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Dorothy was dumb-foundered, she had quite forgotten that Lord Wilton was her informant, and to get out of the sc.r.a.pe into which she had fallen, for she abhorred all concealment, she thought it best to show Mrs.
Rushmere the Earl's letter.
Sending Polly downstairs to prepare the dinner, she made her mother take a seat on a lounge by the window, while she read the important doc.u.ment, and shewed her the mysterious sealed packet, and the draft for the money.
Mrs. Rushmere made her read it twice over. It was a long time before she spoke. She sat lost in a profound reverie.
"Mother," said Dorothy, "you will not mention what I have read to any one. Neither to father nor Gilbert."
"Poor Gilly," sighed the mother, "how blind he has been to reject the gold and take up with the dross, and exchange a real lady for a cunning impostor. He ha' given himself away for a bra.s.s farthing. Well, Dorothy, you have had your revenge, and bitterly will father and son repent o'
their obstinate folly."
"We will talk no more of that, mother. It was a painful experience, but it is past and gone. The Lord did not intend me to be Gilbert's wife.
'The lot is cast into the lap, but the choosing of it is from Him.' I feel this day happy and grateful that it is so."
"You may well do that, Dorothy. Your fortunes, will, indeed, lie far apart. Oh! my child, when I think of all that he has lost, of all that might have been his, it is enough to break my heart."
"Mother, I don't understand you."
"No, nor is it fit you should. But I see, I know it all. Time will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and when I am in the dust, Dorothy, and you are a great lady, remember how dearly I loved you.
Loved you while poor and friendless, and gathered you into my heart as my own."
Mrs. Rushmere's head was now resting upon Dorothy's bosom, and she was weeping bitterly.
"Mother, I am so sorry I showed you that letter, it has grieved you so much; but I have never kept anything from you. I did not like to conceal my correspondence with the Earl. Do you think it would be improper in me to answer his letter, and accept that money?"
"You must do both, Dorothy. You owe him both love and obedience. You have given me your confidence, I will give you mine. I feel certain that you be his daughter."
"Mother!"
"Whether by marriage or imprudent love, remains yet to be told. But time will prove that I be right."
"Ah, how could that poor starved creature be an Earl's wife?" and Dorothy shuddered, as if an arrow had suddenly pierced her heart.
"How, indeed?" continued Mrs. Rushmere.
"There was a wild story afloat some years agone, of his having seduced a beautiful girl adopted by his mother. She went home to her grandmother in consequence, and the cruel old woman turned her into the streets, an'
she was never heard of again--folks did say that she walked into the sea when the tide was coming in, an' destroyed hersel'. No one but G.o.d knows."
"But I could not love Lord Wilton if I were that miserable lost creature's daughter," cried Dorothy, wringing her hands. "Oh mother!
mother! it would be worse than being called the beggar's brat that farmer Rushmere picked up on the heath. If I thought that I were his child through that infamous connection, I would spurn him and his gift from me as accursed things!"
She took the packet from her bosom, and was about to put her threat into execution. Mrs. Rushmere stayed her hand.
"Dorothy, what be you about? Supposing your mother to have been his wife, you may be destroying the proofs of your legitimacy. As Lawrence would say, 'cutting your own throat.'"
"True," said Dorothy, frightened at her own rashness. "How wrong it is of any one to act without thinking. This wedding-ring, after all, may be a true witness that my poor mother was an honest woman."
"At any rate, Dorothy, it is useless for you to try and puzzle out the truth; even if so be that you hit upon it, without farther evidence you could not satisfy yoursel' that it was so. But be sartin sure o' this, that mystery and concealment are generally used to cover crime. If Lord Wilton had acted rightly, he would not have been afraid of owning his wife to the world. Selfishness and sin must lie at some one's door, and women--the poor creatures--when they love, generally fling their all into the scale, regardless of consequences.
"But there's the dinner-bell, my pet, father will be rampaging if he comes in and finds us talking here."
After Dorothy had given Mrs. Rushmere her tea that evening, and got her comfortably to bed, she tripped across the dreary heath by the light of the July moon to see Mrs. Martin, and tell her all that had transpired.
She found no one at home but Mr. Fitzmorris, who was walking up and down the lawn, with a closed book in his hand, in which he could no longer see to read. He looked up, as the little gate swung to, and came forward to meet her. "Oh, Mr. Fitzmorris, you are the very person I wanted to see. I am so glad to find you alone."
He looked into the sweet face with an inquiring glance, but seemed suddenly struck with its unusual pallor.
"Dorothy, something has happened to annoy you. I can read that face of yours like an open book. _You_ could not deceive any one."
"I hope I may never be tempted to try. But oh, Mr. Fitzmorris, I was sorely tempted last night to do a very dishonourable thing."
"And did the tempter succeed, Dorothy?"
"No, though I had not the courage to say 'get thee behind me Satan.' But if you will sit down under this tree, I will tell you all about it, and the many anxious thoughts that are pa.s.sing through my mind."
"I am hardly old enough, Dorothy, to be a father confessor."
"But I have as much confidence in you, Mr. Fitzmorris, as though you were as old as Methuselah."
Gerard laughed heartily.
"As you have inducted me into this office, Dorothy, make a clean breast of it."
"But it is no laughing matter," quoth Dorothy, "I found it sad and serious enough."
She then informed him of the contents of Lord Wilton's letter, and showed him the check for the fifty pounds, and the mysterious sealed packet. He listened very attentively.
"It is too dark under the trees, Dorothy, to examine these important papers. Come with me into my study. There we shall be free from interruption."
When once in the sanctum sanctorum, into which no one ever intruded but Mrs. Martin, and that only once-a-week, to dust the furniture and arrange his books and papers, the vicar lighted his candles, and bidding Dorothy take a seat in the big leather arm-chair, he went to the table and read Lord Wilton's letter.
To Dorothy's great surprise, he made no comment on its contents.
"You wish me to take charge of this packet?" he asked.
"If you will be troubled with it. But what do you think of the letter, Mr. Fitzmorris?"
"A great deal, Dorothy, but the contents are too sacred to be lightly talked about. Have you any idea of the relation in which this man stands to you, my young friend?"
"I scarcely dare guess," and Dorothy, bowed her head on her hands and burst into tears.
"That he is your father there can be no doubt."
"Oh, sir, how can I love him as a father, if I be the child of sin and dishonour?"
"Still, Dorothy, he is your father," said Gerard, solemnly taking the hand that trembled in his own, "the author of your being; as such, however erring, he has a right to claim from you the love and duty of a child. That he truly loves you, and is anxious to repair, as far as now lies in his power, the injury he has inflicted upon you and your poor mother, is touchingly evident. My dear little cousin, (what a thrill of joy shot through Dorothy's heart as he called her so,) it is not for us, who are all sinners in the sight of a holy G.o.d, lightly to condemn another. No one knows how they would themselves act when placed in situations of strong temptation. The best of us are so much the creatures of circ.u.mstances, that we ought to pity rather than p.r.o.nounce harsh judgment against the fallen.
"Take this unhappy father to your heart, Dorothy, and cherish him there.