During the days that followed Monica lived as in one long, happy dream. The clouds all seemed to have rolled away, letting in the sunshine to the innermost recesses of her heart. Why was she so calmly and serenely happy, despite the real sorrow hanging over her in the recent death of a tenderly-loved father? Why did even the loss of the brother, to whom she had vowed such changeless devotion, give her no special pang? She had felt his going much, yet it did not weigh her down with any load of Yes, she no longer doubted that now. Something in the very perfectness of her own love drove away the haunting doubts and fears that had troubled her for so long. He had her heart, and she had his, and when once she had him home again the last shadow would have vanished away. How her heart beat as she pictured that meeting! How she counted the hours till she had him back! Only once was she disturbed in her quiet, dreamy time of waiting. Once, as she was riding through the loneliest part of the lonely pine wood, Conrad Fitzgerald suddenly stood in her path, gazing earnestly at her with a look she could not fathom. Her face flushed and paled. She regarded him with a glance of haughty displeasure. “Let me pass, Sir Conrad.” He did not move; he was still fixedly regarding her. “I told you how it would be, Monica,” he said. “I told you Arthur would be sent away.” She smiled a smile he did not understand. “Let me pass,” she said again. His eyes began to glow dangerously. Her beauty and her scorn drove him to a sort of fury. “Is this the way you keep your promise? Is this how you treat a man you have promised to call your friend?” “My friend!” Monica repeated the words very slowly, with an inflection the meaning of which could not be misunderstood; nor did he affect to misunderstand her. “Lady Monica,” he said, “you have heard some lying story, I perceive, trumped up by that scoundrel you call your husband.” He was forced to spring on one side then, for Monica had urged her horse forward, regardless of his presence, and the flash in her eye made him recoil for a moment; but he was wild with “You shall hear me!” he cried. “You shall, I say! You have heard his story, now hear mine. He has brought false reports. I know him of old. He is my enemy. He has poisoned others against me before now. Lady Monica, upon my word of honour——” “Your honour!” That was all. Indeed, there was no more to be said. Even Conrad felt that, and his grasp upon the reins relaxed. Monica was not in the least afraid of him. She looked him steadily over as she moved quietly onward, without the least haste or flurry. Her quiet courage, her lofty scorn of him, stung him to madness. “Very good, Lady Monica—I beg your He was following Monica as he spoke, and there was a deep, steady malevolence in every tone of his voice, and in each word that he uttered, which gave something of sinister significance to threats that might well have been mere idle bravado. Monica paid not the slightest heed. She rode on as if she did not even hear; but she wished she had her husband beside her. But days sped by; news from Germany was good. Randolph’s task was accomplished, and he was on his way home; nay, he would be there almost as soon as the letter which announced him. He did not specify exactly how he would come, but he bid her look for him about dusk that very day. How her heart throbbed with joy! She could not strenuously combat Mrs. Pendrill’s determination to return home at once, so that husband and wife should be alone on his return. She wanted Randolph all to herself. She hungered for him; she hardly knew how to wait for the slowly crawling hours to pass. She drove Mrs. Pendrill to St. Maws, and on her return wandered aimlessly about the great lonely house, saying to herself, in a sort of ceaseless cadence: “He is coming. He is coming. He is coming.” Dusk was falling in the dim house. The shadows were growing black in the gloomy hall, where Monica was restlessly pacing. The last pale gleam of sunlight flickered and faded as she watched and waited with intense expectancy. A man’s firm step upon the terrace without—a man’s tall shadow across the threshold. Monica sprang forward with a low cry. “Randolph!” “Not exactly that, Lady Trevlyn!” She stopped short, and threw up her “Sir Conrad, how dare you! Leave my husband’s house this instant! Do you wish him to find you here? Do you wish a second chastisement at his hands?” Conrad’s face flushed crimson, darkening with the intensity of his rage, as he heard those last words. He had been drinking deeply; his usual caution and cowardice were merged in a passionate desire for revenge at all costs. And what better revenge could he enjoy at that moment than to be surprised by the master of the house upon his return in company with his wife? Monica had asked him if he wished Randolph to find him there—it was just that wish which had brought him. “Monica!” he cried passionately, “you shall hear me. I will be heard! You shall not judge me till I can plead my own cause. The veriest criminal is heard in his defence.” He advanced a step nearer, but she recoiled before him, and pointed to the door. “Go, Sir Conrad, unless you wish to be expelled by my servants. I will listen to nothing.” She moved as if to summon assistance, but he sprang forward and seized her hand, holding her wrist in so fierce a grasp that she could neither free herself nor reach the bell. She was a prisoner at his mercy. But Monica was a true Trevlyn, and a stranger to mere physical fear. The madness “Loose me, Sir Conrad!” she said. “Not until you have heard me.” “I will not hear you. I know as much of your story as there is any need I should. Loose me, I say! Do you know that my husband will be here immediately? Do you wish him to expel you from his house?” Conrad laughed wildly, a sort of “Do I wish him to find me here? Yes, I do—I do!” he laughed wildly. “Kiss me, Monica—call me your friend again! There is yet time—show him you are not his slave—show him how you assert yourself in his absence.” Monica recoiled with a cry of horror; but the strength of madness was upon him. He held her fast by the wrist. It was unspeakably hideous to be alone “Monica, I love you—you shall—you must be mine!” Was that another step without? It was—it was! Thank Heaven he had come! “Randolph! Randolph! Randolph!” Monica’s voice rang out with that sudden piercing clearness that bespeaks terror and distress. The next moment Conrad was hurled backwards, with a force that sent him staggering against the wall, breathless and powerless. Before he could recover himself he was lifted bodily off his feet, shaken like a rat, and literally thrown down the terrace steps, rolling over and over in the descent, till he lay at the foot stunned, bruised and shaken. He picked himself Monica, white, trembling, unnerved by all she had gone through during the past minutes, held out her arms to her husband. “Randolph! Oh, Randolph!” He clasped her close to his heart, and held her there as if he never meant to let her go. He bent his head over her, and she felt his kisses on her cheek. He did not doubt—he did not distrust her! His strong arms pressed her even closer and closer. She lay against his breast, feeling no wish ever to leave that shelter. Oh, he was so true and noble—her own loving, faithful husband! How she loved him she had never known until that supreme moment. At last she stirred in his arms and lifted her face to his. “Randolph, you must never leave me again,” she said. “I cannot bear it—I cannot.” “I will not, my dear wife,” he answered. “Never again shall aught but death part thee and me.” She clung to him, half shuddering. “Ah! do not talk of death, Randolph. I cannot bear it—I cannot listen.” He pressed a kiss upon her trembling lips. “Does my wife love me now?” he asked, very gravely and tenderly. “Let me hear it from your own sweet lips, my Monica.” “Ah, Randolph, I love, I love you;” she lifted her eyes to his as she spoke. There “Not your husband?” he asked, returning her look with one equally full of meaning. “Monica, you may love as well, but I think you cannot love more than I do.” She laid her head down again. It was unspeakably sweet to hear him say so, to feel his arms about her, to know that they were united at last, and that nothing could part them now. “Not even death,” said Monica to herself; “for love like ours is stronger than death.” “How came that scoundrel here?” asked Randolph, somewhat later as they “I think he came to frighten me—perhaps to try and hurt us once more by his wicked words and deeds. Randolph, is he mad? He looked so dreadful to-day. He was not the old Conrad I once knew. It was terrible—till you came.” “I believe at times he is mad,” answered Randolph, “with a sort of madness that is not actual insanity, though somewhat akin to it. It is the madness of ungovernable passion and hatred that rises up in him from time to time against certain individuals, and becomes, as it seems, a sort of monomania with him. It was so with his friend and benefactor Colonel Hamilton, when once he felt himself found out. Ever since the horsewhipping I Monica glanced up at him, a world of loving confidence in her eyes; yet the clinging clasp of her hands tightened upon his arm. He fancied she trembled a little. “What is it, my Monica?” She pressed a little more closely towards him. “Randolph, do you think he will try to hurt you now—try to do you some injury?” The husband smiled re-assuringly at her. “Hurt me? How, Monica?” “Oh, I don’t know; but he has spoken such cruel, wicked words. He said he had vowed to ruin our happiness—he looked as if he meant it—so vindictive, so terrible!” she shivered a little. He took her hands, and held them in his warm, strong clasp. “Are you afraid of what that bad man says, Monica—a man who is a coward and a scoundrel of the deepest dye? Are you afraid of idle threats from his lips? How could he ruin our happiness now?” She looked up at him, still with a sort of undefined trouble in her eyes. “He might hurt you, Randolph,” she half whispered. “What hurts you, hurts Randolph laid his hand smilingly upon her lips. “My darling, you are unnerved by the fright he gave you. When was Monica troubled by idle fears before?” “I don’t know what I fear, Randolph; but I have feelings sometimes—premonitions, presentiments, and I cannot shake them off. Ever since Conrad came, I felt a kind of horror of him, even though I tried to call him friend. Sometimes I think it must mean something.” “No doubt it does,” answered Randolph. “It is the natural shrinking of your pure soul from his evil, vicious nature. I can well understand it. It could hardly be otherwise. He could not deceive you long.” She looked gravely out before her. “No, I do not think he really deceived me long—not my innermost self of all. But I was very self-willed. I wanted to judge for myself, and I could not judge him rightly. I believed him. I did not want to be unjust—and he deceived me.” Randolph smiled and laid his hand caressingly upon her shoulder. She looked up with a smile. “That is right, Monica. You must put away these sad, wistful looks. We must not let this evening’s happiness be marred by any doubts and fears. You have your husband again. Is not that enough?” She turned and laid her head against his shoulder. His arm was fast about her in a moment. She drew a long breath, almost like a sigh. “Randolph, I think that moments like this must be a foretaste of heaven.” He kissed her, and she added, low and dreamily: “Only there, there will be no fear of parting. Death could not part us there.” “Death could not sunder our hearts even here, my Monica,” said Randolph. “Some love is for eternity.” “Yes,” she answered, looking out over the wide sea with a deep smile, that seemed as if it were reading the future in the vast, heaving expanse of moon-lit water. “Our love is like that—not for time alone, but for eternity.” He caught the gravity of her mood. Some subtle sympathy drew them ever closer and more close together. “And so,” he added gravely and tenderly, She stood very still and quiet. “Yes,” she said, “for ever and ever. Randolph, if we could both die to-night I think it would be a happy thing for us.” “Why?” “Because then there would be no parting to fear.” “And now?” “Now I do fear it. I fear it without knowing why. He will part us if he can.” Randolph strained his wife close to his heart. “If he can! Monica, look up; put away these idle fears, my love. Can I not “Ah! if only we could!” breathed Monica. decoration |