On the Church Steps Part 5
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"Who left it, Bill?" I hurriedly asked, taking it to the flaring gaslight on the stairway.
"Two ladies in a carriage--an old 'un and a pretty young lady, shure.
They charged me giv' it yees, and druv' off."
"And why didn't you bring it in, you blockhead?" I shouted, for it was Bessie Stewart's card. On it was written in pencil: "Westminster Hotel. On our way through New York. Leave on the 8 train for the South to-night. Come up to dinner."
The eight-o'clock train, and it was now striking nine!
"Shure, Mr. Charles, you had said you was not to be disturbed on no account, and that I was to bring in no messages."
"Did you tell those ladies that? What time were they here?"
"About five o'clock--just after you had shut the dure, and the clerks was gone. Indeed, and they didn't wait for no reply, but hearin' you were in there, they druv' off the minute they give me the card. The pretty young lady didn't like the looks of our office, I reckon."
It was of no use to storm at Bill. He had simply obeyed orders like a faithful machine. So, after a hot five minutes, I rushed up to the Westminster. Perhaps they had not gone. Bessie would know there was a mistake, and would wait for me.
But they were gone. On the books of the hotel were registered in a clear hand, Bessie's hand, "Mrs. M. Antoinette Sloman and maid; Miss Bessie Stewart." They had arrived that afternoon, must have driven directly from the train to the office, and had dined, after waiting a little time for some one who did not come.
"And where were they going?" I asked of the sympathetic clerk, who seemed interested.
"Going South--I don't know where. The elder lady seemed delicate, and the young lady quite anxious that she should stay here to-night and go on in the morning. But no, she would go on to-night."
I took the midnight train for Philadelphia. They would surely not go farther to-night if Mrs. Sloman seemed such an invalid.
I scanned every hotel-book in vain. I walked the streets of the city, and all the long Sunday I haunted one or two churches that my memory suggested to me were among the probabilities for that day. They were either not in the city or most securely hid.
And all this time there was a letter in the New York post-office waiting for me. I found it at my room when I went back to it on Monday noon.
It ran as follows:
"WESTMINSTER HOTEL.
"Very sorry not to see you--Aunt Sloman especially sorry; but she has set her heart on going to Philadelphia to-night. We shall stay at a private house, a quiet boarding-house; for aunt goes to consult Dr. R---- there, and wishes to be very retired. I shall not give you our address: as you sail so soon, it would not be worth while to come over. I will write you on the other side. B.S."
Where's a Philadelphia directory? Where is this Dr. R----? I find him, sure enough--such a number Walnut street. Time is precious--Monday noon!
"I'll transfer my berth to the Sat.u.r.day steamer: that will do as well.
Can't help it if they do scold at the office."
To drive to the Cunard company's office and make the transfer took some little time, but was not this my wedding holiday? I sighed as I again took my seat in the car at Jersey City. On this golden Monday afternoon I should have been slowly coming down the Housatonic Valley, with my dear little wife beside me. Instead, the unfamiliar train, and the fat man at my side reading a campaign newspaper, and shaking his huge sides over some broad burlesque.
The celebrated surgeon, Dr. R----, was not at home in answer to my ring on Monday evening.
"How soon will he be in? I will wait."
"He can see no patients to-night sir," said the man; "and he may not be home until midnight."
"But I am an _im_patient," I might have urged, when a carriage dashed up to the door. A slight little man descended, and came slowly up the steps.
"Dr. R----?" I said inquiringly.
"Yes, sir."
"Just one minute, doctor, if you please. I only want to get an address from you."
He scanned me from head to foot: "Walk into my office, young man."
I might have wondered at the brusqueness of his manner had I not caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror over the mantelshelf. Dusty and worn, and with a keen look of anxiety showing out of every feature, I should scarcely have recognized myself.
I explained as collectedly as possible that I wanted the address of one of his patients, a dear old friend of mine, whom I had missed as she pa.s.sed through New York, and that, as I was about to sail for Europe in a few days, I had rushed over to bid her good-bye. "Mrs.
Antoinette Sloman, it is, doctor."
The doctor eyed me keenly: he put out his hand to the little silver bell that stood on the table and tapped it sharply. The servant appeared at the door: "Let the carriage wait, James."
Again the watchful, keen expression. Did he think me an escaped lunatic, or that I had an intent to rob the old lady? Apparently the scrutiny was satisfactory, for he took out a little black book from his pocket, and turning over the leaves, said, "Certainly, here it is--No. 30 Elm street, West Philadelphia."
Over the river, then, again: no wonder I had not seen them in the Sunday's search.
"I will take you over," said Dr. R----, replacing the book in his pocket again. "Mrs. Sloman is on my list. Wait till I eat a biscuit, and I'll drive you over in my carriage."
Shrewd little man! thought I: if I am a convict or a lunatic with designs on Mrs. Sloman, he is going to be there to see.
"Till he ate a biscuit?" I should think so. To his invitation, most courteously urged, that I should come and share his supper--"You've just come from the train, and you won't get back to your hotel for two hours, at least"--I yielded a ready acceptance, for I was really very hungry: I forget whether I had eaten anything all day.
But the biscuit proved to be an elegant little supper served in glittering plate, and the doctor lounged over the tempting bivalves until I could scarce conceal my impatience.
"Do you chance to know," he said carelessly, as at last we rose from the table and he flung his napkin down, "Mrs. Sloman's niece, Miss Stewart?"
"Excellently well," I said smiling: "in fact, I believe I am engaged to be married to her."
"My dear fellow," said the doctor, bursting out laughing, "I am delighted to hear it! Take my carriage and go. I saw you were a lawyer, and you looked anxious and hurried; and I made up my mind that you had come over to badger the old lady into making her will. I congratulate you with all my soul--and myself, too," he added, shaking my hand. "Only think! Had it not been for your frankness, I should have taken a five-mile ride to watch you and keep you from doing my patient an injury."
The good doctor quite hurried me into the carriage in the effusion of his discovery; and I was soon rolling away in that luxurious vehicle over the bridge, and toward Bessie at last.
I cannot record that interview in words, nor can I now set down any but the mere outline of our talk. My darling came down to meet me with a quick flush of joy that she did not try to conceal. She was natural, was herself, and only too glad, after the _contretemps_ in New York, to see me again. She pitied me as though I had been a tired child when I told her pathetically of my two journeys to Philadelphia, and laughed outright at my interview with Dr. R----.
I was so sure of my ground. When I came to speak of the journey--_our_ journey--I knew I should prevail. It was a deep wound, and she shrank from any talk about it. I had to be very gentle and tender before she would listen to me at all.
But there was something else at work against me--what was it?--something that I could neither see nor divine. And it was not altogether made up of Aunt Sloman, I was sure.
"I cannot leave her now, Charlie. Dr. R---- wishes her to remain in Philadelphia, so that he can watch her case. That settles it, Charlie: I must stay with her."
What was there to be said? "Is there no one else, no one to take your place?"
"n.o.body; and I would not leave her even if there were."
Still, I was unsatisfied. A feeling of uneasiness took possession of me. I seemed to read in Bessie's eyes that there was a thought between us hidden out of sight. There is no clairvoyant like a lover. I could see the shadow clearly enough, but whence, in her outer life, had the shadow come? _Between_ us, surely, it could not be. Even her anxiety for her aunt could not explain it: it was something concealed.
When at last I had to leave her, "So to-morrow is your last day?" she said.
On the Church Steps Part 5
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On the Church Steps Part 5 summary
You're reading On the Church Steps Part 5. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Sarah C. Hallowell already has 569 views.
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