by T. S. Arthur
“Dear Agnes,”—so ran the note of Mr. Markland to his wife,—”I know that you will be surprised and disappointed at receiving only a letter, instead of your husband. But some matters in New York require my attention, and I go on by the evening train, to return day after to-morrow. I engaged to transact some important business for Mr. Lyon, when he left for the South, and in pursuance of this, I am now going away. In a letter received from Mr. Lyon, to-day, was one for Fanny. I do not know its contents. Use your own discretion about giving it to her. You will find it enclosed. My mind has been so much occupied to-day, that I could not give the subject the serious consideration it requires. I leave it with you, having more faith in your intuitions than in my own judgment. He did not hint, even remotely, at a correspondence with Fanny, when he left; nor has he mentioned the fact of enclosing a letter for her in the one received from him to-day. Thus, delicately, has he left the matter in our hands. Perhaps you had better retain the letter until I return. We can then digest the subject more thoroughly. But, in order to furnish your mind some basis to rest upon, I will say, that during the time Mr. Lyon was here I observed him very closely; and that every thing about him gave me the impression of a pure, high-minded, honourable man. Such is the testimony borne in his favour by letters from men of standing in England, by whom he is trusted with large interests. I do not think an evidence of prepossession for our daughter, on his part, need occasion anxiety, but rather pleasure. Of course, she is too young to leave the home-nest for two or three years yet. But time is pressing, and my mind is in no condition, just now, to think clearly on a subject involving such important results. I think, however, that you had better keep the letter until my return. It will be the most prudent course.”
Keep the letter! Its contents were already in the heart of Fanny!
“Where’s Edward? What’s the matter?” queried Aunt Grace, coming up at this moment, and seeing that all colour had left the cheeks of Mrs. Markland.
Scarcely reflecting on what she did, the latter handed her husband’s letter in silence to her sister-in-law, and tottered, rather than walked, to a garden chair near at hand.
“Well, now, here is pretty business, upon my word!” exclaimed Aunt Grace, warmly. “Sending a letter to our Fanny! Who ever heard of such assurance! Oh! I knew that some trouble would come of his visit here. I felt it the moment I set my eyes on him. Keep the letter from Fanny? Of course you will; and when you have a talk with Edward about it, just let me be there; I want my say.”
“It is too late,” murmured the unhappy mother, in a low, sad voice.
“Too late! How? What do you mean, Agnes?”
“Fanny has the letter already.”
“What!” There was a sharp, thrusting rebuke in the voice of Aunt Grace, that seemed like a sword in the heart of Mrs. Markland.
“She stood by me when I opened her father’s letter, enclosing the one for her. I did not dream from whence it came, and handed it to her without a thought.”
“Agnes! Agnes! What have you done?” exclaimed Aunt Grace, in a troubled voice.
“Nothing for which I need reproach myself,” said Mrs. Markland, now grown calmer. “Had the discretion been left with me, I should not have given Fanny the letter until Edward returned. But it passed to her hands through no will of mine. With the Great Controller of events it must now be left.”
“Oh dear! Don’t talk about the Controller of events in a case of this kind. Wise people control such things through the wisdom given them. I always think of Jupiter and the wagoner, when I hear any one going on this way.”
Aunt Grace was excited. She usually was when she thought earnestly. But her warmth of word and manner rarely disturbed Mrs. Markland, who knew her thoroughly, and valued her for her good qualities and strong attachment to the family. No answer was made, and Aunt Grace added, in a slightly changed voice,—
“I don’t know that you are so much to blame, Agnes, seeing that Fanny saw the letter, and that you were ignorant of its contents. But Edward might have known that something like this would happen. Why didn’t he put the letter into his pocket, and keep it until he came home? He seems to have lost his common sense. And then he must go off into that rigmarole about Mr. Lyon, and try to make him out a saint, as if to encourage you to give his letter to Fanny. I’ve no patience with him! Mr. Lyon, indeed! If he doesn’t have a heart-scald of him before he’s done with him, I’m no prophet. Important business for Mr. Lyon! Why didn’t Mr. Lyon attend to his own business when he was in New York? Oh! I can see through it all, as clear as daylight. He’s got his own ends to gain through Edward, who is blind and weak enough to be led by him.”
“Hasty in judgment as ever,” said Mrs. Markland, with a subdued, resigned manner, as she arose and commenced moving toward the house, her sister-in-law walking by her side,—”and quick to decide upon character. But neither men nor women are to be read at a glance.”
“So much the more reason for holding strangers at arms’ length,” returned Aunt Grace.
But Mrs. Markland felt in no mood for argument on so fruitless a subject. On entering the house, she passed to her own private apartment, there to commune with herself alone.
CHAPTER VII.
ONLY a few minutes had Mrs. Markland been in her room, when the door opened quietly, and Fanny’s light footfall was in her ears. She did not look up; but her heart beat with a quicker motion, and her breath was half-suspended.
“Mother!”
She lifted her bowed head, and met the soft, clear eyes of her daughter looking calmly down into her own.
“Fanny, dear!” she said, in half-surprise, as she placed an arm around her, and drew her closely to her side.
An open letter was in Fanny’s hand, and she held it toward her mother. There was a warmer hue upon her face, as she said,—
“It is from Mr. Lyon.”
“Shall I read it?” inquired Mrs. Markland.
“I have brought it for you to read,” was the daughter’s answer.
The letter was brief:
“To MISS FANNY MARKLAND:
“As I am now writing to your father, I must fulfil a half promise, made during my sojourn at Woodbine Lodge, to write to you also. Pleasant days were those to me, and they will ever make a green spot in my memory. What a little paradise enshrines you! Art, hand in hand with Nature, have made a world of beauty for you to dwell in. Yet, all is but a type of moral beauty—and its true enjoyment is only for those whose souls are attuned to deeper harmonies.
“Since leaving Woodbine Lodge, my thoughts have acquired a double current. They run backward as well as forward. The true hospitality of your manly-hearted father; the kind welcome to a stranger, given so cordially by your gentle, good mother; and your own graceful courtesy, toward one in whom you had no personal interest, charmed—nay, touched me with a sense of gratitude. To forget all this would be to change my nature. Nor can I shut out the image of Aunt Grace, so reserved but lady-like in her deportment; yet close in observation and quick to read character. I fear I did not make a good impression on her—but she may know me better one of these days. Make to her my very sincere regards.
“And now, what more shall I say? A first letter to a young lady is usually a thing of shreds and patches, made up of sentences that might come in almost any other connection; and mine is no exception to the rule. I do not ask an answer; yet I will say, that I know nothing that would give me more pleasure than such a favour from your hand.
“Remember me in all kindness and esteem to your excellent parents.
“Sincerely yours, LEE LYON.”
The deep breath taken by Mrs. Markland was one of relief. And yet, there was something in the letter that left her mind in uncertainty as to the real intentions of Mr. Lyon. Regret that he should have written at all mingled with certain pleasing emotions awakened by the graceful compliments of their late guest.
“It’s a beautiful letter, isn’t it, mother?”
“Yes, love,” was answered almost w
ithout reflection.
Fanny re-folded the letter, with the care of one who was handling something precious.
“Shall I answer it?” she inquired.
“Not now. We must think about that. You are too young to enter into correspondence with a gentleman—especially with one about whom we know so little. Before his brief visit to Woodbine Lodge, we had never so much as heard of Mr. Lyon.”
A slight shade of disappointment crossed the bright young face of Fanny Markland—not unobserved by her mother.
“It would seem rude, were I to take no notice of the letter whatever,” said she, after reflecting a moment.
“Your father can acknowledge the receipt for you, when he writes to Mr. Lyon.”
“But would that do?” asked Fanny, in evident doubt.
“O yes, and is, in my view, the only right course. We know but little, if any thing, about Mr. Lyon. If he should not be a true man, there is no telling how much you might suffer in the estimation of right-minded people, by his representation that you were in correspondence with him. A young girl can never be too guarded, on this point. If Mr. Lyon is a man worthy of your respect, he will be disappointed in you, if he receive an answer to his letter, under your own hand.”
“Why, mother? Does he not say that he knows of nothing that would give him more pleasure than to receive an answer from me?” Fanny spoke with animation.
“True, my child, and that part of his letter I like least of all.”
“Why so?” inquired the daughter.
“Have you not gathered the answer to your own question from what I have already said? A true man, who had a genuine respect for a young lady, would not desire, on so slight an acquaintance, to draw her into a correspondence; therefore the fact that Mr. Lyon half invites you to a correspondence, causes doubts to arise in my mind. His sending you a letter at all, when he is yet to us almost an entire stranger, I cannot but regard as a breach of the hospitalities extended to him.”
“Is not that a harsh judgment?” said Fanny, a warmer hue mantling her face.
“Reflect calmly, my child, and you will not think so.”
“Then I ought not to answer this letter?” said Fanny, after musing for some time.
“Let your father, in one of his letters, acknowledge the receipt for you. If Mr. Lyon be a true man, he will respect you the more.”
Not entirely satisfied, though she gave no intimation of this, Fanny returned to the seclusion of her own room, to muse on so unexpected a circumstance; and as she mused, the beating of her heart grew quicker. Again she read the letter from Mr. Lyon, and again and again conned it over, until every sentence was imprinted on her memory. She did not reject the view taken by her mother; nay, she even tried to make it her own; but, for all this, not the shadow of a doubt touching Mr. Lyon could find a place in her thoughts. Before her mental vision he stood, the very type of noble manhood.
CHAPTER VIII.
WHAT an error had been committed! How painfully was this realized by Mrs. Markland. How often had she looked forward, with a vague feeling of anxiety, to the time, yet far distant—she had believed—when the heart-strings of her daughter would tremble in musical response to the low-breathed voice of love—and now that time had come. Alas! that it had come so soon—ere thought and perception had gained matured strength and wise discrimination. The voice of the charmer was in her ears, and she was leaning to hearken.
Fanny did not join the family at the tea-table on that evening; and on the next morning, when she met her mother, her face was paler than usual, and her eyes drooped under the earnest gaze that sought to read her very thoughts. It was plain, from her appearance, that her sleep had been neither sound nor refreshing.
Mrs. Markland deemed it wisest to make no allusion to what had occurred on the previous evening. Her views in regard to answering Mr. Lyon’s letter had been clearly expressed, and she had no fear that her daughter would act in opposition to them. Most anxiously did she await her husband’s return. Thus far in life they had, in all important events, “seen eye to eye,” and she had ever reposed full confidence in his judgment. If that confidence wavered in any degree now, it had been disturbed through his seeming entire trust in Mr. Lyon.
Aunt Grace had her share of curiosity, and she was dying, as they say, to know what was in Fanny’s letter. The non-appearance of her niece at the tea-table had disappointed her considerably; and it was as much as she could do to keep from going to her room during the evening. Sundry times she tried to discover whether Mrs. Markland had seen the letter or, not, but the efforts were unsuccessful; the mother choosing for the present not to enter into further conversation with her on the subject.
All eye and all ear was Aunt Grace on the next morning, when Fanny made her appearance; but only through the eye was any information gathered, and that of a most unsatisfactory character. The little said by Fanny or her mother, was as a remote as possible from the subject that occupied most nearly their thoughts. Aunt Grace tried in various ways to lead them in the direction she would have them go; but it was all in vain that she asked questions touching the return of her brother, and wondered what could have taken him off to New York in such a hurry; no one made any satisfactory reply. At last, feeling a little chafed, and, at the same time, a little malicious, she said—
“That Mr. Lyon’s at the bottom of this business.”
The sentence told, as she had expected and intended. Fanny glanced quickly toward her, and a crimson spot burned on her cheek. But no word passed her lips. “So much gained,” thought Aunt Grace; and then she said aloud—
“I’ve no faith in the man myself.”
This, she believed, would throw Fanny off of her guard; but she was mistaken. The colour deepened on the young girl’s cheeks, but she made no response.
“If he doesn’t get Edward into trouble before he’s done with him, I’m no prophet,” added Aunt Grace, with a dash of vinegar in her tones.
“Why do you say that?” asked Mrs. Markland, who felt constrained to speak.
“I’ve no opinion of the man, and never had from the beginning, as you are very well aware,” answered the sister-in-law.
“Our estimate of character should have a sounder basis than mere opinion, or, to speak more accurately—prejudice,” said Mrs. Markland.
“I don’t know what eyes were given us for, if we are not to see with them,” returned Aunt Grace, dogmatically. “But no wonder so many stumble and fall, when so few use their eyes. There isn’t that man living who does not bear, stamped upon his face, the symbols of his character. And plainly enough are these to be seen in the countenance of Mr. Lyon.”
“And how do you read them, Aunt Grace?” inquired Fanny, with a manner so passionless, that even the sharp-sighted aunt was deceived in regard to the amount of feeling that lay hidden in her heart.
“How do I read them? I’ll tell you. I read them as the index to a whole volume of scheming selfishness. The man is unsound at the core.” Aunt Grace was tempted by the unruffled exterior of her niece to speak thus strongly. Her words went deeper than she had expected. Fanny’s face crimsoned instantly to the very temples, and an indignant light flashed in her soft blue eyes.
“Objects often take their colour from the medium through which we see them,” she said quickly, and in a voice considerably disturbed, looking, as she spoke, steadily and meaningly at her aunt.
“And so you think the hue is in the medium, and not in the object?” said Aunt Grace, her tone a little modified.
“In the present instance, I certainly do,” answered Fanny, with some ardour.
“Ah, child! child!” returned her aunt, “this may be quite as true in your case as in mine. Neither of us may see the object in its true colour. You will, at least, admit this to be possible.”
“Oh, yes.”
“And suppose you see it in a false colour?”
“Well?” Fanny seemed a little bewildered.
“Well? And what then?” Aunt Grace gazed steadily u
pon the countenance of Fanny, until her eyes drooped to the floor. “To whom is it of most consequence to see aright?”
Sharp-seeing, but not wise Aunt Grace! In the blindness of thy anxiety for Fanny, thou art increasing her peril. What need for thee to assume for the maiden, far too young yet to have the deeper chords of womanhood awakened in her heart to love’s music, that the evil or good in the stranger’s character might be any thing to her?
“You talk very strangely, Grace,” said Mrs. Markland, with just enough of rebuke in her voice to make her sister-in-law conscious that she was going too far. “Perhaps we had better change the subject,” she added, after the pause of a few moments.
“As you like,” coldly returned Aunt Grace, who soon after left the room, feeling by no means well satisfied with herself or anybody else. Not a word had been said to her touching the contents of Fanny’s letter, and in that fact was indicated a want of confidence that considerably annoyed her. She had not, certainly, gone just the right way about inviting confidence; but this defect in her own conduct was not seen very clearly.
A constrained reserve marked the intercourse of mother, daughter, and aunt during the day; and when night came, and the evening circle was formed as usual, how dimly burned the hearth-fire, and how sombre were the shadows cast by its flickering blaze! Early they separated, each with a strange pressure on the feelings, and a deep disquietude of heart.
Most of the succeeding day Fanny kept apart from the family; spending a greater portion of the time alone in her room. Once or twice it crossed the mother’s thought, that Fanny might be tempted to answer the letter of Mr. Lyon, notwithstanding her promise not to do so for the present. But she repelled the thought instantly, as unjust to her beautiful, loving, obedient child. Still, Fanny’s seclusion of herself weighed on her mind, and led her several times to go into her room. Nothing, either in her manner or employment, gave the least confirmation to the vague fear which had haunted her.
The sun was nearly two hours above the horizon, when Fanny left the house, and bent her steps towards a pleasant grove of trees that stood some distance away. In the midst of the grove, which was not far from the entrance-gate to her father’s beautiful grounds, was a summer-house, in Oriental style, close beside an ornamental fountain. This was the favourite resort of the maiden, and thither she now retired, feeling certain of complete seclusion, to lose herself in the bewildering mazes of love’s young dream. Before the eyes of her mind, one form stood visible, and that a form of manly grace and beauty,—the very embodiment of all human excellence. The disparaging words of her aunt had, like friction upon a polished surface, only made brighter to her vision the form which the other had sought to blacken. What a new existence seemed opening before her, with new and higher capacities for enjoyment! The half-closed bud had suddenly unfolded itself in the summer air, and every blushing petal thrilled with a more exquisite sense of life.