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your Temple chambers,” answered Sir Reginald. “If report does not belie
you, you spend the greater part of your existence at a certain villa at
Fulham.”
There was that in Sir Reginald Eversleigh’s tone which attracted the
attention of the men within hearing—almost all of whom were well
acquainted with the careers of the two cousins, and many of whom knew
them personally.
Though the club loungers were too well-bred to listen, it was
nevertheless obvious that the attention of all had been more or less
aroused by the baronet’s tone and manner.
Douglas Dale answered, in accents as audible, and a tone as haughty as
the accents and tone of his cousin.
“Report is not likely to belie me,” he said, “since there is no mystery
in my life to afford food for gossip. If by a certain villa at Fulham
you mean Hilton House, you are not mistaken. I have the honour to be a
frequent guest at that house.”
“It is an honour which many of us have enjoyed,” answered Reginald,
with a sneer.
“An honour which I used to find deuced expensive, by Jove!” exclaimed
Viscount Caversham, who was standing near Douglas Dale.
“That was at the time when Sir Reginald Eversleigh usurped the position
of host in Madame Durski’s house,” replied Douglas. “You would find
things much changed there now, Caversham, were the lady to favour you
by an invitation. When Madame Durski first came to England she was so
unfortunate as to fall into the hands of evil counsellors. She has
learned since to know her friends from her enemies.”
“She is a very charming woman,” drawled the viscount, laughingly; “but
if you want to keep a balance at your banker’s, Dale, I should strongly
advise you to refuse her hospitality.”
“Madame Durski will shortly be my wife,” replied Douglas, in a voice
loud enough to be heard by the bystanders; “and the smallest word
calculated to cast a slur on her fair fame will be an insult to me—an
insult which I shall know how to resent.”
This announcement fell like a thunderbolt in the assembly of
fashionable idlers. All knew the history of the house at Fulham. They
knew of Paulina Durski only as a beautiful, but dangerous, syren, whose
fatal smiles lured men to their ruin. That Douglas Dale should unite
himself to such a woman seemed to them little short of absolute
madness.
Love must be strong indeed which will face the ridicule of mankind
unflinchingly. Douglas Dale knew that, in redeeming Paulina from her
miserable situation, in elevating her to a position that many blameless
and well-born Englishwomen would have gladly accepted, he was making a
sacrifice which the men amongst whom he lived would condemn as the act
of a fool. But he was willing to endure this, painful though it was to
him, for the sake of the woman he loved.
“Better that I should have the scorn of shallow-brained worldlings than
that the blight on her life should continue,” he said to himself. “When
she is my wife, no man will dare to question her honour—no woman will
dare to frown upon her when she enters society leaning on my arm.”
This is what Douglas Dale repeated to himself very often during his
courtship of Paulina Durski. This is what he thought as he stood erect
and defiant in the crowded room of the Pall Mall club, facing the
curious looks of his acquaintances.
After the first shock there was a dead silence; no voice murmured the
common-place phrases of congratulation which might naturally have
followed such an announcement. If Douglas Dale had just announced that
some dire misfortune had befallen him, the faces of the men around him
could not have been more serious. No one smiled; no one applauded his
choice; not one voice congratulated him on having won for himself so
fair a bride.
That ominous silence told Douglas Dale how terrible was the stigma
which the world had set upon her he so fondly loved. The anguish which
rent his heart during those few moments is not to be expressed by
words. After that most painful silence, he walked to the table at which
it was his habit to sit, and began to read a newspaper. Sir Reginald
watched him furtively for a few moments in silence, and then left the
room.
After this the two cousins met frequently; but they never spoke. They
passed each other with the coldest and most ceremonious salutation. The
idlers of the club perceived this, and commented on the fact.
“Douglas Dale and his cousin are not on speaking terms,” they said:
“they have quarrelled about that beautiful Austrian widow, at whose
house there used to be such high play.”
In Paulina’s society, Douglas tried to forget the cruel shadow which
darkened, and which, in all likelihood, would for ever darken, her
name; and while in her society he contrived to banish from his mind all
bitter thought of the world’s harsh verdict and cruel condemnation.
But away from Paulina he was tortured by the recollection of that scene
at the Phoenix Club; tormented by the thought that, let him make what
sacrifice he might, he could never wipe out the stain which those
midnight assemblies of gamesters had left on his future wife’s
reputation.
“We will leave England for ever after the marriage,” he said to himself
sometimes. “We will make our home in some fair Italian city, where my
Paulina will be respected and admired as if she were a queen, as well
as the loveliest and sweetest of women.”
If he asked Paulina where their future life was to be spent she always
replied to him in the same manner.
“Wherever you take me I shall be content,” she said. “I can never be
grateful enough for your goodness; I can never repay the debt I owe
you. Let our future be your planning, not mine.”
“And you have no wish, no fancy, that I can realize, Paulina?”
“None. Prom my earliest girlhood I have sighed for only one blessing—
peace! You have given me that. What more can I ask at your hands? Ah!
Douglas, I fear my love has already cost you too dearly. The world will
never forgive you for your choice; you, who might make so brilliant a
marriage!”
Her generous feelings once aroused, Paulina could be almost as noble as
her lover. Again and again she implored him to withdraw his promise—to
leave, and to forget her.
“Believe me, Douglas, our engagement is a mistake,” she said. “Consider
this before it is too late. You are a proud man where honour is
concerned, and the past life of her whom you marry should be without
spot or blemish. It is not so with me. If I have not sinned as other
women have sinned, I have stooped to be the companion of gamblers and
rou�s; I have allowed my house to become the haunt of reckless and
dissipated men. Society revenges itself cruelly upon those who break
its laws. Society will neither forget nor forgive my offence.”
“I do not live for society, but for you, Paulina,” replied Douglas,
passionately; “you are all the world to me. Let me never hear these
arguments again, unless you would have me think that you are weary of
me, and that you only want an excuse for getting rid of me.”
“Weary of you!” exclaimed Paulina; “my friend, my benefactor. How can I
ever prove my gratitude for your goodness—your devotion?”
“By learning to love me a little,” answered Douglas, tenderly.
“The lesson ought not to be difficult,” Paulina murmured.
Could she do less than love this noble friend, this pure-minded and
unselfish adorer?
He came to her one day, accompanied by a solicitor; but before
introducing the man of law, he asked for a private interview with
Paulina, and in this interview gave her a new proof of his devotion.
“In thinking much of our position, dearest, I have been struck with a
sudden terror of the uncertainty of life. What would be your fate,
Paulina, if anything were to happen—if—well, if I were to die
suddenly, as men so often die in this high-pressure age, before
marriage had united our interests? What would be your fate, alone and
helpless, assailed once more by all the perplexities of poverty, and,
perhaps, subject to the mean spite of my cousin, Reginald Eversleigh,
who does not forgive me for having robbed him of his place in your
heart, little as he was worthy of your love?”
“Oh, Douglas!” exclaimed Paulina, “why do you imagine such things? Why
should death assail you?”
“Why, indeed, dearest,” returned Douglas, with a smile. “Do not think
that I anticipate so sad a close to our engagement. But it is the duty
of a man to look sharply out for every danger in the pathway of the
woman he is bound to protect. I am a lawyer, remember, Paulina, and I
contemplate the future with the eye of a lawyer. So far as I can secure
you from even the possibility of misfortune, I will do it. I have
brought a solicitor here to-day, in order that he may read you a will
which I have this morning executed in your favour.”
“A will!” repeated Madame Durski; “you are only too good to me. But
there is something horrible to my mind in these legal formalities.”
“That is only a woman’s prejudice. It is the feminine idea that a man
must needs be at the point of death when he makes his will. And now let
me explain the nature of this will,” continued Douglas. “I have told
you that if I should happen to die without direct heirs, the estate
left me by Sir Oswald Eversleigh will go to my cousin Reginald. That
estate, from which is derived my income, I have no power to alienate; I
am a tenant for life only. But my income has been double, and sometimes
treble, my expenditure, for my habits have been very simple, and my
life only that of a student in the Temple. My sole extravagance,
indeed, has been the collection of a library. I have, therefore, been
able to save twelve thousand pounds, and this sum is my own to
bequeath. I have made a will, leaving this amount to you, Paulina—
charged only with a small annuity to a faithful old servant—together
with my personal property, consisting only of a few good Italian
pictures, a library of rare old books, and the carvings and decorations
of my roams—all valuable in their way. This is all the law allows me
to give you, Paulina; but it will, at least, secure you from want.”
Madame Durski tried to speak; but she was too deeply affected by this
new proof of her lover’s generosity. Tears choked her utterance; she
took Douglas Dale’s hand in both her own, and lifted it to her lips;
and this silent expression of gratitude touched his heart more than the
most eloquent speech could have affected it.
He led her into the room where the attorney awaited her.
“This gentleman is Mr. Horley,” he said, “a friend and adviser in whom
you may place unbounded confidence. My will is to remain in his
possession; and should any untimely fate overtake me, he will protect
your interests. And now, Mr. Horley, will you be good enough to read
the document to Madame Durski, in order that she may understand what
her position would be in case of the worst?”
Mr. Horley read the will. It was as simple and concise as the law
allows any legal document to be; and it made
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