A Mad Marriage by May Agnes Fleming (best ebook reader android .TXT) đ
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answer; that if that answer be favorable they are to be married next
spring in London. His mother told me. Whatever he told you last night,
Crystal, I am quite sure he did not tell you this.â
âNo,â she said, in a voice like a whisper, her very lips blanchedââhe
did not tell me this.â
âThere is one fortunate circumstance about it,â the young man went on;
âhe is a villain, but he wonât break her heart. Incredible it may seem
to you, but all the beauty and attraction of your demi-god are quite
thrown away upon her. She doesnât care for him. She knows him to be
weaker and more unstable than waterâthe frailest of all broken reeds
for any woman to lean onâand will rejoice accordingly at being rid of
him. But for you, Crystalâyouâre not the first, nor the
hundred-and-first, he has sworn undying love to; and youâll not be the
last, that I swear, if you give him a chance. If you care for Lord
Eric Dynely, and want to keep him, why, then, marry him out of
handâstrike while the iron is hot.â
She said not a word. White and still she stood, all life and color
stricken out of eyes and face by his words.
As he looked at her the bitterness died out of his own soul in
compassion and remorse.
âOh, Crystal, forgive me!â he said. âI am a brute! I ought not to say
such things to you. ButâI loved you soâI have loved you all my life. I
trusted you, and I trusted him.â
It was more than she could bearâher own pain and his. She turned
hastily away, down one of the garden paths, and vanished.
The day was six hours olderâthe vicarage clocks were striking
elevenâas Lord Dynely dismounted from âhis red roan steedâ at the
vicarage gate, and flung his horseâs bridle over that very gate-post.
Before he could reach the house, a slim, white figure came gliding out
of one of the garden paths and beckoned him to approach.
âYou, my darling,â he said, gayly, âand on the watch for your devoted
knightâs coming. Iâm not late, am I? But early rising, as you understand
the term in this primitive wilderness, is not my most prominent
perfection.â
âEric,â she said, faintly. âI have something to say to you. Last night
when we were talkingâwhen you told me you cared for me, youâyou said
nothing of Miss Forrester.â
His face flushed, his blue eyes flashed with the quick angry light ever
so ready to rise.
âWho has been talking to you?â he demanded. âBut I need hardly ask. Mr.
Terrence Dennison, of course.â
âI have known it this long time,â she returned, shrinking from his angry
looks, trembling like a nervous child, yet resolute to go on, âonly I
forgot it yesterday. Oh, Lord Dynely! You were very cruel to say such
things to me, and all the time engaged to marry her.â
She broke down utterly for the first time with the words, and covering
her face with her hands, sobbed hysterically.
âWhy did you ever come hereâwhy did you make me love youâhow could you
deceive me so? I knew I was not worthy of you. I was happy before you
came; Iââ
âYou would have married Dennison, and lived happy for ever after? Is
that what you are trying to say, Miss Higgins? Terry has been pleading
his own cause this morning, I see, and slandering me. Common gratitude
from the dependant of my motherâs bounty might have kept him silent, if
nothing else; but gratitude is an obsolete virtue. Since you are so
easily influenced by him, it would be a pity to take you from him. Here
is his ringâlet me replace it on your finger, and take back all the
nonsensical things I said to you last evening.â
She uttered a cry like a child under the lash. At that sound all anger
died out within him, he caught her hands and held them in a fierce,
close clasp.
âI will never let you go,â he said. âI swear it. My wife you shall be,
and no otherâs. You are mineâmine alone, and as mine I claim you. I
deny all Dennisonâs slanders. I am not engaged to Miss Forrester or any
other living woman. Miss Forrester is no more anxious to marry me than I
am to marry her. It is all my motherâs doing and her guardianâsâthey
made the compact, but we will not ratify it. You I love, and you I will
make my wife. Where is your father?âin his study? Then I will go to him
at once, and make an end of all doubt.â
He strode away, and, looking handsome and haughty, was admitted into Mr.
Higginsâ private sanctum. In few and somewhat insolently authoritative
words he made known his errand. He loved his daughter Crystal, he wished
to make her his wife. Then he sat still, and looked at the clergyman. If
he expected the Vicar of Starling to be overpowered by the honor he was
doing him, he was mistaken.
Mr. Higgins sat aghast, literally aghast, and pushing his spectacles up
his forehead sat helplessly staring at the young wooer.
âMy daughter! My daughter Crystal. You want to marry her, Lord Dynely.
Oh, impossible! impossible!â
âAnd why impossible, sir, may I ask?â haughtily and angrily.
âBecauseâLord bless my soul! because sheâs too young to marry any one;
because when sheâs two or three years older weâre going to marry her to
Terry Dennison. Itâs been an understood thing always, always, that
Christabel was to marry Terry.â
âAnd may I ask again, Mr. Higgins,â cried Lord Dynely, still more
angrily, still more haughtily, âif you prefer Dennison to me?â
âWellâwellâwell, donât be angry, my dear young gentleman, donât be
angry. Bless my soul! you marry Crystal! Upon my word and honor, I
never thought of such a thingânever! Prefer Dennison! well, in a
worldly point of view, youâre the best match of course, but, then, we
know Terry, and heâs one of the family, and heâs a good ladâoh, a very
good lad! and I shouldnât be afraid to trust my little one to his
keeping.â
âAnd you are afraid to trust her to mine!â said lordly Eric, pale with
passion.
âNo, no, not that either! Bless my soul, donât be so quick to jump at
conclusions. Itâs only thisâI know him better than I do youâI trust
him entirely, and then itâs been an understood thing always. Crissy has
no right to play fast and loose with Terry. Besides, thereâs your
cousinâno, sheâs not your cousin, I suppose, but itâs all the same. I
mean, of course, Miss France Forrester.â
âWell, sir,â demands the exasperated young lord, âand what of Miss
France Forrester?â
âWhy, thisâyouâve been engaged to her, or so I have been told.â
âThen, Mr. Higgins, youâve been told an infernal lie,â retorted Lord
Dynely, too utterly overcome with rage and exasperation to much mind
what he said; âI never was engaged to France Forrester or anyone else.
Am I to understand that you decline to accept me as the husband of your
daughter?â
âOh, dear me,â said Mr. Higgins, in a troubled tone, âI donât know what
to say, Iâm sure. Youâve taken me so much by surpriseâI always looked
upon her as belonging to Terryââ
This was growing more than Lord Dynely could bear. He rose to his feet,
exasperated beyond endurance.
âOh, donât,â said the vicar, piteously; âwait a little, my lord. What
does Christabel say? She is in love with you, I suppose?â
âShe does me that honor, Mr. Higgins.â
âItâs a brilliant match for her, and yet,â in that troubled tone, âI do
believe she would be happier married toâ-â
âMr. Higgins, you insult me! I decline to listen longer. Good-morning.â
âI beg your pardon, Lord Dynely. I had no intention of insulting you, I
am sure. If Crystal wishes it, and you wish it, why thenâwhy then I
have no more to say. Only this, obtain your motherâs consent. No
daughter of mine shall enter any family that considers her beneath them
or is unwilling to receive her. Obtain your motherâs consent and you
shall have mine. Onlyââthis in a low voice and with a sorrowful shake
of the headââI would rather it had been Terry.â
Lord Dynely, quite pale with haughty surprise and anger, bowed himself
out. Opposition was crowding upon him, and he set his teeth, and swore
he would have her in spite of a thousand imbecile vicars, a thousand
match-making mothers. And Mr. Higgins sat blinking in a dazed way in the
sunshine, full of vague, apprehensive regrets.
âHeâs a fine young manâa handsome young man, well-born, well-bred,
titled and rich; and yet I am afraid of him. Itâs these brilliant young
men who break their wivesâ hearts as easily as I could my pipe-stem. It
will be a great match for one of my girls, but I would rather it were
Terry.â
Leaning against the vine-clad porch, Lord Dynely came face to face with
Terry himself. He paused and looked at him, his blue eyes lurid with
anger and defiance.
âWell, little âun,â he said, with an insolent laugh, âyouâve heard the
news, I suppose? Iâm to marry Crystal. Congratulate me, wonât you? Iâve
been rather poaching on your manor, you see; but, if the dear little
girl has the bad taste to prefer me to you, what then? And allâs fair in
love and war.â
He turned to go before Dennison could speak, that defiant ring still in
eyes, and voice, and laugh.
âCan you tell me where Iâll find her, Terry? Ah, I see her in the arbor
yonder. Donât look so seedy, dear old manâyou know the adage that has
held good ever since the world began, thatâ
âThey shall take who have the power,
And they shall keep who can.â
His mocking laugh came back as he struck a Vesuvian, lit a cigarette,
and sauntered down the path to join Crystal.
CHAPTER XIII.
LIGHTLY WON, LIGHTLY LOST.
âNorton?â
âYes, my lord.â
âPack my portmanteau, and hold yourself in readiness to accompany me by
the 9:50 train. I return to Devonshire.â
âYes, my lord.â
âTell them to have the trap round in fifteen minutes. Train starts in
half an hour. Can do the distance in the odd quarter.â
âYes, my lord.â
âHand me that tobacco pouch, Norton, that book of cigarette paper,
andâ-Come in.â
All this multiplicity of directions Lord Dynely murmured in the
sleepiest, laziest of tones, his long, slender length stretched out upon
a sofa. His orders had been cut short by a tap at the door, and, in
answer to his invitation, Terry Dennison entered.
It was nine oâclock of the morning following that interview in the Vicar
of Starlingâs study. Only nine oâclock, and Lord Dynely, whose usual
hour of rising and calling for chocolate in bed was twelve, was up and
dressed. Not only dressed, but dressed for travelling, in most
unexceptional get up. He was, as has been said, a dandy of the first
water, as difficult to please in the fit of a coat as any young duchess
about her wedding robe. He found fault with Pooleâs most faultless works
of art, and the peculiar shade of necktie most becoming his complexion
had been known to painfully exercise his manly mind for hours.
As he lay now, every garment he wore, in make, and coloring, and
texture, was above reproach. To do him justice, his efforts were not
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