A Mad Marriage by May Agnes Fleming (best ebook reader android .TXT) đ
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no! not as I loved him. Do you remember what I said to you that day?
Do you remember what you promised me?â
He does not answer. She does not know what she is asking him to do. She
does not know of the struggle that is going on in the heart, beating in
such hard throbs against her own.
âI recall it all, as though it were this moment,â she softly went on. âI
said to you, âBe a friend, a brother to my boy. He is not like youâhe
is reckless and extravagant, easily led, self-willed, and wild. He will
go wrong, and you must be his protector. Let nothing he ever says,
nothing he ever does, tempt you to anger, tempt you to desert him.
Promise me that.ââ
Still silentâstill with that strange, rigid look on his face, that half
frightens her in the midst of her supremely selfish pleadings, and which
she does not understand.
âYou knelt down,â she went on, âyou kissed my hand; and kneeling there,
alone with God and me, this is what you said:
ââNothing Eric can ever say, can ever do, will tempt me to angerâthat I
swear. For his sake and for yours, I will do all mortal man can do. You
have been the good angel of my lifeâI would be less than man if I ever
forgot it.â You promised that, Terryâthe time has come now for you to
keep your word.â
Still silence. Oh! if he would but speak, if that dark, strange, rigid
look would but leave his face.
âMy Terry! my Terry!â she whispered, âyou have been brave and noble in
the past. For sake of him and me, you gave up name, fortune, loveâfor
sake of him and me, I call upon you now in some way to save his life.â
He drew a long, hard breath, and looked down upon her. Did she know
what she asked? No, he saw she did not. All the same though, so that
he saved Eric, it didnât much matter.
âTerry, speak to me,â she pleaded, âdonât stand and look at me like
this. Oh! if you ever loved me, if you ever loved Crystal, save him who
is the life of our lives. Terry, I call upon youâsave Eric!â
He stooped and kissed her.
âSay no more, mother. If mortal man can do it, I will save Eric.â
She gave a great sob of unutterable joy and relief, laid her face on his
shoulder and was still.
âYou need have no fear,â he went on; âEric shall not fight Di Venturini.
And now, too much time has been spent here already. You must go to the
Hotel du Louvre at once. Crystal is ill.â
âIll?â
Rapidly and concisely he narrated his visit to Eric, only suppressing
Ericâs own insulting languageâhow Crystal had overheard, and the
result. At any other time Lady Dynely would have been unspeakably
horrifiedânow the greater horror had swallowed up all lesser.
âYes, yes, I will go to her at once. Oh, poor child! Terry, will you
tell meâhow do you mean to save Eric?â
He smiled.
âYou will learn later. At present do not in any way let Eric suspect
that you know anything. Andâthat my plan to save him may succeedâyou
must give him an opiate to-night.â
âAn opiate?â
âHe must be made to sleep beyond the hour of meeting, else, not even
Crystalâs death could keep him away. To steady his nerves for to-morrow
some sleep will be necessaryâhe will, therefore, probably retire early.
In fact, you must see that he does, and induce him to take a glass of
wine, or beer, and administer an opiate in the drink that will hold him
for eight hours at least. All depends upon that.â
âOh, I can do that. I have done it often before.â
âVery well; that is all you are to do. Now go quickly to the Louvre, and
perform your part. In about two hours I will call to see how Crystal is.
I have other business of importance meantime. For the present good-by.â
*
The last act of âLa Sorciïżœre dâOrâ is over, the ballet has begun, and a
group of gentlemen are loitering about the vestibule of the theatre, not
quite sure whether they will return to their stalls for the great
display of legs and lime-light, or go virtuously home to bed. Mr.
Boville is among them, and Mr. Boville is debating within himself the
advisability of a little game of lansquenet, as a soothing preparation
for slumber, when a man strides hurriedly up and lays his hand heavily
on his shoulder.
âBoville! I thought I would find you here. Will you leave the theatre
and come with me?â
Boville swings round and faces his interrogator.
âYou, Dennison! Certainly, my dear fellow. But what the deuce is the
matter? On my word you look like your own ghost.â
âCome with me,â Dennison replies, hurriedly, and Boville links his arm
through the dragoonâs and goes.
Without a word, Terry leads him away from the glare and gaslight glitter
of the thronged boulevards to some distant, dimly-lighted, deserted
street.
Without a word Boville follows. This is something serious, he feels. Has
the duel got wind? Dennison and Dynely are relatives, Boville hazily
recollectsârelatives of some sort; he is not quite clear about it. No
doubt Dennison has come to speak of the duel; but why with that face?
âBoville,â Terry abruptly begins, âLord Dynely and Prince Di Venturini
fight to-morrow, do they not, and you are Dynelyâs second?â
âWeluctantlyâyes. Itâs a bad business, old boy. Dynely hasnât a ghost
of a chance, and so Iâve told him. But a wilful manâyou know the
proverb. Besides, weally, you know,â Mr. Boville has a rooted objection
to the letter R, âI donât see how he is going to get out of it. The
Princeâconfound him! would bwand him as a coward far and wide, and
Ericâs not that. My dear Terry,â they are passing under a street lamp at
the moment, and the light falls full upon his companionâs face, âwhat
have you been doing to yourself? There is a bwuised swelling the size
of an egg between your eyes.â
Dennisonâs face turns crimson, a deep, burning, tingling crimson once
more. He pulls his hat far over his eyes, and tries to laugh.
âAn accident, Boville. Never mind my faceâIâve no beauty to spoil. Iâve
come to talk to you about this duel. At what hour do they meet?â
âAt first peep of day, between half-past six and seven. It wonât do to
be later. But who told you? De Concressault or Dynely himself?â
âBoth. Boville, this meeting must never take place!â
âDelighted, Iâm shaw, to hear it,â drawled Mr. Boville, opening two very
small, very sleepy blue eyes to their widest; ânever was accessory to a
murder in my lifeâdonât want to begin now. But, at the same time, how
do you pwopwose to pwevent it?â
âYou can refuse to act for Eric.â
Boville shrugged his shoulders and inserted his glass in his eye.
âAnd have my bwains blown out for my pains. Havenât got many bwains,
thank Heavenânever was in our familyâstill, the few Iâve got I pwopose
to keep. That dodge wonât work, Terry, twy something else.â
âIt will be downright slaughter, Bovilleânothing less.â
âKnow it, dear boyâtold Dynely so; but whatâs the use of telling? Heâs
got into this infernal little scwape, and must take the consequences.
Heâs had his three weeksâ flirtation with Feliciaânow heâs got to pay
the penalty. Apropos des bottes, she was in capital fawm to-nightâat
her loveliest. If it were she that was to be shot to-morrow, Iâd assist
at the cewemonial with the gweatest pleasure.â
There is a momentâs silence, and the two men walk on in the rain. Then
Dennison speaks in an altered voice.
âThere is one way, Bovilleâonly one.â
âVewy pleased to hear it, dear boy. Give it a name.â
âI must go out in Dynelyâs place.â
It is the proud boast of Herbert Bovilleâs life that since he was in
pinafores he has never felt surprise or any other earthly emotion. But
nowâhe actually stops in the rain, and stares at his companion, aghast.
âGo out inâmy dear Dennison, I donât think I can have heard you
awight. Will you kindly wepeat your last wemark?â
âOh nonsense, Bovilleâyour hearingâs all right. I must go out in
Dynelyâs place; such has been my intention from the first, and I call
upon you to aid and second me.â
Boville fixed his glass in his eye, and tried in the darkness to see his
friend.
âI always thought,â he said in a helpless tone, âthat I had less bwains
myself than any other fellow of my acquaintance. Now I know I was
mistaken. Pway, Terry, when did you take leave of your senses?â
Terry muttered something forcible and strong.
âLook here, Boville,â he cried impatiently; âdonât let us waste time
chaffing. As surely as we both stand here, I mean this. Dynely hasnât a
ghost of a chance, as we both know; for him to meet Di Venturini would
be sheer murder. Now with me it is different. I may not be the same dead
shot the prince is, and I havenât had his experience with living
targets, but my pistol hand is tolerably sure for all that. And I mean
to meet Di Venturini to-morrow.â
He said it with a dogged determination that convinced Boville at last.
âBy Jove!â he said, âthis is a rum go! Do you mean to tell me, Terry,
that Eric will stand by and allow this?â
Eric knows nothing about itâwill not until all is over. He is the last
man on earth who would allow it. The devil himself is not more
obstinate or more plucky than Dynely.â
âYou must be awfully fond of him, Terry, old boy! Gad! I never heard of
such a thing in all my life. Knocks Damon and the other fellow into a
cocked-hat. By Jove! it does. At the same time you stand no more chance
before the prince than Dynely.â
âI donât think so,â Dennison responded, coolly; âas I tell you, Iâm a
very fair shot and can hold my own with most men.â
âWith most men, perhapsânot with the prince. And, then, itâs
impossibleâoh, utterly impossible! You donât suppose, now, Dennison,
you donât suppose Di Venturini will fight you instead of Dynely?â
âI donât suppose he would, if he knew. It is not my intention to let him
know.â
âAh, how will you help it?â
âSimply enough. Di Venturini never saw Eric in his life.â
âBut he has seen you, dear boy, and De Concressault knows Eric like a
book. How do you propose to baffle two pair of eyes?â
âBoville,â said Terry, earnestly, âthis thing has to be done, that is
the whole amount of it. Even if I were sureâwhich I am not at allâthat
Di Venturini would shoot me, I would still meet him. It will be the
early dawn of a dark and rainy morning. I shall wear this slouch hat,
which, to a great degree, will hide my face. And in figure and general
air Dynely and I are alikeâhave often been accosted for each other.
They will never suspectâhow should they? They will take it for granted
that I am Lord Dynely, and the duel will be fought, and there will be
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