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"Ah! thereby hangs a tale--too long to tell at this sharp pace. Wait until to-morrow, Miss Mollie. There's our vehicle yonder. I might tell you by the way, but the road is long, and the night is chill, and I am to be charioteer. I couldn't do proper justice to the subject, you perceive; and besides, I want you to cuddle up and go to sleep. Here we are. Pile in, Mrs. Sharpe; the back seat, if you please. Miss Dane and I will sit in front and shield you from the inclemency of the weather."
"Much obliged to you, sir," Mrs. Sharpe said, dryly, obeying orders, nevertheless.
"I'll sit back with Mrs. Sharpe," said Mollie, sensitively shrinking.
"You'll do nothing of the sort!" retorted Mr. Ingelow, authoritatively.
"You'll do precisely as I tell you! You and Mrs. Sharpe are both in my power, and if you don't keep uncommonly civil and docile, I'll run off with the pair of you and start a seraglio! There, ma'am, you're comfortable, I hope? Now, the sooner you go to sleep the better."
He helped Mrs. Sharpe into the back seat of the two-seated buggy, wrapped her up, and then a.s.sisted Mollie up in front.
"A splendid night for our business," he said, getting in beside her and gathering up the reins. "Now then, off we go, over 'brake, bush and scaur,' and good-bye to Doctor Oleander and the trip to Cuba!"
Obedience was not very hard in this instance. Miss Dane snugged up nice and close to Mr. Ingelow, and felt very comfortable indeed. As for him, there was a glow of happiness about his heart like the halo round a full moon. They would have been satisfied, just then, to sit side by side and drive along in a glory of moonshine forever and ever.
"Where are we going?" Mollie asked once.
"To the city--to New York."
"Oh! I know. But where?"
"Wherever you please, Miss Mollie. That will be Mr. Walraven's, I presume?"
"But--"
Mollie hesitated.
"What?" he said, in surprise. "Don't you want to go home?"
"Very much, Mr. Ingelow. It isn't that."
"Well, what is it, then?"
"Mr. Ingelow, you'll think me very silly, I dare say; but I don't want to go up there in a matter-of-fact sort of way at day-break to-morrow morning, in this double buggy, with you and Mrs. Sharpe. I should like--how shall I say it?--a little _coup de theatre_!"
"Oh! I understand," Mr. Ingelow laughed. "It is quite natural. I should like it myself. And, by Jove! I've got a capital idea."
Mollie looked up brightly.
"Oleander has given out that he is going to Cuba--he makes no secret of one half the story, you see--and Mr. Walraven gives a farewell dinner in honor of the mournful occasion, on Thursday--to-morrow evening. The party is select--very--on your account, you know--only Sir Roger Trajenna, Walraven's lawyer, Sardonyx, and myself. Now, when we're all a.s.sembled, discussing your absence, as I'll take care we shall be, and Oleander is telling lies by the yard, do you appear like a thunder-clap and transfix him. Guilt will be confounded, innocence triumphantly vindicated, the virtuous made happy, and the curtain will go down amid tremendous applause. Eh, how do you like the style of that?"
Mollie laughed gleefully. Half-tamed thing that she was, a few moments of breezy freedom, by the side of the man she loved, made her all her old, happy, mischief-loving self again. In the first bright sparkle and intoxication, she could quite forget that awful fact that she was Dr.
Oleander's wedded wife.
"Splendid! Oh! what fun it will be to see him! And such glorious revenge, too!"
"Seriously, Mollie," said Mr. Ingelow, "he deserves to be punished for his unmanly trick."
"And he shall be!" Mollie cried, her eyes sparkling. "He shall be, if all the world knows the story! What care I? I will have my revenge on the man I hate--on the man who has wronged me beyond reparation. And then I can go away where no one will know me, and make my own way through the world, as I did before I ever came to New York."
Hugh Ingelow looked at her. Her eyes were alight, her cheeks flushed, her whole face eager, angry, and aglow.
"Wronged you beyond reparation!" he slowly repeated. "Mollie, what do you mean?"
"I mean," Mollie pa.s.sionately cried, "that I am his wife. And I will never forgive him for making me that--never, never, if it were my dying day!"
"His wife!"
The young man looked at her thunder-struck.
"Oh! you don't know. You hadn't heard, of course. It wasn't this time. I would have murdered him and myself this time before he would ever lay a finger on me. It was before. You remember that other time I was carried off?"
"Oh!"
It was all Mr. Ingelow said; but, singular to relate, he looked unutterably relieved.
"He married me then--forced me to marry him--and I--Oh, miserable girl that I am! why did I not die a thousand deaths sooner than consent? But I was mad, and it's too late now. Mr. Rashleigh married us. You recollect that story he told at Mrs. Grand's dinner-party? Well, I was the masked heroine of that adventure; but I never, never, never thought Guy Oleander was the hero. I'd have died, even then, sooner than become his wife. I hoped it was--I thought it was--"
She paused abruptly.
"Who?" pointedly asked Hugh Ingelow.
Mollie stole a side-long glance from under her sweeping lashes at the handsome face.
"Some one who loved me as well, and whom I--well, didn't exactly hate; and I do hate Doctor Oleander!"
"Which is extremely natural; at the same time wicked, I suppose. Now, Mollie, don't try to keep awake and talk, because the journey is long and dreary. Follow Mrs. Sharpe's example and go to sleep."
He wrapped her up closer; and Mollie, with a delicious sense of safety, and comfort, and sleepiness, cuddled close in her wraps and felt luxuriously happy.
She had slept very little of late. Tears had been her nightly portion, instead of slumber. Now she was happy and at rest; and the very rush of the swift wind, as they bowled along, made her drowsy. She leaned her head against his arm and fell fast asleep.
CHAPTER XXIII.
PRIVATE THEATRICALS.
It was broad day when Mollie awoke, the sun shining brilliantly. She started up on her elbow, bewildered, and gazed around.
She was lying on a lounge in a strange room, and Mrs. Susan Sharpe was seated in an elbow-chair before her, nodding drowsily. At Mollie's exclamation she opened her eyes.
"Where are we?" asked the young lady, still bewildered.
"In Mr. Ingelow's studio," responded Mrs. Susan Sharpe.
"Oh, Broadway! Then we are safe in New York?"