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Holmes, Mary Jane, 1825-1907 [1856], 'Lena Rivers. (Miller, Orton & Mulligan, New York and Auburn) [word count] [eaf600T].
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CHAPTER XXXII. REACTION.

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The light of a dark, cloudy morning shone faintly in at
the window of Grandma Nichols' room, and roused her
from her slumber. On the pillow beside her rested no
youthful head—there was no kind voice bidding her
“good morrow”—no gentle hand ministering to her comfort—
for 'Lena was gone, and on the table lay the note,
which at first escaped Mrs. Nichols' attention. Thinking
her granddaughter had arisen early and gone before her,
she attempted to make her own toilet, which was nearly
completed, when her eye caught the note. It was directed
to her, and with a dim foreboding she took it up, reading
that her child was gone—gone from those who should
have sustained her in her hour of trial, but who, instead,
turned against her, crushing her down, until in a state of
desperation she had fled. It was in vain that the breakfast-bell
rang out its loud summons. Grandma did not
heed it; and when Corinda came up to seek her, she started
back in affright at the scene before her. Mrs. Nichols'
cap was not yet on, and her thin gray locks fell around
her livid face as she swayed from side to side, moaning at
intervals, “God forgive me that I broke her heart.”

The sound of the opening door aroused her, and looking
up she said, pointing toward the vacant bed, “Leny's
gone; I've killed her.”

Corinda waited for no more, but darting through the
hall and down the stairs, she rushed into the dining-room,
announcing the startling news that “old miss had done
murdered Miss 'Lena, and hid her under the bed!”

“What will come next!” exclaimed Mrs. Livingstone,

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following her husband to his mother's room, where a moment
sufficed to explain the whole.

'Lena was gone, and the shock had for a time unsettled
the poor old lady's reason. The sight of his mother's distress
aroused all the better nature of Mr. Livingstone,
and tenderly soothing her, he told her that 'Lena should
be found—he would go for her himself. Carrie, too, was
touched, and with unwonted kindness she gathered up
the scattered locks, and tying on the muslin cap, placed
her hand for an instant on the wrinkled brow.

“Keep it there; it feels soft, like 'Leny's,” said Mrs.
Nichols, the tears gushing out at this little act of
sympathy.

Meantime, Mr. Livingstone, after a short consultation
with his wife, hurried off to the neighbors, none of whom
knew aught of the fugitive, and all of whom offered their
assistance in searching. Never once did it occur to Mr.
Livingstone that she might have taken the cars, for that
he knew would need money, and he supposed she had
none in her possession. By a strange coincidence, too,
the depot agent who sold her the ticket, left the very next
morning for Indiana, where he had been intending to go
for some time, and where he remained for more than a
week, thus preventing the information which he could
otherwise have given concerning her flight. Consequently,
Mr. Livingstone returned each night, weary and disheartened,
to his home, where all the day long his mother
moaned and wept, asking for her 'Lena.

At last, as day after day went by and brought no tidings
of the wanderer, she ceased to ask for her, but
whenever a stranger came to the house, she would whisper
softly to them, “'Leny's dead. I killed her; did you
know it?” at the same time passing to them the crumpled
note, which she ever held in her hand.

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'Lena was a general favorite in the neighborhood which
had so recently denounced her, and when it became known
that she was gone, there came a reaction, and those who
had been the most bitter against her now changed their
opinion, wondering how they could ever have thought her
guilty. The stories concerning her visits to Captain Atherton's
were traced back to their source, resulting in exonerating
her from all blame, while many things, hitherto
kept secret, concerning Anna's engagement, were brought
to light, and 'Lena was universally commended for her efforts
to save her cousin from a marriage so wholly unnatural.
Severely was the captain censured for the part he
had taken in deceiving Anna, a part which he frankly confessed,
while he openly espoused the cause of the fugitive.

Mrs. Livingstone, on the contrary, was not generous
enough to make a like confession. Public suspicion pointed
to her as the intercepter of Anna's letters, and though
she did not deny it, she wondered what that had to do
with 'Lena, at the same time asking “how they expected
to clear up the Graham affair.”

This was comparatively easy, for in the present state of
feeling the neighborhood were willing to overlook many
things which had before seemed dark and mysterious,
while Mrs. Graham, for some most unaccountable reason,
suddenly retracted almost everything she had said, acknowledging
that she was too hasty in her conclusions,
and evincing for the missing girl a degree of interest perfectly
surprising to Mrs. Livingstone, who looked on in
utter astonishment, wondering what the end would be.
About this time Durward returned, greatly pained at the
existing state of things. In Frankfort, where 'Lena's
flight was a topic of discussion, he had met with the depot
agent, who was on his way home, and who spoke of
the young girl whose rather singular manner had

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attracted his attention. This was undoubtedly 'Lena, and after
a few moments' conversation with his mother, Durward
announced his intention of going after her, at least as far
as Rockford, where he fancied she might have gone.

To his surprise his mother made no objection, but her
manner seemed so strange that he at last asked what was
the matter.

“Nothing—nothing in particular,” said she, “only I've
been thinking it all over lately, and I've come to the conclusion
that perhaps 'Lena is innocent after all.”

Oh, how eagerly Durward caught at her words, interrupting
her almost before she had finished speaking, with,
Do you know anything? Have you heard anything!”

She had heard—she did know; but ere she could reply,
the violent ringing of the door-bell, and the arrival
of visitors, prevented her answer. In a perfect fever of
excitement Durward glanced at his watch. If he waited
long, he would be too late for the cars, and with a hasty
adieu he left the parlor, turning back ere he reached the
outer door, and telling his mother he must speak with her
alone. If Mrs. Graham had at first intended to divulge
what she knew, the impulse was now gone, and to her
son's urgent request that she should disclose what she
knew, she replied, “It isn't much—only your father has
another daguerreotype, the counterpart of the first one.
He procured it in Cincinnati, and 'Lena I know was not
there.”

“Is that all?” asked Durward, in a disappointed tone.

“Why, no, not exactly. I have examined both pictures
closely, and I do not think they resemble 'Lena as
much as we at first supposed. Possibly it might have
been some one else, her mother, may be,” and Mrs. Graham
looked earnestly at her son, who rather impatiently
answered, “Her mother died years ago.”

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At the same time he walked away, pondering upon what
he had heard, and hoping, half believing, that 'Lena would
yet be exonerated from all blame. For a moment Mrs.
Graham gazed after him, regretting that she had not told
him all, but thinking there was time enough yet, and remembering
that her husband had said she might wait until
his return, if she chose, she went back to the parlor,
while Durward kept on his way.

CHAPTER XXXIII. THE WANDERER.

Fiercely the noontide blaze of a scorching July sun
was falling upon the huge walls of the “Laurel Hill Sun,”
where a group of idlers were lounging on the long, narrow
piazza, some niching into still more grotesque carving
the rude, unpainted railing, while others, half reclining
on one elbow, shaded their eyes with their old
slouched hats, as they gazed wistfully toward the long
hill, eager to catch the first sight of the daily stage which
was momentarily expected.

“Jerry is late, to-day—but it's so plaugy hot he's favorin'
his hosses, I guess,” said the rosy-faced landlord,
with that peculiar intonation which stamped him at once
a genuine Yankee.

“A watched pot never biles,” muttered one of the
loungers, who regularly for fifteen years had been at his
post, waiting for the stage, which during all that time had
brought him neither letter, message, friend, nor foe.

But force of habit is everything, and after the very

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wise saying recorded above, he resumed his whittling,
never again looking up until the loud blast of the driver's
horn was heard on the distant hill-top, where the
four weary, jaded horses were now visible. It was the
driver's usual custom to blow his horn from the moment
he appeared on the hill, until with a grand flourish he
reined his panting steeds before the door of the inn. But
this time there was one sharp, shrill sound, and then all
was still, the omission eliciting several remarks not very
complimentary to the weather, which was probably the
cause of “Jerry's” unwonted silence. Very slowly the
vehicle came on, the horses never leaving a walk, and the
idler of fifteen years' standing, who for a time had suspended
his whittling, “wondered what was to pay.”

A nearer approach revealed three or four male passengers,
all occupied with a young lady, who, on the back
seat, was carefully supported by one of her companions.

“A sick gal, I guess. Wonder if the disease is catchin'?”
said the whittler, standing back several paces and
looking over the heads of the others, who crowded forward
as the stage came up. The loud greeting of the
noisy group was answered by Jerry with a low “sh—sh,”
as he pointed significantly at the slight form which two of
the gentlemen were lifting from the coach, asking at the
same time if there were a physician near.

“What's the matter on her? Hain't got the cholery,
has she,” said the landlord, who, having hallooed to his
wife to “fetch up her vittles,” now appeared on the piazza
ready to welcome his guests.

At the first mention of cholera, the fifteen years' man
vamosed, retreating across the road, and seating himself
on the fence under the shadow of the locust trees.

“Who is she, Jerry?” asked the younger of the set,
gazing curiously upon the white, beautiful face of the

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stranger, who had been laid upon the lounge in the common
sitting-room.

“Lord only knows,” said Jerry, wiping the heavy drops
of sweat from his good-humored face; “I found her at the
hotel in Livony. She came there in the cars, and said she
wanted to go over to 'tother railroad. She was so weak
that I had to lift her into the stage as I would a baby, and
she ain't much heavier. You orto seen how sweet she smiled
when she thanked me, and asked me not to drive very
fast, it made her head ache so. Zounds, I wouldn't of
trotted the horses if I'd never got here. Jest after we
started she fainted, and she's been kinder talkin' strangelike
ever since. Some of the gentlemen thought I'd better
leave her back a piece at Brown's tavern, but I wanted
to fetch her here, where Aunt Betsy could nuss her up,
and then I can kinder tend to her myself, you know.”

This last remark called forth no answering joke, for
Jerry's companions all knew his kindly nature, and it was
no wonder to them that his sympathies were so strongly
enlisted for the fair girl thus thrown upon his protection.
It was a big, noble heart over which Jerry Langley buttoned
his driver's coat, and when the physician who had
arrived pronounced the lady too ill to proceed any further,
he called aside the fidgety landlord, whose peculiarities
he well knew, and bade him “not to fret and stew,
for if the gal hadn't money, Jerry Langley was good for
a longer time than she would live, poor critter;” and he
wiped a tear away, glancing, the while, at the buryingground
which lay just across the garden, and thinking
how if she died, her grave should be beneath the wide-spreading
oak, where often in the summer nights he sat,
counting the head-stones which marked the last restingplace
of the slumbering host, and wondering if death
were, as some had said, a long, eternal sleep.

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Aunt Betsey, of whom he had spoken, was the landlady,
a little dumpy, pleasant-faced, active woman, equally
in her element bending over the steaming gridiron, or
smoothing the pillows of the sick-bed, where her powers
of nursing had won golden laurels from others than Jerry
Langley. When the news was brought to the kitchen
that among the passengers was a sick girl, who was to be
left, her first thought, natural to everybody, was, “What
shall I do?” while the second, natural to her, was, “Take
care of her, of course.”

Accordingly, when the dinner was upon the table, she
laid aside her broad check apron, substituting in its place
a half-worn silk, for Jerry had reported the invalid to be
“every inch a lady;” then smoothing her soft, silvery
hair with her fat, rosy hands, she repaired to the sitting-room,
where she found the driver watching his charge,
from whom he kept the buzzing flies by means of his bandana,
which he waved to and fro with untiring patience.

“Handsome as a London doll,” was her first exclamation,
adding, “but I should think she'd be awful hot with
them curls, danglin' in her neck! If she's goin' to be sick,
they'd better be cut off!”

If there was any one thing for which Aunt Betsey Aldergrass
possessed a particular passion, it was for hair-cutting,
she being barber general for Laurel Hill, which
numbered about thirty houses, store and church inclusive,
and now when she saw the shining tresses which
lay in such profusion upon the pillow, her fingers tingled
to their very tips, while she involuntarily felt for her scissors!
Very reverentially, as if it were almost sacrilege,
Jerry's broad palm was laid protectingly upon the clustering
ringlets, while he said, “No, Aunt Betsey, if she dies
for't, you shant touch one of them; 'twould spile her, and
she looks so pretty.”

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Slowly the long, fringed lids unclosed, and the brown
eyes looked up so gratefully at Jerry, that he beat a precipitate
retreat, muttering to himself that “he never
could stand the gals, anyway, they made his heart thump
so!”

“Am I very sick, and can't I go on!” asked the young
lady, attempting to rise, but sinking back from extreme
weakness.

“Considerable sick, I guess,” answered the landlady,
taking from a side cupboard an immense decanter of camphor,
and passing it toward the stranger. “Considerable
sick, and I wouldn't wonder if you had to lay by a day or
so. Will they be consarned about you to home, 'cause if
they be, my old man'll write.

“I have no home,” was the sad answer, to which Aunt
Betsey responded in astonishment, “Hain't no home!
Where does your marm live?”

“Mother is dead,” said the girl, her tears dropping
fast upon the pillow.

Instinctively the landlady drew nearer to her, as she
asked, “And your pa—where is he?”

“I never saw him,” said the girl, while her interrogator
continued: “Never saw your pa, and your marm is dead—
poor child what is your name, and where did you come
from?”

For a moment the stranger hesitated, and then thinking
it better to tell the truth at once, she replied, “My
name is 'Lena. I lived with my uncle a great many miles
from here, but I wasn't happy. They did not want me
there, and I ran away. I am going to my cousin, but I'd
rather not tell where, so you will please not ask me.”

There was something in her manner which silenced
Aunt Betsey, who, erelong, proposed that she should go
up stairs and lie down on a nice little bed, where she

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would be more quiet. But 'Lena refused, saying she
should feel better soon.

“Mebby, then, you'd eat a mouffle or two. We've got
some roasted pork, and Hetty'll warm over the gravy;”
but 'Lena's stomach rebelled at the very thought, seeing
which, the landlady went back to the kitchen, where she
soon prepared a bowl of gruel, in spite of the discouraging
remarks of her husband, who, being a little after
the Old Hunks order, cautioned her “not to fuss too
much, as gals that run away warn't apt to be plagued with
money.”

Fortunately, Aunt Betsey's heart covered a broader
sphere, and the moment the stage was gone she closed the
door to shut out the dust, dropped the green curtains,
and drawing from the spare-room a large, stuffed chair,
bade 'Lena “see if she couldn't set up a minit.” But this
was impossible, and all that long, sultry afternoon she lay
upon the lounge, holding her aching head, which seemed
well-nigh bursting with its weight of pain and thought.
“Was it right for her to run away? Ought she not to
have staid and bravely met the worst? Suppose she were
to die there alone, among strangers and without money,
for her scanty purse was well-nigh drained.” These and
similar reflections crowded upon her, until her brain grew
wild and dizzy, and when at sunset the physician came
again, he was surprised to find how much her fever had
increased.

“She ought not to lie here,” said he, as he saw how the
loud shouts of the school-boys made her shudder. “Isn't
there some place where she can be more quiet?”

At the head of the stairs was a small room, containing
a single bed and window, which last looked out upon the
garden and the graveyard beyond. Its furniture was of
the plainest kind, it being reserved for more common

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travelers, and here the landlord said 'Lena must be taken.
His wife would far rather have given her the front chamber,
which was large, airy and light, but Uncle Tim Aldergrass
said “No,” squealing out through his little
peaked nose that “'twarn't an atom likely he'd ever more'n
half git his pay, anyway, and he warn't a goin' to give up
the hull house.”

“How much more will it be if she has the best chamber,”
asked Jerry, pulling at Uncle's Tim's coat-tail and
leading him aside. “How much will it be, 'cause if 'tain't
too much, she shan't stay in that eight by nine pen.”

“A dollar a week, and cheap at that,” muttered Uncle
Tim, while Jerry, going out behind the wood-house, counted
over his funds, sighing as he found them quite too small
to meet the extra dollar per week, should she long continue
ill.

“If I hadn't of fooled so much away for tobacker and
things, I shouldn't be so plaguy poor now,” thought he,
forgetting the many hearts which his hard-earned gains
had made glad, for no one ever appealed in vain for help
from Jerry Langley, who represented one class of Yankees,
while Timothy Aldergrass represented another.

The next morning just as daylight was beginning to be
visible, Jerry knocked softly at Aunt Betsey's door, telling
her that for more than an hour he'd heard the young
lady takin' on, and he guessed she was worse. Hastily
throwing on her loose-gown Aunt Betsey repaired to 'Lena's
room, where she found her sitting up in the bed,
moaning, talking, and whispering, while the wild expression
of her eyes betokened a disordered brain.

“The Lord help us! she's crazy as a loon. Run for the
doctor quick!” exclaimed Mrs. Aldergrass, and without
boot or shoe, Jerry ran off in his stocking-feet, alarming
the physician, who immediately hastened to the inn,

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pronouncing 'Lena's disease to be brain fever, as he had at
first feared.

Rapidly she grew worse, talking of her home, which
was sometimes in Kentucky and sometimes in Massachusetts,
where she said they had buried her mother. At
other times she would ask Aunt Betsey to send for Durward
when she was dead, and tell him how innocent she
was.

“Didn't I tell you there was something wrong?” Uncle
Timothy would squeak. “Nobody knows who we
are harborin' nor how much 'twill damage the house.”

But as day after day went by, and 'Lena's fever raged
more fiercely, even Uncle Tim relented, and when she
would beg of them to take her home and bury her by the
side of Mabel, where Durward could see her grave, he
would sigh, “Poor critter, I wish you was to home,” but
whether this wish was prompted by a sincere desire to
please 'Lena, or from a more selfish motive, we are unable
to state. One morning, the fifth of 'Lena's illness, she
seemed much worse, talking incessantly and tossing from
side to side, her long hair floating in wild disorder over
her pillow, or streaming down her shoulders. Hitherto
Aunt Betsey had restrained her barberic desire, each day
arranging the heavy locks, and tucking them under the
muslin cap, where they refused to stay. Once the doctor
himself had suggested the propriety of cutting them
away, adding, though, that they would wait awhile, as it
was a pity to lose them.

“Better be cut off than yanked off,” said Aunt Betsey,
on the morning when 'Lena in her frenzy would occasionally
tear out handfulls of her shining hair and scatter it
over the floor.

Satisfied that she was doing right, she carefully approached
the bedside, and taking one of the curls in her

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hand, was about to sever it, when 'Lena, divining her intentions,
sprang up, and gathering up her hair, exclaimed,
“No, no, not these; take everything else, but leave me
my curls. Durward thought they were beautiful, and I
cannot lose them.”

At the side door below, the noonday stage was unloading
its passengers, and as the tones of their voices came
in at the open window, 'Lena suddenly grew calmer, and
assuming a listening attitude, whispered, “Hark! He's
come. Don't you hear him?”

But Aunt Betsey heard nothing, except her husband
calling her to come down, and leaving 'Lena, who had
almost instantly become quiet, to the care of a neighbor,
she started for the kitchen, meeting in the lower hall with
Hetty, who was showing one of the passengers to a room
where he could wash and refresh himself after his dusty
ride. As they passed each other, Hetty asked, “Have
you clipped her curls!”

“No,” answered Mrs. Aldergrass, “she wouldn't let
me touch 'em, for she said that Durward, whom she talks
so much about, liked 'em, and they mustn't be cut off.”

Instantly the stranger, whose elegant appearance both
Hetty and her mistress had been admiring, stopped, and
turning to the latter, said, “Of whom are you speaking?”

“Of a young girl that came in the stage, sick, five or
six days ago,” answered Mrs. Aldergrass.

“What is her name, and where does she live?” continued
the stranger.

“She calls herself 'Lena, but the 'tother name I don't
know, and I guess she lives in Kentucky or Massachusetts.”

The young man waited to hear no more, but mechanically
followed Hetty to his room, starting and turning
pale as a wild, unnatural laugh fell on his ear.

“It is the young lady, sir,” said Hetty, observing his

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agitated manner. “She raves most all the time, and the
doctor says she'll die if she don't stop.”

The gentleman nodded, and the next moment he was,
as he wished to be, alone. He had found her then—his
lost 'Lena—sick, perhaps dying, and his heart gave one
agonized throb as he thought, “What if she should die?
Yet why should I wish her to live?” he asked, “when
she is as surely lost to me as if she were indeed resting in
her grave!”

And still, reason as he would, a something told him that
all would yet be well, else, perhaps, he had never followed
her. Believing she would stop at Mr. Everett's, he had
come on thus far, finding her where he least expected it,
and spite of his fears, there was much of pleasure mingled
with his pain as he thought how he would protect and care
for her, ministering to her comfort, and softening, as far
as possible, the disagreeable things which he saw must
necessarily surround her. Money, he knew, would purchase
almost everything, and if ever Durward Bellmont
felt glad that he was rich, it was when he found 'Lena
Rivers sick and alone at the not very comfortable inn of
Laurel Hill.

As he was entering the dining-room, he saw Jerry—
whose long, lank figure and original manner had afforded
him much amusement during his ride—handing a dozen or
more oranges to Mrs. Aldergrass, saying, as he did so,
“They are for Miss 'Lena. I thought mebby they'd taste
good, this hot weather, and I ransacked the hull town to
find the nicest and best.”

For a moment Durward's cheek flushed at the idea of
'Lena's being cared for by such as Jerry, but the next instant
his heart grew warm toward the uncouth driver,
who, without any possible motive save the promptings of
his own kindly nature, had thus thought of the stranger

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girl. Erelong the stage was announced as ready and
waiting, but to the surprise and regret of his fellow-passengers,
who had found him a most agreeable traveling
companion, Durward said he was not going any further
that day.

“A new streak, ain't it?” asked Jerry, who knew he
was booked for the entire route; but the young man
made no reply, and the fresh, spirited horses soon bore the
lumbering vehicle far out of sight, leaving him to watch
the cloud of dust which it carried in its train.

Uncle Timothy was in his element, for it was not often
that a guest of Durward's appearance honored his house
with more than a passing call, and with the familiarity so
common to a country landlord, he slapped him on the
shoulder, telling him “there was the tallest kind of fish in
the Honeoye,” whose waters, through the thick foliage of
the trees, were just discernible, sparkling and gleaming
in the bright sunlight.

“I never fish, thank you, sir,” answered Durward, while
the good-natured landlord continued: “Now you don't
say it! Hunt, then, mebby?”

“Occasionally,” said Durward, adding, “But my reason
for stopping here is of entirely a different nature. I
hear there is with you a sick lady. She is a friend of
mine, and I am staying to see that she is well attended to.

“Yes, yes,” said Uncle Timothy, suddenly changing his
opinion of 'Lena, whose want of money had made him
sadly suspicious of her. “Yes, yes, a fine gal; fell into
good hands, too, for my old woman is the greatest kind
of a nuss. Wan't to see her, don't you?—the lady I
mean.”

“Not just yet; I would like a few moments' conversation
with your wife first,” answered Durward.

Greatly frustrated when she learned that the

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stylishlooking gentleman wished to talk with her, Aunt Betsey
rubbed her shining face with flour, and donning another
cap, repaired to the sitting-room, where she commenced
making excuses about herself, the house, and everything
else, saying, “'t want what he was used to, she knew, but
she hoped he'd try to put up with it.”

As soon as he was able to get in a word, Durward proceeded
to ask her every particular concerning 'Lena's illness,
and whether she would probably recognize him
should he venture into her presence.

“Bless your dear heart, no. She hain't known a soul
on us these three days. Sometimes she calls me `grandmother,
' and says when she's dead I'll know she's innocent.
'Pears like somebody had been slanderin' her, for
she begs and pleads with Durward, as she calls him, not
to believe it. Ain't you the one she means?”

Durward nodded, and Mrs. Aldergrass continued: “I
thought so, for when the stage driv up she was standin'
straight in the bed, ravin' and screechin', but the minit she
heard your voice she dropped down, and has been as quiet
ever since. Will you go up now?”

Durward signified his willingness, and following his
landlady, he soon stood in the close, pent-up room, where,
in an uneasy slumber, 'Lena lay panting for breath, and
at intervals faintly moaning in her sleep. She had fearfully
changed since last he saw her, and, with a groan, he
bent over her, murmuring, “My poor 'Lena,” while he
gently laid his cool, moist hand upon her burning brow.
As if there were something soothing in its touch, she
quickly placed her little hot, parched hand on his, whispering,
“Keep it there. It will make me well.”

For a long time he sat by her, bathing her head and
carefully removing from her face and neck the thick curls
which Mrs. Aldergrass had thought to cut away. At

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last she awoke, but Durward shrank almost in fear from
the wild, bright eyes which gazed so fixedly upon him,
for in them was no ray of reason. She called him “John,”
blessing him for coming, and saying, “Did you tell Durward.
Does he know?”

“I am Durward,” said he. “Don't you recognize me?
Look again.”

“No, no,” she answered, with a mocking laugh, which
made him shudder, it was so unlike the merry, ringing
tones he had once loved to hear. “No, no, you are not
Durward. He would not look at me as you do. He
thinks me guilty.”

It was in vain Durward strove to convince her of his
indentity. She would only answer with a laugh, which
grated so harshly on his ear that he finally desisted, and
suffered her to think he was her cousin. The smallness of
her chamber troubled him, and when Mrs. Aldergrass
came up he asked if there was no other apartment where
'Lena would be more comfortable.

“Of course there is,” said Aunt Betsey. “There's the
best chamber I was goin' to give to you.”

“Never mind me,” said he. “Let her have every comfort
the house affords, and you shall be amply paid.”

Uncle Timothy had now no objection to the offer, and
the large, airy room with its snowy, draped bed was soon
in readiness for the sufferer, who, in one of her wayward
moods, absolutely refused to be moved. It was in vain
that Aunt Betsey plead, persuaded, and threatened, and
at last in despair Durward was called in to try his powers
of persuasion.

“That's something more like it,” said 'Lena, and when
he urged upon her the necessity of her removal, she
asked, “Will you go with me?”

“Certainly,” said he.

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“And stay with me?”

“Certainly.”

“Then I'll go,” she continued, stretching her arms toward
him as a child toward its mother.

A moment more and she was reclining on the soft downy
pillows, the special pride of Mrs. Aldergrass, who bustled
in and out, while her husband, ashamed of his stinginess,
said “they should of moved her afore, only 't was a bad
sign.”

During the remainder of the day she seemed more
quiet, talking incessantly, it is true, but never raving if
Durward were near. It is strange what power he had
over her, a word from him sufficing at any time to subdue
her when in her most violent fits of frenzy. For two days
and nights he watched by her side, never giving himself
a moment's rest, while the neighbors looked on, surmising
and commenting as people always will. Every delicacy
of the season, however costly, was purchased for her comfort,
while each morning the flowers which he knew she
loved the best were freshly gathered from the different
gardens of Laurel Hill, and in broken pitchers, cracked
tumblers, and nicked saucers, adorned the room.

At the close of the third day she fell into a heavy slumber,
and Durward, worn out and weary, retired to take
the rest he so much needed. For a long time 'Lena slept,
watched by the physician, who, knowing that the crisis
had arrived, waited anxiously for her waking, which came
at last, bringing with it the light of returning reason.
Dreamily she gazed about the room, and in a voice no
longer strong with the excitement of delirium, asked,
“Where am I, and how came I here?”

In a few words the physician explained all that was necessary
for her to know, and then going for Mrs. Aldergrass,
told her of the favorable change in his patient,

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adding that a sudden shock might still prove fatal. “Therefore,”
said he, “though I know not in what relation this
Mr. Bellmont stands to her, I think it advisable for her to
remain awhile in ignorance of his presence. It is of the
utmost consequence that she be kept quiet for a few days,
at the end of which time she can see him.”

All this Aunt Betsey communicated to Durward, who,
unwilling to do anything which would endanger 'Lena's
safety, kept himself aloof, treading softly and speaking
low, for as if her hearing were sharpened by disease, she
more than once, when he was talking in the hall below,
started up, listening eagerly; then, as if satisfied that she
had been deceived, she would resume her position, while
the flush on her cheek deepened as she thought, “Oh,
what if it had indeed been he!”

Nearly all the day long he sat just without the door,
holding his breath as he caught the faint tones of her
voice, and longing for the hour when he could see her,
and obtain, if possible, some clue to the mystery attending
her and his father. His mother's words, together with
what he had heard 'Lena say in her ravings, had tended
to convince him that she, at least, might be innocent, and
once assured of this, he felt that he would gladly fold her
to his bosom, and cherish her there as the choicest of
heaven's blessings. All this time 'Lena had no suspicion
of his presence, but she wondered at the many luxuries
which surrounded her, and once, when Mrs. Aldergrass
offered her some choice wine, she asked who it was that
supplied her with so many comforts. Aunt Betsey's forte
did not lay in keeping a secret, and rather evasively she
replied, “You mustn't ask me too many questions just
yet!”

'Lena's suspicions were at once aroused, and for more
than an hour she lay thinking—trying to recall something

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which seemed to her like a dream. At last calling Aunt
Betsey to her, she said, “There was somebody here while
I was so sick—somebody besides strangers—somebody that
staid with me all the time—who was it?”

“Nobody, nobody—I mustn't tell,” said Mrs. Aldergrass,
hurriedly, while 'Lena continued, “Was it Cousin
John?”

“No, no; don't guess any more,” was Mrs. Aldergrass'
reply, and 'Lena, clasping her hands together, exclaimed,
“Oh, could it be he.

The words reached Durward's ear, and nothing but a
sense of the harm it might do prevented him from going
at once to her bedside. That night, at his earnest request,
the physician gave him permission to see her in the
morning, and Mrs. Aldergrass was commissioned to prepare
her for the interview. 'Lena did not ask who it was;
she felt that she knew; and the knowledge that he was
there—that he had cared for her—operated upon her like
a spell, soothing her into the most refreshing slumber she
had experienced for many a weary week. With the sunrising
she was awake, but Mrs. Aldergrass, who came in
soon after, told her that the visitor was not to be admitted
until about ten, as she would by that time have become
more composed, and be the better able to endure the excitement
of the interview. A natural delicacy prevented
'Lena from objecting to the delay, and, as calmly as possible,
she watched Mrs. Aldergrass while she put the room
to rights, and then patiently submitted to the arranging
of her curls, which during her illness had become matted
and tangled. Before eight everything was in readiness,
and soon after, worn out by her own exertions, 'Lena
again fell asleep.

“How lovely she looks,” thought Mrs. Aldergrass.

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“He shall just have a peep at her,” and stepping to the
door she beckoned Durward to her side.

Never before had 'Lena seemed so beautiful to him, and
as he looked upon her, he felt his doubts removing, one
by one. She was innocent—it could not be otherwise—
and very impatiently he awaited the lapse of the two
hours which must pass ere he could see her, face to face.
At length, as the surest way of killing time, he started out
for a walk in the pleasant wood which skirted the foot of
Laurel Hill.

Here for a time we leave him, while in another chapter
we speak of an event which, in the natural order of
things, should here be narrated.

CHAPTER XXXIV. 'LENA'S FATHER.

Two or three days before the morning of which we
have spoken, Uncle Timothy, who like many of his profession
had been guilty of a slight infringement of the
“Maine” liquor law, had been called to answer for the
same at the court then in session in the village of Canandaigua,
the terminus of the stage route. Altogether too
stingy to pay the coach fare, his own horse had carried
him out, going for him on the night preceding Durward's
projected meeting with 'Lena. On the afternoon of that
day the cars from New York brought up several passengers,
who being bound for Buffalo, were obliged to wait
some hours for the arrival of the Albany train.

Among those who stopped at the same house with Uncle
Timothy, was our old acquaintance, Mr. Graham, who

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had returned from Europe, and was now homeward bound,
firmly fixed in his intention to do right at last. Many and
many a time during his travels had the image of a pale,
sad face arisen before him, accusing him of so long neglecting
to own his child, for 'Lena was his daughter, and
she, who in all her bright beauty had years ago gone
down to an early grave, was his wife, the wife of his first,
and in bitterness of heart he sometimes thought, of
his only love. His childhood's home, which was at the
sunny south, was not a happy one, for ere he had learned
to lisp his mother's name, she had died, leaving him to the
guardianship of his father, who was cold, exacting, and
tyrannical, ruling his son with a rod of iron, and by his
stern, unbending manner increasing the natural cowardice
of his disposition. From his mother Harry had inherited
a generous, impulsive nature, frequently leading him into
errors which his father condemned with so much severity
that he early learned the art of concealment, as far, at
least, as his father was concerned.

At the age of eighteen he left home for Yale, where he
spent four happy years, for the restraints of college life,
though sometimes irksome, were preferable far to the
dull monotony of his southern home; and when at last
he was graduated, and there was no longer an excuse for
tarrying, he lingered by the way, stopping at the then village
of Springfield, where, actuated by some sudden freak,
he registered himself as Harry Rivers, the latter being his
middle name. For doing this he had no particular reason,
except that it suited his fancy, and Rivers, he thought,
was a better name than Graham. Here he met with Helena
Nichols, whose uncommon beauty first attracted his
attention, and whose fresh, unstudied manners afterward
won his love to such an extent, that in an unguarded moment,
and without a thought of the result, he married

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her, neglecting to tell her his real name before their marriage,
because he feared she would cease to respect him
if she knew he had deceived her, and then afterward finding
it harder than ever to confess his fault.

As time wore on, his father's letters, commanding him
to return, grew more and more peremptory, until at last
he wrote, “I am sick—dying—and if you do not come, I'll
cast you off forever.”

Harry knew this was no unmeaning threat, and he now
began to reap the fruit of his folly. He could not give
up Helena, who daily grew dearer to him, neither could
he brave the displeasure of his father by acknowledging
his marriage, for disinheritance was sure to follow. In
this dilemma he resolved to compromise the matter. He
would leave Helena awhile; he would visit his father, and
if a favorable opportunity occurred, he would confess all;
if not, he would return to his wife and do the best he
could. But she must be provided for during his absence,
and to effect this, he wrote to his father, saying he stood
greatly in need of five hundred dollars, and that immediately
on its receipt he would start for home. Inconsistent
as it seemed with his general character, the elder Mr.
Graham was generous with his money, lavishing upon his
son all that he asked for, and the money was accordingly
sent without a moment's hesitation.

And now Harry's besetting sin, secrecy, came again into
action, and instead of manfully telling Helena the truth,
he left her privately, stealing away at night, and quieting
his conscience by promising himself to reveal all in a letter,
which was actually written, but as at the time of its
arrival Helena was at home, and the postmaster knew of
no such person, it was at last sent to Washington with
thousands of its companions. The reader already knows
how 'Lena's young mother watched for her recreant

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husband's coming until life and hope died out together, and
it is only necessary to repeat that part of the story which
relates to Harry, who on his return home found his father
much worse than he expected. At his bedside, ministering
to his wants, was a young, dashing widow, who prided
herself upon being Lady Bellmont. On his death-bed her
father had committed her to the guardianship of Mr. Graham,
who, strictly honorable in all his dealings, had held
his trust until the time of her marriage with a young
Englishman.

Unfortunately, as it proved for Harry, and fortunately
for Sir Arthur, who had nothing in common with his
wife, the latter died within two years after his marriage,
leaving his widow and infant son again to the care of Mr.
Graham, with whom Lady Bellmont, as she was pleased
to call herself, lived at intervals, swaying him whichever
way she listed, and influencing him as he had never been
influenced before. The secret of this was, that the old
man had his eye upon her vast possessions, which he destined
for his son, who, ignorant of the honor intended
him, had presumed to marry according to the promptings
of his heart.

Scarcely was the first greeting over, ere his father at
once made known his plans, to which Harry listened with
mingled pain and amazement. “Lucy—Lady Bellmont!”
said he, “why, she's a mother—a widow—beside being
ten years my senior.”

“Three years,” interrupted his father. “She is twenty-five,
you twenty-two, and then as to her being a widow
and a mother, the immensity of her wealth atones for
that. She is much sought after, but I think she prefers
you. She will make you a good wife, and I am resolved
to see the union consummated ere I die.”

“Never, sir, never,” answered Harry, in a more

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decided manner than he had before assumed toward his father.
“It is utterly impossible.”

Mr. Graham was too much exhausted to urge the matter
at that time, but he continued at intervals to harass
Harry, until the very sight of Lucy Bellmont became hateful
to him. It was not so, however, with her son, the Durward
of our story. He was a fine little fellow, whom
every one loved, and for hours would Harry amuse himself
with him, while his thoughts were with his own wife
and child, the latter of whom was to be so strangely connected
with the fortunes of the boy at his side. For
weeks his father lingered, each day seeming an age to
Harry, who, though he did not wish to hasten his father's
death, still longed to be away. Twice had he written
without obtaining an answer, and he was about making
up his mind to start, at all events, when his father suddenly
died, leaving him the sole heir of all his princely fortune,
and with his latest breath enjoining it upon him to
marry Lucy Bellmont, who, after the funeral was over,
adverted to it, saying in her softest tones, “I hope you
don't feel obliged to fulfill your father's request.”

“Of course not,” was Harry's short answer, as he went
on with his preparations for his journey, anticipating the
happiness he should experience in making Helena the mistress
of his luxurious home.

But alas for human hopes. The very morning on which
he was intending to start, he was seized with a fever,
which kept him confined to his bed until the spring was
far advanced. Sooner than he was able he started for
Springfield in quest of Helena, learning from the woman
whom he had left in charge, that she was dead, and her baby
too! The shock was too much for him in his weak state,
and for two weeks he was again confined to a sick-bed,
sincerely mourning the untimely end of one whom he had

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truly loved, and whose death his own foolish conduct had
hastened. Soon after their marriage her portrait had
been taken by the best artist in the town, and this he determined
to procure as a memento of the few happy days
he had spent with Helena. But the cottage where he left
her was now occupied by strangers, and after many inquiries,
he learned that the portrait, together with some
of the furniture, had been sold to pay the rent, which became
due soon after his departure. His next thought was
to visit her parents, but from this his natural timidity shrank.
They would reproach him, he thought, with the death of
their daughter, whom he had so deeply wronged, and not
possessing sufficient courage to meet them face to face, he
again started for home, bearing a sad heart, which scarcely
again felt a thrill of joy until the morning when he first
met with 'Lena, whose exact resemblance to her mother
so startled him as to arouse the jealousy of his wife.

It would be both needless and tiresome to enumerate
the many ways and means by which Lucy Bellmont sought
to ensnare him. Suffice it to say, that she at last succeeded,
and he married her, finding in the companionship of
her son more real pleasure than he ever experienced in her
society. After a time Mrs. Graham, growing weary of
Charleston, where her haughty, overbearing manner made
her unpopular, besought her husband to remove, which he
finally did, going to Louisville, where he remained until the
time of his removal to Woodlawn. Fully believing what
the old nurse had told him of the death of his wife and
child, he had no idea of the existence of the latter, though
often in the stillness of night the remembrance of the little
girl whom Durward had pointed out to him in the
cars, arose before him, haunting him with visions of the
past, but it was not until he met her at Maple Grove that
he entertained a thought of her being his daughter.

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From that time his whole being seemed changed, for
there was now an object for which to live. Carefully had
he guarded from his wife a knowledge of his first marriage,
for he dreaded her sneering reproaches, and he could not
hear his beloved Helena's name breathed lightly by one
so greatly her inferior. When he saw 'Lena, however,
his first impulse was to clasp her in his arms and compel
his wife to own her, but day after day went by, and he
still delayed, hoping for a more favorable opportunity,
which never came. Had he found her in less favorable
circumstances, he might have done differently, but seeing
only the brightest side of her life, he believed her comparatively
happy. She was well educated, accomplished,
and beautiful, and so he waited, secure in the fact that he
was near to see that no harm should befall her. Once it
occurred to him that possibly he might die suddenly, thus
leaving his relationship to her a secret forever, and acting
upon this thought, he immediately made his will, bequeathing
all to 'Lena, whom he acknowledged to be his daughter,
adding an explanation of the whole affair, together
with a most touching letter to his child, who would never
see it until he was dead.

This done, he felt greatly relieved, and each day found
some good excuse for still keeping it from his wife, who
worried him incessantly concerning his evident preference
for 'Lena. Many and many a time he resolved to tell her
all, but as often postponed the matter, until, with the
broad Atlantic between them, he ventured to write what
he could not tell her verbally, and, strange to say, the effect
upon his wife was far different from what he had expected.
She did not faint, for there was no one by to see
her, neither did she rave, for there was no one to hear
her, but with her usual inconsistency, she blamed her husband
for not telling her before. Then came other thoughts,

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of a different nature. She had helped to impair 'Lena's
reputation, and if disgrace attached to her, it would also
fall upon her own family. Consequently, as we have seen,
she set herself at work to atone, as far as possible, for her
conduct. Her husband had given her permission to wait,
if she chose, until his return, ere she made the affair public,
and as she dreaded the remarks it would necessarily
call forth, she resolved to do so. He had advised her to
tell 'Lena, but she was gone—no one knew whither, and
nervously she waited for some tidings of the wanderer.
She was willing to receive 'Lena, but not the grandmother;
she was voted an intolerable nuisance, who should never
darken the doors of Woodlawn—never!

Meantime, Mr. Graham had again crossed the ocean,
landing in New York, from whence he started for home,
meeting, as we have seen, with a detention in Canandaigua,
where he accidentally fell in with Uncle Timothy, who,
being minus quite a little sum of money on account of his
transgression, was lamenting his ill fortune to one of his
acquaintances, and threatening to give up tavern keeping
if the Maine law wasn't repealed.

“Here,” said he, “it has cost me up'ards of fifty
dollars, and I'll bet I hain't sold mor'n a barrel, besides
what wine that Kentucky chap has bought for his gal,
and I suppose they call that nothin', bein' it's for sickness.
Why, good Lord, the hull on't was for modicine,
or chimistry, or mechanies!”

This reminded his friend to inquire after the sick lady,
whose name he did not remember.

“It's 'Lena,” answered Uncle Timothy, “'Lena Rivers
that dandified chap calls her, and it's plaguy curis to me
what she's a runnin' away for, and he a streakin' it through
the country arter her; there's mischief summers, so I tell

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'em, but that's no consarn of mine so long as he pays
down regular.”

Mr. Graham's curiosity was instantly aroused, and the
moment he could speak to Uncle Timothy alone, he asked
what he meant by the sick lady.

In his own peculiar dialect, Uncle Timothy told all he
knew, adding, “A relation of yourn, mebby?”

“Yes, yes,” said Mr. Graham. “Is it far to Laurel
Hill?”

“Better'n a dozen miles. Was you goin' out there?”

Mr. Graham replied in the affirmative, at the same time
asking if he could procure a horse and carriage there.

Uncle Timothy never let an opportunity pass for turning
a penny, and now nudging Mr. Graham with his elbow,
he said, “Them liv'ry scamps'll charge you tew dollars,
at the lowest calkerlation. I'm goin' right out, and
will take you for six shillin'. What do you think?”

Mr. Graham's thoughts were not very complimentary
to the shrewd Yankee, but keeping his opinion to himself,
he replied that he would go, suggesting that they
should start immediately.

“In less than five minits. You jest set down while I
go to the store arter some jimcracks for the old woman,”
said Uncle Timothy, starting up the street, which the
last Mr. Graham saw of him for three long hours.

At the end of that time, the little man came stubbing
down the walk, making many apologies, and saying “he
got so engaged the darned `liquor law,' and the
putty-heads that made it, that he'd no idee 'twas so late.”

On their way home he still continued to discourse on
his favorite topic, lamenting that he had voted for the
present governor, announcing his intention of “jinin' the
Hindews the fust time they met at Suckerport,” a village
at the foot of Honeoye lake, and stopping every man

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whom he knew to belong to that order, to ask if they
took a fee, and if “there was any bedivelment of gridirons
and goats, such as the Masons and Odd Fellers had!”
Being repeatedly assured that the fee was only a dollar,
and that the initiatory process was not very painful, he
concluded “to go it, provided they'd promise to run him
for constable. Office is the hull any of the buggers jine
'em for, and I may as well go in for a sheer,” said he,
thinking if he could not have the privilege of selling liquor,
he would at least secure the right of arresting those who
drank it!

In this way his progress homeward was not very rapid,
and the clock had struck ten long ere they reached the
inn, which they found still and dark, save the light which
was kept burning in 'Lena's room.

“That's her chamber—the young gal's—where you see
the candle,” said Uncle Timothy, as they drew up before
the huge walls of the tavern. “I guess you won't want
to disturb her to-night.”

“Certainly not,” answered Mr. Graham, adding, as he
felt a twinge of his inveterate habit of secrecy, “If you'd
just as lief, you need not speak of me to the young gentleman;
I wish to take him by surprise”—meaning Durward.

There was no particular necessity for this caution, for
Uncle Timothy was too much absorbed in his loss to think
of anything else, and when his wife asked “who it was
that he lighted up to bed,” he replied, “A chap that
wanted to come out this way, and so rid with me.”

Mr. Graham was very tired, and now scarcely had his
head pressed the pillow ere he was asleep, dreaming of
'Lena, whose presence was to shed such a halo of sunlight
over his hitherto cheerless home. The ringing of the bell
next morning failed to arouse him, but when Mrs. Aldergrass,
noticing his absence from the table, inquired for

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him, Uncle Timothy answered, “Never mind, let him
sleep—tuckered out, mebby—and you know we allus
have a sixpence more for an extra meal!

About eight Mr. Graham arose, and after a more than
usually careful toilet, he sat down to collect his scattered
thoughts, for now that the interview was so near, his
ideas seemed suddenly to forsake him. From the window
he saw Durward depart for his walk, watching him until
he disappeared in the dim shadow of the woods.

“I will wait until his return, and let him tell her,”
thought he, but when a half hour or more went by and
Durward did not come, he concluded to go down and ask
to see her by himself.

In order to do this, it was necessary for him to pass
'Lena's room, the door of which was ajar. She was
awake, and hearing his step, thought it was Mrs. Aldergrass,
and called to her. A thrill of exquisite delight ran
through his frame at the sound of her voice, and for an
instant he debated the propriety of going to her at once.
A second call decided him, and in a moment he was at
her bedside, clasping her in his arms, and exclaiming,
“My precious 'Lena! My daughter! Has nothing ever
told you that I am your father, the husband of your angel
mother, who lives again in her child—my child—my
'Lena?”

For a moment 'Lena's brain grew dizzy, and she had
well-nigh fainted, when the sound of Mr. Graham's voice
again brought her back to consciousness. Pressing his
lips to her white brow, he said, “Speak to me, my daughter.
Say that you receive me as your father, for such I
am.”

With lightning rapidity 'Lena's thoughts traversed the
past, whose dark mystery was now made plain, and as the
thought that it might be so—that it was so—flashed upon

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her, she clasped her hands together, exclaiming, “My
father! Is it true?
You are not deceiving me?”

“Deceive you, darling?—no,” said he. I am your
father, and Helena Nichols was my wife.”

“Why then did you leave her? Why have you so
long left me unacknowledged?” asked 'Lena.

Mr. Graham groaned bitterly. The hardest part was
yet to come, but he met it manfully, telling her the whole
story, sparing not himself in the least, and ending by asking
if, after all this, she could forgive and love him as her
father.

Raising herself in bed, 'Lena wound her arms around
his neck, and laying her face against his, wept like a little
child. He felt that he was sufficiently answered, and
holding her closer to his bosom, he pushed back the
clustering curls, kissing her again and again, while he said
aloud, “I have your answer, dearest one; we will never
be parted again.”

So absorbed was he in his newly recovered treasure,
that he did not observe the fiery eye, the glittering teeth,
and clenched fist of Durward Bellmont, who had returned
from his walk, and who, in coming up to his room, had
recognized the tones of his father's voice. Recoiling
backward a step or two, he was just in time to see 'Lena
as she threw herself into Mr. Graham's arms—in time to
hear the tender words of endearment lavished upon her
by his father! Staggering backward, he caught at the
banister to keep from falling, while a moan of anguish
came from his ashen lips. Alone in his room, he grew
calmer, though his heart still quivered with unutterable
agony as he strode up and down the room, exclaiming, as
he had once done before, “I would far rather see her
dead than thus—my lost, lost 'Lena!”

Then, in the deep bitterness of his spirit, he cursed his

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father, whom he believed to be far more guilty than she.
“I cannot meet him,” thought he; “there is murder at
my heart, and I must away ere he knows of my presence.”

Suiting the action to the word, he hastened down the
stairs, glancing back once, and seeing 'Lena reclining upon
his father's arm, while her eyes were raised to his with
a sweet, confiding smile, which told of perfect happiness.

“Thank God that I am unarmed, else he could not
live,” thought he, hurrying into the bar-room, where he
placed in Uncle Timothy's hands double the sum due
for himself and 'Lena, and then, without a word of explanation,
he walked away.

He was a good pedestrian, and preferring solitude in
his present state of feeling, he determined to go on foot
to Canadaigua, a distance of little more than a dozen
miles. Meantime, Mr. Graham was learning from 'Lena
the cause of her being there, and though she, as far as
possible, softened the fact of his having been accessory
to her misfortunes, he felt it none the less keenly, and
would frequently interrupt her with the exclamation that
it was the result of his cowardice—his despicable habit
of secrecy. When she spoke of the curl which his wife
had burned, he seemed deeply affected, groaning aloud
as he hid his face in his hands.

“And she found it—she burned it,” said he; and it
was all I had left of my Helena. I cut it from her head
on the morning of my departure, when she lay sleeping,
little dreaming of my cruel desertion. But,” he added,
“I can bear it better now that I have you, her living image,
for what she was when last I saw her, you are now.”

Their conversation then turned upon Durward, and
with the tact he so well knew how to employ, Mr. Graham
drew from his blushing daughter a confession of the
love she bore him.

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“He is worthy of you,” said he, while 'Lena, without
seeming to heed the remark, said, “I have not seen him
yet, but I am expecting him every moment, for he was to
visit me this morning.”

At this juncture Mrs. Aldergrass, who had been at one
of her neighbor's, came in, appearing greatly surprised at
the sight of the stranger, whom 'Lena quietly introduced
as “her father,” while Mr. Graham colored painfully as
Mrs. Aldergrass, curtsying very low, hoped Mr. Rivers
was well!

“Let it go so,” whispered 'Lena, as she saw her father
about to speak.

Mr. Graham complied, and then observing how anxiously
his daughter's eyes sought the door-way, whenever
a footstep was heard, he asked Mrs. Aldergrass for Mr.
Bellmont, saying they would like to see him, if he had
returned.

Quickly going down stairs, Mrs. Aldergrass soon came
back, announcing that “he'd paid his bill and gone off.”

“Gone!” said Mr. Graham. “There must be some mistake.
I will go down and inquire.”

With his hand in his pocket grasping the purse containing
the gold, Uncle Timothy told all he knew, adding,
that “'twan't noways likely but he'd come back agin, for
he'd left things in his room to the vally of five or six
dollars.”

Upon reflection, Mr. Graham concluded so, too, and
returning to 'Lena, he sat by her all day, soothing her
with assurances that Durward would surely come back,
as there was no possible reason for his leaving them so abruptly.
As the day wore away and the night came on,
he seemed less sure, while even Uncle Timothy began to
fidget, and when in the evening a young pettifogger, who
had recently hung out his shingle on Laurel Hill, came in,

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he asked him, in a low tone, “if, under the present governor,
they hung folks on circumstantial evidence alone.”

“Unquestionably, for that is sometimes the best kind
of evidence,” answered the sprig of the law, taking out
some little ivory tablets and making a charge against Uncle
Timothy for professional advice!

“But if one of my boarders, who has lots of money,
goes off in broad daylight and is never heard of agin,
would that be any sign he was murdered—by the landlord?”
continued Uncle Timothy, beginning to think
there might be a worse law than the Maine liquor law.

“That depends upon the previous character of the landlord,”
answered the lawyer, making another entry, while
Uncle Timothy, brightening up, exclaimed, “I shall stand
the racket, then, for my character is tip-top.”

In the morning Mr. Graham announced his intention of
going in quest of Durward, and with a magnanimity quite
praiseworthy, Uncle Timothy offered his hoss and wagon
for nothin', provided Mr. Graham would leave his watch
as a guaranty against his runnin' off!”

Just as Mr. Graham was about to start, a horseman
rode up, saying he had come from Canandaigna at the request
of a Mr. Bellmont, who wished him to bring letters
for Mr. Graham and Miss Rivers.

“And where is Mr. Bellmont?” asked Mr. Graham, to
which the man replied, that he took the six o'clock train
the night before, saying, further, that his manner was so
strange as to induce a suspicion of insanity on the part of
those who saw him.

Taking the package, Mr. Graham repaired to 'Lena's
room, giving her her letter, and then reading his, which
was full of bitterness, denouncing him as a villain, and
cautioning him, as he valued his life, never again to cross
the track of his outraged step-son.

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“You have robbed me,” he wrote, “of all I hold most
dear, and while I do not censure her the less, I blame you
the more, for you are older in experience, older in years,
and ten-fold older in sin, and I know you must have used
every art your foul nature could suggest, ere you won my
lost 'Lena from the path of rectitude.”

In the utmost astonishment Mr. Graham looked up at
'Lena, who had fainted. It was long ere she returned to
consciousness, and then her fainting fit was followed by
another more severe, if possible, than the first, while in
speechless agony Mr. Graham hung over her.

“I killed the mother, and now I am killing the child,”
thought he.

But at last 'Lena seemed better, and taking from the
pillow the crumpled note, she passed it toward her father,
bidding him read it. It was as follows:

My Lost 'Lena: By this title it seems appropriate
for me to call you, for you are more surely lost to me
than you would be were this summer sun shining upon
your grave. And, 'Lena, believe me when I say I would
rather, far rather, see you dead than the guilty thing you
are, for then your memory would be to me as a holy,
blessed influence, leading me on to a better world, where
I could hope to greet you as my spirit bride. But now,
alas! how dark the cloud which shrouds you from my
sight.

“Oh, 'Lena, 'Lena, how could you deceive me thus,
when I thought you so pure and innocent, when even
now, I would willingly lay down my life could that save
you from ruin.

“Do you ask what I mean? I have only to refer you
to what this morning took place between you and the vile
man I once called father, and whom I believed to be the

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soul of truth and honor. With a heart full of tenderness
toward you, I was hastening to your side, when a scene
met my view which stilled the beatings of my pulse and
curdled the very blood in my veins. I saw you throw your
arms around his neck—the husband of my mother. I
saw you lay your head upon his bosom. I heard him as
he called you dearest, and said you would never be parted
again!

“You know all that has passed heretofore, and can you
wonder that my worst fears are now confirmed? God
knows how I struggled against those doubts, which were
nearly removed, when, by the evidence of my own eye-sight,
uncertainty was made sure.

“And now, my once loved, but erring 'Lena, farewell.
I am going away—whither, I know not, care not, so that
I never hear your name coupled with disgrace. Another
reason why I go, is that the hot blood of the south burns
too fiercely in my veins to suffer me to meet your destroyer
and not raise my hand against him. When this
reaches you, I shall be far away. But what matters it to
you? And yet, 'Lena, there will come a time when you'll
remember one who, had you remained true to yourself,
would have devoted his life to make you happy, for I
know I am not indifferent to you. I have read it in your
speaking eye, and in the child-like confidence with which
you would yield to me when no one else could control
your wild ravings.

“But enough of this. Time hastens, and I must say
farewell—farewell forever—my lost, lost 'Lena!

Durward.

Gradually as Mr. Graham read, he felt a glow of indignation
at Durward's hastiness. “Rash boy! he might at
least have spoken with me,” said he, as he finished the

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letter, but 'Lena would hear no word of censure against
him. She did not blame him. She saw it all, understood
it all, and as she recalled the contents of his letter, her
own heart sadly echoed, “lost forever.

As well as he was able, Mr. Graham tried to comfort
her, but in spite of his endeavors, there was still at her
heart the same dull, heavy pain, and most anxiously Mr.
Graham watched her, waiting impatiently for the time
when she would be able to start for home, as he hoped a
change of place and scene would do much toward restoring
both her health and spirits. Soon after his arrival at
Laurel Hill, Mr. Graham had written to Mr. Livingstone,
telling him what he had before told his wife, and adding,
“Of course, my daughter's home will in future be with
me, at Woodlawn, where I shall be happy to see yourself
and family at any time.”

This part of the letter he showed to 'Lena, who, after
reading it, seemed for a long time absorbed in thought.

“What is it, darling? Of what are you thinking?”
Mr. Graham asked, at length, and 'Lena, taking the hand
which he had laid gently upon her forehead, replied, “I
am thinking of poor grandmother. She is not happy,
now, at Maple Grove. She will be more unhappy should
I leave her, and if you please, I would rather stay there
with her. I can see you every day.”

“Do you suppose me cruel enough to separate you
from your grandmother?” interrupted Mr. Graham.
“No, no, I am not quite so bad as that. Woodlawn is
large—there are rooms enough—and grandma shall have
her choice, provided it is a reasonable one.”

“And your wife—Mrs. Graham? What will she say?”
timidly inquired 'Lena, involuntarily shrinking from the
very thought of coming in contact with the little lady,

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who had so recently come up before her in the new and
formidable aspect of step-mother!

Mr. Graham did not know himself what she would say,
neither did he care. The fault of his youth once confessed,
he felt himself a new man, able to cope with almost
anything, and if in the future his wife objected to
what he knew to be right, it would do her no good, for
henceforth he was to rule his own house. Some such
thoughts passed through his mind, but it would not be
proper, he knew, to express himself thus to 'Lena, so he
laughingly replied, “Oh, we'll fix that, easily enough.”

At the time he wrote to Mr. Livingstone, he had also
sent a letter to his wife, announcing his safe return from
Europe, and saying that he should be at home as soon as
'Lena's health would admit of her traveling. Not wishing
to alarm her unnecessarily, he merely said of Durward,
that he had found him at Laurel Hill. To this letter
Mrs. Graham replied immediately, and with a far better
grace than her husband had expected. Very frankly
she confessed the unkind part she had acted toward 'Lena,
and while she said she was sorry, she also spoke of the
reaction which had taken place in the minds of Lena's
friends, who, she said, would gladly welcome her back.

The continued absence of Durward was now the only
drawback to 'Lena's happiness, and with a comparatively
light heart, she began to anticipate her journey home.
Most liberally did Mr. Graham pay for both himself and
'Lena, and Uncle Timothy, as he counted the shining coin,
dropping it upon the table to make sure it was not bogus,
felt quite reconciled to his recent loss of fifty dollars.
Jerry, the driver, was also generously rewarded for his
kindness to the stranger-girl, and just before he left, Mr.
Graham offered to make him his chief overseer, if he
would accompany him to Kentucky.

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“You are just the man I want,” said he, “and I know
you'll like it. What do you say?”

For the sake of occasionally seeing 'Lena, whom he
considered as something more than mortal, Jerry would
gladly have gone, but he was a staunch abolitionist, dyed
in the wool, and scratching his head, he replied, “I'm
obleeged to you, but I b'lieve I'd rather drive hosses than
niggers!

“Mebby you could run one on 'em off, and so make a
little sumthin',” slily whispered Uncle Timothy, his eyes
always on the main chance, but it was no part of Jerry's
creed to make anything, and as 'Lena at that moment appeared,
he beat a precipitate retreat, going out behind
the church, where he watched the departure of his southern
friends, saying afterward, to Mrs. Aldergrass, who
chided him for his conduct, that “he never could bid nobody
good-by, he was so darned tender-hearted!”

CHAPTER XXXV. EXCITEMENT AT MAPLE GROVE.

“'Lena been gone four weeks and father never stirred
a peg after her! That is smart, I must say. Why didn't
you let me know it before!” exclaimed John Jr., as he
one morning unexpectedly made his appearance at Maple
Grove.

During his absence Carrie had been his only correspondent,
and for some reason or other she delayed telling
him of 'Lena's flight until quite recently. Instantly

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forgetting his resolution of not returning for a year, he came
home with headlong haste, determining to start immediately
after his cousin.

“I reckon if you knew all that has been said about her,
you wouldn't feel quite so anxious to get her back,” said
Carrie. “For my part, I feel quite relieved at her
absence.”

“Shut up your head,” roared John Jr. “'Lena is no
more guilty than you. By George, I 'most cried when I
heard how nobly she worked to save Anna from old
Baldhead. And this is her reward! Gracious Peter! I
sometimes wish there wasn't a woman in the world!”

“If they'd all marry you, there wouldn't be long!”
retorted Carrie.

“You've said it now, haven't you?” answered John Jr.,
while his father suggested that they stop quarreling, adding,
as an apology for his own neglect, that Durward had gone
after 'Lena, who was probably at Mr. Everett's, and that
he himself had advertised in all the principal papers.

“Just like Bellmont! He's a fine fellow and deserves
'Lena, if anybody does,” exclaimed John Jr., while Carrie
chimed in, “Pshaw! I've no idea he's gone for her.
Why, they've hardly spoken for several months, and besides
that, Mrs. Graham will never suffer him to marry
one of so low origin.”

“The deary me!” said John Jr., mimicking his sister's
manner, “how much lower is her origin than yours?”

Carrie's reply was prevented by the appearance of her
grandmother, who, hearing that John Jr. was there, had
hobbled in to see him. Perfectly rational on all other
subjects, Mrs. Nichols still persisted in saying of 'Lena,
that she had killed her, and now, when her first greeting
with John Jr. was over, she whispered in his ear; “Have
they told you 'Leny was dead? She is—I killed her—it

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says so here,” and she handed him the almost worn-out
note which she constantly carried with her. Rough as he
seemed at times, there was in John Jr.'s nature many a
tender spot, and when he saw the look of childish imbecility
on his grandmother's face, he pressed his strong
arm around her, and a tear actually dropped upon her
gray hair as he told her 'Lena was not dead—he was going
to find her and bring her home. At that moment
old Cæsar, who had been to the post-office, returned,
bringing Mr. Graham's letter, which had just arrived.

“That's Mr. Graham's handwriting,” said Carrie, glancing
at the superscription. “Perhaps he knows something
of 'Lena!” and she looked meaningly at her mother,
who, with a peculiar twist of her mouth, replied,
“Very likely.”

“You are right. He does know something of her,”
said Mr. Livingstone, as he finished reading the letter.
“She is with him at a little village called Laurel Hill,
somewhere in New York.”

“There! I told you so. Poor Mrs. Graham. It will
kill her. I must go and see her immediately,” exclaimed
Mrs. Livingstone, settling herself back quite composedly
in her chair, while Carrie, turning to her brother, asked
“what he thought of 'Lena now.”

“Just what I always did,” he replied. “There's fraud
somewhere. Will you let me see that, sir?” advancing
toward his father, who, placing the letter in his hand,
walked to the window to hide the varied emotions of his
face.

Rapidly John Jr. perused it, comprehending the whole;
then, when it was finished, he seized his hat, and throwing
it up in the air, shouted, “Hurrah! Hurrah for Miss
'Lena Rivers Graham, daughter of the Honorable Harry
Rivers Graham. I was never so glad in my life.

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Hurrah!” and again the hat went up, upsetting in its descent
a costly vase, the fragments of which followed in
the direction of the hat, as the young man capered about
the room, perfectly insane with joy.

“Is the boy crazy?” asked Mrs. Livingstone, catching
him by the coat as he passed her, while Carrie attempted
to snatch the letter from his hand.

“Crazy?—yes,” said he. “Who do you think 'Lena's
father is? No less a person than Mr. Graham himself!
Now taunt her again, Cad, with her low origin, if you
like. She isn't coming here to live any more. She's
going to Woodlawn. She'll marry Durward, while you'll
be a cross, dried-up old maid, eh, Cad?” and he chucked
her under the chin, while she began to cry, bidding him
let her alone.

“What do you mean?” interposed Mrs. Livingstone,
trembling lest it might be true.

“I will read the letter and you can judge for yourself,”
replied John.

Both Carrie and her mother were too much astonished
to utter a syllable, while, in their hearts, each hoped it
would prove untrue. Bending forward, grandma had
listened eagerly, her dim eye lighting up as she occasionally
caught the meaning of what she heard; but she could
not understand it at once, and turning to her son, she
said, “What is it, John? what does it mean?”

As well as they could, Mr. Livingstone and John Jr.
explained it to her, and when at length she comprehended
it, in her own peculiar way she exclaimed, “Thank God
that 'Leny is a lady, at last—as good as the biggest on
'em. Oh, I wish Helleny had lived to know who her husband
was. Poor critter! Mebby he'll give me money
to go back and see the old place, once more, afore I die.”

“If he don't I will,” said Mr. Livingstone, upon which

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his wife, who had not spoken before, wondered “where
he'd get it.”

By this time Carrie had comforted herself with the assurance,
that as 'Lena was now Durward's sister, he would
not, of course, marry her, and determining to make the
best of it, she replied to her brother, who rallied her on
her crest-fallen looks, that he was greatly mistaken, for
“she was as pleased as any one at 'Lena's good fortune,
but it did not follow that she must make a fool of herself,
as some others did.”

The closing part of this remark was lost on John Jr.,
who had left the room. In the first excitement, he had
thought “how glad Nellie will be,” and acting, as he
generally did, upon impulse, he now ordered his horse,
and dashing off at full speed, as usual, surprised Nellie, first
with his sudden appearance, second, with his announcement
of 'Lena's parentage, and third, by an offer of
himself!

“It's your destiny,” said he, “and it's of no use to resist.
What did poor little Meb die for, if it wasn't to
make room for you. So you may as well say yes first as
last. I'm odd, I know, but you can fix me over. I'll do
exactly what you wish me to. Say yes, Nellie, won't
you?”

And Nellie did say yes, wondering, the while, if ever
before woman had such wooing. We think not, for never
was there another John Jr.

“I have had happiness enough for one day,” said he,
kissing her blushing cheek and hurrying away.

As if every hitherto neglected duty were now suddenly
remembered, he went straight from Mr. Douglass' to the
marble factory, where he ordered a costly stone for the
little grave on the sunny slope, as yet unmarked save by
the tall grass and rank weeds which grew above it.

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“What inscription will you have?” asked the engraver.

John Jr. thought for a moment, and then replied,
“Simply `Mabel.' Nothing more nor less; that tells the
whole story,” and involuntarily murmuring to himself,
“Poor little Meb, I wish she knew how happy I am,” he
started for home, where he was somewhat surprised to
find Mrs. Graham.

She had also received a letter from her husband, and
deeming secrecy no longer advisable, had come over to
Maple Grove, where, to her great satisfaction, she found
that the news had preceded her. Feeling sure that Mrs.
Graham must feel greatly annoyed, both Carrie and her
mother began, at first, to act the part of consolers, telling
her it might not be true, after all, for perhaps it was a
ruse of Mr. Graham's to cover some deep-laid scheme.
But for once in her life Mrs. Graham did well, and to
their astonishment, replied, “Oh, I hope not, for you do
not know how I long for the society of a daughter, and
as Mr. Graham's child I shall gladly welcome 'Lena home,
trying, if possible, to overlook the vulgarity of her family
friends!”

Though wincing terribly, neither Mrs. Livingstone nor
her daughter were to be outgeneraled. If Mrs. Graham
could so soon change her tactics, so could they, and for
the next half hour they lauded 'Lena to the skies. They
had always liked her—particularly Mrs. Livingstone—
who said, “If allowed to speak my mind, Mrs. Graham, I
must say that I have felt a good deal pained by those reports
which you put in circulation.”

I put reports in circulation!” retorted Mrs. Graham.
“What do you mean? It was yourself, madam, as I can
prove by the whole neighborhood!”

The war of words was growing sharper and more personal,
when John Jr.'s appearance put an end to it, and

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the two ladies, thinking they might as well be friends as
enemies, introduced another topic of conversation, soon
after which Mrs. Graham took her leave. Pausing in the
door-way, she said, “Would it afford you any gratification
to be at Woodlawn when 'Lena arrives?”

Knowing that, under the circumstances, it would look
better, Mrs. Livingstone said “yes,” while Carrie, thinking
Durward would be there, made a similar reply, saying
“she was exceedingly anxious to see her cousin.”

“Very well. I will let you know when I expect her,”
said Mrs. Graham, curtsying herself from the room.

“Spell Toady, Cad,” whispered John Jr., and with more
than her usual quickness, Carrie replied, by doing as he
desired.

“That'll do,” said he, as he walked off to the back
yard, where he found the younger portion of the blacks
engaged in a rather novel employment for them.

The news of 'Lena's good fortune had reached the
kitchen, causing much excitement, for she was a favorite
there.

“'Clar for't,” said Aunt Milly, “we orto have a bonfire.
It won't hurt nothin' on the brick pavement.”

Accordingly, as it was now dark, the children were set
at work gathering blocks, chips, sticks, dried twigs, and
leaves, and by the time John Jr. appeared, they had collected
quite a pile. Not knowing how he would like it,
they all took to their heels, except Thomas Jefferson, who,
having some of his mother's spirit, stood his ground, replying,
when asked what they were about, that they were
“gwine to celebrate Miss 'Lena.” Taking in the whole
fun at once, John Jr. called out, “Good! come back here,
you scapegraces.”

Scarcely had he uttered these words, when from behind
the ley-leach, the smoke-house, and the trees, emerged

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the little darkies, their eyes and ivories shining with the
expected frolic. Taught by John Jr., they hurrahed at the
top of their voices when the flames burst up, and one little
fellow, not yet able to talk plain, made his bare, shining
legs fly like drumsticks as he shouted, “Huyah for Miss
'Leny Yivers Gayum—”

“Bellmont, too, say,” whispered John Jr., as he saw
Carrie on the back piazza.

Bellmont too, say!” yelled the youngster, leaping so
high as to lose his balance.

Rolling over the green-sward like a ball, he landed at
the feet of Carrie, who, spurning him as she would a toad,
went back to the parlor, where for more than an hour she
cried from pure vexation.

CHAPTER XXXVI. ARRIVAL AT WOODLAWN.

It was a warm September night at Woodlawn. The
windows were open, and through the richly-wrought curtains
the balmy air of evening was stealing, mingling its
delicious perfume of flowers without with the odor of
those which drooped from the many costly vases which
adorned the handsome parlors. Lamps were burning,
casting a mellow light over the gorgeous furniture, while
in robes of snowy white the mistress of the mansion flitted
from room to room, a little nervous, a little fidgety, and,
without meaning to be so, a little cross. For more than
two hours she had waited for her husband, delaying the
supper, which the cook, quite as anxious as herself, pronounced
spoiled by the delay.

According to promise, the party from Maple Grove had

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arrived, with the exception of John Jr., who had generously
remained with his grandmother, she having been
purposely omitted in the invitation. From the first, Mrs.
Graham had decided that Mrs. Nichols should never live
at Woodlawn, and she thought it proper to have it understood
at once. Accordingly, as she was conducting
Mrs. Livingstone and Carrie to 'Lena's room, she casually
remarked, “I've made no provision for Mrs. Nichols, except
as an occasional visitor, for of course she will remain
with her son. She is undoubtedly much attached to your
family, and will be happier there!”

This 'Lena's!” interrupted Carrie, ere her mother
had time to reply. “It's the very best chamber in the
house—Brussels carpets, marble and rosewood furniture,
damask curtains. Why, she'll hardly know how to act,”
she continued, half unconsciously, as she gazed around the
elegant apartment, which, with one of her unaccountable
freaks, Mrs. Graham had fitted up with the utmost taste.

“Yes, this is 'Lena's,” said Mrs. Graham, complacently.
“Will it compare at all with her chamber at Maple Grove?
I do not wish it to seem inferior!”

“Carrie bit her lip, while her mother very coolly replied,
“Ye-es, on the whole quite as good, perhaps better,
as some of the furniture is new!”

“Have I told you,” continued Mrs. Graham, bent on
tormenting them, “Have I told you that we are to spend
the winter in New Orleans, where 'Lena will of course be
the reigning belle? You ought to be there, dear,” laying
her hand on Carrie's shoulder. “It would be so gratifying
to you to witness the sensation she will create!”

“Spiteful old thing—she tries to insult us,” thought Carrie,
her heart swelling with bitterness toward the ever-hated
'Lena, whose future life seemed so bright and joyous.

The sound of wheels was now heard, and the ladies

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reached the lower hall just as the carriage, which had
been sent to the station at Midway, drove up at a side
door. Carrie's first thought was for Durward, and shading
her eyes with her hand, she looked anxiously out.
But only Mr. Graham alighted, gently lifting out his
daughter, who was still an invalid.

“Mighty careful of her,” thought Mrs. Livingstone, as
in his arms he bore her up the marble steps.

Depositing her in their midst, and placing his arm
around her, he said, turning to his wife, “Lucy, this is my
daughter. Will you receive and love her as such, for my
sake?”

In a moment 'Lena's soft, white hand lay in the fat,
chubby one of Mrs. Graham, who kissed her pale cheek,
calling her “'Lena,” and saying “she was welcome to
Woodlawn.”

Mrs. Livingstone and Carrie now pressed forward, overwhelming
her with caresses, telling her how badly they
had felt at her absence, chiding her for running away,
calling her a naughty puss, and perfectly bewildering her
with their new mode of conduct. Mr. Livingstone's turn
came next, but he neither kissed nor caressed her, for
that was not in keeping with his nature, but very, very
tenderly he looked into her eyes, as he said, “You know,
'Lena, that I am glad—most glad for you.”

Unostentatious as was this greeting, 'Lena felt that
there was more sincerity in it than all that had gone before,
and the tears gushed forth involuntarily. Mentally
styling her, the one “a baby,” and the other “a fool,”
Mrs. Livingstone and Carrie returned to the parlor, while
Mrs. Graham, calling a servant, bade her show 'Lena to
her room.

“Hadn't you better go up and assist your cousin,”
whispered Mrs. Livingstone to Carrie, who forthwith

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departed, knocking at the door, an act of politeness she had
never before thought it necessary to offer 'Lena. But
she was an heiress, now, fully, yes, more than equal, and
that made a vast difference.

“I came to see if I could render you any service,” she
said, in answer to 'Lena's look of inquiry.

“No I thank you,” returned 'Lena, beginning to get an
inkling of the truth. “You know I'm accustomed to
waiting upon myself, and if I wan't anything, Drusa can
assist me. I've only to change my soiled dress and smooth
my hair,” she continued, as she shook out her long and now
rather rough tresses.

“What handsome hair you've got,” said Carrie, taking
one of the curls in her hand. “I'd forgotten it was so
beautiful. Hasn't it improved during your absence?”

“A course of fever is not usually very beneficial to
one's hair, I believe,” answered 'Lena, as she proceeded
to brush and arrange her wavy locks, which really had
lost some of their luster.

Foiled in her attempt at toadyism, Carrie took another
tack. Looking 'Lena in the face, she said, “What is it?
I can't make it out, but—but somehow you've changed;
you don't look so—so—”

“So well you would say, I suppose,” returned 'Lena,
laughingly, “I've grown thin, but I hope to improve by-and-by.”

Drusa glanced at the two girls as they stood side by
side, and her large eyes sparkled as she thought her young
mistress “a heap the best lookin' now.

By this time Carrie had thought to ask for Durward.
Instantly 'Lena turned whiter, if possible, than she was
before, and in an unsteady voice she replied, that “she
did not know.”

“Not know!” repeated Carrie, her own countenance

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brightening visibly. “Haven't you seen him? Wasn't
he at that funny, out-of-the-way place, where you were?”

“Yes, but he left before I saw him,” returned 'Lena, her
manner plainly indicating that there was something wrong.

Carrie's spirits rose. There was a chance for her, and
on their way down stairs she laughed and chatted so familiarly,
that 'Lena wondered if it could be the same
haughty girl who had seldom spoken to her except to repulse
or command her. The supper-bell-rang just as they
reached the parlor, and Mr. Graham, taking 'Lena on his
arm, led the way to the dining-room, where the entire silver
tea-set had been brought out, in honor of the occasion.

“Hasn't 'Lena changed, mother?” said Carrie, feeling
hateful, and knowing no better way of showing it. “Hasn't
her sickness changed her?”

“It has made her grow old; that's all the difference I
perceive,” returned Mrs. Livingstone, satisfied that she'd
said the thing which she knew would most annoy herself.

“How old are you, dear,” asked Mrs. Graham, leaning
across the table.

“Eighteen,” was 'Lena's answer, to which Mrs. Graham
replied, “I thought so. Three years younger than
Carrie, I believe.”

“Two, only two,” interrupted Mrs. Livingstone, while
Carrie exclaimed, “Horrors! How old do you take me
to be.”

Adroitly changing the conversation, Mrs. Graham made
no reply, and soon after they rose from the table. Scarcely
had they returned to the parlor, when John Jr. was
announced. “He had,” he said, “got his grandmother to
sleep and put her to bed, and now he had come to pay his
respects to Miss Graham.

Catching her in his arms, he exclaimed, “Little girl! I'm
as much delighted with your good fortune as I should be

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had it happened to myself. But where is Bellmont?” he
continued, looking about the room.

Mr. Graham replied that he was not there.

“Not here?” repeated John Jr. “What have you done
with him, 'Lena?”

Lifting her eyes, full of tears, to her cousin's face, 'Lena
said, softly, “Please don't talk about it now.”

“There's something wrong,” thought John Jr. “I'll
bet I'll have to shoot that dog yet.”

'Lena longed to pour out her troubles to some one, and
knowing she could confide in John Jr., she soon found an
opportunity of whispering to him, “Come to-morrow, and
I will tell you all about it.”

Between ten and eleven the company departed, Mrs.
Livingstone and Carrie taking a most affectionate leave
of 'Lena, urging her not to fail of coming over the next
day, as they should be expecting her. The ludicrous expression
of John Jr.'s face was a sufficient interpretation
of his thoughts, as whispering aside to 'Lena, he said, “I
can't do it justice if I try!”

The next morning Mr. Graham got out his carriage to
carry 'Lena to Maple Grove, asking his wife to accompany
them. But she excused herself, on the plea of a headache,
and they set off without her. The meeting between 'Lena
and her grandmother was affecting, and Carrie, in order
to sustain the character she had assumed, walked to
the window, to hide her emotions, probably—at least
John Jr. thought so, for with the utmost gravity, he
passed her his silk pocket handkerchief! When the first
transports of her interview with 'Lena were over, Mrs.
Nichols fastened herself upon Mr. Graham, while John
Jr. invited 'Lena to the garden, where he claimed from
her the promised story, which she told him unreservedly.

“Oh, that's nothing, compared with my experience,”

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said John Jr., plucking at the rich, purple grapes which
hung in heavy clusters above his head. “That's easily
settled. I'll go after Durward myself, and bring him
back, either dead or alive—the latter if possible, the former
if necessary. So cheer up. I've faith to believe that
you and Durward will be married about the same time
that Nellie and I are. We are engaged—did I tell you?”

Involuntarily 'Lena's eyes wandered in the direction of
the sunny slope and the little grave, as yet but nine
months made.

“I know what you think,” said John Jr. rather testily,
“but hang me if I can help it. Meb was never intended
for me, except by mother. I suppose there is in the world
somebody for whom she was made, but it wasn't I, and
that's the reason she died. I am sorry as anybody, and
every night in my life I think of poor Meb, who loved me
so well, and who met with so poor a return. I've
bought her some grave-stones, though,” he continued, as
if that were an ample atonement for the past.

While they were thus occupied, Mr. Graham was discussing
with Mrs. Nichols the propriety of her removing
to Woodlawn.

“I shan't live long to trouble anybody,” said she, when
asked if she would like to go, “and I'm nothin' without
'Leny.”

So it was arranged that she should go with him, and
when 'Lena returned to the house, she found her grandmother
in her chamber, packing up, preparatory to her
departure.

“We'll have to come agin',” said she, “for I've as much
as two loads.”

“Don't take them,” interposed 'Lena. “You won't
need them, and nothing will harm them here.”

After a little, grandma was persuaded, and her last

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charge to Mrs. Livingstone and Carrie was, “that they
keep the dum niggers from her things.”

Habit with Mrs. Nichols was everything. She had
lived at Maple Grove for years, and every niche and corner
of her room she understood. She knew the blacks
and they knew her, and ere she was half-way to Woodlawn,
she began to wish she had not started. Politely,
but coldly, Mrs. Graham received her, saying, “I thought,
perhaps, you would return with them to spend the day!
laying great emphasis on the last words, as if that, of
course, was to be the limit of her visit. Grandma understood
it, and it strengthened her resolution of not remaining
long.

“Miss Graham don't want to be pestered with me,”
said she to 'Lena, the first time they were alone, “and I
don't mean that she shall be. 'Tilda is used to me, and
she don't mind it now, so I shall go back afore long. You
can come to see me every day, and once in a while I'll
come here.”

That afternoon a heavy rain came on, and Mrs. Graham
remarked to Mrs. Nichols that “she hoped she was
not homesick, as there was every probability of her being
obliged to stay over night!” adding, by way of comfort,
that “she was going to Frankfort the next day to make
purchases for 'Lena, and would take her home.”

Accordingly, the next morning Mrs. Livingstone was
not very agreeably surprised by the return of her mother-in-law,
who, Mrs. Graham said, “was so homesick they
couldn't keep her.”

That night when Mrs. Graham, who was naturally generous,
returned from the city, she left at Maple Grove a
large bundle for grandma, consisting of dresses, aprons,
caps, and the like, which she had purchased as a sort of
peace-offering, or reward, rather, for her having decamped

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so quietly from Woodlawn. But the poor old lady did
not live to wear them. Both her mind and body were
greatly impaired, and for two or three years she had been
failing gradually. There was no particular disease, but a
general breaking up of the springs of life, and a few
weeks after 'Lena's arrival at Woodlawn, they made another
grave on the sunny slope, and Mabel no longer
slept alone.

CHAPTER XXXVII. DURWARD.

From place to place and from scene to scene Durward
had hurried, caring nothing except to forget, if possible,
the past, and knowing not where he was going, until he
at last found himself in Richmond, Virginia. This was
his mother's birth-place, and as several of her more distant
relatives were still living here, he determined to stop
for awhile, hoping that new objects and new scenes would
have some power to rouse him from the lethargy into
which he had fallen. Constantly in terror lest he should
hear of 'Lena's disgrace, which he felt sure would be published
to the world, he had, since his departure from Laurel
Hill, resolutely refrained from looking in a newspaper,
until one morning some weeks after his arrival at Richmond.

Entering a reading-room, he caught up the Cincinnati
Gazette, and after assuring himself by a hasty glance that
it did not contain what he so much dreaded to see, he sat
down to read it, paying no attention to the date, which
was three or four weeks back. Accidentally he cast his
eye over the list of arrivals at the Burnet House, seeing

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among them the names of “Mr. H. R. Graham, and Miss
L. R. Graham, Woodford county, Kentucky!”

Audacious! How dare they be so bold!” he exclaimed,
springing to his feet and tearing the paper in
fragments, which he scattered upon the floor.

“Considerable kind of uppish, 'pears to me,” said a
strange voice, having in its tone the nasal twang peculiar
to a certain class of Yankees.

Looking up, Durward saw before him a young man in
whose style of dress and freckled face we at once recognize
Joel Slocum. Wearying of Cincinnati, as he had before
done with Lexington, he had traveled at last to Virginia.
Remembering to have heard that his grandmother's
aunt had married, died, and left a daughter in Richmond,
he determined, if possible, to find some trace of
her. Accordingly, he had come on to that city, making
it the theater of his daguerrean operations. These alone
not being sufficient to support him, he had latterly turned
his attention to literary pursuits, being at present engaged
in manufacturing a book after the Sam Slick order,
which, to use his own expression, “he expected would
have a thunderin' sale.”

In order to sustain the new character which he had assumed,
he came every day to the reading-room, tumbling
over books and papers, generally carrying one of the former
in his hand, affecting an utter disregard of his personal
appearance, daubing his fingers with ink, wiping them on
the pocket of his coat, and doing numerous other things
which he fancied would stamp him a distinguished person.

On the morning of which we have spoken, Joel's attention
was attracted toward Durward, whose daguerreotype
he had seen at Maple Grove, and though he did not recognize
the original, he fancied he might have met him
before, and was about making his acquaintance, when

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Durward's action drew from him the remark we have
mentioned. Thinking him to be some impertinent fellow,
Durward paid him no attention, and was about leaving,
when, hitching his chair a little nearer, Joel said, “Be
you from Virginny?”

“No.”

“From York state?”

“No.”

“From Pennsylvany?”

“No.”

“Mebby, then, you are from Kentucky?”

No answer.

“Be you from Kentucky?”

“Yes.”

“Do you know Mr. Graham's folks?”

“Yes,” said Durward, trembling lest the next should
be something concerning his step-father—but it was not.

Settling himself a little further back in the chair, Joel
continued: “Wall, I calkerlate that I'm some relation
to Miss Graham. Be you 'quainted with her?”

Durward knew that a relationship with Mrs. Graham
also implied a relationship with himself, and feeling a little
curious as well as somewhat amused, he replied, “Related
to Mrs. Graham! Pray how?”

“Why, you see,” said Joel, “that my grandmarm's
aunt—she was younger than grandmarm, and was her
aunt tew. Wall, she went off to Virginia to teach music,
and so married a nabob—know what that is, I s'pose; she
had one gal and died, and this gal was never heard from
until I took it into my head to look her up, and I've found
out that she was Lucy Temple. She married an Englishman,
first—then a man from South Carolina, who is now.
livin' in Kentucky, between Versailles and Frankfort.”

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“What was your grandmother's aunt's name?” asked
Durward.

“Susan Howard, returned Joel. “The Howards were
a stuck-up set, grandmarm and all—not a bit like t'other
side of the family. My mother's name was Scovandyke—”

“And yours?” interrupted Durward.

“Is Joel Slocum, of Slocumville, Massachusetts, at your
service, sir,” said the young man, rising up and going
through a most wonderful bow, which he always used on
great occasions.

In a moment Durward knew who he was, and greatly
amused, he said, “Can you tell me, Mr. Slocum, what relation
this Lucy Temple, your great-great-aunt's daughter,
would be to you?”

“My third cousin, of course,” answered Joel. “I figgered
that out with a slate and pencil.”

“And her son, if she had one?”

“Would be my fourth cousin; no great connection, to
be sure—but enough to brag on, if they happened to be
smart!”

“Supposing I tell you that I am Lucy Temple's son?”
said Durward, to which Joel, not the least suspicious, replied,
“Wall, s'posin' you du; 'twon't make it so.”

“But I am, really and truly,” continued Durward.
“Her first husband was a Bellmont, and I am Durward
Bellmont, your fourth cousin, it seems.”

Jehosiphat! If this ain't curis,” exclaimed Joel,
grasping Durward's hand. “How do you du, and how is
your marm. And do you know Helleny Rivers?”

Durward's brow darkened as he replied in the affirmative,
while Joel continued: “We are from the same
town, and used to think a sight of each other, but when
I seen her in Kentucky, I thought she'd got to be mighty
toppin'. Mebby, though, 'twas only my notion.”

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Durward did not answer, and after a little his companion
said, “I suppose you know I sometimes take picters
for a livin'. I'm goin' to my office now, and if you'll come
with me I'll take yourn for nothin', bein' you're related.”

Mechanically, and because he had nothing else to do,
Durward followed the young man to his “office,” which
was a dingy, cheerless apartment in the fourth story of a
crazy old building. On the table in the center of the
room were several likenesses, which he carelessly examined.
Coming at last to a larger and richer case, he
opened it, but instantly it dropped from his hand, while
an exclamation of surprise escaped his lips.

“What's the row, old feller,” asked Joel, coming forward
and picking up the picture which Durward had recognized
as 'Lena Rivers.

“How came you by it?” said Durward eagerly, and
with a knowing wink, Joel replied, “I know, and that's
enough.”

“But I must know, too. It is of the utmost importance
that I know,” said Durward, and after a moment's
reflection, Joel answered: “Wall, I don't s'pose it'll do
any hurt if I tell you. When I was a boy I had a hankerin'
for 'Leny, and I didn't get over it after I was grown,
either, so a year or two ago I thought I'd go to Kentuck
and see her. Knowin' how tickled she and Mrs. Nichols
would be with a picter of their old home in the mountains,
I took it for 'em and started. In Albany I went to
see a family that used to live in Slocumville. The woman
was a gal with 'Leny's mother, and thought a sight of her.
Wall, in the chamber where they put me to sleep, was an
old portrait, which looked so much like 'Leny, that in the
mornin' I asked whose it was, and if you b'lieve me, 'twas
'Leny's mother! You know she married, or thought she
married, a southern rascal, who got her portrait taken and

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then run off, and the picter, which in its day was an expensive
one, was sold to pay up. A few years afterward,
Miss Rice, the woman I was tellin' you about, came acrost
it, and bought it for a little or nothin' to remember Helleny
Nichols by. Thinks to me, nothin' can please 'Leny
better than a daguerreotype of her mother, so I out with
my apparatus and took it. But when I come to see that
they were as nigh alike as two peas, I hated to give it up,
for I thought it would be almost as good as lookin' at
'Leny. So I kept it myself, but I don't want her to know
it, for she'd be mad.”

“Did you ever take a copy of this for any one?”
asked Durward, a faint light beginning to dawn upon
him.

“What a feller to hang on,” answered Joel, “but bein'
I've started, I'll go it and tell the hull. One morning
when I was in Lexington, a gentleman came in, calling
himself Mr. Graham, and saying he wanted a copy of an
old mountain house which he had seen at Mr. Livingstone's.
Whilst I was gettin' it ready, he happened to
come acrost this one, and what is the queerest of all, he
like to fainted away. I had to throw water in his face
and everything. Bimeby he cum to, and says he,
`Where did you get that?' I told him all about it, and
then, layin' his head on the table, he groaned orfully, wipin'
off the thumpinest great drops of sweat, and kissin'
the picter as if he was crazy.”

“Mebby you knew Helleny Nichols?” says I.

“Knew her, yes,” says he, jumpin' up and walkin' the
room as fast.

“All to once he grew calm, just as though nothin' had
happened, and says he, `I must have that or one jest like it.'

“At first I hesitated, for I felt kinder mean always
about keepin' it, and I didn't want 'Leny to know I'd got

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it. I told him so, and he said nobody but himself should
ever see it. So I took a smaller one, leavin' off the lower
part of the body, as the dress is old-fashioned, you see.
He was as tickled as a boy with a new top, and actually
forgot to take the other one of the mountain house.
Some months after, I came across him in Cincinnati. His
wife was with him, and I thought then that she looked
like Aunt Nancy. Wall, he went with me to my office,
and said he wanted another daguerreotype, as he'd lost
the first one. Now I'm pretty good at figgerin', and I've
thought that matter over until I've come to this conclusion—
that man—was—'Lena's father—the husband or
something of Helleny Nichols! But what ails you?
Are you faintin', too,” he exclaimed, as he saw the death-like
whiteness which had settled upon Durward's face and
around his mouth.

“Tell me more, everything you know,” gasped Durward.

“I have told you all I know for certain,” said Joel. “The
rest is only guess-work, but it looks plaguy reasonable.
'Leny's father, I've heard, was from South Car'lina—”

“So was Mr. Graham,” said Durward, more to himself
than to Joel, who continued, “And he's your step-father,
ain't he—the husband of Lucy Temple, my cousin?”

Durward nodded, and as a customer just then came in,
he arose to go, telling Joel he would see him again.
Alone in his room, he sat down to think of the strange
story he had heard. Gradually as he thought, his mind
went back to the time when Mr. Graham first came home
from Springfield. He was a little boy, then, five or six
years of age, but he now remembered many things calculated
to prove what he scarcely yet dared to hope. He
recalled Mr. Graham's preparations to return, when he
was taken suddenly ill. He knew that immediately after
his recovery he had gone northward. He remembered

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how sad he had seemed after his return, neglecting to
play with him as had been his wont, and when to this he
added Joel's story, together with the singularity of his
father's conduct toward 'Lena, he could not fail to be convinced.

“She is innocent, thank heaven! I see it all now.
Fool that I was to be so hasty,” he exclaimed, his whole
being seeming to undergo a sudden change as the joyous
conviction flashed upon him.

In his excitement he forgot his promise of again seeing
Joel Slocum, and ere the sun-setting he was far on his
road home. Occasionally he felt a lingering doubt, as he
wondered what possible motive his father could have had
for concealment, but these wore away as the distance between
himself and Kentucky diminished. As the train
paused at one of the stations, he was greatly surprised at
seeing John Jr. among the crowd gathered at the depot.

“Livingstone, Livingstone, how came you here?”
shouted Durward, leaning from the open window.

The cars were already in motion, but at the risk of his
life John Jr. bounded upon the platform, and was soon
seated by the side of Durward.

You are a great one, ain't you?” said he. “Here I've
been looking for you all over christendom, to tell you the
news. You've got a new sister. Did you know it?”

“'Lena! Is it true? Is it 'Lena?” said Durward,
and John replied by relating the particulars as far as he
knew them, and ending by asking Durward if “he didn't
think he was sold!

“Don't talk,” answered Durward. “I want to think,
for I was never so happy in my life.”

“Nor I either,” returned John Jr. “So if you please
you needn't speak to me, as I wish to think, too.”

But John Jr. could not long keep still; he must tell his

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companion of his engagement with Nellie—and he did,
falling asleep soon after, and leaving Durward to his own
reflections.

CHAPTER XXXVIII. CONCLUSION.

We hope the reader does not expect us to describe the
meeting between Durward and 'Lena, for we have not the
least, or, at the most, only a faint idea of what took place.
We only know that it occurred in the summer-house at
the foot of the garden, whither 'Lena had fled at the first
intimation of his arrival, and that on her return to the
house, after an interview of two whole hours, there were
on her cheeks traces of tears, which the expression of her
face said were not tears of grief.

“How do you like my daughter?” asked Mr. Graham,
mischievously, at the same time laying his arm proudly
about her neck.

“So well that I have asked her to become my wife, and she
has promised to do so, provided we obtain your consent,”
answered Durward, himself throwing an arm around the
blushing girl, who tried to escape, but he would not let
her, holding her fast until his father's answer was given.

Then turning to Mrs. Graham, he said, “Now, mother,
we will hear you.”

Kind and affectionate as she tried to be toward 'Lena,
Mrs. Graham had not yet fully conquered her olden prejudice,
and had the matter been left wholly with herself,
she would, perhaps, have chosen for her son a bride in
whose veins no plebeian blood was flowing; but she well

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knew that her objections would have no weight, whatever,
and very wisely she answered, that “she should interpose
no impediment to his marriage with her husband's
daughter.”

“Then it is settled,” said he, “and four weeks from
to-night I shall claim 'Lena for my own.”

“No, no, not so soon after poor grandma's death,”
said 'Lena, her tears flowing afresh at the mention of her
loss.

“If grandma could speak, she would tell you not to
wait,” urged Durward; but 'Lena was decided, and the
most that she would promise was, that early in the spring
she would think about it!

“Six whole months,” said Durward, counting them off
upon his fingers. “I'll never wait so long as that!” but
for the present he forebore pressing her further on the
subject, consoling himself with the reflection that he
should, at least, have her in the house with him, which
would in a great measure relieve the tedium of waiting
the prescribed length of time.

During the autumn, his entire devotion to 'Lena,
whom he would hardly suffer to be out of his sight, furnished
Carrie with a subject for very many ill-natured remarks
concerning the “sickish actions of newly engaged
people.”

“I declare,” said she, one evening after the departure
of Durward, 'Lena, and Nellie, who had all been spending
the day at Maple Grove, “I declare, I'm perfectly
disgusted, and if this is a specimen, I hope I shall never
be engaged.”

“Pray don't give yourself a moment's uneasiness,” retorted
John Jr., for whom the speech was partially intended.
“I've not the least idea that such a calamity
will ever befall you, and years hence my grandchildren

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will read on a moss-grown gravestone, “Sacred to the
memory of Miss Caroline Livingstone, aged 70. In single
blessedness she lived—and in the same did die!”

“You think you are cunning, don't you,” returned Carrie,
more angry than she was willing to admit.

She had received news of Durward's engagement much
better than, under the circumstances, could have been expected,
and when some of her acquaintances joked her on
the subject, asking why she did not marry Durward herself,
she replied, as was very true, that “he knew and she
knew,” saying further, that there were some good things
about him, and she presumed he would be tolerably happy
with Cousin 'Lena, as they were somewhat alike!
Very naturally, too, she took to quoting and cousining
'Lena, while John Jr. seldom let an opportunity pass of
hinting at the very recent date of her admiration of Miss
Graham.

Almost every day for several weeks after Durward's
return, he looked for a visit from Joel Slocum, who, being
proverbially slow in his movements, did not make his
appearance until sometime toward the last of November.
Then he came in full dress, claiming, and proving, too,
his relationship with Mrs. Graham, who was terribly annoyed,
as a matter of course, and who, it was rumored,
at last hired him to leave! For the truth of this we cannot
vouch. We only know, that the morning after his departure,
Mr. Graham's pocket-book was minus some two
hundred dollars, and when he declared his intention of
investigating the case, his lady went into violent hysterics,
thereby inducing him to desist.

During the winter, nothing of importance occurred, if
we expect the fact that a part of Mabel's fortune, which
was supposed to have been lost, was found to be good,
and that John Jr. one day unexpectedly found himself to

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be the lawful heir of fifty thousand dollars. Upon Mrs.
Livingstone this circumstance produced a rather novel
effect, renewing, in its original force, all her old affection
for Mabel, who was now “our dear little Meb.” Many
were the comparisons drawn between Mrs. John Jr. No. 1,
and Mrs. John Jr. No. 2, that was to be, the former being
pronounced far more lady-like and accomplished than the
latter, who, during her frequent visits at Maple Grove,
continually startled her mother-in-law elect by her loud,
ringing laugh, for Nellie was now very happy. Her influence,
too, over John Jr. became, erelong, perceptible
in his quiet, gentle manner, and his abstinence from the
rude speeches which heretofore had almost seemed a part
of his nature.

Mrs. Graham had proposed spending the winter in New
Orleans, but to this Durward objected. He wanted
'Lena all to himself, he said, and as she seemed perfectly
satisfied to remain where she was, the project was given
up, Mrs. Graham contenting herself with anticipating the
splendid entertainment she would give at the wedding,
which was to take place about the last of March. Toward
the first of January the preparations began, and if
Carry had never before felt a pang of envy, she did now,
when she saw the elegant bridal trosseau which Mr. Graham
saw fit to purchase for his daughter. But all such feelings
must be concealed, and almost every day she rode
over to Woodlawn, admiring this, going into ecstasies
over that, and patronizingly giving her advice on all subjects,
while all the time her heart was swelling with its
heavy weight of bitter disappointment. Having always
felt so sure of securing Durward, she had invariably treated
other gentleman with such cool indifference that she
was a favorite with but few, and as she considered these
few greatly her inferiors, she had more than once felt a

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pang of fear lest John Jr.'s prediction concerning the lettering
on her tomb-stone should prove true!

“Anything but that,” said she, dashing away the angry
tears, as she thought how 'Lena had supplanted her in the
affections of the only person she could ever love.

“Old Marster Atherton done want to see you in the
parlor,” said Corinda, putting her woolly head in at the
door, and interrupting her young mistress' reflections.

Since his unfortunate affair with Anna, the captain had
rather avoided Maple Grove, but feeling lonely at Sunnyside,
he had come over this morning to call. Finding
Mrs. Livingstone absent, he had asked for Carrie, who
was so unusually gracious that the bachelor gentleman
wondered he had never before discovered how agreeable
and how greatly superior to her sister Carrie was! All
his favorite pieces were sung to him, and then, with the
patience of a martyr, the young lady seated herself at the
backgammon board, her special aversion, playing game
after game, until she could scarcely tell her men from his.
On his way home the captain fell into a curious train of
reflections touching his future, while Carrie, when asked
by Corinda, if “old marster was done gone,” sharply
reprimanded the negro girl, telling her “it was very impolite
to call anybody old, particularly one so young as
Captain Atherton!”

The next day the captain came again, and the next, and
the next, until at last his former intimacy at Maple Grove
seemed to be fully reëstablished. And all this time no
one had an inkling of the true state of things, not even
John Jr., who never dreamed it possible for his haughty,
beautiful sister, to grace Sunnyside as its mistress. “But
stranger things than that had happened and were happening
every day.” Thus reasoned Carrie as she sat alone
in her room, revolving the propriety or impropriety of

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answering “Yes” to a delicate perfumed note which the
captain had that morning placed in her hand at parting.
She looked at herself in the long mirror. Her face was
fair, very fair, and as yet untouched by a single mark or
line. She thought of him, bald, wrinkled, fat and forty-six!

“No, I'll never do it,” she exclaimed, passionately,
tearing the note into fragments. “Better live single all
my days.”

At this moment, the handsome carriage of Mrs. Graham
drew up, and from it alighted 'Lena, richly clad in velvets
and costly furs. The sight of her produced a reaction,
and Carrie thought again. Captain Atherton was generous
to a fault. He was both able and willing to grant
her slightest wish, and as his wife, she could compete with,
if not outdo, 'Lena in the splendor of her surroundings.
The golden pen was resumed, and with a steady hand
Carrie Livingstone wrote the words which sealed her
destiny for life. This done, nothing could move her, and
though her father entreated, her mother scolded, and
John Jr. actually swore, it made no difference. “She was
old enough to choose for herself,” she said, “and she had
done so.”

When Mrs. Livingstone became convinced that her
daughter was in earnest, she gave up the contest, taking
sides with her, and saying she would not have it otherwise
if she could. Like Durward, Captain Atherton was
in a hurry, and as Carrie's chief desire was to be married
before 'Lena, thus preventing John Jr. from teasing her
about being left in the rear, it was decided that the wedding
should take place just one week before the time appointed
for that of her cousin. Determining not to be
outdone by Mrs. Graham, Mrs. Livingstone launched forth
on a large scale, and there commenced between the two

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houses a species of rivalry extremely amusing to a lookeron.
Did Mrs. Graham purchase for 'Lena a costly silk,
Mrs. Livingstone forthwith secured a piece of similar quality,
but different pattern, for Carrie. Did Mrs. Graham
order forty dollar's worth of confectionary, Mrs. Livingstone
immediately increased her order to fifty dollars.
And when it was known that Mrs Graham had engaged
a Louisville French cook at two dollars per day, Mrs. Livingstone
sent to Cincinnati, offering three dollars for one!

Carrie had decided upon a tour to Europe, and the
captain had given his consent, when it was currently reported
that Durward and 'Lena were also intending to
sail for Liverpool. In this dilemma there was no alternative
save a trip to California, or the Sandwich Islands!
The former was chosen, Captain Atherton generously offering
to defray Mrs. Livingstone's expenses if she would
accompany them. This plan Carrie warmly seconded, for
she knew her mother's presence would greatly relieve her
from the society of her husband, which was not as agreeable
to her as it ought to have been. But now a new obstacle
arose. Mr. Livingstone refused to let his wife go,
unless Anna could be persuaded to come home and remain
with him while she was gone.

Unwilling as Carrie was to meet her sister, under existing
circumstances, she, for the sake of her mother's
company, reluctantly consented, and her father accordingly
wrote to Anna, inviting her and Malcolm to be
present at Carrie's wedding, purposely omitting the name
of the bridegroom. A little fidgety, Captain Atherton
awaited the answer, which was that they would come, and
three days before the appointed time they were there.
It was dark when they arrived, and as they were not expected
that night, they entered the house ere any one was
aware of their presence. John Jr. chanced to be in the

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hall, and the moment he saw Anna, he caught her in his
arms, shouting so uproarously that his father and mother
at once hastened to the spot.

“Will you forgive me, father,” said Anna. “You would
if you knew how much I loved him—Malcolm—my husband.”

Mr. Livingstone replied by clasping her closer to his
bosom, while he extended his hand toward Malcolm, who,
proud as ever, had no forgiveness to ask. With a haughtiness
equal to her own, he returned the greeting of his
mother-in-law, who, after welcoming her daughter, turned
to him, saying, “she hoped he was well.”

“Where's Carrie?” asked Anna, and John Jr. replied,
“In the parlor, with her future spouse. Shall I introduce
you?”

So saying, he dragged her into the parlor, where she
recoiled almost in terror as she saw Captain Atherton, sitting
much nearer to Carrie than he had ever sat to her!

“Oh, Carrie!” she exclaimed, “It is impossible. It
cannot be—that I see you again!” she added, as she
met her sister's warning look.

Another moment and they were in each other's arms,
weeping bitterly, the one that her only sister should thus
wantonly throw herself away, and the other, she scarcely
knew why, only she was wretched. It was but for an
instant, however, and then Carrie was herself again.
Playfully presenting Anna to her future brother-in-law,
she said, “Ain't I good to take up with what you left!”

But no one smiled at this joke—the captain, least of all,
and as Carrie glanced from him to the noble, manly form of
Malcolm, she felt that her sister had made a happy choice.
The next day 'Lena came, overjoyed to meet Anna, who,
since the night of her elopement, had looked upon her

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with a species of adoration, and who, perhaps more than
any one else, rejoiced in her good fortune.

“You deserve it all,” said she, when they were alone,
and if Carrie only had one tithe of your happiness in store,
I should be satisfied.”

But Carrie asked for no sympathy, would receive none.
“It was no one's business whom she married,” she said,
“if she only suited herself;” and so one pleasant night in
the early spring, when the new moon hung like a silver
thread in the western sky, and the shining stars from
their far-off homes looked sadly down upon her, they
decked her in her bridal robes, arranged the fall of her
flowing veil, placed the orange wreath among the heavy
braids of her hair, and then, white, cold, and feelingless
as a marble statue, she laid her hand in Captain Atherton's,
and in a calm, unwavering voice took upon her the
vows which made her his forever. It was a grand affair,
outrivaling anything which had been seen in the country
for a long time, but Mrs. Graham smiled complacently,
thinking how she would outdo it all. A few days after
the ceremony, Carrie, already grown weary of her
new position, began to urge their immediate departure for
California.

“There was no need of further delay,” she said. “No
one cared to see 'Lena married. Weddings were stupid
things, anyway, and her mother could just as well go one
time as another.”

At first Mrs. Livingstone hesitated, but when the bride
of four days burst into a passionate fit of weeping, declaring
“she'd kill herself if she had to stay much longer at
Sunnyside and be petted by that old fool,” she consented,
and one week from the day of their marriage they started.
In Carrie's eyes there was already a look of weary sadness,
which said that the bitter tears were constantly

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welling up, while on her brow a shadow was resting, as
if Sunnyside were a greater burden than she could bear.
But the elegance of her traveling costume in a measure
consoled her, and when she was repeatedly mistaken for
the daughter of her portly spouse, she thought of his great
wealth, and gathered what comfort she could from that.
Alas, for a union without love! It seldom fails to end
in misery, and thus, when all too late, poor Carrie found
it. Her husband was proud of her, and had she permitted,
would have loved her after his fashion, but to use her own
words, “the very sight of him was hateful,” and his affectionate
advances were invariably repulsed, until at last he
treated her with a cold politeness, far more endurable
than his fawning attentions had been. She was welcome
to go her own way, and he went his, each having in San
Francisco their own suite of rooms, Carrie's being with
her mother, and each setting up, as it were, a separate
establishment. In this way they got on quite comfortably
for a few weeks, at the end of which time Carrie took it
into her capricious head to return home, to Maple Grove.
She would never go back to Sunnyside, she said. And
without a word of opposition the captain picked up his
things, paid his bills, and started for Kentucky, leaving
his wife at Maple Grove, she giving as a reason that “ma
could not spare her yet.”

Far different from this were the future prospects of
Durward and 'Lena, who with perfect love in their hearts
were made one, a week after the departure of Captain
Atherton for California. In the style of her dress 'Lena
had followed the dictates of her own good taste, rather
than the wishes of Mrs. Graham, and the assembled guests
unanimously pronounced her the most beautiful bride
they had ever seen. Very proudly Durward looked down
upon her as he placed the first husband's kiss on her pure,

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white brow, and in the soft brown eyes, brimming with
tears, which she raised to his face, there was a world of
tenderness, telling that theirs was a union of hearts as
well as hands.

“Nellie and Anna—John Jr. and Malcolm, were bridesmaids
and groomsmen, Anna being arrayed in the same
white satin and embroidered lace which had been destined
for the bride of Captain Atherton. But far better
they became the fair wife of Malcolm Everett, who laughingly
proposed that they be married over, as he led her to
the crowded drawing-rooms. Mrs. Graham was in her
element, for many whispered remarks reached her ears
concerning the superiority of her entertainment to that
of Mrs. Livingstone, who unfortunately was not present
to be mortified by her triumph.

The next night a smaller party assembled at the house of
Mr. Douglass, in Frankfort, proceeding thence to the Episcopal
church, where Nellie was soon transformed into
Nellie Livingstone. Perhaps it was the remembrance of
the frail young girl to whom his vows had once before
been plighted that made John Jr. so unusually serious,
appearing for a time as if he were in a dream. But the
moment they rallied him upon the strangeness of his manner,
he brightened up, saying he was trying to get used
to thinking that Nellie was really his. It had been decided
that he should accompany Durward and 'Lena to
Europe, and a day or two after his marriage he asked Mr.
Everett to go, too. Anna's eyes fairly danced with joy,
for of all things, a tour to Italy, and with Malcolm, too,
was in her estimation the very best. But much as her
husband would like to go, he could not afford it, and so
he frankly said, kissing away the big tear which rolled
down Anna's cheek.

With a peculiar smile John Jr. placed a sealed package

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in his sister's lap, saying, as he did so, “I have anticipated
all this and provided for it. “I suppose you are aware
that Mabel generously willed me all her property, which,
contrary to our expectations, has proved to be considerable.
I know I do not deserve a cent of it, but as she had
no nearer relative than Mr. Douglass, I have concluded
to use it for the comfort of his daughter and for the good
of others. I wan't you and Anna to join us, and I've
given her such a sum as will bear your expenses, and leave
you more than you can earn dickering at law for three or
four years. So, puss,” turning to Anna, “it's all settled,
and do you go and buy all those dresses you've thought
of by this time. We can wait a week or two, until they
are made, and then, hurrah for the sunny skies of France
and Italy. I've talked with father about it, and he's willing
to stay alone for the sake of having you go. Oh, don't
thank me,” he continued, retreating toward the door, as
he saw them about to speak. “It makes me ashamed.
Besides that, it's poor little Meb to whom you are indebted.
She loved Anna, and would willingly have her money
used for this purpose.”

After a little reflection Malcolm concluded to accept
John's offer, and a happier, more merry party never stepped
on board a steamer than that which, on the 15th of April,
sailed for Europe, which they reached in safety, being at
the last accounts in Paris, where Durward's high English
blood had already procured for them an acquaintance with
the emperor and empress, 'Lena having come to the honor
of actually kissing the Prince of Algiers, while Nellie and
Anna contented themselves with a look at the dress of the
royal infant, John Jr. slily bidding them take pattern!

A few words more, and our story is told. Just as Mr.
Livingstone was getting tolerably well suited with his
bachelor life, he was one morning surprised by the return

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of his wife and daughter, the latter of whom, as we have
before stated, took up her abode at Maple Grove. Almost
every day the old captain rides over to see her, but
he generally carries back a longer face than he brings.
The bald spot on his head is growing larger, and to her
utter dismay Carrie has discovered a “crow track” in the
corner of her eye. Frequently, after a war of words with
her mother, which occurs oftener than it ought, she announces
her intention of repairing forthwith to Sunnyside,
but a sight of the captain on his cream-colored horse is
sufficient to banish all such thoughts. And thus she lives,
that most wretched of all beings, an unloving and unloved
wife.

During the absence of their children, Mr. and Mrs. Graham
remain at Woodlawn, which, as it is the property of
Durward, will be his own and 'Lena's home, his parents
going back to Louisville.

Jerry Langley has changed his occupation of driver for
that of a brakeman on the railroad between Canandaigua
and Niagara Falls, where he is the unfailing friend of all
the halt, blind, maimed, and lazy, who call on him for aid.

In conclusion, we will say of our old friend, Uncle
Timothy, that he joined “the Hindews” as proposed, was
nominated for constable, and, sure of success, bought an
old gig for the better transportation of himself over the
town. But alas for human hopes—particularly if founded
upon politics—the whole American ticket was defeated
at Laurel Hill, since which time he has gone over to the
Republicans, swearing eternal allegiance to them, provided
they procure for him the desired office, and denouncing
his quondam brethren as Know Nothings in reality.

THE END.
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Holmes, Mary Jane, 1825-1907 [1856], 'Lena Rivers. (Miller, Orton & Mulligan, New York and Auburn) [word count] [eaf600T].
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