A Mad Marriage by May Agnes Fleming (best ebook reader android .TXT) đ
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âChiefly, I think, because he wanted to make certainty more than
certain, partly because he knew his childâ_our_ childâwas with me, and
he wanted to see her.â
A pang that is like a red-hot knife-thrust goes through France
Forresterâs heart. Our child! Yes, this woman has been his wife, is
the mother of his child. She gives a little gasp.
âYouâyou let him see her?â
âI did not let him see herâI am not quite a fool. As I told him he
shall see her one day to his cost. She is mine, and I mean to keep her.
His name he took from meâhis child he cannot.â
There is silence again. The pity has died out of Feliciaâs face; it is
hard, and bitter, and relentless as she speaks again.
âAll the evil he could work me he did. I loved him and he left meâhe
cast me off with scorn and hatred. I swore revenge; but what can a
womanâeven a bad womanâdo? Look, here, Miss Forrester!â Her voice rose
rapidly and her eyes flashed. âIn marrying me he fell a victim to a
plot, an unscrupulous plot, I donât deny. I was not Major Lovellâs
daughter; I was no fit wife for such as heâI was taken from the lowest
concert-room of New York city. When I was a baby I was thrown upon the
streets; I had to make my own living, and earn the crusts I lived on. I
knew no mother, no father, no God. To make moneyâto wear fine clothes
anyhowâthat was my religion. Lovell came and took me, and Gordon Caryll
saw and fell in love with me. He asked no questionsâhe married me. And
I loved him with a love that would have been my earthly salvation, if he
had let it. I was true to him, in thought, and word, and action; I would
have given my life for him. Then Lovell died, and dying told his story.
I fled, and hid myself from his first fury; I knew he would take my life
if we met. And then, months after, he found me out, and spurned me as
he would a dog, and showed me the decree of divorce, and left me
forever. Miss Forrester, I was a fool, I know, but I fell down there on
the sands where he quitted me like a dead woman. It would have been
better for him and for you to-day,â with another reckless laugh, âif I
had died. Butâhere I am.â
She broke off abruptly. In the dark eyes looking at her she read nothing
but a great and infinite pity.
âPoor soul!â France said, softly, âyou loved him, and were his wife. It
was hard on you.â
Madame shrugged her shoulders.
âI have survived it, you see. Men die and worms eat them, but not for
love! That night my baby was born. There is the story. You have heard it
often before, no doubt. He is divorcedâI cannot stop your marriage. Do
as you willâonly I had to come and tell you this.â
She arose as she spoke. France stood up, too, and drew a step nearer.
âMadame,â she softly said, wistful wonder in her eyes, âdo youâdo you
love him yet?â
Once more madame laughed.
âLove! Ma foi! it is years since I knew what the word meant. Only fools
ever love. Not I, Miss Forrester! I hate him as I doâwell, not the
devilâfor I have no reason to hate him. No, no! it would be strange,
indeed, if I did; I finished with all that forever the evening we parted
by the Quebec shore. I am to marry the Prince Di Venturini in a month;
but marrying and lovingâwell, they are different things.â
âDoes he know of this?â France asked, hardly knowing why she did ask.
âM. Di Venturini? Not yetânot at all if I can help it. And I donât
think he ever will. Mr. Caryll will not tell, and I am quite sure I
shall not.â
She moved to the door; on the threshold she paused.
âAre you angry with me for coming?â she demanded, abruptly.
âAngry?â France echoed, wearily. âOh, no, why should I be?â
Angry! No, she was angry with no one. She felt tired and sick, and worn
outâshe would like to be alone, to darken her room and lie down, and
get away from the distracting music of that ceaseless band, from the
dazzling glare of the sunshine, from the heavy odor of the flowers. But,
angryâno. A touch of pity crossed again madameâs hard, insolent beauty.
âI am sorry for you,â she said. âYou look good and gentleâyou deserve
to be happy. Yes, I am sorry for you.â
And then she had left the room, and her silks were rustling down the
wide stairway, and France was alone.
Alone! She leaned her folded arms on the table, and laid her face down
upon them and drew a long, tired sigh. It was all over; and the woman
was gone, and out of Franceâs life all the happiness was forever gone,
too.
Gordonâs wife! How strangely it sounded. She was to have been
thatâshe never could be now. If he were dead and in his coffin, she
could not be one whit more widowed than she was. There was a dull sort
of aching at her heartâbut no acute pain. She wondered at her own
torpor.
The band was striking up another tune. She could not endure that. She
arose and toiled slowly and wearily up the stairs to her own room. The
great hotel was very still. She reached her chamber, lowered the blinds,
threw herself face downward on the bed.
âGordonâs wife! Gordonâs wife!â Over and over, like some refrain, the
words rang in her ears. Then they grew fainter and fainterâdied out
altogether; and in the midst of her great trouble France fell fast
asleep.
CHAPTER IX.
âTHE PARTING THAT THEY HAD.â
The last amber glitter of the sunset was gleaming through the closed
jalousies, and lying in broad yellow bars on the carpet, when France
awoke. Awoke with a great start, suddenly, and broad awake, her horrible
trouble flashing upon her with the vividness and swiftness of lightning.
Gordonâs wife was alive; she could never be that; she must give him up
at once and forever. Then a passionate sense of desperation and misery
seized her.
âI cannot! I cannot!â she cried out, clenching her hands and flinging
herself face downward among the pillows. âOh, I cannot give him up!â
The yellow light flickered, faded, grew gray. One by one the golden bars
aslant the carpet slid out of sight. Ten minutes more and the closed
room was almost dark. And slowly the wild tempest of hysterical sobs was
subsiding, too violent to be long-lived, but France Forrester did not
move. Presently it died away altogether, and kneeling by the bedside,
her face bowed in her hands, she was seeking for strength to bear her
bitter sorrow where strength alone can be found.
âThou whose life was all trouble,â Franceâs soul cried, âhelp me to bear
this!â
No thought had ever come to her that he was freeâthat legally she might
become his wife to-morrow in all honor before the world. Her French
mother had reared her in a faith which teaches that divorce is
impossibleâa faith which holds marriage a sacrament, too holy to be
broken by law of man, in which, âuntil death doth ye part,â is meant in
the fullest and most awful sense of the words. His wife livedâhis
wife, although she were Princess Di Venturini within the hourâand she
and Gordon, even as friends, must meet no more. Friends! Ah, no, they
could never meet as that; and so they must meet just once, and say
good-by forever.
She got up at last, utterly exhausted in body and mind. How still the
vast hotel was. How dark the room had grown. She drew up the blinds in a
sort of panic and let in the gray light of evening. It was almost night.
Perhaps Gordon had come and was waiting for her. She must go to him at
once, at once.
âOh, my poor dear,â she thought, âyou have borne so muchâcould you not
have been spared this last, bitterest blow?â
She went down stairs without pause. If he had returned at all, he would
be in the salon; he would not tell his mother until he had told
herâthat she felt. She never stopped to think of her white cheeks and
swollen eyes; he was alone and in trouble, and she must go to him.
Yes, he had come. As she softly pushed the door open she saw him. He was
sitting where she had sat three hours ago. Three hours! was it only
that? Three years seemed to have passed since this morning. He sat, his
folded arms on the table, his head lying on themâhis whole attitude
despairing and broken down.
He did not hear her as she entered and crossed the room, neither heard
nor saw, until she laid one hand lightly on his shoulder and spoke.
âGordon!â
Then he looked up. To her dying day that look would haunt her, so full
of utter, infinite despair. Those haggard, hopeless eyes might almost
have told her the story, had Madame Felicia never come. Haggard and
hopeless as they were, they were quick even in this supreme hour to see
the change in her.
âYou have been crying?â he said.
In all the months they had been together he had never seen the trace of
tears on Franceâs happy face before. The sight of those swollen eyelids
and tear-blotted cheeks struck him now as with a sense of actual
physical pain.
âWhat is it?â he asked. ââIll news travels apace,â but I hardly think,â
with a harsh sort of laugh, âmine can have reached you already. France,
my own love, what is it?â
But she shrank away, drawing her hand from his grasp, and covering her
eyes with the other.
âOh, Gordon, hush!â she cried out; âI cannot bear it. Iâ-,â with a
great gasp, âI know all.â
âAll!â His face turned of a dull, grayish pallor, his eyes never left
her. âFrance, do you know what you are saying? What do you mean by all?â
âThatâthatâ-â No, her dry lips would not speak the words. âMadame
Felicia has been here,â she said, with a quick desperate gesture, and
walked away to the window.
The bright street below was dazzling with gaslightsâgolden stars
studded the violet February sky. Carriages filled with brilliant ladies
flew ceaselessly byâthe brilliant life of the most brilliant capital of
the world was at its height. And France leaned her forehead against the
cool glass and wondered, with a dull sickness of heart, if only this
time yesterday she had indeed been happier than the happiest of them
all.
Gordon Caryll had risen from his chair and stood looking at her,
actually dumbfounded by her last words. In whatever way she might have
heard the loathsome truth, he had never thought of thisâthat she
would have the untold audacity to force an entrance here.
âFrance!â he exclaimed, a dark flush of intense anger crimsoning his
face; âdo you mean what you say?âthat woman has dared come here?â
âYes,â she said, wearily. âAh, donât be angry, Gordon. What does it
matter, since I must know it?âwhat difference who tells the tale? She
is not to blame, poor soul, for being alive.â
âPoor soul!â he repeats, in a strange,
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