A Mad Marriage by May Agnes Fleming (best ebook reader android .TXT) đ
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vain, his dress always looked as though it were a part of himself.
He looked up gayly at Dennisonâs approach. He was in high good humor
this morningâat peace with all the world. Yesterdayâs irritation had
entirely passed away. Crystalâs father might be exasperating to the last
degree, but Crystal herself was entirely satisfactory. And when Crystal
was his wife he would take care the Vicar of Starling and his family saw
uncommonly little of her. For Terryâwell, looking at it
dispassionately, after an excellent dinner and a prime Manilla, he was
forced to admit that Terry, poor beggar! had some little cause of
complaint. Something very like foul play had been done on his part,
something the codes of his order and his honor would hardly recognize.
Still, what was done, was done. Crystal he would resign to no man
living, and Dennison must make the best of it. This unexpected
opposition had but strengthened his passion; he had never been so
thoroughly in earnest before about any love affair in his life. He was
going to see his mother to-day and bring her to reason. She would prove
a little restive on his hands at first, on Franceâs account, but he
would speedily bring her around. For Franceâwell, he winced a little at
the thought of meeting France. To be laughed at was horrible, and he
could see Franceâs dark, mischievous, satirical eyes, Franceâs cynical
little laugh, hear Franceâs sarcastic, cutting speeches. âWho was she?â
indeed. The girl must be a witch. Your sharp girl, your clever girl, was
an outrage on nature. Women were made for manâs use, benefit and
pleasure; why, then, were half of them as man didnât like them? Crystal,
without two ideas in her pretty head and loving heart, was his ideal of
womankind. Yes, he would bring his mother round, fetch her down here to
see Crystal, have the marriage arranged to take place before Christmas,
all on the quiet, and spend the Winter rambling about sunny Italy. And
next season Lady Dynely would burst upon London the loveliest thing out,
a pride to her husband, an honor and credit to his taste.
All this in rambling, disconnected, self-satisfied fashion, Lord Dynely
had thought over last night. Now he lay rolling up a cigarette, with
white, practised fingers, a smile on his lips and in his handsome blue
eyes as he looked up at Mr. Dennison.
âHow are you, Terry?â he said, genially. âCome in; knock those things
off the chair, and sit down. Iâm in the midst of an exodus, you seeâoff
to Devonshire. Any commission for France or the madre?â
âI will send a note by you to Lady Dynely,â Terry answered. He was
looking very grave, and rather pale, Eric could see at second glance,
his mouth set and stern under his tawny beard and mustache. âIt may be
some time before I see her in person. I join my regiment this week at
Windsor.â
âAh! leave of absence expired? Be off, Norton, and order round the trap.
Only ten minutes to starting time now. Very inhospitable of me,
Terryâyou donât pay morning calls at Carruthers Court oftenâbut I
really must cut it short. Twenty-five minutes to starting time, and you
know what the drive to the station is.â
âI wonât detain you,â Terry answers, setting his lips still harder under
his leonine beard. âI came to say a few words about Crystal.â
Lord Dynelyâs cigarette was quite ready now. He looked up at his
companion with that slow, indolent smile of his that had so much of
latent insolence in it, struck a fuse and lit up.
âAbout Crystal? Let us hear it, Terry. You couldnât choose a more
interesting subject. How is the little darling this morning?â
âI wonât say anything about your conduct in this matter, Lord Dynely,â
Terry began; âyou know best whether it has been the conduct of a man of
honor or not. Crystal, perhaps, is not to blame.â
âHow magnanimous! âCrystal is not to blame.â You have never asked her to
marry you, and because she honors me by her preference and acceptance,
she is not to blame. And donât you thinkâas her friend, now, Terryâshe
makes a rather better match in marrying Lord Dynely than she would in
marrying Terry Dennison?â
That angry gleam was lighting again Ericâs sleepy eyes, but his soft,
slow tones never rose as he spoke. He watched Terry from behind the
wreaths of scented smoke, and saw the flush that arose and overspread
his whole face.
âYes,â Terry answered, after a pause, in a slow, strange voice, âyou are
right; she makes a better match in marrying Lord Dynely than in marrying
Terry Dennison. As I had never, in so many words, asked her to be my
wife, whatever may have been understood, I repeat I hold her blameless
in this. She loves youâshe never did me. I might have foreseen, butâI
trusted you both.â
âDonât seem to see it,â Lord Dynely drawled, looking at his watch. âOnly
seven minutes, Mr. Dennison; very sorry to cut it short, I repeat,
butââ
âBut you shall hear what I have come to say,â Terry exclaimed, turning
upon him. âIt is this: I know how you hold womenâI know how it is you
have treated themâI know you hold it fair sport to win hearts and fling
them away. What I have come to say isâdonât do it here. She has no
brother or father capable of protecting her. I will be her brother, if I
may be no more. For your motherâs sake, you are the last man on earth I
would wish to raise my hand against, but this I say, this I meanâif you
trifle with Crystal as you have trifled with others, Eric, you shall
answer to me!â
He brought his clenched hand down upon the inlaid table, the veins of
his forehead swollen and dark, with the intensity of feeling within him.
Lord Dynely laughed softly, and flung his cigarette out through the open
window.
âBon! But would it not be well to intimate as much quietly. You do it
very well, my dear boy, for an amateur; but one gets so much of that
kind of thing at the theatre, and they do it better there. You mean
well, I dare sayâsentiments do you honor, and all that; but this
tremendous earnestness is in such deuced bad formâin August, of all
months, particularly.â
âI have said my say,â was Dennisonâs response. âIt is part of your
creed, I know, to make a jest of all things; jest if you like, but hear
and remember. As surely as we both stand hereâif there is any foul play
in this business, your life shall answer it. You shall not play with
her, fool her and leave her, as you have done with so many. You shall
not break her heart, and go unpunished of God and man. If all is not
open and above board here, you shall pay the penaltyâthat I swear.â
âTimeâs up,â said Eric, looking at his watch again. He replaced it,
arose to his feet, and laid his hand on Terryâs shoulder, with that
winning smile of his that made his face so charming.
âLook here, Terry,â he said, âI am not such a scoundrel, such a
Lovelace, such a Don Giovanni, as you try to make me out. Iâm ready to
go with little Crystal to the St. Georgeâs slaughter-house, or the
little church down among the trees yonder, this very morning if I might.
Youâre a good fellow, and, as I said before, your sentiments do you
honor, and so on. You feel a little sore about this business,
naturallyâI would myself, in your place; but allâs right and on the
square here. I never was in earnest beforeâI am now. Iâm going up for
my motherâshe must come here and receive Crystal as her daughter. And
when the wedding comes off, you shall be the best man, âanâ ye will,â
Terryâthat I swear, since swearing seems the order of the day. And
now, dear old man, donât lecture any more; itâs too hotâgive you my
word it is, and I want to reserve all my strength for the journey.
Hereâs seltzer and sherry. Compose your feelings with that liquid
refreshment, and dash off your note to the madre while I get into my
outer garments.â
There was no resisting Eric in this mood, it was not in human nature.
The charming smile, the charming voice, the affectionate, frankly
cordial manner, would have moved and melted a Medusa.
âNo, Crystal was not to blame,â Terry thought, with a sigh, glancing
over at their two images in the glassâit was in the nature of things
that women should fall in love at sight with Eric.
He scrawled off the note in a big, slap-dash sort of hand, each long
word filling a whole line; folded, sealed it, and gave it to Eric just
as he sprang up into the trap.
âBye-bye, old boy,â he said, gayly. âWhen shall I tell the madre to
expect you? Not before Christmas? Oh, nonsense! She couldnât survive
without you half the time. Well, as you wonât be here when I return,
adieu and au revoir. Love to everybody.â
The groom touched the horses. They sped down the avenue like the wind,
and Terry was alone.
*
âIt is very odd we donât hear from Ericâthat he doesnât return. I canât
understand it at all. It is three weeks since he left; he was to be back
in one. Thereâs something very singular about it, to say the least.â
Thus petulantly Lady Dynely to Miss Forrester. They were together in the
drawing-roomâher ladyship reclining upon a sofa, a book in her hand.
Miss Forrester looking charming in palest amber tissue and white roses,
lying back in a vast downy arm-chair before the open window, putting the
finishing touches to a small sketch.
âThe house is like a tomb since he and Terry left. It is most
incomprehensible indeed, Ericâs staying all this time. If you understand
it, France, and feel satisfied, it is more than I do. My dear child, do
put down that tiresome drawing and listen. Ever since Mr. Locksleyâs
advent, I believe you have given yourself wholly to art.â
The color rose in Miss Forresterâs clear, dark face. She looked up from
her drawing at once.
âI beg your pardon, Lady Dynely. What was it you said?â
âAbout Eric. Itâs three weeks since he went awayâhe was to be back in
one. And he never writes to me at least. Perhaps he treats you
betterâFrance, what are you laughing at? Eric has written to you?â
Miss Forresterâs musical, merry laugh chimed out.
âOh, yes, ma mïżœre, Eric has written to me.â
âAnd you never told me. What does the wretched boy say?â
âI donât think he is wretched. It was a very pleasant letter. He merely
wrote to give me up.â
âFrance!â in horror.
âYes, mammaâhe came to his senses down in Lincolnshire. Couldnât think
of forcing my inclinationsâif the proposed alliance of the noble houses
of Dynely and Forrester were distasteful to me, then, at any cost to
himself and his own lacerated heart, he resigned me. It read like one of
Lord Chesterfieldâs masterpiecesâwas a model of polite and chivalric
composition.â
âGood Heaven! and youâFrance, what did you say?â
Again Miss Forresterâs laugh rang out.
âI answered in three words, mammaâterse, pithy, and to the point. I
wrote, âDear Eric: Who is she?â That epistle he has not done me the
honor of answering. I think I see his
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