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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44803 ***
+
+Note: Images of the original pages are available through the
+ Digital Library of the Falvey Memorial Library,
+ Villanova University. See
+ http://digital.library.villanova.edu/Item/vudl:322376
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
+
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE GOLDEN'S DAUGHTER
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+ CHAPTER II.
+ CHAPTER III.
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ CHAPTER V.
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ CHAPTER X.
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ CHAPTER XX.
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+ CHAPTER XXII.
+ CHAPTER XXIII.
+ CHAPTER XXIV.
+ CHAPTER XXV.
+ CHAPTER XXVI.
+ CHAPTER XXVII.
+ CHAPTER XXVIII.
+ CHAPTER XXIX.
+ CHAPTER XXX.
+ CHAPTER XXXI.
+ CHAPTER XXXII.
+ CHAPTER XXXIII.
+ CHAPTER XXXIV.
+ CHAPTER XXXV.
+ CHAPTER XXXVI.
+ CHAPTER XXXVII.
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+ CHAPTER XXXIX.
+ CHAPTER XL.
+ CHAPTER XLI.
+ CHAPTER XLII.
+ CHAPTER XLIII.
+ CHAPTER XLIV.
+ CHAPTER XLV.
+ CHAPTER XLVI.
+ CHAPTER XLVII.
+ CHAPTER XLVIII.
+ CHAPTER XLIX.
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE GOLDEN'S DAUGHTER
+
+Or
+
+The Dream of a Life Time
+
+by
+
+MRS. ALEX. McVEIGH MILLER
+
+Author of
+"Little Coquette Bonnie," "The Senator's Bride," "Brunette and
+Blonde," etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+New York
+The American News Company
+Publishers' Agents
+39-41 Chambers Street
+
+Copyright, 1883,
+Norman L. Munro.
+
+Copyright 1901,
+By Street & Smith
+
+Little Golden's Daughter
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE GOLDEN'S DAUGHTER;
+
+OR,
+
+_The Dream of Her Life-Time_.
+
+By MRS. ALEX. McVEIGH MILLER.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+Beautiful Golden Glenalvan stood by the willow-bordered lake and looked
+into its azure depths with a dreamy light in her pansy-blue eyes.
+
+She had been singing as she danced along the sunny path, but the sweet
+song died on the coral lips as she came to the little lake with its
+green fringe of willows and the white lilies sleeping on its breast.
+
+The wind as it sighed through the trees, and the low, soft ripple of
+the water, always sounded sad to Golden.
+
+It seemed to her vivid fancy that the wind and the waves were trying to
+tell her some sad story in a language she could not understand.
+
+She was unconsciously saddened whenever she came to its banks and
+listened to the low, soft murmur.
+
+It had a tragic story to tell her, indeed, but its language was too
+mysterious for her to understand. Some day she would know.
+
+The afternoon sunshine threw the long, slanting shadows of old
+Glenalvan Hall far across the level greensward almost to the border of
+the lake.
+
+It had once been a fine and stately mansion, picturesque and
+pretentious, with many peaks and gables and oriel windows. But its
+ancient glory had long departed.
+
+It seemed little more than a picturesque, ivy-covered ruin now. But
+there still remained in one wing a few habitable apartments that were
+fine and large, and lofty.
+
+Here the last of the Glenalvans--once a proud and wealthy race--dwelt
+in respectable, shabby-genteel poverty.
+
+But poverty did not seem to have hurt lovely little Golden Glenalvan.
+
+She had a wealth of beauty, and a happy heart that made her seem like
+a gleam of sunshine in the home she brightened. She was a careless,
+willful child not yet sixteen.
+
+The plain, simple, blue gingham dress was worn quite short, yet, the
+beautiful, golden tresses fell to her waist in long, loose, childish
+ringlets.
+
+Free and careless as the birds, she roamed at will through the wild,
+neglected park and the green woods that lay around her ancestral home.
+
+The dwellers in Glenalvan Hall were divided into two families. In
+the best and most habitable part, John Glenalvan lived with his wife
+and family, consisting of two daughters and a son. In a few battered
+rooms in the tumble-down wing, John Glenalvan's father, an old and
+hoary-headed man, kept house with his pretty little granddaughter,
+Golden, and one old black servant called Dinah.
+
+We have digressed a little from Golden as she stands beside the lake,
+swinging her wide, straw hat by its blue ribbons. Let us return.
+
+The little maiden is communing with herself. Quite unconsciously she
+speaks her thoughts aloud:
+
+"Old Dinah says that Elinor and Clare will give a little party to-night
+in honor of their brother's wealthy friend, who is to come on a visit
+to him to-day. How I wish they would invite me. I should like to go."
+
+"Should you now, really?" said a slightly sarcastic voice close to her.
+
+She looked up, and saw her cousin, Elinor coming along the path toward
+her.
+
+Elinor Glenalvan was a tall and queenly beauty of the most pronounced
+brunette type. She had large, black eyes that sparkled like diamonds,
+and glossy, black hair braided into a coronet on the top of her haughty
+head.
+
+Her features were well-cut and regular, her skin a clear olive, her
+cheeks and lips were a rich, glowing crimson. She was twenty-one years
+old, and her sister Clare, who walked by her side, was nineteen.
+
+Clare Glenalvan was a weak, vain, pretty girl, but with no such decided
+claim to beauty as Elinor. Her hair and eyes were not as dark as her
+sister's, her cheeks and lips were less rosy. She had a mincing,
+affected air, but was considered stylish and elegant.
+
+Both girls were attired in the best their father could afford from his
+very limited income, and their little cousin's simple blue gingham
+looked plain indeed by contrast with their cool, polka-dotted lawns,
+and lace ruffles.
+
+Elinor carried a small basket on her arm. They had come to the lake
+for water-lilies to decorate the rooms for the party of which they had
+caught Golden talking aloud.
+
+The little girl blushed at her dilemma a moment, then she faced the
+occasion bravely.
+
+"I did not know that you could hear me, Elinor," she said, lifting her
+beautiful, frank, blue eyes to her cousin's face, "but it is true.
+I should like to come to your party. You have invited grandpa's old
+servant to come and help with the supper, and she will go. Why do you
+not ask grandpa and me?"
+
+"Grandpa is too old to come, and you are too young," replied Elinor,
+with a careless, flippant laugh, while Clare stared at Golden, and
+murmured audibly:
+
+"The bold, little thing."
+
+Golden revolved her cousin's reply a moment in her mind.
+
+"Well, perhaps he is too old," she said, with a little sigh, "and yet I
+think he might enjoy seeing the young people amusing themselves. But as
+for me, Elinor, I know I am not too young! Minnie Edwards is coming, I
+have heard, and she is a month younger than I am! The only difference
+is that _she_ puts up her hair, and wears long dresses. I would wear
+long dresses, too, only I do not believe grandpa could afford it. It
+would take several yards more for a trail, or even to touch all around."
+
+Clare and Elinor laughed heartlessly at the wistful calculation of the
+difference between short and long dresses. Then the elder sister said,
+abruptly:
+
+"It is a great pity grandpa cannot keep you a little girl in short
+dresses forever, Golden! You will not find it very pleasant to be a
+woman."
+
+"Why not?" said innocent Golden. "Are not women happy?"
+
+"Some are," said Elinor, "but I do not think _you_ will ever be."
+
+"Why not?" asked the girl again.
+
+The two sisters exchanged significant glances that did not escape
+Golden's keen eyes.
+
+"Elinor, why do you and Clare look at each other so hatefully?" she
+cried out in sudden resentment and childish passion. "What is the
+matter? What have I done?"
+
+"You have done nothing except to be born," said Clare Glenalvan,
+irritably, "and under the circumstances, _that_ is the worst thing you
+_could have_ done."
+
+Was it only the fancy of beautiful Golden, or did the wind in the trees
+and grasses sigh mournfully, and the blue waves go lapsing past with a
+sadder tone?
+
+"Clare, I don't know what you mean," she cried, half-angrily. "I never
+harmed anyone in my life! I have not hurt anyone by being born, have I?"
+
+The sisters looked at the beautiful, half-defiant face with its rose
+flushed cheeks and flashing, violet eyes, and Elinor sneered rudely,
+while Clare answered in a sharp, complaining voice:
+
+"Yes, you have hurt every soul that bears the name of Glenalvan--the
+dead Glenalvans as well as the living ones. You are a living disgrace
+to the proud, old name that your mother was the first to disgrace!"
+
+Then she paused, a little frightened, for Golden had started so
+violently that she had almost fallen backward into the lake.
+
+She steadied herself by catching the branch of a bending willow, and
+looked at her cousin with death-white lips and cheeks, and scornful
+eyes.
+
+"Clare, you are a cruel, wicked girl," she cried. "I will go and tell
+grandpa what terrible things you have said of me! I did not believe one
+word!"
+
+The tears of wounded pride were streaming down her cheeks as she
+sped along the path and across the green lawn up to the old hall. The
+sisters looked at each other, a little disconcerted.
+
+"Clare, you were too hasty," said Elinor, uneasily. "Grandpa will be
+very angry."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+Little Golden sped across the green lawn, her young heart full of pain
+and anger at the cruel words her cousins had spoken to her.
+
+Flying through the long, dark corridor of the old hall, and passing
+through several lofty and empty old rooms, she emerged at last in the
+sunny bay-window where her grandfather dozed daily, surrounded by pots
+of fragrant roses and geraniums.
+
+But with the breathless words of complaint just parting her coral lips,
+Golden saw that the old arm-chair was vacant.
+
+She was surprised and a little dismayed; she had been so sure of
+finding him there.
+
+She turned round and ran out to the sunny kitchen in the back yard,
+where old Dinah stood at a table ironing some simple white garments
+for her young mistress, and crooning to herself a fragment of a negro
+revival tune.
+
+The only nurse and the best friend that Golden had ever known after her
+grandfather, was homely, warm-hearted, black Dinah.
+
+Golden loved the old negress dearly. Ever since she had first lisped
+her name, the girl had familiarly called her "black mammy," after the
+fashion of most southern children with their nurses.
+
+Now she called out quickly before she had reached the kitchen door.
+
+"Oh, black mammy, where is grandpa?"
+
+Black mammy turned with such a start that she dropped the flat-iron she
+was wielding with such consummate skill.
+
+"Oh! honey, chile, how you skeered me," she cried, "an' I've dropped de
+flat-iron, and e'enamost burnt my black toes off! What for did ye come
+callin' me so suddent?"
+
+"Where is grandpa?" repeated the child.
+
+She came up to the door and looked at Dinah, and the old woman saw how
+pale she was, and what a strange light gleamed in the violet eyes under
+their long, curling lashes of golden-brown.
+
+"Come, dearie, don't be afeard because de old man ain't a-nid-noddin'
+in his arm-cheer as usual. He's out a-walkin' wif his son."
+
+"Uncle John?" asked little Golden, with a wondering look.
+
+"Who else, honey?" said Dinah, as she vigorously rubbed a fresh iron
+with salt and beeswax.
+
+"It is so strange," said Golden, momentarily diverted from her
+immediate grievance by Dinah's news. "Uncle John comes so seldom. What
+did he want, black mammy?"
+
+"Want? De debbil, his best friend, knows better dan your poor ole black
+mammy," said Dinah, shaking her head. "All I know is dat he come
+looking black as a thunder-cloud, and ax ole massa to take a walk with
+him."
+
+"And he went?" said Golden.
+
+"Oh! yes, he went, pore ole soul, a-hobblin' off as sweet as a lamb
+with that snake in the grass!"
+
+"Oh! black mammy, grandpa would not like you to speak that way of his
+son," cried Golden.
+
+"I axes your pardon, honey. I spoke my mind afore I thought," answered
+Dinah.
+
+"There is no offense as far as I am concerned," replied her young
+mistress, readily. "There is no love lost between my uncle and me."
+
+Then she added, with a shade of anxiety in her voice:
+
+"Will they be long gone, do you think?"
+
+"I hasn't the leastest idea," said busy Dinah, "but ole massa is too
+feeble to walk very fur."
+
+Golden turned away silently, and went to her grandfather's nook in the
+bay-window to await his return. She was burning with impatience to tell
+him the cruel and unkind things her cousins had said to her, and to ask
+if they were true.
+
+She sat down in the old arm-chair, among the blossoming flowers,
+herself the fairest flower of all, and leaning her dimpled cheek on her
+hand, relapsed into troubled thought.
+
+The strange relations sustained by her grandfather and herself toward
+his son's family puzzled her as it had often done before. Living in the
+same house, and nearly related as they were, there was little or no
+intercourse between the two families and they were barely friendly.
+
+Ever since Golden could remember, it had been so. She had questioned
+her grandfather and she had questioned Dinah, but they gave her no
+satisfaction on the subject.
+
+It remained a pregnant mystery to the lonely child, living her
+thoughtless, girlish life in the ruined rooms of the western wing, and
+in the tangled gardens, and the wild, green wood.
+
+A brief time of impatient waiting, then Golden heard the murmur of
+voices beneath the window.
+
+She leaned her curly head out, and heard one sentence spoken in the
+clear, curt voice of John Glenalvan:
+
+"You understand now, father, how important it is to us that you should
+keep Golden's daughter more carefully secluded?"
+
+"The child will fret--she has been so used to an outdoor life, it will
+injure her health," feebly objected the old man.
+
+"Her health is the poorest objection you could urge with me," said John
+Glenalvan, cruelly. "If she had died long ago it would have been the
+very best thing that could have happened for us all."
+
+The father's reply was lost in the distance as they passed on. They
+came in at the front door, passed down the long corridor, and separated
+to their divided abodes.
+
+Golden's grandfather came heavily into the quiet sitting-room, leaning
+on his oaken cane, and sought his favorite chair at the sunny window
+where the flowers bloomed and the bright-winged butterflies hovered.
+
+He was not prepared to see Golden start up from the chair with a white
+face, and wild, frightened, blue eyes.
+
+She clutched his arms and leaned against him. He felt her frightened
+heart-beats plainly.
+
+"Oh, grandpa, grandpa," she wailed, "what is the matter with everyone?
+What have I done that some wish me dead and others are sorry that ever
+I was born?"
+
+She felt the tremulous lips of the old man pressed fondly on her
+drooping head, she heard a sorrowful murmur:
+
+"Poor little Golden's daughter," then he said aloud:
+
+"My darling, who has been saying such cruel things to you?"
+
+"It is Clare and Elinor, and Uncle John," she sobbed. "They--the girls,
+I mean, now--said the worst thing I could have done was to be born; and
+that my mother was the first to disgrace the name of Glenalvan. And,
+grandpa, I heard what Uncle John said when he passed under the window.
+He said if I had died long ago it must have been better for all."
+
+Old Hugh Glenalvan's kindly blue eyes were flashing fire. He held the
+quivering little form against his breast with loving arms, and his
+outraged old heart beat fast against the girl's.
+
+But he could not answer her. Indignant pain and grief kept him dumb.
+
+"Grandpa, tell me what I have done to be hated by my kind," she sobbed.
+"Am I deformed? Am I repulsive to look at?"
+
+"My darling, you are as perfect and as beautiful as an angel," he
+answered, fondly kissing the fair, innocent brow.
+
+"Why do they hate me, then?" she wailed. "I would love them all if they
+would let me."
+
+"They are cruel and heartless. If they were not, they could not help
+but love you, my Golden," said the old man, bitterly. Then he sat down
+and drew her to a seat upon his knee.
+
+"Think no more of them, my darling," he said, brushing away the shining
+pearls of grief that hung trembling on her thick lashes. "They are
+cruel and unjust to you. Keep away from their presence and forget that
+the same strain of blood flows in your veins. Look upon them as aliens
+and strangers. Give all your love to me."
+
+She hid her sweet face against his shoulder, her breast heaving with
+the sobs that she could not repress.
+
+"I have a heart full of love," she sighed, "and it is all your own,
+dear grandpa. But tell me, oh, tell me of my mother! Can it be true?
+She did not, oh, she could not disgrace our proud old name."
+
+"Hush, Golden, you torture me," the old man said, hoarsely. "There
+is a mystery surrounding you, my little one. Your history is a sad
+one. But you shall never know it if I can keep the blighting secret
+from your knowledge. Ask me no more, my darling. Dismiss it from your
+thoughts. You have always been happy heretofore. Be happy still. You
+are innocent, pure and beautiful. There is no reason why you should not
+have a quiet, happy life if you will keep away from those who wound
+you with their cruel words, and cling closely to your simple, peaceful
+home."
+
+Her wild sobs had ceased. She was looking earnestly into his face,
+while long, low sighs quivered over her lips.
+
+"Now, listen to me, Golden," he said. "Your uncle has made a hard
+request of me, darling, but I have promised that it shall be done.
+Golden, will you trust me, and help me to keep my word?"
+
+"Is it about me?" she said.
+
+"Yes, dear. You know the three upper chambers which foolish people
+believe to be haunted, Golden?"
+
+"Yes," she said, and he saw a slight quiver pass over the delicate
+lips, and her face grew pale.
+
+"Of course you know that is all nonsense, little one," he said,
+reassuringly. "There are no ghosts in Glenalvan Hall. It is only
+foolish and superstitious people who believe that silly tale. Golden,
+would you be willing to remain secluded in those haunted rooms for one
+week, or for whatever number of days John Glenalvan's expected guest
+shall remain?"
+
+The breath came a little faster over the beautiful, parted lips.
+
+"I am almost afraid," she sighed. "Oh, grandpa, why should they wish to
+hide me away like a criminal? I have done nothing."
+
+"I know that, dear. It is a heartless whim of those heartless people.
+They do not wish their guest to see you, or even to know of your
+existence. Do not mind them, pet. Perhaps they are jealous and fear
+that he might fall in love with you. That would never do, because
+they mean to marry him to Elinor and prop the fallen fortunes of the
+Glenalvans. You will humor their fancy, won't you, Golden?"
+
+The pansy-blue eyes flashed with resentful fire.
+
+"Why should I humor them?" she cried. "They are hard and cold to me.
+Why should I shut myself up in prison, away from the sunshine, and the
+flowers and the birds in those gloomy, haunted chambers for their sake?"
+
+"It is for _my_ sake, darling," he replied. "I have promised them that
+you will do it for me. Will you not do so, Golden?"
+
+"I am afraid of the haunted rooms, grandpa," said the child, with a
+shiver.
+
+"Not in the daylight I hope," he said.
+
+"No, not in the daytime," she replied.
+
+"Old Dinah could sleep in your room at night, Golden. So, you see,
+there could be nothing to fear. My little darling, I have loved you and
+cared for you all your life, and I have never asked you for a sacrifice
+before. Will you make this concession for my sake?"
+
+The beautiful girl clasped her white arms round his neck, and kissed
+his withered cheek.
+
+"I cannot refuse if it is for your sake, grandpa," she said. "You have
+been father, mother, friends and home to me all my life! I have had no
+one but you, grandpa, and I love you too dearly to grieve you. I will
+do as you wish me."
+
+He kissed her and thanked her many times.
+
+"You must believe that it hurts me as much as it does you, my pet," he
+said, "but it will not be for long--and John is so violent, I had to
+promise for the sake of peace. I hope you will never regret this sweet
+yielding to my will."
+
+"I am sure I shall not," said the child-like girl, but she gave an
+unconscious shudder.
+
+His hands rested, as if in blessing, on her hair. He whispered,
+inaudibly:
+
+"God bless my hapless daughter's child."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+Glenalvan Hall, like all old family mansions belonging to old and
+respectable families, had its reputed ghost.
+
+It was currently reported that three rooms in the upper story were
+haunted by the spirit of a fair young girl who had once inhabited them,
+and who had pined away and died for love of a handsome man who had not
+known of her love nor reciprocated it.
+
+This fair ancestress of Golden's--Erma Glenalvan, as she was
+called--was said to haunt the suite of rooms she had occupied in life,
+and credulous people believed that on moonlight nights she walked up
+and down, weeping and sighing, and wringing her white hands because her
+spirit could not retain its grave.
+
+It was to these gloomy and dismantled rooms, haunted by the restless
+ghost of an unhappy girl, that little Golden was consigned for a week
+or more by the stern desire of John Glenalvan. It was a hard trial to
+the child.
+
+She would not have consented to it but for the pleadings of her
+grandfather. Her love and gratitude to him made her yield an easy
+consent to his prayer, while she inwardly quaked with fear at the dread
+ordeal before her.
+
+Old Dinah was desired by her master to transfer suitable bedding and
+furniture to the room Golden would occupy, and to carry her meals to
+that room daily and attend carefully on her young mistress. Black Dinah
+was furious.
+
+"I know'd dar was deviltry afoot," she said. "I know'd it! John
+Glenalvan never sets his foot in ole massa's presence without some
+devil's broth is a-brewing!"
+
+"Hush, Dinah," old Hugh said, sternly. "You must not speak of my son
+that way. Do as I bid you. No harm can come to the child. She is
+willing to the plan."
+
+Dinah's loud complaints subsided into muttering and grumbling, but she
+did as her master had ordered.
+
+That night when old Hugh had laid his gray head on his pillow, and old
+Dinah had gone into the other wing of the hall, little Golden sat down
+to read in the ghostly-looking chamber where Erma Glenalvan's loving
+heart had broken for a hopeless love.
+
+Through the weird stillness and solitude of the haunted room, the sound
+of the gay dance music came to Golden's ears, softened and mellowed by
+the distance.
+
+The little maiden's heart beat faster at the delicious sound, so
+inspiring to youthful ears. She threw down her book impatiently.
+
+"How sweet it sounds," she said. "They are in the great dancing-hall.
+I should like to see them. How cruel my cousins are to me!"
+
+The sweet lips quivered, and the blue eyes darkened with anger. Golden
+was a spoiled, impetuous child. Her grandpa and old Dinah had always
+yielded to her in everything and placed no restraint on her impetuous
+temper.
+
+Her little heart was swelling bitterly now, with resentment against
+her cruel cousins. She felt their neglect and their insults keenly,
+the more so because she was ignorant of any possible reason for their
+contumely.
+
+"I should like to spoil their party for them," the little creature
+said to herself with a passionate vindictiveness, quite unusual with
+her. "I have a great mind to play ghost, and frighten them all out of
+the dancing-hall. It would not be a bit too bad for them, after their
+meanness to me!"
+
+She had heard old Dinah say that Clare and Elinor were very much
+afraid of the beautiful phantom of Glenalvan Hall. They would not have
+ventured into the haunted suite alone for any amount of money.
+
+Clare had been heard to say that the very sight of the ghost would be
+sufficient to strike her dead.
+
+Beautiful Golden, who was as changeful as the summer breeze, began to
+laugh at the mischievous idea which had occurred to her.
+
+"What a fine joke it would be to personate poor Erma Glenalvan," she
+thought. "How Clare and Elinor would fly from the festive scene when I
+appeared, weeping and wringing my hands."
+
+She had heard the ghost described by Dinah, who averred that she had
+seen it several times.
+
+She remembered the long, white robe, the flowing veil of golden
+hair, the pearl necklace, the wondrous beauty, shining, as old Dinah
+declared, like a star.
+
+The beauty, the youth, the veil of golden hair she had. But the dress
+and the pearls. Where should she find them?
+
+An old wardrobe which had once belonged, no doubt, to the love-lorn
+Erma, stood against the wall. Golden pulled the door open, not without
+some little fear, and looked in at the collection of moth-eaten dresses
+that hung on the pegs.
+
+She could not tell whom they belonged to, for she had never looked into
+the wardrobe before, but she guessed that they were very old, for a
+cloud of dust rose from them as the door flew open, and as she touched
+them with her hand, some of the folds fell into rents, and showed how
+long they had been the prey of the moth.
+
+But as Golden pulled one after another down from the pegs and tossed
+them into a rainbow heap on the floor, she came to one at last that
+would serve her purpose.
+
+It was a long, white dress of rich, brocaded silk, yellowed by time,
+antique in style, but tolerably well-preserved.
+
+Golden uttered a cry of delight, patting her little foot blithely to
+the merry measure of the dance music.
+
+"The very thing," she cried, and then she shivered slightly. "Perhaps
+it belonged to poor Erma," she thought.
+
+But in a few minutes Golden's blue gingham lay on the floor, and she
+had slipped into the old brocade, and hooked it together. It fitted her
+perfectly.
+
+The neck was low, and finished with a deep frill of fine, old, yellow
+lace. The sleeves were short, and the dimpled shoulders and beautifully
+moulded arms were exposed to the greatest advantage.
+
+Golden then took up the comb and brush and brushed her long, yellow
+ringlets out of curl until they fell about her slender, graceful form
+like a veil of summer sunshine.
+
+"If I only had the pearls, now, I might readily pass for the phantom,"
+she said, looking at the reflection of herself in the glass. "How nice
+I look. This dress is quite becoming, I declare."
+
+As she turned round, admiring the long, soft, trailing folds of the
+brocade, something rattled in what appeared to be the region of the
+pocket.
+
+Golden ran her slim fingers into the pocket, and they encountered a
+rent between the lining and the material of the dress.
+
+Following the rent with her fingers to the very edge of the skirt, they
+encountered something which she drew out and found to be a necklace of
+large, gleaming, milk-white pearls.
+
+Golden uttered a cry of surprise and joy as she clasped the beautiful
+treasure, so strangely found, around her firm, white throat.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the dancing-room that night they had been talking of the Glenalvan
+ghost. Elinor or Clare had taken a great deal of pains to let Bertram
+Chesleigh know how grand and wealthy the Glenalvans had been before the
+war, and especially they had been pleased to have him hear about the
+beautiful phantom of the girl, Erma, who had died of a broken heart.
+
+Though they were afraid of her, and would not have willingly beheld her
+for anything, they were proud of the _prestige_ of a family ghost. They
+considered that only distinguished families ever had such visitations.
+
+Elinor told him the pretty legend she had heard from a superstitious
+old servant. She said the phantom would fly if anyone approached her,
+but if she could once be overtaken and kissed by a very handsome man
+she would rest in her grave and walk no more.
+
+But it was confidently asserted that no one could accomplish such a
+feat, for the phantom flew before every pursuer as if fear lent it
+wings.
+
+"If you could catch and kiss her, Mr. Chesleigh, I think the ghost
+would be forever laid," said Clare Glenalvan, with a simper, and
+affected laugh.
+
+"Thank you, Miss Clare," said Bertram Chesleigh, with a bow, though he
+was inwardly disgusted. He knew that he was a very handsome man.
+
+His mirror had told him so, but he did not admire Clare's forwardness
+in telling him of it so plainly.
+
+The merry dance went on. The subject of the Glenalvan ghost had passed
+from the minds of the dancers when suddenly the music, which had been
+filling the air with sweetness, came to a dead stop.
+
+All the dancers looked toward the door where the band was stationed,
+for the cause of the silence.
+
+The performers had dropped their instruments, and were staring
+open-mouthed at a vision in the wide, open doorway that opened from
+a long dark, corridor--a vision clearly outlined against the outer
+darkness, and plainly seen by all in the room--a girlish form in
+sweeping, white robes and falling, golden hair, the beautiful face,
+convulsed with woe and pain, the white arms extended, the small hands
+clasping and unclasping each other in gestures of infinite despair.
+
+"The Glenalvan ghost!" ran from lip to lip in a murmur of awe and
+terror, while timid young girls clung shrieking to their partners, and
+the utmost confusion prevailed.
+
+Elinor Glenalvan tried to faint in the arms of Bertram Chesleigh, but
+he put her hastily into a chair and said quickly:
+
+"Miss Glenalvan, I am going to earn your everlasting gratitude. I shall
+kiss the beautiful Erma, and the Glenalvan ghost will be forever laid."
+
+He sprang toward the doorway, but in that moment the beautiful phantom
+turned and fled precipitately before him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+It had not entered into little Golden's plan for the discomfiture of
+her scornful cousins, that anyone would have the temerity to approach
+her in her character of the Glenalvan ghost. On the contrary, she had
+confidently expected to spread fear, dismay and confusion among the
+festive guests, and to effect her own escape unmolested and unsuspected.
+
+What was her surprise and dismay to see a tall, dark, handsome man
+start from Elinor's side, and cross the room toward her with the
+evident purpose of accosting her!
+
+Beautiful Golden was filled with fear and alarm. She turned swiftly and
+fled down the long, dark corridor, her heart beating with dread lest
+she should be overtaken and identified by her pursuer.
+
+She thought of her grandfather's grief and mortification if he should
+find out her girlish prank, and of her stern uncle's wrathful anger.
+
+These swift thoughts seemed to lend wings to her light feet. She flew
+rather than ran down the dark hall, but her rapid heart-beats could not
+drown the quick and steady footsteps of her pursuer. They seemed to
+come nearer and gain upon her.
+
+To gain her own rooms in the western wing Golden would be compelled to
+go up a wide stairway leading directly from the corridor in which she
+was then running.
+
+It dawned on her mind in the whirl of thoughts that rushed over her,
+that it would be very unwise to return to the haunted rooms just then.
+She believed that she would undoubtedly be pursued and captured if she
+did.
+
+It occurred to her that her best plan would be to escape into the open
+air and hide herself in the belt of thick, dense shrubbery that grew
+below the lake.
+
+She knew every bend and turn, and secret nook within it. Her pursuer
+did not. She could baffle him there.
+
+Inspired by what seemed to her a happy thought, Golden flew past the
+wide staircase and gained the outer door.
+
+She flashed down the marble steps outside, and struck breathlessly
+across the green lawn.
+
+But swift and breathless as her flight had been, she had "a foe-man
+worthy of her steel." Bertram Chesleigh had never faltered in his swift
+pursuit of the supposed phantom.
+
+If such a thing were indeed possible, he meant to capture the flying
+form, and kiss the face whose beauty had struck him even through its
+tragic expression of sorrow and despair.
+
+He was light-footed and swift, and inspired by the novelty of the
+chase. He was determined to keep his word to the handsome Elinor, if
+possible.
+
+He went over the marble steps at one flying bound that gained him a
+great advantage over Golden. As he followed her over the lawn he was so
+near that the frightened girl could hear his quick, panting breath, and
+dreaded every moment to feel his outstretched hands clutch her white
+shoulder.
+
+It was a lovely night. The moon was at its full. Its white radiance
+touched everything with weird beauty. It shone on the leaves, the
+flowers, and the grass, and made the dew-drops glitter like diamonds.
+
+Golden's white brocade shone with a silvery gleam as she fled through
+the moonlight, her white arms and neck gleamed like ivory through the
+golden mist of her streaming hair.
+
+She had crossed the green expanse of the lawn in safety. Her light feet
+struck into the path by the lake. When once she had crossed that path
+she would be into the shrubbery. She felt sure that she might mislead
+the determined follower then.
+
+But the race had been an unequal one. That flying leap over the flight
+of marble steps had decided the contest in the man's favor.
+
+Scarce a minute more and the dreaded touch fell on her shoulder, two
+strong arms were passed quickly around her waist, her head was drawn
+back against a manly breast, and to Golden's horror and consternation,
+she felt a pair of warm, mustached lips pressed fully and passionately
+upon her own.
+
+"Lovely Erma, may your spirit rest in peace after this fond kiss of
+love," he cried; and Golden, trying vainly to struggle out of his
+clasp, lifted her eyes and saw a dark, splendid, handsome face gazing
+into her own, with large, black eyes that were full of eager admiration
+and sparkled with pleasant excitement.
+
+"Let me go!" she cried, with her blue eyes full of angry tears, "let me
+go! How dared you--oh, how dared you _kiss_ me?"
+
+But the strong arms held her fast, although Bertram Chesleigh began
+to realize that it was not a phantom, but a real creature of flesh and
+blood he had kissed so warmly.
+
+He held her fast, and looked down with a smile into the girlish face
+that was so very beautiful even through the crimson flush of anger.
+
+"Do not be angry," he said. "You should be glad that I have kissed you."
+
+"Why should I be glad?" she demanded, in a sharp, imperious little
+voice.
+
+The dark eyes of little Golden's captor sparkled with mirth at her
+indignant question.
+
+"They told me up yonder at the hall," he replied, "that if a handsome
+man could catch and kiss the Glenalvan ghost its wandering spirit would
+be laid forever. Do you think that you can rest easy in your grave now,
+beautiful Erma?"
+
+Golden wrenched herself from his clasp, but he still held her so
+tightly by one hand that she could not leave him. She looked at him
+with bright eyes in which anger and reluctant mirth were strangely
+blended. His quaint humor was infectious.
+
+"Do you think yourself so very handsome, sir?" she demanded.
+
+"A lady told me so this evening," he replied, unblushingly. "One must
+always take a lady's word, must not one, fair Erma?"
+
+"I am not Erma," she replied, impetuously; "I am only Golden."
+
+"Golden! What a beautiful name!" cried Golden's captor.
+"Golden--_what_?"
+
+"Golden Glenalvan," she replied.
+
+"That is prettier still," he said; then he looked at her more closely.
+"Are you any kin to Clare and Elinor?"
+
+"Yes; we are cousins," the girl replied, frankly.
+
+She forgot how strange it was for her to be standing there talking to
+this stranger from whom she had been desperately fleeing a moment ago.
+
+But the dark, mesmeric eyes held her gaze with a luring power; the
+warm, soft hand that clasped her own, sent strange thrills of tingling
+sweetness through every nerve.
+
+When she had looked at the dark, handsome, smiling face once she liked
+to look at it again. She forgot to feel afraid of him.
+
+They were standing on the border of the lake. The moonlight made it
+shine like a sheet of silver; but Bertram Chesleigh had no eyes for its
+beauty while the fair, fresh face of that innocent girl was lifted to
+his.
+
+He said to himself that in all his life he had never seen anyone half
+so lovely.
+
+"And you are not a ghost, after all?" he said.
+
+"No; I was only masquerading," she replied. "I did it to frighten my
+cousins and spoil their party. Do you think I have succeeded?" she
+inquired, with _naive_ anxiety.
+
+He looked a little surprised.
+
+"I do not know, I am sure," he said. "Why did you wish to spoil their
+pleasure?"
+
+"Because they would not invite me to go, and said cruel things to me,
+besides," answered Golden, with a heaving breast.
+
+"Why would they not invite you?" he inquired, more surprised than ever.
+
+"Elinor said I was _too young_, but I should sooner think that grandpa
+guessed the true reason!" she replied with innocent frankness.
+
+"What did grandpa guess?" he inquired.
+
+"They were afraid for Uncle John's rich guest to see me. They mean to
+marry him to Elinor," she replied, readily, and without a suspicion
+that it was the "rich guest" himself who held her small hand that
+moment so warmly and tightly in his own.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh laughed long and merrily, and the little girl awoke
+to a sense of her imprudence.
+
+"Oh? I should not have talked to you so," she cried. "They will be very
+angry. Oh, please don't tell anyone I was the ghost! Grandpa would
+scold me, and I could not bear that."
+
+At that moment the murmur of voices and laughter was borne to them on
+the breeze from the hall door.
+
+"Your friends are coming to look for you," she cried. "Oh! _do_ let go
+my hand. I must hide myself. You will not betray my secret?"
+
+"No; I will keep it faithfully, Golden," he replied, then he kissed her
+small hand and released her, for he did not wish his friends to find
+him with her.
+
+She darted away like a bird, and hid herself in the shrubbery. The
+young man lighted a cigar and turned back to meet his friends.
+
+"Did you catch the ghost? Did you kiss her?" they asked him, eagerly.
+
+"I was never so outwitted in my life," he replied. "Would you believe
+it if I should tell you that I pursued her across the lawn to the
+border of the lake, and that just as I might have touched her with my
+hand she sprang into the water and not a ripple on the surface showed
+where she had gone down?"
+
+This clever and non-committal reply was accepted as a statement of
+facts by the credulous. The romantic story spread from one to another
+rapidly.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh found himself quite a hero a few minutes after he had
+returned to the house. But though they praised his bravery, everyone
+chaffed him because he had failed to get the kiss from the beautiful
+phantom.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+"Father, where is Golden this morning?"
+
+Old Hugh Glenalvan looked up with a frightened start as his son came
+into his presence with a stern brow and heavy footstep.
+
+It was the morning after the Glenalvans' little party, and the old man
+was sitting in the sunny bay-window, thinking of his little sunbeam, as
+he called her lovingly in his thoughts.
+
+Old Dinah had been in and brought him a message to say that she was
+very lonely and wished her grandpa to come and see her and bring her a
+bunch of roses. He was just thinking of doing so, when John Glenalvan
+came frowningly into his presence.
+
+"Father, where is Golden this morning?" he asked, sharply, and the old
+man trembled with fear of, he knew not what, as he replied:
+
+"She is up in the haunted rooms where you told me to put her, John."
+
+"Come with me. I wish to see her," he said, and the old man's face grew
+ashen pale as he asked:
+
+"What is the matter? Has Golden done anything, John?"
+
+"You will know soon enough," was the short reply; and full of
+apprehension the old man led the way to his granddaughter's room.
+
+Beautiful Golden was walking up and down the dreary chamber, impatient
+as a captive bird. She started, and grew very pale as she caught sight
+of her Uncle John's stern face. She did not speak to him, but ran up to
+her grandfather and kissed his poor, old, wrinkled cheek.
+
+"Good-morning, dear grandpa," she said. "I am very lonely. I miss you
+so much. Did black mammy tell you to bring me some roses?"
+
+"Yes, dear, but I did not have the time," said the grandfather,
+with a tremulous voice, and stealing a glance at his son. For some
+inexplicable reason he stood in great fear of him.
+
+"Have done with such foolish chat, girl," broke in John Glenalvan,
+roughly. "So you played the ghost last night, eh, miss?"
+
+Golden gave a violent start, and clung to her grandfather. She
+trembled, and her sweet lips grew very pale.
+
+"You need not deny it. Your looks betray your guilt," continued John
+Glenalvan, roughly.
+
+"No, no, my Golden would not have done such a thing," cried her
+grandfather, warmly. "Who says that she did?"
+
+Golden looked anxiously into her uncle's face as that question left the
+old man's lips. Her heart fell at the thought that the handsome man who
+had kissed her by the lake, had betrayed her to her merciless uncle.
+
+But his next word relieved her from the dread.
+
+"I say so myself," he replied. "I saw and recognized her myself, as did
+Clare and Elinor also. She came and stood in the hall doorway where
+they were dancing, tricked out like the ghost of Erma Glenalvan. Deny
+it if you dare, miss!"
+
+The girl's quick temper flamed up at his harsh manner.
+
+"I do not wish to deny it," she cried defiantly. "I did it, and I
+frightened all your fine company, too! I am very glad of it."
+
+John Glenalvan sprang toward her with upraised hand as though he would
+strike her, but she stepped quickly out of his reach, and he said, with
+sullen rage:
+
+"You hear the little Jezebel, father. Take care, take care that I do
+not put my long-pending threat into execution."
+
+"John, she is but a playful child," he pleaded, pitifully. "She meant
+no harm, I am sure. Oh, Golden, my darling! why did you do it?"
+
+"To spite the girls, grandpa, for their cruelty to me," she replied,
+"but I am very sorry now, since it has grieved you so. Believe me,
+grandpa, I did not think you would ever hear of it. Can you forgive
+me?" she pleaded, wistfully.
+
+"You must ask your uncle's forgiveness, not mine, my dear," was the
+tremulous reply.
+
+"I will not ask his pardon," she replied, stoutly, her blue eyes
+flashing, and the color flaming into her cheeks, "I am sorry to have
+displeased you, grandpa, dear, but I do not in the least care for
+anyone else whether they are offended or not."
+
+"Where did you get the fine toggery you wore last night?" demanded John
+Glenalvan, his fingers tingling with the impulse to slap the fair,
+defiant face.
+
+"That is no concern of yours," she replied, resentfully.
+
+"Tell me, dear," whispered old Hugh, intent on preserving a semblance
+of peace if it were possible.
+
+Golden threw open the door of the wardrobe and showed him the brocade,
+which looked very yellow and old in the clear light of day.
+
+"She had a necklace of pearls around her neck," said John, in an artful
+aside to his father.
+
+"Did you, Golden?" asked her grandfather.
+
+Golden went to the little toilet-table and took up the costly necklace
+which John Glenalvan instantly snatched from her hand and placed in his
+pocket.
+
+Golden looked at him, tearful, dismayed, and excessively angry.
+
+"Give them back to me," she cried. "They are mine! I found them--indeed
+I did, grandpa. They had fallen through a hole in the pocket of the
+dress into the skirt lining. They are mine, and you shall give them
+back to me, Uncle John."
+
+"I will show you whether I will or not," he replied. "The necklace
+belongs to me. Everything in the house belongs to me, as well as the
+estate itself. You only have a home on sufferance here. Take care that
+you do not lose that."
+
+"Is it true, grandpa?" asked Golden, and the old man nodded sadly.
+
+John Glenalvan took down the white brocade, and carried it away in a
+compact bundle under his arm.
+
+"I shall take this away," he said, "to make sure that you do not play
+any more disgraceful tricks upon us. I depend upon you, father, to see
+that she keeps to this room, and behaves herself for the remainder of
+the week. If she does not, I emphatically assure you that you both will
+suffer through her willfulness and disobedience!"
+
+"I will promise for her," said the old man, putting his hand over
+Golden's pouting and rebellious mouth. "She will not be naughty any
+more!"
+
+"See that she keeps the promise," his son replied, sternly, as he
+turned away.
+
+He went to Elinor's _boudoir_ where he found his two daughters
+quarreling over Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+"I tell you he admires me the most," exclaimed the elder girl,
+angrily, just as her father threw the necklace and the brocade into her
+lap, and said, triumphantly:
+
+"Here is the finery the ghost wore, my dears. Divide it between you."
+
+The brocade was thrown down in disgust, but a pitched battle ensued
+over the pearl necklace.
+
+"I am the elder, and I am determined to have it," cried Elinor,
+resolutely.
+
+"I shall have it myself, if I perish in the effort," retorted Clare.
+
+A wordy war ensued, from which John Glenalvan, to whom it was nothing
+new, retreated in disgust.
+
+The contest was ended at last by the handsome Elinor's boxing the ears
+of her sister, and taking possession of the spoil on the barbarous
+principle of "might is right."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+"Did I dream the whole thing?" said Bertram Chesleigh to himself,
+"or was it, indeed, only a ghost that I kissed on the border of the
+lake? Do ghosts have warm, living flesh and blood, and balmy lips, and
+blushes that come and go, and delicious little tempers, and the power
+to thrill one's nerves with quivering darts of fire? Have I lost my
+heart to a phantom?"
+
+He might well ask himself these questions. A day and night had gone
+since the Glenalvans had their little party, and so far he had been
+unable to learn anything at all concerning the beautiful girl whom all
+but himself believed to have been the ghost of the dead Erma Glenalvan.
+
+As he had promised to keep little Golden's secret inviolate, he could
+of course make no opening inquiries, but his little, careless, artful
+speeches, and innocent inquiries all failed of effect.
+
+He could learn nothing of the maid whose beauty and grace had literally
+carried his heart by storm. It seemed quite plain that she did not live
+in the house.
+
+It was equally certain that she did not reside in the neighborhood,
+for his friend, young Fred Glenalvan, had often assured him that his
+father's family were the only living descendants of the once numerous
+race.
+
+Mr. Chesleigh asked himself if there was indeed a mystery, or if he had
+been fooled by an elfish spirit from the world of shadows.
+
+His heart and his reason answered in the negative. It was a human
+being, warm, breathing, living, whom he had clasped and kissed that
+night. His veins tingled with electric fire at the remembrance.
+
+Alone in his room the second night after his rencontre with the ghost,
+Bertram Chesleigh walked up and down restlessly, half mad with himself
+that he should dwell so persistently on that one thought, yet finding
+it so dangerously sweet he would not willingly have forgotten it.
+It seemed to him that he had never really lived till now, when this
+romantic passion for the beautiful unknown fired his heart.
+
+Elinor and Clare had been very much frightened at the appearance of the
+family ghost. They talked about it in low, awe-struck whispers.
+
+When Bertram Chesleigh expressed a desire to visit the haunted suite
+of rooms they expressed themselves as horrified, and declared that the
+rooms of the hapless Erma had been walled up long years before, and
+that all the rooms of the western wing were in such a ruinous condition
+that it was exceedingly dangerous to venture there at all.
+
+They declared that their father had engaged workmen to pull down the
+western wing on account of its precarious condition.
+
+But singularly enough Bertram Chesleigh's thoughts were running on the
+haunted rooms almost continuously to-night. Everything connected with
+the Glenalvan ghost had a deep interest for him.
+
+Some impulse impelled him to visit the western wing.
+
+He knew that the wide hall on which his room door opened had a corridor
+leading from it into the ruined western wing of the hall.
+
+Some impulse stronger than his will, some "spirit in his feet,"
+tempted him forth under cover of the silence and the night to explore
+the dangerous region in the vague hope of finding some trace of the
+mysterious ghost of last night.
+
+To have met her again he would have dared even more threatening dangers
+than the settling timbers and falling roof which Fred, and Clare and
+Elinor were unanimous in declaring menaced everyone who entered the
+decaying portion of the hall.
+
+Softly shod in his velvet slippers, he opened the door and peered out
+into the long hall.
+
+It was lighted by long windows at either end, through which the
+moonlight poured a flood of white radiance. Putting a convenient box of
+matches into the pocket of his dressing-gown, he sallied boldly forth.
+
+Whether ghost or human, he longed to encounter the beautiful girl he
+loved again.
+
+He entered the long corridor and walked along softly, guided by the
+moonlight that entered through the windows and lay in fantastic shadows
+upon the floor.
+
+He found that the building was in a ruinous condition indeed. The rooms
+into which he looked were dismantled and bare, the papering hung in
+ragged, fantastic strips from the walls; huge rats scampered over the
+floor, frightened night-birds flapped against the windows with wild,
+unearthly noises. Surely, the place was well-fitted to be the abode of
+ghosts and shadows, it was so weird and uncanny.
+
+But Bertram Chesleigh held on his way undauntedly. It seemed to him
+that he had explored every room on that upper floor, when suddenly he
+discovered a little passage down which he turned and found himself in
+front of a closed door.
+
+The majority of the doors had stood open, swinging carelessly on their
+hinges.
+
+The midnight explorer did not know why his heart beat so strangely when
+he stood before this closed one.
+
+He turned the handle noiselessly, and entered, carefully closing the
+door behind him.
+
+In the large and lofty apartment, where he now found himself, a dim and
+shaded night-lamp was burning, thick, dark curtains shaded the windows,
+a large rug covered the center of the floor, a low, white cottage-bed
+stood in the furthest corner, draped in neat and spotless white.
+
+Then the midnight explorer started, and with difficulty repressed the
+cry that rose to his lips.
+
+For the soft, white counterpane thrown over the bed, outlined the
+curves of an exquisite, girlish form.
+
+On the white, ruffled pillow nestled a sleeping face as lovely as a
+budding rose.
+
+The round, white arms were thrown carelessly up above her head, the
+wealth of curling, golden hair, strayed in rich confusion over the
+pillow; the golden-brown lashes lay softly on the rosy, dimpled cheeks;
+the lips were smiling as if some happy dream stirred the white breast
+that rose and fell so softly over the innocent heart.
+
+"Ghost or human?" Bertram Chesleigh asked himself, as he gazed in
+astonishment and ecstacy at the beautiful, unconscious sleeper.
+
+He came nearer with noiseless footsteps and bated breath to the
+bedside. He bent so near that he could hear the soft, sweet breath that
+fluttered over the parted lips.
+
+"It is she," he said to himself, with mingled rapture and amaze.
+
+Then, in the next breath, he murmured:
+
+"I must beat a quiet retreat. How frightened and angry she would be,
+were she to awake and find me here!"
+
+He was one of the purest and most honorable minded men in the world.
+
+He turned to go, but could not tear his fascinated eyes from that
+beautiful, child-like, sleeping face.
+
+His splendid black eyes lingered on its innocent beauty in passionate
+admiration.
+
+"If I might only touch that little hand that lies so near me on the
+pillow, it would cool the thirst of my heart," he said wistfully to
+himself, while his heart beat fast with joy that he had found her
+again, this lovely creature of whom he had dreamed night and day for
+twenty-four hours.
+
+He looked at the sweetly-smiling, parted lips, and his pulses thrilled
+at the remembrance of the tender caress he had pressed upon them such a
+short while before.
+
+Carried away by the force of as pure and mad a passion as ever thrilled
+the heart of man, the enraptured lover bent his head and pressed a kiss
+as soft and light as the fall of a rose-leaf on the white hand that lay
+so temptingly near him.
+
+He meant to go then, but as he lifted his head, blushing with shame
+at the temptation that had prompted him to that wrongful and stolen
+caress, a sharp indignant voice fell on his ears with the suddenness of
+a thunder-clap.
+
+"Oh, you black-hearted wilyun--you wicked betrayer of innercence! Get
+out o' this afore I kill you with my own hands, you han'some debbil!"
+
+Bertram Chesleigh turned and saw a ludicrous, yet startling sight
+framed in the open doorway of an inner chamber which in his agitation,
+he had not noticed before.
+
+Old Black Dinah, who was the color of ebony and very tall and lean,
+stood before him, clad in a short night-gown of gay, striped cotton
+from which her slim legs and arms stuck out like bean-poles.
+
+Her stubbly, gray wool seemed to stand erect on her head with horror,
+and her brandished arms, snapping black eyes, and furious face, made up
+a startling picture of wrath and horror, strangely combined with the
+ludicrous.
+
+"You black-hearted wilyun!" old Dinah repeated, advancing angrily upon
+her dismayed foe, "get out o' de room o' my innercent lamb afore she
+wakes and finds you here, you wolf!"
+
+"I beg your pardon--I stumbled into this room by the merest accident,"
+Chesleigh was beginning to say, when, startled by Dinah's loud and
+angry tones, little Golden awoke, and flashed the light of her wide
+blue eyes upon their excited faces.
+
+She uttered a cry of fear and terror when she saw the tall, manly form
+standing in the room.
+
+Old Dinah ran to her instantly, and she hid her frightened face on the
+shoulder of the old black woman.
+
+"Black mammy, what does all this mean?" cried the girl, nervously.
+
+Dinah gave a prolonged and lugubrious groan, and rolled up the whites
+of her eyes in reply. The intruder saw that it was imperative that he
+should stay long enough to explain matters to the alarmed girl.
+
+He said to himself that no one had ever been placed in such a strange
+and embarrassing position before.
+
+Every instinct of delicacy and respect for the young girl prompted
+him to retire at once; yet he could not bear to go and leave a wrong
+impression on the mind of the beautiful girl whom he admired so much.
+
+He retreated to the door, and, standing there, said, anxiously and
+respectfully:
+
+"I entreat you to believe, Miss Glenalvan, that I entered here with no
+wrongful motive. Led by a fit of curiosity, I was exploring the ruined
+wing of the hall, and I entered without a dream of finding it occupied
+by any living being. I had been led to believe that these rooms were
+totally unoccupied, and were even unsafe to enter. Will you accept my
+apology?"
+
+Little Golden's head was still hidden against Dinah's shoulder, and the
+old woman broke out sharply and quickly:
+
+"Honey, chile, don't you go for to 'cept dat wilyun's 'pology! Ef he
+done really cum in dis room by accident, he would agone out ag'in when
+he found dat a young lady occupied de room. But no; de first sight my
+ole brack eyes saw when I jumped off my pallet and come to de door was
+dat strange man a-kissin' you, my precious lamb."
+
+Golden began to sob, and Mr. Chesleigh mentally anathematized the old
+woman's long tongue that had thus betrayed the secret he had intended
+to keep so carefully.
+
+His face grew scarlet as he hastened to say:
+
+"I kissed your hand, Miss Glenalvan, and I entreat your pardon for
+yielding to that overmastering temptation. Can you forgive me?"
+
+But Golden was still weeping bitterly, and old Dinah, in her fear and
+indignation for her darling, pointed quickly to the door.
+
+"Go," she said. "Don't you see how you frighten the chile by staying?"
+
+There seemed nothing to be gained by staying. The old woman was utterly
+unreasonable, and Golden was so agitated she could not speak.
+
+The embarrassed intruder silently withdrew to his own apartment, where
+he spent the night brooding over the strange discovery he had made and
+the unpleasant position in which he had placed himself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+"Honey, chile, where did you git 'quainted wid dat ondecent man?"
+inquired old Dinah of her nursling, as soon as Mr. Chesleigh had
+quitted the room.
+
+"What makes you think I am acquainted with him, mammy?" inquired the
+child in surprise.
+
+Dinah shook her woolly head sagely.
+
+"Don't try to deceabe your ole brack mammy, my lamb," she said. "He
+called you Missie Glenalvan--do you think I didn't notice that?"
+
+Golden's pretty cheeks grew scarlet with blushes.
+
+"I shall have to 'form your grandpa of what he done, the impident
+wilyun!" continued Dinah, emphatically.
+
+"Oh, black mammy, please don't tell," cried the girl impulsively. "You
+heard what he said--it was a mere accident, I am quite, quite sure he
+meant no harm."
+
+"Ole massa shall be de jedge o' dat," replied Dinah decidedly. "I'll
+miss my guess if de ole man don't put a pistol-hole frew my fine,
+han'some gentleman!"
+
+"Oh, black mammy! then you shall not tell," cried Golden in terror.
+"Indeed, indeed, he is not the wicked man you believe him. He has kept
+my secret for me, and I must keep his now. That would only be fair."
+
+"Ah, den you _do_ know him," cried Dinah, horrified. "Tell me all about
+it dis minute, if you know what's best for you, chile."
+
+Golden did not resent the old nurse's tone of authority. She knew the
+old woman's love for her too well. She dried her eyes and reluctantly
+related her escapade two nights before.
+
+"He kept my secret," she concluded, "and it would not be fair for us to
+make trouble for him, would it, black mammy?"
+
+Old Dinah had slipped down to the floor, and sat with her long, black
+arms clasped around her knees, looking up into her nursling's eager,
+fearful face, with a good deal of trouble in her keen, black eyes.
+
+The old woman was shrewd and intelligent in her way. She foresaw
+trouble, and perhaps the bitterest sorrow from these two meetings
+between the handsome guest of John Glenalvan and the young mistress.
+
+"Black mammy, promise me you will not tell grandpa," Golden pleaded. "I
+will do anything you ask me if only you will not tell him."
+
+Thereupon Dinah announced her ultimatum.
+
+"If you will promise me never to speak to the strange gentleman again,
+little missie, I will not tell ole massa."
+
+Golden opened wide her blue eyes. She looked very lovely as she leaned
+back among the snowy, ruffled pillows, her golden hair straying loosely
+about her shoulders, her cheeks tinted with a deep, warm blush, her
+little hands nervously clasping and unclasping each other.
+
+"Black mammy, I think you are very cross to-night," she pouted. "Why
+should I never speak to the handsome gentleman again?"
+
+"Because it's best for you. Ole brack mammy knows better dan you,
+chile."
+
+"But I liked him so much," said Golden, blushing rosy red.
+
+"You had no business to like him," responded Dinah. "He's to marry Miss
+Elinor."
+
+"I do not believe it," said Golden, quickly.
+
+"He's not for you, anyway," retorted Dinah. "You'll nebber marry no
+one, my dear."
+
+"Why not?" asked the child. "Will nobody ever love me?"
+
+"Nobody'll ever love ye like your grandpa, honey, and 'taint likely dat
+ever he will give ye away to anyone."
+
+Golden was silent a moment. She seemed to be thinking intently. After a
+moment she said gravely and sadly:
+
+"Grandpa is old, and I am young. Who will take care of me when he is
+gone?"
+
+"Your old brack mammy, I guess, honey."
+
+"You are old, too," said Golden. "You may not live as long as I do."
+
+"Bless the chile's heart, how she _do_ talk," said the old negress.
+"Ah, my precious lamb, I has outlived dem as was younger and fairer dan
+ole black Dinah."
+
+The old black face looked very sad for a moment, then Dinah continued:
+
+"Little missie, it's my clair duty to tell old massa de sarcumstances
+of the case to-morrow morning. Leastwise, unless you promise me nebber
+to speak to dat man ag'in."
+
+"That is very hard," sighed Golden.
+
+"Hard," said Dinah. "I should think you would be so mad at the wilyun,
+a-comin' in and kissin' you so unceremonious, dat you would nebber want
+to speak to him any more."
+
+Golden hid her face in the pillows, and a deep sigh fluttered over her
+lips.
+
+"Come, dearie, won't you promise?" said Dinah. "I knows what's for your
+good better dan you does yourself, chile."
+
+"Must I promise it, indeed?" sighed the innocent child, lifting her
+flushed face from the pillow a moment to fix her big, blue, imploring
+eyes on the old woman's obdurate face.
+
+"Yes, you must sartainly promise it," was the uncompromising reply.
+
+There was silence for a moment, and Dinah saw the tears come into the
+sweet, blue eyes.
+
+"Honey, chile, does you promise me?" she inquired, only confirmed in
+the opinion by this demonstration.
+
+"Yes, I promise not to speak to him unless you give me leave, black
+mammy," replied Golden, with quivering lips.
+
+"That's right, darling. Mammy can depend on your word. Lie down, and go
+to sleep, honey, and I'll fetch my pallet in yere, and sleep on de flo'
+by your bedside, so that no one kin 'trude on you ag'in."
+
+The girl laid her fair head silently on the pillow, and Dinah threw
+down a quilt on the floor and rolled herself in it. She was soon
+snoring profoundly.
+
+Not so with beautiful Golden. It was quite impossible for her to sleep
+again. She shut her eyelids resolutely, but the busy, beautiful brain
+was too active to admit of her losing consciousness again. She lay
+thinking of the splendid, dark-eyed stranger.
+
+"He has kissed me twice," she whispered to her heart, "and yet I do not
+even know his name. I wonder if I shall ever see him again. I hope I
+shall."
+
+As she remembered how earnestly he had apologized for his presence in
+her room, she could not believe him the wicked villain old Dinah had so
+loudly represented him.
+
+"He is handsome, and I believe that he is good," the girl said to
+herself, "and they tell me Elinor wants to marry him; I would like to
+marry him myself, just to spite my cousins."
+
+Poor little Golden! Her spite against her cousins was almost as old as
+her years. They had always hated her, and Golden had been quick to find
+it out and resent it.
+
+She had a quick and fiery temper, but it did not take her long to
+repent of her little fits of passion.
+
+She was a bright, winsome, lovable child. It was a wonder that anyone
+could hate her for her beautiful, innocent life.
+
+Yet there were those who did, and it was beginning to dawn vaguely on
+the mind of the girl that it was so. She knew that her life was passed
+differently from that of the other girls of her age and class.
+
+There were no teachers, no companions, no pleasures for her, and no
+promise of any change in the future.
+
+She wondered a little why it was so, but she never complained to her
+grandfather. It was, perhaps, only his way, she said to herself, little
+dreaming of the dark mystery that lay like a deep, impassible gulf
+between her and the dwellers in the outside world of which she knew so
+very, very little.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+A week elapsed, and there seemed but little prospect of the little
+prisoner's release from the haunted chambers of the ruined wing.
+
+The Glenalvans' guest lingered on, fascinated, it appeared, by the
+attractions of the beautiful Elinor. At least Elinor stoutly maintained
+this fact in the privacy of the family circle, while Clare as
+obstinately persisted that Mr. Chesleigh was perfectly impartial in his
+attentions to both.
+
+But however doubtful was Elinor's impression, the fact remained that he
+was pleased with his visit.
+
+He consented by their urgent invitation to prolong his stay another
+week. The girls were jubilant over his decision.
+
+Meanwhile, old Dinah watched her secluded nursling with unremitting
+vigilance. She could not remain with her all day, because her
+housekeeping duties took her constantly into the lower part of the
+house, but she visited her intermittently, and at night rolled herself
+in a thick counterpane and slept on the floor by the side of Golden's
+couch.
+
+She took the added precaution to turn the rusty key in the lock at
+night.
+
+Old Dinah had never heard the familiar adage that "love laughs at
+locksmiths."
+
+She was ordinarily a very sound and healthy sleeper. The mere accident
+of a rheumatic attack, and consequent sleeplessness, had caused her
+appearance the night Mr. Chesleigh had entered the room.
+
+Usually she might have been lifted, counterpane and all, and carried
+away bodily without being aware of it.
+
+Nearly two weeks after the night of her rencontre with Mr. Chesleigh,
+old Dinah awoke suddenly "in the dead waste and middle of the night,"
+seized in the relentless grip of her old enemy, the rheumatism.
+
+She rolled herself out of her quilt and sat upright, groaning
+dolorously, and rubbing her knees in which the pain had settled.
+
+"Oh, Lordy! oh, Lordy!" she groaned, "how my ole bones does ache! Miss
+Golden! Miss Golden! my precious lam', wake up, and bid your ole brack
+mammy a las' far'well. I'm a-dyin', sartin, shuah!"
+
+But Golden, usually a very light sleeper, made no reply. Dinah reared
+her woolly head upward and looked into the bed.
+
+The bed was _empty_.
+
+Then Dinah looked around her in amazement to see if Golden was not
+in the room, laughing at her lugubrious groans as she had often done
+before. But she saw no trace of her young mistress.
+
+"Miss Golden! Miss Golden!" she called, "is you in de udder room? Ef
+you is, come in here! I'se berry sick, honey, almos' a-dyin'."
+
+But her repeated calls elicited no reply. It appeared that pretty
+Golden was out of sight and hearing.
+
+Suddenly old Dinah saw the dainty, white, ruffled night-dress, in
+which Golden had retired that night, lying in a snowy heap upon the
+floor.
+
+Dinah seized upon the garment and shook it vigorously, as if she
+expected to see the slight form of her young mistress drop from its
+folds to the floor.
+
+"Um--me-e-e," she groaned, "has de sperets carried de chile off?"
+
+She glanced up at the row of pegs where she had hung Golden's few
+articles of apparel. Her best dress--a dark-blue cashmere--was gone,
+also her hat and a summer jacket.
+
+"She hab runned away from us," old Dinah exclaimed, with almost a howl
+of despair.
+
+The thought inspired her with such grief and terror that she forgot
+her ailment entirely. She hobbled out from the room and made her way
+down stairs to her master's apartment and burst into his presence--a
+ludicrous object indeed in her striped cotton bed-gown.
+
+Old Hugh Glenalvan, late as it was, had not retired to bed. Wrapped
+in an old wadded dressing-gown he sat in an easy-chair before an old,
+carved oaken cabinet.
+
+One quaint little drawer was open, and the white-haired old man
+was poring over some simple treasures he had taken from it--simple
+treasures, yet dearer to his heart than gold or precious stones--a few
+old photographs, an old-fashioned ambrotype in an ebony case, a thin,
+gold ring and some locks of hair.
+
+Upon this sad and touching picture of memory and tenderness old Dinah's
+grotesque figure broke startlingly.
+
+"Ole massa! ole massa!" she cried, wildly, "has you seen little missie?
+Is she here with you?"
+
+The old man swept his treasures off his knees into the quaint cabinet
+and looked at his old servant in amazement.
+
+"Dinah, what does this startling intrusion mean?" he inquired, pushing
+his spectacles off his brow and regarding her with a mild frown.
+
+"Little Golden is missing. She hab runned away from us, ole massa!"
+shouted Dinah, desperately.
+
+"Dinah, you must be crazy," repeated Mr. Glenalvan, blankly.
+
+"It's de Lard's truth, ole massa. She hab done followed in her mudder's
+footsteps! Dat han'some man ober at John Glenalvan's has been and gone
+and 'ticed our Golden from us," wailed the old negress, in despair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+It was not long before Mr. Glenalvan had heard the whole of Golden's
+simple love-story from his servant. They were filled with horror and
+grief at its too probable termination.
+
+"Dinah, it may be that she has stolen out into the grounds for a walk
+in the fresh air. She was growing very restless with the close, indoor
+confinement. Have you thought of that?" he said, hoping feebly against
+hope.
+
+"Shall I go out and look for her, den, ole massa?" said Dinah, in a
+tone that plainly betrayed her hopelessness.
+
+"Let us both go," said old Hugh.
+
+They sallied forth anxiously into the brilliant moonlight that lay in
+silvery brightness all over the sweet, southern landscape--old Hugh,
+bareheaded, in his tattered dressing-gown, old Dinah in her short
+night-dress, too ridiculous a figure for anyone to contemplate without
+inward mirth.
+
+It so happened that Elinor, whom the hard exigencies of poverty
+compelled to be her own dressmaker, had sat up late that night to
+complete some alterations in a dress in which she had intended to array
+her fair self for the morrow.
+
+Having stitched on the last bit of lace, she went to the window and
+leaned out to cool her heated brow.
+
+"My head aches, and I am almost melted with sewing by that hot lamp,"
+she said to herself, fretfully. "How I hate this poverty that grinds
+one down so! When once I am married to Bertram Chesleigh I will never
+touch a needle again! I will order all my dresses of Worth, of Paris.
+And I _will_ marry Bertram Chesleigh! I swear it; and woe be to anyone
+that tries to prevent me!"
+
+Her dark eyes flashed luridly a moment, and her white hand was angrily
+clenched.
+
+She was thinking of Clare, who had persisted in rivaling her with Mr.
+Chesleigh.
+
+At that moment the subdued murmur of voices floated up to her window
+from the lawn.
+
+She glanced down quickly, and saw old Dinah and her master crossing the
+lawn, their grotesque shadows flying long and dark before them in the
+brilliant moonlight.
+
+Quick as thought Elinor was out of her seat, and gliding softly through
+the door in quest of her father.
+
+Before old Glenalvan and his servant had crossed the lawn, two dark
+figures stole forth from the hall and silently followed them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the green border of the silver lake two figures were standing in
+the beautiful moonlight. One was a man, tall, dark, splendid, with a
+princely beauty.
+
+His arm was thrown protectingly about a slender form that clung
+lovingly to his side.
+
+It was Golden Glenalvan, dressed in a dark suit and light cloth jacket,
+a neat, little walking-hat, set jauntily on her streaming, golden curls.
+
+Her blue eyes were lifted tenderly, and yet anxiously to her lover's
+face.
+
+"Oh, Bert," she said, giving him the tender name by which he had taught
+her to call him, "you must indeed let me go now. We have been saying
+good-bye at least a half an hour."
+
+"Parting is such a sweet pain," said the lover, bending to kiss the
+tempting, up-turned lips. "Give me just one more minute, my darling."
+
+"But I have been out so long," she objected, faintly. "What if black
+mammy should awake and find me gone?"
+
+"There is not the slightest danger," said Bertram Chesleigh carelessly.
+"The old woman sleeps so soundly that a thunder-clap would scarcely
+wake her."
+
+But just at that moment of his fancied security, old Dinah, in Golden's
+deserted chamber, was vigorously shaking her empty night-dress in a
+dazed attempt to evolve from its snowy folds the strangely missing girl.
+
+Golden smiled, then sighed faintly. He kissed her lips before the sigh
+had fairly breathed over them.
+
+"If you must indeed go, my darling," he said to her in a low voice,
+freighted with passionate tenderness, "tell me once again, my little
+Golden, how dearly you love me."
+
+"Love you," echoed the beautiful girl, and there was a Heaven of
+tenderness in the starry blue eyes she raised to his face. "Oh, my
+dearest, if I talked to you until the beautiful sun rose to-morrow, I
+could not put my love into words. It is deep in my heart, and nothing
+but death can ever tear it thence."
+
+She threw her arms around his neck, and their lips met in a long,
+passionate kiss. There was a silence broken only by the soft sigh of
+the rippling waves, while they stood
+
+ "tranced in long embraces,
+ Mixed with kisses, sweeter, sweeter
+ Than anything on earth."
+
+On that hush of exquisite silence that brooded round them, broke
+hastening footsteps and angry voices.
+
+The lovers started back from each other in dismay to find themselves
+surrounded by an astonished group.
+
+Old Dinah formed a central and conspicuous figure, beyond which old
+Hugh Glenalvan's silvery locks fluttered forlornly in the breeze.
+
+John Glenalvan and Elinor, his daughter, brought up the rear. Perhaps
+the old gentleman and his servant were as much astonished at seeing
+these followers as they were at the sight that met their eyes.
+
+Old Dinah recovered her self-possession first of all, perhaps because
+she had vaguely suspected some such eclaircissement from the facts
+already in her possession.
+
+She rushed forward and caught her disobedient nursling by the hand.
+
+"Oh, my darlin', my honey, chile," she cried. "Come away from dat
+black-hearted wilyun to your grandpa and your ole brack mammy."
+
+But to the consternation of everybody, the girl shook Dinah's hand off,
+and clung persistently to her lover.
+
+He drew his arm protectingly around the slight figure, and Golden cried
+out with pretty, childish defiance:
+
+"He loves me! he loves me! and I will not leave him."
+
+That sight and those words fairly maddened Elinor Glenalvan. The blood
+seemed to boil in her veins.
+
+"Loves you--ha! ha! loves you, the child of sin and shame!" she cried
+out, in a hoarse voice of bitter scorn and passion. "Oh, yes, he loves
+you. That is why he has lured you to your ruin, as a stranger did your
+mother before you."
+
+"Hush, Elinor," said John Glenalvan, in his sternest tone; then he
+looked at his father, who had crept to Golden's side, and stood there
+trembling and speechless. "Father," he said, harshly, "take the girl
+away. I must speak with Mr. Chesleigh alone."
+
+"I will not go," said Golden, and she looked up into her lover's face
+with a strange, wistful pleading in her soft, blue eyes, and in her
+sweet, coaxing lips.
+
+He bent down and whispered something that made her leave his side and
+put her small hand gently into her grandfather's.
+
+"Grandpa, I will go home with you now," she said to him, tremulously,
+and he led her away, followed by Dinah, who glared angrily behind her,
+and muttered opprobrious invectives as she went.
+
+If looks could have killed, Bertram Chesleigh would never have lived to
+figure any further in the pages of my romance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+Bertram Chesleigh was left alone by the lake, with the angry eyes of
+John Glenalvan glaring upon him, while Elinor, speechless with rage,
+stood a little apart and watched him.
+
+"Mr. Chesleigh, may I ask the meaning of this singular scene?" inquired
+his host, stiffly.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh, standing with folded arms in dignified silence,
+opened his lips and said, briefly:
+
+"It means, Mr. Glenalvan, that I have made the acquaintance of your
+niece and fallen in love with her."
+
+A threatening flash came into Elinor's eyes in the moonlight. She bit
+her lips fiercely to keep back the words that rose to them.
+
+"I am sorry to hear that," said John Glenalvan, in a subdued voice.
+Inwardly he was raging with anger, but he allowed no trace of it to
+escape him. "Will you tell me where and how you became acquainted with
+that child?"
+
+"I must decline to do so," said the young man, firmly.
+
+John Glenalvan looked around at his daughter.
+
+"Elinor, return to the house," he said. "I will join you there
+presently."
+
+Elinor walked away, but she did not return to the hall as her father
+had commanded. Instead, she hid herself behind a clump of willows,
+where she could hear every word that passed between the two men.
+
+Some excited words ensued. Bertram Chesleigh was cool and calm. He
+denied that John Glenalvan had any right to call him to account for
+what he carelessly termed his innocent flirtation with little Golden.
+
+"From what I can hear," he said, "you have treated the girl both
+cruelly and wrongfully. I stand ready to answer to Golden's grandfather
+for any wrong he may consider I have done, but I shall make no apology
+to you, Mr. Glenalvan."
+
+"Why, not?" said the man, with repressed passion. "The girl is my
+niece!"
+
+"Yet you have wickedly secluded her from all society, and even debarred
+her of her freedom," said Bertram Chesleigh, indignantly. "It is your
+fault alone that she has been driven to seek the natural delights of
+youth in a clandestine manner."
+
+"It is not my fault, but her mother's," said John Glenalvan,
+significantly.
+
+His face grew pale as he spoke; his eyes strayed furtively to the quiet
+lake, lying silvery and serene in the clear moonlight.
+
+"How? I do not understand you," said the other, haughtily.
+
+John Glenalvan hesitated a moment. When he spoke it was with an
+affectation of deep feeling and manly sorrow.
+
+"Mr. Chesleigh," he said, "your unhesitating charge against me of
+cruelty to my niece forces me to the disclosure of a most painful
+family secret--one that I would fain have guarded from your knowledge.
+There is a strong reason for my course toward Golden Glenalvan."
+
+He paused, and the listener said, hoarsely:
+
+"A reason----" then paused, because his voice had broken utterly.
+
+"Yes, a reason," was the bitter reply. "Mr. Chesleigh, little Golden is
+the child of my own and only sister, but--how shall I tell you--she has
+no right and no place in the world. She is _a nameless child_!"
+
+The solid earth seemed to reel beneath Mr. Chesleigh's feet. He
+staggered back dizzily, and threw up his hands as if the man had struck
+him.
+
+"He is proud. The blow tells fearfully," thought Elinor, watching him
+through the trees with vindictive eyes. "Ah, my defiant Golden, your
+last chance is gone now. He will never look at you again!"
+
+"Mr. Glenalvan, you do not mean it. You are but trying my credulity,"
+cried Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+"Is it likely that I would publish a falsehood to my own discredit?"
+inquired the other.
+
+"No, no--but, oh, God, this is too dreadful to believe!"
+
+"Dreadful, but true," groaned John Glenalvan. "Golden is the child of
+sin and shame. If I had had my way she would have been consigned to a
+foundling asylum. But my father weakly insisted on rearing her himself,
+and I was injudicious enough to permit it. The only stipulation I made
+was that she should be kept away from the sight of the world as much as
+possible. I see now that all precautions were useless. Young as she is,
+the bad blood in her veins begins to show itself already in depraved
+conduct."
+
+"Hush! do not censure her harmless meetings with me," said Bertram
+Chesleigh, in a voice of agony. "The child is so pure and innocent she
+has no idea of evil. I would die before I would wrong her!"
+
+"I am glad to hear you say so," said the other. "If you really mean it,
+perhaps you will agree to relinquish your useless pursuit of her. You
+would not be willing to marry her after what you have heard, I am quite
+sure."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meantime little Golden walked away with her grandfather, who stumbled
+along like one in a painful dream, his gray head bowed as if beneath
+the weight of sorrow, his footsteps faltering and slow.
+
+He had not spoken one word, and his silence impressed Golden with a
+sense of her wrong-doing and disobedience far more than the loudest
+reproaches could have done.
+
+She clung to his hand, weeping and sighing, and shivering silently at
+old Dinah's muttered invectives against Mr. Chesleigh.
+
+Hugh Glenalvan spoke no words to his granddaughter until he had led her
+into the house.
+
+Then he sank into his chair, and his gray head drooped upon his breast.
+
+Surprise and sorrow seemed to have deprived him of the power of speech.
+
+Golden knelt at his feet and laid her golden head upon his knee.
+
+"Grandpa, speak to me," she wailed. "Do not be angry with your little
+Golden! Oh, grandpa, you have been so hard and strict with me; you have
+kept me too secluded. If you had let me have freedom and happiness like
+other girls, this never would have happened!"
+
+"Hush, little missie; you must not speak to ole massa like dat," cried
+Dinah, trying to pull her away. "You don't know what you talkin' 'bout.
+Come away till ole massa is well enough to talk to you 'bout dis fing."
+
+She lifted the girl and would have led her away, but the old man waved
+his hand feebly to detain her, and so she placed her in a chair instead.
+
+Then she brought a glass of wine and poured a little between the white,
+writhing lips of her old master.
+
+"Grandpa, speak to me!" wailed Golden again.
+
+Old Dinah looked at her almost sternly, and said abruptly:
+
+"You must let him alone, Miss Golden, you have enamost kilt him now,
+with your badness and deceit."
+
+"Black mammy, you shall not speak to me so," cried the girl,
+resentfully, and then the bright head drooped on the arm of the chair,
+and she wept bitterly, more from fright at the condition of her
+grandfather, than from any tangible sense of her own wrong-doing.
+
+She loved her grandfather dearly, and the sight of his suffering
+stabbed her tender heart deeply.
+
+While she wept silently, old Dinah busied herself in anxious cares for
+the old man.
+
+He seemed frozen into a statue of despair, sitting with his head bowed
+forlornly, and his vacant eyes on the floor.
+
+But quite suddenly he roused himself and looked around him with a
+heavy, hopeless gaze.
+
+"Dinah, leave me alone," he said, with unwonted impatience. "I am not
+ill, or if I am it is with a sickness beyond mortal healing. Golden's
+disobedience and her cruel, undeserved reproaches have broken my heart."
+
+Golden threw herself impulsively at his feet again.
+
+"Grandpa, forgive me," she wailed. "I shall die if you do not say that
+you will pardon me!"
+
+He did not answer her. He only looked at his old black servant.
+
+"Dinah, you may leave us," he said, sorrowfully, "I had hoped to keep
+the secret all my life; but the time has come when I must reveal to my
+grandchild her mother's story."
+
+"Um-me-e e," groaned the old negress. "Sh, I t'ought it was a brack day
+when John Glenalvan kem here dat mornin' a-askin' ole massa to shut my
+pore chile up like a crim'nal."
+
+"Hush, Dinah," the old man repeated, pointing to the door. She went
+out, and Golden turned her beautiful eyes, like blue violets drowned in
+tears, upon his pale, drawn face.
+
+"Oh, grandpa," she cried, "you will tell me something of my mother at
+last. I have so longed to hear something of my mother and my father."
+
+A groan forced itself through Hugh Glenalvan's livid lips.
+
+"Your desire shall be gratified," he replied. "But the telling will
+cost you great sorrow, child."
+
+Her beautiful face grew white and scared.
+
+"Oh, grandpa," she cried, "then Elinor and Clare told the truth. My
+poor mother----"
+
+A bursting sob checked the rest of her speech.
+
+"Golden, before I tell you your mother's story, I must receive your own
+confession. Dinah has told me all the beginning of your acquaintance
+with my son's visitor. You must now give me the history of what further
+intercourse has passed between you. How comes it that my little Golden,
+whom I deemed so true and pure, broke her promise to old Dinah?"
+
+The beautiful face drooped from his gaze, overspread with warm, crimson
+blushes. No words came from the sweet, tremulous red lips.
+
+"A promise, child, no matter how humble the person to whom it is made,
+should be held perfectly sacred and inviolate," he continued. "I could
+not have believed that you, the child I had reared so carefully, could
+have been so ignoble as to falsify your promise."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+Beautiful Golden sobbed wildly at the reproachful words of her
+grandfather.
+
+"Grandpa, I didn't mean it," she wept. "Indeed, indeed, I intended to
+keep my promise to black mammy. It was quite by accident that I broke
+it."
+
+"How could it have been by accident?" inquired the old man,
+incredulously.
+
+"Do you remember my habit of sleep-walking?" she inquired.
+
+"Yes--ah, yes, for it has frightened me often to see a little, white
+figure glide into my room at night, with vacant, unseeing eyes. I
+always feared you would run into some terrible danger. Your mother had
+the same unfortunate habit," replied the old man.
+
+"Grandpa, it was through that habit of mine that I broke my word to
+black mammy," said Golden, with an earnestness that showed how truthful
+was her explanation.
+
+"Tell me how it occurred, Golden," he said, fixing his dim eyes
+anxiously on her face.
+
+"Grandpa, I am almost ashamed to tell you," she replied, blushing
+crimson, "but it was in this way. The night after Mr. Chesleigh entered
+my room by accident, I was very restless in my sleep. I will tell you
+the truth. I had begun to love the handsome stranger. I thought of him
+before I fell asleep, and in my restless slumbers I dreamed of him. So
+I fell into my old habit of wandering in a state of somnambulism. It
+was a beautiful moonlight night. I dressed myself and wandered out into
+the grounds, and down by the lake, my favorite resting-place. Suddenly
+I started, broad awake in the arms of Mr. Chesleigh. I had gone too
+near the edge of the lake, and he had saved me from falling in."
+
+She shuddered slightly, and resumed:
+
+"In common gratitude I was compelled to speak, and thank the gentleman
+for saving me from a watery grave. Do you think I was wrong to do so?"
+
+"It would have been cold and ungrateful to have omitted thanking him,"
+he admitted.
+
+"So I thought," said Golden.
+
+"If your intercourse had stopped there, Golden, I should have had no
+words of blame for you. But you have carried on a secret intrigue ever
+since. You have stolen out to meet that man every night, have you not?"
+
+"Yes, grandpa, but we loved each other," said the simple child, who
+seemed to think that was ample excuse for what she had done.
+
+Hugh Glenalvan groaned, and remained lost in thought for a moment.
+
+Then he bent down and whispered a question in her ear.
+
+She started violently; the warm, ever-ready color flashed into her
+cheek; she threw up her head and looked at him with proud, grieved eyes.
+
+"Grandpa, you hurt me cruelly," she replied. "Do not think of me so
+unkindly. I am as pure as the snow."
+
+He seemed to be relieved by the words so quickly and proudly spoken.
+The next minute he said, gravely:
+
+"My child, has this gentleman ever said anything to you of marriage?"
+
+Little Golden remained silent and thoughtful a moment, then she
+answered, steadily.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He wishes to marry you, then?"
+
+"Yes," answered the girl, with a little quiver of triumphant happiness
+in her voice.
+
+"When?" he asked.
+
+A shadow fell over the fair, sweet face a moment.
+
+"I do not know exactly when," she replied. "But Mr. Chesleigh will see
+you to-morrow--he told me just now that he would--and then he will
+settle everything."
+
+There was a silence for a moment. The breeze sighed softly through the
+trees outside; they could hear it in the utter stillness. The dim,
+flaring light fell on the gray head of the old man, drooping forlornly
+on his breast, and on the lovely, upturned face of the girl, with its
+tender blue eyes and falling golden hair.
+
+"Grandpa," she whispered, "do not be angry with your little girl. Put
+your hand on my head and say you forgive me for my fault."
+
+He could not resist the coaxing voice and the asking blue eyes. He laid
+his hand on the golden head and said, solemnly and kindly:
+
+"I forgive you, my little Golden, and I pray Heaven that no evil may
+come of this affair!"
+
+She kissed his wrinkled, tremulous, old hand, where it hung over the
+arm of the chair.
+
+"Thank you," she said, gratefully. "I am so glad you are not angry with
+me. And now, dear grandpa, I am going to kneel right here and listen
+while you tell me my mother's story."
+
+In the momentary silence the wind outside seemed to sigh more sadly
+through the trees; the dim light flared and flickered, casting weird,
+fantastic shadows in the corners of the room. Deep, heavy sighs
+quivered over the old man's lips as the beautiful, child-like girl
+knelt there, with her blue eyes lifted so eagerly to his face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+"You are the image of your mother, my child," said Golden's
+grandfather. "She had a white skin, pink cheeks, blue eyes, and shining
+hair. You inherit her happy, light-hearted disposition. You bear the
+same name also--Golden Glenalvan."
+
+"Why was I never called by my father's name?" asked innocent Golden.
+
+"My child, you anticipate my story," he answered, "but I will tell you.
+You have no right to your father's name."
+
+A cry of terror came from the parted lips of the girl.
+
+"Oh, grandpa, you do not mean _that_--you could not be so cruel!"
+
+"You must remember that it is not my fault," he answered.
+
+She sprang up and stood before him, with a look of white despair on her
+lovely young face.
+
+"Now I understand it all," she said. "I know why my life is so unlike
+that of other girls. Oh, grandpa, grandpa, tell me where to find my
+mother that I may curse her for my ruined life!"
+
+His only answer was a low and heart-wrung groan.
+
+"Grandpa, tell me where to find her," repeated little Golden, wildly.
+"She must be living, for I remember now that no one has ever told me
+plainly that she was dead. I will go to her--I will reproach her for
+her sin! I will tell her what a life mine has been--how I have been
+hated and despised for my mother's fault, even by my kindred."
+
+Sighs, long and bitter, heaved the old man's breast, but he answered
+her not. She flung herself weeping at his feet.
+
+"You do not speak!" she cried. "Oh, grandpa, tell me where to find my
+cruel mother!"
+
+"She is with your father," said Hugh Glenalvan, in a deep and bitter
+voice that showed what agony he endured in the revelation of his
+daughter's disgrace and infamy.
+
+Golden threw up her little hands in convulsive agony.
+
+"Oh, not that!" she cried. "Tell me it is not true!"
+
+Again he had no answer for her, and Golden cried out reproachfully:
+
+"Grandpa, grandpa, why did you suffer her to be so wicked?"
+
+"It was through no fault of mine," he answered heavily.
+
+She looked at him in silent anguish a moment, then she asked him:
+
+"Where is she? Tell me where to find her, if you know."
+
+"John told me she was in New York the last time he heard of her; but
+that was years ago. I pray God that she may be dead ere this."
+
+And then he wrung his hands, and the tears rolled down his withered
+cheeks.
+
+"Oh, my lost little daughter, my precious little Golden," he moaned in
+agony. "How little I dreamed in your innocent babyhood that you were
+reserved for such a fate!"
+
+Golden was regarding him attentively.
+
+"Uncle John told you she was in New York," she said. "What did Uncle
+John know? Did he hate my mother as he hates me?"
+
+He looked at her, startled.
+
+"Hate your mother," he cried. "His own sister! No--of course not--that
+is, not until she fell!"
+
+"He hated her then?" asked Golden, musingly.
+
+"Yes, he hated her then. I believe he could have killed her."
+
+"He should have killed her betrayer," said Golden, who seemed suddenly
+to have acquired the gravity and thoughtfulness of a woman.
+
+"I would have killed him myself if I could have laid hands on the
+villain," said her grandfather, with sudden, irrepressible passion.
+
+The bitter grief and impatient wrath of the girl had sobered down into
+quietness more grievous than tears.
+
+Her face showed deathly white in the dim light; her lips were set in a
+line of intense pain; her pansy-blue eyes had grown black with feeling.
+
+She brought a low stool and sat down at her grandfather's feet, folding
+her white hands meekly in her lap, and drooping her fair head heavily.
+
+"Grandpa, I will not interrupt you again," she said. "I will sit here
+quite still, and listen. Now tell me all my mother's story."
+
+She kept her word.
+
+After he had told her all he had to tell, and she knew the whole tragic
+story of her mother's disgrace, she still sat there silently, with her
+dark eyes bent on her clasped hands.
+
+The cloud of shame and disgrace seemed to lower upon her head with the
+weight of the whole world.
+
+"You understand all I have told, my child?" he said to her, after
+waiting vainly for her to speak.
+
+She put her small hand to her head in a dazed, uncertain way.
+
+"Oh, yes, I think so," she replied. "But my head seems in a whirl. I
+will ask you just a few questions, grandpa, to make sure that I have
+understood."
+
+And then she seemed to fall into a "brown study." When she had
+collected her thoughts a little she began to question him.
+
+"I think you said that my mother eloped at sixteen with a handsome
+stranger whose acquaintance she had casually made in her long, lonely
+rambles in the woods. In a few weeks she wrote to you from New York
+that she was happily married. Am I right, grandpa?"
+
+"Yes," he replied.
+
+"And then, although you and Uncle John wrote repeatedly, you could
+hear no more from her until a year had passed, and she came back
+unexpectedly one dreadful stormy night."
+
+She paused, and he murmured a dreary, "Yes, dear."
+
+"She was in sore trouble," the girl went on, slowly. "She had found out
+that her husband had deceived her. She was not legally his wife. Their
+marriage had only been a mock marriage. So she left him."
+
+"That is right," he said, as she paused again.
+
+"And Uncle John, her only and elder brother, cursed her for the
+disgrace she had brought on the Glenalvans. I think you told me that,
+did you not, dear grandpa?" she said, lifting her heavy eyes a moment
+to his sad, old face.
+
+"Yes, dear, he cursed her. John was always stern and hard, and he
+was always jealous of our love for his little sister. He thought we
+had spoiled her, and he was bitterly angry when she returned to us
+in sorrow and shame. He was married to a woman as hard as himself,
+and they were both for driving her forth like a dog. But Dinah and
+I--for my daughter's mother had died while she was away--were too
+tender-hearted for that. We cared for the poor, desolate child in spite
+of John's threats and curses."
+
+"And that very night I was born," said little Golden, with the heaviest
+sigh in which any mortal ever cursed the ill-fated hour of birth.
+
+"Yes, you were born in the storm and terror of that dreadful night,"
+he answered with a heavy sigh. "And your mother almost broke her heart
+over you because you would never bear the name of the man she had loved
+so well."
+
+"And that name, dear grandpa, tell me what it was," she cried, with
+repressed eagerness.
+
+"My dear, she would never reveal that name. She loved him although he
+had betrayed her. She was afraid of our vengeance."
+
+A look of keen disappointment came over the beautiful, mobile face.
+
+"But, grandpa," she said, "when she wrote you from New York, after she
+left you, in the first flush of her happiness, when she had not your
+vengeance to fear, did she not reveal her name then?"
+
+"Not even then," said the old man, bitterly. "She hinted that there was
+some innocent but just cause for secrecy just then, but that she would
+send her true name and address in the next letter. That next letter
+never came."
+
+"There is not the slightest clew for me, then. I shall never find my
+mother," said the girl, sorrowfully.
+
+"Golden, why should you wish to find her? She is a sinner, leading a
+life of shame. She deserted you in your helpless infancy to return to
+the arms of the villain who had betrayed her."
+
+"So Uncle John says," returned the girl, meaningly.
+
+He started, more at the tone than the words.
+
+"Golden, do you doubt him?" he cried.
+
+"Yes," said the girl steadily, turning on him the full splendor of her
+purple-blue eyes, in which glowed a spark of indignant fire. "Yes,
+grandpa, I doubt it. I utterly refuse to believe such a scandalous
+story of my mother."
+
+He looked at her sadly, touched by her loyal faith in the mother she
+had never known.
+
+"But think, my dear," he said. "You were but a few days old when she
+stole away in the night and left you without a line to tell us of her
+whereabouts. But John's blood was up. He traced her to New York, and
+learned enough to be sure that she had returned to her lover. Then he
+lost all trace of them, and came home reluctantly enough, for he would
+have shot the villain if he could have laid hands on him."
+
+"It is a plausible story," the girl said, thoughtfully. "I might
+believe it if any one but John Glenalvan had told it. But oh, grandpa,
+that man always reminds me of a snake in the grass."
+
+"My child, that is one of old Dinah's homely phrases," he remonstrated.
+
+"It is a very true one, though," she maintained, stoutly.
+
+He saw that he could not convince her, so he sighed and remained silent.
+
+He had never thought of doubting his son's assertion himself. Golden's
+incredulity awakened a vague sense of uneasiness in his mind.
+
+The girl sat silently also for a brief space of time, while the old
+clock in the corner slowly ticked away the moments of that momentous
+night.
+
+She roused herself from her drooping, dejected attitude at last and
+looked up at the quiet old man.
+
+"Grandpa," she said anxiously, as if some sudden doubt or fear had
+come into her mind, "what will Bert say when he hears this dreadful
+story?"
+
+"Bert?" said her grandfather, questioningly.
+
+"Mr. Chesleigh, I mean," she replied. "What will he say when my story
+is known to him? Will he, too, hate me for my mother's sin?"
+
+A look of pain and dread came over the sad, old face.
+
+"My darling, how can I tell?" he said. "I have heard that the
+Chesleighs are very proud. It is only too likely that he will scorn you
+when he knows the truth. I am afraid you must give up all thought of
+loving him, dear."
+
+A strange, intense look came over the beautiful young face.
+
+"I cannot do that," she said. "I love him with my whole heart! I shall
+love him all my life. He loves me, too, grandpa. He cannot give me up!
+He will be true to me. I am not to blame for my mother's fault."
+
+"No, dear, I know that," he answered; "but the sins of the parents are
+visited on the children. It is not likely that Mr. Chesleigh will care
+to wed a nameless girl. He is wealthy and high-born, and can have his
+choice from among the best in the land. Your Cousin Elinor aspires to
+marry him."
+
+"He will never marry Elinor," said little Golden, decidedly. "He loves
+me alone. He will be true to me."
+
+"God grant it, dear," her grandfather said, with a patient sigh, in
+which there was but little hope.
+
+Then he looked up and saw the first pale gleams of the summer dawn
+stealing into the room through the open window.
+
+The birds began to warble their mating songs in the broad-leaved
+magnolia trees outside, as if there were no care nor sorrow, nor
+blighting disgrace anywhere in the wide, beautiful world.
+
+"My little one," he said to the grave, hollow-eyed child, who seemed
+suddenly to have grown a full-statured woman, "go to your room and
+rest. You look terribly ill and wretched. Do not go back to the haunted
+chamber again, but to your old room down stairs. Try to sleep, if you
+can."
+
+He looked after her in wonder as she turned to obey him. Yesterday
+she had been a beautiful, charming, careless child, full of pretty,
+evanescent angers and quick repentances.
+
+The bloom, the smiles, the brightness were all gone now. The gold-brown
+lashes drooped heavily against the death-white cheeks, the sweet lips
+quivered heart-brokenly, the slow and lagging step was that of a weary
+woman.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+As soon as she had reached the seclusion of her own chamber, little
+Golden threw herself across her bed and wept as though her tender heart
+would break.
+
+Strangely nurtured as she had been, the pride of race had been as
+strong in her young heart as that of any Glenalvan of them all, and the
+shock of her grandfather's revelation had been a terrible one.
+
+"I wish that I had died in my innocent babyhood," she wept; and her
+black mammy, who had been lingering near her unobserved, came forward
+to her and said quickly, while she smoothed the golden hair lovingly
+with her old black hands:
+
+"You must not say dat, honey, chile. I has great hopes in your life. I
+has almos' wore out my ole brack knees a-prayin' an' a-prayin' to de
+good Lawd dat you might be de instrument to sabe your mudder from her
+sinful life."
+
+Little Golden looked at her black mammy with a kind of pathetic wonder
+in her beautiful, tearful eyes.
+
+"How could I do that, black mammy?" she said.
+
+"By seekin' dat poor soul out, Miss Golden, and 'suadin' her to forsake
+dat wicked man, an' spend de balance ob her life in prayin' an'
+repentin' ob her deadly sins," said Dinah, devoutly and earnestly.
+
+Golden sat up in the bed and looked at Dinah with eager, shining eyes
+and impulsively clasped hands.
+
+"Ah, black mammy, if I only could," she cried; "but you forget I do not
+know where to find her. I do not even know the name of that dreadful
+man."
+
+And she shivered at the thought of his wickedness. She remembered that
+he was her father, that his bad blood flowed in her veins.
+
+Old Dinah was looking at her strangely.
+
+"Little missie, what would you think if I could tell you his name?" she
+said, with a little note of triumph in her tone.
+
+"Could you--oh, could you?" cried little Golden, impulsively.
+
+"Jest wait one minute, darlin'," said Dinah, hobbling out of the room.
+
+Golden waited, wonderingly and impatiently.
+
+After a little while Dinah returned, and laid a small package, wrapped
+in tissue paper, in her hand.
+
+Golden removed the wrappers tremblingly. A small bit of crumpled
+pasteboard fell out into her hand.
+
+She straightened it out and devoured with eager eyes the aristocratic
+name printed upon it in small, clear, black type.
+
+Then she raised her gleaming eyes to the excited face of the old black
+woman.
+
+"So," she said with a long, deep, sobbing breath, "this is my father's
+name?"
+
+"Yes, chile, leastways I has de berry best reason for finking so,"
+replied Dinah, promptly.
+
+"Then you are not sure?" cried the girl, and there was a note of keen
+disappointment in her voice.
+
+"All I know is dis, honey. It fell outer your mudder's pocket de night
+when you was born. She was drawin' out her handkercher, an' it fell
+onto de floor 'thout her seein' it. I didn't say nofin' to de poor,
+distracted chile. I only picked the keerd up and put it away. I sabed
+it for you, honey, chile."
+
+"And I am very grateful to you, black mammy," said the girl. "You had
+very good reason for thinking it was my father's name. But it is a
+wonder you never gave it to grandpa, or to Uncle John."
+
+"Who? _Me_ gib John Glenalvan anything, or tell him anything? Not to
+sabe his brack soul from de debbil, who's got a bill ob sale for him!"
+cried Dinah, flying into a rage, as she always did at the mention of
+Golden's uncle.
+
+"Black mammy, why do you hate my uncle so bitterly?" asked Golden.
+
+"'Cause he's a snake in de grass," replied Dinah, shortly.
+
+"I know that--at least I have always felt it," said Golden,
+meditatively; "but there must be some particular reason, mammy. Tell me
+what it is."
+
+"Well, den, if you mus' know, dere's two reasons," said Dinah. "De
+first is dat he hated your pore, sweet mudder. De second one is dat
+he's like a human wampire fastened on your gran'pa."
+
+"I don't understand what you mean by your second reason," said Golden,
+gravely.
+
+Dinah looked at her a moment in meditative silence; then she said
+abruptly:
+
+"I don't keer what dey say, I'll tell you, my chile. Your Uncle John
+done badgered and badgered your grandpa while you was a leetle, teeny
+babby until, for de sake ob peace, dat pore ole man done made John a
+deed to Glenalvan Hall and de whole estate. Your gran'pa ain't no more
+dan a beggar in the ole hall his own fader left him in his will."
+
+"But why did my grandfather give away his property like that?" asked
+the girl.
+
+"'Cause John swore if he didn't do it dat he would carry you off and
+put you into a foundling asylum. You was a pore, leetle, deliky babby
+then, and we skeecely 'spected you would live from one day to de nex'
+one. So to hab de pleasure ob keepin' an' tendin' you de ole man
+'sented to beggar hisself."
+
+"Grandpa did all that for my unworthy sake, and yet I reproached him
+for being strict and hard with me! Oh, how wicked and ungrateful he
+must think me," cried the girl, tearfully.
+
+"No he don't, honey, chile," said the black woman, soothingly, "you see
+he knowed dat you wasn't 'ware of all what you had to t'ank him for."
+
+"No, indeed, I never dreamed of all I had cost him," exclaimed
+beautiful Golden, self-reproachfully. "And so, black mammy, we are only
+staying at Glenalvan Hall on the sufferance of my uncle?"
+
+"Dat's jest de way ob it, missie. And, look ye, too dat ongrateful,
+graspin' wilyun has done threaten your pore gran'pa, time and ag'in, to
+pack bofe of you'uns off to de pore-house."
+
+"The unnatural monster!" exclaimed little Golden, in a perfect tempest
+of passionate wrath.
+
+"Well you may say so," cried Dinah, in a fever of sympathy. "De debbil
+will nebber git his due till he gets John Glenalvan! De blood biles in
+my ole vains when I fink ob all de insults dat man has heaped on his
+own fader, 'long ob you and your pore misguided mudder."
+
+Beautiful little Golden sat upright regarding the excited old woman in
+grave silence. Her blue eyes were on fire with indignation and grief.
+At times she would murmur: "Poor, dear grandpa, dear true-hearted
+grandpa," and relapse into silence again.
+
+She roused herself at last from her musing mood, and looked up at
+Dinah. There was a hopeful light in the soft, blue eyes, so lately
+drowned in tears of sorrow and despair.
+
+"Black mammy, I have been thinking," she said, "and I will tell you
+what I mean to do."
+
+"What, honey?"
+
+"I will tell you a secret, mammy. Mr. Chesleigh loves me. We are--that
+is, I will be his wife one of these days."
+
+"Miss Golden, is dat so?" cried black mammy, delighted. "I am so glad!
+I was 'fraid--well, nebber min' what I was 'fraid of, chile; but 'deed
+I is so glad dat Mr. Chesly's gwine to marry you. He is a rich man,
+honey. You kin snap your lily fingers at ugly Marse John, when once you
+is Mr. Chesly's wife."
+
+"Yes, he is very rich, black mammy," said the girl, with a pretty,
+almost childish complacency. "He has told me so, and he tells me I
+shall have jewels and fine dresses, and all that heart could desire
+when I go to live with him--I mean," blushing rosy red, "when I become
+his wife."
+
+"And powerful pretty you will look in dem fine tings, honey," said her
+black mammy, admiringly.
+
+"But the best thing of all, black mammy, is that I shall be able to
+take grandpa away from this place, and love him and care for him,"
+cried Golden, exultantly. "I shall take you, too, mammy, for you have
+been the only mother I ever knew. Grandpa shall have the happiest home
+in the world, and Bert and I will both love him dearly, dearly!"
+
+"And your pore, lost mudder, darlin', you had forgotten her," said
+Dinah, a little wistfully, her thoughts straying back through the mist
+of years, to the lost little nursling who had fluttered from the safe
+parental nest, and steeped the white wings of her soul in the blackness
+of sin.
+
+But Golden shook her dainty head decidedly.
+
+"No, black mammy, I had not forgotten," she said. "When I am Bert's
+wife, he shall help me to seek and save my poor, lost mother. We
+will try to win her back to the path of right, and save her soul for
+Heaven," she concluded, with girlish ardor and fervency.
+
+"May the good Lawd help you to succeed, my innercent lamb," said the
+good old black woman, prayerfully. "Her little soul was too white
+and tender for de brack debbil to git it at de last for his brack
+dominions."
+
+There was a sudden tap at the door. Golden looked at it eagerly and
+expectantly, while Dinah threw it open.
+
+A small black boy, a servant of John Glenalvan, stood outside with a
+sealed letter in his hand.
+
+"For Missie Golden, from Mass Chesleigh," he said, putting it in
+Dinah's hand, and quickly retiring.
+
+Dinah carried it silently to her mistress, who kissed the
+superscription, and eagerly tore it open.
+
+The thick, satin-smooth sheet rustled in the trembling little hand as
+the blue eyes ran over it, lovingly and eagerly.
+
+As she read, the tender, loving eyes grew wild and startled, an ashen
+shade crept around the rosebud lips, the young face whitened to the
+corpse-like hue of death. She crumpled the sheet in her hand at last,
+and threw it wildly from her, while a cry of intolerable anguish
+thrilled over her white lips.
+
+"Oh, mammy, mammy, my heart is broken--broken! I shall never see him
+again. He has forsaken me for my mother's sin!"
+
+Then she fell back cold and rigid, like one dead upon the bed. Dinah
+flew to her assistance, cursing in her heart the wickedness and
+heartlessness of men.
+
+But though she worked busily and anxiously, the morning sun rode
+high in the heavens before the deeply-stricken girl recovered her
+consciousness. Her grandfather was watching beside her pillow when her
+eyes first opened, and she threw her arms around his neck and wept long
+and bitterly on his faithful breast.
+
+"You were right," she whispered to him. "You know the cruel world
+better than I did. He has left me, grandpa--I shall never see him
+again. He discards me for my mother's sin."
+
+She wept and moaned all day, refusing all consolation. She was
+terrified by the coldness and cruelty of the world that condemned her
+for the sins of others.
+
+Many and many a time she had chafed at the narrowness and loneliness of
+her lot, but she had never known sorrow until to-day.
+
+Its horrible reality crushed her down before its pitiless strength like
+the fury of the storm-rain. A crushed and bleeding victim, she lay weak
+and stunned in its victorious path.
+
+At nightfall she slept, wearied out by the force and violence of her
+deep, overmastering emotion.
+
+Old Dinah persuaded her weary, haggard old master to retire to his room
+and bed, promising to watch faithfully herself by the sick girl.
+
+She dozed until midnight, when, as Golden still slept on heavily,
+she permitted herself to take a wary nap in an old arm-chair. It was
+daylight when the weary, suffering old creature awoke. The beautiful
+Golden was gone.
+
+A little three-cornered note lay on the pillow that still held the
+impress of the dear little head. The child had written sorrowfully to
+her grandfather:
+
+ "Grandpa, darling, I have only brought you trouble and sorrow all my
+ life-time, so I am going away. Your son will be kinder to you when I
+ am gone, and your life will be less hard; perhaps black mammy will
+ be kind and faithful to you, so you will not miss your thoughtless
+ little Golden very much. God bless you, grandpa, you must pray for
+ me nightly, for I am going to seek my mother, the erring mother who
+ cursed me with life! If indeed, she is living in sin and shame,
+ I will strive to reclaim her and restore her to the safe path of
+ virtue. I have nothing else to live for. Love and happiness, the
+ delights of this world, are not for me. It shall be _the dream of my
+ life-time_ to find and save my wronged and erring mother."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+From the fair southern clime where her lines had hitherto been cast,
+little Golden traveled straight to the great, thronged city of New York.
+
+During her long day and night of intense suffering, the thought, first
+suggested to her mind by old Dinah, of seeking and reclaiming her
+erring mother, had fastened on her mind with irresistible force and
+power.
+
+Every thought and feeling of this beautiful, unhappy child was as pure
+as that of an angel.
+
+The knowledge that the young mother who had given her birth was living
+a life of sin and dishonor was most revolting to her mind. She could
+not think of it without a mortal shudder.
+
+When Dinah fell asleep by her pillow the girl awakened suddenly and lay
+for a little while in silent meditation. The idea she had been silently
+revolving in her mind all day gathered strength in the solitude and
+stillness of the midnight hour.
+
+Golden was young, buoyant, ignorant of the world, and thought not
+of the difficulties that would hedge the path of duty which she was
+marking out for her little, untried feet.
+
+She did not know how dear she was to her grandfather's heart, and how
+bitterly he would be wounded by her desertion. She only thought of
+escaping from the life which had suddenly become so unbearable, and of
+filling her heart with other aims now that the love she had given so
+lavishly from the depths of a warm and generous heart, had been cast
+back to her in scorn and contempt.
+
+In the pocket of her best cashmere dress was a little purse filled with
+gold pieces of which no one knew but herself.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh had given it to her in a happy, never-to-be-forgotten
+hour which now it almost killed her even to recall.
+
+Almost staggering with weakness, Golden rose and silently and
+cautiously dressed herself in her blue cashmere dress and hat and
+jacket.
+
+She decided not to take anything with her. It would be easier to
+purchase new things when she had arrived in New York.
+
+When she was ready to go, Golden knelt down a moment and pressed her
+fair cheek lovingly and sorrowfully to the toil-worn wrinkled hand of
+her old black mammy.
+
+She loved the old negress dearly. Under that homely black breast beat
+the only heart that had ever given a mother's love to the beautiful,
+forsaken child of poor, wronged and misguided little Golden.
+
+Then with a lingering, loving, backward glance around, the girl left
+the room and proceeded to her grandfather's apartment.
+
+The kind old man was asleep with a look of care and anxiety deeply
+imprinted on his pale, worn features.
+
+Golden pressed her trembling lips to the thin, gray locks that
+straggled over the pillow, and her girlish tears fell on them, shining
+like jewels in the dim gleam of the night-lamp.
+
+Then Golden stole away noiselessly. There was one more farewell to
+be said ere she set forth on the mission whose only clew lay in the
+crumpled card hidden away securely in the little purse of gold.
+
+She knelt down on the banks of the tranquil little lake she had always
+loved so dearly, and clasped her little hands and lifted her white face
+in the bright moonlight.
+
+"Farewell, little lake," she murmured to the silvery, tranquil sheet
+of water. "I pray God that the time may come when I shall kneel by
+you again, and tell you that I have reclaimed my erring mother, and
+that her soul has been washed as pure and free from sin as the lilies
+sleeping on your breast."
+
+Was it only little Golden's excited fancy, or did a shadow, soft and
+impalpable as a mist wreath, and pale as the moonbeams, glide across
+the still water in the form of a woman, and a voice as soft and low as
+the sigh of the breeze murmur sadly:
+
+"Bless you, my daughter."
+
+She started and looked around; the voice and vision had been so real
+she could hardly imagine it fancy, but the phantom shape had dissolved
+into moonbeams again, and the voice had melted into music on the
+"homeless winds."
+
+"If my poor mother was dead I should believe that her spirit had
+blessed me," said the beautiful girl to herself. "But she is alive, so
+it could not have been she, perhaps it was my guardian angel."
+
+She plucked a beautiful, large, white lily from the lake and started
+on her way to the railway station, carrying the spotless flower in her
+hand.
+
+Perhaps some thought of the poet, Longfellow's, verses came to her mind:
+
+ "Bear a lily in thine hand,
+ Gates of brass cannot withstand
+ One touch of that magic wand,
+ Bear through sorrow, wrong and ruth,
+ On thy lips the smile of truth,
+ In thy heart the dew of youth."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+We will return to Bertram Chesleigh, little Golden's recreant lover.
+
+All of John Glenalvan's influence had been brought to bear on the proud
+young man to induce him to relinquish his pursuit of the beautiful girl
+whose acquaintance he had so strangely and imprudently formed.
+
+Mr. Chesleigh's own pride of birth, united to John Glenalvan's artful
+innuendoes, was a powerful ally in the young man's mind against his
+love for the lonely and beautiful little girl.
+
+In the light of John Glenalvan's revelations, a great revulsion had
+taken place in his mind.
+
+He heartily wished that he had never made the acquaintance of the
+lovely little creature, or that he had not followed it up with such
+ardor and passion.
+
+With few, if any exceptions, men are naturally selfish. Bertram
+Chesleigh, who had never known a desire unfulfilled in the course of
+his prosperous life, was no exception to the general rule.
+
+In pursuing his acquaintance with little Golden, he had been actuated
+more by a regard for his own pleasure than by any thought of risk for
+her.
+
+In the light of recent developments, he thought also first of himself.
+How to escape from the consequences of his headlong passion became
+momentarily a paramount consideration.
+
+When his conscience reproached him he replied to it that it was only
+natural and right that he should think first of himself.
+
+He had his high social station to maintain, and he was quite sure that
+his friends and relations would have declined to receive even as his
+bride, a woman of stained birth.
+
+Golden had, it seemed, no place in the world, no social status whatever.
+
+If he made her his bride, his troubles and embarrassments would be
+legion. If he left her all would go well with him, and he argued with
+himself that the child would speedily forget him and resign herself to
+her strange and lonely life.
+
+So, under the influence of these vexing thoughts, and John Glenalvan's
+specious arguments and representations, that unjust letter was written
+to poor, suffering little Golden.
+
+Ah, we are so careless and so thoughtless over what we write. Bertram
+Chesleigh was not a bad man, and never meant to be cruel, and yet he
+had done more harm in the writing of that letter than if he had pierced
+the tender heart with a dagger.
+
+Even while writing it he felt ashamed and sorry, yet no premonition
+came to tell him of the dim future when he would have given tears of
+blood to have obliterated even the memory of that letter from the heart
+of little Golden which it had seared as with the breath of fire.
+
+He never forgot a single word of that letter he had written to her,
+although in his haste and agitation he had kept no copy of it. It did
+not seem so hard to him at first as it did afterward, when he knew what
+suffering the writing had caused and the consequences were forever
+beyond recall.
+
+After he had written and dispatched it he made his adieu to the family
+of John Glenalvan and departed, feeling like a coward, while if he had
+truly understood the depth of tenderness and capabilities of woe in the
+girl he had deserted, he might have felt more like a murderer.
+
+The Glenalvans, while terribly disappointed in their hopes for Elinor,
+were relieved at the departure of their guest for the present. Elinor
+entreated her father to make arrangements for removing Golden out of
+the way in case the young man should repeat his visit, and he promised,
+with an oath more forcible than polite, that he would certainly do so.
+
+But before he had taken any decisive step in the furtherance of his
+purpose, the unfortunate girl had taken her fate in her own hands. When
+John Glenalvan entered the ruined wing the second day for the purpose,
+as he had emphatically expressed it, of "having it out with his father
+in cursed few words," he found the old man and his faithful old
+servant in a frenzy of grief and despair over Golden's farewell letter.
+
+John was unfeignedly glad that Golden had gone away herself without
+giving him the trouble and annoyance of sending her.
+
+"It is much better as it is, father," he said to the poor,
+broken-hearted old creature. "I fully intended to send the girl away.
+She has only saved herself the ignominy of a summary dismissal. Do not
+fret yourself over her. She has only forsaken you to lead a life of
+shame with her erring mother. I hope that a lightning flash may strike
+her dead before she ever returns here again to disgrace and shame us
+yet further!"
+
+"Forbear, John. You are cruel and impious," cried the old man, lifting
+his hand feebly, and his son strode angrily out of the room, muttering
+curses "not loud but deep," and followed by the vivid lightnings of old
+Dinah's black eyes.
+
+"Oh, de brack-hearted wilyun!" she muttered. "May de good Lard hasten
+de time ob punishment for his cruel sins!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+The first thing that happened to little Golden Glenalvan after she
+arrived in the city of New York, was something that not infrequently
+happens to simple and inexperienced travelers.
+
+She had her pocket picked of her purse by some expert thief. Such
+things have often happened in the annals of New York crime, and will
+again, but it is probable that no one's life was ever so much affected
+by such a loss as was the unfortunate little Golden's.
+
+She found herself by this totally unlooked-for catastrophe thrown
+into the streets of the great, wicked city penniless, friendless, and
+utterly forsaken. Every cent she possessed in the world had been in
+the little purse, together with the card that bore her father's name.
+The latter was not so great a loss to her. The name of the man who had
+wronged her mother was engraven on her mind in characters that were
+never to be destroyed.
+
+Her little plans for the discovery of her mother, laid with such
+girlish art, were all turned away by this accident. She had meant to
+take cheap lodgings somewhere, and prosecute her search, but now she
+knew not what to do, nor where to turn.
+
+The great, busy city, with its strange faces and hurry and bustle
+frightened her, even though she dreamed not in her girlish innocence of
+its festering sin and underlying wickedness.
+
+Sinking down on a secluded seat in Central Park where she had been
+walking when she first discovered her loss, she sobbed bitterly in her
+grief and distress--so bitterly that a well-dressed, benevolent-looking
+lady who was walking along a path with a pretty poodle frisking before
+her, went up to her with kind abruptness.
+
+"My dear little girl," she said, laying her hand gently on the
+showering, golden wealth of hair that escaped from Golden's little
+sailor hat, "what is the matter? Can I help you?"
+
+Golden lifted her head and the lady who had a kind, middle-aged face,
+decidedly aristocratic, started and uttered a cry of surprise at the
+beautiful, girlish face with its tearful eyes like purple-blue pansies
+drowned in dew.
+
+In a moment the lady's quick eyes had seen from the cut and fashion
+of Golden's simple garments that she was a stranger in New York. She
+repeated kindly:
+
+"What ails you, my child? Have you become separated from your friends?"
+
+"No, for I have not a friend in this whole, great city. But I have lost
+my purse," answered Golden, with childish directness.
+
+The lady sat down beside her and regarded her a moment in thoughtful
+silence. She saw nothing but the most infantile sweetness, purity
+and truth in the lovely, troubled young face. She was touched and
+interested.
+
+"So you have lost your purse?" she said. "Have you had your pocket
+picked?"
+
+"I do not know," answered Golden, forlornly. "I carried it in my jacket
+pocket, and awhile ago, when I felt for it I discovered that it was
+gone."
+
+"Now, I am quite sure you are a stranger in New York," said the lady.
+"If you belonged in the city you would know better than to carry your
+purse carelessly in the pocket of your walking jacket. New York is full
+of sneak thieves who are on the watch for the unwary. You say you have
+not a friend in the city. Where are you from, my child?"
+
+"From the south," replied Golden.
+
+"Did you come to New York alone?"
+
+"Yes madam. I am an orphan," replied the girl, not wishing to disclose
+her history to her interrogator.
+
+"What do you wish for in this great city?" asked the lady.
+
+"I want to find some employment at present. Can you help me?" asked
+Golden, timidly and beseechingly lifting her large blue eyes to the
+interested face of the lady.
+
+"Perhaps I can," said the lady, smiling gently. "What kind of
+employment do you wish? What kind of work can you do?"
+
+The beautiful, girlish face grew a little blank. She remembered her
+careless, idle life at Glenalvan Hall, where no one ever taught her
+anything but her grandfather and old Dinah. She was compelled to
+confess despondently that she did not know how to do anything.
+
+The lady who was a really good woman with a decidedly benevolent turn,
+studied the drooping face attentively. She saw that there was some
+mystery about the girl, but the lovely young face was so guileless
+and winning that she could see no evil in it. She asked her, rather
+abruptly, what her name was.
+
+"Golden Glenalvan," answered the girl, and the lady frowned slightly,
+and said it was too fanciful and pretty.
+
+"If you are going to work for your living, I would advise you to call
+yourself by some plain and common name, such as Jones or Brown or
+Smith."
+
+"Then I will call myself Mary Smith," replied Golden, resignedly.
+
+"That will do very well. Now, my child, do you think you would like to
+undertake chambermaid's work?"
+
+She glanced, as she spoke, at the girl's ungloved hands, and saw that
+they were delicately white and aristocratic, so she answered the
+question negatively to herself before Golden answered, shrinkingly and
+timidly:
+
+"I do not believe I would like it, madam, but I am willing to try. I
+must do something to support myself, and I have no choice left me since
+I do not know how to do anything."
+
+The lady looked at her a little wonderingly.
+
+"My child, if you would tell me something about yourself I might know
+better how to help you," she said. "It is quite evident that you have
+met with reverses. You are unaccustomed to labor, and you look like a
+born lady."
+
+Golden was silent, and a deep blush colored her face. Not for worlds
+would she have told her sad story to this gentle woman.
+
+She fancied that the sweet pity beaming from her gray eyes now would
+change to scorn and contempt, if she could know that she was a nameless
+child seeking a lost and guilty mother.
+
+"Perhaps you have imprudently run away from your friends," she said,
+questioningly, and striking so near the truth that Golden burst into
+tears again, and would have left her but that she detained her by a
+firm yet gentle pressure of the hand.
+
+"Do not go," she said. "I want to help you if I can. Perhaps I could
+tell you something you are far too young and innocent to know."
+
+"What is that, ma'am?" asked Golden, looking at her questioningly.
+
+"This, my child--that one so pretty and simple as you are should not
+be alone and friendless in this great city. You are in the greatest
+danger. Beauty is only a curse to a poor girl who has to earn her own
+living."
+
+"Yes, madam," Golden answered, with perfect meekness, though she
+crimsoned painfully.
+
+"So I think," continued her kind friend, "that a home and shelter in
+even the humblest capacity is better for you than to be wandering alone
+in the streets homeless and penniless."
+
+"I know that," said Golden, "but I have nowhere to go," and the pathos
+of the tearful tone touched the kind lady's heart.
+
+"My child, I have been thinking about that," she said. "I have a friend
+who needs a nurse for her little invalid girl. Should you like to try
+for the situation?"
+
+"Oh, yes," Golden answered, gratefully.
+
+"The little girl is the petted and only daughter of wealthy people,"
+continued the kind lady. "She is delicate, and has been humored and
+spoiled injudiciously all her life, until she is, at times, quite
+overbearing and disagreeable, so much so indeed that her mother can
+scarcely keep a nurse for her more than a week or two at a time. Are
+you frightened at my description? Have you a good store of patience?"
+
+"I have been impatient and self-willed all my life," confessed Golden,
+frankly.
+
+"Yet you have a sweet-tempered face, if there is any truth in
+physiognomy," said her new friend. "It seems to me that you could not
+grow impatient ministering to the needs of that poor, little invalid
+child. Think how much happiness you could give the poor, ailing little
+soul if you tried. And when you are as old as I am," she added, with a
+faint sigh, "you will understand that the greatest pleasure in life is
+in giving happiness to others."
+
+"I will try to be patient and kind to the child, if you will be so
+kind as to get the place for me," said little Golden, trembling with
+eagerness.
+
+"Very well, my dear; I will myself accompany you to my friend's house
+and speak a kind word in your favor. It is rather a risk to run, this
+introducing and vouching for a total stranger, but I believe that your
+gentle, honest face will be a passport to Mrs. Desmond's favor, just as
+it has been to mine. You will follow me, now, my child."
+
+Golden walked on with the warm-hearted woman some distance through the
+beautiful green park, when, to her surprise, her benefactress stopped
+before an elegant, liveried carriage, with quite an imposing-looking
+driver in a white hat and gloves.
+
+"Drive to Mrs. Desmond's, John," she said, as the footman handed her
+and her timid _protege_ into the carriage.
+
+Little Golden felt like one in a bewildering dream as she lay back
+among the luxurious satin cushions and was whirled through the stately
+streets, past the beautiful buildings and brown-stone palaces until
+they stopped at last before one more splendid than all the rest,
+and she found herself gliding up the marble steps, her young heart
+throbbing fast at the novelty and strangeness of her position.
+
+She was going to be a servant in this splendid house! She, one of the
+Glenalvans of Glenalvan Hall, a name that had been proud and honored in
+the past until her girlish mother had stained its haughty prestige with
+shame.
+
+Her heart beat heavily and slow. The thought came to her mind that
+these proud and wealthy people would not even permit her to be a
+servant to their daughter if they knew that she was a nameless child.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+Mrs. Markham, little Golden's kind, new friend, was evidently on terms
+of intimacy with Mrs. Desmond.
+
+Instead of sending her card to the lady and awaiting her appearance
+in the formal drawing-room, she was at once conducted up stairs to a
+charming _boudoir_ hung with rose-colored silk and white lace.
+
+The carpet was white velvet strewn with a pattern of pink moss
+rosebuds, and the chairs and couches were upholstered in a deeper shade
+of rose-color.
+
+Everything in the room was costly and tasteful, and vases of
+freshly-cut flowers diffused delicious fragrance through the air.
+
+Little Golden had never before been in such a costly and tasteful room,
+and she uttered an involuntary low exclamation of surprise and delight
+at which Mrs. Markham smiled indulgently.
+
+"Does this pretty room surprise you?" she inquired.
+
+"Yes, madam, I have never seen anything so beautiful and costly
+before," answered the simple child.
+
+At that moment the heavy draperies that hung between the _boudoir_ and
+the dressing-room were swept aside by a white, jeweled hand, and the
+mistress of all this magnificence entered the room.
+
+She was a beautiful young lady, with great, velvety black eyes, dark,
+waving hair, crimson lips, and rounded cheeks like the sunny side of a
+peach. Her morning-dress was elegant, costly and becoming.
+
+"Ah, Mrs. Markham, good-morning. I am very glad to see you," she cried,
+then she looked past her friend inquiringly at the little, shrinking
+figure of Golden.
+
+"Edith, this is a little _protege_ of mine, Mary Smith by name," Mrs.
+Markham hastened to say. "If you have not secured a nurse yet, will you
+try her for little Ruby?"
+
+"I shall be very glad to do so if you think she will suit," returned
+Mrs. Desmond as they all seated themselves.
+
+Then the handsome brunette looked patronizingly at the new applicant
+for her favor. The scrutiny did not seem to please her. The slender,
+arched, black brows met over the bright eyes in a slight frown.
+
+"Child, why do you not put your hair up?" she asked, glancing at the
+bright wealth of loosely flowing ringlets. "It is not becoming to
+nurses to wear it in that way."
+
+"I can put it up if you wish me, ma'am," Golden replied in a low
+voice, her eyelids drooping that the lady might not see the childish
+resentment that flashed into them at her slightly scornful tone.
+
+"Very well, I shall insist upon that if I engage you," replied Mrs.
+Desmond. "You will tuck it up and wear a nurse's cap over it. Have you
+any recommendations to give with her, Mrs. Markham?" she continued,
+expectantly.
+
+"No, for Mary has never been in service before," replied the kind lady.
+"She is a young southern girl seeking employment in this city, and I
+should like to befriend her if possible. I fancied that her gentle,
+innocent face might recommend her to your favor as it did to mine."
+
+Mrs. Desmond turned to look at Golden again, and met the gaze of the
+soft blue eyes fixed on her with a kind of puzzled intentness.
+
+"Child, why do you stare at me so curiously?" she inquired.
+
+The deep color rushed into Golden's face, making her more lovely than
+ever.
+
+"I beg your pardon," she hastened to say, falteringly. "You remind me
+so much of someone I have known that I could not keep from looking at
+your face. It was very rude, I know."
+
+"Never mind, I am not angry," answered Mrs. Desmond. "Do you think you
+would make a good, patient nurse for my little girl, Mary?"
+
+"I will do the best I can," little Golden replied, in her gentle,
+refined voice.
+
+Mrs. Desmond looked at her friend.
+
+"I am not in the habit of engaging help without recommendation. It is
+rather a risk to run," she remarked, "but to please you, my friend, and
+because I really need a maid for Ruby, I will give Mary Smith a trial.
+When can you come Mary?"
+
+"She can stay now, if you like, Edith," said Mrs. Markham.
+
+"That will suit me very well," said Mrs. Desmond. "I will engage you
+for one month at least, Mary, and I will pay you ten dollars a month.
+Will that suit you?"
+
+"Yes, thank you," Golden answered, timidly.
+
+"Very well, you may stay now, and you may go at once to Ruby, for I
+have been compelled to lend her my own maid, for a week past, and she
+is so dissatisfied with the position that she threatens to leave me if
+she is not relieved. I can assure you that you will find your position
+no sinecure. I hope you will try to find means to amuse the child. You
+must be very kind and patient with her, Mary. I allow no scolding or
+fault-finding, for my little girl is very frail and delicate."
+
+Golden rose and stood waiting while the languid, fine lady talked.
+
+When she had ended her little speech, she pointed her white finger at
+the dressing-room door.
+
+"Go through the drawing-room," she said, "into my bed-chamber. You will
+find that it has a door connecting with the nursery. You will find
+my little daughter in there. You may introduce yourself to her. Mrs.
+Markham and I will look in presently and see how Ruby is pleased with
+you."
+
+"Try and make a good impression on the little one's mind at first,"
+said Mrs. Markham, kindly. "First impressions are everything with
+children."
+
+Beautiful Golden thanked her with a grateful look, and silently
+withdrew to follow Mrs. Desmond's instructions.
+
+"You do not seem as pleased as I had expected, Edith," Mrs. Markham
+said, in a tone of disappointment, when they were alone.
+
+"To tell the truth, I think the girl is too pretty," Mrs. Desmond
+replied, with some embarrassment.
+
+"I thought you liked pretty things about you," said her friend.
+
+"So I do, but I do not like pretty servants," was the significant
+reply. "As a rule they are vain and trifling, and do not attend to
+their business. They are always looking out to attract admiration to
+their pretty faces."
+
+"I do not believe that Mary Smith is one of that kind," said Mrs.
+Markham. "She seems a good, simple, innocent girl. But if she fails to
+suit you, Edith, you may return her to me, and I will find some other
+place for her. I imagined that you would be delighted with such a girl
+for Ruby's attendant."
+
+"And so I am, and I am ever so much obliged to you for thinking of me.
+I hope that she will please Ruby better than the girls we have had
+lately, for I feel quite worn out with anxiety over the dear little
+creature," replied Mrs. Desmond, but so constrained that Mrs. Markham
+saw that she was only half-hearted in her pleasure, and wondered why it
+was that Golden's beauty, which was so attractive to her own eyes, was
+distasteful to Mrs. Desmond, who was beautiful herself, and liked to
+gather beautiful things around her.
+
+It is said that every family has its skeleton. Mrs. Markham did not
+know that the skeleton in her friend's closet was the lurking fiend of
+jealousy. Mrs. Desmond was a charming lady, but she secretly disliked
+every pretty woman she knew.
+
+Little Golden went on through the dressing-room to the bed-chamber,
+which was a perfect bower of elegance and repose, and timidly opened
+the nursery door, for the description of little Ruby Desmond had rather
+intimidated her.
+
+She found herself in a large, airy, sunny chamber, splendidly adapted
+for a nursery, and luxuriously fitted up for that purpose.
+
+In a low rocking-chair a smart French maid was indolently lounging and
+yawning over a French novel.
+
+In a corner of the room a little girl of six years, small for her age,
+and pale and delicate-looking, was sobbing fretfully in a fit of the
+sulks.
+
+She dashed the tears from her eyes and looked up curiously at the timid
+intruder.
+
+"Who are you?" she demanded, abruptly.
+
+"I am Mary Smith, your new nurse, little Miss Ruby," said Golden, in a
+clear, sweet voice, and with a winning smile.
+
+The French maid threw down her novel and stared, and little Ruby came
+out of her corner.
+
+"So you are my new maid, are you?" she asked, pertly. "Well, I hope you
+will not be as hateful as Celine here is, for if you do I shall be sure
+to throw my top at your head. I am very glad you are come, for I am
+perfectly tired of Celine, and I want her to leave me at once--at once,
+do you hear me, Celine?"
+
+Celine flounced out of the room in a huff, and the little one continued:
+
+"There is one comfort, you are not as ugly as Celine and the others! I
+hate ugly people, and so does my papa, but mamma likes them best. _You_
+are the prettiest nurse I ever saw! You look just like my big wax doll,
+with your blue eyes and long hair. Nurses always wear their hair under
+a cap, did you not know that?"
+
+Little Golden did not answer one word to the voluble discourse of the
+spoiled child.
+
+She stood silently in the center of the large apartment, her small
+hand pressed to her beating heart, her pale lips apart, her blue eyes
+upraised to a large portrait that hung against the wall in a splendid
+frame of gold and ebony. The dark, handsome, splendid face that smiled
+down upon her was the face of her lost lover, Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+Fortunately for Golden, little Ruby Desmond did not observe the
+preoccupation of her new nurse. She had entered upon a voluble tirade
+against nurses in general, and when she had ended she remarked with a
+sudden change of tone:
+
+"But I don't believe I shall hate you as much as I did the rest. You
+are younger and prettier than any girl I ever had to amuse me. Come,
+now, Mary, lay off your hat and jacket. I want you to make my doll a
+new dress. That lazy Celine would not stick a needle in it, for all I
+stormed and scolded, and threatened to complain to mamma."
+
+Thus adjured, Golden turned her eyes with an effort away from the
+portrait of Bertram Chesleigh, and proceeded to obey the instructions
+of her little mistress with what cheerfulness she could, although her
+heart was beating wildly with the shock she had received on coming
+suddenly face to face with her lover's portrait in this strange place.
+
+She longed, yet dreaded to ask little Ruby what the original of the
+portrait was to her.
+
+Looking from the portrait to the child she could plainly discern in
+Ruby's proud mouth and flashing, dark eyes, a great and striking
+resemblance to Mr. Chesleigh.
+
+But she was afraid to ask the question that trembled on her lips, so
+she sat down mutely while Ruby brought a large wax doll and placed it
+in her lap, together with a large quantity of scraps of silk and muslin
+and odds and ends of pretty lace.
+
+Then she pulled open the drawer of a child's bureau and brought out a
+garnet silk dress of her own, elaborately made and trimmed.
+
+"I want Dollie's dress made exactly like this," she said, hanging it
+open over the back of a chair for Golden's inspection. "It is in the
+latest fashion, so Celine says. Celine thinks of nothing but French
+novels and fashions, so she ought to know."
+
+"Your doll is very beautiful. Is it a new one?" asked Golden, trying
+to say something to please the little creature who was hovering about
+her, busy and excited with her important preparations for the miniature
+dressmaking.
+
+"Oh, yes, it is tolerably new! Papa gave it to me last week," replied
+Ruby. "There was a little trunk of clothes with her, but I do not like
+any of the dresses. They are quite old-fashioned and shabby, I think.
+Mamma says herself that they must have been made at least a year ago.
+So I shall never be satisfied until I have a new-fashioned dress for
+Dollie."
+
+She was silent a moment, watching Golden's deft finger as they slowly
+cut and basted, then she resumed:
+
+"I have tried and tried, but I cannot think of a name for her. Can you
+tell me a pretty name for her, Mary?"
+
+"Would you like to call her Golden?" asked the girl, feeling as if the
+sound of her own name would be a relief in this new, strange atmosphere.
+
+"Golden! what a pretty name," said the child. "I like that. I will call
+Dollie by that name. I shall be Golden--Golden Chesleigh," she added,
+after a minute's thought.
+
+The new nurse started so violently, that the doll's dress fell from her
+fingers. The lovely crimson color rushed into her face.
+
+"Chesleigh! Why do you call her that?" she asked, falteringly. "Do you
+know anybody by that name, Miss Ruby?"
+
+The little girl laughed quite happily.
+
+"Well, I should think I did," she said, brightly. "My own uncle is
+named Chesleigh--Bertram Chesleigh. There is his portrait on the wall.
+Look at it, Mary, and tell me if he is not me very handsomest man you
+ever beheld."
+
+Golden looked up into the dark eyes that had gazed into her own so
+fondly, and at the proud yet tender lips that had kissed her with such
+passionate love, and she could barely repress the moan of pain that
+came from her lips.
+
+"Yes, he is very handsome," she said faintly. "Does he ever call here
+to see you?"
+
+"Oh, yes, often and often, when he is at home," said Ruby. "But he is
+gone away traveling in the sunny south now. He travels a great deal.
+Mamma calls him a bird of passage."
+
+"Is he fond of you?" said Golden, seeing that she was expected to say
+something.
+
+"Oh, yes, very fond," said Ruby, brightening up so much that Golden
+saw it was a favorite subject with her. "He had that splendid portrait
+painted expressly for a present to me. Mamma begged me to let it hang
+in the drawing-room, but I would not. I told her I would have it in the
+nursery where I could see it every minute."
+
+"Is he--married?" asked Golden, carelessly, to all appearance, and
+taking up her work again.
+
+"Oh, dear, no! and I hope he never will be! He loves me better than
+anyone now, but he would like his wife best if he were married," cried
+the spoiled child.
+
+Golden sighed softly and made no reply, and the entrance of Mrs.
+Desmond and her visitor interrupted the conversation.
+
+"Good-morning, Mrs. Markham. You see I have a new nurse," said Ruby,
+looking up with a faint flush of pleasant excitement on her delicate
+face.
+
+"You have to thank Mrs. Markham for bringing her to you," said Mrs.
+Desmond, glad to see a smile on the usually sullen or pain-drawn little
+white face.
+
+Ruby went forward and kissed Mrs. Markham charmingly as if she was
+always loving and sweet-tempered instead of self-willed and capricious
+as everyone represented her.
+
+"I thank you very much," she said, "I think I shall like Mary better
+than the others. She is very kind and obliging. You see she is making a
+new dress for my doll. Celine was too lazy. She would not dress my doll
+at all."
+
+Mrs. Markham gave her _protege_ an encouraging smile, and Golden
+blushed with pleasure.
+
+"She has given my new doll a name," continued Ruby, vivaciously. "It is
+Golden. Do you not think it pretty? The name would suit Mary herself
+I think, as she has such lovely curls, I believe I shall call her
+goldilocks," she added, laying her small hand caressingly on Golden's
+hair.
+
+Mrs. Markham smiled indulgently, but her friend looked annoyed.
+
+"Indeed, Ruby, you must not call her by such a silly name," she said.
+"She must put her hair up, and wear a little cup over it like a French
+_bonne_."
+
+"It is a pity to cover it up, it is so thick and long, and shines so
+bright. Mary is a very pretty girl, don't you think so, mamma? She
+looks just like my wax doll," said the child.
+
+"Pretty is that pretty does, my child," Mrs. Desmond answered, shortly,
+and Mrs. Markham, stooping over Golden, put a card with her name and
+address upon it, in her hand, and said in her kind, patronizing voice:
+
+"If you do not suit Mrs. Desmond, Mary, after she has given you a fair
+trial, you may come to me, and I will help you to another place."
+
+The quick tears brimmed over in little Golden's eyes. She kissed Mrs.
+Markham's hand in silent gratitude.
+
+"It is quite likely I shall keep her if she continues to please Ruby
+as well as she does now. But Ruby is such a capricious little darling
+there is no telling how soon this new fancy of hers may change. 'New
+brooms sweep clean,' you know," said Mrs. Desmond, quoting the old
+adage a little stiffly.
+
+Mrs. Markham made some careless reply and took her departure. She
+was vaguely conscious of a chill never felt before in Mrs. Desmond's
+manner, and resented her lack of gratitude for the service she had done
+her.
+
+"The child is so pleased and interested, it will be quite a pity if she
+sends Mary Smith away from her," the benevolent woman thought silently
+to herself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+"I am quite sure that my papa will be pleased with your looks," said
+little Ruby, artlessly, when her mother had gone out and left them
+alone to the doll's dressmaking. "He likes pretty faces as well as I
+do. He hates Celine and the chambermaid both, because, as he says, they
+are 'so deucedly ugly.'"
+
+"I suppose papa loves his little pet very much," said Golden, smiling
+sadly at the little one's prattle.
+
+"Yes, indeed," said Ruby. "He gives me oceans of pretty things. But
+I do not see him much, only an hour after dinner. You see, papa and
+mamma are both very gay. They always go out in the evening to balls or
+operas."
+
+Before the dinner hour Celine made her appearance with a large, white
+bib-apron and neat cap for Golden's use.
+
+"My mistress sent you these," she said, not unkindly. "Shall I show you
+how to use them, or do you know already?"
+
+"You will please show me," the girl answered, gently.
+
+Celine brought combs and brushes and arranged the bright, shining
+hair in a thick plait which she wound about the small head and pinned
+securely with hairpins.
+
+"_Ma foi_," she said, unable to repress an involuntary tribute of
+admiration, "you have the most beautiful hair I ever saw."
+
+"Yes, and it's a shame to put a cap on it," cried Ruby. "I think
+mamma is very unkind to me, I did not want Mary Smith's beautiful hair
+covered!"
+
+"Fie, my little lady, what a funny-looking nurse-maid she would be
+without her little cap," cried Celine, as she put the last touches to
+the bib and cap.
+
+"Thank you," said Golden, as she gave a timid glance into the swinging
+mirror.
+
+Celine noted the little incident with feminine quickness, and smiled.
+
+"Should you know yourself again?" she asked.
+
+"It makes a great difference in my appearance," little Golden replied.
+
+"But it does not make you any less pretty," declared Celine. "When
+your hair hung down it hid all your neck. Now I see that your ears are
+as pretty as sea-shells, and your neck as white as snow. You are too
+good-looking for your place, Miss Smith."
+
+"And you are too ugly for yours!" put in Ruby, sharply.
+
+"Hold your tongue, Miss Pert," said the French maid, with an ugly
+frown. "It's a deal better to be an ugly servant than a pretty one in
+this place, and so Miss Smith will find out before long. Not as I says
+it out of spite for the poor thing. She's to be pitied, being _your_
+nurse," pronounced Mademoiselle Celine as she flitted out of the room,
+seeing that Golden made her no answer. Indeed the poor girl did not
+know what to say. She was puzzled and frightened over the maid's pert
+innuendoes, but she did not in the least comprehend what she meant.
+
+When Celine was gone she looked into the minor again and then at the
+portrait on the wall. The hot tears came into the great, blue eyes and
+blinded them.
+
+"Oh, Bert," she whispered inaudibly, "would you know me, would you love
+me in this strange and altered guise?"
+
+"You must do my hair over before dinner, Mary," said the little girl.
+"I always dine with mamma and papa when they have no company. You will
+go with me and stand behind my chair while I am eating, to attend to my
+wants."
+
+Golden gave a gasp of mingled pride and dread.
+
+"Must I indeed do that?" she asked.
+
+"Oh, yes, all my nurses do that way," said the child. "Now, Mary, I
+must have my hair curled over, and dress for dinner just as mamma does,
+you know."
+
+Golden found that she had a most exacting little mistress. Although
+frail and diseased, the little creature never allowed her active mind
+and thin, little body one moment's rest.
+
+She was always flying from one thing to another, and kept everyone
+about her attending to her whims and fancied wants. Yet, in spite of
+her capricious exactions, Golden could not help being drawn to the
+child.
+
+The dark eyes, and the proud, sweet mouth so like those of the man she
+loved, won her in spite of herself.
+
+At dinner, where she stood droopingly behind little Ruby's chair, the
+master of the house did not even glance toward her, so that she had a
+fair chance to observe him from under her heavy, curling lashes.
+
+The scrutiny did not satisfy her, although she could not have told how
+it chanced, for Mr. Desmond was faultlessly handsome.
+
+He had a fair, effeminate face, full of languid passion, and those
+large, long-lashed gray eyes which can shoot the most killing glances.
+
+His hair was parted in the middle with scrupulous exactness. His dress
+was elegant to the verge of foppishness, and a magnificent diamond
+sparkled on his white hand.
+
+His wife and little daughter seemed to regard him with the most
+admiring affection, which he accepted with a bored and rather
+patronizing air.
+
+When the long and ceremonious dinner was over, little Ruby sprang down
+from her chair and caught his hand.
+
+"Come, papa, come, mamma," she cried, "you must go to the nursery now."
+
+They went away with her, and when Golden returned to the nursery later,
+she found the little girl sitting on her father's knee, and chatting
+volubly to him, while Mrs. Desmond was nowhere to be seen.
+
+Ruby jumped down from her perch and ran to Golden.
+
+"Papa," she said, evidently referring to some subject they had been
+discussing. "I will show it to you, and you will say that I am right."
+
+With a quick, deft motion, she pulled the cap from Golden's head, and
+loosened the braid so that the curling, rippling mass of gold fell in
+a shower of beauty over the girl's shoulders. Then she cried out in
+gleeful triumph:
+
+"Isn't it lovely, papa? Did you ever see such a pretty nurse."
+
+Mr. Desmond looked in amazement at the blushing, shrinking girl, and
+murmured inaudibly:
+
+"Ye gods, what a perfect beauty!"
+
+At that moment the brilliant brunette, Mrs. Desmond, swept into the
+room with a waft of exquisite perfume, her diamonds glittering, her
+rich silk and laces rustling majestically, a white satin opera cloak
+folded gracefully around her white shoulders.
+
+She looked at Golden so wrathfully that it froze the quick murmur of
+irrepressible admiration on her lips.
+
+"Girl, what does this disordered appearance mean? Why is your hair down
+after my strict orders?" she demanded, angrily.
+
+"Your daughter pulled it down, madam," Golden answered, with outward
+dignity and quietness, though she was inwardly chafed and deeply
+wounded.
+
+Mrs. Desmond turned round in a gust of passion and gave Ruby a ringing
+slap on the cheek with her white, jeweled hand.
+
+"Take that, and behave yourself better the next time," she cried,
+sharply.
+
+Ruby ran, screaming, to her father, and Mrs. Desmond cried out
+impatiently:
+
+"Come, Mr. Desmond, the carriage is waiting. Mary, put the child to
+bed. Good-night, Ruby."
+
+She bent to kiss the child good-night, but Ruby pushed her away with
+an angry scream, and ran to hide her face in Golden's skirts.
+
+Mrs. Desmond turned away, followed by her husband, who said
+reproachfully as they passed from the room:
+
+"You were needlessly cruel to the poor little thing Edith, my dear."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+
+Mrs. Desmond came into the nursery the next morning with her arms full
+of new toys as a propitiatory gift to her offended little daughter.
+
+She greeted Golden very kindly, feeling ashamed of her petulance of the
+evening before, when she saw how patiently she was ministering to the
+comfort of her little daughter.
+
+Little Ruby was suffering with a headache this morning. She lay on a
+silken lounge, with her head propped on pillows, and Golden was bathing
+the hot temples with _eau de cologne_.
+
+"Are you still pleased with your nurse, my darling?" inquired her
+mother.
+
+"Oh, yes, mamma. Mary is the kindest nurse I ever had," answered Ruby,
+lifting her heavy eyes tenderly to Golden's sweet face.
+
+"I am very glad to hear it," said her mother. "Does your head ache too
+bad for you to take your morning drive with me, dear?"
+
+"Oh, no, I think it will be better when I get out in the air," said
+Ruby, with a brightening face. "Shall we take my nurse with us?"
+
+"Not this morning, I think, as I shall drive the pony-phaeton, and
+there is only room for two."
+
+"Will not papa go then?" said the child, disappointed.
+
+"No; he has a business engagement, and cannot accompany us. You see we
+are going to the seaside next week, and he has a great many things to
+see to first," Mrs. Desmond answered, with the child's disappointment
+reflected on her own beautiful face.
+
+She loved her husband with the devotion of a strong, intense nature,
+and begrudged every moment he spent away from her side.
+
+Her jealousy was as strong as her love, and Mr. Desmond was the type of
+man best calculated to keep this baleful passion in the fullest play.
+
+He had been noted as a male flirt before he married Edith Chesleigh,
+and his conduct since their union had not been of a sort to strengthen
+his wife's faith in his fidelity. Beautiful as she was herself, she
+soon found that he was by no means blind to the charms of other women.
+
+She turned to the nurse with a suppressed sigh, and said, quietly:
+
+"You may dress Ruby now in a white hat and dress, and cardinal sash,
+while I am getting ready."
+
+Then she kissed Ruby and went to her dressing-room. Golden hastened to
+follow her instructions.
+
+"We shall go to the seaside next week and stay two months. Shall you
+like that, Mary?" asked the child, while Golden was brushing her dark
+curls over her fingers.
+
+"I dare say I shall like it, if you do," replied the girl.
+
+"Oh, we will have a splendid time. We will go bathing in the sea in
+the mornings, and afterward we will stroll on the sands, and gather
+beautiful, rosy shells. At night they have balls and dancing. Sometimes
+mamma lets me stay up awhile to see them dance. Oh, it is grand fun! I
+wish I was a grown lady," cried the child, flapping her hands.
+
+Golden listened in silence, and the strange loneliness and quietude of
+the life in which she had been reared, struck her more and more by its
+contrast with the bright, bustling world outside and beyond Glenalvan
+Hall.
+
+When little Ruby had gone away for her drive with her mother, she sat
+down in the quiet nursery and resigned herself to thought.
+
+Her thought went back to the gray, old hall in the sunny south, and the
+kind, old man she had deserted. She wondered if he would forgive her,
+and pray for her that she might find her mother.
+
+"I shall never find her now," she thought. "I have lost my money, and
+it will be a long time before I can earn enough to resign my situation
+here, and try to find her. Mrs. Markham was so sweet and kind. I wonder
+if she would help me. But, no, she would scorn me like all the rest, if
+she knew the story of my poor, young mother's disgrace."
+
+"Good-morning, little Mary. Where is my daughter this morning?" said a
+clear, musical voice.
+
+Golden looked up with a start, and saw Mr. Desmond, standing, tall,
+debonair and handsome, in the center of the lofty apartment. He had
+entered and closed the door so softly that she had not heard a sound.
+
+"Miss Ruby has gone out driving with her mother," she answered.
+
+"Ah," said Mr. Desmond. "I suppose she will not be gone long, so I will
+wait here until she returns."
+
+He drew forward a chair quite close to hers. Golden regarded him in
+surprise.
+
+"Miss Ruby was very anxious that you should go with her, but her mother
+said you had a business engagement this morning and could not find time
+to gratify her," she remarked to him, rather pointedly.
+
+He flushed, then laughed carelessly.
+
+"Oh, yes, so I did have," he replied, "I only looked in a minute to bid
+Ruby good-morning."
+
+"Yes, sir," the nurse replied, constrainedly, and looked out of the
+window. The way Mr. Desmond regarded her out of his large, bold eyes
+made her feel slightly nervous. She heartily wished that he would go
+away and leave her alone.
+
+But Mr. Desmond seemed in no haste to fulfill his business engagement.
+He sat silently a moment, regarding the delicate profile of the half
+averted face, then said, carelessly:
+
+"Where do you come from, Mary--New York?"
+
+"I am from the south, Mr. Desmond," said the girl, biting her lips to
+keep back her resentment at his familiar address.
+
+"Indeed? From what part of the south?" he inquired.
+
+"Excuse me, sir, I do not care to reveal my private affairs to a total
+stranger," replied Golden, with such sudden spirit and haughtiness that
+the fine gentleman stared.
+
+"Whew!" he exclaimed, "I did not mean any offense, Miss Smith, I
+only wished to know the precise spot where such peerless beauties as
+yourself are reared. I would certainly immigrate instanter to that most
+precious locality."
+
+Golden rose, crimson with anger, and crossed to the door.
+
+"Where are you going?" he inquired, following her and taking hold of
+her hand.
+
+"I am going down stairs, Mr. Desmond," she replied coldly, and trying
+to wrench her hand away.
+
+"Are you offended at my plain speaking?" he inquired, trying to look
+into her flashing eyes. "Surely you are aware that you are beautiful?"
+
+"If I am, it does not become you to tell me so, sir," she replied,
+resentfully. "Such compliments belong to your wife."
+
+"My wife is a beautiful woman, but not half so beautiful as you are,
+little Mary," he replied, still keeping a tight hold on her hand.
+
+"Mr. Desmond, let me go," she pleaded, the angry tears crowding into
+her soft blue eyes, "I will not listen to such words from you. You are
+cruel and unkind. What would Mrs. Desmond say if she could see you?"
+
+He started uneasily, then laughed.
+
+"She would say I was only teasing you, as I was," he replied. "Believe
+me, Mary, I was only joking you. I did not think that you would take it
+as earnest or become angry. Say that you forgive me, fair one, and I
+will release you."
+
+"Let go my hand, I forgive you," Golden replied, glad to be released on
+any terms, and shrinking from him with an utter loathing and horror.
+
+"Thank you for your pardon," he cried, laughingly. "You must seal the
+sweet pledge with a kiss, my lovely girl."
+
+He threw his arm around her struggling little form, clasping her
+closely to his breast, and pressed a full, passionate kiss on her
+loathing lips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+
+At Golden's loud scream of alarm and anger, the door of Mrs. Desmond's
+sleeping apartment opened suddenly, and Celine, the maid, stood aghast
+upon the threshold.
+
+She beheld the pretty, new nurse in the arms of her master, saw his
+handsome head bent over her as he kissed the beautiful crimson lips.
+At Celine's startled cry he turned upon her fiercely, at the same time
+releasing Golden.
+
+"What do you mean by spying upon my actions, Celine?" he demanded
+angrily.
+
+"Pardon, monsieur, I meant no offense," said the maid, as smooth as
+silk, "I but thought you were romping with little Miss Ruby, and looked
+in to behold the little one's delight."
+
+Mr. Desmond saw that it was necessary to conciliate Mademoiselle Celine.
+
+"I did come in to see Ruby," he replied, "but she had gone to ride. So
+I attempted a bit of harmless gallantry with her nurse, here, such as
+most pretty girls would have taken with pleasure, but she was timid and
+frightened at my little joke. Hold your tongue about it, Celine, and
+here's a trifle to buy you a new cap."
+
+He tossed a gold piece at her feet, and Celine picked it up, curtsying
+and smiling. Little Golden, standing apart from them, regarded the
+scene with horror and disgust.
+
+Mr. Desmond, turning suddenly to her, quailed at the look of fiery
+scorn in the beautiful, spirited young face.
+
+"Are you very angry with me, Mary?" he inquired in a subdued voice.
+
+"No words can do justice to my contempt for you," she replied, in a
+voice of cutting scorn. "How dared you maltreat and insult me so? Shame
+on you for your cruelty to a poor and helpless girl!"
+
+She was so beautiful in her anger that he could scarcely remove his
+gaze from her face. Her cheeks were scarlet, her eyes were darkened and
+dilated with anger, her lovely lips were curled disdainfully. He read
+the proud purity of her young soul in every haughty movement of her
+lithe young figure and clenched, white hands.
+
+He regarded her in silence a moment, then exclaimed with apparent
+frankness:
+
+"Mary, I will tell you the truth, and then you will be able to pardon
+my conduct. My wife told me that she had engaged you totally without
+recommendation, and we both were afraid that we had run too great
+a risk in intrusting our little darling to your care. I determined
+therefore to test you. I have done so, and I am delighted to find that
+your principles and your virtue are so steadfast and true. Are you
+willing to grant me your pardon after this explanation?"
+
+At this specious apology the simple girl looked from the hypocrite's
+anxious face to that of the maid.
+
+Celine being a woman, she reasoned, would tell her whether to accept
+this explanation or not.
+
+The artful maid gave her an encouraging smile.
+
+"Monsieur is right," she said. "He did well to test your principles,
+Miss Smith. Do not be so rude as to withhold your forgiveness after his
+manly apology."
+
+Golden, with her slight knowledge of the wicked world, thought that Mr.
+Desmond and Celine had told her the truth. She answered, falteringly,
+after a moment of silence:
+
+"Then I will forgive you, Mr. Desmond, if you will promise not to
+molest me again. Otherwise I shall return to Mrs. Markham's protection."
+
+"You must not think of leaving us. Ruby is so pleased with you that
+it would be a shame to desert her. You need not fear me. I am quite
+satisfied of your truth and worth, and my wife will be delighted when
+I tell her how nobly I have proved your virtue," said Mr. Desmond,
+hastily.
+
+Then he looked at his watch, and muttering something about his business
+engagement, hurried away.
+
+Celine looked at Golden with an odd, significant smile.
+
+"Now, Miss Smith, you understand what I meant by saying that you were
+too good-looking for your place," she said.
+
+"But I thought _he_ said, and so did you, Celine, that he was only
+testing my virtue," said poor Golden, in perplexity.
+
+"Bah! that was only master's blarney," replied Celine, airily. "Of
+course I had to agree with him, or lose my situation, and I don't
+choose to do that, for I have a good place and lots of perquisites.
+But the truth is that monsieur only invented that tale of testing you
+because he was frightened when he found he had tackled an honest girl,
+and he did not wish for the madam to get hold of it."
+
+"Then he is a wicked villain, and I shall go away to-day," cried the
+girl, indignantly, "I love little Ruby, but I will go away, I cannot
+remain."
+
+"If you take _my_ advice you will stay and say nothing about it,"
+replied the maid. "If you go to another place you are just as likely to
+encounter the same difficulty. You are too pretty to be a servant. I
+have told you that already."
+
+"But I cannot remain here and encounter the persecutions of Mr.
+Desmond," replied Golden, decidedly.
+
+"I do not believe he will annoy you again," said Celine, confidently.
+"He has found out that you are honest, and he will be afraid to pursue
+you any further. The child is so pleased with you it would be a pity
+to forsake her. You may take my word for it that monsieur is too much
+afraid of his wife to bother you again. Why, she is so jealous that if
+she knew her husband had kissed you, she would want to cut your ears
+off."
+
+Golden shivered at Celine's vivid words.
+
+"It is better I should go, then," she said, with a sigh. "I would not,
+for the world, create trouble between husband and wife."
+
+"You had better stay," said Celine. "I shall not tell of you, and you
+may be pretty sure master won't. So Mrs. Desmond need never know."
+
+"It is better I should go," said Golden, decidedly; and then she threw
+herself down upon a lounge and burst into tears.
+
+"Oh! why are women so weak, and men so cruel?" she wildly sobbed.
+
+"It's their nature," replied Celine, but Golden made her no answer. She
+only continued to weep heart-brokenly.
+
+"I am the most miserable girl on earth," she sobbed. "I wish that I had
+never been born!"
+
+The maid's curiosity was greatly excited by Golden's words. She knelt
+down by the girl and inquired the cause of her sorrow, and promised her
+her friendship and advice if she would confide in her.
+
+But in Golden's pure mind there was an instinctive distrust of Celine.
+Her ready acceptance of her master's bribe had excited her disgust and
+dislike. She answered evasively that she had nothing to confide, and
+only desired to be left in peace.
+
+"Oh, very well, miss," replied the maid, "you can be left alone, I'm
+sure, but you'll find that it's better to make a friend of Celine Duval
+than an enemy."
+
+She flounced out of the room as she spoke, and Golden was left alone
+to the companionship of her own sad thoughts. She lay silently a long
+while looking at the portrait of Bertram Chesleigh, and weeping bitter
+tears over her unhappy fate. How beautiful and life-like was the
+picture!
+
+The blissful hours she had spent with the original rushed over her
+mind, making the contrast with the gloom of the present more harrowing.
+She found herself exclaiming:
+
+ "Oh, that those lips had language--life has passed
+ With me but roughly since I heard them last."
+
+But no sound came from the lips of the false-hearted lover, who had
+given her a few hours of happiness only to leave her to the darkness of
+despair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+
+Golden had quite decided in her mind that she would rather leave Mrs.
+Desmond at once, than risk a renewal of her husband's distasteful
+attentions, but little Ruby's first words on returning from her drive,
+dispelled the idea for the present at least from her thoughts.
+
+"Oh, Mary!" the little one had cried, with childish directness, as soon
+as she entered the room. "Oh, Mary! I have heard bad news!"
+
+"I am very sorry for you, dear," said Golden, gently.
+
+Ruby looked up into the face of her uncle, where it hung against the
+wall.
+
+"Oh, poor Uncle Bertie!" she sighed.
+
+"Was it about Mr. Chesleigh, Ruby?" she inquired.
+
+"Yes," said the child. "Mamma has had a telegram from some people about
+him. He is very sick, and he is away down south at a place called
+Glenalvan Hall."
+
+Golden drew her breath heavily, and sank into a chair. It seemed as if
+an arrow had pierced her heart. She could not speak, but stared at Ruby
+with a dumb misery in her eyes, that the little one could in nowise
+understand.
+
+"Some of us will have to go to him--mamma and papa, I suppose,"
+continued Ruby. "I asked mamma to let me go, but she says it would be
+too warm for me at this time of the year in the south, because I am so
+delicate."
+
+"Is he very sick? Will he die?" inquired Golden, speaking in a strange,
+unnatural voice.
+
+"They hope not, but he is very sick," said Ruby; and at that moment
+Mrs. Desmond swept into the room.
+
+Her bright eyes looked dim and heavy as though she might have been
+weeping.
+
+"I am very sorry you have had bad news, madam," said Golden, trying to
+appear quiet and natural, though her pulse was beating at fever-heat,
+and her eyes were heavy and dim beneath their drooping lashes.
+
+"Ruby has told you of my brother's illness, then," said Mrs. Desmond,
+more gently than she usually spoke to her dependents.
+
+"Yes, madam," said Golden, faintly, unable to utter another word.
+
+"He has brain fever," said Mrs. Desmond, despondently. "Mr. Desmond
+will leave for the south to-night, and if he is no better when he
+arrives, he will telegraph for me to go to him. He is unwilling for me
+to go if it can be prevented, as it is so warm down there at this time
+of year. Besides, I am unwilling to leave Ruby, and I could not run the
+risk of taking her."
+
+She threw herself into a chair, and wept a few genuine tears.
+
+Little Golden, watching her with dry eyes and pale, mute lips, wondered
+if the sister's heart ached half so heavily and painfully as her own
+did.
+
+"Yet why should I grieve for him?" the poor child asked herself. "I
+should rather rejoice. He has forsaken and deserted me."
+
+She could find no answer to that question in her heart, save that she
+loved him. Loved him in despite of her cruel wrongs.
+
+Before night another telegram was received, saying that Bertram
+Chesleigh had asked repeatedly for his sister. So it was decided that
+Mrs. Desmond should accompany her husband.
+
+"Mary, do you think that you and the housekeeper can take care of my
+little Ruby while I am gone?" inquired Mrs. Desmond, tearfully.
+
+Golden promised so earnestly to give her whole care and attention
+to the little one that Mrs. Desmond could not help confiding in her
+promise.
+
+The child herself, though half-distracted with grief at the parting
+with her parents, promised bravely to be a good and patient girl for
+Uncle Bertie's sake.
+
+Celine was to accompany her mistress, and was in a bustle of pleasant
+preparation. The hours passed swiftly, and the time for the farewells
+soon came and passed.
+
+Little Ruby sobbed herself to sleep dismally, with her arms around
+Golden's neck, unconscious that the girl shed sadder tears than her
+own, when her little charge was peacefully dreaming.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+
+"The slow, sad hours that bring us all things ill," waned slowly, while
+Golden and Ruby waited impatiently for news of the travelers.
+
+Ruby was very restless and capricious, besides her daily headaches grew
+worse as the heat of the summer season advanced. She fretted very much
+over her postponed trip to the seaside.
+
+At length a telegram came from the travelers to say that they had
+reached Glenalvan Hall, and Mr. Chesleigh was no better. After this
+these bulletins came almost daily, but with no encouraging words. Very
+ill, and no prospect of improvement yet, was their daily burden.
+
+In about two weeks Mr. Desmond returned unexpectedly.
+
+Ruby was overjoyed. She laughed and wept together, as she hung around
+his neck.
+
+"Uncle Bertie must be better, or you would not have returned," she
+cried.
+
+But her father shook his head gravely.
+
+"No, dear, I am sorry to say he is not improving at all. Indeed the
+case is so critical that it may be weeks before your mother can return.
+That is why I have come."
+
+"Shall you go back, then?" inquired Ruby.
+
+"Yes, in about a week. Have you fretted for us very much, Ruby?"
+
+"A great deal," she replied. "Oh, papa," clapping her little hands,
+"now I know why you have come back. You are going to take me to mamma
+and Uncle Bert."
+
+"Nothing is further from my intentions," replied Mr. Desmond. "I have
+come to take you to the seashore."
+
+"The seashore--while my uncle is so ill?" cried the child, a little
+surprised.
+
+"Yes, Ruby. You must remember your own health is very frail. Your
+mother is very anxious about you. You will go to the seashore in the
+care of Mrs. Markham. Will that arrangement please you?"
+
+"Very much," smiled Ruby. "I love Mrs. Markham. Of course I shall take
+my nurse?"
+
+"Yes, of course," he replied, then inquired, carelessly: "Are you still
+satisfied with Mary Smith?"
+
+"Oh, yes, Mary is a splendid girl--I do not intend ever to part from
+her," replied the child, enthusiastically, "I am quite getting over my
+sulky spells since she came. Mary does not tease and cross me as the
+others did."
+
+Golden, who had sat sewing quietly by the window, without ever lifting
+her eyes from her work since Mr. Desmond entered, crimsoned painfully
+at thus having his attention drawn upon her.
+
+But he took no notice of her except to say patronizingly:
+
+"I am glad you have found such a treasure, Ruby. I hope she will remain
+with you. Are you willing to accompany Ruby to the seaside, Mary?"
+
+"Yes, sir," she answered, quietly.
+
+"Very well, I will go and see Mrs. Markham now. If she can go by the
+last of the week I will accompany the party and see you all safely
+settled before I return south."
+
+Golden made him no answer, thinking that none was necessary, and he
+went out to call on Mrs. Markham.
+
+It was all carried out as Mr. Desmond wished. In the latter part of the
+week he accompanied the party to the seashore, saw them installed in
+comfortable quarters, and after staying two days took leave again.
+
+During his short stay, he enjoyed himself according to his flirting
+tastes with the lively seaside belles.
+
+In her capacity of Ruby's nurse Golden was compelled to see him a great
+deal, but he treated her at all times with such subdued respect and
+delicate attention that the girl grew less afraid of him, and began
+to think that Celine was right when she said he would abandon his
+pursuit of her now that he had found out she was an honest girl. She
+did not know that Mr. Desmond's quiet respect and delicate courtesy
+was more dangerous than his former open advances had been. Still she
+was relieved when he was gone, and she was left alone with little Ruby
+and Mrs. Markham, who was very kind to the lonely girl though in a
+decidedly patronizing fashion.
+
+When Golden and Ruby had been at the seaside a month with Mrs. Markham,
+the glad tidings that Mr. Chesleigh was beginning to improve, were
+conveyed to little Ruby in a short but affectionate letter from her
+mother.
+
+ "Your dear uncle has had a great fight for his life, but the doctor
+ now says that he is likely to get well," Mrs. Desmond wrote. "If he
+ continues to improve, we shall be able to start home with him in
+ about two weeks, journeying slowly. We will join you then at the
+ seaside, as the physician thinks that a month by the sea will quite
+ restore Bertram's health."
+
+It was Golden's task to read this letter to the little six-year-old,
+whose education, owing to her extreme frailty of constitution, had not
+yet commenced.
+
+The child cried out noisily for joy at the welcome news, but Golden
+said not a word. Yet her thoughts were very busy.
+
+"I shall see him again very soon," she said to herself. "Will he
+recognize, in his sister's servant, the girl that loved him so dearly?"
+
+Then the thought came to her that he would not wish to see her again;
+she had no part nor lot in his life henceforth, by his own desire.
+
+Musing sadly by the great, moaning sea, while little Ruby gathered
+the rosy-tinted shells along the sands, she murmured to herself those
+sweet, pathetic lines of Owen Meredith:
+
+ "Oh, being of beauty and bliss! Seen and known
+ In the depths of my heart, and possessed there alone,
+ My days know thee not, and my lips name thee never,
+ Thy place in my poor life is vacant forever;
+ We have met, we have parted,
+ No name is recorded
+ In my annals on earth."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+
+In few more days Mrs. Markham received a letter from Mrs. Desmond. Her
+brother was so much better that she had quite recovered the tone of her
+spirits, and wrote, cheerfully:
+
+ "If nothing more happens, I shall be with you the first of September.
+ Bertram will be with me, and I shall also bring a very charming
+ young lady whom I have invited to spend the winter months with me
+ in New York. She is the daughter of our host, and has been Bert's
+ unwearied attendant throughout his illness. Between you and me, dear
+ friend, she is so desperately in love with my brother, that she has
+ neither eyes nor ears for anyone else. She has a younger sister whom
+ I have not invited. I do not like her. She is the most abominable
+ flirt I ever saw, and has done nothing but make eyes at Mr. Desmond
+ since we came to Glenalvan Hall."
+
+"Glenalvan Hall," mused Mrs. Markham, holding the letter in her hand,
+and drawing her eyebrows thoughtfully together. "How familiar the word
+sounds! Where have I heard it?"
+
+She puzzled over it awhile, then gave it up. In the gay whirl of
+fashionable society, she had forgotten the pretty name of the poor girl
+she had befriended.
+
+But she carried her letter into Ruby's room and read it aloud to her,
+and Golden's cheeks that had grown very pale and delicate of late, grew
+paler still.
+
+"Elinor is coming," she said to herself, in dismay. "What shall I do?"
+
+She thought at first that she would go away quietly before they came.
+
+She could not stay and face her proud cousin, Elinor, and the man who
+had loved her, and then despised her for the stain upon her.
+
+But the thought came into her mind, where would she go? She had never
+received any of her wages from Mrs. Desmond yet. If she went away she
+would be utterly friendless and penniless.
+
+She clung to little Ruby because the child loved her very dearly, and
+without her love she was utterly alone.
+
+And underlying all was a fierce, passionate longing she could not
+still, to see Bertram Chesleigh's face once more, to hear again that
+musical, luring voice, whose accents she had hung upon so fondly.
+
+A few days before the first of September, she turned timidly to Mrs.
+Markham, who was amusing herself with little Ruby down on the sands.
+
+"Mrs. Markham," she said, "will you tell me this, please? Are not green
+glasses good for weak eyes?"
+
+"I have heard so," replied the lady. "Are your eyes weak, Mary?"
+
+She looked into the girl's face as she spoke, and saw that the sweet,
+blue eyes were dull and heavy.
+
+How was she to guess that sleepless nights and bitter tears had dimmed
+their sapphire sparkle.
+
+"Are your eyes weak, Mary?" she repeated, seeing that the girl
+hesitated.
+
+A blush tinged the pearly cheek, and Golden glanced out at the
+foam-crested waves rolling in toward the shore.
+
+"I think that the glare of the sun on the sands, and on the water, is
+very weakening to the sight," she replied, evasively.
+
+"So it is. I have heard others complain of the same thing. If the
+light affects your eyes I would advise you, by all means, to wear the
+glasses."
+
+"Thank you. I believe I will try a pair," returned Golden.
+
+"Oh, Mary, you will be a perfect fright, if you do!" cried out little
+Ruby, in childish disapproval. "You have covered up all your long, gold
+hair under that ugly cap, and now, if you cover up your pretty, blue
+eyes, you will be as horrid-looking as--as--I don't know what!"
+
+"Never mind the looks, my dear," said Mrs. Markham, in her gentle way.
+"If Mary is kind and loving at heart her looks will not signify."
+
+"But I do so love pretty things," said the child, "and I love to look
+at Mary. She looks like a picture at night when she combs out her
+shining hair over her shoulders. There is not a lady at the seaside
+this summer as pretty as my nurse!"
+
+"Fie, my dear; you must not make Mary vain," cried the lady, half
+smiling.
+
+"I want to ask you a favor, Mrs. Markham," said Golden, blushing very
+much.
+
+"A favor! What is it, Mary?" asked Mrs. Markham, encouragingly.
+
+Golden glanced down at her blue cashmere dress, which had grown very
+shabby and worn during the two months she had been in little Ruby's
+service.
+
+"You see I had lost all my money when I went into Mrs. Desmond's
+service," she said falteringly, "and I have not received any of my
+wages yet, and--and I am getting too shabby to be respectable-looking."
+
+That was little Golden's plea, but the truth was that she did not
+wish her Cousin Elinor and Bertram Chesleigh to recognize her, and so
+wished to lay aside the blue cashmere which had been her best dress at
+Glenalvan Hall.
+
+"Oh, you poor child!" burst out Mrs. Markham, "why did you never tell
+me that before? I see, now; you want me to lend you the money to buy a
+new dress."
+
+"If you will be so very, very kind," faltered Golden, gratefully.
+
+"I will do it with the greatest pleasure," answered Mrs. Markham, whose
+purse was ever open to the needy and distressed.
+
+So on the first of September little Golden appeared in quite an altered
+guise. The pretty, blue cashmere that was so becoming to her rose-leaf
+complexion was laid aside, and she wore a sober, dark-gray dress, so
+long and plain that she looked a great deal taller and older. She
+had pinned a dark silk handkerchief high up around her white throat,
+thus concealing its fairness and graceful contour. She had fashioned
+herself a huge, abominable cap that hid every wave of her golden
+hair. Dark-green spectacles were fastened before the bright, blue
+eyes, and with her long, tucked, white apron, little Golden made the
+primmest-looking nurse-maid that could have been imagined. She looked
+in the mirror and decided that no one who had known her at Glenalvan
+Hall would recognize her now.
+
+But little Ruby exclaimed dolorously at her strange appearance:
+
+"Oh, Mary, you have made yourself quite ugly!" she cried, "and I had
+been thinking how I would show Uncle Bert my pretty nurse."
+
+"Oh, Ruby, you must not!" cried Golden, in terror. "Promise me you will
+not."
+
+"Will not--what?" asked the little one, surprised.
+
+"Will not show me to Mr. Chesleigh, nor tell him that you think I am
+pretty," said Golden, in alarm.
+
+"Very well, I won't," said the little one, disappointed, "but I am very
+sorry, for I am sure Uncle Bertie would be glad to know that I have a
+good and pretty nurse. He used to laugh at the ugly ones, and he said
+their faces were so horrid it was not strange they were bad tempered."
+
+"There is another thing I want you to promise me, please, darling,"
+said Golden, who was on the best of terms with her little charge.
+
+"What is it, Mary?" inquired the child.
+
+"When your uncle comes to sit and talk with you, Ruby, you must let me
+run away and stay until he leaves you."
+
+"Why should you do that?" asked Ruby.
+
+"I have some sewing to do," replied Golden, evasively.
+
+"I know, but you always do your sewing with me," said Ruby.
+
+"You see it would be quite different with a man in the way."
+
+"Uncle Bert would not bother you one bit. I cannot see why you are
+afraid of him," rejoined the child.
+
+"But I do not like men, Ruby. I do not like to be where a man is. Now,
+dear, will you excuse me?" pleaded Golden.
+
+"Yes, I will, since you insist on it," answered Ruby. "But I can't see
+what makes you hate men! Now I like them. I like papa, I like Uncle
+Bert, and I shall like my husband when I grow big enough to have one.
+Do you ever intend to have a husband, Mary?" said the child, with a
+child's thoughtlessness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+
+The beautiful color surged hotly into Golden's cheeks at Ruby's artless
+question. She turned her head away to hide the pain that made her sweet
+lips quiver.
+
+"Mary, do you ever intend to have a husband?" repeated the child.
+
+"Hush, Ruby. You are too young to talk about husbands," answered Golden.
+
+"Dear me, is my daughter contemplating marriage?" cried a gay, sweet
+voice, and, looking up, they saw Mrs. Desmond in her traveling wraps,
+dusty and weary, but looking very glad and eager at seeing her child
+again.
+
+Ruby sprang to her arms, and Golden looked on with sympathetic tears in
+her eyes at the happy reunion of the mother and child. Mrs. Desmond did
+not seem to see her until she had fairly smothered Ruby in kisses, when
+she looked up and said, approvingly:
+
+"How do you do, Mary? That is a very nice new dress--quite suitable to
+you."
+
+After a minute she said, suddenly, as if the thought had just occurred
+to her:
+
+"By the way, you have never yet received any of your wages from me.
+Here are twenty dollars for two months. I am very glad you have taken
+such good care of Ruby."
+
+Golden thanked her and took the money, but the gold seemed to burn
+the delicate palm. It was hard to be receiving a servant's wages from
+Bertram Chesleigh's sister.
+
+"Where is papa and Uncle Bert?" asked Ruby.
+
+"Papa will be here directly. Bert is very tired--he has gone to his
+room to rest. You must not go to him yet."
+
+"And the young lady, mamma--she came?"
+
+"Oh, yes."
+
+"Is she pretty, mamma? Has she blue eyes, or black?"
+
+"She is decidedly handsome, and her eyes are black."
+
+"Do you like her, mamma?"
+
+"Quite well, dear. She is very charming. I will tell you a secret.
+Perhaps she will be your auntie some day."
+
+"Is she going to marry Uncle Bert?" inquired Ruby, wide-eyed.
+
+"Nothing is settled yet, dear. But it seems probable. Bert could not
+find a more brilliant Mrs. Chesleigh."
+
+"I do not wish for Uncle Bert to marry. I shall tell him so!" cried
+Ruby.
+
+"Fie, little selfishness, you will do no such thing! He ought to marry
+and settle down at home. We should not then have to be running after
+him in every out-of-the-way place where he chooses to fall sick. Here I
+have been by his sick-bed all summer, ruining my health and missing the
+whole season by the sea!"
+
+"How gladly I would have exchanged places with you," moaned little
+Golden, to herself.
+
+"Mamma, did you like Glenalvan Hall?" inquired Ruby.
+
+"Oh, very much, though it is little better than a ruin. It must have
+been quite a grand place once. It is beautiful still in its decay. The
+owners were ruined by the late war."
+
+Oh, how anxiously beautiful Golden longed to hear one word from her old
+grandfather and her black mammy. She listened with a beating heart to
+the lady's words, but she never named the two that little Golden loved
+so dearly, and after awhile she rose and said that Celine was waiting
+for her, and she must go.
+
+Little Ruby clung to her dress.
+
+"Mayn't I go?" she pleaded, and Mrs. Desmond yielding a smiling assent,
+they went away together, and left Golden alone in the room.
+
+Alone, with her young heart full of strange, troubled joy. Bertram
+Chesleigh was here, under the same roof with her.
+
+She should see him, she should hear him once again. There was a bitter,
+troubled pleasure in the thought.
+
+She could not bear the tumult of oppressive thoughts that rushed over
+her mind. To escape them she went in quest of Mrs. Markham, and paid
+her the money she had borrowed from her a few days before.
+
+Then she went back to the room to wait for little Ruby, but the child
+was so preoccupied with her friends that she did not return to her room
+during the day.
+
+At twilight she came flitting in joyously as a little fairy.
+
+"Oh, Mary, I have had such a charming day! And you must dress me now
+in my white lace dress over the pink satin slip, and my white satin
+slippers, and embroidered rose-silk stockings. I am going to stay up
+for the ball to-night. Won't that be splendid?"
+
+Golden looked a little anxiously at the moist, flushed face and
+shining, dark eyes.
+
+"Darling, let me persuade you to lie down on the sofa and rest awhile,"
+she urged. "You have had such a busy, exciting day, that you need rest.
+To-morrow you will have one of your bad headaches."
+
+"Oh, no I am not tired one bit. And mamma and Miss Glenalvan are gone
+to dress now. I must be ready when they call for me," urged Ruby.
+
+"I suppose Miss Glenalvan is very pretty, is she not, Ruby?" said
+Golden, as she combed and brushed the little girl's long, shining,
+black ringlets.
+
+"Oh, yes, she is very pretty--she has large, black eyes, and rosy
+cheeks, and splendid hair, but she is not beautiful like you, Mary,"
+was the prompt reply.
+
+"You must not let Miss Glenalvan hear you say that," said Golden. "She
+would be displeased."
+
+"Hump!" said Ruby, carelessly, then she flew to another subject, while
+Golden trembled nervously. "Uncle Bert is looking wretchedly ill. Ouch,
+Mary, what _did_ make you jerk that curl so? His eyes are as big as
+saucers. Are you almost done? You pull my hair dreadfully. I asked
+him if he was going to marry Miss Glenalvan. He said that was a silly
+question. Mary, what has come over you? You were never so rough with my
+head before."
+
+"There, it is finished now. I did not mean to hurt you; excuse me,
+dear," faltered Golden, as she laid out the white lace dress and satin
+slippers for the eager child.
+
+"All right, I am not angry," said Ruby. "I told Uncle Bert what a kind
+girl you were, and he was delighted to hear it. I wanted to tell him
+you were pretty, too, but I didn't, as you didn't want him to know
+_that_. But I can tell you one thing, Mary, if he ever sees you, he
+will find out for himself."
+
+"What! in this great cap and glasses?" cried Golden, alarmed.
+
+"Yes, indeed; you can't hide your round cheeks, and your red mouth, and
+your dimpled chin!" cried the child, in pretty triumph.
+
+"I can keep out of Mr. Chesleigh's way, anyhow," Golden replied, as she
+buttoned the pretty dress and clasped a slight gold chain around the
+white neck of the child.
+
+"Now you are quite finished," she said. "You look very sweet, and I
+hope you will enjoy yourself very much."
+
+"Thank you," said the little girl, impulsively kissing her; then she
+added, a little pityingly: "It is a pity _you_ cannot be dressed in
+white, and go to the ball, too, Mary. Do you never wish to?"
+
+"Sometimes," admitted Golden, with her sweet frankness, and a soft,
+little sigh.
+
+Ruby studied her attentively a moment, her dark head perched daintily
+like a bird's.
+
+"I should like to see you in a ball-dress," she said. "It should be a
+white lace over blue satin, and looped with violets. You should have
+large, white pearls around your neck, and your hair hanging down and a
+_bandeau_ of pearls to bind it. It is a great pity you are not rich,
+Mary. People say that you are too pretty to be a servant."
+
+Something like a sob rose in Golden's throat and was hardly repressed.
+They had told her this so often.
+
+She was beautiful, but it had only brought her sorrow. To her, as her
+mother, had been given--
+
+ "The fatal gift of beauty which became
+ A funeral dower of present woes and past."
+
+"I am very sorry I am so pretty, Ruby," she said, sorrowfully, and the
+child answered, quickly:
+
+"I would not be sorry if I were you, Mary. Some good man will fall in
+love with your pretty face some day and marry you."
+
+Golden made no reply to this well-meant solace, for the door opened to
+admit Mrs. Desmond, followed by her young lady guest.
+
+Golden retreated shyly to the furthest corner of the room. She was face
+to face at last with her haughty cousin Elinor. She drooped her head a
+moment sadly, while a flood of memories rushed over her, then bravely
+lifted it again and looked at the young lady through her disfiguring
+green glasses.
+
+Elinor Glenalvan only glanced with careless indifference at the
+prim-looking figure of the nurse, then her large, black eyes turned
+away again, so that Golden had time to observe her with impunity.
+
+The Glenalvans had exerted themselves to the utmost to secure an outfit
+for Elinor. The result did credit to their efforts. The girl was
+certainly dazzling.
+
+She wore cream-colored _moire_, trimmed with rich Spanish lace and
+cardinal satin. Great clusters of Jaqueminot roses burned on her bosom
+and in her shining, raven hair.
+
+The costly pearl necklace that John Glenalvan had taken from Golden was
+clasped around her white throat.
+
+A throb of resentment stirred the young girl's breast as she observed
+it.
+
+Mrs. Desmond wore white lace looped with diminutive and richly-colored
+sunflowers. Her jewels were diamonds, and she was as usual brilliantly
+beautiful and graceful. Golden caught her breath in awed admiration of
+the two beautiful women.
+
+"Are you ready, Ruby?" inquired Mrs. Desmond.
+
+"Yes, mamma," said the child, blithely.
+
+All three went out then, and Golden threw a dark shawl over her head
+and went out upon the seashore.
+
+It was a moonlight night, calm and still, with that slight chill in the
+air that comes with September.
+
+She sat down, a quiet, forlorn little figure on the lonely sands, and
+watched the great foam-capped waves rolling in to her feet.
+
+Something in the immensity and solemnity of the great ocean seemed to
+calm the turbulence of the fevered young heart and whisper a gentle
+"peace, be still," to the passions that racked her wronged and outraged
+spirit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+
+As Golden had feared, little Ruby's day and night of excitement proved
+too much for her. She was unable to rise from her bed the next morning,
+being prostrated by one of her nervous headaches.
+
+To add to her ill-feeling, damp, rainy weather set in during the night,
+spoiling all the pleasant plans of the newly-arrived party for the day.
+
+Golden darkened the room, lighted a fire on the hearth, and carefully
+tended the little patient who dozed fitfully until mid-day, when she
+awakened and declared herself better.
+
+"Has no one been in to see me, Mary?" she inquired, and Golden answered:
+
+"Yes, your mamma came to the door while you were sleeping, but went
+away again, saying that she would not disturb your rest."
+
+"You may go and tell her to come now, Mary."
+
+"I think she is with your uncle just now, dear. Cannot you wait a
+little while?" said Golden. "She said she would go to him a little
+while, as you were asleep.
+
+"No, I cannot wait," replied Ruby fretfully. "Tell mamma to bring Uncle
+Bert with her."
+
+"If you have too much company your head will ache again, Ruby."
+
+"No, it will not. It is ever so much better. Why don't you do as I ask
+you, Mary?" cried the spoiled child.
+
+Golden went out without any further objection. She asked Celine, whom
+she met in the hall, to deliver Ruby's message to her mother and her
+uncle.
+
+Celine looked into the sick-room a minute later to say that they were
+engaged just at present, but would come in about fifteen minutes.
+
+"Oh, dear," fretted the ailing little one, "that is a long time to
+wait. Give me my dolls, Mary. I'll try to amuse myself with them."
+
+Golden brought the miscellaneous family of dolls and ranged them around
+Ruby on the bed, chatting pleasantly to her the while in the hope of
+lessening the weariness of waiting.
+
+"You must keep your promise and let me go out when they come," she
+said, presently, feeling that she was growing so nervous she could not
+possibly remain in the same room with Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+"Very well; you may go into the next room," replied the child.
+
+"You may leave the door just a little ajar that I may call you when I
+want you."
+
+"I hope you will not want me until they are gone out again," replied
+Golden.
+
+When the expected rap came on the door, the girl opened it with a
+trembling hand. She did not look up as Mrs. Desmond and her brother
+entered, but softly closing the door after them, glided precipitately
+from the room.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh saw the little, retreating figure in the huge cap and
+gray gown, and laughed as he kissed his little niece.
+
+"I suppose that was Mary Smith, the prodigy?" he said.
+
+"Yes, and you must not laugh at her," said Ruby, a little resentfully.
+"She is very good and sweet, and I love her dearly."
+
+There was an element of teasing in Bertram Chesleigh's nature, and
+Ruby's words roused it into activity.
+
+"She looked very prim and starched," he observed. "She must be an old
+maid--is she not, Ruby?"
+
+He expected that the little girl would grow indignant at this comment
+on her favorite, but instead of this she puckered her little brows
+thoughtfully.
+
+"I don't quite know what you mean by an old maid," she replied.
+
+"You are caught in the trap, Bert. You will have to define yourself,"
+said Mrs. Desmond, laughingly.
+
+"I don't know whether I can," he replied as gayly. "But I think, Ruby,
+that an old maid is a person who--who doesn't like men, and grows old
+and never marries."
+
+"Then my nurse is an old maid. You guessed right, Uncle Bert," said the
+child, with perfect soberness.
+
+"Why do you think so, my dear?" inquired her mother, very much amused
+at the child's notion.
+
+"Because I know it, mamma. Mary Smith hates men. She told me she did.
+She does not like to be where men are. That is why she went out just
+now. She says she will always stay out of the room when Uncle Bert is
+with me."
+
+"That is very sensible indeed in Mary," said Mrs. Desmond, with decided
+approval, while Bertram Chesleigh only laughed and said that men were
+not ogres, and he would not have eaten Miss Smith even if she had
+remained in the room.
+
+Meanwhile Golden had retreated to the sitting-room, leaving the door
+ajar as Ruby had bidden her.
+
+Every word of the conversation which had so strangely turned upon
+herself was distinctly audible.
+
+She listened in fear and trembling to Ruby's disclosures regarding
+her antipathy to men, dreading to hear some further revelation that
+would draw suspicion upon her, but the child had no idea of imparting
+anything she had promised to keep a secret, and the conversation
+gradually turned upon indifferent subjects, so that Golden, whose heart
+was beating wildly at the sound of her lover's voice, ventured at last
+on a sly peep at him through the open door.
+
+The breath came thick and fast over the sweet parted lips as she
+gazed--hardly as he had used her, the ineffable love and pity of a
+woman's heart came up to the beautiful blue eyes, and shone out upon
+the unconscious ingrate who dreamed not whose eyes were yearning over
+him with all the pain and pathos of a loving, yet outraged heart.
+
+"Oh, how pale and ill he looks," cried the poor child to herself.
+"He looks sad and altered, too. He has suffered almost as much as I
+have. Was it that which made him ill, I wonder? After all, he loved me
+dearly. But if he had overlooked the shame of my birth and brought me
+here, his sister would have scorned me. Ought I to blame him so very,
+very much?"
+
+As she asked herself the piteous question, the memory of some words
+rose into her mind--solemn words not to be lightly forgotten.
+
+"Will you, forsaking all others, cleave only unto her, so long as ye
+both shall live?"
+
+By the light of those words, Golden answered her own question. With a
+tearless sob she turned her eyes away from the too dear face of the
+false one.
+
+But though she would not look at him, she could not help hearing his
+voice as he answered little Ruby's voluble chatter.
+
+Presently the child showed him her great, wax doll, and when he had
+admired it sufficiently to please her, she said with an air of mystery:
+
+"You could not guess dollie's name if you tried all day, Uncle Bertie."
+
+"It is something high-flown, no doubt," he laughed. "It is Queen
+Victoria, or Princess Louise, or something like that."
+
+"You are quite wrong," she replied, with sparkling eyes.
+
+"Am I? Well, I have it now. You have called her Mary Smith, after your
+old-maid nurse."
+
+"No, I have not," said the little one, merrily. "I have called her
+Golden--Golden Chesleigh."
+
+In the next breath she added, quickly:
+
+"Oh, Uncle Bert, what made you start just as if someone had shot you?"
+
+"Did I start?" he inquired. "It must have been because I am very
+nervous since my illness. Well, and what did you say your elegant doll
+was named?"
+
+"Did you not understand me before? It is Golden Chesleigh--Chesleigh
+after you, Uncle Bert. Is it not a pretty name?"
+
+"Very!" he rejoined, pale to the lips. "Did you think of it yourself,
+Ruby?"
+
+"Not at all; I asked Mary for a name, and she said Golden. Then I added
+Chesleigh."
+
+Some curiosity came over him to see the good nurse who loved Ruby and
+was kind to her, but who hated men, and who had chosen for the pretty
+wax doll, the sweet and unusual name of Golden.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There came a light tap on the outer door. Mrs. Desmond rose to open it.
+Golden peeped again and saw her cousin Elinor coming in.
+
+"May I come in and see the invalid?" she asked, brightly, and Bertram
+Chesleigh answered:
+
+"Yes, do, Miss Glenalvan. Ruby is better and is holding a levee of her
+humble subjects."
+
+Elinor kissed the child and sat down as near as she dared to Mr.
+Chesleigh.
+
+She looked very bright and blooming, and her dress was as usual
+fashionable and becoming.
+
+Golden could see that Mrs. Desmond regarded her with a real fondness.
+Elinor had found out the lady's weakness and played upon it skillfully.
+
+She saw that she was jealous of her husband, and immediately affected
+an indifference to, and an utter obliviousness of the fascinations of
+the handsome Mr. Desmond, that delighted his wife and drew her heart to
+Elinor.
+
+Clare, on the contrary, had an uncontrollable propensity for flirting,
+and took a malicious pleasure in witnessing the grand lady's silent
+rage at her walks and talks, and careless enjoyment of her flippant
+husband's society.
+
+The result was that Elinor received a charmingly worded invitation to
+return to the north with Mrs. Desmond, while Clare was silently and
+chillingly ignored.
+
+She was bitterly angry at missing the trip, and sorely repented her
+weakness, but too late for the repentance to avail, while Elinor was
+transported with delight.
+
+Surely, she thought, a whole winter in New York, with beautiful Golden
+out of the way, would be sufficient for the accomplishment of her
+designs upon Bertram Chesleigh's heart.
+
+Sweet Golden read her cousin's purpose plainly in the tender glances
+she gave Mr. Chesleigh now and then, from beneath her black-fringed
+lashes, and the heart of the innocent girl sank heavily.
+
+"She will win him from me," she said, drearily to herself. "Elinor is
+so beautiful, and graceful, and brilliant, it is a wonder that he ever
+liked me better than he did her. It was but a light fancy after all,
+perhaps. He will forget it and turn to her."
+
+The thought gave her inexpressible pain.
+
+She sank upon the floor and hid her face in her hands, weeping silent
+and bitter tears while the hum of gay talk and laughter flowed on
+unheeded in the next room.
+
+So it is ever in the busy, jostling world. Sorrow and joy go side by
+side.
+
+The bridal train meets the funeral procession. Life is mingled sunshine
+and shadow.
+
+Ah, if Bertram Chesleigh could only have known what true and faithful
+little heart was breaking so near him.
+
+After awhile the brightness died from Ruby's eyes, the little face
+looked tired and wan. She said, almost petulantly:
+
+"Now I shall send you all away. Miss Glenalvan laughs so much she makes
+my head ache."
+
+"Fie, my darling," cried her mother.
+
+"It is the truth, mamma," cried the willful little girl. "I want you
+all to go now and Mary shall bathe my head until I get better."
+
+"Who is Mary? I feel quite jealous of her," said Elinor, sweetly, but
+inwardly raging at the spoiled child's "whims" as she termed them to
+herself.
+
+"Mary is my nurse," said the child, and her uncle laughingly added:
+
+"A person with antipathy to me, Miss Glenalvan. You should cultivate
+her. She must be a _rara avis_."
+
+"Do you suppose that all women admire your sex, sir?" retorted the
+young lady, spiritedly, and they left the room exchanging lively
+_badinage_, while Mrs. Desmond looked inside the other door for Golden.
+
+She saw her sitting quietly, her sweet face bent over some sewing, no
+trace apparent of the heartache she was silently enduring.
+
+"Mary, you may come to your charge now," she said with so much more
+than her usual kindness of tone that Golden's delicate lip quivered.
+Mrs. Desmond had been pleased to hear that Ruby's beautiful nurse
+disliked men and was not willing to remain in the room with one.
+
+She laid aside her sewing and went in to Ruby. Mrs. Desmond bent to
+kiss her pet, and said, fondly:
+
+"Shall I stay and bathe your head, love?"
+
+"No, mamma, I would rather have Mary," she replied.
+
+"I shall be jealous of Mary. You are so fond of her," the mother
+rejoined as she left the room.
+
+Golden put the dolls away and bathed the brow of the little sufferer
+until she fell into a deep and quiet sleep.
+
+Then she sat near the window and watched the gloomy September rain
+pattering drearily down, and the white mist rising from the sea.
+
+The door opened and Celine came in softly, and sat down.
+
+"I want to talk to you a little, Mary," she said, in her low voice.
+"Shall I disturb the child?"
+
+"Not if you talk softly," replied Golden, hoping that Celine would tell
+her something about Glenalvan Hall.
+
+She was not disappointed, for the maid said at once:
+
+"I want to tell you about a queer old black woman I saw at that place
+where Mr. Chesleigh was ill--Glenalvan Hall," watching her narrowly.
+
+Golden started and looked up eagerly.
+
+"Yes, tell me about her, Celine," she said, with repressed excitement.
+
+"Well, to begin with," said Celine, "she was a most ridiculous-looking
+old creature, full of grumblings and complaints. This old creature when
+she found I was from New York, came to me secretly, and asked me the
+oddest question."
+
+Golden, chancing to look up at that moment, met Celine's eyes fixed
+upon her with such a strange expression that her heart gave a
+frightened bound. It was evident that the maid had some suspicions of
+her.
+
+She forced a calmness she did not feel, and replied carelessly:
+
+"The blacks, you know, Celine, are very ignorant. Their questions
+appear quite ridiculous sometimes to intelligent and well-informed
+people."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+
+Celine looked cunningly at Golden, as she made her confused explanation.
+
+"You seem to be well acquainted with the character of the negroes," she
+said. "Perhaps you have been in the south."
+
+"I have," replied Golden, with sudden, pretty defiance. "It was my
+birth-place."
+
+"Where? Glenalvan Hall?" asked Celine, thinking to catch her.
+
+"I did not say that," replied Golden, coolly.
+
+"No? Well, I will tell you what that old woman--Dinah, she was called,
+asked me about a young lady."
+
+Golden lifted her eyes and regarded her bravely.
+
+"Well?" she said.
+
+"She asked me," continued Celine, "if I had seen a young girl in New
+York of about sixteen, with large, blue eyes, and long, golden curls,
+dressed in a blue cashmere dress, and hat and jacket, I told her yes,
+for her description of the lady's appearance corresponded exactly with
+yours."
+
+Golden remained perfectly silent, her eyes turned resolutely from
+Celine.
+
+"She asked me," the maid continued, "if the young girl had found her
+mother."
+
+Golden could not repress a sudden, violent start.
+
+"Aha," cried Celine, quickly. "You see I am acquainted with your whole
+history!"
+
+"You know nothing about me whatever, Celine," replied Golden, warmly,
+"and I cannot see by what right you pry into my affairs."
+
+"Oh, well, if we are so hoity-toity, we can keep our secret," returned
+Celine, scornfully, "but somebody will find that it was better to have
+made a friend than an enemy of Celine Duval!"
+
+With these ambiguous words, Celine bounced out of the room, leaving
+poor little Golden terribly frightened and distressed.
+
+She silently resolved that she would leave Mrs. Desmond the next day,
+proceed to New York, and make an effort to find her mother.
+
+Meanwhile the irate maid had gone to Elinor's room. Mrs. Desmond had
+kindly promised to allow Celine to superintend her toilet while they
+remained at the seaside, and she was waiting now for the Frenchwoman to
+arrange her hair.
+
+Celine had become possessed of Golden's secret, and she was determined
+to make capital out of it for herself.
+
+Elinor was quite chatty and confidential with the skillful French maid.
+In a very few moments while she was braiding the young lady's hair she
+had dropped a few artful hints and innuendoes that made Elinor start up
+half wild with fear and terror.
+
+"Oh, no, Celine, you must have imagined it. It is too incredible to
+believe!"
+
+"I do not ask you to believe _my_ simple word, Miss Glenalvan," replied
+Celine. "Look at the girl yourself, ma'am, and then you can tell me if
+my suspicions are well founded."
+
+Elinor looked at her blankly for a moment. The maid returned her gaze
+with unruffled serenity.
+
+"Only take a good look at her yourself, miss," she repeated.
+
+"How am I to do so without exciting her suspicions?" demanded Elinor.
+
+"Easily enough," replied the wily French maid. "Go back to the room and
+pretend to have lost some trifle. Get her to go down on her knees to
+find it and you can obtain a good look into her face."
+
+Elinor Glenalvan waited for no more. Clenching her small hands
+vindictively, and with an evil look on her handsome face, she hurried
+out into the corridor and made her way to Ruby's room.
+
+She turned the handle softly and looked in. The child lay on the bed
+sleeping peacefully, and Golden remained at the window peering out
+through the half-open blind at the dismal prospect, her red lips
+quivering grievously, her sweet blue eyes dim with unshed tears.
+
+She started up nervously as her cousin came in abruptly and closed the
+door.
+
+Elinor looked into her face and her heart grave a great, frightened
+bound. She recognized the beautiful face instantly in spite of the
+disfiguring cap and glasses.
+
+Controlling her rage by a violent effort, she observed with comparative
+calmness:
+
+"I have lost a gold cuff-button, Mary, and thought perhaps I had
+dropped it in here. Have you seen it?"
+
+Golden answered her with a shrinking negative, and Elinor continued:
+
+"I am almost certain that I dropped it in this room. Perhaps it has
+rolled beneath the bed. Will you get down and look under it, Mary?"
+
+Golden complied without a word, and Elinor had the desired opportunity
+of looking at the girl's face.
+
+In another moment, half beside herself with jealous rage, she caught
+the cap and glasses from Golden's head and face, and cried out in low,
+hoarse accents of intense passion:
+
+"Golden Glenalvan, you shameless creature, what are you doing here?"
+
+Golden sprang to her feet and looked at her heartless cousin in
+momentary terrified silence.
+
+"What are you doing here?" Elinor repeated, in a voice of raging scorn.
+"Did you wish to advertise your disgrace to Bertram Chesleigh's sister?"
+
+"Disgrace?" faltered the poor, heart-broken child.
+
+"Yes, your disgrace. It is plain enough to be seen!" cried Elinor,
+pointing a scornful finger at her cousin, who had dropped into a chair
+and hid her blushing face in her small hands. "Did you come here that
+Mrs. Desmond might learn the full measure of her brother's sin?"
+
+Golden looked up with tear-wet, blue eyes into the blazing orbs of the
+angry girl.
+
+"Elinor, I did not know she was his sister until after I came," she
+murmured, pleadingly.
+
+"But when you found it out, why did you not go away?" Elinor demanded,
+sharply.
+
+"I had nowhere to go--I was friendless and penniless. What could I do
+but stay?" moaned Golden.
+
+"You should have drowned yourself. You are not fit to live, you wicked,
+deceitful girl. So you were Mr. Chesleigh's mistress after all,
+although you swore that you were pure and innocent!" blazed Elinor.
+
+"I am innocent! I was never Bertram Chesleigh's mistress!" Golden
+cried. "I am his own true----" she stopped with a moan of anguish. "Go,
+I must not tell--I must keep my promise! Oh, Elinor, you are my cousin.
+Do not be so hard and cruel!"
+
+"How dare you claim me as your cousin?" cried Elinor, angrily, "Get up
+from the floor and stop making a simpleton of yourself. You have got to
+go away from here. Do you understand me?"
+
+Golden rose to her feet and looked steadily into Elinor's face with
+flashing blue eyes.
+
+A spirit was roused within her that quite equaled her cousin's.
+
+"Elinor," she answered, "I understand you, but let me tell you here
+and now, that I defy your commands. You have no authority over me, and
+I am the mistress of my own actions. I shall remain in Mrs. Desmond's
+service as long as I choose to do so. Your whole treatment of me has
+been such as to merit no consideration at my hands, and it shall
+receive none."
+
+If angry looks could have killed, little Golden would never have
+survived her defiant speech, for Elinor's dark eyes glared upon her
+with the deadly fury of an enraged tigress.
+
+"You will not go," she hissed. "Perhaps you think to stay here and
+resume your old sinful relations with Bertram Chesleigh."
+
+Before Golden could reply to the cruel taunt, there was an unthought-of
+interruption.
+
+Little Ruby, awakened by Elinor's angry tones, sprang upright in the
+bed, and cried out in the utmost surprise and resentment.
+
+"What is the matter? Why are you scolding my nurse, Miss Glenalvan?"
+
+Elinor turned to Ruby with an instantaneous change of manner.
+
+"Why, you little darling," she cried, with honeyed sweetness, "what
+an absurd idea! You must have dreamed it all. I was only asking Mary
+about a gold cuff-button I had dropped on the floor. I am very sorry I
+disturbed you in your refreshing sleep."
+
+She left the room before the child could challenge her plausible
+excuse, and returned to Celine.
+
+"I was right, ma'am," the maid cried, triumphantly. "I see it in your
+face."
+
+Elinor dropped into a chair, and the change in her face was quite
+striking enough to have excited the woman's exclamation.
+
+She was as white as death, her black eyes gleamed with vindictive rage,
+her thin lips were set in a cruel line.
+
+"Yes, you were right," she said, in a low, intense voice, "Celine, that
+girl must go away from here."
+
+"Did you tell her so?" asked the woman.
+
+"Yes, and," helplessly, "she defied me. Oh, what am I to do?"
+
+"She would not go for you?"
+
+"No she is determined to stay. But," passionately, "she must go, and go
+this very day. If she remains, and Mr. Chesleigh sees her, all is lost.
+He will recognize her instantly."
+
+"I expect you would give a great deal to get the girl out of your way,"
+said the maid, artfully.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+
+Elinor lifted her flashing eyes, and looked at the maid, struck by her
+significantly-uttered words.
+
+"Yes," she answered, boldly, "I would give anything I possess to anyone
+who would remove her from my path without my agency being known in the
+matter."
+
+"You would not care by what means?" asked Celine.
+
+"No," declared the young lady.
+
+Celine turned the key in the lock, and coming nearer to Elinor,
+whispered softly:
+
+"What will you give me, Miss Glenalvan, if I will have the girl driven
+out under a disgraceful ban this very night?"
+
+"Can you do it?" inquired Elinor, eagerly.
+
+"Easily," was the confident reply, "if you will make it worth my while
+to do so."
+
+Elinor revolved the words a moment in her mind. She saw that Celine's
+services would have to be amply requited, otherwise the selfish
+creature would not trouble herself to help her out of her difficulty.
+
+"You know I am not well off, Celine," she said, "but father has
+promised to send me some money this month to buy my winter outfit.
+To tell the truth I shall need every cent of it, for I've scarcely a
+decent thing to wear this winter, but if you will get the girl away
+before Mr. Chesleigh sees her, I will divide my allowance with you."
+
+
+"How much money has your father agreed to send you?" inquired the
+rapacious woman.
+
+"Three hundred dollars," replied Elinor, "and I will give you one-half
+of it if you will do me this service."
+
+She felt as if she making a very liberal offer, and was surprised when
+the Frenchwoman shook her head.
+
+"A hundred and fifty would not pay me for the trouble," she said,
+conclusively.
+
+Elinor looked at her a little blankly.
+
+"But don't you understand. Celine, that I cannot spare any more?" she
+said. "I must keep enough to buy a decent dress and hat and cloak for
+the winter."
+
+"That matters not to me," replied Celine, with the utmost indifference.
+"You must either give me the whole three hundred or I will not help
+you."
+
+Elinor was angered and amazed at the woman's shameless rapacity.
+
+"I will not do it!" she exclaimed, "I dare say Golden will go away of
+herself; anyhow, I do not intend to be fleeced so shamelessly."
+
+"As you please, miss," replied the maid coolly. She had the game in
+her own hands, and was insolently aware of the fact. "I'm not anxious
+to accommodate you, I dare say I could make more by selling my secret.
+Don't you think Mr. Chesleigh would give me a thousand dollars for
+telling him where to find his missing sweetheart?"
+
+Elinor grew frightened and acquiescent all in a moment at Celine's
+baleful threat.
+
+"Oh, Celine, don't do that," she cried, "I was only joking when I said
+I would not do it. You shall have every dollar of the money if you will
+get Golden away to-night as you said you would."
+
+"I thought I should bring you to your senses," muttered Celine, then
+she added aloud:
+
+"Thank you, miss. Are you sure that your father will send the money?"
+
+"He promised to do so without fail," replied Elinor.
+
+"And you will really hand it over to me as soon as received?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then you may consider the little marplot gone. In less than an hour
+you will see her leaving this hotel followed by Mrs. Desmond's curse,"
+replied Celine, with perfect confidence in her power of executing the
+task she had undertaken.
+
+"What do you mean? How will you accomplish it?" inquired Elinor.
+
+"Never mind about that, I will do as I said, never fear. Are you done
+with me now, Miss Glenalvan? If you are I will go to Mrs. Desmond. She
+will need me to do her hair."
+
+"You may go, Celine," replied the young lady. "Now be sure," a little
+nervously, "that you do not implicate _me_ in the affair."
+
+"Trust me for managing everything all right," was the airy reply.
+
+She went out and made her way to the dressing-room of her mistress.
+
+Mrs. Desmond was sitting before the dressing-table with a small
+jewel-casket open in her lap.
+
+She was turning over some pretty rings with her white fingers.
+
+Celine went up to the table and began to get out the combs and brushes.
+
+"Are you ready for me to do your hair?" she inquired.
+
+"In a moment," replied Mrs. Desmond. "I am looking over my rings now.
+I want to select one of the neatest and plainest for a present to
+someone."
+
+Celine simpered and coughed. She fully expected to become the fortunate
+recipient.
+
+"I must confess that I have been mistaken for once," continued
+Mrs. Desmond, half to herself. "When the girl came here first, I
+was prejudiced against her, partly because she was so pretty and
+childish-looking, and again because we had had so many hateful nurses,
+I thought she must necessarily be like them. But I was for once happily
+mistaken. She has been so humble and unobtrusive, and endeared herself
+so much to my little girl, that I must really reward her for her good
+care of my darling during my absence."
+
+"Of whom are you speaking, ma'am?" inquired Celine, green with envy, as
+the lady paused, having selected a plain, gold band, set with a single,
+shining, white pearl.
+
+"Of Mary Smith," Mrs. Desmond replied, "and I am going to give her this
+ring in token of my respect for her good character, and my gratitude
+for the really motherly care which she has taken of my dear, frail,
+little Ruby."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+
+At Mrs. Desmond's kindly-spoken words, Celine heaved a deep sigh and
+remained silent. The lady glanced up at her in some surprise.
+
+"What is the matter, Celine?" she inquired. "Do you not think I am
+right to acknowledge my appreciation of her valuable services?"
+
+The maid only sighed more deeply, casting down her eyes as if in great
+distress.
+
+"I hope you are not jealous, Celine," continued her mistress. "You know
+I have given you many such testimonials of my favor."
+
+"Yes, that you have, and I'm not jealous--not a bit, dear mistress,"
+cried Celine; "but, oh, dear, oh, dear! that you should have been so
+cruelly deceived and betrayed."
+
+"Celine, what do you mean?" asked the lady, disturbed.
+
+"Oh, my dear lady, I hate to grieve you, but I can't bear to see you
+imposed upon any longer by that shameless girl! Oh, my dear mistress,
+where are your eyes that you can't see her disgrace? Oh, how I wish I
+had told all I knew at first!" cried Celine, wringing her hands, while
+tears fell from her eyes.
+
+Mrs. Desmond sprang up and caught her by the arm excitedly.
+
+"Speak! What is it that you know?" she cried, passionately. "Have I
+been deceived in Mary Smith?"
+
+"Yes, my dear lady--most cruelly deceived!" exclaimed Celine.
+
+"But she has certainly been kind to the child. Else Ruby would have
+complained," said Mrs. Desmond in perplexity.
+
+"Oh, yes, she was kind to the child, I admit, but it was all for a
+blind. And all the--all the while--oh, Mrs. Desmond, if you could only
+understand without my telling it," cried Celine, breaking off abruptly,
+with an appearance of grief and reluctance.
+
+The passionate, jealous heart of the listener caught the artful bait
+instantly.
+
+She gasped for breath, her brilliant face whitened to a marble pallor,
+and she caught at the back of a chair to steady herself.
+
+If Celine had not been utterly selfish and pitiless she must have
+retracted her cruel lie in the face of that utter despair on the
+beautiful face of her mistress. But the greed of gold overpowered every
+other consideration in her base mind.
+
+"Celine," the startled woman broke out, "do you mean to say that--my
+husband----" she paused, and her blazing eyes searched the woman's face.
+
+"Your husband loves her--alas, yes, my poor, deceived mistress," cried
+the maid. "The deceitful creature has won his heart from you."
+
+There was a moment's silence while Mrs. Desmond groped blindly in her
+mind for some tangible proof on which to pin her faith in her beloved
+husband.
+
+"Celine, you must be mistaken," she exclaimed. "You know we have been
+away from home almost the whole time since the girl came to us. She has
+had no chance with my husband."
+
+"Alas, Mrs. Desmond, you force me to tell you," sighed Celine. "Know,
+then, that it all began before you went south to Mr. Chesleigh. The
+very day after she came I caught Mr. Desmond kissing Mary Smith, with
+his arms around her waist."
+
+"Celine, will you swear to this?" gasped the unhappy wife.
+
+"I will take my Bible oath to its truth," was the emphatic reply.
+
+"Then God help me," moaned the stricken woman. "Celine, why did you not
+tell me all this before?"
+
+"I was afraid of master's anger," she replied. "He threatened me and I
+promised not to tell. Oh, my dear lady, will you promise to shield me
+from his wrath? I could not see you so imposed on any longer."
+
+"So the affair has been going on from bad to worse, Celine?" inquired
+her mistress, faintly.
+
+"Yes, my dear mistress. You remember how anxious he was to return
+to New York and take little Miss Ruby to the seashore. It was
+all an excuse to get back to the nurse. And since we came back
+yesterday--well, I've told enough already. Are you angry with me, my
+dear, injured lady?" inquired Celine breaking off, artfully, just
+where she really had nothing more to tell, unless she had fabricated a
+wholesale lie.
+
+Mrs. Desmond shook her head and remained silent. The maid was
+disappointed. She had expected a wild outpouring of anger from the
+jealous wife, but instead she preserved an ominous quiet.
+
+Her head drooped on her bosom, her face was colorless as death, her
+wild, burning, dark eyes were the only signs of life in her.
+
+Celine was a little startled at the effect of her wickedness. She
+brought some _eau de cologne_, and tried to bathe the face of her
+mistress but was quickly motioned away.
+
+"Go, Celine, send that girl here to me," she said, speaking in a dry,
+hard, unnatural voice.
+
+The maid went out, and Mrs. Desmond waited but a moment before the door
+unclasped and little Golden entered. She paused in the middle of the
+room, and said in her gentle voice:
+
+"You sent for me, Mrs. Desmond?"
+
+Mrs. Desmond lifted her eyes and looked at the beautiful girl whom she
+believed to be the wicked destroyer of her happiness. Golden shrank
+before the withering scorn of that look.
+
+"Oh, madam, is anything the matter?" she faltered.
+
+Mrs. Desmond rose and towered above her in all the dignity of her
+insulted wifehood.
+
+"Oh, no," she said, in a low, deep voice of concentrated passion,
+"there is very little the matter--only this trifle. You have
+shamelessly robbed me of my husband."
+
+"Madam!" cried Golden, in alarm and consternation.
+
+"You need not pretend innocence--you cannot deceive me," cried the
+outraged wife. "You have won his heart, you have stolen him from me,
+and you have forever ruined my life."
+
+"Oh, madam, who has told you this dreadful tale? It is not true.
+I would sooner die than wrong you," cried Golden, with pitiful
+earnestness.
+
+"Hush, do not lie to me," exclaimed Mrs. Desmond, lifting and pointing
+a scornful finger at the shrinking form. "Your looks declare your
+shame. Go, leave the house this moment wretched creature, before in my
+madness I lay violent hands on you!"
+
+But Golden did not go. She knelt down before her angry accuser, and
+looked up at her pleadingly.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Desmond, you are mistaken! You wrong me bitterly by such a
+suspicion!" she cried, with the tears streaming down her fair cheeks.
+
+"Wrong you!" Mrs. Desmond cried, "are you not then----" she bent and
+fairly hissed the remaining words into the girl's ear. Golden threw up
+her hands with a cry of dismay.
+
+"Oh, my God, this is too horrible!" she wailed, "how can I bear it?"
+
+"Did I not speak the truth?" Mrs. Desmond demanded.
+
+"It is true, madam, I cannot deny it," replied the girl, crimson with
+burning blushes, "but I--oh, I call Heaven to witness my truth, Mrs.
+Desmond, I am nothing to your husband, I was--was--married before I
+came to you."
+
+"Then where is your husband?"
+
+"I cannot tell," faltered the white lips.
+
+"That is strange," said Mrs. Desmond, scornfully. "Has he left you?"
+
+"Yes, madam," with a pitiful droop of the fair head.
+
+"Why did he do so?" inquired the lady
+
+"I cannot tell you," Golden murmured, sorrowfully.
+
+Ah, if Mrs. Desmond had only known the truth, that it was her brother's
+wife kneeling there ashamed and dejected before her. But she did not
+dream it, and her anger rose at the girl's unsatisfactory replies to
+her questions.
+
+"I will not ask you any more questions," she said, "I do not wish to
+hear more of your weak falsehoods. Get up from there, and go. Leave the
+house now and at once, before I publish your conduct to everyone. You
+need not go to Mrs. Markham for sympathy. I shall go to her at once and
+tell her what you are."
+
+Golden stood still, staring at her blankly a moment. She was dazed and
+frightened at the shameful suspicion that had fallen upon her, and she
+did not know how to convince Mrs. Desmond of her innocence.
+
+"Oh, madam, if I could only induce you to believe that I am not the
+vile creature you think me," she cried in anguish.
+
+"Hush; leave the room!" Mrs. Desmond answered stormily. "Go, and take
+with you the bitterest curse of an injured woman. May the good God
+speedily avenge my cruel wrongs!"
+
+She crossed to the door, threw it open, and pointed silently to it.
+
+Golden obeyed the mute sentence of her lifted finger and glided out,
+a forlorn, little figure, feeling almost annihilated by the vivid
+lightning of Mrs. Desmond's angry eyes.
+
+The door slammed heavily behind her, and she walked along through the
+brightly lighted hotel corridor, for the twilight had fallen long ago.
+
+The rain was falling heavily, and Golden shrank and trembled at the
+thought of encountering the black, inclement night. The thought came to
+her--why should she go?
+
+She was ill, friendless, almost penniless. It was her husband's right
+to protect her.
+
+And here she was passing his very door. Should she not appeal to him
+for comfort in this terrible hour?
+
+Her trembling limbs refused to carry her past his door. She turned the
+handle with a weak and trembling hand and stepped over the threshold.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+
+When Golden on the impulse of the moment had entered the room that she
+knew was Bertram Chesleigh's, she stood frightened and trembling inside
+the closed door, afraid to look up at first at the man who had treated
+her so cruelly.
+
+Gathering courage at the shuddering remembrance of the terrors that
+awaited her in the darkness of the gloomy night outside, she looked up
+at last, determined to make at least one appeal to her husband.
+
+The gas had been lighted and it threw a flood of brightness over every
+object in the room.
+
+On a sofa at the further end Bertram Chesleigh lay sleeping in a
+careless position, as if he had just thrown himself down, wearied and
+overcome with fatigue.
+
+The jet-black hair was tossed carelessly back from his high, white
+brow, and the thick, dark lashes lay heavily upon his cheeks, as if his
+slumber was deep and dreamless.
+
+A small table was drawn closely to his side, littered with writing
+materials, and a pen with the ink scarcely dried upon it, lay beside a
+letter just stamped and sealed, and addressed to:
+
+ RICHARD LEITH.
+ No. ---- Park Avenue, New York.
+
+As Golden glided across the room, and paused, with her small hand
+resting upon the table, the superscription of the letter caught her
+eyes by the merest chance. She started, caught it up in her hand and
+scanned it eagerly.
+
+"Richard Leith," she read, and her voice trembled with eagerness. "How
+strange! Why is he writing to Richard Leith?"
+
+She glanced at the sleeper, but not the quiver of an eyelash betrayed
+disturbance at her presence.
+
+She drew a slip of paper toward her, and neatly copied the address from
+the letter, placing it securely in her little purse.
+
+Then she paused, turning another wistful glance from the letter which
+she still held in her hand, to the pale, handsome face of the husband
+who had discarded her because she had been born to a heritage of shame.
+
+She wondered again if Bertram Chesleigh knew Richard Leith, and why he
+had written to him, but no thought of the truth came into her mind, or
+how gladly she would have flown to the quiet sleeper and folded him in
+her loving arms, and sobbed out her gladness on his broad breast.
+
+Instead she stood gazing at him a few moments in troubled silence, the
+tear-drops hanging like pearls on her thick, golden lashes, her breast
+heaving with suppressed sighs.
+
+Then she turned and went out of the room, her first impulse to awaken
+him having been diverted into another course by her opportune discovery
+of the address of the man whom she believed to be her father.
+
+"Bertram would only despise and defy me if I appealed to him, perhaps,"
+she murmured, "I will seek my misguided mother instead."
+
+She gave him one sad, reproachful glance and hurried out of the room.
+
+As she closed the door it inadvertently slammed and awakened the
+sleeper. He started up, confusedly passing his hand across his brow,
+and looking up for the person whom he supposed had entered the room.
+
+"I distinctly heard the door slam," he said to himself. "Someone either
+entered or left the room."
+
+But as no one appeared, he concluded that someone had entered, and
+finding him asleep, had gone out again.
+
+He crossed to the door and looked out into the lighted corridor.
+
+No one was visible, and he was about to close the door again, when his
+sister Edith came suddenly in sight.
+
+He waited until she came up to him, her dark silk dress rustling as she
+moved hurriedly along.
+
+"Come in, Edith," he said. "I am sorry I was asleep when you came in
+just now. Why did you not awaken me? I was only dozing. The closing of
+the door awakened me instantly."
+
+She looked up at him in surprise, and then he saw that her brilliant
+face was quite pale, and her dark eyes had a strange, unnatural glare
+in them.
+
+"I have not been in your room since morning," she replied. "What made
+you think so, Bert?"
+
+"Someone must have come in and gone out again, for I was awakened by
+the closing of the door, and I thought at first it must have been you.
+Doubtless it was only a servant. It does not matter. But, Edith, has
+anything happened? You look pale and strange."
+
+She threw herself down into a chair, and her unnatural calm gave way to
+a flood of tears.
+
+Mr. Chesleigh was shocked and distressed. He bent over her and
+entreated her to tell him the cause of her grief.
+
+Checking her tears by a great effort of will, Mrs. Desmond told him all
+that had passed.
+
+"I will never live with Mr. Desmond again," she said, passionately,
+when she had finished her story. "Ever since we married he has outraged
+my love and my pride by his glaring flirtations, but this last affair
+is too grievous and shameful to be tamely endured. I hate him for his
+falsehood and infidelity, and I will never live with him again!"
+
+"Edith, think of the scandal, the notoriety, if you leave your
+husband," he remonstrated.
+
+"I do not care," she replied, her dark eyes blazing with wrath and
+defiance; "let them say what they will; I will not tamely endure such a
+cruel insult! You must make some arrangement for me, Bertie, for I will
+never, never live with Mr. Desmond again!"
+
+And Bertram Chesleigh, with his heart on fire at his beloved sister's
+wrongs and his brain puzzled over the best way to right them, little
+dreamed that his own weakness and wrong-doing had been the sole cause
+of her sorrow. His fiery indignation was spent upon his brother-in-law
+when it should have been bestowed upon himself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+
+"I will not go in to bid little Ruby farewell," Golden said to herself
+sadly, as she left the room of Bertram Chesleigh. "The little one loves
+me and I could not bear her grief at parting with me. I will slip into
+the next room without her knowledge, get my hat and jacket, and go away
+quietly. When I am gone, perhaps Mrs. Desmond may become reconciled to
+her husband."
+
+She did not dream that the proud woman's anger and resentment against
+her husband would carry her to the length of a separation with him.
+
+She donned her hat and jacket, and tied her few articles of clothing
+into a compact bundle. Taking them in her hand, she stole noiselessly
+out, and made her way to the lower portico of the great hotel.
+
+She paused there, a little dismayed, and looked out at the black and
+starless night with the chill September drizzle falling ceaselessly.
+She would be obliged to walk two miles through the storm to take the
+midnight train for New York.
+
+It would have been perfectly easy to have hired a conveyance but she
+had only nine dollars left in her purse after discharging her debt to
+Mrs. Markham, and not knowing how much her fare to the city might be,
+she was afraid to waste a penny in hack hire.
+
+She decided that she must walk, so, unfurling her small sun-umbrella
+as some slight protection against the beating rain, she plunged with a
+shiver into the wet and darkness of the untoward night.
+
+She groped along wearily in the dreary road, scarcely conscious of her
+physical discomfort and peril in the agonizing pain and humiliation
+that ached at her heart. She had been driven forth under the ban of
+cruel shame and disgrace.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh would hear the story of Ruby's wicked, deceitful
+nurse, and would hate her memory, little thinking that it was his own
+wretched wife, and that she had borne Mrs. Desmond's angry charge
+without defending herself, and all for his sake, because he was too
+proud to acknowledge her claim on him.
+
+The weary walk was accomplished at last, and Golden waited several
+hours in her wet and draggled garments in the fireless room at the
+station for the train that was to take her to New York.
+
+It came at last, and in a few more miserable hours she was safe in the
+city. She found, after paying her fare, that she had enough left to pay
+for a bed and breakfast at a hotel, and gladly availed herself of the
+privilege.
+
+Wretched and impatient as she felt, her overstrained mind yielded to
+the physical weakness that was stealing over her, and she slept soundly
+for several hours. Rising, refreshed and strengthened, she made a
+substantial breakfast and sallied for No. ---- Park Avenue. She hardly
+knew what she would do when she arrived there, but the conviction was
+strong upon her that she must go.
+
+She had no difficulty in finding the number. The house was large and
+elegant, with a flight of brown stone steps in front. Golden climbed
+them a little timidly, and rang the bell.
+
+The servant in waiting stared at her cheap attire a little
+superciliously as he opened the door, but when she inquired if Mrs.
+Leith were at home his aspect changed.
+
+"Oh, you are come in answer to the advertisement for a maid," he said.
+"Yes, my mistress is at home, and she will see you at once. Come this
+way."
+
+Golden followed him in silence to the lady's dressing-room. The thought
+came to her that this would be an admirable pretext for making the
+acquaintance of the Leiths, so she did not deny that she was seeking a
+situation.
+
+A beautiful, golden-haired lady opened the door at her timid knock. The
+girl's heart gave a great, muffled throb.
+
+"My mother," she thought.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+
+"Mrs. Leith, this is a young woman who has answered the advertisement
+for a maid," said the man, respectfully, as he turned away.
+
+The beautiful lady nodded Golden to a seat, and looked at her with
+careless condescension.
+
+"What is your name?" she inquired.
+
+"Mary Smith," answered the girl in a low, fluttering voice.
+
+"Have you any recommendations?"
+
+"Not as a maid, as the occupation is new to me. I have been a nurse
+heretofore, but if you will try me I will do my best to please you,"
+said Golden, anxiously.
+
+"I am very hard to please," said Mrs. Leith.
+
+She did not tell Golden that she was so very hard to please that no one
+could suit her, leaving her to find that out for herself, as she would
+be sure to do if she remained.
+
+There was a moment's silence, and Golden gravely regarded Mrs. Leith.
+She was _petite_ and graceful in form, with large, blue eyes, waving
+masses of golden hair, and beautifully-moulded features. She was barely
+thirty years old in appearance, and was richly and becomingly attired.
+
+Yet Golden shivered and trembled as she regarded the fair, smiling
+beauty. How could she look so bright and careless with the brand of
+deadly sin upon her? There was neither sorrow nor repentance on the
+smiling, debonair face.
+
+"And this is my mother," Golden thought to herself, with a strange
+heaviness at her heart. "She seems utterly indifferent at her
+wickedness. Ah, she little dreams that the poor babe that she deserted
+so heartlessly is sitting before her now."
+
+Mrs. Leith's light, careless voice jarred suddenly on her mournful mood.
+
+"Well, I will try you, Mary, for I need a maid. My last one was so
+incapable I had to discharge her. You may do my hair for me now. I am
+going to drive in the park with Mr. Leith, if his troublesome clients
+do not detain him. My husband is a lawyer, Mary, and his time is almost
+wholly engrossed by his business."
+
+"Her husband," Golden repeated to herself, as she wound the shining
+tresses into braids. "So they keep up that farce before the world.
+Poor mother! how she must love my father to remain with him on such
+humiliating terms. Is she really happy, or does she only wear a mask?"
+
+But there was no apparent sorrow or remorse on the complacent face of
+the lady as she gave her orders and directions to the new maid.
+
+The uppermost thought in her mind was how to make the most of her
+beauty.
+
+Golden had to arrange her hair twice before she was suited, and she
+tried several dresses in turn before she decided on one. She was
+inordinately vain and fond of finery, and Golden thought pitifully to
+herself:
+
+"Her beauty is the only hold she has on my father, and she is compelled
+to make its preservation the sole aim of her life."
+
+She wondered a little that no yearning throb had stirred her heart
+at the sight of her beautiful mother, but she told herself that it
+was simply because her mother's sin had wholly alienated the natural
+affection of her purer-hearted daughter.
+
+She pitied her with a great, yearning pity, but no impulse prompted her
+to kiss the dewy, crimson lips, she had no temptation to pillow her
+head on the fair bosom that had denied its shelter and sustenance to
+her helpless infancy.
+
+Mrs. Leith did not look as if she would have made a tender mother.
+
+"Have you any children, madam?" she asked, suddenly, and Mrs. Leith
+answered:
+
+"No," rather shortly, but added a minute later: "And I am glad of it,
+for I do not love children. But Mr. Leith does, and is rather sorry
+that we have none."
+
+"He is justly punished for his sin," thought his unknown daughter,
+while she secretly wondered why he had never claimed the child his wife
+had heartlessly deserted to return to him.
+
+"Perhaps she told him I was dead," thought Golden, looking at the
+beautiful woman with a strange thrill of repulsion. "Perhaps he would
+have loved me and cared for me, had he known I lived."
+
+A thrill of pity, half mixed with tenderness, stirred her heart for the
+father who had been cheated of the child he would have loved.
+
+She became conscious of a burning desire to meet her father--the man
+who had wronged her mother, and who had been wronged in turn, in that
+he had never beheld the face of his child.
+
+There was a manly step at the door, and it opened, admitting a tall,
+handsome man in the prime of life.
+
+Golden's heart gave a quick, wild throb, then sank heavily in her
+breast.
+
+She retreated hastily to the shade of a window-curtain, where she could
+observe the new-comer, herself unobserved.
+
+Richard Leith was tall, dark, and very handsome, though there
+were iron-gray threads in his dark, waving hair, and in the long,
+magnificent beard that rippled down upon his breast.
+
+He looked like a man who had known trouble and sorrow. His face was
+both sad and stern, and his dark eyes were cold and gloomy.
+
+Mrs. Leith looked up at him carelessly, and his grave face did not
+brighten at the sight of her beauty, enhanced as it was by the rich,
+blue silk, and becoming white lace bonnet with its garland of roses.
+
+"Are you ready for your drive, Mrs. Leith?" he inquired, with
+punctilious politeness.
+
+"Yes, I am just ready," she replied, carelessly. "You see I have a
+new maid; she is rather awkward, but I shall keep her until I can do
+better."
+
+Mr. Leith gave an indifferent nod toward the gray gown and white cap
+that was dimly visible at the furthest corner of the room, then he went
+out with his wife, and Golden sank down upon the carpet and wept some
+bitter, bitter tears, that seemed to lift a little bit of the load of
+grief from her oppressed bosom.
+
+After all, she had found her father and mother, and it was possible
+that she might bring them to see the wickedness of their course, and to
+seek reformation.
+
+She determined not to reveal her identity just yet.
+
+She would stay with them a little and learn more of them before she
+made her strong appeal to them in behalf of truth.
+
+She would not reproach them just yet for the blight they had cast on
+her innocent life. She would patiently bide her time.
+
+It was a strange position to be placed in.
+
+Under the roof of her own parents, unknown and unacknowledged, with her
+whole life laid bare and desolate through their sin.
+
+A hot and passionate resentment against them surged up into Golden's
+wounded heart.
+
+What right had her mother to be so fair and happy when she had sinned
+so grievously?
+
+Perhaps she would be very angry when she knew that the child she had so
+pitilessly deserted had hunted her down to confront her with her sin.
+
+"I will wait a little. I will not speak yet," she said. "I shall know
+them better after awhile, and I shall know how to approach them better."
+
+So the days waned and faded.
+
+Golden began to become very well acquainted with the beautiful woman
+whom she believed to be her mother. She was vain, frivolous, heartless.
+
+The pure-hearted girl recoiled instinctively from her. But she could
+not understand Mr. Leith so well.
+
+He was a mystery to her. Some settled shadow seemed to brood heavily
+over him always.
+
+He was engrossed with his studies and business. Golden wondered if it
+was remorse that preyed so heavily on him. She had never seen a smile
+on the stern, finely-cut lips.
+
+There was one thing that struck her strangely, Richard Leith and his
+so-called wife did not appear very fond of each other. The gentleman
+was studiously courteous, polite and kind, but Golden never saw on
+his expressive face that light of adoring tenderness she had loved to
+see on Bertram Chesleigh's whenever he looked at her. Mrs. Leith was
+totally absorbed in her dresses, her novels, and her daily drives,
+during which she excited much admiration by her beauty and her
+exquisite toilets. But love and passion--these seemed to be worn-out
+themes between the strangely-mated pair. They addressed each other
+formally as Mr. and Mrs. Leith, but Golden had noticed that the lady's
+clothing was marked "G. L." She knew, of course, that the letter
+G. stood for Golden, but when she asked her about it with apparent
+carelessness one day, the lady answered that it was for Gertrude.
+
+"She has discarded even her name," her daughter mused bitterly.
+"Perhaps she has even forgotten her old home and her deserted father
+and her little child."
+
+And in spite of herself Golden felt that she heartily despised the
+woman whom she should have loved in spite of all her faults because
+she was her mother. But some strange and subtle fascination drew her
+nearer and nearer to Richard Leith.
+
+Her anger and scorn which she had tried to foster at first began to
+dissolve in spite of herself into a yearning and sorrowful tenderness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+
+Several weeks went by, and Golden wondered very much if the Desmonds
+had returned to the city, and if the lady still held her unjust
+suspicions and jealousy against her.
+
+She often wondered as she looked at Richard Leith's stern, set face,
+why Bertram Chesleigh had written to him, and for what object.
+
+One day she heard Mrs. Leith remark to her husband that she had seen
+Mr. Desmond driving in the park alone that morning.
+
+"He looked pale and dejected--quite unlike himself," she added, "I
+wonder if his handsome wife and little daughter are at the seaside yet."
+
+"Did you not know," said Mr. Leith, "Mrs. Desmond and Ruby have gone to
+Europe with Chesleigh."
+
+"Gone without her husband," cried the lady. "How strange! Do you not
+think so?"
+
+"Not strange when you hear the circumstances," Mr. Leith replied,
+gravely. "The truth is Mrs. Desmond became violently jealous of a
+pretty servant girl, and declared she would leave him--even threatened
+a divorce. To save publicity her brother persuaded her to take a trip
+with him to Europe, hoping that time might soften her anger. You
+understand that these are not public facts, Mrs. Leith. They came to me
+personally as the Desmonds' lawyer."
+
+"I shall not repeat them," she replied, taking the gentle hint,
+good-humoredly. "Do you think she will ever be reconciled, Mr. Leith?"
+
+"I scarcely think so. Mrs. Desmond is perfectly implacable at present.
+Mr. Desmond employed me as a mediator between them, but I could
+accomplish nothing. He swears that she was unjustly jealous, and that
+there was nothing at all between him and the girl. But I could not
+induce Mr. Chesleigh nor his sister to believe the assertion."
+
+"What became of the girl?" inquired Mrs. Leith.
+
+"Mrs. Desmond drove the wretched creature away. It is not known what
+became of her," replied the lawyer; "altogether it is a very sad
+affair. Chesleigh has acted on my advice in taking his sister out of
+the country for awhile. I pity Bertram Chesleigh. He has had a bad
+entanglement himself lately which he has been compelled to place in my
+hands. But, poor boy, I fear I can do nothing for him."
+
+"He is trying to get a divorce from me," thought Golden, with a dizzy
+horror in her mind, and the bitter agony of the thought drove the color
+from her face, and the life from her heart. With an exceeding bitter
+cry she threw up her arms in the air, staggered blindly forward and
+fell heavily upon the floor.
+
+"What is that?" cried Mr. Leith, looking round with a great start.
+
+"Why, it's Mary Smith! I had forgotten that she was in the room," cried
+Mrs. Leith. "Oh, look, she is dead!"
+
+She began to wring her hands excitedly, but Mr. Leith said quietly:
+
+"Do not alarm yourself. She has only fainted I suppose. Bring some
+water and we will soon revive her."
+
+She ran into the dressing-room, and Mr. Leith bent down over the
+prostrate form and lifted the drooping head compassionately.
+
+The ugly, concealing cap and glasses had fallen off, and as his gaze
+rested fully on the lovely, marble-white face, a cry of surprise and
+anguish broke from his lips.
+
+"My God, how terribly like!" he muttered. Then, as Mrs. Leith returned
+with water and _eau de cologne_, he applied them both, without the
+slightest success, for Golden still lay cold, white and rigid, like one
+dead, upon his arm.
+
+"Is she dead?" Mrs. Leith whispered, fearfully.
+
+"I cannot tell. Ring for the housekeeper. Perhaps she may know better
+how to apply the remedies," he replied, still holding the light form
+in his arms, and gazing with a dazed expression on the beautiful,
+unconscious face.
+
+The housekeeper came, and declared, in a fright at first, that the girl
+was dead. Then she turned Mr. Leith out of the room, loosened Golden's
+clothing, and rubbed her vigorously.
+
+In about ten minutes the quiet eyelids fluttered faintly, and a gasping
+sigh parted the white lips.
+
+The housekeeper beckoned Mrs. Leith to her side.
+
+"She lives," she whispered, softly, "but she had better have died."
+
+"I do not understand you," Mrs. Leith replied.
+
+"I have made a discovery," continued the old housekeeper. "The girl has
+deceived you, madam. She is a bad lot, for all her sweet, childish,
+innocent face."
+
+"Deceived me--how?" Mrs. Leith demanded.
+
+"She is not an innocent maiden, as she appeared. Oh, Mrs. Leith, can
+you not see for yourself? The wretched creature is likely to become a
+mother in a few short months."
+
+"You are jesting. She is barely more than a child," Mrs. Leith broke
+out, incredulously.
+
+"It's the Lord's truth, madam. Faugh! the wicked little piece! A pity I
+hadn't let her die!" sniffed the virtuous housekeeper, with a scornful
+glance at the reviving girl.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+
+Mrs. Leith drew back her trailing silken skirts from contact with poor
+Golden's recumbent form as if there were contamination in her very
+touch.
+
+"I have been terribly deceived," she said, "I had begun to like the
+girl very much. She suited me more than any maid I have had for a long
+while, and I thought her quite pure and respectable. Do the best you
+can for her, Mrs. Brown, for I shall send her away as soon as she is
+able to walk."
+
+Heedless of Golden's large, blue eyes that unclosed and fixed
+themselves reproachfully upon her, she swept from the room and sought
+Mr. Leith, to whom she confided the housekeeper's discovery.
+
+The grave-faced lawyer looked shocked and distressed, unaccountably so,
+the lady thought.
+
+"I can scarcely credit it," he said. "She has such an innocent and
+child-like face."
+
+"Such faces are sometimes deceiving," remarked the lady. "This instance
+proves the fact."
+
+"What do you intend to do with the poor child!" Mr. Leith asked, with
+an unconscious sigh.
+
+"I shall send her away, of course," Mrs. Leith replied, decidedly.
+
+"Oh, _cruel, unnatural mother_!" said a faint, reproachful voice,
+behind her.
+
+She turned with a start and saw that Golden had followed her.
+
+The poor child stood trembling in the doorway, her dress in disorder,
+her beautiful hair broken loose from its fastenings, and streaming over
+her shoulders, her great, blue eyes blazing like stars in her lovely,
+pallid face, her sweet lips curled in scorn as she pointed her finger
+at Mrs. Leith, and exclaimed:
+
+"Oh, cruel, unnatural mother! Is your life so pure that you can afford
+to sit in judgment on me?"
+
+"Is the girl mad?" Mrs. Leith exclaimed, recoiling from her.
+
+"No, I am not mad, although my wrongs have been bitter enough to
+madden any human being," Golden retorted, passionately. "I am not mad,
+although your terrible sin has ruined my life and broken my heart."
+
+"_My_ sin, _mine_!" retorted Mrs. Leith, in apparent bewilderment.
+"What do you mean, girl? I am nothing to you!"
+
+"Nothing to me, oh, my God," moaned Golden, wringing her white hands.
+"Then you deny that you are my mother?"
+
+"_Your_ mother, girl, when I have never had a child in my life. Mr.
+Leith, do you not see that the wretched creature is raving mad?" cried
+the lady, retreating to his side apprehensively.
+
+Golden turned her flashing blue eyes on the white, startled face of the
+man.
+
+"She denies that she is my mother," she said. "Perhaps you will deny
+that you are my father."
+
+She saw a quiver pass over the man's pale face.
+
+"I do not understand your words," he replied, in a voice shaken with
+emotion. "Explain yourself."
+
+"I am the child Golden Glenalvan deserted at Glenalvan Hall in its
+helpless infancy, that she might return to New York and lead a life of
+shame with you," she cried out bitterly.
+
+Richard Leith's dark eyes turned on her face with a lurid gleam in
+their shadowed depths.
+
+"Hold!" he cried. "Whoever you are, you shall not malign the memory of
+poor, little Golden. She was pure as the snow."
+
+"Pure!" the girl repeated, blankly. "She was never your wife. They told
+me she lived with you in open shame."
+
+A startling change came over the face of Richard Leith. There was a
+glare, like that of madness, in his eyes.
+
+He fell backward into a chair, and the labored breath came from between
+his parted lips in strong, shuddering sighs.
+
+Mrs. Leith flew to his side, and bent anxiously over him.
+
+"Mr. Leith, what is it? What does all this mean? I am mystified," she
+cried.
+
+His heavy, dark eyes full of sorrow and despair, lifted gloomily to her
+wondering face.
+
+"It means," he replied, "that I have had a secret in my life, and that
+the time is come for you to know it. If this girl speaks truly she is
+indeed my daughter, though not yours."
+
+"Not hers!" echoed Golden, in bewilderment, as she looked at the
+beautiful woman whom she had for long weeks believed to be her mother.
+
+"Not hers," he replied, "for long before I met and married this lady,
+little Golden Glenalvan was dead."
+
+A startled cry came from Golden's lips.
+
+"Dead," she shuddered; "no, no; you are deceiving me."
+
+"Not so, as God is my judge," he replied. "But sit down, child, and
+tell me all your story. Then we may be able to understand each other."
+
+Golden glanced half-fearfully at Mrs. Leith, who stood leaning against
+her husband's chair, pale and silent, and anxious-looking. The lady
+quietly and gravely motioned her to a seat.
+
+She thankfully obeyed the gesture, for she felt ill and weary, and the
+sudden shock of learning that her mother was dead, had been a terrible
+one to her, and had almost stricken her senseless again.
+
+In low, pathetic tones, and with many tears, Golden told Richard Leith
+all that she knew of her mother, and as much as she could of her own
+lonely life, without revealing the tragic story of her unfortunate love.
+
+He listened in silence, although she could see that he was terribly
+agitated.
+
+His white brow was beaded with great drops of sweat, his eyes stared
+wildly, he bit his lips till the blood started to keep back the groans
+of pain.
+
+When she had finished he went over to her, knelt at her feet, and
+gently kissed her cold, little hand.
+
+"You are my daughter," he said, "and you are the living image of your
+mother. But until this moment, little Golden, I believed you dead. I
+wrote to John Glenalvan when my wife ran away from me, and asked him
+if she had returned to her father. He wrote back that she had done so,
+that she had given birth to a little daughter, and that the mother and
+child had both died. Then he added his curse, and threatened, if I ever
+came near Glenalvan Hall, to shoot me down like a dog."
+
+His voice broke huskily a moment. Golden looked at him eagerly.
+
+"You said your wife," she faltered. "Was my mother, then, legally
+married to you? Am I not a----" her voice broke huskily over the word,
+"a nameless child?"
+
+"Your mother was my legal wife, little one. You are my own daughter,
+born in lawful wedlock. God only knows what crafty and wicked enemy
+of mine wrote that lying letter to my poor, young wife, telling her
+that I had deceived her by a mock marriage. She was too credulous, and
+believed the lie too easily. It was not true. I can give you every
+proof that your mother was my lawful wife, little Golden."
+
+She fell on her knees, and with upraised hands and streaming eyes,
+thanked God for those precious words.
+
+Her mother had been pure and noble. There was no shadow of stain on her
+daughter's birth.
+
+Then, with a sudden, startling thought she confronted him, her white
+hands clasped in agony, her voice ringing wild and shrill:
+
+"John Glenalvan told you that my mother died. He lied! She disappeared
+very suddenly the night after I was born, and that villain declared
+that she had deserted me and returned to her sinful life with you. She
+did not die, and she did not return to you. Oh, my God, where is she
+now?"
+
+She saw that terrible question reflected on her father's face.
+
+It whitened to the awful hue of death, and he reeled backward like a
+smitten man.
+
+A faint cry came from Mrs. Leith, who had dropped heavily into a chair.
+
+"Oh, Heaven, if she is yet living, what, then, am I?"
+
+Richard Leith went to her side, and looked down at her white, scared
+face, pitifully.
+
+"Gertrude," he said to her gently, "we have both been the victims of a
+terrible wrong. When I married you several years after the loss of my
+first wife, won by your beauty, which reminded me of my poor, little
+Golden's, I honestly believed that she was dead. There is some terrible
+mystery here, and John Glenalvan is at the bottom of it. But I will
+wring the truth from his false lips, and if my lost little Golden has
+come to harm at his hands, his life shall pay the penalty of his sin!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+
+"Oh, father," cried little Golden. "Why did you lure my poor mother
+from her home. She was so young, so trusting. Why did you persuade her
+to desert her parents?"
+
+The man's pale, handsome features quivered all over with vain remorse
+and penitence.
+
+"You do well to reproach me, little Golden," he sighed. "There is no
+excuse for my sin. But I will tell you how I came to act so imprudently.
+
+"I was a struggling young lawyer, poor and proud, when I first met
+your beautiful mother during a business trip to the south. Her family,
+though reduced to comparative poverty by the late war, were proud
+and aristocratic people, and I felt quite sure that they would have
+refused me the hand of their petted darling.
+
+"I had heard so much of the pride of the southerners that I was afraid
+to ask the Glenalvans for their beautiful child. So I acted the part of
+a coward and stole her from them. The dear girl loved me well, and went
+with me willingly when I promised to take her back to them after we
+were married.
+
+"I took her to New York, and made her my true and lawful wife, but so
+afraid was I of those haughty Glenalvans that I refused to allow her to
+write my name and address to her friends. I was waiting till I should
+have acquired a fame and fortune that would make me acceptable in their
+eyes. Oh, God, how terribly my sin has found me out after all these
+years."
+
+He paused and wiped away the cold dew that beaded his high, white brow.
+After a moment he went on, sadly:
+
+"I was fast gaining prominence and a competence in my profession, when
+some base enemy of mine--as a lawyer I had some of the blackest-hearted
+enemies that a man ever had--wrote my darling a letter, defaming me
+in scandalous terms, and averring that I had deceived her by a mock
+marriage.
+
+"Poor child, she was very simple and credulous. She fell an easy victim
+to the liar's tale. She fled from me, leaving that cruel letter behind
+her, the only thing there was to hint at the reason of her hurried
+flight."
+
+"Oh, if only you had followed her then," moaned beautiful Golden.
+
+"If I only had!" he echoed. "My first impulse was to do so; but I
+had on hand a very important case, which I had staked everything on
+winning. If I managed it well my success was assured as one of the
+leading lawyers of the day. My speech for the defense was anticipated
+anxiously by many. So I suffered my ambition to overrule my first
+instinctive resolve to follow my wife, and instead I wrote to her
+brother. He sent me that lying letter that almost broke my heart."
+
+He broke down and sobbed like a woman, or rather, unlike a woman, for
+those great, convulsive moans of agony that issued from his breast
+seemed as if they would rend his heart in twain.
+
+Golden stole to his side and laid her small hand kindly on his gray
+head, that was bowed in sorrow and remorse.
+
+"I am sorry for you, my father," she said. "You have been weak and
+imprudent, but not sinful, as I thought. But, oh, my poor mother! My
+heart is torn over her wretched fate. She must have perished miserably,
+or we should have heard from her ere now. Oh, father, what shall we do?"
+
+They looked at each other with dim, miserable eyes, this strangely
+reunited father and daughter, the awful mystery of the wife and
+mother's fate chilled their hearts.
+
+He took her hand and drew her gently nearer to him.
+
+"My child, I shall go to Glenalvan Hall and confront John Glenalvan
+with his sin. I believe the whole key to the mystery lies in that
+villain's hands."
+
+"I am almost sure of it," she replied. "He hated my mother, and he
+hated me. I will go with you. What joy it will be to stand up proudly
+before him and tell him that my birth was honest and honorable, and
+that my father is a good and true man, who is glad to see me, for you
+_are_ glad, aren't you?" she asked him, pleadingly.
+
+"Yes, dear, I am very glad. I have always longed to have a child of
+my own to love. It seemed as if my heart was always yearning for the
+daughter I believed to be dead. But Golden," he looked at her anxiously
+and pleadingly as he clasped her little hand, "you have a story of your
+own to tell me before we go on the quest for your mother. The great
+mystery of love has come to you already in your tender youth. Tell me,
+my daughter, are you a wife?"
+
+The crimson color flushed into her cheeks, then receded, leaving her
+deathly pale again.
+
+Tears rose into the great, blue eyes, and trembled on the long-fringed
+lashes.
+
+Her lips parted and closed again without a sound.
+
+"Tell me, Golden," he urged, anxiously; "are you a wife, or has some
+artful villain deceived you? If so----" he clenched his hand, and the
+lightnings of passion flashed from his somber, dark eyes.
+
+A moan of pain came from the girl's white lips.
+
+"Oh, father, I cannot tell you now," she sighed. "Only trust me. Do not
+believe me vile and wicked. Perhaps I may be able to tell you the truth
+some day."
+
+As she spoke, some strange, new light flashed into his mind.
+
+She saw the startled gleam flash into his eyes.
+
+"Tell me," he cried out, hoarsely, "are you the girl that was dismissed
+from Mrs. Desmond's employ under the stigma of a disgraceful suspicion?"
+
+She covered her face with her hands and faltered "yes," in a voice of
+agony.
+
+"Was that terrible accusation true?" he demanded, in a voice so changed
+she could scarcely recognize it.
+
+"No, never! It was false, I swear it before Heaven. My trouble came to
+me before I entered Mrs. Desmond's employ," she replied.
+
+"Golden, you must tell me the name of the man who has wronged you," he
+said, sternly.
+
+"I cannot," she answered, sorrowfully.
+
+"You mean you will not," he said.
+
+"I cannot. I am bound by a promise," she answered.
+
+"It was a foolish promise. The time has come when you must break it,"
+he answered, steadily. "You must clear yourself in Mrs. Desmond's eyes,
+and reconcile her to her husband. Do you know that they are separated
+on your account?"
+
+"I heard you say so," she replied.
+
+"It is true, and I am their lawyer. Will you let me write to Mrs.
+Desmond, and tell her the name of the man who is really in fault, and
+for whose sin she has deserted her innocent husband?"
+
+"I cannot," she moaned again, in a voice of agony. "I am bound by a
+sacred promise. Bitter as the consequences are, I must keep it!"
+
+It seemed incredible to him that this frail, slight girl should hold
+her secret so resolutely in the face of the trouble it had caused.
+
+"But, Golden, think a moment," he began.
+
+"I have thought until my brain is almost wild," she interrupted,
+pitifully. "But I can see no possible loophole out of my solemn vow of
+silence."
+
+"You were wrong to take such a vow, Golden, and it is almost wicked for
+you to keep it. Do you see how much is at stake? Through your silence
+a man and his wife are divided in anger and shame, and a cloud of the
+blackest disgrace is lowering over your own head. Do you know that it
+is a fearful thing to come between husband and wife?"
+
+"I feel its enormity in the very depths of my heart," she replied,
+shuddering and weeping.
+
+"Then surely you will speak; you _must_ speak," he urged.
+
+But she only shook her head.
+
+"Not if I command you to do so?" he asked.
+
+"Not if you command me," she replied, with mournful firmness.
+
+There was a moment's silence, and Richard Leith gazed upon the girl
+with a sick and shuddering heart.
+
+A vague suspicion was beginning to steal into his mind.
+
+What if Golden was deceiving him, and Mrs. Desmond's belief were true?
+
+He reeled before the sickening horror of the thought. The dread
+suspicion seemed to float in fiery letters before his eyes.
+
+He looked at the bowed figure of the sobbing girl, and steeled his
+heart against her. She was no child of his if she could let the shadow
+of suspicion tamely rest upon her head.
+
+"Golden," he said, "think of what I must endure if you refuse to
+declare yourself. Would you have me acknowledge a child who has covered
+my honorable name with shame? Shall I take you by the hand and say to
+the world that honors me as a stainless man: 'This is my daughter. She
+has disgraced herself, and brought ruin and despair into another's
+home.'"
+
+She shrank and trembled before the keen denunciation of his words. She
+threw herself at his feet and looked up with frightened, imploring eyes.
+
+"Father, do not disown me," she cried. "I have not disgraced you--you
+will know the truth some day. Tell the whole world my piteous story.
+It may be--it may be that the telling will bring you joy, not sorrow.
+For," she said to her own heart, hopefully, "if Bertram Chesleigh
+should hear the truth, and know that I am not a nameless child, surely
+he will claim me then. He can no longer be ashamed of me."
+
+She felt that the happiness of her whole future hung trembling in the
+balance on the chance of her father's recognition of her. If in his
+anger at her obstinacy he should repudiate her claim on him, nothing
+was left her but despair.
+
+Richard Leith could be as hard as marble when he chose. His pride
+and his anger rose in arms now against the thought of receiving this
+branded girl as his own daughter.
+
+"Golden," he said, "what if I say that I will not receive you as my
+daughter unless you consent to clear up this disgraceful mystery that
+surrounds you?"
+
+"You will not tell me so--you could not be so cruel," she cried,
+fearfully.
+
+"Only one word, Golden. The name of the man who has wronged you. Tell
+me, that I may punish him."
+
+"You must not, for _I love him_," she moaned, despairingly.
+
+"You force me to believe that Mrs. Desmond was right, and that you are
+a lost and guilty creature," he said scathingly.
+
+A long, low wail came from her lips, then she bowed her head and
+remained silent.
+
+"Do you still persist in this obstinate silence?" he asked.
+
+"I must," she answered faintly.
+
+"Go, then," he thundered at her, "you are no child of mine. I refuse
+you the shelter of my home, my name, and my heart. I cannot believe
+that you are the child of my innocent little Golden. Go, and never let
+me see your face again."
+
+And with the cruel words he turned and left the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+
+Little Golden stared at the closing door through which her father had
+vanished, with blank, terror-filled eyes. To have found him and lost
+him like this was too terrible.
+
+She sat gazing before her like one dazed, with the angry words of
+her father still ringing in her ears, when a low and fluttering sigh
+recalled her to the fact of Mrs. Leith's presence which she had
+forgotten for the moment in her anguish of soul.
+
+She looked around shrinkingly at the fair woman who had taken her
+mother's place, and her mother's name, dreading to meet a glance of
+scorn, even transcending that which her father had cast upon her.
+
+Instead she met the beautiful, troubled eyes of her step-mother fixed
+upon her with tenderest pity.
+
+Mrs. Leith had been vain, careless, and frivolous all her life. She
+had never known a care or sorrow in the whole course of her pleasant,
+prosperous existence.
+
+The hard crust of selfishness and indifference had grown over the
+better impulses of a nature that at the core was true, and sweet, and
+womanly.
+
+The last hour with its strange revelations had been the turning point
+in her life.
+
+She realized with a shudder the dreadful position in which she was
+placed. She was married to a man who, in all probability, had a wife
+living.
+
+It was possible that she herself was almost as much an outcast as the
+wretched girl who crouched weeping on the floor, homeless, friendless,
+and forsaken, in the hour of her direst need.
+
+Never before had Mrs. Leith been brought face to face with a real
+sorrow. She gazed wonderingly upon poor little Golden, the course
+of whose checkered life had run as strangely as that of one of her
+favorite novel heroines.
+
+So it happened that when Golden looked timidly up expecting to be
+immediately annihilated by her scornful glance, she met only the
+gentlest pity beaming from the large, blue eyes of the unhappy woman.
+
+"Come to me, Golden," she said, and as the young girl advanced she
+asked her in a strangely saddened voice:
+
+"Are you angry with me, child, that I have filled your mother's place
+and worn her name for twelve, long years?"
+
+"No, I am not angry," Golden answered, gently. "It was through no fault
+of yours--you did not know."
+
+"No, I did not know," Mrs. Leith murmured, putting her hands to her
+eyes while the tears fell through her fingers. "I did not know, and now
+it is too late."
+
+"What shall you do now?" Golden asked her wonderingly.
+
+"I shall go away," Mrs. Leith replied, sadly.
+
+"Are you angry with my father?" asked the girl.
+
+"No, Golden, he sinned ignorantly," replied Mrs. Leith. "Therefore I
+cannot blame him. But I must go away from him, and never see him again
+until he learns the truth whether or not his first wife was living when
+he married me."
+
+Then there was a brief silence. The two women, so lately mistress and
+maid--now placed upon the same level by the equalizing hand of sorrow,
+sat still a little while looking out upon the unknown future with
+dreary, hopeless eyes. Then Mrs. Leith roused herself with an effort.
+
+"And you, Golden--where will you go? What will you do?" she asked.
+
+"God knows," the girl exclaimed, hopelessly. "I am so stunned by the
+revelations of to-day that I know not where to turn. For weary months
+the dream of finding and reclaiming my guilty mother has filled and
+occupied my thoughts. Now that I know her innocent and pure, the
+terrible mystery of her fate chills the blood in my veins. Where shall
+I look for her? How shall I find her?"
+
+Mrs. Leith looked at her compassionately.
+
+"Poor child!" she said. "You are too ill and weary to seek for anyone
+now. Leave that sorrowful quest to your father, and place yourself in
+my care."
+
+The tears brimmed over in Golden's beautiful eyes at the kindly spoken
+words of her step-mother.
+
+"Oh, madam," she cried, "you offer to befriend me. Then you do not
+believe that I am the lost and guilty creature they would fain make me
+out."
+
+Mrs. Leith's beautiful face beamed with sympathy as she answered:
+
+"No, Golden, I do not believe you are a sinner. I have a strong
+conviction that you are a deserted or discarded wife, and I will care
+for you in your forlorn situation with the tenderness of your own
+mother."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+
+Richard Leith went down to his office, and threw himself heavily into a
+chair, bowing his gray head dejectedly on his hands.
+
+His brain was almost crazed with the agony of the last hour's discovery.
+
+The sealed book of the past had been roughly torn open again, and in
+agony of soul he repented the selfish course he had pursued with the
+fair, young wife he had stolen from her home and friends.
+
+Where was she now, his beautiful, golden-haired darling?
+
+What fate had kept her from her home and friends, and from the little
+child that had come to such bitter grief in the absence of the
+mother-love that might have shielded her from harm?
+
+He sprang from his chair, and paced impatiently up and down the floor,
+while he hurriedly settled his plans. He would leave for the south that
+night.
+
+He would seek out John Glenalvan, and charge him with his sin.
+
+He would force him to unfold the mystery of little Golden's
+disappearance. Perhaps, oh, God, the villain had murdered her.
+
+If he had, he should suffer the dire punishment the law meted out for
+such wretched criminals.
+
+"But before I go," he said to himself, grimly, "I will go and see
+Desmond. If he has lied to me heretofore, woe be unto him. The base
+betrayer of my poor child's innocence shall receive no mercy at my
+hands."
+
+He threw on his hat and directed his steps to the hotel where Mr.
+Desmond was staying in preference to the grand, deserted dwelling,
+which was closed and left in the solitary care of the housekeeper
+during the absence of the family.
+
+Mr. Desmond was smoking in his luxurious parlor, carelessly habited in
+dressing-gown and slippers.
+
+His handsome, debonair face looked pale and worn, and melancholy. A
+hopeful gleam came into the listless eyes as his visitor was admitted.
+
+"Ah, Leith, so glad to see you," he cried, throwing away his cigar, and
+eagerly advancing. "You bring me news--Edith has relented?"
+
+"There is nothing more unlikely," Mr. Leith returned, with grim
+truthfulness; then he broke out with fiery impetuosity: "Desmond, for
+God's sake tell me the truth. Have you deceived me as well as your
+wife? Are you guilty of this monstrous sin?"
+
+Mr. Desmond was startled by the almost agonizing entreaty of the
+lawyer's look and voice.
+
+On the impulse of the moment he caught up a small Bible that lay upon a
+table close at hand, and pressed his lips upon it while he exclaimed in
+the deep, convincing tones of truth:
+
+"Leith, I solemnly swear to you that I am innocent of the crime laid to
+my charge, so help me God."
+
+Something in the man's deep earnestness, and in his look of suffering,
+staggered Richard Leith's doubts and fears, and made him feel that
+he had been a brute to doubt his daughter's agonized declarations of
+innocence. He exclaimed with sudden fervor and earnestness:
+
+"Mr. Desmond, it is but fair to tell you that I have found the girl,
+Mary Smith, and that she exonerates you, too."
+
+"I was sure she would, although she despises me," cried Mr. Desmond. "I
+admit that I behaved despicably to her. I tried to get up a flirtation
+with her, but she scorned me with the pride of a queen, and the affair
+went no further. I believed her as pure and cold as the snow. No one
+was more amazed than myself when I learned the truth through my wife's
+causeless jealousy."
+
+"You say 'causeless jealousy,' Desmond," Mr. Leith remonstrated,
+gravely, "but you forget that ever since your marriage you have
+persistently wounded your loving and sensitive wife by the most open
+and flagrant flirtations, thus giving her the greatest cause to doubt
+your fidelity."
+
+Mr. Desmond looked thoroughly ashamed and penitent at the perfectly
+truthful charge.
+
+"You speak the truth, I have behaved shamefully," he replied. "But I
+have had my lesson now. I never knew how much I loved and honored my
+sweet and beautiful wife until in her righteous wrath she deserted me.
+But if she will believe me this time and return to me, I will never
+offend her again by my foolish propensities. I will never even look at
+another woman. I am quite cured of flirting."
+
+He spoke so soberly and earnestly that Mr. Leith was fain to believe
+him, but he answered gravely:
+
+"Your wife is so thoroughly incensed against you, that she will never
+believe even your sworn word without additional proof."
+
+"But how can I prove it to her?" cried the anxious husband. "She would
+not believe Mary Smith's denial, and she refuses to credit mine."
+
+"There is only one way out of the trouble," the lawyer said, gravely.
+
+"And that?" Mr. Desmond asked, anxiously.
+
+"Is to find out the man who is really in fault, and obtain his sworn
+statement," Richard Leith replied.
+
+"The girl will give us the necessary information, of course," Mr.
+Desmond exclaimed, his spirits rising.
+
+"On the contrary, she obstinately refuses to do so. She makes a most
+perplexing mystery of her unhappy situation."
+
+Mr. Desmond looked uneasy and perplexed a moment, then he exclaimed,
+confidently:
+
+"It is only a question of blackmail then. She will tell the truth if a
+golden bribe is offered her. Depend upon it, she is only waiting for
+that."
+
+"You are mistaken," Richard Leith returned, gravely. "You do not
+understand her motives. I will tell you a harrowing secret, Desmond. I
+have discovered that that unfortunate girl is my own daughter!"
+
+In a few eloquent words he told Mr. Desmond the story of his strange
+marriage, and its tragic _denouement_--the lost wife, the ruined
+daughter.
+
+In his own despair and agitation, it did not seem strange to the lawyer
+that his excitement was reflected on the face of his listener, but
+when he had finished his story, Desmond sprang wildly to his feet,
+exclaiming:
+
+"Good God, Leith, I can lay my hand on the destroyer of your child. It
+is my wife's brother--it is Bertram Chesleigh!"
+
+"Heaven, how blind I have been!" Richard Leith exclaimed, with lurid
+eyes, and a deathly-pale face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+
+There was a moment's silence, then Mr. Leith said, huskily:
+
+"Tell me how this fact came to your knowledge, Desmond."
+
+"Do you remember the sudden trip my wife and I took to Florida last
+summer?"
+
+"Yes, I heard of it," the lawyer replied.
+
+"I will go back a few months previous to that trip." Mr. Desmond said.
+
+"It was this winter a year previous that Bertram Chesleigh made the
+acquaintance of young Frederick Glenalvan in New York and was invited
+by him to visit his far-away Floridian home.
+
+"About the first of last June Bert accepted the invitation, and spent
+about two weeks at Glenalvan Hall.
+
+"He wrote to my wife from there, hinting vaguely at having lost his
+heart to a perfect 'pearl of beauty.'
+
+"Edith, who is excessively proud, and mortally afraid of a
+_mesalliance_, replied to him coolly, discountenancing the idea and
+begging him not to marry out of his own state.
+
+"Between you and me, Leith, I believe she had a great heiress booked
+for the young fellow in New York."
+
+He paused for breath, but at Richard Leith's look of impatience, went
+on hastily:
+
+"Bertram did not reply to his sister's letter, but in the latter part
+of the same month Fred Glenalvan wrote us that Bertram was lying ill
+with brain fever.
+
+"We went to him at once and found him not expected to live, He was
+delirious, and through all his illness he called incessantly on one
+name. Morning, noon and night it was always, 'Golden, Golden, Golden.'"
+
+A groan forced itself through Richard Leith's rigid lips, but he did
+not speak, and Mr. Desmond continued:
+
+"That cry for Golden was always coupled with a wild appeal for
+forgiveness for some wrong, the nature of which we could not determine.
+
+"My curiosity and that of my wife were powerfully excited, and we
+wondered who the Golden was that he called upon, and why she never came.
+
+"It was quite evident that the Glenalvans did not care to divulge
+the secret, so we never presumed to ask, but when Bertram grew
+convalescent Edith inquired of him, and he told her the truth."
+
+"Let me hear it," said Richard Leith, gaspingly, while the knotted
+veins stood out like cords on his forehead.
+
+"It was the same story your daughter told you--that of a fair young
+girl kept aloof from her kind, slighted and scorned for no visible
+fault."
+
+"Bertram met and loved her. They had some secret meetings by night in
+one of which they were discovered, and in the scene that followed, the
+fact was disclosed that the girl was illegitimate."
+
+"Oh, my weakness, my sin!" groaned the wretched listener. "Curses upon
+John Glenalvan for his horrible villainy."
+
+"Bertram declared that he had only entertained the most honorable
+feelings toward the girl," said Mr. Desmond, "but he confessed that
+the knowledge of her parentage so staggered him that he was induced to
+forsake her. He left Glenalvan Hall before daylight without seeing her
+again."
+
+"The cowardly cur!" Richard Leith exclaimed, clenching his hands until
+the purple nails sunk into the quivering flesh.
+
+"Hear me out," said Mr. Desmond, quickly, "before you judge him too
+hardly."
+
+"I am listening," answered Richard Leith, trying to master his surging
+passions beneath an appearance of calmness. "I am listening, but what
+more can there be to say, Mr. Desmond?"
+
+"This, Mr. Leith: Bertram went away, determined to forsake the hapless
+girl, but his love and remorse, and the overpowering cause of shame,
+urged his return so powerfully that in three days he returned to
+Glenalvan Hall with the full intention of marrying the girl at once,
+and taking her abroad with him where no one knew her unfortunate story.
+
+"When he reached there she was gone--none knew whither. John Glenalvan
+told him that she had gone away with the boldly-avowed intention of
+leading a life of sin with her mother. Poor Bertram had suffered so
+much that he could not bear that crowning blow. He staggered and fell
+like a log at the villain's feet. A brain fever followed that nearly
+cost him his life."
+
+"One more score is added to my terrible list against John Glenalvan,"
+Richard Leith muttered darkly.
+
+"I have no more to say," continued Mr. Desmond, "except that all the
+circumstances point unerringly at Bertram Chesleigh as the man who
+wronged your daughter."
+
+"You are right," groaned the unhappy father. "Oh, God, if only she had
+remained at Glenalvan Hall that he might have made reparation for his
+sin!"
+
+"Did not Bertram write to you in relation to the unfortunate affair? He
+mentioned an intention to do so," said Mr. Desmond.
+
+"Only a letter so cautiously worded that I could gain no clew to the
+real truth," replied Richard Leith. "No names were mentioned. He only
+described the girl who was supposed to have entered some one of the
+many nameless houses in this city. He wished me to reclaim her, if
+possible, provide her a home, and he agreed to make her a generous
+allowance."
+
+"Poor Bert," said Mr. Desmond, "and all the while she was in his
+sister's employ, and in reach of his hand, if he had only known it."
+
+There was a moment's heavy silence; then Richard Leith rose hastily.
+
+"I must go home now," he said. "I--may God forgive me--I was so
+maddened by my child's wrongs and my own suspicions that I refused to
+own her; I drove her away from her rightful home. Pray God that she
+be not gone. If she has, I must bring her back and tell her that I
+know her whole sad story, and I must make the best I can of her poor,
+blighted life."
+
+"Shall you write to Bertram Chesleigh?" inquired Desmond.
+
+"Yes, for they must know that they have wronged you, and that you are
+innocent," replied the lawyer. "And, Desmond, you must write to your
+wife. I will inclose your letter with mine, otherwise, in her pride and
+anger, she might return it unopened. I thank God that your fidelity is
+vindicated, and that your reunion is now insured."
+
+"I have a better plan than writing to her," said Desmond, blushing like
+a school-girl. "I will follow your letter to her brother, and plead
+my cause in person. I cannot wait, Leith; I am too impatient. I long
+to meet my wife and child again. You will give me their address? The
+_Europa_ sails to-night. I must go with her."
+
+Mr. Leith saw no objection to the plan. He was sorry for the impatient
+husband who had received a lesson that would last a life-time.
+
+He gave him his wife's address in Italy, with his cordial good wishes
+and went away to seek his wronged, unhappy daughter.
+
+"She cannot have gone yet. She was to weak and ill to have gone to-day.
+She would have waited until she was better," he kept whispering to his
+reproachful heart as he hurried along.
+
+Then he thought of the beautiful, fashionable woman who had taken the
+place of little Golden's mother, and worn her name for twelve long
+years.
+
+"Poor Gertrude," he murmured sadly. "I wonder how she bears it. Perhaps
+she will not grieve much. She does not love me as she did when I first
+made her my wife. Perhaps I am to blame. I have chilled her tender
+nature by my carelessness or coldness, for I have never loved her as I
+did my lost little Golden."
+
+He hurried up the marble steps and ran impatiently along the hall,
+stumbling against the housekeeper, who was pacing sedately along with a
+little basket of keys.
+
+As he was rushing past her she stopped and called to him.
+
+"Mistress and her maid are gone away, sir."
+
+"Where?" he inquired, pausing and looking back in bewildered surprise.
+
+"I cannot tell you, for I do not know," the woman replied,
+respectfully. "But she bade me say that she left a letter for you on
+her dressing-table."
+
+He ran up to Mrs. Leith's dressing-room, and found it in some slight
+disorder, as if traveling bags had been hurriedly packed.
+
+Amid the dainty litter of the dressing-table he saw a square envelope
+addressed to himself, and hurriedly tore it open.
+
+His gaze ran over the few pathetic words daintily penciled on the
+perfumed, satiny sheet.
+
+"Richard," she wrote. "I have gone away from you. I have long felt that
+I had but a small share in your heart, and now I know that I have,
+perhaps, no right to your name, and no place in your home. So it is
+best that I should leave you. I have taken little Golden with me. There
+is one thing, at least, that I can do. I can be a mother to the child
+whose father has disowned her, and whose mother is so tragically lost.
+
+"You were wrong, Richard. The child has been wronged, but I believe
+that she is innocent. I have loved you more than you knew; perhaps more
+than you cared, and for your sake I will care for your forlorn child.
+You will not seek for us. We are companions in misery, and you will
+respect our grief. I cannot tell you where we shall go. But if you find
+little Golden's mother I shall know it, and the mother shall have her
+child."
+
+With the simple name, "Gertrude," the letter ended; Richard Leith
+reread it slowly, filled with a great surprise and wonder.
+
+"She will care for the child I treated so heartlessly," he murmured.
+"God bless her. I did not know that Gertrude could be so true and
+noble. I have wronged her indeed, and she has worn the mask of
+carelessness and frivolity over a wounded heart. Oh, God, if I only
+knew where to find them."
+
+He almost cursed himself for his cruelty to his wronged and miserable
+daughter.
+
+He remembered how young she was, and how ignorant of the world when
+Bertram Chesleigh had won her heart. Perhaps she was not to blame.
+His wrath waxed hot against the man who had betrayed her guileless
+innocence.
+
+He went down and asked the housekeeper if Mrs. Leith had gone away in
+the carriage, and she answered that the lady had walked, and the maid
+had accompanied her.
+
+"I cannot go south until I have found them," he said to himself, sadly.
+"Poor little Golden, poor Gertrude."
+
+Before the next day he had visited every depot and every wharf by which
+they might have left the city, but he had learned nothing. The next day
+after he inserted a personal in the _Herald_:
+
+ "TO GERTRUDE:--Return with Golden. Her true story is known and she is
+ freely forgiven. Anxiously, R. L."
+
+But the two for whom that yearning cry was written were fated never to
+behold it. And the dreary winter days came and went while he waited for
+tidings, filled with the heart-sickness of a great despair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.
+
+
+While the winter snow still whirled in blinding drifts through the
+streets of New York, the sun shone, the flowers bloomed, the birds sang
+around old Glenalvan Hall in far-away Florida.
+
+Old Dinah crooned her quaint revival hymns in the sunny doorway of the
+kitchen, and her old master dozed in the bright, bay-window among the
+pots of fragrant flowers.
+
+It was February, and hints of the nearing spring were in the air that
+sighed softly among the flowers, and lifted the thin, white locks from
+the brow of old Hugh, as his weary head lay resting on the back of his
+easy-chair.
+
+Very thin, and sad, and mournful looked the old man as he sat in his
+easy-chair, with his lonely thoughts fixed ever on the past. He was old
+and weary. Life held no charm for him now.
+
+One thought of the last lonely sheaf waiting for the reaper as he sat
+with his withered hands folded, and that look of patient grief on his
+thin, white, aged face.
+
+"Oh, my lost little Golden," he murmured aloud: "She tarries long. The
+quest for her mother is a weary one. Oh, that God would give me back
+the mother and child, both innocent and pure as when I lost them."
+
+A sudden shadow fell between him and the light. He looked up and saw a
+man standing before him, a man with a pale, worn, troubled face, and
+dark eyes that held the story of a tragedy in their somber depths.
+
+"Pardon," he said, "I have ventured unannounced into your presence. My
+name is Richard Leith."
+
+The old man stared at him with dim, unrecognizing eyes. That name
+conveyed no meaning to his mind. He had never heard it before.
+
+"You are a stranger," he said.
+
+"Yes," Richard Leith answered, and stood silent a moment.
+
+How should he tell Hugh Glenalvan that he was the man who had stolen
+his daughter from him and desolated his life?
+
+It was a hard task. His voice quivered and broke as he said:
+
+"I am a stranger, but I am also your son-in-law."
+
+"I have no son-in-law," the old man replied, gazing blankly at him.
+
+"Your daughter was my wife," said Richard Leith.
+
+"Little Golden?" said the old man, like one dazed.
+
+"Yes," answered the lawyer. "I stole her from you sixteen years ago,
+and made her my darling wife. Oh, sir, can you ever forgive me the
+sorrow I have caused you?"
+
+"A wife! She was a wife! Thank God for that," the old man murmured,
+with trembling delight. "And you have brought her back at last. Where
+is she, my darling little Golden?"
+
+"Oh, God!" murmured the conscience-smitten man before him.
+
+"Let me see her, my sweet child," cried Hugh Glenalvan, feebly rising.
+"It was cruel to keep the little one from me so long. Oh, Golden,
+Golden, come to me, my darling."
+
+Richard Leith put him back with gentle hands into his chair. He knelt
+down at his feet and told him all his sorrowful story, throwing all the
+blame on himself, and pleading humbly for pardon from the father whom
+he had robbed of his darling.
+
+"I loved her," he said. "She was dearer than my own life. I would have
+brought her back to you in time. I was only waiting for the fame and
+fortune that came to me soon. But treachery came between us. I lost
+her, and henceforth I have lived hand in hand with sorrow and despair."
+
+The soft wind sighing past the window seemed to echo that heavy word
+"despair."
+
+"At the door of John Glenalvan lies your sorrow and mine," continued
+Richard Leith, "I am come to call him to account."
+
+"Who are you that dares arraign John Glenalvan?" exclaimed a harsh,
+blatant voice, as the speaker strode rudely into their presence.
+
+Richard Leith sprang to his feet and confronted the intruder. His dark
+eyes blazed with wrath as he answered:
+
+"I am Richard Leith, the husband of Golden Glenalvan, whom you falsely
+reported dead to gain some wicked end of your own. Liar, I have found
+you out in your sin! I demand my wronged wife at your hands."
+
+John Glenalvan glared lividly at the daring man who thus boldly
+confronted him with his sin.
+
+The blood retreated from his face and lips, and his eyes were wild and
+startled.
+
+"Answer me," cried Richard Leith, advancing upon him. "Where is Golden,
+my wife?"
+
+"You lie! She was never your wife," John Glenalvan retorted, furiously.
+
+"Shame upon you, John, to malign the fair name of your sister," cried
+his father, indignantly. "Rather rejoice that she is proved innocent at
+last."
+
+"Let him prove her so, if he can," cried the wretch, maliciously.
+
+"I can do so. Here is the certificate of my marriage to Golden
+Glenalvan in New York sixteen years ago, replied Richard Leith,
+unfolding a yellowed paper and holding it open before the eyes of the
+father and son.
+
+"Then she was really your wife," John said, with unwilling belief.
+
+"Of course she was my wife. How dared you think evil of your own
+sister?" demanded the lawyer, scornfully.
+
+"I do not answer to you for my thoughts, sir," replied John Glenalvan,
+angrily.
+
+"But you must answer to me for the deed which has deprived me of
+my wife and child for fifteen years," cried Richard Leith. "John
+Glenalvan, where is my wife?"
+
+"How should I know?" he retorted.
+
+"It is too late to fence with me," answered Richard Leith. "You, and
+you alone, are at the bottom of my wife's mysterious disappearance. You
+have either shut her up in solitary confinement, or you have murdered
+her!"
+
+"Murdered her! How dare you hint at such a thing?" John Glenalvan
+thundered, growing white with fear.
+
+"I dare do more," cried the lawyer, driven to desperation. "If you do
+not tell me what has become of my wife I will have you arrested for her
+murder."
+
+At these warning words John Glenalvan threw himself upon his accuser
+with the cry of an infuriated wild beast.
+
+Richard Leith was weak and ill. He had risen from a sick-bed, on which
+wasting anxiety and grief had thrown him, when he came to Glenalvan
+Hall.
+
+He went down like an infant before the strong fury of his opponent, and
+the old man's wailing cry pierced the air.
+
+"John, hold your hand! For God's sake, do not murder the man!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL.
+
+
+John Glenalvan did not heed his father's frightened remonstrance.
+
+He continued to rain furious blows on his feeble but struggling foe.
+
+The fell instinct of murder was aroused within his soul, and Richard
+Leith would have fallen a sure victim to its fury, but that suddenly
+the slight form of a woman rushed into the room, and, with a wild and
+piercing shriek, sprang upon John Glenalvan's neck, clutching it with
+frantic fingers in the endeavor to tear him from his almost dying
+victim.
+
+Almost strangling in the fierce tenacity of her grasp, the wretch
+released Mr. Leith, and springing upward with a savage bound, threw his
+frail assailant from him into the middle of the room.
+
+The terrible shock hurled her prostrate on the floor. She lay there
+stunned and bleeding, and the wretch, after one horror-struck glance at
+her, rushed from the room.
+
+"Golden--it is Golden! and he has killed her" wailed her grandfather,
+falling on his knees beside her; and Richard Leith, where he lay, half
+dying, comprehended the anguished wail, and crawled on his hands and
+knees to the side of his hapless daughter.
+
+It was little Golden, indeed, but she lay still and silent, with the
+blood oozing from her nostrils and a slight cut on her temple.
+
+As he reached her side, old Dinah rushed into the room.
+
+"Little missie, little missie!" she cried; then she stopped short in
+terror. "Oh, my Hebenly Master, who has done dis t'ing?"
+
+"Dinah," her master said quickly, "go and send Fred Glenalvan to me."
+
+She hobbled out obediently, and in a moment returned with the handsome
+young dandy, who glanced at his grandfather with haughty indifference.
+
+"Fredrick," the old man said, with strange sternness, "here are two
+people whom your father has nearly killed. You must go and bring a
+doctor for them."
+
+Frederick started at the sight of the bleeding forms upon the floor,
+but in an instant his countenance hardened into marble.
+
+"If my father has hurt them," he replied, "I doubt not that he had good
+reason for doing so, and they may die before I will fetch a physician
+to them."
+
+With that insolent reply he turned on his heel and left the room.
+
+"Vipers!" muttered the old man, indignantly, then he looked at Dinah
+sadly.
+
+"My faithful old soul," he said, "you must do what you can for them. I
+must go and seek for help myself."
+
+He went feebly from the room and across the lawn. Outside the gates he
+encountered a carriage waiting. The driver stood on the ground by the
+horses' heads, and a lady sat on the satin cushions with a troubled
+look on her lovely, blond face. She sprang out impulsively and came up
+to him.
+
+"Oh, sir," she cried, "I _know_ you are Mr. Glenalvan. Have you seen
+little Golden? She went into the hall a few minutes ago."
+
+"I have seen her, I fear she is dead, and I must bring a doctor," the
+old man wailed, heart-brokenly.
+
+She caught his arm and turned to the driver.
+
+"Drive into town at your highest speed and fetch a physician," she
+said, throwing her purse at his feet, then she took the old man's arm
+and hurried him in.
+
+"I am your little Golden's friend," she explained to him as they went
+along. "I came here with her and was waiting outside while she paid you
+a visit."
+
+Old Dinah was bathing the wound of her unconscious mistress when they
+entered, and Richard Leith lay upon the floor watching her with dim,
+despairing eyes.
+
+"Oh, Heaven, who has done this terrible deed?" Mrs. Leith cried wildly,
+as her eyes took in the dreadful scene.
+
+"Gertrude," her husband cried out at the sound of her voice, and she
+knelt down by him weeping wildly.
+
+"Oh, Richard, who is it that has killed you and your child?" she sobbed
+in anguish.
+
+"It is John Glenalvan's dreadful work," he replied, then he looked into
+her face with dim, yearning eyes.
+
+"Gertrude! I believe I am dying," he said faintly. "Will you forgive me
+before I die?"
+
+"Forgive you?" she said. "Ah, Richard, do not think that I blamed you.
+You sinned ignorantly."
+
+"Yes, ignorantly," he echoed, and a spasm of pain crossed his face an
+instant, then he said sadly: "But I did not mean _that_, Gertrude. I
+meant you must forgive me that I was careless and blind, that I did not
+prize your true heart more."
+
+She put her white hand to her heart, and a look of pain came into the
+large, blue eyes, then she said with mournful pathos:
+
+"For all the heartaches I have borne. Richard, I freely forgive you."
+
+"Thank you," he murmured, then his eyes dwelt on her gratefully. "It
+was so noble in you to care for my poor child," he murmured, "but
+Gertrude, I repented in an hour. I came back to tell her so, and she
+was gone, both were gone. I sought you everywhere, my heart nearly
+broke; I fell ill, and lay for weary weeks fevered and maddened by my
+impatience and anxiety. At last I grew better and came here!"
+
+"Have you found _her_?" she murmured, anxiously, while the red blood
+suffused her fair cheeks.
+
+He shook his head mournfully, and his eyes closed languidly. She
+believed that he was dead, and started up with a cry of woe, but when
+the physician came a little later he decided that he was only in a deep
+swoon.
+
+Golden recovered consciousness, and the hapless father and daughter
+were removed to adjoining rooms, the physician veering anxiously from
+one room to another.
+
+He believed that Mr. Leith's life might be saved by his medical skill,
+but he shook his head ominously over the beautiful, golden-haired
+child, whose shrill wails of agony pierced every heart, for in the
+agitation of her mind, and the fearful shock of her heavy fall, the
+pangs of premature motherhood had came upon her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+John Glenalvan had fled from the scene of his villainy with a speed
+to which sudden fear and remorse had lent wings. He believed that he
+had killed Richard Leith and his unfortunate child, and in the fear of
+punishment for his crime he did not even stop to apprise his family of
+what had occurred, but hurried away to seek a hiding-place for himself.
+
+Too late he regretted the blind rage that had forced him into the
+commission of such a desperate deed. The cries of his victims seemed to
+pursue him in his hurried flight.
+
+His son reported his cowardly deeds to his mother and sister, and they
+remained lost in fear and wonder.
+
+To do them justice, wicked as they were, they had no idea of the
+enormity of John Glenalvan's sin. They honestly believed that his
+sister Golden had disgraced the family. They dreamed not of the dread
+secret locked in his breast.
+
+Clare made a stealthy tour of discovery into the western wing, and soon
+finding out how matters stood, returned to her mother in a frenzy of
+wrath and anger against her hapless cousin, little Golden.
+
+"Oh, mother, such dreadful goings on," she said. "That shameless girl
+sick in one room, a strange man dead in another, and a doctor, and
+old Dinah, and a strange woman tending them. If I were you, mother,
+I really should not stand it. I would turn the whole tribe out of
+doors--should not you, Fred?"
+
+But Frederick, who, despite his defiant manner to his grandfather,
+looked pale and uneasy, vetoed the proposition as imprudent.
+
+"I do not know what provocation my father had to maltreat them so,"
+he said, "but certainly, they have a bad case against him; and if the
+man is dead, as you say, Clare, and if our cousin dies, too, they can
+indict him for murder."
+
+Mrs. Glenalvan and her daughter were so frightened at that grim word,
+murder, that they broke into hysterical tears and sobbing, while the
+hopeful son and heir sat silent, overwhelmed by the dread of evil that
+had fallen upon them all, to which was added the terrors of doubt and
+suspense.
+
+"That strange man and woman--who can they be, Fred?" inquired his
+mother.
+
+"I cannot tell; but I have my suspicions," he replied. "I believe they
+are the parents of Golden."
+
+"It is no wonder, then, that papa was goaded into attempting murder,"
+cried Clare. "Only think of the impudence of our wicked aunt in coming
+back to Glanalvan Hall. I should think father must have been maddened
+at the very sight. And yet, mother, she is one of the fairest women I
+ever saw. She does not look like a lost woman. She has a very innocent
+appearance."
+
+There were others beside these three, who wondered over the beautiful,
+strange woman who claimed to be little Golden's friend.
+
+Old Dinah and her master gazed upon her wonderful beauty, which
+reminded them so powerfully of the missing Golden's, and they wondered
+what her name could be.
+
+Old Dinah asked her at last what she should call her, and she answered
+simply, though with a burning blush:
+
+"My name is Gertrude."
+
+"Mrs. or Miss?" asked the inquisitive old negress, and again the lady's
+face grew crimson as she answered:
+
+"Mrs."
+
+"They must not know that I was his wife," she said to herself,
+resolutely. "I could not bear to have them know it. Perhaps they would
+hate me and judge him unjustly."
+
+But her tears fell heavily as she looked at the deathly white face
+laying on the pillow, and she wondered to herself if it would not be
+less hard for her to see him die then and there, than live to find his
+lost wife again.
+
+"God forgive me for my weakness and selfishness," she cried, starting
+at her own thoughts. "May he live to find the happiness of which he has
+been cheated so long."
+
+The long, weary night, filled with mortal agony to poor little Golden,
+slowly wore away.
+
+At the earliest peep of dawn a messenger arrived from the town with a
+telegram for Mr. Leith.
+
+He lay barely conscious on his pillow, breathing heavily and slow, and
+the physician read the message to him cautiously.
+
+It was from Mr. Desmond, and ran briefly:
+
+"We arrived in New York this hour. Is Golden with you? Bertram is
+half-crazed with anxiety."
+
+And across the lightning wires the fatal message flashed back to their
+anxious hearts:
+
+"_Golden is here. Her child is dead and she is dying._"
+
+Dying! This was the end of that brief dream of love, those weary months
+of supreme self-sacrifice.
+
+Whiter than the pillow on which she lay, beautiful Golden was breathing
+her sad young life out in heavy sighs and moans, while hidden carefully
+out of sight beneath its white linen sheet, "There lay the sweet,
+little baby that never had drawn a breath."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI.
+
+
+Into that splendid home in New York where the Desmonds had just
+arrived from Europe, that terrible telegram came like a thunder-clap.
+Bertram Chesleigh's repentant soul reeled in agony before it.
+
+"I am justly punished for my cowardly desertion of my darling," he
+groaned to his sister, to whom he had confided his sorrowful secret.
+"But, oh, God! how terribly I have suffered for the weakness and folly
+of an hour!"
+
+Edith, whose heart had been strangely changed and softened since her
+reconciliation with her husband, wept with him over the dreadful news.
+
+"Bertram, we must go to her," she said. "In death, if not in life, we
+must lift the shadow from the poor girl's memory. Elinor Glenalvan is
+going home to-day. Shall we accompany her?"
+
+"Yes; but do not tell her why we go. She hated my poor, little Golden,"
+he answered, sighing heavily.
+
+Elinor wondered secretly over their going, but rejoiced also. She had
+gone abroad with them, had had a most delightful time, and she sighed
+to think that the end had come at last.
+
+But one thing grieved her most of all. All her arts and her beauty,
+added to Mrs. Desmond's influence, had failed to win Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+She almost hated him when she thought of going home to hear her
+mother's lamentations over her failure, and her sister's taunts.
+
+Her spirits rose at the welcome news that he was going south with her.
+
+Perhaps she might triumph yet. It was a hopeful augury that he was not
+willing to lose sight of her yet.
+
+Poor vain and artful Elinor! She did not dream of the real truth.
+
+She believed that Golden had been thrust out of her way forever.
+
+Strangely enough, though she had known the true cause of the Desmonds'
+separation, she had never been able to ferret out the reason of their
+reconciliation.
+
+Immediately after Mr. Desmond reached Italy his wife had summarily
+dismissed Celine.
+
+No hints, nor careless appearance of wonder on Elinor's part could
+elicit the reason for the maid's dismissal.
+
+She only knew that the Frenchwoman had gone away in insolent triumph,
+taking with her the money she had wrested from her in payment for her
+treachery to poor little Golden.
+
+Mrs. Desmond's generous impulse to accompany her brother was frustrated
+by the sudden illness of her little daughter, so Bertram was forced to
+go on his sad mission without her, and Elinor was jubilant over the
+prospect of a long, delightful trip under his exclusive care.
+
+Anticipation and reality are different things, however, as Elinor was
+fated to learn.
+
+Never was there a more gloomy or self-absorbed cavalier than the
+handsome and entertaining Mr. Chesleigh on this occasion.
+
+Elinor bit her ruby lip and looked daggers as he lounged in his seat,
+pretending to be absorbed in a newspaper, but with lips compressed
+beneath his dark mustache, and a strange, somber light in the large,
+black eyes that puzzled Elinor, who had not the key to his mood.
+
+Indeed she began to be conscious of a vague feeling of dread and
+anxiety.
+
+She asked herself over and over why he had chosen to bear her company
+on her homeward way.
+
+Evidently it was through no tenderness for her. Though scrupulously
+polite and attentive, he preserved the appearance of distant
+friendliness in too marked a fashion to be misinterpreted.
+
+When at last, after traveling without delay or rest, they found
+themselves seated in the carriage that was to convey them to Glenalvan
+Hall, Elinor felt a certain sense of relief mingled with her chagrin
+and disappointment. She loved Bertram Chesleigh, but his moodiness and
+silence were strangely oppressive.
+
+"Why did he come with me?" she asked herself for the last time as
+the carriage rolled along the breezy, wooded drive, and her strange
+companion lay back among the cushions, his hat tilted over his eyes,
+his face pale, his lips working convulsively. "What will Clare say when
+she sees how disdainfully he treats me? How she will triumph at my
+disappointment."
+
+Her heart sank at the prospect of returning to the quietude and
+dreariness of Glenalvan Hall after the gay, easy, luxurious life she
+had led for the last few months.
+
+For a moment her love for the indifferent man beside her was
+transformed to hate.
+
+Why had he slighted her beauty, and her fascinations to turn to that
+doll-faced child whose life was a disgrace to the Glenalvans?
+
+She hated Bertram Chesleigh because he had not rescued her from the
+poverty of which she had grown so weary, and from which his love might
+have delivered her.
+
+"At least I have the satisfaction of knowing that I removed that little
+vixen, Golden, from his pathway," she thought, with vindictive triumph.
+"If she had remained who knows what might have happened? I should like
+to know what became of her when she left Mrs. Desmond's. I sincerely
+hope she drowned herself in the sea!"
+
+The carriage turned a sudden bend in the road, and Elinor, leaning idly
+forward to note the old, familiar landmarks, gazed intently one moment,
+then uttered a stifled cry of terror.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh started, like one awaking from a dream.
+
+"What is it? Has anything alarmed you, Miss Glenalvan?" he inquired,
+courteously.
+
+"Look there," she cried, fearfully, pointing her hand through the
+window.
+
+He followed the direction of her finger and saw--oh horror, that they
+were passing the burial-ground of the Glenalvans.
+
+He saw a little band of black-robed mourners grouped around a narrow
+mound of freshly-thrown-up earth.
+
+He saw the minister standing at the head of the grave with his open
+book, and fancied he could hear him repeating the solemn, beautiful
+words with which we consign "ashes to ashes, and dust to dust."
+
+"Pray tell the driver to stop," Elinor cried out, excitedly, "I must
+get out. Someone of my own family must be dead."
+
+He made no answer. He was handing her out with hands that trembled as
+nervously as her own. One terrible, blasting thought was in his mind.
+
+"It is Golden, my wronged, little wife, and my babe that I never saw,
+whom they are hiding beneath that little mound," he said to himself, in
+agony. "Oh, God! that I should have come only in time for this!"
+
+He opened the little, white gate that led into the green burial-place,
+with its glimmering, white stones, and Elinor silently followed him.
+
+The little group about the grave fell back as they approached, and they
+saw the men throwing up the earth upon the new-made grave. Its dull,
+awful thud fell like the crash of a great despair upon his heart.
+
+"Ashes to ashes, dust to dust," murmured the minister's solemn voice,
+and the conscience-stricken man fell on his knees and hid his face in
+his hand, afraid and ashamed, for that deep voice seemed to condemn him
+for the evil he had wrought.
+
+A weak and trembling hand fluttered down on his shoulder, and a thin,
+quavering voice sounded reproachfully in his ear:
+
+"So you have come to exhult over your wicked work, Bertram Chesleigh."
+
+The wretched man looked up into the streaming eyes of old Hugh
+Glenalvan.
+
+At a little distance he saw old black Dinah regarding him with looks
+of horror and loathing. A beautiful, golden-haired woman stood apart,
+weeping silently, and Elinor Glenalvan had gone to the minister and was
+speaking to him agitatedly.
+
+Bertram sprang up desperately.
+
+"Oh, sir, for God's sake," he cried to the dejected old man, "tell me
+whom they have buried here!"
+
+And the answer came in broken tones:
+
+"Golden Glenalvan and her babe."
+
+Bertram Chesleigh, kneeling in the dust that was heaped above the dead
+heart that had loved him so devotedly, lifted his hands and eyes to
+Heaven, and cried out, in a broken, contrite voice:
+
+"I call God to witness that it is Golden Chesleigh, not Golden
+Glenalvan, you have buried here. This dead girl was my wife, made so
+by a secret marriage last summer. It is my wife and my child you have
+hidden from me in this low grave. May God forgive me for the wrong I
+did them."
+
+Then, unable to bear the strain upon his nerves and his heart any
+longer, the wretched man fell forward heavily, and lay in a deep swoon
+across the mound that covered little Golden and her child.
+
+A terrible punishment had been meted out to him for the pride and
+selfishness that had made of his innocent child-wife an outcast, and a
+creature at whom to point the finger of a seemingly just scorn.
+
+The deathless flame of that deep "remorse that spurns atonement's
+power" had been kindled in his heart, never to go out save with the
+breath of life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII.
+
+
+For a few moments all believed that Bertram Chesleigh was dead. Elinor
+Glenalvan, filled with astonishment and deadly rage, devoutly hoped
+that he was.
+
+Her love had turned to hate, and as by a sudden flash she understood
+fully the passion of remorse and despair that had brought him to
+Glenalvan Hall.
+
+The vindictive wish came over her that he had died before he had spoken
+the brave words that had cleared the stain from the memory of the girl
+she had hated with such jealous fire and passion. She had yet to learn
+that every shadow had been cleared from Golden's name.
+
+While she stood like a statue, and angrily regarded the striking scene,
+the others busied themselves with the restoration of the unconscious
+man.
+
+Dinah brought cold water from a little spring, and bathed his face and
+hands. Gertrude held her smelling-salts to his nose.
+
+In a short time he revived and looked about him with an agony of sorrow
+in his pale, drawn face. His first conscious thought was of his loved
+and deeply-wronged wife.
+
+"She is dead," he groaned. "I shall never hear her sweet lips pronounce
+my pardon. Oh, God, did she leave me no message? Did she not curse me
+in dying for the woe I had wrought?"
+
+They all stood aloof from him except Gertrude. She told him what he
+asked in a grave and gentle voice.
+
+"She made no mention of you, Mr. Chesleigh. She was patient and brave
+to the last. She kept her vow of silence to the bitter end, and died
+with the story of her innocence untold."
+
+"I, coward that I was, bound her to secrecy," he said, "but I did not
+dream then of what would happen after. I wish to God that she had
+spoken and vindicated her honor."
+
+And again an expression of the deepest sorrow convulsed the dark,
+handsome face.
+
+"She was too true and loyal to break her vow," answered Gertrude,
+tearfully. "I believe that the shame and sorrow of it all killed her.
+She was a martyr to her love."
+
+He groaned and dropped his head upon his folded arms. There was
+silence, and every eye but Elinor's rested tearfully upon the low mound
+beneath which slumbered the poor girl who had died with the brand of
+the erring upon her, but who in this hour was proven guiltless and
+pure, as Gertrude had said, a patient martyr to affection.
+
+"Oh, that I might have seen her even once," groaned Bertram Chesleigh,
+turning instinctively for comfort to the sweet, sympathetic face of
+Gertrude. "Oh, tell me, did she suffer in dying? Was she conscious?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"No, she passed from a quiet slumber into death. The change was so
+gradual we scarcely knew when she was gone."
+
+"Gone!"
+
+The word thrilled him with a keen and bitter pain. The sweet,
+child-wife he had loved so dearly was lost from his life forever. She
+was gone from a world that had used her harshly and coldly, to take her
+fitting place among the angels.
+
+The soft wind sighing through the trees and the grass seemed to murmur
+her requiem: "_Requiescat in pace_."
+
+He rose and stood among them, his heavy eyes turning to the sad, old
+face of the grandfather whom he had bereaved of his darling. He held
+out his hand to him humbly.
+
+"_She_ is gone from us, and I cannot sue for her pardon," he said,
+wistfully. "But will you not forgive me, sir, for the sorrow my
+weakness and pride brought upon her and you?"
+
+But old Hugh Glenalvan's kindly blue eyes flashed upon him with a gleam
+of their youthful fire, and his voice quivered with anger and despair
+as he replied:
+
+"I will never forgive you unless _she_ should rise from the grave and
+forgive you too!"
+
+"Ye must forgive as ye would be forgiven," said the gentle, admonitory
+voice of the man of God.
+
+But the indignant old man shook off his suppliant hand.
+
+"She was his wife, and he discarded and deserted her. There is no
+forgiveness for such a sin," he said, with fiery scorn, as he turned
+away.
+
+They went away and left Bertram alone with the wronged and quiet dead.
+
+Gertrude, in her gentle, womanly pity would fain have persuaded him to
+go home with them, but he refused to listen.
+
+"Leave me to my lonely vigil here," he said, sorrowfully. "If her
+gentle spirit is yet hovering about she may accept my bitter grief and
+repentance as some atonement."
+
+When they had all gone and left him he bowed his head with a bitter cry.
+
+"Oh, Golden, my lost, little darling, only six feet of earth between
+us, and yet I shall never see you, speak to you, nor hear you again!"
+
+A low, respectful cough interrupted the mournful tenor of his thoughts.
+
+He glanced up and saw the old grave-digger leaning on his spade and
+regarding him wistfully.
+
+"What are you waiting for, my man?" he inquired, feeling impatient at
+this seeming intrusion on his grief.
+
+"If you please, sir, I have not yet finished throwing up the earth and
+shaping the mound," said the man, with some embarrassment.
+
+A bitter cry came from Bertram Chesleigh's lips.
+
+"What! would you bury her still deeper from my sight?" he cried. "Oh,
+rather throw off this heavy covering of earth and suffer me to look
+upon my darling one again."
+
+The man stared at him half fearfully.
+
+"Oh, sir, your sorrow has almost crazed you," he said. "You had better
+return to your friends and leave me here to finish my necessary work."
+
+But a new thought, born of his grief and remorse, had come into the
+mind of the mourner.
+
+"My man, look at me," he said, earnestly; "I want you to open this
+grave and let me see my wife again. You cannot refuse me when I pray
+you to do it. Only think! They have buried my child and I have never
+even seen its face. I must kiss the babe and its mother once, I cannot
+go away until I have done so."
+
+"Oh, sir, surely you are going mad," the man cried, alarmed. "I have
+never heard of such a thing. I could not do it if I would. I could not
+take the coffin out alone."
+
+"Let me help you," said the distracted mourner.
+
+"What you wish is quite impossible, sir," faltered the man, anxiously;
+"let me beg you to go on to the hall, and leave me to finish my sad
+duty."
+
+"You must not refuse me, it will break my heart," Bertram Chesleigh
+cried, "I will pay you well. See," he drew out a handful of shining
+gold pieces. "I will give you a hundred dollars if you will show me the
+faces of my wife and child."
+
+The dull eyes of the grave-digger grew bright at that sight. He was
+poor, and a hundred dollars were wealth to him.
+
+"I am sorry for you, sir, I wish I could do what you wish. That money
+would do my poor wife and children a deal of good. If you could wait
+until night," he said, lowering his voice and glancing significantly
+around him, "I might get help and do the job for you."
+
+Some whispered words passed between them: then Bertram Chesleigh rose
+and passed out of the green graveyard, casting one yearning look behind
+him at the low grave that held his darling.
+
+He bent his lagging footsteps toward old Glenalvan Hall, whose
+ivy-wreathed towers glistened picturesquely in the evening sunshine.
+
+Bertram went in through the wide entrance, and crossing the level lawn
+walked along the border of the beautiful lake.
+
+"It was here that we parted," he murmured to himself, in his sorrowful
+retrospection. "How beautiful, how happy she was, how full of love
+and trust. Oh, God, what dark spell came over me, and made me for
+twenty-four terrible hours false to my love and my vows? That old man
+was right. There is no forgiveness for such a terrible sin!"
+
+Frederick Glenalvan saw him from the house, and came down to meet him.
+
+"Chesleigh, I have heard all," he said, with pretended sympathy,
+"Elinor told us. My dear friend, how sorry I am for you. I was about
+to go and seek you. You must come up to the house and take some
+refreshment. You look ready to drop."
+
+"I feel fearfully ill," said Chesleigh, staggering unsteadily, and
+putting his hand to his head. "I need something, but do not ask me
+to accept the shelter of your roof, Fred. I have a quarrel with your
+father. He has bitterly deceived me, and must answer to me for his sin.
+
+"Father is not at home. He has been absent for several days," said
+Fred, confusedly. "But if you will not come up to the hall sit down
+here on this bench, and I will bring you some wine."
+
+Bertram obeyed his request almost mechanically. His head ached, and he
+felt dull, lifeless and inert.
+
+The grief and excitement under which he had labored for several days
+were beginning to tell heavily upon his overstrained nerves. With the
+murmured name of Golden, his head drooped on his breast and he relapsed
+into semi-unconsciousness.
+
+He was aroused by a hand lifting his head, and starting into
+consciousness, saw Frederick Glenalvan by his side, and Elinor standing
+before him with a small tray on which were arranged a glass of wine and
+several slices of cake. He did not notice how white and strange she
+looked, nor how steely her voice sounded as she said:
+
+"You are faint and ill. Drink this--it will revive you."
+
+She put the wine to his lips, and he drank it thirstily. A fire seemed
+to run through his veins, new life came into his limbs. He arose and
+thanked her, but refused the cake.
+
+"I am better, but I cannot eat; it would choke me," he said, and Elinor
+did not press him. She turned away, and as she passed the lake she
+furtively tossed the wine-glass in, and the cake after it.
+
+"So father had deceived him, and must answer to him for his sin," she
+said to herself, bitterly, as she walked along. "Well, well, we shall
+see! Oh, how I hate him! Yet once I loved him, and hoped to be his
+wife. I might have been if that little jade had never come between. Oh,
+how I hate her even in her grave!"
+
+She went back to the hall, walking like one in a dream, with lurid,
+blazing eyes, and a face blanched to the pallor of a marble image,
+muttering wickedly to herself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII.
+
+
+When Elinor had gone, Frederick Glenalvan turned curiously to Chesleigh.
+
+"So you were really the husband of Golden Leith, and not her betrayer,
+as everybody believed?" he said.
+
+"Yes, she was my lawful wife; but why do you call her Golden Leith?"
+Bertram Chesleigh inquired, curiously.
+
+"Did you not know," said Fred, carelessly, "that she had found her
+father? He is a New York lawyer, and his name is Richard Leith. It
+seems that her mother was really married to him after all."
+
+"Thank God! Then there is really not a shadow of disgrace upon my poor,
+wronged wife," cried Bertram Chesleigh, gladly. "Oh, God! if only she
+had lived."
+
+He was silent a moment, then asked, suddenly:
+
+"Where is Richard Leith now?"
+
+"He is lying ill in the western wing of Glenalvan Hall," Frederick
+replied, with some embarrassment at the inward consciousness of who
+caused that illness.
+
+"Is is possible? I must go to him at once," cried Bertram, starting up.
+"I am an old friend of Richard Leith. Will you accompany me, Fred?"
+
+Frederick walked with him across the grassy slope of the lawn, but left
+him in the wide corridor that separated the divided dwellings of the
+strangely sundered family.
+
+"I can accompany you no further," he said, confusedly. "The truth is,
+Mr. Leith and father have had a little difficulty, and we are not on
+the best of terms."
+
+He turned away, and Bertram knocked nervously on the door before him,
+and was admitted by Dinah, who scowled blackly when she saw whom the
+visitor was.
+
+"I wish to see Mr. Leith," he said, and the old woman silently motioned
+him to follow her into the sick man's room.
+
+White as the pillows on which he lay, was Richard Leith, but there
+was a smile of peace on his face, for Gertrude was sitting in a chair
+by his bedside, and she had been telling him of the strange scene at
+Golden's burial that evening; how Bertram Chesleigh had claimed her as
+his wife, and the child for his own.
+
+"Thank God! she was innocent and pure. Oh, how could I ever have
+doubted the child of my precious Golden," cried the bereaved father, in
+a passion of remorse and grief.
+
+"You know the whole truth, now. Can you ever forgive me?" inquired
+Bertram, advancing.
+
+"You here, Bertram Chesleigh? Oh, how could you have been so cruel?"
+exclaimed Mr. Leith, excitedly, as he rose on his elbow, and looked at
+the pale face and gleaming eyes of the intruder.
+
+"I will tell you all the truth, and perhaps you will understand me
+better," began Bertram Chesleigh, eagerly, but before the words were
+ended, a terrible change came over his face. It was distorted by
+contortions of pain, and with a shrill cry of agony he fell to the
+floor in strong convulsions.
+
+Gertrude sprang from her chair with a frightened shriek that brought
+Dinah rushing into the room with her old master close at her heels,
+followed by the hired nurse who had the care of Mr. Leith.
+
+"This man is dying--bring a doctor at once!" cried Gertrude, shrilly.
+
+"The doctor is here, madam," said the pleasant voice of the physician
+himself, who had just entered the door on his usual daily visit to Mr.
+Leith. "Why, what have we here?"
+
+He bent down over the tall, superb form that lay upon the floor
+writhing in a violent fit.
+
+There were a few moments of busy silence while he worked over the
+patient, then he looked up with a dark frown on his broad brow.
+
+"Who is this man, and how came he here?" he inquired.
+
+"He is my son-in-law, doctor, and he had barely entered the room when
+he fell in a fit," said Richard Leith. "What ails him?"
+
+Another dire contortion of the prostrate form, and the busy physician
+answered, sternly:
+
+"He has all the symptoms of arsenical poisoning."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The hovering night fell rainy, dark, and cheerless. The skillful
+physician worked steadily, anxiously, and patiently, trying to save
+from the grasp of the fell destroyer the writhing victim of Elinor
+Glenalvan's deadly hate and wicked revenge.
+
+Everyone was filled with grief and sorrow. All warring passions, all
+human resentments were forgotten in the anxiety with which they watched
+the wavering balance in which Bertram Chesleigh lay fluctuating between
+life and death.
+
+Arsenic had been administered to him in a draught of wine, declared the
+physician, and the wonder arose who had given it to him.
+
+Someone started the theory that he had taken it himself, with intent to
+commit suicide.
+
+Then they searched him, but not a grain of the deadly drug was
+discovered on his person. It was all a baffling mystery.
+
+They had left him mourning despairingly over little Golden's grave,
+and they had seen him no more until he had come to them in this awful
+condition.
+
+"If I had not come in at the moment I did, no earthly power could have
+saved him," declared the physician; "As it is, I hope--mind, I only say
+hope--that I may save his life."
+
+At midnight Gertrude stole to the outer door for a breath of fresh air.
+She felt faint, weary and dispirited.
+
+The death of Golden, whom she had learned to love very deeply, had
+deeply grieved her saddened heart.
+
+"Poor child," she moaned, sitting down on the marble steps and gazing
+sadly at the silver crescent of the young moon as it struggled through
+a bank of clouds; "she has had a fate as tragic and sad as her poor
+young mother's."
+
+The sound of muffled footsteps on the grass caused Gertrude to start up
+with a sudden cry.
+
+A youth was coming toward her, and his low, entreating "stay, madam,"
+arrested her contemplated flight.
+
+He came close to her side, and as his rough garments brushed the stone
+ballustrade, the cool, moist smell of newly thrown up earth came
+distinctly to her senses.
+
+She shivered and thought of that new-made grave lying in the silence
+and calm of the dewy night.
+
+"Will you tell me if Mr. Chesleigh is here, ma'am?" he inquired,
+respectfully.
+
+"Yes, he is here. What can you want of Mr. Chesleigh at this unseemly
+hour of the night?" she inquired, in wonder.
+
+"I have important business with him," said the youth, and Gertrude
+thought she detected a trembling, as of fear, in his voice. "Can I see
+him a moment, if you please?"
+
+"No, you cannot, for he is ill and unconscious, and we fear that he is
+dying," she replied.
+
+A smothered exclamation escaped from the youth's lips.
+
+"Oh, this is dreadful!" he said, as if unconscious of having a
+listener. "What shall we do now?"
+
+"Can I help you?" asked Gertrude, gently.
+
+He bent toward her eagerly.
+
+"Oh, madam, you are a friend of the poor lady that was buried this
+afternoon?" he said, almost fearfully.
+
+"Yes," she answered, with a quickened heart-beat.
+
+"Then come with me, for God's sake. There is not a minute to lose.
+Don't be afraid. No harm shall come to you."
+
+So impressed was Gertrude by the youth's strange eagerness that she
+followed him without a word across the green lawn, through the wide
+gate, and along the winding road.
+
+"Not here!" she said, aghast, as he paused at the white gate of the
+Glenalvan burying ground.
+
+"Yes, even here," he answered, solemnly; and the gate-latch clicked
+softly beneath his hand. "Follow me, lady. No harm shall happen you."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV.
+
+
+When Bertram Chesleigh came to full consciousness again he found
+himself lying on a couch in Mr. Leith's bedroom.
+
+The curtains were drawn at the windows, but the light of the full day
+glimmered through, and he saw the grave-faced physician sitting beside
+him, while Richard Leith, from the bed opposite, regarded him with an
+intent expression. He struggled up feebly and pressed his hand to his
+brow.
+
+"I have had a shock," he said, with an air of strange perplexity, as he
+looked into their anxious faces. "What was it? What has happened to me?"
+
+"You have been near to death's door," replied the physician, gravely,
+"but you will recover now."
+
+"I wish that I had died!" the young man burst out, with such passionate
+realization of his misery, that the doctor exclaimed, incautiously:
+
+"So, then, you _did_ try to commit suicide?"
+
+The brilliant, dark eyes looked at him in amazement.
+
+"Suicide! suicide!" he repeated, blankly. "Who dares to say that of me?"
+
+The doctor regarded him thoughtfully.
+
+"My dear sir," he said, quietly, "I happened in here very opportunely
+last evening and found you suffering all the terrible symptoms of
+arsenic poisoning. Your friends feared that your grief had unhinged
+your mind, and that under temporary aberration you had attempted the
+destruction of your own life."
+
+"They were wrong. I could never have been such a coward," Bertram
+answered, in such a tone of convincing truthfulness that no one could
+doubt him. "Indeed, doctor, you must have been mistaken. I have taken
+no drug recently."
+
+"I am not mistaken," the physician asserted, confidently. "You had most
+certainly had arsenic administered to you in a draught of wine."
+
+A startled gleam came into Mr. Chesleigh's eyes, his face whitened, a
+cry of horror came from his lips.
+
+"Doctor, are you quite, quite sure?" he exclaimed.
+
+"I would swear to the drug," was the instant reply. "Do you admit the
+wine?"
+
+"Yes," came the grave reply; "I drank a glass of wine before coming in
+here yesterday evening, but I did not dream it was drugged," and an
+expression of almost incredulous horror swept over the handsome face.
+
+"Who gave you the wine?" inquired the doctor and Richard Leith almost
+simultaneously.
+
+But Bertram Chesleigh shook his head.
+
+"Do not ask me," he said. "It is terrible, yet I will not betray my
+would-be destroyer."
+
+"It was one of the Glenalvans," asserted Richard Leith, seeing the
+truth as by a flash of light.
+
+"Do not ask me," the young man replied again. "I must not tell you. It
+is too terrible. I can scarce believe the dread reality myself."
+
+But though he refused to reveal the secret, Richard Leith felt morally
+certain that it was to some of the family of John Glenalvan the young
+man owed the attempted destruction of his life. He had heard that
+Elinor had "set her cap" at him.
+
+This, then, was the dreadful revenge she had taken for her
+disappointment.
+
+The physician went away and left them together. Then the lawyer told
+his son-in-law his whole sad story. Bertram's indignation knew no
+bounds.
+
+"May the curse of an offended God rest upon John Glenalvan's head!" he
+exclaimed. "It is to him and his family that my poor Golden owes the
+bitter sorrows of her brief life. My sister's maid, Celine, confessed
+that it was Elinor Glenalvan who discovered Golden's identity, and
+bribed her to send her away under a ban of disgrace. Oh, God, Leith,
+could I only have known that the girl little Ruby loved so dearly, and
+who shunned me so persistently, was my deserted wife, how joyously
+would I have taken her to my heart and claimed her for my own."
+
+"Yes, if you had only known," Richard Leith replied, with mournful
+emphasis. "My poor young daughter, hers indeed was a hard lot. Scorned
+by her kindred, deserted by her husband, despised and disowned by her
+miserable father! How glad she must have been to creep into the kindly
+shelter of the grave! Ah, Heaven, Chesleigh, I never can forget my own
+wretched share in breaking that tender heart."
+
+His head sank back on his pillow, and almost womanly tears coursed over
+his pale cheeks.
+
+"But she forgave me before she died," he continued, pathetically, after
+a little. "She was an angel, Chesleigh. I can never forget how sweet
+and patient she was. The day before she died they carried me into her
+room. I lay on a couch by the side of her bed. They showed me the
+beautiful little waxen image--the babe that had never drawn a single
+breath of life in this world, and I could not keep from crying when
+they said her terrible fall had killed the child. The minister came,
+and told her that she must die in a few hours, too. But was it not
+strange, Chesleigh? She smiled sadly and shook her head."
+
+"'No, you are all mistaken,' she said. 'I should not be sorry to die,
+but my time has not come yet. I cannot die until I know whether I shall
+meet my mother in Heaven, or whether she is still on earth.'
+
+"But that night she passed away peacefully in her sleep. It was so calm
+and gradual we did not know when the end had come. It was like those
+sweet lines of Hood:
+
+ "'We watched her breathing through the night,
+ Her breathing soft and low,
+ As in her breast the wave of life
+ Went heaving to and fro.
+ Our very hopes belied our fears,
+ Our fears our hopes belied;
+ We thought her dying when she slept,
+ And sleeping when she died.'"
+
+He ceased, and there was a heavy silence in the room. Bertram Chesleigh
+broke it in a hushed, low voice.
+
+"Poor, martyred child! Was she, then, so anxious to find her mother?"
+
+"She declared that it was the one dream of her life-time," Richard
+Leith replied.
+
+"And there is no clew save that which John Glenalvan holds?" inquired
+Bertram, thoughtfully.
+
+"None, and the villain has fled. I do not believe his own wife and
+children know aught of his whereabouts."
+
+A look of grave determination swept over Bertram's handsome, pallid
+face.
+
+"Then I will take up the quest where it dropped from Golden's little
+hand in dying. I will track the villain, if it is to the end of the
+world. It shall be my task to vindicate her mother's memory," he said,
+gravely and earnestly.
+
+"It is _my_ task rather," said Richard Leith.
+
+"We will join hands in the effort," his son-in-law answered.
+
+Old Dinah came in with a note for Mr. Leith. It was from Gertrude.
+
+ "I have gone away," she wrote. "I can leave you no address, but I
+ shall be cognizant of all that transpires at Glenalvan Hall, and I
+ may see you again ere long. You will soon be well enough to go about
+ again, and that you may be enabled to solve the distressing mystery
+ of your lost wife's fate, is the earnest prayer of
+
+ "GERTRUDE."
+
+"Surely no man was ever placed in such a terrible position," said
+Richard Leith. "For aught I know, I may have two wives living."
+
+"It is through no fault of yours," replied Mr. Chesleigh; "but it is
+most distressing. Your second wife appears to be a very beautiful and
+winning woman."
+
+"She is both, but I never discovered her worth until it was too late to
+love her," Mr. Leith replied, sadly. "Her noble conduct to my helpless
+daughter first opened my eyes to her lovable character."
+
+"God bless her!" Bertram Chesleigh uttered, fervently.
+
+They had some further conversation, and then Mr. Chesleigh announced
+his intention of going away.
+
+"I will not trespass further on Mr. Glenalvan's hospitality," he said
+decidedly. "I do not forget how much reason he has to hate the sight of
+me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV.
+
+
+The twilight hour found Bertram Chesleigh wending his way to the green
+graveyard where his hapless wife lay buried. As he had hoped, he found
+the old grave-digger waiting for him.
+
+He had been sodding the mound with velvety green turf, and planting
+lilies and immortelles upon it.
+
+"Why have you done this?" he said. "Did you not know I would come
+to-night? I was at death's door last night, or I would have come as I
+said. Did you do what you promised?"
+
+"Yes, sir, and waited a long time for you," said the man, doffing his
+cap respectfully. "I even sent my son to look for you. He learned of
+your bad condition, and then we were compelled to put the coffin back
+in the ground again."
+
+There was a strange, repressed excitement in the man's manner, but
+Mr. Chesleigh, absorbed in the bitterness of his own despair, did not
+observe it.
+
+He counted over a hundred dollars into the man's hand, and then said,
+with a tremor of hope in his voice:
+
+"I will double the amount if you will do your work over to-night. I
+_must_ see her. I am mad for one last look at my darling's face!"
+
+The grave-digger shuddered.
+
+"Oh, sir, it is too late," he said. "Have you forgotten how soon
+death's touch blasts everything human? And the little babe--_that_ was
+dead long before _she_ was. I know you could not bear to see them now."
+
+"Hush, hush!" the mourner cried, in a voice of agony. "I will hear no
+more. Go, now, and leave me!"
+
+"Cheer up, sir," said the man, with a strange gleam in his eyes, as he
+turned to go. "The Lord may have some blessing in store for you yet,
+sir."
+
+His only answer was a hollow groan from the wretched man. He threw
+himself face downward on the green grave, crushing all the sweet lilies
+and immortelles beneath his shuddering frame, and cried out to Heaven
+to kill him because he had blighted Golden's innocent life.
+
+He lay there an hour or two, musing sorrowfully over the hapless fate
+of his beautiful girl-bride.
+
+He recalled their brief, happy love-dream from which they had been so
+rudely awakened.
+
+Over and over again he cursed himself for that first impulse of pride
+and selfishness that had made him false to his bride in the hour when
+he should have protected and shielded her.
+
+A passionate, despairing longing to see her again filled his soul.
+
+"I will go back and wander by the lake again," he resolved, in the
+madness of his despair. "It was there that we spent our sweetest, most
+blissful hours. In the calm and silence of the night I will dream them
+over again."
+
+He went to the lake, but the very spirit of unrest was upon him.
+
+The stars came forth and shone weirdly in the sky, the perfume of
+spring flowers sweetened the air. He grew restless and fanciful.
+
+Such a brief while ago she had stolen nightly from the haunted rooms to
+meet him here beside the silvery lake.
+
+It almost seemed that she would come to him presently, gliding like a
+fairy across the green lawn to the glad shelter of his arms.
+
+Some impulse prompted him to seek the haunted rooms, to spend an hour
+of solitary musing in their quiet shade.
+
+He knew of a retired stairway by which he could make his way
+unperceived, and following the blind fate that led him, he went up to
+the hall and up the narrow, secluded stairs which little Golden had
+shown him, and by which she had obtained egress to her lover.
+
+He went along the dark corridor with a strangely beating heart, and
+paused before the closed door of the haunted room.
+
+He placed his hand on the knob, but to his surprise it refused to yield
+to his touch.
+
+Disappointed, he was about turning away, when a heavy step crossed the
+floor inside, the key clicked in the lock, and the door was cautiously
+opened.
+
+A flood of light streamed out into the corridor, and showed Bertram
+Chesleigh the tall form, and dark, saturnine face of John Glenalvan.
+
+There was a moment of complete astonishment on the part of each of the
+two men.
+
+Both recoiled from each other in the first suddenness of the shock, and
+then an angry oath burst from John Glenalvan's lips.
+
+"I thought it was Elinor!"
+
+"Luckily you were mistaken," returned Mr. Chesleigh, quickly recovering
+his wits. "This _rencontre_ is most opportune for me, sir. I have
+wished to see you."
+
+He stepped into the room as he spoke, and boldly confronted the
+villain, who glared at him with a mixture of defiance and dismay.
+
+"You wished to see me. I feel flattered," he said, with an attempt at
+cutting sarcasm. "May I ask why?"
+
+There was a moment's silence while Bertram Chesleigh rapidly reviewed
+the situation in his mind. Then he spoke:
+
+"You may ask, and I may answer," he said. "Mr. Glenalvan, I might heap
+the bitterest reproach upon your head, if by so doing the cruel work of
+your life might be undone. But the past is past. My wife is dead, and
+no reproaches and no lamentations can bring her back to me. But there
+is one issue between you and me. I have taken up my dead wife's quest
+where she left it. I demand that you shall tell me where to find my
+little Golden's deeply-wronged mother."
+
+The dark face before him whitened to the awful pallor of death, the
+man's eyes blazed luridly, his hands were clenched as they hung at his
+sides.
+
+"What if I refuse to answer your question?" he inquired, in a low,
+tense voice.
+
+"I will find means to force you to confession," Bertram Chesleigh
+replied, unhesitatingly.
+
+"I defy you to do so," John Glenalvan replied, with an imprecation. "I
+am not afraid of you."
+
+"You have caused my wife's death, and nearly murdered her father. I
+will have you arrested for it," exclaimed Mr. Chesleigh.
+
+"Do so, and I will prove that I only acted in self-defense," was the
+instant reply.
+
+"I will charge you with the murder or abduction of Golden Leith, your
+own sister," pursued Mr. Chesleigh.
+
+"And I will swear before any court in the land that she is the inmate
+of a nameless house in New York," was the taunting answer of the
+villain.
+
+They gazed at each other a moment, then Bertram Chesleigh exclaimed, in
+wonder:
+
+"What a black and unnatural heart you must have, John Glenalvan. How
+can you thus malign the fair fame of your own sister?"
+
+"Do not call her my sister. I hated her, the blue-eyed, doll-faced
+creature. She stole the love of my parents from me. It was all lavished
+on her, there was none left for me. But I have had a most glorious
+revenge," he laughed, wickedly.
+
+"Yes, you have had a most terrible revenge," said Bertram Chesleigh,
+with a shudder. "You have blighted her life and that of her child. Four
+lives--perhaps five--have been ruined by your sin. Is it not time that
+vengeance should cease?"
+
+"No!" thundered John Glenalvan, harshly. "For sixteen years the taste
+of revenge has been sweet on my lips. It is sweet still."
+
+"And you will not speak?" asked Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+"Never!" with triumphant malice.
+
+"I have one card yet to play," began the other, slowly.
+
+A light step suddenly crossed the threshold, and Elinor Glenalvan
+appeared in the room, bearing a waiter with a substantial supper
+arranged upon it.
+
+"Papa, were you growing impatient?" she asked; then her startled eyes
+fell on Bertram Chesleigh, meeting a glance of fiery scorn.
+
+"_You here_!" she gasped.
+
+The waiter fell from her nerveless hands, and its contents crashed upon
+the floor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVI.
+
+
+"Yes, Miss Glenalvan, it is I," was the answer, as his burning eyes
+devoured her pale, frightened face. "Did you take me for a ghost?"
+
+"Why should I take you for a ghost?" she faltered, trembling, but
+trying to brave it out with an air of defiance.
+
+"Because you tried to murder me last night, and came very near
+succeeding," he replied.
+
+"It is false. How dare you accuse me of such a crime?" she broke out,
+passionately, flying to her father's side, as if for protection.
+
+"How dare you?" echoed John Glenalvan, furiously.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh lifted his hand imperiously.
+
+"Listen," he said, "I told you I had one more card to play. Your fair
+daughter there attempted to poison me last night with drugged wine.
+The physician who saved my life declared that I had taken arsenic in a
+draught of wine. Do you see where you stand _now_?"
+
+"Do not believe him, father; it is false!" cried Elinor, furiously; but
+John Glenalvan, turning to look into her wild, frightened face, read
+the signs of guilt too plainly to be mistaken.
+
+The sight forced a groan even from his hardened lips.
+
+"You see where you stand," repeated Bertram Chesleigh, with stern
+brevity. "How will you bear to see your cherished daughter dragged into
+court on such a dreadful charge?"
+
+"You will not dare do such a thing," Elinor flashed out, quivering with
+rage.
+
+"That will be as your father says," was the firm reply. "If it pleases
+him to reveal the secret of Golden Leith's fate, I'll spare you and
+him; if not, you need expect no mercy from me."
+
+The grim _ultimatum_ was spoken. Elinor and her father knew by that
+flashing eye and stern-set lip that there was no appeal from the
+calmly-spoken decision.
+
+"Coward, to threaten a girl," she cried, taking refuge in vituperation
+now that denial had failed.
+
+But Mr. Chesleigh regarded them in silent scorn, and her father sternly
+silenced her. He was furious with wrath, and it seemed to him that not
+even for his daughter's sake could he forego his dear revenge.
+
+"Elinor," he said, with a dark frown, "if indeed you have done this
+thing you must prepare to face the consequences. I will not accede to
+his demand. Nothing shall balk me of my revenge."
+
+Abject terror and despair filled Elinor's soul at those threatening
+words. She knew too well how guilty she was. She was filled with terror
+at the too probable punishment of her wickedness.
+
+Falling on her knees, she caught her father's hand in hers, and bathed
+them with her frightened tears.
+
+"Oh, father, do not sacrifice me to your revenge," she cried, wildly.
+"Remember that I am your own child. I should be dearer to you than your
+revenge. Oh! for mercy's sake, make terms with the wretch, and save me
+from his wicked vengeance."
+
+Mr. Chesleigh did not even notice her. He stood with folded arms and
+curling lips awaiting his enemy's reply.
+
+The sullen determination on John Glenalvan's face softened as she
+continued her anxious pleading.
+
+"Father, I cannot live if that wretched story becomes known," she
+wailed. "If you do not save me I shall drown myself."
+
+A slight shudder convulsed his frame at the words. He looked down at
+the frightened, tear-wet face.
+
+"Elinor," he said, "if I have to sacrifice my revenge for your sake, I
+shall hate you every moment of your future life."
+
+"Anything but exposure," she wailed. "Oh, father, save me."
+
+His dark brow lowered like a thunder cloud.
+
+"So be it," he said, "but, mark me, girl, I shall hate you forever
+after."
+
+"Then you will speak?" Bertram Chesleigh cried, gladly.
+
+John Glenalvan hesitated a moment, then answered, gloomily:
+
+"Yes, to save that wretched girl I will reveal the secret that has been
+locked in my breast for sixteen years."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVII.
+
+
+There was a moment's silence, then Bertram Chesleigh said, quickly:
+
+"Come with me, Mr. Glenalvan. Let the secret you have kept so long be
+revealed in the hearing of your father and Richard Leith."
+
+The guilty man recoiled from the demand. He said, hoarsely:
+
+"I refuse to do so. I will reveal it to you, and you may bear the news
+yourself to them."
+
+Bertram Chesleigh considered the reply a moment, then answered, firmly.
+
+"I prefer that they should hear it from your own lips."
+
+John Glenalvan regarded him with furious eyes.
+
+"You wish to humble me all you can," he said.
+
+"Not so," replied Mr. Chesleigh. "But I consider that they have too
+decided a right to hear your confession, for me to exclude them from
+this momentous interview."
+
+The angry man regarded him silently a moment, then said, with a sigh of
+baffled rage:
+
+"So be it. I am not now in a position to dictate terms, and must obey
+your will. You swear to keep Elinor's secret if I do this thing?"
+
+"Yes," Bertram answered.
+
+"I am ready to accompany you, then. Elinor," he turned a furious gaze
+on his daughter who was weeping nervously near the door; "go to your
+mother, now. Tell her that you have ruined all my plans, and that I
+forever curse the hour in which you were born."
+
+She turned away, casting one last look of fiery anger and hatred on the
+man she had tried to murder, and left the room.
+
+The two men went down together to Richard Leith's room. The lawyer was
+sitting up in an easy-chair, talking to old Hugh Glenalvan who occupied
+a chair near the window.
+
+They both looked up in surprise at the unexpected sight of John
+Glenalvan, whom they had supposed to be far away in hiding somewhere.
+
+Bertram spoke at once, quietly:
+
+"You will pardon this late intrusion, Mr. Glenalvan. This gentleman has
+an important communication to make to you, and I ventured to bring him
+at once."
+
+"A communication?" faltered the old man, looking blankly at his son.
+
+"Yes," answered Mr. Chesleigh, with the flush of joyful triumph on
+his handsome face. "He will solve for you the strange mystery of your
+daughter's disappearance, sixteen years ago."
+
+A cry came from Richard Leith's white lips. The old man echoed it
+feebly, as he rose and went to his son, but John waved him rudely back.
+
+"Do not come near me," he said, harshly; "I have always hated you
+because you loved my sister best."
+
+"I could not help it, John. She was more lovable than you," the father
+faltered, feebly.
+
+"And so she stole your love from me and earned my hate. But I have had
+a great revenge," said the relentless wretch, grimly.
+
+"Oh, John, John!"
+
+The wailing cry came from the old man's lips; he looked at his son in
+surprise and horror.
+
+"Yes, revenge," repeated John Glenalvan, seeming to take a malicious
+pride in his wickedness now that its revelation was forced upon him.
+"I hated her, and when my opportunity came, I seized upon it. I knew
+she was a wife, yet it was my hand that sent her that lying letter that
+made her leave her husband."
+
+"Devil!" Richard Leith muttered, making an effort to spring upon him,
+but Bertram Chesleigh held him back, and the villain who had so wronged
+him laughed mockingly.
+
+"She came home," he went on, after a minute, "came home, and her child
+was born. The following night came her mysterious disappearance which
+I accounted for by declaring that she had returned to her deceiver,
+unable to exist away from him."
+
+All eyes were fixed on his dark, demoniac face as he proceeded. Every
+heart hung trembling on his further words.
+
+At last the fearful mystery of little Golden's fate would be known to
+those who loved and mourned her.
+
+Old Dinah had stolen silently in, and sat crouching in a corner, her
+beady, black eyes fixed intently on the face of the man whom she had
+always distrusted.
+
+"Speak," Richard Leith thundered, almost mad with impatience. "Speak!
+You know she never came to me. Where is she now, my poor, wronged
+darling?"
+
+"Is she dead or living?" echoed the wronged woman's father.
+
+"_She is dead_!" John Glenalvan answered, coldly.
+
+"Dead!" they echoed, despairingly.
+
+"She has been dead these sixteen years," he answered.
+
+"Vile wretch, then you murdered her," cried Richard Leith, struggling
+frantically in Bertram Chesleigh's strong hold.
+
+The villain laughed heartlessly.
+
+"Not so," he replied. "I hated her, but I would not have risked hanging
+for her sake. It was no fault of mine that she came to her death so
+tragically."
+
+"Dead and buried these sixteen years," old Hugh moaned, wringing his
+feeble hands, and weeping as if the bereavement were but of yesterday.
+"John, tell me where to find my darling's grave."
+
+"_She lies in the bottom of the lake_!" he replied, and those who
+watched him saw him shudder and turn pale for the first time.
+
+"How came she there?" broke out Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+"My sister was a somnambulist, Mr. Chesleigh. You will not deny that
+fact, father. She wandered from the house in her sleep, and walked
+deliberately into the lake."
+
+"You saw her?"
+
+"Yes, I was the only witness to the tragic deed," he replied, and again
+they saw a shudder shake his strong frame, and the chill dew beaded his
+forehead.
+
+"Devil, you lie! You pushed her in!" cried Richard Leith, wild with
+rage and grief.
+
+"Did you, John? Oh, tell me the truth," moaned his father.
+
+"No, I did not, as there is a Heaven that hears me. I hated Golden
+because you and my mother loved her best, and because half of your
+property would go to her, but the thought of murder had not entered my
+head. I was out late that night, and returning with my mind full of
+envious thoughts toward my sister, I saw her crossing the moonlighted
+lawn, and on coming nearer saw that she was asleep. Keeping near to
+her, I followed her down to the lake, and she walked on straight,
+without pause or backward glance, into the water."
+
+"And you put out no hand to save her--murderer!" cried Bertram
+Chesleigh, in terrific scorn.
+
+"I did not know what she would do until all was over," he replied.
+
+"You might have saved her even then," Bertram Chesleigh said.
+
+"Yes, I might, but I hated her, and the devil whispered to me that this
+was my opportunity, so I watched the water close over her head, and
+then I walked away," he replied.
+
+"Oh, my God, is de vengeance ob Hebben asleep dat such debbils roam de
+yerth?" wailed old Dinah.
+
+They echoed her cry. Surely the vengeance of Heaven slumbered that such
+demons walked the earth unsmitten.
+
+"Then temptation entered my soul," he continued. "I did not think it
+was right for Golden's child to inherit her share of the property when
+I needed it so much for my own growing family. So I fabricated that
+slander, and eventually forced my father to make over the remnant of
+the Glenalvans' possessions to me, and I transferred my hatred from
+Golden to her child. Now you know all."
+
+Old Hugh pointed to the door with a shaking finger.
+
+"Go, now, before I call down the terrible vengeance of God on your
+guilty head!" he cried. "Go, and leave me to weep for my murdered
+darling!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVIII.
+
+
+The next day men were set to work to drag the lake for Golden Leith's
+body.
+
+A poor, bleached skeleton, partially petrified by the action of the
+water, and therefore in a good state of preservation, was all they
+found.
+
+The broad, gold band of a wedding-ring still clung to the fleshless
+finger, and the name within was all that remained to assure them that
+this was she whom they sought--the hapless girl whose bright life had
+been blasted by a brother's sin, and whose name had been covered with
+ignominy and shame for sixteen years.
+
+They placed the precious remains in a coffin, and prepared to give them
+Christian burial the next day.
+
+All night and all day it stood on trestles in Hugh Glenalvan's
+sitting-room, with mourners at head and foot--the husband and father,
+so tragically bereaved of their darling, sat there dumb and tearless
+in their great affliction, and old Dinah stole in and out, with the
+corner of her apron pressed to her streaming eyes, her old black face
+convulsed with grief.
+
+Only a few days ago the daughter's coffin had stood there where the
+mother's rested now.
+
+Both her nurslings were gone, and the faithful, old creature's heart
+was almost broken.
+
+Throughout the night and day not a member of John Glenalvan's family
+was visible. The curtains remained drawn at the windows, the doors
+closed, there was no sign of life within the house.
+
+The time came when poor little Golden's remains were to be consigned to
+the kindly shelter of the grave.
+
+It was a beautiful evening about the first of March. The grass was blue
+with violets, the birds twittered softly in the orange and magnolia
+trees, the sun shone brightly as it slowly declined in the western sky;
+Dinah had been in and deposited some beautiful wreaths of flowers upon
+the bier.
+
+The friends who had loved the dead woman long ago had come to know her
+mournful fate at last, and had sent these sweet testimonials of their
+sympathy and grief.
+
+They were waiting in the graveyard to pay the last outward tokens of
+respect to the lost one, but they would not venture to the house to
+intrude on the privacy of the bereaved ones.
+
+So the gentle minister came and told them that they must bid a last
+farewell to the loved one, and Bertram Chesleigh stood ready to support
+the still feeble footsteps of Richard Leith with his strong young arm.
+
+"Oh, my daughter, my daughter, how cruelly God has afflicted me,"
+moaned the bereaved father, laying his white head down upon the
+coffin-lid, while the first heavy tears splashed down his cheeks.
+
+"Do not arraign your Maker. Rather thank Him that your child has
+at last been proven pure and innocent," said the minister, to whom
+Golden's whole history was known.
+
+"Thank God," Bertram Chesleigh uttered fervently, then, with a sigh
+that was almost a sob, he added: "Ah, if only my wife had lived to see
+this day!"
+
+"She lives--she is here!" said a low, clear voice in the doorway.
+
+All looked around, startled. Two figures were entering the room. Both
+were clothed in deep mourning.
+
+One was Gertrude Leith, pale and grave-looking, the other was alight,
+and deeply veiled. She clung to Mrs. Leith's arm tremblingly. They
+crossed the floor and stood by that long, dark, solemn object that
+occupied the center of the room. Mrs. Leith raised her companion's veil.
+
+All started and uttered a cry of incredulous surprise.
+
+Little Golden's daughter, pallid, beautiful, tearful, was standing
+there, looking at them across her mother's coffin.
+
+"Thank God!" she said, in her sweet, clear voice, with a sound of tears
+in its sweetness. "Thank God, my mother was pure and innocent! The
+dream of my life-time is fulfilled at last."
+
+"Does the grave give up its dead?" they cried, and Bertram Chesleigh
+went to her side and touched her white hand, half-fearfully.
+
+"My wife," he said.
+
+"Yes, your wife," she answered, lifting her violet eyes to his face
+with such deep reproach in their tragic depths, that he was awed into
+momentary silence.
+
+Then she turned from him, and went to her grandfather, who was gazing
+at her with dazed eyes full of grief and dread. She put her arms around
+his neck, and kissed his poor, withered cheek with her sweet, quivering
+lips.
+
+"Grandpa, you must not take me for a ghost," she said. "It is your own
+little Golden come back to live and love you again. I was not dead,
+after all. Did I not tell you I could not die yet? But I cannot tell
+you all the story of my rescue from the grave now. Let us give all our
+thoughts to our martyred dead."
+
+She looked up and saw her father and old Dinah waiting to greet her.
+
+It was a strange scene beside that flower-wreathed coffin.
+
+There was passionate joy over the living girl, and bitter sorrow over
+the dead.
+
+Mrs. Leith had beckoned Bertram Chesleigh away. Behind the heavy
+hangings of the bay-window she said to him, gently:
+
+"Do not press your wife yet, Mr. Chesleigh. Remember you have wronged
+her deeply, and she does not yet know how you have repented and atoned."
+
+"I can never atone," he said, heavily.
+
+"Perhaps she may think differently when she knows all," said Mrs.
+Leith. "Women are very tender and forgiving, you know."
+
+"If she never speaks to me again, I shall still rejoice that she is
+living," he said, with a beam of gladness in his large, black eyes.
+
+"Do you wonder how she was saved?" she inquired.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I will tell you, then, briefly," she answered. "You remember how you
+bribed the grave-digger to open her coffin for you that night?"
+
+"Yes, and then I was too ill to keep my appointment," he answered.
+
+"That wild fancy of yours was the means of her rescue," said Mrs.
+Leith. "When the man opened the coffin to be in readiness for you,
+he discovered slight signs of life in Golden. Growing alarmed and
+impatient at your tardiness, he sent his son to look for you, and the
+youth encountered me. I went with him, and we removed her to the man's
+little cottage near by. Little by little we fed the signs of reviving
+life, and you see the result."
+
+"For which I bless and thank you forever," he said, kissing her hand
+respectfully.
+
+"I have but little more to say," she went on, smiling a little sadly,
+"and it is this: Golden is very weak and exhausted yet. She is not
+strong enough to bear the excitement of her mother's burial. I will
+remain here with her while they are bearing Mrs. Leith to the grave,
+and I will tell her your whole story. She shall hear how you came back
+here to seek her in two days after your ill-considered desertion of
+her, and found her gone. I will tell her how nobly you vindicated her
+honor beside her grave. She shall know that you forced John Glenalvan
+to reveal the hidden story of her mother's fate. When you come back I
+think she cannot fail to forgive you."
+
+"You will do all this for me?" he said, with a strange moisture in his
+eyes. "I cannot thank you sufficiently. You are an angel."
+
+"No, only a very faulty and sad-hearted woman," she replied, with a
+pensive sigh, and then they went back to the mourners.
+
+She kept her promise nobly. While they bore the poor remains of Richard
+Leith's first wife to the grave, his second wife sat with his daughter
+and tried to turn the swelling current of her grief by relating the
+story of Bertram Chesleigh's repentance and atonement.
+
+"Golden, if you could have heard his noble vindication of your honor
+beside your grave; how proudly he claimed you for his wife, and your
+child for his own, you could not fail to pity and forgive him for
+the one great error into which he was led by his own pride and John
+Glenalvan's evil counsel."
+
+"I have suffered so much through his fault," said the wronged wife,
+with mournful pathos.
+
+"Yes, dear, but you must show your own nobility of soul now," said the
+step-mother, gently. "You must remember:
+
+ "'To err is human,
+ To forgive divine.'"
+
+The beautiful, pale face grew very grave and troubled.
+
+"If only I could forget his cruelty," she said. "Ah, my friend, I was
+hurt so cruelly by that letter he sent me! I trusted him so fully. I
+believed in his truth as I believed in my God. I was almost maddened by
+the suddenness of my sorrow. Every word is branded upon my memory. See!
+I can repeat every sentence:
+
+"'Though it almost kills me to forsake you, Golden, I must go away. The
+disgrace of your birth is so terrible that I can never claim you for
+my wife. Pride and honor alike forbid it. You must see for yourself,
+poor child, that your terrible misfortune has wholly set you apart from
+the world, and as you have sworn to keep our private marriage a secret
+until I give you leave to reveal it, I must beg you to hold the story
+unspoken in your breast forever.'"
+
+She paused and looked at Mrs. Leith with a whole tragedy of sorrow in
+her violet orbs.
+
+"Were they not cruel words to write to his own wife?" she said
+pathetically. "But I obeyed him. Through all the shame and sorrow
+that came afterward I kept my promise. Do you think I did not suffer
+more than death in keeping it? When Mrs. Desmond drove me out in such
+terrible disgrace do you think I did not long to say to her: I am as
+good and pure as you are; I am your brother's wife! And what did I not
+suffer when I knew she was separated from her husband on my account?
+Then when my own father disowned and despised me, how my heart ached to
+answer, I am Bertram Chesleigh's own wife! Oh, Gertrude, is it right
+and just that I should forgive him for all that I have suffered and
+made others suffer for his sake?"
+
+"Yes, dear, because his repentance was so quick and his remorse so
+deep," said the gentle monitor. "You must remember, Golden, that if you
+had not gone away that night you would have escaped all that suffering;
+your husband returned in twenty-four hours to claim you, and John
+Glenalvan told him that you had gone away with the deliberate intention
+of leading a sinful life. Do you wonder that it threw him on a bed of
+sickness that almost cost him his life? You must forgive him and love
+him again, dear, because he is so penitent and devoted now."
+
+And when the mourners returned from that sad funeral, Mrs. Leith sent
+him in to his wronged wife.
+
+He knelt down before the pale, golden-haired girl, and begged her to
+forgive him, not that he deserved it, but because he loved her so
+dearly.
+
+With the meek tenderness of woman, she forgave him and there was peace
+between them.
+
+Several hours later he had led her out to old Hugh Glenalvan who was
+dozing sadly in his easy-chair.
+
+"Mr. Glenalvan," he said, "you see my darling has risen from the grave
+to forgive me. Will you keep the promise you made, and forgive me too?"
+
+"Yes, grandpa, you must forgive him, for I love him dearly," said
+little Golden.
+
+So the old man forgave him, and solemnly blessed them as they knelt
+before him, one withered hand resting kindly on the dark, bowed head,
+and the other on the golden one.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIX.
+
+
+Gertrude Leith having done what she could for the happiness of others,
+prepared to take her own departure.
+
+"You will not leave us, my dear, true friend, my second mother," Golden
+exclaimed, as she came in veiled and bonneted, to bid her good-bye.
+
+"Yes, dear, it will be better for a time, at least, that I should go
+away. I shall return north and go back to those quiet quarters in
+Brooklyn, where you and I spent those peaceful weeks before we came
+south. When you come to New York with your husband you will find me
+there."
+
+"I will certainly seek you out," Golden replied. "But surely you do not
+intend to forsake my father. The doubt and perplexity are all over now.
+You know that you are legally his wife, my own mother being dead before
+he ever knew you."
+
+"Yes, I know, dear," she answered, gently. "Yet it is best I should
+go away for a time. Your father must have time for his grief. After
+awhile, if he desires it, I may return to him."
+
+Her words were too full of wisdom for anyone to gainsay them, so she
+went away.
+
+Richard Leith's grief and remorse over his lost little Golden was as
+deep and passionate as if she had died yesterday instead of more than
+sixteen years ago.
+
+He was too sorrowful to remember the fair woman he had put in the dead
+wife's place in the vain hope of stilling the fever and pain that had
+ached ceaselessly at his heart for sixteen years.
+
+The time came later on when the first wife's memory became a sweet
+and chastened dream to him, and his second wife's new loveliness of
+character won its place in his heart.
+
+Some years of quiet happiness and mutual love came to them after
+they learned to know each other better, but there was no year in
+which Richard Leith did not return south once, at least, to spend a
+few solemn hours by the low grave under the whispering cedars and
+broad-leaved magnolias, where the broken marble shaft bore the fond
+inscription:
+
+ "IN LOVING MEMORY OF GOLDEN,
+
+ WIFE OF RICHARD LEITH."
+
+There was one other to whom that green grave became like a shrine, a
+holy Mecca, to which his poor, faltering footsteps were daily bent.
+
+It was old Hugh Glenalvan, whom old Dinah daily guided to the sacred
+spot, where he would sit for hours, his gray locks fluttering in the
+gentle breeze, meditating, or perhaps holding spirit communion with the
+sainted dead.
+
+It was discovered on the day of Golden Leith's burial that John
+Glenalvan and his whole family had secretly left the house the night
+previous.
+
+A week later a letter came from the villain to Bertram Chesleigh,
+offering to sell Glenalvan Hall on fair terms, and stating that he
+should never live in the south again.
+
+A bargain was closed at once, and Bertram Chesleigh became the
+possessor of the old hall, which was speedily repaired and remodeled
+under the supervision of himself and his lovely young wife.
+
+Before the work was completed a chance newspaper chronicled the fact of
+a distressing railway accident and among the list of killed appeared
+the name of John Glenalvan.
+
+Bertram and Golden destroyed the newspaper, and old Hugh never knew
+that his wicked son had gone suddenly and without preparation into the
+presence of his august Maker.
+
+The old man's life flowed on in sweet serenity. All his happiness was
+centered in the living Golden, and beside the grave of the dead one.
+
+While he lived, Golden and her husband made their home at Glenalvan
+Hall, but after several years of quiet peace the white soul of the
+noble old man took on the wings of immortality, and soared to its
+Heavenly home through the open gates of the sunset.
+
+They made him a grave by his daughter's side, and when the grass was
+growing green upon his grave they took old Dinah with them and turned
+their faces northward.
+
+Black mammy had become reconciled to Mr. Chesleigh when she saw how
+happy he made her little missie. Her kind and wrinkled old visage
+reflected the radiant happiness that shone on Golden's beautiful face.
+
+She waited on her kindly and devotedly as ever, declaring that no
+starched-up French maid should ever take her place while she lived, and
+Golden, with a shuddering remembrance of the wicked Celine's treachery,
+always assured her "old mammy" that she need never fear such an
+intruder on her privileges.
+
+The day came when one of the most beautiful and palatial homes in New
+York opened wide its doors to receive Bertram Chesleigh's fair wife as
+its honored mistress.
+
+Though Golden had seen some of the stately homes of New York she was
+astonished at the luxury and magnificence of her own.
+
+Mr. Chesleigh smiled indulgently at her pretty, childish delight as
+he led her through suite after suite of the sumptuous, luxurious
+apartments the day after their arrival.
+
+"I am glad you are so pleased with your new home," he said, "but now,
+my darling, you must run away and let black mammy dress you. I have
+invited a few guests to dinner."
+
+"Strangers?" she asked, with a shy pretty blush on the exquisite face
+that was fresh and sweet as a rosebud with only that pensive droop of
+the golden-brown lashes to hint at the sorrow through which she had
+passed.
+
+"Not exactly,'" he replied with a smile. "Lawyer Leith and his wife,
+Mr. and Mrs. Desmond, and little Ruby. I think you will be glad to see
+her, though she must have tyrannized over you dreadfully in the old
+days."
+
+"A dear little tyrant she was," laughed Mrs. Chesleigh. "I shall be
+very pleased to see her again."
+
+She went to her dressing-room, and a loving remembrance of some things
+the child had said to her once, caused her to choose a lovely dress
+of white and blue, with large, gleaming white pearls for her neck and
+wrists, and knots of fragrance-breathing violets fastened among her
+creamy laces.
+
+Bertram uttered a cry of delight when she came to him in the
+drawing-room in the beautiful dress with the golden curls framing the
+perfect face in a halo of light.
+
+She looked beyond him and saw her father and his wife gazing at her
+with eyes full of love and wonder, and she sprang joyfully to their
+embrace.
+
+Mrs. Leith released her after some low-murmured words of love and
+praise, and she saw her husband's sister by her side.
+
+Mrs. Desmond had grown more brilliantly lovely than ever. Happiness and
+contentment had lent new radiance to the lovely face, but there was a
+wistful air, almost amounting to humility, about her as she extended
+her jeweled hand, and said, sweetly:
+
+"My dear little sister, can you ever forgive me?"
+
+"Freely," she said, clasping the offered hand, and proffering the kiss
+of peace.
+
+"And me, too--I am deeply repentant," said a low voice beside Mrs.
+Desmond, and looking up, Golden saw Mr. Desmond, debonairly handsome
+as ever, but so humble and ashamed that even a harder heart than our
+little Golden's must have pardoned his folly.
+
+Then Ruby took possession of her and gave her a bear-like hug.
+
+"Oh, you darling," she cried, "I have missed you so much, and to think
+you were Uncle Bert's wife all the while. It is just like one of
+mamma's novels that she is always reading. I warn you, Uncle Bert, that
+I shall make you jealous, I shall stay with her so much. And I do so
+want to see that dear old black mammy I have heard about."
+
+Her childish curiosity was gratified, and the New York child, after her
+first surprise, grew very fond of the good-natured, old negress who had
+been Golden's nurse from babyhood up.
+
+"I do not have a nurse any more," she confided to Golden. "They have
+hired a governess for me, and I like to study. It improves my temper."
+
+"Which was never very bad," smiled Golden, kissing the pretty little
+brunette.
+
+"When you go into society you will be surprised to meet Elinor
+Glenalvan again," Mrs. Desmond said to her after awhile. "She has
+picked up a rich, old man somewhere, and is Mrs. Langley now. Six
+months ago she burst upon society in a blaze of glory, and at present
+she is considered the handsomest woman in New York. But her star will
+fade when you are introduced to the social world."
+
+Soon afterward the two cousins met at a brilliant reception. Both
+looked their best, Elinor in Ruby velvet and diamonds, Golden in
+misty, white lace and pearls, Elinor just touched with the tips of her
+fingers the arm of her decrepit old spouse, Golden clung lovingly to
+her princely-looking and devoted husband. As they passed each other
+Mrs. Langley cast one look of bitter hatred and envy upon her fair,
+angelic-looking rival.
+
+It was as Mrs. Desmond had predicted. Elinor's star paled before the
+superior loveliness of Golden, and in bitter anger and chagrin, the
+eclipsed beauty retired from the field, and removed to a distant city,
+where she was seen and heard of no more by those who had formerly known
+her.
+
+Little Golden was glad when her enemy was gone, but she felt no vanity
+over her brilliant social successes. Her chief joy and pride was that
+she reigned queen over her husband's adoring heart.
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+
+This story was originally serialized in the _Family Story Paper_, where
+it ran from June 5, 1882 to September 4, 1882. This e-text is derived
+from a later reprint as No. 218 in _The Favorite Library_ published by
+The American News Company. The reprint edition also included two filler
+short stories: "A Mock Idyl" by Percy Ross and "Farewell" by W. H.
+Stacpoole. The filler stories are not included here.
+
+A table of contents was added for the convenience of the reader.
+
+Some inconsistent punctuation was retained (e.g. "Life Time" vs.
+"Life-Time" in title; "upturned" vs. "up-turned").
+
+Some inconsistently italicized text was retained (e.g. "rencontre").
+
+Some unusual spellings were retained (e.g. "exhult," "ballustrade").
+
+Accent marks to match original were omitted (e.g. "protege").
+
+Italics are represented with _underscores_.
+
+Page 3, changed "herelf" to "herself."
+
+Page 4, changed "to hasty" to "too hasty."
+
+Page 6, added missing quote before "Oh, grandpa."
+
+Page 13, changed "strangly" to "strangely."
+
+Page 17, changed "recounter" to "rencontre."
+
+Page 22, changed "neverspeak" to "never speak."
+
+Page 24, changed "aughs" to "laughs."
+
+Page 27, added comma after "Oh, my darlin'."
+
+Page 29, changed "founding" to "foundling" and changed ? to ! after
+"the girl is my niece."
+
+Page 31, changed "furthur intercouse" to "further intercourse."
+
+Page 37, changed "matin" to "mating."
+
+Page 38, added missing quote after "Jest wait one minute, darlin'."
+
+Page 42, changed "struggled" to "straggled."
+
+Page 48, changed "greatsest" to "greatest."
+
+Page 54, added missing quote before "He likes pretty faces."
+
+Page 55, changed "flirted" to "flitted."
+
+Page 56, changed "you hair" to "your hair."
+
+Page 60, changed "must not thing" to "must not think."
+
+Page 61, changed "significent" to "significant."
+
+Page 66, changed "thoughfully" to "thoughtfully."
+
+Page 75, removed extra "the" from "It is the the truth."
+
+Page 80, changed "Your know" to "You know" and "father as" to "father
+has."
+
+Page 83, changed "distress" to "mistress."
+
+Page 84, changed ? to ! in "you are mistaken!"
+
+Page 85, added missing quote before "Go, and take."
+
+Page 87, changed "her her husband" to "her husband."
+
+Page 91, changed "idendity" to "identity," "Lieth" to "Leith,"
+"Bestram" to "Bertram," "maked" to "marked" and "cousse" to "course."
+
+Page 97, changed "cempetence" to "competence."
+
+Page 101, changed "gazedw onderingly" to "gazed wonderingly."
+
+Page 102, changed "perference" to "preference," "you wife" to "your
+wife," and "guilty of his" to "guilty of this."
+
+Page 104, changed "delerious" to "delirious."
+
+Page 106, added missing open quote before "I wonder how."
+
+Page 107, changed "bess" to "bless."
+
+Page 110, changed "prostate" to "prostrate."
+
+Page 111, added missing quote before "I _know_."
+
+Page 112, changed "Lieth's" to "Leith's," "Lieth" to "Leith" and
+"idict" to "indict."
+
+Page 113, changed "as last" to "at last."
+
+Page 116, adding missing comma after "for God's sake" and changed
+"unable so bear" to "unable to bear."
+
+Page 117, added missing quote after "seen her even once."
+
+Page 118, changed "requim" to "requiem."
+
+Page 120, added missing quote after "absent for several days."
+
+Page 124, changed "Lieth" and "Keith" to "Leith."
+
+Page 127, changed "queit" to "quiet."
+
+Page 128, changed "No?" to "No!"
+
+Page 129, changed "belive" to "believe."
+
+Page 130, changed "hated" to "hatred."
+
+Page 139, changed "uncle Bert" to "Uncle Bert."
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44803 ***
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44803 ***</div>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Little Golden's Daughter, by Mrs. Alex.
+McVeigh Miller</h1>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ Note:
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ Images of the original pages are available through the
+ Digital Library of the Falvey Memorial Library,
+ Villanova University. See
+ <a href="http://digital.library.villanova.edu/Item/vudl:322376">
+ http://digital.library.villanova.edu/Item/vudl:322376</a><br />
+ <br />
+ Click on the book cover image to see an enlarged version.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 392px;">
+<a href="images/coverlarge.jpg"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="392" height="600" alt="Cover" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<p class="center">
+
+<a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XL">CHAPTER XL.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLI">CHAPTER XLI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLII">CHAPTER XLII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLIII">CHAPTER XLIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLIV">CHAPTER XLIV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLV">CHAPTER XLV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLVI">CHAPTER XLVI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLVII">CHAPTER XLVII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLVIII">CHAPTER XLVIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLIX">CHAPTER XLIX.</a><br />
+
+</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<h1>Little Golden's Daughter</h1>
+<p class="p4 small center">OR</p>
+<p class="p2 large center">The Dream of a Life Time</p>
+<p class="p6 tiny center">BY</p>
+<p class="medium center">MRS. ALEX. McVEIGH MILLER</p>
+<p class="tiny center">AUTHOR OF</p>
+<p class="center">"Little Coquette Bonnie," "The Senator's Bride," "Brunette and<br />
+Blonde," etc.</p>
+<p class="p6 center">NEW YORK<br />
+<span class="medium">THE AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY</span><br />
+<span class="small">PUBLISHERS' AGENTS</span><br />
+39-41 CHAMBERS STREET<br />
+</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center">
+Copyright, 1883,<br />
+NORMAN L. MUNRO.</p>
+<hr class="r5" />
+<p class="center">
+Copyright 1901,<br />
+By STREET &amp; SMITH</p>
+<hr class="r5" />
+<p class="center">
+Little Golden's Daughter</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="LITTLE_GOLDENS_DAUGHTER" id="LITTLE_GOLDENS_DAUGHTER">LITTLE GOLDEN'S DAUGHTER;</a></h2>
+
+<p class="center">OR,</p>
+
+<p class="center large"><i>The Dream of Her Life-Time</i>.</p>
+
+<hr class="r5" />
+
+<p class="center medium">By MRS. ALEX. McVEIGH MILLER.</p>
+
+<hr class="r5" />
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Beautiful Golden Glenalvan stood by the willow-bordered lake
+and looked into its azure depths with a dreamy light in her pansy-blue
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>She had been singing as she danced along the sunny path, but
+the sweet song died on the coral lips as she came to the little lake
+with its green fringe of willows and the white lilies sleeping on
+its breast.</p>
+
+<p>The wind as it sighed through the trees, and the low, soft ripple
+of the water, always sounded sad to Golden.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to her vivid fancy that the wind and the waves were
+trying to tell her some sad story in a language she could not understand.</p>
+
+<p>She was unconsciously saddened whenever she came to its
+banks and listened to the low, soft murmur.</p>
+
+<p>It had a tragic story to tell her, indeed, but its language was
+too mysterious for her to understand. Some day she would
+know.</p>
+
+<p>The afternoon sunshine threw the long, slanting shadows of
+old Glenalvan Hall far across the level greensward almost to the
+border of the lake.</p>
+
+<p>It had once been a fine and stately mansion, picturesque and
+pretentious, with many peaks and gables and oriel windows. But
+its ancient glory had long departed.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed little more than a picturesque, ivy-covered ruin now.
+But there still remained in one wing a few habitable apartments
+that were fine and large, and lofty.</p>
+
+<p>Here the last of the Glenalvans&mdash;once a proud and wealthy race&mdash;dwelt
+in respectable, shabby-genteel poverty.</p>
+
+<p>But poverty did not seem to have hurt lovely little Golden
+Glenalvan.</p>
+
+<p>She had a wealth of beauty, and a happy heart that made her
+seem like a gleam of sunshine in the home she brightened. She
+was a careless, willful child not yet sixteen.</p>
+
+<p>The plain, simple, blue gingham dress was worn quite short,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
+yet, the beautiful, golden tresses fell to her waist in long, loose,
+childish ringlets.</p>
+
+<p>Free and careless as the birds, she roamed at will through the
+wild, neglected park and the green woods that lay around her
+ancestral home.</p>
+
+<p>The dwellers in Glenalvan Hall were divided into two families.
+In the best and most habitable part, John Glenalvan lived with
+his wife and family, consisting of two daughters and a son. In
+a few battered rooms in the tumble-down wing, John Glenalvan's
+father, an old and hoary-headed man, kept house with his pretty
+little granddaughter, Golden, and one old black servant called
+Dinah.</p>
+
+<p>We have digressed a little from Golden as she stands beside
+the lake, swinging her wide, straw hat by its blue ribbons. Let
+us return.</p>
+
+<p>The little maiden is communing with herself. Quite unconsciously
+she speaks her thoughts aloud:</p>
+
+<p>"Old Dinah says that Elinor and Clare will give a little party
+to-night in honor of their brother's wealthy friend, who is to come
+on a visit to him to-day. How I wish they would invite me. I
+should like to go."</p>
+
+<p>"Should you now, really?" said a slightly sarcastic voice close
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up, and saw her cousin, Elinor coming along the
+path toward her.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor Glenalvan was a tall and queenly beauty of the most
+pronounced brunette type. She had large, black eyes that
+sparkled like diamonds, and glossy, black hair braided into a
+coronet on the top of her haughty head.</p>
+
+<p>Her features were well-cut and regular, her skin a clear olive,
+her cheeks and lips were a rich, glowing crimson. She was
+twenty-one years old, and her sister Clare, who walked by her
+side, was nineteen.</p>
+
+<p>Clare Glenalvan was a weak, vain, pretty girl, but with no
+such decided claim to beauty as Elinor. Her hair and eyes were
+not as dark as her sister's, her cheeks and lips were less rosy.
+She had a mincing, affected air, but was considered stylish and
+elegant.</p>
+
+<p>Both girls were attired in the best their father could afford
+from his very limited income, and their little cousin's simple blue
+gingham looked plain indeed by contrast with their cool, polka-dotted
+lawns, and lace ruffles.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor carried a small basket on her arm. They had come to
+the lake for water-lilies to decorate the rooms for the party of
+which they had caught Golden talking aloud.</p>
+
+<p>The little girl blushed at her dilemma a moment, then she
+faced the occasion bravely.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not know that you could hear me, Elinor," she said, lifting
+her beautiful, frank, blue eyes to her cousin's face, "but it is
+true. I should like to come to your party. You have invited
+grandpa's old servant to come and help with the supper, and she
+will go. Why do you not ask grandpa and me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa is too old to come, and you are too young," replied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+Elinor, with a careless, flippant laugh, while Clare stared at
+Golden, and murmured audibly:</p>
+
+<p>"The bold, little thing."</p>
+
+<p>Golden revolved her cousin's reply a moment in her mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, perhaps he is too old," she said, with a little sigh, "and
+yet I think he might enjoy seeing the young people amusing
+themselves. But as for me, Elinor, I know I am not too young!
+Minnie Edwards is coming, I have heard, and she is a month
+younger than I am! The only difference is that <i>she</i> puts up her
+hair, and wears long dresses. I would wear long dresses, too,
+only I do not believe grandpa could afford it. It would take
+several yards more for a trail, or even to touch all around."</p>
+
+<p>Clare and Elinor laughed heartlessly at the wistful calculation
+of the difference between short and long dresses. Then the elder
+sister said, abruptly:</p>
+
+<p>"It is a great pity grandpa cannot keep you a little girl in short
+dresses forever, Golden! You will not find it very pleasant to be
+a woman."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" said innocent Golden. "Are not women happy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Some are," said Elinor, "but I do not think <i>you</i> will ever
+be."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" asked the girl again.</p>
+
+<p>The two sisters exchanged significant glances that did not
+escape Golden's keen eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor, why do you and Clare look at each other so hatefully?"
+she cried out in sudden resentment and childish passion.
+"What is the matter? What have I done?"</p>
+
+<p>"You have done nothing except to be born," said Clare Glenalvan,
+irritably, "and under the circumstances, <i>that</i> is the worst
+thing you <i>could have</i> done."</p>
+
+<p>Was it only the fancy of beautiful Golden, or did the wind in
+the trees and grasses sigh mournfully, and the blue waves go
+lapsing past with a sadder tone?</p>
+
+<p>"Clare, I don't know what you mean," she cried, half-angrily.
+"I never harmed anyone in my life! I have not hurt anyone by
+being born, have I?"</p>
+
+<p>The sisters looked at the beautiful, half-defiant face with its
+rose flushed cheeks and flashing, violet eyes, and Elinor sneered
+rudely, while Clare answered in a sharp, complaining voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you have hurt every soul that bears the name of Glenalvan&mdash;the
+dead Glenalvans as well as the living ones. You are
+a living disgrace to the proud, old name that your mother was
+the first to disgrace!"</p>
+
+<p>Then she paused, a little frightened, for Golden had started so
+violently that she had almost fallen backward into the lake.</p>
+
+<p>She steadied herself by catching the branch of a bending willow,
+and looked at her cousin with death-white lips and cheeks,
+and scornful eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Clare, you are a cruel, wicked girl," she cried. "I will go
+and tell grandpa what terrible things you have said of me! I did
+not believe one word!"</p>
+
+<p>The tears of wounded pride were streaming down her cheeks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+as she sped along the path and across the green lawn up to the
+old hall. The sisters looked at each other, a little disconcerted.</p>
+
+<p>"Clare, you were too hasty," said Elinor, uneasily. "Grandpa
+will be very angry."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Little Golden sped across the green lawn, her young heart
+full of pain and anger at the cruel words her cousins had spoken
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>Flying through the long, dark corridor of the old hall, and passing
+through several lofty and empty old rooms, she emerged at
+last in the sunny bay-window where her grandfather dozed daily,
+surrounded by pots of fragrant roses and geraniums.</p>
+
+<p>But with the breathless words of complaint just parting her
+coral lips, Golden saw that the old arm-chair was vacant.</p>
+
+<p>She was surprised and a little dismayed; she had been so sure
+of finding him there.</p>
+
+<p>She turned round and ran out to the sunny kitchen in the back
+yard, where old Dinah stood at a table ironing some simple white
+garments for her young mistress, and crooning to herself a fragment
+of a negro revival tune.</p>
+
+<p>The only nurse and the best friend that Golden had ever
+known after her grandfather, was homely, warm-hearted, black
+Dinah.</p>
+
+<p>Golden loved the old negress dearly. Ever since she had first
+lisped her name, the girl had familiarly called her "black
+mammy," after the fashion of most southern children with their
+nurses.</p>
+
+<p>Now she called out quickly before she had reached the kitchen
+door.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, black mammy, where is grandpa?"</p>
+
+<p>Black mammy turned with such a start that she dropped the
+flat-iron she was wielding with such consummate skill.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! honey, chile, how you skeered me," she cried, "an' I've
+dropped de flat-iron, and e'enamost burnt my black toes off!
+What for did ye come callin' me so suddent?"</p>
+
+<p>"Where is grandpa?" repeated the child.</p>
+
+<p>She came up to the door and looked at Dinah, and the old woman
+saw how pale she was, and what a strange light gleamed
+in the violet eyes under their long, curling lashes of golden-brown.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, dearie, don't be afeard because de old man ain't a-nid-noddin'
+in his arm-cheer as usual. He's out a-walkin' wif his
+son."</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle John?" asked little Golden, with a wondering look.</p>
+
+<p>"Who else, honey?" said Dinah, as she vigorously rubbed a
+fresh iron with salt and beeswax.</p>
+
+<p>"It is so strange," said Golden, momentarily diverted from her
+immediate grievance by Dinah's news. "Uncle John comes so
+seldom. What did he want, black mammy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Want? De debbil, his best friend, knows better dan your
+poor ole black mammy," said Dinah, shaking her head. "All I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+know is dat he come looking black as a thunder-cloud, and ax ole
+massa to take a walk with him."</p>
+
+<p>"And he went?" said Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! yes, he went, pore ole soul, a-hobblin' off as sweet as a
+lamb with that snake in the grass!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! black mammy, grandpa would not like you to speak that
+way of his son," cried Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"I axes your pardon, honey. I spoke my mind afore I
+thought," answered Dinah.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no offense as far as I am concerned," replied her
+young mistress, readily. "There is no love lost between my uncle
+and me."</p>
+
+<p>Then she added, with a shade of anxiety in her voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Will they be long gone, do you think?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hasn't the leastest idea," said busy Dinah, "but ole massa
+is too feeble to walk very fur."</p>
+
+<p>Golden turned away silently, and went to her grandfather's
+nook in the bay-window to await his return. She was burning
+with impatience to tell him the cruel and unkind things her
+cousins had said to her, and to ask if they were true.</p>
+
+<p>She sat down in the old arm-chair, among the blossoming flowers,
+herself the fairest flower of all, and leaning her dimpled
+cheek on her hand, relapsed into troubled thought.</p>
+
+<p>The strange relations sustained by her grandfather and herself
+toward his son's family puzzled her as it had often done before.
+Living in the same house, and nearly related as they were, there
+was little or no intercourse between the two families and they
+were barely friendly.</p>
+
+<p>Ever since Golden could remember, it had been so. She had
+questioned her grandfather and she had questioned Dinah, but
+they gave her no satisfaction on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>It remained a pregnant mystery to the lonely child, living her
+thoughtless, girlish life in the ruined rooms of the western wing,
+and in the tangled gardens, and the wild, green wood.</p>
+
+<p>A brief time of impatient waiting, then Golden heard the murmur
+of voices beneath the window.</p>
+
+<p>She leaned her curly head out, and heard one sentence spoken in
+the clear, curt voice of John Glenalvan:</p>
+
+<p>"You understand now, father, how important it is to us that
+you should keep Golden's daughter more carefully secluded?"</p>
+
+<p>"The child will fret&mdash;she has been so used to an outdoor life,
+it will injure her health," feebly objected the old man.</p>
+
+<p>"Her health is the poorest objection you could urge with me,"
+said John Glenalvan, cruelly. "If she had died long ago it
+would have been the very best thing that could have happened
+for us all."</p>
+
+<p>The father's reply was lost in the distance as they passed on.
+They came in at the front door, passed down the long corridor,
+and separated to their divided abodes.</p>
+
+<p>Golden's grandfather came heavily into the quiet sitting-room,
+leaning on his oaken cane, and sought his favorite chair at the
+sunny window where the flowers bloomed and the bright-winged
+butterflies hovered.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He was not prepared to see Golden start up from the chair with
+a white face, and wild, frightened, blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p>She clutched his arms and leaned against him. He felt her
+frightened heart-beats plainly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, grandpa, grandpa," she wailed, "what is the matter with
+everyone? What have I done that some wish me dead and others
+are sorry that ever I was born?"</p>
+
+<p>She felt the tremulous lips of the old man pressed fondly on her
+drooping head, she heard a sorrowful murmur:</p>
+
+<p>"Poor little Golden's daughter," then he said aloud:</p>
+
+<p>"My darling, who has been saying such cruel things to you?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is Clare and Elinor, and Uncle John," she sobbed. "They&mdash;the
+girls, I mean, now&mdash;said the worst thing I could have done
+was to be born; and that my mother was the first to disgrace the
+name of Glenalvan. And, grandpa, I heard what Uncle John
+said when he passed under the window. He said if I had died
+long ago it must have been better for all."</p>
+
+<p>Old Hugh Glenalvan's kindly blue eyes were flashing fire. He
+held the quivering little form against his breast with loving arms,
+and his outraged old heart beat fast against the girl's.</p>
+
+<p>But he could not answer her. Indignant pain and grief kept
+him dumb.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, tell me what I have done to be hated by my kind,"
+she sobbed. "Am I deformed? Am I repulsive to look at?"</p>
+
+<p>"My darling, you are as perfect and as beautiful as an angel,"
+he answered, fondly kissing the fair, innocent brow.</p>
+
+<p>"Why do they hate me, then?" she wailed. "I would love
+them all if they would let me."</p>
+
+<p>"They are cruel and heartless. If they were not, they could
+not help but love you, my Golden," said the old man, bitterly.
+Then he sat down and drew her to a seat upon his knee.</p>
+
+<p>"Think no more of them, my darling," he said, brushing away
+the shining pearls of grief that hung trembling on her thick lashes.
+"They are cruel and unjust to you. Keep away from their presence
+and forget that the same strain of blood flows in your veins.
+Look upon them as aliens and strangers. Give all your love to
+me."</p>
+
+<p>She hid her sweet face against his shoulder, her breast heaving
+with the sobs that she could not repress.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a heart full of love," she sighed, "and it is all your
+own, dear grandpa. But tell me, oh, tell me of my mother! Can
+it be true? She did not, oh, she could not disgrace our proud old
+name."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, Golden, you torture me," the old man said, hoarsely.
+"There is a mystery surrounding you, my little one. Your
+history is a sad one. But you shall never know it if I can keep
+the blighting secret from your knowledge. Ask me no more, my
+darling. Dismiss it from your thoughts. You have always been
+happy heretofore. Be happy still. You are innocent, pure and
+beautiful. There is no reason why you should not have a quiet,
+happy life if you will keep away from those who wound you with
+their cruel words, and cling closely to your simple, peaceful
+home."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Her wild sobs had ceased. She was looking earnestly into his
+face, while long, low sighs quivered over her lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, listen to me, Golden," he said. "Your uncle has made
+a hard request of me, darling, but I have promised that it shall be
+done. Golden, will you trust me, and help me to keep my
+word?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is it about me?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear. You know the three upper chambers which foolish
+people believe to be haunted, Golden?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said, and he saw a slight quiver pass over the delicate
+lips, and her face grew pale.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course you know that is all nonsense, little one," he said,
+reassuringly. "There are no ghosts in Glenalvan Hall. It is only
+foolish and superstitious people who believe that silly tale. Golden,
+would you be willing to remain secluded in those haunted
+rooms for one week, or for whatever number of days John Glenalvan's
+expected guest shall remain?"</p>
+
+<p>The breath came a little faster over the beautiful, parted lips.</p>
+
+<p>"I am almost afraid," she sighed. "Oh, grandpa, why should
+they wish to hide me away like a criminal? I have done nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"I know that, dear. It is a heartless whim of those heartless
+people. They do not wish their guest to see you, or even to
+know of your existence. Do not mind them, pet. Perhaps they
+are jealous and fear that he might fall in love with you. That
+would never do, because they mean to marry him to Elinor and
+prop the fallen fortunes of the Glenalvans. You will humor their
+fancy, won't you, Golden?"</p>
+
+<p>The pansy-blue eyes flashed with resentful fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I humor them?" she cried. "They are hard and
+cold to me. Why should I shut myself up in prison, away from
+the sunshine, and the flowers and the birds in those gloomy,
+haunted chambers for their sake?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is for <i>my</i> sake, darling," he replied. "I have promised
+them that you will do it for me. Will you not do so, Golden?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid of the haunted rooms, grandpa," said the child,
+with a shiver.</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the daylight I hope," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"No, not in the daytime," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Old Dinah could sleep in your room at night, Golden. So, you
+see, there could be nothing to fear. My little darling, I have
+loved you and cared for you all your life, and I have never asked
+you for a sacrifice before. Will you make this concession for my
+sake?"</p>
+
+<p>The beautiful girl clasped her white arms round his neck, and
+kissed his withered cheek.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot refuse if it is for your sake, grandpa," she said.
+"You have been father, mother, friends and home to me all my
+life! I have had no one but you, grandpa, and I love you too
+dearly to grieve you. I will do as you wish me."</p>
+
+<p>He kissed her and thanked her many times.</p>
+
+<p>"You must believe that it hurts me as much as it does you, my
+pet," he said, "but it will not be for long&mdash;and John is so violent,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+I had to promise for the sake of peace. I hope you will never regret
+this sweet yielding to my will."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure I shall not," said the child-like girl, but she gave
+an unconscious shudder.</p>
+
+<p>His hands rested, as if in blessing, on her hair. He whispered,
+inaudibly:</p>
+
+<p>"God bless my hapless daughter's child."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Glenalvan Hall, like all old family mansions belonging to
+old and respectable families, had its reputed ghost.</p>
+
+<p>It was currently reported that three rooms in the upper story
+were haunted by the spirit of a fair young girl who had once inhabited
+them, and who had pined away and died for love of a
+handsome man who had not known of her love nor reciprocated
+it.</p>
+
+<p>This fair ancestress of Golden's&mdash;Erma Glenalvan, as she was
+called&mdash;was said to haunt the suite of rooms she had occupied in
+life, and credulous people believed that on moonlight nights she
+walked up and down, weeping and sighing, and wringing her
+white hands because her spirit could not retain its grave.</p>
+
+<p>It was to these gloomy and dismantled rooms, haunted by the
+restless ghost of an unhappy girl, that little Golden was consigned
+for a week or more by the stern desire of John Glenalvan.
+It was a hard trial to the child.</p>
+
+<p>She would not have consented to it but for the pleadings of her
+grandfather. Her love and gratitude to him made her yield an
+easy consent to his prayer, while she inwardly quaked with fear
+at the dread ordeal before her.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah was desired by her master to transfer suitable bedding
+and furniture to the room Golden would occupy, and to carry
+her meals to that room daily and attend carefully on her young
+mistress. Black Dinah was furious.</p>
+
+<p>"I know'd dar was deviltry afoot," she said. "I know'd it!
+John Glenalvan never sets his foot in ole massa's presence without
+some devil's broth is a-brewing!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, Dinah," old Hugh said, sternly. "You must not speak
+of my son that way. Do as I bid you. No harm can come to the
+child. She is willing to the plan."</p>
+
+<p>Dinah's loud complaints subsided into muttering and grumbling,
+but she did as her master had ordered.</p>
+
+<p>That night when old Hugh had laid his gray head on his pillow,
+and old Dinah had gone into the other wing of the hall, little
+Golden sat down to read in the ghostly-looking chamber where
+Erma Glenalvan's loving heart had broken for a hopeless love.</p>
+
+<p>Through the weird stillness and solitude of the haunted room,
+the sound of the gay dance music came to Golden's ears, softened
+and mellowed by the distance.</p>
+
+<p>The little maiden's heart beat faster at the delicious sound, so
+inspiring to youthful ears. She threw down her book impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"How sweet it sounds," she said. "They are in the great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+dancing-hall. I should like to see them. How cruel my cousins
+are to me!"</p>
+
+<p>The sweet lips quivered, and the blue eyes darkened with anger.
+Golden was a spoiled, impetuous child. Her grandpa and
+old Dinah had always yielded to her in everything and placed no
+restraint on her impetuous temper.</p>
+
+<p>Her little heart was swelling bitterly now, with resentment
+against her cruel cousins. She felt their neglect and their insults
+keenly, the more so because she was ignorant of any possible reason
+for their contumely.</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to spoil their party for them," the little creature
+said to herself with a passionate vindictiveness, quite unusual
+with her. "I have a great mind to play ghost, and frighten them
+all out of the dancing-hall. It would not be a bit too bad for
+them, after their meanness to me!"</p>
+
+<p>She had heard old Dinah say that Clare and Elinor were very
+much afraid of the beautiful phantom of Glenalvan Hall. They
+would not have ventured into the haunted suite alone for any
+amount of money.</p>
+
+<p>Clare had been heard to say that the very sight of the ghost
+would be sufficient to strike her dead.</p>
+
+<p>Beautiful Golden, who was as changeful as the summer breeze,
+began to laugh at the mischievous idea which had occurred to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"What a fine joke it would be to personate poor Erma Glenalvan,"
+she thought. "How Clare and Elinor would fly from
+the festive scene when I appeared, weeping and wringing my
+hands."</p>
+
+<p>She had heard the ghost described by Dinah, who averred that
+she had seen it several times.</p>
+
+<p>She remembered the long, white robe, the flowing veil of golden
+hair, the pearl necklace, the wondrous beauty, shining, as
+old Dinah declared, like a star.</p>
+
+<p>The beauty, the youth, the veil of golden hair she had. But the
+dress and the pearls. Where should she find them?</p>
+
+<p>An old wardrobe which had once belonged, no doubt, to the
+love-lorn Erma, stood against the wall. Golden pulled the door
+open, not without some little fear, and looked in at the collection
+of moth-eaten dresses that hung on the pegs.</p>
+
+<p>She could not tell whom they belonged to, for she had never
+looked into the wardrobe before, but she guessed that they were
+very old, for a cloud of dust rose from them as the door flew
+open, and as she touched them with her hand, some of the folds
+fell into rents, and showed how long they had been the prey of
+the moth.</p>
+
+<p>But as Golden pulled one after another down from the pegs
+and tossed them into a rainbow heap on the floor, she came to
+one at last that would serve her purpose.</p>
+
+<p>It was a long, white dress of rich, brocaded silk, yellowed by
+time, antique in style, but tolerably well-preserved.</p>
+
+<p>Golden uttered a cry of delight, patting her little foot blithely
+to the merry measure of the dance music.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The very thing," she cried, and then she shivered slightly.
+"Perhaps it belonged to poor Erma," she thought.</p>
+
+<p>But in a few minutes Golden's blue gingham lay on the floor,
+and she had slipped into the old brocade, and hooked it together.
+It fitted her perfectly.</p>
+
+<p>The neck was low, and finished with a deep frill of fine, old,
+yellow lace. The sleeves were short, and the dimpled shoulders
+and beautifully moulded arms were exposed to the greatest advantage.</p>
+
+<p>Golden then took up the comb and brush and brushed her long,
+yellow ringlets out of curl until they fell about her slender, graceful
+form like a veil of summer sunshine.</p>
+
+<p>"If I only had the pearls, now, I might readily pass for the
+phantom," she said, looking at the reflection of herself in the
+glass. "How nice I look. This dress is quite becoming, I declare."</p>
+
+<p>As she turned round, admiring the long, soft, trailing folds of
+the brocade, something rattled in what appeared to be the region
+of the pocket.</p>
+
+<p>Golden ran her slim fingers into the pocket, and they encountered
+a rent between the lining and the material of the dress.</p>
+
+<p>Following the rent with her fingers to the very edge of the
+skirt, they encountered something which she drew out and found
+to be a necklace of large, gleaming, milk-white pearls.</p>
+
+<p>Golden uttered a cry of surprise and joy as she clasped the
+beautiful treasure, so strangely found, around her firm, white
+throat.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>In the dancing-room that night they had been talking of the
+Glenalvan ghost. Elinor or Clare had taken a great deal of pains
+to let Bertram Chesleigh know how grand and wealthy the Glenalvans
+had been before the war, and especially they had been
+pleased to have him hear about the beautiful phantom of the girl,
+Erma, who had died of a broken heart.</p>
+
+<p>Though they were afraid of her, and would not have willingly
+beheld her for anything, they were proud of the <i>prestige</i> of a
+family ghost. They considered that only distinguished families
+ever had such visitations.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor told him the pretty legend she had heard from a superstitious
+old servant. She said the phantom would fly if anyone
+approached her, but if she could once be overtaken and kissed by
+a very handsome man she would rest in her grave and walk no
+more.</p>
+
+<p>But it was confidently asserted that no one could accomplish
+such a feat, for the phantom flew before every pursuer as if fear
+lent it wings.</p>
+
+<p>"If you could catch and kiss her, Mr. Chesleigh, I think the
+ghost would be forever laid," said Clare Glenalvan, with a simper,
+and affected laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Miss Clare," said Bertram Chesleigh, with a bow,
+though he was inwardly disgusted. He knew that he was a very
+handsome man.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>His mirror had told him so, but he did not admire Clare's forwardness
+in telling him of it so plainly.</p>
+
+<p>The merry dance went on. The subject of the Glenalvan ghost
+had passed from the minds of the dancers when suddenly the
+music, which had been filling the air with sweetness, came to a
+dead stop.</p>
+
+<p>All the dancers looked toward the door where the band was
+stationed, for the cause of the silence.</p>
+
+<p>The performers had dropped their instruments, and were staring
+open-mouthed at a vision in the wide, open doorway that
+opened from a long dark, corridor&mdash;a vision clearly outlined
+against the outer darkness, and plainly seen by all in the room&mdash;a
+girlish form in sweeping, white robes and falling, golden hair,
+the beautiful face, convulsed with woe and pain, the white arms
+extended, the small hands clasping and unclasping each other in
+gestures of infinite despair.</p>
+
+<p>"The Glenalvan ghost!" ran from lip to lip in a murmur of awe
+and terror, while timid young girls clung shrieking to their partners,
+and the utmost confusion prevailed.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor Glenalvan tried to faint in the arms of Bertram Chesleigh,
+but he put her hastily into a chair and said quickly:</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Glenalvan, I am going to earn your everlasting gratitude.
+I shall kiss the beautiful Erma, and the Glenalvan ghost will be
+forever laid."</p>
+
+<p>He sprang toward the doorway, but in that moment the beautiful
+phantom turned and fled precipitately before him.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>It had not entered into little Golden's plan for the discomfiture
+of her scornful cousins, that anyone would have the temerity to
+approach her in her character of the Glenalvan ghost. On the
+contrary, she had confidently expected to spread fear, dismay and
+confusion among the festive guests, and to effect her own
+escape unmolested and unsuspected.</p>
+
+<p>What was her surprise and dismay to see a tall, dark, handsome
+man start from Elinor's side, and cross the room toward her with
+the evident purpose of accosting her!</p>
+
+<p>Beautiful Golden was filled with fear and alarm. She turned
+swiftly and fled down the long, dark corridor, her heart beating
+with dread lest she should be overtaken and identified by her
+pursuer.</p>
+
+<p>She thought of her grandfather's grief and mortification if he
+should find out her girlish prank, and of her stern uncle's wrathful
+anger.</p>
+
+<p>These swift thoughts seemed to lend wings to her light feet.
+She flew rather than ran down the dark hall, but her rapid heart-beats
+could not drown the quick and steady footsteps of her pursuer.
+They seemed to come nearer and gain upon her.</p>
+
+<p>To gain her own rooms in the western wing Golden would be
+compelled to go up a wide stairway leading directly from the
+corridor in which she was then running.</p>
+
+<p>It dawned on her mind in the whirl of thoughts that rushed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+over her, that it would be very unwise to return to the haunted
+rooms just then. She believed that she would undoubtedly be
+pursued and captured if she did.</p>
+
+<p>It occurred to her that her best plan would be to escape into the
+open air and hide herself in the belt of thick, dense shrubbery
+that grew below the lake.</p>
+
+<p>She knew every bend and turn, and secret nook within it. Her
+pursuer did not. She could baffle him there.</p>
+
+<p>Inspired by what seemed to her a happy thought, Golden flew
+past the wide staircase and gained the outer door.</p>
+
+<p>She flashed down the marble steps outside, and struck breathlessly
+across the green lawn.</p>
+
+<p>But swift and breathless as her flight had been, she had "a foe-man
+worthy of her steel." Bertram Chesleigh had never faltered
+in his swift pursuit of the supposed phantom.</p>
+
+<p>If such a thing were indeed possible, he meant to capture the
+flying form, and kiss the face whose beauty had struck him even
+through its tragic expression of sorrow and despair.</p>
+
+<p>He was light-footed and swift, and inspired by the novelty of
+the chase. He was determined to keep his word to the handsome
+Elinor, if possible.</p>
+
+<p>He went over the marble steps at one flying bound that gained
+him a great advantage over Golden. As he followed her over the
+lawn he was so near that the frightened girl could hear his quick,
+panting breath, and dreaded every moment to feel his outstretched
+hands clutch her white shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>It was a lovely night. The moon was at its full. Its white radiance
+touched everything with weird beauty. It shone on the
+leaves, the flowers, and the grass, and made the dew-drops glitter
+like diamonds.</p>
+
+<p>Golden's white brocade shone with a silvery gleam as she fled
+through the moonlight, her white arms and neck gleamed like
+ivory through the golden mist of her streaming hair.</p>
+
+<p>She had crossed the green expanse of the lawn in safety. Her light
+feet struck into the path by the lake. When once she had crossed
+that path she would be into the shrubbery. She felt sure that she
+might mislead the determined follower then.</p>
+
+<p>But the race had been an unequal one. That flying leap over
+the flight of marble steps had decided the contest in the man's
+favor.</p>
+
+<p>Scarce a minute more and the dreaded touch fell on her shoulder,
+two strong arms were passed quickly around her waist, her
+head was drawn back against a manly breast, and to Golden's
+horror and consternation, she felt a pair of warm, mustached lips
+pressed fully and passionately upon her own.</p>
+
+<p>"Lovely Erma, may your spirit rest in peace after this fond
+kiss of love," he cried; and Golden, trying vainly to struggle out
+of his clasp, lifted her eyes and saw a dark, splendid, handsome
+face gazing into her own, with large, black eyes that were full of
+eager admiration and sparkled with pleasant excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me go!" she cried, with her blue eyes full of angry tears,
+"let me go! How dared you&mdash;oh, how dared you <i>kiss</i> me?"</p>
+
+<p>But the strong arms held her fast, although Bertram Chesleigh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+began to realize that it was not a phantom, but a real creature of
+flesh and blood he had kissed so warmly.</p>
+
+<p>He held her fast, and looked down with a smile into the girlish
+face that was so very beautiful even through the crimson flush of
+anger.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not be angry," he said. "You should be glad that I have
+kissed you."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I be glad?" she demanded, in a sharp, imperious
+little voice.</p>
+
+<p>The dark eyes of little Golden's captor sparkled with mirth at
+her indignant question.</p>
+
+<p>"They told me up yonder at the hall," he replied, "that if a
+handsome man could catch and kiss the Glenalvan ghost its wandering
+spirit would be laid forever. Do you think that you can
+rest easy in your grave now, beautiful Erma?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden wrenched herself from his clasp, but he still held her
+so tightly by one hand that she could not leave him. She looked
+at him with bright eyes in which anger and reluctant mirth
+were strangely blended. His quaint humor was infectious.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think yourself so very handsome, sir?" she demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"A lady told me so this evening," he replied, unblushingly.
+"One must always take a lady's word, must not one, fair
+Erma?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not Erma," she replied, impetuously; "I am only Golden."</p>
+
+<p>"Golden! What a beautiful name!" cried Golden's captor.
+"Golden&mdash;<i>what</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"Golden Glenalvan," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"That is prettier still," he said; then he looked at her more
+closely. "Are you any kin to Clare and Elinor?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; we are cousins," the girl replied, frankly.</p>
+
+<p>She forgot how strange it was for her to be standing there talking
+to this stranger from whom she had been desperately fleeing
+a moment ago.</p>
+
+<p>But the dark, mesmeric eyes held her gaze with a luring power;
+the warm, soft hand that clasped her own, sent strange thrills of
+tingling sweetness through every nerve.</p>
+
+<p>When she had looked at the dark, handsome, smiling face
+once she liked to look at it again. She forgot to feel afraid of
+him.</p>
+
+<p>They were standing on the border of the lake. The moonlight
+made it shine like a sheet of silver; but Bertram Chesleigh had no
+eyes for its beauty while the fair, fresh face of that innocent girl
+was lifted to his.</p>
+
+<p>He said to himself that in all his life he had never seen anyone
+half so lovely.</p>
+
+<p>"And you are not a ghost, after all?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"No; I was only masquerading," she replied. "I did it to
+frighten my cousins and spoil their party. Do you think I have
+succeeded?" she inquired, with <i>naive</i> anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>He looked a little surprised.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know, I am sure," he said. "Why did you wish to
+spoil their pleasure?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Because they would not invite me to go, and said cruel
+things to me, besides," answered Golden, with a heaving breast.</p>
+
+<p>"Why would they not invite you?" he inquired, more surprised
+than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor said I was <i>too young</i>, but I should sooner think that
+grandpa guessed the true reason!" she replied with innocent frankness.</p>
+
+<p>"What did grandpa guess?" he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"They were afraid for Uncle John's rich guest to see me. They
+mean to marry him to Elinor," she replied, readily, and without
+a suspicion that it was the "rich guest" himself who held her
+small hand that moment so warmly and tightly in his own.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh laughed long and merrily, and the little girl
+awoke to a sense of her imprudence.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh? I should not have talked to you so," she cried. "They
+will be very angry. Oh, please don't tell anyone I was the
+ghost! Grandpa would scold me, and I could not bear that."</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the murmur of voices and laughter was borne
+to them on the breeze from the hall door.</p>
+
+<p>"Your friends are coming to look for you," she cried. "Oh! <i>do</i>
+let go my hand. I must hide myself. You will not betray my
+secret?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; I will keep it faithfully, Golden," he replied, then he
+kissed her small hand and released her, for he did not wish his
+friends to find him with her.</p>
+
+<p>She darted away like a bird, and hid herself in the shrubbery.
+The young man lighted a cigar and turned back to meet
+his friends.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you catch the ghost? Did you kiss her?" they asked him,
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"I was never so outwitted in my life," he replied. "Would
+you believe it if I should tell you that I pursued her across the
+lawn to the border of the lake, and that just as I might have
+touched her with my hand she sprang into the water and not a
+ripple on the surface showed where she had gone down?"</p>
+
+<p>This clever and non-committal reply was accepted as a statement
+of facts by the credulous. The romantic story spread from
+one to another rapidly.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh found himself quite a hero a few minutes
+after he had returned to the house. But though they praised his
+bravery, everyone chaffed him because he had failed to get the
+kiss from the beautiful phantom.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"Father, where is Golden this morning?"</p>
+
+<p>Old Hugh Glenalvan looked up with a frightened start as his
+son came into his presence with a stern brow and heavy footstep.</p>
+
+<p>It was the morning after the Glenalvans' little party, and the
+old man was sitting in the sunny bay-window, thinking of his
+little sunbeam, as he called her lovingly in his thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah had been in and brought him a message to say that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+she was very lonely and wished her grandpa to come and see her
+and bring her a bunch of roses. He was just thinking of doing
+so, when John Glenalvan came frowningly into his presence.</p>
+
+<p>"Father, where is Golden this morning?" he asked, sharply,
+and the old man trembled with fear of, he knew not what, as he
+replied:</p>
+
+<p>"She is up in the haunted rooms where you told me to put her,
+John."</p>
+
+<p>"Come with me. I wish to see her," he said, and the old man's
+face grew ashen pale as he asked:</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter? Has Golden done anything, John?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will know soon enough," was the short reply; and full
+of apprehension the old man led the way to his granddaughter's
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Beautiful Golden was walking up and down the dreary chamber,
+impatient as a captive bird. She started, and grew very pale
+as she caught sight of her Uncle John's stern face. She did not
+speak to him, but ran up to her grandfather and kissed his poor,
+old, wrinkled cheek.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-morning, dear grandpa," she said. "I am very lonely.
+I miss you so much. Did black mammy tell you to bring me
+some roses?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear, but I did not have the time," said the grandfather,
+with a tremulous voice, and stealing a glance at his son. For
+some inexplicable reason he stood in great fear of him.</p>
+
+<p>"Have done with such foolish chat, girl," broke in John Glenalvan,
+roughly. "So you played the ghost last night, eh, miss?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden gave a violent start, and clung to her grandfather. She
+trembled, and her sweet lips grew very pale.</p>
+
+<p>"You need not deny it. Your looks betray your guilt," continued
+John Glenalvan, roughly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, my Golden would not have done such a thing," cried
+her grandfather, warmly. "Who says that she did?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden looked anxiously into her uncle's face as that question
+left the old man's lips. Her heart fell at the thought
+that the handsome man who had kissed her by the lake, had betrayed
+her to her merciless uncle.</p>
+
+<p>But his next word relieved her from the dread.</p>
+
+<p>"I say so myself," he replied. "I saw and recognized her myself,
+as did Clare and Elinor also. She came and stood in the hall
+doorway where they were dancing, tricked out like the ghost of
+Erma Glenalvan. Deny it if you dare, miss!"</p>
+
+<p>The girl's quick temper flamed up at his harsh manner.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not wish to deny it," she cried defiantly. "I did it, and
+I frightened all your fine company, too! I am very glad of it."</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan sprang toward her with upraised hand as
+though he would strike her, but she stepped quickly out of his
+reach, and he said, with sullen rage:</p>
+
+<p>"You hear the little Jezebel, father. Take care, take care that
+I do not put my long-pending threat into execution."</p>
+
+<p>"John, she is but a playful child," he pleaded, pitifully. "She
+meant no harm, I am sure. Oh, Golden, my darling! why did
+you do it?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"To spite the girls, grandpa, for their cruelty to me," she replied,
+"but I am very sorry now, since it has grieved you so.
+Believe me, grandpa, I did not think you would ever hear of it.
+Can you forgive me?" she pleaded, wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>"You must ask your uncle's forgiveness, not mine, my dear,"
+was the tremulous reply.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not ask his pardon," she replied, stoutly, her blue eyes
+flashing, and the color flaming into her cheeks, "I am sorry to
+have displeased you, grandpa, dear, but I do not in the least care
+for anyone else whether they are offended or not."</p>
+
+<p>"Where did you get the fine toggery you wore last night?" demanded
+John Glenalvan, his fingers tingling with the impulse to
+slap the fair, defiant face.</p>
+
+<p>"That is no concern of yours," she replied, resentfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me, dear," whispered old Hugh, intent on preserving a
+semblance of peace if it were possible.</p>
+
+<p>Golden threw open the door of the wardrobe and showed him
+the brocade, which looked very yellow and old in the clear light
+of day.</p>
+
+<p>"She had a necklace of pearls around her neck," said John, in
+an artful aside to his father.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you, Golden?" asked her grandfather.</p>
+
+<p>Golden went to the little toilet-table and took up the costly
+necklace which John Glenalvan instantly snatched from her hand
+and placed in his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>Golden looked at him, tearful, dismayed, and excessively
+angry.</p>
+
+<p>"Give them back to me," she cried. "They are mine! I found
+them&mdash;indeed I did, grandpa. They had fallen through a hole in
+the pocket of the dress into the skirt lining. They are mine, and
+you shall give them back to me, Uncle John."</p>
+
+<p>"I will show you whether I will or not," he replied. "The
+necklace belongs to me. Everything in the house belongs to me,
+as well as the estate itself. You only have a home on sufferance
+here. Take care that you do not lose that."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it true, grandpa?" asked Golden, and the old man nodded
+sadly.</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan took down the white brocade, and carried it
+away in a compact bundle under his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall take this away," he said, "to make sure that you do not
+play any more disgraceful tricks upon us. I depend upon you,
+father, to see that she keeps to this room, and behaves herself
+for the remainder of the week. If she does not, I emphatically
+assure you that you both will suffer through her willfulness and
+disobedience!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will promise for her," said the old man, putting his hand
+over Golden's pouting and rebellious mouth. "She will not be
+naughty any more!"</p>
+
+<p>"See that she keeps the promise," his son replied, sternly, as he
+turned away.</p>
+
+<p>He went to Elinor's <i>boudoir</i> where he found his two daughters
+quarreling over Bertram Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you he admires me the most," exclaimed the elder girl,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+angrily, just as her father threw the necklace and the brocade
+into her lap, and said, triumphantly:</p>
+
+<p>"Here is the finery the ghost wore, my dears. Divide it between
+you."</p>
+
+<p>The brocade was thrown down in disgust, but a pitched battle
+ensued over the pearl necklace.</p>
+
+<p>"I am the elder, and I am determined to have it," cried Elinor,
+resolutely.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall have it myself, if I perish in the effort," retorted
+Clare.</p>
+
+<p>A wordy war ensued, from which John Glenalvan, to whom it
+was nothing new, retreated in disgust.</p>
+
+<p>The contest was ended at last by the handsome Elinor's boxing
+the ears of her sister, and taking possession of the spoil on the
+barbarous principle of "might is right."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"Did I dream the whole thing?" said Bertram Chesleigh to
+himself, "or was it, indeed, only a ghost that I kissed on the
+border of the lake? Do ghosts have warm, living flesh and blood,
+and balmy lips, and blushes that come and go, and delicious little
+tempers, and the power to thrill one's nerves with quivering darts
+of fire? Have I lost my heart to a phantom?"</p>
+
+<p>He might well ask himself these questions. A day and night
+had gone since the Glenalvans had their little party, and so far he
+had been unable to learn anything at all concerning the beautiful
+girl whom all but himself believed to have been the ghost of the
+dead Erma Glenalvan.</p>
+
+<p>As he had promised to keep little Golden's secret inviolate, he
+could of course make no opening inquiries, but his little, careless,
+artful speeches, and innocent inquiries all failed of effect.</p>
+
+<p>He could learn nothing of the maid whose beauty and grace
+had literally carried his heart by storm. It seemed quite plain
+that she did not live in the house.</p>
+
+<p>It was equally certain that she did not reside in the neighborhood,
+for his friend, young Fred Glenalvan, had often assured
+him that his father's family were the only living descendants of
+the once numerous race.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Chesleigh asked himself if there was indeed a mystery, or
+if he had been fooled by an elfish spirit from the world of
+shadows.</p>
+
+<p>His heart and his reason answered in the negative. It was a
+human being, warm, breathing, living, whom he had clasped and
+kissed that night. His veins tingled with electric fire at the remembrance.</p>
+
+<p>Alone in his room the second night after his rencontre with the
+ghost, Bertram Chesleigh walked up and down restlessly, half
+mad with himself that he should dwell so persistently on that one
+thought, yet finding it so dangerously sweet he would not willingly
+have forgotten it. It seemed to him that he had never
+really lived till now, when this romantic passion for the beautiful
+unknown fired his heart.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Elinor and Clare had been very much frightened at the appearance
+of the family ghost. They talked about it in low, awe-struck
+whispers.</p>
+
+<p>When Bertram Chesleigh expressed a desire to visit the haunted
+suite of rooms they expressed themselves as horrified, and declared
+that the rooms of the hapless Erma had been walled up
+long years before, and that all the rooms of the western wing
+were in such a ruinous condition that it was exceedingly dangerous
+to venture there at all.</p>
+
+<p>They declared that their father had engaged workmen to pull
+down the western wing on account of its precarious condition.</p>
+
+<p>But singularly enough Bertram Chesleigh's thoughts were running
+on the haunted rooms almost continuously to-night. Everything
+connected with the Glenalvan ghost had a deep interest for
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Some impulse impelled him to visit the western wing.</p>
+
+<p>He knew that the wide hall on which his room door opened
+had a corridor leading from it into the ruined western wing of
+the hall.</p>
+
+<p>Some impulse stronger than his will, some "spirit in his feet,"
+tempted him forth under cover of the silence and the night to
+explore the dangerous region in the vague hope of finding some
+trace of the mysterious ghost of last night.</p>
+
+<p>To have met her again he would have dared even more threatening
+dangers than the settling timbers and falling roof which
+Fred, and Clare and Elinor were unanimous in declaring menaced
+everyone who entered the decaying portion of the hall.</p>
+
+<p>Softly shod in his velvet slippers, he opened the door and peered
+out into the long hall.</p>
+
+<p>It was lighted by long windows at either end, through which
+the moonlight poured a flood of white radiance. Putting a convenient
+box of matches into the pocket of his dressing-gown, he
+sallied boldly forth.</p>
+
+<p>Whether ghost or human, he longed to encounter the beautiful
+girl he loved again.</p>
+
+<p>He entered the long corridor and walked along softly, guided
+by the moonlight that entered through the windows and lay in
+fantastic shadows upon the floor.</p>
+
+<p>He found that the building was in a ruinous condition indeed.
+The rooms into which he looked were dismantled and bare, the
+papering hung in ragged, fantastic strips from the walls; huge rats
+scampered over the floor, frightened night-birds flapped against
+the windows with wild, unearthly noises. Surely, the place was
+well-fitted to be the abode of ghosts and shadows, it was so weird
+and uncanny.</p>
+
+<p>But Bertram Chesleigh held on his way undauntedly. It seemed
+to him that he had explored every room on that upper floor,
+when suddenly he discovered a little passage down which he
+turned and found himself in front of a closed door.</p>
+
+<p>The majority of the doors had stood open, swinging carelessly
+on their hinges.</p>
+
+<p>The midnight explorer did not know why his heart beat so
+strangely when he stood before this closed one.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He turned the handle noiselessly, and entered, carefully closing
+the door behind him.</p>
+
+<p>In the large and lofty apartment, where he now found himself,
+a dim and shaded night-lamp was burning, thick, dark curtains
+shaded the windows, a large rug covered the center of the floor,
+a low, white cottage-bed stood in the furthest corner, draped in
+neat and spotless white.</p>
+
+<p>Then the midnight explorer started, and with difficulty repressed
+the cry that rose to his lips.</p>
+
+<p>For the soft, white counterpane thrown over the bed, outlined
+the curves of an exquisite, girlish form.</p>
+
+<p>On the white, ruffled pillow nestled a sleeping face as lovely as
+a budding rose.</p>
+
+<p>The round, white arms were thrown carelessly up above her
+head, the wealth of curling, golden hair, strayed in rich confusion
+over the pillow; the golden-brown lashes lay softly on the
+rosy, dimpled cheeks; the lips were smiling as if some happy
+dream stirred the white breast that rose and fell so softly over the
+innocent heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Ghost or human?" Bertram Chesleigh asked himself, as he
+gazed in astonishment and ecstacy at the beautiful, unconscious
+sleeper.</p>
+
+<p>He came nearer with noiseless footsteps and bated breath to the
+bedside. He bent so near that he could hear the soft, sweet
+breath that fluttered over the parted lips.</p>
+
+<p>"It is she," he said to himself, with mingled rapture and
+amaze.</p>
+
+<p>Then, in the next breath, he murmured:</p>
+
+<p>"I must beat a quiet retreat. How frightened and angry she
+would be, were she to awake and find me here!"</p>
+
+<p>He was one of the purest and most honorable minded men in the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>He turned to go, but could not tear his fascinated eyes from
+that beautiful, child-like, sleeping face.</p>
+
+<p>His splendid black eyes lingered on its innocent beauty in passionate
+admiration.</p>
+
+<p>"If I might only touch that little hand that lies so near me on
+the pillow, it would cool the thirst of my heart," he said wistfully
+to himself, while his heart beat fast with joy that he had found
+her again, this lovely creature of whom he had dreamed night
+and day for twenty-four hours.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at the sweetly-smiling, parted lips, and his pulses
+thrilled at the remembrance of the tender caress he had pressed
+upon them such a short while before.</p>
+
+<p>Carried away by the force of as pure and mad a passion as ever
+thrilled the heart of man, the enraptured lover bent his head and
+pressed a kiss as soft and light as the fall of a rose-leaf on the
+white hand that lay so temptingly near him.</p>
+
+<p>He meant to go then, but as he lifted his head, blushing with
+shame at the temptation that had prompted him to that wrongful
+and stolen caress, a sharp indignant voice fell on his ears with
+the suddenness of a thunder-clap.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you black-hearted wilyun&mdash;you wicked betrayer of innercence!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+Get out o' this afore I kill you with my own hands, you
+han'some debbil!"</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh turned and saw a ludicrous, yet startling
+sight framed in the open doorway of an inner chamber which in
+his agitation, he had not noticed before.</p>
+
+<p>Old Black Dinah, who was the color of ebony and very tall and
+lean, stood before him, clad in a short night-gown of gay, striped
+cotton from which her slim legs and arms stuck out like bean-poles.</p>
+
+<p>Her stubbly, gray wool seemed to stand erect on her head with
+horror, and her brandished arms, snapping black eyes, and furious
+face, made up a startling picture of wrath and horror, strangely
+combined with the ludicrous.</p>
+
+<p>"You black-hearted wilyun!" old Dinah repeated, advancing
+angrily upon her dismayed foe, "get out o' de room o' my innercent
+lamb afore she wakes and finds you here, you wolf!"</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon&mdash;I stumbled into this room by the merest
+accident," Chesleigh was beginning to say, when, startled by Dinah's
+loud and angry tones, little Golden awoke, and flashed the
+light of her wide blue eyes upon their excited faces.</p>
+
+<p>She uttered a cry of fear and terror when she saw the tall,
+manly form standing in the room.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah ran to her instantly, and she hid her frightened face
+on the shoulder of the old black woman.</p>
+
+<p>"Black mammy, what does all this mean?" cried the girl, nervously.</p>
+
+<p>Dinah gave a prolonged and lugubrious groan, and rolled up
+the whites of her eyes in reply. The intruder saw that it was
+imperative that he should stay long enough to explain matters to
+the alarmed girl.</p>
+
+<p>He said to himself that no one had ever been placed in such a
+strange and embarrassing position before.</p>
+
+<p>Every instinct of delicacy and respect for the young girl
+prompted him to retire at once; yet he could not bear to go and
+leave a wrong impression on the mind of the beautiful girl whom
+he admired so much.</p>
+
+<p>He retreated to the door, and, standing there, said, anxiously
+and respectfully:</p>
+
+<p>"I entreat you to believe, Miss Glenalvan, that I entered here
+with no wrongful motive. Led by a fit of curiosity, I was exploring
+the ruined wing of the hall, and I entered without a dream
+of finding it occupied by any living being. I had been led to believe
+that these rooms were totally unoccupied, and were even
+unsafe to enter. Will you accept my apology?"</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden's head was still hidden against Dinah's shoulder,
+and the old woman broke out sharply and quickly:</p>
+
+<p>"Honey, chile, don't you go for to 'cept dat wilyun's 'pology!
+Ef he done really cum in dis room by accident, he would agone
+out ag'in when he found dat a young lady occupied de room.
+But no; de first sight my ole brack eyes saw when I jumped off
+my pallet and come to de door was dat strange man a-kissin' you,
+my precious lamb."</p>
+
+<p>Golden began to sob, and Mr. Chesleigh mentally anathematized<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+the old woman's long tongue that had thus betrayed the secret
+he had intended to keep so carefully.</p>
+
+<p>His face grew scarlet as he hastened to say:</p>
+
+<p>"I kissed your hand, Miss Glenalvan, and I entreat your pardon
+for yielding to that overmastering temptation. Can you forgive
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>But Golden was still weeping bitterly, and old Dinah, in
+her fear and indignation for her darling, pointed quickly to the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>"Go," she said. "Don't you see how you frighten the chile
+by staying?"</p>
+
+<p>There seemed nothing to be gained by staying. The old woman
+was utterly unreasonable, and Golden was so agitated she could
+not speak.</p>
+
+<p>The embarrassed intruder silently withdrew to his own apartment,
+where he spent the night brooding over the strange discovery
+he had made and the unpleasant position in which he had
+placed himself.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"Honey, chile, where did you git 'quainted wid dat ondecent
+man?" inquired old Dinah of her nursling, as soon as Mr. Chesleigh
+had quitted the room.</p>
+
+<p>"What makes you think I am acquainted with him, mammy?"
+inquired the child in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>Dinah shook her woolly head sagely.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't try to deceabe your ole brack mammy, my lamb," she
+said. "He called you Missie Glenalvan&mdash;do you think I didn't
+notice that?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden's pretty cheeks grew scarlet with blushes.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall have to 'form your grandpa of what he done, the impident
+wilyun!" continued Dinah, emphatically.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, black mammy, please don't tell," cried the girl impulsively.
+"You heard what he said&mdash;it was a mere accident, I am
+quite, quite sure he meant no harm."</p>
+
+<p>"Ole massa shall be de jedge o' dat," replied Dinah decidedly.
+"I'll miss my guess if de ole man don't put a pistol-hole frew my
+fine, han'some gentleman!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, black mammy! then you shall not tell," cried Golden in
+terror. "Indeed, indeed, he is not the wicked man you believe
+him. He has kept my secret for me, and I must keep his now.
+That would only be fair."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, den you <i>do</i> know him," cried Dinah, horrified. "Tell
+me all about it dis minute, if you know what's best for you,
+chile."</p>
+
+<p>Golden did not resent the old nurse's tone of authority. She
+knew the old woman's love for her too well. She dried her eyes
+and reluctantly related her escapade two nights before.</p>
+
+<p>"He kept my secret," she concluded, "and it would not be fair
+for us to make trouble for him, would it, black mammy?"</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah had slipped down to the floor, and sat with her long,
+black arms clasped around her knees, looking up into her nursling's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+eager, fearful face, with a good deal of trouble in her keen,
+black eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The old woman was shrewd and intelligent in her way. She
+foresaw trouble, and perhaps the bitterest sorrow from these two
+meetings between the handsome guest of John Glenalvan and the
+young mistress.</p>
+
+<p>"Black mammy, promise me you will not tell grandpa," Golden
+pleaded. "I will do anything you ask me if only you will not
+tell him."</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon Dinah announced her ultimatum.</p>
+
+<p>"If you will promise me never to speak to the strange gentleman
+again, little missie, I will not tell ole massa."</p>
+
+<p>Golden opened wide her blue eyes. She looked very lovely as
+she leaned back among the snowy, ruffled pillows, her golden hair
+straying loosely about her shoulders, her cheeks tinted with a
+deep, warm blush, her little hands nervously clasping and unclasping
+each other.</p>
+
+<p>"Black mammy, I think you are very cross to-night," she
+pouted. "Why should I never speak to the handsome gentleman
+again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because it's best for you. Ole brack mammy knows better
+dan you, chile."</p>
+
+<p>"But I liked him so much," said Golden, blushing rosy red.</p>
+
+<p>"You had no business to like him," responded Dinah. "He's
+to marry Miss Elinor."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not believe it," said Golden, quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"He's not for you, anyway," retorted Dinah. "You'll nebber
+marry no one, my dear."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" asked the child. "Will nobody ever love me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody'll ever love ye like your grandpa, honey, and 'taint
+likely dat ever he will give ye away to anyone."</p>
+
+<p>Golden was silent a moment. She seemed to be thinking intently.
+After a moment she said gravely and sadly:</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa is old, and I am young. Who will take care of me
+when he is gone?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your old brack mammy, I guess, honey."</p>
+
+<p>"You are old, too," said Golden. "You may not live as long
+as I do."</p>
+
+<p>"Bless the chile's heart, how she <i>do</i> talk," said the old negress.
+"Ah, my precious lamb, I has outlived dem as was younger and
+fairer dan ole black Dinah."</p>
+
+<p>The old black face looked very sad for a moment, then Dinah
+continued:</p>
+
+<p>"Little missie, it's my clair duty to tell old massa de sarcumstances
+of the case to-morrow morning. Leastwise, unless you
+promise me nebber to speak to dat man ag'in."</p>
+
+<p>"That is very hard," sighed Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Hard," said Dinah. "I should think you would be so mad
+at the wilyun, a-comin' in and kissin' you so unceremonious, dat
+you would nebber want to speak to him any more."</p>
+
+<p>Golden hid her face in the pillows, and a deep sigh fluttered
+over her lips.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Come, dearie, won't you promise?" said Dinah. "I knows
+what's for your good better dan you does yourself, chile."</p>
+
+<p>"Must I promise it, indeed?" sighed the innocent child, lifting
+her flushed face from the pillow a moment to fix her big, blue,
+imploring eyes on the old woman's obdurate face.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you must sartainly promise it," was the uncompromising
+reply.</p>
+
+<p>There was silence for a moment, and Dinah saw the tears come
+into the sweet, blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Honey, chile, does you promise me?" she inquired, only confirmed
+in the opinion by this demonstration.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I promise not to speak to him unless you give me leave,
+black mammy," replied Golden, with quivering lips.</p>
+
+<p>"That's right, darling. Mammy can depend on your word.
+Lie down, and go to sleep, honey, and I'll fetch my pallet in yere,
+and sleep on de flo' by your bedside, so that no one kin 'trude on
+you ag'in."</p>
+
+<p>The girl laid her fair head silently on the pillow, and Dinah
+threw down a quilt on the floor and rolled herself in it. She was
+soon snoring profoundly.</p>
+
+<p>Not so with beautiful Golden. It was quite impossible for her
+to sleep again. She shut her eyelids resolutely, but the busy,
+beautiful brain was too active to admit of her losing consciousness
+again. She lay thinking of the splendid, dark-eyed
+stranger.</p>
+
+<p>"He has kissed me twice," she whispered to her heart, "and
+yet I do not even know his name. I wonder if I shall ever see
+him again. I hope I shall."</p>
+
+<p>As she remembered how earnestly he had apologized for his
+presence in her room, she could not believe him the wicked villain
+old Dinah had so loudly represented him.</p>
+
+<p>"He is handsome, and I believe that he is good," the girl said
+to herself, "and they tell me Elinor wants to marry him; I would
+like to marry him myself, just to spite my cousins."</p>
+
+<p>Poor little Golden! Her spite against her cousins was almost
+as old as her years. They had always hated her, and Golden had
+been quick to find it out and resent it.</p>
+
+<p>She had a quick and fiery temper, but it did not take her long
+to repent of her little fits of passion.</p>
+
+<p>She was a bright, winsome, lovable child. It was a wonder
+that anyone could hate her for her beautiful, innocent life.</p>
+
+<p>Yet there were those who did, and it was beginning to dawn
+vaguely on the mind of the girl that it was so. She knew that
+her life was passed differently from that of the other girls of her
+age and class.</p>
+
+<p>There were no teachers, no companions, no pleasures for her,
+and no promise of any change in the future.</p>
+
+<p>She wondered a little why it was so, but she never complained
+to her grandfather. It was, perhaps, only his way, she said to
+herself, little dreaming of the dark mystery that lay like a deep,
+impassible gulf between her and the dwellers in the outside world
+of which she knew so very, very little.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>A week elapsed, and there seemed but little prospect of the
+little prisoner's release from the haunted chambers of the ruined
+wing.</p>
+
+<p>The Glenalvans' guest lingered on, fascinated, it appeared, by
+the attractions of the beautiful Elinor. At least Elinor stoutly
+maintained this fact in the privacy of the family circle, while
+Clare as obstinately persisted that Mr. Chesleigh was perfectly
+impartial in his attentions to both.</p>
+
+<p>But however doubtful was Elinor's impression, the fact remained
+that he was pleased with his visit.</p>
+
+<p>He consented by their urgent invitation to prolong his stay another
+week. The girls were jubilant over his decision.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, old Dinah watched her secluded nursling with unremitting
+vigilance. She could not remain with her all day, because
+her housekeeping duties took her constantly into the lower
+part of the house, but she visited her intermittently, and at night
+rolled herself in a thick counterpane and slept on the floor by the
+side of Golden's couch.</p>
+
+<p>She took the added precaution to turn the rusty key in the lock
+at night.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah had never heard the familiar adage that "love
+laughs at locksmiths."</p>
+
+<p>She was ordinarily a very sound and healthy sleeper. The mere
+accident of a rheumatic attack, and consequent sleeplessness, had
+caused her appearance the night Mr. Chesleigh had entered the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Usually she might have been lifted, counterpane and all, and
+carried away bodily without being aware of it.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly two weeks after the night of her rencontre with Mr.
+Chesleigh, old Dinah awoke suddenly "in the dead waste and
+middle of the night," seized in the relentless grip of her old
+enemy, the rheumatism.</p>
+
+<p>She rolled herself out of her quilt and sat upright, groaning
+dolorously, and rubbing her knees in which the pain had settled.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Lordy! oh, Lordy!" she groaned, "how my ole bones
+does ache! Miss Golden! Miss Golden! my precious lam', wake
+up, and bid your ole brack mammy a las' far'well. I'm a-dyin',
+sartin, shuah!"</p>
+
+<p>But Golden, usually a very light sleeper, made no reply. Dinah
+reared her woolly head upward and looked into the bed.</p>
+
+<p>The bed was <i>empty</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Then Dinah looked around her in amazement to see if Golden
+was not in the room, laughing at her lugubrious groans as she
+had often done before. But she saw no trace of her young mistress.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Golden! Miss Golden!" she called, "is you in de udder
+room? Ef you is, come in here! I'se berry sick, honey, almos'
+a-dyin'."</p>
+
+<p>But her repeated calls elicited no reply. It appeared that
+pretty Golden was out of sight and hearing.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly old Dinah saw the dainty, white, ruffled night-dress,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+in which Golden had retired that night, lying in a snowy heap
+upon the floor.</p>
+
+<p>Dinah seized upon the garment and shook it vigorously, as if
+she expected to see the slight form of her young mistress drop
+from its folds to the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"Um&mdash;me-e-e," she groaned, "has de sperets carried de chile
+off?"</p>
+
+<p>She glanced up at the row of pegs where she had hung Golden's
+few articles of apparel. Her best dress&mdash;a dark-blue cashmere&mdash;was
+gone, also her hat and a summer jacket.</p>
+
+<p>"She hab runned away from us," old Dinah exclaimed, with
+almost a howl of despair.</p>
+
+<p>The thought inspired her with such grief and terror that she
+forgot her ailment entirely. She hobbled out from the room and
+made her way down stairs to her master's apartment and burst
+into his presence&mdash;a ludicrous object indeed in her striped cotton
+bed-gown.</p>
+
+<p>Old Hugh Glenalvan, late as it was, had not retired to bed.
+Wrapped in an old wadded dressing-gown he sat in an easy-chair
+before an old, carved oaken cabinet.</p>
+
+<p>One quaint little drawer was open, and the white-haired old man
+was poring over some simple treasures he had taken from it&mdash;simple
+treasures, yet dearer to his heart than gold or precious
+stones&mdash;a few old photographs, an old-fashioned ambrotype in an
+ebony case, a thin, gold ring and some locks of hair.</p>
+
+<p>Upon this sad and touching picture of memory and tenderness
+old Dinah's grotesque figure broke startlingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Ole massa! ole massa!" she cried, wildly, "has you seen little
+missie? Is she here with you?"</p>
+
+<p>The old man swept his treasures off his knees into the quaint
+cabinet and looked at his old servant in amazement.</p>
+
+<p>"Dinah, what does this startling intrusion mean?" he inquired,
+pushing his spectacles off his brow and regarding her with a mild
+frown.</p>
+
+<p>"Little Golden is missing. She hab runned away from us, ole
+massa!" shouted Dinah, desperately.</p>
+
+<p>"Dinah, you must be crazy," repeated Mr. Glenalvan, blankly.</p>
+
+<p>"It's de Lard's truth, ole massa. She hab done followed in her
+mudder's footsteps! Dat han'some man ober at John Glenalvan's
+has been and gone and 'ticed our Golden from us," wailed the
+old negress, in despair.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>It was not long before Mr. Glenalvan had heard the whole of
+Golden's simple love-story from his servant. They were filled with
+horror and grief at its too probable termination.</p>
+
+<p>"Dinah, it may be that she has stolen out into the grounds for
+a walk in the fresh air. She was growing very restless with the
+close, indoor confinement. Have you thought of that?" he said,
+hoping feebly against hope.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I go out and look for her, den, ole massa?" said Dinah,
+in a tone that plainly betrayed her hopelessness.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Let us both go," said old Hugh.</p>
+
+<p>They sallied forth anxiously into the brilliant moonlight that lay
+in silvery brightness all over the sweet, southern landscape&mdash;old
+Hugh, bareheaded, in his tattered dressing-gown, old Dinah in her
+short night-dress, too ridiculous a figure for anyone to contemplate
+without inward mirth.</p>
+
+<p>It so happened that Elinor, whom the hard exigencies of
+poverty compelled to be her own dressmaker, had sat up late
+that night to complete some alterations in a dress in which she
+had intended to array her fair self for the morrow.</p>
+
+<p>Having stitched on the last bit of lace, she went to the window
+and leaned out to cool her heated brow.</p>
+
+<p>"My head aches, and I am almost melted with sewing by that
+hot lamp," she said to herself, fretfully. "How I hate this poverty
+that grinds one down so! When once I am married to Bertram
+Chesleigh I will never touch a needle again! I will order
+all my dresses of Worth, of Paris. And I <i>will</i> marry Bertram
+Chesleigh! I swear it; and woe be to anyone that tries to prevent
+me!"</p>
+
+<p>Her dark eyes flashed luridly a moment, and her white hand
+was angrily clenched.</p>
+
+<p>She was thinking of Clare, who had persisted in rivaling her
+with Mr. Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the subdued murmur of voices floated up to
+her window from the lawn.</p>
+
+<p>She glanced down quickly, and saw old Dinah and her master
+crossing the lawn, their grotesque shadows flying long and dark
+before them in the brilliant moonlight.</p>
+
+<p>Quick as thought Elinor was out of her seat, and gliding softly
+through the door in quest of her father.</p>
+
+<p>Before old Glenalvan and his servant had crossed the lawn,
+two dark figures stole forth from the hall and silently followed
+them.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>On the green border of the silver lake two figures were standing
+in the beautiful moonlight. One was a man, tall, dark, splendid,
+with a princely beauty.</p>
+
+<p>His arm was thrown protectingly about a slender form that
+clung lovingly to his side.</p>
+
+<p>It was Golden Glenalvan, dressed in a dark suit and light cloth
+jacket, a neat, little walking-hat, set jauntily on her streaming,
+golden curls.</p>
+
+<p>Her blue eyes were lifted tenderly, and yet anxiously to her
+lover's face.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Bert," she said, giving him the tender name by which he
+had taught her to call him, "you must indeed let me go now.
+We have been saying good-bye at least a half an hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Parting is such a sweet pain," said the lover, bending to kiss
+the tempting, up-turned lips. "Give me just one more minute,
+my darling."</p>
+
+<p>"But I have been out so long," she objected, faintly. "What
+if black mammy should awake and find me gone?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"There is not the slightest danger," said Bertram Chesleigh
+carelessly. "The old woman sleeps so soundly that a thunder-clap
+would scarcely wake her."</p>
+
+<p>But just at that moment of his fancied security, old Dinah, in
+Golden's deserted chamber, was vigorously shaking her empty
+night-dress in a dazed attempt to evolve from its snowy folds the
+strangely missing girl.</p>
+
+<p>Golden smiled, then sighed faintly. He kissed her lips before
+the sigh had fairly breathed over them.</p>
+
+<p>"If you must indeed go, my darling," he said to her in a low
+voice, freighted with passionate tenderness, "tell me once again,
+my little Golden, how dearly you love me."</p>
+
+<p>"Love you," echoed the beautiful girl, and there was a Heaven
+of tenderness in the starry blue eyes she raised to his face. "Oh,
+my dearest, if I talked to you until the beautiful sun rose to-morrow,
+I could not put my love into words. It is deep in my heart,
+and nothing but death can ever tear it thence."</p>
+
+<p>She threw her arms around his neck, and their lips met in a
+long, passionate kiss. There was a silence broken only by the
+soft sigh of the rippling waves, while they stood</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">"tranced in long embraces,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mixed with kisses, sweeter, sweeter<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Than anything on earth."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>On that hush of exquisite silence that brooded round them,
+broke hastening footsteps and angry voices.</p>
+
+<p>The lovers started back from each other in dismay to find themselves
+surrounded by an astonished group.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah formed a central and conspicuous figure, beyond
+which old Hugh Glenalvan's silvery locks fluttered forlornly in
+the breeze.</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan and Elinor, his daughter, brought up the rear.
+Perhaps the old gentleman and his servant were as much astonished
+at seeing these followers as they were at the sight that met
+their eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah recovered her self-possession first of all, perhaps because
+she had vaguely suspected some such eclaircissement from
+the facts already in her possession.</p>
+
+<p>She rushed forward and caught her disobedient nursling by
+the hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my darlin', my honey, chile," she cried. "Come away
+from dat black-hearted wilyun to your grandpa and your ole
+brack mammy."</p>
+
+<p>But to the consternation of everybody, the girl shook Dinah's
+hand off, and clung persistently to her lover.</p>
+
+<p>He drew his arm protectingly around the slight figure, and
+Golden cried out with pretty, childish defiance:</p>
+
+<p>"He loves me! he loves me! and I will not leave him."</p>
+
+<p>That sight and those words fairly maddened Elinor Glenalvan.
+The blood seemed to boil in her veins.</p>
+
+<p>"Loves you&mdash;ha! ha! loves you, the child of sin and shame!"
+she cried out, in a hoarse voice of bitter scorn and passion. "Oh,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+yes, he loves you. That is why he has lured you to your ruin, as
+a stranger did your mother before you."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, Elinor," said John Glenalvan, in his sternest tone; then
+he looked at his father, who had crept to Golden's side, and stood
+there trembling and speechless. "Father," he said, harshly,
+"take the girl away. I must speak with Mr. Chesleigh alone."</p>
+
+<p>"I will not go," said Golden, and she looked up into her lover's
+face with a strange, wistful pleading in her soft, blue eyes, and
+in her sweet, coaxing lips.</p>
+
+<p>He bent down and whispered something that made her leave
+his side and put her small hand gently into her grandfather's.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, I will go home with you now," she said to him,
+tremulously, and he led her away, followed by Dinah, who glared
+angrily behind her, and muttered opprobrious invectives as she
+went.</p>
+
+<p>If looks could have killed, Bertram Chesleigh would never have
+lived to figure any further in the pages of my romance.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh was left alone by the lake, with the angry
+eyes of John Glenalvan glaring upon him, while Elinor, speechless
+with rage, stood a little apart and watched him.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Chesleigh, may I ask the meaning of this singular scene?"
+inquired his host, stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh, standing with folded arms in dignified silence,
+opened his lips and said, briefly:</p>
+
+<p>"It means, Mr. Glenalvan, that I have made the acquaintance
+of your niece and fallen in love with her."</p>
+
+<p>A threatening flash came into Elinor's eyes in the moonlight.
+She bit her lips fiercely to keep back the words that rose to
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to hear that," said John Glenalvan, in a subdued
+voice. Inwardly he was raging with anger, but he allowed no
+trace of it to escape him. "Will you tell me where and how you
+became acquainted with that child?"</p>
+
+<p>"I must decline to do so," said the young man, firmly.</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan looked around at his daughter.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor, return to the house," he said. "I will join you there
+presently."</p>
+
+<p>Elinor walked away, but she did not return to the hall as her
+father had commanded. Instead, she hid herself behind a clump
+of willows, where she could hear every word that passed between
+the two men.</p>
+
+<p>Some excited words ensued. Bertram Chesleigh was cool and
+calm. He denied that John Glenalvan had any right to call him
+to account for what he carelessly termed his innocent flirtation
+with little Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"From what I can hear," he said, "you have treated the girl
+both cruelly and wrongfully. I stand ready to answer to Golden's
+grandfather for any wrong he may consider I have done, but I
+shall make no apology to you, Mr. Glenalvan."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Why, not?" said the man, with repressed passion. "The girl is
+my niece!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yet you have wickedly secluded her from all society, and
+even debarred her of her freedom," said Bertram Chesleigh, indignantly.
+"It is your fault alone that she has been driven to
+seek the natural delights of youth in a clandestine manner."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not my fault, but her mother's," said John Glenalvan,
+significantly.</p>
+
+<p>His face grew pale as he spoke; his eyes strayed furtively to
+the quiet lake, lying silvery and serene in the clear moonlight.</p>
+
+<p>"How? I do not understand you," said the other, haughtily.</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan hesitated a moment. When he spoke it was
+with an affectation of deep feeling and manly sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Chesleigh," he said, "your unhesitating charge against
+me of cruelty to my niece forces me to the disclosure of a most
+painful family secret&mdash;one that I would fain have guarded from
+your knowledge. There is a strong reason for my course toward
+Golden Glenalvan."</p>
+
+<p>He paused, and the listener said, hoarsely:</p>
+
+<p>"A reason&mdash;&mdash;" then paused, because his voice had broken
+utterly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, a reason," was the bitter reply. "Mr. Chesleigh, little
+Golden is the child of my own and only sister, but&mdash;how shall I
+tell you&mdash;she has no right and no place in the world. She is <i>a
+nameless child</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>The solid earth seemed to reel beneath Mr. Chesleigh's feet. He
+staggered back dizzily, and threw up his hands as if the man had
+struck him.</p>
+
+<p>"He is proud. The blow tells fearfully," thought Elinor, watching
+him through the trees with vindictive eyes. "Ah, my
+defiant Golden, your last chance is gone now. He will never
+look at you again!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Glenalvan, you do not mean it. You are but trying my
+credulity," cried Bertram Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it likely that I would publish a falsehood to my own discredit?"
+inquired the other.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no&mdash;but, oh, God, this is too dreadful to believe!"</p>
+
+<p>"Dreadful, but true," groaned John Glenalvan. "Golden is
+the child of sin and shame. If I had had my way she would have
+been consigned to a foundling asylum. But my father weakly
+insisted on rearing her himself, and I was injudicious enough to
+permit it. The only stipulation I made was that she should be
+kept away from the sight of the world as much as possible. I
+see now that all precautions were useless. Young as she is, the
+bad blood in her veins begins to show itself already in depraved
+conduct."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush! do not censure her harmless meetings with me," said
+Bertram Chesleigh, in a voice of agony. "The child is so pure
+and innocent she has no idea of evil. I would die before I would
+wrong her!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to hear you say so," said the other. "If you really
+mean it, perhaps you will agree to relinquish your useless pursuit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+of her. You would not be willing to marry her after what you
+have heard, I am quite sure."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Meantime little Golden walked away with her grandfather, who
+stumbled along like one in a painful dream, his gray head bowed
+as if beneath the weight of sorrow, his footsteps faltering and
+slow.</p>
+
+<p>He had not spoken one word, and his silence impressed Golden
+with a sense of her wrong-doing and disobedience far more than
+the loudest reproaches could have done.</p>
+
+<p>She clung to his hand, weeping and sighing, and shivering
+silently at old Dinah's muttered invectives against Mr. Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>Hugh Glenalvan spoke no words to his granddaughter until he
+had led her into the house.</p>
+
+<p>Then he sank into his chair, and his gray head drooped upon
+his breast.</p>
+
+<p>Surprise and sorrow seemed to have deprived him of the power
+of speech.</p>
+
+<p>Golden knelt at his feet and laid her golden head upon his
+knee.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, speak to me," she wailed. "Do not be angry with
+your little Golden! Oh, grandpa, you have been so hard and strict
+with me; you have kept me too secluded. If you had let me have
+freedom and happiness like other girls, this never would have
+happened!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, little missie; you must not speak to ole massa like dat,"
+cried Dinah, trying to pull her away. "You don't know what
+you talkin' 'bout. Come away till ole massa is well enough to
+talk to you 'bout dis fing."</p>
+
+<p>She lifted the girl and would have led her away, but the old
+man waved his hand feebly to detain her, and so she placed her
+in a chair instead.</p>
+
+<p>Then she brought a glass of wine and poured a little between
+the white, writhing lips of her old master.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, speak to me!" wailed Golden again.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah looked at her almost sternly, and said abruptly:</p>
+
+<p>"You must let him alone, Miss Golden, you have enamost kilt
+him now, with your badness and deceit."</p>
+
+<p>"Black mammy, you shall not speak to me so," cried the girl,
+resentfully, and then the bright head drooped on the arm of the
+chair, and she wept bitterly, more from fright at the condition of
+her grandfather, than from any tangible sense of her own wrong-doing.</p>
+
+<p>She loved her grandfather dearly, and the sight of his suffering
+stabbed her tender heart deeply.</p>
+
+<p>While she wept silently, old Dinah busied herself in anxious
+cares for the old man.</p>
+
+<p>He seemed frozen into a statue of despair, sitting with his head
+bowed forlornly, and his vacant eyes on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>But quite suddenly he roused himself and looked around him
+with a heavy, hopeless gaze.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Dinah, leave me alone," he said, with unwonted impatience.
+"I am not ill, or if I am it is with a sickness beyond mortal healing.
+Golden's disobedience and her cruel, undeserved reproaches
+have broken my heart."</p>
+
+<p>Golden threw herself impulsively at his feet again.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, forgive me," she wailed. "I shall die if you do not
+say that you will pardon me!"</p>
+
+<p>He did not answer her. He only looked at his old black servant.</p>
+
+<p>"Dinah, you may leave us," he said, sorrowfully, "I had hoped
+to keep the secret all my life; but the time has come when I must
+reveal to my grandchild her mother's story."</p>
+
+<p>"Um-me-e e," groaned the old negress. "Sh, I t'ought it was
+a brack day when John Glenalvan kem here dat mornin' a-askin'
+ole massa to shut my pore chile up like a crim'nal."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, Dinah," the old man repeated, pointing to the door.
+She went out, and Golden turned her beautiful eyes, like blue
+violets drowned in tears, upon his pale, drawn face.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, grandpa," she cried, "you will tell me something of my
+mother at last. I have so longed to hear something of my mother
+and my father."</p>
+
+<p>A groan forced itself through Hugh Glenalvan's livid lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Your desire shall be gratified," he replied. "But the telling
+will cost you great sorrow, child."</p>
+
+<p>Her beautiful face grew white and scared.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, grandpa," she cried, "then Elinor and Clare told the truth.
+My poor mother&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A bursting sob checked the rest of her speech.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden, before I tell you your mother's story, I must receive
+your own confession. Dinah has told me all the beginning of your
+acquaintance with my son's visitor. You must now give me the
+history of what further intercourse has passed between you. How
+comes it that my little Golden, whom I deemed so true and pure,
+broke her promise to old Dinah?"</p>
+
+<p>The beautiful face drooped from his gaze, overspread with
+warm, crimson blushes. No words came from the sweet, tremulous
+red lips.</p>
+
+<p>"A promise, child, no matter how humble the person to whom
+it is made, should be held perfectly sacred and inviolate," he continued.
+"I could not have believed that you, the child I had
+reared so carefully, could have been so ignoble as to falsify your
+promise."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Beautiful Golden sobbed wildly at the reproachful words of her
+grandfather.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, I didn't mean it," she wept. "Indeed, indeed, I
+intended to keep my promise to black mammy. It was quite by
+accident that I broke it."</p>
+
+<p>"How could it have been by accident?" inquired the old man,
+incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you remember my habit of sleep-walking?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;ah, yes, for it has frightened me often to see a little,
+white figure glide into my room at night, with vacant, unseeing
+eyes. I always feared you would run into some terrible danger.
+Your mother had the same unfortunate habit," replied the old
+man.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, it was through that habit of mine that I broke my
+word to black mammy," said Golden, with an earnestness that
+showed how truthful was her explanation.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me how it occurred, Golden," he said, fixing his dim eyes
+anxiously on her face.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, I am almost ashamed to tell you," she replied,
+blushing crimson, "but it was in this way. The night after Mr.
+Chesleigh entered my room by accident, I was very restless in my
+sleep. I will tell you the truth. I had begun to love the handsome
+stranger. I thought of him before I fell asleep, and in my
+restless slumbers I dreamed of him. So I fell into my old habit
+of wandering in a state of somnambulism. It was a beautiful
+moonlight night. I dressed myself and wandered out into the
+grounds, and down by the lake, my favorite resting-place. Suddenly
+I started, broad awake in the arms of Mr. Chesleigh. I had
+gone too near the edge of the lake, and he had saved me from
+falling in."</p>
+
+<p>She shuddered slightly, and resumed:</p>
+
+<p>"In common gratitude I was compelled to speak, and thank
+the gentleman for saving me from a watery grave. Do you think
+I was wrong to do so?"</p>
+
+<p>"It would have been cold and ungrateful to have omitted thanking
+him," he admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"So I thought," said Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"If your intercourse had stopped there, Golden, I should have
+had no words of blame for you. But you have carried on a secret
+intrigue ever since. You have stolen out to meet that man
+every night, have you not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, grandpa, but we loved each other," said the simple
+child, who seemed to think that was ample excuse for what she
+had done.</p>
+
+<p>Hugh Glenalvan groaned, and remained lost in thought for a
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>Then he bent down and whispered a question in her ear.</p>
+
+<p>She started violently; the warm, ever-ready color flashed into
+her cheek; she threw up her head and looked at him with proud,
+grieved eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, you hurt me cruelly," she replied. "Do not think
+of me so unkindly. I am as pure as the snow."</p>
+
+<p>He seemed to be relieved by the words so quickly and proudly
+spoken. The next minute he said, gravely:</p>
+
+<p>"My child, has this gentleman ever said anything to you of
+marriage?"</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden remained silent and thoughtful a moment, then
+she answered, steadily.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"He wishes to marry you, then?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered the girl, with a little quiver of triumphant
+happiness in her voice.</p>
+
+<p>"When?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>A shadow fell over the fair, sweet face a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know exactly when," she replied. "But Mr. Chesleigh
+will see you to-morrow&mdash;he told me just now that he would&mdash;and
+then he will settle everything."</p>
+
+<p>There was a silence for a moment. The breeze sighed softly
+through the trees outside; they could hear it in the utter stillness.
+The dim, flaring light fell on the gray head of the old man,
+drooping forlornly on his breast, and on the lovely, upturned
+face of the girl, with its tender blue eyes and falling golden hair.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa," she whispered, "do not be angry with your little
+girl. Put your hand on my head and say you forgive me for my
+fault."</p>
+
+<p>He could not resist the coaxing voice and the asking blue
+eyes. He laid his hand on the golden head and said, solemnly
+and kindly:</p>
+
+<p>"I forgive you, my little Golden, and I pray Heaven that no
+evil may come of this affair!"</p>
+
+<p>She kissed his wrinkled, tremulous, old hand, where it hung
+over the arm of the chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," she said, gratefully. "I am so glad you are not
+angry with me. And now, dear grandpa, I am going to kneel
+right here and listen while you tell me my mother's story."</p>
+
+<p>In the momentary silence the wind outside seemed to sigh more
+sadly through the trees; the dim light flared and flickered, casting
+weird, fantastic shadows in the corners of the room. Deep,
+heavy sighs quivered over the old man's lips as the beautiful,
+child-like girl knelt there, with her blue eyes lifted so eagerly to
+his face.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"You are the image of your mother, my child," said Golden's
+grandfather. "She had a white skin, pink cheeks, blue eyes,
+and shining hair. You inherit her happy, light-hearted disposition.
+You bear the same name also&mdash;Golden Glenalvan."</p>
+
+<p>"Why was I never called by my father's name?" asked innocent
+Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"My child, you anticipate my story," he answered, "but I will
+tell you. You have no right to your father's name."</p>
+
+<p>A cry of terror came from the parted lips of the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, grandpa, you do not mean <i>that</i>&mdash;you could not be so
+cruel!"</p>
+
+<p>"You must remember that it is not my fault," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>She sprang up and stood before him, with a look of white despair
+on her lovely young face.</p>
+
+<p>"Now I understand it all," she said. "I know why my life
+is so unlike that of other girls. Oh, grandpa, grandpa, tell me
+where to find my mother that I may curse her for my ruined
+life!"</p>
+
+<p>His only answer was a low and heart-wrung groan.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, tell me where to find her," repeated little Golden,
+wildly. "She must be living, for I remember now that no one
+has ever told me plainly that she was dead. I will go to her&mdash;I
+will reproach her for her sin! I will tell her what a life mine
+has been&mdash;how I have been hated and despised for my mother's
+fault, even by my kindred."</p>
+
+<p>Sighs, long and bitter, heaved the old man's breast, but he answered
+her not. She flung herself weeping at his feet.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not speak!" she cried. "Oh, grandpa, tell me where
+to find my cruel mother!"</p>
+
+<p>"She is with your father," said Hugh Glenalvan, in a deep and
+bitter voice that showed what agony he endured in the revelation
+of his daughter's disgrace and infamy.</p>
+
+<p>Golden threw up her little hands in convulsive agony.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, not that!" she cried. "Tell me it is not true!"</p>
+
+<p>Again he had no answer for her, and Golden cried out reproachfully:</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, grandpa, why did you suffer her to be so wicked?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was through no fault of mine," he answered heavily.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him in silent anguish a moment, then she asked
+him:</p>
+
+<p>"Where is she? Tell me where to find her, if you know."</p>
+
+<p>"John told me she was in New York the last time he heard of
+her; but that was years ago. I pray God that she may be dead
+ere this."</p>
+
+<p>And then he wrung his hands, and the tears rolled down his
+withered cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my lost little daughter, my precious little Golden," he
+moaned in agony. "How little I dreamed in your innocent babyhood
+that you were reserved for such a fate!"</p>
+
+<p>Golden was regarding him attentively.</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle John told you she was in New York," she said.
+"What did Uncle John know? Did he hate my mother as he hates
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her, startled.</p>
+
+<p>"Hate your mother," he cried. "His own sister! No&mdash;of course
+not&mdash;that is, not until she fell!"</p>
+
+<p>"He hated her then?" asked Golden, musingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he hated her then. I believe he could have killed her."</p>
+
+<p>"He should have killed her betrayer," said Golden, who seemed
+suddenly to have acquired the gravity and thoughtfulness of a
+woman.</p>
+
+<p>"I would have killed him myself if I could have laid hands on
+the villain," said her grandfather, with sudden, irrepressible
+passion.</p>
+
+<p>The bitter grief and impatient wrath of the girl had sobered down
+into quietness more grievous than tears.</p>
+
+<p>Her face showed deathly white in the dim light; her lips were
+set in a line of intense pain; her pansy-blue eyes had grown black
+with feeling.</p>
+
+<p>She brought a low stool and sat down at her grandfather's feet,
+folding her white hands meekly in her lap, and drooping her fair
+head heavily.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, I will not interrupt you again," she said. "I will
+sit here quite still, and listen. Now tell me all my mother's
+story."</p>
+
+<p>She kept her word.</p>
+
+<p>After he had told her all he had to tell, and she knew the
+whole tragic story of her mother's disgrace, she still sat there silently,
+with her dark eyes bent on her clasped hands.</p>
+
+<p>The cloud of shame and disgrace seemed to lower upon her
+head with the weight of the whole world.</p>
+
+<p>"You understand all I have told, my child?" he said to her,
+after waiting vainly for her to speak.</p>
+
+<p>She put her small hand to her head in a dazed, uncertain way.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, I think so," she replied. "But my head seems in a
+whirl. I will ask you just a few questions, grandpa, to make
+sure that I have understood."</p>
+
+<p>And then she seemed to fall into a "brown study." When
+she had collected her thoughts a little she began to question him.</p>
+
+<p>"I think you said that my mother eloped at sixteen with a
+handsome stranger whose acquaintance she had casually made
+in her long, lonely rambles in the woods. In a few weeks she
+wrote to you from New York that she was happily married. Am
+I right, grandpa?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"And then, although you and Uncle John wrote repeatedly,
+you could hear no more from her until a year had passed, and
+she came back unexpectedly one dreadful stormy night."</p>
+
+<p>She paused, and he murmured a dreary, "Yes, dear."</p>
+
+<p>"She was in sore trouble," the girl went on, slowly. "She
+had found out that her husband had deceived her. She was not
+legally his wife. Their marriage had only been a mock marriage.
+So she left him."</p>
+
+<p>"That is right," he said, as she paused again.</p>
+
+<p>"And Uncle John, her only and elder brother, cursed her for
+the disgrace she had brought on the Glenalvans. I think you
+told me that, did you not, dear grandpa?" she said, lifting her
+heavy eyes a moment to his sad, old face.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear, he cursed her. John was always stern and hard,
+and he was always jealous of our love for his little sister. He
+thought we had spoiled her, and he was bitterly angry when she
+returned to us in sorrow and shame. He was married to a woman
+as hard as himself, and they were both for driving her forth
+like a dog. But Dinah and I&mdash;for my daughter's mother had died
+while she was away&mdash;were too tender-hearted for that. We
+cared for the poor, desolate child in spite of John's threats and
+curses."</p>
+
+<p>"And that very night I was born," said little Golden, with the
+heaviest sigh in which any mortal ever cursed the ill-fated hour
+of birth.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you were born in the storm and terror of that dreadful
+night," he answered with a heavy sigh. "And your mother
+almost broke her heart over you because you would never bear
+the name of the man she had loved so well."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And that name, dear grandpa, tell me what it was," she
+cried, with repressed eagerness.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, she would never reveal that name. She loved him
+although he had betrayed her. She was afraid of our vengeance."</p>
+
+<p>A look of keen disappointment came over the beautiful, mobile
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"But, grandpa," she said, "when she wrote you from New
+York, after she left you, in the first flush of her happiness,
+when she had not your vengeance to fear, did she not reveal
+her name then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not even then," said the old man, bitterly. "She hinted
+that there was some innocent but just cause for secrecy just
+then, but that she would send her true name and address in
+the next letter. That next letter never came."</p>
+
+<p>"There is not the slightest clew for me, then. I shall never
+find my mother," said the girl, sorrowfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden, why should you wish to find her? She is a sinner,
+leading a life of shame. She deserted you in your helpless infancy
+to return to the arms of the villain who had betrayed her."</p>
+
+<p>"So Uncle John says," returned the girl, meaningly.</p>
+
+<p>He started, more at the tone than the words.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden, do you doubt him?" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the girl steadily, turning on him the full splendor
+of her purple-blue eyes, in which glowed a spark of indignant
+fire. "Yes, grandpa, I doubt it. I utterly refuse to believe
+such a scandalous story of my mother."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her sadly, touched by her loyal faith in the
+mother she had never known.</p>
+
+<p>"But think, my dear," he said. "You were but a few days
+old when she stole away in the night and left you without a
+line to tell us of her whereabouts. But John's blood was up.
+He traced her to New York, and learned enough to be sure that
+she had returned to her lover. Then he lost all trace of them,
+and came home reluctantly enough, for he would have shot
+the villain if he could have laid hands on him."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a plausible story," the girl said, thoughtfully. "I might
+believe it if any one but John Glenalvan had told it. But oh,
+grandpa, that man always reminds me of a snake in the grass."</p>
+
+<p>"My child, that is one of old Dinah's homely phrases," he remonstrated.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a very true one, though," she maintained, stoutly.</p>
+
+<p>He saw that he could not convince her, so he sighed and remained
+silent.</p>
+
+<p>He had never thought of doubting his son's assertion himself.
+Golden's incredulity awakened a vague sense of uneasiness
+in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>The girl sat silently also for a brief space of time, while the
+old clock in the corner slowly ticked away the moments of that
+momentous night.</p>
+
+<p>She roused herself from her drooping, dejected attitude at
+last and looked up at the quiet old man.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa," she said anxiously, as if some sudden doubt or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+fear had come into her mind, "what will Bert say when he hears
+this dreadful story?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bert?" said her grandfather, questioningly.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Chesleigh, I mean," she replied. "What will he say
+when my story is known to him? Will he, too, hate me for my
+mother's sin?"</p>
+
+<p>A look of pain and dread came over the sad, old face.</p>
+
+<p>"My darling, how can I tell?" he said. "I have heard that
+the Chesleighs are very proud. It is only too likely that he will
+scorn you when he knows the truth. I am afraid you must give
+up all thought of loving him, dear."</p>
+
+<p>A strange, intense look came over the beautiful young face.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot do that," she said. "I love him with my whole
+heart! I shall love him all my life. He loves me, too, grandpa.
+He cannot give me up! He will be true to me. I am not to
+blame for my mother's fault."</p>
+
+<p>"No, dear, I know that," he answered; "but the sins of the
+parents are visited on the children. It is not likely that Mr.
+Chesleigh will care to wed a nameless girl. He is wealthy and
+high-born, and can have his choice from among the best in the
+land. Your Cousin Elinor aspires to marry him."</p>
+
+<p>"He will never marry Elinor," said little Golden, decidedly.
+"He loves me alone. He will be true to me."</p>
+
+<p>"God grant it, dear," her grandfather said, with a patient sigh,
+in which there was but little hope.</p>
+
+<p>Then he looked up and saw the first pale gleams of the summer
+dawn stealing into the room through the open window.</p>
+
+<p>The birds began to warble their mating songs in the broad-leaved
+magnolia trees outside, as if there were no care nor sorrow,
+nor blighting disgrace anywhere in the wide, beautiful
+world.</p>
+
+<p>"My little one," he said to the grave, hollow-eyed child, who
+seemed suddenly to have grown a full-statured woman, "go to
+your room and rest. You look terribly ill and wretched. Do not
+go back to the haunted chamber again, but to your old room
+down stairs. Try to sleep, if you can."</p>
+
+<p>He looked after her in wonder as she turned to obey him. Yesterday
+she had been a beautiful, charming, careless child, full of
+pretty, evanescent angers and quick repentances.</p>
+
+<p>The bloom, the smiles, the brightness were all gone now. The
+gold-brown lashes drooped heavily against the death-white cheeks,
+the sweet lips quivered heart-brokenly, the slow and lagging step
+was that of a weary woman.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>As soon as she had reached the seclusion of her own chamber,
+little Golden threw herself across her bed and wept as though her
+tender heart would break.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely nurtured as she had been, the pride of race had been
+as strong in her young heart as that of any Glenalvan of them
+all, and the shock of her grandfather's revelation had been a terrible
+one.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I wish that I had died in my innocent babyhood," she wept;
+and her black mammy, who had been lingering near her unobserved,
+came forward to her and said quickly, while she smoothed
+the golden hair lovingly with her old black hands:</p>
+
+<p>"You must not say dat, honey, chile. I has great hopes in your
+life. I has almos' wore out my ole brack knees a-prayin' an' a-prayin'
+to de good Lawd dat you might be de instrument to sabe
+your mudder from her sinful life."</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden looked at her black mammy with a kind of pathetic
+wonder in her beautiful, tearful eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"How could I do that, black mammy?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"By seekin' dat poor soul out, Miss Golden, and 'suadin' her to
+forsake dat wicked man, an' spend de balance ob her life in prayin'
+an' repentin' ob her deadly sins," said Dinah, devoutly and
+earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>Golden sat up in the bed and looked at Dinah with eager, shining
+eyes and impulsively clasped hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, black mammy, if I only could," she cried; "but you forget
+I do not know where to find her. I do not even know the
+name of that dreadful man."</p>
+
+<p>And she shivered at the thought of his wickedness. She remembered
+that he was her father, that his bad blood flowed in
+her veins.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah was looking at her strangely.</p>
+
+<p>"Little missie, what would you think if I could tell you his
+name?" she said, with a little note of triumph in her tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Could you&mdash;oh, could you?" cried little Golden, impulsively.</p>
+
+<p>"Jest wait one minute, darlin'," said Dinah, hobbling out of the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Golden waited, wonderingly and impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>After a little while Dinah returned, and laid a small package,
+wrapped in tissue paper, in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>Golden removed the wrappers tremblingly. A small bit of
+crumpled pasteboard fell out into her hand.</p>
+
+<p>She straightened it out and devoured with eager eyes the aristocratic
+name printed upon it in small, clear, black type.</p>
+
+<p>Then she raised her gleaming eyes to the excited face of the old
+black woman.</p>
+
+<p>"So," she said with a long, deep, sobbing breath, "this is my
+father's name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, chile, leastways I has de berry best reason for finking
+so," replied Dinah, promptly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you are not sure?" cried the girl, and there was a note
+of keen disappointment in her voice.</p>
+
+<p>"All I know is dis, honey. It fell outer your mudder's pocket
+de night when you was born. She was drawin' out her handkercher,
+an' it fell onto de floor 'thout her seein' it. I didn't say
+nofin' to de poor, distracted chile. I only picked the keerd up
+and put it away. I sabed it for you, honey, chile."</p>
+
+<p>"And I am very grateful to you, black mammy," said the girl.
+"You had very good reason for thinking it was my father's name.
+But it is a wonder you never gave it to grandpa, or to Uncle
+John."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Who? <i>Me</i> gib John Glenalvan anything, or tell him anything?
+Not to sabe his brack soul from de debbil, who's got a bill ob sale
+for him!" cried Dinah, flying into a rage, as she always did at the
+mention of Golden's uncle.</p>
+
+<p>"Black mammy, why do you hate my uncle so bitterly?" asked
+Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"'Cause he's a snake in de grass," replied Dinah, shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"I know that&mdash;at least I have always felt it," said Golden,
+meditatively; "but there must be some particular reason, mammy.
+Tell me what it is."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, den, if you mus' know, dere's two reasons," said
+Dinah. "De first is dat he hated your pore, sweet mudder.
+De second one is dat he's like a human wampire fastened on
+your gran'pa."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't understand what you mean by your second reason,"
+said Golden, gravely.</p>
+
+<p>Dinah looked at her a moment in meditative silence; then she
+said abruptly:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't keer what dey say, I'll tell you, my chile. Your Uncle
+John done badgered and badgered your grandpa while you
+was a leetle, teeny babby until, for de sake ob peace, dat pore ole
+man done made John a deed to Glenalvan Hall and de whole estate.
+Your gran'pa ain't no more dan a beggar in the ole hall
+his own fader left him in his will."</p>
+
+<p>"But why did my grandfather give away his property like
+that?" asked the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"'Cause John swore if he didn't do it dat he would carry you
+off and put you into a foundling asylum. You was a pore, leetle,
+deliky babby then, and we skeecely 'spected you would live
+from one day to de nex' one. So to hab de pleasure ob keepin'
+an' tendin' you de ole man 'sented to beggar hisself."</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa did all that for my unworthy sake, and yet I reproached
+him for being strict and hard with me! Oh, how wicked
+and ungrateful he must think me," cried the girl, tearfully.</p>
+
+<p>"No he don't, honey, chile," said the black woman, soothingly,
+"you see he knowed dat you wasn't 'ware of all what you
+had to t'ank him for."</p>
+
+<p>"No, indeed, I never dreamed of all I had cost him," exclaimed
+beautiful Golden, self-reproachfully. "And so, black mammy,
+we are only staying at Glenalvan Hall on the sufferance of my
+uncle?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dat's jest de way ob it, missie. And, look ye, too dat ongrateful,
+graspin' wilyun has done threaten your pore gran'pa,
+time and ag'in, to pack bofe of you'uns off to de pore-house."</p>
+
+<p>"The unnatural monster!" exclaimed little Golden, in a perfect
+tempest of passionate wrath.</p>
+
+<p>"Well you may say so," cried Dinah, in a fever of sympathy.
+"De debbil will nebber git his due till he gets John Glenalvan!
+De blood biles in my ole vains when I fink ob all de insults dat
+man has heaped on his own fader, 'long ob you and your pore
+misguided mudder."</p>
+
+<p>Beautiful little Golden sat upright regarding the excited old
+woman in grave silence. Her blue eyes were on fire with indignation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+and grief. At times she would murmur: "Poor, dear
+grandpa, dear true-hearted grandpa," and relapse into silence
+again.</p>
+
+<p>She roused herself at last from her musing mood, and looked
+up at Dinah. There was a hopeful light in the soft, blue eyes, so
+lately drowned in tears of sorrow and despair.</p>
+
+<p>"Black mammy, I have been thinking," she said, "and I will
+tell you what I mean to do."</p>
+
+<p>"What, honey?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you a secret, mammy. Mr. Chesleigh loves me.
+We are&mdash;that is, I will be his wife one of these days."</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Golden, is dat so?" cried black mammy, delighted. "I
+am so glad! I was 'fraid&mdash;well, nebber min' what I was 'fraid of,
+chile; but 'deed I is so glad dat Mr. Chesly's gwine to marry you.
+He is a rich man, honey. You kin snap your lily fingers at ugly
+Marse John, when once you is Mr. Chesly's wife."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he is very rich, black mammy," said the girl, with a
+pretty, almost childish complacency. "He has told me so, and
+he tells me I shall have jewels and fine dresses, and all that heart
+could desire when I go to live with him&mdash;I mean," blushing rosy
+red, "when I become his wife."</p>
+
+<p>"And powerful pretty you will look in dem fine tings, honey,"
+said her black mammy, admiringly.</p>
+
+<p>"But the best thing of all, black mammy, is that I shall be able
+to take grandpa away from this place, and love him and care for
+him," cried Golden, exultantly. "I shall take you, too, mammy,
+for you have been the only mother I ever knew. Grandpa shall
+have the happiest home in the world, and Bert and I will both
+love him dearly, dearly!"</p>
+
+<p>"And your pore, lost mudder, darlin', you had forgotten her,"
+said Dinah, a little wistfully, her thoughts straying back through
+the mist of years, to the lost little nursling who had fluttered
+from the safe parental nest, and steeped the white wings of her
+soul in the blackness of sin.</p>
+
+<p>But Golden shook her dainty head decidedly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, black mammy, I had not forgotten," she said. "When
+I am Bert's wife, he shall help me to seek and save my poor, lost
+mother. We will try to win her back to the path of right, and
+save her soul for Heaven," she concluded, with girlish ardor and
+fervency.</p>
+
+<p>"May the good Lawd help you to succeed, my innercent
+lamb," said the good old black woman, prayerfully. "Her little
+soul was too white and tender for de brack debbil to git it at de
+last for his brack dominions."</p>
+
+<p>There was a sudden tap at the door. Golden looked at it eagerly
+and expectantly, while Dinah threw it open.</p>
+
+<p>A small black boy, a servant of John Glenalvan, stood outside
+with a sealed letter in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"For Missie Golden, from Mass Chesleigh," he said, putting it
+in Dinah's hand, and quickly retiring.</p>
+
+<p>Dinah carried it silently to her mistress, who kissed the superscription,
+and eagerly tore it open.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The thick, satin-smooth sheet rustled in the trembling little
+hand as the blue eyes ran over it, lovingly and eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>As she read, the tender, loving eyes grew wild and startled, an
+ashen shade crept around the rosebud lips, the young face whitened
+to the corpse-like hue of death. She crumpled the sheet in
+her hand at last, and threw it wildly from her, while a cry of
+intolerable anguish thrilled over her white lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, mammy, mammy, my heart is broken&mdash;broken! I shall
+never see him again. He has forsaken me for my mother's sin!"</p>
+
+<p>Then she fell back cold and rigid, like one dead upon the bed.
+Dinah flew to her assistance, cursing in her heart the wickedness
+and heartlessness of men.</p>
+
+<p>But though she worked busily and anxiously, the morning sun
+rode high in the heavens before the deeply-stricken girl recovered
+her consciousness. Her grandfather was watching beside
+her pillow when her eyes first opened, and she threw her arms
+around his neck and wept long and bitterly on his faithful breast.</p>
+
+<p>"You were right," she whispered to him. "You know the
+cruel world better than I did. He has left me, grandpa&mdash;I shall
+never see him again. He discards me for my mother's sin."</p>
+
+<p>She wept and moaned all day, refusing all consolation. She
+was terrified by the coldness and cruelty of the world that condemned
+her for the sins of others.</p>
+
+<p>Many and many a time she had chafed at the narrowness and
+loneliness of her lot, but she had never known sorrow until to-day.</p>
+
+<p>Its horrible reality crushed her down before its pitiless strength
+like the fury of the storm-rain. A crushed and bleeding victim,
+she lay weak and stunned in its victorious path.</p>
+
+<p>At nightfall she slept, wearied out by the force and violence of
+her deep, overmastering emotion.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah persuaded her weary, haggard old master to retire
+to his room and bed, promising to watch faithfully herself by
+the sick girl.</p>
+
+<p>She dozed until midnight, when, as Golden still slept on heavily,
+she permitted herself to take a wary nap in an old arm-chair.
+It was daylight when the weary, suffering old creature awoke.
+The beautiful Golden was gone.</p>
+
+<p>A little three-cornered note lay on the pillow that still held the
+impress of the dear little head. The child had written sorrowfully
+to her grandfather:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Grandpa, darling, I have only brought you trouble and sorrow
+all my life-time, so I am going away. Your son will be
+kinder to you when I am gone, and your life will be less hard;
+perhaps black mammy will be kind and faithful to you, so you
+will not miss your thoughtless little Golden very much. God
+bless you, grandpa, you must pray for me nightly, for I am going
+to seek my mother, the erring mother who cursed me with life!
+If indeed, she is living in sin and shame, I will strive to reclaim
+her and restore her to the safe path of virtue. I have nothing
+else to live for. Love and happiness, the delights of this world,
+are not for me. It shall be <i>the dream of my life-time</i> to find and
+save my wronged and erring mother."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>From the fair southern clime where her lines had hitherto been
+cast, little Golden traveled straight to the great, thronged city of
+New York.</p>
+
+<p>During her long day and night of intense suffering, the thought,
+first suggested to her mind by old Dinah, of seeking and reclaiming
+her erring mother, had fastened on her mind with irresistible
+force and power.</p>
+
+<p>Every thought and feeling of this beautiful, unhappy child
+was as pure as that of an angel.</p>
+
+<p>The knowledge that the young mother who had given her
+birth was living a life of sin and dishonor was most revolting to
+her mind. She could not think of it without a mortal shudder.</p>
+
+<p>When Dinah fell asleep by her pillow the girl awakened suddenly
+and lay for a little while in silent meditation. The idea
+she had been silently revolving in her mind all day gathered
+strength in the solitude and stillness of the midnight hour.</p>
+
+<p>Golden was young, buoyant, ignorant of the world, and
+thought not of the difficulties that would hedge the path of duty
+which she was marking out for her little, untried feet.</p>
+
+<p>She did not know how dear she was to her grandfather's heart,
+and how bitterly he would be wounded by her desertion. She
+only thought of escaping from the life which had suddenly become
+so unbearable, and of filling her heart with other aims now
+that the love she had given so lavishly from the depths of a
+warm and generous heart, had been cast back to her in scorn
+and contempt.</p>
+
+<p>In the pocket of her best cashmere dress was a little purse
+filled with gold pieces of which no one knew but herself.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh had given it to her in a happy, never-to-be-forgotten
+hour which now it almost killed her even to recall.</p>
+
+<p>Almost staggering with weakness, Golden rose and silently
+and cautiously dressed herself in her blue cashmere dress and
+hat and jacket.</p>
+
+<p>She decided not to take anything with her. It would be easier
+to purchase new things when she had arrived in New York.</p>
+
+<p>When she was ready to go, Golden knelt down a moment and
+pressed her fair cheek lovingly and sorrowfully to the toil-worn
+wrinkled hand of her old black mammy.</p>
+
+<p>She loved the old negress dearly. Under that homely black
+breast beat the only heart that had ever given a mother's love to
+the beautiful, forsaken child of poor, wronged and misguided
+little Golden.</p>
+
+<p>Then with a lingering, loving, backward glance around, the
+girl left the room and proceeded to her grandfather's apartment.</p>
+
+<p>The kind old man was asleep with a look of care and anxiety
+deeply imprinted on his pale, worn features.</p>
+
+<p>Golden pressed her trembling lips to the thin, gray locks that
+straggled over the pillow, and her girlish tears fell on them,
+shining like jewels in the dim gleam of the night-lamp.</p>
+
+<p>Then Golden stole away noiselessly. There was one more farewell
+to be said ere she set forth on the mission whose only clew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+lay in the crumpled card hidden away securely in the little purse
+of gold.</p>
+
+<p>She knelt down on the banks of the tranquil little lake she had
+always loved so dearly, and clasped her little hands and lifted
+her white face in the bright moonlight.</p>
+
+<p>"Farewell, little lake," she murmured to the silvery, tranquil
+sheet of water. "I pray God that the time may come when I
+shall kneel by you again, and tell you that I have reclaimed my
+erring mother, and that her soul has been washed as pure and
+free from sin as the lilies sleeping on your breast."</p>
+
+<p>Was it only little Golden's excited fancy, or did a shadow, soft
+and impalpable as a mist wreath, and pale as the moonbeams,
+glide across the still water in the form of a woman, and a voice
+as soft and low as the sigh of the breeze murmur sadly:</p>
+
+<p>"Bless you, my daughter."</p>
+
+<p>She started and looked around; the voice and vision had been
+so real she could hardly imagine it fancy, but the phantom shape
+had dissolved into moonbeams again, and the voice had melted
+into music on the "homeless winds."</p>
+
+<p>"If my poor mother was dead I should believe that her spirit
+had blessed me," said the beautiful girl to herself. "But she is
+alive, so it could not have been she, perhaps it was my guardian
+angel."</p>
+
+<p>She plucked a beautiful, large, white lily from the lake and
+started on her way to the railway station, carrying the spotless
+flower in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps some thought of the poet, Longfellow's, verses came
+to her mind:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Bear a lily in thine hand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Gates of brass cannot withstand<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">One touch of that magic wand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Bear through sorrow, wrong and ruth,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">On thy lips the smile of truth,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In thy heart the dew of youth."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>We will return to Bertram Chesleigh, little Golden's recreant
+lover.</p>
+
+<p>All of John Glenalvan's influence had been brought to bear on
+the proud young man to induce him to relinquish his pursuit of
+the beautiful girl whose acquaintance he had so strangely and
+imprudently formed.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Chesleigh's own pride of birth, united to John Glenalvan's
+artful innuendoes, was a powerful ally in the young man's
+mind against his love for the lonely and beautiful little girl.</p>
+
+<p>In the light of John Glenalvan's revelations, a great revulsion
+had taken place in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>He heartily wished that he had never made the acquaintance
+of the lovely little creature, or that he had not followed it up
+with such ardor and passion.</p>
+
+<p>With few, if any exceptions, men are naturally selfish. Bertram
+Chesleigh, who had never known a desire unfulfilled in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+the course of his prosperous life, was no exception to the general
+rule.</p>
+
+<p>In pursuing his acquaintance with little Golden, he had been
+actuated more by a regard for his own pleasure than by any
+thought of risk for her.</p>
+
+<p>In the light of recent developments, he thought also first of
+himself. How to escape from the consequences of his headlong
+passion became momentarily a paramount consideration.</p>
+
+<p>When his conscience reproached him he replied to it that it was
+only natural and right that he should think first of himself.</p>
+
+<p>He had his high social station to maintain, and he was quite
+sure that his friends and relations would have declined to receive
+even as his bride, a woman of stained birth.</p>
+
+<p>Golden had, it seemed, no place in the world, no social status
+whatever.</p>
+
+<p>If he made her his bride, his troubles and embarrassments would
+be legion. If he left her all would go well with him, and he
+argued with himself that the child would speedily forget him and
+resign herself to her strange and lonely life.</p>
+
+<p>So, under the influence of these vexing thoughts, and John
+Glenalvan's specious arguments and representations, that unjust
+letter was written to poor, suffering little Golden.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, we are so careless and so thoughtless over what we write.
+Bertram Chesleigh was not a bad man, and never meant to be
+cruel, and yet he had done more harm in the writing of that letter
+than if he had pierced the tender heart with a dagger.</p>
+
+<p>Even while writing it he felt ashamed and sorry, yet no premonition
+came to tell him of the dim future when he would have
+given tears of blood to have obliterated even the memory of that
+letter from the heart of little Golden which it had seared as with
+the breath of fire.</p>
+
+<p>He never forgot a single word of that letter he had written to
+her, although in his haste and agitation he had kept no copy of
+it. It did not seem so hard to him at first as it did afterward,
+when he knew what suffering the writing had caused and the
+consequences were forever beyond recall.</p>
+
+<p>After he had written and dispatched it he made his adieu to the
+family of John Glenalvan and departed, feeling like a coward,
+while if he had truly understood the depth of tenderness and
+capabilities of woe in the girl he had deserted, he might have felt
+more like a murderer.</p>
+
+<p>The Glenalvans, while terribly disappointed in their hopes for
+Elinor, were relieved at the departure of their guest for the present.
+Elinor entreated her father to make arrangements for removing
+Golden out of the way in case the young man should repeat his
+visit, and he promised, with an oath more forcible than polite,
+that he would certainly do so.</p>
+
+<p>But before he had taken any decisive step in the furtherance
+of his purpose, the unfortunate girl had taken her fate in her own
+hands. When John Glenalvan entered the ruined wing the
+second day for the purpose, as he had emphatically expressed it,
+of "having it out with his father in cursed few words," he found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+the old man and his faithful old servant in a frenzy of grief and
+despair over Golden's farewell letter.</p>
+
+<p>John was unfeignedly glad that Golden had gone away herself
+without giving him the trouble and annoyance of sending her.</p>
+
+<p>"It is much better as it is, father," he said to the poor, broken-hearted
+old creature. "I fully intended to send the girl away.
+She has only saved herself the ignominy of a summary dismissal.
+Do not fret yourself over her. She has only forsaken you to lead
+a life of shame with her erring mother. I hope that a lightning
+flash may strike her dead before she ever returns here again to
+disgrace and shame us yet further!"</p>
+
+<p>"Forbear, John. You are cruel and impious," cried the old
+man, lifting his hand feebly, and his son strode angrily out of
+the room, muttering curses "not loud but deep," and followed
+by the vivid lightnings of old Dinah's black eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, de brack-hearted wilyun!" she muttered. "May de good
+Lard hasten de time ob punishment for his cruel sins!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>The first thing that happened to little Golden Glenalvan after
+she arrived in the city of New York, was something that not infrequently
+happens to simple and inexperienced travelers.</p>
+
+<p>She had her pocket picked of her purse by some expert thief.
+Such things have often happened in the annals of New York
+crime, and will again, but it is probable that no one's life was
+ever so much affected by such a loss as was the unfortunate
+little Golden's.</p>
+
+<p>She found herself by this totally unlooked-for catastrophe
+thrown into the streets of the great, wicked city penniless,
+friendless, and utterly forsaken. Every cent she possessed in
+the world had been in the little purse, together with the card
+that bore her father's name. The latter was not so great a loss
+to her. The name of the man who had wronged her mother
+was engraven on her mind in characters that were never to be
+destroyed.</p>
+
+<p>Her little plans for the discovery of her mother, laid with such
+girlish art, were all turned away by this accident. She had
+meant to take cheap lodgings somewhere, and prosecute her
+search, but now she knew not what to do, nor where to turn.</p>
+
+<p>The great, busy city, with its strange faces and hurry and
+bustle frightened her, even though she dreamed not in her
+girlish innocence of its festering sin and underlying wickedness.</p>
+
+<p>Sinking down on a secluded seat in Central Park where she
+had been walking when she first discovered her loss, she sobbed
+bitterly in her grief and distress&mdash;so bitterly that a well-dressed,
+benevolent-looking lady who was walking along a path with a
+pretty poodle frisking before her, went up to her with kind
+abruptness.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear little girl," she said, laying her hand gently on the
+showering, golden wealth of hair that escaped from Golden's
+little sailor hat, "what is the matter? Can I help you?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Golden lifted her head and the lady who had a kind, middle-aged
+face, decidedly aristocratic, started and uttered a cry of surprise
+at the beautiful, girlish face with its tearful eyes like purple-blue
+pansies drowned in dew.</p>
+
+<p>In a moment the lady's quick eyes had seen from the cut and
+fashion of Golden's simple garments that she was a stranger in
+New York. She repeated kindly:</p>
+
+<p>"What ails you, my child? Have you become separated from
+your friends?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, for I have not a friend in this whole, great city. But I have
+lost my purse," answered Golden, with childish directness.</p>
+
+<p>The lady sat down beside her and regarded her a moment in
+thoughtful silence. She saw nothing but the most infantile sweetness,
+purity and truth in the lovely, troubled young face. She was
+touched and interested.</p>
+
+<p>"So you have lost your purse?" she said. "Have you had your
+pocket picked?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know," answered Golden, forlornly. "I carried it in
+my jacket pocket, and awhile ago, when I felt for it I discovered
+that it was gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, I am quite sure you are a stranger in New York," said
+the lady. "If you belonged in the city you would know better
+than to carry your purse carelessly in the pocket of your walking
+jacket. New York is full of sneak thieves who are on the watch
+for the unwary. You say you have not a friend in the city. Where
+are you from, my child?"</p>
+
+<p>"From the south," replied Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you come to New York alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes madam. I am an orphan," replied the girl, not wishing to
+disclose her history to her interrogator.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you wish for in this great city?" asked the lady.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to find some employment at present. Can you help me?"
+asked Golden, timidly and beseechingly lifting her large blue eyes
+to the interested face of the lady.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps I can," said the lady, smiling gently. "What kind of
+employment do you wish? What kind of work can you do?"</p>
+
+<p>The beautiful, girlish face grew a little blank. She remembered
+her careless, idle life at Glenalvan Hall, where no one ever taught
+her anything but her grandfather and old Dinah. She was compelled
+to confess despondently that she did not know how to do
+anything.</p>
+
+<p>The lady who was a really good woman with a decidedly benevolent
+turn, studied the drooping face attentively. She saw that there
+was some mystery about the girl, but the lovely young face was so
+guileless and winning that she could see no evil in it. She asked
+her, rather abruptly, what her name was.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden Glenalvan," answered the girl, and the lady frowned
+slightly, and said it was too fanciful and pretty.</p>
+
+<p>"If you are going to work for your living, I would advise you
+to call yourself by some plain and common name, such as Jones or
+Brown or Smith."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I will call myself Mary Smith," replied Golden, resignedly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That will do very well. Now, my child, do you think you
+would like to undertake chambermaid's work?"</p>
+
+<p>She glanced, as she spoke, at the girl's ungloved hands, and
+saw that they were delicately white and aristocratic, so she answered
+the question negatively to herself before Golden answered,
+shrinkingly and timidly:</p>
+
+<p>"I do not believe I would like it, madam, but I am willing to
+try. I must do something to support myself, and I have no
+choice left me since I do not know how to do anything."</p>
+
+<p>The lady looked at her a little wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>"My child, if you would tell me something about yourself I
+might know better how to help you," she said. "It is quite
+evident that you have met with reverses. You are unaccustomed
+to labor, and you look like a born lady."</p>
+
+<p>Golden was silent, and a deep blush colored her face. Not for
+worlds would she have told her sad story to this gentle woman.</p>
+
+<p>She fancied that the sweet pity beaming from her gray eyes
+now would change to scorn and contempt, if she could know that
+she was a nameless child seeking a lost and guilty mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you have imprudently run away from your friends,"
+she said, questioningly, and striking so near the truth that Golden
+burst into tears again, and would have left her but that she detained
+her by a firm yet gentle pressure of the hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not go," she said. "I want to help you if I can. Perhaps
+I could tell you something you are far too young and innocent to
+know."</p>
+
+<p>"What is that, ma'am?" asked Golden, looking at her questioningly.</p>
+
+<p>"This, my child&mdash;that one so pretty and simple as you are
+should not be alone and friendless in this great city. You are in
+the greatest danger. Beauty is only a curse to a poor girl who
+has to earn her own living."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, madam," Golden answered, with perfect meekness,
+though she crimsoned painfully.</p>
+
+<p>"So I think," continued her kind friend, "that a home and
+shelter in even the humblest capacity is better for you than to be
+wandering alone in the streets homeless and penniless."</p>
+
+<p>"I know that," said Golden, "but I have nowhere to go," and
+the pathos of the tearful tone touched the kind lady's heart.</p>
+
+<p>"My child, I have been thinking about that," she said. "I
+have a friend who needs a nurse for her little invalid girl. Should
+you like to try for the situation?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," Golden answered, gratefully.</p>
+
+<p>"The little girl is the petted and only daughter of wealthy people,"
+continued the kind lady. "She is delicate, and has been
+humored and spoiled injudiciously all her life, until she is, at
+times, quite overbearing and disagreeable, so much so indeed that
+her mother can scarcely keep a nurse for her more than a week or
+two at a time. Are you frightened at my description? Have you
+a good store of patience?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have been impatient and self-willed all my life," confessed
+Golden, frankly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet you have a sweet-tempered face, if there is any truth in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+physiognomy," said her new friend. "It seems to me that you
+could not grow impatient ministering to the needs of that poor,
+little invalid child. Think how much happiness you could give
+the poor, ailing little soul if you tried. And when you are as old
+as I am," she added, with a faint sigh, "you will understand that
+the greatest pleasure in life is in giving happiness to others."</p>
+
+<p>"I will try to be patient and kind to the child, if you will be
+so kind as to get the place for me," said little Golden, trembling
+with eagerness.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, my dear; I will myself accompany you to my
+friend's house and speak a kind word in your favor. It is rather
+a risk to run, this introducing and vouching for a total stranger,
+but I believe that your gentle, honest face will be a passport to
+Mrs. Desmond's favor, just as it has been to mine. You will follow
+me, now, my child."</p>
+
+<p>Golden walked on with the warm-hearted woman some distance
+through the beautiful green park, when, to her surprise, her benefactress
+stopped before an elegant, liveried carriage, with quite
+an imposing-looking driver in a white hat and gloves.</p>
+
+<p>"Drive to Mrs. Desmond's, John," she said, as the footman
+handed her and her timid <i>protege</i> into the carriage.</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden felt like one in a bewildering dream as she lay
+back among the luxurious satin cushions and was whirled through
+the stately streets, past the beautiful buildings and brown-stone
+palaces until they stopped at last before one more splendid than
+all the rest, and she found herself gliding up the marble steps, her
+young heart throbbing fast at the novelty and strangeness of her
+position.</p>
+
+<p>She was going to be a servant in this splendid house! She, one
+of the Glenalvans of Glenalvan Hall, a name that had been proud
+and honored in the past until her girlish mother had stained its
+haughty prestige with shame.</p>
+
+<p>Her heart beat heavily and slow. The thought came to her
+mind that these proud and wealthy people would not even permit
+her to be a servant to their daughter if they knew that she was a
+nameless child.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Markham, little Golden's kind, new friend, was evidently
+on terms of intimacy with Mrs. Desmond.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of sending her card to the lady and awaiting her appearance
+in the formal drawing-room, she was at once conducted up
+stairs to a charming <i>boudoir</i> hung with rose-colored silk and
+white lace.</p>
+
+<p>The carpet was white velvet strewn with a pattern of pink moss
+rosebuds, and the chairs and couches were upholstered in a deeper
+shade of rose-color.</p>
+
+<p>Everything in the room was costly and tasteful, and vases of
+freshly-cut flowers diffused delicious fragrance through the air.</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden had never before been in such a costly and tasteful
+room, and she uttered an involuntary low exclamation of surprise
+and delight at which Mrs. Markham smiled indulgently.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Does this pretty room surprise you?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, madam, I have never seen anything so beautiful and
+costly before," answered the simple child.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the heavy draperies that hung between the
+<i>boudoir</i> and the dressing-room were swept aside by a white,
+jeweled hand, and the mistress of all this magnificence entered
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>She was a beautiful young lady, with great, velvety black eyes,
+dark, waving hair, crimson lips, and rounded cheeks like the
+sunny side of a peach. Her morning-dress was elegant, costly
+and becoming.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Mrs. Markham, good-morning. I am very glad to see
+you," she cried, then she looked past her friend inquiringly at
+the little, shrinking figure of Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Edith, this is a little <i>protege</i> of mine, Mary Smith by name,"
+Mrs. Markham hastened to say. "If you have not secured a
+nurse yet, will you try her for little Ruby?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be very glad to do so if you think she will suit," returned
+Mrs. Desmond as they all seated themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Then the handsome brunette looked patronizingly at the new
+applicant for her favor. The scrutiny did not seem to please her.
+The slender, arched, black brows met over the bright eyes in a
+slight frown.</p>
+
+<p>"Child, why do you not put your hair up?" she asked, glancing
+at the bright wealth of loosely flowing ringlets. "It is not becoming
+to nurses to wear it in that way."</p>
+
+<p>"I can put it up if you wish me, ma'am," Golden replied in a
+low voice, her eyelids drooping that the lady might not see the
+childish resentment that flashed into them at her slightly scornful
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, I shall insist upon that if I engage you," replied
+Mrs. Desmond. "You will tuck it up and wear a nurse's cap
+over it. Have you any recommendations to give with her, Mrs.
+Markham?" she continued, expectantly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, for Mary has never been in service before," replied the
+kind lady. "She is a young southern girl seeking employment
+in this city, and I should like to befriend her if possible. I fancied
+that her gentle, innocent face might recommend her to your
+favor as it did to mine."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond turned to look at Golden again, and met the
+gaze of the soft blue eyes fixed on her with a kind of puzzled intentness.</p>
+
+<p>"Child, why do you stare at me so curiously?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>The deep color rushed into Golden's face, making her more
+lovely than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon," she hastened to say, falteringly. "You
+remind me so much of someone I have known that I could not
+keep from looking at your face. It was very rude, I know."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, I am not angry," answered Mrs. Desmond.
+"Do you think you would make a good, patient nurse for my little
+girl, Mary?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will do the best I can," little Golden replied, in her gentle,
+refined voice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond looked at her friend.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not in the habit of engaging help without recommendation.
+It is rather a risk to run," she remarked, "but to please
+you, my friend, and because I really need a maid for Ruby, I
+will give Mary Smith a trial. When can you come Mary?"</p>
+
+<p>"She can stay now, if you like, Edith," said Mrs. Markham.</p>
+
+<p>"That will suit me very well," said Mrs. Desmond. "I will
+engage you for one month at least, Mary, and I will pay you ten
+dollars a month. Will that suit you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, thank you," Golden answered, timidly.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, you may stay now, and you may go at once to
+Ruby, for I have been compelled to lend her my own maid, for a
+week past, and she is so dissatisfied with the position that she
+threatens to leave me if she is not relieved. I can assure you that
+you will find your position no sinecure. I hope you will try to
+find means to amuse the child. You must be very kind and patient
+with her, Mary. I allow no scolding or fault-finding, for
+my little girl is very frail and delicate."</p>
+
+<p>Golden rose and stood waiting while the languid, fine lady
+talked.</p>
+
+<p>When she had ended her little speech, she pointed her white
+finger at the dressing-room door.</p>
+
+<p>"Go through the drawing-room," she said, "into my bed-chamber.
+You will find that it has a door connecting with the
+nursery. You will find my little daughter in there. You may
+introduce yourself to her. Mrs. Markham and I will look in presently
+and see how Ruby is pleased with you."</p>
+
+<p>"Try and make a good impression on the little one's mind at
+first," said Mrs. Markham, kindly. "First impressions are everything
+with children."</p>
+
+<p>Beautiful Golden thanked her with a grateful look, and silently
+withdrew to follow Mrs. Desmond's instructions.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not seem as pleased as I had expected, Edith," Mrs.
+Markham said, in a tone of disappointment, when they were
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>"To tell the truth, I think the girl is too pretty," Mrs. Desmond
+replied, with some embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you liked pretty things about you," said her friend.</p>
+
+<p>"So I do, but I do not like pretty servants," was the significant
+reply. "As a rule they are vain and trifling, and do not attend
+to their business. They are always looking out to attract admiration
+to their pretty faces."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not believe that Mary Smith is one of that kind," said
+Mrs. Markham. "She seems a good, simple, innocent girl. But
+if she fails to suit you, Edith, you may return her to me, and I
+will find some other place for her. I imagined that you would be
+delighted with such a girl for Ruby's attendant."</p>
+
+<p>"And so I am, and I am ever so much obliged to you for thinking
+of me. I hope that she will please Ruby better than the girls
+we have had lately, for I feel quite worn out with anxiety over
+the dear little creature," replied Mrs. Desmond, but so constrained
+that Mrs. Markham saw that she was only half-hearted in her
+pleasure, and wondered why it was that Golden's beauty, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+was so attractive to her own eyes, was distasteful to Mrs. Desmond,
+who was beautiful herself, and liked to gather beautiful
+things around her.</p>
+
+<p>It is said that every family has its skeleton. Mrs. Markham
+did not know that the skeleton in her friend's closet was the lurking
+fiend of jealousy. Mrs. Desmond was a charming lady, but
+she secretly disliked every pretty woman she knew.</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden went on through the dressing-room to the bed-chamber,
+which was a perfect bower of elegance and repose, and
+timidly opened the nursery door, for the description of little Ruby
+Desmond had rather intimidated her.</p>
+
+<p>She found herself in a large, airy, sunny chamber, splendidly
+adapted for a nursery, and luxuriously fitted up for that purpose.</p>
+
+<p>In a low rocking-chair a smart French maid was indolently
+lounging and yawning over a French novel.</p>
+
+<p>In a corner of the room a little girl of six years, small for her
+age, and pale and delicate-looking, was sobbing fretfully in a fit
+of the sulks.</p>
+
+<p>She dashed the tears from her eyes and looked up curiously at
+the timid intruder.</p>
+
+<p>"Who are you?" she demanded, abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am Mary Smith, your new nurse, little Miss Ruby," said
+Golden, in a clear, sweet voice, and with a winning smile.</p>
+
+<p>The French maid threw down her novel and stared, and little
+Ruby came out of her corner.</p>
+
+<p>"So you are my new maid, are you?" she asked, pertly. "Well,
+I hope you will not be as hateful as Celine here is, for if you do I
+shall be sure to throw my top at your head. I am very glad you
+are come, for I am perfectly tired of Celine, and I want her to
+leave me at once&mdash;at once, do you hear me, Celine?"</p>
+
+<p>Celine flounced out of the room in a huff, and the little one continued:</p>
+
+<p>"There is one comfort, you are not as ugly as Celine and the
+others! I hate ugly people, and so does my papa, but mamma
+likes them best. <i>You</i> are the prettiest nurse I ever saw! You
+look just like my big wax doll, with your blue eyes and long hair.
+Nurses always wear their hair under a cap, did you not know
+that?"</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden did not answer one word to the voluble discourse
+of the spoiled child.</p>
+
+<p>She stood silently in the center of the large apartment, her
+small hand pressed to her beating heart, her pale lips apart, her
+blue eyes upraised to a large portrait that hung against the wall
+in a splendid frame of gold and ebony. The dark, handsome,
+splendid face that smiled down upon her was the face of her lost
+lover, Bertram Chesleigh.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Fortunately for Golden, little Ruby Desmond did not observe
+the preoccupation of her new nurse. She had entered upon a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+voluble tirade against nurses in general, and when she had ended
+she remarked with a sudden change of tone:</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't believe I shall hate you as much as I did the rest.
+You are younger and prettier than any girl I ever had to amuse
+me. Come, now, Mary, lay off your hat and jacket. I want you
+to make my doll a new dress. That lazy Celine would not stick a
+needle in it, for all I stormed and scolded, and threatened to complain
+to mamma."</p>
+
+<p>Thus adjured, Golden turned her eyes with an effort away from
+the portrait of Bertram Chesleigh, and proceeded to obey the instructions
+of her little mistress with what cheerfulness she could,
+although her heart was beating wildly with the shock she had
+received on coming suddenly face to face with her lover's portrait
+in this strange place.</p>
+
+<p>She longed, yet dreaded to ask little Ruby what the original of
+the portrait was to her.</p>
+
+<p>Looking from the portrait to the child she could plainly discern
+in Ruby's proud mouth and flashing, dark eyes, a great and striking
+resemblance to Mr. Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>But she was afraid to ask the question that trembled on her
+lips, so she sat down mutely while Ruby brought a large wax doll
+and placed it in her lap, together with a large quantity of scraps
+of silk and muslin and odds and ends of pretty lace.</p>
+
+<p>Then she pulled open the drawer of a child's bureau and brought
+out a garnet silk dress of her own, elaborately made and trimmed.</p>
+
+<p>"I want Dollie's dress made exactly like this," she said, hanging
+it open over the back of a chair for Golden's inspection. "It
+is in the latest fashion, so Celine says. Celine thinks of nothing
+but French novels and fashions, so she ought to know."</p>
+
+<p>"Your doll is very beautiful. Is it a new one?" asked Golden,
+trying to say something to please the little creature who was
+hovering about her, busy and excited with her important preparations
+for the miniature dressmaking.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, it is tolerably new! Papa gave it to me last week,"
+replied Ruby. "There was a little trunk of clothes with her, but
+I do not like any of the dresses. They are quite old-fashioned and
+shabby, I think. Mamma says herself that they must have been
+made at least a year ago. So I shall never be satisfied until I have
+a new-fashioned dress for Dollie."</p>
+
+<p>She was silent a moment, watching Golden's deft finger as they
+slowly cut and basted, then she resumed:</p>
+
+<p>"I have tried and tried, but I cannot think of a name for her.
+Can you tell me a pretty name for her, Mary?"</p>
+
+<p>"Would you like to call her Golden?" asked the girl, feeling as
+if the sound of her own name would be a relief in this new, strange
+atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden! what a pretty name," said the child. "I like that.
+I will call Dollie by that name. I shall be Golden&mdash;Golden Chesleigh,"
+she added, after a minute's thought.</p>
+
+<p>The new nurse started so violently, that the doll's dress
+fell from her fingers. The lovely crimson color rushed into her
+face.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Chesleigh! Why do you call her that?" she asked, falteringly.
+"Do you know anybody by that name, Miss Ruby?"</p>
+
+<p>The little girl laughed quite happily.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I should think I did," she said, brightly. "My own
+uncle is named Chesleigh&mdash;Bertram Chesleigh. There is his portrait
+on the wall. Look at it, Mary, and tell me if he is not me
+very handsomest man you ever beheld."</p>
+
+<p>Golden looked up into the dark eyes that had gazed into her
+own so fondly, and at the proud yet tender lips that had kissed
+her with such passionate love, and she could barely repress the
+moan of pain that came from her lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he is very handsome," she said faintly. "Does he ever
+call here to see you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, often and often, when he is at home," said Ruby.
+"But he is gone away traveling in the sunny south now. He
+travels a great deal. Mamma calls him a bird of passage."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he fond of you?" said Golden, seeing that she was expected
+to say something.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, very fond," said Ruby, brightening up so much that
+Golden saw it was a favorite subject with her. "He had that
+splendid portrait painted expressly for a present to me. Mamma
+begged me to let it hang in the drawing-room, but I would not. I
+told her I would have it in the nursery where I could see it every
+minute."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he&mdash;married?" asked Golden, carelessly, to all appearance,
+and taking up her work again.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear, no! and I hope he never will be! He loves me better
+than anyone now, but he would like his wife best if he were
+married," cried the spoiled child.</p>
+
+<p>Golden sighed softly and made no reply, and the entrance of
+Mrs. Desmond and her visitor interrupted the conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-morning, Mrs. Markham. You see I have a new nurse,"
+said Ruby, looking up with a faint flush of pleasant excitement
+on her delicate face.</p>
+
+<p>"You have to thank Mrs. Markham for bringing her to you,"
+said Mrs. Desmond, glad to see a smile on the usually sullen or
+pain-drawn little white face.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby went forward and kissed Mrs. Markham charmingly
+as if she was always loving and sweet-tempered instead of self-willed
+and capricious as everyone represented her.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you very much," she said, "I think I shall like Mary
+better than the others. She is very kind and obliging. You see
+she is making a new dress for my doll. Celine was too lazy.
+She would not dress my doll at all."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Markham gave her <i>protege</i> an encouraging smile, and
+Golden blushed with pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>"She has given my new doll a name," continued Ruby, vivaciously.
+"It is Golden. Do you not think it pretty? The name
+would suit Mary herself I think, as she has such lovely curls, I
+believe I shall call her goldilocks," she added, laying her small
+hand caressingly on Golden's hair.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Markham smiled indulgently, but her friend looked annoyed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, Ruby, you must not call her by such a silly name,"
+she said. "She must put her hair up, and wear a little cup over
+it like a French <i>bonne</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a pity to cover it up, it is so thick and long, and shines
+so bright. Mary is a very pretty girl, don't you think so, mamma?
+She looks just like my wax doll," said the child.</p>
+
+<p>"Pretty is that pretty does, my child," Mrs. Desmond answered,
+shortly, and Mrs. Markham, stooping over Golden, put a card
+with her name and address upon it, in her hand, and said in her
+kind, patronizing voice:</p>
+
+<p>"If you do not suit Mrs. Desmond, Mary, after she has given
+you a fair trial, you may come to me, and I will help you to another
+place."</p>
+
+<p>The quick tears brimmed over in little Golden's eyes. She kissed
+Mrs. Markham's hand in silent gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>"It is quite likely I shall keep her if she continues to please
+Ruby as well as she does now. But Ruby is such a capricious
+little darling there is no telling how soon this new fancy of hers
+may change. 'New brooms sweep clean,' you know," said Mrs.
+Desmond, quoting the old adage a little stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Markham made some careless reply and took her departure.
+She was vaguely conscious of a chill never felt before in Mrs. Desmond's
+manner, and resented her lack of gratitude for the service
+she had done her.</p>
+
+<p>"The child is so pleased and interested, it will be quite a pity if
+she sends Mary Smith away from her," the benevolent woman
+thought silently to herself.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"I am quite sure that my papa will be pleased with your
+looks," said little Ruby, artlessly, when her mother had gone out
+and left them alone to the doll's dressmaking. "He likes pretty
+faces as well as I do. He hates Celine and the chambermaid both,
+because, as he says, they are 'so deucedly ugly.'"</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose papa loves his little pet very much," said Golden,
+smiling sadly at the little one's prattle.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed," said Ruby. "He gives me oceans of pretty
+things. But I do not see him much, only an hour after dinner.
+You see, papa and mamma are both very gay. They always go
+out in the evening to balls or operas."</p>
+
+<p>Before the dinner hour Celine made her appearance with a large,
+white bib-apron and neat cap for Golden's use.</p>
+
+<p>"My mistress sent you these," she said, not unkindly. "Shall
+I show you how to use them, or do you know already?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will please show me," the girl answered, gently.</p>
+
+<p>Celine brought combs and brushes and arranged the bright,
+shining hair in a thick plait which she wound about the small
+head and pinned securely with hairpins.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Ma foi</i>," she said, unable to repress an involuntary tribute
+of admiration, "you have the most beautiful hair I ever saw."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and it's a shame to put a cap on it," cried Ruby. "I think<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+mamma is very unkind to me, I did not want Mary Smith's
+beautiful hair covered!"</p>
+
+<p>"Fie, my little lady, what a funny-looking nurse-maid she
+would be without her little cap," cried Celine, as she put the last
+touches to the bib and cap.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said Golden, as she gave a timid glance into the
+swinging mirror.</p>
+
+<p>Celine noted the little incident with feminine quickness, and
+smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Should you know yourself again?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It makes a great difference in my appearance," little Golden
+replied.</p>
+
+<p>"But it does not make you any less pretty," declared Celine.
+"When your hair hung down it hid all your neck. Now I see
+that your ears are as pretty as sea-shells, and your neck as white
+as snow. You are too good-looking for your place, Miss Smith."</p>
+
+<p>"And you are too ugly for yours!" put in Ruby, sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"Hold your tongue, Miss Pert," said the French maid, with an
+ugly frown. "It's a deal better to be an ugly servant than a
+pretty one in this place, and so Miss Smith will find out before
+long. Not as I says it out of spite for the poor thing. She's to
+be pitied, being <i>your</i> nurse," pronounced Mademoiselle Celine as
+she flitted out of the room, seeing that Golden made her no answer.
+Indeed the poor girl did not know what to say. She was puzzled
+and frightened over the maid's pert innuendoes, but she did not
+in the least comprehend what she meant.</p>
+
+<p>When Celine was gone she looked into the minor again and
+then at the portrait on the wall. The hot tears came into the
+great, blue eyes and blinded them.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Bert," she whispered inaudibly, "would you know me,
+would you love me in this strange and altered guise?"</p>
+
+<p>"You must do my hair over before dinner, Mary," said the little
+girl. "I always dine with mamma and papa when they have
+no company. You will go with me and stand behind my chair
+while I am eating, to attend to my wants."</p>
+
+<p>Golden gave a gasp of mingled pride and dread.</p>
+
+<p>"Must I indeed do that?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, all my nurses do that way," said the child. "Now,
+Mary, I must have my hair curled over, and dress for dinner just
+as mamma does, you know."</p>
+
+<p>Golden found that she had a most exacting little mistress. Although
+frail and diseased, the little creature never allowed her
+active mind and thin, little body one moment's rest.</p>
+
+<p>She was always flying from one thing to another, and kept
+everyone about her attending to her whims and fancied wants.
+Yet, in spite of her capricious exactions, Golden could not help
+being drawn to the child.</p>
+
+<p>The dark eyes, and the proud, sweet mouth so like those of the
+man she loved, won her in spite of herself.</p>
+
+<p>At dinner, where she stood droopingly behind little Ruby's
+chair, the master of the house did not even glance toward her, so
+that she had a fair chance to observe him from under her heavy,
+curling lashes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The scrutiny did not satisfy her, although she could not have
+told how it chanced, for Mr. Desmond was faultlessly handsome.</p>
+
+<p>He had a fair, effeminate face, full of languid passion, and those
+large, long-lashed gray eyes which can shoot the most killing
+glances.</p>
+
+<p>His hair was parted in the middle with scrupulous exactness.
+His dress was elegant to the verge of foppishness, and a magnificent
+diamond sparkled on his white hand.</p>
+
+<p>His wife and little daughter seemed to regard him with the
+most admiring affection, which he accepted with a bored and
+rather patronizing air.</p>
+
+<p>When the long and ceremonious dinner was over, little Ruby
+sprang down from her chair and caught his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, papa, come, mamma," she cried, "you must go to the
+nursery now."</p>
+
+<p>They went away with her, and when Golden returned to the
+nursery later, she found the little girl sitting on her father's knee,
+and chatting volubly to him, while Mrs. Desmond was nowhere
+to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby jumped down from her perch and ran to Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Papa," she said, evidently referring to some subject they had
+been discussing. "I will show it to you, and you will say that I
+am right."</p>
+
+<p>With a quick, deft motion, she pulled the cap from Golden's
+head, and loosened the braid so that the curling, rippling mass of
+gold fell in a shower of beauty over the girl's shoulders. Then
+she cried out in gleeful triumph:</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it lovely, papa? Did you ever see such a pretty nurse."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond looked in amazement at the blushing, shrinking
+girl, and murmured inaudibly:</p>
+
+<p>"Ye gods, what a perfect beauty!"</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the brilliant brunette, Mrs. Desmond, swept
+into the room with a waft of exquisite perfume, her diamonds
+glittering, her rich silk and laces rustling majestically, a white
+satin opera cloak folded gracefully around her white shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at Golden so wrathfully that it froze the quick murmur
+of irrepressible admiration on her lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Girl, what does this disordered appearance mean? Why is
+your hair down after my strict orders?" she demanded, angrily.</p>
+
+<p>"Your daughter pulled it down, madam," Golden answered,
+with outward dignity and quietness, though she was inwardly
+chafed and deeply wounded.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond turned round in a gust of passion and gave Ruby
+a ringing slap on the cheek with her white, jeweled hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Take that, and behave yourself better the next time," she
+cried, sharply.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby ran, screaming, to her father, and Mrs. Desmond cried
+out impatiently:</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Mr. Desmond, the carriage is waiting. Mary, put the
+child to bed. Good-night, Ruby."</p>
+
+<p>She bent to kiss the child good-night, but Ruby pushed her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+away with an angry scream, and ran to hide her face in Golden's
+skirts.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond turned away, followed by her husband, who
+said reproachfully as they passed from the room:</p>
+
+<p>"You were needlessly cruel to the poor little thing Edith, my
+dear."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond came into the nursery the next morning with
+her arms full of new toys as a propitiatory gift to her offended
+little daughter.</p>
+
+<p>She greeted Golden very kindly, feeling ashamed of her petulance
+of the evening before, when she saw how patiently she was
+ministering to the comfort of her little daughter.</p>
+
+<p>Little Ruby was suffering with a headache this morning. She
+lay on a silken lounge, with her head propped on pillows, and
+Golden was bathing the hot temples with <i>eau de cologne</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you still pleased with your nurse, my darling?" inquired
+her mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, mamma. Mary is the kindest nurse I ever had," answered
+Ruby, lifting her heavy eyes tenderly to Golden's sweet
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad to hear it," said her mother. "Does your
+head ache too bad for you to take your morning drive with me,
+dear?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, I think it will be better when I get out in the air,"
+said Ruby, with a brightening face. "Shall we take my nurse
+with us?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not this morning, I think, as I shall drive the pony-phaeton,
+and there is only room for two."</p>
+
+<p>"Will not papa go then?" said the child, disappointed.</p>
+
+<p>"No; he has a business engagement, and cannot accompany us.
+You see we are going to the seaside next week, and he has a great
+many things to see to first," Mrs. Desmond answered, with the
+child's disappointment reflected on her own beautiful face.</p>
+
+<p>She loved her husband with the devotion of a strong, intense
+nature, and begrudged every moment he spent away from her
+side.</p>
+
+<p>Her jealousy was as strong as her love, and Mr. Desmond was
+the type of man best calculated to keep this baleful passion in
+the fullest play.</p>
+
+<p>He had been noted as a male flirt before he married Edith
+Chesleigh, and his conduct since their union had not been of a
+sort to strengthen his wife's faith in his fidelity. Beautiful as she
+was herself, she soon found that he was by no means blind to the
+charms of other women.</p>
+
+<p>She turned to the nurse with a suppressed sigh, and said,
+quietly:</p>
+
+<p>"You may dress Ruby now in a white hat and dress, and cardinal
+sash, while I am getting ready."</p>
+
+<p>Then she kissed Ruby and went to her dressing-room. Golden
+hastened to follow her instructions.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"We shall go to the seaside next week and stay two months.
+Shall you like that, Mary?" asked the child, while Golden was
+brushing her dark curls over her fingers.</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say I shall like it, if you do," replied the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we will have a splendid time. We will go bathing in the
+sea in the mornings, and afterward we will stroll on the sands,
+and gather beautiful, rosy shells. At night they have balls and
+dancing. Sometimes mamma lets me stay up awhile to see them
+dance. Oh, it is grand fun! I wish I was a grown lady," cried
+the child, flapping her hands.</p>
+
+<p>Golden listened in silence, and the strange loneliness and quietude
+of the life in which she had been reared, struck her more
+and more by its contrast with the bright, bustling world outside
+and beyond Glenalvan Hall.</p>
+
+<p>When little Ruby had gone away for her drive with her mother,
+she sat down in the quiet nursery and resigned herself to
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>Her thought went back to the gray, old hall in the sunny south,
+and the kind, old man she had deserted. She wondered if he
+would forgive her, and pray for her that she might find her
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall never find her now," she thought. "I have lost my
+money, and it will be a long time before I can earn enough to
+resign my situation here, and try to find her. Mrs. Markham
+was so sweet and kind. I wonder if she would help me. But,
+no, she would scorn me like all the rest, if she knew the story of
+my poor, young mother's disgrace."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-morning, little Mary. Where is my daughter this
+morning?" said a clear, musical voice.</p>
+
+<p>Golden looked up with a start, and saw Mr. Desmond, standing,
+tall, debonair and handsome, in the center of the lofty apartment.
+He had entered and closed the door so softly that she had
+not heard a sound.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Ruby has gone out driving with her mother," she answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," said Mr. Desmond. "I suppose she will not be gone
+long, so I will wait here until she returns."</p>
+
+<p>He drew forward a chair quite close to hers. Golden regarded
+him in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Ruby was very anxious that you should go with her,
+but her mother said you had a business engagement this morning
+and could not find time to gratify her," she remarked to him,
+rather pointedly.</p>
+
+<p>He flushed, then laughed carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, so I did have," he replied, "I only looked in a minute
+to bid Ruby good-morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," the nurse replied, constrainedly, and looked out of
+the window. The way Mr. Desmond regarded her out of his
+large, bold eyes made her feel slightly nervous. She heartily
+wished that he would go away and leave her alone.</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Desmond seemed in no haste to fulfill his business engagement.
+He sat silently a moment, regarding the delicate
+profile of the half averted face, then said, carelessly:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Where do you come from, Mary&mdash;New York?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am from the south, Mr. Desmond," said the girl, biting her
+lips to keep back her resentment at his familiar address.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed? From what part of the south?" he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me, sir, I do not care to reveal my private affairs to
+a total stranger," replied Golden, with such sudden spirit and
+haughtiness that the fine gentleman stared.</p>
+
+<p>"Whew!" he exclaimed, "I did not mean any offense, Miss
+Smith, I only wished to know the precise spot where such peerless
+beauties as yourself are reared. I would certainly immigrate
+instanter to that most precious locality."</p>
+
+<p>Golden rose, crimson with anger, and crossed to the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you going?" he inquired, following her and taking
+hold of her hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I am going down stairs, Mr. Desmond," she replied coldly,
+and trying to wrench her hand away.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you offended at my plain speaking?" he inquired, trying
+to look into her flashing eyes. "Surely you are aware that you
+are beautiful?"</p>
+
+<p>"If I am, it does not become you to tell me so, sir," she replied,
+resentfully. "Such compliments belong to your wife."</p>
+
+<p>"My wife is a beautiful woman, but not half so beautiful as
+you are, little Mary," he replied, still keeping a tight hold on her
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Desmond, let me go," she pleaded, the angry tears crowding
+into her soft blue eyes, "I will not listen to such words from
+you. You are cruel and unkind. What would Mrs. Desmond
+say if she could see you?"</p>
+
+<p>He started uneasily, then laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"She would say I was only teasing you, as I was," he replied.
+"Believe me, Mary, I was only joking you. I did not think that
+you would take it as earnest or become angry. Say that you
+forgive me, fair one, and I will release you."</p>
+
+<p>"Let go my hand, I forgive you," Golden replied, glad to be
+released on any terms, and shrinking from him with an utter
+loathing and horror.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you for your pardon," he cried, laughingly. "You
+must seal the sweet pledge with a kiss, my lovely girl."</p>
+
+<p>He threw his arm around her struggling little form, clasping
+her closely to his breast, and pressed a full, passionate kiss on
+her loathing lips.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>At Golden's loud scream of alarm and anger, the door of Mrs.
+Desmond's sleeping apartment opened suddenly, and Celine, the
+maid, stood aghast upon the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>She beheld the pretty, new nurse in the arms of her master,
+saw his handsome head bent over her as he kissed the beautiful
+crimson lips. At Celine's startled cry he turned upon her fiercely,
+at the same time releasing Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean by spying upon my actions, Celine?" he
+demanded angrily.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Pardon, monsieur, I meant no offense," said the maid, as
+smooth as silk, "I but thought you were romping with little Miss
+Ruby, and looked in to behold the little one's delight."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond saw that it was necessary to conciliate Mademoiselle
+Celine.</p>
+
+<p>"I did come in to see Ruby," he replied, "but she had gone to
+ride. So I attempted a bit of harmless gallantry with her nurse,
+here, such as most pretty girls would have taken with pleasure,
+but she was timid and frightened at my little joke. Hold your
+tongue about it, Celine, and here's a trifle to buy you a new cap."</p>
+
+<p>He tossed a gold piece at her feet, and Celine picked it up,
+curtsying and smiling. Little Golden, standing apart from
+them, regarded the scene with horror and disgust.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond, turning suddenly to her, quailed at the look of
+fiery scorn in the beautiful, spirited young face.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you very angry with me, Mary?" he inquired in a subdued
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>"No words can do justice to my contempt for you," she replied,
+in a voice of cutting scorn. "How dared you maltreat
+and insult me so? Shame on you for your cruelty to a poor and
+helpless girl!"</p>
+
+<p>She was so beautiful in her anger that he could scarcely remove
+his gaze from her face. Her cheeks were scarlet, her eyes
+were darkened and dilated with anger, her lovely lips were
+curled disdainfully. He read the proud purity of her young soul
+in every haughty movement of her lithe young figure and
+clenched, white hands.</p>
+
+<p>He regarded her in silence a moment, then exclaimed with
+apparent frankness:</p>
+
+<p>"Mary, I will tell you the truth, and then you will be able to
+pardon my conduct. My wife told me that she had engaged you
+totally without recommendation, and we both were afraid that
+we had run too great a risk in intrusting our little darling to
+your care. I determined therefore to test you. I have done so,
+and I am delighted to find that your principles and your virtue
+are so steadfast and true. Are you willing to grant me your pardon
+after this explanation?"</p>
+
+<p>At this specious apology the simple girl looked from the hypocrite's
+anxious face to that of the maid.</p>
+
+<p>Celine being a woman, she reasoned, would tell her whether to
+accept this explanation or not.</p>
+
+<p>The artful maid gave her an encouraging smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur is right," she said. "He did well to test your
+principles, Miss Smith. Do not be so rude as to withhold your
+forgiveness after his manly apology."</p>
+
+<p>Golden, with her slight knowledge of the wicked world, thought
+that Mr. Desmond and Celine had told her the truth. She answered,
+falteringly, after a moment of silence:</p>
+
+<p>"Then I will forgive you, Mr. Desmond, if you will promise
+not to molest me again. Otherwise I shall return to Mrs. Markham's
+protection."</p>
+
+<p>"You must not think of leaving us. Ruby is so pleased with
+you that it would be a shame to desert her. You need not fear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+me. I am quite satisfied of your truth and worth, and my wife
+will be delighted when I tell her how nobly I have proved your
+virtue," said Mr. Desmond, hastily.</p>
+
+<p>Then he looked at his watch, and muttering something about
+his business engagement, hurried away.</p>
+
+<p>Celine looked at Golden with an odd, significant smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Miss Smith, you understand what I meant by saying
+that you were too good-looking for your place," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"But I thought <i>he</i> said, and so did you, Celine, that he was
+only testing my virtue," said poor Golden, in perplexity.</p>
+
+<p>"Bah! that was only master's blarney," replied Celine, airily.
+"Of course I had to agree with him, or lose my situation, and I
+don't choose to do that, for I have a good place and lots of perquisites.
+But the truth is that monsieur only invented that tale
+of testing you because he was frightened when he found he had
+tackled an honest girl, and he did not wish for the madam to get
+hold of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he is a wicked villain, and I shall go away to-day," cried
+the girl, indignantly, "I love little Ruby, but I will go away, I
+cannot remain."</p>
+
+<p>"If you take <i>my</i> advice you will stay and say nothing about
+it," replied the maid. "If you go to another place you are just
+as likely to encounter the same difficulty. You are too pretty to
+be a servant. I have told you that already."</p>
+
+<p>"But I cannot remain here and encounter the persecutions of
+Mr. Desmond," replied Golden, decidedly.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not believe he will annoy you again," said Celine, confidently.
+"He has found out that you are honest, and he will be
+afraid to pursue you any further. The child is so pleased with
+you it would be a pity to forsake her. You may take my word
+for it that monsieur is too much afraid of his wife to bother you
+again. Why, she is so jealous that if she knew her husband had
+kissed you, she would want to cut your ears off."</p>
+
+<p>Golden shivered at Celine's vivid words.</p>
+
+<p>"It is better I should go, then," she said, with a sigh. "I
+would not, for the world, create trouble between husband and
+wife."</p>
+
+<p>"You had better stay," said Celine. "I shall not tell of you,
+and you may be pretty sure master won't. So Mrs. Desmond
+need never know."</p>
+
+<p>"It is better I should go," said Golden, decidedly; and then
+she threw herself down upon a lounge and burst into tears.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! why are women so weak, and men so cruel?" she wildly
+sobbed.</p>
+
+<p>"It's their nature," replied Celine, but Golden made her no
+answer. She only continued to weep heart-brokenly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am the most miserable girl on earth," she sobbed. "I wish
+that I had never been born!"</p>
+
+<p>The maid's curiosity was greatly excited by Golden's words.
+She knelt down by the girl and inquired the cause of her sorrow,
+and promised her her friendship and advice if she would confide
+in her.</p>
+
+<p>But in Golden's pure mind there was an instinctive distrust of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+Celine. Her ready acceptance of her master's bribe had excited
+her disgust and dislike. She answered evasively that she had
+nothing to confide, and only desired to be left in peace.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, very well, miss," replied the maid, "you can be left
+alone, I'm sure, but you'll find that it's better to make a friend
+of Celine Duval than an enemy."</p>
+
+<p>She flounced out of the room as she spoke, and Golden was
+left alone to the companionship of her own sad thoughts. She
+lay silently a long while looking at the portrait of Bertram Chesleigh,
+and weeping bitter tears over her unhappy fate. How
+beautiful and life-like was the picture!</p>
+
+<p>The blissful hours she had spent with the original rushed over
+her mind, making the contrast with the gloom of the present
+more harrowing. She found herself exclaiming:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Oh, that those lips had language&mdash;life has passed<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">With me but roughly since I heard them last."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But no sound came from the lips of the false-hearted lover,
+who had given her a few hours of happiness only to leave her to
+the darkness of despair.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Golden had quite decided in her mind that she would rather
+leave Mrs. Desmond at once, than risk a renewal of her husband's
+distasteful attentions, but little Ruby's first words on returning
+from her drive, dispelled the idea for the present at least from
+her thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mary!" the little one had cried, with childish directness,
+as soon as she entered the room. "Oh, Mary! I have heard bad
+news!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry for you, dear," said Golden, gently.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby looked up into the face of her uncle, where it hung against
+the wall.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, poor Uncle Bertie!" she sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"Was it about Mr. Chesleigh, Ruby?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the child. "Mamma has had a telegram from
+some people about him. He is very sick, and he is away down
+south at a place called Glenalvan Hall."</p>
+
+<p>Golden drew her breath heavily, and sank into a chair. It
+seemed as if an arrow had pierced her heart. She could not
+speak, but stared at Ruby with a dumb misery in her eyes, that
+the little one could in nowise understand.</p>
+
+<p>"Some of us will have to go to him&mdash;mamma and papa, I suppose,"
+continued Ruby. "I asked mamma to let me go, but she
+says it would be too warm for me at this time of the year in the
+south, because I am so delicate."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he very sick? Will he die?" inquired Golden, speaking in a
+strange, unnatural voice.</p>
+
+<p>"They hope not, but he is very sick," said Ruby; and at that
+moment Mrs. Desmond swept into the room.</p>
+
+<p>Her bright eyes looked dim and heavy as though she might
+have been weeping.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry you have had bad news, madam," said Golden,
+trying to appear quiet and natural, though her pulse was beating
+at fever-heat, and her eyes were heavy and dim beneath their
+drooping lashes.</p>
+
+<p>"Ruby has told you of my brother's illness, then," said Mrs.
+Desmond, more gently than she usually spoke to her dependents.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, madam," said Golden, faintly, unable to utter another
+word.</p>
+
+<p>"He has brain fever," said Mrs. Desmond, despondently. "Mr.
+Desmond will leave for the south to-night, and if he is no better
+when he arrives, he will telegraph for me to go to him. He is
+unwilling for me to go if it can be prevented, as it is so warm
+down there at this time of year. Besides, I am unwilling to leave
+Ruby, and I could not run the risk of taking her."</p>
+
+<p>She threw herself into a chair, and wept a few genuine tears.</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden, watching her with dry eyes and pale, mute lips,
+wondered if the sister's heart ached half so heavily and painfully
+as her own did.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet why should I grieve for him?" the poor child asked herself.
+"I should rather rejoice. He has forsaken and deserted
+me."</p>
+
+<p>She could find no answer to that question in her heart, save
+that she loved him. Loved him in despite of her cruel wrongs.</p>
+
+<p>Before night another telegram was received, saying that Bertram
+Chesleigh had asked repeatedly for his sister. So it was decided
+that Mrs. Desmond should accompany her husband.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary, do you think that you and the housekeeper can take
+care of my little Ruby while I am gone?" inquired Mrs. Desmond,
+tearfully.</p>
+
+<p>Golden promised so earnestly to give her whole care and attention
+to the little one that Mrs. Desmond could not help confiding
+in her promise.</p>
+
+<p>The child herself, though half-distracted with grief at the parting
+with her parents, promised bravely to be a good and patient
+girl for Uncle Bertie's sake.</p>
+
+<p>Celine was to accompany her mistress, and was in a bustle of
+pleasant preparation. The hours passed swiftly, and the time for
+the farewells soon came and passed.</p>
+
+<p>Little Ruby sobbed herself to sleep dismally, with her arms
+around Golden's neck, unconscious that the girl shed sadder
+tears than her own, when her little charge was peacefully dreaming.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"The slow, sad hours that bring us all things ill," waned slowly,
+while Golden and Ruby waited impatiently for news of the
+travelers.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby was very restless and capricious, besides her daily headaches
+grew worse as the heat of the summer season advanced.
+She fretted very much over her postponed trip to the seaside.</p>
+
+<p>At length a telegram came from the travelers to say that they
+had reached Glenalvan Hall, and Mr. Chesleigh was no better.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+After this these bulletins came almost daily, but with no encouraging
+words. Very ill, and no prospect of improvement yet,
+was their daily burden.</p>
+
+<p>In about two weeks Mr. Desmond returned unexpectedly.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby was overjoyed. She laughed and wept together, as she
+hung around his neck.</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle Bertie must be better, or you would not have returned,"
+she cried.</p>
+
+<p>But her father shook his head gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"No, dear, I am sorry to say he is not improving at all. Indeed
+the case is so critical that it may be weeks before your
+mother can return. That is why I have come."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall you go back, then?" inquired Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, in about a week. Have you fretted for us very much,
+Ruby?"</p>
+
+<p>"A great deal," she replied. "Oh, papa," clapping her little
+hands, "now I know why you have come back. You are going
+to take me to mamma and Uncle Bert."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing is further from my intentions," replied Mr. Desmond.
+"I have come to take you to the seashore."</p>
+
+<p>"The seashore&mdash;while my uncle is so ill?" cried the child, a
+little surprised.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Ruby. You must remember your own health is very
+frail. Your mother is very anxious about you. You will go to
+the seashore in the care of Mrs. Markham. Will that arrangement
+please you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very much," smiled Ruby. "I love Mrs. Markham. Of
+course I shall take my nurse?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course," he replied, then inquired, carelessly: "Are
+you still satisfied with Mary Smith?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, Mary is a splendid girl&mdash;I do not intend ever to part
+from her," replied the child, enthusiastically, "I am quite getting
+over my sulky spells since she came. Mary does not tease
+and cross me as the others did."</p>
+
+<p>Golden, who had sat sewing quietly by the window, without
+ever lifting her eyes from her work since Mr. Desmond entered,
+crimsoned painfully at thus having his attention drawn upon
+her.</p>
+
+<p>But he took no notice of her except to say patronizingly:</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad you have found such a treasure, Ruby. I hope she
+will remain with you. Are you willing to accompany Ruby to
+the seaside, Mary?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," she answered, quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, I will go and see Mrs. Markham now. If she can
+go by the last of the week I will accompany the party and see
+you all safely settled before I return south."</p>
+
+<p>Golden made him no answer, thinking that none was necessary,
+and he went out to call on Mrs. Markham.</p>
+
+<p>It was all carried out as Mr. Desmond wished. In the latter
+part of the week he accompanied the party to the seashore, saw
+them installed in comfortable quarters, and after staying two
+days took leave again.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>During his short stay, he enjoyed himself according to his flirting
+tastes with the lively seaside belles.</p>
+
+<p>In her capacity of Ruby's nurse Golden was compelled to see
+him a great deal, but he treated her at all times with such subdued
+respect and delicate attention that the girl grew less afraid
+of him, and began to think that Celine was right when she said
+he would abandon his pursuit of her now that he had found out
+she was an honest girl. She did not know that Mr. Desmond's
+quiet respect and delicate courtesy was more dangerous than his
+former open advances had been. Still she was relieved when he
+was gone, and she was left alone with little Ruby and Mrs. Markham,
+who was very kind to the lonely girl though in a decidedly
+patronizing fashion.</p>
+
+<p>When Golden and Ruby had been at the seaside a month with
+Mrs. Markham, the glad tidings that Mr. Chesleigh was beginning
+to improve, were conveyed to little Ruby in a short but affectionate
+letter from her mother.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"Your dear uncle has had a great fight for his life, but the
+doctor now says that he is likely to get well," Mrs. Desmond
+wrote. "If he continues to improve, we shall be able to start
+home with him in about two weeks, journeying slowly. We will
+join you then at the seaside, as the physician thinks that a month
+by the sea will quite restore Bertram's health."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It was Golden's task to read this letter to the little six-year-old,
+whose education, owing to her extreme frailty of constitution,
+had not yet commenced.</p>
+
+<p>The child cried out noisily for joy at the welcome news, but
+Golden said not a word. Yet her thoughts were very busy.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall see him again very soon," she said to herself. "Will
+he recognize, in his sister's servant, the girl that loved him so
+dearly?"</p>
+
+<p>Then the thought came to her that he would not wish to see
+her again; she had no part nor lot in his life henceforth, by his
+own desire.</p>
+
+<p>Musing sadly by the great, moaning sea, while little Ruby
+gathered the rosy-tinted shells along the sands, she murmured to
+herself those sweet, pathetic lines of Owen Meredith:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Oh, being of beauty and bliss! Seen and known<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In the depths of my heart, and possessed there alone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">My days know thee not, and my lips name thee never,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Thy place in my poor life is vacant forever;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">We have met, we have parted,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">No name is recorded<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In my annals on earth."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>In few more days Mrs. Markham received a letter from Mrs.
+Desmond. Her brother was so much better that she had quite recovered
+the tone of her spirits, and wrote, cheerfully:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"If nothing more happens, I shall be with you the first of September.
+Bertram will be with me, and I shall also bring a very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+charming young lady whom I have invited to spend the winter
+months with me in New York. She is the daughter of our host,
+and has been Bert's unwearied attendant throughout his illness.
+Between you and me, dear friend, she is so desperately in love
+with my brother, that she has neither eyes nor ears for anyone else.
+She has a younger sister whom I have not invited. I do not like
+her. She is the most abominable flirt I ever saw, and has done
+nothing but make eyes at Mr. Desmond since we came to Glenalvan
+Hall."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Glenalvan Hall," mused Mrs. Markham, holding the letter in
+her hand, and drawing her eyebrows thoughtfully together. "How
+familiar the word sounds! Where have I heard it?"</p>
+
+<p>She puzzled over it awhile, then gave it up. In the gay whirl
+of fashionable society, she had forgotten the pretty name of the
+poor girl she had befriended.</p>
+
+<p>But she carried her letter into Ruby's room and read it aloud to
+her, and Golden's cheeks that had grown very pale and delicate
+of late, grew paler still.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor is coming," she said to herself, in dismay. "What
+shall I do?"</p>
+
+<p>She thought at first that she would go away quietly before they
+came.</p>
+
+<p>She could not stay and face her proud cousin, Elinor, and the
+man who had loved her, and then despised her for the stain upon
+her.</p>
+
+<p>But the thought came into her mind, where would she go? She
+had never received any of her wages from Mrs. Desmond yet. If
+she went away she would be utterly friendless and penniless.</p>
+
+<p>She clung to little Ruby because the child loved her very dearly,
+and without her love she was utterly alone.</p>
+
+<p>And underlying all was a fierce, passionate longing she could
+not still, to see Bertram Chesleigh's face once more, to hear again
+that musical, luring voice, whose accents she had hung upon so
+fondly.</p>
+
+<p>A few days before the first of September, she turned timidly to
+Mrs. Markham, who was amusing herself with little Ruby down
+on the sands.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Markham," she said, "will you tell me this, please? Are
+not green glasses good for weak eyes?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard so," replied the lady. "Are your eyes weak,
+Mary?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked into the girl's face as she spoke, and saw that the
+sweet, blue eyes were dull and heavy.</p>
+
+<p>How was she to guess that sleepless nights and bitter tears had
+dimmed their sapphire sparkle.</p>
+
+<p>"Are your eyes weak, Mary?" she repeated, seeing that the girl
+hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>A blush tinged the pearly cheek, and Golden glanced out at the
+foam-crested waves rolling in toward the shore.</p>
+
+<p>"I think that the glare of the sun on the sands, and on the
+water, is very weakening to the sight," she replied, evasively.</p>
+
+<p>"So it is. I have heard others complain of the same thing. If<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+the light affects your eyes I would advise you, by all means, to
+wear the glasses."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. I believe I will try a pair," returned Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mary, you will be a perfect fright, if you do!" cried out
+little Ruby, in childish disapproval. "You have covered up all
+your long, gold hair under that ugly cap, and now, if you cover
+up your pretty, blue eyes, you will be as horrid-looking as&mdash;as&mdash;I
+don't know what!"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind the looks, my dear," said Mrs. Markham, in her
+gentle way. "If Mary is kind and loving at heart her looks will
+not signify."</p>
+
+<p>"But I do so love pretty things," said the child, "and I love to
+look at Mary. She looks like a picture at night when she combs
+out her shining hair over her shoulders. There is not a lady at
+the seaside this summer as pretty as my nurse!"</p>
+
+<p>"Fie, my dear; you must not make Mary vain," cried the lady,
+half smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to ask you a favor, Mrs. Markham," said Golden,
+blushing very much.</p>
+
+<p>"A favor! What is it, Mary?" asked Mrs. Markham, encouragingly.</p>
+
+<p>Golden glanced down at her blue cashmere dress, which had
+grown very shabby and worn during the two months she had
+been in little Ruby's service.</p>
+
+<p>"You see I had lost all my money when I went into Mrs. Desmond's
+service," she said falteringly, "and I have not received
+any of my wages yet, and&mdash;and I am getting too shabby to be
+respectable-looking."</p>
+
+<p>That was little Golden's plea, but the truth was that she did
+not wish her Cousin Elinor and Bertram Chesleigh to recognize
+her, and so wished to lay aside the blue cashmere which had
+been her best dress at Glenalvan Hall.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you poor child!" burst out Mrs. Markham, "why did you
+never tell me that before? I see, now; you want me to lend you
+the money to buy a new dress."</p>
+
+<p>"If you will be so very, very kind," faltered Golden, gratefully.</p>
+
+<p>"I will do it with the greatest pleasure," answered Mrs. Markham,
+whose purse was ever open to the needy and distressed.</p>
+
+<p>So on the first of September little Golden appeared in quite an
+altered guise. The pretty, blue cashmere that was so becoming
+to her rose-leaf complexion was laid aside, and she wore a sober,
+dark-gray dress, so long and plain that she looked a great deal
+taller and older. She had pinned a dark silk handkerchief high
+up around her white throat, thus concealing its fairness and
+graceful contour. She had fashioned herself a huge, abominable
+cap that hid every wave of her golden hair. Dark-green spectacles
+were fastened before the bright, blue eyes, and with her
+long, tucked, white apron, little Golden made the primmest-looking
+nurse-maid that could have been imagined. She looked
+in the mirror and decided that no one who had known her at
+Glenalvan Hall would recognize her now.</p>
+
+<p>But little Ruby exclaimed dolorously at her strange appearance:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mary, you have made yourself quite ugly!" she cried,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+"and I had been thinking how I would show Uncle Bert my
+pretty nurse."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Ruby, you must not!" cried Golden, in terror. "Promise
+me you will not."</p>
+
+<p>"Will not&mdash;what?" asked the little one, surprised.</p>
+
+<p>"Will not show me to Mr. Chesleigh, nor tell him that you
+think I am pretty," said Golden, in alarm.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, I won't," said the little one, disappointed, "but
+I am very sorry, for I am sure Uncle Bertie would be glad to
+know that I have a good and pretty nurse. He used to laugh at
+the ugly ones, and he said their faces were so horrid it was not
+strange they were bad tempered."</p>
+
+<p>"There is another thing I want you to promise me, please,
+darling," said Golden, who was on the best of terms with her
+little charge.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, Mary?" inquired the child.</p>
+
+<p>"When your uncle comes to sit and talk with you, Ruby, you
+must let me run away and stay until he leaves you."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should you do that?" asked Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"I have some sewing to do," replied Golden, evasively.</p>
+
+<p>"I know, but you always do your sewing with me," said Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"You see it would be quite different with a man in the way."</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle Bert would not bother you one bit. I cannot see why
+you are afraid of him," rejoined the child.</p>
+
+<p>"But I do not like men, Ruby. I do not like to be where a
+man is. Now, dear, will you excuse me?" pleaded Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I will, since you insist on it," answered Ruby. "But
+I can't see what makes you hate men! Now I like them. I like
+papa, I like Uncle Bert, and I shall like my husband when I
+grow big enough to have one. Do you ever intend to have a
+husband, Mary?" said the child, with a child's thoughtlessness.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>The beautiful color surged hotly into Golden's cheeks at Ruby's
+artless question. She turned her head away to hide the pain that
+made her sweet lips quiver.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary, do you ever intend to have a husband?" repeated the
+child.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, Ruby. You are too young to talk about husbands,"
+answered Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me, is my daughter contemplating marriage?" cried a
+gay, sweet voice, and, looking up, they saw Mrs. Desmond in her
+traveling wraps, dusty and weary, but looking very glad and
+eager at seeing her child again.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby sprang to her arms, and Golden looked on with sympathetic
+tears in her eyes at the happy reunion of the mother and
+child. Mrs. Desmond did not seem to see her until she had fairly
+smothered Ruby in kisses, when she looked up and said, approvingly:</p>
+
+<p>"How do you do, Mary? That is a very nice new dress&mdash;quite
+suitable to you."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>After a minute she said, suddenly, as if the thought had just
+occurred to her:</p>
+
+<p>"By the way, you have never yet received any of your wages
+from me. Here are twenty dollars for two months. I am very
+glad you have taken such good care of Ruby."</p>
+
+<p>Golden thanked her and took the money, but the gold seemed
+to burn the delicate palm. It was hard to be receiving a servant's
+wages from Bertram Chesleigh's sister.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is papa and Uncle Bert?" asked Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"Papa will be here directly. Bert is very tired&mdash;he has gone
+to his room to rest. You must not go to him yet."</p>
+
+<p>"And the young lady, mamma&mdash;she came?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Is she pretty, mamma? Has she blue eyes, or black?"</p>
+
+<p>"She is decidedly handsome, and her eyes are black."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you like her, mamma?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite well, dear. She is very charming. I will tell you a
+secret. Perhaps she will be your auntie some day."</p>
+
+<p>"Is she going to marry Uncle Bert?" inquired Ruby, wide-eyed.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing is settled yet, dear. But it seems probable. Bert
+could not find a more brilliant Mrs. Chesleigh."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not wish for Uncle Bert to marry. I shall tell him so!"
+cried Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"Fie, little selfishness, you will do no such thing! He ought
+to marry and settle down at home. We should not then have to
+be running after him in every out-of-the-way place where he
+chooses to fall sick. Here I have been by his sick-bed all summer,
+ruining my health and missing the whole season by the sea!"</p>
+
+<p>"How gladly I would have exchanged places with you," moaned
+little Golden, to herself.</p>
+
+<p>"Mamma, did you like Glenalvan Hall?" inquired Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, very much, though it is little better than a ruin. It must
+have been quite a grand place once. It is beautiful still in its decay.
+The owners were ruined by the late war."</p>
+
+<p>Oh, how anxiously beautiful Golden longed to hear one word
+from her old grandfather and her black mammy. She listened
+with a beating heart to the lady's words, but she never named the
+two that little Golden loved so dearly, and after awhile she rose
+and said that Celine was waiting for her, and she must go.</p>
+
+<p>Little Ruby clung to her dress.</p>
+
+<p>"Mayn't I go?" she pleaded, and Mrs. Desmond yielding a smiling
+assent, they went away together, and left Golden alone in the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Alone, with her young heart full of strange, troubled joy.
+Bertram Chesleigh was here, under the same roof with her.</p>
+
+<p>She should see him, she should hear him once again. There
+was a bitter, troubled pleasure in the thought.</p>
+
+<p>She could not bear the tumult of oppressive thoughts that rushed
+over her mind. To escape them she went in quest of Mrs.
+Markham, and paid her the money she had borrowed from her a
+few days before.</p>
+
+<p>Then she went back to the room to wait for little Ruby, but the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+child was so preoccupied with her friends that she did not return
+to her room during the day.</p>
+
+<p>At twilight she came flitting in joyously as a little fairy.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mary, I have had such a charming day! And you must
+dress me now in my white lace dress over the pink satin slip, and
+my white satin slippers, and embroidered rose-silk stockings. I
+am going to stay up for the ball to-night. Won't that be splendid?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden looked a little anxiously at the moist, flushed face and
+shining, dark eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Darling, let me persuade you to lie down on the sofa and rest
+awhile," she urged. "You have had such a busy, exciting day,
+that you need rest. To-morrow you will have one of your bad
+headaches."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no I am not tired one bit. And mamma and Miss Glenalvan
+are gone to dress now. I must be ready when they call for
+me," urged Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose Miss Glenalvan is very pretty, is she not, Ruby?"
+said Golden, as she combed and brushed the little girl's long, shining,
+black ringlets.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, she is very pretty&mdash;she has large, black eyes, and
+rosy cheeks, and splendid hair, but she is not beautiful like you,
+Mary," was the prompt reply.</p>
+
+<p>"You must not let Miss Glenalvan hear you say that," said
+Golden. "She would be displeased."</p>
+
+<p>"Hump!" said Ruby, carelessly, then she flew to another subject,
+while Golden trembled nervously. "Uncle Bert is looking
+wretchedly ill. Ouch, Mary, what <i>did</i> make you jerk that curl
+so? His eyes are as big as saucers. Are you almost done? You
+pull my hair dreadfully. I asked him if he was going to marry
+Miss Glenalvan. He said that was a silly question. Mary, what
+has come over you? You were never so rough with my head
+before."</p>
+
+<p>"There, it is finished now. I did not mean to hurt you; excuse
+me, dear," faltered Golden, as she laid out the white lace dress
+and satin slippers for the eager child.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, I am not angry," said Ruby. "I told Uncle Bert
+what a kind girl you were, and he was delighted to hear it. I
+wanted to tell him you were pretty, too, but I didn't, as you didn't
+want him to know <i>that</i>. But I can tell you one thing, Mary, if
+he ever sees you, he will find out for himself."</p>
+
+<p>"What! in this great cap and glasses?" cried Golden, alarmed.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed; you can't hide your round cheeks, and your red
+mouth, and your dimpled chin!" cried the child, in pretty
+triumph.</p>
+
+<p>"I can keep out of Mr. Chesleigh's way, anyhow," Golden replied,
+as she buttoned the pretty dress and clasped a slight gold
+chain around the white neck of the child.</p>
+
+<p>"Now you are quite finished," she said. "You look very sweet,
+and I hope you will enjoy yourself very much."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said the little girl, impulsively kissing her; then
+she added, a little pityingly: "It is a pity <i>you</i> cannot be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+dressed in white, and go to the ball, too, Mary. Do you never wish
+to?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sometimes," admitted Golden, with her sweet frankness, and
+a soft, little sigh.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby studied her attentively a moment, her dark head perched
+daintily like a bird's.</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to see you in a ball-dress," she said. "It should
+be a white lace over blue satin, and looped with violets. You
+should have large, white pearls around your neck, and your hair
+hanging down and a <i>bandeau</i> of pearls to bind it. It is a great
+pity you are not rich, Mary. People say that you are too pretty
+to be a servant."</p>
+
+<p>Something like a sob rose in Golden's throat and was hardly repressed.
+They had told her this so often.</p>
+
+<p>She was beautiful, but it had only brought her sorrow. To her,
+as her mother, had been given&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"The fatal gift of beauty which became<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A funeral dower of present woes and past."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry I am so pretty, Ruby," she said, sorrowfully,
+and the child answered, quickly:</p>
+
+<p>"I would not be sorry if I were you, Mary. Some good man
+will fall in love with your pretty face some day and marry you."</p>
+
+<p>Golden made no reply to this well-meant solace, for the door
+opened to admit Mrs. Desmond, followed by her young lady
+guest.</p>
+
+<p>Golden retreated shyly to the furthest corner of the room. She
+was face to face at last with her haughty cousin Elinor. She
+drooped her head a moment sadly, while a flood of memories
+rushed over her, then bravely lifted it again and looked at the
+young lady through her disfiguring green glasses.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor Glenalvan only glanced with careless indifference at the
+prim-looking figure of the nurse, then her large, black eyes turned
+away again, so that Golden had time to observe her with impunity.</p>
+
+<p>The Glenalvans had exerted themselves to the utmost to secure
+an outfit for Elinor. The result did credit to their efforts. The
+girl was certainly dazzling.</p>
+
+<p>She wore cream-colored <i>moire</i>, trimmed with rich Spanish lace
+and cardinal satin. Great clusters of Jaqueminot roses burned on
+her bosom and in her shining, raven hair.</p>
+
+<p>The costly pearl necklace that John Glenalvan had taken from
+Golden was clasped around her white throat.</p>
+
+<p>A throb of resentment stirred the young girl's breast as she observed
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond wore white lace looped with diminutive and
+richly-colored sunflowers. Her jewels were diamonds, and she
+was as usual brilliantly beautiful and graceful. Golden caught
+her breath in awed admiration of the two beautiful women.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you ready, Ruby?" inquired Mrs. Desmond.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, mamma," said the child, blithely.</p>
+
+<p>All three went out then, and Golden threw a dark shawl over
+her head and went out upon the seashore.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was a moonlight night, calm and still, with that slight chill
+in the air that comes with September.</p>
+
+<p>She sat down, a quiet, forlorn little figure on the lonely sands,
+and watched the great foam-capped waves rolling in to her feet.</p>
+
+<p>Something in the immensity and solemnity of the great ocean
+seemed to calm the turbulence of the fevered young heart and
+whisper a gentle "peace, be still," to the passions that racked her
+wronged and outraged spirit.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>As Golden had feared, little Ruby's day and night of excitement
+proved too much for her. She was unable to rise from her
+bed the next morning, being prostrated by one of her nervous
+headaches.</p>
+
+<p>To add to her ill-feeling, damp, rainy weather set in during the
+night, spoiling all the pleasant plans of the newly-arrived party
+for the day.</p>
+
+<p>Golden darkened the room, lighted a fire on the hearth, and
+carefully tended the little patient who dozed fitfully until mid-day,
+when she awakened and declared herself better.</p>
+
+<p>"Has no one been in to see me, Mary?" she inquired, and Golden
+answered:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your mamma came to the door while you were sleeping,
+but went away again, saying that she would not disturb your
+rest."</p>
+
+<p>"You may go and tell her to come now, Mary."</p>
+
+<p>"I think she is with your uncle just now, dear. Cannot you
+wait a little while?" said Golden. "She said she would go to
+him a little while, as you were asleep.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I cannot wait," replied Ruby fretfully. "Tell mamma
+to bring Uncle Bert with her."</p>
+
+<p>"If you have too much company your head will ache again,
+Ruby."</p>
+
+<p>"No, it will not. It is ever so much better. Why don't you
+do as I ask you, Mary?" cried the spoiled child.</p>
+
+<p>Golden went out without any further objection. She asked
+Celine, whom she met in the hall, to deliver Ruby's message to
+her mother and her uncle.</p>
+
+<p>Celine looked into the sick-room a minute later to say that
+they were engaged just at present, but would come in about
+fifteen minutes.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear," fretted the ailing little one, "that is a long time
+to wait. Give me my dolls, Mary. I'll try to amuse myself with
+them."</p>
+
+<p>Golden brought the miscellaneous family of dolls and ranged
+them around Ruby on the bed, chatting pleasantly to her the
+while in the hope of lessening the weariness of waiting.</p>
+
+<p>"You must keep your promise and let me go out when they
+come," she said, presently, feeling that she was growing so nervous
+she could not possibly remain in the same room with Bertram Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well; you may go into the next room," replied the child.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You may leave the door just a little ajar that I may call you
+when I want you."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you will not want me until they are gone out again,"
+replied Golden.</p>
+
+<p>When the expected rap came on the door, the girl opened it
+with a trembling hand. She did not look up as Mrs. Desmond
+and her brother entered, but softly closing the door after them,
+glided precipitately from the room.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh saw the little, retreating figure in the huge
+cap and gray gown, and laughed as he kissed his little niece.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose that was Mary Smith, the prodigy?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and you must not laugh at her," said Ruby, a little resentfully.
+"She is very good and sweet, and I love her dearly."</p>
+
+<p>There was an element of teasing in Bertram Chesleigh's nature,
+and Ruby's words roused it into activity.</p>
+
+<p>"She looked very prim and starched," he observed. "She must
+be an old maid&mdash;is she not, Ruby?"</p>
+
+<p>He expected that the little girl would grow indignant at this
+comment on her favorite, but instead of this she puckered her
+little brows thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't quite know what you mean by an old maid," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"You are caught in the trap, Bert. You will have to define
+yourself," said Mrs. Desmond, laughingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know whether I can," he replied as gayly. "But I
+think, Ruby, that an old maid is a person who&mdash;who doesn't like
+men, and grows old and never marries."</p>
+
+<p>"Then my nurse is an old maid. You guessed right, Uncle
+Bert," said the child, with perfect soberness.</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you think so, my dear?" inquired her mother, very
+much amused at the child's notion.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I know it, mamma. Mary Smith hates men. She
+told me she did. She does not like to be where men are. That
+is why she went out just now. She says she will always stay out
+of the room when Uncle Bert is with me."</p>
+
+<p>"That is very sensible indeed in Mary," said Mrs. Desmond,
+with decided approval, while Bertram Chesleigh only laughed and
+said that men were not ogres, and he would not have eaten Miss
+Smith even if she had remained in the room.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Golden had retreated to the sitting-room, leaving
+the door ajar as Ruby had bidden her.</p>
+
+<p>Every word of the conversation which had so strangely turned
+upon herself was distinctly audible.</p>
+
+<p>She listened in fear and trembling to Ruby's disclosures regarding
+her antipathy to men, dreading to hear some further revelation
+that would draw suspicion upon her, but the child had no
+idea of imparting anything she had promised to keep a secret, and
+the conversation gradually turned upon indifferent subjects, so
+that Golden, whose heart was beating wildly at the sound of her
+lover's voice, ventured at last on a sly peep at him through the
+open door.</p>
+
+<p>The breath came thick and fast over the sweet parted lips as
+she gazed&mdash;hardly as he had used her, the ineffable love and pity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+of a woman's heart came up to the beautiful blue eyes, and shone
+out upon the unconscious ingrate who dreamed not whose eyes
+were yearning over him with all the pain and pathos of a loving,
+yet outraged heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, how pale and ill he looks," cried the poor child to herself.
+"He looks sad and altered, too. He has suffered almost as much
+as I have. Was it that which made him ill, I wonder? After all, he
+loved me dearly. But if he had overlooked the shame of my birth
+and brought me here, his sister would have scorned me. Ought
+I to blame him so very, very much?"</p>
+
+<p>As she asked herself the piteous question, the memory of some
+words rose into her mind&mdash;solemn words not to be lightly forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you, forsaking all others, cleave only unto her, so long
+as ye both shall live?"</p>
+
+<p>By the light of those words, Golden answered her own question.
+With a tearless sob she turned her eyes away from the too dear
+face of the false one.</p>
+
+<p>But though she would not look at him, she could not help
+hearing his voice as he answered little Ruby's voluble chatter.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the child showed him her great, wax doll, and when
+he had admired it sufficiently to please her, she said with an air
+of mystery:</p>
+
+<p>"You could not guess dollie's name if you tried all day, Uncle
+Bertie."</p>
+
+<p>"It is something high-flown, no doubt," he laughed.
+"It is Queen Victoria, or Princess Louise, or something like
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"You are quite wrong," she replied, with sparkling eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I? Well, I have it now. You have called her Mary Smith,
+after your old-maid nurse."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I have not," said the little one, merrily. "I have called
+her Golden&mdash;Golden Chesleigh."</p>
+
+<p>In the next breath she added, quickly:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Uncle Bert, what made you start just as if someone had
+shot you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Did I start?" he inquired. "It must have been because I am
+very nervous since my illness. Well, and what did you say your
+elegant doll was named?"</p>
+
+<p>"Did you not understand me before? It is Golden Chesleigh&mdash;Chesleigh
+after you, Uncle Bert. Is it not a pretty name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very!" he rejoined, pale to the lips. "Did you think of it
+yourself, Ruby?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all; I asked Mary for a name, and she said Golden. Then
+I added Chesleigh."</p>
+
+<p>Some curiosity came over him to see the good nurse who loved
+Ruby and was kind to her, but who hated men, and who had
+chosen for the pretty wax doll, the sweet and unusual name of
+Golden.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>There came a light tap on the outer door. Mrs. Desmond rose
+to open it. Golden peeped again and saw her cousin Elinor coming
+in.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"May I come in and see the invalid?" she asked, brightly, and
+Bertram Chesleigh answered:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, do, Miss Glenalvan. Ruby is better and is holding a
+levee of her humble subjects."</p>
+
+<p>Elinor kissed the child and sat down as near as she dared to
+Mr. Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>She looked very bright and blooming, and her dress was as
+usual fashionable and becoming.</p>
+
+<p>Golden could see that Mrs. Desmond regarded her with a real
+fondness. Elinor had found out the lady's weakness and played
+upon it skillfully.</p>
+
+<p>She saw that she was jealous of her husband, and immediately
+affected an indifference to, and an utter obliviousness of the fascinations
+of the handsome Mr. Desmond, that delighted his wife
+and drew her heart to Elinor.</p>
+
+<p>Clare, on the contrary, had an uncontrollable propensity for
+flirting, and took a malicious pleasure in witnessing the grand
+lady's silent rage at her walks and talks, and careless enjoyment
+of her flippant husband's society.</p>
+
+<p>The result was that Elinor received a charmingly worded invitation
+to return to the north with Mrs. Desmond, while Clare
+was silently and chillingly ignored.</p>
+
+<p>She was bitterly angry at missing the trip, and sorely repented
+her weakness, but too late for the repentance to avail, while Elinor
+was transported with delight.</p>
+
+<p>Surely, she thought, a whole winter in New York, with beautiful
+Golden out of the way, would be sufficient for the accomplishment
+of her designs upon Bertram Chesleigh's heart.</p>
+
+<p>Sweet Golden read her cousin's purpose plainly in the tender
+glances she gave Mr. Chesleigh now and then, from beneath her
+black-fringed lashes, and the heart of the innocent girl sank
+heavily.</p>
+
+<p>"She will win him from me," she said, drearily to herself.
+"Elinor is so beautiful, and graceful, and brilliant, it is a wonder
+that he ever liked me better than he did her. It was but a light
+fancy after all, perhaps. He will forget it and turn to her."</p>
+
+<p>The thought gave her inexpressible pain.</p>
+
+<p>She sank upon the floor and hid her face in her hands, weeping
+silent and bitter tears while the hum of gay talk and laughter
+flowed on unheeded in the next room.</p>
+
+<p>So it is ever in the busy, jostling world. Sorrow and joy go
+side by side.</p>
+
+<p>The bridal train meets the funeral procession. Life is mingled
+sunshine and shadow.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, if Bertram Chesleigh could only have known what true
+and faithful little heart was breaking so near him.</p>
+
+<p>After awhile the brightness died from Ruby's eyes, the little
+face looked tired and wan. She said, almost petulantly:</p>
+
+<p>"Now I shall send you all away. Miss Glenalvan laughs so
+much she makes my head ache."</p>
+
+<p>"Fie, my darling," cried her mother.</p>
+
+<p>"It is the truth, mamma," cried the willful little girl. "I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+want you all to go now and Mary shall bathe my head until I get
+better."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is Mary? I feel quite jealous of her," said Elinor,
+sweetly, but inwardly raging at the spoiled child's "whims" as
+she termed them to herself.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary is my nurse," said the child, and her uncle laughingly
+added:</p>
+
+<p>"A person with antipathy to me, Miss Glenalvan. You should
+cultivate her. She must be a <i>rara avis</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you suppose that all women admire your sex, sir?"
+retorted the young lady, spiritedly, and they left the room exchanging
+lively <i>badinage</i>, while Mrs. Desmond looked inside the
+other door for Golden.</p>
+
+<p>She saw her sitting quietly, her sweet face bent over some sewing,
+no trace apparent of the heartache she was silently enduring.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary, you may come to your charge now," she said with so
+much more than her usual kindness of tone that Golden's delicate
+lip quivered. Mrs. Desmond had been pleased to hear that Ruby's
+beautiful nurse disliked men and was not willing to remain
+in the room with one.</p>
+
+<p>She laid aside her sewing and went in to Ruby. Mrs. Desmond
+bent to kiss her pet, and said, fondly:</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I stay and bathe your head, love?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, mamma, I would rather have Mary," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be jealous of Mary. You are so fond of her," the
+mother rejoined as she left the room.</p>
+
+<p>Golden put the dolls away and bathed the brow of the little
+sufferer until she fell into a deep and quiet sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Then she sat near the window and watched the gloomy
+September rain pattering drearily down, and the white mist rising
+from the sea.</p>
+
+<p>The door opened and Celine came in softly, and sat down.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to talk to you a little, Mary," she said, in her low
+voice. "Shall I disturb the child?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not if you talk softly," replied Golden, hoping that Celine
+would tell her something about Glenalvan Hall.</p>
+
+<p>She was not disappointed, for the maid said at once:</p>
+
+<p>"I want to tell you about a queer old black woman I saw at
+that place where Mr. Chesleigh was ill&mdash;Glenalvan Hall," watching
+her narrowly.</p>
+
+<p>Golden started and looked up eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, tell me about her, Celine," she said, with repressed excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, to begin with," said Celine, "she was a most ridiculous-looking
+old creature, full of grumblings and complaints.
+This old creature when she found I was from New York, came
+to me secretly, and asked me the oddest question."</p>
+
+<p>Golden, chancing to look up at that moment, met Celine's
+eyes fixed upon her with such a strange expression that her heart
+gave a frightened bound. It was evident that the maid had some
+suspicions of her.</p>
+
+<p>She forced a calmness she did not feel, and replied carelessly:</p>
+
+<p>"The blacks, you know, Celine, are very ignorant. Their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+questions appear quite ridiculous sometimes to intelligent and
+well-informed people."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Celine looked cunningly at Golden, as she made her confused
+explanation.</p>
+
+<p>"You seem to be well acquainted with the character of the
+negroes," she said. "Perhaps you have been in the south."</p>
+
+<p>"I have," replied Golden, with sudden, pretty defiance. "It
+was my birth-place."</p>
+
+<p>"Where? Glenalvan Hall?" asked Celine, thinking to catch
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not say that," replied Golden, coolly.</p>
+
+<p>"No? Well, I will tell you what that old woman&mdash;Dinah, she
+was called, asked me about a young lady."</p>
+
+<p>Golden lifted her eyes and regarded her bravely.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"She asked me," continued Celine, "if I had seen a young girl
+in New York of about sixteen, with large, blue eyes, and long,
+golden curls, dressed in a blue cashmere dress, and hat and jacket,
+I told her yes, for her description of the lady's appearance corresponded
+exactly with yours."</p>
+
+<p>Golden remained perfectly silent, her eyes turned resolutely
+from Celine.</p>
+
+<p>"She asked me," the maid continued, "if the young girl had
+found her mother."</p>
+
+<p>Golden could not repress a sudden, violent start.</p>
+
+<p>"Aha," cried Celine, quickly. "You see I am acquainted with
+your whole history!"</p>
+
+<p>"You know nothing about me whatever, Celine," replied
+Golden, warmly, "and I cannot see by what right you pry into my
+affairs."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, if we are so hoity-toity, we can keep our secret,"
+returned Celine, scornfully, "but somebody will find that it was
+better to have made a friend than an enemy of Celine Duval!"</p>
+
+<p>With these ambiguous words, Celine bounced out of the room,
+leaving poor little Golden terribly frightened and distressed.</p>
+
+<p>She silently resolved that she would leave Mrs. Desmond the
+next day, proceed to New York, and make an effort to find her
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the irate maid had gone to Elinor's room. Mrs.
+Desmond had kindly promised to allow Celine to superintend her
+toilet while they remained at the seaside, and she was waiting
+now for the Frenchwoman to arrange her hair.</p>
+
+<p>Celine had become possessed of Golden's secret, and she was
+determined to make capital out of it for herself.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor was quite chatty and confidential with the skillful French
+maid. In a very few moments while she was braiding the young
+lady's hair she had dropped a few artful hints and innuendoes
+that made Elinor start up half wild with fear and terror.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, Celine, you must have imagined it. It is too incredible
+to believe!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I do not ask you to believe <i>my</i> simple word, Miss Glenalvan,"
+replied Celine. "Look at the girl yourself, ma'am, and then you
+can tell me if my suspicions are well founded."</p>
+
+<p>Elinor looked at her blankly for a moment. The maid returned
+her gaze with unruffled serenity.</p>
+
+<p>"Only take a good look at her yourself, miss," she repeated.</p>
+
+<p>"How am I to do so without exciting her suspicions?" demanded
+Elinor.</p>
+
+<p>"Easily enough," replied the wily French maid. "Go back to
+the room and pretend to have lost some trifle. Get her to go down
+on her knees to find it and you can obtain a good look into her
+face."</p>
+
+<p>Elinor Glenalvan waited for no more. Clenching her small
+hands vindictively, and with an evil look on her handsome face,
+she hurried out into the corridor and made her way to Ruby's
+room.</p>
+
+<p>She turned the handle softly and looked in. The child lay on
+the bed sleeping peacefully, and Golden remained at the window
+peering out through the half-open blind at the dismal prospect,
+her red lips quivering grievously, her sweet blue eyes dim with
+unshed tears.</p>
+
+<p>She started up nervously as her cousin came in abruptly and
+closed the door.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor looked into her face and her heart grave a great, frightened
+bound. She recognized the beautiful face instantly in spite
+of the disfiguring cap and glasses.</p>
+
+<p>Controlling her rage by a violent effort, she observed with comparative
+calmness:</p>
+
+<p>"I have lost a gold cuff-button, Mary, and thought perhaps I
+had dropped it in here. Have you seen it?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden answered her with a shrinking negative, and Elinor
+continued:</p>
+
+<p>"I am almost certain that I dropped it in this room. Perhaps
+it has rolled beneath the bed. Will you get down and look under
+it, Mary?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden complied without a word, and Elinor had the desired
+opportunity of looking at the girl's face.</p>
+
+<p>In another moment, half beside herself with jealous rage, she
+caught the cap and glasses from Golden's head and face, and cried
+out in low, hoarse accents of intense passion:</p>
+
+<p>"Golden Glenalvan, you shameless creature, what are you doing here?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden sprang to her feet and looked at her heartless cousin in
+momentary terrified silence.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing here?" Elinor repeated, in a voice of raging
+scorn. "Did you wish to advertise your disgrace to Bertram
+Chesleigh's sister?"</p>
+
+<p>"Disgrace?" faltered the poor, heart-broken child.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your disgrace. It is plain enough to be seen!" cried Elinor,
+pointing a scornful finger at her cousin, who had dropped
+into a chair and hid her blushing face in her small hands. "Did
+you come here that Mrs. Desmond might learn the full measure
+of her brother's sin?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Golden looked up with tear-wet, blue eyes into the blazing orbs
+of the angry girl.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor, I did not know she was his sister until after I came,"
+she murmured, pleadingly.</p>
+
+<p>"But when you found it out, why did you not go away?" Elinor
+demanded, sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"I had nowhere to go&mdash;I was friendless and penniless. What
+could I do but stay?" moaned Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"You should have drowned yourself. You are not fit to live,
+you wicked, deceitful girl. So you were Mr. Chesleigh's mistress
+after all, although you swore that you were pure and innocent!"
+blazed Elinor.</p>
+
+<p>"I am innocent! I was never Bertram Chesleigh's mistress!"
+Golden cried. "I am his own true&mdash;&mdash;" she stopped with a moan
+of anguish. "Go, I must not tell&mdash;I must keep my promise! Oh,
+Elinor, you are my cousin. Do not be so hard and cruel!"</p>
+
+<p>"How dare you claim me as your cousin?" cried Elinor, angrily,
+"Get up from the floor and stop making a simpleton of yourself.
+You have got to go away from here. Do you understand me?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden rose to her feet and looked steadily into Elinor's face
+with flashing blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p>A spirit was roused within her that quite equaled her cousin's.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor," she answered, "I understand you, but let me tell
+you here and now, that I defy your commands. You have no
+authority over me, and I am the mistress of my own actions. I
+shall remain in Mrs. Desmond's service as long as I choose to do
+so. Your whole treatment of me has been such as to merit no
+consideration at my hands, and it shall receive none."</p>
+
+<p>If angry looks could have killed, little Golden would never have
+survived her defiant speech, for Elinor's dark eyes glared upon
+her with the deadly fury of an enraged tigress.</p>
+
+<p>"You will not go," she hissed. "Perhaps you think to stay
+here and resume your old sinful relations with Bertram Chesleigh."</p>
+
+<p>Before Golden could reply to the cruel taunt, there was an unthought-of
+interruption.</p>
+
+<p>Little Ruby, awakened by Elinor's angry tones, sprang upright
+in the bed, and cried out in the utmost surprise and resentment.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter? Why are you scolding my nurse, Miss
+Glenalvan?"</p>
+
+<p>Elinor turned to Ruby with an instantaneous change of manner.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, you little darling," she cried, with honeyed sweetness,
+"what an absurd idea! You must have dreamed it all. I was
+only asking Mary about a gold cuff-button I had dropped on the
+floor. I am very sorry I disturbed you in your refreshing
+sleep."</p>
+
+<p>She left the room before the child could challenge her plausible
+excuse, and returned to Celine.</p>
+
+<p>"I was right, ma'am," the maid cried, triumphantly. "I see
+it in your face."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Elinor dropped into a chair, and the change in her face was
+quite striking enough to have excited the woman's exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>She was as white as death, her black eyes gleamed with vindictive
+rage, her thin lips were set in a cruel line.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you were right," she said, in a low, intense voice, "Celine,
+that girl must go away from here."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you tell her so?" asked the woman.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and," helplessly, "she defied me. Oh, what am I to
+do?"</p>
+
+<p>"She would not go for you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No she is determined to stay. But," passionately, "she must
+go, and go this very day. If she remains, and Mr. Chesleigh sees
+her, all is lost. He will recognize her instantly."</p>
+
+<p>"I expect you would give a great deal to get the girl out of your
+way," said the maid, artfully.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Elinor lifted her flashing eyes, and looked at the maid, struck
+by her significantly-uttered words.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she answered, boldly, "I would give anything I possess
+to anyone who would remove her from my path without my
+agency being known in the matter."</p>
+
+<p>"You would not care by what means?" asked Celine.</p>
+
+<p>"No," declared the young lady.</p>
+
+<p>Celine turned the key in the lock, and coming nearer to Elinor,
+whispered softly:</p>
+
+<p>"What will you give me, Miss Glenalvan, if I will have the
+girl driven out under a disgraceful ban this very night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Can you do it?" inquired Elinor, eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Easily," was the confident reply, "if you will make it worth
+my while to do so."</p>
+
+<p>Elinor revolved the words a moment in her mind. She saw
+that Celine's services would have to be amply requited, otherwise
+the selfish creature would not trouble herself to help her out of
+her difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>"You know I am not well off, Celine," she said, "but father
+has promised to send me some money this month to buy my
+winter outfit. To tell the truth I shall need every cent of it, for
+I've scarcely a decent thing to wear this winter, but if you will
+get the girl away before Mr. Chesleigh sees her, I will divide my
+allowance with you."</p>
+
+
+<p>"How much money has your father agreed to send you?" inquired
+the rapacious woman.</p>
+
+<p>"Three hundred dollars," replied Elinor, "and I will give you
+one-half of it if you will do me this service."</p>
+
+<p>She felt as if she making a very liberal offer, and was
+surprised when the Frenchwoman shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"A hundred and fifty would not pay me for the trouble," she
+said, conclusively.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor looked at her a little blankly.</p>
+
+<p>"But don't you understand. Celine, that I cannot spare any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+more?" she said. "I must keep enough to buy a decent dress and
+hat and cloak for the winter."</p>
+
+<p>"That matters not to me," replied Celine, with the utmost indifference.
+"You must either give me the whole three hundred
+or I will not help you."</p>
+
+<p>Elinor was angered and amazed at the woman's shameless rapacity.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not do it!" she exclaimed, "I dare say Golden will go
+away of herself; anyhow, I do not intend to be fleeced so shamelessly."</p>
+
+<p>"As you please, miss," replied the maid coolly. She had the
+game in her own hands, and was insolently aware of the fact.
+"I'm not anxious to accommodate you, I dare say I could make
+more by selling my secret. Don't you think Mr. Chesleigh would
+give me a thousand dollars for telling him where to find his missing
+sweetheart?"</p>
+
+<p>Elinor grew frightened and acquiescent all in a moment at
+Celine's baleful threat.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Celine, don't do that," she cried, "I was only joking
+when I said I would not do it. You shall have every dollar of
+the money if you will get Golden away to-night as you said you
+would."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought I should bring you to your senses," muttered
+Celine, then she added aloud:</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, miss. Are you sure that your father will send
+the money?"</p>
+
+<p>"He promised to do so without fail," replied Elinor.</p>
+
+<p>"And you will really hand it over to me as soon as received?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you may consider the little marplot gone. In less than
+an hour you will see her leaving this hotel followed by Mrs. Desmond's
+curse," replied Celine, with perfect confidence in her
+power of executing the task she had undertaken.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean? How will you accomplish it?" inquired
+Elinor.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind about that, I will do as I said, never fear. Are
+you done with me now, Miss Glenalvan? If you are I will go to
+Mrs. Desmond. She will need me to do her hair."</p>
+
+<p>"You may go, Celine," replied the young lady. "Now be sure,"
+a little nervously, "that you do not implicate <i>me</i> in the affair."</p>
+
+<p>"Trust me for managing everything all right," was the airy
+reply.</p>
+
+<p>She went out and made her way to the dressing-room of her
+mistress.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond was sitting before the dressing-table with a small
+jewel-casket open in her lap.</p>
+
+<p>She was turning over some pretty rings with her white fingers.</p>
+
+<p>Celine went up to the table and began to get out the combs and
+brushes.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you ready for me to do your hair?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"In a moment," replied Mrs. Desmond. "I am looking over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+my rings now. I want to select one of the neatest and plainest
+for a present to someone."</p>
+
+<p>Celine simpered and coughed. She fully expected to become
+the fortunate recipient.</p>
+
+<p>"I must confess that I have been mistaken for once," continued
+Mrs. Desmond, half to herself. "When the girl came here
+first, I was prejudiced against her, partly because she was so
+pretty and childish-looking, and again because we had had so
+many hateful nurses, I thought she must necessarily be like
+them. But I was for once happily mistaken. She has been so
+humble and unobtrusive, and endeared herself so much to my
+little girl, that I must really reward her for her good care of my
+darling during my absence."</p>
+
+<p>"Of whom are you speaking, ma'am?" inquired Celine, green
+with envy, as the lady paused, having selected a plain, gold band,
+set with a single, shining, white pearl.</p>
+
+<p>"Of Mary Smith," Mrs. Desmond replied, "and I am going to
+give her this ring in token of my respect for her good character,
+and my gratitude for the really motherly care which she has
+taken of my dear, frail, little Ruby."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>At Mrs. Desmond's kindly-spoken words, Celine heaved a deep
+sigh and remained silent. The lady glanced up at her in some
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter, Celine?" she inquired. "Do you not
+think I am right to acknowledge my appreciation of her valuable
+services?"</p>
+
+<p>The maid only sighed more deeply, casting down her eyes as
+if in great distress.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you are not jealous, Celine," continued her mistress.
+"You know I have given you many such testimonials of my favor."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that you have, and I'm not jealous&mdash;not a bit, dear mistress,"
+cried Celine; "but, oh, dear, oh, dear! that you should
+have been so cruelly deceived and betrayed."</p>
+
+<p>"Celine, what do you mean?" asked the lady, disturbed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my dear lady, I hate to grieve you, but I can't bear to
+see you imposed upon any longer by that shameless girl! Oh,
+my dear mistress, where are your eyes that you can't see her disgrace?
+Oh, how I wish I had told all I knew at first!" cried Celine,
+wringing her hands, while tears fell from her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond sprang up and caught her by the arm excitedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Speak! What is it that you know?" she cried, passionately.
+"Have I been deceived in Mary Smith?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my dear lady&mdash;most cruelly deceived!" exclaimed Celine.</p>
+
+<p>"But she has certainly been kind to the child. Else Ruby
+would have complained," said Mrs. Desmond in perplexity.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, she was kind to the child, I admit, but it was all for
+a blind. And all the&mdash;all the while&mdash;oh, Mrs. Desmond, if you
+could only understand without my telling it," cried Celine,
+breaking off abruptly, with an appearance of grief and reluctance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The passionate, jealous heart of the listener caught the artful
+bait instantly.</p>
+
+<p>She gasped for breath, her brilliant face whitened to a marble
+pallor, and she caught at the back of a chair to steady herself.</p>
+
+<p>If Celine had not been utterly selfish and pitiless she must have
+retracted her cruel lie in the face of that utter despair on the
+beautiful face of her mistress. But the greed of gold overpowered
+every other consideration in her base mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Celine," the startled woman broke out, "do you mean to
+say that&mdash;my husband&mdash;&mdash;" she paused, and her blazing eyes
+searched the woman's face.</p>
+
+<p>"Your husband loves her&mdash;alas, yes, my poor, deceived mistress,"
+cried the maid. "The deceitful creature has won his heart
+from you."</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence while Mrs. Desmond groped
+blindly in her mind for some tangible proof on which to pin her
+faith in her beloved husband.</p>
+
+<p>"Celine, you must be mistaken," she exclaimed. "You know
+we have been away from home almost the whole time since the
+girl came to us. She has had no chance with my husband."</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, Mrs. Desmond, you force me to tell you," sighed Celine.
+"Know, then, that it all began before you went south to Mr.
+Chesleigh. The very day after she came I caught Mr. Desmond
+kissing Mary Smith, with his arms around her waist."</p>
+
+<p>"Celine, will you swear to this?" gasped the unhappy wife.</p>
+
+<p>"I will take my Bible oath to its truth," was the emphatic reply.</p>
+
+<p>"Then God help me," moaned the stricken woman. "Celine,
+why did you not tell me all this before?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was afraid of master's anger," she replied. "He threatened
+me and I promised not to tell. Oh, my dear lady, will you
+promise to shield me from his wrath? I could not see you so imposed
+on any longer."</p>
+
+<p>"So the affair has been going on from bad to worse, Celine?"
+inquired her mistress, faintly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my dear mistress. You remember how anxious he was
+to return to New York and take little Miss Ruby to the seashore.
+It was all an excuse to get back to the nurse. And since we came
+back yesterday&mdash;well, I've told enough already. Are you angry
+with me, my dear, injured lady?" inquired Celine breaking off,
+artfully, just where she really had nothing more to tell, unless
+she had fabricated a wholesale lie.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond shook her head and remained silent. The maid
+was disappointed. She had expected a wild outpouring of anger
+from the jealous wife, but instead she preserved an ominous
+quiet.</p>
+
+<p>Her head drooped on her bosom, her face was colorless as death,
+her wild, burning, dark eyes were the only signs of life in her.</p>
+
+<p>Celine was a little startled at the effect of her wickedness. She
+brought some <i>eau de cologne</i>, and tried to bathe the face of her
+mistress but was quickly motioned away.</p>
+
+<p>"Go, Celine, send that girl here to me," she said, speaking in a
+dry, hard, unnatural voice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The maid went out, and Mrs. Desmond waited but a moment
+before the door unclasped and little Golden entered. She paused
+in the middle of the room, and said in her gentle voice:</p>
+
+<p>"You sent for me, Mrs. Desmond?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond lifted her eyes and looked at the beautiful girl
+whom she believed to be the wicked destroyer of her happiness.
+Golden shrank before the withering scorn of that look.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, madam, is anything the matter?" she faltered.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond rose and towered above her in all the dignity of
+her insulted wifehood.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no," she said, in a low, deep voice of concentrated passion,
+"there is very little the matter&mdash;only this trifle. You have
+shamelessly robbed me of my husband."</p>
+
+<p>"Madam!" cried Golden, in alarm and consternation.</p>
+
+<p>"You need not pretend innocence&mdash;you cannot deceive me,"
+cried the outraged wife. "You have won his heart, you have
+stolen him from me, and you have forever ruined my life."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, madam, who has told you this dreadful tale? It is not
+true. I would sooner die than wrong you," cried Golden, with
+pitiful earnestness.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, do not lie to me," exclaimed Mrs. Desmond, lifting and
+pointing a scornful finger at the shrinking form. "Your looks
+declare your shame. Go, leave the house this moment wretched
+creature, before in my madness I lay violent hands on you!"</p>
+
+<p>But Golden did not go. She knelt down before her angry
+accuser, and looked up at her pleadingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mrs. Desmond, you are mistaken! You wrong me
+bitterly by such a suspicion!" she cried, with the tears streaming
+down her fair cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"Wrong you!" Mrs. Desmond cried, "are you not then&mdash;&mdash;"
+she bent and fairly hissed the remaining words into the girl's ear.
+Golden threw up her hands with a cry of dismay.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my God, this is too horrible!" she wailed, "how can I
+bear it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Did I not speak the truth?" Mrs. Desmond demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"It is true, madam, I cannot deny it," replied the girl, crimson
+with burning blushes, "but I&mdash;oh, I call Heaven to witness my
+truth, Mrs. Desmond, I am nothing to your husband, I was&mdash;was&mdash;married
+before I came to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Then where is your husband?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell," faltered the white lips.</p>
+
+<p>"That is strange," said Mrs. Desmond, scornfully. "Has he
+left you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, madam," with a pitiful droop of the fair head.</p>
+
+<p>"Why did he do so?" inquired the lady</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell you," Golden murmured, sorrowfully.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, if Mrs. Desmond had only known the truth, that it was her
+brother's wife kneeling there ashamed and dejected before her.
+But she did not dream it, and her anger rose at the girl's unsatisfactory
+replies to her questions.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not ask you any more questions," she said, "I do not
+wish to hear more of your weak falsehoods. Get up from there,
+and go. Leave the house now and at once, before I publish your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+conduct to everyone. You need not go to Mrs. Markham for
+sympathy. I shall go to her at once and tell her what you are."</p>
+
+<p>Golden stood still, staring at her blankly a moment. She was
+dazed and frightened at the shameful suspicion that had fallen
+upon her, and she did not know how to convince Mrs. Desmond
+of her innocence.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, madam, if I could only induce you to believe that I am
+not the vile creature you think me," she cried in anguish.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush; leave the room!" Mrs. Desmond answered stormily.
+"Go, and take with you the bitterest curse of an injured woman.
+May the good God speedily avenge my cruel wrongs!"</p>
+
+<p>She crossed to the door, threw it open, and pointed silently to
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Golden obeyed the mute sentence of her lifted finger and glided
+out, a forlorn, little figure, feeling almost annihilated by the vivid
+lightning of Mrs. Desmond's angry eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The door slammed heavily behind her, and she walked along
+through the brightly lighted hotel corridor, for the twilight had
+fallen long ago.</p>
+
+<p>The rain was falling heavily, and Golden shrank and trembled
+at the thought of encountering the black, inclement night. The
+thought came to her&mdash;why should she go?</p>
+
+<p>She was ill, friendless, almost penniless. It was her husband's
+right to protect her.</p>
+
+<p>And here she was passing his very door. Should she not appeal
+to him for comfort in this terrible hour?</p>
+
+<p>Her trembling limbs refused to carry her past his door. She
+turned the handle with a weak and trembling hand and stepped
+over the threshold.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>When Golden on the impulse of the moment had entered the
+room that she knew was Bertram Chesleigh's, she stood frightened
+and trembling inside the closed door, afraid to look up at first
+at the man who had treated her so cruelly.</p>
+
+<p>Gathering courage at the shuddering remembrance of the terrors
+that awaited her in the darkness of the gloomy night outside,
+she looked up at last, determined to make at least one appeal to
+her husband.</p>
+
+<p>The gas had been lighted and it threw a flood of brightness
+over every object in the room.</p>
+
+<p>On a sofa at the further end Bertram Chesleigh lay sleeping in
+a careless position, as if he had just thrown himself down, wearied
+and overcome with fatigue.</p>
+
+<p>The jet-black hair was tossed carelessly back from his high,
+white brow, and the thick, dark lashes lay heavily upon his
+cheeks, as if his slumber was deep and dreamless.</p>
+
+<p>A small table was drawn closely to his side, littered with writing
+materials, and a pen with the ink scarcely dried upon it, lay
+beside a letter just stamped and sealed, and addressed to:</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<span class="smcap">Richard Leith</span>.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">No. &mdash;&mdash; Park Avenue, New York.</span>
+</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As Golden glided across the room, and paused, with her small
+hand resting upon the table, the superscription of the letter caught
+her eyes by the merest chance. She started, caught it up in her
+hand and scanned it eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Richard Leith," she read, and her voice trembled with eagerness.
+"How strange! Why is he writing to Richard Leith?"</p>
+
+<p>She glanced at the sleeper, but not the quiver of an eyelash betrayed
+disturbance at her presence.</p>
+
+<p>She drew a slip of paper toward her, and neatly copied the address
+from the letter, placing it securely in her little purse.</p>
+
+<p>Then she paused, turning another wistful glance from the letter
+which she still held in her hand, to the pale, handsome face
+of the husband who had discarded her because she had been born
+to a heritage of shame.</p>
+
+<p>She wondered again if Bertram Chesleigh knew Richard Leith,
+and why he had written to him, but no thought of the truth
+came into her mind, or how gladly she would have flown to the
+quiet sleeper and folded him in her loving arms, and sobbed out
+her gladness on his broad breast.</p>
+
+<p>Instead she stood gazing at him a few moments in troubled
+silence, the tear-drops hanging like pearls on her thick, golden
+lashes, her breast heaving with suppressed sighs.</p>
+
+<p>Then she turned and went out of the room, her first impulse
+to awaken him having been diverted into another course by her
+opportune discovery of the address of the man whom she believed
+to be her father.</p>
+
+<p>"Bertram would only despise and defy me if I appealed to
+him, perhaps," she murmured, "I will seek my misguided
+mother instead."</p>
+
+<p>She gave him one sad, reproachful glance and hurried out of
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>As she closed the door it inadvertently slammed and awakened
+the sleeper. He started up, confusedly passing his hand across
+his brow, and looking up for the person whom he supposed had
+entered the room.</p>
+
+<p>"I distinctly heard the door slam," he said to himself. "Someone
+either entered or left the room."</p>
+
+<p>But as no one appeared, he concluded that someone had entered,
+and finding him asleep, had gone out again.</p>
+
+<p>He crossed to the door and looked out into the lighted corridor.</p>
+
+<p>No one was visible, and he was about to close the door again,
+when his sister Edith came suddenly in sight.</p>
+
+<p>He waited until she came up to him, her dark silk dress rustling
+as she moved hurriedly along.</p>
+
+<p>"Come in, Edith," he said. "I am sorry I was asleep when
+you came in just now. Why did you not awaken me? I was
+only dozing. The closing of the door awakened me instantly."</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him in surprise, and then he saw that her
+brilliant face was quite pale, and her dark eyes had a strange,
+unnatural glare in them.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not been in your room since morning," she replied.
+"What made you think so, Bert?"</p>
+
+<p>"Someone must have come in and gone out again, for I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+awakened by the closing of the door, and I thought at first it
+must have been you. Doubtless it was only a servant. It does
+not matter. But, Edith, has anything happened? You look pale
+and strange."</p>
+
+<p>She threw herself down into a chair, and her unnatural calm
+gave way to a flood of tears.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Chesleigh was shocked and distressed. He bent over her
+and entreated her to tell him the cause of her grief.</p>
+
+<p>Checking her tears by a great effort of will, Mrs. Desmond told
+him all that had passed.</p>
+
+<p>"I will never live with Mr. Desmond again," she said, passionately,
+when she had finished her story. "Ever since we married
+he has outraged my love and my pride by his glaring flirtations,
+but this last affair is too grievous and shameful to be
+tamely endured. I hate him for his falsehood and infidelity, and
+I will never live with him again!"</p>
+
+<p>"Edith, think of the scandal, the notoriety, if you leave your
+husband," he remonstrated.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not care," she replied, her dark eyes blazing with wrath
+and defiance; "let them say what they will; I will not tamely
+endure such a cruel insult! You must make some arrangement
+for me, Bertie, for I will never, never live with Mr. Desmond
+again!"</p>
+
+<p>And Bertram Chesleigh, with his heart on fire at his beloved
+sister's wrongs and his brain puzzled over the best way to right
+them, little dreamed that his own weakness and wrong-doing
+had been the sole cause of her sorrow. His fiery indignation
+was spent upon his brother-in-law when it should have been
+bestowed upon himself.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXI" id="CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"I will not go in to bid little Ruby farewell," Golden said to
+herself sadly, as she left the room of Bertram Chesleigh. "The
+little one loves me and I could not bear her grief at parting with
+me. I will slip into the next room without her knowledge, get
+my hat and jacket, and go away quietly. When I am gone, perhaps
+Mrs. Desmond may become reconciled to her husband."</p>
+
+<p>She did not dream that the proud woman's anger and resentment
+against her husband would carry her to the length of a
+separation with him.</p>
+
+<p>She donned her hat and jacket, and tied her few articles of
+clothing into a compact bundle. Taking them in her hand, she
+stole noiselessly out, and made her way to the lower portico of
+the great hotel.</p>
+
+<p>She paused there, a little dismayed, and looked out at the black
+and starless night with the chill September drizzle falling ceaselessly.
+She would be obliged to walk two miles through the
+storm to take the midnight train for New York.</p>
+
+<p>It would have been perfectly easy to have hired a conveyance
+but she had only nine dollars left in her purse after discharging
+her debt to Mrs. Markham, and not knowing how much her fare<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+to the city might be, she was afraid to waste a penny in hack
+hire.</p>
+
+<p>She decided that she must walk, so, unfurling her small sun-umbrella
+as some slight protection against the beating rain, she
+plunged with a shiver into the wet and darkness of the untoward
+night.</p>
+
+<p>She groped along wearily in the dreary road, scarcely conscious
+of her physical discomfort and peril in the agonizing pain and
+humiliation that ached at her heart. She had been driven forth
+under the ban of cruel shame and disgrace.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh would hear the story of Ruby's wicked, deceitful
+nurse, and would hate her memory, little thinking that it
+was his own wretched wife, and that she had borne Mrs. Desmond's
+angry charge without defending herself, and all for his
+sake, because he was too proud to acknowledge her claim on
+him.</p>
+
+<p>The weary walk was accomplished at last, and Golden waited
+several hours in her wet and draggled garments in the fireless
+room at the station for the train that was to take her to New
+York.</p>
+
+<p>It came at last, and in a few more miserable hours she was safe
+in the city. She found, after paying her fare, that she had
+enough left to pay for a bed and breakfast at a hotel, and gladly
+availed herself of the privilege.</p>
+
+<p>Wretched and impatient as she felt, her overstrained mind
+yielded to the physical weakness that was stealing over her, and
+she slept soundly for several hours. Rising, refreshed and
+strengthened, she made a substantial breakfast and sallied for
+No. &mdash;&mdash; Park Avenue. She hardly knew what she would do when
+she arrived there, but the conviction was strong upon her that
+she must go.</p>
+
+<p>She had no difficulty in finding the number. The house was
+large and elegant, with a flight of brown stone steps in front.
+Golden climbed them a little timidly, and rang the bell.</p>
+
+<p>The servant in waiting stared at her cheap attire a little superciliously
+as he opened the door, but when she inquired if Mrs.
+Leith were at home his aspect changed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you are come in answer to the advertisement for a maid,"
+he said. "Yes, my mistress is at home, and she will see you at
+once. Come this way."</p>
+
+<p>Golden followed him in silence to the lady's dressing-room.
+The thought came to her that this would be an admirable pretext
+for making the acquaintance of the Leiths, so she did not deny
+that she was seeking a situation.</p>
+
+<p>A beautiful, golden-haired lady opened the door at her timid
+knock. The girl's heart gave a great, muffled throb.</p>
+
+<p>"My mother," she thought.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXII" id="CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"Mrs. Leith, this is a young woman who has answered the
+advertisement for a maid," said the man, respectfully, as he
+turned away.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The beautiful lady nodded Golden to a seat, and looked at her
+with careless condescension.</p>
+
+<p>"What is your name?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary Smith," answered the girl in a low, fluttering voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you any recommendations?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not as a maid, as the occupation is new to me. I have been
+a nurse heretofore, but if you will try me I will do my best to
+please you," said Golden, anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very hard to please," said Mrs. Leith.</p>
+
+<p>She did not tell Golden that she was so very hard to please
+that no one could suit her, leaving her to find that out for herself,
+as she would be sure to do if she remained.</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence, and Golden gravely regarded
+Mrs. Leith. She was <i>petite</i> and graceful in form, with large, blue
+eyes, waving masses of golden hair, and beautifully-moulded
+features. She was barely thirty years old in appearance, and
+was richly and becomingly attired.</p>
+
+<p>Yet Golden shivered and trembled as she regarded the fair,
+smiling beauty. How could she look so bright and careless with
+the brand of deadly sin upon her? There was neither sorrow
+nor repentance on the smiling, debonair face.</p>
+
+<p>"And this is my mother," Golden thought to herself, with a
+strange heaviness at her heart. "She seems utterly indifferent
+at her wickedness. Ah, she little dreams that the poor babe that
+she deserted so heartlessly is sitting before her now."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith's light, careless voice jarred suddenly on her mournful
+mood.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I will try you, Mary, for I need a maid. My last one
+was so incapable I had to discharge her. You may do my hair
+for me now. I am going to drive in the park with Mr. Leith, if
+his troublesome clients do not detain him. My husband is a
+lawyer, Mary, and his time is almost wholly engrossed by his
+business."</p>
+
+<p>"Her husband," Golden repeated to herself, as she wound the
+shining tresses into braids. "So they keep up that farce before
+the world. Poor mother! how she must love my father to remain
+with him on such humiliating terms. Is she really happy,
+or does she only wear a mask?"</p>
+
+<p>But there was no apparent sorrow or remorse on the complacent
+face of the lady as she gave her orders and directions to the new
+maid.</p>
+
+<p>The uppermost thought in her mind was how to make the
+most of her beauty.</p>
+
+<p>Golden had to arrange her hair twice before she was suited,
+and she tried several dresses in turn before she decided on one.
+She was inordinately vain and fond of finery, and Golden thought
+pitifully to herself:</p>
+
+<p>"Her beauty is the only hold she has on my father, and she is
+compelled to make its preservation the sole aim of her life."</p>
+
+<p>She wondered a little that no yearning throb had stirred her
+heart at the sight of her beautiful mother, but she told herself
+that it was simply because her mother's sin had wholly alienated
+the natural affection of her purer-hearted daughter.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>She pitied her with a great, yearning pity, but no impulse
+prompted her to kiss the dewy, crimson lips, she had no temptation
+to pillow her head on the fair bosom that had denied its
+shelter and sustenance to her helpless infancy.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith did not look as if she would have made a tender
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you any children, madam?" she asked, suddenly, and
+Mrs. Leith answered:</p>
+
+<p>"No," rather shortly, but added a minute later: "And I am
+glad of it, for I do not love children. But Mr. Leith does, and is
+rather sorry that we have none."</p>
+
+<p>"He is justly punished for his sin," thought his unknown
+daughter, while she secretly wondered why he had never claimed
+the child his wife had heartlessly deserted to return to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps she told him I was dead," thought Golden, looking
+at the beautiful woman with a strange thrill of repulsion. "Perhaps
+he would have loved me and cared for me, had he known I
+lived."</p>
+
+<p>A thrill of pity, half mixed with tenderness, stirred her heart
+for the father who had been cheated of the child he would have
+loved.</p>
+
+<p>She became conscious of a burning desire to meet her father&mdash;the
+man who had wronged her mother, and who had been
+wronged in turn, in that he had never beheld the face of his
+child.</p>
+
+<p>There was a manly step at the door, and it opened, admitting a
+tall, handsome man in the prime of life.</p>
+
+<p>Golden's heart gave a quick, wild throb, then sank heavily in
+her breast.</p>
+
+<p>She retreated hastily to the shade of a window-curtain, where
+she could observe the new-comer, herself unobserved.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith was tall, dark, and very handsome, though there
+were iron-gray threads in his dark, waving hair, and in the long,
+magnificent beard that rippled down upon his breast.</p>
+
+<p>He looked like a man who had known trouble and sorrow.
+His face was both sad and stern, and his dark eyes were cold and
+gloomy.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith looked up at him carelessly, and his grave face did
+not brighten at the sight of her beauty, enhanced as it was by
+the rich, blue silk, and becoming white lace bonnet with its garland
+of roses.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you ready for your drive, Mrs. Leith?" he inquired, with
+punctilious politeness.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I am just ready," she replied, carelessly. "You see I
+have a new maid; she is rather awkward, but I shall keep her until
+I can do better."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Leith gave an indifferent nod toward the gray gown and
+white cap that was dimly visible at the furthest corner of the
+room, then he went out with his wife, and Golden sank down
+upon the carpet and wept some bitter, bitter tears, that seemed
+to lift a little bit of the load of grief from her oppressed bosom.</p>
+
+<p>After all, she had found her father and mother, and it was possible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+that she might bring them to see the wickedness of their
+course, and to seek reformation.</p>
+
+<p>She determined not to reveal her identity just yet.</p>
+
+<p>She would stay with them a little and learn more of them before
+she made her strong appeal to them in behalf of truth.</p>
+
+<p>She would not reproach them just yet for the blight they
+had cast on her innocent life. She would patiently bide her
+time.</p>
+
+<p>It was a strange position to be placed in.</p>
+
+<p>Under the roof of her own parents, unknown and unacknowledged,
+with her whole life laid bare and desolate through their
+sin.</p>
+
+<p>A hot and passionate resentment against them surged up into
+Golden's wounded heart.</p>
+
+<p>What right had her mother to be so fair and happy when she
+had sinned so grievously?</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps she would be very angry when she knew that the child
+she had so pitilessly deserted had hunted her down to confront
+her with her sin.</p>
+
+<p>"I will wait a little. I will not speak yet," she said. "I shall
+know them better after awhile, and I shall know how to approach
+them better."</p>
+
+<p>So the days waned and faded.</p>
+
+<p>Golden began to become very well acquainted with the beautiful
+woman whom she believed to be her mother. She was vain,
+frivolous, heartless.</p>
+
+<p>The pure-hearted girl recoiled instinctively from her. But she
+could not understand Mr. Leith so well.</p>
+
+<p>He was a mystery to her. Some settled shadow seemed to
+brood heavily over him always.</p>
+
+<p>He was engrossed with his studies and business. Golden wondered
+if it was remorse that preyed so heavily on him. She had
+never seen a smile on the stern, finely-cut lips.</p>
+
+<p>There was one thing that struck her strangely, Richard Leith
+and his so-called wife did not appear very fond of each other.
+The gentleman was studiously courteous, polite and kind, but
+Golden never saw on his expressive face that light of adoring
+tenderness she had loved to see on Bertram Chesleigh's whenever
+he looked at her. Mrs. Leith was totally absorbed in her dresses,
+her novels, and her daily drives, during which she excited much
+admiration by her beauty and her exquisite toilets. But love
+and passion&mdash;these seemed to be worn-out themes between the
+strangely-mated pair. They addressed each other formally as
+Mr. and Mrs. Leith, but Golden had noticed that the lady's clothing
+was marked "G. L." She knew, of course, that the letter G.
+stood for Golden, but when she asked her about it with apparent
+carelessness one day, the lady answered that it was for Gertrude.</p>
+
+<p>"She has discarded even her name," her daughter mused bitterly.
+"Perhaps she has even forgotten her old home and her
+deserted father and her little child."</p>
+
+<p>And in spite of herself Golden felt that she heartily despised
+the woman whom she should have loved in spite of all her faults<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+because she was her mother. But some strange and subtle fascination
+drew her nearer and nearer to Richard Leith.</p>
+
+<p>Her anger and scorn which she had tried to foster at first began
+to dissolve in spite of herself into a yearning and sorrowful tenderness.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Several weeks went by, and Golden wondered very much if
+the Desmonds had returned to the city, and if the lady still held
+her unjust suspicions and jealousy against her.</p>
+
+<p>She often wondered as she looked at Richard Leith's stern, set
+face, why Bertram Chesleigh had written to him, and for what
+object.</p>
+
+<p>One day she heard Mrs. Leith remark to her husband that she
+had seen Mr. Desmond driving in the park alone that morning.</p>
+
+<p>"He looked pale and dejected&mdash;quite unlike himself," she
+added, "I wonder if his handsome wife and little daughter are
+at the seaside yet."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you not know," said Mr. Leith, "Mrs. Desmond and
+Ruby have gone to Europe with Chesleigh."</p>
+
+<p>"Gone without her husband," cried the lady. "How strange!
+Do you not think so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not strange when you hear the circumstances," Mr. Leith
+replied, gravely. "The truth is Mrs. Desmond became violently
+jealous of a pretty servant girl, and declared she would leave
+him&mdash;even threatened a divorce. To save publicity her brother
+persuaded her to take a trip with him to Europe, hoping that
+time might soften her anger. You understand that these are not
+public facts, Mrs. Leith. They came to me personally as the
+Desmonds' lawyer."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not repeat them," she replied, taking the gentle hint,
+good-humoredly. "Do you think she will ever be reconciled,
+Mr. Leith?"</p>
+
+<p>"I scarcely think so. Mrs. Desmond is perfectly implacable at
+present. Mr. Desmond employed me as a mediator between
+them, but I could accomplish nothing. He swears that she was
+unjustly jealous, and that there was nothing at all between him
+and the girl. But I could not induce Mr. Chesleigh nor his sister
+to believe the assertion."</p>
+
+<p>"What became of the girl?" inquired Mrs. Leith.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Desmond drove the wretched creature away. It is not
+known what became of her," replied the lawyer; "altogether it
+is a very sad affair. Chesleigh has acted on my advice in taking
+his sister out of the country for awhile. I pity Bertram Chesleigh.
+He has had a bad entanglement himself lately which he
+has been compelled to place in my hands. But, poor boy, I fear
+I can do nothing for him."</p>
+
+<p>"He is trying to get a divorce from me," thought Golden, with
+a dizzy horror in her mind, and the bitter agony of the thought
+drove the color from her face, and the life from her heart. With
+an exceeding bitter cry she threw up her arms in the air, staggered
+blindly forward and fell heavily upon the floor.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"What is that?" cried Mr. Leith, looking round with a great
+start.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, it's Mary Smith! I had forgotten that she was in the
+room," cried Mrs. Leith. "Oh, look, she is dead!"</p>
+
+<p>She began to wring her hands excitedly, but Mr. Leith said
+quietly:</p>
+
+<p>"Do not alarm yourself. She has only fainted I suppose.
+Bring some water and we will soon revive her."</p>
+
+<p>She ran into the dressing-room, and Mr. Leith bent down over
+the prostrate form and lifted the drooping head compassionately.</p>
+
+<p>The ugly, concealing cap and glasses had fallen off, and as his
+gaze rested fully on the lovely, marble-white face, a cry of surprise
+and anguish broke from his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"My God, how terribly like!" he muttered. Then, as Mrs.
+Leith returned with water and <i>eau de cologne</i>, he applied them
+both, without the slightest success, for Golden still lay cold, white
+and rigid, like one dead, upon his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Is she dead?" Mrs. Leith whispered, fearfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell. Ring for the housekeeper. Perhaps she may
+know better how to apply the remedies," he replied, still holding
+the light form in his arms, and gazing with a dazed expression on
+the beautiful, unconscious face.</p>
+
+<p>The housekeeper came, and declared, in a fright at first, that
+the girl was dead. Then she turned Mr. Leith out of the room,
+loosened Golden's clothing, and rubbed her vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>In about ten minutes the quiet eyelids fluttered faintly, and a
+gasping sigh parted the white lips.</p>
+
+<p>The housekeeper beckoned Mrs. Leith to her side.</p>
+
+<p>"She lives," she whispered, softly, "but she had better have
+died."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand you," Mrs. Leith replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I have made a discovery," continued the old housekeeper.
+"The girl has deceived you, madam. She is a bad lot, for all her
+sweet, childish, innocent face."</p>
+
+<p>"Deceived me&mdash;how?" Mrs. Leith demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"She is not an innocent maiden, as she appeared. Oh, Mrs.
+Leith, can you not see for yourself? The wretched creature is
+likely to become a mother in a few short months."</p>
+
+<p>"You are jesting. She is barely more than a child," Mrs. Leith
+broke out, incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the Lord's truth, madam. Faugh! the wicked little piece!
+A pity I hadn't let her die!" sniffed the virtuous housekeeper,
+with a scornful glance at the reviving girl.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith drew back her trailing silken skirts from contact
+with poor Golden's recumbent form as if there were contamination
+in her very touch.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been terribly deceived," she said, "I had begun to like
+the girl very much. She suited me more than any maid I have
+had for a long while, and I thought her quite pure and respectable.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+Do the best you can for her, Mrs. Brown, for I shall send
+her away as soon as she is able to walk."</p>
+
+<p>Heedless of Golden's large, blue eyes that unclosed and fixed
+themselves reproachfully upon her, she swept from the room
+and sought Mr. Leith, to whom she confided the housekeeper's
+discovery.</p>
+
+<p>The grave-faced lawyer looked shocked and distressed, unaccountably
+so, the lady thought.</p>
+
+<p>"I can scarcely credit it," he said. "She has such an innocent
+and child-like face."</p>
+
+<p>"Such faces are sometimes deceiving," remarked the lady.
+"This instance proves the fact."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you intend to do with the poor child!" Mr. Leith
+asked, with an unconscious sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall send her away, of course," Mrs. Leith replied, decidedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, <i>cruel, unnatural mother</i>!" said a faint, reproachful voice,
+behind her.</p>
+
+<p>She turned with a start and saw that Golden had followed her.</p>
+
+<p>The poor child stood trembling in the doorway, her dress in
+disorder, her beautiful hair broken loose from its fastenings, and
+streaming over her shoulders, her great, blue eyes blazing like
+stars in her lovely, pallid face, her sweet lips curled in scorn as
+she pointed her finger at Mrs. Leith, and exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, cruel, unnatural mother! Is your life so pure that you
+can afford to sit in judgment on me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is the girl mad?" Mrs. Leith exclaimed, recoiling from her.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I am not mad, although my wrongs have been bitter
+enough to madden any human being," Golden retorted, passionately.
+"I am not mad, although your terrible sin has ruined
+my life and broken my heart."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>My</i> sin, <i>mine</i>!" retorted Mrs. Leith, in apparent bewilderment.
+"What do you mean, girl? I am nothing to you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing to me, oh, my God," moaned Golden, wringing her
+white hands. "Then you deny that you are my mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Your</i> mother, girl, when I have never had a child in my life.
+Mr. Leith, do you not see that the wretched creature is raving
+mad?" cried the lady, retreating to his side apprehensively.</p>
+
+<p>Golden turned her flashing blue eyes on the white, startled face
+of the man.</p>
+
+<p>"She denies that she is my mother," she said. "Perhaps you
+will deny that you are my father."</p>
+
+<p>She saw a quiver pass over the man's pale face.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand your words," he replied, in a voice shaken
+with emotion. "Explain yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"I am the child Golden Glenalvan deserted at Glenalvan Hall
+in its helpless infancy, that she might return to New York and
+lead a life of shame with you," she cried out bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith's dark eyes turned on her face with a lurid gleam
+in their shadowed depths.</p>
+
+<p>"Hold!" he cried. "Whoever you are, you shall not malign
+the memory of poor, little Golden. She was pure as the snow."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Pure!" the girl repeated, blankly. "She was never your wife.
+They told me she lived with you in open shame."</p>
+
+<p>A startling change came over the face of Richard Leith.
+There was a glare, like that of madness, in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>He fell backward into a chair, and the labored breath came
+from between his parted lips in strong, shuddering sighs.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith flew to his side, and bent anxiously over him.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Leith, what is it? What does all this mean? I am mystified,"
+she cried.</p>
+
+<p>His heavy, dark eyes full of sorrow and despair, lifted gloomily
+to her wondering face.</p>
+
+<p>"It means," he replied, "that I have had a secret in my life,
+and that the time is come for you to know it. If this girl speaks
+truly she is indeed my daughter, though not yours."</p>
+
+<p>"Not hers!" echoed Golden, in bewilderment, as she looked at
+the beautiful woman whom she had for long weeks believed to
+be her mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Not hers," he replied, "for long before I met and married
+this lady, little Golden Glenalvan was dead."</p>
+
+<p>A startled cry came from Golden's lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Dead," she shuddered; "no, no; you are deceiving me."</p>
+
+<p>"Not so, as God is my judge," he replied. "But sit down,
+child, and tell me all your story. Then we may be able to understand
+each other."</p>
+
+<p>Golden glanced half-fearfully at Mrs. Leith, who stood leaning
+against her husband's chair, pale and silent, and anxious-looking.
+The lady quietly and gravely motioned her to a seat.</p>
+
+<p>She thankfully obeyed the gesture, for she felt ill and weary,
+and the sudden shock of learning that her mother was dead, had
+been a terrible one to her, and had almost stricken her senseless
+again.</p>
+
+<p>In low, pathetic tones, and with many tears, Golden told Richard
+Leith all that she knew of her mother, and as much as she
+could of her own lonely life, without revealing the tragic story
+of her unfortunate love.</p>
+
+<p>He listened in silence, although she could see that he was terribly
+agitated.</p>
+
+<p>His white brow was beaded with great drops of sweat, his eyes
+stared wildly, he bit his lips till the blood started to keep back
+the groans of pain.</p>
+
+<p>When she had finished he went over to her, knelt at her feet,
+and gently kissed her cold, little hand.</p>
+
+<p>"You are my daughter," he said, "and you are the living
+image of your mother. But until this moment, little Golden, I
+believed you dead. I wrote to John Glenalvan when my wife
+ran away from me, and asked him if she had returned to her
+father. He wrote back that she had done so, that she had given
+birth to a little daughter, and that the mother and child had
+both died. Then he added his curse, and threatened, if I ever
+came near Glenalvan Hall, to shoot me down like a dog."</p>
+
+<p>His voice broke huskily a moment. Golden looked at him
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"You said your wife," she faltered. "Was my mother, then,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+legally married to you? Am I not a&mdash;&mdash;" her voice broke huskily
+over the word, "a nameless child?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your mother was my legal wife, little one. You are my own
+daughter, born in lawful wedlock. God only knows what crafty
+and wicked enemy of mine wrote that lying letter to my poor,
+young wife, telling her that I had deceived her by a mock marriage.
+She was too credulous, and believed the lie too easily. It
+was not true. I can give you every proof that your mother was
+my lawful wife, little Golden."</p>
+
+<p>She fell on her knees, and with upraised hands and streaming
+eyes, thanked God for those precious words.</p>
+
+<p>Her mother had been pure and noble. There was no shadow
+of stain on her daughter's birth.</p>
+
+<p>Then, with a sudden, startling thought she confronted him,
+her white hands clasped in agony, her voice ringing wild and
+shrill:</p>
+
+<p>"John Glenalvan told you that my mother died. He lied!
+She disappeared very suddenly the night after I was born, and
+that villain declared that she had deserted me and returned to
+her sinful life with you. She did not die, and she did not return
+to you. Oh, my God, where is she now?"</p>
+
+<p>She saw that terrible question reflected on her father's face.</p>
+
+<p>It whitened to the awful hue of death, and he reeled backward
+like a smitten man.</p>
+
+<p>A faint cry came from Mrs. Leith, who had dropped heavily
+into a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Heaven, if she is yet living, what, then, am I?"</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith went to her side, and looked down at her white,
+scared face, pitifully.</p>
+
+<p>"Gertrude," he said to her gently, "we have both been the
+victims of a terrible wrong. When I married you several years
+after the loss of my first wife, won by your beauty, which reminded
+me of my poor, little Golden's, I honestly believed that
+she was dead. There is some terrible mystery here, and John
+Glenalvan is at the bottom of it. But I will wring the truth from
+his false lips, and if my lost little Golden has come to harm at
+his hands, his life shall pay the penalty of his sin!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXV" id="CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"Oh, father," cried little Golden. "Why did you lure my
+poor mother from her home. She was so young, so trusting.
+Why did you persuade her to desert her parents?"</p>
+
+<p>The man's pale, handsome features quivered all over with vain
+remorse and penitence.</p>
+
+<p>"You do well to reproach me, little Golden," he sighed.
+"There is no excuse for my sin. But I will tell you how I came
+to act so imprudently.</p>
+
+<p>"I was a struggling young lawyer, poor and proud, when I
+first met your beautiful mother during a business trip to the
+south. Her family, though reduced to comparative poverty by
+the late war, were proud and aristocratic people, and I felt quite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+sure that they would have refused me the hand of their petted
+darling.</p>
+
+<p>"I had heard so much of the pride of the southerners that I was
+afraid to ask the Glenalvans for their beautiful child. So I acted
+the part of a coward and stole her from them. The dear girl
+loved me well, and went with me willingly when I promised to
+take her back to them after we were married.</p>
+
+<p>"I took her to New York, and made her my true and lawful
+wife, but so afraid was I of those haughty Glenalvans that I refused
+to allow her to write my name and address to her friends.
+I was waiting till I should have acquired a fame and fortune that
+would make me acceptable in their eyes. Oh, God, how terribly
+my sin has found me out after all these years."</p>
+
+<p>He paused and wiped away the cold dew that beaded his
+high, white brow. After a moment he went on, sadly:</p>
+
+<p>"I was fast gaining prominence and a competence in my profession,
+when some base enemy of mine&mdash;as a lawyer I had some
+of the blackest-hearted enemies that a man ever had&mdash;wrote my
+darling a letter, defaming me in scandalous terms, and averring
+that I had deceived her by a mock marriage.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor child, she was very simple and credulous. She fell an
+easy victim to the liar's tale. She fled from me, leaving that
+cruel letter behind her, the only thing there was to hint at the
+reason of her hurried flight."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if only you had followed her then," moaned beautiful
+Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"If I only had!" he echoed. "My first impulse was to do so;
+but I had on hand a very important case, which I had staked
+everything on winning. If I managed it well my success was
+assured as one of the leading lawyers of the day. My speech for
+the defense was anticipated anxiously by many. So I suffered
+my ambition to overrule my first instinctive resolve to follow my
+wife, and instead I wrote to her brother. He sent me that lying
+letter that almost broke my heart."</p>
+
+<p>He broke down and sobbed like a woman, or rather, unlike a
+woman, for those great, convulsive moans of agony that issued
+from his breast seemed as if they would rend his heart in twain.</p>
+
+<p>Golden stole to his side and laid her small hand kindly on his
+gray head, that was bowed in sorrow and remorse.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry for you, my father," she said. "You have been
+weak and imprudent, but not sinful, as I thought. But, oh, my
+poor mother! My heart is torn over her wretched fate. She must
+have perished miserably, or we should have heard from her ere
+now. Oh, father, what shall we do?"</p>
+
+<p>They looked at each other with dim, miserable eyes, this
+strangely reunited father and daughter, the awful mystery of
+the wife and mother's fate chilled their hearts.</p>
+
+<p>He took her hand and drew her gently nearer to him.</p>
+
+<p>"My child, I shall go to Glenalvan Hall and confront John
+Glenalvan with his sin. I believe the whole key to the mystery
+lies in that villain's hands."</p>
+
+<p>"I am almost sure of it," she replied. "He hated my mother,
+and he hated me. I will go with you. What joy it will be to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+stand up proudly before him and tell him that my birth was honest
+and honorable, and that my father is a good and true man,
+who is glad to see me, for you <i>are</i> glad, aren't you?" she asked
+him, pleadingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear, I am very glad. I have always longed to have a
+child of my own to love. It seemed as if my heart was always
+yearning for the daughter I believed to be dead. But Golden,"
+he looked at her anxiously and pleadingly as he clasped her little
+hand, "you have a story of your own to tell me before we go on
+the quest for your mother. The great mystery of love has come
+to you already in your tender youth. Tell me, my daughter, are
+you a wife?"</p>
+
+<p>The crimson color flushed into her cheeks, then receded, leaving
+her deathly pale again.</p>
+
+<p>Tears rose into the great, blue eyes, and trembled on the long-fringed
+lashes.</p>
+
+<p>Her lips parted and closed again without a sound.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me, Golden," he urged, anxiously; "are you a wife, or
+has some artful villain deceived you? If so&mdash;&mdash;" he clenched his
+hand, and the lightnings of passion flashed from his somber, dark
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>A moan of pain came from the girl's white lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, father, I cannot tell you now," she sighed. "Only trust
+me. Do not believe me vile and wicked. Perhaps I may be able
+to tell you the truth some day."</p>
+
+<p>As she spoke, some strange, new light flashed into his mind.</p>
+
+<p>She saw the startled gleam flash into his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," he cried out, hoarsely, "are you the girl that was
+dismissed from Mrs. Desmond's employ under the stigma of a disgraceful
+suspicion?"</p>
+
+<p>She covered her face with her hands and faltered "yes," in a
+voice of agony.</p>
+
+<p>"Was that terrible accusation true?" he demanded, in a voice
+so changed she could scarcely recognize it.</p>
+
+<p>"No, never! It was false, I swear it before Heaven. My trouble
+came to me before I entered Mrs. Desmond's employ," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden, you must tell me the name of the man who has
+wronged you," he said, sternly.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot," she answered, sorrowfully.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean you will not," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot. I am bound by a promise," she answered.</p>
+
+<p>"It was a foolish promise. The time has come when you must
+break it," he answered, steadily. "You must clear yourself in
+Mrs. Desmond's eyes, and reconcile her to her husband. Do you
+know that they are separated on your account?"</p>
+
+<p>"I heard you say so," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"It is true, and I am their lawyer. Will you let me write to
+Mrs. Desmond, and tell her the name of the man who is really in
+fault, and for whose sin she has deserted her innocent husband?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot," she moaned again, in a voice of agony. "I am
+bound by a sacred promise. Bitter as the consequences are, I
+must keep it!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It seemed incredible to him that this frail, slight girl should
+hold her secret so resolutely in the face of the trouble it had
+caused.</p>
+
+<p>"But, Golden, think a moment," he began.</p>
+
+<p>"I have thought until my brain is almost wild," she interrupted,
+pitifully. "But I can see no possible loophole out of my solemn
+vow of silence."</p>
+
+<p>"You were wrong to take such a vow, Golden, and it is almost
+wicked for you to keep it. Do you see how much is at stake?
+Through your silence a man and his wife are divided in anger and
+shame, and a cloud of the blackest disgrace is lowering over your
+own head. Do you know that it is a fearful thing to come between
+husband and wife?"</p>
+
+<p>"I feel its enormity in the very depths of my heart," she replied,
+shuddering and weeping.</p>
+
+<p>"Then surely you will speak; you <i>must</i> speak," he urged.</p>
+
+<p>But she only shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"Not if I command you to do so?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Not if you command me," she replied, with mournful firmness.</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence, and Richard Leith gazed upon
+the girl with a sick and shuddering heart.</p>
+
+<p>A vague suspicion was beginning to steal into his mind.</p>
+
+<p>What if Golden was deceiving him, and Mrs. Desmond's belief
+were true?</p>
+
+<p>He reeled before the sickening horror of the thought. The
+dread suspicion seemed to float in fiery letters before his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at the bowed figure of the sobbing girl, and steeled
+his heart against her. She was no child of his if she could let
+the shadow of suspicion tamely rest upon her head.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden," he said, "think of what I must endure if you refuse
+to declare yourself. Would you have me acknowledge a child
+who has covered my honorable name with shame? Shall I take
+you by the hand and say to the world that honors me as a stainless
+man: 'This is my daughter. She has disgraced herself, and
+brought ruin and despair into another's home.'"</p>
+
+<p>She shrank and trembled before the keen denunciation of his
+words. She threw herself at his feet and looked up with frightened,
+imploring eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Father, do not disown me," she cried. "I have not disgraced
+you&mdash;you will know the truth some day. Tell the whole world
+my piteous story. It may be&mdash;it may be that the telling will
+bring you joy, not sorrow. For," she said to her own heart,
+hopefully, "if Bertram Chesleigh should hear the truth, and
+know that I am not a nameless child, surely he will claim me
+then. He can no longer be ashamed of me."</p>
+
+<p>She felt that the happiness of her whole future hung trembling
+in the balance on the chance of her father's recognition of her.
+If in his anger at her obstinacy he should repudiate her claim on
+him, nothing was left her but despair.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith could be as hard as marble when he chose. His
+pride and his anger rose in arms now against the thought of receiving
+this branded girl as his own daughter.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Golden," he said, "what if I say that I will not receive you
+as my daughter unless you consent to clear up this disgraceful
+mystery that surrounds you?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will not tell me so&mdash;you could not be so cruel," she cried,
+fearfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Only one word, Golden. The name of the man who has
+wronged you. Tell me, that I may punish him."</p>
+
+<p>"You must not, for <i>I love him</i>," she moaned, despairingly.</p>
+
+<p>"You force me to believe that Mrs. Desmond was right, and
+that you are a lost and guilty creature," he said scathingly.</p>
+
+<p>A long, low wail came from her lips, then she bowed her head
+and remained silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you still persist in this obstinate silence?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I must," she answered faintly.</p>
+
+<p>"Go, then," he thundered at her, "you are no child of mine.
+I refuse you the shelter of my home, my name, and my heart.
+I cannot believe that you are the child of my innocent little
+Golden. Go, and never let me see your face again."</p>
+
+<p>And with the cruel words he turned and left the room.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Little Golden stared at the closing door through which her
+father had vanished, with blank, terror-filled eyes. To have
+found him and lost him like this was too terrible.</p>
+
+<p>She sat gazing before her like one dazed, with the angry words
+of her father still ringing in her ears, when a low and fluttering
+sigh recalled her to the fact of Mrs. Leith's presence which she
+had forgotten for the moment in her anguish of soul.</p>
+
+<p>She looked around shrinkingly at the fair woman who had
+taken her mother's place, and her mother's name, dreading to
+meet a glance of scorn, even transcending that which her father
+had cast upon her.</p>
+
+<p>Instead she met the beautiful, troubled eyes of her step-mother
+fixed upon her with tenderest pity.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith had been vain, careless, and frivolous all her life.
+She had never known a care or sorrow in the whole course of
+her pleasant, prosperous existence.</p>
+
+<p>The hard crust of selfishness and indifference had grown over
+the better impulses of a nature that at the core was true, and
+sweet, and womanly.</p>
+
+<p>The last hour with its strange revelations had been the
+turning point in her life.</p>
+
+<p>She realized with a shudder the dreadful position in which she
+was placed. She was married to a man who, in all probability,
+had a wife living.</p>
+
+<p>It was possible that she herself was almost as much an outcast
+as the wretched girl who crouched weeping on the floor,
+homeless, friendless, and forsaken, in the hour of her direst
+need.</p>
+
+<p>Never before had Mrs. Leith been brought face to face with a
+real sorrow. She gazed wonderingly upon poor little Golden, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+course of whose checkered life had run as strangely as that of
+one of her favorite novel heroines.</p>
+
+<p>So it happened that when Golden looked timidly up expecting
+to be immediately annihilated by her scornful glance, she met
+only the gentlest pity beaming from the large, blue eyes of the
+unhappy woman.</p>
+
+<p>"Come to me, Golden," she said, and as the young girl advanced
+she asked her in a strangely saddened voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Are you angry with me, child, that I have filled your mother's
+place and worn her name for twelve, long years?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I am not angry," Golden answered, gently. "It was
+through no fault of yours&mdash;you did not know."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I did not know," Mrs. Leith murmured, putting her
+hands to her eyes while the tears fell through her fingers. "I
+did not know, and now it is too late."</p>
+
+<p>"What shall you do now?" Golden asked her wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall go away," Mrs. Leith replied, sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you angry with my father?" asked the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Golden, he sinned ignorantly," replied Mrs. Leith.
+"Therefore I cannot blame him. But I must go away from him,
+and never see him again until he learns the truth whether or not
+his first wife was living when he married me."</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a brief silence. The two women, so lately mistress
+and maid&mdash;now placed upon the same level by the equalizing
+hand of sorrow, sat still a little while looking out upon the
+unknown future with dreary, hopeless eyes. Then Mrs. Leith
+roused herself with an effort.</p>
+
+<p>"And you, Golden&mdash;where will you go? What will you do?"
+she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"God knows," the girl exclaimed, hopelessly. "I am so
+stunned by the revelations of to-day that I know not where to
+turn. For weary months the dream of finding and reclaiming
+my guilty mother has filled and occupied my thoughts. Now
+that I know her innocent and pure, the terrible mystery of her
+fate chills the blood in my veins. Where shall I look for her?
+How shall I find her?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith looked at her compassionately.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor child!" she said. "You are too ill and weary to seek
+for anyone now. Leave that sorrowful quest to your father, and
+place yourself in my care."</p>
+
+<p>The tears brimmed over in Golden's beautiful eyes at the kindly
+spoken words of her step-mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, madam," she cried, "you offer to befriend me. Then you
+do not believe that I am the lost and guilty creature they would
+fain make me out."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith's beautiful face beamed with sympathy as she answered:</p>
+
+<p>"No, Golden, I do not believe you are a sinner. I have a
+strong conviction that you are a deserted or discarded wife, and I
+will care for you in your forlorn situation with the tenderness of
+your own mother."</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Richard Leith went down to his office, and threw himself
+heavily into a chair, bowing his gray head dejectedly on his
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>His brain was almost crazed with the agony of the last hour's
+discovery.</p>
+
+<p>The sealed book of the past had been roughly torn open again,
+and in agony of soul he repented the selfish course he had pursued
+with the fair, young wife he had stolen from her home and
+friends.</p>
+
+<p>Where was she now, his beautiful, golden-haired darling?</p>
+
+<p>What fate had kept her from her home and friends, and from
+the little child that had come to such bitter grief in the absence
+of the mother-love that might have shielded her from harm?</p>
+
+<p>He sprang from his chair, and paced impatiently up and down
+the floor, while he hurriedly settled his plans. He would leave
+for the south that night.</p>
+
+<p>He would seek out John Glenalvan, and charge him with his
+sin.</p>
+
+<p>He would force him to unfold the mystery of little Golden's
+disappearance. Perhaps, oh, God, the villain had murdered
+her.</p>
+
+<p>If he had, he should suffer the dire punishment the law meted
+out for such wretched criminals.</p>
+
+<p>"But before I go," he said to himself, grimly, "I will go and
+see Desmond. If he has lied to me heretofore, woe be unto him.
+The base betrayer of my poor child's innocence shall receive no
+mercy at my hands."</p>
+
+<p>He threw on his hat and directed his steps to the hotel where
+Mr. Desmond was staying in preference to the grand, deserted
+dwelling, which was closed and left in the solitary care of the
+housekeeper during the absence of the family.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond was smoking in his luxurious parlor, carelessly
+habited in dressing-gown and slippers.</p>
+
+<p>His handsome, debonair face looked pale and worn, and melancholy.
+A hopeful gleam came into the listless eyes as his visitor
+was admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Leith, so glad to see you," he cried, throwing away his
+cigar, and eagerly advancing. "You bring me news&mdash;Edith has
+relented?"</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing more unlikely," Mr. Leith returned, with
+grim truthfulness; then he broke out with fiery impetuosity:
+"Desmond, for God's sake tell me the truth. Have you deceived
+me as well as your wife? Are you guilty of this monstrous sin?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond was startled by the almost agonizing entreaty of
+the lawyer's look and voice.</p>
+
+<p>On the impulse of the moment he caught up a small Bible that
+lay upon a table close at hand, and pressed his lips upon it while
+he exclaimed in the deep, convincing tones of truth:</p>
+
+<p>"Leith, I solemnly swear to you that I am innocent of the
+crime laid to my charge, so help me God."</p>
+
+<p>Something in the man's deep earnestness, and in his look of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+suffering, staggered Richard Leith's doubts and fears, and made
+him feel that he had been a brute to doubt his daughter's agonized
+declarations of innocence. He exclaimed with sudden fervor
+and earnestness:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Desmond, it is but fair to tell you that I have found the
+girl, Mary Smith, and that she exonerates you, too."</p>
+
+<p>"I was sure she would, although she despises me," cried Mr.
+Desmond. "I admit that I behaved despicably to her. I tried
+to get up a flirtation with her, but she scorned me with the pride
+of a queen, and the affair went no further. I believed her as pure
+and cold as the snow. No one was more amazed than myself
+when I learned the truth through my wife's causeless jealousy."</p>
+
+<p>"You say 'causeless jealousy,' Desmond," Mr. Leith remonstrated,
+gravely, "but you forget that ever since your marriage
+you have persistently wounded your loving and sensitive wife by
+the most open and flagrant flirtations, thus giving her the greatest
+cause to doubt your fidelity."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond looked thoroughly ashamed and penitent at the
+perfectly truthful charge.</p>
+
+<p>"You speak the truth, I have behaved shamefully," he replied.
+"But I have had my lesson now. I never knew how much I
+loved and honored my sweet and beautiful wife until in her
+righteous wrath she deserted me. But if she will believe me this
+time and return to me, I will never offend her again by my foolish
+propensities. I will never even look at another woman. I
+am quite cured of flirting."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke so soberly and earnestly that Mr. Leith was fain to
+believe him, but he answered gravely:</p>
+
+<p>"Your wife is so thoroughly incensed against you, that she will
+never believe even your sworn word without additional proof."</p>
+
+<p>"But how can I prove it to her?" cried the anxious husband.
+"She would not believe Mary Smith's denial, and she refuses to
+credit mine."</p>
+
+<p>"There is only one way out of the trouble," the lawyer said,
+gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"And that?" Mr. Desmond asked, anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Is to find out the man who is really in fault, and obtain his
+sworn statement," Richard Leith replied.</p>
+
+<p>"The girl will give us the necessary information, of course,"
+Mr. Desmond exclaimed, his spirits rising.</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary, she obstinately refuses to do so. She makes
+a most perplexing mystery of her unhappy situation."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond looked uneasy and perplexed a moment, then he
+exclaimed, confidently:</p>
+
+<p>"It is only a question of blackmail then. She will tell the
+truth if a golden bribe is offered her. Depend upon it, she is only
+waiting for that."</p>
+
+<p>"You are mistaken," Richard Leith returned, gravely. "You
+do not understand her motives. I will tell you a harrowing secret,
+Desmond. I have discovered that that unfortunate girl is
+my own daughter!"</p>
+
+<p>In a few eloquent words he told Mr. Desmond the story of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+strange marriage, and its tragic <i>denouement</i>&mdash;the lost wife, the
+ruined daughter.</p>
+
+<p>In his own despair and agitation, it did not seem strange to the
+lawyer that his excitement was reflected on the face of his listener,
+but when he had finished his story, Desmond sprang wildly to
+his feet, exclaiming:</p>
+
+<p>"Good God, Leith, I can lay my hand on the destroyer of your
+child. It is my wife's brother&mdash;it is Bertram Chesleigh!"</p>
+
+<p>"Heaven, how blind I have been!" Richard Leith exclaimed,
+with lurid eyes, and a deathly-pale face.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence, then Mr. Leith said, huskily:</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me how this fact came to your knowledge, Desmond."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you remember the sudden trip my wife and I took to Florida
+last summer?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I heard of it," the lawyer replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go back a few months previous to that trip." Mr. Desmond
+said.</p>
+
+<p>"It was this winter a year previous that Bertram Chesleigh
+made the acquaintance of young Frederick Glenalvan in New
+York and was invited by him to visit his far-away Floridian
+home.</p>
+
+<p>"About the first of last June Bert accepted the invitation, and
+spent about two weeks at Glenalvan Hall.</p>
+
+<p>"He wrote to my wife from there, hinting vaguely at having
+lost his heart to a perfect 'pearl of beauty.'</p>
+
+<p>"Edith, who is excessively proud, and mortally afraid of a <i>mesalliance</i>,
+replied to him coolly, discountenancing the idea and begging
+him not to marry out of his own state.</p>
+
+<p>"Between you and me, Leith, I believe she had a great heiress
+booked for the young fellow in New York."</p>
+
+<p>He paused for breath, but at Richard Leith's look of impatience,
+went on hastily:</p>
+
+<p>"Bertram did not reply to his sister's letter, but in the latter
+part of the same month Fred Glenalvan wrote us that Bertram
+was lying ill with brain fever.</p>
+
+<p>"We went to him at once and found him not expected to live,
+He was delirious, and through all his illness he called incessantly
+on one name. Morning, noon and night it was always, 'Golden,
+Golden, Golden.'"</p>
+
+<p>A groan forced itself through Richard Leith's rigid lips, but he
+did not speak, and Mr. Desmond continued:</p>
+
+<p>"That cry for Golden was always coupled with a wild appeal
+for forgiveness for some wrong, the nature of which we could
+not determine.</p>
+
+<p>"My curiosity and that of my wife were powerfully excited,
+and we wondered who the Golden was that he called upon, and
+why she never came.</p>
+
+<p>"It was quite evident that the Glenalvans did not care to
+divulge the secret, so we never presumed to ask, but when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+Bertram grew convalescent Edith inquired of him, and he told
+her the truth."</p>
+
+<p>"Let me hear it," said Richard Leith, gaspingly, while the
+knotted veins stood out like cords on his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>"It was the same story your daughter told you&mdash;that of a fair
+young girl kept aloof from her kind, slighted and scorned for no
+visible fault."</p>
+
+<p>"Bertram met and loved her. They had some secret meetings
+by night in one of which they were discovered, and in the
+scene that followed, the fact was disclosed that the girl was illegitimate."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my weakness, my sin!" groaned the wretched listener.
+"Curses upon John Glenalvan for his horrible villainy."</p>
+
+<p>"Bertram declared that he had only entertained the most honorable
+feelings toward the girl," said Mr. Desmond, "but he confessed
+that the knowledge of her parentage so staggered him that
+he was induced to forsake her. He left Glenalvan Hall before
+daylight without seeing her again."</p>
+
+<p>"The cowardly cur!" Richard Leith exclaimed, clenching his
+hands until the purple nails sunk into the quivering flesh.</p>
+
+<p>"Hear me out," said Mr. Desmond, quickly, "before you judge
+him too hardly."</p>
+
+<p>"I am listening," answered Richard Leith, trying to master his
+surging passions beneath an appearance of calmness. "I am listening,
+but what more can there be to say, Mr. Desmond?"</p>
+
+<p>"This, Mr. Leith: Bertram went away, determined to forsake
+the hapless girl, but his love and remorse, and the overpowering
+cause of shame, urged his return so powerfully that in three days
+he returned to Glenalvan Hall with the full intention of marrying
+the girl at once, and taking her abroad with him where no
+one knew her unfortunate story.</p>
+
+<p>"When he reached there she was gone&mdash;none knew whither.
+John Glenalvan told him that she had gone away with the boldly-avowed
+intention of leading a life of sin with her mother.
+Poor Bertram had suffered so much that he could not bear that
+crowning blow. He staggered and fell like a log at the villain's
+feet. A brain fever followed that nearly cost him his life."</p>
+
+<p>"One more score is added to my terrible list against John Glenalvan,"
+Richard Leith muttered darkly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no more to say," continued Mr. Desmond, "except that
+all the circumstances point unerringly at Bertram Chesleigh as
+the man who wronged your daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right," groaned the unhappy father. "Oh, God, if
+only she had remained at Glenalvan Hall that he might have
+made reparation for his sin!"</p>
+
+<p>"Did not Bertram write to you in relation to the unfortunate
+affair? He mentioned an intention to do so," said Mr. Desmond.</p>
+
+<p>"Only a letter so cautiously worded that I could gain no clew
+to the real truth," replied Richard Leith. "No names were mentioned.
+He only described the girl who was supposed to have entered
+some one of the many nameless houses in this city. He
+wished me to reclaim her, if possible, provide her a home, and he
+agreed to make her a generous allowance."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Poor Bert," said Mr. Desmond, "and all the while she was
+in his sister's employ, and in reach of his hand, if he had only
+known it."</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's heavy silence; then Richard Leith rose
+hastily.</p>
+
+<p>"I must go home now," he said. "I&mdash;may God forgive me&mdash;I
+was so maddened by my child's wrongs and my own suspicions
+that I refused to own her; I drove her away from her rightful
+home. Pray God that she be not gone. If she has, I must bring
+her back and tell her that I know her whole sad story, and I must
+make the best I can of her poor, blighted life."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall you write to Bertram Chesleigh?" inquired Desmond.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, for they must know that they have wronged you, and
+that you are innocent," replied the lawyer. "And, Desmond,
+you must write to your wife. I will inclose your letter with
+mine, otherwise, in her pride and anger, she might return it unopened.
+I thank God that your fidelity is vindicated, and that
+your reunion is now insured."</p>
+
+<p>"I have a better plan than writing to her," said Desmond,
+blushing like a school-girl. "I will follow your letter to her
+brother, and plead my cause in person. I cannot wait, Leith; I
+am too impatient. I long to meet my wife and child again. You
+will give me their address? The <i>Europa</i> sails to-night. I must
+go with her."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Leith saw no objection to the plan. He was sorry for the
+impatient husband who had received a lesson that would last a
+life-time.</p>
+
+<p>He gave him his wife's address in Italy, with his cordial good
+wishes and went away to seek his wronged, unhappy daughter.</p>
+
+<p>"She cannot have gone yet. She was to weak and ill to have
+gone to-day. She would have waited until she was better," he
+kept whispering to his reproachful heart as he hurried along.</p>
+
+<p>Then he thought of the beautiful, fashionable woman who
+had taken the place of little Golden's mother, and worn her
+name for twelve long years.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Gertrude," he murmured sadly. "I wonder how she
+bears it. Perhaps she will not grieve much. She does not love
+me as she did when I first made her my wife. Perhaps I am to
+blame. I have chilled her tender nature by my carelessness or
+coldness, for I have never loved her as I did my lost little Golden."</p>
+
+<p>He hurried up the marble steps and ran impatiently along the
+hall, stumbling against the housekeeper, who was pacing sedately
+along with a little basket of keys.</p>
+
+<p>As he was rushing past her she stopped and called to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Mistress and her maid are gone away, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Where?" he inquired, pausing and looking back in bewildered
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell you, for I do not know," the woman replied, respectfully.
+"But she bade me say that she left a letter for you on
+her dressing-table."</p>
+
+<p>He ran up to Mrs. Leith's dressing-room, and found it in some
+slight disorder, as if traveling bags had been hurriedly packed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Amid the dainty litter of the dressing-table he saw a square
+envelope addressed to himself, and hurriedly tore it open.</p>
+
+<p>His gaze ran over the few pathetic words daintily penciled
+on the perfumed, satiny sheet.</p>
+
+<p>"Richard," she wrote. "I have gone away from you. I have
+long felt that I had but a small share in your heart, and now I
+know that I have, perhaps, no right to your name, and no place
+in your home. So it is best that I should leave you. I have
+taken little Golden with me. There is one thing, at least, that
+I can do. I can be a mother to the child whose father has disowned
+her, and whose mother is so tragically lost.</p>
+
+<p>"You were wrong, Richard. The child has been wronged, but
+I believe that she is innocent. I have loved you more than you
+knew; perhaps more than you cared, and for your sake I will
+care for your forlorn child. You will not seek for us. We are
+companions in misery, and you will respect our grief. I cannot
+tell you where we shall go. But if you find little Golden's
+mother I shall know it, and the mother shall have her child."</p>
+
+<p>With the simple name, "Gertrude," the letter ended; Richard
+Leith reread it slowly, filled with a great surprise and wonder.</p>
+
+<p>"She will care for the child I treated so heartlessly," he murmured.
+"God bless her. I did not know that Gertrude could be
+so true and noble. I have wronged her indeed, and she has
+worn the mask of carelessness and frivolity over a wounded
+heart. Oh, God, if I only knew where to find them."</p>
+
+<p>He almost cursed himself for his cruelty to his wronged and
+miserable daughter.</p>
+
+<p>He remembered how young she was, and how ignorant of the
+world when Bertram Chesleigh had won her heart. Perhaps she
+was not to blame. His wrath waxed hot against the man who
+had betrayed her guileless innocence.</p>
+
+<p>He went down and asked the housekeeper if Mrs. Leith had
+gone away in the carriage, and she answered that the lady had
+walked, and the maid had accompanied her.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot go south until I have found them," he said to himself,
+sadly. "Poor little Golden, poor Gertrude."</p>
+
+<p>Before the next day he had visited every depot and every wharf
+by which they might have left the city, but he had learned nothing.
+The next day after he inserted a personal in the <i>Herald</i>:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"<span class="smcap">To Gertrude</span>:&mdash;Return with Golden. Her true story is
+known and she is freely forgiven. Anxiously,</p>
+
+<p class="sig">R. L."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>But the two for whom that yearning cry was written were
+fated never to behold it. And the dreary winter days came and
+went while he waited for tidings, filled with the heart-sickness
+of a great despair.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>While the winter snow still whirled in blinding drifts through
+the streets of New York, the sun shone, the flowers bloomed, the
+birds sang around old Glenalvan Hall in far-away Florida.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah crooned her quaint revival hymns in the sunny doorway<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+of the kitchen, and her old master dozed in the bright, bay-window
+among the pots of fragrant flowers.</p>
+
+<p>It was February, and hints of the nearing spring were in the
+air that sighed softly among the flowers, and lifted the thin, white
+locks from the brow of old Hugh, as his weary head lay resting
+on the back of his easy-chair.</p>
+
+<p>Very thin, and sad, and mournful looked the old man as he sat
+in his easy-chair, with his lonely thoughts fixed ever on the past.
+He was old and weary. Life held no charm for him now.</p>
+
+<p>One thought of the last lonely sheaf waiting for the reaper as
+he sat with his withered hands folded, and that look of patient
+grief on his thin, white, aged face.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my lost little Golden," he murmured aloud: "She tarries
+long. The quest for her mother is a weary one. Oh, that God
+would give me back the mother and child, both innocent and pure
+as when I lost them."</p>
+
+<p>A sudden shadow fell between him and the light. He looked
+up and saw a man standing before him, a man with a pale, worn,
+troubled face, and dark eyes that held the story of a tragedy in
+their somber depths.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon," he said, "I have ventured unannounced into your
+presence. My name is Richard Leith."</p>
+
+<p>The old man stared at him with dim, unrecognizing eyes. That
+name conveyed no meaning to his mind. He had never heard it
+before.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a stranger," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Richard Leith answered, and stood silent a moment.</p>
+
+<p>How should he tell Hugh Glenalvan that he was the man who
+had stolen his daughter from him and desolated his life?</p>
+
+<p>It was a hard task. His voice quivered and broke as he said:</p>
+
+<p>"I am a stranger, but I am also your son-in-law."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no son-in-law," the old man replied, gazing blankly at
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Your daughter was my wife," said Richard Leith.</p>
+
+<p>"Little Golden?" said the old man, like one dazed.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered the lawyer. "I stole her from you sixteen
+years ago, and made her my darling wife. Oh, sir, can you ever
+forgive me the sorrow I have caused you?"</p>
+
+<p>"A wife! She was a wife! Thank God for that," the old man
+murmured, with trembling delight. "And you have brought
+her back at last. Where is she, my darling little Golden?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, God!" murmured the conscience-smitten man before
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me see her, my sweet child," cried Hugh Glenalvan, feebly
+rising. "It was cruel to keep the little one from me so long.
+Oh, Golden, Golden, come to me, my darling."</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith put him back with gentle hands into his chair.
+He knelt down at his feet and told him all his sorrowful story,
+throwing all the blame on himself, and pleading humbly for pardon
+from the father whom he had robbed of his darling.</p>
+
+<p>"I loved her," he said. "She was dearer than my own life. I
+would have brought her back to you in time. I was only waiting
+for the fame and fortune that came to me soon. But treachery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+came between us. I lost her, and henceforth I have lived hand
+in hand with sorrow and despair."</p>
+
+<p>The soft wind sighing past the window seemed to echo that
+heavy word "despair."</p>
+
+<p>"At the door of John Glenalvan lies your sorrow and mine,"
+continued Richard Leith, "I am come to call him to account."</p>
+
+<p>"Who are you that dares arraign John Glenalvan?" exclaimed
+a harsh, blatant voice, as the speaker strode rudely into their
+presence.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith sprang to his feet and confronted the intruder.
+His dark eyes blazed with wrath as he answered:</p>
+
+<p>"I am Richard Leith, the husband of Golden Glenalvan, whom
+you falsely reported dead to gain some wicked end of your own.
+Liar, I have found you out in your sin! I demand my wronged
+wife at your hands."</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan glared lividly at the daring man who thus
+boldly confronted him with his sin.</p>
+
+<p>The blood retreated from his face and lips, and his eyes were
+wild and startled.</p>
+
+<p>"Answer me," cried Richard Leith, advancing upon him.
+"Where is Golden, my wife?"</p>
+
+<p>"You lie! She was never your wife," John Glenalvan retorted,
+furiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Shame upon you, John, to malign the fair name of your sister,"
+cried his father, indignantly. "Rather rejoice that she is
+proved innocent at last."</p>
+
+<p>"Let him prove her so, if he can," cried the wretch, maliciously.</p>
+
+<p>"I can do so. Here is the certificate of my marriage to Golden
+Glenalvan in New York sixteen years ago, replied Richard Leith,
+unfolding a yellowed paper and holding it open before the eyes of
+the father and son.</p>
+
+<p>"Then she was really your wife," John said, with unwilling
+belief.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course she was my wife. How dared you think evil of
+your own sister?" demanded the lawyer, scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not answer to you for my thoughts, sir," replied John
+Glenalvan, angrily.</p>
+
+<p>"But you must answer to me for the deed which has deprived
+me of my wife and child for fifteen years," cried Richard Leith.
+"John Glenalvan, where is my wife?"</p>
+
+<p>"How should I know?" he retorted.</p>
+
+<p>"It is too late to fence with me," answered Richard Leith.
+"You, and you alone, are at the bottom of my wife's mysterious
+disappearance. You have either shut her up in solitary confinement,
+or you have murdered her!"</p>
+
+<p>"Murdered her! How dare you hint at such a thing?" John
+Glenalvan thundered, growing white with fear.</p>
+
+<p>"I dare do more," cried the lawyer, driven to desperation. "If
+you do not tell me what has become of my wife I will have you
+arrested for her murder."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At these warning words John Glenalvan threw himself upon
+his accuser with the cry of an infuriated wild beast.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith was weak and ill. He had risen from a sick-bed,
+on which wasting anxiety and grief had thrown him, when he
+came to Glenalvan Hall.</p>
+
+<p>He went down like an infant before the strong fury of his opponent,
+and the old man's wailing cry pierced the air.</p>
+
+<p>"John, hold your hand! For God's sake, do not murder the
+man!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XL" id="CHAPTER_XL">CHAPTER XL.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>John Glenalvan did not heed his father's frightened remonstrance.</p>
+
+<p>He continued to rain furious blows on his feeble but struggling
+foe.</p>
+
+<p>The fell instinct of murder was aroused within his soul, and
+Richard Leith would have fallen a sure victim to its fury, but
+that suddenly the slight form of a woman rushed into the room,
+and, with a wild and piercing shriek, sprang upon John Glenalvan's
+neck, clutching it with frantic fingers in the endeavor to
+tear him from his almost dying victim.</p>
+
+<p>Almost strangling in the fierce tenacity of her grasp, the wretch
+released Mr. Leith, and springing upward with a savage bound,
+threw his frail assailant from him into the middle of the room.</p>
+
+<p>The terrible shock hurled her prostrate on the floor. She lay
+there stunned and bleeding, and the wretch, after one horror-struck
+glance at her, rushed from the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden&mdash;it is Golden! and he has killed her" wailed her
+grandfather, falling on his knees beside her; and Richard Leith,
+where he lay, half dying, comprehended the anguished wail, and
+crawled on his hands and knees to the side of his hapless daughter.</p>
+
+<p>It was little Golden, indeed, but she lay still and silent, with
+the blood oozing from her nostrils and a slight cut on her temple.</p>
+
+<p>As he reached her side, old Dinah rushed into the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Little missie, little missie!" she cried; then she stopped short
+in terror. "Oh, my Hebenly Master, who has done dis t'ing?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dinah," her master said quickly, "go and send Fred Glenalvan
+to me."</p>
+
+<p>She hobbled out obediently, and in a moment returned with the
+handsome young dandy, who glanced at his grandfather with
+haughty indifference.</p>
+
+<p>"Fredrick," the old man said, with strange sternness, "here
+are two people whom your father has nearly killed. You must
+go and bring a doctor for them."</p>
+
+<p>Frederick started at the sight of the bleeding forms upon the
+floor, but in an instant his countenance hardened into marble.</p>
+
+<p>"If my father has hurt them," he replied, "I doubt not that he
+had good reason for doing so, and they may die before I will
+fetch a physician to them."</p>
+
+<p>With that insolent reply he turned on his heel and left the
+room.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Vipers!" muttered the old man, indignantly, then he looked
+at Dinah sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"My faithful old soul," he said, "you must do what you can
+for them. I must go and seek for help myself."</p>
+
+<p>He went feebly from the room and across the lawn. Outside
+the gates he encountered a carriage waiting. The driver stood
+on the ground by the horses' heads, and a lady sat on the satin
+cushions with a troubled look on her lovely, blond face. She
+sprang out impulsively and came up to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir," she cried, "I <i>know</i> you are Mr. Glenalvan. Have
+you seen little Golden? She went into the hall a few minutes
+ago."</p>
+
+<p>"I have seen her, I fear she is dead, and I must bring a doctor,"
+the old man wailed, heart-brokenly.</p>
+
+<p>She caught his arm and turned to the driver.</p>
+
+<p>"Drive into town at your highest speed and fetch a physician,"
+she said, throwing her purse at his feet, then she took the
+old man's arm and hurried him in.</p>
+
+<p>"I am your little Golden's friend," she explained to him as
+they went along. "I came here with her and was waiting outside
+while she paid you a visit."</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah was bathing the wound of her unconscious mistress
+when they entered, and Richard Leith lay upon the floor watching
+her with dim, despairing eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Heaven, who has done this terrible deed?" Mrs. Leith
+cried wildly, as her eyes took in the dreadful scene.</p>
+
+<p>"Gertrude," her husband cried out at the sound of her voice,
+and she knelt down by him weeping wildly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Richard, who is it that has killed you and your child?"
+she sobbed in anguish.</p>
+
+<p>"It is John Glenalvan's dreadful work," he replied, then he
+looked into her face with dim, yearning eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Gertrude! I believe I am dying," he said faintly. "Will you
+forgive me before I die?"</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive you?" she said. "Ah, Richard, do not think that I
+blamed you. You sinned ignorantly."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, ignorantly," he echoed, and a spasm of pain crossed his
+face an instant, then he said sadly: "But I did not mean <i>that</i>,
+Gertrude. I meant you must forgive me that I was careless and
+blind, that I did not prize your true heart more."</p>
+
+<p>She put her white hand to her heart, and a look of pain came
+into the large, blue eyes, then she said with mournful pathos:</p>
+
+<p>"For all the heartaches I have borne. Richard, I freely forgive
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," he murmured, then his eyes dwelt on her gratefully.
+"It was so noble in you to care for my poor child," he
+murmured, "but Gertrude, I repented in an hour. I came back
+to tell her so, and she was gone, both were gone. I sought you
+everywhere, my heart nearly broke; I fell ill, and lay for weary
+weeks fevered and maddened by my impatience and anxiety.
+At last I grew better and came here!"</p>
+
+<p>"Have you found <i>her</i>?" she murmured, anxiously, while the
+red blood suffused her fair cheeks.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He shook his head mournfully, and his eyes closed languidly.
+She believed that he was dead, and started up with a cry of woe,
+but when the physician came a little later he decided that he was
+only in a deep swoon.</p>
+
+<p>Golden recovered consciousness, and the hapless father and
+daughter were removed to adjoining rooms, the physician veering
+anxiously from one room to another.</p>
+
+<p>He believed that Mr. Leith's life might be saved by his medical
+skill, but he shook his head ominously over the beautiful, golden-haired
+child, whose shrill wails of agony pierced every heart,
+for in the agitation of her mind, and the fearful shock of her
+heavy fall, the pangs of premature motherhood had came upon
+her.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>John Glenalvan had fled from the scene of his villainy with a
+speed to which sudden fear and remorse had lent wings. He
+believed that he had killed Richard Leith and his unfortunate
+child, and in the fear of punishment for his crime he did not
+even stop to apprise his family of what had occurred, but hurried
+away to seek a hiding-place for himself.</p>
+
+<p>Too late he regretted the blind rage that had forced him into
+the commission of such a desperate deed. The cries of his victims
+seemed to pursue him in his hurried flight.</p>
+
+<p>His son reported his cowardly deeds to his mother and sister,
+and they remained lost in fear and wonder.</p>
+
+<p>To do them justice, wicked as they were, they had no idea of
+the enormity of John Glenalvan's sin. They honestly believed
+that his sister Golden had disgraced the family. They dreamed
+not of the dread secret locked in his breast.</p>
+
+<p>Clare made a stealthy tour of discovery into the western wing,
+and soon finding out how matters stood, returned to her mother
+in a frenzy of wrath and anger against her hapless cousin, little
+Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, mother, such dreadful goings on," she said. "That
+shameless girl sick in one room, a strange man dead in another,
+and a doctor, and old Dinah, and a strange woman tending them.
+If I were you, mother, I really should not stand it. I would turn
+the whole tribe out of doors&mdash;should not you, Fred?"</p>
+
+<p>But Frederick, who, despite his defiant manner to his grandfather,
+looked pale and uneasy, vetoed the proposition as imprudent.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know what provocation my father had to maltreat
+them so," he said, "but certainly, they have a bad case against
+him; and if the man is dead, as you say, Clare, and if our cousin
+dies, too, they can indict him for murder."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Glenalvan and her daughter were so frightened at that
+grim word, murder, that they broke into hysterical tears and sobbing,
+while the hopeful son and heir sat silent, overwhelmed by
+the dread of evil that had fallen upon them all, to which was
+added the terrors of doubt and suspense.</p>
+
+<p>"That strange man and woman&mdash;who can they be, Fred?" inquired
+his mother.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell; but I have my suspicions," he replied. "I believe
+they are the parents of Golden."</p>
+
+<p>"It is no wonder, then, that papa was goaded into attempting
+murder," cried Clare. "Only think of the impudence of our
+wicked aunt in coming back to Glanalvan Hall. I should think
+father must have been maddened at the very sight. And yet,
+mother, she is one of the fairest women I ever saw. She does
+not look like a lost woman. She has a very innocent appearance."</p>
+
+<p>There were others beside these three, who wondered over
+the beautiful, strange woman who claimed to be little Golden's
+friend.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah and her master gazed upon her wonderful beauty,
+which reminded them so powerfully of the missing Golden's, and
+they wondered what her name could be.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah asked her at last what she should call her, and she
+answered simply, though with a burning blush:</p>
+
+<p>"My name is Gertrude."</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. or Miss?" asked the inquisitive old negress, and again the
+lady's face grew crimson as she answered:</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs."</p>
+
+<p>"They must not know that I was his wife," she said to herself,
+resolutely. "I could not bear to have them know it. Perhaps
+they would hate me and judge him unjustly."</p>
+
+<p>But her tears fell heavily as she looked at the deathly white face
+laying on the pillow, and she wondered to herself if it would not
+be less hard for her to see him die then and there, than live to find
+his lost wife again.</p>
+
+<p>"God forgive me for my weakness and selfishness," she cried,
+starting at her own thoughts. "May he live to find the happiness
+of which he has been cheated so long."</p>
+
+<p>The long, weary night, filled with mortal agony to poor little
+Golden, slowly wore away.</p>
+
+<p>At the earliest peep of dawn a messenger arrived from the town
+with a telegram for Mr. Leith.</p>
+
+<p>He lay barely conscious on his pillow, breathing heavily and
+slow, and the physician read the message to him cautiously.</p>
+
+<p>It was from Mr. Desmond, and ran briefly:</p>
+
+<p>"We arrived in New York this hour. Is Golden with you?
+Bertram is half-crazed with anxiety."</p>
+
+<p>And across the lightning wires the fatal message flashed back
+to their anxious hearts:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Golden is here. Her child is dead and she is dying.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Dying! This was the end of that brief dream of love, those
+weary months of supreme self-sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p>Whiter than the pillow on which she lay, beautiful Golden was
+breathing her sad young life out in heavy sighs and moans, while
+hidden carefully out of sight beneath its white linen sheet, "There
+lay the sweet, little baby that never had drawn a breath."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLI" id="CHAPTER_XLI">CHAPTER XLI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Into that splendid home in New York where the Desmonds had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+just arrived from Europe, that terrible telegram came like a
+thunder-clap. Bertram Chesleigh's repentant soul reeled in agony
+before it.</p>
+
+<p>"I am justly punished for my cowardly desertion of my darling,"
+he groaned to his sister, to whom he had confided his sorrowful
+secret. "But, oh, God! how terribly I have suffered for
+the weakness and folly of an hour!"</p>
+
+<p>Edith, whose heart had been strangely changed and softened
+since her reconciliation with her husband, wept with him over
+the dreadful news.</p>
+
+<p>"Bertram, we must go to her," she said. "In death, if not in
+life, we must lift the shadow from the poor girl's memory. Elinor
+Glenalvan is going home to-day. Shall we accompany her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but do not tell her why we go. She hated my poor, little
+Golden," he answered, sighing heavily.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor wondered secretly over their going, but rejoiced also.
+She had gone abroad with them, had had a most delightful time,
+and she sighed to think that the end had come at last.</p>
+
+<p>But one thing grieved her most of all. All her arts and her
+beauty, added to Mrs. Desmond's influence, had failed to win Bertram
+Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>She almost hated him when she thought of going home to hear
+her mother's lamentations over her failure, and her sister's
+taunts.</p>
+
+<p>Her spirits rose at the welcome news that he was going south
+with her.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps she might triumph yet. It was a hopeful augury that
+he was not willing to lose sight of her yet.</p>
+
+<p>Poor vain and artful Elinor! She did not dream of the real
+truth.</p>
+
+<p>She believed that Golden had been thrust out of her way forever.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, though she had known the true cause of the
+Desmonds' separation, she had never been able to ferret out the
+reason of their reconciliation.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately after Mr. Desmond reached Italy his wife had
+summarily dismissed Celine.</p>
+
+<p>No hints, nor careless appearance of wonder on Elinor's part
+could elicit the reason for the maid's dismissal.</p>
+
+<p>She only knew that the Frenchwoman had gone away in insolent
+triumph, taking with her the money she had wrested from
+her in payment for her treachery to poor little Golden.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond's generous impulse to accompany her brother
+was frustrated by the sudden illness of her little daughter, so
+Bertram was forced to go on his sad mission without her, and
+Elinor was jubilant over the prospect of a long, delightful trip
+under his exclusive care.</p>
+
+<p>Anticipation and reality are different things, however, as Elinor
+was fated to learn.</p>
+
+<p>Never was there a more gloomy or self-absorbed cavalier than the
+handsome and entertaining Mr. Chesleigh on this occasion.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor bit her ruby lip and looked daggers as he lounged in his
+seat, pretending to be absorbed in a newspaper, but with lips<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+compressed beneath his dark mustache, and a strange, somber
+light in the large, black eyes that puzzled Elinor, who had not the
+key to his mood.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed she began to be conscious of a vague feeling of dread
+and anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>She asked herself over and over why he had chosen to bear her
+company on her homeward way.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently it was through no tenderness for her. Though
+scrupulously polite and attentive, he preserved the appearance
+of distant friendliness in too marked a fashion to be misinterpreted.</p>
+
+<p>When at last, after traveling without delay or rest, they found
+themselves seated in the carriage that was to convey them to
+Glenalvan Hall, Elinor felt a certain sense of relief mingled with
+her chagrin and disappointment. She loved Bertram Chesleigh,
+but his moodiness and silence were strangely oppressive.</p>
+
+<p>"Why did he come with me?" she asked herself for the last
+time as the carriage rolled along the breezy, wooded drive, and
+her strange companion lay back among the cushions, his hat tilted
+over his eyes, his face pale, his lips working convulsively. "What
+will Clare say when she sees how disdainfully he treats me? How
+she will triumph at my disappointment."</p>
+
+<p>Her heart sank at the prospect of returning to the quietude
+and dreariness of Glenalvan Hall after the gay, easy, luxurious
+life she had led for the last few months.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment her love for the indifferent man beside her was
+transformed to hate.</p>
+
+<p>Why had he slighted her beauty, and her fascinations to turn
+to that doll-faced child whose life was a disgrace to the Glenalvans?</p>
+
+<p>She hated Bertram Chesleigh because he had not rescued her
+from the poverty of which she had grown so weary, and from
+which his love might have delivered her.</p>
+
+<p>"At least I have the satisfaction of knowing that I removed
+that little vixen, Golden, from his pathway," she thought, with
+vindictive triumph. "If she had remained who knows what
+might have happened? I should like to know what became of her
+when she left Mrs. Desmond's. I sincerely hope she drowned herself
+in the sea!"</p>
+
+<p>The carriage turned a sudden bend in the road, and Elinor,
+leaning idly forward to note the old, familiar landmarks, gazed
+intently one moment, then uttered a stifled cry of terror.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh started, like one awaking from a dream.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it? Has anything alarmed you, Miss Glenalvan?" he
+inquired, courteously.</p>
+
+<p>"Look there," she cried, fearfully, pointing her hand through
+the window.</p>
+
+<p>He followed the direction of her finger and saw&mdash;oh horror,
+that they were passing the burial-ground of the Glenalvans.</p>
+
+<p>He saw a little band of black-robed mourners grouped around a
+narrow mound of freshly-thrown-up earth.</p>
+
+<p>He saw the minister standing at the head of the grave with his
+open book, and fancied he could hear him repeating the solemn,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+beautiful words with which we consign "ashes to ashes, and
+dust to dust."</p>
+
+<p>"Pray tell the driver to stop," Elinor cried out, excitedly, "I
+must get out. Someone of my own family must be dead."</p>
+
+<p>He made no answer. He was handing her out with hands that
+trembled as nervously as her own. One terrible, blasting thought
+was in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>"It is Golden, my wronged, little wife, and my babe that I
+never saw, whom they are hiding beneath that little mound," he
+said to himself, in agony. "Oh, God! that I should have come
+only in time for this!"</p>
+
+<p>He opened the little, white gate that led into the green burial-place,
+with its glimmering, white stones, and Elinor silently followed
+him.</p>
+
+<p>The little group about the grave fell back as they approached,
+and they saw the men throwing up the earth upon the new-made
+grave. Its dull, awful thud fell like the crash of a great despair
+upon his heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Ashes to ashes, dust to dust," murmured the minister's solemn
+voice, and the conscience-stricken man fell on his knees and hid
+his face in his hand, afraid and ashamed, for that deep voice
+seemed to condemn him for the evil he had wrought.</p>
+
+<p>A weak and trembling hand fluttered down on his shoulder,
+and a thin, quavering voice sounded reproachfully in his ear:</p>
+
+<p>"So you have come to exhult over your wicked work, Bertram
+Chesleigh."</p>
+
+<p>The wretched man looked up into the streaming eyes of old
+Hugh Glenalvan.</p>
+
+<p>At a little distance he saw old black Dinah regarding him with
+looks of horror and loathing. A beautiful, golden-haired woman
+stood apart, weeping silently, and Elinor Glenalvan had gone to
+the minister and was speaking to him agitatedly.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram sprang up desperately.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir, for God's sake," he cried to the dejected old man,
+"tell me whom they have buried here!"</p>
+
+<p>And the answer came in broken tones:</p>
+
+<p>"Golden Glenalvan and her babe."</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh, kneeling in the dust that was heaped above
+the dead heart that had loved him so devotedly, lifted his hands
+and eyes to Heaven, and cried out, in a broken, contrite voice:</p>
+
+<p>"I call God to witness that it is Golden Chesleigh, not Golden
+Glenalvan, you have buried here. This dead girl was my wife,
+made so by a secret marriage last summer. It is my wife and
+my child you have hidden from me in this low grave. May God
+forgive me for the wrong I did them."</p>
+
+<p>Then, unable to bear the strain upon his nerves and his heart
+any longer, the wretched man fell forward heavily, and lay in a
+deep swoon across the mound that covered little Golden and her
+child.</p>
+
+<p>A terrible punishment had been meted out to him for the pride
+and selfishness that had made of his innocent child-wife an outcast,
+and a creature at whom to point the finger of a seemingly
+just scorn.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The deathless flame of that deep "remorse that spurns atonement's
+power" had been kindled in his heart, never to go out
+save with the breath of life.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLII" id="CHAPTER_XLII">CHAPTER XLII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>For a few moments all believed that Bertram Chesleigh was
+dead. Elinor Glenalvan, filled with astonishment and deadly
+rage, devoutly hoped that he was.</p>
+
+<p>Her love had turned to hate, and as by a sudden flash she understood
+fully the passion of remorse and despair that had
+brought him to Glenalvan Hall.</p>
+
+<p>The vindictive wish came over her that he had died before he
+had spoken the brave words that had cleared the stain from the
+memory of the girl she had hated with such jealous fire and passion.
+She had yet to learn that every shadow had been cleared
+from Golden's name.</p>
+
+<p>While she stood like a statue, and angrily regarded the striking
+scene, the others busied themselves with the restoration of the
+unconscious man.</p>
+
+<p>Dinah brought cold water from a little spring, and bathed his
+face and hands. Gertrude held her smelling-salts to his nose.</p>
+
+<p>In a short time he revived and looked about him with an
+agony of sorrow in his pale, drawn face. His first conscious
+thought was of his loved and deeply-wronged wife.</p>
+
+<p>"She is dead," he groaned. "I shall never hear her sweet
+lips pronounce my pardon. Oh, God, did she leave me no message?
+Did she not curse me in dying for the woe I had wrought?"</p>
+
+<p>They all stood aloof from him except Gertrude. She told him
+what he asked in a grave and gentle voice.</p>
+
+<p>"She made no mention of you, Mr. Chesleigh. She was patient
+and brave to the last. She kept her vow of silence to the bitter
+end, and died with the story of her innocence untold."</p>
+
+<p>"I, coward that I was, bound her to secrecy," he said, "but I
+did not dream then of what would happen after. I wish to God
+that she had spoken and vindicated her honor."</p>
+
+<p>And again an expression of the deepest sorrow convulsed the
+dark, handsome face.</p>
+
+<p>"She was too true and loyal to break her vow," answered
+Gertrude, tearfully. "I believe that the shame and sorrow of it
+all killed her. She was a martyr to her love."</p>
+
+<p>He groaned and dropped his head upon his folded arms. There
+was silence, and every eye but Elinor's rested tearfully upon the
+low mound beneath which slumbered the poor girl who had died
+with the brand of the erring upon her, but who in this hour was
+proven guiltless and pure, as Gertrude had said, a patient martyr
+to affection.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that I might have seen her even once," groaned Bertram
+Chesleigh, turning instinctively for comfort to the sweet, sympathetic
+face of Gertrude. "Oh, tell me, did she suffer in dying?
+Was she conscious?"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No, she passed from a quiet slumber into death. The change
+was so gradual we scarcely knew when she was gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Gone!"</p>
+
+<p>The word thrilled him with a keen and bitter pain. The sweet,
+child-wife he had loved so dearly was lost from his life forever.
+She was gone from a world that had used her harshly and coldly,
+to take her fitting place among the angels.</p>
+
+<p>The soft wind sighing through the trees and the grass seemed
+to murmur her requiem: "<i>Requiescat in pace</i>."</p>
+
+<p>He rose and stood among them, his heavy eyes turning to the
+sad, old face of the grandfather whom he had bereaved of his
+darling. He held out his hand to him humbly.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>She</i> is gone from us, and I cannot sue for her pardon," he said,
+wistfully. "But will you not forgive me, sir, for the sorrow my
+weakness and pride brought upon her and you?"</p>
+
+<p>But old Hugh Glenalvan's kindly blue eyes flashed upon him
+with a gleam of their youthful fire, and his voice quivered with
+anger and despair as he replied:</p>
+
+<p>"I will never forgive you unless <i>she</i> should rise from the grave
+and forgive you too!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ye must forgive as ye would be forgiven," said the gentle,
+admonitory voice of the man of God.</p>
+
+<p>But the indignant old man shook off his suppliant hand.</p>
+
+<p>"She was his wife, and he discarded and deserted her. There
+is no forgiveness for such a sin," he said, with fiery scorn, as he
+turned away.</p>
+
+<p>They went away and left Bertram alone with the wronged and
+quiet dead.</p>
+
+<p>Gertrude, in her gentle, womanly pity would fain have persuaded
+him to go home with them, but he refused to listen.</p>
+
+<p>"Leave me to my lonely vigil here," he said, sorrowfully. "If
+her gentle spirit is yet hovering about she may accept my bitter
+grief and repentance as some atonement."</p>
+
+<p>When they had all gone and left him he bowed his head with a
+bitter cry.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Golden, my lost, little darling, only six feet of earth between
+us, and yet I shall never see you, speak to you, nor hear
+you again!"</p>
+
+<p>A low, respectful cough interrupted the mournful tenor of his
+thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>He glanced up and saw the old grave-digger leaning on his
+spade and regarding him wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you waiting for, my man?" he inquired, feeling impatient
+at this seeming intrusion on his grief.</p>
+
+<p>"If you please, sir, I have not yet finished throwing up the
+earth and shaping the mound," said the man, with some embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>A bitter cry came from Bertram Chesleigh's lips.</p>
+
+<p>"What! would you bury her still deeper from my sight?" he
+cried. "Oh, rather throw off this heavy covering of earth and
+suffer me to look upon my darling one again."</p>
+
+<p>The man stared at him half fearfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir, your sorrow has almost crazed you," he said. "You<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+had better return to your friends and leave me here to finish my
+necessary work."</p>
+
+<p>But a new thought, born of his grief and remorse, had come
+into the mind of the mourner.</p>
+
+<p>"My man, look at me," he said, earnestly; "I want you to
+open this grave and let me see my wife again. You cannot refuse
+me when I pray you to do it. Only think! They have buried
+my child and I have never even seen its face. I must kiss the
+babe and its mother once, I cannot go away until I have done
+so."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir, surely you are going mad," the man cried, alarmed.
+"I have never heard of such a thing. I could not do it if I would.
+I could not take the coffin out alone."</p>
+
+<p>"Let me help you," said the distracted mourner.</p>
+
+<p>"What you wish is quite impossible, sir," faltered the man,
+anxiously; "let me beg you to go on to the hall, and leave me to
+finish my sad duty."</p>
+
+<p>"You must not refuse me, it will break my heart," Bertram
+Chesleigh cried, "I will pay you well. See," he drew out a handful
+of shining gold pieces. "I will give you a hundred dollars if
+you will show me the faces of my wife and child."</p>
+
+<p>The dull eyes of the grave-digger grew bright at that sight. He
+was poor, and a hundred dollars were wealth to him.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry for you, sir, I wish I could do what you wish.
+That money would do my poor wife and children a deal of good.
+If you could wait until night," he said, lowering his voice and
+glancing significantly around him, "I might get help and do the
+job for you."</p>
+
+<p>Some whispered words passed between them: then Bertram
+Chesleigh rose and passed out of the green graveyard, casting one
+yearning look behind him at the low grave that held his darling.</p>
+
+<p>He bent his lagging footsteps toward old Glenalvan Hall, whose
+ivy-wreathed towers glistened picturesquely in the evening sunshine.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram went in through the wide entrance, and crossing the
+level lawn walked along the border of the beautiful lake.</p>
+
+<p>"It was here that we parted," he murmured to himself, in his
+sorrowful retrospection. "How beautiful, how happy she was,
+how full of love and trust. Oh, God, what dark spell came over
+me, and made me for twenty-four terrible hours false to my love
+and my vows? That old man was right. There is no forgiveness
+for such a terrible sin!"</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Glenalvan saw him from the house, and came down
+to meet him.</p>
+
+<p>"Chesleigh, I have heard all," he said, with pretended sympathy,
+"Elinor told us. My dear friend, how sorry I am for you.
+I was about to go and seek you. You must come up to the house
+and take some refreshment. You look ready to drop."</p>
+
+<p>"I feel fearfully ill," said Chesleigh, staggering unsteadily,
+and putting his hand to his head. "I need something, but do
+not ask me to accept the shelter of your roof, Fred. I have a
+quarrel with your father. He has bitterly deceived me, and must
+answer to me for his sin.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Father is not at home. He has been absent for several days,"
+said Fred, confusedly. "But if you will not come up to the hall
+sit down here on this bench, and I will bring you some wine."</p>
+
+<p>Bertram obeyed his request almost mechanically. His head
+ached, and he felt dull, lifeless and inert.</p>
+
+<p>The grief and excitement under which he had labored for several
+days were beginning to tell heavily upon his overstrained nerves.
+With the murmured name of Golden, his head drooped on his
+breast and he relapsed into semi-unconsciousness.</p>
+
+<p>He was aroused by a hand lifting his head, and starting into
+consciousness, saw Frederick Glenalvan by his side, and Elinor
+standing before him with a small tray on which were arranged
+a glass of wine and several slices of cake. He did not notice
+how white and strange she looked, nor how steely her voice
+sounded as she said:</p>
+
+<p>"You are faint and ill. Drink this&mdash;it will revive you."</p>
+
+<p>She put the wine to his lips, and he drank it thirstily. A fire
+seemed to run through his veins, new life came into his limbs.
+He arose and thanked her, but refused the cake.</p>
+
+<p>"I am better, but I cannot eat; it would choke me," he said,
+and Elinor did not press him. She turned away, and as she
+passed the lake she furtively tossed the wine-glass in, and the
+cake after it.</p>
+
+<p>"So father had deceived him, and must answer to him for his
+sin," she said to herself, bitterly, as she walked along. "Well,
+well, we shall see! Oh, how I hate him! Yet once I loved him,
+and hoped to be his wife. I might have been if that little jade
+had never come between. Oh, how I hate her even in her
+grave!"</p>
+
+<p>She went back to the hall, walking like one in a dream, with
+lurid, blazing eyes, and a face blanched to the pallor of a marble
+image, muttering wickedly to herself.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLIII" id="CHAPTER_XLIII">CHAPTER XLIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>When Elinor had gone, Frederick Glenalvan turned curiously
+to Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"So you were really the husband of Golden Leith, and not her
+betrayer, as everybody believed?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, she was my lawful wife; but why do you call her Golden
+Leith?" Bertram Chesleigh inquired, curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you not know," said Fred, carelessly, "that she had
+found her father? He is a New York lawyer, and his name is
+Richard Leith. It seems that her mother was really married to
+him after all."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God! Then there is really not a shadow of disgrace
+upon my poor, wronged wife," cried Bertram Chesleigh, gladly.
+"Oh, God! if only she had lived."</p>
+
+<p>He was silent a moment, then asked, suddenly:</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Richard Leith now?"</p>
+
+<p>"He is lying ill in the western wing of Glenalvan Hall," Frederick
+replied, with some embarrassment at the inward consciousness
+of who caused that illness.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Is is possible? I must go to him at once," cried Bertram,
+starting up. "I am an old friend of Richard Leith. Will you
+accompany me, Fred?"</p>
+
+<p>Frederick walked with him across the grassy slope of the lawn,
+but left him in the wide corridor that separated the divided
+dwellings of the strangely sundered family.</p>
+
+<p>"I can accompany you no further," he said, confusedly. "The
+truth is, Mr. Leith and father have had a little difficulty, and we
+are not on the best of terms."</p>
+
+<p>He turned away, and Bertram knocked nervously on the door
+before him, and was admitted by Dinah, who scowled blackly
+when she saw whom the visitor was.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish to see Mr. Leith," he said, and the old woman silently
+motioned him to follow her into the sick man's room.</p>
+
+<p>White as the pillows on which he lay, was Richard Leith, but
+there was a smile of peace on his face, for Gertrude was sitting
+in a chair by his bedside, and she had been telling him of the
+strange scene at Golden's burial that evening; how Bertram
+Chesleigh had claimed her as his wife, and the child for his own.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God! she was innocent and pure. Oh, how could I
+ever have doubted the child of my precious Golden," cried the
+bereaved father, in a passion of remorse and grief.</p>
+
+<p>"You know the whole truth, now. Can you ever forgive me?"
+inquired Bertram, advancing.</p>
+
+<p>"You here, Bertram Chesleigh? Oh, how could you have been
+so cruel?" exclaimed Mr. Leith, excitedly, as he rose on his elbow,
+and looked at the pale face and gleaming eyes of the intruder.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you all the truth, and perhaps you will understand
+me better," began Bertram Chesleigh, eagerly, but before the
+words were ended, a terrible change came over his face. It was
+distorted by contortions of pain, and with a shrill cry of agony
+he fell to the floor in strong convulsions.</p>
+
+<p>Gertrude sprang from her chair with a frightened shriek that
+brought Dinah rushing into the room with her old master close
+at her heels, followed by the hired nurse who had the care of Mr.
+Leith.</p>
+
+<p>"This man is dying&mdash;bring a doctor at once!" cried Gertrude,
+shrilly.</p>
+
+<p>"The doctor is here, madam," said the pleasant voice of the
+physician himself, who had just entered the door on his usual
+daily visit to Mr. Leith. "Why, what have we here?"</p>
+
+<p>He bent down over the tall, superb form that lay upon the
+floor writhing in a violent fit.</p>
+
+<p>There were a few moments of busy silence while he worked
+over the patient, then he looked up with a dark frown on his
+broad brow.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is this man, and how came he here?" he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"He is my son-in-law, doctor, and he had barely entered the
+room when he fell in a fit," said Richard Leith. "What ails
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>Another dire contortion of the prostrate form, and the busy
+physician answered, sternly:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"He has all the symptoms of arsenical poisoning."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>The hovering night fell rainy, dark, and cheerless. The skillful
+physician worked steadily, anxiously, and patiently, trying
+to save from the grasp of the fell destroyer the writhing victim
+of Elinor Glenalvan's deadly hate and wicked revenge.</p>
+
+<p>Everyone was filled with grief and sorrow. All warring passions,
+all human resentments were forgotten in the anxiety
+with which they watched the wavering balance in which Bertram
+Chesleigh lay fluctuating between life and death.</p>
+
+<p>Arsenic had been administered to him in a draught of wine,
+declared the physician, and the wonder arose who had given it
+to him.</p>
+
+<p>Someone started the theory that he had taken it himself, with
+intent to commit suicide.</p>
+
+<p>Then they searched him, but not a grain of the deadly drug
+was discovered on his person. It was all a baffling mystery.</p>
+
+<p>They had left him mourning despairingly over little Golden's
+grave, and they had seen him no more until he had come to them
+in this awful condition.</p>
+
+<p>"If I had not come in at the moment I did, no earthly power
+could have saved him," declared the physician; "As it is, I hope&mdash;mind,
+I only say hope&mdash;that I may save his life."</p>
+
+<p>At midnight Gertrude stole to the outer door for a breath of
+fresh air. She felt faint, weary and dispirited.</p>
+
+<p>The death of Golden, whom she had learned to love very deeply,
+had deeply grieved her saddened heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor child," she moaned, sitting down on the marble steps
+and gazing sadly at the silver crescent of the young moon as it
+struggled through a bank of clouds; "she has had a fate as tragic
+and sad as her poor young mother's."</p>
+
+<p>The sound of muffled footsteps on the grass caused Gertrude to
+start up with a sudden cry.</p>
+
+<p>A youth was coming toward her, and his low, entreating "stay,
+madam," arrested her contemplated flight.</p>
+
+<p>He came close to her side, and as his rough garments brushed
+the stone ballustrade, the cool, moist smell of newly thrown up
+earth came distinctly to her senses.</p>
+
+<p>She shivered and thought of that new-made grave lying in the
+silence and calm of the dewy night.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you tell me if Mr. Chesleigh is here, ma'am?" he inquired,
+respectfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he is here. What can you want of Mr. Chesleigh at this
+unseemly hour of the night?" she inquired, in wonder.</p>
+
+<p>"I have important business with him," said the youth, and
+Gertrude thought she detected a trembling, as of fear, in his voice.
+"Can I see him a moment, if you please?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, you cannot, for he is ill and unconscious, and we fear
+that he is dying," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>A smothered exclamation escaped from the youth's lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, this is dreadful!" he said, as if unconscious of having a
+listener. "What shall we do now?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Can I help you?" asked Gertrude, gently.</p>
+
+<p>He bent toward her eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, madam, you are a friend of the poor lady that was buried
+this afternoon?" he said, almost fearfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she answered, with a quickened heart-beat.</p>
+
+<p>"Then come with me, for God's sake. There is not a minute
+to lose. Don't be afraid. No harm shall come to you."</p>
+
+<p>So impressed was Gertrude by the youth's strange eagerness
+that she followed him without a word across the green lawn,
+through the wide gate, and along the winding road.</p>
+
+<p>"Not here!" she said, aghast, as he paused at the white gate of
+the Glenalvan burying ground.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, even here," he answered, solemnly; and the gate-latch
+clicked softly beneath his hand. "Follow me, lady. No harm
+shall happen you."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLIV" id="CHAPTER_XLIV">CHAPTER XLIV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>When Bertram Chesleigh came to full consciousness again he
+found himself lying on a couch in Mr. Leith's bedroom.</p>
+
+<p>The curtains were drawn at the windows, but the light of the
+full day glimmered through, and he saw the grave-faced physician
+sitting beside him, while Richard Leith, from the bed opposite,
+regarded him with an intent expression. He struggled up
+feebly and pressed his hand to his brow.</p>
+
+<p>"I have had a shock," he said, with an air of strange perplexity,
+as he looked into their anxious faces. "What was it? What has
+happened to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"You have been near to death's door," replied the physician,
+gravely, "but you will recover now."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish that I had died!" the young man burst out, with such
+passionate realization of his misery, that the doctor exclaimed,
+incautiously:</p>
+
+<p>"So, then, you <i>did</i> try to commit suicide?"</p>
+
+<p>The brilliant, dark eyes looked at him in amazement.</p>
+
+<p>"Suicide! suicide!" he repeated, blankly. "Who dares to say
+that of me?"</p>
+
+<p>The doctor regarded him thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear sir," he said, quietly, "I happened in here very opportunely
+last evening and found you suffering all the terrible
+symptoms of arsenic poisoning. Your friends feared that your
+grief had unhinged your mind, and that under temporary aberration
+you had attempted the destruction of your own life."</p>
+
+<p>"They were wrong. I could never have been such a coward,"
+Bertram answered, in such a tone of convincing truthfulness that
+no one could doubt him. "Indeed, doctor, you must have been
+mistaken. I have taken no drug recently."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not mistaken," the physician asserted, confidently. "You
+had most certainly had arsenic administered to you in a draught
+of wine."</p>
+
+<p>A startled gleam came into Mr. Chesleigh's eyes, his face whitened,
+a cry of horror came from his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Doctor, are you quite, quite sure?" he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I would swear to the drug," was the instant reply. "Do you
+admit the wine?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," came the grave reply; "I drank a glass of wine before
+coming in here yesterday evening, but I did not dream it was
+drugged," and an expression of almost incredulous horror swept
+over the handsome face.</p>
+
+<p>"Who gave you the wine?" inquired the doctor and Richard
+Leith almost simultaneously.</p>
+
+<p>But Bertram Chesleigh shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not ask me," he said. "It is terrible, yet I will not betray
+my would-be destroyer."</p>
+
+<p>"It was one of the Glenalvans," asserted Richard Leith, seeing
+the truth as by a flash of light.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not ask me," the young man replied again. "I must not
+tell you. It is too terrible. I can scarce believe the dread reality
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>But though he refused to reveal the secret, Richard Leith felt
+morally certain that it was to some of the family of John Glenalvan
+the young man owed the attempted destruction of his life.
+He had heard that Elinor had "set her cap" at him.</p>
+
+<p>This, then, was the dreadful revenge she had taken for her disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>The physician went away and left them together. Then the
+lawyer told his son-in-law his whole sad story. Bertram's indignation
+knew no bounds.</p>
+
+<p>"May the curse of an offended God rest upon John Glenalvan's
+head!" he exclaimed. "It is to him and his family that
+my poor Golden owes the bitter sorrows of her brief life. My
+sister's maid, Celine, confessed that it was Elinor Glenalvan who
+discovered Golden's identity, and bribed her to send her away
+under a ban of disgrace. Oh, God, Leith, could I only have
+known that the girl little Ruby loved so dearly, and who shunned
+me so persistently, was my deserted wife, how joyously would
+I have taken her to my heart and claimed her for my own."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, if you had only known," Richard Leith replied, with
+mournful emphasis. "My poor young daughter, hers indeed
+was a hard lot. Scorned by her kindred, deserted by her husband,
+despised and disowned by her miserable father! How glad
+she must have been to creep into the kindly shelter of the grave!
+Ah, Heaven, Chesleigh, I never can forget my own wretched
+share in breaking that tender heart."</p>
+
+<p>His head sank back on his pillow, and almost womanly tears
+coursed over his pale cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"But she forgave me before she died," he continued, pathetically,
+after a little. "She was an angel, Chesleigh. I can never
+forget how sweet and patient she was. The day before she died
+they carried me into her room. I lay on a couch by the side of
+her bed. They showed me the beautiful little waxen image&mdash;the
+babe that had never drawn a single breath of life in this world,
+and I could not keep from crying when they said her terrible fall
+had killed the child. The minister came, and told her that she
+must die in a few hours, too. But was it not strange, Chesleigh?
+She smiled sadly and shook her head."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'No, you are all mistaken,' she said. 'I should not be sorry
+to die, but my time has not come yet. I cannot die until I know
+whether I shall meet my mother in Heaven, or whether she is
+still on earth.'</p>
+
+<p>"But that night she passed away peacefully in her sleep. It
+was so calm and gradual we did not know when the end had
+come. It was like those sweet lines of Hood:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"'We watched her breathing through the night,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Her breathing soft and low,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">As in her breast the wave of life<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Went heaving to and fro.<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Our very hopes belied our fears,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Our fears our hopes belied;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">We thought her dying when she slept,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And sleeping when she died.'"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>He ceased, and there was a heavy silence in the room. Bertram
+Chesleigh broke it in a hushed, low voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor, martyred child! Was she, then, so anxious to find her
+mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"She declared that it was the one dream of her life-time,"
+Richard Leith replied.</p>
+
+<p>"And there is no clew save that which John Glenalvan holds?"
+inquired Bertram, thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"None, and the villain has fled. I do not believe his own wife
+and children know aught of his whereabouts."</p>
+
+<p>A look of grave determination swept over Bertram's handsome,
+pallid face.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I will take up the quest where it dropped from Golden's
+little hand in dying. I will track the villain, if it is to the
+end of the world. It shall be my task to vindicate her mother's
+memory," he said, gravely and earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>"It is <i>my</i> task rather," said Richard Leith.</p>
+
+<p>"We will join hands in the effort," his son-in-law answered.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah came in with a note for Mr. Leith. It was from
+Gertrude.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"I have gone away," she wrote. "I can leave you no address,
+but I shall be cognizant of all that transpires at Glenalvan Hall,
+and I may see you again ere long. You will soon be well enough
+to go about again, and that you may be enabled to solve the distressing
+mystery of your lost wife's fate, is the earnest prayer of</p>
+
+<p class="sig">"<span class="smcap">Gertrude</span>."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>"Surely no man was ever placed in such a terrible position,"
+said Richard Leith. "For aught I know, I may have two wives
+living."</p>
+
+<p>"It is through no fault of yours," replied Mr. Chesleigh; "but
+it is most distressing. Your second wife appears to be a very
+beautiful and winning woman."</p>
+
+<p>"She is both, but I never discovered her worth until it was too
+late to love her," Mr. Leith replied, sadly. "Her noble conduct
+to my helpless daughter first opened my eyes to her lovable
+character."</p>
+
+<p>"God bless her!" Bertram Chesleigh uttered, fervently.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>They had some further conversation, and then Mr. Chesleigh
+announced his intention of going away.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not trespass further on Mr. Glenalvan's hospitality,"
+he said decidedly. "I do not forget how much reason he has to
+hate the sight of me."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLV" id="CHAPTER_XLV">CHAPTER XLV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>The twilight hour found Bertram Chesleigh wending his way
+to the green graveyard where his hapless wife lay buried. As he
+had hoped, he found the old grave-digger waiting for him.</p>
+
+<p>He had been sodding the mound with velvety green turf, and
+planting lilies and immortelles upon it.</p>
+
+<p>"Why have you done this?" he said. "Did you not know I
+would come to-night? I was at death's door last night, or I
+would have come as I said. Did you do what you promised?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, and waited a long time for you," said the man, doffing
+his cap respectfully. "I even sent my son to look for you.
+He learned of your bad condition, and then we were compelled
+to put the coffin back in the ground again."</p>
+
+<p>There was a strange, repressed excitement in the man's manner,
+but Mr. Chesleigh, absorbed in the bitterness of his own despair,
+did not observe it.</p>
+
+<p>He counted over a hundred dollars into the man's hand, and
+then said, with a tremor of hope in his voice:</p>
+
+<p>"I will double the amount if you will do your work over to-night.
+I <i>must</i> see her. I am mad for one last look at my darling's
+face!"</p>
+
+<p>The grave-digger shuddered.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir, it is too late," he said. "Have you forgotten how
+soon death's touch blasts everything human? And the little babe&mdash;<i>that</i>
+was dead long before <i>she</i> was. I know you could not bear
+to see them now."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, hush!" the mourner cried, in a voice of agony. "I will
+hear no more. Go, now, and leave me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Cheer up, sir," said the man, with a strange gleam in his eyes,
+as he turned to go. "The Lord may have some blessing in store
+for you yet, sir."</p>
+
+<p>His only answer was a hollow groan from the wretched man.
+He threw himself face downward on the green grave, crushing
+all the sweet lilies and immortelles beneath his shuddering frame,
+and cried out to Heaven to kill him because he had blighted
+Golden's innocent life.</p>
+
+<p>He lay there an hour or two, musing sorrowfully over the hapless
+fate of his beautiful girl-bride.</p>
+
+<p>He recalled their brief, happy love-dream from which they had
+been so rudely awakened.</p>
+
+<p>Over and over again he cursed himself for that first impulse of
+pride and selfishness that had made him false to his bride in the
+hour when he should have protected and shielded her.</p>
+
+<p>A passionate, despairing longing to see her again filled his
+soul.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go back and wander by the lake again," he resolved, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+the madness of his despair. "It was there that we spent our
+sweetest, most blissful hours. In the calm and silence of the
+night I will dream them over again."</p>
+
+<p>He went to the lake, but the very spirit of unrest was upon
+him.</p>
+
+<p>The stars came forth and shone weirdly in the sky, the perfume
+of spring flowers sweetened the air. He grew restless and fanciful.</p>
+
+<p>Such a brief while ago she had stolen nightly from the haunted
+rooms to meet him here beside the silvery lake.</p>
+
+<p>It almost seemed that she would come to him presently, gliding
+like a fairy across the green lawn to the glad shelter of his
+arms.</p>
+
+<p>Some impulse prompted him to seek the haunted rooms, to spend
+an hour of solitary musing in their quiet shade.</p>
+
+<p>He knew of a retired stairway by which he could make his way
+unperceived, and following the blind fate that led him, he went
+up to the hall and up the narrow, secluded stairs which little
+Golden had shown him, and by which she had obtained egress to
+her lover.</p>
+
+<p>He went along the dark corridor with a strangely beating heart,
+and paused before the closed door of the haunted room.</p>
+
+<p>He placed his hand on the knob, but to his surprise it refused to
+yield to his touch.</p>
+
+<p>Disappointed, he was about turning away, when a heavy step
+crossed the floor inside, the key clicked in the lock, and the door
+was cautiously opened.</p>
+
+<p>A flood of light streamed out into the corridor, and showed
+Bertram Chesleigh the tall form, and dark, saturnine face of John
+Glenalvan.</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment of complete astonishment on the part of
+each of the two men.</p>
+
+<p>Both recoiled from each other in the first suddenness of the
+shock, and then an angry oath burst from John Glenalvan's
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought it was Elinor!"</p>
+
+<p>"Luckily you were mistaken," returned Mr. Chesleigh, quickly
+recovering his wits. "This <i>rencontre</i> is most opportune for me,
+sir. I have wished to see you."</p>
+
+<p>He stepped into the room as he spoke, and boldly confronted
+the villain, who glared at him with a mixture of defiance and dismay.</p>
+
+<p>"You wished to see me. I feel flattered," he said, with an attempt
+at cutting sarcasm. "May I ask why?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence while Bertram Chesleigh rapidly
+reviewed the situation in his mind. Then he spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"You may ask, and I may answer," he said. "Mr. Glenalvan,
+I might heap the bitterest reproach upon your head, if by so doing
+the cruel work of your life might be undone. But the past is
+past. My wife is dead, and no reproaches and no lamentations
+can bring her back to me. But there is one issue between you
+and me. I have taken up my dead wife's quest where she left it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+I demand that you shall tell me where to find my little Golden's
+deeply-wronged mother."</p>
+
+<p>The dark face before him whitened to the awful pallor of death,
+the man's eyes blazed luridly, his hands were clenched as they
+hung at his sides.</p>
+
+<p>"What if I refuse to answer your question?" he inquired, in a
+low, tense voice.</p>
+
+<p>"I will find means to force you to confession," Bertram Chesleigh
+replied, unhesitatingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I defy you to do so," John Glenalvan replied, with an imprecation.
+"I am not afraid of you."</p>
+
+<p>"You have caused my wife's death, and nearly murdered her
+father. I will have you arrested for it," exclaimed Mr. Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Do so, and I will prove that I only acted in self-defense," was
+the instant reply.</p>
+
+<p>"I will charge you with the murder or abduction of Golden
+Leith, your own sister," pursued Mr. Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"And I will swear before any court in the land that she is the
+inmate of a nameless house in New York," was the taunting answer
+of the villain.</p>
+
+<p>They gazed at each other a moment, then Bertram Chesleigh
+exclaimed, in wonder:</p>
+
+<p>"What a black and unnatural heart you must have, John Glenalvan.
+How can you thus malign the fair fame of your own
+sister?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do not call her my sister. I hated her, the blue-eyed, doll-faced
+creature. She stole the love of my parents from me. It
+was all lavished on her, there was none left for me. But I have
+had a most glorious revenge," he laughed, wickedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you have had a most terrible revenge," said Bertram
+Chesleigh, with a shudder. "You have blighted her life and that
+of her child. Four lives&mdash;perhaps five&mdash;have been ruined by your
+sin. Is it not time that vengeance should cease?"</p>
+
+<p>"No!" thundered John Glenalvan, harshly. "For sixteen
+years the taste of revenge has been sweet on my lips. It is sweet
+still."</p>
+
+<p>"And you will not speak?" asked Bertram Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" with triumphant malice.</p>
+
+<p>"I have one card yet to play," began the other, slowly.</p>
+
+<p>A light step suddenly crossed the threshold, and Elinor Glenalvan
+appeared in the room, bearing a waiter with a substantial
+supper arranged upon it.</p>
+
+<p>"Papa, were you growing impatient?" she asked; then her
+startled eyes fell on Bertram Chesleigh, meeting a glance of fiery
+scorn.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>You here</i>!" she gasped.</p>
+
+<p>The waiter fell from her nerveless hands, and its contents
+crashed upon the floor.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLVI" id="CHAPTER_XLVI">CHAPTER XLVI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"Yes, Miss Glenalvan, it is I," was the answer, as his burning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+eyes devoured her pale, frightened face. "Did you take me for
+a ghost?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I take you for a ghost?" she faltered, trembling,
+but trying to brave it out with an air of defiance.</p>
+
+<p>"Because you tried to murder me last night, and came very
+near succeeding," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"It is false. How dare you accuse me of such a crime?" she
+broke out, passionately, flying to her father's side, as if for protection.</p>
+
+<p>"How dare you?" echoed John Glenalvan, furiously.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh lifted his hand imperiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen," he said, "I told you I had one more card to play.
+Your fair daughter there attempted to poison me last night with
+drugged wine. The physician who saved my life declared that I
+had taken arsenic in a draught of wine. Do you see where you
+stand <i>now</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do not believe him, father; it is false!" cried Elinor, furiously;
+but John Glenalvan, turning to look into her wild, frightened
+face, read the signs of guilt too plainly to be mistaken.</p>
+
+<p>The sight forced a groan even from his hardened lips.</p>
+
+<p>"You see where you stand," repeated Bertram Chesleigh, with
+stern brevity. "How will you bear to see your cherished
+daughter dragged into court on such a dreadful charge?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will not dare do such a thing," Elinor flashed out, quivering
+with rage.</p>
+
+<p>"That will be as your father says," was the firm reply. "If it
+pleases him to reveal the secret of Golden Leith's fate, I'll spare
+you and him; if not, you need expect no mercy from me."</p>
+
+<p>The grim <i>ultimatum</i> was spoken. Elinor and her father knew
+by that flashing eye and stern-set lip that there was no appeal
+from the calmly-spoken decision.</p>
+
+<p>"Coward, to threaten a girl," she cried, taking refuge in vituperation
+now that denial had failed.</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Chesleigh regarded them in silent scorn, and her
+father sternly silenced her. He was furious with wrath, and it
+seemed to him that not even for his daughter's sake could he
+forego his dear revenge.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor," he said, with a dark frown, "if indeed you have done
+this thing you must prepare to face the consequences. I will not
+accede to his demand. Nothing shall balk me of my revenge."</p>
+
+<p>Abject terror and despair filled Elinor's soul at those threatening
+words. She knew too well how guilty she was. She was
+filled with terror at the too probable punishment of her wickedness.</p>
+
+<p>Falling on her knees, she caught her father's hand in hers,
+and bathed them with her frightened tears.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, father, do not sacrifice me to your revenge," she cried,
+wildly. "Remember that I am your own child. I should be
+dearer to you than your revenge. Oh! for mercy's sake, make
+terms with the wretch, and save me from his wicked vengeance."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Chesleigh did not even notice her. He stood with folded
+arms and curling lips awaiting his enemy's reply.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The sullen determination on John Glenalvan's face softened as
+she continued her anxious pleading.</p>
+
+<p>"Father, I cannot live if that wretched story becomes known,"
+she wailed. "If you do not save me I shall drown myself."</p>
+
+<p>A slight shudder convulsed his frame at the words. He
+looked down at the frightened, tear-wet face.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor," he said, "if I have to sacrifice my revenge for your
+sake, I shall hate you every moment of your future life."</p>
+
+<p>"Anything but exposure," she wailed. "Oh, father, save me."</p>
+
+<p>His dark brow lowered like a thunder cloud.</p>
+
+<p>"So be it," he said, "but, mark me, girl, I shall hate you forever
+after."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you will speak?" Bertram Chesleigh cried, gladly.</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan hesitated a moment, then answered, gloomily:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, to save that wretched girl I will reveal the secret that
+has been locked in my breast for sixteen years."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLVII" id="CHAPTER_XLVII">CHAPTER XLVII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence, then Bertram Chesleigh said,
+quickly:</p>
+
+<p>"Come with me, Mr. Glenalvan. Let the secret you have kept
+so long be revealed in the hearing of your father and Richard
+Leith."</p>
+
+<p>The guilty man recoiled from the demand. He said, hoarsely:</p>
+
+<p>"I refuse to do so. I will reveal it to you, and you may bear
+the news yourself to them."</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh considered the reply a moment, then answered,
+firmly.</p>
+
+<p>"I prefer that they should hear it from your own lips."</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan regarded him with furious eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You wish to humble me all you can," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so," replied Mr. Chesleigh. "But I consider that they
+have too decided a right to hear your confession, for me to exclude
+them from this momentous interview."</p>
+
+<p>The angry man regarded him silently a moment, then said,
+with a sigh of baffled rage:</p>
+
+<p>"So be it. I am not now in a position to dictate terms, and
+must obey your will. You swear to keep Elinor's secret if I do
+this thing?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Bertram answered.</p>
+
+<p>"I am ready to accompany you, then. Elinor," he turned a
+furious gaze on his daughter who was weeping nervously near
+the door; "go to your mother, now. Tell her that you have
+ruined all my plans, and that I forever curse the hour in which
+you were born."</p>
+
+<p>She turned away, casting one last look of fiery anger and hatred
+on the man she had tried to murder, and left the room.</p>
+
+<p>The two men went down together to Richard Leith's room.
+The lawyer was sitting up in an easy-chair, talking to old Hugh
+Glenalvan who occupied a chair near the window.</p>
+
+<p>They both looked up in surprise at the unexpected sight of John<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+Glenalvan, whom they had supposed to be far away in hiding
+somewhere.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram spoke at once, quietly:</p>
+
+<p>"You will pardon this late intrusion, Mr. Glenalvan. This
+gentleman has an important communication to make to you, and
+I ventured to bring him at once."</p>
+
+<p>"A communication?" faltered the old man, looking blankly at
+his son.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered Mr. Chesleigh, with the flush of joyful triumph
+on his handsome face. "He will solve for you the strange mystery
+of your daughter's disappearance, sixteen years ago."</p>
+
+<p>A cry came from Richard Leith's white lips. The old man
+echoed it feebly, as he rose and went to his son, but John waved
+him rudely back.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not come near me," he said, harshly; "I have always hated
+you because you loved my sister best."</p>
+
+<p>"I could not help it, John. She was more lovable than you,"
+the father faltered, feebly.</p>
+
+<p>"And so she stole your love from me and earned my hate. But
+I have had a great revenge," said the relentless wretch, grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, John, John!"</p>
+
+<p>The wailing cry came from the old man's lips; he looked at his
+son in surprise and horror.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, revenge," repeated John Glenalvan, seeming to take a
+malicious pride in his wickedness now that its revelation was
+forced upon him. "I hated her, and when my opportunity came,
+I seized upon it. I knew she was a wife, yet it was my hand
+that sent her that lying letter that made her leave her husband."</p>
+
+<p>"Devil!" Richard Leith muttered, making an effort to spring
+upon him, but Bertram Chesleigh held him back, and the villain
+who had so wronged him laughed mockingly.</p>
+
+<p>"She came home," he went on, after a minute, "came home,
+and her child was born. The following night came her mysterious
+disappearance which I accounted for by declaring that she
+had returned to her deceiver, unable to exist away from him."</p>
+
+<p>All eyes were fixed on his dark, demoniac face as he proceeded.
+Every heart hung trembling on his further words.</p>
+
+<p>At last the fearful mystery of little Golden's fate would be
+known to those who loved and mourned her.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah had stolen silently in, and sat crouching in a corner,
+her beady, black eyes fixed intently on the face of the man whom
+she had always distrusted.</p>
+
+<p>"Speak," Richard Leith thundered, almost mad with impatience.
+"Speak! You know she never came to me. Where is she
+now, my poor, wronged darling?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is she dead or living?" echoed the wronged woman's father.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>She is dead</i>!" John Glenalvan answered, coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"Dead!" they echoed, despairingly.</p>
+
+<p>"She has been dead these sixteen years," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Vile wretch, then you murdered her," cried Richard Leith,
+struggling frantically in Bertram Chesleigh's strong hold.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The villain laughed heartlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so," he replied. "I hated her, but I would not have risked
+hanging for her sake. It was no fault of mine that she came to
+her death so tragically."</p>
+
+<p>"Dead and buried these sixteen years," old Hugh moaned,
+wringing his feeble hands, and weeping as if the bereavement
+were but of yesterday. "John, tell me where to find my darling's
+grave."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>She lies in the bottom of the lake</i>!" he replied, and those who
+watched him saw him shudder and turn pale for the first time.</p>
+
+<p>"How came she there?" broke out Bertram Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"My sister was a somnambulist, Mr. Chesleigh. You will not
+deny that fact, father. She wandered from the house in her
+sleep, and walked deliberately into the lake."</p>
+
+<p>"You saw her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I was the only witness to the tragic deed," he replied,
+and again they saw a shudder shake his strong frame, and the
+chill dew beaded his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>"Devil, you lie! You pushed her in!" cried Richard Leith, wild
+with rage and grief.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you, John? Oh, tell me the truth," moaned his father.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I did not, as there is a Heaven that hears me. I hated
+Golden because you and my mother loved her best, and because
+half of your property would go to her, but the thought of murder
+had not entered my head. I was out late that night, and returning
+with my mind full of envious thoughts toward my sister, I
+saw her crossing the moonlighted lawn, and on coming nearer
+saw that she was asleep. Keeping near to her, I followed her
+down to the lake, and she walked on straight, without pause or
+backward glance, into the water."</p>
+
+<p>"And you put out no hand to save her&mdash;murderer!" cried Bertram
+Chesleigh, in terrific scorn.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not know what she would do until all was over," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"You might have saved her even then," Bertram Chesleigh
+said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I might, but I hated her, and the devil whispered to me
+that this was my opportunity, so I watched the water close over
+her head, and then I walked away," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my God, is de vengeance ob Hebben asleep dat such debbils
+roam de yerth?" wailed old Dinah.</p>
+
+<p>They echoed her cry. Surely the vengeance of Heaven slumbered
+that such demons walked the earth unsmitten.</p>
+
+<p>"Then temptation entered my soul," he continued. "I did not
+think it was right for Golden's child to inherit her share of the
+property when I needed it so much for my own growing family.
+So I fabricated that slander, and eventually forced my father to
+make over the remnant of the Glenalvans' possessions to me, and
+I transferred my hatred from Golden to her child. Now you know
+all."</p>
+
+<p>Old Hugh pointed to the door with a shaking finger.</p>
+
+<p>"Go, now, before I call down the terrible vengeance of God on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+your guilty head!" he cried. "Go, and leave me to weep for my
+murdered darling!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLVIII" id="CHAPTER_XLVIII">CHAPTER XLVIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>The next day men were set to work to drag the lake for Golden
+Leith's body.</p>
+
+<p>A poor, bleached skeleton, partially petrified by the action of
+the water, and therefore in a good state of preservation, was all
+they found.</p>
+
+<p>The broad, gold band of a wedding-ring still clung to the fleshless
+finger, and the name within was all that remained to assure
+them that this was she whom they sought&mdash;the hapless girl
+whose bright life had been blasted by a brother's sin, and whose
+name had been covered with ignominy and shame for sixteen
+years.</p>
+
+<p>They placed the precious remains in a coffin, and prepared to
+give them Christian burial the next day.</p>
+
+<p>All night and all day it stood on trestles in Hugh Glenalvan's
+sitting-room, with mourners at head and foot&mdash;the husband and
+father, so tragically bereaved of their darling, sat there dumb
+and tearless in their great affliction, and old Dinah stole in and
+out, with the corner of her apron pressed to her streaming eyes,
+her old black face convulsed with grief.</p>
+
+<p>Only a few days ago the daughter's coffin had stood there where
+the mother's rested now.</p>
+
+<p>Both her nurslings were gone, and the faithful, old creature's
+heart was almost broken.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout the night and day not a member of John Glenalvan's
+family was visible. The curtains remained drawn at the
+windows, the doors closed, there was no sign of life within the
+house.</p>
+
+<p>The time came when poor little Golden's remains were to be
+consigned to the kindly shelter of the grave.</p>
+
+<p>It was a beautiful evening about the first of March. The grass
+was blue with violets, the birds twittered softly in the orange and
+magnolia trees, the sun shone brightly as it slowly declined in
+the western sky; Dinah had been in and deposited some beautiful
+wreaths of flowers upon the bier.</p>
+
+<p>The friends who had loved the dead woman long ago had come
+to know her mournful fate at last, and had sent these sweet testimonials
+of their sympathy and grief.</p>
+
+<p>They were waiting in the graveyard to pay the last outward
+tokens of respect to the lost one, but they would not venture to
+the house to intrude on the privacy of the bereaved ones.</p>
+
+<p>So the gentle minister came and told them that they must bid
+a last farewell to the loved one, and Bertram Chesleigh stood
+ready to support the still feeble footsteps of Richard Leith with
+his strong young arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my daughter, my daughter, how cruelly God has afflicted
+me," moaned the bereaved father, laying his white head down
+upon the coffin-lid, while the first heavy tears splashed down his
+cheeks.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Do not arraign your Maker. Rather thank Him that your
+child has at last been proven pure and innocent," said the minister,
+to whom Golden's whole history was known.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God," Bertram Chesleigh uttered fervently, then, with
+a sigh that was almost a sob, he added: "Ah, if only my wife had
+lived to see this day!"</p>
+
+<p>"She lives&mdash;she is here!" said a low, clear voice in the doorway.</p>
+
+<p>All looked around, startled. Two figures were entering the
+room. Both were clothed in deep mourning.</p>
+
+<p>One was Gertrude Leith, pale and grave-looking, the other was
+alight, and deeply veiled. She clung to Mrs. Leith's arm tremblingly.
+They crossed the floor and stood by that long, dark,
+solemn object that occupied the center of the room. Mrs. Leith
+raised her companion's veil.</p>
+
+<p>All started and uttered a cry of incredulous surprise.</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden's daughter, pallid, beautiful, tearful, was standing
+there, looking at them across her mother's coffin.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God!" she said, in her sweet, clear voice, with a sound
+of tears in its sweetness. "Thank God, my mother was pure
+and innocent! The dream of my life-time is fulfilled at last."</p>
+
+<p>"Does the grave give up its dead?" they cried, and Bertram
+Chesleigh went to her side and touched her white hand, half-fearfully.</p>
+
+<p>"My wife," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your wife," she answered, lifting her violet eyes to his
+face with such deep reproach in their tragic depths, that he was
+awed into momentary silence.</p>
+
+<p>Then she turned from him, and went to her grandfather, who
+was gazing at her with dazed eyes full of grief and dread. She
+put her arms around his neck, and kissed his poor, withered
+cheek with her sweet, quivering lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, you must not take me for a ghost," she said. "It
+is your own little Golden come back to live and love you again.
+I was not dead, after all. Did I not tell you I could not die yet?
+But I cannot tell you all the story of my rescue from the grave
+now. Let us give all our thoughts to our martyred dead."</p>
+
+<p>She looked up and saw her father and old Dinah waiting to
+greet her.</p>
+
+<p>It was a strange scene beside that flower-wreathed coffin.</p>
+
+<p>There was passionate joy over the living girl, and bitter sorrow
+over the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith had beckoned Bertram Chesleigh away. Behind
+the heavy hangings of the bay-window she said to him, gently:</p>
+
+<p>"Do not press your wife yet, Mr. Chesleigh. Remember you
+have wronged her deeply, and she does not yet know how you
+have repented and atoned."</p>
+
+<p>"I can never atone," he said, heavily.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps she may think differently when she knows all,"
+said Mrs. Leith. "Women are very tender and forgiving, you
+know."</p>
+
+<p>"If she never speaks to me again, I shall still rejoice that she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+is living," he said, with a beam of gladness in his large, black
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you wonder how she was saved?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you, then, briefly," she answered. "You remember
+how you bribed the grave-digger to open her coffin for you
+that night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and then I was too ill to keep my appointment," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"That wild fancy of yours was the means of her rescue," said
+Mrs. Leith. "When the man opened the coffin to be in readiness
+for you, he discovered slight signs of life in Golden. Growing
+alarmed and impatient at your tardiness, he sent his son to look
+for you, and the youth encountered me. I went with him, and
+we removed her to the man's little cottage near by. Little by
+little we fed the signs of reviving life, and you see the result."</p>
+
+<p>"For which I bless and thank you forever," he said, kissing her
+hand respectfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I have but little more to say," she went on, smiling a little
+sadly, "and it is this: Golden is very weak and exhausted yet.
+She is not strong enough to bear the excitement of her mother's
+burial. I will remain here with her while they are bearing Mrs.
+Leith to the grave, and I will tell her your whole story. She shall
+hear how you came back here to seek her in two days after your
+ill-considered desertion of her, and found her gone. I will tell
+her how nobly you vindicated her honor beside her grave. She
+shall know that you forced John Glenalvan to reveal the hidden
+story of her mother's fate. When you come back I think she
+cannot fail to forgive you."</p>
+
+<p>"You will do all this for me?" he said, with a strange moisture
+in his eyes. "I cannot thank you sufficiently. You are an
+angel."</p>
+
+<p>"No, only a very faulty and sad-hearted woman," she replied,
+with a pensive sigh, and then they went back to the mourners.</p>
+
+<p>She kept her promise nobly. While they bore the poor remains
+of Richard Leith's first wife to the grave, his second wife sat with
+his daughter and tried to turn the swelling current of her grief
+by relating the story of Bertram Chesleigh's repentance and
+atonement.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden, if you could have heard his noble vindication of your
+honor beside your grave; how proudly he claimed you for his
+wife, and your child for his own, you could not fail to pity and
+forgive him for the one great error into which he was led by his
+own pride and John Glenalvan's evil counsel."</p>
+
+<p>"I have suffered so much through his fault," said the wronged
+wife, with mournful pathos.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear, but you must show your own nobility of soul now,"
+said the step-mother, gently. "You must remember:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"'To err is human,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To forgive divine.'"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The beautiful, pale face grew very grave and troubled.</p>
+
+<p>"If only I could forget his cruelty," she said. "Ah, my friend,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+I was hurt so cruelly by that letter he sent me! I trusted him so
+fully. I believed in his truth as I believed in my God. I was almost
+maddened by the suddenness of my sorrow. Every word is branded
+upon my memory. See! I can repeat every sentence:</p>
+
+<p>"'Though it almost kills me to forsake you, Golden, I must go
+away. The disgrace of your birth is so terrible that I can never
+claim you for my wife. Pride and honor alike forbid it. You
+must see for yourself, poor child, that your terrible misfortune
+has wholly set you apart from the world, and as you have sworn
+to keep our private marriage a secret until I give you leave to
+reveal it, I must beg you to hold the story unspoken in your
+breast forever.'"</p>
+
+<p>She paused and looked at Mrs. Leith with a whole tragedy of
+sorrow in her violet orbs.</p>
+
+<p>"Were they not cruel words to write to his own wife?" she
+said pathetically. "But I obeyed him. Through all the shame
+and sorrow that came afterward I kept my promise. Do you
+think I did not suffer more than death in keeping it? When Mrs.
+Desmond drove me out in such terrible disgrace do you think I
+did not long to say to her: I am as good and pure as you are; I
+am your brother's wife! And what did I not suffer when I knew
+she was separated from her husband on my account? Then
+when my own father disowned and despised me, how my heart
+ached to answer, I am Bertram Chesleigh's own wife! Oh, Gertrude,
+is it right and just that I should forgive him for all that I
+have suffered and made others suffer for his sake?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear, because his repentance was so quick and his remorse
+so deep," said the gentle monitor. "You must remember,
+Golden, that if you had not gone away that night you would
+have escaped all that suffering; your husband returned in twenty-four
+hours to claim you, and John Glenalvan told him that you
+had gone away with the deliberate intention of leading a sinful
+life. Do you wonder that it threw him on a bed of sickness that
+almost cost him his life? You must forgive him and love him
+again, dear, because he is so penitent and devoted now."</p>
+
+<p>And when the mourners returned from that sad funeral, Mrs.
+Leith sent him in to his wronged wife.</p>
+
+<p>He knelt down before the pale, golden-haired girl, and begged
+her to forgive him, not that he deserved it, but because he loved
+her so dearly.</p>
+
+<p>With the meek tenderness of woman, she forgave him and
+there was peace between them.</p>
+
+<p>Several hours later he had led her out to old Hugh Glenalvan
+who was dozing sadly in his easy-chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Glenalvan," he said, "you see my darling has risen from
+the grave to forgive me. Will you keep the promise you made,
+and forgive me too?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, grandpa, you must forgive him, for I love him dearly,"
+said little Golden.</p>
+
+<p>So the old man forgave him, and solemnly blessed them as they
+knelt before him, one withered hand resting kindly on the dark,
+bowed head, and the other on the golden one.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLIX" id="CHAPTER_XLIX">CHAPTER XLIX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Gertrude Leith having done what she could for the happiness
+of others, prepared to take her own departure.</p>
+
+<p>"You will not leave us, my dear, true friend, my second mother,"
+Golden exclaimed, as she came in veiled and bonneted, to bid
+her good-bye.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear, it will be better for a time, at least, that I should
+go away. I shall return north and go back to those quiet quarters
+in Brooklyn, where you and I spent those peaceful weeks before
+we came south. When you come to New York with your
+husband you will find me there."</p>
+
+<p>"I will certainly seek you out," Golden replied. "But surely
+you do not intend to forsake my father. The doubt and perplexity
+are all over now. You know that you are legally his wife, my
+own mother being dead before he ever knew you."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I know, dear," she answered, gently. "Yet it is best I
+should go away for a time. Your father must have time for his
+grief. After awhile, if he desires it, I may return to him."</p>
+
+<p>Her words were too full of wisdom for anyone to gainsay them,
+so she went away.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith's grief and remorse over his lost little Golden was
+as deep and passionate as if she had died yesterday instead of more
+than sixteen years ago.</p>
+
+<p>He was too sorrowful to remember the fair woman he had put
+in the dead wife's place in the vain hope of stilling the fever
+and pain that had ached ceaselessly at his heart for sixteen
+years.</p>
+
+<p>The time came later on when the first wife's memory became a
+sweet and chastened dream to him, and his second wife's new
+loveliness of character won its place in his heart.</p>
+
+<p>Some years of quiet happiness and mutual love came to them
+after they learned to know each other better, but there was no
+year in which Richard Leith did not return south once, at least,
+to spend a few solemn hours by the low grave under the whispering
+cedars and broad-leaved magnolias, where the broken marble
+shaft bore the fond inscription:</p>
+
+<p class="center medium">"IN LOVING MEMORY OF GOLDEN,</p>
+<p class="center small">WIFE OF RICHARD LEITH."</p>
+
+<p>There was one other to whom that green grave became like a
+shrine, a holy Mecca, to which his poor, faltering footsteps were
+daily bent.</p>
+
+<p>It was old Hugh Glenalvan, whom old Dinah daily guided to
+the sacred spot, where he would sit for hours, his gray locks fluttering
+in the gentle breeze, meditating, or perhaps holding spirit
+communion with the sainted dead.</p>
+
+<p>It was discovered on the day of Golden Leith's burial that John
+Glenalvan and his whole family had secretly left the house the
+night previous.</p>
+
+<p>A week later a letter came from the villain to Bertram Chesleigh,
+offering to sell Glenalvan Hall on fair terms, and stating
+that he should never live in the south again.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A bargain was closed at once, and Bertram Chesleigh became
+the possessor of the old hall, which was speedily repaired and remodeled
+under the supervision of himself and his lovely young
+wife.</p>
+
+<p>Before the work was completed a chance newspaper chronicled
+the fact of a distressing railway accident and among the list of
+killed appeared the name of John Glenalvan.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram and Golden destroyed the newspaper, and old Hugh
+never knew that his wicked son had gone suddenly and without
+preparation into the presence of his august Maker.</p>
+
+<p>The old man's life flowed on in sweet serenity. All his happiness
+was centered in the living Golden, and beside the grave of
+the dead one.</p>
+
+<p>While he lived, Golden and her husband made their home at
+Glenalvan Hall, but after several years of quiet peace the white
+soul of the noble old man took on the wings of immortality, and
+soared to its Heavenly home through the open gates of the sunset.</p>
+
+<p>They made him a grave by his daughter's side, and when the
+grass was growing green upon his grave they took old Dinah
+with them and turned their faces northward.</p>
+
+<p>Black mammy had become reconciled to Mr. Chesleigh when
+she saw how happy he made her little missie. Her kind and
+wrinkled old visage reflected the radiant happiness that shone on
+Golden's beautiful face.</p>
+
+<p>She waited on her kindly and devotedly as ever, declaring that
+no starched-up French maid should ever take her place while she
+lived, and Golden, with a shuddering remembrance of the wicked
+Celine's treachery, always assured her "old mammy" that she
+need never fear such an intruder on her privileges.</p>
+
+<p>The day came when one of the most beautiful and palatial
+homes in New York opened wide its doors to receive Bertram
+Chesleigh's fair wife as its honored mistress.</p>
+
+<p>Though Golden had seen some of the stately homes of New
+York she was astonished at the luxury and magnificence of her
+own.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Chesleigh smiled indulgently at her pretty, childish delight
+as he led her through suite after suite of the sumptuous, luxurious
+apartments the day after their arrival.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad you are so pleased with your new home," he said,
+"but now, my darling, you must run away and let black mammy
+dress you. I have invited a few guests to dinner."</p>
+
+<p>"Strangers?" she asked, with a shy pretty blush on the exquisite
+face that was fresh and sweet as a rosebud with only that
+pensive droop of the golden-brown lashes to hint at the sorrow
+through which she had passed.</p>
+
+<p>"Not exactly,'" he replied with a smile. "Lawyer Leith and
+his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Desmond, and little Ruby. I think you
+will be glad to see her, though she must have tyrannized over
+you dreadfully in the old days."</p>
+
+<p>"A dear little tyrant she was," laughed Mrs. Chesleigh. "I
+shall be very pleased to see her again."</p>
+
+<p>She went to her dressing-room, and a loving remembrance of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+some things the child had said to her once, caused her to choose
+a lovely dress of white and blue, with large, gleaming white pearls
+for her neck and wrists, and knots of fragrance-breathing violets
+fastened among her creamy laces.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram uttered a cry of delight when she came to him in the
+drawing-room in the beautiful dress with the golden curls framing
+the perfect face in a halo of light.</p>
+
+<p>She looked beyond him and saw her father and his wife gazing
+at her with eyes full of love and wonder, and she sprang joyfully
+to their embrace.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith released her after some low-murmured words of
+love and praise, and she saw her husband's sister by her side.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond had grown more brilliantly lovely than ever.
+Happiness and contentment had lent new radiance to the lovely
+face, but there was a wistful air, almost amounting to humility,
+about her as she extended her jeweled hand, and said, sweetly:</p>
+
+<p>"My dear little sister, can you ever forgive me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Freely," she said, clasping the offered hand, and proffering
+the kiss of peace.</p>
+
+<p>"And me, too&mdash;I am deeply repentant," said a low voice beside
+Mrs. Desmond, and looking up, Golden saw Mr. Desmond, debonairly
+handsome as ever, but so humble and ashamed that even a
+harder heart than our little Golden's must have pardoned his
+folly.</p>
+
+<p>Then Ruby took possession of her and gave her a bear-like hug.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you darling," she cried, "I have missed you so much, and
+to think you were Uncle Bert's wife all the while. It is just like
+one of mamma's novels that she is always reading. I warn you,
+Uncle Bert, that I shall make you jealous, I shall stay with her
+so much. And I do so want to see that dear old black mammy
+I have heard about."</p>
+
+<p>Her childish curiosity was gratified, and the New York child,
+after her first surprise, grew very fond of the good-natured, old
+negress who had been Golden's nurse from babyhood up.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not have a nurse any more," she confided to Golden.
+"They have hired a governess for me, and I like to study. It
+improves my temper."</p>
+
+<p>"Which was never very bad," smiled Golden, kissing the pretty
+little brunette.</p>
+
+<p>"When you go into society you will be surprised to meet Elinor
+Glenalvan again," Mrs. Desmond said to her after awhile. "She
+has picked up a rich, old man somewhere, and is Mrs. Langley
+now. Six months ago she burst upon society in a blaze of glory,
+and at present she is considered the handsomest woman in New
+York. But her star will fade when you are introduced to the social
+world."</p>
+
+<p>Soon afterward the two cousins met at a brilliant reception.
+Both looked their best, Elinor in Ruby velvet and diamonds,
+Golden in misty, white lace and pearls, Elinor just touched with
+the tips of her fingers the arm of her decrepit old spouse, Golden
+clung lovingly to her princely-looking and devoted husband. As
+they passed each other Mrs. Langley cast one look of bitter hatred
+and envy upon her fair, angelic-looking rival.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was as Mrs. Desmond had predicted. Elinor's star paled before
+the superior loveliness of Golden, and in bitter anger and
+chagrin, the eclipsed beauty retired from the field, and removed
+to a distant city, where she was seen and heard of no more by
+those who had formerly known her.</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden was glad when her enemy was gone, but she felt
+no vanity over her brilliant social successes. Her chief joy
+and pride was that she reigned queen over her husband's adoring
+heart.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Transcribers_Notes" id="Transcribers_Notes">Transcriber's Note:</a></h2>
+
+<p>This story was originally serialized in the <i>Family Story Paper</i>,
+where it ran from June 5, 1882 to September 4, 1882. This e-text is derived from
+a later reprint as No. 218 in <i>The Favorite Library</i> published by The American
+News Company. The reprint edition also included two filler short stories:
+"A Mock Idyl" by Percy Ross and "Farewell" by W. H. Stacpoole. The filler stories
+are not included here.</p>
+
+<p>A table of contents was added for the convenience of the reader.</p>
+
+<p>Some inconsistent punctuation was retained (e.g. "Life Time" vs.
+"Life-Time" in title; "upturned" vs. "up-turned").</p>
+
+<p>Some inconsistently italicized text was retained (e.g. "rencontre").</p>
+
+<p>Some unusual spellings were retained (e.g. "exhult," "ballustrade").</p>
+
+<p>Accent marks to match original were omitted (e.g. "protege").</p>
+
+<p>Page 3, changed "herelf" to "herself."</p>
+
+<p>Page 4, changed "to hasty" to "too hasty."</p>
+
+<p>Page 6, added missing quote before "Oh, grandpa."</p>
+
+<p>Page 13, changed "strangly" to "strangely."</p>
+
+<p>Page 17, changed "recounter" to "rencontre."</p>
+
+<p>Page 22, changed "neverspeak" to "never speak."</p>
+
+<p>Page 24, changed "aughs" to "laughs."</p>
+
+<p>Page 27, added comma after "Oh, my darlin'."</p>
+
+<p>Page 29, changed "founding" to "foundling" and changed ? to ! after
+"the girl is my niece."</p>
+
+<p>Page 31, changed "furthur intercouse" to "further intercourse."</p>
+
+<p>Page 37, changed "matin" to "mating."</p>
+
+<p>Page 38, added missing quote after "Jest wait one minute, darlin'."</p>
+
+<p>Page 42, changed "struggled" to "straggled."</p>
+
+<p>Page 48, changed "greatsest" to "greatest."</p>
+
+<p>Page 54, added missing quote before "He likes pretty faces."</p>
+
+<p>Page 55, changed "flirted" to "flitted."</p>
+
+<p>Page 56, changed "you hair" to "your hair."</p>
+
+<p>Page 60, changed "must not thing" to "must not think."</p>
+
+<p>Page 61, changed "significent" to "significant."</p>
+
+<p>Page 66, changed "thoughfully" to "thoughtfully."</p>
+
+<p>Page 75, removed extra "the" from "It is the the truth."</p>
+
+<p>Page 80, changed "Your know" to "You know" and "father as" to "father
+has."</p>
+
+<p>Page 83, changed "distress" to "mistress."</p>
+
+<p>Page 84, changed ? to ! in "you are mistaken!"</p>
+
+<p>Page 85, added missing quote before "Go, and take."</p>
+
+<p>Page 87, changed "her her husband" to "her husband."</p>
+
+<p>Page 91, changed "idendity" to "identity," "Lieth" to "Leith,"
+"Bestram" to "Bertram," "maked" to "marked" and "cousse" to "course."</p>
+
+<p>Page 97, changed "cempetence" to "competence."</p>
+
+<p>Page 101, changed "gazedw onderingly" to "gazed wonderingly."</p>
+
+<p>Page 102, changed "perference" to "preference," "you wife" to "your wife,"
+and "guilty of his" to "guilty of this."</p>
+
+<p>Page 104, changed "delerious" to "delirious."</p>
+
+<p>Page 106, added missing open quote before "I wonder how."</p>
+
+<p>Page 107, changed "bess" to "bless."</p>
+
+<p>Page 110, changed "prostate" to "prostrate."</p>
+
+<p>Page 111, added missing quote before "I <i>know</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Page 112, changed "Lieth's" to "Leith's," "Lieth" to "Leith"
+and "idict" to "indict."</p>
+
+<p>Page 113, changed "as last" to "at last."</p>
+
+<p>Page 116, adding missing comma after "for God's sake" and
+changed "unable so bear" to "unable to bear."</p>
+
+<p>Page 117, added missing quote after "seen her even once."</p>
+
+<p>Page 118, changed "requim" to "requiem."</p>
+
+<p>Page 120, added missing quote after "absent for several days."</p>
+
+<p>Page 124, changed "Lieth" and "Keith" to "Leith."</p>
+
+<p>Page 127, changed "queit" to "quiet."</p>
+
+<p>Page 128, changed "No?" to "No!"</p>
+
+<p>Page 129, changed "belive" to "believe."</p>
+
+<p>Page 130, changed "hated" to "hatred."</p>
+
+<p>Page 139, changed "uncle Bert" to "Uncle Bert."</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44803 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+<body>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Little Golden's Daughter, by Mrs. Alex.
+McVeigh Miller</h1>
+<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a
+href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></p>
+<p>Title: Little Golden's Daughter</p>
+<p> or, The Dream of a Life Time</p>
+<p>Author: Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller</p>
+<p>Release Date: January 30, 2014 [eBook #44803]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LITTLE GOLDEN'S DAUGHTER***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h4>E-text prepared by Demian Katz<br />
+ and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
+ from page images generously made available by the<br />
+ Digital Library of the Falvey Memorial Library,<br />
+ Villanova University<br />
+ (<a href="http://digital.library.villanova.edu">http://digital.library.villanova.edu</a></h4>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ Note:
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ Images of the original pages are available through the
+ Digital Library of the Falvey Memorial Library,
+ Villanova University. See
+ <a href="http://digital.library.villanova.edu/Item/vudl:322376">
+ http://digital.library.villanova.edu/Item/vudl:322376</a><br />
+ <br />
+ Click on the book cover image to see an enlarged version.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 392px;">
+<a href="images/coverlarge.jpg"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="392" height="600" alt="Cover" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<p class="center">
+
+<a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XL">CHAPTER XL.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLI">CHAPTER XLI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLII">CHAPTER XLII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLIII">CHAPTER XLIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLIV">CHAPTER XLIV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLV">CHAPTER XLV.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLVI">CHAPTER XLVI.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLVII">CHAPTER XLVII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLVIII">CHAPTER XLVIII.</a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLIX">CHAPTER XLIX.</a><br />
+
+</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<h1>Little Golden's Daughter</h1>
+<p class="p4 small center">OR</p>
+<p class="p2 large center">The Dream of a Life Time</p>
+<p class="p6 tiny center">BY</p>
+<p class="medium center">MRS. ALEX. McVEIGH MILLER</p>
+<p class="tiny center">AUTHOR OF</p>
+<p class="center">"Little Coquette Bonnie," "The Senator's Bride," "Brunette and<br />
+Blonde," etc.</p>
+<p class="p6 center">NEW YORK<br />
+<span class="medium">THE AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY</span><br />
+<span class="small">PUBLISHERS' AGENTS</span><br />
+39-41 CHAMBERS STREET<br />
+</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center">
+Copyright, 1883,<br />
+NORMAN L. MUNRO.</p>
+<hr class="r5" />
+<p class="center">
+Copyright 1901,<br />
+By STREET &amp; SMITH</p>
+<hr class="r5" />
+<p class="center">
+Little Golden's Daughter</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="LITTLE_GOLDENS_DAUGHTER" id="LITTLE_GOLDENS_DAUGHTER">LITTLE GOLDEN'S DAUGHTER;</a></h2>
+
+<p class="center">OR,</p>
+
+<p class="center large"><i>The Dream of Her Life-Time</i>.</p>
+
+<hr class="r5" />
+
+<p class="center medium">By MRS. ALEX. McVEIGH MILLER.</p>
+
+<hr class="r5" />
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Beautiful Golden Glenalvan stood by the willow-bordered lake
+and looked into its azure depths with a dreamy light in her pansy-blue
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>She had been singing as she danced along the sunny path, but
+the sweet song died on the coral lips as she came to the little lake
+with its green fringe of willows and the white lilies sleeping on
+its breast.</p>
+
+<p>The wind as it sighed through the trees, and the low, soft ripple
+of the water, always sounded sad to Golden.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to her vivid fancy that the wind and the waves were
+trying to tell her some sad story in a language she could not understand.</p>
+
+<p>She was unconsciously saddened whenever she came to its
+banks and listened to the low, soft murmur.</p>
+
+<p>It had a tragic story to tell her, indeed, but its language was
+too mysterious for her to understand. Some day she would
+know.</p>
+
+<p>The afternoon sunshine threw the long, slanting shadows of
+old Glenalvan Hall far across the level greensward almost to the
+border of the lake.</p>
+
+<p>It had once been a fine and stately mansion, picturesque and
+pretentious, with many peaks and gables and oriel windows. But
+its ancient glory had long departed.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed little more than a picturesque, ivy-covered ruin now.
+But there still remained in one wing a few habitable apartments
+that were fine and large, and lofty.</p>
+
+<p>Here the last of the Glenalvans&mdash;once a proud and wealthy race&mdash;dwelt
+in respectable, shabby-genteel poverty.</p>
+
+<p>But poverty did not seem to have hurt lovely little Golden
+Glenalvan.</p>
+
+<p>She had a wealth of beauty, and a happy heart that made her
+seem like a gleam of sunshine in the home she brightened. She
+was a careless, willful child not yet sixteen.</p>
+
+<p>The plain, simple, blue gingham dress was worn quite short,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
+yet, the beautiful, golden tresses fell to her waist in long, loose,
+childish ringlets.</p>
+
+<p>Free and careless as the birds, she roamed at will through the
+wild, neglected park and the green woods that lay around her
+ancestral home.</p>
+
+<p>The dwellers in Glenalvan Hall were divided into two families.
+In the best and most habitable part, John Glenalvan lived with
+his wife and family, consisting of two daughters and a son. In
+a few battered rooms in the tumble-down wing, John Glenalvan's
+father, an old and hoary-headed man, kept house with his pretty
+little granddaughter, Golden, and one old black servant called
+Dinah.</p>
+
+<p>We have digressed a little from Golden as she stands beside
+the lake, swinging her wide, straw hat by its blue ribbons. Let
+us return.</p>
+
+<p>The little maiden is communing with herself. Quite unconsciously
+she speaks her thoughts aloud:</p>
+
+<p>"Old Dinah says that Elinor and Clare will give a little party
+to-night in honor of their brother's wealthy friend, who is to come
+on a visit to him to-day. How I wish they would invite me. I
+should like to go."</p>
+
+<p>"Should you now, really?" said a slightly sarcastic voice close
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up, and saw her cousin, Elinor coming along the
+path toward her.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor Glenalvan was a tall and queenly beauty of the most
+pronounced brunette type. She had large, black eyes that
+sparkled like diamonds, and glossy, black hair braided into a
+coronet on the top of her haughty head.</p>
+
+<p>Her features were well-cut and regular, her skin a clear olive,
+her cheeks and lips were a rich, glowing crimson. She was
+twenty-one years old, and her sister Clare, who walked by her
+side, was nineteen.</p>
+
+<p>Clare Glenalvan was a weak, vain, pretty girl, but with no
+such decided claim to beauty as Elinor. Her hair and eyes were
+not as dark as her sister's, her cheeks and lips were less rosy.
+She had a mincing, affected air, but was considered stylish and
+elegant.</p>
+
+<p>Both girls were attired in the best their father could afford
+from his very limited income, and their little cousin's simple blue
+gingham looked plain indeed by contrast with their cool, polka-dotted
+lawns, and lace ruffles.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor carried a small basket on her arm. They had come to
+the lake for water-lilies to decorate the rooms for the party of
+which they had caught Golden talking aloud.</p>
+
+<p>The little girl blushed at her dilemma a moment, then she
+faced the occasion bravely.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not know that you could hear me, Elinor," she said, lifting
+her beautiful, frank, blue eyes to her cousin's face, "but it is
+true. I should like to come to your party. You have invited
+grandpa's old servant to come and help with the supper, and she
+will go. Why do you not ask grandpa and me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa is too old to come, and you are too young," replied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+Elinor, with a careless, flippant laugh, while Clare stared at
+Golden, and murmured audibly:</p>
+
+<p>"The bold, little thing."</p>
+
+<p>Golden revolved her cousin's reply a moment in her mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, perhaps he is too old," she said, with a little sigh, "and
+yet I think he might enjoy seeing the young people amusing
+themselves. But as for me, Elinor, I know I am not too young!
+Minnie Edwards is coming, I have heard, and she is a month
+younger than I am! The only difference is that <i>she</i> puts up her
+hair, and wears long dresses. I would wear long dresses, too,
+only I do not believe grandpa could afford it. It would take
+several yards more for a trail, or even to touch all around."</p>
+
+<p>Clare and Elinor laughed heartlessly at the wistful calculation
+of the difference between short and long dresses. Then the elder
+sister said, abruptly:</p>
+
+<p>"It is a great pity grandpa cannot keep you a little girl in short
+dresses forever, Golden! You will not find it very pleasant to be
+a woman."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" said innocent Golden. "Are not women happy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Some are," said Elinor, "but I do not think <i>you</i> will ever
+be."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" asked the girl again.</p>
+
+<p>The two sisters exchanged significant glances that did not
+escape Golden's keen eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor, why do you and Clare look at each other so hatefully?"
+she cried out in sudden resentment and childish passion.
+"What is the matter? What have I done?"</p>
+
+<p>"You have done nothing except to be born," said Clare Glenalvan,
+irritably, "and under the circumstances, <i>that</i> is the worst
+thing you <i>could have</i> done."</p>
+
+<p>Was it only the fancy of beautiful Golden, or did the wind in
+the trees and grasses sigh mournfully, and the blue waves go
+lapsing past with a sadder tone?</p>
+
+<p>"Clare, I don't know what you mean," she cried, half-angrily.
+"I never harmed anyone in my life! I have not hurt anyone by
+being born, have I?"</p>
+
+<p>The sisters looked at the beautiful, half-defiant face with its
+rose flushed cheeks and flashing, violet eyes, and Elinor sneered
+rudely, while Clare answered in a sharp, complaining voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you have hurt every soul that bears the name of Glenalvan&mdash;the
+dead Glenalvans as well as the living ones. You are
+a living disgrace to the proud, old name that your mother was
+the first to disgrace!"</p>
+
+<p>Then she paused, a little frightened, for Golden had started so
+violently that she had almost fallen backward into the lake.</p>
+
+<p>She steadied herself by catching the branch of a bending willow,
+and looked at her cousin with death-white lips and cheeks,
+and scornful eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Clare, you are a cruel, wicked girl," she cried. "I will go
+and tell grandpa what terrible things you have said of me! I did
+not believe one word!"</p>
+
+<p>The tears of wounded pride were streaming down her cheeks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+as she sped along the path and across the green lawn up to the
+old hall. The sisters looked at each other, a little disconcerted.</p>
+
+<p>"Clare, you were too hasty," said Elinor, uneasily. "Grandpa
+will be very angry."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Little Golden sped across the green lawn, her young heart
+full of pain and anger at the cruel words her cousins had spoken
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>Flying through the long, dark corridor of the old hall, and passing
+through several lofty and empty old rooms, she emerged at
+last in the sunny bay-window where her grandfather dozed daily,
+surrounded by pots of fragrant roses and geraniums.</p>
+
+<p>But with the breathless words of complaint just parting her
+coral lips, Golden saw that the old arm-chair was vacant.</p>
+
+<p>She was surprised and a little dismayed; she had been so sure
+of finding him there.</p>
+
+<p>She turned round and ran out to the sunny kitchen in the back
+yard, where old Dinah stood at a table ironing some simple white
+garments for her young mistress, and crooning to herself a fragment
+of a negro revival tune.</p>
+
+<p>The only nurse and the best friend that Golden had ever
+known after her grandfather, was homely, warm-hearted, black
+Dinah.</p>
+
+<p>Golden loved the old negress dearly. Ever since she had first
+lisped her name, the girl had familiarly called her "black
+mammy," after the fashion of most southern children with their
+nurses.</p>
+
+<p>Now she called out quickly before she had reached the kitchen
+door.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, black mammy, where is grandpa?"</p>
+
+<p>Black mammy turned with such a start that she dropped the
+flat-iron she was wielding with such consummate skill.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! honey, chile, how you skeered me," she cried, "an' I've
+dropped de flat-iron, and e'enamost burnt my black toes off!
+What for did ye come callin' me so suddent?"</p>
+
+<p>"Where is grandpa?" repeated the child.</p>
+
+<p>She came up to the door and looked at Dinah, and the old woman
+saw how pale she was, and what a strange light gleamed
+in the violet eyes under their long, curling lashes of golden-brown.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, dearie, don't be afeard because de old man ain't a-nid-noddin'
+in his arm-cheer as usual. He's out a-walkin' wif his
+son."</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle John?" asked little Golden, with a wondering look.</p>
+
+<p>"Who else, honey?" said Dinah, as she vigorously rubbed a
+fresh iron with salt and beeswax.</p>
+
+<p>"It is so strange," said Golden, momentarily diverted from her
+immediate grievance by Dinah's news. "Uncle John comes so
+seldom. What did he want, black mammy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Want? De debbil, his best friend, knows better dan your
+poor ole black mammy," said Dinah, shaking her head. "All I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+know is dat he come looking black as a thunder-cloud, and ax ole
+massa to take a walk with him."</p>
+
+<p>"And he went?" said Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! yes, he went, pore ole soul, a-hobblin' off as sweet as a
+lamb with that snake in the grass!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! black mammy, grandpa would not like you to speak that
+way of his son," cried Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"I axes your pardon, honey. I spoke my mind afore I
+thought," answered Dinah.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no offense as far as I am concerned," replied her
+young mistress, readily. "There is no love lost between my uncle
+and me."</p>
+
+<p>Then she added, with a shade of anxiety in her voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Will they be long gone, do you think?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hasn't the leastest idea," said busy Dinah, "but ole massa
+is too feeble to walk very fur."</p>
+
+<p>Golden turned away silently, and went to her grandfather's
+nook in the bay-window to await his return. She was burning
+with impatience to tell him the cruel and unkind things her
+cousins had said to her, and to ask if they were true.</p>
+
+<p>She sat down in the old arm-chair, among the blossoming flowers,
+herself the fairest flower of all, and leaning her dimpled
+cheek on her hand, relapsed into troubled thought.</p>
+
+<p>The strange relations sustained by her grandfather and herself
+toward his son's family puzzled her as it had often done before.
+Living in the same house, and nearly related as they were, there
+was little or no intercourse between the two families and they
+were barely friendly.</p>
+
+<p>Ever since Golden could remember, it had been so. She had
+questioned her grandfather and she had questioned Dinah, but
+they gave her no satisfaction on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>It remained a pregnant mystery to the lonely child, living her
+thoughtless, girlish life in the ruined rooms of the western wing,
+and in the tangled gardens, and the wild, green wood.</p>
+
+<p>A brief time of impatient waiting, then Golden heard the murmur
+of voices beneath the window.</p>
+
+<p>She leaned her curly head out, and heard one sentence spoken in
+the clear, curt voice of John Glenalvan:</p>
+
+<p>"You understand now, father, how important it is to us that
+you should keep Golden's daughter more carefully secluded?"</p>
+
+<p>"The child will fret&mdash;she has been so used to an outdoor life,
+it will injure her health," feebly objected the old man.</p>
+
+<p>"Her health is the poorest objection you could urge with me,"
+said John Glenalvan, cruelly. "If she had died long ago it
+would have been the very best thing that could have happened
+for us all."</p>
+
+<p>The father's reply was lost in the distance as they passed on.
+They came in at the front door, passed down the long corridor,
+and separated to their divided abodes.</p>
+
+<p>Golden's grandfather came heavily into the quiet sitting-room,
+leaning on his oaken cane, and sought his favorite chair at the
+sunny window where the flowers bloomed and the bright-winged
+butterflies hovered.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He was not prepared to see Golden start up from the chair with
+a white face, and wild, frightened, blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p>She clutched his arms and leaned against him. He felt her
+frightened heart-beats plainly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, grandpa, grandpa," she wailed, "what is the matter with
+everyone? What have I done that some wish me dead and others
+are sorry that ever I was born?"</p>
+
+<p>She felt the tremulous lips of the old man pressed fondly on her
+drooping head, she heard a sorrowful murmur:</p>
+
+<p>"Poor little Golden's daughter," then he said aloud:</p>
+
+<p>"My darling, who has been saying such cruel things to you?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is Clare and Elinor, and Uncle John," she sobbed. "They&mdash;the
+girls, I mean, now&mdash;said the worst thing I could have done
+was to be born; and that my mother was the first to disgrace the
+name of Glenalvan. And, grandpa, I heard what Uncle John
+said when he passed under the window. He said if I had died
+long ago it must have been better for all."</p>
+
+<p>Old Hugh Glenalvan's kindly blue eyes were flashing fire. He
+held the quivering little form against his breast with loving arms,
+and his outraged old heart beat fast against the girl's.</p>
+
+<p>But he could not answer her. Indignant pain and grief kept
+him dumb.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, tell me what I have done to be hated by my kind,"
+she sobbed. "Am I deformed? Am I repulsive to look at?"</p>
+
+<p>"My darling, you are as perfect and as beautiful as an angel,"
+he answered, fondly kissing the fair, innocent brow.</p>
+
+<p>"Why do they hate me, then?" she wailed. "I would love
+them all if they would let me."</p>
+
+<p>"They are cruel and heartless. If they were not, they could
+not help but love you, my Golden," said the old man, bitterly.
+Then he sat down and drew her to a seat upon his knee.</p>
+
+<p>"Think no more of them, my darling," he said, brushing away
+the shining pearls of grief that hung trembling on her thick lashes.
+"They are cruel and unjust to you. Keep away from their presence
+and forget that the same strain of blood flows in your veins.
+Look upon them as aliens and strangers. Give all your love to
+me."</p>
+
+<p>She hid her sweet face against his shoulder, her breast heaving
+with the sobs that she could not repress.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a heart full of love," she sighed, "and it is all your
+own, dear grandpa. But tell me, oh, tell me of my mother! Can
+it be true? She did not, oh, she could not disgrace our proud old
+name."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, Golden, you torture me," the old man said, hoarsely.
+"There is a mystery surrounding you, my little one. Your
+history is a sad one. But you shall never know it if I can keep
+the blighting secret from your knowledge. Ask me no more, my
+darling. Dismiss it from your thoughts. You have always been
+happy heretofore. Be happy still. You are innocent, pure and
+beautiful. There is no reason why you should not have a quiet,
+happy life if you will keep away from those who wound you with
+their cruel words, and cling closely to your simple, peaceful
+home."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Her wild sobs had ceased. She was looking earnestly into his
+face, while long, low sighs quivered over her lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, listen to me, Golden," he said. "Your uncle has made
+a hard request of me, darling, but I have promised that it shall be
+done. Golden, will you trust me, and help me to keep my
+word?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is it about me?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear. You know the three upper chambers which foolish
+people believe to be haunted, Golden?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said, and he saw a slight quiver pass over the delicate
+lips, and her face grew pale.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course you know that is all nonsense, little one," he said,
+reassuringly. "There are no ghosts in Glenalvan Hall. It is only
+foolish and superstitious people who believe that silly tale. Golden,
+would you be willing to remain secluded in those haunted
+rooms for one week, or for whatever number of days John Glenalvan's
+expected guest shall remain?"</p>
+
+<p>The breath came a little faster over the beautiful, parted lips.</p>
+
+<p>"I am almost afraid," she sighed. "Oh, grandpa, why should
+they wish to hide me away like a criminal? I have done nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"I know that, dear. It is a heartless whim of those heartless
+people. They do not wish their guest to see you, or even to
+know of your existence. Do not mind them, pet. Perhaps they
+are jealous and fear that he might fall in love with you. That
+would never do, because they mean to marry him to Elinor and
+prop the fallen fortunes of the Glenalvans. You will humor their
+fancy, won't you, Golden?"</p>
+
+<p>The pansy-blue eyes flashed with resentful fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I humor them?" she cried. "They are hard and
+cold to me. Why should I shut myself up in prison, away from
+the sunshine, and the flowers and the birds in those gloomy,
+haunted chambers for their sake?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is for <i>my</i> sake, darling," he replied. "I have promised
+them that you will do it for me. Will you not do so, Golden?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid of the haunted rooms, grandpa," said the child,
+with a shiver.</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the daylight I hope," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"No, not in the daytime," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Old Dinah could sleep in your room at night, Golden. So, you
+see, there could be nothing to fear. My little darling, I have
+loved you and cared for you all your life, and I have never asked
+you for a sacrifice before. Will you make this concession for my
+sake?"</p>
+
+<p>The beautiful girl clasped her white arms round his neck, and
+kissed his withered cheek.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot refuse if it is for your sake, grandpa," she said.
+"You have been father, mother, friends and home to me all my
+life! I have had no one but you, grandpa, and I love you too
+dearly to grieve you. I will do as you wish me."</p>
+
+<p>He kissed her and thanked her many times.</p>
+
+<p>"You must believe that it hurts me as much as it does you, my
+pet," he said, "but it will not be for long&mdash;and John is so violent,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+I had to promise for the sake of peace. I hope you will never regret
+this sweet yielding to my will."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure I shall not," said the child-like girl, but she gave
+an unconscious shudder.</p>
+
+<p>His hands rested, as if in blessing, on her hair. He whispered,
+inaudibly:</p>
+
+<p>"God bless my hapless daughter's child."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Glenalvan Hall, like all old family mansions belonging to
+old and respectable families, had its reputed ghost.</p>
+
+<p>It was currently reported that three rooms in the upper story
+were haunted by the spirit of a fair young girl who had once inhabited
+them, and who had pined away and died for love of a
+handsome man who had not known of her love nor reciprocated
+it.</p>
+
+<p>This fair ancestress of Golden's&mdash;Erma Glenalvan, as she was
+called&mdash;was said to haunt the suite of rooms she had occupied in
+life, and credulous people believed that on moonlight nights she
+walked up and down, weeping and sighing, and wringing her
+white hands because her spirit could not retain its grave.</p>
+
+<p>It was to these gloomy and dismantled rooms, haunted by the
+restless ghost of an unhappy girl, that little Golden was consigned
+for a week or more by the stern desire of John Glenalvan.
+It was a hard trial to the child.</p>
+
+<p>She would not have consented to it but for the pleadings of her
+grandfather. Her love and gratitude to him made her yield an
+easy consent to his prayer, while she inwardly quaked with fear
+at the dread ordeal before her.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah was desired by her master to transfer suitable bedding
+and furniture to the room Golden would occupy, and to carry
+her meals to that room daily and attend carefully on her young
+mistress. Black Dinah was furious.</p>
+
+<p>"I know'd dar was deviltry afoot," she said. "I know'd it!
+John Glenalvan never sets his foot in ole massa's presence without
+some devil's broth is a-brewing!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, Dinah," old Hugh said, sternly. "You must not speak
+of my son that way. Do as I bid you. No harm can come to the
+child. She is willing to the plan."</p>
+
+<p>Dinah's loud complaints subsided into muttering and grumbling,
+but she did as her master had ordered.</p>
+
+<p>That night when old Hugh had laid his gray head on his pillow,
+and old Dinah had gone into the other wing of the hall, little
+Golden sat down to read in the ghostly-looking chamber where
+Erma Glenalvan's loving heart had broken for a hopeless love.</p>
+
+<p>Through the weird stillness and solitude of the haunted room,
+the sound of the gay dance music came to Golden's ears, softened
+and mellowed by the distance.</p>
+
+<p>The little maiden's heart beat faster at the delicious sound, so
+inspiring to youthful ears. She threw down her book impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"How sweet it sounds," she said. "They are in the great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+dancing-hall. I should like to see them. How cruel my cousins
+are to me!"</p>
+
+<p>The sweet lips quivered, and the blue eyes darkened with anger.
+Golden was a spoiled, impetuous child. Her grandpa and
+old Dinah had always yielded to her in everything and placed no
+restraint on her impetuous temper.</p>
+
+<p>Her little heart was swelling bitterly now, with resentment
+against her cruel cousins. She felt their neglect and their insults
+keenly, the more so because she was ignorant of any possible reason
+for their contumely.</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to spoil their party for them," the little creature
+said to herself with a passionate vindictiveness, quite unusual
+with her. "I have a great mind to play ghost, and frighten them
+all out of the dancing-hall. It would not be a bit too bad for
+them, after their meanness to me!"</p>
+
+<p>She had heard old Dinah say that Clare and Elinor were very
+much afraid of the beautiful phantom of Glenalvan Hall. They
+would not have ventured into the haunted suite alone for any
+amount of money.</p>
+
+<p>Clare had been heard to say that the very sight of the ghost
+would be sufficient to strike her dead.</p>
+
+<p>Beautiful Golden, who was as changeful as the summer breeze,
+began to laugh at the mischievous idea which had occurred to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"What a fine joke it would be to personate poor Erma Glenalvan,"
+she thought. "How Clare and Elinor would fly from
+the festive scene when I appeared, weeping and wringing my
+hands."</p>
+
+<p>She had heard the ghost described by Dinah, who averred that
+she had seen it several times.</p>
+
+<p>She remembered the long, white robe, the flowing veil of golden
+hair, the pearl necklace, the wondrous beauty, shining, as
+old Dinah declared, like a star.</p>
+
+<p>The beauty, the youth, the veil of golden hair she had. But the
+dress and the pearls. Where should she find them?</p>
+
+<p>An old wardrobe which had once belonged, no doubt, to the
+love-lorn Erma, stood against the wall. Golden pulled the door
+open, not without some little fear, and looked in at the collection
+of moth-eaten dresses that hung on the pegs.</p>
+
+<p>She could not tell whom they belonged to, for she had never
+looked into the wardrobe before, but she guessed that they were
+very old, for a cloud of dust rose from them as the door flew
+open, and as she touched them with her hand, some of the folds
+fell into rents, and showed how long they had been the prey of
+the moth.</p>
+
+<p>But as Golden pulled one after another down from the pegs
+and tossed them into a rainbow heap on the floor, she came to
+one at last that would serve her purpose.</p>
+
+<p>It was a long, white dress of rich, brocaded silk, yellowed by
+time, antique in style, but tolerably well-preserved.</p>
+
+<p>Golden uttered a cry of delight, patting her little foot blithely
+to the merry measure of the dance music.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The very thing," she cried, and then she shivered slightly.
+"Perhaps it belonged to poor Erma," she thought.</p>
+
+<p>But in a few minutes Golden's blue gingham lay on the floor,
+and she had slipped into the old brocade, and hooked it together.
+It fitted her perfectly.</p>
+
+<p>The neck was low, and finished with a deep frill of fine, old,
+yellow lace. The sleeves were short, and the dimpled shoulders
+and beautifully moulded arms were exposed to the greatest advantage.</p>
+
+<p>Golden then took up the comb and brush and brushed her long,
+yellow ringlets out of curl until they fell about her slender, graceful
+form like a veil of summer sunshine.</p>
+
+<p>"If I only had the pearls, now, I might readily pass for the
+phantom," she said, looking at the reflection of herself in the
+glass. "How nice I look. This dress is quite becoming, I declare."</p>
+
+<p>As she turned round, admiring the long, soft, trailing folds of
+the brocade, something rattled in what appeared to be the region
+of the pocket.</p>
+
+<p>Golden ran her slim fingers into the pocket, and they encountered
+a rent between the lining and the material of the dress.</p>
+
+<p>Following the rent with her fingers to the very edge of the
+skirt, they encountered something which she drew out and found
+to be a necklace of large, gleaming, milk-white pearls.</p>
+
+<p>Golden uttered a cry of surprise and joy as she clasped the
+beautiful treasure, so strangely found, around her firm, white
+throat.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>In the dancing-room that night they had been talking of the
+Glenalvan ghost. Elinor or Clare had taken a great deal of pains
+to let Bertram Chesleigh know how grand and wealthy the Glenalvans
+had been before the war, and especially they had been
+pleased to have him hear about the beautiful phantom of the girl,
+Erma, who had died of a broken heart.</p>
+
+<p>Though they were afraid of her, and would not have willingly
+beheld her for anything, they were proud of the <i>prestige</i> of a
+family ghost. They considered that only distinguished families
+ever had such visitations.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor told him the pretty legend she had heard from a superstitious
+old servant. She said the phantom would fly if anyone
+approached her, but if she could once be overtaken and kissed by
+a very handsome man she would rest in her grave and walk no
+more.</p>
+
+<p>But it was confidently asserted that no one could accomplish
+such a feat, for the phantom flew before every pursuer as if fear
+lent it wings.</p>
+
+<p>"If you could catch and kiss her, Mr. Chesleigh, I think the
+ghost would be forever laid," said Clare Glenalvan, with a simper,
+and affected laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Miss Clare," said Bertram Chesleigh, with a bow,
+though he was inwardly disgusted. He knew that he was a very
+handsome man.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>His mirror had told him so, but he did not admire Clare's forwardness
+in telling him of it so plainly.</p>
+
+<p>The merry dance went on. The subject of the Glenalvan ghost
+had passed from the minds of the dancers when suddenly the
+music, which had been filling the air with sweetness, came to a
+dead stop.</p>
+
+<p>All the dancers looked toward the door where the band was
+stationed, for the cause of the silence.</p>
+
+<p>The performers had dropped their instruments, and were staring
+open-mouthed at a vision in the wide, open doorway that
+opened from a long dark, corridor&mdash;a vision clearly outlined
+against the outer darkness, and plainly seen by all in the room&mdash;a
+girlish form in sweeping, white robes and falling, golden hair,
+the beautiful face, convulsed with woe and pain, the white arms
+extended, the small hands clasping and unclasping each other in
+gestures of infinite despair.</p>
+
+<p>"The Glenalvan ghost!" ran from lip to lip in a murmur of awe
+and terror, while timid young girls clung shrieking to their partners,
+and the utmost confusion prevailed.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor Glenalvan tried to faint in the arms of Bertram Chesleigh,
+but he put her hastily into a chair and said quickly:</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Glenalvan, I am going to earn your everlasting gratitude.
+I shall kiss the beautiful Erma, and the Glenalvan ghost will be
+forever laid."</p>
+
+<p>He sprang toward the doorway, but in that moment the beautiful
+phantom turned and fled precipitately before him.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>It had not entered into little Golden's plan for the discomfiture
+of her scornful cousins, that anyone would have the temerity to
+approach her in her character of the Glenalvan ghost. On the
+contrary, she had confidently expected to spread fear, dismay and
+confusion among the festive guests, and to effect her own
+escape unmolested and unsuspected.</p>
+
+<p>What was her surprise and dismay to see a tall, dark, handsome
+man start from Elinor's side, and cross the room toward her with
+the evident purpose of accosting her!</p>
+
+<p>Beautiful Golden was filled with fear and alarm. She turned
+swiftly and fled down the long, dark corridor, her heart beating
+with dread lest she should be overtaken and identified by her
+pursuer.</p>
+
+<p>She thought of her grandfather's grief and mortification if he
+should find out her girlish prank, and of her stern uncle's wrathful
+anger.</p>
+
+<p>These swift thoughts seemed to lend wings to her light feet.
+She flew rather than ran down the dark hall, but her rapid heart-beats
+could not drown the quick and steady footsteps of her pursuer.
+They seemed to come nearer and gain upon her.</p>
+
+<p>To gain her own rooms in the western wing Golden would be
+compelled to go up a wide stairway leading directly from the
+corridor in which she was then running.</p>
+
+<p>It dawned on her mind in the whirl of thoughts that rushed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+over her, that it would be very unwise to return to the haunted
+rooms just then. She believed that she would undoubtedly be
+pursued and captured if she did.</p>
+
+<p>It occurred to her that her best plan would be to escape into the
+open air and hide herself in the belt of thick, dense shrubbery
+that grew below the lake.</p>
+
+<p>She knew every bend and turn, and secret nook within it. Her
+pursuer did not. She could baffle him there.</p>
+
+<p>Inspired by what seemed to her a happy thought, Golden flew
+past the wide staircase and gained the outer door.</p>
+
+<p>She flashed down the marble steps outside, and struck breathlessly
+across the green lawn.</p>
+
+<p>But swift and breathless as her flight had been, she had "a foe-man
+worthy of her steel." Bertram Chesleigh had never faltered
+in his swift pursuit of the supposed phantom.</p>
+
+<p>If such a thing were indeed possible, he meant to capture the
+flying form, and kiss the face whose beauty had struck him even
+through its tragic expression of sorrow and despair.</p>
+
+<p>He was light-footed and swift, and inspired by the novelty of
+the chase. He was determined to keep his word to the handsome
+Elinor, if possible.</p>
+
+<p>He went over the marble steps at one flying bound that gained
+him a great advantage over Golden. As he followed her over the
+lawn he was so near that the frightened girl could hear his quick,
+panting breath, and dreaded every moment to feel his outstretched
+hands clutch her white shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>It was a lovely night. The moon was at its full. Its white radiance
+touched everything with weird beauty. It shone on the
+leaves, the flowers, and the grass, and made the dew-drops glitter
+like diamonds.</p>
+
+<p>Golden's white brocade shone with a silvery gleam as she fled
+through the moonlight, her white arms and neck gleamed like
+ivory through the golden mist of her streaming hair.</p>
+
+<p>She had crossed the green expanse of the lawn in safety. Her light
+feet struck into the path by the lake. When once she had crossed
+that path she would be into the shrubbery. She felt sure that she
+might mislead the determined follower then.</p>
+
+<p>But the race had been an unequal one. That flying leap over
+the flight of marble steps had decided the contest in the man's
+favor.</p>
+
+<p>Scarce a minute more and the dreaded touch fell on her shoulder,
+two strong arms were passed quickly around her waist, her
+head was drawn back against a manly breast, and to Golden's
+horror and consternation, she felt a pair of warm, mustached lips
+pressed fully and passionately upon her own.</p>
+
+<p>"Lovely Erma, may your spirit rest in peace after this fond
+kiss of love," he cried; and Golden, trying vainly to struggle out
+of his clasp, lifted her eyes and saw a dark, splendid, handsome
+face gazing into her own, with large, black eyes that were full of
+eager admiration and sparkled with pleasant excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me go!" she cried, with her blue eyes full of angry tears,
+"let me go! How dared you&mdash;oh, how dared you <i>kiss</i> me?"</p>
+
+<p>But the strong arms held her fast, although Bertram Chesleigh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+began to realize that it was not a phantom, but a real creature of
+flesh and blood he had kissed so warmly.</p>
+
+<p>He held her fast, and looked down with a smile into the girlish
+face that was so very beautiful even through the crimson flush of
+anger.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not be angry," he said. "You should be glad that I have
+kissed you."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I be glad?" she demanded, in a sharp, imperious
+little voice.</p>
+
+<p>The dark eyes of little Golden's captor sparkled with mirth at
+her indignant question.</p>
+
+<p>"They told me up yonder at the hall," he replied, "that if a
+handsome man could catch and kiss the Glenalvan ghost its wandering
+spirit would be laid forever. Do you think that you can
+rest easy in your grave now, beautiful Erma?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden wrenched herself from his clasp, but he still held her
+so tightly by one hand that she could not leave him. She looked
+at him with bright eyes in which anger and reluctant mirth
+were strangely blended. His quaint humor was infectious.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think yourself so very handsome, sir?" she demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"A lady told me so this evening," he replied, unblushingly.
+"One must always take a lady's word, must not one, fair
+Erma?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not Erma," she replied, impetuously; "I am only Golden."</p>
+
+<p>"Golden! What a beautiful name!" cried Golden's captor.
+"Golden&mdash;<i>what</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"Golden Glenalvan," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"That is prettier still," he said; then he looked at her more
+closely. "Are you any kin to Clare and Elinor?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; we are cousins," the girl replied, frankly.</p>
+
+<p>She forgot how strange it was for her to be standing there talking
+to this stranger from whom she had been desperately fleeing
+a moment ago.</p>
+
+<p>But the dark, mesmeric eyes held her gaze with a luring power;
+the warm, soft hand that clasped her own, sent strange thrills of
+tingling sweetness through every nerve.</p>
+
+<p>When she had looked at the dark, handsome, smiling face
+once she liked to look at it again. She forgot to feel afraid of
+him.</p>
+
+<p>They were standing on the border of the lake. The moonlight
+made it shine like a sheet of silver; but Bertram Chesleigh had no
+eyes for its beauty while the fair, fresh face of that innocent girl
+was lifted to his.</p>
+
+<p>He said to himself that in all his life he had never seen anyone
+half so lovely.</p>
+
+<p>"And you are not a ghost, after all?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"No; I was only masquerading," she replied. "I did it to
+frighten my cousins and spoil their party. Do you think I have
+succeeded?" she inquired, with <i>naive</i> anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>He looked a little surprised.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know, I am sure," he said. "Why did you wish to
+spoil their pleasure?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Because they would not invite me to go, and said cruel
+things to me, besides," answered Golden, with a heaving breast.</p>
+
+<p>"Why would they not invite you?" he inquired, more surprised
+than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor said I was <i>too young</i>, but I should sooner think that
+grandpa guessed the true reason!" she replied with innocent frankness.</p>
+
+<p>"What did grandpa guess?" he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"They were afraid for Uncle John's rich guest to see me. They
+mean to marry him to Elinor," she replied, readily, and without
+a suspicion that it was the "rich guest" himself who held her
+small hand that moment so warmly and tightly in his own.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh laughed long and merrily, and the little girl
+awoke to a sense of her imprudence.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh? I should not have talked to you so," she cried. "They
+will be very angry. Oh, please don't tell anyone I was the
+ghost! Grandpa would scold me, and I could not bear that."</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the murmur of voices and laughter was borne
+to them on the breeze from the hall door.</p>
+
+<p>"Your friends are coming to look for you," she cried. "Oh! <i>do</i>
+let go my hand. I must hide myself. You will not betray my
+secret?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; I will keep it faithfully, Golden," he replied, then he
+kissed her small hand and released her, for he did not wish his
+friends to find him with her.</p>
+
+<p>She darted away like a bird, and hid herself in the shrubbery.
+The young man lighted a cigar and turned back to meet
+his friends.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you catch the ghost? Did you kiss her?" they asked him,
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"I was never so outwitted in my life," he replied. "Would
+you believe it if I should tell you that I pursued her across the
+lawn to the border of the lake, and that just as I might have
+touched her with my hand she sprang into the water and not a
+ripple on the surface showed where she had gone down?"</p>
+
+<p>This clever and non-committal reply was accepted as a statement
+of facts by the credulous. The romantic story spread from
+one to another rapidly.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh found himself quite a hero a few minutes
+after he had returned to the house. But though they praised his
+bravery, everyone chaffed him because he had failed to get the
+kiss from the beautiful phantom.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"Father, where is Golden this morning?"</p>
+
+<p>Old Hugh Glenalvan looked up with a frightened start as his
+son came into his presence with a stern brow and heavy footstep.</p>
+
+<p>It was the morning after the Glenalvans' little party, and the
+old man was sitting in the sunny bay-window, thinking of his
+little sunbeam, as he called her lovingly in his thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah had been in and brought him a message to say that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+she was very lonely and wished her grandpa to come and see her
+and bring her a bunch of roses. He was just thinking of doing
+so, when John Glenalvan came frowningly into his presence.</p>
+
+<p>"Father, where is Golden this morning?" he asked, sharply,
+and the old man trembled with fear of, he knew not what, as he
+replied:</p>
+
+<p>"She is up in the haunted rooms where you told me to put her,
+John."</p>
+
+<p>"Come with me. I wish to see her," he said, and the old man's
+face grew ashen pale as he asked:</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter? Has Golden done anything, John?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will know soon enough," was the short reply; and full
+of apprehension the old man led the way to his granddaughter's
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Beautiful Golden was walking up and down the dreary chamber,
+impatient as a captive bird. She started, and grew very pale
+as she caught sight of her Uncle John's stern face. She did not
+speak to him, but ran up to her grandfather and kissed his poor,
+old, wrinkled cheek.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-morning, dear grandpa," she said. "I am very lonely.
+I miss you so much. Did black mammy tell you to bring me
+some roses?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear, but I did not have the time," said the grandfather,
+with a tremulous voice, and stealing a glance at his son. For
+some inexplicable reason he stood in great fear of him.</p>
+
+<p>"Have done with such foolish chat, girl," broke in John Glenalvan,
+roughly. "So you played the ghost last night, eh, miss?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden gave a violent start, and clung to her grandfather. She
+trembled, and her sweet lips grew very pale.</p>
+
+<p>"You need not deny it. Your looks betray your guilt," continued
+John Glenalvan, roughly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, my Golden would not have done such a thing," cried
+her grandfather, warmly. "Who says that she did?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden looked anxiously into her uncle's face as that question
+left the old man's lips. Her heart fell at the thought
+that the handsome man who had kissed her by the lake, had betrayed
+her to her merciless uncle.</p>
+
+<p>But his next word relieved her from the dread.</p>
+
+<p>"I say so myself," he replied. "I saw and recognized her myself,
+as did Clare and Elinor also. She came and stood in the hall
+doorway where they were dancing, tricked out like the ghost of
+Erma Glenalvan. Deny it if you dare, miss!"</p>
+
+<p>The girl's quick temper flamed up at his harsh manner.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not wish to deny it," she cried defiantly. "I did it, and
+I frightened all your fine company, too! I am very glad of it."</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan sprang toward her with upraised hand as
+though he would strike her, but she stepped quickly out of his
+reach, and he said, with sullen rage:</p>
+
+<p>"You hear the little Jezebel, father. Take care, take care that
+I do not put my long-pending threat into execution."</p>
+
+<p>"John, she is but a playful child," he pleaded, pitifully. "She
+meant no harm, I am sure. Oh, Golden, my darling! why did
+you do it?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"To spite the girls, grandpa, for their cruelty to me," she replied,
+"but I am very sorry now, since it has grieved you so.
+Believe me, grandpa, I did not think you would ever hear of it.
+Can you forgive me?" she pleaded, wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>"You must ask your uncle's forgiveness, not mine, my dear,"
+was the tremulous reply.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not ask his pardon," she replied, stoutly, her blue eyes
+flashing, and the color flaming into her cheeks, "I am sorry to
+have displeased you, grandpa, dear, but I do not in the least care
+for anyone else whether they are offended or not."</p>
+
+<p>"Where did you get the fine toggery you wore last night?" demanded
+John Glenalvan, his fingers tingling with the impulse to
+slap the fair, defiant face.</p>
+
+<p>"That is no concern of yours," she replied, resentfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me, dear," whispered old Hugh, intent on preserving a
+semblance of peace if it were possible.</p>
+
+<p>Golden threw open the door of the wardrobe and showed him
+the brocade, which looked very yellow and old in the clear light
+of day.</p>
+
+<p>"She had a necklace of pearls around her neck," said John, in
+an artful aside to his father.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you, Golden?" asked her grandfather.</p>
+
+<p>Golden went to the little toilet-table and took up the costly
+necklace which John Glenalvan instantly snatched from her hand
+and placed in his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>Golden looked at him, tearful, dismayed, and excessively
+angry.</p>
+
+<p>"Give them back to me," she cried. "They are mine! I found
+them&mdash;indeed I did, grandpa. They had fallen through a hole in
+the pocket of the dress into the skirt lining. They are mine, and
+you shall give them back to me, Uncle John."</p>
+
+<p>"I will show you whether I will or not," he replied. "The
+necklace belongs to me. Everything in the house belongs to me,
+as well as the estate itself. You only have a home on sufferance
+here. Take care that you do not lose that."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it true, grandpa?" asked Golden, and the old man nodded
+sadly.</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan took down the white brocade, and carried it
+away in a compact bundle under his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall take this away," he said, "to make sure that you do not
+play any more disgraceful tricks upon us. I depend upon you,
+father, to see that she keeps to this room, and behaves herself
+for the remainder of the week. If she does not, I emphatically
+assure you that you both will suffer through her willfulness and
+disobedience!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will promise for her," said the old man, putting his hand
+over Golden's pouting and rebellious mouth. "She will not be
+naughty any more!"</p>
+
+<p>"See that she keeps the promise," his son replied, sternly, as he
+turned away.</p>
+
+<p>He went to Elinor's <i>boudoir</i> where he found his two daughters
+quarreling over Bertram Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you he admires me the most," exclaimed the elder girl,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+angrily, just as her father threw the necklace and the brocade
+into her lap, and said, triumphantly:</p>
+
+<p>"Here is the finery the ghost wore, my dears. Divide it between
+you."</p>
+
+<p>The brocade was thrown down in disgust, but a pitched battle
+ensued over the pearl necklace.</p>
+
+<p>"I am the elder, and I am determined to have it," cried Elinor,
+resolutely.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall have it myself, if I perish in the effort," retorted
+Clare.</p>
+
+<p>A wordy war ensued, from which John Glenalvan, to whom it
+was nothing new, retreated in disgust.</p>
+
+<p>The contest was ended at last by the handsome Elinor's boxing
+the ears of her sister, and taking possession of the spoil on the
+barbarous principle of "might is right."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"Did I dream the whole thing?" said Bertram Chesleigh to
+himself, "or was it, indeed, only a ghost that I kissed on the
+border of the lake? Do ghosts have warm, living flesh and blood,
+and balmy lips, and blushes that come and go, and delicious little
+tempers, and the power to thrill one's nerves with quivering darts
+of fire? Have I lost my heart to a phantom?"</p>
+
+<p>He might well ask himself these questions. A day and night
+had gone since the Glenalvans had their little party, and so far he
+had been unable to learn anything at all concerning the beautiful
+girl whom all but himself believed to have been the ghost of the
+dead Erma Glenalvan.</p>
+
+<p>As he had promised to keep little Golden's secret inviolate, he
+could of course make no opening inquiries, but his little, careless,
+artful speeches, and innocent inquiries all failed of effect.</p>
+
+<p>He could learn nothing of the maid whose beauty and grace
+had literally carried his heart by storm. It seemed quite plain
+that she did not live in the house.</p>
+
+<p>It was equally certain that she did not reside in the neighborhood,
+for his friend, young Fred Glenalvan, had often assured
+him that his father's family were the only living descendants of
+the once numerous race.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Chesleigh asked himself if there was indeed a mystery, or
+if he had been fooled by an elfish spirit from the world of
+shadows.</p>
+
+<p>His heart and his reason answered in the negative. It was a
+human being, warm, breathing, living, whom he had clasped and
+kissed that night. His veins tingled with electric fire at the remembrance.</p>
+
+<p>Alone in his room the second night after his rencontre with the
+ghost, Bertram Chesleigh walked up and down restlessly, half
+mad with himself that he should dwell so persistently on that one
+thought, yet finding it so dangerously sweet he would not willingly
+have forgotten it. It seemed to him that he had never
+really lived till now, when this romantic passion for the beautiful
+unknown fired his heart.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Elinor and Clare had been very much frightened at the appearance
+of the family ghost. They talked about it in low, awe-struck
+whispers.</p>
+
+<p>When Bertram Chesleigh expressed a desire to visit the haunted
+suite of rooms they expressed themselves as horrified, and declared
+that the rooms of the hapless Erma had been walled up
+long years before, and that all the rooms of the western wing
+were in such a ruinous condition that it was exceedingly dangerous
+to venture there at all.</p>
+
+<p>They declared that their father had engaged workmen to pull
+down the western wing on account of its precarious condition.</p>
+
+<p>But singularly enough Bertram Chesleigh's thoughts were running
+on the haunted rooms almost continuously to-night. Everything
+connected with the Glenalvan ghost had a deep interest for
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Some impulse impelled him to visit the western wing.</p>
+
+<p>He knew that the wide hall on which his room door opened
+had a corridor leading from it into the ruined western wing of
+the hall.</p>
+
+<p>Some impulse stronger than his will, some "spirit in his feet,"
+tempted him forth under cover of the silence and the night to
+explore the dangerous region in the vague hope of finding some
+trace of the mysterious ghost of last night.</p>
+
+<p>To have met her again he would have dared even more threatening
+dangers than the settling timbers and falling roof which
+Fred, and Clare and Elinor were unanimous in declaring menaced
+everyone who entered the decaying portion of the hall.</p>
+
+<p>Softly shod in his velvet slippers, he opened the door and peered
+out into the long hall.</p>
+
+<p>It was lighted by long windows at either end, through which
+the moonlight poured a flood of white radiance. Putting a convenient
+box of matches into the pocket of his dressing-gown, he
+sallied boldly forth.</p>
+
+<p>Whether ghost or human, he longed to encounter the beautiful
+girl he loved again.</p>
+
+<p>He entered the long corridor and walked along softly, guided
+by the moonlight that entered through the windows and lay in
+fantastic shadows upon the floor.</p>
+
+<p>He found that the building was in a ruinous condition indeed.
+The rooms into which he looked were dismantled and bare, the
+papering hung in ragged, fantastic strips from the walls; huge rats
+scampered over the floor, frightened night-birds flapped against
+the windows with wild, unearthly noises. Surely, the place was
+well-fitted to be the abode of ghosts and shadows, it was so weird
+and uncanny.</p>
+
+<p>But Bertram Chesleigh held on his way undauntedly. It seemed
+to him that he had explored every room on that upper floor,
+when suddenly he discovered a little passage down which he
+turned and found himself in front of a closed door.</p>
+
+<p>The majority of the doors had stood open, swinging carelessly
+on their hinges.</p>
+
+<p>The midnight explorer did not know why his heart beat so
+strangely when he stood before this closed one.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He turned the handle noiselessly, and entered, carefully closing
+the door behind him.</p>
+
+<p>In the large and lofty apartment, where he now found himself,
+a dim and shaded night-lamp was burning, thick, dark curtains
+shaded the windows, a large rug covered the center of the floor,
+a low, white cottage-bed stood in the furthest corner, draped in
+neat and spotless white.</p>
+
+<p>Then the midnight explorer started, and with difficulty repressed
+the cry that rose to his lips.</p>
+
+<p>For the soft, white counterpane thrown over the bed, outlined
+the curves of an exquisite, girlish form.</p>
+
+<p>On the white, ruffled pillow nestled a sleeping face as lovely as
+a budding rose.</p>
+
+<p>The round, white arms were thrown carelessly up above her
+head, the wealth of curling, golden hair, strayed in rich confusion
+over the pillow; the golden-brown lashes lay softly on the
+rosy, dimpled cheeks; the lips were smiling as if some happy
+dream stirred the white breast that rose and fell so softly over the
+innocent heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Ghost or human?" Bertram Chesleigh asked himself, as he
+gazed in astonishment and ecstacy at the beautiful, unconscious
+sleeper.</p>
+
+<p>He came nearer with noiseless footsteps and bated breath to the
+bedside. He bent so near that he could hear the soft, sweet
+breath that fluttered over the parted lips.</p>
+
+<p>"It is she," he said to himself, with mingled rapture and
+amaze.</p>
+
+<p>Then, in the next breath, he murmured:</p>
+
+<p>"I must beat a quiet retreat. How frightened and angry she
+would be, were she to awake and find me here!"</p>
+
+<p>He was one of the purest and most honorable minded men in the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>He turned to go, but could not tear his fascinated eyes from
+that beautiful, child-like, sleeping face.</p>
+
+<p>His splendid black eyes lingered on its innocent beauty in passionate
+admiration.</p>
+
+<p>"If I might only touch that little hand that lies so near me on
+the pillow, it would cool the thirst of my heart," he said wistfully
+to himself, while his heart beat fast with joy that he had found
+her again, this lovely creature of whom he had dreamed night
+and day for twenty-four hours.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at the sweetly-smiling, parted lips, and his pulses
+thrilled at the remembrance of the tender caress he had pressed
+upon them such a short while before.</p>
+
+<p>Carried away by the force of as pure and mad a passion as ever
+thrilled the heart of man, the enraptured lover bent his head and
+pressed a kiss as soft and light as the fall of a rose-leaf on the
+white hand that lay so temptingly near him.</p>
+
+<p>He meant to go then, but as he lifted his head, blushing with
+shame at the temptation that had prompted him to that wrongful
+and stolen caress, a sharp indignant voice fell on his ears with
+the suddenness of a thunder-clap.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you black-hearted wilyun&mdash;you wicked betrayer of innercence!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+Get out o' this afore I kill you with my own hands, you
+han'some debbil!"</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh turned and saw a ludicrous, yet startling
+sight framed in the open doorway of an inner chamber which in
+his agitation, he had not noticed before.</p>
+
+<p>Old Black Dinah, who was the color of ebony and very tall and
+lean, stood before him, clad in a short night-gown of gay, striped
+cotton from which her slim legs and arms stuck out like bean-poles.</p>
+
+<p>Her stubbly, gray wool seemed to stand erect on her head with
+horror, and her brandished arms, snapping black eyes, and furious
+face, made up a startling picture of wrath and horror, strangely
+combined with the ludicrous.</p>
+
+<p>"You black-hearted wilyun!" old Dinah repeated, advancing
+angrily upon her dismayed foe, "get out o' de room o' my innercent
+lamb afore she wakes and finds you here, you wolf!"</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon&mdash;I stumbled into this room by the merest
+accident," Chesleigh was beginning to say, when, startled by Dinah's
+loud and angry tones, little Golden awoke, and flashed the
+light of her wide blue eyes upon their excited faces.</p>
+
+<p>She uttered a cry of fear and terror when she saw the tall,
+manly form standing in the room.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah ran to her instantly, and she hid her frightened face
+on the shoulder of the old black woman.</p>
+
+<p>"Black mammy, what does all this mean?" cried the girl, nervously.</p>
+
+<p>Dinah gave a prolonged and lugubrious groan, and rolled up
+the whites of her eyes in reply. The intruder saw that it was
+imperative that he should stay long enough to explain matters to
+the alarmed girl.</p>
+
+<p>He said to himself that no one had ever been placed in such a
+strange and embarrassing position before.</p>
+
+<p>Every instinct of delicacy and respect for the young girl
+prompted him to retire at once; yet he could not bear to go and
+leave a wrong impression on the mind of the beautiful girl whom
+he admired so much.</p>
+
+<p>He retreated to the door, and, standing there, said, anxiously
+and respectfully:</p>
+
+<p>"I entreat you to believe, Miss Glenalvan, that I entered here
+with no wrongful motive. Led by a fit of curiosity, I was exploring
+the ruined wing of the hall, and I entered without a dream
+of finding it occupied by any living being. I had been led to believe
+that these rooms were totally unoccupied, and were even
+unsafe to enter. Will you accept my apology?"</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden's head was still hidden against Dinah's shoulder,
+and the old woman broke out sharply and quickly:</p>
+
+<p>"Honey, chile, don't you go for to 'cept dat wilyun's 'pology!
+Ef he done really cum in dis room by accident, he would agone
+out ag'in when he found dat a young lady occupied de room.
+But no; de first sight my ole brack eyes saw when I jumped off
+my pallet and come to de door was dat strange man a-kissin' you,
+my precious lamb."</p>
+
+<p>Golden began to sob, and Mr. Chesleigh mentally anathematized<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+the old woman's long tongue that had thus betrayed the secret
+he had intended to keep so carefully.</p>
+
+<p>His face grew scarlet as he hastened to say:</p>
+
+<p>"I kissed your hand, Miss Glenalvan, and I entreat your pardon
+for yielding to that overmastering temptation. Can you forgive
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>But Golden was still weeping bitterly, and old Dinah, in
+her fear and indignation for her darling, pointed quickly to the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>"Go," she said. "Don't you see how you frighten the chile
+by staying?"</p>
+
+<p>There seemed nothing to be gained by staying. The old woman
+was utterly unreasonable, and Golden was so agitated she could
+not speak.</p>
+
+<p>The embarrassed intruder silently withdrew to his own apartment,
+where he spent the night brooding over the strange discovery
+he had made and the unpleasant position in which he had
+placed himself.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"Honey, chile, where did you git 'quainted wid dat ondecent
+man?" inquired old Dinah of her nursling, as soon as Mr. Chesleigh
+had quitted the room.</p>
+
+<p>"What makes you think I am acquainted with him, mammy?"
+inquired the child in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>Dinah shook her woolly head sagely.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't try to deceabe your ole brack mammy, my lamb," she
+said. "He called you Missie Glenalvan&mdash;do you think I didn't
+notice that?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden's pretty cheeks grew scarlet with blushes.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall have to 'form your grandpa of what he done, the impident
+wilyun!" continued Dinah, emphatically.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, black mammy, please don't tell," cried the girl impulsively.
+"You heard what he said&mdash;it was a mere accident, I am
+quite, quite sure he meant no harm."</p>
+
+<p>"Ole massa shall be de jedge o' dat," replied Dinah decidedly.
+"I'll miss my guess if de ole man don't put a pistol-hole frew my
+fine, han'some gentleman!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, black mammy! then you shall not tell," cried Golden in
+terror. "Indeed, indeed, he is not the wicked man you believe
+him. He has kept my secret for me, and I must keep his now.
+That would only be fair."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, den you <i>do</i> know him," cried Dinah, horrified. "Tell
+me all about it dis minute, if you know what's best for you,
+chile."</p>
+
+<p>Golden did not resent the old nurse's tone of authority. She
+knew the old woman's love for her too well. She dried her eyes
+and reluctantly related her escapade two nights before.</p>
+
+<p>"He kept my secret," she concluded, "and it would not be fair
+for us to make trouble for him, would it, black mammy?"</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah had slipped down to the floor, and sat with her long,
+black arms clasped around her knees, looking up into her nursling's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+eager, fearful face, with a good deal of trouble in her keen,
+black eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The old woman was shrewd and intelligent in her way. She
+foresaw trouble, and perhaps the bitterest sorrow from these two
+meetings between the handsome guest of John Glenalvan and the
+young mistress.</p>
+
+<p>"Black mammy, promise me you will not tell grandpa," Golden
+pleaded. "I will do anything you ask me if only you will not
+tell him."</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon Dinah announced her ultimatum.</p>
+
+<p>"If you will promise me never to speak to the strange gentleman
+again, little missie, I will not tell ole massa."</p>
+
+<p>Golden opened wide her blue eyes. She looked very lovely as
+she leaned back among the snowy, ruffled pillows, her golden hair
+straying loosely about her shoulders, her cheeks tinted with a
+deep, warm blush, her little hands nervously clasping and unclasping
+each other.</p>
+
+<p>"Black mammy, I think you are very cross to-night," she
+pouted. "Why should I never speak to the handsome gentleman
+again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because it's best for you. Ole brack mammy knows better
+dan you, chile."</p>
+
+<p>"But I liked him so much," said Golden, blushing rosy red.</p>
+
+<p>"You had no business to like him," responded Dinah. "He's
+to marry Miss Elinor."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not believe it," said Golden, quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"He's not for you, anyway," retorted Dinah. "You'll nebber
+marry no one, my dear."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" asked the child. "Will nobody ever love me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody'll ever love ye like your grandpa, honey, and 'taint
+likely dat ever he will give ye away to anyone."</p>
+
+<p>Golden was silent a moment. She seemed to be thinking intently.
+After a moment she said gravely and sadly:</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa is old, and I am young. Who will take care of me
+when he is gone?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your old brack mammy, I guess, honey."</p>
+
+<p>"You are old, too," said Golden. "You may not live as long
+as I do."</p>
+
+<p>"Bless the chile's heart, how she <i>do</i> talk," said the old negress.
+"Ah, my precious lamb, I has outlived dem as was younger and
+fairer dan ole black Dinah."</p>
+
+<p>The old black face looked very sad for a moment, then Dinah
+continued:</p>
+
+<p>"Little missie, it's my clair duty to tell old massa de sarcumstances
+of the case to-morrow morning. Leastwise, unless you
+promise me nebber to speak to dat man ag'in."</p>
+
+<p>"That is very hard," sighed Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Hard," said Dinah. "I should think you would be so mad
+at the wilyun, a-comin' in and kissin' you so unceremonious, dat
+you would nebber want to speak to him any more."</p>
+
+<p>Golden hid her face in the pillows, and a deep sigh fluttered
+over her lips.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Come, dearie, won't you promise?" said Dinah. "I knows
+what's for your good better dan you does yourself, chile."</p>
+
+<p>"Must I promise it, indeed?" sighed the innocent child, lifting
+her flushed face from the pillow a moment to fix her big, blue,
+imploring eyes on the old woman's obdurate face.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you must sartainly promise it," was the uncompromising
+reply.</p>
+
+<p>There was silence for a moment, and Dinah saw the tears come
+into the sweet, blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Honey, chile, does you promise me?" she inquired, only confirmed
+in the opinion by this demonstration.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I promise not to speak to him unless you give me leave,
+black mammy," replied Golden, with quivering lips.</p>
+
+<p>"That's right, darling. Mammy can depend on your word.
+Lie down, and go to sleep, honey, and I'll fetch my pallet in yere,
+and sleep on de flo' by your bedside, so that no one kin 'trude on
+you ag'in."</p>
+
+<p>The girl laid her fair head silently on the pillow, and Dinah
+threw down a quilt on the floor and rolled herself in it. She was
+soon snoring profoundly.</p>
+
+<p>Not so with beautiful Golden. It was quite impossible for her
+to sleep again. She shut her eyelids resolutely, but the busy,
+beautiful brain was too active to admit of her losing consciousness
+again. She lay thinking of the splendid, dark-eyed
+stranger.</p>
+
+<p>"He has kissed me twice," she whispered to her heart, "and
+yet I do not even know his name. I wonder if I shall ever see
+him again. I hope I shall."</p>
+
+<p>As she remembered how earnestly he had apologized for his
+presence in her room, she could not believe him the wicked villain
+old Dinah had so loudly represented him.</p>
+
+<p>"He is handsome, and I believe that he is good," the girl said
+to herself, "and they tell me Elinor wants to marry him; I would
+like to marry him myself, just to spite my cousins."</p>
+
+<p>Poor little Golden! Her spite against her cousins was almost
+as old as her years. They had always hated her, and Golden had
+been quick to find it out and resent it.</p>
+
+<p>She had a quick and fiery temper, but it did not take her long
+to repent of her little fits of passion.</p>
+
+<p>She was a bright, winsome, lovable child. It was a wonder
+that anyone could hate her for her beautiful, innocent life.</p>
+
+<p>Yet there were those who did, and it was beginning to dawn
+vaguely on the mind of the girl that it was so. She knew that
+her life was passed differently from that of the other girls of her
+age and class.</p>
+
+<p>There were no teachers, no companions, no pleasures for her,
+and no promise of any change in the future.</p>
+
+<p>She wondered a little why it was so, but she never complained
+to her grandfather. It was, perhaps, only his way, she said to
+herself, little dreaming of the dark mystery that lay like a deep,
+impassible gulf between her and the dwellers in the outside world
+of which she knew so very, very little.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>A week elapsed, and there seemed but little prospect of the
+little prisoner's release from the haunted chambers of the ruined
+wing.</p>
+
+<p>The Glenalvans' guest lingered on, fascinated, it appeared, by
+the attractions of the beautiful Elinor. At least Elinor stoutly
+maintained this fact in the privacy of the family circle, while
+Clare as obstinately persisted that Mr. Chesleigh was perfectly
+impartial in his attentions to both.</p>
+
+<p>But however doubtful was Elinor's impression, the fact remained
+that he was pleased with his visit.</p>
+
+<p>He consented by their urgent invitation to prolong his stay another
+week. The girls were jubilant over his decision.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, old Dinah watched her secluded nursling with unremitting
+vigilance. She could not remain with her all day, because
+her housekeeping duties took her constantly into the lower
+part of the house, but she visited her intermittently, and at night
+rolled herself in a thick counterpane and slept on the floor by the
+side of Golden's couch.</p>
+
+<p>She took the added precaution to turn the rusty key in the lock
+at night.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah had never heard the familiar adage that "love
+laughs at locksmiths."</p>
+
+<p>She was ordinarily a very sound and healthy sleeper. The mere
+accident of a rheumatic attack, and consequent sleeplessness, had
+caused her appearance the night Mr. Chesleigh had entered the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Usually she might have been lifted, counterpane and all, and
+carried away bodily without being aware of it.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly two weeks after the night of her rencontre with Mr.
+Chesleigh, old Dinah awoke suddenly "in the dead waste and
+middle of the night," seized in the relentless grip of her old
+enemy, the rheumatism.</p>
+
+<p>She rolled herself out of her quilt and sat upright, groaning
+dolorously, and rubbing her knees in which the pain had settled.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Lordy! oh, Lordy!" she groaned, "how my ole bones
+does ache! Miss Golden! Miss Golden! my precious lam', wake
+up, and bid your ole brack mammy a las' far'well. I'm a-dyin',
+sartin, shuah!"</p>
+
+<p>But Golden, usually a very light sleeper, made no reply. Dinah
+reared her woolly head upward and looked into the bed.</p>
+
+<p>The bed was <i>empty</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Then Dinah looked around her in amazement to see if Golden
+was not in the room, laughing at her lugubrious groans as she
+had often done before. But she saw no trace of her young mistress.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Golden! Miss Golden!" she called, "is you in de udder
+room? Ef you is, come in here! I'se berry sick, honey, almos'
+a-dyin'."</p>
+
+<p>But her repeated calls elicited no reply. It appeared that
+pretty Golden was out of sight and hearing.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly old Dinah saw the dainty, white, ruffled night-dress,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+in which Golden had retired that night, lying in a snowy heap
+upon the floor.</p>
+
+<p>Dinah seized upon the garment and shook it vigorously, as if
+she expected to see the slight form of her young mistress drop
+from its folds to the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"Um&mdash;me-e-e," she groaned, "has de sperets carried de chile
+off?"</p>
+
+<p>She glanced up at the row of pegs where she had hung Golden's
+few articles of apparel. Her best dress&mdash;a dark-blue cashmere&mdash;was
+gone, also her hat and a summer jacket.</p>
+
+<p>"She hab runned away from us," old Dinah exclaimed, with
+almost a howl of despair.</p>
+
+<p>The thought inspired her with such grief and terror that she
+forgot her ailment entirely. She hobbled out from the room and
+made her way down stairs to her master's apartment and burst
+into his presence&mdash;a ludicrous object indeed in her striped cotton
+bed-gown.</p>
+
+<p>Old Hugh Glenalvan, late as it was, had not retired to bed.
+Wrapped in an old wadded dressing-gown he sat in an easy-chair
+before an old, carved oaken cabinet.</p>
+
+<p>One quaint little drawer was open, and the white-haired old man
+was poring over some simple treasures he had taken from it&mdash;simple
+treasures, yet dearer to his heart than gold or precious
+stones&mdash;a few old photographs, an old-fashioned ambrotype in an
+ebony case, a thin, gold ring and some locks of hair.</p>
+
+<p>Upon this sad and touching picture of memory and tenderness
+old Dinah's grotesque figure broke startlingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Ole massa! ole massa!" she cried, wildly, "has you seen little
+missie? Is she here with you?"</p>
+
+<p>The old man swept his treasures off his knees into the quaint
+cabinet and looked at his old servant in amazement.</p>
+
+<p>"Dinah, what does this startling intrusion mean?" he inquired,
+pushing his spectacles off his brow and regarding her with a mild
+frown.</p>
+
+<p>"Little Golden is missing. She hab runned away from us, ole
+massa!" shouted Dinah, desperately.</p>
+
+<p>"Dinah, you must be crazy," repeated Mr. Glenalvan, blankly.</p>
+
+<p>"It's de Lard's truth, ole massa. She hab done followed in her
+mudder's footsteps! Dat han'some man ober at John Glenalvan's
+has been and gone and 'ticed our Golden from us," wailed the
+old negress, in despair.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>It was not long before Mr. Glenalvan had heard the whole of
+Golden's simple love-story from his servant. They were filled with
+horror and grief at its too probable termination.</p>
+
+<p>"Dinah, it may be that she has stolen out into the grounds for
+a walk in the fresh air. She was growing very restless with the
+close, indoor confinement. Have you thought of that?" he said,
+hoping feebly against hope.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I go out and look for her, den, ole massa?" said Dinah,
+in a tone that plainly betrayed her hopelessness.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Let us both go," said old Hugh.</p>
+
+<p>They sallied forth anxiously into the brilliant moonlight that lay
+in silvery brightness all over the sweet, southern landscape&mdash;old
+Hugh, bareheaded, in his tattered dressing-gown, old Dinah in her
+short night-dress, too ridiculous a figure for anyone to contemplate
+without inward mirth.</p>
+
+<p>It so happened that Elinor, whom the hard exigencies of
+poverty compelled to be her own dressmaker, had sat up late
+that night to complete some alterations in a dress in which she
+had intended to array her fair self for the morrow.</p>
+
+<p>Having stitched on the last bit of lace, she went to the window
+and leaned out to cool her heated brow.</p>
+
+<p>"My head aches, and I am almost melted with sewing by that
+hot lamp," she said to herself, fretfully. "How I hate this poverty
+that grinds one down so! When once I am married to Bertram
+Chesleigh I will never touch a needle again! I will order
+all my dresses of Worth, of Paris. And I <i>will</i> marry Bertram
+Chesleigh! I swear it; and woe be to anyone that tries to prevent
+me!"</p>
+
+<p>Her dark eyes flashed luridly a moment, and her white hand
+was angrily clenched.</p>
+
+<p>She was thinking of Clare, who had persisted in rivaling her
+with Mr. Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the subdued murmur of voices floated up to
+her window from the lawn.</p>
+
+<p>She glanced down quickly, and saw old Dinah and her master
+crossing the lawn, their grotesque shadows flying long and dark
+before them in the brilliant moonlight.</p>
+
+<p>Quick as thought Elinor was out of her seat, and gliding softly
+through the door in quest of her father.</p>
+
+<p>Before old Glenalvan and his servant had crossed the lawn,
+two dark figures stole forth from the hall and silently followed
+them.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>On the green border of the silver lake two figures were standing
+in the beautiful moonlight. One was a man, tall, dark, splendid,
+with a princely beauty.</p>
+
+<p>His arm was thrown protectingly about a slender form that
+clung lovingly to his side.</p>
+
+<p>It was Golden Glenalvan, dressed in a dark suit and light cloth
+jacket, a neat, little walking-hat, set jauntily on her streaming,
+golden curls.</p>
+
+<p>Her blue eyes were lifted tenderly, and yet anxiously to her
+lover's face.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Bert," she said, giving him the tender name by which he
+had taught her to call him, "you must indeed let me go now.
+We have been saying good-bye at least a half an hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Parting is such a sweet pain," said the lover, bending to kiss
+the tempting, up-turned lips. "Give me just one more minute,
+my darling."</p>
+
+<p>"But I have been out so long," she objected, faintly. "What
+if black mammy should awake and find me gone?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"There is not the slightest danger," said Bertram Chesleigh
+carelessly. "The old woman sleeps so soundly that a thunder-clap
+would scarcely wake her."</p>
+
+<p>But just at that moment of his fancied security, old Dinah, in
+Golden's deserted chamber, was vigorously shaking her empty
+night-dress in a dazed attempt to evolve from its snowy folds the
+strangely missing girl.</p>
+
+<p>Golden smiled, then sighed faintly. He kissed her lips before
+the sigh had fairly breathed over them.</p>
+
+<p>"If you must indeed go, my darling," he said to her in a low
+voice, freighted with passionate tenderness, "tell me once again,
+my little Golden, how dearly you love me."</p>
+
+<p>"Love you," echoed the beautiful girl, and there was a Heaven
+of tenderness in the starry blue eyes she raised to his face. "Oh,
+my dearest, if I talked to you until the beautiful sun rose to-morrow,
+I could not put my love into words. It is deep in my heart,
+and nothing but death can ever tear it thence."</p>
+
+<p>She threw her arms around his neck, and their lips met in a
+long, passionate kiss. There was a silence broken only by the
+soft sigh of the rippling waves, while they stood</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">"tranced in long embraces,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mixed with kisses, sweeter, sweeter<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Than anything on earth."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>On that hush of exquisite silence that brooded round them,
+broke hastening footsteps and angry voices.</p>
+
+<p>The lovers started back from each other in dismay to find themselves
+surrounded by an astonished group.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah formed a central and conspicuous figure, beyond
+which old Hugh Glenalvan's silvery locks fluttered forlornly in
+the breeze.</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan and Elinor, his daughter, brought up the rear.
+Perhaps the old gentleman and his servant were as much astonished
+at seeing these followers as they were at the sight that met
+their eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah recovered her self-possession first of all, perhaps because
+she had vaguely suspected some such eclaircissement from
+the facts already in her possession.</p>
+
+<p>She rushed forward and caught her disobedient nursling by
+the hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my darlin', my honey, chile," she cried. "Come away
+from dat black-hearted wilyun to your grandpa and your ole
+brack mammy."</p>
+
+<p>But to the consternation of everybody, the girl shook Dinah's
+hand off, and clung persistently to her lover.</p>
+
+<p>He drew his arm protectingly around the slight figure, and
+Golden cried out with pretty, childish defiance:</p>
+
+<p>"He loves me! he loves me! and I will not leave him."</p>
+
+<p>That sight and those words fairly maddened Elinor Glenalvan.
+The blood seemed to boil in her veins.</p>
+
+<p>"Loves you&mdash;ha! ha! loves you, the child of sin and shame!"
+she cried out, in a hoarse voice of bitter scorn and passion. "Oh,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+yes, he loves you. That is why he has lured you to your ruin, as
+a stranger did your mother before you."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, Elinor," said John Glenalvan, in his sternest tone; then
+he looked at his father, who had crept to Golden's side, and stood
+there trembling and speechless. "Father," he said, harshly,
+"take the girl away. I must speak with Mr. Chesleigh alone."</p>
+
+<p>"I will not go," said Golden, and she looked up into her lover's
+face with a strange, wistful pleading in her soft, blue eyes, and
+in her sweet, coaxing lips.</p>
+
+<p>He bent down and whispered something that made her leave
+his side and put her small hand gently into her grandfather's.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, I will go home with you now," she said to him,
+tremulously, and he led her away, followed by Dinah, who glared
+angrily behind her, and muttered opprobrious invectives as she
+went.</p>
+
+<p>If looks could have killed, Bertram Chesleigh would never have
+lived to figure any further in the pages of my romance.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh was left alone by the lake, with the angry
+eyes of John Glenalvan glaring upon him, while Elinor, speechless
+with rage, stood a little apart and watched him.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Chesleigh, may I ask the meaning of this singular scene?"
+inquired his host, stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh, standing with folded arms in dignified silence,
+opened his lips and said, briefly:</p>
+
+<p>"It means, Mr. Glenalvan, that I have made the acquaintance
+of your niece and fallen in love with her."</p>
+
+<p>A threatening flash came into Elinor's eyes in the moonlight.
+She bit her lips fiercely to keep back the words that rose to
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to hear that," said John Glenalvan, in a subdued
+voice. Inwardly he was raging with anger, but he allowed no
+trace of it to escape him. "Will you tell me where and how you
+became acquainted with that child?"</p>
+
+<p>"I must decline to do so," said the young man, firmly.</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan looked around at his daughter.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor, return to the house," he said. "I will join you there
+presently."</p>
+
+<p>Elinor walked away, but she did not return to the hall as her
+father had commanded. Instead, she hid herself behind a clump
+of willows, where she could hear every word that passed between
+the two men.</p>
+
+<p>Some excited words ensued. Bertram Chesleigh was cool and
+calm. He denied that John Glenalvan had any right to call him
+to account for what he carelessly termed his innocent flirtation
+with little Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"From what I can hear," he said, "you have treated the girl
+both cruelly and wrongfully. I stand ready to answer to Golden's
+grandfather for any wrong he may consider I have done, but I
+shall make no apology to you, Mr. Glenalvan."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Why, not?" said the man, with repressed passion. "The girl is
+my niece!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yet you have wickedly secluded her from all society, and
+even debarred her of her freedom," said Bertram Chesleigh, indignantly.
+"It is your fault alone that she has been driven to
+seek the natural delights of youth in a clandestine manner."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not my fault, but her mother's," said John Glenalvan,
+significantly.</p>
+
+<p>His face grew pale as he spoke; his eyes strayed furtively to
+the quiet lake, lying silvery and serene in the clear moonlight.</p>
+
+<p>"How? I do not understand you," said the other, haughtily.</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan hesitated a moment. When he spoke it was
+with an affectation of deep feeling and manly sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Chesleigh," he said, "your unhesitating charge against
+me of cruelty to my niece forces me to the disclosure of a most
+painful family secret&mdash;one that I would fain have guarded from
+your knowledge. There is a strong reason for my course toward
+Golden Glenalvan."</p>
+
+<p>He paused, and the listener said, hoarsely:</p>
+
+<p>"A reason&mdash;&mdash;" then paused, because his voice had broken
+utterly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, a reason," was the bitter reply. "Mr. Chesleigh, little
+Golden is the child of my own and only sister, but&mdash;how shall I
+tell you&mdash;she has no right and no place in the world. She is <i>a
+nameless child</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>The solid earth seemed to reel beneath Mr. Chesleigh's feet. He
+staggered back dizzily, and threw up his hands as if the man had
+struck him.</p>
+
+<p>"He is proud. The blow tells fearfully," thought Elinor, watching
+him through the trees with vindictive eyes. "Ah, my
+defiant Golden, your last chance is gone now. He will never
+look at you again!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Glenalvan, you do not mean it. You are but trying my
+credulity," cried Bertram Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it likely that I would publish a falsehood to my own discredit?"
+inquired the other.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no&mdash;but, oh, God, this is too dreadful to believe!"</p>
+
+<p>"Dreadful, but true," groaned John Glenalvan. "Golden is
+the child of sin and shame. If I had had my way she would have
+been consigned to a foundling asylum. But my father weakly
+insisted on rearing her himself, and I was injudicious enough to
+permit it. The only stipulation I made was that she should be
+kept away from the sight of the world as much as possible. I
+see now that all precautions were useless. Young as she is, the
+bad blood in her veins begins to show itself already in depraved
+conduct."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush! do not censure her harmless meetings with me," said
+Bertram Chesleigh, in a voice of agony. "The child is so pure
+and innocent she has no idea of evil. I would die before I would
+wrong her!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to hear you say so," said the other. "If you really
+mean it, perhaps you will agree to relinquish your useless pursuit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+of her. You would not be willing to marry her after what you
+have heard, I am quite sure."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Meantime little Golden walked away with her grandfather, who
+stumbled along like one in a painful dream, his gray head bowed
+as if beneath the weight of sorrow, his footsteps faltering and
+slow.</p>
+
+<p>He had not spoken one word, and his silence impressed Golden
+with a sense of her wrong-doing and disobedience far more than
+the loudest reproaches could have done.</p>
+
+<p>She clung to his hand, weeping and sighing, and shivering
+silently at old Dinah's muttered invectives against Mr. Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>Hugh Glenalvan spoke no words to his granddaughter until he
+had led her into the house.</p>
+
+<p>Then he sank into his chair, and his gray head drooped upon
+his breast.</p>
+
+<p>Surprise and sorrow seemed to have deprived him of the power
+of speech.</p>
+
+<p>Golden knelt at his feet and laid her golden head upon his
+knee.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, speak to me," she wailed. "Do not be angry with
+your little Golden! Oh, grandpa, you have been so hard and strict
+with me; you have kept me too secluded. If you had let me have
+freedom and happiness like other girls, this never would have
+happened!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, little missie; you must not speak to ole massa like dat,"
+cried Dinah, trying to pull her away. "You don't know what
+you talkin' 'bout. Come away till ole massa is well enough to
+talk to you 'bout dis fing."</p>
+
+<p>She lifted the girl and would have led her away, but the old
+man waved his hand feebly to detain her, and so she placed her
+in a chair instead.</p>
+
+<p>Then she brought a glass of wine and poured a little between
+the white, writhing lips of her old master.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, speak to me!" wailed Golden again.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah looked at her almost sternly, and said abruptly:</p>
+
+<p>"You must let him alone, Miss Golden, you have enamost kilt
+him now, with your badness and deceit."</p>
+
+<p>"Black mammy, you shall not speak to me so," cried the girl,
+resentfully, and then the bright head drooped on the arm of the
+chair, and she wept bitterly, more from fright at the condition of
+her grandfather, than from any tangible sense of her own wrong-doing.</p>
+
+<p>She loved her grandfather dearly, and the sight of his suffering
+stabbed her tender heart deeply.</p>
+
+<p>While she wept silently, old Dinah busied herself in anxious
+cares for the old man.</p>
+
+<p>He seemed frozen into a statue of despair, sitting with his head
+bowed forlornly, and his vacant eyes on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>But quite suddenly he roused himself and looked around him
+with a heavy, hopeless gaze.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Dinah, leave me alone," he said, with unwonted impatience.
+"I am not ill, or if I am it is with a sickness beyond mortal healing.
+Golden's disobedience and her cruel, undeserved reproaches
+have broken my heart."</p>
+
+<p>Golden threw herself impulsively at his feet again.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, forgive me," she wailed. "I shall die if you do not
+say that you will pardon me!"</p>
+
+<p>He did not answer her. He only looked at his old black servant.</p>
+
+<p>"Dinah, you may leave us," he said, sorrowfully, "I had hoped
+to keep the secret all my life; but the time has come when I must
+reveal to my grandchild her mother's story."</p>
+
+<p>"Um-me-e e," groaned the old negress. "Sh, I t'ought it was
+a brack day when John Glenalvan kem here dat mornin' a-askin'
+ole massa to shut my pore chile up like a crim'nal."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, Dinah," the old man repeated, pointing to the door.
+She went out, and Golden turned her beautiful eyes, like blue
+violets drowned in tears, upon his pale, drawn face.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, grandpa," she cried, "you will tell me something of my
+mother at last. I have so longed to hear something of my mother
+and my father."</p>
+
+<p>A groan forced itself through Hugh Glenalvan's livid lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Your desire shall be gratified," he replied. "But the telling
+will cost you great sorrow, child."</p>
+
+<p>Her beautiful face grew white and scared.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, grandpa," she cried, "then Elinor and Clare told the truth.
+My poor mother&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A bursting sob checked the rest of her speech.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden, before I tell you your mother's story, I must receive
+your own confession. Dinah has told me all the beginning of your
+acquaintance with my son's visitor. You must now give me the
+history of what further intercourse has passed between you. How
+comes it that my little Golden, whom I deemed so true and pure,
+broke her promise to old Dinah?"</p>
+
+<p>The beautiful face drooped from his gaze, overspread with
+warm, crimson blushes. No words came from the sweet, tremulous
+red lips.</p>
+
+<p>"A promise, child, no matter how humble the person to whom
+it is made, should be held perfectly sacred and inviolate," he continued.
+"I could not have believed that you, the child I had
+reared so carefully, could have been so ignoble as to falsify your
+promise."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Beautiful Golden sobbed wildly at the reproachful words of her
+grandfather.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, I didn't mean it," she wept. "Indeed, indeed, I
+intended to keep my promise to black mammy. It was quite by
+accident that I broke it."</p>
+
+<p>"How could it have been by accident?" inquired the old man,
+incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you remember my habit of sleep-walking?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;ah, yes, for it has frightened me often to see a little,
+white figure glide into my room at night, with vacant, unseeing
+eyes. I always feared you would run into some terrible danger.
+Your mother had the same unfortunate habit," replied the old
+man.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, it was through that habit of mine that I broke my
+word to black mammy," said Golden, with an earnestness that
+showed how truthful was her explanation.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me how it occurred, Golden," he said, fixing his dim eyes
+anxiously on her face.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, I am almost ashamed to tell you," she replied,
+blushing crimson, "but it was in this way. The night after Mr.
+Chesleigh entered my room by accident, I was very restless in my
+sleep. I will tell you the truth. I had begun to love the handsome
+stranger. I thought of him before I fell asleep, and in my
+restless slumbers I dreamed of him. So I fell into my old habit
+of wandering in a state of somnambulism. It was a beautiful
+moonlight night. I dressed myself and wandered out into the
+grounds, and down by the lake, my favorite resting-place. Suddenly
+I started, broad awake in the arms of Mr. Chesleigh. I had
+gone too near the edge of the lake, and he had saved me from
+falling in."</p>
+
+<p>She shuddered slightly, and resumed:</p>
+
+<p>"In common gratitude I was compelled to speak, and thank
+the gentleman for saving me from a watery grave. Do you think
+I was wrong to do so?"</p>
+
+<p>"It would have been cold and ungrateful to have omitted thanking
+him," he admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"So I thought," said Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"If your intercourse had stopped there, Golden, I should have
+had no words of blame for you. But you have carried on a secret
+intrigue ever since. You have stolen out to meet that man
+every night, have you not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, grandpa, but we loved each other," said the simple
+child, who seemed to think that was ample excuse for what she
+had done.</p>
+
+<p>Hugh Glenalvan groaned, and remained lost in thought for a
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>Then he bent down and whispered a question in her ear.</p>
+
+<p>She started violently; the warm, ever-ready color flashed into
+her cheek; she threw up her head and looked at him with proud,
+grieved eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, you hurt me cruelly," she replied. "Do not think
+of me so unkindly. I am as pure as the snow."</p>
+
+<p>He seemed to be relieved by the words so quickly and proudly
+spoken. The next minute he said, gravely:</p>
+
+<p>"My child, has this gentleman ever said anything to you of
+marriage?"</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden remained silent and thoughtful a moment, then
+she answered, steadily.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"He wishes to marry you, then?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered the girl, with a little quiver of triumphant
+happiness in her voice.</p>
+
+<p>"When?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>A shadow fell over the fair, sweet face a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know exactly when," she replied. "But Mr. Chesleigh
+will see you to-morrow&mdash;he told me just now that he would&mdash;and
+then he will settle everything."</p>
+
+<p>There was a silence for a moment. The breeze sighed softly
+through the trees outside; they could hear it in the utter stillness.
+The dim, flaring light fell on the gray head of the old man,
+drooping forlornly on his breast, and on the lovely, upturned
+face of the girl, with its tender blue eyes and falling golden hair.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa," she whispered, "do not be angry with your little
+girl. Put your hand on my head and say you forgive me for my
+fault."</p>
+
+<p>He could not resist the coaxing voice and the asking blue
+eyes. He laid his hand on the golden head and said, solemnly
+and kindly:</p>
+
+<p>"I forgive you, my little Golden, and I pray Heaven that no
+evil may come of this affair!"</p>
+
+<p>She kissed his wrinkled, tremulous, old hand, where it hung
+over the arm of the chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," she said, gratefully. "I am so glad you are not
+angry with me. And now, dear grandpa, I am going to kneel
+right here and listen while you tell me my mother's story."</p>
+
+<p>In the momentary silence the wind outside seemed to sigh more
+sadly through the trees; the dim light flared and flickered, casting
+weird, fantastic shadows in the corners of the room. Deep,
+heavy sighs quivered over the old man's lips as the beautiful,
+child-like girl knelt there, with her blue eyes lifted so eagerly to
+his face.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"You are the image of your mother, my child," said Golden's
+grandfather. "She had a white skin, pink cheeks, blue eyes,
+and shining hair. You inherit her happy, light-hearted disposition.
+You bear the same name also&mdash;Golden Glenalvan."</p>
+
+<p>"Why was I never called by my father's name?" asked innocent
+Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"My child, you anticipate my story," he answered, "but I will
+tell you. You have no right to your father's name."</p>
+
+<p>A cry of terror came from the parted lips of the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, grandpa, you do not mean <i>that</i>&mdash;you could not be so
+cruel!"</p>
+
+<p>"You must remember that it is not my fault," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>She sprang up and stood before him, with a look of white despair
+on her lovely young face.</p>
+
+<p>"Now I understand it all," she said. "I know why my life
+is so unlike that of other girls. Oh, grandpa, grandpa, tell me
+where to find my mother that I may curse her for my ruined
+life!"</p>
+
+<p>His only answer was a low and heart-wrung groan.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, tell me where to find her," repeated little Golden,
+wildly. "She must be living, for I remember now that no one
+has ever told me plainly that she was dead. I will go to her&mdash;I
+will reproach her for her sin! I will tell her what a life mine
+has been&mdash;how I have been hated and despised for my mother's
+fault, even by my kindred."</p>
+
+<p>Sighs, long and bitter, heaved the old man's breast, but he answered
+her not. She flung herself weeping at his feet.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not speak!" she cried. "Oh, grandpa, tell me where
+to find my cruel mother!"</p>
+
+<p>"She is with your father," said Hugh Glenalvan, in a deep and
+bitter voice that showed what agony he endured in the revelation
+of his daughter's disgrace and infamy.</p>
+
+<p>Golden threw up her little hands in convulsive agony.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, not that!" she cried. "Tell me it is not true!"</p>
+
+<p>Again he had no answer for her, and Golden cried out reproachfully:</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, grandpa, why did you suffer her to be so wicked?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was through no fault of mine," he answered heavily.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him in silent anguish a moment, then she asked
+him:</p>
+
+<p>"Where is she? Tell me where to find her, if you know."</p>
+
+<p>"John told me she was in New York the last time he heard of
+her; but that was years ago. I pray God that she may be dead
+ere this."</p>
+
+<p>And then he wrung his hands, and the tears rolled down his
+withered cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my lost little daughter, my precious little Golden," he
+moaned in agony. "How little I dreamed in your innocent babyhood
+that you were reserved for such a fate!"</p>
+
+<p>Golden was regarding him attentively.</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle John told you she was in New York," she said.
+"What did Uncle John know? Did he hate my mother as he hates
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her, startled.</p>
+
+<p>"Hate your mother," he cried. "His own sister! No&mdash;of course
+not&mdash;that is, not until she fell!"</p>
+
+<p>"He hated her then?" asked Golden, musingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he hated her then. I believe he could have killed her."</p>
+
+<p>"He should have killed her betrayer," said Golden, who seemed
+suddenly to have acquired the gravity and thoughtfulness of a
+woman.</p>
+
+<p>"I would have killed him myself if I could have laid hands on
+the villain," said her grandfather, with sudden, irrepressible
+passion.</p>
+
+<p>The bitter grief and impatient wrath of the girl had sobered down
+into quietness more grievous than tears.</p>
+
+<p>Her face showed deathly white in the dim light; her lips were
+set in a line of intense pain; her pansy-blue eyes had grown black
+with feeling.</p>
+
+<p>She brought a low stool and sat down at her grandfather's feet,
+folding her white hands meekly in her lap, and drooping her fair
+head heavily.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, I will not interrupt you again," she said. "I will
+sit here quite still, and listen. Now tell me all my mother's
+story."</p>
+
+<p>She kept her word.</p>
+
+<p>After he had told her all he had to tell, and she knew the
+whole tragic story of her mother's disgrace, she still sat there silently,
+with her dark eyes bent on her clasped hands.</p>
+
+<p>The cloud of shame and disgrace seemed to lower upon her
+head with the weight of the whole world.</p>
+
+<p>"You understand all I have told, my child?" he said to her,
+after waiting vainly for her to speak.</p>
+
+<p>She put her small hand to her head in a dazed, uncertain way.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, I think so," she replied. "But my head seems in a
+whirl. I will ask you just a few questions, grandpa, to make
+sure that I have understood."</p>
+
+<p>And then she seemed to fall into a "brown study." When
+she had collected her thoughts a little she began to question him.</p>
+
+<p>"I think you said that my mother eloped at sixteen with a
+handsome stranger whose acquaintance she had casually made
+in her long, lonely rambles in the woods. In a few weeks she
+wrote to you from New York that she was happily married. Am
+I right, grandpa?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"And then, although you and Uncle John wrote repeatedly,
+you could hear no more from her until a year had passed, and
+she came back unexpectedly one dreadful stormy night."</p>
+
+<p>She paused, and he murmured a dreary, "Yes, dear."</p>
+
+<p>"She was in sore trouble," the girl went on, slowly. "She
+had found out that her husband had deceived her. She was not
+legally his wife. Their marriage had only been a mock marriage.
+So she left him."</p>
+
+<p>"That is right," he said, as she paused again.</p>
+
+<p>"And Uncle John, her only and elder brother, cursed her for
+the disgrace she had brought on the Glenalvans. I think you
+told me that, did you not, dear grandpa?" she said, lifting her
+heavy eyes a moment to his sad, old face.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear, he cursed her. John was always stern and hard,
+and he was always jealous of our love for his little sister. He
+thought we had spoiled her, and he was bitterly angry when she
+returned to us in sorrow and shame. He was married to a woman
+as hard as himself, and they were both for driving her forth
+like a dog. But Dinah and I&mdash;for my daughter's mother had died
+while she was away&mdash;were too tender-hearted for that. We
+cared for the poor, desolate child in spite of John's threats and
+curses."</p>
+
+<p>"And that very night I was born," said little Golden, with the
+heaviest sigh in which any mortal ever cursed the ill-fated hour
+of birth.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you were born in the storm and terror of that dreadful
+night," he answered with a heavy sigh. "And your mother
+almost broke her heart over you because you would never bear
+the name of the man she had loved so well."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And that name, dear grandpa, tell me what it was," she
+cried, with repressed eagerness.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, she would never reveal that name. She loved him
+although he had betrayed her. She was afraid of our vengeance."</p>
+
+<p>A look of keen disappointment came over the beautiful, mobile
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"But, grandpa," she said, "when she wrote you from New
+York, after she left you, in the first flush of her happiness,
+when she had not your vengeance to fear, did she not reveal
+her name then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not even then," said the old man, bitterly. "She hinted
+that there was some innocent but just cause for secrecy just
+then, but that she would send her true name and address in
+the next letter. That next letter never came."</p>
+
+<p>"There is not the slightest clew for me, then. I shall never
+find my mother," said the girl, sorrowfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden, why should you wish to find her? She is a sinner,
+leading a life of shame. She deserted you in your helpless infancy
+to return to the arms of the villain who had betrayed her."</p>
+
+<p>"So Uncle John says," returned the girl, meaningly.</p>
+
+<p>He started, more at the tone than the words.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden, do you doubt him?" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the girl steadily, turning on him the full splendor
+of her purple-blue eyes, in which glowed a spark of indignant
+fire. "Yes, grandpa, I doubt it. I utterly refuse to believe
+such a scandalous story of my mother."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her sadly, touched by her loyal faith in the
+mother she had never known.</p>
+
+<p>"But think, my dear," he said. "You were but a few days
+old when she stole away in the night and left you without a
+line to tell us of her whereabouts. But John's blood was up.
+He traced her to New York, and learned enough to be sure that
+she had returned to her lover. Then he lost all trace of them,
+and came home reluctantly enough, for he would have shot
+the villain if he could have laid hands on him."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a plausible story," the girl said, thoughtfully. "I might
+believe it if any one but John Glenalvan had told it. But oh,
+grandpa, that man always reminds me of a snake in the grass."</p>
+
+<p>"My child, that is one of old Dinah's homely phrases," he remonstrated.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a very true one, though," she maintained, stoutly.</p>
+
+<p>He saw that he could not convince her, so he sighed and remained
+silent.</p>
+
+<p>He had never thought of doubting his son's assertion himself.
+Golden's incredulity awakened a vague sense of uneasiness
+in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>The girl sat silently also for a brief space of time, while the
+old clock in the corner slowly ticked away the moments of that
+momentous night.</p>
+
+<p>She roused herself from her drooping, dejected attitude at
+last and looked up at the quiet old man.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa," she said anxiously, as if some sudden doubt or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+fear had come into her mind, "what will Bert say when he hears
+this dreadful story?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bert?" said her grandfather, questioningly.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Chesleigh, I mean," she replied. "What will he say
+when my story is known to him? Will he, too, hate me for my
+mother's sin?"</p>
+
+<p>A look of pain and dread came over the sad, old face.</p>
+
+<p>"My darling, how can I tell?" he said. "I have heard that
+the Chesleighs are very proud. It is only too likely that he will
+scorn you when he knows the truth. I am afraid you must give
+up all thought of loving him, dear."</p>
+
+<p>A strange, intense look came over the beautiful young face.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot do that," she said. "I love him with my whole
+heart! I shall love him all my life. He loves me, too, grandpa.
+He cannot give me up! He will be true to me. I am not to
+blame for my mother's fault."</p>
+
+<p>"No, dear, I know that," he answered; "but the sins of the
+parents are visited on the children. It is not likely that Mr.
+Chesleigh will care to wed a nameless girl. He is wealthy and
+high-born, and can have his choice from among the best in the
+land. Your Cousin Elinor aspires to marry him."</p>
+
+<p>"He will never marry Elinor," said little Golden, decidedly.
+"He loves me alone. He will be true to me."</p>
+
+<p>"God grant it, dear," her grandfather said, with a patient sigh,
+in which there was but little hope.</p>
+
+<p>Then he looked up and saw the first pale gleams of the summer
+dawn stealing into the room through the open window.</p>
+
+<p>The birds began to warble their mating songs in the broad-leaved
+magnolia trees outside, as if there were no care nor sorrow,
+nor blighting disgrace anywhere in the wide, beautiful
+world.</p>
+
+<p>"My little one," he said to the grave, hollow-eyed child, who
+seemed suddenly to have grown a full-statured woman, "go to
+your room and rest. You look terribly ill and wretched. Do not
+go back to the haunted chamber again, but to your old room
+down stairs. Try to sleep, if you can."</p>
+
+<p>He looked after her in wonder as she turned to obey him. Yesterday
+she had been a beautiful, charming, careless child, full of
+pretty, evanescent angers and quick repentances.</p>
+
+<p>The bloom, the smiles, the brightness were all gone now. The
+gold-brown lashes drooped heavily against the death-white cheeks,
+the sweet lips quivered heart-brokenly, the slow and lagging step
+was that of a weary woman.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>As soon as she had reached the seclusion of her own chamber,
+little Golden threw herself across her bed and wept as though her
+tender heart would break.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely nurtured as she had been, the pride of race had been
+as strong in her young heart as that of any Glenalvan of them
+all, and the shock of her grandfather's revelation had been a terrible
+one.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I wish that I had died in my innocent babyhood," she wept;
+and her black mammy, who had been lingering near her unobserved,
+came forward to her and said quickly, while she smoothed
+the golden hair lovingly with her old black hands:</p>
+
+<p>"You must not say dat, honey, chile. I has great hopes in your
+life. I has almos' wore out my ole brack knees a-prayin' an' a-prayin'
+to de good Lawd dat you might be de instrument to sabe
+your mudder from her sinful life."</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden looked at her black mammy with a kind of pathetic
+wonder in her beautiful, tearful eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"How could I do that, black mammy?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"By seekin' dat poor soul out, Miss Golden, and 'suadin' her to
+forsake dat wicked man, an' spend de balance ob her life in prayin'
+an' repentin' ob her deadly sins," said Dinah, devoutly and
+earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>Golden sat up in the bed and looked at Dinah with eager, shining
+eyes and impulsively clasped hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, black mammy, if I only could," she cried; "but you forget
+I do not know where to find her. I do not even know the
+name of that dreadful man."</p>
+
+<p>And she shivered at the thought of his wickedness. She remembered
+that he was her father, that his bad blood flowed in
+her veins.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah was looking at her strangely.</p>
+
+<p>"Little missie, what would you think if I could tell you his
+name?" she said, with a little note of triumph in her tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Could you&mdash;oh, could you?" cried little Golden, impulsively.</p>
+
+<p>"Jest wait one minute, darlin'," said Dinah, hobbling out of the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Golden waited, wonderingly and impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>After a little while Dinah returned, and laid a small package,
+wrapped in tissue paper, in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>Golden removed the wrappers tremblingly. A small bit of
+crumpled pasteboard fell out into her hand.</p>
+
+<p>She straightened it out and devoured with eager eyes the aristocratic
+name printed upon it in small, clear, black type.</p>
+
+<p>Then she raised her gleaming eyes to the excited face of the old
+black woman.</p>
+
+<p>"So," she said with a long, deep, sobbing breath, "this is my
+father's name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, chile, leastways I has de berry best reason for finking
+so," replied Dinah, promptly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you are not sure?" cried the girl, and there was a note
+of keen disappointment in her voice.</p>
+
+<p>"All I know is dis, honey. It fell outer your mudder's pocket
+de night when you was born. She was drawin' out her handkercher,
+an' it fell onto de floor 'thout her seein' it. I didn't say
+nofin' to de poor, distracted chile. I only picked the keerd up
+and put it away. I sabed it for you, honey, chile."</p>
+
+<p>"And I am very grateful to you, black mammy," said the girl.
+"You had very good reason for thinking it was my father's name.
+But it is a wonder you never gave it to grandpa, or to Uncle
+John."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Who? <i>Me</i> gib John Glenalvan anything, or tell him anything?
+Not to sabe his brack soul from de debbil, who's got a bill ob sale
+for him!" cried Dinah, flying into a rage, as she always did at the
+mention of Golden's uncle.</p>
+
+<p>"Black mammy, why do you hate my uncle so bitterly?" asked
+Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"'Cause he's a snake in de grass," replied Dinah, shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"I know that&mdash;at least I have always felt it," said Golden,
+meditatively; "but there must be some particular reason, mammy.
+Tell me what it is."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, den, if you mus' know, dere's two reasons," said
+Dinah. "De first is dat he hated your pore, sweet mudder.
+De second one is dat he's like a human wampire fastened on
+your gran'pa."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't understand what you mean by your second reason,"
+said Golden, gravely.</p>
+
+<p>Dinah looked at her a moment in meditative silence; then she
+said abruptly:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't keer what dey say, I'll tell you, my chile. Your Uncle
+John done badgered and badgered your grandpa while you
+was a leetle, teeny babby until, for de sake ob peace, dat pore ole
+man done made John a deed to Glenalvan Hall and de whole estate.
+Your gran'pa ain't no more dan a beggar in the ole hall
+his own fader left him in his will."</p>
+
+<p>"But why did my grandfather give away his property like
+that?" asked the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"'Cause John swore if he didn't do it dat he would carry you
+off and put you into a foundling asylum. You was a pore, leetle,
+deliky babby then, and we skeecely 'spected you would live
+from one day to de nex' one. So to hab de pleasure ob keepin'
+an' tendin' you de ole man 'sented to beggar hisself."</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa did all that for my unworthy sake, and yet I reproached
+him for being strict and hard with me! Oh, how wicked
+and ungrateful he must think me," cried the girl, tearfully.</p>
+
+<p>"No he don't, honey, chile," said the black woman, soothingly,
+"you see he knowed dat you wasn't 'ware of all what you
+had to t'ank him for."</p>
+
+<p>"No, indeed, I never dreamed of all I had cost him," exclaimed
+beautiful Golden, self-reproachfully. "And so, black mammy,
+we are only staying at Glenalvan Hall on the sufferance of my
+uncle?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dat's jest de way ob it, missie. And, look ye, too dat ongrateful,
+graspin' wilyun has done threaten your pore gran'pa,
+time and ag'in, to pack bofe of you'uns off to de pore-house."</p>
+
+<p>"The unnatural monster!" exclaimed little Golden, in a perfect
+tempest of passionate wrath.</p>
+
+<p>"Well you may say so," cried Dinah, in a fever of sympathy.
+"De debbil will nebber git his due till he gets John Glenalvan!
+De blood biles in my ole vains when I fink ob all de insults dat
+man has heaped on his own fader, 'long ob you and your pore
+misguided mudder."</p>
+
+<p>Beautiful little Golden sat upright regarding the excited old
+woman in grave silence. Her blue eyes were on fire with indignation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+and grief. At times she would murmur: "Poor, dear
+grandpa, dear true-hearted grandpa," and relapse into silence
+again.</p>
+
+<p>She roused herself at last from her musing mood, and looked
+up at Dinah. There was a hopeful light in the soft, blue eyes, so
+lately drowned in tears of sorrow and despair.</p>
+
+<p>"Black mammy, I have been thinking," she said, "and I will
+tell you what I mean to do."</p>
+
+<p>"What, honey?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you a secret, mammy. Mr. Chesleigh loves me.
+We are&mdash;that is, I will be his wife one of these days."</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Golden, is dat so?" cried black mammy, delighted. "I
+am so glad! I was 'fraid&mdash;well, nebber min' what I was 'fraid of,
+chile; but 'deed I is so glad dat Mr. Chesly's gwine to marry you.
+He is a rich man, honey. You kin snap your lily fingers at ugly
+Marse John, when once you is Mr. Chesly's wife."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he is very rich, black mammy," said the girl, with a
+pretty, almost childish complacency. "He has told me so, and
+he tells me I shall have jewels and fine dresses, and all that heart
+could desire when I go to live with him&mdash;I mean," blushing rosy
+red, "when I become his wife."</p>
+
+<p>"And powerful pretty you will look in dem fine tings, honey,"
+said her black mammy, admiringly.</p>
+
+<p>"But the best thing of all, black mammy, is that I shall be able
+to take grandpa away from this place, and love him and care for
+him," cried Golden, exultantly. "I shall take you, too, mammy,
+for you have been the only mother I ever knew. Grandpa shall
+have the happiest home in the world, and Bert and I will both
+love him dearly, dearly!"</p>
+
+<p>"And your pore, lost mudder, darlin', you had forgotten her,"
+said Dinah, a little wistfully, her thoughts straying back through
+the mist of years, to the lost little nursling who had fluttered
+from the safe parental nest, and steeped the white wings of her
+soul in the blackness of sin.</p>
+
+<p>But Golden shook her dainty head decidedly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, black mammy, I had not forgotten," she said. "When
+I am Bert's wife, he shall help me to seek and save my poor, lost
+mother. We will try to win her back to the path of right, and
+save her soul for Heaven," she concluded, with girlish ardor and
+fervency.</p>
+
+<p>"May the good Lawd help you to succeed, my innercent
+lamb," said the good old black woman, prayerfully. "Her little
+soul was too white and tender for de brack debbil to git it at de
+last for his brack dominions."</p>
+
+<p>There was a sudden tap at the door. Golden looked at it eagerly
+and expectantly, while Dinah threw it open.</p>
+
+<p>A small black boy, a servant of John Glenalvan, stood outside
+with a sealed letter in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"For Missie Golden, from Mass Chesleigh," he said, putting it
+in Dinah's hand, and quickly retiring.</p>
+
+<p>Dinah carried it silently to her mistress, who kissed the superscription,
+and eagerly tore it open.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The thick, satin-smooth sheet rustled in the trembling little
+hand as the blue eyes ran over it, lovingly and eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>As she read, the tender, loving eyes grew wild and startled, an
+ashen shade crept around the rosebud lips, the young face whitened
+to the corpse-like hue of death. She crumpled the sheet in
+her hand at last, and threw it wildly from her, while a cry of
+intolerable anguish thrilled over her white lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, mammy, mammy, my heart is broken&mdash;broken! I shall
+never see him again. He has forsaken me for my mother's sin!"</p>
+
+<p>Then she fell back cold and rigid, like one dead upon the bed.
+Dinah flew to her assistance, cursing in her heart the wickedness
+and heartlessness of men.</p>
+
+<p>But though she worked busily and anxiously, the morning sun
+rode high in the heavens before the deeply-stricken girl recovered
+her consciousness. Her grandfather was watching beside
+her pillow when her eyes first opened, and she threw her arms
+around his neck and wept long and bitterly on his faithful breast.</p>
+
+<p>"You were right," she whispered to him. "You know the
+cruel world better than I did. He has left me, grandpa&mdash;I shall
+never see him again. He discards me for my mother's sin."</p>
+
+<p>She wept and moaned all day, refusing all consolation. She
+was terrified by the coldness and cruelty of the world that condemned
+her for the sins of others.</p>
+
+<p>Many and many a time she had chafed at the narrowness and
+loneliness of her lot, but she had never known sorrow until to-day.</p>
+
+<p>Its horrible reality crushed her down before its pitiless strength
+like the fury of the storm-rain. A crushed and bleeding victim,
+she lay weak and stunned in its victorious path.</p>
+
+<p>At nightfall she slept, wearied out by the force and violence of
+her deep, overmastering emotion.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah persuaded her weary, haggard old master to retire
+to his room and bed, promising to watch faithfully herself by
+the sick girl.</p>
+
+<p>She dozed until midnight, when, as Golden still slept on heavily,
+she permitted herself to take a wary nap in an old arm-chair.
+It was daylight when the weary, suffering old creature awoke.
+The beautiful Golden was gone.</p>
+
+<p>A little three-cornered note lay on the pillow that still held the
+impress of the dear little head. The child had written sorrowfully
+to her grandfather:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Grandpa, darling, I have only brought you trouble and sorrow
+all my life-time, so I am going away. Your son will be
+kinder to you when I am gone, and your life will be less hard;
+perhaps black mammy will be kind and faithful to you, so you
+will not miss your thoughtless little Golden very much. God
+bless you, grandpa, you must pray for me nightly, for I am going
+to seek my mother, the erring mother who cursed me with life!
+If indeed, she is living in sin and shame, I will strive to reclaim
+her and restore her to the safe path of virtue. I have nothing
+else to live for. Love and happiness, the delights of this world,
+are not for me. It shall be <i>the dream of my life-time</i> to find and
+save my wronged and erring mother."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>From the fair southern clime where her lines had hitherto been
+cast, little Golden traveled straight to the great, thronged city of
+New York.</p>
+
+<p>During her long day and night of intense suffering, the thought,
+first suggested to her mind by old Dinah, of seeking and reclaiming
+her erring mother, had fastened on her mind with irresistible
+force and power.</p>
+
+<p>Every thought and feeling of this beautiful, unhappy child
+was as pure as that of an angel.</p>
+
+<p>The knowledge that the young mother who had given her
+birth was living a life of sin and dishonor was most revolting to
+her mind. She could not think of it without a mortal shudder.</p>
+
+<p>When Dinah fell asleep by her pillow the girl awakened suddenly
+and lay for a little while in silent meditation. The idea
+she had been silently revolving in her mind all day gathered
+strength in the solitude and stillness of the midnight hour.</p>
+
+<p>Golden was young, buoyant, ignorant of the world, and
+thought not of the difficulties that would hedge the path of duty
+which she was marking out for her little, untried feet.</p>
+
+<p>She did not know how dear she was to her grandfather's heart,
+and how bitterly he would be wounded by her desertion. She
+only thought of escaping from the life which had suddenly become
+so unbearable, and of filling her heart with other aims now
+that the love she had given so lavishly from the depths of a
+warm and generous heart, had been cast back to her in scorn
+and contempt.</p>
+
+<p>In the pocket of her best cashmere dress was a little purse
+filled with gold pieces of which no one knew but herself.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh had given it to her in a happy, never-to-be-forgotten
+hour which now it almost killed her even to recall.</p>
+
+<p>Almost staggering with weakness, Golden rose and silently
+and cautiously dressed herself in her blue cashmere dress and
+hat and jacket.</p>
+
+<p>She decided not to take anything with her. It would be easier
+to purchase new things when she had arrived in New York.</p>
+
+<p>When she was ready to go, Golden knelt down a moment and
+pressed her fair cheek lovingly and sorrowfully to the toil-worn
+wrinkled hand of her old black mammy.</p>
+
+<p>She loved the old negress dearly. Under that homely black
+breast beat the only heart that had ever given a mother's love to
+the beautiful, forsaken child of poor, wronged and misguided
+little Golden.</p>
+
+<p>Then with a lingering, loving, backward glance around, the
+girl left the room and proceeded to her grandfather's apartment.</p>
+
+<p>The kind old man was asleep with a look of care and anxiety
+deeply imprinted on his pale, worn features.</p>
+
+<p>Golden pressed her trembling lips to the thin, gray locks that
+straggled over the pillow, and her girlish tears fell on them,
+shining like jewels in the dim gleam of the night-lamp.</p>
+
+<p>Then Golden stole away noiselessly. There was one more farewell
+to be said ere she set forth on the mission whose only clew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+lay in the crumpled card hidden away securely in the little purse
+of gold.</p>
+
+<p>She knelt down on the banks of the tranquil little lake she had
+always loved so dearly, and clasped her little hands and lifted
+her white face in the bright moonlight.</p>
+
+<p>"Farewell, little lake," she murmured to the silvery, tranquil
+sheet of water. "I pray God that the time may come when I
+shall kneel by you again, and tell you that I have reclaimed my
+erring mother, and that her soul has been washed as pure and
+free from sin as the lilies sleeping on your breast."</p>
+
+<p>Was it only little Golden's excited fancy, or did a shadow, soft
+and impalpable as a mist wreath, and pale as the moonbeams,
+glide across the still water in the form of a woman, and a voice
+as soft and low as the sigh of the breeze murmur sadly:</p>
+
+<p>"Bless you, my daughter."</p>
+
+<p>She started and looked around; the voice and vision had been
+so real she could hardly imagine it fancy, but the phantom shape
+had dissolved into moonbeams again, and the voice had melted
+into music on the "homeless winds."</p>
+
+<p>"If my poor mother was dead I should believe that her spirit
+had blessed me," said the beautiful girl to herself. "But she is
+alive, so it could not have been she, perhaps it was my guardian
+angel."</p>
+
+<p>She plucked a beautiful, large, white lily from the lake and
+started on her way to the railway station, carrying the spotless
+flower in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps some thought of the poet, Longfellow's, verses came
+to her mind:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Bear a lily in thine hand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Gates of brass cannot withstand<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">One touch of that magic wand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Bear through sorrow, wrong and ruth,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">On thy lips the smile of truth,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In thy heart the dew of youth."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>We will return to Bertram Chesleigh, little Golden's recreant
+lover.</p>
+
+<p>All of John Glenalvan's influence had been brought to bear on
+the proud young man to induce him to relinquish his pursuit of
+the beautiful girl whose acquaintance he had so strangely and
+imprudently formed.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Chesleigh's own pride of birth, united to John Glenalvan's
+artful innuendoes, was a powerful ally in the young man's
+mind against his love for the lonely and beautiful little girl.</p>
+
+<p>In the light of John Glenalvan's revelations, a great revulsion
+had taken place in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>He heartily wished that he had never made the acquaintance
+of the lovely little creature, or that he had not followed it up
+with such ardor and passion.</p>
+
+<p>With few, if any exceptions, men are naturally selfish. Bertram
+Chesleigh, who had never known a desire unfulfilled in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+the course of his prosperous life, was no exception to the general
+rule.</p>
+
+<p>In pursuing his acquaintance with little Golden, he had been
+actuated more by a regard for his own pleasure than by any
+thought of risk for her.</p>
+
+<p>In the light of recent developments, he thought also first of
+himself. How to escape from the consequences of his headlong
+passion became momentarily a paramount consideration.</p>
+
+<p>When his conscience reproached him he replied to it that it was
+only natural and right that he should think first of himself.</p>
+
+<p>He had his high social station to maintain, and he was quite
+sure that his friends and relations would have declined to receive
+even as his bride, a woman of stained birth.</p>
+
+<p>Golden had, it seemed, no place in the world, no social status
+whatever.</p>
+
+<p>If he made her his bride, his troubles and embarrassments would
+be legion. If he left her all would go well with him, and he
+argued with himself that the child would speedily forget him and
+resign herself to her strange and lonely life.</p>
+
+<p>So, under the influence of these vexing thoughts, and John
+Glenalvan's specious arguments and representations, that unjust
+letter was written to poor, suffering little Golden.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, we are so careless and so thoughtless over what we write.
+Bertram Chesleigh was not a bad man, and never meant to be
+cruel, and yet he had done more harm in the writing of that letter
+than if he had pierced the tender heart with a dagger.</p>
+
+<p>Even while writing it he felt ashamed and sorry, yet no premonition
+came to tell him of the dim future when he would have
+given tears of blood to have obliterated even the memory of that
+letter from the heart of little Golden which it had seared as with
+the breath of fire.</p>
+
+<p>He never forgot a single word of that letter he had written to
+her, although in his haste and agitation he had kept no copy of
+it. It did not seem so hard to him at first as it did afterward,
+when he knew what suffering the writing had caused and the
+consequences were forever beyond recall.</p>
+
+<p>After he had written and dispatched it he made his adieu to the
+family of John Glenalvan and departed, feeling like a coward,
+while if he had truly understood the depth of tenderness and
+capabilities of woe in the girl he had deserted, he might have felt
+more like a murderer.</p>
+
+<p>The Glenalvans, while terribly disappointed in their hopes for
+Elinor, were relieved at the departure of their guest for the present.
+Elinor entreated her father to make arrangements for removing
+Golden out of the way in case the young man should repeat his
+visit, and he promised, with an oath more forcible than polite,
+that he would certainly do so.</p>
+
+<p>But before he had taken any decisive step in the furtherance
+of his purpose, the unfortunate girl had taken her fate in her own
+hands. When John Glenalvan entered the ruined wing the
+second day for the purpose, as he had emphatically expressed it,
+of "having it out with his father in cursed few words," he found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+the old man and his faithful old servant in a frenzy of grief and
+despair over Golden's farewell letter.</p>
+
+<p>John was unfeignedly glad that Golden had gone away herself
+without giving him the trouble and annoyance of sending her.</p>
+
+<p>"It is much better as it is, father," he said to the poor, broken-hearted
+old creature. "I fully intended to send the girl away.
+She has only saved herself the ignominy of a summary dismissal.
+Do not fret yourself over her. She has only forsaken you to lead
+a life of shame with her erring mother. I hope that a lightning
+flash may strike her dead before she ever returns here again to
+disgrace and shame us yet further!"</p>
+
+<p>"Forbear, John. You are cruel and impious," cried the old
+man, lifting his hand feebly, and his son strode angrily out of
+the room, muttering curses "not loud but deep," and followed
+by the vivid lightnings of old Dinah's black eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, de brack-hearted wilyun!" she muttered. "May de good
+Lard hasten de time ob punishment for his cruel sins!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>The first thing that happened to little Golden Glenalvan after
+she arrived in the city of New York, was something that not infrequently
+happens to simple and inexperienced travelers.</p>
+
+<p>She had her pocket picked of her purse by some expert thief.
+Such things have often happened in the annals of New York
+crime, and will again, but it is probable that no one's life was
+ever so much affected by such a loss as was the unfortunate
+little Golden's.</p>
+
+<p>She found herself by this totally unlooked-for catastrophe
+thrown into the streets of the great, wicked city penniless,
+friendless, and utterly forsaken. Every cent she possessed in
+the world had been in the little purse, together with the card
+that bore her father's name. The latter was not so great a loss
+to her. The name of the man who had wronged her mother
+was engraven on her mind in characters that were never to be
+destroyed.</p>
+
+<p>Her little plans for the discovery of her mother, laid with such
+girlish art, were all turned away by this accident. She had
+meant to take cheap lodgings somewhere, and prosecute her
+search, but now she knew not what to do, nor where to turn.</p>
+
+<p>The great, busy city, with its strange faces and hurry and
+bustle frightened her, even though she dreamed not in her
+girlish innocence of its festering sin and underlying wickedness.</p>
+
+<p>Sinking down on a secluded seat in Central Park where she
+had been walking when she first discovered her loss, she sobbed
+bitterly in her grief and distress&mdash;so bitterly that a well-dressed,
+benevolent-looking lady who was walking along a path with a
+pretty poodle frisking before her, went up to her with kind
+abruptness.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear little girl," she said, laying her hand gently on the
+showering, golden wealth of hair that escaped from Golden's
+little sailor hat, "what is the matter? Can I help you?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Golden lifted her head and the lady who had a kind, middle-aged
+face, decidedly aristocratic, started and uttered a cry of surprise
+at the beautiful, girlish face with its tearful eyes like purple-blue
+pansies drowned in dew.</p>
+
+<p>In a moment the lady's quick eyes had seen from the cut and
+fashion of Golden's simple garments that she was a stranger in
+New York. She repeated kindly:</p>
+
+<p>"What ails you, my child? Have you become separated from
+your friends?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, for I have not a friend in this whole, great city. But I have
+lost my purse," answered Golden, with childish directness.</p>
+
+<p>The lady sat down beside her and regarded her a moment in
+thoughtful silence. She saw nothing but the most infantile sweetness,
+purity and truth in the lovely, troubled young face. She was
+touched and interested.</p>
+
+<p>"So you have lost your purse?" she said. "Have you had your
+pocket picked?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know," answered Golden, forlornly. "I carried it in
+my jacket pocket, and awhile ago, when I felt for it I discovered
+that it was gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, I am quite sure you are a stranger in New York," said
+the lady. "If you belonged in the city you would know better
+than to carry your purse carelessly in the pocket of your walking
+jacket. New York is full of sneak thieves who are on the watch
+for the unwary. You say you have not a friend in the city. Where
+are you from, my child?"</p>
+
+<p>"From the south," replied Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you come to New York alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes madam. I am an orphan," replied the girl, not wishing to
+disclose her history to her interrogator.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you wish for in this great city?" asked the lady.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to find some employment at present. Can you help me?"
+asked Golden, timidly and beseechingly lifting her large blue eyes
+to the interested face of the lady.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps I can," said the lady, smiling gently. "What kind of
+employment do you wish? What kind of work can you do?"</p>
+
+<p>The beautiful, girlish face grew a little blank. She remembered
+her careless, idle life at Glenalvan Hall, where no one ever taught
+her anything but her grandfather and old Dinah. She was compelled
+to confess despondently that she did not know how to do
+anything.</p>
+
+<p>The lady who was a really good woman with a decidedly benevolent
+turn, studied the drooping face attentively. She saw that there
+was some mystery about the girl, but the lovely young face was so
+guileless and winning that she could see no evil in it. She asked
+her, rather abruptly, what her name was.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden Glenalvan," answered the girl, and the lady frowned
+slightly, and said it was too fanciful and pretty.</p>
+
+<p>"If you are going to work for your living, I would advise you
+to call yourself by some plain and common name, such as Jones or
+Brown or Smith."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I will call myself Mary Smith," replied Golden, resignedly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That will do very well. Now, my child, do you think you
+would like to undertake chambermaid's work?"</p>
+
+<p>She glanced, as she spoke, at the girl's ungloved hands, and
+saw that they were delicately white and aristocratic, so she answered
+the question negatively to herself before Golden answered,
+shrinkingly and timidly:</p>
+
+<p>"I do not believe I would like it, madam, but I am willing to
+try. I must do something to support myself, and I have no
+choice left me since I do not know how to do anything."</p>
+
+<p>The lady looked at her a little wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>"My child, if you would tell me something about yourself I
+might know better how to help you," she said. "It is quite
+evident that you have met with reverses. You are unaccustomed
+to labor, and you look like a born lady."</p>
+
+<p>Golden was silent, and a deep blush colored her face. Not for
+worlds would she have told her sad story to this gentle woman.</p>
+
+<p>She fancied that the sweet pity beaming from her gray eyes
+now would change to scorn and contempt, if she could know that
+she was a nameless child seeking a lost and guilty mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you have imprudently run away from your friends,"
+she said, questioningly, and striking so near the truth that Golden
+burst into tears again, and would have left her but that she detained
+her by a firm yet gentle pressure of the hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not go," she said. "I want to help you if I can. Perhaps
+I could tell you something you are far too young and innocent to
+know."</p>
+
+<p>"What is that, ma'am?" asked Golden, looking at her questioningly.</p>
+
+<p>"This, my child&mdash;that one so pretty and simple as you are
+should not be alone and friendless in this great city. You are in
+the greatest danger. Beauty is only a curse to a poor girl who
+has to earn her own living."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, madam," Golden answered, with perfect meekness,
+though she crimsoned painfully.</p>
+
+<p>"So I think," continued her kind friend, "that a home and
+shelter in even the humblest capacity is better for you than to be
+wandering alone in the streets homeless and penniless."</p>
+
+<p>"I know that," said Golden, "but I have nowhere to go," and
+the pathos of the tearful tone touched the kind lady's heart.</p>
+
+<p>"My child, I have been thinking about that," she said. "I
+have a friend who needs a nurse for her little invalid girl. Should
+you like to try for the situation?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," Golden answered, gratefully.</p>
+
+<p>"The little girl is the petted and only daughter of wealthy people,"
+continued the kind lady. "She is delicate, and has been
+humored and spoiled injudiciously all her life, until she is, at
+times, quite overbearing and disagreeable, so much so indeed that
+her mother can scarcely keep a nurse for her more than a week or
+two at a time. Are you frightened at my description? Have you
+a good store of patience?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have been impatient and self-willed all my life," confessed
+Golden, frankly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet you have a sweet-tempered face, if there is any truth in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+physiognomy," said her new friend. "It seems to me that you
+could not grow impatient ministering to the needs of that poor,
+little invalid child. Think how much happiness you could give
+the poor, ailing little soul if you tried. And when you are as old
+as I am," she added, with a faint sigh, "you will understand that
+the greatest pleasure in life is in giving happiness to others."</p>
+
+<p>"I will try to be patient and kind to the child, if you will be
+so kind as to get the place for me," said little Golden, trembling
+with eagerness.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, my dear; I will myself accompany you to my
+friend's house and speak a kind word in your favor. It is rather
+a risk to run, this introducing and vouching for a total stranger,
+but I believe that your gentle, honest face will be a passport to
+Mrs. Desmond's favor, just as it has been to mine. You will follow
+me, now, my child."</p>
+
+<p>Golden walked on with the warm-hearted woman some distance
+through the beautiful green park, when, to her surprise, her benefactress
+stopped before an elegant, liveried carriage, with quite
+an imposing-looking driver in a white hat and gloves.</p>
+
+<p>"Drive to Mrs. Desmond's, John," she said, as the footman
+handed her and her timid <i>protege</i> into the carriage.</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden felt like one in a bewildering dream as she lay
+back among the luxurious satin cushions and was whirled through
+the stately streets, past the beautiful buildings and brown-stone
+palaces until they stopped at last before one more splendid than
+all the rest, and she found herself gliding up the marble steps, her
+young heart throbbing fast at the novelty and strangeness of her
+position.</p>
+
+<p>She was going to be a servant in this splendid house! She, one
+of the Glenalvans of Glenalvan Hall, a name that had been proud
+and honored in the past until her girlish mother had stained its
+haughty prestige with shame.</p>
+
+<p>Her heart beat heavily and slow. The thought came to her
+mind that these proud and wealthy people would not even permit
+her to be a servant to their daughter if they knew that she was a
+nameless child.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Markham, little Golden's kind, new friend, was evidently
+on terms of intimacy with Mrs. Desmond.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of sending her card to the lady and awaiting her appearance
+in the formal drawing-room, she was at once conducted up
+stairs to a charming <i>boudoir</i> hung with rose-colored silk and
+white lace.</p>
+
+<p>The carpet was white velvet strewn with a pattern of pink moss
+rosebuds, and the chairs and couches were upholstered in a deeper
+shade of rose-color.</p>
+
+<p>Everything in the room was costly and tasteful, and vases of
+freshly-cut flowers diffused delicious fragrance through the air.</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden had never before been in such a costly and tasteful
+room, and she uttered an involuntary low exclamation of surprise
+and delight at which Mrs. Markham smiled indulgently.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Does this pretty room surprise you?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, madam, I have never seen anything so beautiful and
+costly before," answered the simple child.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the heavy draperies that hung between the
+<i>boudoir</i> and the dressing-room were swept aside by a white,
+jeweled hand, and the mistress of all this magnificence entered
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>She was a beautiful young lady, with great, velvety black eyes,
+dark, waving hair, crimson lips, and rounded cheeks like the
+sunny side of a peach. Her morning-dress was elegant, costly
+and becoming.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Mrs. Markham, good-morning. I am very glad to see
+you," she cried, then she looked past her friend inquiringly at
+the little, shrinking figure of Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Edith, this is a little <i>protege</i> of mine, Mary Smith by name,"
+Mrs. Markham hastened to say. "If you have not secured a
+nurse yet, will you try her for little Ruby?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be very glad to do so if you think she will suit," returned
+Mrs. Desmond as they all seated themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Then the handsome brunette looked patronizingly at the new
+applicant for her favor. The scrutiny did not seem to please her.
+The slender, arched, black brows met over the bright eyes in a
+slight frown.</p>
+
+<p>"Child, why do you not put your hair up?" she asked, glancing
+at the bright wealth of loosely flowing ringlets. "It is not becoming
+to nurses to wear it in that way."</p>
+
+<p>"I can put it up if you wish me, ma'am," Golden replied in a
+low voice, her eyelids drooping that the lady might not see the
+childish resentment that flashed into them at her slightly scornful
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, I shall insist upon that if I engage you," replied
+Mrs. Desmond. "You will tuck it up and wear a nurse's cap
+over it. Have you any recommendations to give with her, Mrs.
+Markham?" she continued, expectantly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, for Mary has never been in service before," replied the
+kind lady. "She is a young southern girl seeking employment
+in this city, and I should like to befriend her if possible. I fancied
+that her gentle, innocent face might recommend her to your
+favor as it did to mine."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond turned to look at Golden again, and met the
+gaze of the soft blue eyes fixed on her with a kind of puzzled intentness.</p>
+
+<p>"Child, why do you stare at me so curiously?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>The deep color rushed into Golden's face, making her more
+lovely than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon," she hastened to say, falteringly. "You
+remind me so much of someone I have known that I could not
+keep from looking at your face. It was very rude, I know."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, I am not angry," answered Mrs. Desmond.
+"Do you think you would make a good, patient nurse for my little
+girl, Mary?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will do the best I can," little Golden replied, in her gentle,
+refined voice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond looked at her friend.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not in the habit of engaging help without recommendation.
+It is rather a risk to run," she remarked, "but to please
+you, my friend, and because I really need a maid for Ruby, I
+will give Mary Smith a trial. When can you come Mary?"</p>
+
+<p>"She can stay now, if you like, Edith," said Mrs. Markham.</p>
+
+<p>"That will suit me very well," said Mrs. Desmond. "I will
+engage you for one month at least, Mary, and I will pay you ten
+dollars a month. Will that suit you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, thank you," Golden answered, timidly.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, you may stay now, and you may go at once to
+Ruby, for I have been compelled to lend her my own maid, for a
+week past, and she is so dissatisfied with the position that she
+threatens to leave me if she is not relieved. I can assure you that
+you will find your position no sinecure. I hope you will try to
+find means to amuse the child. You must be very kind and patient
+with her, Mary. I allow no scolding or fault-finding, for
+my little girl is very frail and delicate."</p>
+
+<p>Golden rose and stood waiting while the languid, fine lady
+talked.</p>
+
+<p>When she had ended her little speech, she pointed her white
+finger at the dressing-room door.</p>
+
+<p>"Go through the drawing-room," she said, "into my bed-chamber.
+You will find that it has a door connecting with the
+nursery. You will find my little daughter in there. You may
+introduce yourself to her. Mrs. Markham and I will look in presently
+and see how Ruby is pleased with you."</p>
+
+<p>"Try and make a good impression on the little one's mind at
+first," said Mrs. Markham, kindly. "First impressions are everything
+with children."</p>
+
+<p>Beautiful Golden thanked her with a grateful look, and silently
+withdrew to follow Mrs. Desmond's instructions.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not seem as pleased as I had expected, Edith," Mrs.
+Markham said, in a tone of disappointment, when they were
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>"To tell the truth, I think the girl is too pretty," Mrs. Desmond
+replied, with some embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you liked pretty things about you," said her friend.</p>
+
+<p>"So I do, but I do not like pretty servants," was the significant
+reply. "As a rule they are vain and trifling, and do not attend
+to their business. They are always looking out to attract admiration
+to their pretty faces."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not believe that Mary Smith is one of that kind," said
+Mrs. Markham. "She seems a good, simple, innocent girl. But
+if she fails to suit you, Edith, you may return her to me, and I
+will find some other place for her. I imagined that you would be
+delighted with such a girl for Ruby's attendant."</p>
+
+<p>"And so I am, and I am ever so much obliged to you for thinking
+of me. I hope that she will please Ruby better than the girls
+we have had lately, for I feel quite worn out with anxiety over
+the dear little creature," replied Mrs. Desmond, but so constrained
+that Mrs. Markham saw that she was only half-hearted in her
+pleasure, and wondered why it was that Golden's beauty, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+was so attractive to her own eyes, was distasteful to Mrs. Desmond,
+who was beautiful herself, and liked to gather beautiful
+things around her.</p>
+
+<p>It is said that every family has its skeleton. Mrs. Markham
+did not know that the skeleton in her friend's closet was the lurking
+fiend of jealousy. Mrs. Desmond was a charming lady, but
+she secretly disliked every pretty woman she knew.</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden went on through the dressing-room to the bed-chamber,
+which was a perfect bower of elegance and repose, and
+timidly opened the nursery door, for the description of little Ruby
+Desmond had rather intimidated her.</p>
+
+<p>She found herself in a large, airy, sunny chamber, splendidly
+adapted for a nursery, and luxuriously fitted up for that purpose.</p>
+
+<p>In a low rocking-chair a smart French maid was indolently
+lounging and yawning over a French novel.</p>
+
+<p>In a corner of the room a little girl of six years, small for her
+age, and pale and delicate-looking, was sobbing fretfully in a fit
+of the sulks.</p>
+
+<p>She dashed the tears from her eyes and looked up curiously at
+the timid intruder.</p>
+
+<p>"Who are you?" she demanded, abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am Mary Smith, your new nurse, little Miss Ruby," said
+Golden, in a clear, sweet voice, and with a winning smile.</p>
+
+<p>The French maid threw down her novel and stared, and little
+Ruby came out of her corner.</p>
+
+<p>"So you are my new maid, are you?" she asked, pertly. "Well,
+I hope you will not be as hateful as Celine here is, for if you do I
+shall be sure to throw my top at your head. I am very glad you
+are come, for I am perfectly tired of Celine, and I want her to
+leave me at once&mdash;at once, do you hear me, Celine?"</p>
+
+<p>Celine flounced out of the room in a huff, and the little one continued:</p>
+
+<p>"There is one comfort, you are not as ugly as Celine and the
+others! I hate ugly people, and so does my papa, but mamma
+likes them best. <i>You</i> are the prettiest nurse I ever saw! You
+look just like my big wax doll, with your blue eyes and long hair.
+Nurses always wear their hair under a cap, did you not know
+that?"</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden did not answer one word to the voluble discourse
+of the spoiled child.</p>
+
+<p>She stood silently in the center of the large apartment, her
+small hand pressed to her beating heart, her pale lips apart, her
+blue eyes upraised to a large portrait that hung against the wall
+in a splendid frame of gold and ebony. The dark, handsome,
+splendid face that smiled down upon her was the face of her lost
+lover, Bertram Chesleigh.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Fortunately for Golden, little Ruby Desmond did not observe
+the preoccupation of her new nurse. She had entered upon a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+voluble tirade against nurses in general, and when she had ended
+she remarked with a sudden change of tone:</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't believe I shall hate you as much as I did the rest.
+You are younger and prettier than any girl I ever had to amuse
+me. Come, now, Mary, lay off your hat and jacket. I want you
+to make my doll a new dress. That lazy Celine would not stick a
+needle in it, for all I stormed and scolded, and threatened to complain
+to mamma."</p>
+
+<p>Thus adjured, Golden turned her eyes with an effort away from
+the portrait of Bertram Chesleigh, and proceeded to obey the instructions
+of her little mistress with what cheerfulness she could,
+although her heart was beating wildly with the shock she had
+received on coming suddenly face to face with her lover's portrait
+in this strange place.</p>
+
+<p>She longed, yet dreaded to ask little Ruby what the original of
+the portrait was to her.</p>
+
+<p>Looking from the portrait to the child she could plainly discern
+in Ruby's proud mouth and flashing, dark eyes, a great and striking
+resemblance to Mr. Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>But she was afraid to ask the question that trembled on her
+lips, so she sat down mutely while Ruby brought a large wax doll
+and placed it in her lap, together with a large quantity of scraps
+of silk and muslin and odds and ends of pretty lace.</p>
+
+<p>Then she pulled open the drawer of a child's bureau and brought
+out a garnet silk dress of her own, elaborately made and trimmed.</p>
+
+<p>"I want Dollie's dress made exactly like this," she said, hanging
+it open over the back of a chair for Golden's inspection. "It
+is in the latest fashion, so Celine says. Celine thinks of nothing
+but French novels and fashions, so she ought to know."</p>
+
+<p>"Your doll is very beautiful. Is it a new one?" asked Golden,
+trying to say something to please the little creature who was
+hovering about her, busy and excited with her important preparations
+for the miniature dressmaking.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, it is tolerably new! Papa gave it to me last week,"
+replied Ruby. "There was a little trunk of clothes with her, but
+I do not like any of the dresses. They are quite old-fashioned and
+shabby, I think. Mamma says herself that they must have been
+made at least a year ago. So I shall never be satisfied until I have
+a new-fashioned dress for Dollie."</p>
+
+<p>She was silent a moment, watching Golden's deft finger as they
+slowly cut and basted, then she resumed:</p>
+
+<p>"I have tried and tried, but I cannot think of a name for her.
+Can you tell me a pretty name for her, Mary?"</p>
+
+<p>"Would you like to call her Golden?" asked the girl, feeling as
+if the sound of her own name would be a relief in this new, strange
+atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden! what a pretty name," said the child. "I like that.
+I will call Dollie by that name. I shall be Golden&mdash;Golden Chesleigh,"
+she added, after a minute's thought.</p>
+
+<p>The new nurse started so violently, that the doll's dress
+fell from her fingers. The lovely crimson color rushed into her
+face.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Chesleigh! Why do you call her that?" she asked, falteringly.
+"Do you know anybody by that name, Miss Ruby?"</p>
+
+<p>The little girl laughed quite happily.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I should think I did," she said, brightly. "My own
+uncle is named Chesleigh&mdash;Bertram Chesleigh. There is his portrait
+on the wall. Look at it, Mary, and tell me if he is not me
+very handsomest man you ever beheld."</p>
+
+<p>Golden looked up into the dark eyes that had gazed into her
+own so fondly, and at the proud yet tender lips that had kissed
+her with such passionate love, and she could barely repress the
+moan of pain that came from her lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he is very handsome," she said faintly. "Does he ever
+call here to see you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, often and often, when he is at home," said Ruby.
+"But he is gone away traveling in the sunny south now. He
+travels a great deal. Mamma calls him a bird of passage."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he fond of you?" said Golden, seeing that she was expected
+to say something.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, very fond," said Ruby, brightening up so much that
+Golden saw it was a favorite subject with her. "He had that
+splendid portrait painted expressly for a present to me. Mamma
+begged me to let it hang in the drawing-room, but I would not. I
+told her I would have it in the nursery where I could see it every
+minute."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he&mdash;married?" asked Golden, carelessly, to all appearance,
+and taking up her work again.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear, no! and I hope he never will be! He loves me better
+than anyone now, but he would like his wife best if he were
+married," cried the spoiled child.</p>
+
+<p>Golden sighed softly and made no reply, and the entrance of
+Mrs. Desmond and her visitor interrupted the conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-morning, Mrs. Markham. You see I have a new nurse,"
+said Ruby, looking up with a faint flush of pleasant excitement
+on her delicate face.</p>
+
+<p>"You have to thank Mrs. Markham for bringing her to you,"
+said Mrs. Desmond, glad to see a smile on the usually sullen or
+pain-drawn little white face.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby went forward and kissed Mrs. Markham charmingly
+as if she was always loving and sweet-tempered instead of self-willed
+and capricious as everyone represented her.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you very much," she said, "I think I shall like Mary
+better than the others. She is very kind and obliging. You see
+she is making a new dress for my doll. Celine was too lazy.
+She would not dress my doll at all."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Markham gave her <i>protege</i> an encouraging smile, and
+Golden blushed with pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>"She has given my new doll a name," continued Ruby, vivaciously.
+"It is Golden. Do you not think it pretty? The name
+would suit Mary herself I think, as she has such lovely curls, I
+believe I shall call her goldilocks," she added, laying her small
+hand caressingly on Golden's hair.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Markham smiled indulgently, but her friend looked annoyed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, Ruby, you must not call her by such a silly name,"
+she said. "She must put her hair up, and wear a little cup over
+it like a French <i>bonne</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a pity to cover it up, it is so thick and long, and shines
+so bright. Mary is a very pretty girl, don't you think so, mamma?
+She looks just like my wax doll," said the child.</p>
+
+<p>"Pretty is that pretty does, my child," Mrs. Desmond answered,
+shortly, and Mrs. Markham, stooping over Golden, put a card
+with her name and address upon it, in her hand, and said in her
+kind, patronizing voice:</p>
+
+<p>"If you do not suit Mrs. Desmond, Mary, after she has given
+you a fair trial, you may come to me, and I will help you to another
+place."</p>
+
+<p>The quick tears brimmed over in little Golden's eyes. She kissed
+Mrs. Markham's hand in silent gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>"It is quite likely I shall keep her if she continues to please
+Ruby as well as she does now. But Ruby is such a capricious
+little darling there is no telling how soon this new fancy of hers
+may change. 'New brooms sweep clean,' you know," said Mrs.
+Desmond, quoting the old adage a little stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Markham made some careless reply and took her departure.
+She was vaguely conscious of a chill never felt before in Mrs. Desmond's
+manner, and resented her lack of gratitude for the service
+she had done her.</p>
+
+<p>"The child is so pleased and interested, it will be quite a pity if
+she sends Mary Smith away from her," the benevolent woman
+thought silently to herself.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"I am quite sure that my papa will be pleased with your
+looks," said little Ruby, artlessly, when her mother had gone out
+and left them alone to the doll's dressmaking. "He likes pretty
+faces as well as I do. He hates Celine and the chambermaid both,
+because, as he says, they are 'so deucedly ugly.'"</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose papa loves his little pet very much," said Golden,
+smiling sadly at the little one's prattle.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed," said Ruby. "He gives me oceans of pretty
+things. But I do not see him much, only an hour after dinner.
+You see, papa and mamma are both very gay. They always go
+out in the evening to balls or operas."</p>
+
+<p>Before the dinner hour Celine made her appearance with a large,
+white bib-apron and neat cap for Golden's use.</p>
+
+<p>"My mistress sent you these," she said, not unkindly. "Shall
+I show you how to use them, or do you know already?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will please show me," the girl answered, gently.</p>
+
+<p>Celine brought combs and brushes and arranged the bright,
+shining hair in a thick plait which she wound about the small
+head and pinned securely with hairpins.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Ma foi</i>," she said, unable to repress an involuntary tribute
+of admiration, "you have the most beautiful hair I ever saw."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and it's a shame to put a cap on it," cried Ruby. "I think<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+mamma is very unkind to me, I did not want Mary Smith's
+beautiful hair covered!"</p>
+
+<p>"Fie, my little lady, what a funny-looking nurse-maid she
+would be without her little cap," cried Celine, as she put the last
+touches to the bib and cap.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said Golden, as she gave a timid glance into the
+swinging mirror.</p>
+
+<p>Celine noted the little incident with feminine quickness, and
+smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Should you know yourself again?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It makes a great difference in my appearance," little Golden
+replied.</p>
+
+<p>"But it does not make you any less pretty," declared Celine.
+"When your hair hung down it hid all your neck. Now I see
+that your ears are as pretty as sea-shells, and your neck as white
+as snow. You are too good-looking for your place, Miss Smith."</p>
+
+<p>"And you are too ugly for yours!" put in Ruby, sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"Hold your tongue, Miss Pert," said the French maid, with an
+ugly frown. "It's a deal better to be an ugly servant than a
+pretty one in this place, and so Miss Smith will find out before
+long. Not as I says it out of spite for the poor thing. She's to
+be pitied, being <i>your</i> nurse," pronounced Mademoiselle Celine as
+she flitted out of the room, seeing that Golden made her no answer.
+Indeed the poor girl did not know what to say. She was puzzled
+and frightened over the maid's pert innuendoes, but she did not
+in the least comprehend what she meant.</p>
+
+<p>When Celine was gone she looked into the minor again and
+then at the portrait on the wall. The hot tears came into the
+great, blue eyes and blinded them.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Bert," she whispered inaudibly, "would you know me,
+would you love me in this strange and altered guise?"</p>
+
+<p>"You must do my hair over before dinner, Mary," said the little
+girl. "I always dine with mamma and papa when they have
+no company. You will go with me and stand behind my chair
+while I am eating, to attend to my wants."</p>
+
+<p>Golden gave a gasp of mingled pride and dread.</p>
+
+<p>"Must I indeed do that?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, all my nurses do that way," said the child. "Now,
+Mary, I must have my hair curled over, and dress for dinner just
+as mamma does, you know."</p>
+
+<p>Golden found that she had a most exacting little mistress. Although
+frail and diseased, the little creature never allowed her
+active mind and thin, little body one moment's rest.</p>
+
+<p>She was always flying from one thing to another, and kept
+everyone about her attending to her whims and fancied wants.
+Yet, in spite of her capricious exactions, Golden could not help
+being drawn to the child.</p>
+
+<p>The dark eyes, and the proud, sweet mouth so like those of the
+man she loved, won her in spite of herself.</p>
+
+<p>At dinner, where she stood droopingly behind little Ruby's
+chair, the master of the house did not even glance toward her, so
+that she had a fair chance to observe him from under her heavy,
+curling lashes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The scrutiny did not satisfy her, although she could not have
+told how it chanced, for Mr. Desmond was faultlessly handsome.</p>
+
+<p>He had a fair, effeminate face, full of languid passion, and those
+large, long-lashed gray eyes which can shoot the most killing
+glances.</p>
+
+<p>His hair was parted in the middle with scrupulous exactness.
+His dress was elegant to the verge of foppishness, and a magnificent
+diamond sparkled on his white hand.</p>
+
+<p>His wife and little daughter seemed to regard him with the
+most admiring affection, which he accepted with a bored and
+rather patronizing air.</p>
+
+<p>When the long and ceremonious dinner was over, little Ruby
+sprang down from her chair and caught his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, papa, come, mamma," she cried, "you must go to the
+nursery now."</p>
+
+<p>They went away with her, and when Golden returned to the
+nursery later, she found the little girl sitting on her father's knee,
+and chatting volubly to him, while Mrs. Desmond was nowhere
+to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby jumped down from her perch and ran to Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Papa," she said, evidently referring to some subject they had
+been discussing. "I will show it to you, and you will say that I
+am right."</p>
+
+<p>With a quick, deft motion, she pulled the cap from Golden's
+head, and loosened the braid so that the curling, rippling mass of
+gold fell in a shower of beauty over the girl's shoulders. Then
+she cried out in gleeful triumph:</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it lovely, papa? Did you ever see such a pretty nurse."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond looked in amazement at the blushing, shrinking
+girl, and murmured inaudibly:</p>
+
+<p>"Ye gods, what a perfect beauty!"</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the brilliant brunette, Mrs. Desmond, swept
+into the room with a waft of exquisite perfume, her diamonds
+glittering, her rich silk and laces rustling majestically, a white
+satin opera cloak folded gracefully around her white shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at Golden so wrathfully that it froze the quick murmur
+of irrepressible admiration on her lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Girl, what does this disordered appearance mean? Why is
+your hair down after my strict orders?" she demanded, angrily.</p>
+
+<p>"Your daughter pulled it down, madam," Golden answered,
+with outward dignity and quietness, though she was inwardly
+chafed and deeply wounded.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond turned round in a gust of passion and gave Ruby
+a ringing slap on the cheek with her white, jeweled hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Take that, and behave yourself better the next time," she
+cried, sharply.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby ran, screaming, to her father, and Mrs. Desmond cried
+out impatiently:</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Mr. Desmond, the carriage is waiting. Mary, put the
+child to bed. Good-night, Ruby."</p>
+
+<p>She bent to kiss the child good-night, but Ruby pushed her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+away with an angry scream, and ran to hide her face in Golden's
+skirts.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond turned away, followed by her husband, who
+said reproachfully as they passed from the room:</p>
+
+<p>"You were needlessly cruel to the poor little thing Edith, my
+dear."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond came into the nursery the next morning with
+her arms full of new toys as a propitiatory gift to her offended
+little daughter.</p>
+
+<p>She greeted Golden very kindly, feeling ashamed of her petulance
+of the evening before, when she saw how patiently she was
+ministering to the comfort of her little daughter.</p>
+
+<p>Little Ruby was suffering with a headache this morning. She
+lay on a silken lounge, with her head propped on pillows, and
+Golden was bathing the hot temples with <i>eau de cologne</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you still pleased with your nurse, my darling?" inquired
+her mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, mamma. Mary is the kindest nurse I ever had," answered
+Ruby, lifting her heavy eyes tenderly to Golden's sweet
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad to hear it," said her mother. "Does your
+head ache too bad for you to take your morning drive with me,
+dear?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, I think it will be better when I get out in the air,"
+said Ruby, with a brightening face. "Shall we take my nurse
+with us?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not this morning, I think, as I shall drive the pony-phaeton,
+and there is only room for two."</p>
+
+<p>"Will not papa go then?" said the child, disappointed.</p>
+
+<p>"No; he has a business engagement, and cannot accompany us.
+You see we are going to the seaside next week, and he has a great
+many things to see to first," Mrs. Desmond answered, with the
+child's disappointment reflected on her own beautiful face.</p>
+
+<p>She loved her husband with the devotion of a strong, intense
+nature, and begrudged every moment he spent away from her
+side.</p>
+
+<p>Her jealousy was as strong as her love, and Mr. Desmond was
+the type of man best calculated to keep this baleful passion in
+the fullest play.</p>
+
+<p>He had been noted as a male flirt before he married Edith
+Chesleigh, and his conduct since their union had not been of a
+sort to strengthen his wife's faith in his fidelity. Beautiful as she
+was herself, she soon found that he was by no means blind to the
+charms of other women.</p>
+
+<p>She turned to the nurse with a suppressed sigh, and said,
+quietly:</p>
+
+<p>"You may dress Ruby now in a white hat and dress, and cardinal
+sash, while I am getting ready."</p>
+
+<p>Then she kissed Ruby and went to her dressing-room. Golden
+hastened to follow her instructions.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"We shall go to the seaside next week and stay two months.
+Shall you like that, Mary?" asked the child, while Golden was
+brushing her dark curls over her fingers.</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say I shall like it, if you do," replied the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we will have a splendid time. We will go bathing in the
+sea in the mornings, and afterward we will stroll on the sands,
+and gather beautiful, rosy shells. At night they have balls and
+dancing. Sometimes mamma lets me stay up awhile to see them
+dance. Oh, it is grand fun! I wish I was a grown lady," cried
+the child, flapping her hands.</p>
+
+<p>Golden listened in silence, and the strange loneliness and quietude
+of the life in which she had been reared, struck her more
+and more by its contrast with the bright, bustling world outside
+and beyond Glenalvan Hall.</p>
+
+<p>When little Ruby had gone away for her drive with her mother,
+she sat down in the quiet nursery and resigned herself to
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>Her thought went back to the gray, old hall in the sunny south,
+and the kind, old man she had deserted. She wondered if he
+would forgive her, and pray for her that she might find her
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall never find her now," she thought. "I have lost my
+money, and it will be a long time before I can earn enough to
+resign my situation here, and try to find her. Mrs. Markham
+was so sweet and kind. I wonder if she would help me. But,
+no, she would scorn me like all the rest, if she knew the story of
+my poor, young mother's disgrace."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-morning, little Mary. Where is my daughter this
+morning?" said a clear, musical voice.</p>
+
+<p>Golden looked up with a start, and saw Mr. Desmond, standing,
+tall, debonair and handsome, in the center of the lofty apartment.
+He had entered and closed the door so softly that she had
+not heard a sound.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Ruby has gone out driving with her mother," she answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," said Mr. Desmond. "I suppose she will not be gone
+long, so I will wait here until she returns."</p>
+
+<p>He drew forward a chair quite close to hers. Golden regarded
+him in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Ruby was very anxious that you should go with her,
+but her mother said you had a business engagement this morning
+and could not find time to gratify her," she remarked to him,
+rather pointedly.</p>
+
+<p>He flushed, then laughed carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, so I did have," he replied, "I only looked in a minute
+to bid Ruby good-morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," the nurse replied, constrainedly, and looked out of
+the window. The way Mr. Desmond regarded her out of his
+large, bold eyes made her feel slightly nervous. She heartily
+wished that he would go away and leave her alone.</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Desmond seemed in no haste to fulfill his business engagement.
+He sat silently a moment, regarding the delicate
+profile of the half averted face, then said, carelessly:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Where do you come from, Mary&mdash;New York?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am from the south, Mr. Desmond," said the girl, biting her
+lips to keep back her resentment at his familiar address.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed? From what part of the south?" he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me, sir, I do not care to reveal my private affairs to
+a total stranger," replied Golden, with such sudden spirit and
+haughtiness that the fine gentleman stared.</p>
+
+<p>"Whew!" he exclaimed, "I did not mean any offense, Miss
+Smith, I only wished to know the precise spot where such peerless
+beauties as yourself are reared. I would certainly immigrate
+instanter to that most precious locality."</p>
+
+<p>Golden rose, crimson with anger, and crossed to the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you going?" he inquired, following her and taking
+hold of her hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I am going down stairs, Mr. Desmond," she replied coldly,
+and trying to wrench her hand away.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you offended at my plain speaking?" he inquired, trying
+to look into her flashing eyes. "Surely you are aware that you
+are beautiful?"</p>
+
+<p>"If I am, it does not become you to tell me so, sir," she replied,
+resentfully. "Such compliments belong to your wife."</p>
+
+<p>"My wife is a beautiful woman, but not half so beautiful as
+you are, little Mary," he replied, still keeping a tight hold on her
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Desmond, let me go," she pleaded, the angry tears crowding
+into her soft blue eyes, "I will not listen to such words from
+you. You are cruel and unkind. What would Mrs. Desmond
+say if she could see you?"</p>
+
+<p>He started uneasily, then laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"She would say I was only teasing you, as I was," he replied.
+"Believe me, Mary, I was only joking you. I did not think that
+you would take it as earnest or become angry. Say that you
+forgive me, fair one, and I will release you."</p>
+
+<p>"Let go my hand, I forgive you," Golden replied, glad to be
+released on any terms, and shrinking from him with an utter
+loathing and horror.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you for your pardon," he cried, laughingly. "You
+must seal the sweet pledge with a kiss, my lovely girl."</p>
+
+<p>He threw his arm around her struggling little form, clasping
+her closely to his breast, and pressed a full, passionate kiss on
+her loathing lips.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>At Golden's loud scream of alarm and anger, the door of Mrs.
+Desmond's sleeping apartment opened suddenly, and Celine, the
+maid, stood aghast upon the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>She beheld the pretty, new nurse in the arms of her master,
+saw his handsome head bent over her as he kissed the beautiful
+crimson lips. At Celine's startled cry he turned upon her fiercely,
+at the same time releasing Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean by spying upon my actions, Celine?" he
+demanded angrily.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Pardon, monsieur, I meant no offense," said the maid, as
+smooth as silk, "I but thought you were romping with little Miss
+Ruby, and looked in to behold the little one's delight."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond saw that it was necessary to conciliate Mademoiselle
+Celine.</p>
+
+<p>"I did come in to see Ruby," he replied, "but she had gone to
+ride. So I attempted a bit of harmless gallantry with her nurse,
+here, such as most pretty girls would have taken with pleasure,
+but she was timid and frightened at my little joke. Hold your
+tongue about it, Celine, and here's a trifle to buy you a new cap."</p>
+
+<p>He tossed a gold piece at her feet, and Celine picked it up,
+curtsying and smiling. Little Golden, standing apart from
+them, regarded the scene with horror and disgust.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond, turning suddenly to her, quailed at the look of
+fiery scorn in the beautiful, spirited young face.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you very angry with me, Mary?" he inquired in a subdued
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>"No words can do justice to my contempt for you," she replied,
+in a voice of cutting scorn. "How dared you maltreat
+and insult me so? Shame on you for your cruelty to a poor and
+helpless girl!"</p>
+
+<p>She was so beautiful in her anger that he could scarcely remove
+his gaze from her face. Her cheeks were scarlet, her eyes
+were darkened and dilated with anger, her lovely lips were
+curled disdainfully. He read the proud purity of her young soul
+in every haughty movement of her lithe young figure and
+clenched, white hands.</p>
+
+<p>He regarded her in silence a moment, then exclaimed with
+apparent frankness:</p>
+
+<p>"Mary, I will tell you the truth, and then you will be able to
+pardon my conduct. My wife told me that she had engaged you
+totally without recommendation, and we both were afraid that
+we had run too great a risk in intrusting our little darling to
+your care. I determined therefore to test you. I have done so,
+and I am delighted to find that your principles and your virtue
+are so steadfast and true. Are you willing to grant me your pardon
+after this explanation?"</p>
+
+<p>At this specious apology the simple girl looked from the hypocrite's
+anxious face to that of the maid.</p>
+
+<p>Celine being a woman, she reasoned, would tell her whether to
+accept this explanation or not.</p>
+
+<p>The artful maid gave her an encouraging smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur is right," she said. "He did well to test your
+principles, Miss Smith. Do not be so rude as to withhold your
+forgiveness after his manly apology."</p>
+
+<p>Golden, with her slight knowledge of the wicked world, thought
+that Mr. Desmond and Celine had told her the truth. She answered,
+falteringly, after a moment of silence:</p>
+
+<p>"Then I will forgive you, Mr. Desmond, if you will promise
+not to molest me again. Otherwise I shall return to Mrs. Markham's
+protection."</p>
+
+<p>"You must not think of leaving us. Ruby is so pleased with
+you that it would be a shame to desert her. You need not fear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+me. I am quite satisfied of your truth and worth, and my wife
+will be delighted when I tell her how nobly I have proved your
+virtue," said Mr. Desmond, hastily.</p>
+
+<p>Then he looked at his watch, and muttering something about
+his business engagement, hurried away.</p>
+
+<p>Celine looked at Golden with an odd, significant smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Miss Smith, you understand what I meant by saying
+that you were too good-looking for your place," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"But I thought <i>he</i> said, and so did you, Celine, that he was
+only testing my virtue," said poor Golden, in perplexity.</p>
+
+<p>"Bah! that was only master's blarney," replied Celine, airily.
+"Of course I had to agree with him, or lose my situation, and I
+don't choose to do that, for I have a good place and lots of perquisites.
+But the truth is that monsieur only invented that tale
+of testing you because he was frightened when he found he had
+tackled an honest girl, and he did not wish for the madam to get
+hold of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he is a wicked villain, and I shall go away to-day," cried
+the girl, indignantly, "I love little Ruby, but I will go away, I
+cannot remain."</p>
+
+<p>"If you take <i>my</i> advice you will stay and say nothing about
+it," replied the maid. "If you go to another place you are just
+as likely to encounter the same difficulty. You are too pretty to
+be a servant. I have told you that already."</p>
+
+<p>"But I cannot remain here and encounter the persecutions of
+Mr. Desmond," replied Golden, decidedly.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not believe he will annoy you again," said Celine, confidently.
+"He has found out that you are honest, and he will be
+afraid to pursue you any further. The child is so pleased with
+you it would be a pity to forsake her. You may take my word
+for it that monsieur is too much afraid of his wife to bother you
+again. Why, she is so jealous that if she knew her husband had
+kissed you, she would want to cut your ears off."</p>
+
+<p>Golden shivered at Celine's vivid words.</p>
+
+<p>"It is better I should go, then," she said, with a sigh. "I
+would not, for the world, create trouble between husband and
+wife."</p>
+
+<p>"You had better stay," said Celine. "I shall not tell of you,
+and you may be pretty sure master won't. So Mrs. Desmond
+need never know."</p>
+
+<p>"It is better I should go," said Golden, decidedly; and then
+she threw herself down upon a lounge and burst into tears.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! why are women so weak, and men so cruel?" she wildly
+sobbed.</p>
+
+<p>"It's their nature," replied Celine, but Golden made her no
+answer. She only continued to weep heart-brokenly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am the most miserable girl on earth," she sobbed. "I wish
+that I had never been born!"</p>
+
+<p>The maid's curiosity was greatly excited by Golden's words.
+She knelt down by the girl and inquired the cause of her sorrow,
+and promised her her friendship and advice if she would confide
+in her.</p>
+
+<p>But in Golden's pure mind there was an instinctive distrust of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+Celine. Her ready acceptance of her master's bribe had excited
+her disgust and dislike. She answered evasively that she had
+nothing to confide, and only desired to be left in peace.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, very well, miss," replied the maid, "you can be left
+alone, I'm sure, but you'll find that it's better to make a friend
+of Celine Duval than an enemy."</p>
+
+<p>She flounced out of the room as she spoke, and Golden was
+left alone to the companionship of her own sad thoughts. She
+lay silently a long while looking at the portrait of Bertram Chesleigh,
+and weeping bitter tears over her unhappy fate. How
+beautiful and life-like was the picture!</p>
+
+<p>The blissful hours she had spent with the original rushed over
+her mind, making the contrast with the gloom of the present
+more harrowing. She found herself exclaiming:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Oh, that those lips had language&mdash;life has passed<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">With me but roughly since I heard them last."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But no sound came from the lips of the false-hearted lover,
+who had given her a few hours of happiness only to leave her to
+the darkness of despair.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Golden had quite decided in her mind that she would rather
+leave Mrs. Desmond at once, than risk a renewal of her husband's
+distasteful attentions, but little Ruby's first words on returning
+from her drive, dispelled the idea for the present at least from
+her thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mary!" the little one had cried, with childish directness,
+as soon as she entered the room. "Oh, Mary! I have heard bad
+news!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry for you, dear," said Golden, gently.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby looked up into the face of her uncle, where it hung against
+the wall.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, poor Uncle Bertie!" she sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"Was it about Mr. Chesleigh, Ruby?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the child. "Mamma has had a telegram from
+some people about him. He is very sick, and he is away down
+south at a place called Glenalvan Hall."</p>
+
+<p>Golden drew her breath heavily, and sank into a chair. It
+seemed as if an arrow had pierced her heart. She could not
+speak, but stared at Ruby with a dumb misery in her eyes, that
+the little one could in nowise understand.</p>
+
+<p>"Some of us will have to go to him&mdash;mamma and papa, I suppose,"
+continued Ruby. "I asked mamma to let me go, but she
+says it would be too warm for me at this time of the year in the
+south, because I am so delicate."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he very sick? Will he die?" inquired Golden, speaking in a
+strange, unnatural voice.</p>
+
+<p>"They hope not, but he is very sick," said Ruby; and at that
+moment Mrs. Desmond swept into the room.</p>
+
+<p>Her bright eyes looked dim and heavy as though she might
+have been weeping.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry you have had bad news, madam," said Golden,
+trying to appear quiet and natural, though her pulse was beating
+at fever-heat, and her eyes were heavy and dim beneath their
+drooping lashes.</p>
+
+<p>"Ruby has told you of my brother's illness, then," said Mrs.
+Desmond, more gently than she usually spoke to her dependents.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, madam," said Golden, faintly, unable to utter another
+word.</p>
+
+<p>"He has brain fever," said Mrs. Desmond, despondently. "Mr.
+Desmond will leave for the south to-night, and if he is no better
+when he arrives, he will telegraph for me to go to him. He is
+unwilling for me to go if it can be prevented, as it is so warm
+down there at this time of year. Besides, I am unwilling to leave
+Ruby, and I could not run the risk of taking her."</p>
+
+<p>She threw herself into a chair, and wept a few genuine tears.</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden, watching her with dry eyes and pale, mute lips,
+wondered if the sister's heart ached half so heavily and painfully
+as her own did.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet why should I grieve for him?" the poor child asked herself.
+"I should rather rejoice. He has forsaken and deserted
+me."</p>
+
+<p>She could find no answer to that question in her heart, save
+that she loved him. Loved him in despite of her cruel wrongs.</p>
+
+<p>Before night another telegram was received, saying that Bertram
+Chesleigh had asked repeatedly for his sister. So it was decided
+that Mrs. Desmond should accompany her husband.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary, do you think that you and the housekeeper can take
+care of my little Ruby while I am gone?" inquired Mrs. Desmond,
+tearfully.</p>
+
+<p>Golden promised so earnestly to give her whole care and attention
+to the little one that Mrs. Desmond could not help confiding
+in her promise.</p>
+
+<p>The child herself, though half-distracted with grief at the parting
+with her parents, promised bravely to be a good and patient
+girl for Uncle Bertie's sake.</p>
+
+<p>Celine was to accompany her mistress, and was in a bustle of
+pleasant preparation. The hours passed swiftly, and the time for
+the farewells soon came and passed.</p>
+
+<p>Little Ruby sobbed herself to sleep dismally, with her arms
+around Golden's neck, unconscious that the girl shed sadder
+tears than her own, when her little charge was peacefully dreaming.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"The slow, sad hours that bring us all things ill," waned slowly,
+while Golden and Ruby waited impatiently for news of the
+travelers.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby was very restless and capricious, besides her daily headaches
+grew worse as the heat of the summer season advanced.
+She fretted very much over her postponed trip to the seaside.</p>
+
+<p>At length a telegram came from the travelers to say that they
+had reached Glenalvan Hall, and Mr. Chesleigh was no better.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+After this these bulletins came almost daily, but with no encouraging
+words. Very ill, and no prospect of improvement yet,
+was their daily burden.</p>
+
+<p>In about two weeks Mr. Desmond returned unexpectedly.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby was overjoyed. She laughed and wept together, as she
+hung around his neck.</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle Bertie must be better, or you would not have returned,"
+she cried.</p>
+
+<p>But her father shook his head gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"No, dear, I am sorry to say he is not improving at all. Indeed
+the case is so critical that it may be weeks before your
+mother can return. That is why I have come."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall you go back, then?" inquired Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, in about a week. Have you fretted for us very much,
+Ruby?"</p>
+
+<p>"A great deal," she replied. "Oh, papa," clapping her little
+hands, "now I know why you have come back. You are going
+to take me to mamma and Uncle Bert."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing is further from my intentions," replied Mr. Desmond.
+"I have come to take you to the seashore."</p>
+
+<p>"The seashore&mdash;while my uncle is so ill?" cried the child, a
+little surprised.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Ruby. You must remember your own health is very
+frail. Your mother is very anxious about you. You will go to
+the seashore in the care of Mrs. Markham. Will that arrangement
+please you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very much," smiled Ruby. "I love Mrs. Markham. Of
+course I shall take my nurse?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course," he replied, then inquired, carelessly: "Are
+you still satisfied with Mary Smith?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, Mary is a splendid girl&mdash;I do not intend ever to part
+from her," replied the child, enthusiastically, "I am quite getting
+over my sulky spells since she came. Mary does not tease
+and cross me as the others did."</p>
+
+<p>Golden, who had sat sewing quietly by the window, without
+ever lifting her eyes from her work since Mr. Desmond entered,
+crimsoned painfully at thus having his attention drawn upon
+her.</p>
+
+<p>But he took no notice of her except to say patronizingly:</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad you have found such a treasure, Ruby. I hope she
+will remain with you. Are you willing to accompany Ruby to
+the seaside, Mary?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," she answered, quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, I will go and see Mrs. Markham now. If she can
+go by the last of the week I will accompany the party and see
+you all safely settled before I return south."</p>
+
+<p>Golden made him no answer, thinking that none was necessary,
+and he went out to call on Mrs. Markham.</p>
+
+<p>It was all carried out as Mr. Desmond wished. In the latter
+part of the week he accompanied the party to the seashore, saw
+them installed in comfortable quarters, and after staying two
+days took leave again.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>During his short stay, he enjoyed himself according to his flirting
+tastes with the lively seaside belles.</p>
+
+<p>In her capacity of Ruby's nurse Golden was compelled to see
+him a great deal, but he treated her at all times with such subdued
+respect and delicate attention that the girl grew less afraid
+of him, and began to think that Celine was right when she said
+he would abandon his pursuit of her now that he had found out
+she was an honest girl. She did not know that Mr. Desmond's
+quiet respect and delicate courtesy was more dangerous than his
+former open advances had been. Still she was relieved when he
+was gone, and she was left alone with little Ruby and Mrs. Markham,
+who was very kind to the lonely girl though in a decidedly
+patronizing fashion.</p>
+
+<p>When Golden and Ruby had been at the seaside a month with
+Mrs. Markham, the glad tidings that Mr. Chesleigh was beginning
+to improve, were conveyed to little Ruby in a short but affectionate
+letter from her mother.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"Your dear uncle has had a great fight for his life, but the
+doctor now says that he is likely to get well," Mrs. Desmond
+wrote. "If he continues to improve, we shall be able to start
+home with him in about two weeks, journeying slowly. We will
+join you then at the seaside, as the physician thinks that a month
+by the sea will quite restore Bertram's health."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It was Golden's task to read this letter to the little six-year-old,
+whose education, owing to her extreme frailty of constitution,
+had not yet commenced.</p>
+
+<p>The child cried out noisily for joy at the welcome news, but
+Golden said not a word. Yet her thoughts were very busy.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall see him again very soon," she said to herself. "Will
+he recognize, in his sister's servant, the girl that loved him so
+dearly?"</p>
+
+<p>Then the thought came to her that he would not wish to see
+her again; she had no part nor lot in his life henceforth, by his
+own desire.</p>
+
+<p>Musing sadly by the great, moaning sea, while little Ruby
+gathered the rosy-tinted shells along the sands, she murmured to
+herself those sweet, pathetic lines of Owen Meredith:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Oh, being of beauty and bliss! Seen and known<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In the depths of my heart, and possessed there alone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">My days know thee not, and my lips name thee never,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Thy place in my poor life is vacant forever;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">We have met, we have parted,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">No name is recorded<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In my annals on earth."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>In few more days Mrs. Markham received a letter from Mrs.
+Desmond. Her brother was so much better that she had quite recovered
+the tone of her spirits, and wrote, cheerfully:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"If nothing more happens, I shall be with you the first of September.
+Bertram will be with me, and I shall also bring a very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+charming young lady whom I have invited to spend the winter
+months with me in New York. She is the daughter of our host,
+and has been Bert's unwearied attendant throughout his illness.
+Between you and me, dear friend, she is so desperately in love
+with my brother, that she has neither eyes nor ears for anyone else.
+She has a younger sister whom I have not invited. I do not like
+her. She is the most abominable flirt I ever saw, and has done
+nothing but make eyes at Mr. Desmond since we came to Glenalvan
+Hall."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Glenalvan Hall," mused Mrs. Markham, holding the letter in
+her hand, and drawing her eyebrows thoughtfully together. "How
+familiar the word sounds! Where have I heard it?"</p>
+
+<p>She puzzled over it awhile, then gave it up. In the gay whirl
+of fashionable society, she had forgotten the pretty name of the
+poor girl she had befriended.</p>
+
+<p>But she carried her letter into Ruby's room and read it aloud to
+her, and Golden's cheeks that had grown very pale and delicate
+of late, grew paler still.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor is coming," she said to herself, in dismay. "What
+shall I do?"</p>
+
+<p>She thought at first that she would go away quietly before they
+came.</p>
+
+<p>She could not stay and face her proud cousin, Elinor, and the
+man who had loved her, and then despised her for the stain upon
+her.</p>
+
+<p>But the thought came into her mind, where would she go? She
+had never received any of her wages from Mrs. Desmond yet. If
+she went away she would be utterly friendless and penniless.</p>
+
+<p>She clung to little Ruby because the child loved her very dearly,
+and without her love she was utterly alone.</p>
+
+<p>And underlying all was a fierce, passionate longing she could
+not still, to see Bertram Chesleigh's face once more, to hear again
+that musical, luring voice, whose accents she had hung upon so
+fondly.</p>
+
+<p>A few days before the first of September, she turned timidly to
+Mrs. Markham, who was amusing herself with little Ruby down
+on the sands.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Markham," she said, "will you tell me this, please? Are
+not green glasses good for weak eyes?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard so," replied the lady. "Are your eyes weak,
+Mary?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked into the girl's face as she spoke, and saw that the
+sweet, blue eyes were dull and heavy.</p>
+
+<p>How was she to guess that sleepless nights and bitter tears had
+dimmed their sapphire sparkle.</p>
+
+<p>"Are your eyes weak, Mary?" she repeated, seeing that the girl
+hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>A blush tinged the pearly cheek, and Golden glanced out at the
+foam-crested waves rolling in toward the shore.</p>
+
+<p>"I think that the glare of the sun on the sands, and on the
+water, is very weakening to the sight," she replied, evasively.</p>
+
+<p>"So it is. I have heard others complain of the same thing. If<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+the light affects your eyes I would advise you, by all means, to
+wear the glasses."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. I believe I will try a pair," returned Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mary, you will be a perfect fright, if you do!" cried out
+little Ruby, in childish disapproval. "You have covered up all
+your long, gold hair under that ugly cap, and now, if you cover
+up your pretty, blue eyes, you will be as horrid-looking as&mdash;as&mdash;I
+don't know what!"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind the looks, my dear," said Mrs. Markham, in her
+gentle way. "If Mary is kind and loving at heart her looks will
+not signify."</p>
+
+<p>"But I do so love pretty things," said the child, "and I love to
+look at Mary. She looks like a picture at night when she combs
+out her shining hair over her shoulders. There is not a lady at
+the seaside this summer as pretty as my nurse!"</p>
+
+<p>"Fie, my dear; you must not make Mary vain," cried the lady,
+half smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to ask you a favor, Mrs. Markham," said Golden,
+blushing very much.</p>
+
+<p>"A favor! What is it, Mary?" asked Mrs. Markham, encouragingly.</p>
+
+<p>Golden glanced down at her blue cashmere dress, which had
+grown very shabby and worn during the two months she had
+been in little Ruby's service.</p>
+
+<p>"You see I had lost all my money when I went into Mrs. Desmond's
+service," she said falteringly, "and I have not received
+any of my wages yet, and&mdash;and I am getting too shabby to be
+respectable-looking."</p>
+
+<p>That was little Golden's plea, but the truth was that she did
+not wish her Cousin Elinor and Bertram Chesleigh to recognize
+her, and so wished to lay aside the blue cashmere which had
+been her best dress at Glenalvan Hall.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you poor child!" burst out Mrs. Markham, "why did you
+never tell me that before? I see, now; you want me to lend you
+the money to buy a new dress."</p>
+
+<p>"If you will be so very, very kind," faltered Golden, gratefully.</p>
+
+<p>"I will do it with the greatest pleasure," answered Mrs. Markham,
+whose purse was ever open to the needy and distressed.</p>
+
+<p>So on the first of September little Golden appeared in quite an
+altered guise. The pretty, blue cashmere that was so becoming
+to her rose-leaf complexion was laid aside, and she wore a sober,
+dark-gray dress, so long and plain that she looked a great deal
+taller and older. She had pinned a dark silk handkerchief high
+up around her white throat, thus concealing its fairness and
+graceful contour. She had fashioned herself a huge, abominable
+cap that hid every wave of her golden hair. Dark-green spectacles
+were fastened before the bright, blue eyes, and with her
+long, tucked, white apron, little Golden made the primmest-looking
+nurse-maid that could have been imagined. She looked
+in the mirror and decided that no one who had known her at
+Glenalvan Hall would recognize her now.</p>
+
+<p>But little Ruby exclaimed dolorously at her strange appearance:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mary, you have made yourself quite ugly!" she cried,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+"and I had been thinking how I would show Uncle Bert my
+pretty nurse."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Ruby, you must not!" cried Golden, in terror. "Promise
+me you will not."</p>
+
+<p>"Will not&mdash;what?" asked the little one, surprised.</p>
+
+<p>"Will not show me to Mr. Chesleigh, nor tell him that you
+think I am pretty," said Golden, in alarm.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, I won't," said the little one, disappointed, "but
+I am very sorry, for I am sure Uncle Bertie would be glad to
+know that I have a good and pretty nurse. He used to laugh at
+the ugly ones, and he said their faces were so horrid it was not
+strange they were bad tempered."</p>
+
+<p>"There is another thing I want you to promise me, please,
+darling," said Golden, who was on the best of terms with her
+little charge.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, Mary?" inquired the child.</p>
+
+<p>"When your uncle comes to sit and talk with you, Ruby, you
+must let me run away and stay until he leaves you."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should you do that?" asked Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"I have some sewing to do," replied Golden, evasively.</p>
+
+<p>"I know, but you always do your sewing with me," said Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"You see it would be quite different with a man in the way."</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle Bert would not bother you one bit. I cannot see why
+you are afraid of him," rejoined the child.</p>
+
+<p>"But I do not like men, Ruby. I do not like to be where a
+man is. Now, dear, will you excuse me?" pleaded Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I will, since you insist on it," answered Ruby. "But
+I can't see what makes you hate men! Now I like them. I like
+papa, I like Uncle Bert, and I shall like my husband when I
+grow big enough to have one. Do you ever intend to have a
+husband, Mary?" said the child, with a child's thoughtlessness.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>The beautiful color surged hotly into Golden's cheeks at Ruby's
+artless question. She turned her head away to hide the pain that
+made her sweet lips quiver.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary, do you ever intend to have a husband?" repeated the
+child.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, Ruby. You are too young to talk about husbands,"
+answered Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me, is my daughter contemplating marriage?" cried a
+gay, sweet voice, and, looking up, they saw Mrs. Desmond in her
+traveling wraps, dusty and weary, but looking very glad and
+eager at seeing her child again.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby sprang to her arms, and Golden looked on with sympathetic
+tears in her eyes at the happy reunion of the mother and
+child. Mrs. Desmond did not seem to see her until she had fairly
+smothered Ruby in kisses, when she looked up and said, approvingly:</p>
+
+<p>"How do you do, Mary? That is a very nice new dress&mdash;quite
+suitable to you."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>After a minute she said, suddenly, as if the thought had just
+occurred to her:</p>
+
+<p>"By the way, you have never yet received any of your wages
+from me. Here are twenty dollars for two months. I am very
+glad you have taken such good care of Ruby."</p>
+
+<p>Golden thanked her and took the money, but the gold seemed
+to burn the delicate palm. It was hard to be receiving a servant's
+wages from Bertram Chesleigh's sister.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is papa and Uncle Bert?" asked Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"Papa will be here directly. Bert is very tired&mdash;he has gone
+to his room to rest. You must not go to him yet."</p>
+
+<p>"And the young lady, mamma&mdash;she came?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Is she pretty, mamma? Has she blue eyes, or black?"</p>
+
+<p>"She is decidedly handsome, and her eyes are black."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you like her, mamma?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite well, dear. She is very charming. I will tell you a
+secret. Perhaps she will be your auntie some day."</p>
+
+<p>"Is she going to marry Uncle Bert?" inquired Ruby, wide-eyed.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing is settled yet, dear. But it seems probable. Bert
+could not find a more brilliant Mrs. Chesleigh."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not wish for Uncle Bert to marry. I shall tell him so!"
+cried Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"Fie, little selfishness, you will do no such thing! He ought
+to marry and settle down at home. We should not then have to
+be running after him in every out-of-the-way place where he
+chooses to fall sick. Here I have been by his sick-bed all summer,
+ruining my health and missing the whole season by the sea!"</p>
+
+<p>"How gladly I would have exchanged places with you," moaned
+little Golden, to herself.</p>
+
+<p>"Mamma, did you like Glenalvan Hall?" inquired Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, very much, though it is little better than a ruin. It must
+have been quite a grand place once. It is beautiful still in its decay.
+The owners were ruined by the late war."</p>
+
+<p>Oh, how anxiously beautiful Golden longed to hear one word
+from her old grandfather and her black mammy. She listened
+with a beating heart to the lady's words, but she never named the
+two that little Golden loved so dearly, and after awhile she rose
+and said that Celine was waiting for her, and she must go.</p>
+
+<p>Little Ruby clung to her dress.</p>
+
+<p>"Mayn't I go?" she pleaded, and Mrs. Desmond yielding a smiling
+assent, they went away together, and left Golden alone in the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Alone, with her young heart full of strange, troubled joy.
+Bertram Chesleigh was here, under the same roof with her.</p>
+
+<p>She should see him, she should hear him once again. There
+was a bitter, troubled pleasure in the thought.</p>
+
+<p>She could not bear the tumult of oppressive thoughts that rushed
+over her mind. To escape them she went in quest of Mrs.
+Markham, and paid her the money she had borrowed from her a
+few days before.</p>
+
+<p>Then she went back to the room to wait for little Ruby, but the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+child was so preoccupied with her friends that she did not return
+to her room during the day.</p>
+
+<p>At twilight she came flitting in joyously as a little fairy.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mary, I have had such a charming day! And you must
+dress me now in my white lace dress over the pink satin slip, and
+my white satin slippers, and embroidered rose-silk stockings. I
+am going to stay up for the ball to-night. Won't that be splendid?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden looked a little anxiously at the moist, flushed face and
+shining, dark eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Darling, let me persuade you to lie down on the sofa and rest
+awhile," she urged. "You have had such a busy, exciting day,
+that you need rest. To-morrow you will have one of your bad
+headaches."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no I am not tired one bit. And mamma and Miss Glenalvan
+are gone to dress now. I must be ready when they call for
+me," urged Ruby.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose Miss Glenalvan is very pretty, is she not, Ruby?"
+said Golden, as she combed and brushed the little girl's long, shining,
+black ringlets.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, she is very pretty&mdash;she has large, black eyes, and
+rosy cheeks, and splendid hair, but she is not beautiful like you,
+Mary," was the prompt reply.</p>
+
+<p>"You must not let Miss Glenalvan hear you say that," said
+Golden. "She would be displeased."</p>
+
+<p>"Hump!" said Ruby, carelessly, then she flew to another subject,
+while Golden trembled nervously. "Uncle Bert is looking
+wretchedly ill. Ouch, Mary, what <i>did</i> make you jerk that curl
+so? His eyes are as big as saucers. Are you almost done? You
+pull my hair dreadfully. I asked him if he was going to marry
+Miss Glenalvan. He said that was a silly question. Mary, what
+has come over you? You were never so rough with my head
+before."</p>
+
+<p>"There, it is finished now. I did not mean to hurt you; excuse
+me, dear," faltered Golden, as she laid out the white lace dress
+and satin slippers for the eager child.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, I am not angry," said Ruby. "I told Uncle Bert
+what a kind girl you were, and he was delighted to hear it. I
+wanted to tell him you were pretty, too, but I didn't, as you didn't
+want him to know <i>that</i>. But I can tell you one thing, Mary, if
+he ever sees you, he will find out for himself."</p>
+
+<p>"What! in this great cap and glasses?" cried Golden, alarmed.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed; you can't hide your round cheeks, and your red
+mouth, and your dimpled chin!" cried the child, in pretty
+triumph.</p>
+
+<p>"I can keep out of Mr. Chesleigh's way, anyhow," Golden replied,
+as she buttoned the pretty dress and clasped a slight gold
+chain around the white neck of the child.</p>
+
+<p>"Now you are quite finished," she said. "You look very sweet,
+and I hope you will enjoy yourself very much."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said the little girl, impulsively kissing her; then
+she added, a little pityingly: "It is a pity <i>you</i> cannot be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+dressed in white, and go to the ball, too, Mary. Do you never wish
+to?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sometimes," admitted Golden, with her sweet frankness, and
+a soft, little sigh.</p>
+
+<p>Ruby studied her attentively a moment, her dark head perched
+daintily like a bird's.</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to see you in a ball-dress," she said. "It should
+be a white lace over blue satin, and looped with violets. You
+should have large, white pearls around your neck, and your hair
+hanging down and a <i>bandeau</i> of pearls to bind it. It is a great
+pity you are not rich, Mary. People say that you are too pretty
+to be a servant."</p>
+
+<p>Something like a sob rose in Golden's throat and was hardly repressed.
+They had told her this so often.</p>
+
+<p>She was beautiful, but it had only brought her sorrow. To her,
+as her mother, had been given&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"The fatal gift of beauty which became<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A funeral dower of present woes and past."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry I am so pretty, Ruby," she said, sorrowfully,
+and the child answered, quickly:</p>
+
+<p>"I would not be sorry if I were you, Mary. Some good man
+will fall in love with your pretty face some day and marry you."</p>
+
+<p>Golden made no reply to this well-meant solace, for the door
+opened to admit Mrs. Desmond, followed by her young lady
+guest.</p>
+
+<p>Golden retreated shyly to the furthest corner of the room. She
+was face to face at last with her haughty cousin Elinor. She
+drooped her head a moment sadly, while a flood of memories
+rushed over her, then bravely lifted it again and looked at the
+young lady through her disfiguring green glasses.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor Glenalvan only glanced with careless indifference at the
+prim-looking figure of the nurse, then her large, black eyes turned
+away again, so that Golden had time to observe her with impunity.</p>
+
+<p>The Glenalvans had exerted themselves to the utmost to secure
+an outfit for Elinor. The result did credit to their efforts. The
+girl was certainly dazzling.</p>
+
+<p>She wore cream-colored <i>moire</i>, trimmed with rich Spanish lace
+and cardinal satin. Great clusters of Jaqueminot roses burned on
+her bosom and in her shining, raven hair.</p>
+
+<p>The costly pearl necklace that John Glenalvan had taken from
+Golden was clasped around her white throat.</p>
+
+<p>A throb of resentment stirred the young girl's breast as she observed
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond wore white lace looped with diminutive and
+richly-colored sunflowers. Her jewels were diamonds, and she
+was as usual brilliantly beautiful and graceful. Golden caught
+her breath in awed admiration of the two beautiful women.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you ready, Ruby?" inquired Mrs. Desmond.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, mamma," said the child, blithely.</p>
+
+<p>All three went out then, and Golden threw a dark shawl over
+her head and went out upon the seashore.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was a moonlight night, calm and still, with that slight chill
+in the air that comes with September.</p>
+
+<p>She sat down, a quiet, forlorn little figure on the lonely sands,
+and watched the great foam-capped waves rolling in to her feet.</p>
+
+<p>Something in the immensity and solemnity of the great ocean
+seemed to calm the turbulence of the fevered young heart and
+whisper a gentle "peace, be still," to the passions that racked her
+wronged and outraged spirit.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>As Golden had feared, little Ruby's day and night of excitement
+proved too much for her. She was unable to rise from her
+bed the next morning, being prostrated by one of her nervous
+headaches.</p>
+
+<p>To add to her ill-feeling, damp, rainy weather set in during the
+night, spoiling all the pleasant plans of the newly-arrived party
+for the day.</p>
+
+<p>Golden darkened the room, lighted a fire on the hearth, and
+carefully tended the little patient who dozed fitfully until mid-day,
+when she awakened and declared herself better.</p>
+
+<p>"Has no one been in to see me, Mary?" she inquired, and Golden
+answered:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your mamma came to the door while you were sleeping,
+but went away again, saying that she would not disturb your
+rest."</p>
+
+<p>"You may go and tell her to come now, Mary."</p>
+
+<p>"I think she is with your uncle just now, dear. Cannot you
+wait a little while?" said Golden. "She said she would go to
+him a little while, as you were asleep.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I cannot wait," replied Ruby fretfully. "Tell mamma
+to bring Uncle Bert with her."</p>
+
+<p>"If you have too much company your head will ache again,
+Ruby."</p>
+
+<p>"No, it will not. It is ever so much better. Why don't you
+do as I ask you, Mary?" cried the spoiled child.</p>
+
+<p>Golden went out without any further objection. She asked
+Celine, whom she met in the hall, to deliver Ruby's message to
+her mother and her uncle.</p>
+
+<p>Celine looked into the sick-room a minute later to say that
+they were engaged just at present, but would come in about
+fifteen minutes.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear," fretted the ailing little one, "that is a long time
+to wait. Give me my dolls, Mary. I'll try to amuse myself with
+them."</p>
+
+<p>Golden brought the miscellaneous family of dolls and ranged
+them around Ruby on the bed, chatting pleasantly to her the
+while in the hope of lessening the weariness of waiting.</p>
+
+<p>"You must keep your promise and let me go out when they
+come," she said, presently, feeling that she was growing so nervous
+she could not possibly remain in the same room with Bertram Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well; you may go into the next room," replied the child.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You may leave the door just a little ajar that I may call you
+when I want you."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you will not want me until they are gone out again,"
+replied Golden.</p>
+
+<p>When the expected rap came on the door, the girl opened it
+with a trembling hand. She did not look up as Mrs. Desmond
+and her brother entered, but softly closing the door after them,
+glided precipitately from the room.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh saw the little, retreating figure in the huge
+cap and gray gown, and laughed as he kissed his little niece.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose that was Mary Smith, the prodigy?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and you must not laugh at her," said Ruby, a little resentfully.
+"She is very good and sweet, and I love her dearly."</p>
+
+<p>There was an element of teasing in Bertram Chesleigh's nature,
+and Ruby's words roused it into activity.</p>
+
+<p>"She looked very prim and starched," he observed. "She must
+be an old maid&mdash;is she not, Ruby?"</p>
+
+<p>He expected that the little girl would grow indignant at this
+comment on her favorite, but instead of this she puckered her
+little brows thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't quite know what you mean by an old maid," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"You are caught in the trap, Bert. You will have to define
+yourself," said Mrs. Desmond, laughingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know whether I can," he replied as gayly. "But I
+think, Ruby, that an old maid is a person who&mdash;who doesn't like
+men, and grows old and never marries."</p>
+
+<p>"Then my nurse is an old maid. You guessed right, Uncle
+Bert," said the child, with perfect soberness.</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you think so, my dear?" inquired her mother, very
+much amused at the child's notion.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I know it, mamma. Mary Smith hates men. She
+told me she did. She does not like to be where men are. That
+is why she went out just now. She says she will always stay out
+of the room when Uncle Bert is with me."</p>
+
+<p>"That is very sensible indeed in Mary," said Mrs. Desmond,
+with decided approval, while Bertram Chesleigh only laughed and
+said that men were not ogres, and he would not have eaten Miss
+Smith even if she had remained in the room.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Golden had retreated to the sitting-room, leaving
+the door ajar as Ruby had bidden her.</p>
+
+<p>Every word of the conversation which had so strangely turned
+upon herself was distinctly audible.</p>
+
+<p>She listened in fear and trembling to Ruby's disclosures regarding
+her antipathy to men, dreading to hear some further revelation
+that would draw suspicion upon her, but the child had no
+idea of imparting anything she had promised to keep a secret, and
+the conversation gradually turned upon indifferent subjects, so
+that Golden, whose heart was beating wildly at the sound of her
+lover's voice, ventured at last on a sly peep at him through the
+open door.</p>
+
+<p>The breath came thick and fast over the sweet parted lips as
+she gazed&mdash;hardly as he had used her, the ineffable love and pity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+of a woman's heart came up to the beautiful blue eyes, and shone
+out upon the unconscious ingrate who dreamed not whose eyes
+were yearning over him with all the pain and pathos of a loving,
+yet outraged heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, how pale and ill he looks," cried the poor child to herself.
+"He looks sad and altered, too. He has suffered almost as much
+as I have. Was it that which made him ill, I wonder? After all, he
+loved me dearly. But if he had overlooked the shame of my birth
+and brought me here, his sister would have scorned me. Ought
+I to blame him so very, very much?"</p>
+
+<p>As she asked herself the piteous question, the memory of some
+words rose into her mind&mdash;solemn words not to be lightly forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you, forsaking all others, cleave only unto her, so long
+as ye both shall live?"</p>
+
+<p>By the light of those words, Golden answered her own question.
+With a tearless sob she turned her eyes away from the too dear
+face of the false one.</p>
+
+<p>But though she would not look at him, she could not help
+hearing his voice as he answered little Ruby's voluble chatter.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the child showed him her great, wax doll, and when
+he had admired it sufficiently to please her, she said with an air
+of mystery:</p>
+
+<p>"You could not guess dollie's name if you tried all day, Uncle
+Bertie."</p>
+
+<p>"It is something high-flown, no doubt," he laughed.
+"It is Queen Victoria, or Princess Louise, or something like
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"You are quite wrong," she replied, with sparkling eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I? Well, I have it now. You have called her Mary Smith,
+after your old-maid nurse."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I have not," said the little one, merrily. "I have called
+her Golden&mdash;Golden Chesleigh."</p>
+
+<p>In the next breath she added, quickly:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Uncle Bert, what made you start just as if someone had
+shot you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Did I start?" he inquired. "It must have been because I am
+very nervous since my illness. Well, and what did you say your
+elegant doll was named?"</p>
+
+<p>"Did you not understand me before? It is Golden Chesleigh&mdash;Chesleigh
+after you, Uncle Bert. Is it not a pretty name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very!" he rejoined, pale to the lips. "Did you think of it
+yourself, Ruby?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all; I asked Mary for a name, and she said Golden. Then
+I added Chesleigh."</p>
+
+<p>Some curiosity came over him to see the good nurse who loved
+Ruby and was kind to her, but who hated men, and who had
+chosen for the pretty wax doll, the sweet and unusual name of
+Golden.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>There came a light tap on the outer door. Mrs. Desmond rose
+to open it. Golden peeped again and saw her cousin Elinor coming
+in.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"May I come in and see the invalid?" she asked, brightly, and
+Bertram Chesleigh answered:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, do, Miss Glenalvan. Ruby is better and is holding a
+levee of her humble subjects."</p>
+
+<p>Elinor kissed the child and sat down as near as she dared to
+Mr. Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>She looked very bright and blooming, and her dress was as
+usual fashionable and becoming.</p>
+
+<p>Golden could see that Mrs. Desmond regarded her with a real
+fondness. Elinor had found out the lady's weakness and played
+upon it skillfully.</p>
+
+<p>She saw that she was jealous of her husband, and immediately
+affected an indifference to, and an utter obliviousness of the fascinations
+of the handsome Mr. Desmond, that delighted his wife
+and drew her heart to Elinor.</p>
+
+<p>Clare, on the contrary, had an uncontrollable propensity for
+flirting, and took a malicious pleasure in witnessing the grand
+lady's silent rage at her walks and talks, and careless enjoyment
+of her flippant husband's society.</p>
+
+<p>The result was that Elinor received a charmingly worded invitation
+to return to the north with Mrs. Desmond, while Clare
+was silently and chillingly ignored.</p>
+
+<p>She was bitterly angry at missing the trip, and sorely repented
+her weakness, but too late for the repentance to avail, while Elinor
+was transported with delight.</p>
+
+<p>Surely, she thought, a whole winter in New York, with beautiful
+Golden out of the way, would be sufficient for the accomplishment
+of her designs upon Bertram Chesleigh's heart.</p>
+
+<p>Sweet Golden read her cousin's purpose plainly in the tender
+glances she gave Mr. Chesleigh now and then, from beneath her
+black-fringed lashes, and the heart of the innocent girl sank
+heavily.</p>
+
+<p>"She will win him from me," she said, drearily to herself.
+"Elinor is so beautiful, and graceful, and brilliant, it is a wonder
+that he ever liked me better than he did her. It was but a light
+fancy after all, perhaps. He will forget it and turn to her."</p>
+
+<p>The thought gave her inexpressible pain.</p>
+
+<p>She sank upon the floor and hid her face in her hands, weeping
+silent and bitter tears while the hum of gay talk and laughter
+flowed on unheeded in the next room.</p>
+
+<p>So it is ever in the busy, jostling world. Sorrow and joy go
+side by side.</p>
+
+<p>The bridal train meets the funeral procession. Life is mingled
+sunshine and shadow.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, if Bertram Chesleigh could only have known what true
+and faithful little heart was breaking so near him.</p>
+
+<p>After awhile the brightness died from Ruby's eyes, the little
+face looked tired and wan. She said, almost petulantly:</p>
+
+<p>"Now I shall send you all away. Miss Glenalvan laughs so
+much she makes my head ache."</p>
+
+<p>"Fie, my darling," cried her mother.</p>
+
+<p>"It is the truth, mamma," cried the willful little girl. "I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+want you all to go now and Mary shall bathe my head until I get
+better."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is Mary? I feel quite jealous of her," said Elinor,
+sweetly, but inwardly raging at the spoiled child's "whims" as
+she termed them to herself.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary is my nurse," said the child, and her uncle laughingly
+added:</p>
+
+<p>"A person with antipathy to me, Miss Glenalvan. You should
+cultivate her. She must be a <i>rara avis</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you suppose that all women admire your sex, sir?"
+retorted the young lady, spiritedly, and they left the room exchanging
+lively <i>badinage</i>, while Mrs. Desmond looked inside the
+other door for Golden.</p>
+
+<p>She saw her sitting quietly, her sweet face bent over some sewing,
+no trace apparent of the heartache she was silently enduring.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary, you may come to your charge now," she said with so
+much more than her usual kindness of tone that Golden's delicate
+lip quivered. Mrs. Desmond had been pleased to hear that Ruby's
+beautiful nurse disliked men and was not willing to remain
+in the room with one.</p>
+
+<p>She laid aside her sewing and went in to Ruby. Mrs. Desmond
+bent to kiss her pet, and said, fondly:</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I stay and bathe your head, love?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, mamma, I would rather have Mary," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be jealous of Mary. You are so fond of her," the
+mother rejoined as she left the room.</p>
+
+<p>Golden put the dolls away and bathed the brow of the little
+sufferer until she fell into a deep and quiet sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Then she sat near the window and watched the gloomy
+September rain pattering drearily down, and the white mist rising
+from the sea.</p>
+
+<p>The door opened and Celine came in softly, and sat down.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to talk to you a little, Mary," she said, in her low
+voice. "Shall I disturb the child?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not if you talk softly," replied Golden, hoping that Celine
+would tell her something about Glenalvan Hall.</p>
+
+<p>She was not disappointed, for the maid said at once:</p>
+
+<p>"I want to tell you about a queer old black woman I saw at
+that place where Mr. Chesleigh was ill&mdash;Glenalvan Hall," watching
+her narrowly.</p>
+
+<p>Golden started and looked up eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, tell me about her, Celine," she said, with repressed excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, to begin with," said Celine, "she was a most ridiculous-looking
+old creature, full of grumblings and complaints.
+This old creature when she found I was from New York, came
+to me secretly, and asked me the oddest question."</p>
+
+<p>Golden, chancing to look up at that moment, met Celine's
+eyes fixed upon her with such a strange expression that her heart
+gave a frightened bound. It was evident that the maid had some
+suspicions of her.</p>
+
+<p>She forced a calmness she did not feel, and replied carelessly:</p>
+
+<p>"The blacks, you know, Celine, are very ignorant. Their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+questions appear quite ridiculous sometimes to intelligent and
+well-informed people."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Celine looked cunningly at Golden, as she made her confused
+explanation.</p>
+
+<p>"You seem to be well acquainted with the character of the
+negroes," she said. "Perhaps you have been in the south."</p>
+
+<p>"I have," replied Golden, with sudden, pretty defiance. "It
+was my birth-place."</p>
+
+<p>"Where? Glenalvan Hall?" asked Celine, thinking to catch
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not say that," replied Golden, coolly.</p>
+
+<p>"No? Well, I will tell you what that old woman&mdash;Dinah, she
+was called, asked me about a young lady."</p>
+
+<p>Golden lifted her eyes and regarded her bravely.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"She asked me," continued Celine, "if I had seen a young girl
+in New York of about sixteen, with large, blue eyes, and long,
+golden curls, dressed in a blue cashmere dress, and hat and jacket,
+I told her yes, for her description of the lady's appearance corresponded
+exactly with yours."</p>
+
+<p>Golden remained perfectly silent, her eyes turned resolutely
+from Celine.</p>
+
+<p>"She asked me," the maid continued, "if the young girl had
+found her mother."</p>
+
+<p>Golden could not repress a sudden, violent start.</p>
+
+<p>"Aha," cried Celine, quickly. "You see I am acquainted with
+your whole history!"</p>
+
+<p>"You know nothing about me whatever, Celine," replied
+Golden, warmly, "and I cannot see by what right you pry into my
+affairs."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, if we are so hoity-toity, we can keep our secret,"
+returned Celine, scornfully, "but somebody will find that it was
+better to have made a friend than an enemy of Celine Duval!"</p>
+
+<p>With these ambiguous words, Celine bounced out of the room,
+leaving poor little Golden terribly frightened and distressed.</p>
+
+<p>She silently resolved that she would leave Mrs. Desmond the
+next day, proceed to New York, and make an effort to find her
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the irate maid had gone to Elinor's room. Mrs.
+Desmond had kindly promised to allow Celine to superintend her
+toilet while they remained at the seaside, and she was waiting
+now for the Frenchwoman to arrange her hair.</p>
+
+<p>Celine had become possessed of Golden's secret, and she was
+determined to make capital out of it for herself.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor was quite chatty and confidential with the skillful French
+maid. In a very few moments while she was braiding the young
+lady's hair she had dropped a few artful hints and innuendoes
+that made Elinor start up half wild with fear and terror.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, Celine, you must have imagined it. It is too incredible
+to believe!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I do not ask you to believe <i>my</i> simple word, Miss Glenalvan,"
+replied Celine. "Look at the girl yourself, ma'am, and then you
+can tell me if my suspicions are well founded."</p>
+
+<p>Elinor looked at her blankly for a moment. The maid returned
+her gaze with unruffled serenity.</p>
+
+<p>"Only take a good look at her yourself, miss," she repeated.</p>
+
+<p>"How am I to do so without exciting her suspicions?" demanded
+Elinor.</p>
+
+<p>"Easily enough," replied the wily French maid. "Go back to
+the room and pretend to have lost some trifle. Get her to go down
+on her knees to find it and you can obtain a good look into her
+face."</p>
+
+<p>Elinor Glenalvan waited for no more. Clenching her small
+hands vindictively, and with an evil look on her handsome face,
+she hurried out into the corridor and made her way to Ruby's
+room.</p>
+
+<p>She turned the handle softly and looked in. The child lay on
+the bed sleeping peacefully, and Golden remained at the window
+peering out through the half-open blind at the dismal prospect,
+her red lips quivering grievously, her sweet blue eyes dim with
+unshed tears.</p>
+
+<p>She started up nervously as her cousin came in abruptly and
+closed the door.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor looked into her face and her heart grave a great, frightened
+bound. She recognized the beautiful face instantly in spite
+of the disfiguring cap and glasses.</p>
+
+<p>Controlling her rage by a violent effort, she observed with comparative
+calmness:</p>
+
+<p>"I have lost a gold cuff-button, Mary, and thought perhaps I
+had dropped it in here. Have you seen it?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden answered her with a shrinking negative, and Elinor
+continued:</p>
+
+<p>"I am almost certain that I dropped it in this room. Perhaps
+it has rolled beneath the bed. Will you get down and look under
+it, Mary?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden complied without a word, and Elinor had the desired
+opportunity of looking at the girl's face.</p>
+
+<p>In another moment, half beside herself with jealous rage, she
+caught the cap and glasses from Golden's head and face, and cried
+out in low, hoarse accents of intense passion:</p>
+
+<p>"Golden Glenalvan, you shameless creature, what are you doing here?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden sprang to her feet and looked at her heartless cousin in
+momentary terrified silence.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing here?" Elinor repeated, in a voice of raging
+scorn. "Did you wish to advertise your disgrace to Bertram
+Chesleigh's sister?"</p>
+
+<p>"Disgrace?" faltered the poor, heart-broken child.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your disgrace. It is plain enough to be seen!" cried Elinor,
+pointing a scornful finger at her cousin, who had dropped
+into a chair and hid her blushing face in her small hands. "Did
+you come here that Mrs. Desmond might learn the full measure
+of her brother's sin?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Golden looked up with tear-wet, blue eyes into the blazing orbs
+of the angry girl.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor, I did not know she was his sister until after I came,"
+she murmured, pleadingly.</p>
+
+<p>"But when you found it out, why did you not go away?" Elinor
+demanded, sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"I had nowhere to go&mdash;I was friendless and penniless. What
+could I do but stay?" moaned Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"You should have drowned yourself. You are not fit to live,
+you wicked, deceitful girl. So you were Mr. Chesleigh's mistress
+after all, although you swore that you were pure and innocent!"
+blazed Elinor.</p>
+
+<p>"I am innocent! I was never Bertram Chesleigh's mistress!"
+Golden cried. "I am his own true&mdash;&mdash;" she stopped with a moan
+of anguish. "Go, I must not tell&mdash;I must keep my promise! Oh,
+Elinor, you are my cousin. Do not be so hard and cruel!"</p>
+
+<p>"How dare you claim me as your cousin?" cried Elinor, angrily,
+"Get up from the floor and stop making a simpleton of yourself.
+You have got to go away from here. Do you understand me?"</p>
+
+<p>Golden rose to her feet and looked steadily into Elinor's face
+with flashing blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p>A spirit was roused within her that quite equaled her cousin's.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor," she answered, "I understand you, but let me tell
+you here and now, that I defy your commands. You have no
+authority over me, and I am the mistress of my own actions. I
+shall remain in Mrs. Desmond's service as long as I choose to do
+so. Your whole treatment of me has been such as to merit no
+consideration at my hands, and it shall receive none."</p>
+
+<p>If angry looks could have killed, little Golden would never have
+survived her defiant speech, for Elinor's dark eyes glared upon
+her with the deadly fury of an enraged tigress.</p>
+
+<p>"You will not go," she hissed. "Perhaps you think to stay
+here and resume your old sinful relations with Bertram Chesleigh."</p>
+
+<p>Before Golden could reply to the cruel taunt, there was an unthought-of
+interruption.</p>
+
+<p>Little Ruby, awakened by Elinor's angry tones, sprang upright
+in the bed, and cried out in the utmost surprise and resentment.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter? Why are you scolding my nurse, Miss
+Glenalvan?"</p>
+
+<p>Elinor turned to Ruby with an instantaneous change of manner.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, you little darling," she cried, with honeyed sweetness,
+"what an absurd idea! You must have dreamed it all. I was
+only asking Mary about a gold cuff-button I had dropped on the
+floor. I am very sorry I disturbed you in your refreshing
+sleep."</p>
+
+<p>She left the room before the child could challenge her plausible
+excuse, and returned to Celine.</p>
+
+<p>"I was right, ma'am," the maid cried, triumphantly. "I see
+it in your face."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Elinor dropped into a chair, and the change in her face was
+quite striking enough to have excited the woman's exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>She was as white as death, her black eyes gleamed with vindictive
+rage, her thin lips were set in a cruel line.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you were right," she said, in a low, intense voice, "Celine,
+that girl must go away from here."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you tell her so?" asked the woman.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and," helplessly, "she defied me. Oh, what am I to
+do?"</p>
+
+<p>"She would not go for you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No she is determined to stay. But," passionately, "she must
+go, and go this very day. If she remains, and Mr. Chesleigh sees
+her, all is lost. He will recognize her instantly."</p>
+
+<p>"I expect you would give a great deal to get the girl out of your
+way," said the maid, artfully.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Elinor lifted her flashing eyes, and looked at the maid, struck
+by her significantly-uttered words.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she answered, boldly, "I would give anything I possess
+to anyone who would remove her from my path without my
+agency being known in the matter."</p>
+
+<p>"You would not care by what means?" asked Celine.</p>
+
+<p>"No," declared the young lady.</p>
+
+<p>Celine turned the key in the lock, and coming nearer to Elinor,
+whispered softly:</p>
+
+<p>"What will you give me, Miss Glenalvan, if I will have the
+girl driven out under a disgraceful ban this very night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Can you do it?" inquired Elinor, eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Easily," was the confident reply, "if you will make it worth
+my while to do so."</p>
+
+<p>Elinor revolved the words a moment in her mind. She saw
+that Celine's services would have to be amply requited, otherwise
+the selfish creature would not trouble herself to help her out of
+her difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>"You know I am not well off, Celine," she said, "but father
+has promised to send me some money this month to buy my
+winter outfit. To tell the truth I shall need every cent of it, for
+I've scarcely a decent thing to wear this winter, but if you will
+get the girl away before Mr. Chesleigh sees her, I will divide my
+allowance with you."</p>
+
+
+<p>"How much money has your father agreed to send you?" inquired
+the rapacious woman.</p>
+
+<p>"Three hundred dollars," replied Elinor, "and I will give you
+one-half of it if you will do me this service."</p>
+
+<p>She felt as if she making a very liberal offer, and was
+surprised when the Frenchwoman shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"A hundred and fifty would not pay me for the trouble," she
+said, conclusively.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor looked at her a little blankly.</p>
+
+<p>"But don't you understand. Celine, that I cannot spare any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+more?" she said. "I must keep enough to buy a decent dress and
+hat and cloak for the winter."</p>
+
+<p>"That matters not to me," replied Celine, with the utmost indifference.
+"You must either give me the whole three hundred
+or I will not help you."</p>
+
+<p>Elinor was angered and amazed at the woman's shameless rapacity.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not do it!" she exclaimed, "I dare say Golden will go
+away of herself; anyhow, I do not intend to be fleeced so shamelessly."</p>
+
+<p>"As you please, miss," replied the maid coolly. She had the
+game in her own hands, and was insolently aware of the fact.
+"I'm not anxious to accommodate you, I dare say I could make
+more by selling my secret. Don't you think Mr. Chesleigh would
+give me a thousand dollars for telling him where to find his missing
+sweetheart?"</p>
+
+<p>Elinor grew frightened and acquiescent all in a moment at
+Celine's baleful threat.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Celine, don't do that," she cried, "I was only joking
+when I said I would not do it. You shall have every dollar of
+the money if you will get Golden away to-night as you said you
+would."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought I should bring you to your senses," muttered
+Celine, then she added aloud:</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, miss. Are you sure that your father will send
+the money?"</p>
+
+<p>"He promised to do so without fail," replied Elinor.</p>
+
+<p>"And you will really hand it over to me as soon as received?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you may consider the little marplot gone. In less than
+an hour you will see her leaving this hotel followed by Mrs. Desmond's
+curse," replied Celine, with perfect confidence in her
+power of executing the task she had undertaken.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean? How will you accomplish it?" inquired
+Elinor.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind about that, I will do as I said, never fear. Are
+you done with me now, Miss Glenalvan? If you are I will go to
+Mrs. Desmond. She will need me to do her hair."</p>
+
+<p>"You may go, Celine," replied the young lady. "Now be sure,"
+a little nervously, "that you do not implicate <i>me</i> in the affair."</p>
+
+<p>"Trust me for managing everything all right," was the airy
+reply.</p>
+
+<p>She went out and made her way to the dressing-room of her
+mistress.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond was sitting before the dressing-table with a small
+jewel-casket open in her lap.</p>
+
+<p>She was turning over some pretty rings with her white fingers.</p>
+
+<p>Celine went up to the table and began to get out the combs and
+brushes.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you ready for me to do your hair?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"In a moment," replied Mrs. Desmond. "I am looking over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+my rings now. I want to select one of the neatest and plainest
+for a present to someone."</p>
+
+<p>Celine simpered and coughed. She fully expected to become
+the fortunate recipient.</p>
+
+<p>"I must confess that I have been mistaken for once," continued
+Mrs. Desmond, half to herself. "When the girl came here
+first, I was prejudiced against her, partly because she was so
+pretty and childish-looking, and again because we had had so
+many hateful nurses, I thought she must necessarily be like
+them. But I was for once happily mistaken. She has been so
+humble and unobtrusive, and endeared herself so much to my
+little girl, that I must really reward her for her good care of my
+darling during my absence."</p>
+
+<p>"Of whom are you speaking, ma'am?" inquired Celine, green
+with envy, as the lady paused, having selected a plain, gold band,
+set with a single, shining, white pearl.</p>
+
+<p>"Of Mary Smith," Mrs. Desmond replied, "and I am going to
+give her this ring in token of my respect for her good character,
+and my gratitude for the really motherly care which she has
+taken of my dear, frail, little Ruby."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>At Mrs. Desmond's kindly-spoken words, Celine heaved a deep
+sigh and remained silent. The lady glanced up at her in some
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter, Celine?" she inquired. "Do you not
+think I am right to acknowledge my appreciation of her valuable
+services?"</p>
+
+<p>The maid only sighed more deeply, casting down her eyes as
+if in great distress.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you are not jealous, Celine," continued her mistress.
+"You know I have given you many such testimonials of my favor."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that you have, and I'm not jealous&mdash;not a bit, dear mistress,"
+cried Celine; "but, oh, dear, oh, dear! that you should
+have been so cruelly deceived and betrayed."</p>
+
+<p>"Celine, what do you mean?" asked the lady, disturbed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my dear lady, I hate to grieve you, but I can't bear to
+see you imposed upon any longer by that shameless girl! Oh,
+my dear mistress, where are your eyes that you can't see her disgrace?
+Oh, how I wish I had told all I knew at first!" cried Celine,
+wringing her hands, while tears fell from her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond sprang up and caught her by the arm excitedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Speak! What is it that you know?" she cried, passionately.
+"Have I been deceived in Mary Smith?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my dear lady&mdash;most cruelly deceived!" exclaimed Celine.</p>
+
+<p>"But she has certainly been kind to the child. Else Ruby
+would have complained," said Mrs. Desmond in perplexity.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, she was kind to the child, I admit, but it was all for
+a blind. And all the&mdash;all the while&mdash;oh, Mrs. Desmond, if you
+could only understand without my telling it," cried Celine,
+breaking off abruptly, with an appearance of grief and reluctance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The passionate, jealous heart of the listener caught the artful
+bait instantly.</p>
+
+<p>She gasped for breath, her brilliant face whitened to a marble
+pallor, and she caught at the back of a chair to steady herself.</p>
+
+<p>If Celine had not been utterly selfish and pitiless she must have
+retracted her cruel lie in the face of that utter despair on the
+beautiful face of her mistress. But the greed of gold overpowered
+every other consideration in her base mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Celine," the startled woman broke out, "do you mean to
+say that&mdash;my husband&mdash;&mdash;" she paused, and her blazing eyes
+searched the woman's face.</p>
+
+<p>"Your husband loves her&mdash;alas, yes, my poor, deceived mistress,"
+cried the maid. "The deceitful creature has won his heart
+from you."</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence while Mrs. Desmond groped
+blindly in her mind for some tangible proof on which to pin her
+faith in her beloved husband.</p>
+
+<p>"Celine, you must be mistaken," she exclaimed. "You know
+we have been away from home almost the whole time since the
+girl came to us. She has had no chance with my husband."</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, Mrs. Desmond, you force me to tell you," sighed Celine.
+"Know, then, that it all began before you went south to Mr.
+Chesleigh. The very day after she came I caught Mr. Desmond
+kissing Mary Smith, with his arms around her waist."</p>
+
+<p>"Celine, will you swear to this?" gasped the unhappy wife.</p>
+
+<p>"I will take my Bible oath to its truth," was the emphatic reply.</p>
+
+<p>"Then God help me," moaned the stricken woman. "Celine,
+why did you not tell me all this before?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was afraid of master's anger," she replied. "He threatened
+me and I promised not to tell. Oh, my dear lady, will you
+promise to shield me from his wrath? I could not see you so imposed
+on any longer."</p>
+
+<p>"So the affair has been going on from bad to worse, Celine?"
+inquired her mistress, faintly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my dear mistress. You remember how anxious he was
+to return to New York and take little Miss Ruby to the seashore.
+It was all an excuse to get back to the nurse. And since we came
+back yesterday&mdash;well, I've told enough already. Are you angry
+with me, my dear, injured lady?" inquired Celine breaking off,
+artfully, just where she really had nothing more to tell, unless
+she had fabricated a wholesale lie.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond shook her head and remained silent. The maid
+was disappointed. She had expected a wild outpouring of anger
+from the jealous wife, but instead she preserved an ominous
+quiet.</p>
+
+<p>Her head drooped on her bosom, her face was colorless as death,
+her wild, burning, dark eyes were the only signs of life in her.</p>
+
+<p>Celine was a little startled at the effect of her wickedness. She
+brought some <i>eau de cologne</i>, and tried to bathe the face of her
+mistress but was quickly motioned away.</p>
+
+<p>"Go, Celine, send that girl here to me," she said, speaking in a
+dry, hard, unnatural voice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The maid went out, and Mrs. Desmond waited but a moment
+before the door unclasped and little Golden entered. She paused
+in the middle of the room, and said in her gentle voice:</p>
+
+<p>"You sent for me, Mrs. Desmond?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond lifted her eyes and looked at the beautiful girl
+whom she believed to be the wicked destroyer of her happiness.
+Golden shrank before the withering scorn of that look.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, madam, is anything the matter?" she faltered.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond rose and towered above her in all the dignity of
+her insulted wifehood.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no," she said, in a low, deep voice of concentrated passion,
+"there is very little the matter&mdash;only this trifle. You have
+shamelessly robbed me of my husband."</p>
+
+<p>"Madam!" cried Golden, in alarm and consternation.</p>
+
+<p>"You need not pretend innocence&mdash;you cannot deceive me,"
+cried the outraged wife. "You have won his heart, you have
+stolen him from me, and you have forever ruined my life."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, madam, who has told you this dreadful tale? It is not
+true. I would sooner die than wrong you," cried Golden, with
+pitiful earnestness.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, do not lie to me," exclaimed Mrs. Desmond, lifting and
+pointing a scornful finger at the shrinking form. "Your looks
+declare your shame. Go, leave the house this moment wretched
+creature, before in my madness I lay violent hands on you!"</p>
+
+<p>But Golden did not go. She knelt down before her angry
+accuser, and looked up at her pleadingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mrs. Desmond, you are mistaken! You wrong me
+bitterly by such a suspicion!" she cried, with the tears streaming
+down her fair cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"Wrong you!" Mrs. Desmond cried, "are you not then&mdash;&mdash;"
+she bent and fairly hissed the remaining words into the girl's ear.
+Golden threw up her hands with a cry of dismay.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my God, this is too horrible!" she wailed, "how can I
+bear it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Did I not speak the truth?" Mrs. Desmond demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"It is true, madam, I cannot deny it," replied the girl, crimson
+with burning blushes, "but I&mdash;oh, I call Heaven to witness my
+truth, Mrs. Desmond, I am nothing to your husband, I was&mdash;was&mdash;married
+before I came to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Then where is your husband?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell," faltered the white lips.</p>
+
+<p>"That is strange," said Mrs. Desmond, scornfully. "Has he
+left you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, madam," with a pitiful droop of the fair head.</p>
+
+<p>"Why did he do so?" inquired the lady</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell you," Golden murmured, sorrowfully.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, if Mrs. Desmond had only known the truth, that it was her
+brother's wife kneeling there ashamed and dejected before her.
+But she did not dream it, and her anger rose at the girl's unsatisfactory
+replies to her questions.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not ask you any more questions," she said, "I do not
+wish to hear more of your weak falsehoods. Get up from there,
+and go. Leave the house now and at once, before I publish your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+conduct to everyone. You need not go to Mrs. Markham for
+sympathy. I shall go to her at once and tell her what you are."</p>
+
+<p>Golden stood still, staring at her blankly a moment. She was
+dazed and frightened at the shameful suspicion that had fallen
+upon her, and she did not know how to convince Mrs. Desmond
+of her innocence.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, madam, if I could only induce you to believe that I am
+not the vile creature you think me," she cried in anguish.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush; leave the room!" Mrs. Desmond answered stormily.
+"Go, and take with you the bitterest curse of an injured woman.
+May the good God speedily avenge my cruel wrongs!"</p>
+
+<p>She crossed to the door, threw it open, and pointed silently to
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Golden obeyed the mute sentence of her lifted finger and glided
+out, a forlorn, little figure, feeling almost annihilated by the vivid
+lightning of Mrs. Desmond's angry eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The door slammed heavily behind her, and she walked along
+through the brightly lighted hotel corridor, for the twilight had
+fallen long ago.</p>
+
+<p>The rain was falling heavily, and Golden shrank and trembled
+at the thought of encountering the black, inclement night. The
+thought came to her&mdash;why should she go?</p>
+
+<p>She was ill, friendless, almost penniless. It was her husband's
+right to protect her.</p>
+
+<p>And here she was passing his very door. Should she not appeal
+to him for comfort in this terrible hour?</p>
+
+<p>Her trembling limbs refused to carry her past his door. She
+turned the handle with a weak and trembling hand and stepped
+over the threshold.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>When Golden on the impulse of the moment had entered the
+room that she knew was Bertram Chesleigh's, she stood frightened
+and trembling inside the closed door, afraid to look up at first
+at the man who had treated her so cruelly.</p>
+
+<p>Gathering courage at the shuddering remembrance of the terrors
+that awaited her in the darkness of the gloomy night outside,
+she looked up at last, determined to make at least one appeal to
+her husband.</p>
+
+<p>The gas had been lighted and it threw a flood of brightness
+over every object in the room.</p>
+
+<p>On a sofa at the further end Bertram Chesleigh lay sleeping in
+a careless position, as if he had just thrown himself down, wearied
+and overcome with fatigue.</p>
+
+<p>The jet-black hair was tossed carelessly back from his high,
+white brow, and the thick, dark lashes lay heavily upon his
+cheeks, as if his slumber was deep and dreamless.</p>
+
+<p>A small table was drawn closely to his side, littered with writing
+materials, and a pen with the ink scarcely dried upon it, lay
+beside a letter just stamped and sealed, and addressed to:</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<span class="smcap">Richard Leith</span>.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">No. &mdash;&mdash; Park Avenue, New York.</span>
+</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As Golden glided across the room, and paused, with her small
+hand resting upon the table, the superscription of the letter caught
+her eyes by the merest chance. She started, caught it up in her
+hand and scanned it eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Richard Leith," she read, and her voice trembled with eagerness.
+"How strange! Why is he writing to Richard Leith?"</p>
+
+<p>She glanced at the sleeper, but not the quiver of an eyelash betrayed
+disturbance at her presence.</p>
+
+<p>She drew a slip of paper toward her, and neatly copied the address
+from the letter, placing it securely in her little purse.</p>
+
+<p>Then she paused, turning another wistful glance from the letter
+which she still held in her hand, to the pale, handsome face
+of the husband who had discarded her because she had been born
+to a heritage of shame.</p>
+
+<p>She wondered again if Bertram Chesleigh knew Richard Leith,
+and why he had written to him, but no thought of the truth
+came into her mind, or how gladly she would have flown to the
+quiet sleeper and folded him in her loving arms, and sobbed out
+her gladness on his broad breast.</p>
+
+<p>Instead she stood gazing at him a few moments in troubled
+silence, the tear-drops hanging like pearls on her thick, golden
+lashes, her breast heaving with suppressed sighs.</p>
+
+<p>Then she turned and went out of the room, her first impulse
+to awaken him having been diverted into another course by her
+opportune discovery of the address of the man whom she believed
+to be her father.</p>
+
+<p>"Bertram would only despise and defy me if I appealed to
+him, perhaps," she murmured, "I will seek my misguided
+mother instead."</p>
+
+<p>She gave him one sad, reproachful glance and hurried out of
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>As she closed the door it inadvertently slammed and awakened
+the sleeper. He started up, confusedly passing his hand across
+his brow, and looking up for the person whom he supposed had
+entered the room.</p>
+
+<p>"I distinctly heard the door slam," he said to himself. "Someone
+either entered or left the room."</p>
+
+<p>But as no one appeared, he concluded that someone had entered,
+and finding him asleep, had gone out again.</p>
+
+<p>He crossed to the door and looked out into the lighted corridor.</p>
+
+<p>No one was visible, and he was about to close the door again,
+when his sister Edith came suddenly in sight.</p>
+
+<p>He waited until she came up to him, her dark silk dress rustling
+as she moved hurriedly along.</p>
+
+<p>"Come in, Edith," he said. "I am sorry I was asleep when
+you came in just now. Why did you not awaken me? I was
+only dozing. The closing of the door awakened me instantly."</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him in surprise, and then he saw that her
+brilliant face was quite pale, and her dark eyes had a strange,
+unnatural glare in them.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not been in your room since morning," she replied.
+"What made you think so, Bert?"</p>
+
+<p>"Someone must have come in and gone out again, for I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+awakened by the closing of the door, and I thought at first it
+must have been you. Doubtless it was only a servant. It does
+not matter. But, Edith, has anything happened? You look pale
+and strange."</p>
+
+<p>She threw herself down into a chair, and her unnatural calm
+gave way to a flood of tears.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Chesleigh was shocked and distressed. He bent over her
+and entreated her to tell him the cause of her grief.</p>
+
+<p>Checking her tears by a great effort of will, Mrs. Desmond told
+him all that had passed.</p>
+
+<p>"I will never live with Mr. Desmond again," she said, passionately,
+when she had finished her story. "Ever since we married
+he has outraged my love and my pride by his glaring flirtations,
+but this last affair is too grievous and shameful to be
+tamely endured. I hate him for his falsehood and infidelity, and
+I will never live with him again!"</p>
+
+<p>"Edith, think of the scandal, the notoriety, if you leave your
+husband," he remonstrated.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not care," she replied, her dark eyes blazing with wrath
+and defiance; "let them say what they will; I will not tamely
+endure such a cruel insult! You must make some arrangement
+for me, Bertie, for I will never, never live with Mr. Desmond
+again!"</p>
+
+<p>And Bertram Chesleigh, with his heart on fire at his beloved
+sister's wrongs and his brain puzzled over the best way to right
+them, little dreamed that his own weakness and wrong-doing
+had been the sole cause of her sorrow. His fiery indignation
+was spent upon his brother-in-law when it should have been
+bestowed upon himself.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXI" id="CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"I will not go in to bid little Ruby farewell," Golden said to
+herself sadly, as she left the room of Bertram Chesleigh. "The
+little one loves me and I could not bear her grief at parting with
+me. I will slip into the next room without her knowledge, get
+my hat and jacket, and go away quietly. When I am gone, perhaps
+Mrs. Desmond may become reconciled to her husband."</p>
+
+<p>She did not dream that the proud woman's anger and resentment
+against her husband would carry her to the length of a
+separation with him.</p>
+
+<p>She donned her hat and jacket, and tied her few articles of
+clothing into a compact bundle. Taking them in her hand, she
+stole noiselessly out, and made her way to the lower portico of
+the great hotel.</p>
+
+<p>She paused there, a little dismayed, and looked out at the black
+and starless night with the chill September drizzle falling ceaselessly.
+She would be obliged to walk two miles through the
+storm to take the midnight train for New York.</p>
+
+<p>It would have been perfectly easy to have hired a conveyance
+but she had only nine dollars left in her purse after discharging
+her debt to Mrs. Markham, and not knowing how much her fare<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+to the city might be, she was afraid to waste a penny in hack
+hire.</p>
+
+<p>She decided that she must walk, so, unfurling her small sun-umbrella
+as some slight protection against the beating rain, she
+plunged with a shiver into the wet and darkness of the untoward
+night.</p>
+
+<p>She groped along wearily in the dreary road, scarcely conscious
+of her physical discomfort and peril in the agonizing pain and
+humiliation that ached at her heart. She had been driven forth
+under the ban of cruel shame and disgrace.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh would hear the story of Ruby's wicked, deceitful
+nurse, and would hate her memory, little thinking that it
+was his own wretched wife, and that she had borne Mrs. Desmond's
+angry charge without defending herself, and all for his
+sake, because he was too proud to acknowledge her claim on
+him.</p>
+
+<p>The weary walk was accomplished at last, and Golden waited
+several hours in her wet and draggled garments in the fireless
+room at the station for the train that was to take her to New
+York.</p>
+
+<p>It came at last, and in a few more miserable hours she was safe
+in the city. She found, after paying her fare, that she had
+enough left to pay for a bed and breakfast at a hotel, and gladly
+availed herself of the privilege.</p>
+
+<p>Wretched and impatient as she felt, her overstrained mind
+yielded to the physical weakness that was stealing over her, and
+she slept soundly for several hours. Rising, refreshed and
+strengthened, she made a substantial breakfast and sallied for
+No. &mdash;&mdash; Park Avenue. She hardly knew what she would do when
+she arrived there, but the conviction was strong upon her that
+she must go.</p>
+
+<p>She had no difficulty in finding the number. The house was
+large and elegant, with a flight of brown stone steps in front.
+Golden climbed them a little timidly, and rang the bell.</p>
+
+<p>The servant in waiting stared at her cheap attire a little superciliously
+as he opened the door, but when she inquired if Mrs.
+Leith were at home his aspect changed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you are come in answer to the advertisement for a maid,"
+he said. "Yes, my mistress is at home, and she will see you at
+once. Come this way."</p>
+
+<p>Golden followed him in silence to the lady's dressing-room.
+The thought came to her that this would be an admirable pretext
+for making the acquaintance of the Leiths, so she did not deny
+that she was seeking a situation.</p>
+
+<p>A beautiful, golden-haired lady opened the door at her timid
+knock. The girl's heart gave a great, muffled throb.</p>
+
+<p>"My mother," she thought.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXII" id="CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"Mrs. Leith, this is a young woman who has answered the
+advertisement for a maid," said the man, respectfully, as he
+turned away.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The beautiful lady nodded Golden to a seat, and looked at her
+with careless condescension.</p>
+
+<p>"What is your name?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary Smith," answered the girl in a low, fluttering voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you any recommendations?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not as a maid, as the occupation is new to me. I have been
+a nurse heretofore, but if you will try me I will do my best to
+please you," said Golden, anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very hard to please," said Mrs. Leith.</p>
+
+<p>She did not tell Golden that she was so very hard to please
+that no one could suit her, leaving her to find that out for herself,
+as she would be sure to do if she remained.</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence, and Golden gravely regarded
+Mrs. Leith. She was <i>petite</i> and graceful in form, with large, blue
+eyes, waving masses of golden hair, and beautifully-moulded
+features. She was barely thirty years old in appearance, and
+was richly and becomingly attired.</p>
+
+<p>Yet Golden shivered and trembled as she regarded the fair,
+smiling beauty. How could she look so bright and careless with
+the brand of deadly sin upon her? There was neither sorrow
+nor repentance on the smiling, debonair face.</p>
+
+<p>"And this is my mother," Golden thought to herself, with a
+strange heaviness at her heart. "She seems utterly indifferent
+at her wickedness. Ah, she little dreams that the poor babe that
+she deserted so heartlessly is sitting before her now."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith's light, careless voice jarred suddenly on her mournful
+mood.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I will try you, Mary, for I need a maid. My last one
+was so incapable I had to discharge her. You may do my hair
+for me now. I am going to drive in the park with Mr. Leith, if
+his troublesome clients do not detain him. My husband is a
+lawyer, Mary, and his time is almost wholly engrossed by his
+business."</p>
+
+<p>"Her husband," Golden repeated to herself, as she wound the
+shining tresses into braids. "So they keep up that farce before
+the world. Poor mother! how she must love my father to remain
+with him on such humiliating terms. Is she really happy,
+or does she only wear a mask?"</p>
+
+<p>But there was no apparent sorrow or remorse on the complacent
+face of the lady as she gave her orders and directions to the new
+maid.</p>
+
+<p>The uppermost thought in her mind was how to make the
+most of her beauty.</p>
+
+<p>Golden had to arrange her hair twice before she was suited,
+and she tried several dresses in turn before she decided on one.
+She was inordinately vain and fond of finery, and Golden thought
+pitifully to herself:</p>
+
+<p>"Her beauty is the only hold she has on my father, and she is
+compelled to make its preservation the sole aim of her life."</p>
+
+<p>She wondered a little that no yearning throb had stirred her
+heart at the sight of her beautiful mother, but she told herself
+that it was simply because her mother's sin had wholly alienated
+the natural affection of her purer-hearted daughter.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>She pitied her with a great, yearning pity, but no impulse
+prompted her to kiss the dewy, crimson lips, she had no temptation
+to pillow her head on the fair bosom that had denied its
+shelter and sustenance to her helpless infancy.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith did not look as if she would have made a tender
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you any children, madam?" she asked, suddenly, and
+Mrs. Leith answered:</p>
+
+<p>"No," rather shortly, but added a minute later: "And I am
+glad of it, for I do not love children. But Mr. Leith does, and is
+rather sorry that we have none."</p>
+
+<p>"He is justly punished for his sin," thought his unknown
+daughter, while she secretly wondered why he had never claimed
+the child his wife had heartlessly deserted to return to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps she told him I was dead," thought Golden, looking
+at the beautiful woman with a strange thrill of repulsion. "Perhaps
+he would have loved me and cared for me, had he known I
+lived."</p>
+
+<p>A thrill of pity, half mixed with tenderness, stirred her heart
+for the father who had been cheated of the child he would have
+loved.</p>
+
+<p>She became conscious of a burning desire to meet her father&mdash;the
+man who had wronged her mother, and who had been
+wronged in turn, in that he had never beheld the face of his
+child.</p>
+
+<p>There was a manly step at the door, and it opened, admitting a
+tall, handsome man in the prime of life.</p>
+
+<p>Golden's heart gave a quick, wild throb, then sank heavily in
+her breast.</p>
+
+<p>She retreated hastily to the shade of a window-curtain, where
+she could observe the new-comer, herself unobserved.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith was tall, dark, and very handsome, though there
+were iron-gray threads in his dark, waving hair, and in the long,
+magnificent beard that rippled down upon his breast.</p>
+
+<p>He looked like a man who had known trouble and sorrow.
+His face was both sad and stern, and his dark eyes were cold and
+gloomy.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith looked up at him carelessly, and his grave face did
+not brighten at the sight of her beauty, enhanced as it was by
+the rich, blue silk, and becoming white lace bonnet with its garland
+of roses.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you ready for your drive, Mrs. Leith?" he inquired, with
+punctilious politeness.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I am just ready," she replied, carelessly. "You see I
+have a new maid; she is rather awkward, but I shall keep her until
+I can do better."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Leith gave an indifferent nod toward the gray gown and
+white cap that was dimly visible at the furthest corner of the
+room, then he went out with his wife, and Golden sank down
+upon the carpet and wept some bitter, bitter tears, that seemed
+to lift a little bit of the load of grief from her oppressed bosom.</p>
+
+<p>After all, she had found her father and mother, and it was possible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+that she might bring them to see the wickedness of their
+course, and to seek reformation.</p>
+
+<p>She determined not to reveal her identity just yet.</p>
+
+<p>She would stay with them a little and learn more of them before
+she made her strong appeal to them in behalf of truth.</p>
+
+<p>She would not reproach them just yet for the blight they
+had cast on her innocent life. She would patiently bide her
+time.</p>
+
+<p>It was a strange position to be placed in.</p>
+
+<p>Under the roof of her own parents, unknown and unacknowledged,
+with her whole life laid bare and desolate through their
+sin.</p>
+
+<p>A hot and passionate resentment against them surged up into
+Golden's wounded heart.</p>
+
+<p>What right had her mother to be so fair and happy when she
+had sinned so grievously?</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps she would be very angry when she knew that the child
+she had so pitilessly deserted had hunted her down to confront
+her with her sin.</p>
+
+<p>"I will wait a little. I will not speak yet," she said. "I shall
+know them better after awhile, and I shall know how to approach
+them better."</p>
+
+<p>So the days waned and faded.</p>
+
+<p>Golden began to become very well acquainted with the beautiful
+woman whom she believed to be her mother. She was vain,
+frivolous, heartless.</p>
+
+<p>The pure-hearted girl recoiled instinctively from her. But she
+could not understand Mr. Leith so well.</p>
+
+<p>He was a mystery to her. Some settled shadow seemed to
+brood heavily over him always.</p>
+
+<p>He was engrossed with his studies and business. Golden wondered
+if it was remorse that preyed so heavily on him. She had
+never seen a smile on the stern, finely-cut lips.</p>
+
+<p>There was one thing that struck her strangely, Richard Leith
+and his so-called wife did not appear very fond of each other.
+The gentleman was studiously courteous, polite and kind, but
+Golden never saw on his expressive face that light of adoring
+tenderness she had loved to see on Bertram Chesleigh's whenever
+he looked at her. Mrs. Leith was totally absorbed in her dresses,
+her novels, and her daily drives, during which she excited much
+admiration by her beauty and her exquisite toilets. But love
+and passion&mdash;these seemed to be worn-out themes between the
+strangely-mated pair. They addressed each other formally as
+Mr. and Mrs. Leith, but Golden had noticed that the lady's clothing
+was marked "G. L." She knew, of course, that the letter G.
+stood for Golden, but when she asked her about it with apparent
+carelessness one day, the lady answered that it was for Gertrude.</p>
+
+<p>"She has discarded even her name," her daughter mused bitterly.
+"Perhaps she has even forgotten her old home and her
+deserted father and her little child."</p>
+
+<p>And in spite of herself Golden felt that she heartily despised
+the woman whom she should have loved in spite of all her faults<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+because she was her mother. But some strange and subtle fascination
+drew her nearer and nearer to Richard Leith.</p>
+
+<p>Her anger and scorn which she had tried to foster at first began
+to dissolve in spite of herself into a yearning and sorrowful tenderness.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Several weeks went by, and Golden wondered very much if
+the Desmonds had returned to the city, and if the lady still held
+her unjust suspicions and jealousy against her.</p>
+
+<p>She often wondered as she looked at Richard Leith's stern, set
+face, why Bertram Chesleigh had written to him, and for what
+object.</p>
+
+<p>One day she heard Mrs. Leith remark to her husband that she
+had seen Mr. Desmond driving in the park alone that morning.</p>
+
+<p>"He looked pale and dejected&mdash;quite unlike himself," she
+added, "I wonder if his handsome wife and little daughter are
+at the seaside yet."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you not know," said Mr. Leith, "Mrs. Desmond and
+Ruby have gone to Europe with Chesleigh."</p>
+
+<p>"Gone without her husband," cried the lady. "How strange!
+Do you not think so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not strange when you hear the circumstances," Mr. Leith
+replied, gravely. "The truth is Mrs. Desmond became violently
+jealous of a pretty servant girl, and declared she would leave
+him&mdash;even threatened a divorce. To save publicity her brother
+persuaded her to take a trip with him to Europe, hoping that
+time might soften her anger. You understand that these are not
+public facts, Mrs. Leith. They came to me personally as the
+Desmonds' lawyer."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not repeat them," she replied, taking the gentle hint,
+good-humoredly. "Do you think she will ever be reconciled,
+Mr. Leith?"</p>
+
+<p>"I scarcely think so. Mrs. Desmond is perfectly implacable at
+present. Mr. Desmond employed me as a mediator between
+them, but I could accomplish nothing. He swears that she was
+unjustly jealous, and that there was nothing at all between him
+and the girl. But I could not induce Mr. Chesleigh nor his sister
+to believe the assertion."</p>
+
+<p>"What became of the girl?" inquired Mrs. Leith.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Desmond drove the wretched creature away. It is not
+known what became of her," replied the lawyer; "altogether it
+is a very sad affair. Chesleigh has acted on my advice in taking
+his sister out of the country for awhile. I pity Bertram Chesleigh.
+He has had a bad entanglement himself lately which he
+has been compelled to place in my hands. But, poor boy, I fear
+I can do nothing for him."</p>
+
+<p>"He is trying to get a divorce from me," thought Golden, with
+a dizzy horror in her mind, and the bitter agony of the thought
+drove the color from her face, and the life from her heart. With
+an exceeding bitter cry she threw up her arms in the air, staggered
+blindly forward and fell heavily upon the floor.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"What is that?" cried Mr. Leith, looking round with a great
+start.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, it's Mary Smith! I had forgotten that she was in the
+room," cried Mrs. Leith. "Oh, look, she is dead!"</p>
+
+<p>She began to wring her hands excitedly, but Mr. Leith said
+quietly:</p>
+
+<p>"Do not alarm yourself. She has only fainted I suppose.
+Bring some water and we will soon revive her."</p>
+
+<p>She ran into the dressing-room, and Mr. Leith bent down over
+the prostrate form and lifted the drooping head compassionately.</p>
+
+<p>The ugly, concealing cap and glasses had fallen off, and as his
+gaze rested fully on the lovely, marble-white face, a cry of surprise
+and anguish broke from his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"My God, how terribly like!" he muttered. Then, as Mrs.
+Leith returned with water and <i>eau de cologne</i>, he applied them
+both, without the slightest success, for Golden still lay cold, white
+and rigid, like one dead, upon his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Is she dead?" Mrs. Leith whispered, fearfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell. Ring for the housekeeper. Perhaps she may
+know better how to apply the remedies," he replied, still holding
+the light form in his arms, and gazing with a dazed expression on
+the beautiful, unconscious face.</p>
+
+<p>The housekeeper came, and declared, in a fright at first, that
+the girl was dead. Then she turned Mr. Leith out of the room,
+loosened Golden's clothing, and rubbed her vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>In about ten minutes the quiet eyelids fluttered faintly, and a
+gasping sigh parted the white lips.</p>
+
+<p>The housekeeper beckoned Mrs. Leith to her side.</p>
+
+<p>"She lives," she whispered, softly, "but she had better have
+died."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand you," Mrs. Leith replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I have made a discovery," continued the old housekeeper.
+"The girl has deceived you, madam. She is a bad lot, for all her
+sweet, childish, innocent face."</p>
+
+<p>"Deceived me&mdash;how?" Mrs. Leith demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"She is not an innocent maiden, as she appeared. Oh, Mrs.
+Leith, can you not see for yourself? The wretched creature is
+likely to become a mother in a few short months."</p>
+
+<p>"You are jesting. She is barely more than a child," Mrs. Leith
+broke out, incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the Lord's truth, madam. Faugh! the wicked little piece!
+A pity I hadn't let her die!" sniffed the virtuous housekeeper,
+with a scornful glance at the reviving girl.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith drew back her trailing silken skirts from contact
+with poor Golden's recumbent form as if there were contamination
+in her very touch.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been terribly deceived," she said, "I had begun to like
+the girl very much. She suited me more than any maid I have
+had for a long while, and I thought her quite pure and respectable.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+Do the best you can for her, Mrs. Brown, for I shall send
+her away as soon as she is able to walk."</p>
+
+<p>Heedless of Golden's large, blue eyes that unclosed and fixed
+themselves reproachfully upon her, she swept from the room
+and sought Mr. Leith, to whom she confided the housekeeper's
+discovery.</p>
+
+<p>The grave-faced lawyer looked shocked and distressed, unaccountably
+so, the lady thought.</p>
+
+<p>"I can scarcely credit it," he said. "She has such an innocent
+and child-like face."</p>
+
+<p>"Such faces are sometimes deceiving," remarked the lady.
+"This instance proves the fact."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you intend to do with the poor child!" Mr. Leith
+asked, with an unconscious sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall send her away, of course," Mrs. Leith replied, decidedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, <i>cruel, unnatural mother</i>!" said a faint, reproachful voice,
+behind her.</p>
+
+<p>She turned with a start and saw that Golden had followed her.</p>
+
+<p>The poor child stood trembling in the doorway, her dress in
+disorder, her beautiful hair broken loose from its fastenings, and
+streaming over her shoulders, her great, blue eyes blazing like
+stars in her lovely, pallid face, her sweet lips curled in scorn as
+she pointed her finger at Mrs. Leith, and exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, cruel, unnatural mother! Is your life so pure that you
+can afford to sit in judgment on me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is the girl mad?" Mrs. Leith exclaimed, recoiling from her.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I am not mad, although my wrongs have been bitter
+enough to madden any human being," Golden retorted, passionately.
+"I am not mad, although your terrible sin has ruined
+my life and broken my heart."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>My</i> sin, <i>mine</i>!" retorted Mrs. Leith, in apparent bewilderment.
+"What do you mean, girl? I am nothing to you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing to me, oh, my God," moaned Golden, wringing her
+white hands. "Then you deny that you are my mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Your</i> mother, girl, when I have never had a child in my life.
+Mr. Leith, do you not see that the wretched creature is raving
+mad?" cried the lady, retreating to his side apprehensively.</p>
+
+<p>Golden turned her flashing blue eyes on the white, startled face
+of the man.</p>
+
+<p>"She denies that she is my mother," she said. "Perhaps you
+will deny that you are my father."</p>
+
+<p>She saw a quiver pass over the man's pale face.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand your words," he replied, in a voice shaken
+with emotion. "Explain yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"I am the child Golden Glenalvan deserted at Glenalvan Hall
+in its helpless infancy, that she might return to New York and
+lead a life of shame with you," she cried out bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith's dark eyes turned on her face with a lurid gleam
+in their shadowed depths.</p>
+
+<p>"Hold!" he cried. "Whoever you are, you shall not malign
+the memory of poor, little Golden. She was pure as the snow."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Pure!" the girl repeated, blankly. "She was never your wife.
+They told me she lived with you in open shame."</p>
+
+<p>A startling change came over the face of Richard Leith.
+There was a glare, like that of madness, in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>He fell backward into a chair, and the labored breath came
+from between his parted lips in strong, shuddering sighs.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith flew to his side, and bent anxiously over him.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Leith, what is it? What does all this mean? I am mystified,"
+she cried.</p>
+
+<p>His heavy, dark eyes full of sorrow and despair, lifted gloomily
+to her wondering face.</p>
+
+<p>"It means," he replied, "that I have had a secret in my life,
+and that the time is come for you to know it. If this girl speaks
+truly she is indeed my daughter, though not yours."</p>
+
+<p>"Not hers!" echoed Golden, in bewilderment, as she looked at
+the beautiful woman whom she had for long weeks believed to
+be her mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Not hers," he replied, "for long before I met and married
+this lady, little Golden Glenalvan was dead."</p>
+
+<p>A startled cry came from Golden's lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Dead," she shuddered; "no, no; you are deceiving me."</p>
+
+<p>"Not so, as God is my judge," he replied. "But sit down,
+child, and tell me all your story. Then we may be able to understand
+each other."</p>
+
+<p>Golden glanced half-fearfully at Mrs. Leith, who stood leaning
+against her husband's chair, pale and silent, and anxious-looking.
+The lady quietly and gravely motioned her to a seat.</p>
+
+<p>She thankfully obeyed the gesture, for she felt ill and weary,
+and the sudden shock of learning that her mother was dead, had
+been a terrible one to her, and had almost stricken her senseless
+again.</p>
+
+<p>In low, pathetic tones, and with many tears, Golden told Richard
+Leith all that she knew of her mother, and as much as she
+could of her own lonely life, without revealing the tragic story
+of her unfortunate love.</p>
+
+<p>He listened in silence, although she could see that he was terribly
+agitated.</p>
+
+<p>His white brow was beaded with great drops of sweat, his eyes
+stared wildly, he bit his lips till the blood started to keep back
+the groans of pain.</p>
+
+<p>When she had finished he went over to her, knelt at her feet,
+and gently kissed her cold, little hand.</p>
+
+<p>"You are my daughter," he said, "and you are the living
+image of your mother. But until this moment, little Golden, I
+believed you dead. I wrote to John Glenalvan when my wife
+ran away from me, and asked him if she had returned to her
+father. He wrote back that she had done so, that she had given
+birth to a little daughter, and that the mother and child had
+both died. Then he added his curse, and threatened, if I ever
+came near Glenalvan Hall, to shoot me down like a dog."</p>
+
+<p>His voice broke huskily a moment. Golden looked at him
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"You said your wife," she faltered. "Was my mother, then,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+legally married to you? Am I not a&mdash;&mdash;" her voice broke huskily
+over the word, "a nameless child?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your mother was my legal wife, little one. You are my own
+daughter, born in lawful wedlock. God only knows what crafty
+and wicked enemy of mine wrote that lying letter to my poor,
+young wife, telling her that I had deceived her by a mock marriage.
+She was too credulous, and believed the lie too easily. It
+was not true. I can give you every proof that your mother was
+my lawful wife, little Golden."</p>
+
+<p>She fell on her knees, and with upraised hands and streaming
+eyes, thanked God for those precious words.</p>
+
+<p>Her mother had been pure and noble. There was no shadow
+of stain on her daughter's birth.</p>
+
+<p>Then, with a sudden, startling thought she confronted him,
+her white hands clasped in agony, her voice ringing wild and
+shrill:</p>
+
+<p>"John Glenalvan told you that my mother died. He lied!
+She disappeared very suddenly the night after I was born, and
+that villain declared that she had deserted me and returned to
+her sinful life with you. She did not die, and she did not return
+to you. Oh, my God, where is she now?"</p>
+
+<p>She saw that terrible question reflected on her father's face.</p>
+
+<p>It whitened to the awful hue of death, and he reeled backward
+like a smitten man.</p>
+
+<p>A faint cry came from Mrs. Leith, who had dropped heavily
+into a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Heaven, if she is yet living, what, then, am I?"</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith went to her side, and looked down at her white,
+scared face, pitifully.</p>
+
+<p>"Gertrude," he said to her gently, "we have both been the
+victims of a terrible wrong. When I married you several years
+after the loss of my first wife, won by your beauty, which reminded
+me of my poor, little Golden's, I honestly believed that
+she was dead. There is some terrible mystery here, and John
+Glenalvan is at the bottom of it. But I will wring the truth from
+his false lips, and if my lost little Golden has come to harm at
+his hands, his life shall pay the penalty of his sin!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXV" id="CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"Oh, father," cried little Golden. "Why did you lure my
+poor mother from her home. She was so young, so trusting.
+Why did you persuade her to desert her parents?"</p>
+
+<p>The man's pale, handsome features quivered all over with vain
+remorse and penitence.</p>
+
+<p>"You do well to reproach me, little Golden," he sighed.
+"There is no excuse for my sin. But I will tell you how I came
+to act so imprudently.</p>
+
+<p>"I was a struggling young lawyer, poor and proud, when I
+first met your beautiful mother during a business trip to the
+south. Her family, though reduced to comparative poverty by
+the late war, were proud and aristocratic people, and I felt quite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+sure that they would have refused me the hand of their petted
+darling.</p>
+
+<p>"I had heard so much of the pride of the southerners that I was
+afraid to ask the Glenalvans for their beautiful child. So I acted
+the part of a coward and stole her from them. The dear girl
+loved me well, and went with me willingly when I promised to
+take her back to them after we were married.</p>
+
+<p>"I took her to New York, and made her my true and lawful
+wife, but so afraid was I of those haughty Glenalvans that I refused
+to allow her to write my name and address to her friends.
+I was waiting till I should have acquired a fame and fortune that
+would make me acceptable in their eyes. Oh, God, how terribly
+my sin has found me out after all these years."</p>
+
+<p>He paused and wiped away the cold dew that beaded his
+high, white brow. After a moment he went on, sadly:</p>
+
+<p>"I was fast gaining prominence and a competence in my profession,
+when some base enemy of mine&mdash;as a lawyer I had some
+of the blackest-hearted enemies that a man ever had&mdash;wrote my
+darling a letter, defaming me in scandalous terms, and averring
+that I had deceived her by a mock marriage.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor child, she was very simple and credulous. She fell an
+easy victim to the liar's tale. She fled from me, leaving that
+cruel letter behind her, the only thing there was to hint at the
+reason of her hurried flight."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if only you had followed her then," moaned beautiful
+Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"If I only had!" he echoed. "My first impulse was to do so;
+but I had on hand a very important case, which I had staked
+everything on winning. If I managed it well my success was
+assured as one of the leading lawyers of the day. My speech for
+the defense was anticipated anxiously by many. So I suffered
+my ambition to overrule my first instinctive resolve to follow my
+wife, and instead I wrote to her brother. He sent me that lying
+letter that almost broke my heart."</p>
+
+<p>He broke down and sobbed like a woman, or rather, unlike a
+woman, for those great, convulsive moans of agony that issued
+from his breast seemed as if they would rend his heart in twain.</p>
+
+<p>Golden stole to his side and laid her small hand kindly on his
+gray head, that was bowed in sorrow and remorse.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry for you, my father," she said. "You have been
+weak and imprudent, but not sinful, as I thought. But, oh, my
+poor mother! My heart is torn over her wretched fate. She must
+have perished miserably, or we should have heard from her ere
+now. Oh, father, what shall we do?"</p>
+
+<p>They looked at each other with dim, miserable eyes, this
+strangely reunited father and daughter, the awful mystery of
+the wife and mother's fate chilled their hearts.</p>
+
+<p>He took her hand and drew her gently nearer to him.</p>
+
+<p>"My child, I shall go to Glenalvan Hall and confront John
+Glenalvan with his sin. I believe the whole key to the mystery
+lies in that villain's hands."</p>
+
+<p>"I am almost sure of it," she replied. "He hated my mother,
+and he hated me. I will go with you. What joy it will be to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+stand up proudly before him and tell him that my birth was honest
+and honorable, and that my father is a good and true man,
+who is glad to see me, for you <i>are</i> glad, aren't you?" she asked
+him, pleadingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear, I am very glad. I have always longed to have a
+child of my own to love. It seemed as if my heart was always
+yearning for the daughter I believed to be dead. But Golden,"
+he looked at her anxiously and pleadingly as he clasped her little
+hand, "you have a story of your own to tell me before we go on
+the quest for your mother. The great mystery of love has come
+to you already in your tender youth. Tell me, my daughter, are
+you a wife?"</p>
+
+<p>The crimson color flushed into her cheeks, then receded, leaving
+her deathly pale again.</p>
+
+<p>Tears rose into the great, blue eyes, and trembled on the long-fringed
+lashes.</p>
+
+<p>Her lips parted and closed again without a sound.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me, Golden," he urged, anxiously; "are you a wife, or
+has some artful villain deceived you? If so&mdash;&mdash;" he clenched his
+hand, and the lightnings of passion flashed from his somber, dark
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>A moan of pain came from the girl's white lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, father, I cannot tell you now," she sighed. "Only trust
+me. Do not believe me vile and wicked. Perhaps I may be able
+to tell you the truth some day."</p>
+
+<p>As she spoke, some strange, new light flashed into his mind.</p>
+
+<p>She saw the startled gleam flash into his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," he cried out, hoarsely, "are you the girl that was
+dismissed from Mrs. Desmond's employ under the stigma of a disgraceful
+suspicion?"</p>
+
+<p>She covered her face with her hands and faltered "yes," in a
+voice of agony.</p>
+
+<p>"Was that terrible accusation true?" he demanded, in a voice
+so changed she could scarcely recognize it.</p>
+
+<p>"No, never! It was false, I swear it before Heaven. My trouble
+came to me before I entered Mrs. Desmond's employ," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden, you must tell me the name of the man who has
+wronged you," he said, sternly.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot," she answered, sorrowfully.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean you will not," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot. I am bound by a promise," she answered.</p>
+
+<p>"It was a foolish promise. The time has come when you must
+break it," he answered, steadily. "You must clear yourself in
+Mrs. Desmond's eyes, and reconcile her to her husband. Do you
+know that they are separated on your account?"</p>
+
+<p>"I heard you say so," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"It is true, and I am their lawyer. Will you let me write to
+Mrs. Desmond, and tell her the name of the man who is really in
+fault, and for whose sin she has deserted her innocent husband?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot," she moaned again, in a voice of agony. "I am
+bound by a sacred promise. Bitter as the consequences are, I
+must keep it!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It seemed incredible to him that this frail, slight girl should
+hold her secret so resolutely in the face of the trouble it had
+caused.</p>
+
+<p>"But, Golden, think a moment," he began.</p>
+
+<p>"I have thought until my brain is almost wild," she interrupted,
+pitifully. "But I can see no possible loophole out of my solemn
+vow of silence."</p>
+
+<p>"You were wrong to take such a vow, Golden, and it is almost
+wicked for you to keep it. Do you see how much is at stake?
+Through your silence a man and his wife are divided in anger and
+shame, and a cloud of the blackest disgrace is lowering over your
+own head. Do you know that it is a fearful thing to come between
+husband and wife?"</p>
+
+<p>"I feel its enormity in the very depths of my heart," she replied,
+shuddering and weeping.</p>
+
+<p>"Then surely you will speak; you <i>must</i> speak," he urged.</p>
+
+<p>But she only shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"Not if I command you to do so?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Not if you command me," she replied, with mournful firmness.</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence, and Richard Leith gazed upon
+the girl with a sick and shuddering heart.</p>
+
+<p>A vague suspicion was beginning to steal into his mind.</p>
+
+<p>What if Golden was deceiving him, and Mrs. Desmond's belief
+were true?</p>
+
+<p>He reeled before the sickening horror of the thought. The
+dread suspicion seemed to float in fiery letters before his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at the bowed figure of the sobbing girl, and steeled
+his heart against her. She was no child of his if she could let
+the shadow of suspicion tamely rest upon her head.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden," he said, "think of what I must endure if you refuse
+to declare yourself. Would you have me acknowledge a child
+who has covered my honorable name with shame? Shall I take
+you by the hand and say to the world that honors me as a stainless
+man: 'This is my daughter. She has disgraced herself, and
+brought ruin and despair into another's home.'"</p>
+
+<p>She shrank and trembled before the keen denunciation of his
+words. She threw herself at his feet and looked up with frightened,
+imploring eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Father, do not disown me," she cried. "I have not disgraced
+you&mdash;you will know the truth some day. Tell the whole world
+my piteous story. It may be&mdash;it may be that the telling will
+bring you joy, not sorrow. For," she said to her own heart,
+hopefully, "if Bertram Chesleigh should hear the truth, and
+know that I am not a nameless child, surely he will claim me
+then. He can no longer be ashamed of me."</p>
+
+<p>She felt that the happiness of her whole future hung trembling
+in the balance on the chance of her father's recognition of her.
+If in his anger at her obstinacy he should repudiate her claim on
+him, nothing was left her but despair.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith could be as hard as marble when he chose. His
+pride and his anger rose in arms now against the thought of receiving
+this branded girl as his own daughter.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Golden," he said, "what if I say that I will not receive you
+as my daughter unless you consent to clear up this disgraceful
+mystery that surrounds you?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will not tell me so&mdash;you could not be so cruel," she cried,
+fearfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Only one word, Golden. The name of the man who has
+wronged you. Tell me, that I may punish him."</p>
+
+<p>"You must not, for <i>I love him</i>," she moaned, despairingly.</p>
+
+<p>"You force me to believe that Mrs. Desmond was right, and
+that you are a lost and guilty creature," he said scathingly.</p>
+
+<p>A long, low wail came from her lips, then she bowed her head
+and remained silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you still persist in this obstinate silence?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I must," she answered faintly.</p>
+
+<p>"Go, then," he thundered at her, "you are no child of mine.
+I refuse you the shelter of my home, my name, and my heart.
+I cannot believe that you are the child of my innocent little
+Golden. Go, and never let me see your face again."</p>
+
+<p>And with the cruel words he turned and left the room.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Little Golden stared at the closing door through which her
+father had vanished, with blank, terror-filled eyes. To have
+found him and lost him like this was too terrible.</p>
+
+<p>She sat gazing before her like one dazed, with the angry words
+of her father still ringing in her ears, when a low and fluttering
+sigh recalled her to the fact of Mrs. Leith's presence which she
+had forgotten for the moment in her anguish of soul.</p>
+
+<p>She looked around shrinkingly at the fair woman who had
+taken her mother's place, and her mother's name, dreading to
+meet a glance of scorn, even transcending that which her father
+had cast upon her.</p>
+
+<p>Instead she met the beautiful, troubled eyes of her step-mother
+fixed upon her with tenderest pity.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith had been vain, careless, and frivolous all her life.
+She had never known a care or sorrow in the whole course of
+her pleasant, prosperous existence.</p>
+
+<p>The hard crust of selfishness and indifference had grown over
+the better impulses of a nature that at the core was true, and
+sweet, and womanly.</p>
+
+<p>The last hour with its strange revelations had been the
+turning point in her life.</p>
+
+<p>She realized with a shudder the dreadful position in which she
+was placed. She was married to a man who, in all probability,
+had a wife living.</p>
+
+<p>It was possible that she herself was almost as much an outcast
+as the wretched girl who crouched weeping on the floor,
+homeless, friendless, and forsaken, in the hour of her direst
+need.</p>
+
+<p>Never before had Mrs. Leith been brought face to face with a
+real sorrow. She gazed wonderingly upon poor little Golden, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+course of whose checkered life had run as strangely as that of
+one of her favorite novel heroines.</p>
+
+<p>So it happened that when Golden looked timidly up expecting
+to be immediately annihilated by her scornful glance, she met
+only the gentlest pity beaming from the large, blue eyes of the
+unhappy woman.</p>
+
+<p>"Come to me, Golden," she said, and as the young girl advanced
+she asked her in a strangely saddened voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Are you angry with me, child, that I have filled your mother's
+place and worn her name for twelve, long years?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I am not angry," Golden answered, gently. "It was
+through no fault of yours&mdash;you did not know."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I did not know," Mrs. Leith murmured, putting her
+hands to her eyes while the tears fell through her fingers. "I
+did not know, and now it is too late."</p>
+
+<p>"What shall you do now?" Golden asked her wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall go away," Mrs. Leith replied, sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you angry with my father?" asked the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Golden, he sinned ignorantly," replied Mrs. Leith.
+"Therefore I cannot blame him. But I must go away from him,
+and never see him again until he learns the truth whether or not
+his first wife was living when he married me."</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a brief silence. The two women, so lately mistress
+and maid&mdash;now placed upon the same level by the equalizing
+hand of sorrow, sat still a little while looking out upon the
+unknown future with dreary, hopeless eyes. Then Mrs. Leith
+roused herself with an effort.</p>
+
+<p>"And you, Golden&mdash;where will you go? What will you do?"
+she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"God knows," the girl exclaimed, hopelessly. "I am so
+stunned by the revelations of to-day that I know not where to
+turn. For weary months the dream of finding and reclaiming
+my guilty mother has filled and occupied my thoughts. Now
+that I know her innocent and pure, the terrible mystery of her
+fate chills the blood in my veins. Where shall I look for her?
+How shall I find her?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith looked at her compassionately.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor child!" she said. "You are too ill and weary to seek
+for anyone now. Leave that sorrowful quest to your father, and
+place yourself in my care."</p>
+
+<p>The tears brimmed over in Golden's beautiful eyes at the kindly
+spoken words of her step-mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, madam," she cried, "you offer to befriend me. Then you
+do not believe that I am the lost and guilty creature they would
+fain make me out."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith's beautiful face beamed with sympathy as she answered:</p>
+
+<p>"No, Golden, I do not believe you are a sinner. I have a
+strong conviction that you are a deserted or discarded wife, and I
+will care for you in your forlorn situation with the tenderness of
+your own mother."</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Richard Leith went down to his office, and threw himself
+heavily into a chair, bowing his gray head dejectedly on his
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>His brain was almost crazed with the agony of the last hour's
+discovery.</p>
+
+<p>The sealed book of the past had been roughly torn open again,
+and in agony of soul he repented the selfish course he had pursued
+with the fair, young wife he had stolen from her home and
+friends.</p>
+
+<p>Where was she now, his beautiful, golden-haired darling?</p>
+
+<p>What fate had kept her from her home and friends, and from
+the little child that had come to such bitter grief in the absence
+of the mother-love that might have shielded her from harm?</p>
+
+<p>He sprang from his chair, and paced impatiently up and down
+the floor, while he hurriedly settled his plans. He would leave
+for the south that night.</p>
+
+<p>He would seek out John Glenalvan, and charge him with his
+sin.</p>
+
+<p>He would force him to unfold the mystery of little Golden's
+disappearance. Perhaps, oh, God, the villain had murdered
+her.</p>
+
+<p>If he had, he should suffer the dire punishment the law meted
+out for such wretched criminals.</p>
+
+<p>"But before I go," he said to himself, grimly, "I will go and
+see Desmond. If he has lied to me heretofore, woe be unto him.
+The base betrayer of my poor child's innocence shall receive no
+mercy at my hands."</p>
+
+<p>He threw on his hat and directed his steps to the hotel where
+Mr. Desmond was staying in preference to the grand, deserted
+dwelling, which was closed and left in the solitary care of the
+housekeeper during the absence of the family.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond was smoking in his luxurious parlor, carelessly
+habited in dressing-gown and slippers.</p>
+
+<p>His handsome, debonair face looked pale and worn, and melancholy.
+A hopeful gleam came into the listless eyes as his visitor
+was admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Leith, so glad to see you," he cried, throwing away his
+cigar, and eagerly advancing. "You bring me news&mdash;Edith has
+relented?"</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing more unlikely," Mr. Leith returned, with
+grim truthfulness; then he broke out with fiery impetuosity:
+"Desmond, for God's sake tell me the truth. Have you deceived
+me as well as your wife? Are you guilty of this monstrous sin?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond was startled by the almost agonizing entreaty of
+the lawyer's look and voice.</p>
+
+<p>On the impulse of the moment he caught up a small Bible that
+lay upon a table close at hand, and pressed his lips upon it while
+he exclaimed in the deep, convincing tones of truth:</p>
+
+<p>"Leith, I solemnly swear to you that I am innocent of the
+crime laid to my charge, so help me God."</p>
+
+<p>Something in the man's deep earnestness, and in his look of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+suffering, staggered Richard Leith's doubts and fears, and made
+him feel that he had been a brute to doubt his daughter's agonized
+declarations of innocence. He exclaimed with sudden fervor
+and earnestness:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Desmond, it is but fair to tell you that I have found the
+girl, Mary Smith, and that she exonerates you, too."</p>
+
+<p>"I was sure she would, although she despises me," cried Mr.
+Desmond. "I admit that I behaved despicably to her. I tried
+to get up a flirtation with her, but she scorned me with the pride
+of a queen, and the affair went no further. I believed her as pure
+and cold as the snow. No one was more amazed than myself
+when I learned the truth through my wife's causeless jealousy."</p>
+
+<p>"You say 'causeless jealousy,' Desmond," Mr. Leith remonstrated,
+gravely, "but you forget that ever since your marriage
+you have persistently wounded your loving and sensitive wife by
+the most open and flagrant flirtations, thus giving her the greatest
+cause to doubt your fidelity."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond looked thoroughly ashamed and penitent at the
+perfectly truthful charge.</p>
+
+<p>"You speak the truth, I have behaved shamefully," he replied.
+"But I have had my lesson now. I never knew how much I
+loved and honored my sweet and beautiful wife until in her
+righteous wrath she deserted me. But if she will believe me this
+time and return to me, I will never offend her again by my foolish
+propensities. I will never even look at another woman. I
+am quite cured of flirting."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke so soberly and earnestly that Mr. Leith was fain to
+believe him, but he answered gravely:</p>
+
+<p>"Your wife is so thoroughly incensed against you, that she will
+never believe even your sworn word without additional proof."</p>
+
+<p>"But how can I prove it to her?" cried the anxious husband.
+"She would not believe Mary Smith's denial, and she refuses to
+credit mine."</p>
+
+<p>"There is only one way out of the trouble," the lawyer said,
+gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"And that?" Mr. Desmond asked, anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Is to find out the man who is really in fault, and obtain his
+sworn statement," Richard Leith replied.</p>
+
+<p>"The girl will give us the necessary information, of course,"
+Mr. Desmond exclaimed, his spirits rising.</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary, she obstinately refuses to do so. She makes
+a most perplexing mystery of her unhappy situation."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Desmond looked uneasy and perplexed a moment, then he
+exclaimed, confidently:</p>
+
+<p>"It is only a question of blackmail then. She will tell the
+truth if a golden bribe is offered her. Depend upon it, she is only
+waiting for that."</p>
+
+<p>"You are mistaken," Richard Leith returned, gravely. "You
+do not understand her motives. I will tell you a harrowing secret,
+Desmond. I have discovered that that unfortunate girl is
+my own daughter!"</p>
+
+<p>In a few eloquent words he told Mr. Desmond the story of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+strange marriage, and its tragic <i>denouement</i>&mdash;the lost wife, the
+ruined daughter.</p>
+
+<p>In his own despair and agitation, it did not seem strange to the
+lawyer that his excitement was reflected on the face of his listener,
+but when he had finished his story, Desmond sprang wildly to
+his feet, exclaiming:</p>
+
+<p>"Good God, Leith, I can lay my hand on the destroyer of your
+child. It is my wife's brother&mdash;it is Bertram Chesleigh!"</p>
+
+<p>"Heaven, how blind I have been!" Richard Leith exclaimed,
+with lurid eyes, and a deathly-pale face.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence, then Mr. Leith said, huskily:</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me how this fact came to your knowledge, Desmond."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you remember the sudden trip my wife and I took to Florida
+last summer?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I heard of it," the lawyer replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go back a few months previous to that trip." Mr. Desmond
+said.</p>
+
+<p>"It was this winter a year previous that Bertram Chesleigh
+made the acquaintance of young Frederick Glenalvan in New
+York and was invited by him to visit his far-away Floridian
+home.</p>
+
+<p>"About the first of last June Bert accepted the invitation, and
+spent about two weeks at Glenalvan Hall.</p>
+
+<p>"He wrote to my wife from there, hinting vaguely at having
+lost his heart to a perfect 'pearl of beauty.'</p>
+
+<p>"Edith, who is excessively proud, and mortally afraid of a <i>mesalliance</i>,
+replied to him coolly, discountenancing the idea and begging
+him not to marry out of his own state.</p>
+
+<p>"Between you and me, Leith, I believe she had a great heiress
+booked for the young fellow in New York."</p>
+
+<p>He paused for breath, but at Richard Leith's look of impatience,
+went on hastily:</p>
+
+<p>"Bertram did not reply to his sister's letter, but in the latter
+part of the same month Fred Glenalvan wrote us that Bertram
+was lying ill with brain fever.</p>
+
+<p>"We went to him at once and found him not expected to live,
+He was delirious, and through all his illness he called incessantly
+on one name. Morning, noon and night it was always, 'Golden,
+Golden, Golden.'"</p>
+
+<p>A groan forced itself through Richard Leith's rigid lips, but he
+did not speak, and Mr. Desmond continued:</p>
+
+<p>"That cry for Golden was always coupled with a wild appeal
+for forgiveness for some wrong, the nature of which we could
+not determine.</p>
+
+<p>"My curiosity and that of my wife were powerfully excited,
+and we wondered who the Golden was that he called upon, and
+why she never came.</p>
+
+<p>"It was quite evident that the Glenalvans did not care to
+divulge the secret, so we never presumed to ask, but when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+Bertram grew convalescent Edith inquired of him, and he told
+her the truth."</p>
+
+<p>"Let me hear it," said Richard Leith, gaspingly, while the
+knotted veins stood out like cords on his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>"It was the same story your daughter told you&mdash;that of a fair
+young girl kept aloof from her kind, slighted and scorned for no
+visible fault."</p>
+
+<p>"Bertram met and loved her. They had some secret meetings
+by night in one of which they were discovered, and in the
+scene that followed, the fact was disclosed that the girl was illegitimate."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my weakness, my sin!" groaned the wretched listener.
+"Curses upon John Glenalvan for his horrible villainy."</p>
+
+<p>"Bertram declared that he had only entertained the most honorable
+feelings toward the girl," said Mr. Desmond, "but he confessed
+that the knowledge of her parentage so staggered him that
+he was induced to forsake her. He left Glenalvan Hall before
+daylight without seeing her again."</p>
+
+<p>"The cowardly cur!" Richard Leith exclaimed, clenching his
+hands until the purple nails sunk into the quivering flesh.</p>
+
+<p>"Hear me out," said Mr. Desmond, quickly, "before you judge
+him too hardly."</p>
+
+<p>"I am listening," answered Richard Leith, trying to master his
+surging passions beneath an appearance of calmness. "I am listening,
+but what more can there be to say, Mr. Desmond?"</p>
+
+<p>"This, Mr. Leith: Bertram went away, determined to forsake
+the hapless girl, but his love and remorse, and the overpowering
+cause of shame, urged his return so powerfully that in three days
+he returned to Glenalvan Hall with the full intention of marrying
+the girl at once, and taking her abroad with him where no
+one knew her unfortunate story.</p>
+
+<p>"When he reached there she was gone&mdash;none knew whither.
+John Glenalvan told him that she had gone away with the boldly-avowed
+intention of leading a life of sin with her mother.
+Poor Bertram had suffered so much that he could not bear that
+crowning blow. He staggered and fell like a log at the villain's
+feet. A brain fever followed that nearly cost him his life."</p>
+
+<p>"One more score is added to my terrible list against John Glenalvan,"
+Richard Leith muttered darkly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no more to say," continued Mr. Desmond, "except that
+all the circumstances point unerringly at Bertram Chesleigh as
+the man who wronged your daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right," groaned the unhappy father. "Oh, God, if
+only she had remained at Glenalvan Hall that he might have
+made reparation for his sin!"</p>
+
+<p>"Did not Bertram write to you in relation to the unfortunate
+affair? He mentioned an intention to do so," said Mr. Desmond.</p>
+
+<p>"Only a letter so cautiously worded that I could gain no clew
+to the real truth," replied Richard Leith. "No names were mentioned.
+He only described the girl who was supposed to have entered
+some one of the many nameless houses in this city. He
+wished me to reclaim her, if possible, provide her a home, and he
+agreed to make her a generous allowance."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Poor Bert," said Mr. Desmond, "and all the while she was
+in his sister's employ, and in reach of his hand, if he had only
+known it."</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's heavy silence; then Richard Leith rose
+hastily.</p>
+
+<p>"I must go home now," he said. "I&mdash;may God forgive me&mdash;I
+was so maddened by my child's wrongs and my own suspicions
+that I refused to own her; I drove her away from her rightful
+home. Pray God that she be not gone. If she has, I must bring
+her back and tell her that I know her whole sad story, and I must
+make the best I can of her poor, blighted life."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall you write to Bertram Chesleigh?" inquired Desmond.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, for they must know that they have wronged you, and
+that you are innocent," replied the lawyer. "And, Desmond,
+you must write to your wife. I will inclose your letter with
+mine, otherwise, in her pride and anger, she might return it unopened.
+I thank God that your fidelity is vindicated, and that
+your reunion is now insured."</p>
+
+<p>"I have a better plan than writing to her," said Desmond,
+blushing like a school-girl. "I will follow your letter to her
+brother, and plead my cause in person. I cannot wait, Leith; I
+am too impatient. I long to meet my wife and child again. You
+will give me their address? The <i>Europa</i> sails to-night. I must
+go with her."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Leith saw no objection to the plan. He was sorry for the
+impatient husband who had received a lesson that would last a
+life-time.</p>
+
+<p>He gave him his wife's address in Italy, with his cordial good
+wishes and went away to seek his wronged, unhappy daughter.</p>
+
+<p>"She cannot have gone yet. She was to weak and ill to have
+gone to-day. She would have waited until she was better," he
+kept whispering to his reproachful heart as he hurried along.</p>
+
+<p>Then he thought of the beautiful, fashionable woman who
+had taken the place of little Golden's mother, and worn her
+name for twelve long years.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Gertrude," he murmured sadly. "I wonder how she
+bears it. Perhaps she will not grieve much. She does not love
+me as she did when I first made her my wife. Perhaps I am to
+blame. I have chilled her tender nature by my carelessness or
+coldness, for I have never loved her as I did my lost little Golden."</p>
+
+<p>He hurried up the marble steps and ran impatiently along the
+hall, stumbling against the housekeeper, who was pacing sedately
+along with a little basket of keys.</p>
+
+<p>As he was rushing past her she stopped and called to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Mistress and her maid are gone away, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Where?" he inquired, pausing and looking back in bewildered
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell you, for I do not know," the woman replied, respectfully.
+"But she bade me say that she left a letter for you on
+her dressing-table."</p>
+
+<p>He ran up to Mrs. Leith's dressing-room, and found it in some
+slight disorder, as if traveling bags had been hurriedly packed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Amid the dainty litter of the dressing-table he saw a square
+envelope addressed to himself, and hurriedly tore it open.</p>
+
+<p>His gaze ran over the few pathetic words daintily penciled
+on the perfumed, satiny sheet.</p>
+
+<p>"Richard," she wrote. "I have gone away from you. I have
+long felt that I had but a small share in your heart, and now I
+know that I have, perhaps, no right to your name, and no place
+in your home. So it is best that I should leave you. I have
+taken little Golden with me. There is one thing, at least, that
+I can do. I can be a mother to the child whose father has disowned
+her, and whose mother is so tragically lost.</p>
+
+<p>"You were wrong, Richard. The child has been wronged, but
+I believe that she is innocent. I have loved you more than you
+knew; perhaps more than you cared, and for your sake I will
+care for your forlorn child. You will not seek for us. We are
+companions in misery, and you will respect our grief. I cannot
+tell you where we shall go. But if you find little Golden's
+mother I shall know it, and the mother shall have her child."</p>
+
+<p>With the simple name, "Gertrude," the letter ended; Richard
+Leith reread it slowly, filled with a great surprise and wonder.</p>
+
+<p>"She will care for the child I treated so heartlessly," he murmured.
+"God bless her. I did not know that Gertrude could be
+so true and noble. I have wronged her indeed, and she has
+worn the mask of carelessness and frivolity over a wounded
+heart. Oh, God, if I only knew where to find them."</p>
+
+<p>He almost cursed himself for his cruelty to his wronged and
+miserable daughter.</p>
+
+<p>He remembered how young she was, and how ignorant of the
+world when Bertram Chesleigh had won her heart. Perhaps she
+was not to blame. His wrath waxed hot against the man who
+had betrayed her guileless innocence.</p>
+
+<p>He went down and asked the housekeeper if Mrs. Leith had
+gone away in the carriage, and she answered that the lady had
+walked, and the maid had accompanied her.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot go south until I have found them," he said to himself,
+sadly. "Poor little Golden, poor Gertrude."</p>
+
+<p>Before the next day he had visited every depot and every wharf
+by which they might have left the city, but he had learned nothing.
+The next day after he inserted a personal in the <i>Herald</i>:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"<span class="smcap">To Gertrude</span>:&mdash;Return with Golden. Her true story is
+known and she is freely forgiven. Anxiously,</p>
+
+<p class="sig">R. L."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>But the two for whom that yearning cry was written were
+fated never to behold it. And the dreary winter days came and
+went while he waited for tidings, filled with the heart-sickness
+of a great despair.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>While the winter snow still whirled in blinding drifts through
+the streets of New York, the sun shone, the flowers bloomed, the
+birds sang around old Glenalvan Hall in far-away Florida.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah crooned her quaint revival hymns in the sunny doorway<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+of the kitchen, and her old master dozed in the bright, bay-window
+among the pots of fragrant flowers.</p>
+
+<p>It was February, and hints of the nearing spring were in the
+air that sighed softly among the flowers, and lifted the thin, white
+locks from the brow of old Hugh, as his weary head lay resting
+on the back of his easy-chair.</p>
+
+<p>Very thin, and sad, and mournful looked the old man as he sat
+in his easy-chair, with his lonely thoughts fixed ever on the past.
+He was old and weary. Life held no charm for him now.</p>
+
+<p>One thought of the last lonely sheaf waiting for the reaper as
+he sat with his withered hands folded, and that look of patient
+grief on his thin, white, aged face.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my lost little Golden," he murmured aloud: "She tarries
+long. The quest for her mother is a weary one. Oh, that God
+would give me back the mother and child, both innocent and pure
+as when I lost them."</p>
+
+<p>A sudden shadow fell between him and the light. He looked
+up and saw a man standing before him, a man with a pale, worn,
+troubled face, and dark eyes that held the story of a tragedy in
+their somber depths.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon," he said, "I have ventured unannounced into your
+presence. My name is Richard Leith."</p>
+
+<p>The old man stared at him with dim, unrecognizing eyes. That
+name conveyed no meaning to his mind. He had never heard it
+before.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a stranger," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Richard Leith answered, and stood silent a moment.</p>
+
+<p>How should he tell Hugh Glenalvan that he was the man who
+had stolen his daughter from him and desolated his life?</p>
+
+<p>It was a hard task. His voice quivered and broke as he said:</p>
+
+<p>"I am a stranger, but I am also your son-in-law."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no son-in-law," the old man replied, gazing blankly at
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Your daughter was my wife," said Richard Leith.</p>
+
+<p>"Little Golden?" said the old man, like one dazed.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered the lawyer. "I stole her from you sixteen
+years ago, and made her my darling wife. Oh, sir, can you ever
+forgive me the sorrow I have caused you?"</p>
+
+<p>"A wife! She was a wife! Thank God for that," the old man
+murmured, with trembling delight. "And you have brought
+her back at last. Where is she, my darling little Golden?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, God!" murmured the conscience-smitten man before
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me see her, my sweet child," cried Hugh Glenalvan, feebly
+rising. "It was cruel to keep the little one from me so long.
+Oh, Golden, Golden, come to me, my darling."</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith put him back with gentle hands into his chair.
+He knelt down at his feet and told him all his sorrowful story,
+throwing all the blame on himself, and pleading humbly for pardon
+from the father whom he had robbed of his darling.</p>
+
+<p>"I loved her," he said. "She was dearer than my own life. I
+would have brought her back to you in time. I was only waiting
+for the fame and fortune that came to me soon. But treachery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+came between us. I lost her, and henceforth I have lived hand
+in hand with sorrow and despair."</p>
+
+<p>The soft wind sighing past the window seemed to echo that
+heavy word "despair."</p>
+
+<p>"At the door of John Glenalvan lies your sorrow and mine,"
+continued Richard Leith, "I am come to call him to account."</p>
+
+<p>"Who are you that dares arraign John Glenalvan?" exclaimed
+a harsh, blatant voice, as the speaker strode rudely into their
+presence.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith sprang to his feet and confronted the intruder.
+His dark eyes blazed with wrath as he answered:</p>
+
+<p>"I am Richard Leith, the husband of Golden Glenalvan, whom
+you falsely reported dead to gain some wicked end of your own.
+Liar, I have found you out in your sin! I demand my wronged
+wife at your hands."</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan glared lividly at the daring man who thus
+boldly confronted him with his sin.</p>
+
+<p>The blood retreated from his face and lips, and his eyes were
+wild and startled.</p>
+
+<p>"Answer me," cried Richard Leith, advancing upon him.
+"Where is Golden, my wife?"</p>
+
+<p>"You lie! She was never your wife," John Glenalvan retorted,
+furiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Shame upon you, John, to malign the fair name of your sister,"
+cried his father, indignantly. "Rather rejoice that she is
+proved innocent at last."</p>
+
+<p>"Let him prove her so, if he can," cried the wretch, maliciously.</p>
+
+<p>"I can do so. Here is the certificate of my marriage to Golden
+Glenalvan in New York sixteen years ago, replied Richard Leith,
+unfolding a yellowed paper and holding it open before the eyes of
+the father and son.</p>
+
+<p>"Then she was really your wife," John said, with unwilling
+belief.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course she was my wife. How dared you think evil of
+your own sister?" demanded the lawyer, scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not answer to you for my thoughts, sir," replied John
+Glenalvan, angrily.</p>
+
+<p>"But you must answer to me for the deed which has deprived
+me of my wife and child for fifteen years," cried Richard Leith.
+"John Glenalvan, where is my wife?"</p>
+
+<p>"How should I know?" he retorted.</p>
+
+<p>"It is too late to fence with me," answered Richard Leith.
+"You, and you alone, are at the bottom of my wife's mysterious
+disappearance. You have either shut her up in solitary confinement,
+or you have murdered her!"</p>
+
+<p>"Murdered her! How dare you hint at such a thing?" John
+Glenalvan thundered, growing white with fear.</p>
+
+<p>"I dare do more," cried the lawyer, driven to desperation. "If
+you do not tell me what has become of my wife I will have you
+arrested for her murder."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At these warning words John Glenalvan threw himself upon
+his accuser with the cry of an infuriated wild beast.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith was weak and ill. He had risen from a sick-bed,
+on which wasting anxiety and grief had thrown him, when he
+came to Glenalvan Hall.</p>
+
+<p>He went down like an infant before the strong fury of his opponent,
+and the old man's wailing cry pierced the air.</p>
+
+<p>"John, hold your hand! For God's sake, do not murder the
+man!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XL" id="CHAPTER_XL">CHAPTER XL.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>John Glenalvan did not heed his father's frightened remonstrance.</p>
+
+<p>He continued to rain furious blows on his feeble but struggling
+foe.</p>
+
+<p>The fell instinct of murder was aroused within his soul, and
+Richard Leith would have fallen a sure victim to its fury, but
+that suddenly the slight form of a woman rushed into the room,
+and, with a wild and piercing shriek, sprang upon John Glenalvan's
+neck, clutching it with frantic fingers in the endeavor to
+tear him from his almost dying victim.</p>
+
+<p>Almost strangling in the fierce tenacity of her grasp, the wretch
+released Mr. Leith, and springing upward with a savage bound,
+threw his frail assailant from him into the middle of the room.</p>
+
+<p>The terrible shock hurled her prostrate on the floor. She lay
+there stunned and bleeding, and the wretch, after one horror-struck
+glance at her, rushed from the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden&mdash;it is Golden! and he has killed her" wailed her
+grandfather, falling on his knees beside her; and Richard Leith,
+where he lay, half dying, comprehended the anguished wail, and
+crawled on his hands and knees to the side of his hapless daughter.</p>
+
+<p>It was little Golden, indeed, but she lay still and silent, with
+the blood oozing from her nostrils and a slight cut on her temple.</p>
+
+<p>As he reached her side, old Dinah rushed into the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Little missie, little missie!" she cried; then she stopped short
+in terror. "Oh, my Hebenly Master, who has done dis t'ing?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dinah," her master said quickly, "go and send Fred Glenalvan
+to me."</p>
+
+<p>She hobbled out obediently, and in a moment returned with the
+handsome young dandy, who glanced at his grandfather with
+haughty indifference.</p>
+
+<p>"Fredrick," the old man said, with strange sternness, "here
+are two people whom your father has nearly killed. You must
+go and bring a doctor for them."</p>
+
+<p>Frederick started at the sight of the bleeding forms upon the
+floor, but in an instant his countenance hardened into marble.</p>
+
+<p>"If my father has hurt them," he replied, "I doubt not that he
+had good reason for doing so, and they may die before I will
+fetch a physician to them."</p>
+
+<p>With that insolent reply he turned on his heel and left the
+room.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Vipers!" muttered the old man, indignantly, then he looked
+at Dinah sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"My faithful old soul," he said, "you must do what you can
+for them. I must go and seek for help myself."</p>
+
+<p>He went feebly from the room and across the lawn. Outside
+the gates he encountered a carriage waiting. The driver stood
+on the ground by the horses' heads, and a lady sat on the satin
+cushions with a troubled look on her lovely, blond face. She
+sprang out impulsively and came up to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir," she cried, "I <i>know</i> you are Mr. Glenalvan. Have
+you seen little Golden? She went into the hall a few minutes
+ago."</p>
+
+<p>"I have seen her, I fear she is dead, and I must bring a doctor,"
+the old man wailed, heart-brokenly.</p>
+
+<p>She caught his arm and turned to the driver.</p>
+
+<p>"Drive into town at your highest speed and fetch a physician,"
+she said, throwing her purse at his feet, then she took the
+old man's arm and hurried him in.</p>
+
+<p>"I am your little Golden's friend," she explained to him as
+they went along. "I came here with her and was waiting outside
+while she paid you a visit."</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah was bathing the wound of her unconscious mistress
+when they entered, and Richard Leith lay upon the floor watching
+her with dim, despairing eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Heaven, who has done this terrible deed?" Mrs. Leith
+cried wildly, as her eyes took in the dreadful scene.</p>
+
+<p>"Gertrude," her husband cried out at the sound of her voice,
+and she knelt down by him weeping wildly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Richard, who is it that has killed you and your child?"
+she sobbed in anguish.</p>
+
+<p>"It is John Glenalvan's dreadful work," he replied, then he
+looked into her face with dim, yearning eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Gertrude! I believe I am dying," he said faintly. "Will you
+forgive me before I die?"</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive you?" she said. "Ah, Richard, do not think that I
+blamed you. You sinned ignorantly."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, ignorantly," he echoed, and a spasm of pain crossed his
+face an instant, then he said sadly: "But I did not mean <i>that</i>,
+Gertrude. I meant you must forgive me that I was careless and
+blind, that I did not prize your true heart more."</p>
+
+<p>She put her white hand to her heart, and a look of pain came
+into the large, blue eyes, then she said with mournful pathos:</p>
+
+<p>"For all the heartaches I have borne. Richard, I freely forgive
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," he murmured, then his eyes dwelt on her gratefully.
+"It was so noble in you to care for my poor child," he
+murmured, "but Gertrude, I repented in an hour. I came back
+to tell her so, and she was gone, both were gone. I sought you
+everywhere, my heart nearly broke; I fell ill, and lay for weary
+weeks fevered and maddened by my impatience and anxiety.
+At last I grew better and came here!"</p>
+
+<p>"Have you found <i>her</i>?" she murmured, anxiously, while the
+red blood suffused her fair cheeks.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He shook his head mournfully, and his eyes closed languidly.
+She believed that he was dead, and started up with a cry of woe,
+but when the physician came a little later he decided that he was
+only in a deep swoon.</p>
+
+<p>Golden recovered consciousness, and the hapless father and
+daughter were removed to adjoining rooms, the physician veering
+anxiously from one room to another.</p>
+
+<p>He believed that Mr. Leith's life might be saved by his medical
+skill, but he shook his head ominously over the beautiful, golden-haired
+child, whose shrill wails of agony pierced every heart,
+for in the agitation of her mind, and the fearful shock of her
+heavy fall, the pangs of premature motherhood had came upon
+her.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>John Glenalvan had fled from the scene of his villainy with a
+speed to which sudden fear and remorse had lent wings. He
+believed that he had killed Richard Leith and his unfortunate
+child, and in the fear of punishment for his crime he did not
+even stop to apprise his family of what had occurred, but hurried
+away to seek a hiding-place for himself.</p>
+
+<p>Too late he regretted the blind rage that had forced him into
+the commission of such a desperate deed. The cries of his victims
+seemed to pursue him in his hurried flight.</p>
+
+<p>His son reported his cowardly deeds to his mother and sister,
+and they remained lost in fear and wonder.</p>
+
+<p>To do them justice, wicked as they were, they had no idea of
+the enormity of John Glenalvan's sin. They honestly believed
+that his sister Golden had disgraced the family. They dreamed
+not of the dread secret locked in his breast.</p>
+
+<p>Clare made a stealthy tour of discovery into the western wing,
+and soon finding out how matters stood, returned to her mother
+in a frenzy of wrath and anger against her hapless cousin, little
+Golden.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, mother, such dreadful goings on," she said. "That
+shameless girl sick in one room, a strange man dead in another,
+and a doctor, and old Dinah, and a strange woman tending them.
+If I were you, mother, I really should not stand it. I would turn
+the whole tribe out of doors&mdash;should not you, Fred?"</p>
+
+<p>But Frederick, who, despite his defiant manner to his grandfather,
+looked pale and uneasy, vetoed the proposition as imprudent.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know what provocation my father had to maltreat
+them so," he said, "but certainly, they have a bad case against
+him; and if the man is dead, as you say, Clare, and if our cousin
+dies, too, they can indict him for murder."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Glenalvan and her daughter were so frightened at that
+grim word, murder, that they broke into hysterical tears and sobbing,
+while the hopeful son and heir sat silent, overwhelmed by
+the dread of evil that had fallen upon them all, to which was
+added the terrors of doubt and suspense.</p>
+
+<p>"That strange man and woman&mdash;who can they be, Fred?" inquired
+his mother.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell; but I have my suspicions," he replied. "I believe
+they are the parents of Golden."</p>
+
+<p>"It is no wonder, then, that papa was goaded into attempting
+murder," cried Clare. "Only think of the impudence of our
+wicked aunt in coming back to Glanalvan Hall. I should think
+father must have been maddened at the very sight. And yet,
+mother, she is one of the fairest women I ever saw. She does
+not look like a lost woman. She has a very innocent appearance."</p>
+
+<p>There were others beside these three, who wondered over
+the beautiful, strange woman who claimed to be little Golden's
+friend.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah and her master gazed upon her wonderful beauty,
+which reminded them so powerfully of the missing Golden's, and
+they wondered what her name could be.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah asked her at last what she should call her, and she
+answered simply, though with a burning blush:</p>
+
+<p>"My name is Gertrude."</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. or Miss?" asked the inquisitive old negress, and again the
+lady's face grew crimson as she answered:</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs."</p>
+
+<p>"They must not know that I was his wife," she said to herself,
+resolutely. "I could not bear to have them know it. Perhaps
+they would hate me and judge him unjustly."</p>
+
+<p>But her tears fell heavily as she looked at the deathly white face
+laying on the pillow, and she wondered to herself if it would not
+be less hard for her to see him die then and there, than live to find
+his lost wife again.</p>
+
+<p>"God forgive me for my weakness and selfishness," she cried,
+starting at her own thoughts. "May he live to find the happiness
+of which he has been cheated so long."</p>
+
+<p>The long, weary night, filled with mortal agony to poor little
+Golden, slowly wore away.</p>
+
+<p>At the earliest peep of dawn a messenger arrived from the town
+with a telegram for Mr. Leith.</p>
+
+<p>He lay barely conscious on his pillow, breathing heavily and
+slow, and the physician read the message to him cautiously.</p>
+
+<p>It was from Mr. Desmond, and ran briefly:</p>
+
+<p>"We arrived in New York this hour. Is Golden with you?
+Bertram is half-crazed with anxiety."</p>
+
+<p>And across the lightning wires the fatal message flashed back
+to their anxious hearts:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Golden is here. Her child is dead and she is dying.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Dying! This was the end of that brief dream of love, those
+weary months of supreme self-sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p>Whiter than the pillow on which she lay, beautiful Golden was
+breathing her sad young life out in heavy sighs and moans, while
+hidden carefully out of sight beneath its white linen sheet, "There
+lay the sweet, little baby that never had drawn a breath."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLI" id="CHAPTER_XLI">CHAPTER XLI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Into that splendid home in New York where the Desmonds had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+just arrived from Europe, that terrible telegram came like a
+thunder-clap. Bertram Chesleigh's repentant soul reeled in agony
+before it.</p>
+
+<p>"I am justly punished for my cowardly desertion of my darling,"
+he groaned to his sister, to whom he had confided his sorrowful
+secret. "But, oh, God! how terribly I have suffered for
+the weakness and folly of an hour!"</p>
+
+<p>Edith, whose heart had been strangely changed and softened
+since her reconciliation with her husband, wept with him over
+the dreadful news.</p>
+
+<p>"Bertram, we must go to her," she said. "In death, if not in
+life, we must lift the shadow from the poor girl's memory. Elinor
+Glenalvan is going home to-day. Shall we accompany her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but do not tell her why we go. She hated my poor, little
+Golden," he answered, sighing heavily.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor wondered secretly over their going, but rejoiced also.
+She had gone abroad with them, had had a most delightful time,
+and she sighed to think that the end had come at last.</p>
+
+<p>But one thing grieved her most of all. All her arts and her
+beauty, added to Mrs. Desmond's influence, had failed to win Bertram
+Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>She almost hated him when she thought of going home to hear
+her mother's lamentations over her failure, and her sister's
+taunts.</p>
+
+<p>Her spirits rose at the welcome news that he was going south
+with her.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps she might triumph yet. It was a hopeful augury that
+he was not willing to lose sight of her yet.</p>
+
+<p>Poor vain and artful Elinor! She did not dream of the real
+truth.</p>
+
+<p>She believed that Golden had been thrust out of her way forever.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, though she had known the true cause of the
+Desmonds' separation, she had never been able to ferret out the
+reason of their reconciliation.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately after Mr. Desmond reached Italy his wife had
+summarily dismissed Celine.</p>
+
+<p>No hints, nor careless appearance of wonder on Elinor's part
+could elicit the reason for the maid's dismissal.</p>
+
+<p>She only knew that the Frenchwoman had gone away in insolent
+triumph, taking with her the money she had wrested from
+her in payment for her treachery to poor little Golden.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond's generous impulse to accompany her brother
+was frustrated by the sudden illness of her little daughter, so
+Bertram was forced to go on his sad mission without her, and
+Elinor was jubilant over the prospect of a long, delightful trip
+under his exclusive care.</p>
+
+<p>Anticipation and reality are different things, however, as Elinor
+was fated to learn.</p>
+
+<p>Never was there a more gloomy or self-absorbed cavalier than the
+handsome and entertaining Mr. Chesleigh on this occasion.</p>
+
+<p>Elinor bit her ruby lip and looked daggers as he lounged in his
+seat, pretending to be absorbed in a newspaper, but with lips<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+compressed beneath his dark mustache, and a strange, somber
+light in the large, black eyes that puzzled Elinor, who had not the
+key to his mood.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed she began to be conscious of a vague feeling of dread
+and anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>She asked herself over and over why he had chosen to bear her
+company on her homeward way.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently it was through no tenderness for her. Though
+scrupulously polite and attentive, he preserved the appearance
+of distant friendliness in too marked a fashion to be misinterpreted.</p>
+
+<p>When at last, after traveling without delay or rest, they found
+themselves seated in the carriage that was to convey them to
+Glenalvan Hall, Elinor felt a certain sense of relief mingled with
+her chagrin and disappointment. She loved Bertram Chesleigh,
+but his moodiness and silence were strangely oppressive.</p>
+
+<p>"Why did he come with me?" she asked herself for the last
+time as the carriage rolled along the breezy, wooded drive, and
+her strange companion lay back among the cushions, his hat tilted
+over his eyes, his face pale, his lips working convulsively. "What
+will Clare say when she sees how disdainfully he treats me? How
+she will triumph at my disappointment."</p>
+
+<p>Her heart sank at the prospect of returning to the quietude
+and dreariness of Glenalvan Hall after the gay, easy, luxurious
+life she had led for the last few months.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment her love for the indifferent man beside her was
+transformed to hate.</p>
+
+<p>Why had he slighted her beauty, and her fascinations to turn
+to that doll-faced child whose life was a disgrace to the Glenalvans?</p>
+
+<p>She hated Bertram Chesleigh because he had not rescued her
+from the poverty of which she had grown so weary, and from
+which his love might have delivered her.</p>
+
+<p>"At least I have the satisfaction of knowing that I removed
+that little vixen, Golden, from his pathway," she thought, with
+vindictive triumph. "If she had remained who knows what
+might have happened? I should like to know what became of her
+when she left Mrs. Desmond's. I sincerely hope she drowned herself
+in the sea!"</p>
+
+<p>The carriage turned a sudden bend in the road, and Elinor,
+leaning idly forward to note the old, familiar landmarks, gazed
+intently one moment, then uttered a stifled cry of terror.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh started, like one awaking from a dream.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it? Has anything alarmed you, Miss Glenalvan?" he
+inquired, courteously.</p>
+
+<p>"Look there," she cried, fearfully, pointing her hand through
+the window.</p>
+
+<p>He followed the direction of her finger and saw&mdash;oh horror,
+that they were passing the burial-ground of the Glenalvans.</p>
+
+<p>He saw a little band of black-robed mourners grouped around a
+narrow mound of freshly-thrown-up earth.</p>
+
+<p>He saw the minister standing at the head of the grave with his
+open book, and fancied he could hear him repeating the solemn,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+beautiful words with which we consign "ashes to ashes, and
+dust to dust."</p>
+
+<p>"Pray tell the driver to stop," Elinor cried out, excitedly, "I
+must get out. Someone of my own family must be dead."</p>
+
+<p>He made no answer. He was handing her out with hands that
+trembled as nervously as her own. One terrible, blasting thought
+was in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>"It is Golden, my wronged, little wife, and my babe that I
+never saw, whom they are hiding beneath that little mound," he
+said to himself, in agony. "Oh, God! that I should have come
+only in time for this!"</p>
+
+<p>He opened the little, white gate that led into the green burial-place,
+with its glimmering, white stones, and Elinor silently followed
+him.</p>
+
+<p>The little group about the grave fell back as they approached,
+and they saw the men throwing up the earth upon the new-made
+grave. Its dull, awful thud fell like the crash of a great despair
+upon his heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Ashes to ashes, dust to dust," murmured the minister's solemn
+voice, and the conscience-stricken man fell on his knees and hid
+his face in his hand, afraid and ashamed, for that deep voice
+seemed to condemn him for the evil he had wrought.</p>
+
+<p>A weak and trembling hand fluttered down on his shoulder,
+and a thin, quavering voice sounded reproachfully in his ear:</p>
+
+<p>"So you have come to exhult over your wicked work, Bertram
+Chesleigh."</p>
+
+<p>The wretched man looked up into the streaming eyes of old
+Hugh Glenalvan.</p>
+
+<p>At a little distance he saw old black Dinah regarding him with
+looks of horror and loathing. A beautiful, golden-haired woman
+stood apart, weeping silently, and Elinor Glenalvan had gone to
+the minister and was speaking to him agitatedly.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram sprang up desperately.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir, for God's sake," he cried to the dejected old man,
+"tell me whom they have buried here!"</p>
+
+<p>And the answer came in broken tones:</p>
+
+<p>"Golden Glenalvan and her babe."</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh, kneeling in the dust that was heaped above
+the dead heart that had loved him so devotedly, lifted his hands
+and eyes to Heaven, and cried out, in a broken, contrite voice:</p>
+
+<p>"I call God to witness that it is Golden Chesleigh, not Golden
+Glenalvan, you have buried here. This dead girl was my wife,
+made so by a secret marriage last summer. It is my wife and
+my child you have hidden from me in this low grave. May God
+forgive me for the wrong I did them."</p>
+
+<p>Then, unable to bear the strain upon his nerves and his heart
+any longer, the wretched man fell forward heavily, and lay in a
+deep swoon across the mound that covered little Golden and her
+child.</p>
+
+<p>A terrible punishment had been meted out to him for the pride
+and selfishness that had made of his innocent child-wife an outcast,
+and a creature at whom to point the finger of a seemingly
+just scorn.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The deathless flame of that deep "remorse that spurns atonement's
+power" had been kindled in his heart, never to go out
+save with the breath of life.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLII" id="CHAPTER_XLII">CHAPTER XLII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>For a few moments all believed that Bertram Chesleigh was
+dead. Elinor Glenalvan, filled with astonishment and deadly
+rage, devoutly hoped that he was.</p>
+
+<p>Her love had turned to hate, and as by a sudden flash she understood
+fully the passion of remorse and despair that had
+brought him to Glenalvan Hall.</p>
+
+<p>The vindictive wish came over her that he had died before he
+had spoken the brave words that had cleared the stain from the
+memory of the girl she had hated with such jealous fire and passion.
+She had yet to learn that every shadow had been cleared
+from Golden's name.</p>
+
+<p>While she stood like a statue, and angrily regarded the striking
+scene, the others busied themselves with the restoration of the
+unconscious man.</p>
+
+<p>Dinah brought cold water from a little spring, and bathed his
+face and hands. Gertrude held her smelling-salts to his nose.</p>
+
+<p>In a short time he revived and looked about him with an
+agony of sorrow in his pale, drawn face. His first conscious
+thought was of his loved and deeply-wronged wife.</p>
+
+<p>"She is dead," he groaned. "I shall never hear her sweet
+lips pronounce my pardon. Oh, God, did she leave me no message?
+Did she not curse me in dying for the woe I had wrought?"</p>
+
+<p>They all stood aloof from him except Gertrude. She told him
+what he asked in a grave and gentle voice.</p>
+
+<p>"She made no mention of you, Mr. Chesleigh. She was patient
+and brave to the last. She kept her vow of silence to the bitter
+end, and died with the story of her innocence untold."</p>
+
+<p>"I, coward that I was, bound her to secrecy," he said, "but I
+did not dream then of what would happen after. I wish to God
+that she had spoken and vindicated her honor."</p>
+
+<p>And again an expression of the deepest sorrow convulsed the
+dark, handsome face.</p>
+
+<p>"She was too true and loyal to break her vow," answered
+Gertrude, tearfully. "I believe that the shame and sorrow of it
+all killed her. She was a martyr to her love."</p>
+
+<p>He groaned and dropped his head upon his folded arms. There
+was silence, and every eye but Elinor's rested tearfully upon the
+low mound beneath which slumbered the poor girl who had died
+with the brand of the erring upon her, but who in this hour was
+proven guiltless and pure, as Gertrude had said, a patient martyr
+to affection.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that I might have seen her even once," groaned Bertram
+Chesleigh, turning instinctively for comfort to the sweet, sympathetic
+face of Gertrude. "Oh, tell me, did she suffer in dying?
+Was she conscious?"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No, she passed from a quiet slumber into death. The change
+was so gradual we scarcely knew when she was gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Gone!"</p>
+
+<p>The word thrilled him with a keen and bitter pain. The sweet,
+child-wife he had loved so dearly was lost from his life forever.
+She was gone from a world that had used her harshly and coldly,
+to take her fitting place among the angels.</p>
+
+<p>The soft wind sighing through the trees and the grass seemed
+to murmur her requiem: "<i>Requiescat in pace</i>."</p>
+
+<p>He rose and stood among them, his heavy eyes turning to the
+sad, old face of the grandfather whom he had bereaved of his
+darling. He held out his hand to him humbly.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>She</i> is gone from us, and I cannot sue for her pardon," he said,
+wistfully. "But will you not forgive me, sir, for the sorrow my
+weakness and pride brought upon her and you?"</p>
+
+<p>But old Hugh Glenalvan's kindly blue eyes flashed upon him
+with a gleam of their youthful fire, and his voice quivered with
+anger and despair as he replied:</p>
+
+<p>"I will never forgive you unless <i>she</i> should rise from the grave
+and forgive you too!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ye must forgive as ye would be forgiven," said the gentle,
+admonitory voice of the man of God.</p>
+
+<p>But the indignant old man shook off his suppliant hand.</p>
+
+<p>"She was his wife, and he discarded and deserted her. There
+is no forgiveness for such a sin," he said, with fiery scorn, as he
+turned away.</p>
+
+<p>They went away and left Bertram alone with the wronged and
+quiet dead.</p>
+
+<p>Gertrude, in her gentle, womanly pity would fain have persuaded
+him to go home with them, but he refused to listen.</p>
+
+<p>"Leave me to my lonely vigil here," he said, sorrowfully. "If
+her gentle spirit is yet hovering about she may accept my bitter
+grief and repentance as some atonement."</p>
+
+<p>When they had all gone and left him he bowed his head with a
+bitter cry.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Golden, my lost, little darling, only six feet of earth between
+us, and yet I shall never see you, speak to you, nor hear
+you again!"</p>
+
+<p>A low, respectful cough interrupted the mournful tenor of his
+thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>He glanced up and saw the old grave-digger leaning on his
+spade and regarding him wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you waiting for, my man?" he inquired, feeling impatient
+at this seeming intrusion on his grief.</p>
+
+<p>"If you please, sir, I have not yet finished throwing up the
+earth and shaping the mound," said the man, with some embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>A bitter cry came from Bertram Chesleigh's lips.</p>
+
+<p>"What! would you bury her still deeper from my sight?" he
+cried. "Oh, rather throw off this heavy covering of earth and
+suffer me to look upon my darling one again."</p>
+
+<p>The man stared at him half fearfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir, your sorrow has almost crazed you," he said. "You<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+had better return to your friends and leave me here to finish my
+necessary work."</p>
+
+<p>But a new thought, born of his grief and remorse, had come
+into the mind of the mourner.</p>
+
+<p>"My man, look at me," he said, earnestly; "I want you to
+open this grave and let me see my wife again. You cannot refuse
+me when I pray you to do it. Only think! They have buried
+my child and I have never even seen its face. I must kiss the
+babe and its mother once, I cannot go away until I have done
+so."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir, surely you are going mad," the man cried, alarmed.
+"I have never heard of such a thing. I could not do it if I would.
+I could not take the coffin out alone."</p>
+
+<p>"Let me help you," said the distracted mourner.</p>
+
+<p>"What you wish is quite impossible, sir," faltered the man,
+anxiously; "let me beg you to go on to the hall, and leave me to
+finish my sad duty."</p>
+
+<p>"You must not refuse me, it will break my heart," Bertram
+Chesleigh cried, "I will pay you well. See," he drew out a handful
+of shining gold pieces. "I will give you a hundred dollars if
+you will show me the faces of my wife and child."</p>
+
+<p>The dull eyes of the grave-digger grew bright at that sight. He
+was poor, and a hundred dollars were wealth to him.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry for you, sir, I wish I could do what you wish.
+That money would do my poor wife and children a deal of good.
+If you could wait until night," he said, lowering his voice and
+glancing significantly around him, "I might get help and do the
+job for you."</p>
+
+<p>Some whispered words passed between them: then Bertram
+Chesleigh rose and passed out of the green graveyard, casting one
+yearning look behind him at the low grave that held his darling.</p>
+
+<p>He bent his lagging footsteps toward old Glenalvan Hall, whose
+ivy-wreathed towers glistened picturesquely in the evening sunshine.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram went in through the wide entrance, and crossing the
+level lawn walked along the border of the beautiful lake.</p>
+
+<p>"It was here that we parted," he murmured to himself, in his
+sorrowful retrospection. "How beautiful, how happy she was,
+how full of love and trust. Oh, God, what dark spell came over
+me, and made me for twenty-four terrible hours false to my love
+and my vows? That old man was right. There is no forgiveness
+for such a terrible sin!"</p>
+
+<p>Frederick Glenalvan saw him from the house, and came down
+to meet him.</p>
+
+<p>"Chesleigh, I have heard all," he said, with pretended sympathy,
+"Elinor told us. My dear friend, how sorry I am for you.
+I was about to go and seek you. You must come up to the house
+and take some refreshment. You look ready to drop."</p>
+
+<p>"I feel fearfully ill," said Chesleigh, staggering unsteadily,
+and putting his hand to his head. "I need something, but do
+not ask me to accept the shelter of your roof, Fred. I have a
+quarrel with your father. He has bitterly deceived me, and must
+answer to me for his sin.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Father is not at home. He has been absent for several days,"
+said Fred, confusedly. "But if you will not come up to the hall
+sit down here on this bench, and I will bring you some wine."</p>
+
+<p>Bertram obeyed his request almost mechanically. His head
+ached, and he felt dull, lifeless and inert.</p>
+
+<p>The grief and excitement under which he had labored for several
+days were beginning to tell heavily upon his overstrained nerves.
+With the murmured name of Golden, his head drooped on his
+breast and he relapsed into semi-unconsciousness.</p>
+
+<p>He was aroused by a hand lifting his head, and starting into
+consciousness, saw Frederick Glenalvan by his side, and Elinor
+standing before him with a small tray on which were arranged
+a glass of wine and several slices of cake. He did not notice
+how white and strange she looked, nor how steely her voice
+sounded as she said:</p>
+
+<p>"You are faint and ill. Drink this&mdash;it will revive you."</p>
+
+<p>She put the wine to his lips, and he drank it thirstily. A fire
+seemed to run through his veins, new life came into his limbs.
+He arose and thanked her, but refused the cake.</p>
+
+<p>"I am better, but I cannot eat; it would choke me," he said,
+and Elinor did not press him. She turned away, and as she
+passed the lake she furtively tossed the wine-glass in, and the
+cake after it.</p>
+
+<p>"So father had deceived him, and must answer to him for his
+sin," she said to herself, bitterly, as she walked along. "Well,
+well, we shall see! Oh, how I hate him! Yet once I loved him,
+and hoped to be his wife. I might have been if that little jade
+had never come between. Oh, how I hate her even in her
+grave!"</p>
+
+<p>She went back to the hall, walking like one in a dream, with
+lurid, blazing eyes, and a face blanched to the pallor of a marble
+image, muttering wickedly to herself.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLIII" id="CHAPTER_XLIII">CHAPTER XLIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>When Elinor had gone, Frederick Glenalvan turned curiously
+to Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"So you were really the husband of Golden Leith, and not her
+betrayer, as everybody believed?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, she was my lawful wife; but why do you call her Golden
+Leith?" Bertram Chesleigh inquired, curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you not know," said Fred, carelessly, "that she had
+found her father? He is a New York lawyer, and his name is
+Richard Leith. It seems that her mother was really married to
+him after all."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God! Then there is really not a shadow of disgrace
+upon my poor, wronged wife," cried Bertram Chesleigh, gladly.
+"Oh, God! if only she had lived."</p>
+
+<p>He was silent a moment, then asked, suddenly:</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Richard Leith now?"</p>
+
+<p>"He is lying ill in the western wing of Glenalvan Hall," Frederick
+replied, with some embarrassment at the inward consciousness
+of who caused that illness.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Is is possible? I must go to him at once," cried Bertram,
+starting up. "I am an old friend of Richard Leith. Will you
+accompany me, Fred?"</p>
+
+<p>Frederick walked with him across the grassy slope of the lawn,
+but left him in the wide corridor that separated the divided
+dwellings of the strangely sundered family.</p>
+
+<p>"I can accompany you no further," he said, confusedly. "The
+truth is, Mr. Leith and father have had a little difficulty, and we
+are not on the best of terms."</p>
+
+<p>He turned away, and Bertram knocked nervously on the door
+before him, and was admitted by Dinah, who scowled blackly
+when she saw whom the visitor was.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish to see Mr. Leith," he said, and the old woman silently
+motioned him to follow her into the sick man's room.</p>
+
+<p>White as the pillows on which he lay, was Richard Leith, but
+there was a smile of peace on his face, for Gertrude was sitting
+in a chair by his bedside, and she had been telling him of the
+strange scene at Golden's burial that evening; how Bertram
+Chesleigh had claimed her as his wife, and the child for his own.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God! she was innocent and pure. Oh, how could I
+ever have doubted the child of my precious Golden," cried the
+bereaved father, in a passion of remorse and grief.</p>
+
+<p>"You know the whole truth, now. Can you ever forgive me?"
+inquired Bertram, advancing.</p>
+
+<p>"You here, Bertram Chesleigh? Oh, how could you have been
+so cruel?" exclaimed Mr. Leith, excitedly, as he rose on his elbow,
+and looked at the pale face and gleaming eyes of the intruder.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you all the truth, and perhaps you will understand
+me better," began Bertram Chesleigh, eagerly, but before the
+words were ended, a terrible change came over his face. It was
+distorted by contortions of pain, and with a shrill cry of agony
+he fell to the floor in strong convulsions.</p>
+
+<p>Gertrude sprang from her chair with a frightened shriek that
+brought Dinah rushing into the room with her old master close
+at her heels, followed by the hired nurse who had the care of Mr.
+Leith.</p>
+
+<p>"This man is dying&mdash;bring a doctor at once!" cried Gertrude,
+shrilly.</p>
+
+<p>"The doctor is here, madam," said the pleasant voice of the
+physician himself, who had just entered the door on his usual
+daily visit to Mr. Leith. "Why, what have we here?"</p>
+
+<p>He bent down over the tall, superb form that lay upon the
+floor writhing in a violent fit.</p>
+
+<p>There were a few moments of busy silence while he worked
+over the patient, then he looked up with a dark frown on his
+broad brow.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is this man, and how came he here?" he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"He is my son-in-law, doctor, and he had barely entered the
+room when he fell in a fit," said Richard Leith. "What ails
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>Another dire contortion of the prostrate form, and the busy
+physician answered, sternly:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"He has all the symptoms of arsenical poisoning."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>The hovering night fell rainy, dark, and cheerless. The skillful
+physician worked steadily, anxiously, and patiently, trying
+to save from the grasp of the fell destroyer the writhing victim
+of Elinor Glenalvan's deadly hate and wicked revenge.</p>
+
+<p>Everyone was filled with grief and sorrow. All warring passions,
+all human resentments were forgotten in the anxiety
+with which they watched the wavering balance in which Bertram
+Chesleigh lay fluctuating between life and death.</p>
+
+<p>Arsenic had been administered to him in a draught of wine,
+declared the physician, and the wonder arose who had given it
+to him.</p>
+
+<p>Someone started the theory that he had taken it himself, with
+intent to commit suicide.</p>
+
+<p>Then they searched him, but not a grain of the deadly drug
+was discovered on his person. It was all a baffling mystery.</p>
+
+<p>They had left him mourning despairingly over little Golden's
+grave, and they had seen him no more until he had come to them
+in this awful condition.</p>
+
+<p>"If I had not come in at the moment I did, no earthly power
+could have saved him," declared the physician; "As it is, I hope&mdash;mind,
+I only say hope&mdash;that I may save his life."</p>
+
+<p>At midnight Gertrude stole to the outer door for a breath of
+fresh air. She felt faint, weary and dispirited.</p>
+
+<p>The death of Golden, whom she had learned to love very deeply,
+had deeply grieved her saddened heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor child," she moaned, sitting down on the marble steps
+and gazing sadly at the silver crescent of the young moon as it
+struggled through a bank of clouds; "she has had a fate as tragic
+and sad as her poor young mother's."</p>
+
+<p>The sound of muffled footsteps on the grass caused Gertrude to
+start up with a sudden cry.</p>
+
+<p>A youth was coming toward her, and his low, entreating "stay,
+madam," arrested her contemplated flight.</p>
+
+<p>He came close to her side, and as his rough garments brushed
+the stone ballustrade, the cool, moist smell of newly thrown up
+earth came distinctly to her senses.</p>
+
+<p>She shivered and thought of that new-made grave lying in the
+silence and calm of the dewy night.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you tell me if Mr. Chesleigh is here, ma'am?" he inquired,
+respectfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he is here. What can you want of Mr. Chesleigh at this
+unseemly hour of the night?" she inquired, in wonder.</p>
+
+<p>"I have important business with him," said the youth, and
+Gertrude thought she detected a trembling, as of fear, in his voice.
+"Can I see him a moment, if you please?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, you cannot, for he is ill and unconscious, and we fear
+that he is dying," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>A smothered exclamation escaped from the youth's lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, this is dreadful!" he said, as if unconscious of having a
+listener. "What shall we do now?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Can I help you?" asked Gertrude, gently.</p>
+
+<p>He bent toward her eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, madam, you are a friend of the poor lady that was buried
+this afternoon?" he said, almost fearfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she answered, with a quickened heart-beat.</p>
+
+<p>"Then come with me, for God's sake. There is not a minute
+to lose. Don't be afraid. No harm shall come to you."</p>
+
+<p>So impressed was Gertrude by the youth's strange eagerness
+that she followed him without a word across the green lawn,
+through the wide gate, and along the winding road.</p>
+
+<p>"Not here!" she said, aghast, as he paused at the white gate of
+the Glenalvan burying ground.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, even here," he answered, solemnly; and the gate-latch
+clicked softly beneath his hand. "Follow me, lady. No harm
+shall happen you."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLIV" id="CHAPTER_XLIV">CHAPTER XLIV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>When Bertram Chesleigh came to full consciousness again he
+found himself lying on a couch in Mr. Leith's bedroom.</p>
+
+<p>The curtains were drawn at the windows, but the light of the
+full day glimmered through, and he saw the grave-faced physician
+sitting beside him, while Richard Leith, from the bed opposite,
+regarded him with an intent expression. He struggled up
+feebly and pressed his hand to his brow.</p>
+
+<p>"I have had a shock," he said, with an air of strange perplexity,
+as he looked into their anxious faces. "What was it? What has
+happened to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"You have been near to death's door," replied the physician,
+gravely, "but you will recover now."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish that I had died!" the young man burst out, with such
+passionate realization of his misery, that the doctor exclaimed,
+incautiously:</p>
+
+<p>"So, then, you <i>did</i> try to commit suicide?"</p>
+
+<p>The brilliant, dark eyes looked at him in amazement.</p>
+
+<p>"Suicide! suicide!" he repeated, blankly. "Who dares to say
+that of me?"</p>
+
+<p>The doctor regarded him thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear sir," he said, quietly, "I happened in here very opportunely
+last evening and found you suffering all the terrible
+symptoms of arsenic poisoning. Your friends feared that your
+grief had unhinged your mind, and that under temporary aberration
+you had attempted the destruction of your own life."</p>
+
+<p>"They were wrong. I could never have been such a coward,"
+Bertram answered, in such a tone of convincing truthfulness that
+no one could doubt him. "Indeed, doctor, you must have been
+mistaken. I have taken no drug recently."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not mistaken," the physician asserted, confidently. "You
+had most certainly had arsenic administered to you in a draught
+of wine."</p>
+
+<p>A startled gleam came into Mr. Chesleigh's eyes, his face whitened,
+a cry of horror came from his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Doctor, are you quite, quite sure?" he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I would swear to the drug," was the instant reply. "Do you
+admit the wine?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," came the grave reply; "I drank a glass of wine before
+coming in here yesterday evening, but I did not dream it was
+drugged," and an expression of almost incredulous horror swept
+over the handsome face.</p>
+
+<p>"Who gave you the wine?" inquired the doctor and Richard
+Leith almost simultaneously.</p>
+
+<p>But Bertram Chesleigh shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not ask me," he said. "It is terrible, yet I will not betray
+my would-be destroyer."</p>
+
+<p>"It was one of the Glenalvans," asserted Richard Leith, seeing
+the truth as by a flash of light.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not ask me," the young man replied again. "I must not
+tell you. It is too terrible. I can scarce believe the dread reality
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>But though he refused to reveal the secret, Richard Leith felt
+morally certain that it was to some of the family of John Glenalvan
+the young man owed the attempted destruction of his life.
+He had heard that Elinor had "set her cap" at him.</p>
+
+<p>This, then, was the dreadful revenge she had taken for her disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>The physician went away and left them together. Then the
+lawyer told his son-in-law his whole sad story. Bertram's indignation
+knew no bounds.</p>
+
+<p>"May the curse of an offended God rest upon John Glenalvan's
+head!" he exclaimed. "It is to him and his family that
+my poor Golden owes the bitter sorrows of her brief life. My
+sister's maid, Celine, confessed that it was Elinor Glenalvan who
+discovered Golden's identity, and bribed her to send her away
+under a ban of disgrace. Oh, God, Leith, could I only have
+known that the girl little Ruby loved so dearly, and who shunned
+me so persistently, was my deserted wife, how joyously would
+I have taken her to my heart and claimed her for my own."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, if you had only known," Richard Leith replied, with
+mournful emphasis. "My poor young daughter, hers indeed
+was a hard lot. Scorned by her kindred, deserted by her husband,
+despised and disowned by her miserable father! How glad
+she must have been to creep into the kindly shelter of the grave!
+Ah, Heaven, Chesleigh, I never can forget my own wretched
+share in breaking that tender heart."</p>
+
+<p>His head sank back on his pillow, and almost womanly tears
+coursed over his pale cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"But she forgave me before she died," he continued, pathetically,
+after a little. "She was an angel, Chesleigh. I can never
+forget how sweet and patient she was. The day before she died
+they carried me into her room. I lay on a couch by the side of
+her bed. They showed me the beautiful little waxen image&mdash;the
+babe that had never drawn a single breath of life in this world,
+and I could not keep from crying when they said her terrible fall
+had killed the child. The minister came, and told her that she
+must die in a few hours, too. But was it not strange, Chesleigh?
+She smiled sadly and shook her head."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'No, you are all mistaken,' she said. 'I should not be sorry
+to die, but my time has not come yet. I cannot die until I know
+whether I shall meet my mother in Heaven, or whether she is
+still on earth.'</p>
+
+<p>"But that night she passed away peacefully in her sleep. It
+was so calm and gradual we did not know when the end had
+come. It was like those sweet lines of Hood:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"'We watched her breathing through the night,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Her breathing soft and low,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">As in her breast the wave of life<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Went heaving to and fro.<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Our very hopes belied our fears,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Our fears our hopes belied;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">We thought her dying when she slept,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And sleeping when she died.'"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>He ceased, and there was a heavy silence in the room. Bertram
+Chesleigh broke it in a hushed, low voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor, martyred child! Was she, then, so anxious to find her
+mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"She declared that it was the one dream of her life-time,"
+Richard Leith replied.</p>
+
+<p>"And there is no clew save that which John Glenalvan holds?"
+inquired Bertram, thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"None, and the villain has fled. I do not believe his own wife
+and children know aught of his whereabouts."</p>
+
+<p>A look of grave determination swept over Bertram's handsome,
+pallid face.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I will take up the quest where it dropped from Golden's
+little hand in dying. I will track the villain, if it is to the
+end of the world. It shall be my task to vindicate her mother's
+memory," he said, gravely and earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>"It is <i>my</i> task rather," said Richard Leith.</p>
+
+<p>"We will join hands in the effort," his son-in-law answered.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah came in with a note for Mr. Leith. It was from
+Gertrude.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"I have gone away," she wrote. "I can leave you no address,
+but I shall be cognizant of all that transpires at Glenalvan Hall,
+and I may see you again ere long. You will soon be well enough
+to go about again, and that you may be enabled to solve the distressing
+mystery of your lost wife's fate, is the earnest prayer of</p>
+
+<p class="sig">"<span class="smcap">Gertrude</span>."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>"Surely no man was ever placed in such a terrible position,"
+said Richard Leith. "For aught I know, I may have two wives
+living."</p>
+
+<p>"It is through no fault of yours," replied Mr. Chesleigh; "but
+it is most distressing. Your second wife appears to be a very
+beautiful and winning woman."</p>
+
+<p>"She is both, but I never discovered her worth until it was too
+late to love her," Mr. Leith replied, sadly. "Her noble conduct
+to my helpless daughter first opened my eyes to her lovable
+character."</p>
+
+<p>"God bless her!" Bertram Chesleigh uttered, fervently.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>They had some further conversation, and then Mr. Chesleigh
+announced his intention of going away.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not trespass further on Mr. Glenalvan's hospitality,"
+he said decidedly. "I do not forget how much reason he has to
+hate the sight of me."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLV" id="CHAPTER_XLV">CHAPTER XLV.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>The twilight hour found Bertram Chesleigh wending his way
+to the green graveyard where his hapless wife lay buried. As he
+had hoped, he found the old grave-digger waiting for him.</p>
+
+<p>He had been sodding the mound with velvety green turf, and
+planting lilies and immortelles upon it.</p>
+
+<p>"Why have you done this?" he said. "Did you not know I
+would come to-night? I was at death's door last night, or I
+would have come as I said. Did you do what you promised?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, and waited a long time for you," said the man, doffing
+his cap respectfully. "I even sent my son to look for you.
+He learned of your bad condition, and then we were compelled
+to put the coffin back in the ground again."</p>
+
+<p>There was a strange, repressed excitement in the man's manner,
+but Mr. Chesleigh, absorbed in the bitterness of his own despair,
+did not observe it.</p>
+
+<p>He counted over a hundred dollars into the man's hand, and
+then said, with a tremor of hope in his voice:</p>
+
+<p>"I will double the amount if you will do your work over to-night.
+I <i>must</i> see her. I am mad for one last look at my darling's
+face!"</p>
+
+<p>The grave-digger shuddered.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir, it is too late," he said. "Have you forgotten how
+soon death's touch blasts everything human? And the little babe&mdash;<i>that</i>
+was dead long before <i>she</i> was. I know you could not bear
+to see them now."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, hush!" the mourner cried, in a voice of agony. "I will
+hear no more. Go, now, and leave me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Cheer up, sir," said the man, with a strange gleam in his eyes,
+as he turned to go. "The Lord may have some blessing in store
+for you yet, sir."</p>
+
+<p>His only answer was a hollow groan from the wretched man.
+He threw himself face downward on the green grave, crushing
+all the sweet lilies and immortelles beneath his shuddering frame,
+and cried out to Heaven to kill him because he had blighted
+Golden's innocent life.</p>
+
+<p>He lay there an hour or two, musing sorrowfully over the hapless
+fate of his beautiful girl-bride.</p>
+
+<p>He recalled their brief, happy love-dream from which they had
+been so rudely awakened.</p>
+
+<p>Over and over again he cursed himself for that first impulse of
+pride and selfishness that had made him false to his bride in the
+hour when he should have protected and shielded her.</p>
+
+<p>A passionate, despairing longing to see her again filled his
+soul.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go back and wander by the lake again," he resolved, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+the madness of his despair. "It was there that we spent our
+sweetest, most blissful hours. In the calm and silence of the
+night I will dream them over again."</p>
+
+<p>He went to the lake, but the very spirit of unrest was upon
+him.</p>
+
+<p>The stars came forth and shone weirdly in the sky, the perfume
+of spring flowers sweetened the air. He grew restless and fanciful.</p>
+
+<p>Such a brief while ago she had stolen nightly from the haunted
+rooms to meet him here beside the silvery lake.</p>
+
+<p>It almost seemed that she would come to him presently, gliding
+like a fairy across the green lawn to the glad shelter of his
+arms.</p>
+
+<p>Some impulse prompted him to seek the haunted rooms, to spend
+an hour of solitary musing in their quiet shade.</p>
+
+<p>He knew of a retired stairway by which he could make his way
+unperceived, and following the blind fate that led him, he went
+up to the hall and up the narrow, secluded stairs which little
+Golden had shown him, and by which she had obtained egress to
+her lover.</p>
+
+<p>He went along the dark corridor with a strangely beating heart,
+and paused before the closed door of the haunted room.</p>
+
+<p>He placed his hand on the knob, but to his surprise it refused to
+yield to his touch.</p>
+
+<p>Disappointed, he was about turning away, when a heavy step
+crossed the floor inside, the key clicked in the lock, and the door
+was cautiously opened.</p>
+
+<p>A flood of light streamed out into the corridor, and showed
+Bertram Chesleigh the tall form, and dark, saturnine face of John
+Glenalvan.</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment of complete astonishment on the part of
+each of the two men.</p>
+
+<p>Both recoiled from each other in the first suddenness of the
+shock, and then an angry oath burst from John Glenalvan's
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought it was Elinor!"</p>
+
+<p>"Luckily you were mistaken," returned Mr. Chesleigh, quickly
+recovering his wits. "This <i>rencontre</i> is most opportune for me,
+sir. I have wished to see you."</p>
+
+<p>He stepped into the room as he spoke, and boldly confronted
+the villain, who glared at him with a mixture of defiance and dismay.</p>
+
+<p>"You wished to see me. I feel flattered," he said, with an attempt
+at cutting sarcasm. "May I ask why?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence while Bertram Chesleigh rapidly
+reviewed the situation in his mind. Then he spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"You may ask, and I may answer," he said. "Mr. Glenalvan,
+I might heap the bitterest reproach upon your head, if by so doing
+the cruel work of your life might be undone. But the past is
+past. My wife is dead, and no reproaches and no lamentations
+can bring her back to me. But there is one issue between you
+and me. I have taken up my dead wife's quest where she left it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+I demand that you shall tell me where to find my little Golden's
+deeply-wronged mother."</p>
+
+<p>The dark face before him whitened to the awful pallor of death,
+the man's eyes blazed luridly, his hands were clenched as they
+hung at his sides.</p>
+
+<p>"What if I refuse to answer your question?" he inquired, in a
+low, tense voice.</p>
+
+<p>"I will find means to force you to confession," Bertram Chesleigh
+replied, unhesitatingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I defy you to do so," John Glenalvan replied, with an imprecation.
+"I am not afraid of you."</p>
+
+<p>"You have caused my wife's death, and nearly murdered her
+father. I will have you arrested for it," exclaimed Mr. Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Do so, and I will prove that I only acted in self-defense," was
+the instant reply.</p>
+
+<p>"I will charge you with the murder or abduction of Golden
+Leith, your own sister," pursued Mr. Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"And I will swear before any court in the land that she is the
+inmate of a nameless house in New York," was the taunting answer
+of the villain.</p>
+
+<p>They gazed at each other a moment, then Bertram Chesleigh
+exclaimed, in wonder:</p>
+
+<p>"What a black and unnatural heart you must have, John Glenalvan.
+How can you thus malign the fair fame of your own
+sister?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do not call her my sister. I hated her, the blue-eyed, doll-faced
+creature. She stole the love of my parents from me. It
+was all lavished on her, there was none left for me. But I have
+had a most glorious revenge," he laughed, wickedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you have had a most terrible revenge," said Bertram
+Chesleigh, with a shudder. "You have blighted her life and that
+of her child. Four lives&mdash;perhaps five&mdash;have been ruined by your
+sin. Is it not time that vengeance should cease?"</p>
+
+<p>"No!" thundered John Glenalvan, harshly. "For sixteen
+years the taste of revenge has been sweet on my lips. It is sweet
+still."</p>
+
+<p>"And you will not speak?" asked Bertram Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" with triumphant malice.</p>
+
+<p>"I have one card yet to play," began the other, slowly.</p>
+
+<p>A light step suddenly crossed the threshold, and Elinor Glenalvan
+appeared in the room, bearing a waiter with a substantial
+supper arranged upon it.</p>
+
+<p>"Papa, were you growing impatient?" she asked; then her
+startled eyes fell on Bertram Chesleigh, meeting a glance of fiery
+scorn.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>You here</i>!" she gasped.</p>
+
+<p>The waiter fell from her nerveless hands, and its contents
+crashed upon the floor.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLVI" id="CHAPTER_XLVI">CHAPTER XLVI.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>"Yes, Miss Glenalvan, it is I," was the answer, as his burning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+eyes devoured her pale, frightened face. "Did you take me for
+a ghost?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I take you for a ghost?" she faltered, trembling,
+but trying to brave it out with an air of defiance.</p>
+
+<p>"Because you tried to murder me last night, and came very
+near succeeding," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"It is false. How dare you accuse me of such a crime?" she
+broke out, passionately, flying to her father's side, as if for protection.</p>
+
+<p>"How dare you?" echoed John Glenalvan, furiously.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh lifted his hand imperiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen," he said, "I told you I had one more card to play.
+Your fair daughter there attempted to poison me last night with
+drugged wine. The physician who saved my life declared that I
+had taken arsenic in a draught of wine. Do you see where you
+stand <i>now</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do not believe him, father; it is false!" cried Elinor, furiously;
+but John Glenalvan, turning to look into her wild, frightened
+face, read the signs of guilt too plainly to be mistaken.</p>
+
+<p>The sight forced a groan even from his hardened lips.</p>
+
+<p>"You see where you stand," repeated Bertram Chesleigh, with
+stern brevity. "How will you bear to see your cherished
+daughter dragged into court on such a dreadful charge?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will not dare do such a thing," Elinor flashed out, quivering
+with rage.</p>
+
+<p>"That will be as your father says," was the firm reply. "If it
+pleases him to reveal the secret of Golden Leith's fate, I'll spare
+you and him; if not, you need expect no mercy from me."</p>
+
+<p>The grim <i>ultimatum</i> was spoken. Elinor and her father knew
+by that flashing eye and stern-set lip that there was no appeal
+from the calmly-spoken decision.</p>
+
+<p>"Coward, to threaten a girl," she cried, taking refuge in vituperation
+now that denial had failed.</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Chesleigh regarded them in silent scorn, and her
+father sternly silenced her. He was furious with wrath, and it
+seemed to him that not even for his daughter's sake could he
+forego his dear revenge.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor," he said, with a dark frown, "if indeed you have done
+this thing you must prepare to face the consequences. I will not
+accede to his demand. Nothing shall balk me of my revenge."</p>
+
+<p>Abject terror and despair filled Elinor's soul at those threatening
+words. She knew too well how guilty she was. She was
+filled with terror at the too probable punishment of her wickedness.</p>
+
+<p>Falling on her knees, she caught her father's hand in hers,
+and bathed them with her frightened tears.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, father, do not sacrifice me to your revenge," she cried,
+wildly. "Remember that I am your own child. I should be
+dearer to you than your revenge. Oh! for mercy's sake, make
+terms with the wretch, and save me from his wicked vengeance."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Chesleigh did not even notice her. He stood with folded
+arms and curling lips awaiting his enemy's reply.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The sullen determination on John Glenalvan's face softened as
+she continued her anxious pleading.</p>
+
+<p>"Father, I cannot live if that wretched story becomes known,"
+she wailed. "If you do not save me I shall drown myself."</p>
+
+<p>A slight shudder convulsed his frame at the words. He
+looked down at the frightened, tear-wet face.</p>
+
+<p>"Elinor," he said, "if I have to sacrifice my revenge for your
+sake, I shall hate you every moment of your future life."</p>
+
+<p>"Anything but exposure," she wailed. "Oh, father, save me."</p>
+
+<p>His dark brow lowered like a thunder cloud.</p>
+
+<p>"So be it," he said, "but, mark me, girl, I shall hate you forever
+after."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you will speak?" Bertram Chesleigh cried, gladly.</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan hesitated a moment, then answered, gloomily:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, to save that wretched girl I will reveal the secret that
+has been locked in my breast for sixteen years."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLVII" id="CHAPTER_XLVII">CHAPTER XLVII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence, then Bertram Chesleigh said,
+quickly:</p>
+
+<p>"Come with me, Mr. Glenalvan. Let the secret you have kept
+so long be revealed in the hearing of your father and Richard
+Leith."</p>
+
+<p>The guilty man recoiled from the demand. He said, hoarsely:</p>
+
+<p>"I refuse to do so. I will reveal it to you, and you may bear
+the news yourself to them."</p>
+
+<p>Bertram Chesleigh considered the reply a moment, then answered,
+firmly.</p>
+
+<p>"I prefer that they should hear it from your own lips."</p>
+
+<p>John Glenalvan regarded him with furious eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You wish to humble me all you can," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so," replied Mr. Chesleigh. "But I consider that they
+have too decided a right to hear your confession, for me to exclude
+them from this momentous interview."</p>
+
+<p>The angry man regarded him silently a moment, then said,
+with a sigh of baffled rage:</p>
+
+<p>"So be it. I am not now in a position to dictate terms, and
+must obey your will. You swear to keep Elinor's secret if I do
+this thing?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Bertram answered.</p>
+
+<p>"I am ready to accompany you, then. Elinor," he turned a
+furious gaze on his daughter who was weeping nervously near
+the door; "go to your mother, now. Tell her that you have
+ruined all my plans, and that I forever curse the hour in which
+you were born."</p>
+
+<p>She turned away, casting one last look of fiery anger and hatred
+on the man she had tried to murder, and left the room.</p>
+
+<p>The two men went down together to Richard Leith's room.
+The lawyer was sitting up in an easy-chair, talking to old Hugh
+Glenalvan who occupied a chair near the window.</p>
+
+<p>They both looked up in surprise at the unexpected sight of John<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+Glenalvan, whom they had supposed to be far away in hiding
+somewhere.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram spoke at once, quietly:</p>
+
+<p>"You will pardon this late intrusion, Mr. Glenalvan. This
+gentleman has an important communication to make to you, and
+I ventured to bring him at once."</p>
+
+<p>"A communication?" faltered the old man, looking blankly at
+his son.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered Mr. Chesleigh, with the flush of joyful triumph
+on his handsome face. "He will solve for you the strange mystery
+of your daughter's disappearance, sixteen years ago."</p>
+
+<p>A cry came from Richard Leith's white lips. The old man
+echoed it feebly, as he rose and went to his son, but John waved
+him rudely back.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not come near me," he said, harshly; "I have always hated
+you because you loved my sister best."</p>
+
+<p>"I could not help it, John. She was more lovable than you,"
+the father faltered, feebly.</p>
+
+<p>"And so she stole your love from me and earned my hate. But
+I have had a great revenge," said the relentless wretch, grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, John, John!"</p>
+
+<p>The wailing cry came from the old man's lips; he looked at his
+son in surprise and horror.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, revenge," repeated John Glenalvan, seeming to take a
+malicious pride in his wickedness now that its revelation was
+forced upon him. "I hated her, and when my opportunity came,
+I seized upon it. I knew she was a wife, yet it was my hand
+that sent her that lying letter that made her leave her husband."</p>
+
+<p>"Devil!" Richard Leith muttered, making an effort to spring
+upon him, but Bertram Chesleigh held him back, and the villain
+who had so wronged him laughed mockingly.</p>
+
+<p>"She came home," he went on, after a minute, "came home,
+and her child was born. The following night came her mysterious
+disappearance which I accounted for by declaring that she
+had returned to her deceiver, unable to exist away from him."</p>
+
+<p>All eyes were fixed on his dark, demoniac face as he proceeded.
+Every heart hung trembling on his further words.</p>
+
+<p>At last the fearful mystery of little Golden's fate would be
+known to those who loved and mourned her.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah had stolen silently in, and sat crouching in a corner,
+her beady, black eyes fixed intently on the face of the man whom
+she had always distrusted.</p>
+
+<p>"Speak," Richard Leith thundered, almost mad with impatience.
+"Speak! You know she never came to me. Where is she
+now, my poor, wronged darling?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is she dead or living?" echoed the wronged woman's father.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>She is dead</i>!" John Glenalvan answered, coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"Dead!" they echoed, despairingly.</p>
+
+<p>"She has been dead these sixteen years," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Vile wretch, then you murdered her," cried Richard Leith,
+struggling frantically in Bertram Chesleigh's strong hold.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The villain laughed heartlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so," he replied. "I hated her, but I would not have risked
+hanging for her sake. It was no fault of mine that she came to
+her death so tragically."</p>
+
+<p>"Dead and buried these sixteen years," old Hugh moaned,
+wringing his feeble hands, and weeping as if the bereavement
+were but of yesterday. "John, tell me where to find my darling's
+grave."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>She lies in the bottom of the lake</i>!" he replied, and those who
+watched him saw him shudder and turn pale for the first time.</p>
+
+<p>"How came she there?" broke out Bertram Chesleigh.</p>
+
+<p>"My sister was a somnambulist, Mr. Chesleigh. You will not
+deny that fact, father. She wandered from the house in her
+sleep, and walked deliberately into the lake."</p>
+
+<p>"You saw her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I was the only witness to the tragic deed," he replied,
+and again they saw a shudder shake his strong frame, and the
+chill dew beaded his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>"Devil, you lie! You pushed her in!" cried Richard Leith, wild
+with rage and grief.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you, John? Oh, tell me the truth," moaned his father.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I did not, as there is a Heaven that hears me. I hated
+Golden because you and my mother loved her best, and because
+half of your property would go to her, but the thought of murder
+had not entered my head. I was out late that night, and returning
+with my mind full of envious thoughts toward my sister, I
+saw her crossing the moonlighted lawn, and on coming nearer
+saw that she was asleep. Keeping near to her, I followed her
+down to the lake, and she walked on straight, without pause or
+backward glance, into the water."</p>
+
+<p>"And you put out no hand to save her&mdash;murderer!" cried Bertram
+Chesleigh, in terrific scorn.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not know what she would do until all was over," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"You might have saved her even then," Bertram Chesleigh
+said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I might, but I hated her, and the devil whispered to me
+that this was my opportunity, so I watched the water close over
+her head, and then I walked away," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my God, is de vengeance ob Hebben asleep dat such debbils
+roam de yerth?" wailed old Dinah.</p>
+
+<p>They echoed her cry. Surely the vengeance of Heaven slumbered
+that such demons walked the earth unsmitten.</p>
+
+<p>"Then temptation entered my soul," he continued. "I did not
+think it was right for Golden's child to inherit her share of the
+property when I needed it so much for my own growing family.
+So I fabricated that slander, and eventually forced my father to
+make over the remnant of the Glenalvans' possessions to me, and
+I transferred my hatred from Golden to her child. Now you know
+all."</p>
+
+<p>Old Hugh pointed to the door with a shaking finger.</p>
+
+<p>"Go, now, before I call down the terrible vengeance of God on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+your guilty head!" he cried. "Go, and leave me to weep for my
+murdered darling!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLVIII" id="CHAPTER_XLVIII">CHAPTER XLVIII.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>The next day men were set to work to drag the lake for Golden
+Leith's body.</p>
+
+<p>A poor, bleached skeleton, partially petrified by the action of
+the water, and therefore in a good state of preservation, was all
+they found.</p>
+
+<p>The broad, gold band of a wedding-ring still clung to the fleshless
+finger, and the name within was all that remained to assure
+them that this was she whom they sought&mdash;the hapless girl
+whose bright life had been blasted by a brother's sin, and whose
+name had been covered with ignominy and shame for sixteen
+years.</p>
+
+<p>They placed the precious remains in a coffin, and prepared to
+give them Christian burial the next day.</p>
+
+<p>All night and all day it stood on trestles in Hugh Glenalvan's
+sitting-room, with mourners at head and foot&mdash;the husband and
+father, so tragically bereaved of their darling, sat there dumb
+and tearless in their great affliction, and old Dinah stole in and
+out, with the corner of her apron pressed to her streaming eyes,
+her old black face convulsed with grief.</p>
+
+<p>Only a few days ago the daughter's coffin had stood there where
+the mother's rested now.</p>
+
+<p>Both her nurslings were gone, and the faithful, old creature's
+heart was almost broken.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout the night and day not a member of John Glenalvan's
+family was visible. The curtains remained drawn at the
+windows, the doors closed, there was no sign of life within the
+house.</p>
+
+<p>The time came when poor little Golden's remains were to be
+consigned to the kindly shelter of the grave.</p>
+
+<p>It was a beautiful evening about the first of March. The grass
+was blue with violets, the birds twittered softly in the orange and
+magnolia trees, the sun shone brightly as it slowly declined in
+the western sky; Dinah had been in and deposited some beautiful
+wreaths of flowers upon the bier.</p>
+
+<p>The friends who had loved the dead woman long ago had come
+to know her mournful fate at last, and had sent these sweet testimonials
+of their sympathy and grief.</p>
+
+<p>They were waiting in the graveyard to pay the last outward
+tokens of respect to the lost one, but they would not venture to
+the house to intrude on the privacy of the bereaved ones.</p>
+
+<p>So the gentle minister came and told them that they must bid
+a last farewell to the loved one, and Bertram Chesleigh stood
+ready to support the still feeble footsteps of Richard Leith with
+his strong young arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my daughter, my daughter, how cruelly God has afflicted
+me," moaned the bereaved father, laying his white head down
+upon the coffin-lid, while the first heavy tears splashed down his
+cheeks.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Do not arraign your Maker. Rather thank Him that your
+child has at last been proven pure and innocent," said the minister,
+to whom Golden's whole history was known.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God," Bertram Chesleigh uttered fervently, then, with
+a sigh that was almost a sob, he added: "Ah, if only my wife had
+lived to see this day!"</p>
+
+<p>"She lives&mdash;she is here!" said a low, clear voice in the doorway.</p>
+
+<p>All looked around, startled. Two figures were entering the
+room. Both were clothed in deep mourning.</p>
+
+<p>One was Gertrude Leith, pale and grave-looking, the other was
+alight, and deeply veiled. She clung to Mrs. Leith's arm tremblingly.
+They crossed the floor and stood by that long, dark,
+solemn object that occupied the center of the room. Mrs. Leith
+raised her companion's veil.</p>
+
+<p>All started and uttered a cry of incredulous surprise.</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden's daughter, pallid, beautiful, tearful, was standing
+there, looking at them across her mother's coffin.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God!" she said, in her sweet, clear voice, with a sound
+of tears in its sweetness. "Thank God, my mother was pure
+and innocent! The dream of my life-time is fulfilled at last."</p>
+
+<p>"Does the grave give up its dead?" they cried, and Bertram
+Chesleigh went to her side and touched her white hand, half-fearfully.</p>
+
+<p>"My wife," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your wife," she answered, lifting her violet eyes to his
+face with such deep reproach in their tragic depths, that he was
+awed into momentary silence.</p>
+
+<p>Then she turned from him, and went to her grandfather, who
+was gazing at her with dazed eyes full of grief and dread. She
+put her arms around his neck, and kissed his poor, withered
+cheek with her sweet, quivering lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandpa, you must not take me for a ghost," she said. "It
+is your own little Golden come back to live and love you again.
+I was not dead, after all. Did I not tell you I could not die yet?
+But I cannot tell you all the story of my rescue from the grave
+now. Let us give all our thoughts to our martyred dead."</p>
+
+<p>She looked up and saw her father and old Dinah waiting to
+greet her.</p>
+
+<p>It was a strange scene beside that flower-wreathed coffin.</p>
+
+<p>There was passionate joy over the living girl, and bitter sorrow
+over the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith had beckoned Bertram Chesleigh away. Behind
+the heavy hangings of the bay-window she said to him, gently:</p>
+
+<p>"Do not press your wife yet, Mr. Chesleigh. Remember you
+have wronged her deeply, and she does not yet know how you
+have repented and atoned."</p>
+
+<p>"I can never atone," he said, heavily.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps she may think differently when she knows all,"
+said Mrs. Leith. "Women are very tender and forgiving, you
+know."</p>
+
+<p>"If she never speaks to me again, I shall still rejoice that she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+is living," he said, with a beam of gladness in his large, black
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you wonder how she was saved?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you, then, briefly," she answered. "You remember
+how you bribed the grave-digger to open her coffin for you
+that night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and then I was too ill to keep my appointment," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"That wild fancy of yours was the means of her rescue," said
+Mrs. Leith. "When the man opened the coffin to be in readiness
+for you, he discovered slight signs of life in Golden. Growing
+alarmed and impatient at your tardiness, he sent his son to look
+for you, and the youth encountered me. I went with him, and
+we removed her to the man's little cottage near by. Little by
+little we fed the signs of reviving life, and you see the result."</p>
+
+<p>"For which I bless and thank you forever," he said, kissing her
+hand respectfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I have but little more to say," she went on, smiling a little
+sadly, "and it is this: Golden is very weak and exhausted yet.
+She is not strong enough to bear the excitement of her mother's
+burial. I will remain here with her while they are bearing Mrs.
+Leith to the grave, and I will tell her your whole story. She shall
+hear how you came back here to seek her in two days after your
+ill-considered desertion of her, and found her gone. I will tell
+her how nobly you vindicated her honor beside her grave. She
+shall know that you forced John Glenalvan to reveal the hidden
+story of her mother's fate. When you come back I think she
+cannot fail to forgive you."</p>
+
+<p>"You will do all this for me?" he said, with a strange moisture
+in his eyes. "I cannot thank you sufficiently. You are an
+angel."</p>
+
+<p>"No, only a very faulty and sad-hearted woman," she replied,
+with a pensive sigh, and then they went back to the mourners.</p>
+
+<p>She kept her promise nobly. While they bore the poor remains
+of Richard Leith's first wife to the grave, his second wife sat with
+his daughter and tried to turn the swelling current of her grief
+by relating the story of Bertram Chesleigh's repentance and
+atonement.</p>
+
+<p>"Golden, if you could have heard his noble vindication of your
+honor beside your grave; how proudly he claimed you for his
+wife, and your child for his own, you could not fail to pity and
+forgive him for the one great error into which he was led by his
+own pride and John Glenalvan's evil counsel."</p>
+
+<p>"I have suffered so much through his fault," said the wronged
+wife, with mournful pathos.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear, but you must show your own nobility of soul now,"
+said the step-mother, gently. "You must remember:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"'To err is human,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To forgive divine.'"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The beautiful, pale face grew very grave and troubled.</p>
+
+<p>"If only I could forget his cruelty," she said. "Ah, my friend,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+I was hurt so cruelly by that letter he sent me! I trusted him so
+fully. I believed in his truth as I believed in my God. I was almost
+maddened by the suddenness of my sorrow. Every word is branded
+upon my memory. See! I can repeat every sentence:</p>
+
+<p>"'Though it almost kills me to forsake you, Golden, I must go
+away. The disgrace of your birth is so terrible that I can never
+claim you for my wife. Pride and honor alike forbid it. You
+must see for yourself, poor child, that your terrible misfortune
+has wholly set you apart from the world, and as you have sworn
+to keep our private marriage a secret until I give you leave to
+reveal it, I must beg you to hold the story unspoken in your
+breast forever.'"</p>
+
+<p>She paused and looked at Mrs. Leith with a whole tragedy of
+sorrow in her violet orbs.</p>
+
+<p>"Were they not cruel words to write to his own wife?" she
+said pathetically. "But I obeyed him. Through all the shame
+and sorrow that came afterward I kept my promise. Do you
+think I did not suffer more than death in keeping it? When Mrs.
+Desmond drove me out in such terrible disgrace do you think I
+did not long to say to her: I am as good and pure as you are; I
+am your brother's wife! And what did I not suffer when I knew
+she was separated from her husband on my account? Then
+when my own father disowned and despised me, how my heart
+ached to answer, I am Bertram Chesleigh's own wife! Oh, Gertrude,
+is it right and just that I should forgive him for all that I
+have suffered and made others suffer for his sake?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear, because his repentance was so quick and his remorse
+so deep," said the gentle monitor. "You must remember,
+Golden, that if you had not gone away that night you would
+have escaped all that suffering; your husband returned in twenty-four
+hours to claim you, and John Glenalvan told him that you
+had gone away with the deliberate intention of leading a sinful
+life. Do you wonder that it threw him on a bed of sickness that
+almost cost him his life? You must forgive him and love him
+again, dear, because he is so penitent and devoted now."</p>
+
+<p>And when the mourners returned from that sad funeral, Mrs.
+Leith sent him in to his wronged wife.</p>
+
+<p>He knelt down before the pale, golden-haired girl, and begged
+her to forgive him, not that he deserved it, but because he loved
+her so dearly.</p>
+
+<p>With the meek tenderness of woman, she forgave him and
+there was peace between them.</p>
+
+<p>Several hours later he had led her out to old Hugh Glenalvan
+who was dozing sadly in his easy-chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Glenalvan," he said, "you see my darling has risen from
+the grave to forgive me. Will you keep the promise you made,
+and forgive me too?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, grandpa, you must forgive him, for I love him dearly,"
+said little Golden.</p>
+
+<p>So the old man forgave him, and solemnly blessed them as they
+knelt before him, one withered hand resting kindly on the dark,
+bowed head, and the other on the golden one.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLIX" id="CHAPTER_XLIX">CHAPTER XLIX.</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>Gertrude Leith having done what she could for the happiness
+of others, prepared to take her own departure.</p>
+
+<p>"You will not leave us, my dear, true friend, my second mother,"
+Golden exclaimed, as she came in veiled and bonneted, to bid
+her good-bye.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear, it will be better for a time, at least, that I should
+go away. I shall return north and go back to those quiet quarters
+in Brooklyn, where you and I spent those peaceful weeks before
+we came south. When you come to New York with your
+husband you will find me there."</p>
+
+<p>"I will certainly seek you out," Golden replied. "But surely
+you do not intend to forsake my father. The doubt and perplexity
+are all over now. You know that you are legally his wife, my
+own mother being dead before he ever knew you."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I know, dear," she answered, gently. "Yet it is best I
+should go away for a time. Your father must have time for his
+grief. After awhile, if he desires it, I may return to him."</p>
+
+<p>Her words were too full of wisdom for anyone to gainsay them,
+so she went away.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Leith's grief and remorse over his lost little Golden was
+as deep and passionate as if she had died yesterday instead of more
+than sixteen years ago.</p>
+
+<p>He was too sorrowful to remember the fair woman he had put
+in the dead wife's place in the vain hope of stilling the fever
+and pain that had ached ceaselessly at his heart for sixteen
+years.</p>
+
+<p>The time came later on when the first wife's memory became a
+sweet and chastened dream to him, and his second wife's new
+loveliness of character won its place in his heart.</p>
+
+<p>Some years of quiet happiness and mutual love came to them
+after they learned to know each other better, but there was no
+year in which Richard Leith did not return south once, at least,
+to spend a few solemn hours by the low grave under the whispering
+cedars and broad-leaved magnolias, where the broken marble
+shaft bore the fond inscription:</p>
+
+<p class="center medium">"IN LOVING MEMORY OF GOLDEN,</p>
+<p class="center small">WIFE OF RICHARD LEITH."</p>
+
+<p>There was one other to whom that green grave became like a
+shrine, a holy Mecca, to which his poor, faltering footsteps were
+daily bent.</p>
+
+<p>It was old Hugh Glenalvan, whom old Dinah daily guided to
+the sacred spot, where he would sit for hours, his gray locks fluttering
+in the gentle breeze, meditating, or perhaps holding spirit
+communion with the sainted dead.</p>
+
+<p>It was discovered on the day of Golden Leith's burial that John
+Glenalvan and his whole family had secretly left the house the
+night previous.</p>
+
+<p>A week later a letter came from the villain to Bertram Chesleigh,
+offering to sell Glenalvan Hall on fair terms, and stating
+that he should never live in the south again.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A bargain was closed at once, and Bertram Chesleigh became
+the possessor of the old hall, which was speedily repaired and remodeled
+under the supervision of himself and his lovely young
+wife.</p>
+
+<p>Before the work was completed a chance newspaper chronicled
+the fact of a distressing railway accident and among the list of
+killed appeared the name of John Glenalvan.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram and Golden destroyed the newspaper, and old Hugh
+never knew that his wicked son had gone suddenly and without
+preparation into the presence of his august Maker.</p>
+
+<p>The old man's life flowed on in sweet serenity. All his happiness
+was centered in the living Golden, and beside the grave of
+the dead one.</p>
+
+<p>While he lived, Golden and her husband made their home at
+Glenalvan Hall, but after several years of quiet peace the white
+soul of the noble old man took on the wings of immortality, and
+soared to its Heavenly home through the open gates of the sunset.</p>
+
+<p>They made him a grave by his daughter's side, and when the
+grass was growing green upon his grave they took old Dinah
+with them and turned their faces northward.</p>
+
+<p>Black mammy had become reconciled to Mr. Chesleigh when
+she saw how happy he made her little missie. Her kind and
+wrinkled old visage reflected the radiant happiness that shone on
+Golden's beautiful face.</p>
+
+<p>She waited on her kindly and devotedly as ever, declaring that
+no starched-up French maid should ever take her place while she
+lived, and Golden, with a shuddering remembrance of the wicked
+Celine's treachery, always assured her "old mammy" that she
+need never fear such an intruder on her privileges.</p>
+
+<p>The day came when one of the most beautiful and palatial
+homes in New York opened wide its doors to receive Bertram
+Chesleigh's fair wife as its honored mistress.</p>
+
+<p>Though Golden had seen some of the stately homes of New
+York she was astonished at the luxury and magnificence of her
+own.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Chesleigh smiled indulgently at her pretty, childish delight
+as he led her through suite after suite of the sumptuous, luxurious
+apartments the day after their arrival.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad you are so pleased with your new home," he said,
+"but now, my darling, you must run away and let black mammy
+dress you. I have invited a few guests to dinner."</p>
+
+<p>"Strangers?" she asked, with a shy pretty blush on the exquisite
+face that was fresh and sweet as a rosebud with only that
+pensive droop of the golden-brown lashes to hint at the sorrow
+through which she had passed.</p>
+
+<p>"Not exactly,'" he replied with a smile. "Lawyer Leith and
+his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Desmond, and little Ruby. I think you
+will be glad to see her, though she must have tyrannized over
+you dreadfully in the old days."</p>
+
+<p>"A dear little tyrant she was," laughed Mrs. Chesleigh. "I
+shall be very pleased to see her again."</p>
+
+<p>She went to her dressing-room, and a loving remembrance of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+some things the child had said to her once, caused her to choose
+a lovely dress of white and blue, with large, gleaming white pearls
+for her neck and wrists, and knots of fragrance-breathing violets
+fastened among her creamy laces.</p>
+
+<p>Bertram uttered a cry of delight when she came to him in the
+drawing-room in the beautiful dress with the golden curls framing
+the perfect face in a halo of light.</p>
+
+<p>She looked beyond him and saw her father and his wife gazing
+at her with eyes full of love and wonder, and she sprang joyfully
+to their embrace.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Leith released her after some low-murmured words of
+love and praise, and she saw her husband's sister by her side.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Desmond had grown more brilliantly lovely than ever.
+Happiness and contentment had lent new radiance to the lovely
+face, but there was a wistful air, almost amounting to humility,
+about her as she extended her jeweled hand, and said, sweetly:</p>
+
+<p>"My dear little sister, can you ever forgive me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Freely," she said, clasping the offered hand, and proffering
+the kiss of peace.</p>
+
+<p>"And me, too&mdash;I am deeply repentant," said a low voice beside
+Mrs. Desmond, and looking up, Golden saw Mr. Desmond, debonairly
+handsome as ever, but so humble and ashamed that even a
+harder heart than our little Golden's must have pardoned his
+folly.</p>
+
+<p>Then Ruby took possession of her and gave her a bear-like hug.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you darling," she cried, "I have missed you so much, and
+to think you were Uncle Bert's wife all the while. It is just like
+one of mamma's novels that she is always reading. I warn you,
+Uncle Bert, that I shall make you jealous, I shall stay with her
+so much. And I do so want to see that dear old black mammy
+I have heard about."</p>
+
+<p>Her childish curiosity was gratified, and the New York child,
+after her first surprise, grew very fond of the good-natured, old
+negress who had been Golden's nurse from babyhood up.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not have a nurse any more," she confided to Golden.
+"They have hired a governess for me, and I like to study. It
+improves my temper."</p>
+
+<p>"Which was never very bad," smiled Golden, kissing the pretty
+little brunette.</p>
+
+<p>"When you go into society you will be surprised to meet Elinor
+Glenalvan again," Mrs. Desmond said to her after awhile. "She
+has picked up a rich, old man somewhere, and is Mrs. Langley
+now. Six months ago she burst upon society in a blaze of glory,
+and at present she is considered the handsomest woman in New
+York. But her star will fade when you are introduced to the social
+world."</p>
+
+<p>Soon afterward the two cousins met at a brilliant reception.
+Both looked their best, Elinor in Ruby velvet and diamonds,
+Golden in misty, white lace and pearls, Elinor just touched with
+the tips of her fingers the arm of her decrepit old spouse, Golden
+clung lovingly to her princely-looking and devoted husband. As
+they passed each other Mrs. Langley cast one look of bitter hatred
+and envy upon her fair, angelic-looking rival.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was as Mrs. Desmond had predicted. Elinor's star paled before
+the superior loveliness of Golden, and in bitter anger and
+chagrin, the eclipsed beauty retired from the field, and removed
+to a distant city, where she was seen and heard of no more by
+those who had formerly known her.</p>
+
+<p>Little Golden was glad when her enemy was gone, but she felt
+no vanity over her brilliant social successes. Her chief joy
+and pride was that she reigned queen over her husband's adoring
+heart.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h2><a name="Transcribers_Notes" id="Transcribers_Notes">Transcriber's Note:</a></h2>
+
+<p>This story was originally serialized in the <i>Family Story Paper</i>,
+where it ran from June 5, 1882 to September 4, 1882. This e-text is derived from
+a later reprint as No. 218 in <i>The Favorite Library</i> published by The American
+News Company. The reprint edition also included two filler short stories:
+"A Mock Idyl" by Percy Ross and "Farewell" by W. H. Stacpoole. The filler stories
+are not included here.</p>
+
+<p>A table of contents was added for the convenience of the reader.</p>
+
+<p>Some inconsistent punctuation was retained (e.g. "Life Time" vs.
+"Life-Time" in title; "upturned" vs. "up-turned").</p>
+
+<p>Some inconsistently italicized text was retained (e.g. "rencontre").</p>
+
+<p>Some unusual spellings were retained (e.g. "exhult," "ballustrade").</p>
+
+<p>Accent marks to match original were omitted (e.g. "protege").</p>
+
+<p>Page 3, changed "herelf" to "herself."</p>
+
+<p>Page 4, changed "to hasty" to "too hasty."</p>
+
+<p>Page 6, added missing quote before "Oh, grandpa."</p>
+
+<p>Page 13, changed "strangly" to "strangely."</p>
+
+<p>Page 17, changed "recounter" to "rencontre."</p>
+
+<p>Page 22, changed "neverspeak" to "never speak."</p>
+
+<p>Page 24, changed "aughs" to "laughs."</p>
+
+<p>Page 27, added comma after "Oh, my darlin'."</p>
+
+<p>Page 29, changed "founding" to "foundling" and changed ? to ! after
+"the girl is my niece."</p>
+
+<p>Page 31, changed "furthur intercouse" to "further intercourse."</p>
+
+<p>Page 37, changed "matin" to "mating."</p>
+
+<p>Page 38, added missing quote after "Jest wait one minute, darlin'."</p>
+
+<p>Page 42, changed "struggled" to "straggled."</p>
+
+<p>Page 48, changed "greatsest" to "greatest."</p>
+
+<p>Page 54, added missing quote before "He likes pretty faces."</p>
+
+<p>Page 55, changed "flirted" to "flitted."</p>
+
+<p>Page 56, changed "you hair" to "your hair."</p>
+
+<p>Page 60, changed "must not thing" to "must not think."</p>
+
+<p>Page 61, changed "significent" to "significant."</p>
+
+<p>Page 66, changed "thoughfully" to "thoughtfully."</p>
+
+<p>Page 75, removed extra "the" from "It is the the truth."</p>
+
+<p>Page 80, changed "Your know" to "You know" and "father as" to "father
+has."</p>
+
+<p>Page 83, changed "distress" to "mistress."</p>
+
+<p>Page 84, changed ? to ! in "you are mistaken!"</p>
+
+<p>Page 85, added missing quote before "Go, and take."</p>
+
+<p>Page 87, changed "her her husband" to "her husband."</p>
+
+<p>Page 91, changed "idendity" to "identity," "Lieth" to "Leith,"
+"Bestram" to "Bertram," "maked" to "marked" and "cousse" to "course."</p>
+
+<p>Page 97, changed "cempetence" to "competence."</p>
+
+<p>Page 101, changed "gazedw onderingly" to "gazed wonderingly."</p>
+
+<p>Page 102, changed "perference" to "preference," "you wife" to "your wife,"
+and "guilty of his" to "guilty of this."</p>
+
+<p>Page 104, changed "delerious" to "delirious."</p>
+
+<p>Page 106, added missing open quote before "I wonder how."</p>
+
+<p>Page 107, changed "bess" to "bless."</p>
+
+<p>Page 110, changed "prostate" to "prostrate."</p>
+
+<p>Page 111, added missing quote before "I <i>know</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Page 112, changed "Lieth's" to "Leith's," "Lieth" to "Leith"
+and "idict" to "indict."</p>
+
+<p>Page 113, changed "as last" to "at last."</p>
+
+<p>Page 116, adding missing comma after "for God's sake" and
+changed "unable so bear" to "unable to bear."</p>
+
+<p>Page 117, added missing quote after "seen her even once."</p>
+
+<p>Page 118, changed "requim" to "requiem."</p>
+
+<p>Page 120, added missing quote after "absent for several days."</p>
+
+<p>Page 124, changed "Lieth" and "Keith" to "Leith."</p>
+
+<p>Page 127, changed "queit" to "quiet."</p>
+
+<p>Page 128, changed "No?" to "No!"</p>
+
+<p>Page 129, changed "belive" to "believe."</p>
+
+<p>Page 130, changed "hated" to "hatred."</p>
+
+<p>Page 139, changed "uncle Bert" to "Uncle Bert."</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LITTLE GOLDEN'S DAUGHTER***</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Little Golden's Daughter, by Mrs. Alex.
+McVeigh Miller
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Little Golden's Daughter
+ or, The Dream of a Life Time
+
+
+Author: Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller
+
+
+
+Release Date: January 30, 2014 [eBook #44803]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LITTLE GOLDEN'S DAUGHTER***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Demian Katz and the Online Distributed Proofreading
+Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by
+the Digital Library of the Falvey Memorial Library, Villanova University
+(http://digital.library.villanova.edu)
+
+
+
+Note: Images of the original pages are available through the
+ Digital Library of the Falvey Memorial Library,
+ Villanova University. See
+ http://digital.library.villanova.edu/Item/vudl:322376
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
+
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE GOLDEN'S DAUGHTER
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+ CHAPTER II.
+ CHAPTER III.
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ CHAPTER V.
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ CHAPTER X.
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ CHAPTER XX.
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+ CHAPTER XXII.
+ CHAPTER XXIII.
+ CHAPTER XXIV.
+ CHAPTER XXV.
+ CHAPTER XXVI.
+ CHAPTER XXVII.
+ CHAPTER XXVIII.
+ CHAPTER XXIX.
+ CHAPTER XXX.
+ CHAPTER XXXI.
+ CHAPTER XXXII.
+ CHAPTER XXXIII.
+ CHAPTER XXXIV.
+ CHAPTER XXXV.
+ CHAPTER XXXVI.
+ CHAPTER XXXVII.
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+ CHAPTER XXXIX.
+ CHAPTER XL.
+ CHAPTER XLI.
+ CHAPTER XLII.
+ CHAPTER XLIII.
+ CHAPTER XLIV.
+ CHAPTER XLV.
+ CHAPTER XLVI.
+ CHAPTER XLVII.
+ CHAPTER XLVIII.
+ CHAPTER XLIX.
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE GOLDEN'S DAUGHTER
+
+Or
+
+The Dream of a Life Time
+
+by
+
+MRS. ALEX. McVEIGH MILLER
+
+Author of
+"Little Coquette Bonnie," "The Senator's Bride," "Brunette and
+Blonde," etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+New York
+The American News Company
+Publishers' Agents
+39-41 Chambers Street
+
+Copyright, 1883,
+Norman L. Munro.
+
+Copyright 1901,
+By Street & Smith
+
+Little Golden's Daughter
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE GOLDEN'S DAUGHTER;
+
+OR,
+
+_The Dream of Her Life-Time_.
+
+By MRS. ALEX. McVEIGH MILLER.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+Beautiful Golden Glenalvan stood by the willow-bordered lake and looked
+into its azure depths with a dreamy light in her pansy-blue eyes.
+
+She had been singing as she danced along the sunny path, but the sweet
+song died on the coral lips as she came to the little lake with its
+green fringe of willows and the white lilies sleeping on its breast.
+
+The wind as it sighed through the trees, and the low, soft ripple of
+the water, always sounded sad to Golden.
+
+It seemed to her vivid fancy that the wind and the waves were trying to
+tell her some sad story in a language she could not understand.
+
+She was unconsciously saddened whenever she came to its banks and
+listened to the low, soft murmur.
+
+It had a tragic story to tell her, indeed, but its language was too
+mysterious for her to understand. Some day she would know.
+
+The afternoon sunshine threw the long, slanting shadows of old
+Glenalvan Hall far across the level greensward almost to the border of
+the lake.
+
+It had once been a fine and stately mansion, picturesque and
+pretentious, with many peaks and gables and oriel windows. But its
+ancient glory had long departed.
+
+It seemed little more than a picturesque, ivy-covered ruin now. But
+there still remained in one wing a few habitable apartments that were
+fine and large, and lofty.
+
+Here the last of the Glenalvans--once a proud and wealthy race--dwelt
+in respectable, shabby-genteel poverty.
+
+But poverty did not seem to have hurt lovely little Golden Glenalvan.
+
+She had a wealth of beauty, and a happy heart that made her seem like
+a gleam of sunshine in the home she brightened. She was a careless,
+willful child not yet sixteen.
+
+The plain, simple, blue gingham dress was worn quite short, yet, the
+beautiful, golden tresses fell to her waist in long, loose, childish
+ringlets.
+
+Free and careless as the birds, she roamed at will through the wild,
+neglected park and the green woods that lay around her ancestral home.
+
+The dwellers in Glenalvan Hall were divided into two families. In
+the best and most habitable part, John Glenalvan lived with his wife
+and family, consisting of two daughters and a son. In a few battered
+rooms in the tumble-down wing, John Glenalvan's father, an old and
+hoary-headed man, kept house with his pretty little granddaughter,
+Golden, and one old black servant called Dinah.
+
+We have digressed a little from Golden as she stands beside the lake,
+swinging her wide, straw hat by its blue ribbons. Let us return.
+
+The little maiden is communing with herself. Quite unconsciously she
+speaks her thoughts aloud:
+
+"Old Dinah says that Elinor and Clare will give a little party to-night
+in honor of their brother's wealthy friend, who is to come on a visit
+to him to-day. How I wish they would invite me. I should like to go."
+
+"Should you now, really?" said a slightly sarcastic voice close to her.
+
+She looked up, and saw her cousin, Elinor coming along the path toward
+her.
+
+Elinor Glenalvan was a tall and queenly beauty of the most pronounced
+brunette type. She had large, black eyes that sparkled like diamonds,
+and glossy, black hair braided into a coronet on the top of her haughty
+head.
+
+Her features were well-cut and regular, her skin a clear olive, her
+cheeks and lips were a rich, glowing crimson. She was twenty-one years
+old, and her sister Clare, who walked by her side, was nineteen.
+
+Clare Glenalvan was a weak, vain, pretty girl, but with no such decided
+claim to beauty as Elinor. Her hair and eyes were not as dark as her
+sister's, her cheeks and lips were less rosy. She had a mincing,
+affected air, but was considered stylish and elegant.
+
+Both girls were attired in the best their father could afford from his
+very limited income, and their little cousin's simple blue gingham
+looked plain indeed by contrast with their cool, polka-dotted lawns,
+and lace ruffles.
+
+Elinor carried a small basket on her arm. They had come to the lake
+for water-lilies to decorate the rooms for the party of which they had
+caught Golden talking aloud.
+
+The little girl blushed at her dilemma a moment, then she faced the
+occasion bravely.
+
+"I did not know that you could hear me, Elinor," she said, lifting her
+beautiful, frank, blue eyes to her cousin's face, "but it is true.
+I should like to come to your party. You have invited grandpa's old
+servant to come and help with the supper, and she will go. Why do you
+not ask grandpa and me?"
+
+"Grandpa is too old to come, and you are too young," replied Elinor,
+with a careless, flippant laugh, while Clare stared at Golden, and
+murmured audibly:
+
+"The bold, little thing."
+
+Golden revolved her cousin's reply a moment in her mind.
+
+"Well, perhaps he is too old," she said, with a little sigh, "and yet I
+think he might enjoy seeing the young people amusing themselves. But as
+for me, Elinor, I know I am not too young! Minnie Edwards is coming, I
+have heard, and she is a month younger than I am! The only difference
+is that _she_ puts up her hair, and wears long dresses. I would wear
+long dresses, too, only I do not believe grandpa could afford it. It
+would take several yards more for a trail, or even to touch all around."
+
+Clare and Elinor laughed heartlessly at the wistful calculation of the
+difference between short and long dresses. Then the elder sister said,
+abruptly:
+
+"It is a great pity grandpa cannot keep you a little girl in short
+dresses forever, Golden! You will not find it very pleasant to be a
+woman."
+
+"Why not?" said innocent Golden. "Are not women happy?"
+
+"Some are," said Elinor, "but I do not think _you_ will ever be."
+
+"Why not?" asked the girl again.
+
+The two sisters exchanged significant glances that did not escape
+Golden's keen eyes.
+
+"Elinor, why do you and Clare look at each other so hatefully?" she
+cried out in sudden resentment and childish passion. "What is the
+matter? What have I done?"
+
+"You have done nothing except to be born," said Clare Glenalvan,
+irritably, "and under the circumstances, _that_ is the worst thing you
+_could have_ done."
+
+Was it only the fancy of beautiful Golden, or did the wind in the trees
+and grasses sigh mournfully, and the blue waves go lapsing past with a
+sadder tone?
+
+"Clare, I don't know what you mean," she cried, half-angrily. "I never
+harmed anyone in my life! I have not hurt anyone by being born, have I?"
+
+The sisters looked at the beautiful, half-defiant face with its rose
+flushed cheeks and flashing, violet eyes, and Elinor sneered rudely,
+while Clare answered in a sharp, complaining voice:
+
+"Yes, you have hurt every soul that bears the name of Glenalvan--the
+dead Glenalvans as well as the living ones. You are a living disgrace
+to the proud, old name that your mother was the first to disgrace!"
+
+Then she paused, a little frightened, for Golden had started so
+violently that she had almost fallen backward into the lake.
+
+She steadied herself by catching the branch of a bending willow, and
+looked at her cousin with death-white lips and cheeks, and scornful
+eyes.
+
+"Clare, you are a cruel, wicked girl," she cried. "I will go and tell
+grandpa what terrible things you have said of me! I did not believe one
+word!"
+
+The tears of wounded pride were streaming down her cheeks as she
+sped along the path and across the green lawn up to the old hall. The
+sisters looked at each other, a little disconcerted.
+
+"Clare, you were too hasty," said Elinor, uneasily. "Grandpa will be
+very angry."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+Little Golden sped across the green lawn, her young heart full of pain
+and anger at the cruel words her cousins had spoken to her.
+
+Flying through the long, dark corridor of the old hall, and passing
+through several lofty and empty old rooms, she emerged at last in the
+sunny bay-window where her grandfather dozed daily, surrounded by pots
+of fragrant roses and geraniums.
+
+But with the breathless words of complaint just parting her coral lips,
+Golden saw that the old arm-chair was vacant.
+
+She was surprised and a little dismayed; she had been so sure of
+finding him there.
+
+She turned round and ran out to the sunny kitchen in the back yard,
+where old Dinah stood at a table ironing some simple white garments
+for her young mistress, and crooning to herself a fragment of a negro
+revival tune.
+
+The only nurse and the best friend that Golden had ever known after her
+grandfather, was homely, warm-hearted, black Dinah.
+
+Golden loved the old negress dearly. Ever since she had first lisped
+her name, the girl had familiarly called her "black mammy," after the
+fashion of most southern children with their nurses.
+
+Now she called out quickly before she had reached the kitchen door.
+
+"Oh, black mammy, where is grandpa?"
+
+Black mammy turned with such a start that she dropped the flat-iron she
+was wielding with such consummate skill.
+
+"Oh! honey, chile, how you skeered me," she cried, "an' I've dropped de
+flat-iron, and e'enamost burnt my black toes off! What for did ye come
+callin' me so suddent?"
+
+"Where is grandpa?" repeated the child.
+
+She came up to the door and looked at Dinah, and the old woman saw how
+pale she was, and what a strange light gleamed in the violet eyes under
+their long, curling lashes of golden-brown.
+
+"Come, dearie, don't be afeard because de old man ain't a-nid-noddin'
+in his arm-cheer as usual. He's out a-walkin' wif his son."
+
+"Uncle John?" asked little Golden, with a wondering look.
+
+"Who else, honey?" said Dinah, as she vigorously rubbed a fresh iron
+with salt and beeswax.
+
+"It is so strange," said Golden, momentarily diverted from her
+immediate grievance by Dinah's news. "Uncle John comes so seldom. What
+did he want, black mammy?"
+
+"Want? De debbil, his best friend, knows better dan your poor ole black
+mammy," said Dinah, shaking her head. "All I know is dat he come
+looking black as a thunder-cloud, and ax ole massa to take a walk with
+him."
+
+"And he went?" said Golden.
+
+"Oh! yes, he went, pore ole soul, a-hobblin' off as sweet as a lamb
+with that snake in the grass!"
+
+"Oh! black mammy, grandpa would not like you to speak that way of his
+son," cried Golden.
+
+"I axes your pardon, honey. I spoke my mind afore I thought," answered
+Dinah.
+
+"There is no offense as far as I am concerned," replied her young
+mistress, readily. "There is no love lost between my uncle and me."
+
+Then she added, with a shade of anxiety in her voice:
+
+"Will they be long gone, do you think?"
+
+"I hasn't the leastest idea," said busy Dinah, "but ole massa is too
+feeble to walk very fur."
+
+Golden turned away silently, and went to her grandfather's nook in the
+bay-window to await his return. She was burning with impatience to tell
+him the cruel and unkind things her cousins had said to her, and to ask
+if they were true.
+
+She sat down in the old arm-chair, among the blossoming flowers,
+herself the fairest flower of all, and leaning her dimpled cheek on her
+hand, relapsed into troubled thought.
+
+The strange relations sustained by her grandfather and herself toward
+his son's family puzzled her as it had often done before. Living in the
+same house, and nearly related as they were, there was little or no
+intercourse between the two families and they were barely friendly.
+
+Ever since Golden could remember, it had been so. She had questioned
+her grandfather and she had questioned Dinah, but they gave her no
+satisfaction on the subject.
+
+It remained a pregnant mystery to the lonely child, living her
+thoughtless, girlish life in the ruined rooms of the western wing, and
+in the tangled gardens, and the wild, green wood.
+
+A brief time of impatient waiting, then Golden heard the murmur of
+voices beneath the window.
+
+She leaned her curly head out, and heard one sentence spoken in the
+clear, curt voice of John Glenalvan:
+
+"You understand now, father, how important it is to us that you should
+keep Golden's daughter more carefully secluded?"
+
+"The child will fret--she has been so used to an outdoor life, it will
+injure her health," feebly objected the old man.
+
+"Her health is the poorest objection you could urge with me," said John
+Glenalvan, cruelly. "If she had died long ago it would have been the
+very best thing that could have happened for us all."
+
+The father's reply was lost in the distance as they passed on. They
+came in at the front door, passed down the long corridor, and separated
+to their divided abodes.
+
+Golden's grandfather came heavily into the quiet sitting-room, leaning
+on his oaken cane, and sought his favorite chair at the sunny window
+where the flowers bloomed and the bright-winged butterflies hovered.
+
+He was not prepared to see Golden start up from the chair with a white
+face, and wild, frightened, blue eyes.
+
+She clutched his arms and leaned against him. He felt her frightened
+heart-beats plainly.
+
+"Oh, grandpa, grandpa," she wailed, "what is the matter with everyone?
+What have I done that some wish me dead and others are sorry that ever
+I was born?"
+
+She felt the tremulous lips of the old man pressed fondly on her
+drooping head, she heard a sorrowful murmur:
+
+"Poor little Golden's daughter," then he said aloud:
+
+"My darling, who has been saying such cruel things to you?"
+
+"It is Clare and Elinor, and Uncle John," she sobbed. "They--the girls,
+I mean, now--said the worst thing I could have done was to be born; and
+that my mother was the first to disgrace the name of Glenalvan. And,
+grandpa, I heard what Uncle John said when he passed under the window.
+He said if I had died long ago it must have been better for all."
+
+Old Hugh Glenalvan's kindly blue eyes were flashing fire. He held the
+quivering little form against his breast with loving arms, and his
+outraged old heart beat fast against the girl's.
+
+But he could not answer her. Indignant pain and grief kept him dumb.
+
+"Grandpa, tell me what I have done to be hated by my kind," she sobbed.
+"Am I deformed? Am I repulsive to look at?"
+
+"My darling, you are as perfect and as beautiful as an angel," he
+answered, fondly kissing the fair, innocent brow.
+
+"Why do they hate me, then?" she wailed. "I would love them all if they
+would let me."
+
+"They are cruel and heartless. If they were not, they could not help
+but love you, my Golden," said the old man, bitterly. Then he sat down
+and drew her to a seat upon his knee.
+
+"Think no more of them, my darling," he said, brushing away the shining
+pearls of grief that hung trembling on her thick lashes. "They are
+cruel and unjust to you. Keep away from their presence and forget that
+the same strain of blood flows in your veins. Look upon them as aliens
+and strangers. Give all your love to me."
+
+She hid her sweet face against his shoulder, her breast heaving with
+the sobs that she could not repress.
+
+"I have a heart full of love," she sighed, "and it is all your own,
+dear grandpa. But tell me, oh, tell me of my mother! Can it be true?
+She did not, oh, she could not disgrace our proud old name."
+
+"Hush, Golden, you torture me," the old man said, hoarsely. "There
+is a mystery surrounding you, my little one. Your history is a sad
+one. But you shall never know it if I can keep the blighting secret
+from your knowledge. Ask me no more, my darling. Dismiss it from your
+thoughts. You have always been happy heretofore. Be happy still. You
+are innocent, pure and beautiful. There is no reason why you should not
+have a quiet, happy life if you will keep away from those who wound
+you with their cruel words, and cling closely to your simple, peaceful
+home."
+
+Her wild sobs had ceased. She was looking earnestly into his face,
+while long, low sighs quivered over her lips.
+
+"Now, listen to me, Golden," he said. "Your uncle has made a hard
+request of me, darling, but I have promised that it shall be done.
+Golden, will you trust me, and help me to keep my word?"
+
+"Is it about me?" she said.
+
+"Yes, dear. You know the three upper chambers which foolish people
+believe to be haunted, Golden?"
+
+"Yes," she said, and he saw a slight quiver pass over the delicate
+lips, and her face grew pale.
+
+"Of course you know that is all nonsense, little one," he said,
+reassuringly. "There are no ghosts in Glenalvan Hall. It is only
+foolish and superstitious people who believe that silly tale. Golden,
+would you be willing to remain secluded in those haunted rooms for one
+week, or for whatever number of days John Glenalvan's expected guest
+shall remain?"
+
+The breath came a little faster over the beautiful, parted lips.
+
+"I am almost afraid," she sighed. "Oh, grandpa, why should they wish to
+hide me away like a criminal? I have done nothing."
+
+"I know that, dear. It is a heartless whim of those heartless people.
+They do not wish their guest to see you, or even to know of your
+existence. Do not mind them, pet. Perhaps they are jealous and fear
+that he might fall in love with you. That would never do, because
+they mean to marry him to Elinor and prop the fallen fortunes of the
+Glenalvans. You will humor their fancy, won't you, Golden?"
+
+The pansy-blue eyes flashed with resentful fire.
+
+"Why should I humor them?" she cried. "They are hard and cold to me.
+Why should I shut myself up in prison, away from the sunshine, and the
+flowers and the birds in those gloomy, haunted chambers for their sake?"
+
+"It is for _my_ sake, darling," he replied. "I have promised them that
+you will do it for me. Will you not do so, Golden?"
+
+"I am afraid of the haunted rooms, grandpa," said the child, with a
+shiver.
+
+"Not in the daylight I hope," he said.
+
+"No, not in the daytime," she replied.
+
+"Old Dinah could sleep in your room at night, Golden. So, you see,
+there could be nothing to fear. My little darling, I have loved you and
+cared for you all your life, and I have never asked you for a sacrifice
+before. Will you make this concession for my sake?"
+
+The beautiful girl clasped her white arms round his neck, and kissed
+his withered cheek.
+
+"I cannot refuse if it is for your sake, grandpa," she said. "You have
+been father, mother, friends and home to me all my life! I have had no
+one but you, grandpa, and I love you too dearly to grieve you. I will
+do as you wish me."
+
+He kissed her and thanked her many times.
+
+"You must believe that it hurts me as much as it does you, my pet," he
+said, "but it will not be for long--and John is so violent, I had to
+promise for the sake of peace. I hope you will never regret this sweet
+yielding to my will."
+
+"I am sure I shall not," said the child-like girl, but she gave an
+unconscious shudder.
+
+His hands rested, as if in blessing, on her hair. He whispered,
+inaudibly:
+
+"God bless my hapless daughter's child."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+Glenalvan Hall, like all old family mansions belonging to old and
+respectable families, had its reputed ghost.
+
+It was currently reported that three rooms in the upper story were
+haunted by the spirit of a fair young girl who had once inhabited them,
+and who had pined away and died for love of a handsome man who had not
+known of her love nor reciprocated it.
+
+This fair ancestress of Golden's--Erma Glenalvan, as she was
+called--was said to haunt the suite of rooms she had occupied in life,
+and credulous people believed that on moonlight nights she walked up
+and down, weeping and sighing, and wringing her white hands because her
+spirit could not retain its grave.
+
+It was to these gloomy and dismantled rooms, haunted by the restless
+ghost of an unhappy girl, that little Golden was consigned for a week
+or more by the stern desire of John Glenalvan. It was a hard trial to
+the child.
+
+She would not have consented to it but for the pleadings of her
+grandfather. Her love and gratitude to him made her yield an easy
+consent to his prayer, while she inwardly quaked with fear at the dread
+ordeal before her.
+
+Old Dinah was desired by her master to transfer suitable bedding and
+furniture to the room Golden would occupy, and to carry her meals to
+that room daily and attend carefully on her young mistress. Black Dinah
+was furious.
+
+"I know'd dar was deviltry afoot," she said. "I know'd it! John
+Glenalvan never sets his foot in ole massa's presence without some
+devil's broth is a-brewing!"
+
+"Hush, Dinah," old Hugh said, sternly. "You must not speak of my son
+that way. Do as I bid you. No harm can come to the child. She is
+willing to the plan."
+
+Dinah's loud complaints subsided into muttering and grumbling, but she
+did as her master had ordered.
+
+That night when old Hugh had laid his gray head on his pillow, and old
+Dinah had gone into the other wing of the hall, little Golden sat down
+to read in the ghostly-looking chamber where Erma Glenalvan's loving
+heart had broken for a hopeless love.
+
+Through the weird stillness and solitude of the haunted room, the sound
+of the gay dance music came to Golden's ears, softened and mellowed by
+the distance.
+
+The little maiden's heart beat faster at the delicious sound, so
+inspiring to youthful ears. She threw down her book impatiently.
+
+"How sweet it sounds," she said. "They are in the great dancing-hall.
+I should like to see them. How cruel my cousins are to me!"
+
+The sweet lips quivered, and the blue eyes darkened with anger. Golden
+was a spoiled, impetuous child. Her grandpa and old Dinah had always
+yielded to her in everything and placed no restraint on her impetuous
+temper.
+
+Her little heart was swelling bitterly now, with resentment against
+her cruel cousins. She felt their neglect and their insults keenly,
+the more so because she was ignorant of any possible reason for their
+contumely.
+
+"I should like to spoil their party for them," the little creature
+said to herself with a passionate vindictiveness, quite unusual with
+her. "I have a great mind to play ghost, and frighten them all out of
+the dancing-hall. It would not be a bit too bad for them, after their
+meanness to me!"
+
+She had heard old Dinah say that Clare and Elinor were very much
+afraid of the beautiful phantom of Glenalvan Hall. They would not have
+ventured into the haunted suite alone for any amount of money.
+
+Clare had been heard to say that the very sight of the ghost would be
+sufficient to strike her dead.
+
+Beautiful Golden, who was as changeful as the summer breeze, began to
+laugh at the mischievous idea which had occurred to her.
+
+"What a fine joke it would be to personate poor Erma Glenalvan," she
+thought. "How Clare and Elinor would fly from the festive scene when I
+appeared, weeping and wringing my hands."
+
+She had heard the ghost described by Dinah, who averred that she had
+seen it several times.
+
+She remembered the long, white robe, the flowing veil of golden
+hair, the pearl necklace, the wondrous beauty, shining, as old Dinah
+declared, like a star.
+
+The beauty, the youth, the veil of golden hair she had. But the dress
+and the pearls. Where should she find them?
+
+An old wardrobe which had once belonged, no doubt, to the love-lorn
+Erma, stood against the wall. Golden pulled the door open, not without
+some little fear, and looked in at the collection of moth-eaten dresses
+that hung on the pegs.
+
+She could not tell whom they belonged to, for she had never looked into
+the wardrobe before, but she guessed that they were very old, for a
+cloud of dust rose from them as the door flew open, and as she touched
+them with her hand, some of the folds fell into rents, and showed how
+long they had been the prey of the moth.
+
+But as Golden pulled one after another down from the pegs and tossed
+them into a rainbow heap on the floor, she came to one at last that
+would serve her purpose.
+
+It was a long, white dress of rich, brocaded silk, yellowed by time,
+antique in style, but tolerably well-preserved.
+
+Golden uttered a cry of delight, patting her little foot blithely to
+the merry measure of the dance music.
+
+"The very thing," she cried, and then she shivered slightly. "Perhaps
+it belonged to poor Erma," she thought.
+
+But in a few minutes Golden's blue gingham lay on the floor, and she
+had slipped into the old brocade, and hooked it together. It fitted her
+perfectly.
+
+The neck was low, and finished with a deep frill of fine, old, yellow
+lace. The sleeves were short, and the dimpled shoulders and beautifully
+moulded arms were exposed to the greatest advantage.
+
+Golden then took up the comb and brush and brushed her long, yellow
+ringlets out of curl until they fell about her slender, graceful form
+like a veil of summer sunshine.
+
+"If I only had the pearls, now, I might readily pass for the phantom,"
+she said, looking at the reflection of herself in the glass. "How nice
+I look. This dress is quite becoming, I declare."
+
+As she turned round, admiring the long, soft, trailing folds of the
+brocade, something rattled in what appeared to be the region of the
+pocket.
+
+Golden ran her slim fingers into the pocket, and they encountered a
+rent between the lining and the material of the dress.
+
+Following the rent with her fingers to the very edge of the skirt, they
+encountered something which she drew out and found to be a necklace of
+large, gleaming, milk-white pearls.
+
+Golden uttered a cry of surprise and joy as she clasped the beautiful
+treasure, so strangely found, around her firm, white throat.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the dancing-room that night they had been talking of the Glenalvan
+ghost. Elinor or Clare had taken a great deal of pains to let Bertram
+Chesleigh know how grand and wealthy the Glenalvans had been before the
+war, and especially they had been pleased to have him hear about the
+beautiful phantom of the girl, Erma, who had died of a broken heart.
+
+Though they were afraid of her, and would not have willingly beheld her
+for anything, they were proud of the _prestige_ of a family ghost. They
+considered that only distinguished families ever had such visitations.
+
+Elinor told him the pretty legend she had heard from a superstitious
+old servant. She said the phantom would fly if anyone approached her,
+but if she could once be overtaken and kissed by a very handsome man
+she would rest in her grave and walk no more.
+
+But it was confidently asserted that no one could accomplish such a
+feat, for the phantom flew before every pursuer as if fear lent it
+wings.
+
+"If you could catch and kiss her, Mr. Chesleigh, I think the ghost
+would be forever laid," said Clare Glenalvan, with a simper, and
+affected laugh.
+
+"Thank you, Miss Clare," said Bertram Chesleigh, with a bow, though he
+was inwardly disgusted. He knew that he was a very handsome man.
+
+His mirror had told him so, but he did not admire Clare's forwardness
+in telling him of it so plainly.
+
+The merry dance went on. The subject of the Glenalvan ghost had passed
+from the minds of the dancers when suddenly the music, which had been
+filling the air with sweetness, came to a dead stop.
+
+All the dancers looked toward the door where the band was stationed,
+for the cause of the silence.
+
+The performers had dropped their instruments, and were staring
+open-mouthed at a vision in the wide, open doorway that opened from
+a long dark, corridor--a vision clearly outlined against the outer
+darkness, and plainly seen by all in the room--a girlish form in
+sweeping, white robes and falling, golden hair, the beautiful face,
+convulsed with woe and pain, the white arms extended, the small hands
+clasping and unclasping each other in gestures of infinite despair.
+
+"The Glenalvan ghost!" ran from lip to lip in a murmur of awe and
+terror, while timid young girls clung shrieking to their partners, and
+the utmost confusion prevailed.
+
+Elinor Glenalvan tried to faint in the arms of Bertram Chesleigh, but
+he put her hastily into a chair and said quickly:
+
+"Miss Glenalvan, I am going to earn your everlasting gratitude. I shall
+kiss the beautiful Erma, and the Glenalvan ghost will be forever laid."
+
+He sprang toward the doorway, but in that moment the beautiful phantom
+turned and fled precipitately before him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+It had not entered into little Golden's plan for the discomfiture of
+her scornful cousins, that anyone would have the temerity to approach
+her in her character of the Glenalvan ghost. On the contrary, she had
+confidently expected to spread fear, dismay and confusion among the
+festive guests, and to effect her own escape unmolested and unsuspected.
+
+What was her surprise and dismay to see a tall, dark, handsome man
+start from Elinor's side, and cross the room toward her with the
+evident purpose of accosting her!
+
+Beautiful Golden was filled with fear and alarm. She turned swiftly and
+fled down the long, dark corridor, her heart beating with dread lest
+she should be overtaken and identified by her pursuer.
+
+She thought of her grandfather's grief and mortification if he should
+find out her girlish prank, and of her stern uncle's wrathful anger.
+
+These swift thoughts seemed to lend wings to her light feet. She flew
+rather than ran down the dark hall, but her rapid heart-beats could not
+drown the quick and steady footsteps of her pursuer. They seemed to
+come nearer and gain upon her.
+
+To gain her own rooms in the western wing Golden would be compelled to
+go up a wide stairway leading directly from the corridor in which she
+was then running.
+
+It dawned on her mind in the whirl of thoughts that rushed over her,
+that it would be very unwise to return to the haunted rooms just then.
+She believed that she would undoubtedly be pursued and captured if she
+did.
+
+It occurred to her that her best plan would be to escape into the open
+air and hide herself in the belt of thick, dense shrubbery that grew
+below the lake.
+
+She knew every bend and turn, and secret nook within it. Her pursuer
+did not. She could baffle him there.
+
+Inspired by what seemed to her a happy thought, Golden flew past the
+wide staircase and gained the outer door.
+
+She flashed down the marble steps outside, and struck breathlessly
+across the green lawn.
+
+But swift and breathless as her flight had been, she had "a foe-man
+worthy of her steel." Bertram Chesleigh had never faltered in his swift
+pursuit of the supposed phantom.
+
+If such a thing were indeed possible, he meant to capture the flying
+form, and kiss the face whose beauty had struck him even through its
+tragic expression of sorrow and despair.
+
+He was light-footed and swift, and inspired by the novelty of the
+chase. He was determined to keep his word to the handsome Elinor, if
+possible.
+
+He went over the marble steps at one flying bound that gained him a
+great advantage over Golden. As he followed her over the lawn he was so
+near that the frightened girl could hear his quick, panting breath, and
+dreaded every moment to feel his outstretched hands clutch her white
+shoulder.
+
+It was a lovely night. The moon was at its full. Its white radiance
+touched everything with weird beauty. It shone on the leaves, the
+flowers, and the grass, and made the dew-drops glitter like diamonds.
+
+Golden's white brocade shone with a silvery gleam as she fled through
+the moonlight, her white arms and neck gleamed like ivory through the
+golden mist of her streaming hair.
+
+She had crossed the green expanse of the lawn in safety. Her light feet
+struck into the path by the lake. When once she had crossed that path
+she would be into the shrubbery. She felt sure that she might mislead
+the determined follower then.
+
+But the race had been an unequal one. That flying leap over the flight
+of marble steps had decided the contest in the man's favor.
+
+Scarce a minute more and the dreaded touch fell on her shoulder, two
+strong arms were passed quickly around her waist, her head was drawn
+back against a manly breast, and to Golden's horror and consternation,
+she felt a pair of warm, mustached lips pressed fully and passionately
+upon her own.
+
+"Lovely Erma, may your spirit rest in peace after this fond kiss of
+love," he cried; and Golden, trying vainly to struggle out of his
+clasp, lifted her eyes and saw a dark, splendid, handsome face gazing
+into her own, with large, black eyes that were full of eager admiration
+and sparkled with pleasant excitement.
+
+"Let me go!" she cried, with her blue eyes full of angry tears, "let me
+go! How dared you--oh, how dared you _kiss_ me?"
+
+But the strong arms held her fast, although Bertram Chesleigh began
+to realize that it was not a phantom, but a real creature of flesh and
+blood he had kissed so warmly.
+
+He held her fast, and looked down with a smile into the girlish face
+that was so very beautiful even through the crimson flush of anger.
+
+"Do not be angry," he said. "You should be glad that I have kissed you."
+
+"Why should I be glad?" she demanded, in a sharp, imperious little
+voice.
+
+The dark eyes of little Golden's captor sparkled with mirth at her
+indignant question.
+
+"They told me up yonder at the hall," he replied, "that if a handsome
+man could catch and kiss the Glenalvan ghost its wandering spirit would
+be laid forever. Do you think that you can rest easy in your grave now,
+beautiful Erma?"
+
+Golden wrenched herself from his clasp, but he still held her so
+tightly by one hand that she could not leave him. She looked at him
+with bright eyes in which anger and reluctant mirth were strangely
+blended. His quaint humor was infectious.
+
+"Do you think yourself so very handsome, sir?" she demanded.
+
+"A lady told me so this evening," he replied, unblushingly. "One must
+always take a lady's word, must not one, fair Erma?"
+
+"I am not Erma," she replied, impetuously; "I am only Golden."
+
+"Golden! What a beautiful name!" cried Golden's captor.
+"Golden--_what_?"
+
+"Golden Glenalvan," she replied.
+
+"That is prettier still," he said; then he looked at her more closely.
+"Are you any kin to Clare and Elinor?"
+
+"Yes; we are cousins," the girl replied, frankly.
+
+She forgot how strange it was for her to be standing there talking to
+this stranger from whom she had been desperately fleeing a moment ago.
+
+But the dark, mesmeric eyes held her gaze with a luring power; the
+warm, soft hand that clasped her own, sent strange thrills of tingling
+sweetness through every nerve.
+
+When she had looked at the dark, handsome, smiling face once she liked
+to look at it again. She forgot to feel afraid of him.
+
+They were standing on the border of the lake. The moonlight made it
+shine like a sheet of silver; but Bertram Chesleigh had no eyes for its
+beauty while the fair, fresh face of that innocent girl was lifted to
+his.
+
+He said to himself that in all his life he had never seen anyone half
+so lovely.
+
+"And you are not a ghost, after all?" he said.
+
+"No; I was only masquerading," she replied. "I did it to frighten my
+cousins and spoil their party. Do you think I have succeeded?" she
+inquired, with _naive_ anxiety.
+
+He looked a little surprised.
+
+"I do not know, I am sure," he said. "Why did you wish to spoil their
+pleasure?"
+
+"Because they would not invite me to go, and said cruel things to me,
+besides," answered Golden, with a heaving breast.
+
+"Why would they not invite you?" he inquired, more surprised than ever.
+
+"Elinor said I was _too young_, but I should sooner think that grandpa
+guessed the true reason!" she replied with innocent frankness.
+
+"What did grandpa guess?" he inquired.
+
+"They were afraid for Uncle John's rich guest to see me. They mean to
+marry him to Elinor," she replied, readily, and without a suspicion
+that it was the "rich guest" himself who held her small hand that
+moment so warmly and tightly in his own.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh laughed long and merrily, and the little girl awoke
+to a sense of her imprudence.
+
+"Oh? I should not have talked to you so," she cried. "They will be very
+angry. Oh, please don't tell anyone I was the ghost! Grandpa would
+scold me, and I could not bear that."
+
+At that moment the murmur of voices and laughter was borne to them on
+the breeze from the hall door.
+
+"Your friends are coming to look for you," she cried. "Oh! _do_ let go
+my hand. I must hide myself. You will not betray my secret?"
+
+"No; I will keep it faithfully, Golden," he replied, then he kissed her
+small hand and released her, for he did not wish his friends to find
+him with her.
+
+She darted away like a bird, and hid herself in the shrubbery. The
+young man lighted a cigar and turned back to meet his friends.
+
+"Did you catch the ghost? Did you kiss her?" they asked him, eagerly.
+
+"I was never so outwitted in my life," he replied. "Would you believe
+it if I should tell you that I pursued her across the lawn to the
+border of the lake, and that just as I might have touched her with my
+hand she sprang into the water and not a ripple on the surface showed
+where she had gone down?"
+
+This clever and non-committal reply was accepted as a statement of
+facts by the credulous. The romantic story spread from one to another
+rapidly.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh found himself quite a hero a few minutes after he had
+returned to the house. But though they praised his bravery, everyone
+chaffed him because he had failed to get the kiss from the beautiful
+phantom.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+"Father, where is Golden this morning?"
+
+Old Hugh Glenalvan looked up with a frightened start as his son came
+into his presence with a stern brow and heavy footstep.
+
+It was the morning after the Glenalvans' little party, and the old man
+was sitting in the sunny bay-window, thinking of his little sunbeam, as
+he called her lovingly in his thoughts.
+
+Old Dinah had been in and brought him a message to say that she was
+very lonely and wished her grandpa to come and see her and bring her a
+bunch of roses. He was just thinking of doing so, when John Glenalvan
+came frowningly into his presence.
+
+"Father, where is Golden this morning?" he asked, sharply, and the old
+man trembled with fear of, he knew not what, as he replied:
+
+"She is up in the haunted rooms where you told me to put her, John."
+
+"Come with me. I wish to see her," he said, and the old man's face grew
+ashen pale as he asked:
+
+"What is the matter? Has Golden done anything, John?"
+
+"You will know soon enough," was the short reply; and full of
+apprehension the old man led the way to his granddaughter's room.
+
+Beautiful Golden was walking up and down the dreary chamber, impatient
+as a captive bird. She started, and grew very pale as she caught sight
+of her Uncle John's stern face. She did not speak to him, but ran up to
+her grandfather and kissed his poor, old, wrinkled cheek.
+
+"Good-morning, dear grandpa," she said. "I am very lonely. I miss you
+so much. Did black mammy tell you to bring me some roses?"
+
+"Yes, dear, but I did not have the time," said the grandfather,
+with a tremulous voice, and stealing a glance at his son. For some
+inexplicable reason he stood in great fear of him.
+
+"Have done with such foolish chat, girl," broke in John Glenalvan,
+roughly. "So you played the ghost last night, eh, miss?"
+
+Golden gave a violent start, and clung to her grandfather. She
+trembled, and her sweet lips grew very pale.
+
+"You need not deny it. Your looks betray your guilt," continued John
+Glenalvan, roughly.
+
+"No, no, my Golden would not have done such a thing," cried her
+grandfather, warmly. "Who says that she did?"
+
+Golden looked anxiously into her uncle's face as that question left the
+old man's lips. Her heart fell at the thought that the handsome man who
+had kissed her by the lake, had betrayed her to her merciless uncle.
+
+But his next word relieved her from the dread.
+
+"I say so myself," he replied. "I saw and recognized her myself, as did
+Clare and Elinor also. She came and stood in the hall doorway where
+they were dancing, tricked out like the ghost of Erma Glenalvan. Deny
+it if you dare, miss!"
+
+The girl's quick temper flamed up at his harsh manner.
+
+"I do not wish to deny it," she cried defiantly. "I did it, and I
+frightened all your fine company, too! I am very glad of it."
+
+John Glenalvan sprang toward her with upraised hand as though he would
+strike her, but she stepped quickly out of his reach, and he said, with
+sullen rage:
+
+"You hear the little Jezebel, father. Take care, take care that I do
+not put my long-pending threat into execution."
+
+"John, she is but a playful child," he pleaded, pitifully. "She meant
+no harm, I am sure. Oh, Golden, my darling! why did you do it?"
+
+"To spite the girls, grandpa, for their cruelty to me," she replied,
+"but I am very sorry now, since it has grieved you so. Believe me,
+grandpa, I did not think you would ever hear of it. Can you forgive
+me?" she pleaded, wistfully.
+
+"You must ask your uncle's forgiveness, not mine, my dear," was the
+tremulous reply.
+
+"I will not ask his pardon," she replied, stoutly, her blue eyes
+flashing, and the color flaming into her cheeks, "I am sorry to have
+displeased you, grandpa, dear, but I do not in the least care for
+anyone else whether they are offended or not."
+
+"Where did you get the fine toggery you wore last night?" demanded John
+Glenalvan, his fingers tingling with the impulse to slap the fair,
+defiant face.
+
+"That is no concern of yours," she replied, resentfully.
+
+"Tell me, dear," whispered old Hugh, intent on preserving a semblance
+of peace if it were possible.
+
+Golden threw open the door of the wardrobe and showed him the brocade,
+which looked very yellow and old in the clear light of day.
+
+"She had a necklace of pearls around her neck," said John, in an artful
+aside to his father.
+
+"Did you, Golden?" asked her grandfather.
+
+Golden went to the little toilet-table and took up the costly necklace
+which John Glenalvan instantly snatched from her hand and placed in his
+pocket.
+
+Golden looked at him, tearful, dismayed, and excessively angry.
+
+"Give them back to me," she cried. "They are mine! I found them--indeed
+I did, grandpa. They had fallen through a hole in the pocket of the
+dress into the skirt lining. They are mine, and you shall give them
+back to me, Uncle John."
+
+"I will show you whether I will or not," he replied. "The necklace
+belongs to me. Everything in the house belongs to me, as well as the
+estate itself. You only have a home on sufferance here. Take care that
+you do not lose that."
+
+"Is it true, grandpa?" asked Golden, and the old man nodded sadly.
+
+John Glenalvan took down the white brocade, and carried it away in a
+compact bundle under his arm.
+
+"I shall take this away," he said, "to make sure that you do not play
+any more disgraceful tricks upon us. I depend upon you, father, to see
+that she keeps to this room, and behaves herself for the remainder of
+the week. If she does not, I emphatically assure you that you both will
+suffer through her willfulness and disobedience!"
+
+"I will promise for her," said the old man, putting his hand over
+Golden's pouting and rebellious mouth. "She will not be naughty any
+more!"
+
+"See that she keeps the promise," his son replied, sternly, as he
+turned away.
+
+He went to Elinor's _boudoir_ where he found his two daughters
+quarreling over Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+"I tell you he admires me the most," exclaimed the elder girl,
+angrily, just as her father threw the necklace and the brocade into her
+lap, and said, triumphantly:
+
+"Here is the finery the ghost wore, my dears. Divide it between you."
+
+The brocade was thrown down in disgust, but a pitched battle ensued
+over the pearl necklace.
+
+"I am the elder, and I am determined to have it," cried Elinor,
+resolutely.
+
+"I shall have it myself, if I perish in the effort," retorted Clare.
+
+A wordy war ensued, from which John Glenalvan, to whom it was nothing
+new, retreated in disgust.
+
+The contest was ended at last by the handsome Elinor's boxing the ears
+of her sister, and taking possession of the spoil on the barbarous
+principle of "might is right."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+"Did I dream the whole thing?" said Bertram Chesleigh to himself,
+"or was it, indeed, only a ghost that I kissed on the border of the
+lake? Do ghosts have warm, living flesh and blood, and balmy lips, and
+blushes that come and go, and delicious little tempers, and the power
+to thrill one's nerves with quivering darts of fire? Have I lost my
+heart to a phantom?"
+
+He might well ask himself these questions. A day and night had gone
+since the Glenalvans had their little party, and so far he had been
+unable to learn anything at all concerning the beautiful girl whom all
+but himself believed to have been the ghost of the dead Erma Glenalvan.
+
+As he had promised to keep little Golden's secret inviolate, he could
+of course make no opening inquiries, but his little, careless, artful
+speeches, and innocent inquiries all failed of effect.
+
+He could learn nothing of the maid whose beauty and grace had literally
+carried his heart by storm. It seemed quite plain that she did not live
+in the house.
+
+It was equally certain that she did not reside in the neighborhood,
+for his friend, young Fred Glenalvan, had often assured him that his
+father's family were the only living descendants of the once numerous
+race.
+
+Mr. Chesleigh asked himself if there was indeed a mystery, or if he had
+been fooled by an elfish spirit from the world of shadows.
+
+His heart and his reason answered in the negative. It was a human
+being, warm, breathing, living, whom he had clasped and kissed that
+night. His veins tingled with electric fire at the remembrance.
+
+Alone in his room the second night after his rencontre with the ghost,
+Bertram Chesleigh walked up and down restlessly, half mad with himself
+that he should dwell so persistently on that one thought, yet finding
+it so dangerously sweet he would not willingly have forgotten it.
+It seemed to him that he had never really lived till now, when this
+romantic passion for the beautiful unknown fired his heart.
+
+Elinor and Clare had been very much frightened at the appearance of the
+family ghost. They talked about it in low, awe-struck whispers.
+
+When Bertram Chesleigh expressed a desire to visit the haunted suite
+of rooms they expressed themselves as horrified, and declared that the
+rooms of the hapless Erma had been walled up long years before, and
+that all the rooms of the western wing were in such a ruinous condition
+that it was exceedingly dangerous to venture there at all.
+
+They declared that their father had engaged workmen to pull down the
+western wing on account of its precarious condition.
+
+But singularly enough Bertram Chesleigh's thoughts were running on the
+haunted rooms almost continuously to-night. Everything connected with
+the Glenalvan ghost had a deep interest for him.
+
+Some impulse impelled him to visit the western wing.
+
+He knew that the wide hall on which his room door opened had a corridor
+leading from it into the ruined western wing of the hall.
+
+Some impulse stronger than his will, some "spirit in his feet,"
+tempted him forth under cover of the silence and the night to explore
+the dangerous region in the vague hope of finding some trace of the
+mysterious ghost of last night.
+
+To have met her again he would have dared even more threatening dangers
+than the settling timbers and falling roof which Fred, and Clare and
+Elinor were unanimous in declaring menaced everyone who entered the
+decaying portion of the hall.
+
+Softly shod in his velvet slippers, he opened the door and peered out
+into the long hall.
+
+It was lighted by long windows at either end, through which the
+moonlight poured a flood of white radiance. Putting a convenient box of
+matches into the pocket of his dressing-gown, he sallied boldly forth.
+
+Whether ghost or human, he longed to encounter the beautiful girl he
+loved again.
+
+He entered the long corridor and walked along softly, guided by the
+moonlight that entered through the windows and lay in fantastic shadows
+upon the floor.
+
+He found that the building was in a ruinous condition indeed. The rooms
+into which he looked were dismantled and bare, the papering hung in
+ragged, fantastic strips from the walls; huge rats scampered over the
+floor, frightened night-birds flapped against the windows with wild,
+unearthly noises. Surely, the place was well-fitted to be the abode of
+ghosts and shadows, it was so weird and uncanny.
+
+But Bertram Chesleigh held on his way undauntedly. It seemed to him
+that he had explored every room on that upper floor, when suddenly he
+discovered a little passage down which he turned and found himself in
+front of a closed door.
+
+The majority of the doors had stood open, swinging carelessly on their
+hinges.
+
+The midnight explorer did not know why his heart beat so strangely when
+he stood before this closed one.
+
+He turned the handle noiselessly, and entered, carefully closing the
+door behind him.
+
+In the large and lofty apartment, where he now found himself, a dim and
+shaded night-lamp was burning, thick, dark curtains shaded the windows,
+a large rug covered the center of the floor, a low, white cottage-bed
+stood in the furthest corner, draped in neat and spotless white.
+
+Then the midnight explorer started, and with difficulty repressed the
+cry that rose to his lips.
+
+For the soft, white counterpane thrown over the bed, outlined the
+curves of an exquisite, girlish form.
+
+On the white, ruffled pillow nestled a sleeping face as lovely as a
+budding rose.
+
+The round, white arms were thrown carelessly up above her head, the
+wealth of curling, golden hair, strayed in rich confusion over the
+pillow; the golden-brown lashes lay softly on the rosy, dimpled cheeks;
+the lips were smiling as if some happy dream stirred the white breast
+that rose and fell so softly over the innocent heart.
+
+"Ghost or human?" Bertram Chesleigh asked himself, as he gazed in
+astonishment and ecstacy at the beautiful, unconscious sleeper.
+
+He came nearer with noiseless footsteps and bated breath to the
+bedside. He bent so near that he could hear the soft, sweet breath that
+fluttered over the parted lips.
+
+"It is she," he said to himself, with mingled rapture and amaze.
+
+Then, in the next breath, he murmured:
+
+"I must beat a quiet retreat. How frightened and angry she would be,
+were she to awake and find me here!"
+
+He was one of the purest and most honorable minded men in the world.
+
+He turned to go, but could not tear his fascinated eyes from that
+beautiful, child-like, sleeping face.
+
+His splendid black eyes lingered on its innocent beauty in passionate
+admiration.
+
+"If I might only touch that little hand that lies so near me on the
+pillow, it would cool the thirst of my heart," he said wistfully to
+himself, while his heart beat fast with joy that he had found her
+again, this lovely creature of whom he had dreamed night and day for
+twenty-four hours.
+
+He looked at the sweetly-smiling, parted lips, and his pulses thrilled
+at the remembrance of the tender caress he had pressed upon them such a
+short while before.
+
+Carried away by the force of as pure and mad a passion as ever thrilled
+the heart of man, the enraptured lover bent his head and pressed a kiss
+as soft and light as the fall of a rose-leaf on the white hand that lay
+so temptingly near him.
+
+He meant to go then, but as he lifted his head, blushing with shame
+at the temptation that had prompted him to that wrongful and stolen
+caress, a sharp indignant voice fell on his ears with the suddenness of
+a thunder-clap.
+
+"Oh, you black-hearted wilyun--you wicked betrayer of innercence! Get
+out o' this afore I kill you with my own hands, you han'some debbil!"
+
+Bertram Chesleigh turned and saw a ludicrous, yet startling sight
+framed in the open doorway of an inner chamber which in his agitation,
+he had not noticed before.
+
+Old Black Dinah, who was the color of ebony and very tall and lean,
+stood before him, clad in a short night-gown of gay, striped cotton
+from which her slim legs and arms stuck out like bean-poles.
+
+Her stubbly, gray wool seemed to stand erect on her head with horror,
+and her brandished arms, snapping black eyes, and furious face, made up
+a startling picture of wrath and horror, strangely combined with the
+ludicrous.
+
+"You black-hearted wilyun!" old Dinah repeated, advancing angrily upon
+her dismayed foe, "get out o' de room o' my innercent lamb afore she
+wakes and finds you here, you wolf!"
+
+"I beg your pardon--I stumbled into this room by the merest accident,"
+Chesleigh was beginning to say, when, startled by Dinah's loud and
+angry tones, little Golden awoke, and flashed the light of her wide
+blue eyes upon their excited faces.
+
+She uttered a cry of fear and terror when she saw the tall, manly form
+standing in the room.
+
+Old Dinah ran to her instantly, and she hid her frightened face on the
+shoulder of the old black woman.
+
+"Black mammy, what does all this mean?" cried the girl, nervously.
+
+Dinah gave a prolonged and lugubrious groan, and rolled up the whites
+of her eyes in reply. The intruder saw that it was imperative that he
+should stay long enough to explain matters to the alarmed girl.
+
+He said to himself that no one had ever been placed in such a strange
+and embarrassing position before.
+
+Every instinct of delicacy and respect for the young girl prompted
+him to retire at once; yet he could not bear to go and leave a wrong
+impression on the mind of the beautiful girl whom he admired so much.
+
+He retreated to the door, and, standing there, said, anxiously and
+respectfully:
+
+"I entreat you to believe, Miss Glenalvan, that I entered here with no
+wrongful motive. Led by a fit of curiosity, I was exploring the ruined
+wing of the hall, and I entered without a dream of finding it occupied
+by any living being. I had been led to believe that these rooms were
+totally unoccupied, and were even unsafe to enter. Will you accept my
+apology?"
+
+Little Golden's head was still hidden against Dinah's shoulder, and the
+old woman broke out sharply and quickly:
+
+"Honey, chile, don't you go for to 'cept dat wilyun's 'pology! Ef he
+done really cum in dis room by accident, he would agone out ag'in when
+he found dat a young lady occupied de room. But no; de first sight my
+ole brack eyes saw when I jumped off my pallet and come to de door was
+dat strange man a-kissin' you, my precious lamb."
+
+Golden began to sob, and Mr. Chesleigh mentally anathematized the old
+woman's long tongue that had thus betrayed the secret he had intended
+to keep so carefully.
+
+His face grew scarlet as he hastened to say:
+
+"I kissed your hand, Miss Glenalvan, and I entreat your pardon for
+yielding to that overmastering temptation. Can you forgive me?"
+
+But Golden was still weeping bitterly, and old Dinah, in her fear and
+indignation for her darling, pointed quickly to the door.
+
+"Go," she said. "Don't you see how you frighten the chile by staying?"
+
+There seemed nothing to be gained by staying. The old woman was utterly
+unreasonable, and Golden was so agitated she could not speak.
+
+The embarrassed intruder silently withdrew to his own apartment, where
+he spent the night brooding over the strange discovery he had made and
+the unpleasant position in which he had placed himself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+"Honey, chile, where did you git 'quainted wid dat ondecent man?"
+inquired old Dinah of her nursling, as soon as Mr. Chesleigh had
+quitted the room.
+
+"What makes you think I am acquainted with him, mammy?" inquired the
+child in surprise.
+
+Dinah shook her woolly head sagely.
+
+"Don't try to deceabe your ole brack mammy, my lamb," she said. "He
+called you Missie Glenalvan--do you think I didn't notice that?"
+
+Golden's pretty cheeks grew scarlet with blushes.
+
+"I shall have to 'form your grandpa of what he done, the impident
+wilyun!" continued Dinah, emphatically.
+
+"Oh, black mammy, please don't tell," cried the girl impulsively. "You
+heard what he said--it was a mere accident, I am quite, quite sure he
+meant no harm."
+
+"Ole massa shall be de jedge o' dat," replied Dinah decidedly. "I'll
+miss my guess if de ole man don't put a pistol-hole frew my fine,
+han'some gentleman!"
+
+"Oh, black mammy! then you shall not tell," cried Golden in terror.
+"Indeed, indeed, he is not the wicked man you believe him. He has kept
+my secret for me, and I must keep his now. That would only be fair."
+
+"Ah, den you _do_ know him," cried Dinah, horrified. "Tell me all about
+it dis minute, if you know what's best for you, chile."
+
+Golden did not resent the old nurse's tone of authority. She knew the
+old woman's love for her too well. She dried her eyes and reluctantly
+related her escapade two nights before.
+
+"He kept my secret," she concluded, "and it would not be fair for us to
+make trouble for him, would it, black mammy?"
+
+Old Dinah had slipped down to the floor, and sat with her long, black
+arms clasped around her knees, looking up into her nursling's eager,
+fearful face, with a good deal of trouble in her keen, black eyes.
+
+The old woman was shrewd and intelligent in her way. She foresaw
+trouble, and perhaps the bitterest sorrow from these two meetings
+between the handsome guest of John Glenalvan and the young mistress.
+
+"Black mammy, promise me you will not tell grandpa," Golden pleaded. "I
+will do anything you ask me if only you will not tell him."
+
+Thereupon Dinah announced her ultimatum.
+
+"If you will promise me never to speak to the strange gentleman again,
+little missie, I will not tell ole massa."
+
+Golden opened wide her blue eyes. She looked very lovely as she leaned
+back among the snowy, ruffled pillows, her golden hair straying loosely
+about her shoulders, her cheeks tinted with a deep, warm blush, her
+little hands nervously clasping and unclasping each other.
+
+"Black mammy, I think you are very cross to-night," she pouted. "Why
+should I never speak to the handsome gentleman again?"
+
+"Because it's best for you. Ole brack mammy knows better dan you,
+chile."
+
+"But I liked him so much," said Golden, blushing rosy red.
+
+"You had no business to like him," responded Dinah. "He's to marry Miss
+Elinor."
+
+"I do not believe it," said Golden, quickly.
+
+"He's not for you, anyway," retorted Dinah. "You'll nebber marry no
+one, my dear."
+
+"Why not?" asked the child. "Will nobody ever love me?"
+
+"Nobody'll ever love ye like your grandpa, honey, and 'taint likely dat
+ever he will give ye away to anyone."
+
+Golden was silent a moment. She seemed to be thinking intently. After a
+moment she said gravely and sadly:
+
+"Grandpa is old, and I am young. Who will take care of me when he is
+gone?"
+
+"Your old brack mammy, I guess, honey."
+
+"You are old, too," said Golden. "You may not live as long as I do."
+
+"Bless the chile's heart, how she _do_ talk," said the old negress.
+"Ah, my precious lamb, I has outlived dem as was younger and fairer dan
+ole black Dinah."
+
+The old black face looked very sad for a moment, then Dinah continued:
+
+"Little missie, it's my clair duty to tell old massa de sarcumstances
+of the case to-morrow morning. Leastwise, unless you promise me nebber
+to speak to dat man ag'in."
+
+"That is very hard," sighed Golden.
+
+"Hard," said Dinah. "I should think you would be so mad at the wilyun,
+a-comin' in and kissin' you so unceremonious, dat you would nebber want
+to speak to him any more."
+
+Golden hid her face in the pillows, and a deep sigh fluttered over her
+lips.
+
+"Come, dearie, won't you promise?" said Dinah. "I knows what's for your
+good better dan you does yourself, chile."
+
+"Must I promise it, indeed?" sighed the innocent child, lifting her
+flushed face from the pillow a moment to fix her big, blue, imploring
+eyes on the old woman's obdurate face.
+
+"Yes, you must sartainly promise it," was the uncompromising reply.
+
+There was silence for a moment, and Dinah saw the tears come into the
+sweet, blue eyes.
+
+"Honey, chile, does you promise me?" she inquired, only confirmed in
+the opinion by this demonstration.
+
+"Yes, I promise not to speak to him unless you give me leave, black
+mammy," replied Golden, with quivering lips.
+
+"That's right, darling. Mammy can depend on your word. Lie down, and go
+to sleep, honey, and I'll fetch my pallet in yere, and sleep on de flo'
+by your bedside, so that no one kin 'trude on you ag'in."
+
+The girl laid her fair head silently on the pillow, and Dinah threw
+down a quilt on the floor and rolled herself in it. She was soon
+snoring profoundly.
+
+Not so with beautiful Golden. It was quite impossible for her to sleep
+again. She shut her eyelids resolutely, but the busy, beautiful brain
+was too active to admit of her losing consciousness again. She lay
+thinking of the splendid, dark-eyed stranger.
+
+"He has kissed me twice," she whispered to her heart, "and yet I do not
+even know his name. I wonder if I shall ever see him again. I hope I
+shall."
+
+As she remembered how earnestly he had apologized for his presence in
+her room, she could not believe him the wicked villain old Dinah had so
+loudly represented him.
+
+"He is handsome, and I believe that he is good," the girl said to
+herself, "and they tell me Elinor wants to marry him; I would like to
+marry him myself, just to spite my cousins."
+
+Poor little Golden! Her spite against her cousins was almost as old as
+her years. They had always hated her, and Golden had been quick to find
+it out and resent it.
+
+She had a quick and fiery temper, but it did not take her long to
+repent of her little fits of passion.
+
+She was a bright, winsome, lovable child. It was a wonder that anyone
+could hate her for her beautiful, innocent life.
+
+Yet there were those who did, and it was beginning to dawn vaguely on
+the mind of the girl that it was so. She knew that her life was passed
+differently from that of the other girls of her age and class.
+
+There were no teachers, no companions, no pleasures for her, and no
+promise of any change in the future.
+
+She wondered a little why it was so, but she never complained to her
+grandfather. It was, perhaps, only his way, she said to herself, little
+dreaming of the dark mystery that lay like a deep, impassible gulf
+between her and the dwellers in the outside world of which she knew so
+very, very little.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+A week elapsed, and there seemed but little prospect of the little
+prisoner's release from the haunted chambers of the ruined wing.
+
+The Glenalvans' guest lingered on, fascinated, it appeared, by the
+attractions of the beautiful Elinor. At least Elinor stoutly maintained
+this fact in the privacy of the family circle, while Clare as
+obstinately persisted that Mr. Chesleigh was perfectly impartial in his
+attentions to both.
+
+But however doubtful was Elinor's impression, the fact remained that he
+was pleased with his visit.
+
+He consented by their urgent invitation to prolong his stay another
+week. The girls were jubilant over his decision.
+
+Meanwhile, old Dinah watched her secluded nursling with unremitting
+vigilance. She could not remain with her all day, because her
+housekeeping duties took her constantly into the lower part of the
+house, but she visited her intermittently, and at night rolled herself
+in a thick counterpane and slept on the floor by the side of Golden's
+couch.
+
+She took the added precaution to turn the rusty key in the lock at
+night.
+
+Old Dinah had never heard the familiar adage that "love laughs at
+locksmiths."
+
+She was ordinarily a very sound and healthy sleeper. The mere accident
+of a rheumatic attack, and consequent sleeplessness, had caused her
+appearance the night Mr. Chesleigh had entered the room.
+
+Usually she might have been lifted, counterpane and all, and carried
+away bodily without being aware of it.
+
+Nearly two weeks after the night of her rencontre with Mr. Chesleigh,
+old Dinah awoke suddenly "in the dead waste and middle of the night,"
+seized in the relentless grip of her old enemy, the rheumatism.
+
+She rolled herself out of her quilt and sat upright, groaning
+dolorously, and rubbing her knees in which the pain had settled.
+
+"Oh, Lordy! oh, Lordy!" she groaned, "how my ole bones does ache! Miss
+Golden! Miss Golden! my precious lam', wake up, and bid your ole brack
+mammy a las' far'well. I'm a-dyin', sartin, shuah!"
+
+But Golden, usually a very light sleeper, made no reply. Dinah reared
+her woolly head upward and looked into the bed.
+
+The bed was _empty_.
+
+Then Dinah looked around her in amazement to see if Golden was not
+in the room, laughing at her lugubrious groans as she had often done
+before. But she saw no trace of her young mistress.
+
+"Miss Golden! Miss Golden!" she called, "is you in de udder room? Ef
+you is, come in here! I'se berry sick, honey, almos' a-dyin'."
+
+But her repeated calls elicited no reply. It appeared that pretty
+Golden was out of sight and hearing.
+
+Suddenly old Dinah saw the dainty, white, ruffled night-dress, in
+which Golden had retired that night, lying in a snowy heap upon the
+floor.
+
+Dinah seized upon the garment and shook it vigorously, as if she
+expected to see the slight form of her young mistress drop from its
+folds to the floor.
+
+"Um--me-e-e," she groaned, "has de sperets carried de chile off?"
+
+She glanced up at the row of pegs where she had hung Golden's few
+articles of apparel. Her best dress--a dark-blue cashmere--was gone,
+also her hat and a summer jacket.
+
+"She hab runned away from us," old Dinah exclaimed, with almost a howl
+of despair.
+
+The thought inspired her with such grief and terror that she forgot
+her ailment entirely. She hobbled out from the room and made her way
+down stairs to her master's apartment and burst into his presence--a
+ludicrous object indeed in her striped cotton bed-gown.
+
+Old Hugh Glenalvan, late as it was, had not retired to bed. Wrapped
+in an old wadded dressing-gown he sat in an easy-chair before an old,
+carved oaken cabinet.
+
+One quaint little drawer was open, and the white-haired old man
+was poring over some simple treasures he had taken from it--simple
+treasures, yet dearer to his heart than gold or precious stones--a few
+old photographs, an old-fashioned ambrotype in an ebony case, a thin,
+gold ring and some locks of hair.
+
+Upon this sad and touching picture of memory and tenderness old Dinah's
+grotesque figure broke startlingly.
+
+"Ole massa! ole massa!" she cried, wildly, "has you seen little missie?
+Is she here with you?"
+
+The old man swept his treasures off his knees into the quaint cabinet
+and looked at his old servant in amazement.
+
+"Dinah, what does this startling intrusion mean?" he inquired, pushing
+his spectacles off his brow and regarding her with a mild frown.
+
+"Little Golden is missing. She hab runned away from us, ole massa!"
+shouted Dinah, desperately.
+
+"Dinah, you must be crazy," repeated Mr. Glenalvan, blankly.
+
+"It's de Lard's truth, ole massa. She hab done followed in her mudder's
+footsteps! Dat han'some man ober at John Glenalvan's has been and gone
+and 'ticed our Golden from us," wailed the old negress, in despair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+It was not long before Mr. Glenalvan had heard the whole of Golden's
+simple love-story from his servant. They were filled with horror and
+grief at its too probable termination.
+
+"Dinah, it may be that she has stolen out into the grounds for a walk
+in the fresh air. She was growing very restless with the close, indoor
+confinement. Have you thought of that?" he said, hoping feebly against
+hope.
+
+"Shall I go out and look for her, den, ole massa?" said Dinah, in a
+tone that plainly betrayed her hopelessness.
+
+"Let us both go," said old Hugh.
+
+They sallied forth anxiously into the brilliant moonlight that lay in
+silvery brightness all over the sweet, southern landscape--old Hugh,
+bareheaded, in his tattered dressing-gown, old Dinah in her short
+night-dress, too ridiculous a figure for anyone to contemplate without
+inward mirth.
+
+It so happened that Elinor, whom the hard exigencies of poverty
+compelled to be her own dressmaker, had sat up late that night to
+complete some alterations in a dress in which she had intended to array
+her fair self for the morrow.
+
+Having stitched on the last bit of lace, she went to the window and
+leaned out to cool her heated brow.
+
+"My head aches, and I am almost melted with sewing by that hot lamp,"
+she said to herself, fretfully. "How I hate this poverty that grinds
+one down so! When once I am married to Bertram Chesleigh I will never
+touch a needle again! I will order all my dresses of Worth, of Paris.
+And I _will_ marry Bertram Chesleigh! I swear it; and woe be to anyone
+that tries to prevent me!"
+
+Her dark eyes flashed luridly a moment, and her white hand was angrily
+clenched.
+
+She was thinking of Clare, who had persisted in rivaling her with Mr.
+Chesleigh.
+
+At that moment the subdued murmur of voices floated up to her window
+from the lawn.
+
+She glanced down quickly, and saw old Dinah and her master crossing the
+lawn, their grotesque shadows flying long and dark before them in the
+brilliant moonlight.
+
+Quick as thought Elinor was out of her seat, and gliding softly through
+the door in quest of her father.
+
+Before old Glenalvan and his servant had crossed the lawn, two dark
+figures stole forth from the hall and silently followed them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the green border of the silver lake two figures were standing in
+the beautiful moonlight. One was a man, tall, dark, splendid, with a
+princely beauty.
+
+His arm was thrown protectingly about a slender form that clung
+lovingly to his side.
+
+It was Golden Glenalvan, dressed in a dark suit and light cloth jacket,
+a neat, little walking-hat, set jauntily on her streaming, golden curls.
+
+Her blue eyes were lifted tenderly, and yet anxiously to her lover's
+face.
+
+"Oh, Bert," she said, giving him the tender name by which he had taught
+her to call him, "you must indeed let me go now. We have been saying
+good-bye at least a half an hour."
+
+"Parting is such a sweet pain," said the lover, bending to kiss the
+tempting, up-turned lips. "Give me just one more minute, my darling."
+
+"But I have been out so long," she objected, faintly. "What if black
+mammy should awake and find me gone?"
+
+"There is not the slightest danger," said Bertram Chesleigh carelessly.
+"The old woman sleeps so soundly that a thunder-clap would scarcely
+wake her."
+
+But just at that moment of his fancied security, old Dinah, in Golden's
+deserted chamber, was vigorously shaking her empty night-dress in a
+dazed attempt to evolve from its snowy folds the strangely missing girl.
+
+Golden smiled, then sighed faintly. He kissed her lips before the sigh
+had fairly breathed over them.
+
+"If you must indeed go, my darling," he said to her in a low voice,
+freighted with passionate tenderness, "tell me once again, my little
+Golden, how dearly you love me."
+
+"Love you," echoed the beautiful girl, and there was a Heaven of
+tenderness in the starry blue eyes she raised to his face. "Oh, my
+dearest, if I talked to you until the beautiful sun rose to-morrow, I
+could not put my love into words. It is deep in my heart, and nothing
+but death can ever tear it thence."
+
+She threw her arms around his neck, and their lips met in a long,
+passionate kiss. There was a silence broken only by the soft sigh of
+the rippling waves, while they stood
+
+ "tranced in long embraces,
+ Mixed with kisses, sweeter, sweeter
+ Than anything on earth."
+
+On that hush of exquisite silence that brooded round them, broke
+hastening footsteps and angry voices.
+
+The lovers started back from each other in dismay to find themselves
+surrounded by an astonished group.
+
+Old Dinah formed a central and conspicuous figure, beyond which old
+Hugh Glenalvan's silvery locks fluttered forlornly in the breeze.
+
+John Glenalvan and Elinor, his daughter, brought up the rear. Perhaps
+the old gentleman and his servant were as much astonished at seeing
+these followers as they were at the sight that met their eyes.
+
+Old Dinah recovered her self-possession first of all, perhaps because
+she had vaguely suspected some such eclaircissement from the facts
+already in her possession.
+
+She rushed forward and caught her disobedient nursling by the hand.
+
+"Oh, my darlin', my honey, chile," she cried. "Come away from dat
+black-hearted wilyun to your grandpa and your ole brack mammy."
+
+But to the consternation of everybody, the girl shook Dinah's hand off,
+and clung persistently to her lover.
+
+He drew his arm protectingly around the slight figure, and Golden cried
+out with pretty, childish defiance:
+
+"He loves me! he loves me! and I will not leave him."
+
+That sight and those words fairly maddened Elinor Glenalvan. The blood
+seemed to boil in her veins.
+
+"Loves you--ha! ha! loves you, the child of sin and shame!" she cried
+out, in a hoarse voice of bitter scorn and passion. "Oh, yes, he loves
+you. That is why he has lured you to your ruin, as a stranger did your
+mother before you."
+
+"Hush, Elinor," said John Glenalvan, in his sternest tone; then he
+looked at his father, who had crept to Golden's side, and stood there
+trembling and speechless. "Father," he said, harshly, "take the girl
+away. I must speak with Mr. Chesleigh alone."
+
+"I will not go," said Golden, and she looked up into her lover's face
+with a strange, wistful pleading in her soft, blue eyes, and in her
+sweet, coaxing lips.
+
+He bent down and whispered something that made her leave his side and
+put her small hand gently into her grandfather's.
+
+"Grandpa, I will go home with you now," she said to him, tremulously,
+and he led her away, followed by Dinah, who glared angrily behind her,
+and muttered opprobrious invectives as she went.
+
+If looks could have killed, Bertram Chesleigh would never have lived to
+figure any further in the pages of my romance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+Bertram Chesleigh was left alone by the lake, with the angry eyes of
+John Glenalvan glaring upon him, while Elinor, speechless with rage,
+stood a little apart and watched him.
+
+"Mr. Chesleigh, may I ask the meaning of this singular scene?" inquired
+his host, stiffly.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh, standing with folded arms in dignified silence,
+opened his lips and said, briefly:
+
+"It means, Mr. Glenalvan, that I have made the acquaintance of your
+niece and fallen in love with her."
+
+A threatening flash came into Elinor's eyes in the moonlight. She bit
+her lips fiercely to keep back the words that rose to them.
+
+"I am sorry to hear that," said John Glenalvan, in a subdued voice.
+Inwardly he was raging with anger, but he allowed no trace of it to
+escape him. "Will you tell me where and how you became acquainted with
+that child?"
+
+"I must decline to do so," said the young man, firmly.
+
+John Glenalvan looked around at his daughter.
+
+"Elinor, return to the house," he said. "I will join you there
+presently."
+
+Elinor walked away, but she did not return to the hall as her father
+had commanded. Instead, she hid herself behind a clump of willows,
+where she could hear every word that passed between the two men.
+
+Some excited words ensued. Bertram Chesleigh was cool and calm. He
+denied that John Glenalvan had any right to call him to account for
+what he carelessly termed his innocent flirtation with little Golden.
+
+"From what I can hear," he said, "you have treated the girl both
+cruelly and wrongfully. I stand ready to answer to Golden's grandfather
+for any wrong he may consider I have done, but I shall make no apology
+to you, Mr. Glenalvan."
+
+"Why, not?" said the man, with repressed passion. "The girl is my
+niece!"
+
+"Yet you have wickedly secluded her from all society, and even debarred
+her of her freedom," said Bertram Chesleigh, indignantly. "It is your
+fault alone that she has been driven to seek the natural delights of
+youth in a clandestine manner."
+
+"It is not my fault, but her mother's," said John Glenalvan,
+significantly.
+
+His face grew pale as he spoke; his eyes strayed furtively to the quiet
+lake, lying silvery and serene in the clear moonlight.
+
+"How? I do not understand you," said the other, haughtily.
+
+John Glenalvan hesitated a moment. When he spoke it was with an
+affectation of deep feeling and manly sorrow.
+
+"Mr. Chesleigh," he said, "your unhesitating charge against me of
+cruelty to my niece forces me to the disclosure of a most painful
+family secret--one that I would fain have guarded from your knowledge.
+There is a strong reason for my course toward Golden Glenalvan."
+
+He paused, and the listener said, hoarsely:
+
+"A reason----" then paused, because his voice had broken utterly.
+
+"Yes, a reason," was the bitter reply. "Mr. Chesleigh, little Golden is
+the child of my own and only sister, but--how shall I tell you--she has
+no right and no place in the world. She is _a nameless child_!"
+
+The solid earth seemed to reel beneath Mr. Chesleigh's feet. He
+staggered back dizzily, and threw up his hands as if the man had struck
+him.
+
+"He is proud. The blow tells fearfully," thought Elinor, watching him
+through the trees with vindictive eyes. "Ah, my defiant Golden, your
+last chance is gone now. He will never look at you again!"
+
+"Mr. Glenalvan, you do not mean it. You are but trying my credulity,"
+cried Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+"Is it likely that I would publish a falsehood to my own discredit?"
+inquired the other.
+
+"No, no--but, oh, God, this is too dreadful to believe!"
+
+"Dreadful, but true," groaned John Glenalvan. "Golden is the child of
+sin and shame. If I had had my way she would have been consigned to a
+foundling asylum. But my father weakly insisted on rearing her himself,
+and I was injudicious enough to permit it. The only stipulation I made
+was that she should be kept away from the sight of the world as much as
+possible. I see now that all precautions were useless. Young as she is,
+the bad blood in her veins begins to show itself already in depraved
+conduct."
+
+"Hush! do not censure her harmless meetings with me," said Bertram
+Chesleigh, in a voice of agony. "The child is so pure and innocent she
+has no idea of evil. I would die before I would wrong her!"
+
+"I am glad to hear you say so," said the other. "If you really mean it,
+perhaps you will agree to relinquish your useless pursuit of her. You
+would not be willing to marry her after what you have heard, I am quite
+sure."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meantime little Golden walked away with her grandfather, who stumbled
+along like one in a painful dream, his gray head bowed as if beneath
+the weight of sorrow, his footsteps faltering and slow.
+
+He had not spoken one word, and his silence impressed Golden with a
+sense of her wrong-doing and disobedience far more than the loudest
+reproaches could have done.
+
+She clung to his hand, weeping and sighing, and shivering silently at
+old Dinah's muttered invectives against Mr. Chesleigh.
+
+Hugh Glenalvan spoke no words to his granddaughter until he had led her
+into the house.
+
+Then he sank into his chair, and his gray head drooped upon his breast.
+
+Surprise and sorrow seemed to have deprived him of the power of speech.
+
+Golden knelt at his feet and laid her golden head upon his knee.
+
+"Grandpa, speak to me," she wailed. "Do not be angry with your little
+Golden! Oh, grandpa, you have been so hard and strict with me; you have
+kept me too secluded. If you had let me have freedom and happiness like
+other girls, this never would have happened!"
+
+"Hush, little missie; you must not speak to ole massa like dat," cried
+Dinah, trying to pull her away. "You don't know what you talkin' 'bout.
+Come away till ole massa is well enough to talk to you 'bout dis fing."
+
+She lifted the girl and would have led her away, but the old man waved
+his hand feebly to detain her, and so she placed her in a chair instead.
+
+Then she brought a glass of wine and poured a little between the white,
+writhing lips of her old master.
+
+"Grandpa, speak to me!" wailed Golden again.
+
+Old Dinah looked at her almost sternly, and said abruptly:
+
+"You must let him alone, Miss Golden, you have enamost kilt him now,
+with your badness and deceit."
+
+"Black mammy, you shall not speak to me so," cried the girl,
+resentfully, and then the bright head drooped on the arm of the chair,
+and she wept bitterly, more from fright at the condition of her
+grandfather, than from any tangible sense of her own wrong-doing.
+
+She loved her grandfather dearly, and the sight of his suffering
+stabbed her tender heart deeply.
+
+While she wept silently, old Dinah busied herself in anxious cares for
+the old man.
+
+He seemed frozen into a statue of despair, sitting with his head bowed
+forlornly, and his vacant eyes on the floor.
+
+But quite suddenly he roused himself and looked around him with a
+heavy, hopeless gaze.
+
+"Dinah, leave me alone," he said, with unwonted impatience. "I am not
+ill, or if I am it is with a sickness beyond mortal healing. Golden's
+disobedience and her cruel, undeserved reproaches have broken my heart."
+
+Golden threw herself impulsively at his feet again.
+
+"Grandpa, forgive me," she wailed. "I shall die if you do not say that
+you will pardon me!"
+
+He did not answer her. He only looked at his old black servant.
+
+"Dinah, you may leave us," he said, sorrowfully, "I had hoped to keep
+the secret all my life; but the time has come when I must reveal to my
+grandchild her mother's story."
+
+"Um-me-e e," groaned the old negress. "Sh, I t'ought it was a brack day
+when John Glenalvan kem here dat mornin' a-askin' ole massa to shut my
+pore chile up like a crim'nal."
+
+"Hush, Dinah," the old man repeated, pointing to the door. She went
+out, and Golden turned her beautiful eyes, like blue violets drowned in
+tears, upon his pale, drawn face.
+
+"Oh, grandpa," she cried, "you will tell me something of my mother at
+last. I have so longed to hear something of my mother and my father."
+
+A groan forced itself through Hugh Glenalvan's livid lips.
+
+"Your desire shall be gratified," he replied. "But the telling will
+cost you great sorrow, child."
+
+Her beautiful face grew white and scared.
+
+"Oh, grandpa," she cried, "then Elinor and Clare told the truth. My
+poor mother----"
+
+A bursting sob checked the rest of her speech.
+
+"Golden, before I tell you your mother's story, I must receive your own
+confession. Dinah has told me all the beginning of your acquaintance
+with my son's visitor. You must now give me the history of what further
+intercourse has passed between you. How comes it that my little Golden,
+whom I deemed so true and pure, broke her promise to old Dinah?"
+
+The beautiful face drooped from his gaze, overspread with warm, crimson
+blushes. No words came from the sweet, tremulous red lips.
+
+"A promise, child, no matter how humble the person to whom it is made,
+should be held perfectly sacred and inviolate," he continued. "I could
+not have believed that you, the child I had reared so carefully, could
+have been so ignoble as to falsify your promise."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+Beautiful Golden sobbed wildly at the reproachful words of her
+grandfather.
+
+"Grandpa, I didn't mean it," she wept. "Indeed, indeed, I intended to
+keep my promise to black mammy. It was quite by accident that I broke
+it."
+
+"How could it have been by accident?" inquired the old man,
+incredulously.
+
+"Do you remember my habit of sleep-walking?" she inquired.
+
+"Yes--ah, yes, for it has frightened me often to see a little, white
+figure glide into my room at night, with vacant, unseeing eyes. I
+always feared you would run into some terrible danger. Your mother had
+the same unfortunate habit," replied the old man.
+
+"Grandpa, it was through that habit of mine that I broke my word to
+black mammy," said Golden, with an earnestness that showed how truthful
+was her explanation.
+
+"Tell me how it occurred, Golden," he said, fixing his dim eyes
+anxiously on her face.
+
+"Grandpa, I am almost ashamed to tell you," she replied, blushing
+crimson, "but it was in this way. The night after Mr. Chesleigh entered
+my room by accident, I was very restless in my sleep. I will tell you
+the truth. I had begun to love the handsome stranger. I thought of him
+before I fell asleep, and in my restless slumbers I dreamed of him. So
+I fell into my old habit of wandering in a state of somnambulism. It
+was a beautiful moonlight night. I dressed myself and wandered out into
+the grounds, and down by the lake, my favorite resting-place. Suddenly
+I started, broad awake in the arms of Mr. Chesleigh. I had gone too
+near the edge of the lake, and he had saved me from falling in."
+
+She shuddered slightly, and resumed:
+
+"In common gratitude I was compelled to speak, and thank the gentleman
+for saving me from a watery grave. Do you think I was wrong to do so?"
+
+"It would have been cold and ungrateful to have omitted thanking him,"
+he admitted.
+
+"So I thought," said Golden.
+
+"If your intercourse had stopped there, Golden, I should have had no
+words of blame for you. But you have carried on a secret intrigue ever
+since. You have stolen out to meet that man every night, have you not?"
+
+"Yes, grandpa, but we loved each other," said the simple child, who
+seemed to think that was ample excuse for what she had done.
+
+Hugh Glenalvan groaned, and remained lost in thought for a moment.
+
+Then he bent down and whispered a question in her ear.
+
+She started violently; the warm, ever-ready color flashed into her
+cheek; she threw up her head and looked at him with proud, grieved eyes.
+
+"Grandpa, you hurt me cruelly," she replied. "Do not think of me so
+unkindly. I am as pure as the snow."
+
+He seemed to be relieved by the words so quickly and proudly spoken.
+The next minute he said, gravely:
+
+"My child, has this gentleman ever said anything to you of marriage?"
+
+Little Golden remained silent and thoughtful a moment, then she
+answered, steadily.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He wishes to marry you, then?"
+
+"Yes," answered the girl, with a little quiver of triumphant happiness
+in her voice.
+
+"When?" he asked.
+
+A shadow fell over the fair, sweet face a moment.
+
+"I do not know exactly when," she replied. "But Mr. Chesleigh will see
+you to-morrow--he told me just now that he would--and then he will
+settle everything."
+
+There was a silence for a moment. The breeze sighed softly through the
+trees outside; they could hear it in the utter stillness. The dim,
+flaring light fell on the gray head of the old man, drooping forlornly
+on his breast, and on the lovely, upturned face of the girl, with its
+tender blue eyes and falling golden hair.
+
+"Grandpa," she whispered, "do not be angry with your little girl. Put
+your hand on my head and say you forgive me for my fault."
+
+He could not resist the coaxing voice and the asking blue eyes. He laid
+his hand on the golden head and said, solemnly and kindly:
+
+"I forgive you, my little Golden, and I pray Heaven that no evil may
+come of this affair!"
+
+She kissed his wrinkled, tremulous, old hand, where it hung over the
+arm of the chair.
+
+"Thank you," she said, gratefully. "I am so glad you are not angry with
+me. And now, dear grandpa, I am going to kneel right here and listen
+while you tell me my mother's story."
+
+In the momentary silence the wind outside seemed to sigh more sadly
+through the trees; the dim light flared and flickered, casting weird,
+fantastic shadows in the corners of the room. Deep, heavy sighs
+quivered over the old man's lips as the beautiful, child-like girl
+knelt there, with her blue eyes lifted so eagerly to his face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+"You are the image of your mother, my child," said Golden's
+grandfather. "She had a white skin, pink cheeks, blue eyes, and shining
+hair. You inherit her happy, light-hearted disposition. You bear the
+same name also--Golden Glenalvan."
+
+"Why was I never called by my father's name?" asked innocent Golden.
+
+"My child, you anticipate my story," he answered, "but I will tell you.
+You have no right to your father's name."
+
+A cry of terror came from the parted lips of the girl.
+
+"Oh, grandpa, you do not mean _that_--you could not be so cruel!"
+
+"You must remember that it is not my fault," he answered.
+
+She sprang up and stood before him, with a look of white despair on her
+lovely young face.
+
+"Now I understand it all," she said. "I know why my life is so unlike
+that of other girls. Oh, grandpa, grandpa, tell me where to find my
+mother that I may curse her for my ruined life!"
+
+His only answer was a low and heart-wrung groan.
+
+"Grandpa, tell me where to find her," repeated little Golden, wildly.
+"She must be living, for I remember now that no one has ever told me
+plainly that she was dead. I will go to her--I will reproach her for
+her sin! I will tell her what a life mine has been--how I have been
+hated and despised for my mother's fault, even by my kindred."
+
+Sighs, long and bitter, heaved the old man's breast, but he answered
+her not. She flung herself weeping at his feet.
+
+"You do not speak!" she cried. "Oh, grandpa, tell me where to find my
+cruel mother!"
+
+"She is with your father," said Hugh Glenalvan, in a deep and bitter
+voice that showed what agony he endured in the revelation of his
+daughter's disgrace and infamy.
+
+Golden threw up her little hands in convulsive agony.
+
+"Oh, not that!" she cried. "Tell me it is not true!"
+
+Again he had no answer for her, and Golden cried out reproachfully:
+
+"Grandpa, grandpa, why did you suffer her to be so wicked?"
+
+"It was through no fault of mine," he answered heavily.
+
+She looked at him in silent anguish a moment, then she asked him:
+
+"Where is she? Tell me where to find her, if you know."
+
+"John told me she was in New York the last time he heard of her; but
+that was years ago. I pray God that she may be dead ere this."
+
+And then he wrung his hands, and the tears rolled down his withered
+cheeks.
+
+"Oh, my lost little daughter, my precious little Golden," he moaned in
+agony. "How little I dreamed in your innocent babyhood that you were
+reserved for such a fate!"
+
+Golden was regarding him attentively.
+
+"Uncle John told you she was in New York," she said. "What did Uncle
+John know? Did he hate my mother as he hates me?"
+
+He looked at her, startled.
+
+"Hate your mother," he cried. "His own sister! No--of course not--that
+is, not until she fell!"
+
+"He hated her then?" asked Golden, musingly.
+
+"Yes, he hated her then. I believe he could have killed her."
+
+"He should have killed her betrayer," said Golden, who seemed suddenly
+to have acquired the gravity and thoughtfulness of a woman.
+
+"I would have killed him myself if I could have laid hands on the
+villain," said her grandfather, with sudden, irrepressible passion.
+
+The bitter grief and impatient wrath of the girl had sobered down into
+quietness more grievous than tears.
+
+Her face showed deathly white in the dim light; her lips were set in a
+line of intense pain; her pansy-blue eyes had grown black with feeling.
+
+She brought a low stool and sat down at her grandfather's feet, folding
+her white hands meekly in her lap, and drooping her fair head heavily.
+
+"Grandpa, I will not interrupt you again," she said. "I will sit here
+quite still, and listen. Now tell me all my mother's story."
+
+She kept her word.
+
+After he had told her all he had to tell, and she knew the whole tragic
+story of her mother's disgrace, she still sat there silently, with her
+dark eyes bent on her clasped hands.
+
+The cloud of shame and disgrace seemed to lower upon her head with the
+weight of the whole world.
+
+"You understand all I have told, my child?" he said to her, after
+waiting vainly for her to speak.
+
+She put her small hand to her head in a dazed, uncertain way.
+
+"Oh, yes, I think so," she replied. "But my head seems in a whirl. I
+will ask you just a few questions, grandpa, to make sure that I have
+understood."
+
+And then she seemed to fall into a "brown study." When she had
+collected her thoughts a little she began to question him.
+
+"I think you said that my mother eloped at sixteen with a handsome
+stranger whose acquaintance she had casually made in her long, lonely
+rambles in the woods. In a few weeks she wrote to you from New York
+that she was happily married. Am I right, grandpa?"
+
+"Yes," he replied.
+
+"And then, although you and Uncle John wrote repeatedly, you could
+hear no more from her until a year had passed, and she came back
+unexpectedly one dreadful stormy night."
+
+She paused, and he murmured a dreary, "Yes, dear."
+
+"She was in sore trouble," the girl went on, slowly. "She had found out
+that her husband had deceived her. She was not legally his wife. Their
+marriage had only been a mock marriage. So she left him."
+
+"That is right," he said, as she paused again.
+
+"And Uncle John, her only and elder brother, cursed her for the
+disgrace she had brought on the Glenalvans. I think you told me that,
+did you not, dear grandpa?" she said, lifting her heavy eyes a moment
+to his sad, old face.
+
+"Yes, dear, he cursed her. John was always stern and hard, and he
+was always jealous of our love for his little sister. He thought we
+had spoiled her, and he was bitterly angry when she returned to us
+in sorrow and shame. He was married to a woman as hard as himself,
+and they were both for driving her forth like a dog. But Dinah and
+I--for my daughter's mother had died while she was away--were too
+tender-hearted for that. We cared for the poor, desolate child in spite
+of John's threats and curses."
+
+"And that very night I was born," said little Golden, with the heaviest
+sigh in which any mortal ever cursed the ill-fated hour of birth.
+
+"Yes, you were born in the storm and terror of that dreadful night,"
+he answered with a heavy sigh. "And your mother almost broke her heart
+over you because you would never bear the name of the man she had loved
+so well."
+
+"And that name, dear grandpa, tell me what it was," she cried, with
+repressed eagerness.
+
+"My dear, she would never reveal that name. She loved him although he
+had betrayed her. She was afraid of our vengeance."
+
+A look of keen disappointment came over the beautiful, mobile face.
+
+"But, grandpa," she said, "when she wrote you from New York, after she
+left you, in the first flush of her happiness, when she had not your
+vengeance to fear, did she not reveal her name then?"
+
+"Not even then," said the old man, bitterly. "She hinted that there was
+some innocent but just cause for secrecy just then, but that she would
+send her true name and address in the next letter. That next letter
+never came."
+
+"There is not the slightest clew for me, then. I shall never find my
+mother," said the girl, sorrowfully.
+
+"Golden, why should you wish to find her? She is a sinner, leading a
+life of shame. She deserted you in your helpless infancy to return to
+the arms of the villain who had betrayed her."
+
+"So Uncle John says," returned the girl, meaningly.
+
+He started, more at the tone than the words.
+
+"Golden, do you doubt him?" he cried.
+
+"Yes," said the girl steadily, turning on him the full splendor of her
+purple-blue eyes, in which glowed a spark of indignant fire. "Yes,
+grandpa, I doubt it. I utterly refuse to believe such a scandalous
+story of my mother."
+
+He looked at her sadly, touched by her loyal faith in the mother she
+had never known.
+
+"But think, my dear," he said. "You were but a few days old when she
+stole away in the night and left you without a line to tell us of her
+whereabouts. But John's blood was up. He traced her to New York, and
+learned enough to be sure that she had returned to her lover. Then he
+lost all trace of them, and came home reluctantly enough, for he would
+have shot the villain if he could have laid hands on him."
+
+"It is a plausible story," the girl said, thoughtfully. "I might
+believe it if any one but John Glenalvan had told it. But oh, grandpa,
+that man always reminds me of a snake in the grass."
+
+"My child, that is one of old Dinah's homely phrases," he remonstrated.
+
+"It is a very true one, though," she maintained, stoutly.
+
+He saw that he could not convince her, so he sighed and remained silent.
+
+He had never thought of doubting his son's assertion himself. Golden's
+incredulity awakened a vague sense of uneasiness in his mind.
+
+The girl sat silently also for a brief space of time, while the old
+clock in the corner slowly ticked away the moments of that momentous
+night.
+
+She roused herself from her drooping, dejected attitude at last and
+looked up at the quiet old man.
+
+"Grandpa," she said anxiously, as if some sudden doubt or fear had
+come into her mind, "what will Bert say when he hears this dreadful
+story?"
+
+"Bert?" said her grandfather, questioningly.
+
+"Mr. Chesleigh, I mean," she replied. "What will he say when my story
+is known to him? Will he, too, hate me for my mother's sin?"
+
+A look of pain and dread came over the sad, old face.
+
+"My darling, how can I tell?" he said. "I have heard that the
+Chesleighs are very proud. It is only too likely that he will scorn you
+when he knows the truth. I am afraid you must give up all thought of
+loving him, dear."
+
+A strange, intense look came over the beautiful young face.
+
+"I cannot do that," she said. "I love him with my whole heart! I shall
+love him all my life. He loves me, too, grandpa. He cannot give me up!
+He will be true to me. I am not to blame for my mother's fault."
+
+"No, dear, I know that," he answered; "but the sins of the parents are
+visited on the children. It is not likely that Mr. Chesleigh will care
+to wed a nameless girl. He is wealthy and high-born, and can have his
+choice from among the best in the land. Your Cousin Elinor aspires to
+marry him."
+
+"He will never marry Elinor," said little Golden, decidedly. "He loves
+me alone. He will be true to me."
+
+"God grant it, dear," her grandfather said, with a patient sigh, in
+which there was but little hope.
+
+Then he looked up and saw the first pale gleams of the summer dawn
+stealing into the room through the open window.
+
+The birds began to warble their mating songs in the broad-leaved
+magnolia trees outside, as if there were no care nor sorrow, nor
+blighting disgrace anywhere in the wide, beautiful world.
+
+"My little one," he said to the grave, hollow-eyed child, who seemed
+suddenly to have grown a full-statured woman, "go to your room and
+rest. You look terribly ill and wretched. Do not go back to the haunted
+chamber again, but to your old room down stairs. Try to sleep, if you
+can."
+
+He looked after her in wonder as she turned to obey him. Yesterday
+she had been a beautiful, charming, careless child, full of pretty,
+evanescent angers and quick repentances.
+
+The bloom, the smiles, the brightness were all gone now. The gold-brown
+lashes drooped heavily against the death-white cheeks, the sweet lips
+quivered heart-brokenly, the slow and lagging step was that of a weary
+woman.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+As soon as she had reached the seclusion of her own chamber, little
+Golden threw herself across her bed and wept as though her tender heart
+would break.
+
+Strangely nurtured as she had been, the pride of race had been as
+strong in her young heart as that of any Glenalvan of them all, and the
+shock of her grandfather's revelation had been a terrible one.
+
+"I wish that I had died in my innocent babyhood," she wept; and her
+black mammy, who had been lingering near her unobserved, came forward
+to her and said quickly, while she smoothed the golden hair lovingly
+with her old black hands:
+
+"You must not say dat, honey, chile. I has great hopes in your life. I
+has almos' wore out my ole brack knees a-prayin' an' a-prayin' to de
+good Lawd dat you might be de instrument to sabe your mudder from her
+sinful life."
+
+Little Golden looked at her black mammy with a kind of pathetic wonder
+in her beautiful, tearful eyes.
+
+"How could I do that, black mammy?" she said.
+
+"By seekin' dat poor soul out, Miss Golden, and 'suadin' her to forsake
+dat wicked man, an' spend de balance ob her life in prayin' an'
+repentin' ob her deadly sins," said Dinah, devoutly and earnestly.
+
+Golden sat up in the bed and looked at Dinah with eager, shining eyes
+and impulsively clasped hands.
+
+"Ah, black mammy, if I only could," she cried; "but you forget I do not
+know where to find her. I do not even know the name of that dreadful
+man."
+
+And she shivered at the thought of his wickedness. She remembered that
+he was her father, that his bad blood flowed in her veins.
+
+Old Dinah was looking at her strangely.
+
+"Little missie, what would you think if I could tell you his name?" she
+said, with a little note of triumph in her tone.
+
+"Could you--oh, could you?" cried little Golden, impulsively.
+
+"Jest wait one minute, darlin'," said Dinah, hobbling out of the room.
+
+Golden waited, wonderingly and impatiently.
+
+After a little while Dinah returned, and laid a small package, wrapped
+in tissue paper, in her hand.
+
+Golden removed the wrappers tremblingly. A small bit of crumpled
+pasteboard fell out into her hand.
+
+She straightened it out and devoured with eager eyes the aristocratic
+name printed upon it in small, clear, black type.
+
+Then she raised her gleaming eyes to the excited face of the old black
+woman.
+
+"So," she said with a long, deep, sobbing breath, "this is my father's
+name?"
+
+"Yes, chile, leastways I has de berry best reason for finking so,"
+replied Dinah, promptly.
+
+"Then you are not sure?" cried the girl, and there was a note of keen
+disappointment in her voice.
+
+"All I know is dis, honey. It fell outer your mudder's pocket de night
+when you was born. She was drawin' out her handkercher, an' it fell
+onto de floor 'thout her seein' it. I didn't say nofin' to de poor,
+distracted chile. I only picked the keerd up and put it away. I sabed
+it for you, honey, chile."
+
+"And I am very grateful to you, black mammy," said the girl. "You had
+very good reason for thinking it was my father's name. But it is a
+wonder you never gave it to grandpa, or to Uncle John."
+
+"Who? _Me_ gib John Glenalvan anything, or tell him anything? Not to
+sabe his brack soul from de debbil, who's got a bill ob sale for him!"
+cried Dinah, flying into a rage, as she always did at the mention of
+Golden's uncle.
+
+"Black mammy, why do you hate my uncle so bitterly?" asked Golden.
+
+"'Cause he's a snake in de grass," replied Dinah, shortly.
+
+"I know that--at least I have always felt it," said Golden,
+meditatively; "but there must be some particular reason, mammy. Tell me
+what it is."
+
+"Well, den, if you mus' know, dere's two reasons," said Dinah. "De
+first is dat he hated your pore, sweet mudder. De second one is dat
+he's like a human wampire fastened on your gran'pa."
+
+"I don't understand what you mean by your second reason," said Golden,
+gravely.
+
+Dinah looked at her a moment in meditative silence; then she said
+abruptly:
+
+"I don't keer what dey say, I'll tell you, my chile. Your Uncle John
+done badgered and badgered your grandpa while you was a leetle, teeny
+babby until, for de sake ob peace, dat pore ole man done made John a
+deed to Glenalvan Hall and de whole estate. Your gran'pa ain't no more
+dan a beggar in the ole hall his own fader left him in his will."
+
+"But why did my grandfather give away his property like that?" asked
+the girl.
+
+"'Cause John swore if he didn't do it dat he would carry you off and
+put you into a foundling asylum. You was a pore, leetle, deliky babby
+then, and we skeecely 'spected you would live from one day to de nex'
+one. So to hab de pleasure ob keepin' an' tendin' you de ole man
+'sented to beggar hisself."
+
+"Grandpa did all that for my unworthy sake, and yet I reproached him
+for being strict and hard with me! Oh, how wicked and ungrateful he
+must think me," cried the girl, tearfully.
+
+"No he don't, honey, chile," said the black woman, soothingly, "you see
+he knowed dat you wasn't 'ware of all what you had to t'ank him for."
+
+"No, indeed, I never dreamed of all I had cost him," exclaimed
+beautiful Golden, self-reproachfully. "And so, black mammy, we are only
+staying at Glenalvan Hall on the sufferance of my uncle?"
+
+"Dat's jest de way ob it, missie. And, look ye, too dat ongrateful,
+graspin' wilyun has done threaten your pore gran'pa, time and ag'in, to
+pack bofe of you'uns off to de pore-house."
+
+"The unnatural monster!" exclaimed little Golden, in a perfect tempest
+of passionate wrath.
+
+"Well you may say so," cried Dinah, in a fever of sympathy. "De debbil
+will nebber git his due till he gets John Glenalvan! De blood biles in
+my ole vains when I fink ob all de insults dat man has heaped on his
+own fader, 'long ob you and your pore misguided mudder."
+
+Beautiful little Golden sat upright regarding the excited old woman in
+grave silence. Her blue eyes were on fire with indignation and grief.
+At times she would murmur: "Poor, dear grandpa, dear true-hearted
+grandpa," and relapse into silence again.
+
+She roused herself at last from her musing mood, and looked up at
+Dinah. There was a hopeful light in the soft, blue eyes, so lately
+drowned in tears of sorrow and despair.
+
+"Black mammy, I have been thinking," she said, "and I will tell you
+what I mean to do."
+
+"What, honey?"
+
+"I will tell you a secret, mammy. Mr. Chesleigh loves me. We are--that
+is, I will be his wife one of these days."
+
+"Miss Golden, is dat so?" cried black mammy, delighted. "I am so glad!
+I was 'fraid--well, nebber min' what I was 'fraid of, chile; but 'deed
+I is so glad dat Mr. Chesly's gwine to marry you. He is a rich man,
+honey. You kin snap your lily fingers at ugly Marse John, when once you
+is Mr. Chesly's wife."
+
+"Yes, he is very rich, black mammy," said the girl, with a pretty,
+almost childish complacency. "He has told me so, and he tells me I
+shall have jewels and fine dresses, and all that heart could desire
+when I go to live with him--I mean," blushing rosy red, "when I become
+his wife."
+
+"And powerful pretty you will look in dem fine tings, honey," said her
+black mammy, admiringly.
+
+"But the best thing of all, black mammy, is that I shall be able to
+take grandpa away from this place, and love him and care for him,"
+cried Golden, exultantly. "I shall take you, too, mammy, for you have
+been the only mother I ever knew. Grandpa shall have the happiest home
+in the world, and Bert and I will both love him dearly, dearly!"
+
+"And your pore, lost mudder, darlin', you had forgotten her," said
+Dinah, a little wistfully, her thoughts straying back through the mist
+of years, to the lost little nursling who had fluttered from the safe
+parental nest, and steeped the white wings of her soul in the blackness
+of sin.
+
+But Golden shook her dainty head decidedly.
+
+"No, black mammy, I had not forgotten," she said. "When I am Bert's
+wife, he shall help me to seek and save my poor, lost mother. We
+will try to win her back to the path of right, and save her soul for
+Heaven," she concluded, with girlish ardor and fervency.
+
+"May the good Lawd help you to succeed, my innercent lamb," said the
+good old black woman, prayerfully. "Her little soul was too white
+and tender for de brack debbil to git it at de last for his brack
+dominions."
+
+There was a sudden tap at the door. Golden looked at it eagerly and
+expectantly, while Dinah threw it open.
+
+A small black boy, a servant of John Glenalvan, stood outside with a
+sealed letter in his hand.
+
+"For Missie Golden, from Mass Chesleigh," he said, putting it in
+Dinah's hand, and quickly retiring.
+
+Dinah carried it silently to her mistress, who kissed the
+superscription, and eagerly tore it open.
+
+The thick, satin-smooth sheet rustled in the trembling little hand as
+the blue eyes ran over it, lovingly and eagerly.
+
+As she read, the tender, loving eyes grew wild and startled, an ashen
+shade crept around the rosebud lips, the young face whitened to the
+corpse-like hue of death. She crumpled the sheet in her hand at last,
+and threw it wildly from her, while a cry of intolerable anguish
+thrilled over her white lips.
+
+"Oh, mammy, mammy, my heart is broken--broken! I shall never see him
+again. He has forsaken me for my mother's sin!"
+
+Then she fell back cold and rigid, like one dead upon the bed. Dinah
+flew to her assistance, cursing in her heart the wickedness and
+heartlessness of men.
+
+But though she worked busily and anxiously, the morning sun rode
+high in the heavens before the deeply-stricken girl recovered her
+consciousness. Her grandfather was watching beside her pillow when her
+eyes first opened, and she threw her arms around his neck and wept long
+and bitterly on his faithful breast.
+
+"You were right," she whispered to him. "You know the cruel world
+better than I did. He has left me, grandpa--I shall never see him
+again. He discards me for my mother's sin."
+
+She wept and moaned all day, refusing all consolation. She was
+terrified by the coldness and cruelty of the world that condemned her
+for the sins of others.
+
+Many and many a time she had chafed at the narrowness and loneliness of
+her lot, but she had never known sorrow until to-day.
+
+Its horrible reality crushed her down before its pitiless strength like
+the fury of the storm-rain. A crushed and bleeding victim, she lay weak
+and stunned in its victorious path.
+
+At nightfall she slept, wearied out by the force and violence of her
+deep, overmastering emotion.
+
+Old Dinah persuaded her weary, haggard old master to retire to his room
+and bed, promising to watch faithfully herself by the sick girl.
+
+She dozed until midnight, when, as Golden still slept on heavily,
+she permitted herself to take a wary nap in an old arm-chair. It was
+daylight when the weary, suffering old creature awoke. The beautiful
+Golden was gone.
+
+A little three-cornered note lay on the pillow that still held the
+impress of the dear little head. The child had written sorrowfully to
+her grandfather:
+
+ "Grandpa, darling, I have only brought you trouble and sorrow all my
+ life-time, so I am going away. Your son will be kinder to you when I
+ am gone, and your life will be less hard; perhaps black mammy will
+ be kind and faithful to you, so you will not miss your thoughtless
+ little Golden very much. God bless you, grandpa, you must pray for
+ me nightly, for I am going to seek my mother, the erring mother who
+ cursed me with life! If indeed, she is living in sin and shame,
+ I will strive to reclaim her and restore her to the safe path of
+ virtue. I have nothing else to live for. Love and happiness, the
+ delights of this world, are not for me. It shall be _the dream of my
+ life-time_ to find and save my wronged and erring mother."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+From the fair southern clime where her lines had hitherto been cast,
+little Golden traveled straight to the great, thronged city of New York.
+
+During her long day and night of intense suffering, the thought, first
+suggested to her mind by old Dinah, of seeking and reclaiming her
+erring mother, had fastened on her mind with irresistible force and
+power.
+
+Every thought and feeling of this beautiful, unhappy child was as pure
+as that of an angel.
+
+The knowledge that the young mother who had given her birth was living
+a life of sin and dishonor was most revolting to her mind. She could
+not think of it without a mortal shudder.
+
+When Dinah fell asleep by her pillow the girl awakened suddenly and lay
+for a little while in silent meditation. The idea she had been silently
+revolving in her mind all day gathered strength in the solitude and
+stillness of the midnight hour.
+
+Golden was young, buoyant, ignorant of the world, and thought not
+of the difficulties that would hedge the path of duty which she was
+marking out for her little, untried feet.
+
+She did not know how dear she was to her grandfather's heart, and how
+bitterly he would be wounded by her desertion. She only thought of
+escaping from the life which had suddenly become so unbearable, and of
+filling her heart with other aims now that the love she had given so
+lavishly from the depths of a warm and generous heart, had been cast
+back to her in scorn and contempt.
+
+In the pocket of her best cashmere dress was a little purse filled with
+gold pieces of which no one knew but herself.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh had given it to her in a happy, never-to-be-forgotten
+hour which now it almost killed her even to recall.
+
+Almost staggering with weakness, Golden rose and silently and
+cautiously dressed herself in her blue cashmere dress and hat and
+jacket.
+
+She decided not to take anything with her. It would be easier to
+purchase new things when she had arrived in New York.
+
+When she was ready to go, Golden knelt down a moment and pressed her
+fair cheek lovingly and sorrowfully to the toil-worn wrinkled hand of
+her old black mammy.
+
+She loved the old negress dearly. Under that homely black breast beat
+the only heart that had ever given a mother's love to the beautiful,
+forsaken child of poor, wronged and misguided little Golden.
+
+Then with a lingering, loving, backward glance around, the girl left
+the room and proceeded to her grandfather's apartment.
+
+The kind old man was asleep with a look of care and anxiety deeply
+imprinted on his pale, worn features.
+
+Golden pressed her trembling lips to the thin, gray locks that
+straggled over the pillow, and her girlish tears fell on them, shining
+like jewels in the dim gleam of the night-lamp.
+
+Then Golden stole away noiselessly. There was one more farewell to
+be said ere she set forth on the mission whose only clew lay in the
+crumpled card hidden away securely in the little purse of gold.
+
+She knelt down on the banks of the tranquil little lake she had always
+loved so dearly, and clasped her little hands and lifted her white face
+in the bright moonlight.
+
+"Farewell, little lake," she murmured to the silvery, tranquil sheet
+of water. "I pray God that the time may come when I shall kneel by
+you again, and tell you that I have reclaimed my erring mother, and
+that her soul has been washed as pure and free from sin as the lilies
+sleeping on your breast."
+
+Was it only little Golden's excited fancy, or did a shadow, soft and
+impalpable as a mist wreath, and pale as the moonbeams, glide across
+the still water in the form of a woman, and a voice as soft and low as
+the sigh of the breeze murmur sadly:
+
+"Bless you, my daughter."
+
+She started and looked around; the voice and vision had been so real
+she could hardly imagine it fancy, but the phantom shape had dissolved
+into moonbeams again, and the voice had melted into music on the
+"homeless winds."
+
+"If my poor mother was dead I should believe that her spirit had
+blessed me," said the beautiful girl to herself. "But she is alive, so
+it could not have been she, perhaps it was my guardian angel."
+
+She plucked a beautiful, large, white lily from the lake and started
+on her way to the railway station, carrying the spotless flower in her
+hand.
+
+Perhaps some thought of the poet, Longfellow's, verses came to her mind:
+
+ "Bear a lily in thine hand,
+ Gates of brass cannot withstand
+ One touch of that magic wand,
+ Bear through sorrow, wrong and ruth,
+ On thy lips the smile of truth,
+ In thy heart the dew of youth."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+We will return to Bertram Chesleigh, little Golden's recreant lover.
+
+All of John Glenalvan's influence had been brought to bear on the proud
+young man to induce him to relinquish his pursuit of the beautiful girl
+whose acquaintance he had so strangely and imprudently formed.
+
+Mr. Chesleigh's own pride of birth, united to John Glenalvan's artful
+innuendoes, was a powerful ally in the young man's mind against his
+love for the lonely and beautiful little girl.
+
+In the light of John Glenalvan's revelations, a great revulsion had
+taken place in his mind.
+
+He heartily wished that he had never made the acquaintance of the
+lovely little creature, or that he had not followed it up with such
+ardor and passion.
+
+With few, if any exceptions, men are naturally selfish. Bertram
+Chesleigh, who had never known a desire unfulfilled in the course of
+his prosperous life, was no exception to the general rule.
+
+In pursuing his acquaintance with little Golden, he had been actuated
+more by a regard for his own pleasure than by any thought of risk for
+her.
+
+In the light of recent developments, he thought also first of himself.
+How to escape from the consequences of his headlong passion became
+momentarily a paramount consideration.
+
+When his conscience reproached him he replied to it that it was only
+natural and right that he should think first of himself.
+
+He had his high social station to maintain, and he was quite sure that
+his friends and relations would have declined to receive even as his
+bride, a woman of stained birth.
+
+Golden had, it seemed, no place in the world, no social status whatever.
+
+If he made her his bride, his troubles and embarrassments would be
+legion. If he left her all would go well with him, and he argued with
+himself that the child would speedily forget him and resign herself to
+her strange and lonely life.
+
+So, under the influence of these vexing thoughts, and John Glenalvan's
+specious arguments and representations, that unjust letter was written
+to poor, suffering little Golden.
+
+Ah, we are so careless and so thoughtless over what we write. Bertram
+Chesleigh was not a bad man, and never meant to be cruel, and yet he
+had done more harm in the writing of that letter than if he had pierced
+the tender heart with a dagger.
+
+Even while writing it he felt ashamed and sorry, yet no premonition
+came to tell him of the dim future when he would have given tears of
+blood to have obliterated even the memory of that letter from the heart
+of little Golden which it had seared as with the breath of fire.
+
+He never forgot a single word of that letter he had written to her,
+although in his haste and agitation he had kept no copy of it. It did
+not seem so hard to him at first as it did afterward, when he knew what
+suffering the writing had caused and the consequences were forever
+beyond recall.
+
+After he had written and dispatched it he made his adieu to the family
+of John Glenalvan and departed, feeling like a coward, while if he had
+truly understood the depth of tenderness and capabilities of woe in the
+girl he had deserted, he might have felt more like a murderer.
+
+The Glenalvans, while terribly disappointed in their hopes for Elinor,
+were relieved at the departure of their guest for the present. Elinor
+entreated her father to make arrangements for removing Golden out of
+the way in case the young man should repeat his visit, and he promised,
+with an oath more forcible than polite, that he would certainly do so.
+
+But before he had taken any decisive step in the furtherance of his
+purpose, the unfortunate girl had taken her fate in her own hands. When
+John Glenalvan entered the ruined wing the second day for the purpose,
+as he had emphatically expressed it, of "having it out with his father
+in cursed few words," he found the old man and his faithful old
+servant in a frenzy of grief and despair over Golden's farewell letter.
+
+John was unfeignedly glad that Golden had gone away herself without
+giving him the trouble and annoyance of sending her.
+
+"It is much better as it is, father," he said to the poor,
+broken-hearted old creature. "I fully intended to send the girl away.
+She has only saved herself the ignominy of a summary dismissal. Do not
+fret yourself over her. She has only forsaken you to lead a life of
+shame with her erring mother. I hope that a lightning flash may strike
+her dead before she ever returns here again to disgrace and shame us
+yet further!"
+
+"Forbear, John. You are cruel and impious," cried the old man, lifting
+his hand feebly, and his son strode angrily out of the room, muttering
+curses "not loud but deep," and followed by the vivid lightnings of old
+Dinah's black eyes.
+
+"Oh, de brack-hearted wilyun!" she muttered. "May de good Lard hasten
+de time ob punishment for his cruel sins!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+The first thing that happened to little Golden Glenalvan after she
+arrived in the city of New York, was something that not infrequently
+happens to simple and inexperienced travelers.
+
+She had her pocket picked of her purse by some expert thief. Such
+things have often happened in the annals of New York crime, and will
+again, but it is probable that no one's life was ever so much affected
+by such a loss as was the unfortunate little Golden's.
+
+She found herself by this totally unlooked-for catastrophe thrown
+into the streets of the great, wicked city penniless, friendless, and
+utterly forsaken. Every cent she possessed in the world had been in
+the little purse, together with the card that bore her father's name.
+The latter was not so great a loss to her. The name of the man who had
+wronged her mother was engraven on her mind in characters that were
+never to be destroyed.
+
+Her little plans for the discovery of her mother, laid with such
+girlish art, were all turned away by this accident. She had meant to
+take cheap lodgings somewhere, and prosecute her search, but now she
+knew not what to do, nor where to turn.
+
+The great, busy city, with its strange faces and hurry and bustle
+frightened her, even though she dreamed not in her girlish innocence of
+its festering sin and underlying wickedness.
+
+Sinking down on a secluded seat in Central Park where she had been
+walking when she first discovered her loss, she sobbed bitterly in her
+grief and distress--so bitterly that a well-dressed, benevolent-looking
+lady who was walking along a path with a pretty poodle frisking before
+her, went up to her with kind abruptness.
+
+"My dear little girl," she said, laying her hand gently on the
+showering, golden wealth of hair that escaped from Golden's little
+sailor hat, "what is the matter? Can I help you?"
+
+Golden lifted her head and the lady who had a kind, middle-aged face,
+decidedly aristocratic, started and uttered a cry of surprise at the
+beautiful, girlish face with its tearful eyes like purple-blue pansies
+drowned in dew.
+
+In a moment the lady's quick eyes had seen from the cut and fashion
+of Golden's simple garments that she was a stranger in New York. She
+repeated kindly:
+
+"What ails you, my child? Have you become separated from your friends?"
+
+"No, for I have not a friend in this whole, great city. But I have lost
+my purse," answered Golden, with childish directness.
+
+The lady sat down beside her and regarded her a moment in thoughtful
+silence. She saw nothing but the most infantile sweetness, purity
+and truth in the lovely, troubled young face. She was touched and
+interested.
+
+"So you have lost your purse?" she said. "Have you had your pocket
+picked?"
+
+"I do not know," answered Golden, forlornly. "I carried it in my jacket
+pocket, and awhile ago, when I felt for it I discovered that it was
+gone."
+
+"Now, I am quite sure you are a stranger in New York," said the lady.
+"If you belonged in the city you would know better than to carry your
+purse carelessly in the pocket of your walking jacket. New York is full
+of sneak thieves who are on the watch for the unwary. You say you have
+not a friend in the city. Where are you from, my child?"
+
+"From the south," replied Golden.
+
+"Did you come to New York alone?"
+
+"Yes madam. I am an orphan," replied the girl, not wishing to disclose
+her history to her interrogator.
+
+"What do you wish for in this great city?" asked the lady.
+
+"I want to find some employment at present. Can you help me?" asked
+Golden, timidly and beseechingly lifting her large blue eyes to the
+interested face of the lady.
+
+"Perhaps I can," said the lady, smiling gently. "What kind of
+employment do you wish? What kind of work can you do?"
+
+The beautiful, girlish face grew a little blank. She remembered her
+careless, idle life at Glenalvan Hall, where no one ever taught her
+anything but her grandfather and old Dinah. She was compelled to
+confess despondently that she did not know how to do anything.
+
+The lady who was a really good woman with a decidedly benevolent turn,
+studied the drooping face attentively. She saw that there was some
+mystery about the girl, but the lovely young face was so guileless
+and winning that she could see no evil in it. She asked her, rather
+abruptly, what her name was.
+
+"Golden Glenalvan," answered the girl, and the lady frowned slightly,
+and said it was too fanciful and pretty.
+
+"If you are going to work for your living, I would advise you to call
+yourself by some plain and common name, such as Jones or Brown or
+Smith."
+
+"Then I will call myself Mary Smith," replied Golden, resignedly.
+
+"That will do very well. Now, my child, do you think you would like to
+undertake chambermaid's work?"
+
+She glanced, as she spoke, at the girl's ungloved hands, and saw that
+they were delicately white and aristocratic, so she answered the
+question negatively to herself before Golden answered, shrinkingly and
+timidly:
+
+"I do not believe I would like it, madam, but I am willing to try. I
+must do something to support myself, and I have no choice left me since
+I do not know how to do anything."
+
+The lady looked at her a little wonderingly.
+
+"My child, if you would tell me something about yourself I might know
+better how to help you," she said. "It is quite evident that you have
+met with reverses. You are unaccustomed to labor, and you look like a
+born lady."
+
+Golden was silent, and a deep blush colored her face. Not for worlds
+would she have told her sad story to this gentle woman.
+
+She fancied that the sweet pity beaming from her gray eyes now would
+change to scorn and contempt, if she could know that she was a nameless
+child seeking a lost and guilty mother.
+
+"Perhaps you have imprudently run away from your friends," she said,
+questioningly, and striking so near the truth that Golden burst into
+tears again, and would have left her but that she detained her by a
+firm yet gentle pressure of the hand.
+
+"Do not go," she said. "I want to help you if I can. Perhaps I could
+tell you something you are far too young and innocent to know."
+
+"What is that, ma'am?" asked Golden, looking at her questioningly.
+
+"This, my child--that one so pretty and simple as you are should not
+be alone and friendless in this great city. You are in the greatest
+danger. Beauty is only a curse to a poor girl who has to earn her own
+living."
+
+"Yes, madam," Golden answered, with perfect meekness, though she
+crimsoned painfully.
+
+"So I think," continued her kind friend, "that a home and shelter in
+even the humblest capacity is better for you than to be wandering alone
+in the streets homeless and penniless."
+
+"I know that," said Golden, "but I have nowhere to go," and the pathos
+of the tearful tone touched the kind lady's heart.
+
+"My child, I have been thinking about that," she said. "I have a friend
+who needs a nurse for her little invalid girl. Should you like to try
+for the situation?"
+
+"Oh, yes," Golden answered, gratefully.
+
+"The little girl is the petted and only daughter of wealthy people,"
+continued the kind lady. "She is delicate, and has been humored and
+spoiled injudiciously all her life, until she is, at times, quite
+overbearing and disagreeable, so much so indeed that her mother can
+scarcely keep a nurse for her more than a week or two at a time. Are
+you frightened at my description? Have you a good store of patience?"
+
+"I have been impatient and self-willed all my life," confessed Golden,
+frankly.
+
+"Yet you have a sweet-tempered face, if there is any truth in
+physiognomy," said her new friend. "It seems to me that you could not
+grow impatient ministering to the needs of that poor, little invalid
+child. Think how much happiness you could give the poor, ailing little
+soul if you tried. And when you are as old as I am," she added, with a
+faint sigh, "you will understand that the greatest pleasure in life is
+in giving happiness to others."
+
+"I will try to be patient and kind to the child, if you will be so
+kind as to get the place for me," said little Golden, trembling with
+eagerness.
+
+"Very well, my dear; I will myself accompany you to my friend's house
+and speak a kind word in your favor. It is rather a risk to run, this
+introducing and vouching for a total stranger, but I believe that your
+gentle, honest face will be a passport to Mrs. Desmond's favor, just as
+it has been to mine. You will follow me, now, my child."
+
+Golden walked on with the warm-hearted woman some distance through the
+beautiful green park, when, to her surprise, her benefactress stopped
+before an elegant, liveried carriage, with quite an imposing-looking
+driver in a white hat and gloves.
+
+"Drive to Mrs. Desmond's, John," she said, as the footman handed her
+and her timid _protege_ into the carriage.
+
+Little Golden felt like one in a bewildering dream as she lay back
+among the luxurious satin cushions and was whirled through the stately
+streets, past the beautiful buildings and brown-stone palaces until
+they stopped at last before one more splendid than all the rest,
+and she found herself gliding up the marble steps, her young heart
+throbbing fast at the novelty and strangeness of her position.
+
+She was going to be a servant in this splendid house! She, one of the
+Glenalvans of Glenalvan Hall, a name that had been proud and honored in
+the past until her girlish mother had stained its haughty prestige with
+shame.
+
+Her heart beat heavily and slow. The thought came to her mind that
+these proud and wealthy people would not even permit her to be a
+servant to their daughter if they knew that she was a nameless child.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+Mrs. Markham, little Golden's kind, new friend, was evidently on terms
+of intimacy with Mrs. Desmond.
+
+Instead of sending her card to the lady and awaiting her appearance
+in the formal drawing-room, she was at once conducted up stairs to a
+charming _boudoir_ hung with rose-colored silk and white lace.
+
+The carpet was white velvet strewn with a pattern of pink moss
+rosebuds, and the chairs and couches were upholstered in a deeper shade
+of rose-color.
+
+Everything in the room was costly and tasteful, and vases of
+freshly-cut flowers diffused delicious fragrance through the air.
+
+Little Golden had never before been in such a costly and tasteful room,
+and she uttered an involuntary low exclamation of surprise and delight
+at which Mrs. Markham smiled indulgently.
+
+"Does this pretty room surprise you?" she inquired.
+
+"Yes, madam, I have never seen anything so beautiful and costly
+before," answered the simple child.
+
+At that moment the heavy draperies that hung between the _boudoir_ and
+the dressing-room were swept aside by a white, jeweled hand, and the
+mistress of all this magnificence entered the room.
+
+She was a beautiful young lady, with great, velvety black eyes, dark,
+waving hair, crimson lips, and rounded cheeks like the sunny side of a
+peach. Her morning-dress was elegant, costly and becoming.
+
+"Ah, Mrs. Markham, good-morning. I am very glad to see you," she cried,
+then she looked past her friend inquiringly at the little, shrinking
+figure of Golden.
+
+"Edith, this is a little _protege_ of mine, Mary Smith by name," Mrs.
+Markham hastened to say. "If you have not secured a nurse yet, will you
+try her for little Ruby?"
+
+"I shall be very glad to do so if you think she will suit," returned
+Mrs. Desmond as they all seated themselves.
+
+Then the handsome brunette looked patronizingly at the new applicant
+for her favor. The scrutiny did not seem to please her. The slender,
+arched, black brows met over the bright eyes in a slight frown.
+
+"Child, why do you not put your hair up?" she asked, glancing at the
+bright wealth of loosely flowing ringlets. "It is not becoming to
+nurses to wear it in that way."
+
+"I can put it up if you wish me, ma'am," Golden replied in a low
+voice, her eyelids drooping that the lady might not see the childish
+resentment that flashed into them at her slightly scornful tone.
+
+"Very well, I shall insist upon that if I engage you," replied Mrs.
+Desmond. "You will tuck it up and wear a nurse's cap over it. Have you
+any recommendations to give with her, Mrs. Markham?" she continued,
+expectantly.
+
+"No, for Mary has never been in service before," replied the kind lady.
+"She is a young southern girl seeking employment in this city, and I
+should like to befriend her if possible. I fancied that her gentle,
+innocent face might recommend her to your favor as it did to mine."
+
+Mrs. Desmond turned to look at Golden again, and met the gaze of the
+soft blue eyes fixed on her with a kind of puzzled intentness.
+
+"Child, why do you stare at me so curiously?" she inquired.
+
+The deep color rushed into Golden's face, making her more lovely than
+ever.
+
+"I beg your pardon," she hastened to say, falteringly. "You remind me
+so much of someone I have known that I could not keep from looking at
+your face. It was very rude, I know."
+
+"Never mind, I am not angry," answered Mrs. Desmond. "Do you think you
+would make a good, patient nurse for my little girl, Mary?"
+
+"I will do the best I can," little Golden replied, in her gentle,
+refined voice.
+
+Mrs. Desmond looked at her friend.
+
+"I am not in the habit of engaging help without recommendation. It is
+rather a risk to run," she remarked, "but to please you, my friend, and
+because I really need a maid for Ruby, I will give Mary Smith a trial.
+When can you come Mary?"
+
+"She can stay now, if you like, Edith," said Mrs. Markham.
+
+"That will suit me very well," said Mrs. Desmond. "I will engage you
+for one month at least, Mary, and I will pay you ten dollars a month.
+Will that suit you?"
+
+"Yes, thank you," Golden answered, timidly.
+
+"Very well, you may stay now, and you may go at once to Ruby, for I
+have been compelled to lend her my own maid, for a week past, and she
+is so dissatisfied with the position that she threatens to leave me if
+she is not relieved. I can assure you that you will find your position
+no sinecure. I hope you will try to find means to amuse the child. You
+must be very kind and patient with her, Mary. I allow no scolding or
+fault-finding, for my little girl is very frail and delicate."
+
+Golden rose and stood waiting while the languid, fine lady talked.
+
+When she had ended her little speech, she pointed her white finger at
+the dressing-room door.
+
+"Go through the drawing-room," she said, "into my bed-chamber. You will
+find that it has a door connecting with the nursery. You will find
+my little daughter in there. You may introduce yourself to her. Mrs.
+Markham and I will look in presently and see how Ruby is pleased with
+you."
+
+"Try and make a good impression on the little one's mind at first,"
+said Mrs. Markham, kindly. "First impressions are everything with
+children."
+
+Beautiful Golden thanked her with a grateful look, and silently
+withdrew to follow Mrs. Desmond's instructions.
+
+"You do not seem as pleased as I had expected, Edith," Mrs. Markham
+said, in a tone of disappointment, when they were alone.
+
+"To tell the truth, I think the girl is too pretty," Mrs. Desmond
+replied, with some embarrassment.
+
+"I thought you liked pretty things about you," said her friend.
+
+"So I do, but I do not like pretty servants," was the significant
+reply. "As a rule they are vain and trifling, and do not attend to
+their business. They are always looking out to attract admiration to
+their pretty faces."
+
+"I do not believe that Mary Smith is one of that kind," said Mrs.
+Markham. "She seems a good, simple, innocent girl. But if she fails to
+suit you, Edith, you may return her to me, and I will find some other
+place for her. I imagined that you would be delighted with such a girl
+for Ruby's attendant."
+
+"And so I am, and I am ever so much obliged to you for thinking of me.
+I hope that she will please Ruby better than the girls we have had
+lately, for I feel quite worn out with anxiety over the dear little
+creature," replied Mrs. Desmond, but so constrained that Mrs. Markham
+saw that she was only half-hearted in her pleasure, and wondered why it
+was that Golden's beauty, which was so attractive to her own eyes, was
+distasteful to Mrs. Desmond, who was beautiful herself, and liked to
+gather beautiful things around her.
+
+It is said that every family has its skeleton. Mrs. Markham did not
+know that the skeleton in her friend's closet was the lurking fiend of
+jealousy. Mrs. Desmond was a charming lady, but she secretly disliked
+every pretty woman she knew.
+
+Little Golden went on through the dressing-room to the bed-chamber,
+which was a perfect bower of elegance and repose, and timidly opened
+the nursery door, for the description of little Ruby Desmond had rather
+intimidated her.
+
+She found herself in a large, airy, sunny chamber, splendidly adapted
+for a nursery, and luxuriously fitted up for that purpose.
+
+In a low rocking-chair a smart French maid was indolently lounging and
+yawning over a French novel.
+
+In a corner of the room a little girl of six years, small for her age,
+and pale and delicate-looking, was sobbing fretfully in a fit of the
+sulks.
+
+She dashed the tears from her eyes and looked up curiously at the timid
+intruder.
+
+"Who are you?" she demanded, abruptly.
+
+"I am Mary Smith, your new nurse, little Miss Ruby," said Golden, in a
+clear, sweet voice, and with a winning smile.
+
+The French maid threw down her novel and stared, and little Ruby came
+out of her corner.
+
+"So you are my new maid, are you?" she asked, pertly. "Well, I hope you
+will not be as hateful as Celine here is, for if you do I shall be sure
+to throw my top at your head. I am very glad you are come, for I am
+perfectly tired of Celine, and I want her to leave me at once--at once,
+do you hear me, Celine?"
+
+Celine flounced out of the room in a huff, and the little one continued:
+
+"There is one comfort, you are not as ugly as Celine and the others! I
+hate ugly people, and so does my papa, but mamma likes them best. _You_
+are the prettiest nurse I ever saw! You look just like my big wax doll,
+with your blue eyes and long hair. Nurses always wear their hair under
+a cap, did you not know that?"
+
+Little Golden did not answer one word to the voluble discourse of the
+spoiled child.
+
+She stood silently in the center of the large apartment, her small
+hand pressed to her beating heart, her pale lips apart, her blue eyes
+upraised to a large portrait that hung against the wall in a splendid
+frame of gold and ebony. The dark, handsome, splendid face that smiled
+down upon her was the face of her lost lover, Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+Fortunately for Golden, little Ruby Desmond did not observe the
+preoccupation of her new nurse. She had entered upon a voluble tirade
+against nurses in general, and when she had ended she remarked with a
+sudden change of tone:
+
+"But I don't believe I shall hate you as much as I did the rest. You
+are younger and prettier than any girl I ever had to amuse me. Come,
+now, Mary, lay off your hat and jacket. I want you to make my doll a
+new dress. That lazy Celine would not stick a needle in it, for all I
+stormed and scolded, and threatened to complain to mamma."
+
+Thus adjured, Golden turned her eyes with an effort away from the
+portrait of Bertram Chesleigh, and proceeded to obey the instructions
+of her little mistress with what cheerfulness she could, although her
+heart was beating wildly with the shock she had received on coming
+suddenly face to face with her lover's portrait in this strange place.
+
+She longed, yet dreaded to ask little Ruby what the original of the
+portrait was to her.
+
+Looking from the portrait to the child she could plainly discern in
+Ruby's proud mouth and flashing, dark eyes, a great and striking
+resemblance to Mr. Chesleigh.
+
+But she was afraid to ask the question that trembled on her lips, so
+she sat down mutely while Ruby brought a large wax doll and placed it
+in her lap, together with a large quantity of scraps of silk and muslin
+and odds and ends of pretty lace.
+
+Then she pulled open the drawer of a child's bureau and brought out a
+garnet silk dress of her own, elaborately made and trimmed.
+
+"I want Dollie's dress made exactly like this," she said, hanging it
+open over the back of a chair for Golden's inspection. "It is in the
+latest fashion, so Celine says. Celine thinks of nothing but French
+novels and fashions, so she ought to know."
+
+"Your doll is very beautiful. Is it a new one?" asked Golden, trying
+to say something to please the little creature who was hovering about
+her, busy and excited with her important preparations for the miniature
+dressmaking.
+
+"Oh, yes, it is tolerably new! Papa gave it to me last week," replied
+Ruby. "There was a little trunk of clothes with her, but I do not like
+any of the dresses. They are quite old-fashioned and shabby, I think.
+Mamma says herself that they must have been made at least a year ago.
+So I shall never be satisfied until I have a new-fashioned dress for
+Dollie."
+
+She was silent a moment, watching Golden's deft finger as they slowly
+cut and basted, then she resumed:
+
+"I have tried and tried, but I cannot think of a name for her. Can you
+tell me a pretty name for her, Mary?"
+
+"Would you like to call her Golden?" asked the girl, feeling as if the
+sound of her own name would be a relief in this new, strange atmosphere.
+
+"Golden! what a pretty name," said the child. "I like that. I will call
+Dollie by that name. I shall be Golden--Golden Chesleigh," she added,
+after a minute's thought.
+
+The new nurse started so violently, that the doll's dress fell from her
+fingers. The lovely crimson color rushed into her face.
+
+"Chesleigh! Why do you call her that?" she asked, falteringly. "Do you
+know anybody by that name, Miss Ruby?"
+
+The little girl laughed quite happily.
+
+"Well, I should think I did," she said, brightly. "My own uncle is
+named Chesleigh--Bertram Chesleigh. There is his portrait on the wall.
+Look at it, Mary, and tell me if he is not me very handsomest man you
+ever beheld."
+
+Golden looked up into the dark eyes that had gazed into her own so
+fondly, and at the proud yet tender lips that had kissed her with such
+passionate love, and she could barely repress the moan of pain that
+came from her lips.
+
+"Yes, he is very handsome," she said faintly. "Does he ever call here
+to see you?"
+
+"Oh, yes, often and often, when he is at home," said Ruby. "But he is
+gone away traveling in the sunny south now. He travels a great deal.
+Mamma calls him a bird of passage."
+
+"Is he fond of you?" said Golden, seeing that she was expected to say
+something.
+
+"Oh, yes, very fond," said Ruby, brightening up so much that Golden
+saw it was a favorite subject with her. "He had that splendid portrait
+painted expressly for a present to me. Mamma begged me to let it hang
+in the drawing-room, but I would not. I told her I would have it in the
+nursery where I could see it every minute."
+
+"Is he--married?" asked Golden, carelessly, to all appearance, and
+taking up her work again.
+
+"Oh, dear, no! and I hope he never will be! He loves me better than
+anyone now, but he would like his wife best if he were married," cried
+the spoiled child.
+
+Golden sighed softly and made no reply, and the entrance of Mrs.
+Desmond and her visitor interrupted the conversation.
+
+"Good-morning, Mrs. Markham. You see I have a new nurse," said Ruby,
+looking up with a faint flush of pleasant excitement on her delicate
+face.
+
+"You have to thank Mrs. Markham for bringing her to you," said Mrs.
+Desmond, glad to see a smile on the usually sullen or pain-drawn little
+white face.
+
+Ruby went forward and kissed Mrs. Markham charmingly as if she was
+always loving and sweet-tempered instead of self-willed and capricious
+as everyone represented her.
+
+"I thank you very much," she said, "I think I shall like Mary better
+than the others. She is very kind and obliging. You see she is making a
+new dress for my doll. Celine was too lazy. She would not dress my doll
+at all."
+
+Mrs. Markham gave her _protege_ an encouraging smile, and Golden
+blushed with pleasure.
+
+"She has given my new doll a name," continued Ruby, vivaciously. "It is
+Golden. Do you not think it pretty? The name would suit Mary herself
+I think, as she has such lovely curls, I believe I shall call her
+goldilocks," she added, laying her small hand caressingly on Golden's
+hair.
+
+Mrs. Markham smiled indulgently, but her friend looked annoyed.
+
+"Indeed, Ruby, you must not call her by such a silly name," she said.
+"She must put her hair up, and wear a little cup over it like a French
+_bonne_."
+
+"It is a pity to cover it up, it is so thick and long, and shines so
+bright. Mary is a very pretty girl, don't you think so, mamma? She
+looks just like my wax doll," said the child.
+
+"Pretty is that pretty does, my child," Mrs. Desmond answered, shortly,
+and Mrs. Markham, stooping over Golden, put a card with her name and
+address upon it, in her hand, and said in her kind, patronizing voice:
+
+"If you do not suit Mrs. Desmond, Mary, after she has given you a fair
+trial, you may come to me, and I will help you to another place."
+
+The quick tears brimmed over in little Golden's eyes. She kissed Mrs.
+Markham's hand in silent gratitude.
+
+"It is quite likely I shall keep her if she continues to please Ruby
+as well as she does now. But Ruby is such a capricious little darling
+there is no telling how soon this new fancy of hers may change. 'New
+brooms sweep clean,' you know," said Mrs. Desmond, quoting the old
+adage a little stiffly.
+
+Mrs. Markham made some careless reply and took her departure. She
+was vaguely conscious of a chill never felt before in Mrs. Desmond's
+manner, and resented her lack of gratitude for the service she had done
+her.
+
+"The child is so pleased and interested, it will be quite a pity if she
+sends Mary Smith away from her," the benevolent woman thought silently
+to herself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+"I am quite sure that my papa will be pleased with your looks," said
+little Ruby, artlessly, when her mother had gone out and left them
+alone to the doll's dressmaking. "He likes pretty faces as well as I
+do. He hates Celine and the chambermaid both, because, as he says, they
+are 'so deucedly ugly.'"
+
+"I suppose papa loves his little pet very much," said Golden, smiling
+sadly at the little one's prattle.
+
+"Yes, indeed," said Ruby. "He gives me oceans of pretty things. But
+I do not see him much, only an hour after dinner. You see, papa and
+mamma are both very gay. They always go out in the evening to balls or
+operas."
+
+Before the dinner hour Celine made her appearance with a large, white
+bib-apron and neat cap for Golden's use.
+
+"My mistress sent you these," she said, not unkindly. "Shall I show you
+how to use them, or do you know already?"
+
+"You will please show me," the girl answered, gently.
+
+Celine brought combs and brushes and arranged the bright, shining
+hair in a thick plait which she wound about the small head and pinned
+securely with hairpins.
+
+"_Ma foi_," she said, unable to repress an involuntary tribute of
+admiration, "you have the most beautiful hair I ever saw."
+
+"Yes, and it's a shame to put a cap on it," cried Ruby. "I think
+mamma is very unkind to me, I did not want Mary Smith's beautiful hair
+covered!"
+
+"Fie, my little lady, what a funny-looking nurse-maid she would be
+without her little cap," cried Celine, as she put the last touches to
+the bib and cap.
+
+"Thank you," said Golden, as she gave a timid glance into the swinging
+mirror.
+
+Celine noted the little incident with feminine quickness, and smiled.
+
+"Should you know yourself again?" she asked.
+
+"It makes a great difference in my appearance," little Golden replied.
+
+"But it does not make you any less pretty," declared Celine. "When
+your hair hung down it hid all your neck. Now I see that your ears are
+as pretty as sea-shells, and your neck as white as snow. You are too
+good-looking for your place, Miss Smith."
+
+"And you are too ugly for yours!" put in Ruby, sharply.
+
+"Hold your tongue, Miss Pert," said the French maid, with an ugly
+frown. "It's a deal better to be an ugly servant than a pretty one in
+this place, and so Miss Smith will find out before long. Not as I says
+it out of spite for the poor thing. She's to be pitied, being _your_
+nurse," pronounced Mademoiselle Celine as she flitted out of the room,
+seeing that Golden made her no answer. Indeed the poor girl did not
+know what to say. She was puzzled and frightened over the maid's pert
+innuendoes, but she did not in the least comprehend what she meant.
+
+When Celine was gone she looked into the minor again and then at the
+portrait on the wall. The hot tears came into the great, blue eyes and
+blinded them.
+
+"Oh, Bert," she whispered inaudibly, "would you know me, would you love
+me in this strange and altered guise?"
+
+"You must do my hair over before dinner, Mary," said the little girl.
+"I always dine with mamma and papa when they have no company. You will
+go with me and stand behind my chair while I am eating, to attend to my
+wants."
+
+Golden gave a gasp of mingled pride and dread.
+
+"Must I indeed do that?" she asked.
+
+"Oh, yes, all my nurses do that way," said the child. "Now, Mary, I
+must have my hair curled over, and dress for dinner just as mamma does,
+you know."
+
+Golden found that she had a most exacting little mistress. Although
+frail and diseased, the little creature never allowed her active mind
+and thin, little body one moment's rest.
+
+She was always flying from one thing to another, and kept everyone
+about her attending to her whims and fancied wants. Yet, in spite of
+her capricious exactions, Golden could not help being drawn to the
+child.
+
+The dark eyes, and the proud, sweet mouth so like those of the man she
+loved, won her in spite of herself.
+
+At dinner, where she stood droopingly behind little Ruby's chair, the
+master of the house did not even glance toward her, so that she had a
+fair chance to observe him from under her heavy, curling lashes.
+
+The scrutiny did not satisfy her, although she could not have told how
+it chanced, for Mr. Desmond was faultlessly handsome.
+
+He had a fair, effeminate face, full of languid passion, and those
+large, long-lashed gray eyes which can shoot the most killing glances.
+
+His hair was parted in the middle with scrupulous exactness. His dress
+was elegant to the verge of foppishness, and a magnificent diamond
+sparkled on his white hand.
+
+His wife and little daughter seemed to regard him with the most
+admiring affection, which he accepted with a bored and rather
+patronizing air.
+
+When the long and ceremonious dinner was over, little Ruby sprang down
+from her chair and caught his hand.
+
+"Come, papa, come, mamma," she cried, "you must go to the nursery now."
+
+They went away with her, and when Golden returned to the nursery later,
+she found the little girl sitting on her father's knee, and chatting
+volubly to him, while Mrs. Desmond was nowhere to be seen.
+
+Ruby jumped down from her perch and ran to Golden.
+
+"Papa," she said, evidently referring to some subject they had been
+discussing. "I will show it to you, and you will say that I am right."
+
+With a quick, deft motion, she pulled the cap from Golden's head, and
+loosened the braid so that the curling, rippling mass of gold fell in
+a shower of beauty over the girl's shoulders. Then she cried out in
+gleeful triumph:
+
+"Isn't it lovely, papa? Did you ever see such a pretty nurse."
+
+Mr. Desmond looked in amazement at the blushing, shrinking girl, and
+murmured inaudibly:
+
+"Ye gods, what a perfect beauty!"
+
+At that moment the brilliant brunette, Mrs. Desmond, swept into the
+room with a waft of exquisite perfume, her diamonds glittering, her
+rich silk and laces rustling majestically, a white satin opera cloak
+folded gracefully around her white shoulders.
+
+She looked at Golden so wrathfully that it froze the quick murmur of
+irrepressible admiration on her lips.
+
+"Girl, what does this disordered appearance mean? Why is your hair down
+after my strict orders?" she demanded, angrily.
+
+"Your daughter pulled it down, madam," Golden answered, with outward
+dignity and quietness, though she was inwardly chafed and deeply
+wounded.
+
+Mrs. Desmond turned round in a gust of passion and gave Ruby a ringing
+slap on the cheek with her white, jeweled hand.
+
+"Take that, and behave yourself better the next time," she cried,
+sharply.
+
+Ruby ran, screaming, to her father, and Mrs. Desmond cried out
+impatiently:
+
+"Come, Mr. Desmond, the carriage is waiting. Mary, put the child to
+bed. Good-night, Ruby."
+
+She bent to kiss the child good-night, but Ruby pushed her away with
+an angry scream, and ran to hide her face in Golden's skirts.
+
+Mrs. Desmond turned away, followed by her husband, who said
+reproachfully as they passed from the room:
+
+"You were needlessly cruel to the poor little thing Edith, my dear."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+
+Mrs. Desmond came into the nursery the next morning with her arms full
+of new toys as a propitiatory gift to her offended little daughter.
+
+She greeted Golden very kindly, feeling ashamed of her petulance of the
+evening before, when she saw how patiently she was ministering to the
+comfort of her little daughter.
+
+Little Ruby was suffering with a headache this morning. She lay on a
+silken lounge, with her head propped on pillows, and Golden was bathing
+the hot temples with _eau de cologne_.
+
+"Are you still pleased with your nurse, my darling?" inquired her
+mother.
+
+"Oh, yes, mamma. Mary is the kindest nurse I ever had," answered Ruby,
+lifting her heavy eyes tenderly to Golden's sweet face.
+
+"I am very glad to hear it," said her mother. "Does your head ache too
+bad for you to take your morning drive with me, dear?"
+
+"Oh, no, I think it will be better when I get out in the air," said
+Ruby, with a brightening face. "Shall we take my nurse with us?"
+
+"Not this morning, I think, as I shall drive the pony-phaeton, and
+there is only room for two."
+
+"Will not papa go then?" said the child, disappointed.
+
+"No; he has a business engagement, and cannot accompany us. You see we
+are going to the seaside next week, and he has a great many things to
+see to first," Mrs. Desmond answered, with the child's disappointment
+reflected on her own beautiful face.
+
+She loved her husband with the devotion of a strong, intense nature,
+and begrudged every moment he spent away from her side.
+
+Her jealousy was as strong as her love, and Mr. Desmond was the type of
+man best calculated to keep this baleful passion in the fullest play.
+
+He had been noted as a male flirt before he married Edith Chesleigh,
+and his conduct since their union had not been of a sort to strengthen
+his wife's faith in his fidelity. Beautiful as she was herself, she
+soon found that he was by no means blind to the charms of other women.
+
+She turned to the nurse with a suppressed sigh, and said, quietly:
+
+"You may dress Ruby now in a white hat and dress, and cardinal sash,
+while I am getting ready."
+
+Then she kissed Ruby and went to her dressing-room. Golden hastened to
+follow her instructions.
+
+"We shall go to the seaside next week and stay two months. Shall you
+like that, Mary?" asked the child, while Golden was brushing her dark
+curls over her fingers.
+
+"I dare say I shall like it, if you do," replied the girl.
+
+"Oh, we will have a splendid time. We will go bathing in the sea in
+the mornings, and afterward we will stroll on the sands, and gather
+beautiful, rosy shells. At night they have balls and dancing. Sometimes
+mamma lets me stay up awhile to see them dance. Oh, it is grand fun! I
+wish I was a grown lady," cried the child, flapping her hands.
+
+Golden listened in silence, and the strange loneliness and quietude of
+the life in which she had been reared, struck her more and more by its
+contrast with the bright, bustling world outside and beyond Glenalvan
+Hall.
+
+When little Ruby had gone away for her drive with her mother, she sat
+down in the quiet nursery and resigned herself to thought.
+
+Her thought went back to the gray, old hall in the sunny south, and the
+kind, old man she had deserted. She wondered if he would forgive her,
+and pray for her that she might find her mother.
+
+"I shall never find her now," she thought. "I have lost my money, and
+it will be a long time before I can earn enough to resign my situation
+here, and try to find her. Mrs. Markham was so sweet and kind. I wonder
+if she would help me. But, no, she would scorn me like all the rest, if
+she knew the story of my poor, young mother's disgrace."
+
+"Good-morning, little Mary. Where is my daughter this morning?" said a
+clear, musical voice.
+
+Golden looked up with a start, and saw Mr. Desmond, standing, tall,
+debonair and handsome, in the center of the lofty apartment. He had
+entered and closed the door so softly that she had not heard a sound.
+
+"Miss Ruby has gone out driving with her mother," she answered.
+
+"Ah," said Mr. Desmond. "I suppose she will not be gone long, so I will
+wait here until she returns."
+
+He drew forward a chair quite close to hers. Golden regarded him in
+surprise.
+
+"Miss Ruby was very anxious that you should go with her, but her mother
+said you had a business engagement this morning and could not find time
+to gratify her," she remarked to him, rather pointedly.
+
+He flushed, then laughed carelessly.
+
+"Oh, yes, so I did have," he replied, "I only looked in a minute to bid
+Ruby good-morning."
+
+"Yes, sir," the nurse replied, constrainedly, and looked out of the
+window. The way Mr. Desmond regarded her out of his large, bold eyes
+made her feel slightly nervous. She heartily wished that he would go
+away and leave her alone.
+
+But Mr. Desmond seemed in no haste to fulfill his business engagement.
+He sat silently a moment, regarding the delicate profile of the half
+averted face, then said, carelessly:
+
+"Where do you come from, Mary--New York?"
+
+"I am from the south, Mr. Desmond," said the girl, biting her lips to
+keep back her resentment at his familiar address.
+
+"Indeed? From what part of the south?" he inquired.
+
+"Excuse me, sir, I do not care to reveal my private affairs to a total
+stranger," replied Golden, with such sudden spirit and haughtiness that
+the fine gentleman stared.
+
+"Whew!" he exclaimed, "I did not mean any offense, Miss Smith, I
+only wished to know the precise spot where such peerless beauties as
+yourself are reared. I would certainly immigrate instanter to that most
+precious locality."
+
+Golden rose, crimson with anger, and crossed to the door.
+
+"Where are you going?" he inquired, following her and taking hold of
+her hand.
+
+"I am going down stairs, Mr. Desmond," she replied coldly, and trying
+to wrench her hand away.
+
+"Are you offended at my plain speaking?" he inquired, trying to look
+into her flashing eyes. "Surely you are aware that you are beautiful?"
+
+"If I am, it does not become you to tell me so, sir," she replied,
+resentfully. "Such compliments belong to your wife."
+
+"My wife is a beautiful woman, but not half so beautiful as you are,
+little Mary," he replied, still keeping a tight hold on her hand.
+
+"Mr. Desmond, let me go," she pleaded, the angry tears crowding into
+her soft blue eyes, "I will not listen to such words from you. You are
+cruel and unkind. What would Mrs. Desmond say if she could see you?"
+
+He started uneasily, then laughed.
+
+"She would say I was only teasing you, as I was," he replied. "Believe
+me, Mary, I was only joking you. I did not think that you would take it
+as earnest or become angry. Say that you forgive me, fair one, and I
+will release you."
+
+"Let go my hand, I forgive you," Golden replied, glad to be released on
+any terms, and shrinking from him with an utter loathing and horror.
+
+"Thank you for your pardon," he cried, laughingly. "You must seal the
+sweet pledge with a kiss, my lovely girl."
+
+He threw his arm around her struggling little form, clasping her
+closely to his breast, and pressed a full, passionate kiss on her
+loathing lips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+
+At Golden's loud scream of alarm and anger, the door of Mrs. Desmond's
+sleeping apartment opened suddenly, and Celine, the maid, stood aghast
+upon the threshold.
+
+She beheld the pretty, new nurse in the arms of her master, saw his
+handsome head bent over her as he kissed the beautiful crimson lips.
+At Celine's startled cry he turned upon her fiercely, at the same time
+releasing Golden.
+
+"What do you mean by spying upon my actions, Celine?" he demanded
+angrily.
+
+"Pardon, monsieur, I meant no offense," said the maid, as smooth as
+silk, "I but thought you were romping with little Miss Ruby, and looked
+in to behold the little one's delight."
+
+Mr. Desmond saw that it was necessary to conciliate Mademoiselle Celine.
+
+"I did come in to see Ruby," he replied, "but she had gone to ride. So
+I attempted a bit of harmless gallantry with her nurse, here, such as
+most pretty girls would have taken with pleasure, but she was timid and
+frightened at my little joke. Hold your tongue about it, Celine, and
+here's a trifle to buy you a new cap."
+
+He tossed a gold piece at her feet, and Celine picked it up, curtsying
+and smiling. Little Golden, standing apart from them, regarded the
+scene with horror and disgust.
+
+Mr. Desmond, turning suddenly to her, quailed at the look of fiery
+scorn in the beautiful, spirited young face.
+
+"Are you very angry with me, Mary?" he inquired in a subdued voice.
+
+"No words can do justice to my contempt for you," she replied, in a
+voice of cutting scorn. "How dared you maltreat and insult me so? Shame
+on you for your cruelty to a poor and helpless girl!"
+
+She was so beautiful in her anger that he could scarcely remove his
+gaze from her face. Her cheeks were scarlet, her eyes were darkened and
+dilated with anger, her lovely lips were curled disdainfully. He read
+the proud purity of her young soul in every haughty movement of her
+lithe young figure and clenched, white hands.
+
+He regarded her in silence a moment, then exclaimed with apparent
+frankness:
+
+"Mary, I will tell you the truth, and then you will be able to pardon
+my conduct. My wife told me that she had engaged you totally without
+recommendation, and we both were afraid that we had run too great
+a risk in intrusting our little darling to your care. I determined
+therefore to test you. I have done so, and I am delighted to find that
+your principles and your virtue are so steadfast and true. Are you
+willing to grant me your pardon after this explanation?"
+
+At this specious apology the simple girl looked from the hypocrite's
+anxious face to that of the maid.
+
+Celine being a woman, she reasoned, would tell her whether to accept
+this explanation or not.
+
+The artful maid gave her an encouraging smile.
+
+"Monsieur is right," she said. "He did well to test your principles,
+Miss Smith. Do not be so rude as to withhold your forgiveness after his
+manly apology."
+
+Golden, with her slight knowledge of the wicked world, thought that Mr.
+Desmond and Celine had told her the truth. She answered, falteringly,
+after a moment of silence:
+
+"Then I will forgive you, Mr. Desmond, if you will promise not to
+molest me again. Otherwise I shall return to Mrs. Markham's protection."
+
+"You must not think of leaving us. Ruby is so pleased with you that
+it would be a shame to desert her. You need not fear me. I am quite
+satisfied of your truth and worth, and my wife will be delighted when
+I tell her how nobly I have proved your virtue," said Mr. Desmond,
+hastily.
+
+Then he looked at his watch, and muttering something about his business
+engagement, hurried away.
+
+Celine looked at Golden with an odd, significant smile.
+
+"Now, Miss Smith, you understand what I meant by saying that you were
+too good-looking for your place," she said.
+
+"But I thought _he_ said, and so did you, Celine, that he was only
+testing my virtue," said poor Golden, in perplexity.
+
+"Bah! that was only master's blarney," replied Celine, airily. "Of
+course I had to agree with him, or lose my situation, and I don't
+choose to do that, for I have a good place and lots of perquisites.
+But the truth is that monsieur only invented that tale of testing you
+because he was frightened when he found he had tackled an honest girl,
+and he did not wish for the madam to get hold of it."
+
+"Then he is a wicked villain, and I shall go away to-day," cried the
+girl, indignantly, "I love little Ruby, but I will go away, I cannot
+remain."
+
+"If you take _my_ advice you will stay and say nothing about it,"
+replied the maid. "If you go to another place you are just as likely to
+encounter the same difficulty. You are too pretty to be a servant. I
+have told you that already."
+
+"But I cannot remain here and encounter the persecutions of Mr.
+Desmond," replied Golden, decidedly.
+
+"I do not believe he will annoy you again," said Celine, confidently.
+"He has found out that you are honest, and he will be afraid to pursue
+you any further. The child is so pleased with you it would be a pity
+to forsake her. You may take my word for it that monsieur is too much
+afraid of his wife to bother you again. Why, she is so jealous that if
+she knew her husband had kissed you, she would want to cut your ears
+off."
+
+Golden shivered at Celine's vivid words.
+
+"It is better I should go, then," she said, with a sigh. "I would not,
+for the world, create trouble between husband and wife."
+
+"You had better stay," said Celine. "I shall not tell of you, and you
+may be pretty sure master won't. So Mrs. Desmond need never know."
+
+"It is better I should go," said Golden, decidedly; and then she threw
+herself down upon a lounge and burst into tears.
+
+"Oh! why are women so weak, and men so cruel?" she wildly sobbed.
+
+"It's their nature," replied Celine, but Golden made her no answer. She
+only continued to weep heart-brokenly.
+
+"I am the most miserable girl on earth," she sobbed. "I wish that I had
+never been born!"
+
+The maid's curiosity was greatly excited by Golden's words. She knelt
+down by the girl and inquired the cause of her sorrow, and promised her
+her friendship and advice if she would confide in her.
+
+But in Golden's pure mind there was an instinctive distrust of Celine.
+Her ready acceptance of her master's bribe had excited her disgust and
+dislike. She answered evasively that she had nothing to confide, and
+only desired to be left in peace.
+
+"Oh, very well, miss," replied the maid, "you can be left alone, I'm
+sure, but you'll find that it's better to make a friend of Celine Duval
+than an enemy."
+
+She flounced out of the room as she spoke, and Golden was left alone
+to the companionship of her own sad thoughts. She lay silently a long
+while looking at the portrait of Bertram Chesleigh, and weeping bitter
+tears over her unhappy fate. How beautiful and life-like was the
+picture!
+
+The blissful hours she had spent with the original rushed over her
+mind, making the contrast with the gloom of the present more harrowing.
+She found herself exclaiming:
+
+ "Oh, that those lips had language--life has passed
+ With me but roughly since I heard them last."
+
+But no sound came from the lips of the false-hearted lover, who had
+given her a few hours of happiness only to leave her to the darkness of
+despair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+
+Golden had quite decided in her mind that she would rather leave Mrs.
+Desmond at once, than risk a renewal of her husband's distasteful
+attentions, but little Ruby's first words on returning from her drive,
+dispelled the idea for the present at least from her thoughts.
+
+"Oh, Mary!" the little one had cried, with childish directness, as soon
+as she entered the room. "Oh, Mary! I have heard bad news!"
+
+"I am very sorry for you, dear," said Golden, gently.
+
+Ruby looked up into the face of her uncle, where it hung against the
+wall.
+
+"Oh, poor Uncle Bertie!" she sighed.
+
+"Was it about Mr. Chesleigh, Ruby?" she inquired.
+
+"Yes," said the child. "Mamma has had a telegram from some people about
+him. He is very sick, and he is away down south at a place called
+Glenalvan Hall."
+
+Golden drew her breath heavily, and sank into a chair. It seemed as if
+an arrow had pierced her heart. She could not speak, but stared at Ruby
+with a dumb misery in her eyes, that the little one could in nowise
+understand.
+
+"Some of us will have to go to him--mamma and papa, I suppose,"
+continued Ruby. "I asked mamma to let me go, but she says it would be
+too warm for me at this time of the year in the south, because I am so
+delicate."
+
+"Is he very sick? Will he die?" inquired Golden, speaking in a strange,
+unnatural voice.
+
+"They hope not, but he is very sick," said Ruby; and at that moment
+Mrs. Desmond swept into the room.
+
+Her bright eyes looked dim and heavy as though she might have been
+weeping.
+
+"I am very sorry you have had bad news, madam," said Golden, trying to
+appear quiet and natural, though her pulse was beating at fever-heat,
+and her eyes were heavy and dim beneath their drooping lashes.
+
+"Ruby has told you of my brother's illness, then," said Mrs. Desmond,
+more gently than she usually spoke to her dependents.
+
+"Yes, madam," said Golden, faintly, unable to utter another word.
+
+"He has brain fever," said Mrs. Desmond, despondently. "Mr. Desmond
+will leave for the south to-night, and if he is no better when he
+arrives, he will telegraph for me to go to him. He is unwilling for me
+to go if it can be prevented, as it is so warm down there at this time
+of year. Besides, I am unwilling to leave Ruby, and I could not run the
+risk of taking her."
+
+She threw herself into a chair, and wept a few genuine tears.
+
+Little Golden, watching her with dry eyes and pale, mute lips, wondered
+if the sister's heart ached half so heavily and painfully as her own
+did.
+
+"Yet why should I grieve for him?" the poor child asked herself. "I
+should rather rejoice. He has forsaken and deserted me."
+
+She could find no answer to that question in her heart, save that she
+loved him. Loved him in despite of her cruel wrongs.
+
+Before night another telegram was received, saying that Bertram
+Chesleigh had asked repeatedly for his sister. So it was decided that
+Mrs. Desmond should accompany her husband.
+
+"Mary, do you think that you and the housekeeper can take care of my
+little Ruby while I am gone?" inquired Mrs. Desmond, tearfully.
+
+Golden promised so earnestly to give her whole care and attention
+to the little one that Mrs. Desmond could not help confiding in her
+promise.
+
+The child herself, though half-distracted with grief at the parting
+with her parents, promised bravely to be a good and patient girl for
+Uncle Bertie's sake.
+
+Celine was to accompany her mistress, and was in a bustle of pleasant
+preparation. The hours passed swiftly, and the time for the farewells
+soon came and passed.
+
+Little Ruby sobbed herself to sleep dismally, with her arms around
+Golden's neck, unconscious that the girl shed sadder tears than her
+own, when her little charge was peacefully dreaming.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+
+"The slow, sad hours that bring us all things ill," waned slowly, while
+Golden and Ruby waited impatiently for news of the travelers.
+
+Ruby was very restless and capricious, besides her daily headaches grew
+worse as the heat of the summer season advanced. She fretted very much
+over her postponed trip to the seaside.
+
+At length a telegram came from the travelers to say that they had
+reached Glenalvan Hall, and Mr. Chesleigh was no better. After this
+these bulletins came almost daily, but with no encouraging words. Very
+ill, and no prospect of improvement yet, was their daily burden.
+
+In about two weeks Mr. Desmond returned unexpectedly.
+
+Ruby was overjoyed. She laughed and wept together, as she hung around
+his neck.
+
+"Uncle Bertie must be better, or you would not have returned," she
+cried.
+
+But her father shook his head gravely.
+
+"No, dear, I am sorry to say he is not improving at all. Indeed the
+case is so critical that it may be weeks before your mother can return.
+That is why I have come."
+
+"Shall you go back, then?" inquired Ruby.
+
+"Yes, in about a week. Have you fretted for us very much, Ruby?"
+
+"A great deal," she replied. "Oh, papa," clapping her little hands,
+"now I know why you have come back. You are going to take me to mamma
+and Uncle Bert."
+
+"Nothing is further from my intentions," replied Mr. Desmond. "I have
+come to take you to the seashore."
+
+"The seashore--while my uncle is so ill?" cried the child, a little
+surprised.
+
+"Yes, Ruby. You must remember your own health is very frail. Your
+mother is very anxious about you. You will go to the seashore in the
+care of Mrs. Markham. Will that arrangement please you?"
+
+"Very much," smiled Ruby. "I love Mrs. Markham. Of course I shall take
+my nurse?"
+
+"Yes, of course," he replied, then inquired, carelessly: "Are you still
+satisfied with Mary Smith?"
+
+"Oh, yes, Mary is a splendid girl--I do not intend ever to part from
+her," replied the child, enthusiastically, "I am quite getting over my
+sulky spells since she came. Mary does not tease and cross me as the
+others did."
+
+Golden, who had sat sewing quietly by the window, without ever lifting
+her eyes from her work since Mr. Desmond entered, crimsoned painfully
+at thus having his attention drawn upon her.
+
+But he took no notice of her except to say patronizingly:
+
+"I am glad you have found such a treasure, Ruby. I hope she will remain
+with you. Are you willing to accompany Ruby to the seaside, Mary?"
+
+"Yes, sir," she answered, quietly.
+
+"Very well, I will go and see Mrs. Markham now. If she can go by the
+last of the week I will accompany the party and see you all safely
+settled before I return south."
+
+Golden made him no answer, thinking that none was necessary, and he
+went out to call on Mrs. Markham.
+
+It was all carried out as Mr. Desmond wished. In the latter part of the
+week he accompanied the party to the seashore, saw them installed in
+comfortable quarters, and after staying two days took leave again.
+
+During his short stay, he enjoyed himself according to his flirting
+tastes with the lively seaside belles.
+
+In her capacity of Ruby's nurse Golden was compelled to see him a great
+deal, but he treated her at all times with such subdued respect and
+delicate attention that the girl grew less afraid of him, and began
+to think that Celine was right when she said he would abandon his
+pursuit of her now that he had found out she was an honest girl. She
+did not know that Mr. Desmond's quiet respect and delicate courtesy
+was more dangerous than his former open advances had been. Still she
+was relieved when he was gone, and she was left alone with little Ruby
+and Mrs. Markham, who was very kind to the lonely girl though in a
+decidedly patronizing fashion.
+
+When Golden and Ruby had been at the seaside a month with Mrs. Markham,
+the glad tidings that Mr. Chesleigh was beginning to improve, were
+conveyed to little Ruby in a short but affectionate letter from her
+mother.
+
+ "Your dear uncle has had a great fight for his life, but the doctor
+ now says that he is likely to get well," Mrs. Desmond wrote. "If he
+ continues to improve, we shall be able to start home with him in
+ about two weeks, journeying slowly. We will join you then at the
+ seaside, as the physician thinks that a month by the sea will quite
+ restore Bertram's health."
+
+It was Golden's task to read this letter to the little six-year-old,
+whose education, owing to her extreme frailty of constitution, had not
+yet commenced.
+
+The child cried out noisily for joy at the welcome news, but Golden
+said not a word. Yet her thoughts were very busy.
+
+"I shall see him again very soon," she said to herself. "Will he
+recognize, in his sister's servant, the girl that loved him so dearly?"
+
+Then the thought came to her that he would not wish to see her again;
+she had no part nor lot in his life henceforth, by his own desire.
+
+Musing sadly by the great, moaning sea, while little Ruby gathered
+the rosy-tinted shells along the sands, she murmured to herself those
+sweet, pathetic lines of Owen Meredith:
+
+ "Oh, being of beauty and bliss! Seen and known
+ In the depths of my heart, and possessed there alone,
+ My days know thee not, and my lips name thee never,
+ Thy place in my poor life is vacant forever;
+ We have met, we have parted,
+ No name is recorded
+ In my annals on earth."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+
+In few more days Mrs. Markham received a letter from Mrs. Desmond. Her
+brother was so much better that she had quite recovered the tone of her
+spirits, and wrote, cheerfully:
+
+ "If nothing more happens, I shall be with you the first of September.
+ Bertram will be with me, and I shall also bring a very charming
+ young lady whom I have invited to spend the winter months with me
+ in New York. She is the daughter of our host, and has been Bert's
+ unwearied attendant throughout his illness. Between you and me, dear
+ friend, she is so desperately in love with my brother, that she has
+ neither eyes nor ears for anyone else. She has a younger sister whom
+ I have not invited. I do not like her. She is the most abominable
+ flirt I ever saw, and has done nothing but make eyes at Mr. Desmond
+ since we came to Glenalvan Hall."
+
+"Glenalvan Hall," mused Mrs. Markham, holding the letter in her hand,
+and drawing her eyebrows thoughtfully together. "How familiar the word
+sounds! Where have I heard it?"
+
+She puzzled over it awhile, then gave it up. In the gay whirl of
+fashionable society, she had forgotten the pretty name of the poor girl
+she had befriended.
+
+But she carried her letter into Ruby's room and read it aloud to her,
+and Golden's cheeks that had grown very pale and delicate of late, grew
+paler still.
+
+"Elinor is coming," she said to herself, in dismay. "What shall I do?"
+
+She thought at first that she would go away quietly before they came.
+
+She could not stay and face her proud cousin, Elinor, and the man who
+had loved her, and then despised her for the stain upon her.
+
+But the thought came into her mind, where would she go? She had never
+received any of her wages from Mrs. Desmond yet. If she went away she
+would be utterly friendless and penniless.
+
+She clung to little Ruby because the child loved her very dearly, and
+without her love she was utterly alone.
+
+And underlying all was a fierce, passionate longing she could not
+still, to see Bertram Chesleigh's face once more, to hear again that
+musical, luring voice, whose accents she had hung upon so fondly.
+
+A few days before the first of September, she turned timidly to Mrs.
+Markham, who was amusing herself with little Ruby down on the sands.
+
+"Mrs. Markham," she said, "will you tell me this, please? Are not green
+glasses good for weak eyes?"
+
+"I have heard so," replied the lady. "Are your eyes weak, Mary?"
+
+She looked into the girl's face as she spoke, and saw that the sweet,
+blue eyes were dull and heavy.
+
+How was she to guess that sleepless nights and bitter tears had dimmed
+their sapphire sparkle.
+
+"Are your eyes weak, Mary?" she repeated, seeing that the girl
+hesitated.
+
+A blush tinged the pearly cheek, and Golden glanced out at the
+foam-crested waves rolling in toward the shore.
+
+"I think that the glare of the sun on the sands, and on the water, is
+very weakening to the sight," she replied, evasively.
+
+"So it is. I have heard others complain of the same thing. If the
+light affects your eyes I would advise you, by all means, to wear the
+glasses."
+
+"Thank you. I believe I will try a pair," returned Golden.
+
+"Oh, Mary, you will be a perfect fright, if you do!" cried out little
+Ruby, in childish disapproval. "You have covered up all your long, gold
+hair under that ugly cap, and now, if you cover up your pretty, blue
+eyes, you will be as horrid-looking as--as--I don't know what!"
+
+"Never mind the looks, my dear," said Mrs. Markham, in her gentle way.
+"If Mary is kind and loving at heart her looks will not signify."
+
+"But I do so love pretty things," said the child, "and I love to look
+at Mary. She looks like a picture at night when she combs out her
+shining hair over her shoulders. There is not a lady at the seaside
+this summer as pretty as my nurse!"
+
+"Fie, my dear; you must not make Mary vain," cried the lady, half
+smiling.
+
+"I want to ask you a favor, Mrs. Markham," said Golden, blushing very
+much.
+
+"A favor! What is it, Mary?" asked Mrs. Markham, encouragingly.
+
+Golden glanced down at her blue cashmere dress, which had grown very
+shabby and worn during the two months she had been in little Ruby's
+service.
+
+"You see I had lost all my money when I went into Mrs. Desmond's
+service," she said falteringly, "and I have not received any of my
+wages yet, and--and I am getting too shabby to be respectable-looking."
+
+That was little Golden's plea, but the truth was that she did not
+wish her Cousin Elinor and Bertram Chesleigh to recognize her, and so
+wished to lay aside the blue cashmere which had been her best dress at
+Glenalvan Hall.
+
+"Oh, you poor child!" burst out Mrs. Markham, "why did you never tell
+me that before? I see, now; you want me to lend you the money to buy a
+new dress."
+
+"If you will be so very, very kind," faltered Golden, gratefully.
+
+"I will do it with the greatest pleasure," answered Mrs. Markham, whose
+purse was ever open to the needy and distressed.
+
+So on the first of September little Golden appeared in quite an altered
+guise. The pretty, blue cashmere that was so becoming to her rose-leaf
+complexion was laid aside, and she wore a sober, dark-gray dress, so
+long and plain that she looked a great deal taller and older. She
+had pinned a dark silk handkerchief high up around her white throat,
+thus concealing its fairness and graceful contour. She had fashioned
+herself a huge, abominable cap that hid every wave of her golden
+hair. Dark-green spectacles were fastened before the bright, blue
+eyes, and with her long, tucked, white apron, little Golden made the
+primmest-looking nurse-maid that could have been imagined. She looked
+in the mirror and decided that no one who had known her at Glenalvan
+Hall would recognize her now.
+
+But little Ruby exclaimed dolorously at her strange appearance:
+
+"Oh, Mary, you have made yourself quite ugly!" she cried, "and I had
+been thinking how I would show Uncle Bert my pretty nurse."
+
+"Oh, Ruby, you must not!" cried Golden, in terror. "Promise me you will
+not."
+
+"Will not--what?" asked the little one, surprised.
+
+"Will not show me to Mr. Chesleigh, nor tell him that you think I am
+pretty," said Golden, in alarm.
+
+"Very well, I won't," said the little one, disappointed, "but I am very
+sorry, for I am sure Uncle Bertie would be glad to know that I have a
+good and pretty nurse. He used to laugh at the ugly ones, and he said
+their faces were so horrid it was not strange they were bad tempered."
+
+"There is another thing I want you to promise me, please, darling,"
+said Golden, who was on the best of terms with her little charge.
+
+"What is it, Mary?" inquired the child.
+
+"When your uncle comes to sit and talk with you, Ruby, you must let me
+run away and stay until he leaves you."
+
+"Why should you do that?" asked Ruby.
+
+"I have some sewing to do," replied Golden, evasively.
+
+"I know, but you always do your sewing with me," said Ruby.
+
+"You see it would be quite different with a man in the way."
+
+"Uncle Bert would not bother you one bit. I cannot see why you are
+afraid of him," rejoined the child.
+
+"But I do not like men, Ruby. I do not like to be where a man is. Now,
+dear, will you excuse me?" pleaded Golden.
+
+"Yes, I will, since you insist on it," answered Ruby. "But I can't see
+what makes you hate men! Now I like them. I like papa, I like Uncle
+Bert, and I shall like my husband when I grow big enough to have one.
+Do you ever intend to have a husband, Mary?" said the child, with a
+child's thoughtlessness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+
+The beautiful color surged hotly into Golden's cheeks at Ruby's artless
+question. She turned her head away to hide the pain that made her sweet
+lips quiver.
+
+"Mary, do you ever intend to have a husband?" repeated the child.
+
+"Hush, Ruby. You are too young to talk about husbands," answered Golden.
+
+"Dear me, is my daughter contemplating marriage?" cried a gay, sweet
+voice, and, looking up, they saw Mrs. Desmond in her traveling wraps,
+dusty and weary, but looking very glad and eager at seeing her child
+again.
+
+Ruby sprang to her arms, and Golden looked on with sympathetic tears in
+her eyes at the happy reunion of the mother and child. Mrs. Desmond did
+not seem to see her until she had fairly smothered Ruby in kisses, when
+she looked up and said, approvingly:
+
+"How do you do, Mary? That is a very nice new dress--quite suitable to
+you."
+
+After a minute she said, suddenly, as if the thought had just occurred
+to her:
+
+"By the way, you have never yet received any of your wages from me.
+Here are twenty dollars for two months. I am very glad you have taken
+such good care of Ruby."
+
+Golden thanked her and took the money, but the gold seemed to burn
+the delicate palm. It was hard to be receiving a servant's wages from
+Bertram Chesleigh's sister.
+
+"Where is papa and Uncle Bert?" asked Ruby.
+
+"Papa will be here directly. Bert is very tired--he has gone to his
+room to rest. You must not go to him yet."
+
+"And the young lady, mamma--she came?"
+
+"Oh, yes."
+
+"Is she pretty, mamma? Has she blue eyes, or black?"
+
+"She is decidedly handsome, and her eyes are black."
+
+"Do you like her, mamma?"
+
+"Quite well, dear. She is very charming. I will tell you a secret.
+Perhaps she will be your auntie some day."
+
+"Is she going to marry Uncle Bert?" inquired Ruby, wide-eyed.
+
+"Nothing is settled yet, dear. But it seems probable. Bert could not
+find a more brilliant Mrs. Chesleigh."
+
+"I do not wish for Uncle Bert to marry. I shall tell him so!" cried
+Ruby.
+
+"Fie, little selfishness, you will do no such thing! He ought to marry
+and settle down at home. We should not then have to be running after
+him in every out-of-the-way place where he chooses to fall sick. Here I
+have been by his sick-bed all summer, ruining my health and missing the
+whole season by the sea!"
+
+"How gladly I would have exchanged places with you," moaned little
+Golden, to herself.
+
+"Mamma, did you like Glenalvan Hall?" inquired Ruby.
+
+"Oh, very much, though it is little better than a ruin. It must have
+been quite a grand place once. It is beautiful still in its decay. The
+owners were ruined by the late war."
+
+Oh, how anxiously beautiful Golden longed to hear one word from her old
+grandfather and her black mammy. She listened with a beating heart to
+the lady's words, but she never named the two that little Golden loved
+so dearly, and after awhile she rose and said that Celine was waiting
+for her, and she must go.
+
+Little Ruby clung to her dress.
+
+"Mayn't I go?" she pleaded, and Mrs. Desmond yielding a smiling assent,
+they went away together, and left Golden alone in the room.
+
+Alone, with her young heart full of strange, troubled joy. Bertram
+Chesleigh was here, under the same roof with her.
+
+She should see him, she should hear him once again. There was a bitter,
+troubled pleasure in the thought.
+
+She could not bear the tumult of oppressive thoughts that rushed over
+her mind. To escape them she went in quest of Mrs. Markham, and paid
+her the money she had borrowed from her a few days before.
+
+Then she went back to the room to wait for little Ruby, but the child
+was so preoccupied with her friends that she did not return to her room
+during the day.
+
+At twilight she came flitting in joyously as a little fairy.
+
+"Oh, Mary, I have had such a charming day! And you must dress me now
+in my white lace dress over the pink satin slip, and my white satin
+slippers, and embroidered rose-silk stockings. I am going to stay up
+for the ball to-night. Won't that be splendid?"
+
+Golden looked a little anxiously at the moist, flushed face and
+shining, dark eyes.
+
+"Darling, let me persuade you to lie down on the sofa and rest awhile,"
+she urged. "You have had such a busy, exciting day, that you need rest.
+To-morrow you will have one of your bad headaches."
+
+"Oh, no I am not tired one bit. And mamma and Miss Glenalvan are gone
+to dress now. I must be ready when they call for me," urged Ruby.
+
+"I suppose Miss Glenalvan is very pretty, is she not, Ruby?" said
+Golden, as she combed and brushed the little girl's long, shining,
+black ringlets.
+
+"Oh, yes, she is very pretty--she has large, black eyes, and rosy
+cheeks, and splendid hair, but she is not beautiful like you, Mary,"
+was the prompt reply.
+
+"You must not let Miss Glenalvan hear you say that," said Golden. "She
+would be displeased."
+
+"Hump!" said Ruby, carelessly, then she flew to another subject, while
+Golden trembled nervously. "Uncle Bert is looking wretchedly ill. Ouch,
+Mary, what _did_ make you jerk that curl so? His eyes are as big as
+saucers. Are you almost done? You pull my hair dreadfully. I asked
+him if he was going to marry Miss Glenalvan. He said that was a silly
+question. Mary, what has come over you? You were never so rough with my
+head before."
+
+"There, it is finished now. I did not mean to hurt you; excuse me,
+dear," faltered Golden, as she laid out the white lace dress and satin
+slippers for the eager child.
+
+"All right, I am not angry," said Ruby. "I told Uncle Bert what a kind
+girl you were, and he was delighted to hear it. I wanted to tell him
+you were pretty, too, but I didn't, as you didn't want him to know
+_that_. But I can tell you one thing, Mary, if he ever sees you, he
+will find out for himself."
+
+"What! in this great cap and glasses?" cried Golden, alarmed.
+
+"Yes, indeed; you can't hide your round cheeks, and your red mouth, and
+your dimpled chin!" cried the child, in pretty triumph.
+
+"I can keep out of Mr. Chesleigh's way, anyhow," Golden replied, as she
+buttoned the pretty dress and clasped a slight gold chain around the
+white neck of the child.
+
+"Now you are quite finished," she said. "You look very sweet, and I
+hope you will enjoy yourself very much."
+
+"Thank you," said the little girl, impulsively kissing her; then she
+added, a little pityingly: "It is a pity _you_ cannot be dressed in
+white, and go to the ball, too, Mary. Do you never wish to?"
+
+"Sometimes," admitted Golden, with her sweet frankness, and a soft,
+little sigh.
+
+Ruby studied her attentively a moment, her dark head perched daintily
+like a bird's.
+
+"I should like to see you in a ball-dress," she said. "It should be a
+white lace over blue satin, and looped with violets. You should have
+large, white pearls around your neck, and your hair hanging down and a
+_bandeau_ of pearls to bind it. It is a great pity you are not rich,
+Mary. People say that you are too pretty to be a servant."
+
+Something like a sob rose in Golden's throat and was hardly repressed.
+They had told her this so often.
+
+She was beautiful, but it had only brought her sorrow. To her, as her
+mother, had been given--
+
+ "The fatal gift of beauty which became
+ A funeral dower of present woes and past."
+
+"I am very sorry I am so pretty, Ruby," she said, sorrowfully, and the
+child answered, quickly:
+
+"I would not be sorry if I were you, Mary. Some good man will fall in
+love with your pretty face some day and marry you."
+
+Golden made no reply to this well-meant solace, for the door opened to
+admit Mrs. Desmond, followed by her young lady guest.
+
+Golden retreated shyly to the furthest corner of the room. She was face
+to face at last with her haughty cousin Elinor. She drooped her head a
+moment sadly, while a flood of memories rushed over her, then bravely
+lifted it again and looked at the young lady through her disfiguring
+green glasses.
+
+Elinor Glenalvan only glanced with careless indifference at the
+prim-looking figure of the nurse, then her large, black eyes turned
+away again, so that Golden had time to observe her with impunity.
+
+The Glenalvans had exerted themselves to the utmost to secure an outfit
+for Elinor. The result did credit to their efforts. The girl was
+certainly dazzling.
+
+She wore cream-colored _moire_, trimmed with rich Spanish lace and
+cardinal satin. Great clusters of Jaqueminot roses burned on her bosom
+and in her shining, raven hair.
+
+The costly pearl necklace that John Glenalvan had taken from Golden was
+clasped around her white throat.
+
+A throb of resentment stirred the young girl's breast as she observed
+it.
+
+Mrs. Desmond wore white lace looped with diminutive and richly-colored
+sunflowers. Her jewels were diamonds, and she was as usual brilliantly
+beautiful and graceful. Golden caught her breath in awed admiration of
+the two beautiful women.
+
+"Are you ready, Ruby?" inquired Mrs. Desmond.
+
+"Yes, mamma," said the child, blithely.
+
+All three went out then, and Golden threw a dark shawl over her head
+and went out upon the seashore.
+
+It was a moonlight night, calm and still, with that slight chill in the
+air that comes with September.
+
+She sat down, a quiet, forlorn little figure on the lonely sands, and
+watched the great foam-capped waves rolling in to her feet.
+
+Something in the immensity and solemnity of the great ocean seemed to
+calm the turbulence of the fevered young heart and whisper a gentle
+"peace, be still," to the passions that racked her wronged and outraged
+spirit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+
+As Golden had feared, little Ruby's day and night of excitement proved
+too much for her. She was unable to rise from her bed the next morning,
+being prostrated by one of her nervous headaches.
+
+To add to her ill-feeling, damp, rainy weather set in during the night,
+spoiling all the pleasant plans of the newly-arrived party for the day.
+
+Golden darkened the room, lighted a fire on the hearth, and carefully
+tended the little patient who dozed fitfully until mid-day, when she
+awakened and declared herself better.
+
+"Has no one been in to see me, Mary?" she inquired, and Golden answered:
+
+"Yes, your mamma came to the door while you were sleeping, but went
+away again, saying that she would not disturb your rest."
+
+"You may go and tell her to come now, Mary."
+
+"I think she is with your uncle just now, dear. Cannot you wait a
+little while?" said Golden. "She said she would go to him a little
+while, as you were asleep.
+
+"No, I cannot wait," replied Ruby fretfully. "Tell mamma to bring Uncle
+Bert with her."
+
+"If you have too much company your head will ache again, Ruby."
+
+"No, it will not. It is ever so much better. Why don't you do as I ask
+you, Mary?" cried the spoiled child.
+
+Golden went out without any further objection. She asked Celine, whom
+she met in the hall, to deliver Ruby's message to her mother and her
+uncle.
+
+Celine looked into the sick-room a minute later to say that they were
+engaged just at present, but would come in about fifteen minutes.
+
+"Oh, dear," fretted the ailing little one, "that is a long time to
+wait. Give me my dolls, Mary. I'll try to amuse myself with them."
+
+Golden brought the miscellaneous family of dolls and ranged them around
+Ruby on the bed, chatting pleasantly to her the while in the hope of
+lessening the weariness of waiting.
+
+"You must keep your promise and let me go out when they come," she
+said, presently, feeling that she was growing so nervous she could not
+possibly remain in the same room with Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+"Very well; you may go into the next room," replied the child.
+
+"You may leave the door just a little ajar that I may call you when I
+want you."
+
+"I hope you will not want me until they are gone out again," replied
+Golden.
+
+When the expected rap came on the door, the girl opened it with a
+trembling hand. She did not look up as Mrs. Desmond and her brother
+entered, but softly closing the door after them, glided precipitately
+from the room.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh saw the little, retreating figure in the huge cap and
+gray gown, and laughed as he kissed his little niece.
+
+"I suppose that was Mary Smith, the prodigy?" he said.
+
+"Yes, and you must not laugh at her," said Ruby, a little resentfully.
+"She is very good and sweet, and I love her dearly."
+
+There was an element of teasing in Bertram Chesleigh's nature, and
+Ruby's words roused it into activity.
+
+"She looked very prim and starched," he observed. "She must be an old
+maid--is she not, Ruby?"
+
+He expected that the little girl would grow indignant at this comment
+on her favorite, but instead of this she puckered her little brows
+thoughtfully.
+
+"I don't quite know what you mean by an old maid," she replied.
+
+"You are caught in the trap, Bert. You will have to define yourself,"
+said Mrs. Desmond, laughingly.
+
+"I don't know whether I can," he replied as gayly. "But I think, Ruby,
+that an old maid is a person who--who doesn't like men, and grows old
+and never marries."
+
+"Then my nurse is an old maid. You guessed right, Uncle Bert," said the
+child, with perfect soberness.
+
+"Why do you think so, my dear?" inquired her mother, very much amused
+at the child's notion.
+
+"Because I know it, mamma. Mary Smith hates men. She told me she did.
+She does not like to be where men are. That is why she went out just
+now. She says she will always stay out of the room when Uncle Bert is
+with me."
+
+"That is very sensible indeed in Mary," said Mrs. Desmond, with decided
+approval, while Bertram Chesleigh only laughed and said that men were
+not ogres, and he would not have eaten Miss Smith even if she had
+remained in the room.
+
+Meanwhile Golden had retreated to the sitting-room, leaving the door
+ajar as Ruby had bidden her.
+
+Every word of the conversation which had so strangely turned upon
+herself was distinctly audible.
+
+She listened in fear and trembling to Ruby's disclosures regarding
+her antipathy to men, dreading to hear some further revelation that
+would draw suspicion upon her, but the child had no idea of imparting
+anything she had promised to keep a secret, and the conversation
+gradually turned upon indifferent subjects, so that Golden, whose heart
+was beating wildly at the sound of her lover's voice, ventured at last
+on a sly peep at him through the open door.
+
+The breath came thick and fast over the sweet parted lips as she
+gazed--hardly as he had used her, the ineffable love and pity of a
+woman's heart came up to the beautiful blue eyes, and shone out upon
+the unconscious ingrate who dreamed not whose eyes were yearning over
+him with all the pain and pathos of a loving, yet outraged heart.
+
+"Oh, how pale and ill he looks," cried the poor child to herself.
+"He looks sad and altered, too. He has suffered almost as much as I
+have. Was it that which made him ill, I wonder? After all, he loved me
+dearly. But if he had overlooked the shame of my birth and brought me
+here, his sister would have scorned me. Ought I to blame him so very,
+very much?"
+
+As she asked herself the piteous question, the memory of some words
+rose into her mind--solemn words not to be lightly forgotten.
+
+"Will you, forsaking all others, cleave only unto her, so long as ye
+both shall live?"
+
+By the light of those words, Golden answered her own question. With a
+tearless sob she turned her eyes away from the too dear face of the
+false one.
+
+But though she would not look at him, she could not help hearing his
+voice as he answered little Ruby's voluble chatter.
+
+Presently the child showed him her great, wax doll, and when he had
+admired it sufficiently to please her, she said with an air of mystery:
+
+"You could not guess dollie's name if you tried all day, Uncle Bertie."
+
+"It is something high-flown, no doubt," he laughed. "It is Queen
+Victoria, or Princess Louise, or something like that."
+
+"You are quite wrong," she replied, with sparkling eyes.
+
+"Am I? Well, I have it now. You have called her Mary Smith, after your
+old-maid nurse."
+
+"No, I have not," said the little one, merrily. "I have called her
+Golden--Golden Chesleigh."
+
+In the next breath she added, quickly:
+
+"Oh, Uncle Bert, what made you start just as if someone had shot you?"
+
+"Did I start?" he inquired. "It must have been because I am very
+nervous since my illness. Well, and what did you say your elegant doll
+was named?"
+
+"Did you not understand me before? It is Golden Chesleigh--Chesleigh
+after you, Uncle Bert. Is it not a pretty name?"
+
+"Very!" he rejoined, pale to the lips. "Did you think of it yourself,
+Ruby?"
+
+"Not at all; I asked Mary for a name, and she said Golden. Then I added
+Chesleigh."
+
+Some curiosity came over him to see the good nurse who loved Ruby and
+was kind to her, but who hated men, and who had chosen for the pretty
+wax doll, the sweet and unusual name of Golden.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There came a light tap on the outer door. Mrs. Desmond rose to open it.
+Golden peeped again and saw her cousin Elinor coming in.
+
+"May I come in and see the invalid?" she asked, brightly, and Bertram
+Chesleigh answered:
+
+"Yes, do, Miss Glenalvan. Ruby is better and is holding a levee of her
+humble subjects."
+
+Elinor kissed the child and sat down as near as she dared to Mr.
+Chesleigh.
+
+She looked very bright and blooming, and her dress was as usual
+fashionable and becoming.
+
+Golden could see that Mrs. Desmond regarded her with a real fondness.
+Elinor had found out the lady's weakness and played upon it skillfully.
+
+She saw that she was jealous of her husband, and immediately affected
+an indifference to, and an utter obliviousness of the fascinations of
+the handsome Mr. Desmond, that delighted his wife and drew her heart to
+Elinor.
+
+Clare, on the contrary, had an uncontrollable propensity for flirting,
+and took a malicious pleasure in witnessing the grand lady's silent
+rage at her walks and talks, and careless enjoyment of her flippant
+husband's society.
+
+The result was that Elinor received a charmingly worded invitation to
+return to the north with Mrs. Desmond, while Clare was silently and
+chillingly ignored.
+
+She was bitterly angry at missing the trip, and sorely repented her
+weakness, but too late for the repentance to avail, while Elinor was
+transported with delight.
+
+Surely, she thought, a whole winter in New York, with beautiful Golden
+out of the way, would be sufficient for the accomplishment of her
+designs upon Bertram Chesleigh's heart.
+
+Sweet Golden read her cousin's purpose plainly in the tender glances
+she gave Mr. Chesleigh now and then, from beneath her black-fringed
+lashes, and the heart of the innocent girl sank heavily.
+
+"She will win him from me," she said, drearily to herself. "Elinor is
+so beautiful, and graceful, and brilliant, it is a wonder that he ever
+liked me better than he did her. It was but a light fancy after all,
+perhaps. He will forget it and turn to her."
+
+The thought gave her inexpressible pain.
+
+She sank upon the floor and hid her face in her hands, weeping silent
+and bitter tears while the hum of gay talk and laughter flowed on
+unheeded in the next room.
+
+So it is ever in the busy, jostling world. Sorrow and joy go side by
+side.
+
+The bridal train meets the funeral procession. Life is mingled sunshine
+and shadow.
+
+Ah, if Bertram Chesleigh could only have known what true and faithful
+little heart was breaking so near him.
+
+After awhile the brightness died from Ruby's eyes, the little face
+looked tired and wan. She said, almost petulantly:
+
+"Now I shall send you all away. Miss Glenalvan laughs so much she makes
+my head ache."
+
+"Fie, my darling," cried her mother.
+
+"It is the truth, mamma," cried the willful little girl. "I want you
+all to go now and Mary shall bathe my head until I get better."
+
+"Who is Mary? I feel quite jealous of her," said Elinor, sweetly, but
+inwardly raging at the spoiled child's "whims" as she termed them to
+herself.
+
+"Mary is my nurse," said the child, and her uncle laughingly added:
+
+"A person with antipathy to me, Miss Glenalvan. You should cultivate
+her. She must be a _rara avis_."
+
+"Do you suppose that all women admire your sex, sir?" retorted the
+young lady, spiritedly, and they left the room exchanging lively
+_badinage_, while Mrs. Desmond looked inside the other door for Golden.
+
+She saw her sitting quietly, her sweet face bent over some sewing, no
+trace apparent of the heartache she was silently enduring.
+
+"Mary, you may come to your charge now," she said with so much more
+than her usual kindness of tone that Golden's delicate lip quivered.
+Mrs. Desmond had been pleased to hear that Ruby's beautiful nurse
+disliked men and was not willing to remain in the room with one.
+
+She laid aside her sewing and went in to Ruby. Mrs. Desmond bent to
+kiss her pet, and said, fondly:
+
+"Shall I stay and bathe your head, love?"
+
+"No, mamma, I would rather have Mary," she replied.
+
+"I shall be jealous of Mary. You are so fond of her," the mother
+rejoined as she left the room.
+
+Golden put the dolls away and bathed the brow of the little sufferer
+until she fell into a deep and quiet sleep.
+
+Then she sat near the window and watched the gloomy September rain
+pattering drearily down, and the white mist rising from the sea.
+
+The door opened and Celine came in softly, and sat down.
+
+"I want to talk to you a little, Mary," she said, in her low voice.
+"Shall I disturb the child?"
+
+"Not if you talk softly," replied Golden, hoping that Celine would tell
+her something about Glenalvan Hall.
+
+She was not disappointed, for the maid said at once:
+
+"I want to tell you about a queer old black woman I saw at that place
+where Mr. Chesleigh was ill--Glenalvan Hall," watching her narrowly.
+
+Golden started and looked up eagerly.
+
+"Yes, tell me about her, Celine," she said, with repressed excitement.
+
+"Well, to begin with," said Celine, "she was a most ridiculous-looking
+old creature, full of grumblings and complaints. This old creature when
+she found I was from New York, came to me secretly, and asked me the
+oddest question."
+
+Golden, chancing to look up at that moment, met Celine's eyes fixed
+upon her with such a strange expression that her heart gave a
+frightened bound. It was evident that the maid had some suspicions of
+her.
+
+She forced a calmness she did not feel, and replied carelessly:
+
+"The blacks, you know, Celine, are very ignorant. Their questions
+appear quite ridiculous sometimes to intelligent and well-informed
+people."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+
+Celine looked cunningly at Golden, as she made her confused explanation.
+
+"You seem to be well acquainted with the character of the negroes," she
+said. "Perhaps you have been in the south."
+
+"I have," replied Golden, with sudden, pretty defiance. "It was my
+birth-place."
+
+"Where? Glenalvan Hall?" asked Celine, thinking to catch her.
+
+"I did not say that," replied Golden, coolly.
+
+"No? Well, I will tell you what that old woman--Dinah, she was called,
+asked me about a young lady."
+
+Golden lifted her eyes and regarded her bravely.
+
+"Well?" she said.
+
+"She asked me," continued Celine, "if I had seen a young girl in New
+York of about sixteen, with large, blue eyes, and long, golden curls,
+dressed in a blue cashmere dress, and hat and jacket, I told her yes,
+for her description of the lady's appearance corresponded exactly with
+yours."
+
+Golden remained perfectly silent, her eyes turned resolutely from
+Celine.
+
+"She asked me," the maid continued, "if the young girl had found her
+mother."
+
+Golden could not repress a sudden, violent start.
+
+"Aha," cried Celine, quickly. "You see I am acquainted with your whole
+history!"
+
+"You know nothing about me whatever, Celine," replied Golden, warmly,
+"and I cannot see by what right you pry into my affairs."
+
+"Oh, well, if we are so hoity-toity, we can keep our secret," returned
+Celine, scornfully, "but somebody will find that it was better to have
+made a friend than an enemy of Celine Duval!"
+
+With these ambiguous words, Celine bounced out of the room, leaving
+poor little Golden terribly frightened and distressed.
+
+She silently resolved that she would leave Mrs. Desmond the next day,
+proceed to New York, and make an effort to find her mother.
+
+Meanwhile the irate maid had gone to Elinor's room. Mrs. Desmond had
+kindly promised to allow Celine to superintend her toilet while they
+remained at the seaside, and she was waiting now for the Frenchwoman to
+arrange her hair.
+
+Celine had become possessed of Golden's secret, and she was determined
+to make capital out of it for herself.
+
+Elinor was quite chatty and confidential with the skillful French maid.
+In a very few moments while she was braiding the young lady's hair she
+had dropped a few artful hints and innuendoes that made Elinor start up
+half wild with fear and terror.
+
+"Oh, no, Celine, you must have imagined it. It is too incredible to
+believe!"
+
+"I do not ask you to believe _my_ simple word, Miss Glenalvan," replied
+Celine. "Look at the girl yourself, ma'am, and then you can tell me if
+my suspicions are well founded."
+
+Elinor looked at her blankly for a moment. The maid returned her gaze
+with unruffled serenity.
+
+"Only take a good look at her yourself, miss," she repeated.
+
+"How am I to do so without exciting her suspicions?" demanded Elinor.
+
+"Easily enough," replied the wily French maid. "Go back to the room and
+pretend to have lost some trifle. Get her to go down on her knees to
+find it and you can obtain a good look into her face."
+
+Elinor Glenalvan waited for no more. Clenching her small hands
+vindictively, and with an evil look on her handsome face, she hurried
+out into the corridor and made her way to Ruby's room.
+
+She turned the handle softly and looked in. The child lay on the bed
+sleeping peacefully, and Golden remained at the window peering out
+through the half-open blind at the dismal prospect, her red lips
+quivering grievously, her sweet blue eyes dim with unshed tears.
+
+She started up nervously as her cousin came in abruptly and closed the
+door.
+
+Elinor looked into her face and her heart grave a great, frightened
+bound. She recognized the beautiful face instantly in spite of the
+disfiguring cap and glasses.
+
+Controlling her rage by a violent effort, she observed with comparative
+calmness:
+
+"I have lost a gold cuff-button, Mary, and thought perhaps I had
+dropped it in here. Have you seen it?"
+
+Golden answered her with a shrinking negative, and Elinor continued:
+
+"I am almost certain that I dropped it in this room. Perhaps it has
+rolled beneath the bed. Will you get down and look under it, Mary?"
+
+Golden complied without a word, and Elinor had the desired opportunity
+of looking at the girl's face.
+
+In another moment, half beside herself with jealous rage, she caught
+the cap and glasses from Golden's head and face, and cried out in low,
+hoarse accents of intense passion:
+
+"Golden Glenalvan, you shameless creature, what are you doing here?"
+
+Golden sprang to her feet and looked at her heartless cousin in
+momentary terrified silence.
+
+"What are you doing here?" Elinor repeated, in a voice of raging scorn.
+"Did you wish to advertise your disgrace to Bertram Chesleigh's sister?"
+
+"Disgrace?" faltered the poor, heart-broken child.
+
+"Yes, your disgrace. It is plain enough to be seen!" cried Elinor,
+pointing a scornful finger at her cousin, who had dropped into a chair
+and hid her blushing face in her small hands. "Did you come here that
+Mrs. Desmond might learn the full measure of her brother's sin?"
+
+Golden looked up with tear-wet, blue eyes into the blazing orbs of the
+angry girl.
+
+"Elinor, I did not know she was his sister until after I came," she
+murmured, pleadingly.
+
+"But when you found it out, why did you not go away?" Elinor demanded,
+sharply.
+
+"I had nowhere to go--I was friendless and penniless. What could I do
+but stay?" moaned Golden.
+
+"You should have drowned yourself. You are not fit to live, you wicked,
+deceitful girl. So you were Mr. Chesleigh's mistress after all,
+although you swore that you were pure and innocent!" blazed Elinor.
+
+"I am innocent! I was never Bertram Chesleigh's mistress!" Golden
+cried. "I am his own true----" she stopped with a moan of anguish. "Go,
+I must not tell--I must keep my promise! Oh, Elinor, you are my cousin.
+Do not be so hard and cruel!"
+
+"How dare you claim me as your cousin?" cried Elinor, angrily, "Get up
+from the floor and stop making a simpleton of yourself. You have got to
+go away from here. Do you understand me?"
+
+Golden rose to her feet and looked steadily into Elinor's face with
+flashing blue eyes.
+
+A spirit was roused within her that quite equaled her cousin's.
+
+"Elinor," she answered, "I understand you, but let me tell you here
+and now, that I defy your commands. You have no authority over me, and
+I am the mistress of my own actions. I shall remain in Mrs. Desmond's
+service as long as I choose to do so. Your whole treatment of me has
+been such as to merit no consideration at my hands, and it shall
+receive none."
+
+If angry looks could have killed, little Golden would never have
+survived her defiant speech, for Elinor's dark eyes glared upon her
+with the deadly fury of an enraged tigress.
+
+"You will not go," she hissed. "Perhaps you think to stay here and
+resume your old sinful relations with Bertram Chesleigh."
+
+Before Golden could reply to the cruel taunt, there was an unthought-of
+interruption.
+
+Little Ruby, awakened by Elinor's angry tones, sprang upright in the
+bed, and cried out in the utmost surprise and resentment.
+
+"What is the matter? Why are you scolding my nurse, Miss Glenalvan?"
+
+Elinor turned to Ruby with an instantaneous change of manner.
+
+"Why, you little darling," she cried, with honeyed sweetness, "what
+an absurd idea! You must have dreamed it all. I was only asking Mary
+about a gold cuff-button I had dropped on the floor. I am very sorry I
+disturbed you in your refreshing sleep."
+
+She left the room before the child could challenge her plausible
+excuse, and returned to Celine.
+
+"I was right, ma'am," the maid cried, triumphantly. "I see it in your
+face."
+
+Elinor dropped into a chair, and the change in her face was quite
+striking enough to have excited the woman's exclamation.
+
+She was as white as death, her black eyes gleamed with vindictive rage,
+her thin lips were set in a cruel line.
+
+"Yes, you were right," she said, in a low, intense voice, "Celine, that
+girl must go away from here."
+
+"Did you tell her so?" asked the woman.
+
+"Yes, and," helplessly, "she defied me. Oh, what am I to do?"
+
+"She would not go for you?"
+
+"No she is determined to stay. But," passionately, "she must go, and go
+this very day. If she remains, and Mr. Chesleigh sees her, all is lost.
+He will recognize her instantly."
+
+"I expect you would give a great deal to get the girl out of your way,"
+said the maid, artfully.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+
+Elinor lifted her flashing eyes, and looked at the maid, struck by her
+significantly-uttered words.
+
+"Yes," she answered, boldly, "I would give anything I possess to anyone
+who would remove her from my path without my agency being known in the
+matter."
+
+"You would not care by what means?" asked Celine.
+
+"No," declared the young lady.
+
+Celine turned the key in the lock, and coming nearer to Elinor,
+whispered softly:
+
+"What will you give me, Miss Glenalvan, if I will have the girl driven
+out under a disgraceful ban this very night?"
+
+"Can you do it?" inquired Elinor, eagerly.
+
+"Easily," was the confident reply, "if you will make it worth my while
+to do so."
+
+Elinor revolved the words a moment in her mind. She saw that Celine's
+services would have to be amply requited, otherwise the selfish
+creature would not trouble herself to help her out of her difficulty.
+
+"You know I am not well off, Celine," she said, "but father has
+promised to send me some money this month to buy my winter outfit.
+To tell the truth I shall need every cent of it, for I've scarcely a
+decent thing to wear this winter, but if you will get the girl away
+before Mr. Chesleigh sees her, I will divide my allowance with you."
+
+
+"How much money has your father agreed to send you?" inquired the
+rapacious woman.
+
+"Three hundred dollars," replied Elinor, "and I will give you one-half
+of it if you will do me this service."
+
+She felt as if she making a very liberal offer, and was surprised when
+the Frenchwoman shook her head.
+
+"A hundred and fifty would not pay me for the trouble," she said,
+conclusively.
+
+Elinor looked at her a little blankly.
+
+"But don't you understand. Celine, that I cannot spare any more?" she
+said. "I must keep enough to buy a decent dress and hat and cloak for
+the winter."
+
+"That matters not to me," replied Celine, with the utmost indifference.
+"You must either give me the whole three hundred or I will not help
+you."
+
+Elinor was angered and amazed at the woman's shameless rapacity.
+
+"I will not do it!" she exclaimed, "I dare say Golden will go away of
+herself; anyhow, I do not intend to be fleeced so shamelessly."
+
+"As you please, miss," replied the maid coolly. She had the game in
+her own hands, and was insolently aware of the fact. "I'm not anxious
+to accommodate you, I dare say I could make more by selling my secret.
+Don't you think Mr. Chesleigh would give me a thousand dollars for
+telling him where to find his missing sweetheart?"
+
+Elinor grew frightened and acquiescent all in a moment at Celine's
+baleful threat.
+
+"Oh, Celine, don't do that," she cried, "I was only joking when I said
+I would not do it. You shall have every dollar of the money if you will
+get Golden away to-night as you said you would."
+
+"I thought I should bring you to your senses," muttered Celine, then
+she added aloud:
+
+"Thank you, miss. Are you sure that your father will send the money?"
+
+"He promised to do so without fail," replied Elinor.
+
+"And you will really hand it over to me as soon as received?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then you may consider the little marplot gone. In less than an hour
+you will see her leaving this hotel followed by Mrs. Desmond's curse,"
+replied Celine, with perfect confidence in her power of executing the
+task she had undertaken.
+
+"What do you mean? How will you accomplish it?" inquired Elinor.
+
+"Never mind about that, I will do as I said, never fear. Are you done
+with me now, Miss Glenalvan? If you are I will go to Mrs. Desmond. She
+will need me to do her hair."
+
+"You may go, Celine," replied the young lady. "Now be sure," a little
+nervously, "that you do not implicate _me_ in the affair."
+
+"Trust me for managing everything all right," was the airy reply.
+
+She went out and made her way to the dressing-room of her mistress.
+
+Mrs. Desmond was sitting before the dressing-table with a small
+jewel-casket open in her lap.
+
+She was turning over some pretty rings with her white fingers.
+
+Celine went up to the table and began to get out the combs and brushes.
+
+"Are you ready for me to do your hair?" she inquired.
+
+"In a moment," replied Mrs. Desmond. "I am looking over my rings now.
+I want to select one of the neatest and plainest for a present to
+someone."
+
+Celine simpered and coughed. She fully expected to become the fortunate
+recipient.
+
+"I must confess that I have been mistaken for once," continued
+Mrs. Desmond, half to herself. "When the girl came here first, I
+was prejudiced against her, partly because she was so pretty and
+childish-looking, and again because we had had so many hateful nurses,
+I thought she must necessarily be like them. But I was for once happily
+mistaken. She has been so humble and unobtrusive, and endeared herself
+so much to my little girl, that I must really reward her for her good
+care of my darling during my absence."
+
+"Of whom are you speaking, ma'am?" inquired Celine, green with envy, as
+the lady paused, having selected a plain, gold band, set with a single,
+shining, white pearl.
+
+"Of Mary Smith," Mrs. Desmond replied, "and I am going to give her this
+ring in token of my respect for her good character, and my gratitude
+for the really motherly care which she has taken of my dear, frail,
+little Ruby."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+
+At Mrs. Desmond's kindly-spoken words, Celine heaved a deep sigh and
+remained silent. The lady glanced up at her in some surprise.
+
+"What is the matter, Celine?" she inquired. "Do you not think I am
+right to acknowledge my appreciation of her valuable services?"
+
+The maid only sighed more deeply, casting down her eyes as if in great
+distress.
+
+"I hope you are not jealous, Celine," continued her mistress. "You know
+I have given you many such testimonials of my favor."
+
+"Yes, that you have, and I'm not jealous--not a bit, dear mistress,"
+cried Celine; "but, oh, dear, oh, dear! that you should have been so
+cruelly deceived and betrayed."
+
+"Celine, what do you mean?" asked the lady, disturbed.
+
+"Oh, my dear lady, I hate to grieve you, but I can't bear to see you
+imposed upon any longer by that shameless girl! Oh, my dear mistress,
+where are your eyes that you can't see her disgrace? Oh, how I wish I
+had told all I knew at first!" cried Celine, wringing her hands, while
+tears fell from her eyes.
+
+Mrs. Desmond sprang up and caught her by the arm excitedly.
+
+"Speak! What is it that you know?" she cried, passionately. "Have I
+been deceived in Mary Smith?"
+
+"Yes, my dear lady--most cruelly deceived!" exclaimed Celine.
+
+"But she has certainly been kind to the child. Else Ruby would have
+complained," said Mrs. Desmond in perplexity.
+
+"Oh, yes, she was kind to the child, I admit, but it was all for a
+blind. And all the--all the while--oh, Mrs. Desmond, if you could only
+understand without my telling it," cried Celine, breaking off abruptly,
+with an appearance of grief and reluctance.
+
+The passionate, jealous heart of the listener caught the artful bait
+instantly.
+
+She gasped for breath, her brilliant face whitened to a marble pallor,
+and she caught at the back of a chair to steady herself.
+
+If Celine had not been utterly selfish and pitiless she must have
+retracted her cruel lie in the face of that utter despair on the
+beautiful face of her mistress. But the greed of gold overpowered every
+other consideration in her base mind.
+
+"Celine," the startled woman broke out, "do you mean to say that--my
+husband----" she paused, and her blazing eyes searched the woman's face.
+
+"Your husband loves her--alas, yes, my poor, deceived mistress," cried
+the maid. "The deceitful creature has won his heart from you."
+
+There was a moment's silence while Mrs. Desmond groped blindly in her
+mind for some tangible proof on which to pin her faith in her beloved
+husband.
+
+"Celine, you must be mistaken," she exclaimed. "You know we have been
+away from home almost the whole time since the girl came to us. She has
+had no chance with my husband."
+
+"Alas, Mrs. Desmond, you force me to tell you," sighed Celine. "Know,
+then, that it all began before you went south to Mr. Chesleigh. The
+very day after she came I caught Mr. Desmond kissing Mary Smith, with
+his arms around her waist."
+
+"Celine, will you swear to this?" gasped the unhappy wife.
+
+"I will take my Bible oath to its truth," was the emphatic reply.
+
+"Then God help me," moaned the stricken woman. "Celine, why did you not
+tell me all this before?"
+
+"I was afraid of master's anger," she replied. "He threatened me and I
+promised not to tell. Oh, my dear lady, will you promise to shield me
+from his wrath? I could not see you so imposed on any longer."
+
+"So the affair has been going on from bad to worse, Celine?" inquired
+her mistress, faintly.
+
+"Yes, my dear mistress. You remember how anxious he was to return
+to New York and take little Miss Ruby to the seashore. It was
+all an excuse to get back to the nurse. And since we came back
+yesterday--well, I've told enough already. Are you angry with me, my
+dear, injured lady?" inquired Celine breaking off, artfully, just
+where she really had nothing more to tell, unless she had fabricated a
+wholesale lie.
+
+Mrs. Desmond shook her head and remained silent. The maid was
+disappointed. She had expected a wild outpouring of anger from the
+jealous wife, but instead she preserved an ominous quiet.
+
+Her head drooped on her bosom, her face was colorless as death, her
+wild, burning, dark eyes were the only signs of life in her.
+
+Celine was a little startled at the effect of her wickedness. She
+brought some _eau de cologne_, and tried to bathe the face of her
+mistress but was quickly motioned away.
+
+"Go, Celine, send that girl here to me," she said, speaking in a dry,
+hard, unnatural voice.
+
+The maid went out, and Mrs. Desmond waited but a moment before the door
+unclasped and little Golden entered. She paused in the middle of the
+room, and said in her gentle voice:
+
+"You sent for me, Mrs. Desmond?"
+
+Mrs. Desmond lifted her eyes and looked at the beautiful girl whom she
+believed to be the wicked destroyer of her happiness. Golden shrank
+before the withering scorn of that look.
+
+"Oh, madam, is anything the matter?" she faltered.
+
+Mrs. Desmond rose and towered above her in all the dignity of her
+insulted wifehood.
+
+"Oh, no," she said, in a low, deep voice of concentrated passion,
+"there is very little the matter--only this trifle. You have
+shamelessly robbed me of my husband."
+
+"Madam!" cried Golden, in alarm and consternation.
+
+"You need not pretend innocence--you cannot deceive me," cried the
+outraged wife. "You have won his heart, you have stolen him from me,
+and you have forever ruined my life."
+
+"Oh, madam, who has told you this dreadful tale? It is not true.
+I would sooner die than wrong you," cried Golden, with pitiful
+earnestness.
+
+"Hush, do not lie to me," exclaimed Mrs. Desmond, lifting and pointing
+a scornful finger at the shrinking form. "Your looks declare your
+shame. Go, leave the house this moment wretched creature, before in my
+madness I lay violent hands on you!"
+
+But Golden did not go. She knelt down before her angry accuser, and
+looked up at her pleadingly.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Desmond, you are mistaken! You wrong me bitterly by such a
+suspicion!" she cried, with the tears streaming down her fair cheeks.
+
+"Wrong you!" Mrs. Desmond cried, "are you not then----" she bent and
+fairly hissed the remaining words into the girl's ear. Golden threw up
+her hands with a cry of dismay.
+
+"Oh, my God, this is too horrible!" she wailed, "how can I bear it?"
+
+"Did I not speak the truth?" Mrs. Desmond demanded.
+
+"It is true, madam, I cannot deny it," replied the girl, crimson with
+burning blushes, "but I--oh, I call Heaven to witness my truth, Mrs.
+Desmond, I am nothing to your husband, I was--was--married before I
+came to you."
+
+"Then where is your husband?"
+
+"I cannot tell," faltered the white lips.
+
+"That is strange," said Mrs. Desmond, scornfully. "Has he left you?"
+
+"Yes, madam," with a pitiful droop of the fair head.
+
+"Why did he do so?" inquired the lady
+
+"I cannot tell you," Golden murmured, sorrowfully.
+
+Ah, if Mrs. Desmond had only known the truth, that it was her brother's
+wife kneeling there ashamed and dejected before her. But she did not
+dream it, and her anger rose at the girl's unsatisfactory replies to
+her questions.
+
+"I will not ask you any more questions," she said, "I do not wish to
+hear more of your weak falsehoods. Get up from there, and go. Leave the
+house now and at once, before I publish your conduct to everyone. You
+need not go to Mrs. Markham for sympathy. I shall go to her at once and
+tell her what you are."
+
+Golden stood still, staring at her blankly a moment. She was dazed and
+frightened at the shameful suspicion that had fallen upon her, and she
+did not know how to convince Mrs. Desmond of her innocence.
+
+"Oh, madam, if I could only induce you to believe that I am not the
+vile creature you think me," she cried in anguish.
+
+"Hush; leave the room!" Mrs. Desmond answered stormily. "Go, and take
+with you the bitterest curse of an injured woman. May the good God
+speedily avenge my cruel wrongs!"
+
+She crossed to the door, threw it open, and pointed silently to it.
+
+Golden obeyed the mute sentence of her lifted finger and glided out,
+a forlorn, little figure, feeling almost annihilated by the vivid
+lightning of Mrs. Desmond's angry eyes.
+
+The door slammed heavily behind her, and she walked along through the
+brightly lighted hotel corridor, for the twilight had fallen long ago.
+
+The rain was falling heavily, and Golden shrank and trembled at the
+thought of encountering the black, inclement night. The thought came to
+her--why should she go?
+
+She was ill, friendless, almost penniless. It was her husband's right
+to protect her.
+
+And here she was passing his very door. Should she not appeal to him
+for comfort in this terrible hour?
+
+Her trembling limbs refused to carry her past his door. She turned the
+handle with a weak and trembling hand and stepped over the threshold.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+
+When Golden on the impulse of the moment had entered the room that she
+knew was Bertram Chesleigh's, she stood frightened and trembling inside
+the closed door, afraid to look up at first at the man who had treated
+her so cruelly.
+
+Gathering courage at the shuddering remembrance of the terrors that
+awaited her in the darkness of the gloomy night outside, she looked up
+at last, determined to make at least one appeal to her husband.
+
+The gas had been lighted and it threw a flood of brightness over every
+object in the room.
+
+On a sofa at the further end Bertram Chesleigh lay sleeping in a
+careless position, as if he had just thrown himself down, wearied and
+overcome with fatigue.
+
+The jet-black hair was tossed carelessly back from his high, white
+brow, and the thick, dark lashes lay heavily upon his cheeks, as if his
+slumber was deep and dreamless.
+
+A small table was drawn closely to his side, littered with writing
+materials, and a pen with the ink scarcely dried upon it, lay beside a
+letter just stamped and sealed, and addressed to:
+
+ RICHARD LEITH.
+ No. ---- Park Avenue, New York.
+
+As Golden glided across the room, and paused, with her small hand
+resting upon the table, the superscription of the letter caught her
+eyes by the merest chance. She started, caught it up in her hand and
+scanned it eagerly.
+
+"Richard Leith," she read, and her voice trembled with eagerness. "How
+strange! Why is he writing to Richard Leith?"
+
+She glanced at the sleeper, but not the quiver of an eyelash betrayed
+disturbance at her presence.
+
+She drew a slip of paper toward her, and neatly copied the address from
+the letter, placing it securely in her little purse.
+
+Then she paused, turning another wistful glance from the letter which
+she still held in her hand, to the pale, handsome face of the husband
+who had discarded her because she had been born to a heritage of shame.
+
+She wondered again if Bertram Chesleigh knew Richard Leith, and why he
+had written to him, but no thought of the truth came into her mind, or
+how gladly she would have flown to the quiet sleeper and folded him in
+her loving arms, and sobbed out her gladness on his broad breast.
+
+Instead she stood gazing at him a few moments in troubled silence, the
+tear-drops hanging like pearls on her thick, golden lashes, her breast
+heaving with suppressed sighs.
+
+Then she turned and went out of the room, her first impulse to awaken
+him having been diverted into another course by her opportune discovery
+of the address of the man whom she believed to be her father.
+
+"Bertram would only despise and defy me if I appealed to him, perhaps,"
+she murmured, "I will seek my misguided mother instead."
+
+She gave him one sad, reproachful glance and hurried out of the room.
+
+As she closed the door it inadvertently slammed and awakened the
+sleeper. He started up, confusedly passing his hand across his brow,
+and looking up for the person whom he supposed had entered the room.
+
+"I distinctly heard the door slam," he said to himself. "Someone either
+entered or left the room."
+
+But as no one appeared, he concluded that someone had entered, and
+finding him asleep, had gone out again.
+
+He crossed to the door and looked out into the lighted corridor.
+
+No one was visible, and he was about to close the door again, when his
+sister Edith came suddenly in sight.
+
+He waited until she came up to him, her dark silk dress rustling as she
+moved hurriedly along.
+
+"Come in, Edith," he said. "I am sorry I was asleep when you came in
+just now. Why did you not awaken me? I was only dozing. The closing of
+the door awakened me instantly."
+
+She looked up at him in surprise, and then he saw that her brilliant
+face was quite pale, and her dark eyes had a strange, unnatural glare
+in them.
+
+"I have not been in your room since morning," she replied. "What made
+you think so, Bert?"
+
+"Someone must have come in and gone out again, for I was awakened by
+the closing of the door, and I thought at first it must have been you.
+Doubtless it was only a servant. It does not matter. But, Edith, has
+anything happened? You look pale and strange."
+
+She threw herself down into a chair, and her unnatural calm gave way to
+a flood of tears.
+
+Mr. Chesleigh was shocked and distressed. He bent over her and
+entreated her to tell him the cause of her grief.
+
+Checking her tears by a great effort of will, Mrs. Desmond told him all
+that had passed.
+
+"I will never live with Mr. Desmond again," she said, passionately,
+when she had finished her story. "Ever since we married he has outraged
+my love and my pride by his glaring flirtations, but this last affair
+is too grievous and shameful to be tamely endured. I hate him for his
+falsehood and infidelity, and I will never live with him again!"
+
+"Edith, think of the scandal, the notoriety, if you leave your
+husband," he remonstrated.
+
+"I do not care," she replied, her dark eyes blazing with wrath and
+defiance; "let them say what they will; I will not tamely endure such a
+cruel insult! You must make some arrangement for me, Bertie, for I will
+never, never live with Mr. Desmond again!"
+
+And Bertram Chesleigh, with his heart on fire at his beloved sister's
+wrongs and his brain puzzled over the best way to right them, little
+dreamed that his own weakness and wrong-doing had been the sole cause
+of her sorrow. His fiery indignation was spent upon his brother-in-law
+when it should have been bestowed upon himself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+
+"I will not go in to bid little Ruby farewell," Golden said to herself
+sadly, as she left the room of Bertram Chesleigh. "The little one loves
+me and I could not bear her grief at parting with me. I will slip into
+the next room without her knowledge, get my hat and jacket, and go away
+quietly. When I am gone, perhaps Mrs. Desmond may become reconciled to
+her husband."
+
+She did not dream that the proud woman's anger and resentment against
+her husband would carry her to the length of a separation with him.
+
+She donned her hat and jacket, and tied her few articles of clothing
+into a compact bundle. Taking them in her hand, she stole noiselessly
+out, and made her way to the lower portico of the great hotel.
+
+She paused there, a little dismayed, and looked out at the black and
+starless night with the chill September drizzle falling ceaselessly.
+She would be obliged to walk two miles through the storm to take the
+midnight train for New York.
+
+It would have been perfectly easy to have hired a conveyance but she
+had only nine dollars left in her purse after discharging her debt to
+Mrs. Markham, and not knowing how much her fare to the city might be,
+she was afraid to waste a penny in hack hire.
+
+She decided that she must walk, so, unfurling her small sun-umbrella
+as some slight protection against the beating rain, she plunged with a
+shiver into the wet and darkness of the untoward night.
+
+She groped along wearily in the dreary road, scarcely conscious of her
+physical discomfort and peril in the agonizing pain and humiliation
+that ached at her heart. She had been driven forth under the ban of
+cruel shame and disgrace.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh would hear the story of Ruby's wicked, deceitful
+nurse, and would hate her memory, little thinking that it was his own
+wretched wife, and that she had borne Mrs. Desmond's angry charge
+without defending herself, and all for his sake, because he was too
+proud to acknowledge her claim on him.
+
+The weary walk was accomplished at last, and Golden waited several
+hours in her wet and draggled garments in the fireless room at the
+station for the train that was to take her to New York.
+
+It came at last, and in a few more miserable hours she was safe in the
+city. She found, after paying her fare, that she had enough left to pay
+for a bed and breakfast at a hotel, and gladly availed herself of the
+privilege.
+
+Wretched and impatient as she felt, her overstrained mind yielded to
+the physical weakness that was stealing over her, and she slept soundly
+for several hours. Rising, refreshed and strengthened, she made a
+substantial breakfast and sallied for No. ---- Park Avenue. She hardly
+knew what she would do when she arrived there, but the conviction was
+strong upon her that she must go.
+
+She had no difficulty in finding the number. The house was large and
+elegant, with a flight of brown stone steps in front. Golden climbed
+them a little timidly, and rang the bell.
+
+The servant in waiting stared at her cheap attire a little
+superciliously as he opened the door, but when she inquired if Mrs.
+Leith were at home his aspect changed.
+
+"Oh, you are come in answer to the advertisement for a maid," he said.
+"Yes, my mistress is at home, and she will see you at once. Come this
+way."
+
+Golden followed him in silence to the lady's dressing-room. The thought
+came to her that this would be an admirable pretext for making the
+acquaintance of the Leiths, so she did not deny that she was seeking a
+situation.
+
+A beautiful, golden-haired lady opened the door at her timid knock. The
+girl's heart gave a great, muffled throb.
+
+"My mother," she thought.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+
+"Mrs. Leith, this is a young woman who has answered the advertisement
+for a maid," said the man, respectfully, as he turned away.
+
+The beautiful lady nodded Golden to a seat, and looked at her with
+careless condescension.
+
+"What is your name?" she inquired.
+
+"Mary Smith," answered the girl in a low, fluttering voice.
+
+"Have you any recommendations?"
+
+"Not as a maid, as the occupation is new to me. I have been a nurse
+heretofore, but if you will try me I will do my best to please you,"
+said Golden, anxiously.
+
+"I am very hard to please," said Mrs. Leith.
+
+She did not tell Golden that she was so very hard to please that no one
+could suit her, leaving her to find that out for herself, as she would
+be sure to do if she remained.
+
+There was a moment's silence, and Golden gravely regarded Mrs. Leith.
+She was _petite_ and graceful in form, with large, blue eyes, waving
+masses of golden hair, and beautifully-moulded features. She was barely
+thirty years old in appearance, and was richly and becomingly attired.
+
+Yet Golden shivered and trembled as she regarded the fair, smiling
+beauty. How could she look so bright and careless with the brand of
+deadly sin upon her? There was neither sorrow nor repentance on the
+smiling, debonair face.
+
+"And this is my mother," Golden thought to herself, with a strange
+heaviness at her heart. "She seems utterly indifferent at her
+wickedness. Ah, she little dreams that the poor babe that she deserted
+so heartlessly is sitting before her now."
+
+Mrs. Leith's light, careless voice jarred suddenly on her mournful mood.
+
+"Well, I will try you, Mary, for I need a maid. My last one was so
+incapable I had to discharge her. You may do my hair for me now. I am
+going to drive in the park with Mr. Leith, if his troublesome clients
+do not detain him. My husband is a lawyer, Mary, and his time is almost
+wholly engrossed by his business."
+
+"Her husband," Golden repeated to herself, as she wound the shining
+tresses into braids. "So they keep up that farce before the world.
+Poor mother! how she must love my father to remain with him on such
+humiliating terms. Is she really happy, or does she only wear a mask?"
+
+But there was no apparent sorrow or remorse on the complacent face of
+the lady as she gave her orders and directions to the new maid.
+
+The uppermost thought in her mind was how to make the most of her
+beauty.
+
+Golden had to arrange her hair twice before she was suited, and she
+tried several dresses in turn before she decided on one. She was
+inordinately vain and fond of finery, and Golden thought pitifully to
+herself:
+
+"Her beauty is the only hold she has on my father, and she is compelled
+to make its preservation the sole aim of her life."
+
+She wondered a little that no yearning throb had stirred her heart
+at the sight of her beautiful mother, but she told herself that it
+was simply because her mother's sin had wholly alienated the natural
+affection of her purer-hearted daughter.
+
+She pitied her with a great, yearning pity, but no impulse prompted her
+to kiss the dewy, crimson lips, she had no temptation to pillow her
+head on the fair bosom that had denied its shelter and sustenance to
+her helpless infancy.
+
+Mrs. Leith did not look as if she would have made a tender mother.
+
+"Have you any children, madam?" she asked, suddenly, and Mrs. Leith
+answered:
+
+"No," rather shortly, but added a minute later: "And I am glad of it,
+for I do not love children. But Mr. Leith does, and is rather sorry
+that we have none."
+
+"He is justly punished for his sin," thought his unknown daughter,
+while she secretly wondered why he had never claimed the child his wife
+had heartlessly deserted to return to him.
+
+"Perhaps she told him I was dead," thought Golden, looking at the
+beautiful woman with a strange thrill of repulsion. "Perhaps he would
+have loved me and cared for me, had he known I lived."
+
+A thrill of pity, half mixed with tenderness, stirred her heart for the
+father who had been cheated of the child he would have loved.
+
+She became conscious of a burning desire to meet her father--the man
+who had wronged her mother, and who had been wronged in turn, in that
+he had never beheld the face of his child.
+
+There was a manly step at the door, and it opened, admitting a tall,
+handsome man in the prime of life.
+
+Golden's heart gave a quick, wild throb, then sank heavily in her
+breast.
+
+She retreated hastily to the shade of a window-curtain, where she could
+observe the new-comer, herself unobserved.
+
+Richard Leith was tall, dark, and very handsome, though there
+were iron-gray threads in his dark, waving hair, and in the long,
+magnificent beard that rippled down upon his breast.
+
+He looked like a man who had known trouble and sorrow. His face was
+both sad and stern, and his dark eyes were cold and gloomy.
+
+Mrs. Leith looked up at him carelessly, and his grave face did not
+brighten at the sight of her beauty, enhanced as it was by the rich,
+blue silk, and becoming white lace bonnet with its garland of roses.
+
+"Are you ready for your drive, Mrs. Leith?" he inquired, with
+punctilious politeness.
+
+"Yes, I am just ready," she replied, carelessly. "You see I have a
+new maid; she is rather awkward, but I shall keep her until I can do
+better."
+
+Mr. Leith gave an indifferent nod toward the gray gown and white cap
+that was dimly visible at the furthest corner of the room, then he went
+out with his wife, and Golden sank down upon the carpet and wept some
+bitter, bitter tears, that seemed to lift a little bit of the load of
+grief from her oppressed bosom.
+
+After all, she had found her father and mother, and it was possible
+that she might bring them to see the wickedness of their course, and to
+seek reformation.
+
+She determined not to reveal her identity just yet.
+
+She would stay with them a little and learn more of them before she
+made her strong appeal to them in behalf of truth.
+
+She would not reproach them just yet for the blight they had cast on
+her innocent life. She would patiently bide her time.
+
+It was a strange position to be placed in.
+
+Under the roof of her own parents, unknown and unacknowledged, with her
+whole life laid bare and desolate through their sin.
+
+A hot and passionate resentment against them surged up into Golden's
+wounded heart.
+
+What right had her mother to be so fair and happy when she had sinned
+so grievously?
+
+Perhaps she would be very angry when she knew that the child she had so
+pitilessly deserted had hunted her down to confront her with her sin.
+
+"I will wait a little. I will not speak yet," she said. "I shall know
+them better after awhile, and I shall know how to approach them better."
+
+So the days waned and faded.
+
+Golden began to become very well acquainted with the beautiful woman
+whom she believed to be her mother. She was vain, frivolous, heartless.
+
+The pure-hearted girl recoiled instinctively from her. But she could
+not understand Mr. Leith so well.
+
+He was a mystery to her. Some settled shadow seemed to brood heavily
+over him always.
+
+He was engrossed with his studies and business. Golden wondered if it
+was remorse that preyed so heavily on him. She had never seen a smile
+on the stern, finely-cut lips.
+
+There was one thing that struck her strangely, Richard Leith and his
+so-called wife did not appear very fond of each other. The gentleman
+was studiously courteous, polite and kind, but Golden never saw on
+his expressive face that light of adoring tenderness she had loved to
+see on Bertram Chesleigh's whenever he looked at her. Mrs. Leith was
+totally absorbed in her dresses, her novels, and her daily drives,
+during which she excited much admiration by her beauty and her
+exquisite toilets. But love and passion--these seemed to be worn-out
+themes between the strangely-mated pair. They addressed each other
+formally as Mr. and Mrs. Leith, but Golden had noticed that the lady's
+clothing was marked "G. L." She knew, of course, that the letter
+G. stood for Golden, but when she asked her about it with apparent
+carelessness one day, the lady answered that it was for Gertrude.
+
+"She has discarded even her name," her daughter mused bitterly.
+"Perhaps she has even forgotten her old home and her deserted father
+and her little child."
+
+And in spite of herself Golden felt that she heartily despised the
+woman whom she should have loved in spite of all her faults because
+she was her mother. But some strange and subtle fascination drew her
+nearer and nearer to Richard Leith.
+
+Her anger and scorn which she had tried to foster at first began to
+dissolve in spite of herself into a yearning and sorrowful tenderness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+
+Several weeks went by, and Golden wondered very much if the Desmonds
+had returned to the city, and if the lady still held her unjust
+suspicions and jealousy against her.
+
+She often wondered as she looked at Richard Leith's stern, set face,
+why Bertram Chesleigh had written to him, and for what object.
+
+One day she heard Mrs. Leith remark to her husband that she had seen
+Mr. Desmond driving in the park alone that morning.
+
+"He looked pale and dejected--quite unlike himself," she added, "I
+wonder if his handsome wife and little daughter are at the seaside yet."
+
+"Did you not know," said Mr. Leith, "Mrs. Desmond and Ruby have gone to
+Europe with Chesleigh."
+
+"Gone without her husband," cried the lady. "How strange! Do you not
+think so?"
+
+"Not strange when you hear the circumstances," Mr. Leith replied,
+gravely. "The truth is Mrs. Desmond became violently jealous of a
+pretty servant girl, and declared she would leave him--even threatened
+a divorce. To save publicity her brother persuaded her to take a trip
+with him to Europe, hoping that time might soften her anger. You
+understand that these are not public facts, Mrs. Leith. They came to me
+personally as the Desmonds' lawyer."
+
+"I shall not repeat them," she replied, taking the gentle hint,
+good-humoredly. "Do you think she will ever be reconciled, Mr. Leith?"
+
+"I scarcely think so. Mrs. Desmond is perfectly implacable at present.
+Mr. Desmond employed me as a mediator between them, but I could
+accomplish nothing. He swears that she was unjustly jealous, and that
+there was nothing at all between him and the girl. But I could not
+induce Mr. Chesleigh nor his sister to believe the assertion."
+
+"What became of the girl?" inquired Mrs. Leith.
+
+"Mrs. Desmond drove the wretched creature away. It is not known what
+became of her," replied the lawyer; "altogether it is a very sad
+affair. Chesleigh has acted on my advice in taking his sister out of
+the country for awhile. I pity Bertram Chesleigh. He has had a bad
+entanglement himself lately which he has been compelled to place in my
+hands. But, poor boy, I fear I can do nothing for him."
+
+"He is trying to get a divorce from me," thought Golden, with a dizzy
+horror in her mind, and the bitter agony of the thought drove the color
+from her face, and the life from her heart. With an exceeding bitter
+cry she threw up her arms in the air, staggered blindly forward and
+fell heavily upon the floor.
+
+"What is that?" cried Mr. Leith, looking round with a great start.
+
+"Why, it's Mary Smith! I had forgotten that she was in the room," cried
+Mrs. Leith. "Oh, look, she is dead!"
+
+She began to wring her hands excitedly, but Mr. Leith said quietly:
+
+"Do not alarm yourself. She has only fainted I suppose. Bring some
+water and we will soon revive her."
+
+She ran into the dressing-room, and Mr. Leith bent down over the
+prostrate form and lifted the drooping head compassionately.
+
+The ugly, concealing cap and glasses had fallen off, and as his gaze
+rested fully on the lovely, marble-white face, a cry of surprise and
+anguish broke from his lips.
+
+"My God, how terribly like!" he muttered. Then, as Mrs. Leith returned
+with water and _eau de cologne_, he applied them both, without the
+slightest success, for Golden still lay cold, white and rigid, like one
+dead, upon his arm.
+
+"Is she dead?" Mrs. Leith whispered, fearfully.
+
+"I cannot tell. Ring for the housekeeper. Perhaps she may know better
+how to apply the remedies," he replied, still holding the light form
+in his arms, and gazing with a dazed expression on the beautiful,
+unconscious face.
+
+The housekeeper came, and declared, in a fright at first, that the girl
+was dead. Then she turned Mr. Leith out of the room, loosened Golden's
+clothing, and rubbed her vigorously.
+
+In about ten minutes the quiet eyelids fluttered faintly, and a gasping
+sigh parted the white lips.
+
+The housekeeper beckoned Mrs. Leith to her side.
+
+"She lives," she whispered, softly, "but she had better have died."
+
+"I do not understand you," Mrs. Leith replied.
+
+"I have made a discovery," continued the old housekeeper. "The girl has
+deceived you, madam. She is a bad lot, for all her sweet, childish,
+innocent face."
+
+"Deceived me--how?" Mrs. Leith demanded.
+
+"She is not an innocent maiden, as she appeared. Oh, Mrs. Leith, can
+you not see for yourself? The wretched creature is likely to become a
+mother in a few short months."
+
+"You are jesting. She is barely more than a child," Mrs. Leith broke
+out, incredulously.
+
+"It's the Lord's truth, madam. Faugh! the wicked little piece! A pity I
+hadn't let her die!" sniffed the virtuous housekeeper, with a scornful
+glance at the reviving girl.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+
+Mrs. Leith drew back her trailing silken skirts from contact with poor
+Golden's recumbent form as if there were contamination in her very
+touch.
+
+"I have been terribly deceived," she said, "I had begun to like the
+girl very much. She suited me more than any maid I have had for a long
+while, and I thought her quite pure and respectable. Do the best you
+can for her, Mrs. Brown, for I shall send her away as soon as she is
+able to walk."
+
+Heedless of Golden's large, blue eyes that unclosed and fixed
+themselves reproachfully upon her, she swept from the room and sought
+Mr. Leith, to whom she confided the housekeeper's discovery.
+
+The grave-faced lawyer looked shocked and distressed, unaccountably so,
+the lady thought.
+
+"I can scarcely credit it," he said. "She has such an innocent and
+child-like face."
+
+"Such faces are sometimes deceiving," remarked the lady. "This instance
+proves the fact."
+
+"What do you intend to do with the poor child!" Mr. Leith asked, with
+an unconscious sigh.
+
+"I shall send her away, of course," Mrs. Leith replied, decidedly.
+
+"Oh, _cruel, unnatural mother_!" said a faint, reproachful voice,
+behind her.
+
+She turned with a start and saw that Golden had followed her.
+
+The poor child stood trembling in the doorway, her dress in disorder,
+her beautiful hair broken loose from its fastenings, and streaming over
+her shoulders, her great, blue eyes blazing like stars in her lovely,
+pallid face, her sweet lips curled in scorn as she pointed her finger
+at Mrs. Leith, and exclaimed:
+
+"Oh, cruel, unnatural mother! Is your life so pure that you can afford
+to sit in judgment on me?"
+
+"Is the girl mad?" Mrs. Leith exclaimed, recoiling from her.
+
+"No, I am not mad, although my wrongs have been bitter enough to
+madden any human being," Golden retorted, passionately. "I am not mad,
+although your terrible sin has ruined my life and broken my heart."
+
+"_My_ sin, _mine_!" retorted Mrs. Leith, in apparent bewilderment.
+"What do you mean, girl? I am nothing to you!"
+
+"Nothing to me, oh, my God," moaned Golden, wringing her white hands.
+"Then you deny that you are my mother?"
+
+"_Your_ mother, girl, when I have never had a child in my life. Mr.
+Leith, do you not see that the wretched creature is raving mad?" cried
+the lady, retreating to his side apprehensively.
+
+Golden turned her flashing blue eyes on the white, startled face of the
+man.
+
+"She denies that she is my mother," she said. "Perhaps you will deny
+that you are my father."
+
+She saw a quiver pass over the man's pale face.
+
+"I do not understand your words," he replied, in a voice shaken with
+emotion. "Explain yourself."
+
+"I am the child Golden Glenalvan deserted at Glenalvan Hall in its
+helpless infancy, that she might return to New York and lead a life of
+shame with you," she cried out bitterly.
+
+Richard Leith's dark eyes turned on her face with a lurid gleam in
+their shadowed depths.
+
+"Hold!" he cried. "Whoever you are, you shall not malign the memory of
+poor, little Golden. She was pure as the snow."
+
+"Pure!" the girl repeated, blankly. "She was never your wife. They told
+me she lived with you in open shame."
+
+A startling change came over the face of Richard Leith. There was a
+glare, like that of madness, in his eyes.
+
+He fell backward into a chair, and the labored breath came from between
+his parted lips in strong, shuddering sighs.
+
+Mrs. Leith flew to his side, and bent anxiously over him.
+
+"Mr. Leith, what is it? What does all this mean? I am mystified," she
+cried.
+
+His heavy, dark eyes full of sorrow and despair, lifted gloomily to her
+wondering face.
+
+"It means," he replied, "that I have had a secret in my life, and that
+the time is come for you to know it. If this girl speaks truly she is
+indeed my daughter, though not yours."
+
+"Not hers!" echoed Golden, in bewilderment, as she looked at the
+beautiful woman whom she had for long weeks believed to be her mother.
+
+"Not hers," he replied, "for long before I met and married this lady,
+little Golden Glenalvan was dead."
+
+A startled cry came from Golden's lips.
+
+"Dead," she shuddered; "no, no; you are deceiving me."
+
+"Not so, as God is my judge," he replied. "But sit down, child, and
+tell me all your story. Then we may be able to understand each other."
+
+Golden glanced half-fearfully at Mrs. Leith, who stood leaning against
+her husband's chair, pale and silent, and anxious-looking. The lady
+quietly and gravely motioned her to a seat.
+
+She thankfully obeyed the gesture, for she felt ill and weary, and the
+sudden shock of learning that her mother was dead, had been a terrible
+one to her, and had almost stricken her senseless again.
+
+In low, pathetic tones, and with many tears, Golden told Richard Leith
+all that she knew of her mother, and as much as she could of her own
+lonely life, without revealing the tragic story of her unfortunate love.
+
+He listened in silence, although she could see that he was terribly
+agitated.
+
+His white brow was beaded with great drops of sweat, his eyes stared
+wildly, he bit his lips till the blood started to keep back the groans
+of pain.
+
+When she had finished he went over to her, knelt at her feet, and
+gently kissed her cold, little hand.
+
+"You are my daughter," he said, "and you are the living image of your
+mother. But until this moment, little Golden, I believed you dead. I
+wrote to John Glenalvan when my wife ran away from me, and asked him
+if she had returned to her father. He wrote back that she had done so,
+that she had given birth to a little daughter, and that the mother and
+child had both died. Then he added his curse, and threatened, if I ever
+came near Glenalvan Hall, to shoot me down like a dog."
+
+His voice broke huskily a moment. Golden looked at him eagerly.
+
+"You said your wife," she faltered. "Was my mother, then, legally
+married to you? Am I not a----" her voice broke huskily over the word,
+"a nameless child?"
+
+"Your mother was my legal wife, little one. You are my own daughter,
+born in lawful wedlock. God only knows what crafty and wicked enemy
+of mine wrote that lying letter to my poor, young wife, telling her
+that I had deceived her by a mock marriage. She was too credulous, and
+believed the lie too easily. It was not true. I can give you every
+proof that your mother was my lawful wife, little Golden."
+
+She fell on her knees, and with upraised hands and streaming eyes,
+thanked God for those precious words.
+
+Her mother had been pure and noble. There was no shadow of stain on her
+daughter's birth.
+
+Then, with a sudden, startling thought she confronted him, her white
+hands clasped in agony, her voice ringing wild and shrill:
+
+"John Glenalvan told you that my mother died. He lied! She disappeared
+very suddenly the night after I was born, and that villain declared
+that she had deserted me and returned to her sinful life with you. She
+did not die, and she did not return to you. Oh, my God, where is she
+now?"
+
+She saw that terrible question reflected on her father's face.
+
+It whitened to the awful hue of death, and he reeled backward like a
+smitten man.
+
+A faint cry came from Mrs. Leith, who had dropped heavily into a chair.
+
+"Oh, Heaven, if she is yet living, what, then, am I?"
+
+Richard Leith went to her side, and looked down at her white, scared
+face, pitifully.
+
+"Gertrude," he said to her gently, "we have both been the victims of a
+terrible wrong. When I married you several years after the loss of my
+first wife, won by your beauty, which reminded me of my poor, little
+Golden's, I honestly believed that she was dead. There is some terrible
+mystery here, and John Glenalvan is at the bottom of it. But I will
+wring the truth from his false lips, and if my lost little Golden has
+come to harm at his hands, his life shall pay the penalty of his sin!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+
+"Oh, father," cried little Golden. "Why did you lure my poor mother
+from her home. She was so young, so trusting. Why did you persuade her
+to desert her parents?"
+
+The man's pale, handsome features quivered all over with vain remorse
+and penitence.
+
+"You do well to reproach me, little Golden," he sighed. "There is no
+excuse for my sin. But I will tell you how I came to act so imprudently.
+
+"I was a struggling young lawyer, poor and proud, when I first met
+your beautiful mother during a business trip to the south. Her family,
+though reduced to comparative poverty by the late war, were proud
+and aristocratic people, and I felt quite sure that they would have
+refused me the hand of their petted darling.
+
+"I had heard so much of the pride of the southerners that I was afraid
+to ask the Glenalvans for their beautiful child. So I acted the part of
+a coward and stole her from them. The dear girl loved me well, and went
+with me willingly when I promised to take her back to them after we
+were married.
+
+"I took her to New York, and made her my true and lawful wife, but so
+afraid was I of those haughty Glenalvans that I refused to allow her to
+write my name and address to her friends. I was waiting till I should
+have acquired a fame and fortune that would make me acceptable in their
+eyes. Oh, God, how terribly my sin has found me out after all these
+years."
+
+He paused and wiped away the cold dew that beaded his high, white brow.
+After a moment he went on, sadly:
+
+"I was fast gaining prominence and a competence in my profession, when
+some base enemy of mine--as a lawyer I had some of the blackest-hearted
+enemies that a man ever had--wrote my darling a letter, defaming me
+in scandalous terms, and averring that I had deceived her by a mock
+marriage.
+
+"Poor child, she was very simple and credulous. She fell an easy victim
+to the liar's tale. She fled from me, leaving that cruel letter behind
+her, the only thing there was to hint at the reason of her hurried
+flight."
+
+"Oh, if only you had followed her then," moaned beautiful Golden.
+
+"If I only had!" he echoed. "My first impulse was to do so; but I
+had on hand a very important case, which I had staked everything on
+winning. If I managed it well my success was assured as one of the
+leading lawyers of the day. My speech for the defense was anticipated
+anxiously by many. So I suffered my ambition to overrule my first
+instinctive resolve to follow my wife, and instead I wrote to her
+brother. He sent me that lying letter that almost broke my heart."
+
+He broke down and sobbed like a woman, or rather, unlike a woman, for
+those great, convulsive moans of agony that issued from his breast
+seemed as if they would rend his heart in twain.
+
+Golden stole to his side and laid her small hand kindly on his gray
+head, that was bowed in sorrow and remorse.
+
+"I am sorry for you, my father," she said. "You have been weak and
+imprudent, but not sinful, as I thought. But, oh, my poor mother! My
+heart is torn over her wretched fate. She must have perished miserably,
+or we should have heard from her ere now. Oh, father, what shall we do?"
+
+They looked at each other with dim, miserable eyes, this strangely
+reunited father and daughter, the awful mystery of the wife and
+mother's fate chilled their hearts.
+
+He took her hand and drew her gently nearer to him.
+
+"My child, I shall go to Glenalvan Hall and confront John Glenalvan
+with his sin. I believe the whole key to the mystery lies in that
+villain's hands."
+
+"I am almost sure of it," she replied. "He hated my mother, and he
+hated me. I will go with you. What joy it will be to stand up proudly
+before him and tell him that my birth was honest and honorable, and
+that my father is a good and true man, who is glad to see me, for you
+_are_ glad, aren't you?" she asked him, pleadingly.
+
+"Yes, dear, I am very glad. I have always longed to have a child of
+my own to love. It seemed as if my heart was always yearning for the
+daughter I believed to be dead. But Golden," he looked at her anxiously
+and pleadingly as he clasped her little hand, "you have a story of your
+own to tell me before we go on the quest for your mother. The great
+mystery of love has come to you already in your tender youth. Tell me,
+my daughter, are you a wife?"
+
+The crimson color flushed into her cheeks, then receded, leaving her
+deathly pale again.
+
+Tears rose into the great, blue eyes, and trembled on the long-fringed
+lashes.
+
+Her lips parted and closed again without a sound.
+
+"Tell me, Golden," he urged, anxiously; "are you a wife, or has some
+artful villain deceived you? If so----" he clenched his hand, and the
+lightnings of passion flashed from his somber, dark eyes.
+
+A moan of pain came from the girl's white lips.
+
+"Oh, father, I cannot tell you now," she sighed. "Only trust me. Do not
+believe me vile and wicked. Perhaps I may be able to tell you the truth
+some day."
+
+As she spoke, some strange, new light flashed into his mind.
+
+She saw the startled gleam flash into his eyes.
+
+"Tell me," he cried out, hoarsely, "are you the girl that was dismissed
+from Mrs. Desmond's employ under the stigma of a disgraceful suspicion?"
+
+She covered her face with her hands and faltered "yes," in a voice of
+agony.
+
+"Was that terrible accusation true?" he demanded, in a voice so changed
+she could scarcely recognize it.
+
+"No, never! It was false, I swear it before Heaven. My trouble came to
+me before I entered Mrs. Desmond's employ," she replied.
+
+"Golden, you must tell me the name of the man who has wronged you," he
+said, sternly.
+
+"I cannot," she answered, sorrowfully.
+
+"You mean you will not," he said.
+
+"I cannot. I am bound by a promise," she answered.
+
+"It was a foolish promise. The time has come when you must break it,"
+he answered, steadily. "You must clear yourself in Mrs. Desmond's eyes,
+and reconcile her to her husband. Do you know that they are separated
+on your account?"
+
+"I heard you say so," she replied.
+
+"It is true, and I am their lawyer. Will you let me write to Mrs.
+Desmond, and tell her the name of the man who is really in fault, and
+for whose sin she has deserted her innocent husband?"
+
+"I cannot," she moaned again, in a voice of agony. "I am bound by a
+sacred promise. Bitter as the consequences are, I must keep it!"
+
+It seemed incredible to him that this frail, slight girl should hold
+her secret so resolutely in the face of the trouble it had caused.
+
+"But, Golden, think a moment," he began.
+
+"I have thought until my brain is almost wild," she interrupted,
+pitifully. "But I can see no possible loophole out of my solemn vow of
+silence."
+
+"You were wrong to take such a vow, Golden, and it is almost wicked for
+you to keep it. Do you see how much is at stake? Through your silence
+a man and his wife are divided in anger and shame, and a cloud of the
+blackest disgrace is lowering over your own head. Do you know that it
+is a fearful thing to come between husband and wife?"
+
+"I feel its enormity in the very depths of my heart," she replied,
+shuddering and weeping.
+
+"Then surely you will speak; you _must_ speak," he urged.
+
+But she only shook her head.
+
+"Not if I command you to do so?" he asked.
+
+"Not if you command me," she replied, with mournful firmness.
+
+There was a moment's silence, and Richard Leith gazed upon the girl
+with a sick and shuddering heart.
+
+A vague suspicion was beginning to steal into his mind.
+
+What if Golden was deceiving him, and Mrs. Desmond's belief were true?
+
+He reeled before the sickening horror of the thought. The dread
+suspicion seemed to float in fiery letters before his eyes.
+
+He looked at the bowed figure of the sobbing girl, and steeled his
+heart against her. She was no child of his if she could let the shadow
+of suspicion tamely rest upon her head.
+
+"Golden," he said, "think of what I must endure if you refuse to
+declare yourself. Would you have me acknowledge a child who has covered
+my honorable name with shame? Shall I take you by the hand and say to
+the world that honors me as a stainless man: 'This is my daughter. She
+has disgraced herself, and brought ruin and despair into another's
+home.'"
+
+She shrank and trembled before the keen denunciation of his words. She
+threw herself at his feet and looked up with frightened, imploring eyes.
+
+"Father, do not disown me," she cried. "I have not disgraced you--you
+will know the truth some day. Tell the whole world my piteous story.
+It may be--it may be that the telling will bring you joy, not sorrow.
+For," she said to her own heart, hopefully, "if Bertram Chesleigh
+should hear the truth, and know that I am not a nameless child, surely
+he will claim me then. He can no longer be ashamed of me."
+
+She felt that the happiness of her whole future hung trembling in the
+balance on the chance of her father's recognition of her. If in his
+anger at her obstinacy he should repudiate her claim on him, nothing
+was left her but despair.
+
+Richard Leith could be as hard as marble when he chose. His pride
+and his anger rose in arms now against the thought of receiving this
+branded girl as his own daughter.
+
+"Golden," he said, "what if I say that I will not receive you as my
+daughter unless you consent to clear up this disgraceful mystery that
+surrounds you?"
+
+"You will not tell me so--you could not be so cruel," she cried,
+fearfully.
+
+"Only one word, Golden. The name of the man who has wronged you. Tell
+me, that I may punish him."
+
+"You must not, for _I love him_," she moaned, despairingly.
+
+"You force me to believe that Mrs. Desmond was right, and that you are
+a lost and guilty creature," he said scathingly.
+
+A long, low wail came from her lips, then she bowed her head and
+remained silent.
+
+"Do you still persist in this obstinate silence?" he asked.
+
+"I must," she answered faintly.
+
+"Go, then," he thundered at her, "you are no child of mine. I refuse
+you the shelter of my home, my name, and my heart. I cannot believe
+that you are the child of my innocent little Golden. Go, and never let
+me see your face again."
+
+And with the cruel words he turned and left the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+
+Little Golden stared at the closing door through which her father had
+vanished, with blank, terror-filled eyes. To have found him and lost
+him like this was too terrible.
+
+She sat gazing before her like one dazed, with the angry words of
+her father still ringing in her ears, when a low and fluttering sigh
+recalled her to the fact of Mrs. Leith's presence which she had
+forgotten for the moment in her anguish of soul.
+
+She looked around shrinkingly at the fair woman who had taken her
+mother's place, and her mother's name, dreading to meet a glance of
+scorn, even transcending that which her father had cast upon her.
+
+Instead she met the beautiful, troubled eyes of her step-mother fixed
+upon her with tenderest pity.
+
+Mrs. Leith had been vain, careless, and frivolous all her life. She
+had never known a care or sorrow in the whole course of her pleasant,
+prosperous existence.
+
+The hard crust of selfishness and indifference had grown over the
+better impulses of a nature that at the core was true, and sweet, and
+womanly.
+
+The last hour with its strange revelations had been the turning point
+in her life.
+
+She realized with a shudder the dreadful position in which she was
+placed. She was married to a man who, in all probability, had a wife
+living.
+
+It was possible that she herself was almost as much an outcast as the
+wretched girl who crouched weeping on the floor, homeless, friendless,
+and forsaken, in the hour of her direst need.
+
+Never before had Mrs. Leith been brought face to face with a real
+sorrow. She gazed wonderingly upon poor little Golden, the course
+of whose checkered life had run as strangely as that of one of her
+favorite novel heroines.
+
+So it happened that when Golden looked timidly up expecting to be
+immediately annihilated by her scornful glance, she met only the
+gentlest pity beaming from the large, blue eyes of the unhappy woman.
+
+"Come to me, Golden," she said, and as the young girl advanced she
+asked her in a strangely saddened voice:
+
+"Are you angry with me, child, that I have filled your mother's place
+and worn her name for twelve, long years?"
+
+"No, I am not angry," Golden answered, gently. "It was through no fault
+of yours--you did not know."
+
+"No, I did not know," Mrs. Leith murmured, putting her hands to her
+eyes while the tears fell through her fingers. "I did not know, and now
+it is too late."
+
+"What shall you do now?" Golden asked her wonderingly.
+
+"I shall go away," Mrs. Leith replied, sadly.
+
+"Are you angry with my father?" asked the girl.
+
+"No, Golden, he sinned ignorantly," replied Mrs. Leith. "Therefore I
+cannot blame him. But I must go away from him, and never see him again
+until he learns the truth whether or not his first wife was living when
+he married me."
+
+Then there was a brief silence. The two women, so lately mistress and
+maid--now placed upon the same level by the equalizing hand of sorrow,
+sat still a little while looking out upon the unknown future with
+dreary, hopeless eyes. Then Mrs. Leith roused herself with an effort.
+
+"And you, Golden--where will you go? What will you do?" she asked.
+
+"God knows," the girl exclaimed, hopelessly. "I am so stunned by the
+revelations of to-day that I know not where to turn. For weary months
+the dream of finding and reclaiming my guilty mother has filled and
+occupied my thoughts. Now that I know her innocent and pure, the
+terrible mystery of her fate chills the blood in my veins. Where shall
+I look for her? How shall I find her?"
+
+Mrs. Leith looked at her compassionately.
+
+"Poor child!" she said. "You are too ill and weary to seek for anyone
+now. Leave that sorrowful quest to your father, and place yourself in
+my care."
+
+The tears brimmed over in Golden's beautiful eyes at the kindly spoken
+words of her step-mother.
+
+"Oh, madam," she cried, "you offer to befriend me. Then you do not
+believe that I am the lost and guilty creature they would fain make me
+out."
+
+Mrs. Leith's beautiful face beamed with sympathy as she answered:
+
+"No, Golden, I do not believe you are a sinner. I have a strong
+conviction that you are a deserted or discarded wife, and I will care
+for you in your forlorn situation with the tenderness of your own
+mother."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+
+Richard Leith went down to his office, and threw himself heavily into a
+chair, bowing his gray head dejectedly on his hands.
+
+His brain was almost crazed with the agony of the last hour's discovery.
+
+The sealed book of the past had been roughly torn open again, and in
+agony of soul he repented the selfish course he had pursued with the
+fair, young wife he had stolen from her home and friends.
+
+Where was she now, his beautiful, golden-haired darling?
+
+What fate had kept her from her home and friends, and from the little
+child that had come to such bitter grief in the absence of the
+mother-love that might have shielded her from harm?
+
+He sprang from his chair, and paced impatiently up and down the floor,
+while he hurriedly settled his plans. He would leave for the south that
+night.
+
+He would seek out John Glenalvan, and charge him with his sin.
+
+He would force him to unfold the mystery of little Golden's
+disappearance. Perhaps, oh, God, the villain had murdered her.
+
+If he had, he should suffer the dire punishment the law meted out for
+such wretched criminals.
+
+"But before I go," he said to himself, grimly, "I will go and see
+Desmond. If he has lied to me heretofore, woe be unto him. The base
+betrayer of my poor child's innocence shall receive no mercy at my
+hands."
+
+He threw on his hat and directed his steps to the hotel where Mr.
+Desmond was staying in preference to the grand, deserted dwelling,
+which was closed and left in the solitary care of the housekeeper
+during the absence of the family.
+
+Mr. Desmond was smoking in his luxurious parlor, carelessly habited in
+dressing-gown and slippers.
+
+His handsome, debonair face looked pale and worn, and melancholy. A
+hopeful gleam came into the listless eyes as his visitor was admitted.
+
+"Ah, Leith, so glad to see you," he cried, throwing away his cigar, and
+eagerly advancing. "You bring me news--Edith has relented?"
+
+"There is nothing more unlikely," Mr. Leith returned, with grim
+truthfulness; then he broke out with fiery impetuosity: "Desmond, for
+God's sake tell me the truth. Have you deceived me as well as your
+wife? Are you guilty of this monstrous sin?"
+
+Mr. Desmond was startled by the almost agonizing entreaty of the
+lawyer's look and voice.
+
+On the impulse of the moment he caught up a small Bible that lay upon a
+table close at hand, and pressed his lips upon it while he exclaimed in
+the deep, convincing tones of truth:
+
+"Leith, I solemnly swear to you that I am innocent of the crime laid to
+my charge, so help me God."
+
+Something in the man's deep earnestness, and in his look of suffering,
+staggered Richard Leith's doubts and fears, and made him feel that
+he had been a brute to doubt his daughter's agonized declarations of
+innocence. He exclaimed with sudden fervor and earnestness:
+
+"Mr. Desmond, it is but fair to tell you that I have found the girl,
+Mary Smith, and that she exonerates you, too."
+
+"I was sure she would, although she despises me," cried Mr. Desmond. "I
+admit that I behaved despicably to her. I tried to get up a flirtation
+with her, but she scorned me with the pride of a queen, and the affair
+went no further. I believed her as pure and cold as the snow. No one
+was more amazed than myself when I learned the truth through my wife's
+causeless jealousy."
+
+"You say 'causeless jealousy,' Desmond," Mr. Leith remonstrated,
+gravely, "but you forget that ever since your marriage you have
+persistently wounded your loving and sensitive wife by the most open
+and flagrant flirtations, thus giving her the greatest cause to doubt
+your fidelity."
+
+Mr. Desmond looked thoroughly ashamed and penitent at the perfectly
+truthful charge.
+
+"You speak the truth, I have behaved shamefully," he replied. "But I
+have had my lesson now. I never knew how much I loved and honored my
+sweet and beautiful wife until in her righteous wrath she deserted me.
+But if she will believe me this time and return to me, I will never
+offend her again by my foolish propensities. I will never even look at
+another woman. I am quite cured of flirting."
+
+He spoke so soberly and earnestly that Mr. Leith was fain to believe
+him, but he answered gravely:
+
+"Your wife is so thoroughly incensed against you, that she will never
+believe even your sworn word without additional proof."
+
+"But how can I prove it to her?" cried the anxious husband. "She would
+not believe Mary Smith's denial, and she refuses to credit mine."
+
+"There is only one way out of the trouble," the lawyer said, gravely.
+
+"And that?" Mr. Desmond asked, anxiously.
+
+"Is to find out the man who is really in fault, and obtain his sworn
+statement," Richard Leith replied.
+
+"The girl will give us the necessary information, of course," Mr.
+Desmond exclaimed, his spirits rising.
+
+"On the contrary, she obstinately refuses to do so. She makes a most
+perplexing mystery of her unhappy situation."
+
+Mr. Desmond looked uneasy and perplexed a moment, then he exclaimed,
+confidently:
+
+"It is only a question of blackmail then. She will tell the truth if a
+golden bribe is offered her. Depend upon it, she is only waiting for
+that."
+
+"You are mistaken," Richard Leith returned, gravely. "You do not
+understand her motives. I will tell you a harrowing secret, Desmond. I
+have discovered that that unfortunate girl is my own daughter!"
+
+In a few eloquent words he told Mr. Desmond the story of his strange
+marriage, and its tragic _denouement_--the lost wife, the ruined
+daughter.
+
+In his own despair and agitation, it did not seem strange to the lawyer
+that his excitement was reflected on the face of his listener, but
+when he had finished his story, Desmond sprang wildly to his feet,
+exclaiming:
+
+"Good God, Leith, I can lay my hand on the destroyer of your child. It
+is my wife's brother--it is Bertram Chesleigh!"
+
+"Heaven, how blind I have been!" Richard Leith exclaimed, with lurid
+eyes, and a deathly-pale face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+
+There was a moment's silence, then Mr. Leith said, huskily:
+
+"Tell me how this fact came to your knowledge, Desmond."
+
+"Do you remember the sudden trip my wife and I took to Florida last
+summer?"
+
+"Yes, I heard of it," the lawyer replied.
+
+"I will go back a few months previous to that trip." Mr. Desmond said.
+
+"It was this winter a year previous that Bertram Chesleigh made the
+acquaintance of young Frederick Glenalvan in New York and was invited
+by him to visit his far-away Floridian home.
+
+"About the first of last June Bert accepted the invitation, and spent
+about two weeks at Glenalvan Hall.
+
+"He wrote to my wife from there, hinting vaguely at having lost his
+heart to a perfect 'pearl of beauty.'
+
+"Edith, who is excessively proud, and mortally afraid of a
+_mesalliance_, replied to him coolly, discountenancing the idea and
+begging him not to marry out of his own state.
+
+"Between you and me, Leith, I believe she had a great heiress booked
+for the young fellow in New York."
+
+He paused for breath, but at Richard Leith's look of impatience, went
+on hastily:
+
+"Bertram did not reply to his sister's letter, but in the latter part
+of the same month Fred Glenalvan wrote us that Bertram was lying ill
+with brain fever.
+
+"We went to him at once and found him not expected to live, He was
+delirious, and through all his illness he called incessantly on one
+name. Morning, noon and night it was always, 'Golden, Golden, Golden.'"
+
+A groan forced itself through Richard Leith's rigid lips, but he did
+not speak, and Mr. Desmond continued:
+
+"That cry for Golden was always coupled with a wild appeal for
+forgiveness for some wrong, the nature of which we could not determine.
+
+"My curiosity and that of my wife were powerfully excited, and we
+wondered who the Golden was that he called upon, and why she never came.
+
+"It was quite evident that the Glenalvans did not care to divulge
+the secret, so we never presumed to ask, but when Bertram grew
+convalescent Edith inquired of him, and he told her the truth."
+
+"Let me hear it," said Richard Leith, gaspingly, while the knotted
+veins stood out like cords on his forehead.
+
+"It was the same story your daughter told you--that of a fair young
+girl kept aloof from her kind, slighted and scorned for no visible
+fault."
+
+"Bertram met and loved her. They had some secret meetings by night in
+one of which they were discovered, and in the scene that followed, the
+fact was disclosed that the girl was illegitimate."
+
+"Oh, my weakness, my sin!" groaned the wretched listener. "Curses upon
+John Glenalvan for his horrible villainy."
+
+"Bertram declared that he had only entertained the most honorable
+feelings toward the girl," said Mr. Desmond, "but he confessed that
+the knowledge of her parentage so staggered him that he was induced to
+forsake her. He left Glenalvan Hall before daylight without seeing her
+again."
+
+"The cowardly cur!" Richard Leith exclaimed, clenching his hands until
+the purple nails sunk into the quivering flesh.
+
+"Hear me out," said Mr. Desmond, quickly, "before you judge him too
+hardly."
+
+"I am listening," answered Richard Leith, trying to master his surging
+passions beneath an appearance of calmness. "I am listening, but what
+more can there be to say, Mr. Desmond?"
+
+"This, Mr. Leith: Bertram went away, determined to forsake the hapless
+girl, but his love and remorse, and the overpowering cause of shame,
+urged his return so powerfully that in three days he returned to
+Glenalvan Hall with the full intention of marrying the girl at once,
+and taking her abroad with him where no one knew her unfortunate story.
+
+"When he reached there she was gone--none knew whither. John Glenalvan
+told him that she had gone away with the boldly-avowed intention of
+leading a life of sin with her mother. Poor Bertram had suffered so
+much that he could not bear that crowning blow. He staggered and fell
+like a log at the villain's feet. A brain fever followed that nearly
+cost him his life."
+
+"One more score is added to my terrible list against John Glenalvan,"
+Richard Leith muttered darkly.
+
+"I have no more to say," continued Mr. Desmond, "except that all the
+circumstances point unerringly at Bertram Chesleigh as the man who
+wronged your daughter."
+
+"You are right," groaned the unhappy father. "Oh, God, if only she had
+remained at Glenalvan Hall that he might have made reparation for his
+sin!"
+
+"Did not Bertram write to you in relation to the unfortunate affair? He
+mentioned an intention to do so," said Mr. Desmond.
+
+"Only a letter so cautiously worded that I could gain no clew to the
+real truth," replied Richard Leith. "No names were mentioned. He only
+described the girl who was supposed to have entered some one of the
+many nameless houses in this city. He wished me to reclaim her, if
+possible, provide her a home, and he agreed to make her a generous
+allowance."
+
+"Poor Bert," said Mr. Desmond, "and all the while she was in his
+sister's employ, and in reach of his hand, if he had only known it."
+
+There was a moment's heavy silence; then Richard Leith rose hastily.
+
+"I must go home now," he said. "I--may God forgive me--I was so
+maddened by my child's wrongs and my own suspicions that I refused to
+own her; I drove her away from her rightful home. Pray God that she
+be not gone. If she has, I must bring her back and tell her that I
+know her whole sad story, and I must make the best I can of her poor,
+blighted life."
+
+"Shall you write to Bertram Chesleigh?" inquired Desmond.
+
+"Yes, for they must know that they have wronged you, and that you are
+innocent," replied the lawyer. "And, Desmond, you must write to your
+wife. I will inclose your letter with mine, otherwise, in her pride and
+anger, she might return it unopened. I thank God that your fidelity is
+vindicated, and that your reunion is now insured."
+
+"I have a better plan than writing to her," said Desmond, blushing like
+a school-girl. "I will follow your letter to her brother, and plead
+my cause in person. I cannot wait, Leith; I am too impatient. I long
+to meet my wife and child again. You will give me their address? The
+_Europa_ sails to-night. I must go with her."
+
+Mr. Leith saw no objection to the plan. He was sorry for the impatient
+husband who had received a lesson that would last a life-time.
+
+He gave him his wife's address in Italy, with his cordial good wishes
+and went away to seek his wronged, unhappy daughter.
+
+"She cannot have gone yet. She was to weak and ill to have gone to-day.
+She would have waited until she was better," he kept whispering to his
+reproachful heart as he hurried along.
+
+Then he thought of the beautiful, fashionable woman who had taken the
+place of little Golden's mother, and worn her name for twelve long
+years.
+
+"Poor Gertrude," he murmured sadly. "I wonder how she bears it. Perhaps
+she will not grieve much. She does not love me as she did when I first
+made her my wife. Perhaps I am to blame. I have chilled her tender
+nature by my carelessness or coldness, for I have never loved her as I
+did my lost little Golden."
+
+He hurried up the marble steps and ran impatiently along the hall,
+stumbling against the housekeeper, who was pacing sedately along with a
+little basket of keys.
+
+As he was rushing past her she stopped and called to him.
+
+"Mistress and her maid are gone away, sir."
+
+"Where?" he inquired, pausing and looking back in bewildered surprise.
+
+"I cannot tell you, for I do not know," the woman replied,
+respectfully. "But she bade me say that she left a letter for you on
+her dressing-table."
+
+He ran up to Mrs. Leith's dressing-room, and found it in some slight
+disorder, as if traveling bags had been hurriedly packed.
+
+Amid the dainty litter of the dressing-table he saw a square envelope
+addressed to himself, and hurriedly tore it open.
+
+His gaze ran over the few pathetic words daintily penciled on the
+perfumed, satiny sheet.
+
+"Richard," she wrote. "I have gone away from you. I have long felt that
+I had but a small share in your heart, and now I know that I have,
+perhaps, no right to your name, and no place in your home. So it is
+best that I should leave you. I have taken little Golden with me. There
+is one thing, at least, that I can do. I can be a mother to the child
+whose father has disowned her, and whose mother is so tragically lost.
+
+"You were wrong, Richard. The child has been wronged, but I believe
+that she is innocent. I have loved you more than you knew; perhaps more
+than you cared, and for your sake I will care for your forlorn child.
+You will not seek for us. We are companions in misery, and you will
+respect our grief. I cannot tell you where we shall go. But if you find
+little Golden's mother I shall know it, and the mother shall have her
+child."
+
+With the simple name, "Gertrude," the letter ended; Richard Leith
+reread it slowly, filled with a great surprise and wonder.
+
+"She will care for the child I treated so heartlessly," he murmured.
+"God bless her. I did not know that Gertrude could be so true and
+noble. I have wronged her indeed, and she has worn the mask of
+carelessness and frivolity over a wounded heart. Oh, God, if I only
+knew where to find them."
+
+He almost cursed himself for his cruelty to his wronged and miserable
+daughter.
+
+He remembered how young she was, and how ignorant of the world when
+Bertram Chesleigh had won her heart. Perhaps she was not to blame.
+His wrath waxed hot against the man who had betrayed her guileless
+innocence.
+
+He went down and asked the housekeeper if Mrs. Leith had gone away in
+the carriage, and she answered that the lady had walked, and the maid
+had accompanied her.
+
+"I cannot go south until I have found them," he said to himself, sadly.
+"Poor little Golden, poor Gertrude."
+
+Before the next day he had visited every depot and every wharf by which
+they might have left the city, but he had learned nothing. The next day
+after he inserted a personal in the _Herald_:
+
+ "TO GERTRUDE:--Return with Golden. Her true story is known and she is
+ freely forgiven. Anxiously, R. L."
+
+But the two for whom that yearning cry was written were fated never to
+behold it. And the dreary winter days came and went while he waited for
+tidings, filled with the heart-sickness of a great despair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.
+
+
+While the winter snow still whirled in blinding drifts through the
+streets of New York, the sun shone, the flowers bloomed, the birds sang
+around old Glenalvan Hall in far-away Florida.
+
+Old Dinah crooned her quaint revival hymns in the sunny doorway of the
+kitchen, and her old master dozed in the bright, bay-window among the
+pots of fragrant flowers.
+
+It was February, and hints of the nearing spring were in the air that
+sighed softly among the flowers, and lifted the thin, white locks from
+the brow of old Hugh, as his weary head lay resting on the back of his
+easy-chair.
+
+Very thin, and sad, and mournful looked the old man as he sat in his
+easy-chair, with his lonely thoughts fixed ever on the past. He was old
+and weary. Life held no charm for him now.
+
+One thought of the last lonely sheaf waiting for the reaper as he sat
+with his withered hands folded, and that look of patient grief on his
+thin, white, aged face.
+
+"Oh, my lost little Golden," he murmured aloud: "She tarries long. The
+quest for her mother is a weary one. Oh, that God would give me back
+the mother and child, both innocent and pure as when I lost them."
+
+A sudden shadow fell between him and the light. He looked up and saw a
+man standing before him, a man with a pale, worn, troubled face, and
+dark eyes that held the story of a tragedy in their somber depths.
+
+"Pardon," he said, "I have ventured unannounced into your presence. My
+name is Richard Leith."
+
+The old man stared at him with dim, unrecognizing eyes. That name
+conveyed no meaning to his mind. He had never heard it before.
+
+"You are a stranger," he said.
+
+"Yes," Richard Leith answered, and stood silent a moment.
+
+How should he tell Hugh Glenalvan that he was the man who had stolen
+his daughter from him and desolated his life?
+
+It was a hard task. His voice quivered and broke as he said:
+
+"I am a stranger, but I am also your son-in-law."
+
+"I have no son-in-law," the old man replied, gazing blankly at him.
+
+"Your daughter was my wife," said Richard Leith.
+
+"Little Golden?" said the old man, like one dazed.
+
+"Yes," answered the lawyer. "I stole her from you sixteen years ago,
+and made her my darling wife. Oh, sir, can you ever forgive me the
+sorrow I have caused you?"
+
+"A wife! She was a wife! Thank God for that," the old man murmured,
+with trembling delight. "And you have brought her back at last. Where
+is she, my darling little Golden?"
+
+"Oh, God!" murmured the conscience-smitten man before him.
+
+"Let me see her, my sweet child," cried Hugh Glenalvan, feebly rising.
+"It was cruel to keep the little one from me so long. Oh, Golden,
+Golden, come to me, my darling."
+
+Richard Leith put him back with gentle hands into his chair. He knelt
+down at his feet and told him all his sorrowful story, throwing all the
+blame on himself, and pleading humbly for pardon from the father whom
+he had robbed of his darling.
+
+"I loved her," he said. "She was dearer than my own life. I would have
+brought her back to you in time. I was only waiting for the fame and
+fortune that came to me soon. But treachery came between us. I lost
+her, and henceforth I have lived hand in hand with sorrow and despair."
+
+The soft wind sighing past the window seemed to echo that heavy word
+"despair."
+
+"At the door of John Glenalvan lies your sorrow and mine," continued
+Richard Leith, "I am come to call him to account."
+
+"Who are you that dares arraign John Glenalvan?" exclaimed a harsh,
+blatant voice, as the speaker strode rudely into their presence.
+
+Richard Leith sprang to his feet and confronted the intruder. His dark
+eyes blazed with wrath as he answered:
+
+"I am Richard Leith, the husband of Golden Glenalvan, whom you falsely
+reported dead to gain some wicked end of your own. Liar, I have found
+you out in your sin! I demand my wronged wife at your hands."
+
+John Glenalvan glared lividly at the daring man who thus boldly
+confronted him with his sin.
+
+The blood retreated from his face and lips, and his eyes were wild and
+startled.
+
+"Answer me," cried Richard Leith, advancing upon him. "Where is Golden,
+my wife?"
+
+"You lie! She was never your wife," John Glenalvan retorted, furiously.
+
+"Shame upon you, John, to malign the fair name of your sister," cried
+his father, indignantly. "Rather rejoice that she is proved innocent at
+last."
+
+"Let him prove her so, if he can," cried the wretch, maliciously.
+
+"I can do so. Here is the certificate of my marriage to Golden
+Glenalvan in New York sixteen years ago, replied Richard Leith,
+unfolding a yellowed paper and holding it open before the eyes of the
+father and son.
+
+"Then she was really your wife," John said, with unwilling belief.
+
+"Of course she was my wife. How dared you think evil of your own
+sister?" demanded the lawyer, scornfully.
+
+"I do not answer to you for my thoughts, sir," replied John Glenalvan,
+angrily.
+
+"But you must answer to me for the deed which has deprived me of
+my wife and child for fifteen years," cried Richard Leith. "John
+Glenalvan, where is my wife?"
+
+"How should I know?" he retorted.
+
+"It is too late to fence with me," answered Richard Leith. "You, and
+you alone, are at the bottom of my wife's mysterious disappearance. You
+have either shut her up in solitary confinement, or you have murdered
+her!"
+
+"Murdered her! How dare you hint at such a thing?" John Glenalvan
+thundered, growing white with fear.
+
+"I dare do more," cried the lawyer, driven to desperation. "If you do
+not tell me what has become of my wife I will have you arrested for her
+murder."
+
+At these warning words John Glenalvan threw himself upon his accuser
+with the cry of an infuriated wild beast.
+
+Richard Leith was weak and ill. He had risen from a sick-bed, on which
+wasting anxiety and grief had thrown him, when he came to Glenalvan
+Hall.
+
+He went down like an infant before the strong fury of his opponent, and
+the old man's wailing cry pierced the air.
+
+"John, hold your hand! For God's sake, do not murder the man!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL.
+
+
+John Glenalvan did not heed his father's frightened remonstrance.
+
+He continued to rain furious blows on his feeble but struggling foe.
+
+The fell instinct of murder was aroused within his soul, and Richard
+Leith would have fallen a sure victim to its fury, but that suddenly
+the slight form of a woman rushed into the room, and, with a wild and
+piercing shriek, sprang upon John Glenalvan's neck, clutching it with
+frantic fingers in the endeavor to tear him from his almost dying
+victim.
+
+Almost strangling in the fierce tenacity of her grasp, the wretch
+released Mr. Leith, and springing upward with a savage bound, threw his
+frail assailant from him into the middle of the room.
+
+The terrible shock hurled her prostrate on the floor. She lay there
+stunned and bleeding, and the wretch, after one horror-struck glance at
+her, rushed from the room.
+
+"Golden--it is Golden! and he has killed her" wailed her grandfather,
+falling on his knees beside her; and Richard Leith, where he lay, half
+dying, comprehended the anguished wail, and crawled on his hands and
+knees to the side of his hapless daughter.
+
+It was little Golden, indeed, but she lay still and silent, with the
+blood oozing from her nostrils and a slight cut on her temple.
+
+As he reached her side, old Dinah rushed into the room.
+
+"Little missie, little missie!" she cried; then she stopped short in
+terror. "Oh, my Hebenly Master, who has done dis t'ing?"
+
+"Dinah," her master said quickly, "go and send Fred Glenalvan to me."
+
+She hobbled out obediently, and in a moment returned with the handsome
+young dandy, who glanced at his grandfather with haughty indifference.
+
+"Fredrick," the old man said, with strange sternness, "here are two
+people whom your father has nearly killed. You must go and bring a
+doctor for them."
+
+Frederick started at the sight of the bleeding forms upon the floor,
+but in an instant his countenance hardened into marble.
+
+"If my father has hurt them," he replied, "I doubt not that he had good
+reason for doing so, and they may die before I will fetch a physician
+to them."
+
+With that insolent reply he turned on his heel and left the room.
+
+"Vipers!" muttered the old man, indignantly, then he looked at Dinah
+sadly.
+
+"My faithful old soul," he said, "you must do what you can for them. I
+must go and seek for help myself."
+
+He went feebly from the room and across the lawn. Outside the gates he
+encountered a carriage waiting. The driver stood on the ground by the
+horses' heads, and a lady sat on the satin cushions with a troubled
+look on her lovely, blond face. She sprang out impulsively and came up
+to him.
+
+"Oh, sir," she cried, "I _know_ you are Mr. Glenalvan. Have you seen
+little Golden? She went into the hall a few minutes ago."
+
+"I have seen her, I fear she is dead, and I must bring a doctor," the
+old man wailed, heart-brokenly.
+
+She caught his arm and turned to the driver.
+
+"Drive into town at your highest speed and fetch a physician," she
+said, throwing her purse at his feet, then she took the old man's arm
+and hurried him in.
+
+"I am your little Golden's friend," she explained to him as they went
+along. "I came here with her and was waiting outside while she paid you
+a visit."
+
+Old Dinah was bathing the wound of her unconscious mistress when they
+entered, and Richard Leith lay upon the floor watching her with dim,
+despairing eyes.
+
+"Oh, Heaven, who has done this terrible deed?" Mrs. Leith cried wildly,
+as her eyes took in the dreadful scene.
+
+"Gertrude," her husband cried out at the sound of her voice, and she
+knelt down by him weeping wildly.
+
+"Oh, Richard, who is it that has killed you and your child?" she sobbed
+in anguish.
+
+"It is John Glenalvan's dreadful work," he replied, then he looked into
+her face with dim, yearning eyes.
+
+"Gertrude! I believe I am dying," he said faintly. "Will you forgive me
+before I die?"
+
+"Forgive you?" she said. "Ah, Richard, do not think that I blamed you.
+You sinned ignorantly."
+
+"Yes, ignorantly," he echoed, and a spasm of pain crossed his face an
+instant, then he said sadly: "But I did not mean _that_, Gertrude. I
+meant you must forgive me that I was careless and blind, that I did not
+prize your true heart more."
+
+She put her white hand to her heart, and a look of pain came into the
+large, blue eyes, then she said with mournful pathos:
+
+"For all the heartaches I have borne. Richard, I freely forgive you."
+
+"Thank you," he murmured, then his eyes dwelt on her gratefully. "It
+was so noble in you to care for my poor child," he murmured, "but
+Gertrude, I repented in an hour. I came back to tell her so, and she
+was gone, both were gone. I sought you everywhere, my heart nearly
+broke; I fell ill, and lay for weary weeks fevered and maddened by my
+impatience and anxiety. At last I grew better and came here!"
+
+"Have you found _her_?" she murmured, anxiously, while the red blood
+suffused her fair cheeks.
+
+He shook his head mournfully, and his eyes closed languidly. She
+believed that he was dead, and started up with a cry of woe, but when
+the physician came a little later he decided that he was only in a deep
+swoon.
+
+Golden recovered consciousness, and the hapless father and daughter
+were removed to adjoining rooms, the physician veering anxiously from
+one room to another.
+
+He believed that Mr. Leith's life might be saved by his medical skill,
+but he shook his head ominously over the beautiful, golden-haired
+child, whose shrill wails of agony pierced every heart, for in the
+agitation of her mind, and the fearful shock of her heavy fall, the
+pangs of premature motherhood had came upon her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+John Glenalvan had fled from the scene of his villainy with a speed
+to which sudden fear and remorse had lent wings. He believed that he
+had killed Richard Leith and his unfortunate child, and in the fear of
+punishment for his crime he did not even stop to apprise his family of
+what had occurred, but hurried away to seek a hiding-place for himself.
+
+Too late he regretted the blind rage that had forced him into the
+commission of such a desperate deed. The cries of his victims seemed to
+pursue him in his hurried flight.
+
+His son reported his cowardly deeds to his mother and sister, and they
+remained lost in fear and wonder.
+
+To do them justice, wicked as they were, they had no idea of the
+enormity of John Glenalvan's sin. They honestly believed that his
+sister Golden had disgraced the family. They dreamed not of the dread
+secret locked in his breast.
+
+Clare made a stealthy tour of discovery into the western wing, and soon
+finding out how matters stood, returned to her mother in a frenzy of
+wrath and anger against her hapless cousin, little Golden.
+
+"Oh, mother, such dreadful goings on," she said. "That shameless girl
+sick in one room, a strange man dead in another, and a doctor, and
+old Dinah, and a strange woman tending them. If I were you, mother,
+I really should not stand it. I would turn the whole tribe out of
+doors--should not you, Fred?"
+
+But Frederick, who, despite his defiant manner to his grandfather,
+looked pale and uneasy, vetoed the proposition as imprudent.
+
+"I do not know what provocation my father had to maltreat them so,"
+he said, "but certainly, they have a bad case against him; and if the
+man is dead, as you say, Clare, and if our cousin dies, too, they can
+indict him for murder."
+
+Mrs. Glenalvan and her daughter were so frightened at that grim word,
+murder, that they broke into hysterical tears and sobbing, while the
+hopeful son and heir sat silent, overwhelmed by the dread of evil that
+had fallen upon them all, to which was added the terrors of doubt and
+suspense.
+
+"That strange man and woman--who can they be, Fred?" inquired his
+mother.
+
+"I cannot tell; but I have my suspicions," he replied. "I believe they
+are the parents of Golden."
+
+"It is no wonder, then, that papa was goaded into attempting murder,"
+cried Clare. "Only think of the impudence of our wicked aunt in coming
+back to Glanalvan Hall. I should think father must have been maddened
+at the very sight. And yet, mother, she is one of the fairest women I
+ever saw. She does not look like a lost woman. She has a very innocent
+appearance."
+
+There were others beside these three, who wondered over the beautiful,
+strange woman who claimed to be little Golden's friend.
+
+Old Dinah and her master gazed upon her wonderful beauty, which
+reminded them so powerfully of the missing Golden's, and they wondered
+what her name could be.
+
+Old Dinah asked her at last what she should call her, and she answered
+simply, though with a burning blush:
+
+"My name is Gertrude."
+
+"Mrs. or Miss?" asked the inquisitive old negress, and again the lady's
+face grew crimson as she answered:
+
+"Mrs."
+
+"They must not know that I was his wife," she said to herself,
+resolutely. "I could not bear to have them know it. Perhaps they would
+hate me and judge him unjustly."
+
+But her tears fell heavily as she looked at the deathly white face
+laying on the pillow, and she wondered to herself if it would not be
+less hard for her to see him die then and there, than live to find his
+lost wife again.
+
+"God forgive me for my weakness and selfishness," she cried, starting
+at her own thoughts. "May he live to find the happiness of which he has
+been cheated so long."
+
+The long, weary night, filled with mortal agony to poor little Golden,
+slowly wore away.
+
+At the earliest peep of dawn a messenger arrived from the town with a
+telegram for Mr. Leith.
+
+He lay barely conscious on his pillow, breathing heavily and slow, and
+the physician read the message to him cautiously.
+
+It was from Mr. Desmond, and ran briefly:
+
+"We arrived in New York this hour. Is Golden with you? Bertram is
+half-crazed with anxiety."
+
+And across the lightning wires the fatal message flashed back to their
+anxious hearts:
+
+"_Golden is here. Her child is dead and she is dying._"
+
+Dying! This was the end of that brief dream of love, those weary months
+of supreme self-sacrifice.
+
+Whiter than the pillow on which she lay, beautiful Golden was breathing
+her sad young life out in heavy sighs and moans, while hidden carefully
+out of sight beneath its white linen sheet, "There lay the sweet,
+little baby that never had drawn a breath."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI.
+
+
+Into that splendid home in New York where the Desmonds had just
+arrived from Europe, that terrible telegram came like a thunder-clap.
+Bertram Chesleigh's repentant soul reeled in agony before it.
+
+"I am justly punished for my cowardly desertion of my darling," he
+groaned to his sister, to whom he had confided his sorrowful secret.
+"But, oh, God! how terribly I have suffered for the weakness and folly
+of an hour!"
+
+Edith, whose heart had been strangely changed and softened since her
+reconciliation with her husband, wept with him over the dreadful news.
+
+"Bertram, we must go to her," she said. "In death, if not in life, we
+must lift the shadow from the poor girl's memory. Elinor Glenalvan is
+going home to-day. Shall we accompany her?"
+
+"Yes; but do not tell her why we go. She hated my poor, little Golden,"
+he answered, sighing heavily.
+
+Elinor wondered secretly over their going, but rejoiced also. She had
+gone abroad with them, had had a most delightful time, and she sighed
+to think that the end had come at last.
+
+But one thing grieved her most of all. All her arts and her beauty,
+added to Mrs. Desmond's influence, had failed to win Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+She almost hated him when she thought of going home to hear her
+mother's lamentations over her failure, and her sister's taunts.
+
+Her spirits rose at the welcome news that he was going south with her.
+
+Perhaps she might triumph yet. It was a hopeful augury that he was not
+willing to lose sight of her yet.
+
+Poor vain and artful Elinor! She did not dream of the real truth.
+
+She believed that Golden had been thrust out of her way forever.
+
+Strangely enough, though she had known the true cause of the Desmonds'
+separation, she had never been able to ferret out the reason of their
+reconciliation.
+
+Immediately after Mr. Desmond reached Italy his wife had summarily
+dismissed Celine.
+
+No hints, nor careless appearance of wonder on Elinor's part could
+elicit the reason for the maid's dismissal.
+
+She only knew that the Frenchwoman had gone away in insolent triumph,
+taking with her the money she had wrested from her in payment for her
+treachery to poor little Golden.
+
+Mrs. Desmond's generous impulse to accompany her brother was frustrated
+by the sudden illness of her little daughter, so Bertram was forced to
+go on his sad mission without her, and Elinor was jubilant over the
+prospect of a long, delightful trip under his exclusive care.
+
+Anticipation and reality are different things, however, as Elinor was
+fated to learn.
+
+Never was there a more gloomy or self-absorbed cavalier than the
+handsome and entertaining Mr. Chesleigh on this occasion.
+
+Elinor bit her ruby lip and looked daggers as he lounged in his seat,
+pretending to be absorbed in a newspaper, but with lips compressed
+beneath his dark mustache, and a strange, somber light in the large,
+black eyes that puzzled Elinor, who had not the key to his mood.
+
+Indeed she began to be conscious of a vague feeling of dread and
+anxiety.
+
+She asked herself over and over why he had chosen to bear her company
+on her homeward way.
+
+Evidently it was through no tenderness for her. Though scrupulously
+polite and attentive, he preserved the appearance of distant
+friendliness in too marked a fashion to be misinterpreted.
+
+When at last, after traveling without delay or rest, they found
+themselves seated in the carriage that was to convey them to Glenalvan
+Hall, Elinor felt a certain sense of relief mingled with her chagrin
+and disappointment. She loved Bertram Chesleigh, but his moodiness and
+silence were strangely oppressive.
+
+"Why did he come with me?" she asked herself for the last time as
+the carriage rolled along the breezy, wooded drive, and her strange
+companion lay back among the cushions, his hat tilted over his eyes,
+his face pale, his lips working convulsively. "What will Clare say when
+she sees how disdainfully he treats me? How she will triumph at my
+disappointment."
+
+Her heart sank at the prospect of returning to the quietude and
+dreariness of Glenalvan Hall after the gay, easy, luxurious life she
+had led for the last few months.
+
+For a moment her love for the indifferent man beside her was
+transformed to hate.
+
+Why had he slighted her beauty, and her fascinations to turn to that
+doll-faced child whose life was a disgrace to the Glenalvans?
+
+She hated Bertram Chesleigh because he had not rescued her from the
+poverty of which she had grown so weary, and from which his love might
+have delivered her.
+
+"At least I have the satisfaction of knowing that I removed that little
+vixen, Golden, from his pathway," she thought, with vindictive triumph.
+"If she had remained who knows what might have happened? I should like
+to know what became of her when she left Mrs. Desmond's. I sincerely
+hope she drowned herself in the sea!"
+
+The carriage turned a sudden bend in the road, and Elinor, leaning idly
+forward to note the old, familiar landmarks, gazed intently one moment,
+then uttered a stifled cry of terror.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh started, like one awaking from a dream.
+
+"What is it? Has anything alarmed you, Miss Glenalvan?" he inquired,
+courteously.
+
+"Look there," she cried, fearfully, pointing her hand through the
+window.
+
+He followed the direction of her finger and saw--oh horror, that they
+were passing the burial-ground of the Glenalvans.
+
+He saw a little band of black-robed mourners grouped around a narrow
+mound of freshly-thrown-up earth.
+
+He saw the minister standing at the head of the grave with his open
+book, and fancied he could hear him repeating the solemn, beautiful
+words with which we consign "ashes to ashes, and dust to dust."
+
+"Pray tell the driver to stop," Elinor cried out, excitedly, "I must
+get out. Someone of my own family must be dead."
+
+He made no answer. He was handing her out with hands that trembled as
+nervously as her own. One terrible, blasting thought was in his mind.
+
+"It is Golden, my wronged, little wife, and my babe that I never saw,
+whom they are hiding beneath that little mound," he said to himself, in
+agony. "Oh, God! that I should have come only in time for this!"
+
+He opened the little, white gate that led into the green burial-place,
+with its glimmering, white stones, and Elinor silently followed him.
+
+The little group about the grave fell back as they approached, and they
+saw the men throwing up the earth upon the new-made grave. Its dull,
+awful thud fell like the crash of a great despair upon his heart.
+
+"Ashes to ashes, dust to dust," murmured the minister's solemn voice,
+and the conscience-stricken man fell on his knees and hid his face in
+his hand, afraid and ashamed, for that deep voice seemed to condemn him
+for the evil he had wrought.
+
+A weak and trembling hand fluttered down on his shoulder, and a thin,
+quavering voice sounded reproachfully in his ear:
+
+"So you have come to exhult over your wicked work, Bertram Chesleigh."
+
+The wretched man looked up into the streaming eyes of old Hugh
+Glenalvan.
+
+At a little distance he saw old black Dinah regarding him with looks
+of horror and loathing. A beautiful, golden-haired woman stood apart,
+weeping silently, and Elinor Glenalvan had gone to the minister and was
+speaking to him agitatedly.
+
+Bertram sprang up desperately.
+
+"Oh, sir, for God's sake," he cried to the dejected old man, "tell me
+whom they have buried here!"
+
+And the answer came in broken tones:
+
+"Golden Glenalvan and her babe."
+
+Bertram Chesleigh, kneeling in the dust that was heaped above the dead
+heart that had loved him so devotedly, lifted his hands and eyes to
+Heaven, and cried out, in a broken, contrite voice:
+
+"I call God to witness that it is Golden Chesleigh, not Golden
+Glenalvan, you have buried here. This dead girl was my wife, made so
+by a secret marriage last summer. It is my wife and my child you have
+hidden from me in this low grave. May God forgive me for the wrong I
+did them."
+
+Then, unable to bear the strain upon his nerves and his heart any
+longer, the wretched man fell forward heavily, and lay in a deep swoon
+across the mound that covered little Golden and her child.
+
+A terrible punishment had been meted out to him for the pride and
+selfishness that had made of his innocent child-wife an outcast, and a
+creature at whom to point the finger of a seemingly just scorn.
+
+The deathless flame of that deep "remorse that spurns atonement's
+power" had been kindled in his heart, never to go out save with the
+breath of life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII.
+
+
+For a few moments all believed that Bertram Chesleigh was dead. Elinor
+Glenalvan, filled with astonishment and deadly rage, devoutly hoped
+that he was.
+
+Her love had turned to hate, and as by a sudden flash she understood
+fully the passion of remorse and despair that had brought him to
+Glenalvan Hall.
+
+The vindictive wish came over her that he had died before he had spoken
+the brave words that had cleared the stain from the memory of the girl
+she had hated with such jealous fire and passion. She had yet to learn
+that every shadow had been cleared from Golden's name.
+
+While she stood like a statue, and angrily regarded the striking scene,
+the others busied themselves with the restoration of the unconscious
+man.
+
+Dinah brought cold water from a little spring, and bathed his face and
+hands. Gertrude held her smelling-salts to his nose.
+
+In a short time he revived and looked about him with an agony of sorrow
+in his pale, drawn face. His first conscious thought was of his loved
+and deeply-wronged wife.
+
+"She is dead," he groaned. "I shall never hear her sweet lips pronounce
+my pardon. Oh, God, did she leave me no message? Did she not curse me
+in dying for the woe I had wrought?"
+
+They all stood aloof from him except Gertrude. She told him what he
+asked in a grave and gentle voice.
+
+"She made no mention of you, Mr. Chesleigh. She was patient and brave
+to the last. She kept her vow of silence to the bitter end, and died
+with the story of her innocence untold."
+
+"I, coward that I was, bound her to secrecy," he said, "but I did not
+dream then of what would happen after. I wish to God that she had
+spoken and vindicated her honor."
+
+And again an expression of the deepest sorrow convulsed the dark,
+handsome face.
+
+"She was too true and loyal to break her vow," answered Gertrude,
+tearfully. "I believe that the shame and sorrow of it all killed her.
+She was a martyr to her love."
+
+He groaned and dropped his head upon his folded arms. There was
+silence, and every eye but Elinor's rested tearfully upon the low mound
+beneath which slumbered the poor girl who had died with the brand of
+the erring upon her, but who in this hour was proven guiltless and
+pure, as Gertrude had said, a patient martyr to affection.
+
+"Oh, that I might have seen her even once," groaned Bertram Chesleigh,
+turning instinctively for comfort to the sweet, sympathetic face of
+Gertrude. "Oh, tell me, did she suffer in dying? Was she conscious?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"No, she passed from a quiet slumber into death. The change was so
+gradual we scarcely knew when she was gone."
+
+"Gone!"
+
+The word thrilled him with a keen and bitter pain. The sweet,
+child-wife he had loved so dearly was lost from his life forever. She
+was gone from a world that had used her harshly and coldly, to take her
+fitting place among the angels.
+
+The soft wind sighing through the trees and the grass seemed to murmur
+her requiem: "_Requiescat in pace_."
+
+He rose and stood among them, his heavy eyes turning to the sad, old
+face of the grandfather whom he had bereaved of his darling. He held
+out his hand to him humbly.
+
+"_She_ is gone from us, and I cannot sue for her pardon," he said,
+wistfully. "But will you not forgive me, sir, for the sorrow my
+weakness and pride brought upon her and you?"
+
+But old Hugh Glenalvan's kindly blue eyes flashed upon him with a gleam
+of their youthful fire, and his voice quivered with anger and despair
+as he replied:
+
+"I will never forgive you unless _she_ should rise from the grave and
+forgive you too!"
+
+"Ye must forgive as ye would be forgiven," said the gentle, admonitory
+voice of the man of God.
+
+But the indignant old man shook off his suppliant hand.
+
+"She was his wife, and he discarded and deserted her. There is no
+forgiveness for such a sin," he said, with fiery scorn, as he turned
+away.
+
+They went away and left Bertram alone with the wronged and quiet dead.
+
+Gertrude, in her gentle, womanly pity would fain have persuaded him to
+go home with them, but he refused to listen.
+
+"Leave me to my lonely vigil here," he said, sorrowfully. "If her
+gentle spirit is yet hovering about she may accept my bitter grief and
+repentance as some atonement."
+
+When they had all gone and left him he bowed his head with a bitter cry.
+
+"Oh, Golden, my lost, little darling, only six feet of earth between
+us, and yet I shall never see you, speak to you, nor hear you again!"
+
+A low, respectful cough interrupted the mournful tenor of his thoughts.
+
+He glanced up and saw the old grave-digger leaning on his spade and
+regarding him wistfully.
+
+"What are you waiting for, my man?" he inquired, feeling impatient at
+this seeming intrusion on his grief.
+
+"If you please, sir, I have not yet finished throwing up the earth and
+shaping the mound," said the man, with some embarrassment.
+
+A bitter cry came from Bertram Chesleigh's lips.
+
+"What! would you bury her still deeper from my sight?" he cried. "Oh,
+rather throw off this heavy covering of earth and suffer me to look
+upon my darling one again."
+
+The man stared at him half fearfully.
+
+"Oh, sir, your sorrow has almost crazed you," he said. "You had better
+return to your friends and leave me here to finish my necessary work."
+
+But a new thought, born of his grief and remorse, had come into the
+mind of the mourner.
+
+"My man, look at me," he said, earnestly; "I want you to open this
+grave and let me see my wife again. You cannot refuse me when I pray
+you to do it. Only think! They have buried my child and I have never
+even seen its face. I must kiss the babe and its mother once, I cannot
+go away until I have done so."
+
+"Oh, sir, surely you are going mad," the man cried, alarmed. "I have
+never heard of such a thing. I could not do it if I would. I could not
+take the coffin out alone."
+
+"Let me help you," said the distracted mourner.
+
+"What you wish is quite impossible, sir," faltered the man, anxiously;
+"let me beg you to go on to the hall, and leave me to finish my sad
+duty."
+
+"You must not refuse me, it will break my heart," Bertram Chesleigh
+cried, "I will pay you well. See," he drew out a handful of shining
+gold pieces. "I will give you a hundred dollars if you will show me the
+faces of my wife and child."
+
+The dull eyes of the grave-digger grew bright at that sight. He was
+poor, and a hundred dollars were wealth to him.
+
+"I am sorry for you, sir, I wish I could do what you wish. That money
+would do my poor wife and children a deal of good. If you could wait
+until night," he said, lowering his voice and glancing significantly
+around him, "I might get help and do the job for you."
+
+Some whispered words passed between them: then Bertram Chesleigh rose
+and passed out of the green graveyard, casting one yearning look behind
+him at the low grave that held his darling.
+
+He bent his lagging footsteps toward old Glenalvan Hall, whose
+ivy-wreathed towers glistened picturesquely in the evening sunshine.
+
+Bertram went in through the wide entrance, and crossing the level lawn
+walked along the border of the beautiful lake.
+
+"It was here that we parted," he murmured to himself, in his sorrowful
+retrospection. "How beautiful, how happy she was, how full of love
+and trust. Oh, God, what dark spell came over me, and made me for
+twenty-four terrible hours false to my love and my vows? That old man
+was right. There is no forgiveness for such a terrible sin!"
+
+Frederick Glenalvan saw him from the house, and came down to meet him.
+
+"Chesleigh, I have heard all," he said, with pretended sympathy,
+"Elinor told us. My dear friend, how sorry I am for you. I was about
+to go and seek you. You must come up to the house and take some
+refreshment. You look ready to drop."
+
+"I feel fearfully ill," said Chesleigh, staggering unsteadily, and
+putting his hand to his head. "I need something, but do not ask me
+to accept the shelter of your roof, Fred. I have a quarrel with your
+father. He has bitterly deceived me, and must answer to me for his sin.
+
+"Father is not at home. He has been absent for several days," said
+Fred, confusedly. "But if you will not come up to the hall sit down
+here on this bench, and I will bring you some wine."
+
+Bertram obeyed his request almost mechanically. His head ached, and he
+felt dull, lifeless and inert.
+
+The grief and excitement under which he had labored for several days
+were beginning to tell heavily upon his overstrained nerves. With the
+murmured name of Golden, his head drooped on his breast and he relapsed
+into semi-unconsciousness.
+
+He was aroused by a hand lifting his head, and starting into
+consciousness, saw Frederick Glenalvan by his side, and Elinor standing
+before him with a small tray on which were arranged a glass of wine and
+several slices of cake. He did not notice how white and strange she
+looked, nor how steely her voice sounded as she said:
+
+"You are faint and ill. Drink this--it will revive you."
+
+She put the wine to his lips, and he drank it thirstily. A fire seemed
+to run through his veins, new life came into his limbs. He arose and
+thanked her, but refused the cake.
+
+"I am better, but I cannot eat; it would choke me," he said, and Elinor
+did not press him. She turned away, and as she passed the lake she
+furtively tossed the wine-glass in, and the cake after it.
+
+"So father had deceived him, and must answer to him for his sin," she
+said to herself, bitterly, as she walked along. "Well, well, we shall
+see! Oh, how I hate him! Yet once I loved him, and hoped to be his
+wife. I might have been if that little jade had never come between. Oh,
+how I hate her even in her grave!"
+
+She went back to the hall, walking like one in a dream, with lurid,
+blazing eyes, and a face blanched to the pallor of a marble image,
+muttering wickedly to herself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII.
+
+
+When Elinor had gone, Frederick Glenalvan turned curiously to Chesleigh.
+
+"So you were really the husband of Golden Leith, and not her betrayer,
+as everybody believed?" he said.
+
+"Yes, she was my lawful wife; but why do you call her Golden Leith?"
+Bertram Chesleigh inquired, curiously.
+
+"Did you not know," said Fred, carelessly, "that she had found her
+father? He is a New York lawyer, and his name is Richard Leith. It
+seems that her mother was really married to him after all."
+
+"Thank God! Then there is really not a shadow of disgrace upon my poor,
+wronged wife," cried Bertram Chesleigh, gladly. "Oh, God! if only she
+had lived."
+
+He was silent a moment, then asked, suddenly:
+
+"Where is Richard Leith now?"
+
+"He is lying ill in the western wing of Glenalvan Hall," Frederick
+replied, with some embarrassment at the inward consciousness of who
+caused that illness.
+
+"Is is possible? I must go to him at once," cried Bertram, starting up.
+"I am an old friend of Richard Leith. Will you accompany me, Fred?"
+
+Frederick walked with him across the grassy slope of the lawn, but left
+him in the wide corridor that separated the divided dwellings of the
+strangely sundered family.
+
+"I can accompany you no further," he said, confusedly. "The truth is,
+Mr. Leith and father have had a little difficulty, and we are not on
+the best of terms."
+
+He turned away, and Bertram knocked nervously on the door before him,
+and was admitted by Dinah, who scowled blackly when she saw whom the
+visitor was.
+
+"I wish to see Mr. Leith," he said, and the old woman silently motioned
+him to follow her into the sick man's room.
+
+White as the pillows on which he lay, was Richard Leith, but there
+was a smile of peace on his face, for Gertrude was sitting in a chair
+by his bedside, and she had been telling him of the strange scene at
+Golden's burial that evening; how Bertram Chesleigh had claimed her as
+his wife, and the child for his own.
+
+"Thank God! she was innocent and pure. Oh, how could I ever have
+doubted the child of my precious Golden," cried the bereaved father, in
+a passion of remorse and grief.
+
+"You know the whole truth, now. Can you ever forgive me?" inquired
+Bertram, advancing.
+
+"You here, Bertram Chesleigh? Oh, how could you have been so cruel?"
+exclaimed Mr. Leith, excitedly, as he rose on his elbow, and looked at
+the pale face and gleaming eyes of the intruder.
+
+"I will tell you all the truth, and perhaps you will understand me
+better," began Bertram Chesleigh, eagerly, but before the words were
+ended, a terrible change came over his face. It was distorted by
+contortions of pain, and with a shrill cry of agony he fell to the
+floor in strong convulsions.
+
+Gertrude sprang from her chair with a frightened shriek that brought
+Dinah rushing into the room with her old master close at her heels,
+followed by the hired nurse who had the care of Mr. Leith.
+
+"This man is dying--bring a doctor at once!" cried Gertrude, shrilly.
+
+"The doctor is here, madam," said the pleasant voice of the physician
+himself, who had just entered the door on his usual daily visit to Mr.
+Leith. "Why, what have we here?"
+
+He bent down over the tall, superb form that lay upon the floor
+writhing in a violent fit.
+
+There were a few moments of busy silence while he worked over the
+patient, then he looked up with a dark frown on his broad brow.
+
+"Who is this man, and how came he here?" he inquired.
+
+"He is my son-in-law, doctor, and he had barely entered the room when
+he fell in a fit," said Richard Leith. "What ails him?"
+
+Another dire contortion of the prostrate form, and the busy physician
+answered, sternly:
+
+"He has all the symptoms of arsenical poisoning."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The hovering night fell rainy, dark, and cheerless. The skillful
+physician worked steadily, anxiously, and patiently, trying to save
+from the grasp of the fell destroyer the writhing victim of Elinor
+Glenalvan's deadly hate and wicked revenge.
+
+Everyone was filled with grief and sorrow. All warring passions, all
+human resentments were forgotten in the anxiety with which they watched
+the wavering balance in which Bertram Chesleigh lay fluctuating between
+life and death.
+
+Arsenic had been administered to him in a draught of wine, declared the
+physician, and the wonder arose who had given it to him.
+
+Someone started the theory that he had taken it himself, with intent to
+commit suicide.
+
+Then they searched him, but not a grain of the deadly drug was
+discovered on his person. It was all a baffling mystery.
+
+They had left him mourning despairingly over little Golden's grave,
+and they had seen him no more until he had come to them in this awful
+condition.
+
+"If I had not come in at the moment I did, no earthly power could have
+saved him," declared the physician; "As it is, I hope--mind, I only say
+hope--that I may save his life."
+
+At midnight Gertrude stole to the outer door for a breath of fresh air.
+She felt faint, weary and dispirited.
+
+The death of Golden, whom she had learned to love very deeply, had
+deeply grieved her saddened heart.
+
+"Poor child," she moaned, sitting down on the marble steps and gazing
+sadly at the silver crescent of the young moon as it struggled through
+a bank of clouds; "she has had a fate as tragic and sad as her poor
+young mother's."
+
+The sound of muffled footsteps on the grass caused Gertrude to start up
+with a sudden cry.
+
+A youth was coming toward her, and his low, entreating "stay, madam,"
+arrested her contemplated flight.
+
+He came close to her side, and as his rough garments brushed the stone
+ballustrade, the cool, moist smell of newly thrown up earth came
+distinctly to her senses.
+
+She shivered and thought of that new-made grave lying in the silence
+and calm of the dewy night.
+
+"Will you tell me if Mr. Chesleigh is here, ma'am?" he inquired,
+respectfully.
+
+"Yes, he is here. What can you want of Mr. Chesleigh at this unseemly
+hour of the night?" she inquired, in wonder.
+
+"I have important business with him," said the youth, and Gertrude
+thought she detected a trembling, as of fear, in his voice. "Can I see
+him a moment, if you please?"
+
+"No, you cannot, for he is ill and unconscious, and we fear that he is
+dying," she replied.
+
+A smothered exclamation escaped from the youth's lips.
+
+"Oh, this is dreadful!" he said, as if unconscious of having a
+listener. "What shall we do now?"
+
+"Can I help you?" asked Gertrude, gently.
+
+He bent toward her eagerly.
+
+"Oh, madam, you are a friend of the poor lady that was buried this
+afternoon?" he said, almost fearfully.
+
+"Yes," she answered, with a quickened heart-beat.
+
+"Then come with me, for God's sake. There is not a minute to lose.
+Don't be afraid. No harm shall come to you."
+
+So impressed was Gertrude by the youth's strange eagerness that she
+followed him without a word across the green lawn, through the wide
+gate, and along the winding road.
+
+"Not here!" she said, aghast, as he paused at the white gate of the
+Glenalvan burying ground.
+
+"Yes, even here," he answered, solemnly; and the gate-latch clicked
+softly beneath his hand. "Follow me, lady. No harm shall happen you."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV.
+
+
+When Bertram Chesleigh came to full consciousness again he found
+himself lying on a couch in Mr. Leith's bedroom.
+
+The curtains were drawn at the windows, but the light of the full day
+glimmered through, and he saw the grave-faced physician sitting beside
+him, while Richard Leith, from the bed opposite, regarded him with an
+intent expression. He struggled up feebly and pressed his hand to his
+brow.
+
+"I have had a shock," he said, with an air of strange perplexity, as he
+looked into their anxious faces. "What was it? What has happened to me?"
+
+"You have been near to death's door," replied the physician, gravely,
+"but you will recover now."
+
+"I wish that I had died!" the young man burst out, with such passionate
+realization of his misery, that the doctor exclaimed, incautiously:
+
+"So, then, you _did_ try to commit suicide?"
+
+The brilliant, dark eyes looked at him in amazement.
+
+"Suicide! suicide!" he repeated, blankly. "Who dares to say that of me?"
+
+The doctor regarded him thoughtfully.
+
+"My dear sir," he said, quietly, "I happened in here very opportunely
+last evening and found you suffering all the terrible symptoms of
+arsenic poisoning. Your friends feared that your grief had unhinged
+your mind, and that under temporary aberration you had attempted the
+destruction of your own life."
+
+"They were wrong. I could never have been such a coward," Bertram
+answered, in such a tone of convincing truthfulness that no one could
+doubt him. "Indeed, doctor, you must have been mistaken. I have taken
+no drug recently."
+
+"I am not mistaken," the physician asserted, confidently. "You had most
+certainly had arsenic administered to you in a draught of wine."
+
+A startled gleam came into Mr. Chesleigh's eyes, his face whitened, a
+cry of horror came from his lips.
+
+"Doctor, are you quite, quite sure?" he exclaimed.
+
+"I would swear to the drug," was the instant reply. "Do you admit the
+wine?"
+
+"Yes," came the grave reply; "I drank a glass of wine before coming in
+here yesterday evening, but I did not dream it was drugged," and an
+expression of almost incredulous horror swept over the handsome face.
+
+"Who gave you the wine?" inquired the doctor and Richard Leith almost
+simultaneously.
+
+But Bertram Chesleigh shook his head.
+
+"Do not ask me," he said. "It is terrible, yet I will not betray my
+would-be destroyer."
+
+"It was one of the Glenalvans," asserted Richard Leith, seeing the
+truth as by a flash of light.
+
+"Do not ask me," the young man replied again. "I must not tell you. It
+is too terrible. I can scarce believe the dread reality myself."
+
+But though he refused to reveal the secret, Richard Leith felt morally
+certain that it was to some of the family of John Glenalvan the young
+man owed the attempted destruction of his life. He had heard that
+Elinor had "set her cap" at him.
+
+This, then, was the dreadful revenge she had taken for her
+disappointment.
+
+The physician went away and left them together. Then the lawyer told
+his son-in-law his whole sad story. Bertram's indignation knew no
+bounds.
+
+"May the curse of an offended God rest upon John Glenalvan's head!" he
+exclaimed. "It is to him and his family that my poor Golden owes the
+bitter sorrows of her brief life. My sister's maid, Celine, confessed
+that it was Elinor Glenalvan who discovered Golden's identity, and
+bribed her to send her away under a ban of disgrace. Oh, God, Leith,
+could I only have known that the girl little Ruby loved so dearly, and
+who shunned me so persistently, was my deserted wife, how joyously
+would I have taken her to my heart and claimed her for my own."
+
+"Yes, if you had only known," Richard Leith replied, with mournful
+emphasis. "My poor young daughter, hers indeed was a hard lot. Scorned
+by her kindred, deserted by her husband, despised and disowned by her
+miserable father! How glad she must have been to creep into the kindly
+shelter of the grave! Ah, Heaven, Chesleigh, I never can forget my own
+wretched share in breaking that tender heart."
+
+His head sank back on his pillow, and almost womanly tears coursed over
+his pale cheeks.
+
+"But she forgave me before she died," he continued, pathetically, after
+a little. "She was an angel, Chesleigh. I can never forget how sweet
+and patient she was. The day before she died they carried me into her
+room. I lay on a couch by the side of her bed. They showed me the
+beautiful little waxen image--the babe that had never drawn a single
+breath of life in this world, and I could not keep from crying when
+they said her terrible fall had killed the child. The minister came,
+and told her that she must die in a few hours, too. But was it not
+strange, Chesleigh? She smiled sadly and shook her head."
+
+"'No, you are all mistaken,' she said. 'I should not be sorry to die,
+but my time has not come yet. I cannot die until I know whether I shall
+meet my mother in Heaven, or whether she is still on earth.'
+
+"But that night she passed away peacefully in her sleep. It was so calm
+and gradual we did not know when the end had come. It was like those
+sweet lines of Hood:
+
+ "'We watched her breathing through the night,
+ Her breathing soft and low,
+ As in her breast the wave of life
+ Went heaving to and fro.
+ Our very hopes belied our fears,
+ Our fears our hopes belied;
+ We thought her dying when she slept,
+ And sleeping when she died.'"
+
+He ceased, and there was a heavy silence in the room. Bertram Chesleigh
+broke it in a hushed, low voice.
+
+"Poor, martyred child! Was she, then, so anxious to find her mother?"
+
+"She declared that it was the one dream of her life-time," Richard
+Leith replied.
+
+"And there is no clew save that which John Glenalvan holds?" inquired
+Bertram, thoughtfully.
+
+"None, and the villain has fled. I do not believe his own wife and
+children know aught of his whereabouts."
+
+A look of grave determination swept over Bertram's handsome, pallid
+face.
+
+"Then I will take up the quest where it dropped from Golden's little
+hand in dying. I will track the villain, if it is to the end of the
+world. It shall be my task to vindicate her mother's memory," he said,
+gravely and earnestly.
+
+"It is _my_ task rather," said Richard Leith.
+
+"We will join hands in the effort," his son-in-law answered.
+
+Old Dinah came in with a note for Mr. Leith. It was from Gertrude.
+
+ "I have gone away," she wrote. "I can leave you no address, but I
+ shall be cognizant of all that transpires at Glenalvan Hall, and I
+ may see you again ere long. You will soon be well enough to go about
+ again, and that you may be enabled to solve the distressing mystery
+ of your lost wife's fate, is the earnest prayer of
+
+ "GERTRUDE."
+
+"Surely no man was ever placed in such a terrible position," said
+Richard Leith. "For aught I know, I may have two wives living."
+
+"It is through no fault of yours," replied Mr. Chesleigh; "but it is
+most distressing. Your second wife appears to be a very beautiful and
+winning woman."
+
+"She is both, but I never discovered her worth until it was too late to
+love her," Mr. Leith replied, sadly. "Her noble conduct to my helpless
+daughter first opened my eyes to her lovable character."
+
+"God bless her!" Bertram Chesleigh uttered, fervently.
+
+They had some further conversation, and then Mr. Chesleigh announced
+his intention of going away.
+
+"I will not trespass further on Mr. Glenalvan's hospitality," he said
+decidedly. "I do not forget how much reason he has to hate the sight of
+me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV.
+
+
+The twilight hour found Bertram Chesleigh wending his way to the green
+graveyard where his hapless wife lay buried. As he had hoped, he found
+the old grave-digger waiting for him.
+
+He had been sodding the mound with velvety green turf, and planting
+lilies and immortelles upon it.
+
+"Why have you done this?" he said. "Did you not know I would come
+to-night? I was at death's door last night, or I would have come as I
+said. Did you do what you promised?"
+
+"Yes, sir, and waited a long time for you," said the man, doffing his
+cap respectfully. "I even sent my son to look for you. He learned of
+your bad condition, and then we were compelled to put the coffin back
+in the ground again."
+
+There was a strange, repressed excitement in the man's manner, but
+Mr. Chesleigh, absorbed in the bitterness of his own despair, did not
+observe it.
+
+He counted over a hundred dollars into the man's hand, and then said,
+with a tremor of hope in his voice:
+
+"I will double the amount if you will do your work over to-night. I
+_must_ see her. I am mad for one last look at my darling's face!"
+
+The grave-digger shuddered.
+
+"Oh, sir, it is too late," he said. "Have you forgotten how soon
+death's touch blasts everything human? And the little babe--_that_ was
+dead long before _she_ was. I know you could not bear to see them now."
+
+"Hush, hush!" the mourner cried, in a voice of agony. "I will hear no
+more. Go, now, and leave me!"
+
+"Cheer up, sir," said the man, with a strange gleam in his eyes, as he
+turned to go. "The Lord may have some blessing in store for you yet,
+sir."
+
+His only answer was a hollow groan from the wretched man. He threw
+himself face downward on the green grave, crushing all the sweet lilies
+and immortelles beneath his shuddering frame, and cried out to Heaven
+to kill him because he had blighted Golden's innocent life.
+
+He lay there an hour or two, musing sorrowfully over the hapless fate
+of his beautiful girl-bride.
+
+He recalled their brief, happy love-dream from which they had been so
+rudely awakened.
+
+Over and over again he cursed himself for that first impulse of pride
+and selfishness that had made him false to his bride in the hour when
+he should have protected and shielded her.
+
+A passionate, despairing longing to see her again filled his soul.
+
+"I will go back and wander by the lake again," he resolved, in the
+madness of his despair. "It was there that we spent our sweetest, most
+blissful hours. In the calm and silence of the night I will dream them
+over again."
+
+He went to the lake, but the very spirit of unrest was upon him.
+
+The stars came forth and shone weirdly in the sky, the perfume of
+spring flowers sweetened the air. He grew restless and fanciful.
+
+Such a brief while ago she had stolen nightly from the haunted rooms to
+meet him here beside the silvery lake.
+
+It almost seemed that she would come to him presently, gliding like a
+fairy across the green lawn to the glad shelter of his arms.
+
+Some impulse prompted him to seek the haunted rooms, to spend an hour
+of solitary musing in their quiet shade.
+
+He knew of a retired stairway by which he could make his way
+unperceived, and following the blind fate that led him, he went up to
+the hall and up the narrow, secluded stairs which little Golden had
+shown him, and by which she had obtained egress to her lover.
+
+He went along the dark corridor with a strangely beating heart, and
+paused before the closed door of the haunted room.
+
+He placed his hand on the knob, but to his surprise it refused to yield
+to his touch.
+
+Disappointed, he was about turning away, when a heavy step crossed the
+floor inside, the key clicked in the lock, and the door was cautiously
+opened.
+
+A flood of light streamed out into the corridor, and showed Bertram
+Chesleigh the tall form, and dark, saturnine face of John Glenalvan.
+
+There was a moment of complete astonishment on the part of each of the
+two men.
+
+Both recoiled from each other in the first suddenness of the shock, and
+then an angry oath burst from John Glenalvan's lips.
+
+"I thought it was Elinor!"
+
+"Luckily you were mistaken," returned Mr. Chesleigh, quickly recovering
+his wits. "This _rencontre_ is most opportune for me, sir. I have
+wished to see you."
+
+He stepped into the room as he spoke, and boldly confronted the
+villain, who glared at him with a mixture of defiance and dismay.
+
+"You wished to see me. I feel flattered," he said, with an attempt at
+cutting sarcasm. "May I ask why?"
+
+There was a moment's silence while Bertram Chesleigh rapidly reviewed
+the situation in his mind. Then he spoke:
+
+"You may ask, and I may answer," he said. "Mr. Glenalvan, I might heap
+the bitterest reproach upon your head, if by so doing the cruel work of
+your life might be undone. But the past is past. My wife is dead, and
+no reproaches and no lamentations can bring her back to me. But there
+is one issue between you and me. I have taken up my dead wife's quest
+where she left it. I demand that you shall tell me where to find my
+little Golden's deeply-wronged mother."
+
+The dark face before him whitened to the awful pallor of death, the
+man's eyes blazed luridly, his hands were clenched as they hung at his
+sides.
+
+"What if I refuse to answer your question?" he inquired, in a low,
+tense voice.
+
+"I will find means to force you to confession," Bertram Chesleigh
+replied, unhesitatingly.
+
+"I defy you to do so," John Glenalvan replied, with an imprecation. "I
+am not afraid of you."
+
+"You have caused my wife's death, and nearly murdered her father. I
+will have you arrested for it," exclaimed Mr. Chesleigh.
+
+"Do so, and I will prove that I only acted in self-defense," was the
+instant reply.
+
+"I will charge you with the murder or abduction of Golden Leith, your
+own sister," pursued Mr. Chesleigh.
+
+"And I will swear before any court in the land that she is the inmate
+of a nameless house in New York," was the taunting answer of the
+villain.
+
+They gazed at each other a moment, then Bertram Chesleigh exclaimed, in
+wonder:
+
+"What a black and unnatural heart you must have, John Glenalvan. How
+can you thus malign the fair fame of your own sister?"
+
+"Do not call her my sister. I hated her, the blue-eyed, doll-faced
+creature. She stole the love of my parents from me. It was all lavished
+on her, there was none left for me. But I have had a most glorious
+revenge," he laughed, wickedly.
+
+"Yes, you have had a most terrible revenge," said Bertram Chesleigh,
+with a shudder. "You have blighted her life and that of her child. Four
+lives--perhaps five--have been ruined by your sin. Is it not time that
+vengeance should cease?"
+
+"No!" thundered John Glenalvan, harshly. "For sixteen years the taste
+of revenge has been sweet on my lips. It is sweet still."
+
+"And you will not speak?" asked Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+"Never!" with triumphant malice.
+
+"I have one card yet to play," began the other, slowly.
+
+A light step suddenly crossed the threshold, and Elinor Glenalvan
+appeared in the room, bearing a waiter with a substantial supper
+arranged upon it.
+
+"Papa, were you growing impatient?" she asked; then her startled eyes
+fell on Bertram Chesleigh, meeting a glance of fiery scorn.
+
+"_You here_!" she gasped.
+
+The waiter fell from her nerveless hands, and its contents crashed upon
+the floor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVI.
+
+
+"Yes, Miss Glenalvan, it is I," was the answer, as his burning eyes
+devoured her pale, frightened face. "Did you take me for a ghost?"
+
+"Why should I take you for a ghost?" she faltered, trembling, but
+trying to brave it out with an air of defiance.
+
+"Because you tried to murder me last night, and came very near
+succeeding," he replied.
+
+"It is false. How dare you accuse me of such a crime?" she broke out,
+passionately, flying to her father's side, as if for protection.
+
+"How dare you?" echoed John Glenalvan, furiously.
+
+Bertram Chesleigh lifted his hand imperiously.
+
+"Listen," he said, "I told you I had one more card to play. Your fair
+daughter there attempted to poison me last night with drugged wine.
+The physician who saved my life declared that I had taken arsenic in a
+draught of wine. Do you see where you stand _now_?"
+
+"Do not believe him, father; it is false!" cried Elinor, furiously; but
+John Glenalvan, turning to look into her wild, frightened face, read
+the signs of guilt too plainly to be mistaken.
+
+The sight forced a groan even from his hardened lips.
+
+"You see where you stand," repeated Bertram Chesleigh, with stern
+brevity. "How will you bear to see your cherished daughter dragged into
+court on such a dreadful charge?"
+
+"You will not dare do such a thing," Elinor flashed out, quivering with
+rage.
+
+"That will be as your father says," was the firm reply. "If it pleases
+him to reveal the secret of Golden Leith's fate, I'll spare you and
+him; if not, you need expect no mercy from me."
+
+The grim _ultimatum_ was spoken. Elinor and her father knew by that
+flashing eye and stern-set lip that there was no appeal from the
+calmly-spoken decision.
+
+"Coward, to threaten a girl," she cried, taking refuge in vituperation
+now that denial had failed.
+
+But Mr. Chesleigh regarded them in silent scorn, and her father sternly
+silenced her. He was furious with wrath, and it seemed to him that not
+even for his daughter's sake could he forego his dear revenge.
+
+"Elinor," he said, with a dark frown, "if indeed you have done this
+thing you must prepare to face the consequences. I will not accede to
+his demand. Nothing shall balk me of my revenge."
+
+Abject terror and despair filled Elinor's soul at those threatening
+words. She knew too well how guilty she was. She was filled with terror
+at the too probable punishment of her wickedness.
+
+Falling on her knees, she caught her father's hand in hers, and bathed
+them with her frightened tears.
+
+"Oh, father, do not sacrifice me to your revenge," she cried, wildly.
+"Remember that I am your own child. I should be dearer to you than your
+revenge. Oh! for mercy's sake, make terms with the wretch, and save me
+from his wicked vengeance."
+
+Mr. Chesleigh did not even notice her. He stood with folded arms and
+curling lips awaiting his enemy's reply.
+
+The sullen determination on John Glenalvan's face softened as she
+continued her anxious pleading.
+
+"Father, I cannot live if that wretched story becomes known," she
+wailed. "If you do not save me I shall drown myself."
+
+A slight shudder convulsed his frame at the words. He looked down at
+the frightened, tear-wet face.
+
+"Elinor," he said, "if I have to sacrifice my revenge for your sake, I
+shall hate you every moment of your future life."
+
+"Anything but exposure," she wailed. "Oh, father, save me."
+
+His dark brow lowered like a thunder cloud.
+
+"So be it," he said, "but, mark me, girl, I shall hate you forever
+after."
+
+"Then you will speak?" Bertram Chesleigh cried, gladly.
+
+John Glenalvan hesitated a moment, then answered, gloomily:
+
+"Yes, to save that wretched girl I will reveal the secret that has been
+locked in my breast for sixteen years."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVII.
+
+
+There was a moment's silence, then Bertram Chesleigh said, quickly:
+
+"Come with me, Mr. Glenalvan. Let the secret you have kept so long be
+revealed in the hearing of your father and Richard Leith."
+
+The guilty man recoiled from the demand. He said, hoarsely:
+
+"I refuse to do so. I will reveal it to you, and you may bear the news
+yourself to them."
+
+Bertram Chesleigh considered the reply a moment, then answered, firmly.
+
+"I prefer that they should hear it from your own lips."
+
+John Glenalvan regarded him with furious eyes.
+
+"You wish to humble me all you can," he said.
+
+"Not so," replied Mr. Chesleigh. "But I consider that they have too
+decided a right to hear your confession, for me to exclude them from
+this momentous interview."
+
+The angry man regarded him silently a moment, then said, with a sigh of
+baffled rage:
+
+"So be it. I am not now in a position to dictate terms, and must obey
+your will. You swear to keep Elinor's secret if I do this thing?"
+
+"Yes," Bertram answered.
+
+"I am ready to accompany you, then. Elinor," he turned a furious gaze
+on his daughter who was weeping nervously near the door; "go to your
+mother, now. Tell her that you have ruined all my plans, and that I
+forever curse the hour in which you were born."
+
+She turned away, casting one last look of fiery anger and hatred on the
+man she had tried to murder, and left the room.
+
+The two men went down together to Richard Leith's room. The lawyer was
+sitting up in an easy-chair, talking to old Hugh Glenalvan who occupied
+a chair near the window.
+
+They both looked up in surprise at the unexpected sight of John
+Glenalvan, whom they had supposed to be far away in hiding somewhere.
+
+Bertram spoke at once, quietly:
+
+"You will pardon this late intrusion, Mr. Glenalvan. This gentleman has
+an important communication to make to you, and I ventured to bring him
+at once."
+
+"A communication?" faltered the old man, looking blankly at his son.
+
+"Yes," answered Mr. Chesleigh, with the flush of joyful triumph on
+his handsome face. "He will solve for you the strange mystery of your
+daughter's disappearance, sixteen years ago."
+
+A cry came from Richard Leith's white lips. The old man echoed it
+feebly, as he rose and went to his son, but John waved him rudely back.
+
+"Do not come near me," he said, harshly; "I have always hated you
+because you loved my sister best."
+
+"I could not help it, John. She was more lovable than you," the father
+faltered, feebly.
+
+"And so she stole your love from me and earned my hate. But I have had
+a great revenge," said the relentless wretch, grimly.
+
+"Oh, John, John!"
+
+The wailing cry came from the old man's lips; he looked at his son in
+surprise and horror.
+
+"Yes, revenge," repeated John Glenalvan, seeming to take a malicious
+pride in his wickedness now that its revelation was forced upon him.
+"I hated her, and when my opportunity came, I seized upon it. I knew
+she was a wife, yet it was my hand that sent her that lying letter that
+made her leave her husband."
+
+"Devil!" Richard Leith muttered, making an effort to spring upon him,
+but Bertram Chesleigh held him back, and the villain who had so wronged
+him laughed mockingly.
+
+"She came home," he went on, after a minute, "came home, and her child
+was born. The following night came her mysterious disappearance which
+I accounted for by declaring that she had returned to her deceiver,
+unable to exist away from him."
+
+All eyes were fixed on his dark, demoniac face as he proceeded. Every
+heart hung trembling on his further words.
+
+At last the fearful mystery of little Golden's fate would be known to
+those who loved and mourned her.
+
+Old Dinah had stolen silently in, and sat crouching in a corner, her
+beady, black eyes fixed intently on the face of the man whom she had
+always distrusted.
+
+"Speak," Richard Leith thundered, almost mad with impatience. "Speak!
+You know she never came to me. Where is she now, my poor, wronged
+darling?"
+
+"Is she dead or living?" echoed the wronged woman's father.
+
+"_She is dead_!" John Glenalvan answered, coldly.
+
+"Dead!" they echoed, despairingly.
+
+"She has been dead these sixteen years," he answered.
+
+"Vile wretch, then you murdered her," cried Richard Leith, struggling
+frantically in Bertram Chesleigh's strong hold.
+
+The villain laughed heartlessly.
+
+"Not so," he replied. "I hated her, but I would not have risked hanging
+for her sake. It was no fault of mine that she came to her death so
+tragically."
+
+"Dead and buried these sixteen years," old Hugh moaned, wringing his
+feeble hands, and weeping as if the bereavement were but of yesterday.
+"John, tell me where to find my darling's grave."
+
+"_She lies in the bottom of the lake_!" he replied, and those who
+watched him saw him shudder and turn pale for the first time.
+
+"How came she there?" broke out Bertram Chesleigh.
+
+"My sister was a somnambulist, Mr. Chesleigh. You will not deny that
+fact, father. She wandered from the house in her sleep, and walked
+deliberately into the lake."
+
+"You saw her?"
+
+"Yes, I was the only witness to the tragic deed," he replied, and again
+they saw a shudder shake his strong frame, and the chill dew beaded his
+forehead.
+
+"Devil, you lie! You pushed her in!" cried Richard Leith, wild with
+rage and grief.
+
+"Did you, John? Oh, tell me the truth," moaned his father.
+
+"No, I did not, as there is a Heaven that hears me. I hated Golden
+because you and my mother loved her best, and because half of your
+property would go to her, but the thought of murder had not entered my
+head. I was out late that night, and returning with my mind full of
+envious thoughts toward my sister, I saw her crossing the moonlighted
+lawn, and on coming nearer saw that she was asleep. Keeping near to
+her, I followed her down to the lake, and she walked on straight,
+without pause or backward glance, into the water."
+
+"And you put out no hand to save her--murderer!" cried Bertram
+Chesleigh, in terrific scorn.
+
+"I did not know what she would do until all was over," he replied.
+
+"You might have saved her even then," Bertram Chesleigh said.
+
+"Yes, I might, but I hated her, and the devil whispered to me that this
+was my opportunity, so I watched the water close over her head, and
+then I walked away," he replied.
+
+"Oh, my God, is de vengeance ob Hebben asleep dat such debbils roam de
+yerth?" wailed old Dinah.
+
+They echoed her cry. Surely the vengeance of Heaven slumbered that such
+demons walked the earth unsmitten.
+
+"Then temptation entered my soul," he continued. "I did not think it
+was right for Golden's child to inherit her share of the property when
+I needed it so much for my own growing family. So I fabricated that
+slander, and eventually forced my father to make over the remnant of
+the Glenalvans' possessions to me, and I transferred my hatred from
+Golden to her child. Now you know all."
+
+Old Hugh pointed to the door with a shaking finger.
+
+"Go, now, before I call down the terrible vengeance of God on your
+guilty head!" he cried. "Go, and leave me to weep for my murdered
+darling!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVIII.
+
+
+The next day men were set to work to drag the lake for Golden Leith's
+body.
+
+A poor, bleached skeleton, partially petrified by the action of the
+water, and therefore in a good state of preservation, was all they
+found.
+
+The broad, gold band of a wedding-ring still clung to the fleshless
+finger, and the name within was all that remained to assure them that
+this was she whom they sought--the hapless girl whose bright life had
+been blasted by a brother's sin, and whose name had been covered with
+ignominy and shame for sixteen years.
+
+They placed the precious remains in a coffin, and prepared to give them
+Christian burial the next day.
+
+All night and all day it stood on trestles in Hugh Glenalvan's
+sitting-room, with mourners at head and foot--the husband and father,
+so tragically bereaved of their darling, sat there dumb and tearless
+in their great affliction, and old Dinah stole in and out, with the
+corner of her apron pressed to her streaming eyes, her old black face
+convulsed with grief.
+
+Only a few days ago the daughter's coffin had stood there where the
+mother's rested now.
+
+Both her nurslings were gone, and the faithful, old creature's heart
+was almost broken.
+
+Throughout the night and day not a member of John Glenalvan's family
+was visible. The curtains remained drawn at the windows, the doors
+closed, there was no sign of life within the house.
+
+The time came when poor little Golden's remains were to be consigned to
+the kindly shelter of the grave.
+
+It was a beautiful evening about the first of March. The grass was blue
+with violets, the birds twittered softly in the orange and magnolia
+trees, the sun shone brightly as it slowly declined in the western sky;
+Dinah had been in and deposited some beautiful wreaths of flowers upon
+the bier.
+
+The friends who had loved the dead woman long ago had come to know her
+mournful fate at last, and had sent these sweet testimonials of their
+sympathy and grief.
+
+They were waiting in the graveyard to pay the last outward tokens of
+respect to the lost one, but they would not venture to the house to
+intrude on the privacy of the bereaved ones.
+
+So the gentle minister came and told them that they must bid a last
+farewell to the loved one, and Bertram Chesleigh stood ready to support
+the still feeble footsteps of Richard Leith with his strong young arm.
+
+"Oh, my daughter, my daughter, how cruelly God has afflicted me,"
+moaned the bereaved father, laying his white head down upon the
+coffin-lid, while the first heavy tears splashed down his cheeks.
+
+"Do not arraign your Maker. Rather thank Him that your child has
+at last been proven pure and innocent," said the minister, to whom
+Golden's whole history was known.
+
+"Thank God," Bertram Chesleigh uttered fervently, then, with a sigh
+that was almost a sob, he added: "Ah, if only my wife had lived to see
+this day!"
+
+"She lives--she is here!" said a low, clear voice in the doorway.
+
+All looked around, startled. Two figures were entering the room. Both
+were clothed in deep mourning.
+
+One was Gertrude Leith, pale and grave-looking, the other was alight,
+and deeply veiled. She clung to Mrs. Leith's arm tremblingly. They
+crossed the floor and stood by that long, dark, solemn object that
+occupied the center of the room. Mrs. Leith raised her companion's veil.
+
+All started and uttered a cry of incredulous surprise.
+
+Little Golden's daughter, pallid, beautiful, tearful, was standing
+there, looking at them across her mother's coffin.
+
+"Thank God!" she said, in her sweet, clear voice, with a sound of tears
+in its sweetness. "Thank God, my mother was pure and innocent! The
+dream of my life-time is fulfilled at last."
+
+"Does the grave give up its dead?" they cried, and Bertram Chesleigh
+went to her side and touched her white hand, half-fearfully.
+
+"My wife," he said.
+
+"Yes, your wife," she answered, lifting her violet eyes to his face
+with such deep reproach in their tragic depths, that he was awed into
+momentary silence.
+
+Then she turned from him, and went to her grandfather, who was gazing
+at her with dazed eyes full of grief and dread. She put her arms around
+his neck, and kissed his poor, withered cheek with her sweet, quivering
+lips.
+
+"Grandpa, you must not take me for a ghost," she said. "It is your own
+little Golden come back to live and love you again. I was not dead,
+after all. Did I not tell you I could not die yet? But I cannot tell
+you all the story of my rescue from the grave now. Let us give all our
+thoughts to our martyred dead."
+
+She looked up and saw her father and old Dinah waiting to greet her.
+
+It was a strange scene beside that flower-wreathed coffin.
+
+There was passionate joy over the living girl, and bitter sorrow over
+the dead.
+
+Mrs. Leith had beckoned Bertram Chesleigh away. Behind the heavy
+hangings of the bay-window she said to him, gently:
+
+"Do not press your wife yet, Mr. Chesleigh. Remember you have wronged
+her deeply, and she does not yet know how you have repented and atoned."
+
+"I can never atone," he said, heavily.
+
+"Perhaps she may think differently when she knows all," said Mrs.
+Leith. "Women are very tender and forgiving, you know."
+
+"If she never speaks to me again, I shall still rejoice that she is
+living," he said, with a beam of gladness in his large, black eyes.
+
+"Do you wonder how she was saved?" she inquired.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I will tell you, then, briefly," she answered. "You remember how you
+bribed the grave-digger to open her coffin for you that night?"
+
+"Yes, and then I was too ill to keep my appointment," he answered.
+
+"That wild fancy of yours was the means of her rescue," said Mrs.
+Leith. "When the man opened the coffin to be in readiness for you,
+he discovered slight signs of life in Golden. Growing alarmed and
+impatient at your tardiness, he sent his son to look for you, and the
+youth encountered me. I went with him, and we removed her to the man's
+little cottage near by. Little by little we fed the signs of reviving
+life, and you see the result."
+
+"For which I bless and thank you forever," he said, kissing her hand
+respectfully.
+
+"I have but little more to say," she went on, smiling a little sadly,
+"and it is this: Golden is very weak and exhausted yet. She is not
+strong enough to bear the excitement of her mother's burial. I will
+remain here with her while they are bearing Mrs. Leith to the grave,
+and I will tell her your whole story. She shall hear how you came back
+here to seek her in two days after your ill-considered desertion of
+her, and found her gone. I will tell her how nobly you vindicated her
+honor beside her grave. She shall know that you forced John Glenalvan
+to reveal the hidden story of her mother's fate. When you come back I
+think she cannot fail to forgive you."
+
+"You will do all this for me?" he said, with a strange moisture in his
+eyes. "I cannot thank you sufficiently. You are an angel."
+
+"No, only a very faulty and sad-hearted woman," she replied, with a
+pensive sigh, and then they went back to the mourners.
+
+She kept her promise nobly. While they bore the poor remains of Richard
+Leith's first wife to the grave, his second wife sat with his daughter
+and tried to turn the swelling current of her grief by relating the
+story of Bertram Chesleigh's repentance and atonement.
+
+"Golden, if you could have heard his noble vindication of your honor
+beside your grave; how proudly he claimed you for his wife, and your
+child for his own, you could not fail to pity and forgive him for
+the one great error into which he was led by his own pride and John
+Glenalvan's evil counsel."
+
+"I have suffered so much through his fault," said the wronged wife,
+with mournful pathos.
+
+"Yes, dear, but you must show your own nobility of soul now," said the
+step-mother, gently. "You must remember:
+
+ "'To err is human,
+ To forgive divine.'"
+
+The beautiful, pale face grew very grave and troubled.
+
+"If only I could forget his cruelty," she said. "Ah, my friend, I was
+hurt so cruelly by that letter he sent me! I trusted him so fully. I
+believed in his truth as I believed in my God. I was almost maddened by
+the suddenness of my sorrow. Every word is branded upon my memory. See!
+I can repeat every sentence:
+
+"'Though it almost kills me to forsake you, Golden, I must go away. The
+disgrace of your birth is so terrible that I can never claim you for
+my wife. Pride and honor alike forbid it. You must see for yourself,
+poor child, that your terrible misfortune has wholly set you apart from
+the world, and as you have sworn to keep our private marriage a secret
+until I give you leave to reveal it, I must beg you to hold the story
+unspoken in your breast forever.'"
+
+She paused and looked at Mrs. Leith with a whole tragedy of sorrow in
+her violet orbs.
+
+"Were they not cruel words to write to his own wife?" she said
+pathetically. "But I obeyed him. Through all the shame and sorrow
+that came afterward I kept my promise. Do you think I did not suffer
+more than death in keeping it? When Mrs. Desmond drove me out in such
+terrible disgrace do you think I did not long to say to her: I am as
+good and pure as you are; I am your brother's wife! And what did I not
+suffer when I knew she was separated from her husband on my account?
+Then when my own father disowned and despised me, how my heart ached to
+answer, I am Bertram Chesleigh's own wife! Oh, Gertrude, is it right
+and just that I should forgive him for all that I have suffered and
+made others suffer for his sake?"
+
+"Yes, dear, because his repentance was so quick and his remorse so
+deep," said the gentle monitor. "You must remember, Golden, that if you
+had not gone away that night you would have escaped all that suffering;
+your husband returned in twenty-four hours to claim you, and John
+Glenalvan told him that you had gone away with the deliberate intention
+of leading a sinful life. Do you wonder that it threw him on a bed of
+sickness that almost cost him his life? You must forgive him and love
+him again, dear, because he is so penitent and devoted now."
+
+And when the mourners returned from that sad funeral, Mrs. Leith sent
+him in to his wronged wife.
+
+He knelt down before the pale, golden-haired girl, and begged her to
+forgive him, not that he deserved it, but because he loved her so
+dearly.
+
+With the meek tenderness of woman, she forgave him and there was peace
+between them.
+
+Several hours later he had led her out to old Hugh Glenalvan who was
+dozing sadly in his easy-chair.
+
+"Mr. Glenalvan," he said, "you see my darling has risen from the grave
+to forgive me. Will you keep the promise you made, and forgive me too?"
+
+"Yes, grandpa, you must forgive him, for I love him dearly," said
+little Golden.
+
+So the old man forgave him, and solemnly blessed them as they knelt
+before him, one withered hand resting kindly on the dark, bowed head,
+and the other on the golden one.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIX.
+
+
+Gertrude Leith having done what she could for the happiness of others,
+prepared to take her own departure.
+
+"You will not leave us, my dear, true friend, my second mother," Golden
+exclaimed, as she came in veiled and bonneted, to bid her good-bye.
+
+"Yes, dear, it will be better for a time, at least, that I should go
+away. I shall return north and go back to those quiet quarters in
+Brooklyn, where you and I spent those peaceful weeks before we came
+south. When you come to New York with your husband you will find me
+there."
+
+"I will certainly seek you out," Golden replied. "But surely you do not
+intend to forsake my father. The doubt and perplexity are all over now.
+You know that you are legally his wife, my own mother being dead before
+he ever knew you."
+
+"Yes, I know, dear," she answered, gently. "Yet it is best I should
+go away for a time. Your father must have time for his grief. After
+awhile, if he desires it, I may return to him."
+
+Her words were too full of wisdom for anyone to gainsay them, so she
+went away.
+
+Richard Leith's grief and remorse over his lost little Golden was as
+deep and passionate as if she had died yesterday instead of more than
+sixteen years ago.
+
+He was too sorrowful to remember the fair woman he had put in the dead
+wife's place in the vain hope of stilling the fever and pain that had
+ached ceaselessly at his heart for sixteen years.
+
+The time came later on when the first wife's memory became a sweet
+and chastened dream to him, and his second wife's new loveliness of
+character won its place in his heart.
+
+Some years of quiet happiness and mutual love came to them after
+they learned to know each other better, but there was no year in
+which Richard Leith did not return south once, at least, to spend a
+few solemn hours by the low grave under the whispering cedars and
+broad-leaved magnolias, where the broken marble shaft bore the fond
+inscription:
+
+ "IN LOVING MEMORY OF GOLDEN,
+
+ WIFE OF RICHARD LEITH."
+
+There was one other to whom that green grave became like a shrine, a
+holy Mecca, to which his poor, faltering footsteps were daily bent.
+
+It was old Hugh Glenalvan, whom old Dinah daily guided to the sacred
+spot, where he would sit for hours, his gray locks fluttering in the
+gentle breeze, meditating, or perhaps holding spirit communion with the
+sainted dead.
+
+It was discovered on the day of Golden Leith's burial that John
+Glenalvan and his whole family had secretly left the house the night
+previous.
+
+A week later a letter came from the villain to Bertram Chesleigh,
+offering to sell Glenalvan Hall on fair terms, and stating that he
+should never live in the south again.
+
+A bargain was closed at once, and Bertram Chesleigh became the
+possessor of the old hall, which was speedily repaired and remodeled
+under the supervision of himself and his lovely young wife.
+
+Before the work was completed a chance newspaper chronicled the fact of
+a distressing railway accident and among the list of killed appeared
+the name of John Glenalvan.
+
+Bertram and Golden destroyed the newspaper, and old Hugh never knew
+that his wicked son had gone suddenly and without preparation into the
+presence of his august Maker.
+
+The old man's life flowed on in sweet serenity. All his happiness was
+centered in the living Golden, and beside the grave of the dead one.
+
+While he lived, Golden and her husband made their home at Glenalvan
+Hall, but after several years of quiet peace the white soul of the
+noble old man took on the wings of immortality, and soared to its
+Heavenly home through the open gates of the sunset.
+
+They made him a grave by his daughter's side, and when the grass was
+growing green upon his grave they took old Dinah with them and turned
+their faces northward.
+
+Black mammy had become reconciled to Mr. Chesleigh when she saw how
+happy he made her little missie. Her kind and wrinkled old visage
+reflected the radiant happiness that shone on Golden's beautiful face.
+
+She waited on her kindly and devotedly as ever, declaring that no
+starched-up French maid should ever take her place while she lived, and
+Golden, with a shuddering remembrance of the wicked Celine's treachery,
+always assured her "old mammy" that she need never fear such an
+intruder on her privileges.
+
+The day came when one of the most beautiful and palatial homes in New
+York opened wide its doors to receive Bertram Chesleigh's fair wife as
+its honored mistress.
+
+Though Golden had seen some of the stately homes of New York she was
+astonished at the luxury and magnificence of her own.
+
+Mr. Chesleigh smiled indulgently at her pretty, childish delight as
+he led her through suite after suite of the sumptuous, luxurious
+apartments the day after their arrival.
+
+"I am glad you are so pleased with your new home," he said, "but now,
+my darling, you must run away and let black mammy dress you. I have
+invited a few guests to dinner."
+
+"Strangers?" she asked, with a shy pretty blush on the exquisite face
+that was fresh and sweet as a rosebud with only that pensive droop of
+the golden-brown lashes to hint at the sorrow through which she had
+passed.
+
+"Not exactly,'" he replied with a smile. "Lawyer Leith and his wife,
+Mr. and Mrs. Desmond, and little Ruby. I think you will be glad to see
+her, though she must have tyrannized over you dreadfully in the old
+days."
+
+"A dear little tyrant she was," laughed Mrs. Chesleigh. "I shall be
+very pleased to see her again."
+
+She went to her dressing-room, and a loving remembrance of some things
+the child had said to her once, caused her to choose a lovely dress
+of white and blue, with large, gleaming white pearls for her neck and
+wrists, and knots of fragrance-breathing violets fastened among her
+creamy laces.
+
+Bertram uttered a cry of delight when she came to him in the
+drawing-room in the beautiful dress with the golden curls framing the
+perfect face in a halo of light.
+
+She looked beyond him and saw her father and his wife gazing at her
+with eyes full of love and wonder, and she sprang joyfully to their
+embrace.
+
+Mrs. Leith released her after some low-murmured words of love and
+praise, and she saw her husband's sister by her side.
+
+Mrs. Desmond had grown more brilliantly lovely than ever. Happiness and
+contentment had lent new radiance to the lovely face, but there was a
+wistful air, almost amounting to humility, about her as she extended
+her jeweled hand, and said, sweetly:
+
+"My dear little sister, can you ever forgive me?"
+
+"Freely," she said, clasping the offered hand, and proffering the kiss
+of peace.
+
+"And me, too--I am deeply repentant," said a low voice beside Mrs.
+Desmond, and looking up, Golden saw Mr. Desmond, debonairly handsome
+as ever, but so humble and ashamed that even a harder heart than our
+little Golden's must have pardoned his folly.
+
+Then Ruby took possession of her and gave her a bear-like hug.
+
+"Oh, you darling," she cried, "I have missed you so much, and to think
+you were Uncle Bert's wife all the while. It is just like one of
+mamma's novels that she is always reading. I warn you, Uncle Bert, that
+I shall make you jealous, I shall stay with her so much. And I do so
+want to see that dear old black mammy I have heard about."
+
+Her childish curiosity was gratified, and the New York child, after her
+first surprise, grew very fond of the good-natured, old negress who had
+been Golden's nurse from babyhood up.
+
+"I do not have a nurse any more," she confided to Golden. "They have
+hired a governess for me, and I like to study. It improves my temper."
+
+"Which was never very bad," smiled Golden, kissing the pretty little
+brunette.
+
+"When you go into society you will be surprised to meet Elinor
+Glenalvan again," Mrs. Desmond said to her after awhile. "She has
+picked up a rich, old man somewhere, and is Mrs. Langley now. Six
+months ago she burst upon society in a blaze of glory, and at present
+she is considered the handsomest woman in New York. But her star will
+fade when you are introduced to the social world."
+
+Soon afterward the two cousins met at a brilliant reception. Both
+looked their best, Elinor in Ruby velvet and diamonds, Golden in
+misty, white lace and pearls, Elinor just touched with the tips of her
+fingers the arm of her decrepit old spouse, Golden clung lovingly to
+her princely-looking and devoted husband. As they passed each other
+Mrs. Langley cast one look of bitter hatred and envy upon her fair,
+angelic-looking rival.
+
+It was as Mrs. Desmond had predicted. Elinor's star paled before the
+superior loveliness of Golden, and in bitter anger and chagrin, the
+eclipsed beauty retired from the field, and removed to a distant city,
+where she was seen and heard of no more by those who had formerly known
+her.
+
+Little Golden was glad when her enemy was gone, but she felt no vanity
+over her brilliant social successes. Her chief joy and pride was that
+she reigned queen over her husband's adoring heart.
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+
+This story was originally serialized in the _Family Story Paper_, where
+it ran from June 5, 1882 to September 4, 1882. This e-text is derived
+from a later reprint as No. 218 in _The Favorite Library_ published by
+The American News Company. The reprint edition also included two filler
+short stories: "A Mock Idyl" by Percy Ross and "Farewell" by W. H.
+Stacpoole. The filler stories are not included here.
+
+A table of contents was added for the convenience of the reader.
+
+Some inconsistent punctuation was retained (e.g. "Life Time" vs.
+"Life-Time" in title; "upturned" vs. "up-turned").
+
+Some inconsistently italicized text was retained (e.g. "rencontre").
+
+Some unusual spellings were retained (e.g. "exhult," "ballustrade").
+
+Accent marks to match original were omitted (e.g. "protege").
+
+Italics are represented with _underscores_.
+
+Page 3, changed "herelf" to "herself."
+
+Page 4, changed "to hasty" to "too hasty."
+
+Page 6, added missing quote before "Oh, grandpa."
+
+Page 13, changed "strangly" to "strangely."
+
+Page 17, changed "recounter" to "rencontre."
+
+Page 22, changed "neverspeak" to "never speak."
+
+Page 24, changed "aughs" to "laughs."
+
+Page 27, added comma after "Oh, my darlin'."
+
+Page 29, changed "founding" to "foundling" and changed ? to ! after
+"the girl is my niece."
+
+Page 31, changed "furthur intercouse" to "further intercourse."
+
+Page 37, changed "matin" to "mating."
+
+Page 38, added missing quote after "Jest wait one minute, darlin'."
+
+Page 42, changed "struggled" to "straggled."
+
+Page 48, changed "greatsest" to "greatest."
+
+Page 54, added missing quote before "He likes pretty faces."
+
+Page 55, changed "flirted" to "flitted."
+
+Page 56, changed "you hair" to "your hair."
+
+Page 60, changed "must not thing" to "must not think."
+
+Page 61, changed "significent" to "significant."
+
+Page 66, changed "thoughfully" to "thoughtfully."
+
+Page 75, removed extra "the" from "It is the the truth."
+
+Page 80, changed "Your know" to "You know" and "father as" to "father
+has."
+
+Page 83, changed "distress" to "mistress."
+
+Page 84, changed ? to ! in "you are mistaken!"
+
+Page 85, added missing quote before "Go, and take."
+
+Page 87, changed "her her husband" to "her husband."
+
+Page 91, changed "idendity" to "identity," "Lieth" to "Leith,"
+"Bestram" to "Bertram," "maked" to "marked" and "cousse" to "course."
+
+Page 97, changed "cempetence" to "competence."
+
+Page 101, changed "gazedw onderingly" to "gazed wonderingly."
+
+Page 102, changed "perference" to "preference," "you wife" to "your
+wife," and "guilty of his" to "guilty of this."
+
+Page 104, changed "delerious" to "delirious."
+
+Page 106, added missing open quote before "I wonder how."
+
+Page 107, changed "bess" to "bless."
+
+Page 110, changed "prostate" to "prostrate."
+
+Page 111, added missing quote before "I _know_."
+
+Page 112, changed "Lieth's" to "Leith's," "Lieth" to "Leith" and
+"idict" to "indict."
+
+Page 113, changed "as last" to "at last."
+
+Page 116, adding missing comma after "for God's sake" and changed
+"unable so bear" to "unable to bear."
+
+Page 117, added missing quote after "seen her even once."
+
+Page 118, changed "requim" to "requiem."
+
+Page 120, added missing quote after "absent for several days."
+
+Page 124, changed "Lieth" and "Keith" to "Leith."
+
+Page 127, changed "queit" to "quiet."
+
+Page 128, changed "No?" to "No!"
+
+Page 129, changed "belive" to "believe."
+
+Page 130, changed "hated" to "hatred."
+
+Page 139, changed "uncle Bert" to "Uncle Bert."
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LITTLE GOLDEN'S DAUGHTER***
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