登陆注册
4709200000101

第101章

He read it slowly, tears gathering fast in his eyes, his lips quivering, and his hands tightly clinched.

"My poor Beatrice!" he exclaimed; and then the strength of his young manhood gave way, and Lionel Dacre wept as he had never wept before. "The mean, pitiful scoundrel!" he cried, angry indignation rising as he thought of her cruel death. "The wretched villain--to stand by while she died!"

"Hush!" said Lord Earle. "He has gone to his account. What have you to say to me, Lionel? Because I had a miserable quarrel with my wife I abandoned my children. I never cared to see them from the time they were babes until they were women grown. How guilty am I? That man believed he was about to raise Beatrice in the social scale when he asked her to be his wife, or as he says, he would never have dreamed of proposing to marry my daughter. If he merits blame, what do I deserve?"

"It was a false position, certainly," replied Lionel Dacre.

"This secret must be kept inviolate," said Lord Earle. "Lord Airlie must never know it--it would kill Lady Helena, I believe.

One thing puzzles me, Lionel--Fernely says Lillian met him. I do not think that is true."

"It is!" cried Lionel, a sudden light breaking in upon him. "I saw her with him. Oh, Lord Earle, you may be proud of Lillian!

She is the noblest, truest girl that ever lived. Why, she sacrificed her own love, her own happiness, for her sister! She loved me; and when this wedding, which will never now take place, was over, I intended to ask you to give me Lillian. One night, quite accidentally, while I was wandering in the grounds with a cigar, I saw her speaking to a stranger, her fair sweet face full of pity and compassion, which I mistook for love. Shame to me that I was base enough to doubt her--that I spoke to her the words I uttered! I demanded to know who it was she had met, and why she had met him. She asked me to trust her, saying she could not tell me. I stabbed her with cruel words, and left her vowing that I would never see her again. Her sister must have trusted her with her secret, and she would not divulge it."

"We can not ask her now," said Lord Earle; "my mother tells me she is very ill."

"I must see her," cried Lionel, "and ask her to pardon me if she can. What am I to do for you, Lord Earle? Command me as though I were your own son."

"I want you to go to the cottage," said Ronald, "and see if the man is living or dead. You will know how to act. I need not ask a kinsman and a gentleman to keep my secret."

In a few minutes Lionel Dacre was on his way to the cottage, riding as though it were for dear life. Death had been still more swift. Hugh Fernely lay dead.

The cottager's wife told Lionel how the children out at play had found a man lying in the dank grass near the pond, and how her husband, in his own strong arms, had brought him to their abode.

He lay still for many hours, and then asked for pen and ink. He was writing, she said, nearly all night, and afterward prayed her husband to take the letter to Lord Earle. The man refused any nourishment. Two hours later they went in to persuade him to take some food, and found him lying dead, his face turned to the morning sky.

Lionel Dacre entered the room. The hot anger died out of his heart as he saw the anguish death had marked upon the white countenance. What torture must the man have suffered, what hours of untold agony, to have destroyed him in so short a time! The dark, handsome face appeared to indicate that the man had been dying for years.

Lionel turned reverently away. Man is weak and powerless before death. In a few words he told the woman that she should be amply rewarded for her kindness, and that he himself would defray all expenses.

"He was perhaps an old servant of my lord's?" she said.

"No," was the reply; "Lord Earle did not know him--had never seen him; but the poor man was well known to one of Lord Earle's friends."

Thanks to Lionel's words, the faintest shadow of suspicion was never raised. Of the two deaths, that of Miss Earle excited all attention and aroused all sympathy. No one spoke of Hugh Fernely, or connected him with the occurrence at the Hall.

There was an inquest, and men decided that he had "died by the visitation of God." No one knew the agony that had cast him prostrate in the thick, dank grass, no one knew the unendurable anguish that had shortened his life.

* * * * * * * * * * * *

When Lionel returned to the Hall, he went straight to Lord Earle.

"I was too late," he said; "the man had been dead some hours."

His name was not mentioned between them again. Lord Earle never inquired where he was buried--he never knew.

The gloom had deepened at the Hall. Lillian Earle lay nigh unto death. Many believed that the master of Earlescourt would soon be a childless man. He could not realize it. They told him how she lay with the cruel raging fever sapping her life, but he seemed to forget the living child in mourning for the one that lay dead.

In compliance with Lionel's prayer, Lady Helena took him into the sick room where Lillian lay. She did not know him; the gentle, tender eyes were full of dread and fear; the fair, pure face was burning with the flush of fever; the hot, dry lips were never still. She talked incessantly--at times of Knutsford and Beatrice--then prayed in her sweet, sad voice that Lionel would trust her--only trust her; when Beatrice was married she would tell him all.

He turned away; her eyes had lingered on his face, but no gleam of recognition came into them.

"You do not think she will die?" he asked of Lady Helena; and she never forgot his voice or his manner.

"We hope not," she said; "life and death are in higher hands than ours. If you wish to help her, pray for her."

In after years Lionel Dacre like to remember that the best and most fervent prayers of his life had been offered for gentle, innocent Lillian Earle.

As he turned to quit the chamber he heard her crying for her mother. She wanted her mother--why was she not there? He looked at Lady Helena; she understood him.

"I have written," she said. "I sent for Dora yesterday; she will be here soon."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 宠爱一世:娇妻你别跑

    宠爱一世:娇妻你别跑

    她觉得自己背负着一条生命,所以,她自甘堕落,走向地狱,却在地狱的门口遇到他。人生第一次去酒吧,叶蓝汐遇到了秦嘉晔。然后,深压在内心的罪恶开始叫嚣。她选择赎罪,用另一个人的感情。最终,恶有恶报。可是,秦嘉晔何其无辜?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 列子御风:无拘无束的自在人生

    列子御风:无拘无束的自在人生

    本书主要通过讲述《列子》中的寓言故事,将其中的奇妙哲理用通俗的语言讲述给读者。全书分十篇,从不同的方面讲述天地、讲述人生,给读者一个无拘无束的自在人生。
  • 绛雪园古方选注

    绛雪园古方选注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 吕氏外戚

    吕氏外戚

    秦旭“不小心”“非礼”了一个小姑娘,小姑娘的父亲叫吕布!!于是秦旭悲催了!各种摧残各种恨啊!既然逃不出这魔掌!为了自己的小命!为了身后的一大家子!那就玩命的搀和吧!于是……刘大耳朵、人妻曹和孙绿眼,你们要倒霉了……
  • 佛说佛顶尊胜陀罗尼经

    佛说佛顶尊胜陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 网游之初吻献给过滤嘴

    网游之初吻献给过滤嘴

    一名穷困的、运气不是很好的学生,被迫在毕业前离校。前途渺茫之际,开始以网游为生。游戏世界与现实世界的交织,让他领悟很多,明白很多。为了亲人,为了荣誉,他在全球在线人数最多的网游里,打出了国人的自强、自信,彰显了国人的傲气,展现了中华民族的深厚文化底蕴,彰显了华夏民族的博爱与包容,表达了对生活的热爱,对和平生活的捍卫。同时,也表现出了一个社会最底层的男人,最爱情的坚贞守护。
  • 雪中悍刀行8:剑仙尽低眉

    雪中悍刀行8:剑仙尽低眉

    烽火戏诸侯开创奇幻武侠新世界,持续热销,再创高峰!北凉草包世子横空逆袭,一刀将这世俗捅了个透!奇异人物,奇幻场景,颠覆传统,荡气回肠,组成不一样的鲜活历史,不一样的瑰丽江湖!妖刀烽火颠覆传统用鬼斧般的文字创造了一个奇特而神秘的世界。这里有牵瘦马缺门牙见着歹人跑得比主子还快却是传说中的高手的老黄,有整日摇摇晃晃不求道却能一剑开天门,倒骑青牛的年轻道士,有刚出世便跌入武评第八,一声剑响成了陆地神仙敢叫天下第二劈海相送的断臂抠脚的老剑神,还有骑熊猫扛向日葵不太冷的少女杀手……
  • 身体语言密码大全集(超值金版)

    身体语言密码大全集(超值金版)

    学会读懂和使用身体语言,是一门成功必修课,是洞悉先机、掌控全局的保证。《身体语言密码大全集》由盛乐编著,对身体语言的表现形态、深刻内涵及其广泛运用进行了全面而深入的解读,为你破译身体语言的种种密码,带你走进人类潜意识的最深处,帮你看穿他人的真实意图,窥破人际关系的奥妙,掌握和运用比说话更高效的沟通技巧。《身体语言密码大全集》适合大众阅读。
  • 毕摩的故事

    毕摩的故事

    这天,像以往一样,吉克葜尔者到别家去做“毕”回来。回来了,打着火把照着明回来了。想起家哟,家有个如花似玉的妻子,妻子名下有四个儿子,四个女儿。妻子的确漂亮,想起进山撵山的人就这样唱来着:“快点啊,快点/快点逮住猎物啊/逮住了好去讨阿底呷呷做妻子……”猎人们,坐在深山里唱的这支歌谣,唱的就是阿底呷呷。阿底呷呷又是谁呢?正是他的妻子!多少有头有脸的男人梦寐想得到,终归是他的了!终归是他的,他就要珍惜、要爱护、要袒护……他想到这儿,不禁哑然失笑,未了,他又轻轻摇晃起头。就加快了步伐,走在伸手不见五指的黑夜。
  • 非正常明星

    非正常明星

    一个脑子抽筋的富二代,为了成为大明星,在娱乐圈横冲直撞的故事……“哎哟,腿有点软,结衣老婆你快来扶我一下!”裙号:796473164