Fashion and Famine Part 11
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"Exactly!" was the terse rejoinder.
"I shall break my neck, and smash the carriage."
"Keep cool--keep cool," said Jacob, "and when we get safely back to the Astor, there'll be another dollar to pay for the mending--do you hear?"
"Of course I do!" answered the man, with a chuckle, and gathering himself up in his overcoat like a turtle in its sh.e.l.l, he cowered down in his seat quite contented to be drenched at that price to any possible extent.
Relieved from all anxiety regarding the carriage, Jacob fell back into the state from which this little contention had, for the moment, diverted him. He looked upward--far, in a gable overhead a single beam of light quivered and broke amid the rain-drops--it entered his heart like a poignard.
What was he saying to her?--was he harsh?--or worse, oh, a thousand times worse, could that light be gleaming upon their reconciliation?
Jacob writhed with the thought; he tried to be calm; to quench the fire that broke up from the depths of his heart. His nature strong, and but slowly excited, grew ungovernable when fully aroused. Never till that hour had his imagination been so glowing, so terribly awake. A thousand fears flashed athwart his usually cool brain. Alone, in that great, silent house, with a man like Leicester, was she safe?--his mistress--was she? This thought--the latest and least selfish--goaded him to action.
He strode hurriedly up the steps, crossed the vestibule and groped his way up through the darkness till he reached the attic. A single ray of light penetrating a key-hole, guided him to the door of that singular chamber. He drew close and listened, unconscious of the act, for his anxiety had become intense, and Jacob thought of no forms then.
The rain beating upon the roof overpowered all other sounds; but now and then a murmur reached his ear, broken, but familiar as the pulses of his own heart. This was followed by tones that brought his teeth sharply together. They might be mellowed by distance, but to him they seemed soft and persuasive to a degree of fascination. He could not endure them; they glided through his heart like serpents distilling poison from every coil. He laid his hand upon the latch, hesitated, and turning away, crept through the darkness, ashamed of what he had done. He an eaves-dropper, and with her, his mistress! He paused on the top of the winding staircase beyond ear-shot, but with his eyes fixed upon that ray of light, humbled and crushed in spirit, for he had awoke as from a dream, and found himself listening. There the poor man sat down pale and faint with self-reproach.
Poor Jacob; his punishment was terrible! Minute after minute crept by, and each second seemed an hour. Sometimes he sat with both hands clasped over his face, and both knees pressed hard by his elbows. Then he would stand up in the darkness quiet as a statue; not a murmur could possibly reach his ear from the room. Still he held his breath, and bent forward like one listening. Cruel anxiety forced the position upon him, but it could not impel him one step nearer the door.
He was standing thus, bending forward with his eyes, as it were, devouring the little gleam of light that fell so tranquilly through the key-hole, when the door was suddenly opened and Leicester came out. With the abrupt burst of light rushed a cry, wild and quivering with anguish.
Jacob sprang forward, seized Leicester by the arm, and after one or two fruitless efforts--for every word choked him as it rose--he said--
"Have you killed her? Is it murder?"
"A fit of hysterics, friend, nothing more!" was the cool reply.
Jacob strode into the chamber. His mistress lay p.r.o.ne upon the bed, her face pale as death, and a faint convulsion stirring her limbs.
He bent over her, and gently put the hair back from her temples with his great, awkward hand.
"She is not dead, nor hurt!" he murmured, and though his face expressed profound compa.s.sion, a gleam of wild joy broke through it all. "His scorn has wounded her, not his hand."
Still the poor lady remained insensible. There was a faint quivering of the eyelids, but no other appearance of life. Jacob looked around for some means of restoration, but none were there. He flung up the window, and das.h.i.+ng open a shutter, held out his palm. It was soon full of water-drops, and with these he bathed her forehead and her pale mouth, while a gust of rain swept through the open sash. This aroused her; a shudder crept through her limbs, and her eyes opened. Jacob was bending over her tenderly, as a mother watches her child.
She saw who it was, and rising feebly to her elbow, put him back with one hand, while her eyes wandered eagerly around the room.
"Where--where is he?" she questioned; "oh, Jacob, call him back."
"No!" answered the servant, firmly, notwithstanding that his voice shook--"no, I will not call him back! To-morrow you would not thank me for doing it!"
She turned her head upon the pillow, and closing her eyes, murmured--
"Leave me then--leave me!"
Jacob closed the window, and folding the quilt softly over her, went out. He had half descended the coil of steps, when a voice from below arrested his attention.
"Here yet!" he muttered, springing down into the darkness, and like a wild beast guided by the instinct of his pa.s.sion, he seized Leicester by the arm.
"Softly, softly, friend," exclaimed that gentleman, with a low calm intonation, though one hand was upon his revolver all the time. "Oblige me by relaxing your hand just the least in the world; my arm is tender as a lady's, and your fingers seem made of iron."
"We grasp rattlesnakes hard when we do touch them," muttered Jacob, fiercely, "and close to the throat, it strangles back the poison."
"Never touch a rattlesnake at all, friend, it is a desperate business, I a.s.sure you; they are beautiful reptiles, but rather dangerous to play with. Oh, I am glad that your fingers relax, it would have been unpleasant to shoot a fellow creature here in the dark, and with a gentle lady close by."
"Would it?" muttered Jacob, between his teeth.
The answer was a light laugh, that sounded strangely in that silent dwelling.
"Your hand once more, friend; after all, this darkness makes me quite dependent on your guidance," said the voice again.
There was a fierce struggle in Jacob's bosom; but at last his hand was stretched forth and clasped with the soft, white fingers, whose bare touch filled his soul with loathing.
"This way--I will lead you safely!"
"Why, how you tremble, friend--not with fear, I hope."
"No, with hate!" were the words that sprang to the honest lips of Jacob Strong; but he conquered the impulse to utter them, and only answered--"I'm not afraid!"
"Faith, but it requires courage to grope one's way through all this darkness--every step puts our necks in danger."
Jacob made no observation; he had reached the lower hall, and moved rapidly across the tessellated floor toward the front entrance. The moment they gained the open air, Jacob wrenched his hand from the other's grasp, and hurrying down the steps, opened the carriage door.
The rain prevented any further questioning on the part of Leicester, and he took his seat in silence.
Jacob climbed up to the driver's seat, and took possession of the reins.
The man submitted quietly, glad to gather himself closer in his overcoat. A single crack of the whip, and off went the dripping horses, plunging furiously onward through the darkness, winding round whole blocks of buildings, doubling corners, and crossing one street half a dozen times, till it would have puzzled a man in broad daylight to guess where he was going, or whence he came. At length the carriage dashed into Broadway, and downward to the Astor House.
The coachman kept his seat, and Jacob once more let down the carriage steps. The drive had given him time for deliberation. He was no longer a slave to the rage that an hour before seemed to overpower his strength--rage that had changed his voice, and even his usual habits of language.
"Come in--come in!" said Leicester, as he ran up the steps. "I wish to ask a question or two."
Jacob made no answer, but followed in a heavy indifferent manner. All his faculties were now under control, and he was prepared to act any part that might present itself.
Leicester paused in the lobby, and turning round, cast a glance over Jacob's person. It was the first time he had obtained a full view of those harsh features. Leicester was perplexed. Was this the man who had guided him through the dark pa.s.sages of the mansion-house, or was it only the coachman? The profound darkness had prevented him seeing that another person occupied the driver's seat when he left the carriage; and Jacob's air was so like a brother of the whip, that it puzzled even his acute penetration. The voice--Leicester had a faultless ear, and was certain that in the speech he should detect the man. He spoke, therefore, in a quiet, common way, and took out his purse.
"How much am I to pay you, my fine fellow?"
"What you please. The lady paid, but then it's a wet night, and----"
"Yes, yes, will that do?" cried Leicester, drawing forth a piece of silver. The voice satisfied him that it was the coachman only. The former tone had been quick, peremptory, and inspired with pa.s.sion; now it was calm, drawling, and marked with something of a Down-East tw.a.n.g.
Nothing could have been more unlike than that voice then, and an hour before.
Jacob took the money, and moving toward the light, examined it closely.
"Thank you, sir; I suppose it's a genuine half dollar," he said, turning away with the business-like air he had so well a.s.sumed.
Leicester laughed--"Of course it is--but stop a moment, and tell me--if it is within the limits of your geographical knowledge--where I have been travelling to night?"
"Sir!" answered Jacob, turning back with a perplexed look.
Fashion and Famine Part 11
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Fashion and Famine Part 11 summary
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