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"What can all this mean?" Those of Capitola mutely answered:
"Heaven only knows!"
In his deep pity for the old man's terrible anguish, Herbert could feel no shame or resentment for the false accusation made upon himself.
Indeed, his n.o.ble and candid nature easily explained all as the ravings of some heartrending remembrance. Waiting, therefore, until the violent convulsions of the old man's frame had somewhat subsided, Herbert went to him, and with a low and respectful inflection of voice, said:
"Uncle, if you think that there was any collusion between myself and Mrs. Rocke you wrong us both. You will remember that when I met you in New York I had not seen or heard from her for years, nor had I then any expectation of ever seeing you. The subject of the poor widow came up between us accidentally, and if it is true that I omitted to call her by name it must have been because we both then felt too tenderly by her to call her anything else but 'the poor widow, the poor mother, the good woman,' and so on--and all this she is still."
The old man, without raising his head, held out one hand to his nephew, saying in a voice still trembling with emotion:
"Herbert, I wronged you; forgive me."
Herbert took and pressed that rugged and hairy old hand to his lips, and said:
"Uncle, I do not in the least know what is the cause of your present emotion, but----"
"Emotion! Demmy, sir, what do you mean by emotion? Am I a man to give way to emotion? Demmy, sir, mind what you say!" roared the old lion, getting up and shaking himself free of all weaknesses.
"I merely meant to say, sir, that if I could possibly be of any service to you I am entirely at your orders."
"Then go back to that woman and tell her never to dare to utter, or even to think of, my name again, if she values her life!"
"Sir, you do not mean it! and as for Mrs. Rocke, she is a good woman I feel it my duty to uphold!"
"Good! ugh! ugh! ugh! I'll command myself! I'll not give way again!
Good! ah, lad, it is quite plain to me now that you are an innocent dupe. Tell me now, for instance, do you know anything of that woman's life before she came to reside at Staunton?"
"Nothing; but from what I've seen of her since I'm sure she always was good."
"Did she never mention her former life at all?"
"Never; but, mind, I hold to my faith in her, and would stake my salvation on her integrity," said Herbert, warmly.
"Then you'd lose it, lad, that's all; but I have an explanation to make to you, Herbert. You must give me a minute or two of your company alone, in the library, before tea."
And so saying, Major Warfield arose and led the way across the hall to the library, that was immediately back of the back drawing-room.
Throwing himself into a leathern chair beside the writing-table, he motioned for his companion to take the one on the opposite side. A low fire smoldering on the hearth before them so dimly lighted the room that the young man arose again to pull the bell rope; but the other interrupted with:
"No, you need not ring for lights, Herbert! my story is one that should be told in the dark. Listen, lad; but drop your eyes the while."
"I am all attention, sir!"
"Herbert, the poet says that--
"'At thirty man suspects himself a fool, Knows it at forty and reforms his rule.'
"But, boy, at the ripe age of forty-five, I succeeded in achieving the most sublime folly of my life. I should have taken a degree in madness and been raised to a professor's chair in some college of lunacy!
Herbert, at the age of forty-five I fell in love with and married a girl of sixteen out of a log cabin! merely, forsooth, because she had a pearly skin like the leaf of the white j.a.ponica, soft gray eyes like a timid fawn's and a voice like a cooing turtle dove's! because those delicate cheeks flushed and those soft eyes fell when I spoke to her, and the cooing voice trembled when she replied! because the delicate face brightened when I came and faded when I turned away! because--
"'She wept with delight when I gave her a smile, And trembled with fear at my frown,' etc.;
because she adored me as a sort of G.o.d, I loved her as an angel and married her--married her secretly, for fear of the ridicule of my brother officers, put her in a pastoral log cabin in the woods below the block-house and visited her there by stealth, like Numa did his nymph in the cave. But I was watched; my hidden treasure was discovered and coveted by a younger and prettier follow than myself. Perdition! I cannot tell this story in detail! One night I came home very late and quite unexpectedly and found--this man in my wife's cabin! I broke the man's head and ribs and left him for dead. I tore the woman out of my heart and cauterized its bleeding wounds. This man was Gabriel Le Noir!
Satan burn him forever! This woman was Marah Rocke, G.o.d forgive her! I could have divorced the woman, but as I did not dream of ever marrying again, I did not care to drag my shame before a public tribunal. There!
You know all! Let the subject sink forever!" said Old Hurricane, wiping great drops of sweat from his laboring brows.
"Uncle, I have heard your story and believe you, of course. But I am bound to tell you that without even having heard your poor wife's defense, I believe and uphold her to be innocent! I think you have been as grossly deceived as she has been fearfully wronged and that time and Providence will prove this!" exclaimed Herbert, fervently.
A horrible laugh of scorn was his only answer as Old Hurricane arose, shook himself and led the way back to the parlor.
CHAPTER XII.
MARAH'S DREAM.
And now her narrow kitchen walls Stretched away into stately halls; The weary wheel to a spinnet turned, The tallow candle an astral burned; A manly form at her side she saw, And joy was duty and love was law.
--Whittier.
On the same Sat.u.r.day morning that Herbert Greyson hurried away from his friend's cottage, to travel post to Hurricane Hall, for the sole purpose of accelerating the coming of her good fortune, Marah Rocke walked about the house with a step so light, with eyes so bright and cheeks so blooming, that one might have thought that years had rolled backward in their course and made her a young girl again.
Traverse gazed upon her in delight. Reversing the words of the text, he said:
"We must call you no longer Marah (which is bitter), but we must call you Naomi (which is beautiful), mother!"
"Young flatterer!" she answered, smiling and slightly flushing. "But tell me truly, Traverse, am I very much faded? Have care and toil and grief made me look old?"
"You old?" exclaimed the boy, running his eyes over her beaming face and graceful form with a look of non-comprehension that might have satisfied her, but did not, for she immediately repeated:
"Yes; do I look old? Indeed I do not ask from vanity, child? Ah, it little becomes me to be vain; but I do wish to look well in some one's eyes."
"I wish there was a looking-gla.s.s in the house, mother, that it might tell you; you should be called Naomi instead of Marah."
"Ah! that is just what he used to say to me in the old, happy time--the time in Paradise, before the serpent entered!"
"What 'he,' mother?"
"Your father, boy, of course."
That was the first time she had ever mentioned his father to her son, and now she spoke of him with such a flush of joy and hope that even while her words referred darkly to the past, her eyes looked brightly to the future. All this, taken with the events of the preceding evening, greatly bewildered the mind of Traverse and agitated him with the wildest conjectures.
"Mother, will you tell me about my father, and also what it is beyond this promised kindness of Major Warfield that has made you so happy?" he asked.
"Not now, my boy; dear boy, not now. I must not--I cannot--I dare not yet! Wait a few days and you shall know all. Oh, it is hard to keep a secret from my boy! but then it is not only my secret, but another's!
You do not think hard of me for withholding it now, do you, Traverse?"
she asked, affectionately.