The principal hotels of the town of Halifax are situated on Hollis Street, and Hollis Street is next Water Street, and Water Street is next the harbor. On a dull, windless morning, when the snow clouds hung low in the air, Captain Macartney, encased in a dark uniform and looking exceedingly trim and soldierlike, stepped out of one of these hotels, where he had been to see his stepmother and brother, and walking slowly along the street looked up at the high buildings on each side of him, attentively scrutinizing doorplates and signs as he did so. There at last was the name he wanted, on the door of a large building that looked rusty and shabby between its smart brick and stone neighbors—Dr. Camperdown, Surgeon. He repeated the words with a satisfied air, then making his way up a dark staircase, pushed open a door that had the polite invitation “Walk in” on it in staring letters. He found himself in a large, bare room, with a row of chairs set about its walls. Unfortunately They all looked up when the door of an inner apartment was opened. An ugly, sandy head appeared, and a sharp “Next” was flung into the room. One of the old women meekly prepared to enter, stripping off some outer wrap which she dropped on the chair behind her. “Take your cloud with you,” said one of the younger women kindly; “he’ll let you out by another door into the hall.” After what seemed to Captain Macartney an unconscionably long time, the door was again opened, and another “Next” was ejaculated. His jaws ached with efforts to suppress his yawns. He longed in vain for a paper. Finally, after long, weary waiting and much internal grumbling, all his fellow-sufferers had one by one disappeared, and he had the room to himself. The last to go, the old man, stayed in the inner office a longer time than all the others combined, His hair was shaggy and unkempt, his sharp gray eyes, hiding under the huge eyebrows, were fixed piercingly on the military figure which he came slowly toward, the more closely to examine. His long arms, almost as long as those of the redoubtable Rob Roy—who, Sir Walter Scott tells us, could, without stooping, tie the garters of his Highland hose placed two inches below the knee—were pressed against his sides, and his hands were rammed down into the pockets of an old coffee-colored, office coat, on which a solitary button lingered. “Macartney, is it you,” he said doubtfully, “or your double?” “Come in, come in,” said Dr. Camperdown, passing into the other room. “Sit down,” dragging forward a leather chair on which the dust lay half an inch thick. “Afraid of the dust? Finicky as ever. Wait, I’ll clean it for you—where’s my handkerchief? Gave it to that old woman. Stop a bit—here’s a towel. Now for a talk.” Sprawled out across two chairs, and biting and gnawing at his moustache as if he would uproot it, he gazed with interest at his visitor. “What are you doing in Halifax? Are you in the new regiment?” “Yes; I arrived three days ago in the ‘Acadian.’” “Same hot-headed Irishman as ever?” “No; I have cooled considerably since the old subaltern days. India and fevers and accidents have taken the life out of me. How are you getting on? You have a number of charity patients I see.” “Oh Lord, yes; the leeches!” “Why don’t you shake them off?” Camperdown grunted disapprovingly. “You encourage them, I fancy,” said the officer in his smooth, polished tones. “They would not come if you did not do so. I hope you have others, rich ones, to counterbalance them.” “Yes,” gruffly, “I have.” Camperdown looked benevolently at him. “Never mind me. Talk about yourself. What are you making of your life? You’re getting older. Have you married?” “No, but I am thinking of it,” gravely and with the faintest shade of conceit. “My stepmother urges me to it, and the advice is agreeable, for I have fallen in love.” “Does she reciprocate?” and Dr. Camperdown bit his moustache more savagely than ever in order to restrain a smile. “Not entirely; but—you remember the time I broke my leg, Camperdown, five years ago?” “Yes, a compound fracture.” “The time,” scornfully, “that I was fool enough to let Flora Colonibel twist me ’round her little finger.” “Exactly.” “I was taken to the Armours’ house you remember, and was fussed over and petted till I loathed the sight of her.” “Yes,” dryly, “as much as you had previously admired it.” “By Jove, yes,” said the other with a note of “Very likely,” said Camperdown grimly; “but what are you harking back to that old story for?” “It is an odd thing,” went on Captain Macartney with some show of warmth, “that, tame cat as I became out at Pinewood, and bored to death as I was with confidences and family secrets, from the old colonial days down, that one thing only was never revealed to me.” “What was that?” “The fact that the family possessed a kind of ward or adopted daughter, who was being educated abroad.” “So—they did not tell you that?” “Not a syllable of it,” and Captain Macartney eyed keenly the uncommunicative face before him. “Why should they have told you?” said Dr. Camperdown. “Why—why,” echoed his visitor in some confusion, his face growing furiously red, “for the very good reason that that is the girl with whom I have chosen to fall in love.” Camperdown shrugged his huge shoulders. “How did they know you’d fall in love with the daughter of their poor devil of a bookkeeper?” Captain Macartney half rose from his seat. “Camperdown,” he said haughtily, “in the old “Sit down, sit down,” said Camperdown surlily and impatiently. “Scratch a Russian and you’ll find a Tartar, and scratch an Irishman and you’ll find a fire-eater, and every sensible man is a fool when he falls in love. What do you want to know?” “Everything.” “You love the girl—isn’t that everything?” “No.” “You didn’t propose to her?” “No.” “Did you ask her about her family?” “I did not,” loftily. “You wish to know what her station in life is, and whether she can with propriety be taken into the aristocratic family of the Macartneys?” “Yes,” shortly; “if you will be so kind as to tell me.” “Here’s the matter in a nutshell then. Her father was French, mother ditto, grandfathers and grandmothers the same—all poorest of the poor, and tillers of the soil. Her father got out of the peasant ring, became confidential man for Colonel Armour, and when he reached years of discretion, which was before I did, I believe that he embezzled Captain Macartney was visibly disturbed. “How long ago did this take place?” “Twenty years.” “Is it well known—much talked of?” “No, you know how things are dropped in a town. The story’s known, but no one speaks of it. Now the girl has come back, I suppose Dame Rumor will set it flying again.” Captain Macartney relapsed into a chagrined silence. Camperdown sucking in both his cheeks till he was a marvel of ugliness, watched him sharply, and with wicked enjoyment. “You’ll have to give her up, Macartney.” “By Jove, I will,” said the officer angrily. “My uncle would cut me off with a ha’penny.” “Bah!” said his companion contemptuously. “I would not give her up for all the uncles in Christendom.” “You know nothing about the duty of renunciation,” said the other sarcastically. “I’ve not drunk a glass of wine for a twelve-month.” “What’s wrong?” said the physician with professional curiosity. “Indigestion,” shortly. Then slowly, “Suppose I married the girl—she could not live on air.” “Is not enough for myself.” “You hoped to find her a rich girl,” said Dr. Camperdown sharply. “I will not deny that I had some such expectation,” said the other raising his head, and looking at him coolly, but with honest eyes. “Her dress and appearance—her whole entourage is that of a person occupying a higher station in life than she does.” “Fiddle-de-dee, what does it matter? She’s a lady. What do you care about her ancestors?” “We don’t look upon things on the other side of the Atlantic as you do here,” said Captain Macartney half regretfully. “And it is not that alone. It is the disgrace connected with her name that makes the thing impossible.” “Bosh—give her an honest name. You’re not half a man, Macartney.” The officer sprang from his seat. His Irish blood was “up.” Camperdown chuckled wickedly to himself as he watched him pacing up and down the narrow apartment, holding up his sword with one hand and clasping the other firmly behind his back. From time to time he threw a wrathful glance in the surgeon’s direction and after he had succeeded in controlling himself, he said doggedly: “I shall not marry her, but I will do what I can for her; she ought to be got out of that house.” “Beg pardon, Camperdown, but your questions infuriate me,” said his companion in a low voice. “You know that is no place for a young, innocent girl to be happy. Begin with the head of the house, Colonel Armour. I’ll sketch his career for you in six words; young devil, middle-aged devil, old devil. Flora Colonibel is a painted peacock. Stanton an iceberg. Judy an elf, imp, tigress, anything you will. Valentine a brainless fop. If you’re a man, you’ll help me get her out of it.” “You can’t do anything now,” said Dr. Camperdown pointedly. “Yes I can—I’m her friend.” “You’re her lover, as long as you dangle about her.” “Stuff and nonsense,” said Captain Macartney peevishly and resuming his seat. “She isn’t in love with me.” Dr. Camperdown burst into a roar of laughter. “She doesn’t smile upon you; then why all this agony?” “It’s easily seen that you’ve not proposed to many women,” said Captain Macartney coolly. “They never say yes, at first.” The shaft went home. His ugly vis-À-vis shrugged his shoulders and made no reply. “We had a saying about Flora Colonibel in the past,” said Captain Macartney earnestly, “that she “I’ll look after her,” briefly. “By the way, where did you meet her?” “In Paris, with the French lady who has been traveling with her since she left school, and who asked my stepmother to take charge of her on the journey here.” “Her arrival was a surprise,” said Dr. Camperdown. “Armour didn’t tell me that she was coming.” Captain Macartney surveyed him with some jealousy. “So you too have an eye to her movements?” “Yes,” said Camperdown impishly. “I don’t care for her antecedents.” “Oh, indeed; I am glad that you do not,” said the officer, drawing on his gloves with a smile. “Of course you do not. You have no right to do so. How is that lady with the charming name?” “She is well.” “Is she still in her old quarters?” “Yes.” “I must do myself the pleasure of calling on her. She is as remarkable as ever I suppose?” “I can well believe it. Now I must leave you. I am due at the South Barracks at twelve,” and he rose to go. “Stop, Macartney; there are mitigating circumstances connected with this affair. I told you that Miss Delavigne’s immediate ancestry was poor. It is also noble on her mother’s side—formerly rich. You have heard of the French family the Lacy d’Entrevilles?” “I have.” “Ever hear that they sprang from the stock of a prince royal of France?” “No, I have not.” “They say they did; one of them, a Marquis RÉnÉ ThÉodore something or other was a colonel in Louis the Fourteenth’s body-guards—came out to Quebec in command of a regiment there, then to Acadie and founded this branch of the family; it is too long a story to tell. I dare say mademoiselle is as proud as the rest of them.” “She is,” said his hearer with a short laugh. “Born aristocrats—and years of noses to the grindstone can’t take it out of them, and the Delavignes, though hewers of wood and drawers of water, as compared with the aristocratic Lacy d’Entrevilles, were all high strung and full of honesty. Seriously, Macartney, I think her father was a monomaniac. A quiet man immersed in his “I am glad to hear this,” said Captain Macartney, “and I am exceedingly obliged to you. Some other time I shall ask you to favor me with the whole story,” and he went thoughtfully away. |