The BURSTING of the storm.
MR. DELANCY was sitting in
his library on the afternoon of the fourth day since
the wedding-party left Ivy Cliff, when the entrance
of some one caused him to turn toward the door.
“Irene!” he exclaimed,
in a tone of anxiety and alarm, as he started to his
feet; for his daughter stood before him. Her face
was pale, her eyes fixed and sad, her dress in disorder.
“Irene, in Heaven’s name, what has happened?”
“The worst,” she answered,
in a low, hoarse voice, not moving from the spot where
she first stood still.
“Speak plainly, my child. I cannot bear
suspense.”
“I have left my husband and
returned to you!” was the firmly uttered reply.
“Oh, folly! oh, madness!
What evil counselor has prevailed with you, my unhappy
child?” said Mr. Delancy, in a voice of anguish.
“I have counseled with no one but myself.”
“Never a wise counselor—never
a wise counselor! But why, why have you taken
this desperate step?”
“In self-protection,” replied Irene.
“Sit down, my child. There!”
and he led her to a seat. “Now let me remove
your bonnet and shawl. How wretched you look,
poor, misguided one! I could have laid you in
the grave with less agony than I feel in seeing you
thus.”
Her heart was touched at this, and
tears fell over her face. In the selfishness
of her own sternly-borne trouble, she had forgotten
the sorrow she was bringing to her father’s
heart.
“Poor child! poor child!”
sobbed the old man, as he sat down beside Irene and
drew her head against his breast. And so both
wept together for a time. After they had grown
calm, Mr. Delancy said—
“Tell me, Irene, without disguise
of any kind, the meaning of this step which you have
so hastily taken. Let me have the beginning,
progress and consummation of the sad misunderstanding.”
While yet under the government of
blind passion, ere her husband returned from the drive
which Irene had refused to take with him, she had,
acting from a sudden suggestion that came to her mind,
left her room and, taking the cars, passed down to
Albany, where she remained until morning at one of
the hotels. In silence and loneliness she had,
during the almost sleepless night that followed, ample
time for reflection and repentance. And both came,
with convictions of error and deep regret for the
unwise, almost disgraceful step she had taken, involving
not only suffering, but humiliating exposure of herself
and husband. But it was felt to be too late now
to look back. Pride would have laid upon her a
positive interdiction, if other considerations had
not come in to push the question of return aside.
In the morning, without partaking
of food, Irene left in the New York boat, and passed
down the river toward the home from which she had
gone forth, only a few days before, a happy bride—returning
with the cup, then full of the sweet wine of life,
now brimming with the bitterest potion that had ever
touched her lips.
And so she had come back to her father’s
house. In all the hours of mental anguish which
had passed since her departure from Saratoga, there
had been an accusing spirit at her ear, and, resist
as she would, self-condemnation prevailed over attempted
self-justification. The cause of this unhappy
rupture was so slight, the first provocation so insignificant,
that she felt the difficulty of making out her case
before her father. As to the world, pride counseled
silence.
With but little concealment or extenuation
of her own conduct, Irene told the story of her disagreement
with Hartley.
“And that was all!” exclaimed
Mr. (sic) Delancey, in amazement, when she ended her
narrative.
“All, but enough!” she
answered, with a resolute manner.
Mr. Delancy arose and walked the floor
in silence for more than ten minutes, during which
time Irene neither spoke nor moved.
“Oh, misery!” ejaculated
the father, at length, lifting his hands above his
head and then bringing them down with a gesture of
despair.
Irene started up and moved to his side.
“Dear father!” She spoke
tenderly, laying her hands upon him; but he pushed
her away, saying—
“Wretched girl! you have laid
upon my old head a burden of disgrace and wretchedness
that you have no power to remove.”
“Father! father!” She
clung to him, but he pushed her away. His manner
was like that of one suddenly bereft of reason.
She clung still, but he resolutely tore himself from
her, when she fell exhausted and fainting upon the
floor.
Alarm now took the place of other
emotions, and Mr. Delancy was endeavoring to lift
the insensible body, when a quick, heavy tread in
the portico caused him to look up, just as Hartley
Emerson pushed open one of the French windows and
entered the library. He had a wild, anxious,
half-frightened look. Mr. Delancy let the body
fall from his almost paralyzed arms and staggered
to a chair, while Emerson sprung forward, catching
up the fainting form of his young bride and bearing
it to a sofa.
“How long has she been in this
way?” asked the young man, in a tone of agitation.
“She fainted this moment,” replied Mr.
Delancy.
“How long has she been here?”
“Not half an hour,” was
answered; and as Mr. Delancy spoke he reached for
the bell and jerked it two or three times violently.
The waiter, startled by the loud, prolonged sound,
came hurriedly to the library.
“Send Margaret here, and then
get a horse and ride over swiftly for Dr. Edmundson.
Tell him to come immediately.”
The waiter stood for a moment or two,
looking in a half-terrified way upon the white, deathly
face of Irene, and then fled from the apartment.
No grass grew beneath his horse’s feet as he
held him to his utmost speed for the distance of two
miles, which lay between Ivy Cliff and the doctor’s
residence.
Margaret, startled by the hurried,
half-incoherent summons of the waiter, came flying
into the library. The moment her eyes rested
upon Irene, who still insensible upon the sofa, she
screamed out, in terror—
“Oh, she’s dead! she’s
dead!” and stood still as if suddenly paralyzed;
then, wringing her hands, she broke out in a wild,
sobbing tone—
“My poor, poor child! Oh, she is dead,
dead!”
“No, Margaret,” said Mr.
Delancy, as calmly as he could speak, “she is
not dead; it is only a fainting fit. Bring some
water, quickly.”
Water was brought and dashed into
the face of Irene; but there came no sign of returning
consciousness.
“Hadn’t you better take
her up to her room, Mr. Emerson?” suggested
Margaret.
“Yes,” he replied; and,
lifting the insensible form of his bride in his arms,
the unhappy man bore her to her chamber. Then,
sitting down beside the bed upon which he had placed
her, he kissed her pale cheeks and, laying his face
to hers, sobbed and moaned, in the abandonment of
his grief, like a distressed child weeping in despair
for some lost treasure.
“Come,” said Margaret,
who was an old family domestic, drawing Hartley from
the bedside, “leave her alone with me for a little
while.”
And the husband and father retired
from the room. When they returned, at the call
of Margaret, they found Irene in bed, her white, unconscious
face scarcely relieved against the snowy pillow on
which her head was resting.
“She is alive,” said Margaret,
in a low and excited voice; “I can feel her
heart beat.”
“Thank God!” ejaculated
Emerson, bending again over the motionless form and
gazing anxiously down upon the face of his bride.
But there was no utterance of thankfulness
in the heart of Mr. Delancy. For her to come
back again to conscious life was, he felt, but a return
to wretchedness. If the true prayer of his heart
could have found voice, it would have been for death,
and not for life.
In silence, fear and suspense they
waited an hour before the doctor arrived. Little
change in Irene took place during that time, except
that her respiration became clearer and the pulsations
of her heart distinct and regular. The application
of warm stimulants was immediately ordered, and their
good effects soon became apparent.
“All will come right in a little
while,” said Dr. Edmundson, encouragingly.
“It seems to be only a fainting fit of unusual
length.”
Hartley drew Mr. Delancy aside.
“It will be best that I should
be alone with her when she recovers,” said he.
“You may be right in that,”
said Mr. Delancy, after a moment’s reflection.
“I am sure that I am,” was returned.
“You think she will recover
soon?” said Mr. Delancy, approaching the doctor.
“Yes, at any moment. She
is breathing deeper, and her heart beats with a fuller
impulse.”
“Let us, retire, then;”
and he drew the doctor from the apartment. Pausing
at the door, he called to Margaret in a half whisper.
She went out also, Emerson alone remaining.
Taking his place by the bedside, he
waited, in trembling anxiety, for the moment when
her eyes should open and recognize him. At last
there came a quivering of the eyelids and a motion
about the sleeper’s lips. Emerson bent
over and took one of her hands in his.
“Irene!” He called her
name in a voice of the tenderest affection. The
sound seemed to penetrate to the region of consciousness,
for her lips moved with a murmur of inarticulate words.
He kissed her, and said again—
“Irene!”
There was a sudden lighting up of her face.
“Irene, love! darling!”
The voice of Emerson was burdened with tenderness.
“Oh, Hartley!” she exclaimed,
opening her eyes and looking with a kind of glad bewilderment
into his face. Then, half rising and drawing
her arms around his neck, she hid her face on his bosom,
murmuring—
“Thank God that it is only a dream!”
“Yes, thank God!” replied
her husband, as he kissed her in a kind of wild fervor;
“and may such dreams never come again.”
She lay very still for some moments.
Thought and memory were beginning to act feebly.
The response of her husband had in it something that
set her to questioning. But there was one thing
that made her feel happy: the sound of his loving
voice was in her ears; and all the while she felt
his hand moving, with a soft, caressing touch, over
her cheek and temple.
“Dear Irene!” he murmured
in her ears; and then her hand tightened on his.
And thus she remained until conscious
life regained its full activity. Then the trial
came.
Suddenly lifting herself from the
bosom of her husband, Irene gave a hurried glance
around the well-known chamber, then turned and looked
with a strange, fearful questioning glance into his
face:
“Where am I? What does this mean?”
“It means,” replied Emerson,
“that the dream, thank God! is over, and that
my dear wife is awake again.”
He placed his arms again around her
and drew her to his heart, almost smothering her,
as he did so, with kisses.
She lay passive for a little while;
then, disengaging herself, she said, faintly—
“I feel weak and bewildered; let me lie down.”
She closed her eyes as Emerson placed
her back on the pillow, a sad expression covering
her still pallid face. Sitting down beside her,
he took her hand and held it with a firm pressure.
She did not attempt to withdraw it. He kissed
her, and a warmer flush came over her face.
“Dear Irene!” His hand
pressed tightly upon hers, and she returned the pressure.
“Shall I call your father?
He is very anxious about you.”
“Not yet.” And she
caught slightly her breath, as if feeling were growing
too strong for her.
“Let it be as a dream, Hartley.”
Irene lifted herself up and looked calmly, but with
a very sad expression on her countenance, into her
husband’s face.
“Between us two, Irene, even
as a dream from which both have awakened,” he
replied.
She closed her eyes and sunk back upon the pillow.
Mr. Emerson then went to the door
and spoke to Mr. Delancy. On a brief consultation
it was thought best for Dr. Edmundson not to see her
again. A knowledge of the fact that he had been
called in might give occasion for more disturbing
thoughts than were already pressing upon her mind.
And so, after giving some general directions as to
the avoidance of all things likely to excite her mind
unpleasantly, the doctor withdrew.
Mr. Delancy saw his daughter alone.
The interview was long and earnest. On his part
was the fullest disapproval of her conduct and the
most solemnly spoken admonitions and warnings.
She confessed her error, without any attempt at excuse
or palliation, and promised a wiser conduct in the
future.
“There is not one husband in
five,” said the father, “who would have
forgiven an act like this, placing him, as it does,
in such a false and humiliating position before the
world. He loves you with too deep and true a
love, my child, for girlish trifling like this.
And let me warn you of the danger you incur of turning
against you the spirit of such a man. I have
studied his character closely, and I see in it an
element of firmness that, if it once sets itself, will
be as inflexible as iron. If you repeat acts of
this kind, the day must come when forbearance will
cease; and then, in turning from you, it will be never
to turn back again. Harden him against you once,
and it will be for all time.”
Irene wept bitterly at this strong
representation, and trembled at thought of the danger
she had escaped.
To her husband, when she was alone
with him again, she confessed her fault, and prayed
him to let the memory of it pass from his mind for
ever. On his part was the fullest denial of any
purpose whatever, in the late misunderstanding, to
bend her to his will. He assured her that if
he had dreamed of any serious objection on her part
to the ride, he would not have urged it for a moment.
It involved no promised pleasure to him apart from
pleasure to her; and it was because he believed that
she would enjoy the drive that he had urged her to
make one of the party.
All this was well, as far as it could
go. But repentance and mutual forgiveness did
not restore everything to the old condition—did
not obliterate that one sad page in their history,
and leave them free to make a new and better record.
If the folly had been in private, the effort at forgiving
and forgetting would have been attended with fewer
annoying considerations. But it was committed
in public, and under circumstances calculated to attract
attention and occasion invidious remark. And
then, how were they to meet the different members
of the wedding-party, which they had so suddenly thrown
into consternation?
On the next day the anxious members
of this party made their appearance at Ivy Cliff,
not having, up to this time, received any intelligence
of the fugitive bride. Mr. Delancy did not attempt
to excuse to them the unjustifiable conduct of his
daughter, beyond the admission that she must have
been temporarily deranged. Something was said
about resuming the bridal tour, but Mr. Delancy said,
“No; the quiet of Ivy Cliff will yield more
pleasure than the excitement of travel.”
And all felt this to be true.