AS a lover, Henry Lane was the kindest,
most devoted, self-sacrificing person imaginable.
He appeared really to have no will of his own, so
entire was his deference to his beautiful Amanda;
yet, for all this, he had no very high opinion of her
as an intelligent being. She was lovely, she
was gentle, she was good; and these qualities, combined
with personal grace and beauty, drew him in admiration
to her side, and filled him with the desire to possess
her as his own.
As a husband, Henry Lane was a different
being. His relation had changed, and his exterior
changed correspondingly. Amanda was his wife;
and as such she must be, in a certain sense, under
him. It was his judgment that must govern in
all matters; for her judgment, in the affairs of life,
was held in light estimation. Moreover, as a
man, it was his province to control and direct and
her duty to look to him for guidance.
Yet, for all this, if the truth must
be told, the conclusions of Amanda’s mind were,
in ordinary affairs, even more correct than her husband’s
judgment; for he was governed a great deal by impulses
and first impressions, instead of by the reason of
which he was so proud, while she came naturally into
the woman’s quick perceptions of right and propriety.
This being the case, it may readily be seen that there
was a broad ground-work for unhappiness in the married
state. Amanda could not sink into a mere cipher;
she could not give up her will entirely to the guidance
of another, and cease to act from her own volitions.
It took only a few months to make
the young wife feel that her position was to be one
of great trial. She was of a mild and gentle
character, more inclined to suffer than resist; but
her judgment was clear, and she saw the right or wrong
of any act almost instinctively. Love did not
make her blind to every thing in her husband.
He had faults and unpleasant peculiarities, and she
saw them plainly, and often desired to correct them.
But one trial of this kind sufficed to keep her silent.
He was offended, and showed his state of mind so plainly,
that she resolved never to stand in that relation
to him again.
As time progressed, the passiveness
of Amanda encouraged in Lane his natural love of ruling.
His household was his kingdom, and there his will
must be the law. In his mind arose the conceit
that, in every thing, his judgment was superior to
that of his wife: even in the smaller matters
of household economy, he let this be seen. His
taste, too, was more correct, and applied itself to
guiding and directing her into a proper state of dressing.
He decided about the harmony of colours and the choice
of patterns. She could not buy even a ribbon
without there being some fault found with it, as not
possessing the elements of beauty in just arrangements.
In company, you would often hear him say—“Oh,
my wife has no taste. She would dress like a
fright if I did not watch her all the time.”
Though outwardly passive or concurrent
when such things were said, Amanda felt them as unjust,
and they wounded her more or less severely, according
to the character of the company in which she happened
at the time to be; but her self-satisfied husband saw
nothing of this. And not even when some one, more
plainly spoken than others, would reply to such a
remark—“She did not dress like a
fright before you were married,” did he perceive
his presumption and his errors.
But passiveness under such a relation
does not always permanently remain; it was accompanied
from the first by a sense of oppression and injustice,
though love kept the feeling subdued. The desire
for ruling in any position gains strength by activity.
The more the young wife yielded, the more did the
husband assume, until at length Amanda felt that she
had no will of her own, so to speak. The con-viction
of this, when it formed itself in her mind, half involuntarily
brought with it an instinctive feeling of resistance.
Here was the forming point of antagonism—the
beginning of the state of unhappiness foreshadowed
from the first. Had Amanda asserted her right
to think and act for herself in the early days of her
married life, the jar of discord would have been light.
It now promised to be most afflicting in its character.
The first activity of Amanda’s
newly forming state showed itself in the doing of
certain things to which she was inclined, notwithstanding
the expression of her husband’s disapproval.
Accustomed to the most perfect compliance, Mr. Lane
was disturbed by this.
“Oh, dear! what a horrid looking
thing!” said he one day, as he discovered a
new dress pattern which his wife had just purchased
lying on a chair. “Where in the world did
that come from?”
“I bought it this morning,” replied Amanda.
“Take it back, or throw it into
the fire,” was the husband’s rude response.
“I think it neat,” said Amanda, smiling.
“Neat? It’s awful!
But you’ve no taste. I wish you’d
let me buy your dresses.”
The wife made no answer to this.
Lane said a good deal more about it, to all of which
Amanda opposed but little. However, her mind was
made up to one thing, and that was to take it to the
mantuamaker’s. The next Lane saw of the
dress was on his wife.
“Oh, mercy!” he exclaimed,
holding up his hand, “I thought you had burnt
it. Why did you have it made up?”
“I like it,” quietly answered Mrs. Lane.
“You like any thing.”
“I haven’t much taste,
I know,” said Amanda, “but such as it is,
it is pleasant to gratify it sometimes.”
Something in the way this remark was
made it disturbed the self-satisfaction which was
a leading feature in Mr. Lane’s state of mind;
he, however, answered—“I wish you
would be governed by me in matters of this kind; you
know my taste is superior to yours. Do take off
that dress, and throw it in the fire.”
Amanda did not reply to this, for
it excited feelings and produced thoughts that she
had no wish to manifest. But she did not comply
with her husband’s wishes. She liked the
dress and meant to wear it, and she did wear it, notwithstanding
her husband’s repeated condemnation of her taste.
At this time they had one child—a
babe less than a year old. From the first, Lane
had encroached upon the mother’s province.
This had been felt more sensibly than any thing else
by his wife, for it disturbed the harmonious activity
of the natural law which gives to a mother the perception
of what is best for her infant. Still, she had
been so in the habit of yielding to the force of his
will, that she gave way to his interference here in
numberless instances, though she as often felt that
he was wrong as right. Conceit of his own intelligence
blinded him to the intelligence of others. Of
this Amanda became more and more satisfied every day.
At first, she had passively admitted that he knew
best; but her own common sense and clear perceptions
soon repudiated this idea. While his love of
predominance affected only herself, she could bear
it with great patience; but when it was exercised,
day after day, and week after week, in matters pertaining
to her babe, she grew restless under the oppression.
After the decided, position taken
in regard to her dress, Amanda’s mind acquired
strength in a new direction. A single gratification
of her own will, attained in opposition to the will
of her husband, stirred a latent desire for repeated
gratifications; and it was not long before Lane discovered
this fact, and wondered at the change which had taken
place in his wife’s temper. She no longer
acquiesced in every suggestion, nor yielded when he
opposed argument to an assumed position. The
pleasure of thinking and acting for herself had been
restored, and the delight appertaining to its indulgence
was no more to be suppressed. Her husband’s
reaction on this state put her in greater freedom;
for it made more distinctly manifest the quality of
his ruling affection, and awoke in her mind a more
determined spirit of resistance.
Up to this time, even in the most
trifling matters of domestic and social life, Lane’s
will had been the law. This was to be so no longer.
A new will had come into activity; and that will a
woman’s will. Passive it had been for a
long time under a pressure that partial love and a
yielding temper permitted to remain; but its inward
life was unimpaired; and when its motions became earnest,
it was strong and enduring. The effort made by
Lane to subdue these motions the moment he perceived
them, only gave them a stronger impulse. The
hand laid upon her heart to quiet its pulsations only
made it beat with a quicker effort, while it communicated
its disturbance to his own.
The causes leading to the result we
are to describe have been fully enough set forth;
they steadily progressed until the husband and wife
were in positions of direct antagonism. Lane could
not give up his love of controlling every thing around
him, and his wife, fairly roused to opposition, followed
the promptings of her own will, in matters where right
was clearly on her side, with a quiet perseverance
that always succeeded. Of course, they were often
made unhappy; yet enough forbearance existed on both
sides to prevent an open rupture—at least,
for a time. That, however, came at last, and
was the more violent from the long accumulation of
reactive forces.
The particulars of this rupture we
need not give; it arose in a dispute about the child
when she was two years old. As usual, Lane had
attempted to set aside the judgment of his wife in
something pertaining to the child, as inferior to
his own, and she had not submitted. Warm words
ensued, in which he said a good deal about a wife’s
knowing her place and keeping it.
“I am not your slave!”
said Amanda, indignantly; the cutting words of her
husband throwing her off her guard.
“You are my wife,” he
calmly and half contemptuously replied; “and,
as such, are bound to submit yourself to your husband.”
“To my husband’s intelligence,
not to his mere will,” answered Amanda, less
warmly, but more resolutely than at first.
“Yes, to his will!” said
Lane, growing blind from anger.
“That I have done long enough,”
returned the wife. “But the time is past
now. By your intelligence, when I see in it superior
light to what exists in my own, I will be guided,
but, by your will—never!”
The onward moving current of years,
which, for some time, had been chafing amid obstructions,
now met a sudden barrier, and flowed over in a raging
torrent. A sharp retort met this firm declaration
of Amanda, stinging her into anger, and producing
a state of recrimination. While in this state,
she spoke plainly of his assumption of authority over
her from the first,—of her passiveness
for a time,—of being finally aroused to
opposition.
“And now,” she added,
in conclusion, “I am content to be your wife
and equal, but will be no longer your passive and obedient
slave.”
“Your duty is to obey.
You can occupy no other position as my wife,”
returned the blind and excited husband.
“Then we must part.”
“Be it so.” And as
he said this, Lane turned hurriedly away and left
the house.
Fixed as a statue, for a long time,
sat the stunned and wretched wife. As the current
of thoughts again flowed on, and the words of her
husband presented themselves in even a more offensive
light than when they were first uttered, indignant
pride took the uppermost place in her mind.
“He will not treat me as a wife
and equal,” she said, “and I will no longer
be his slave.”
In anger Lane turned from his wife;
and for hours after parting with her this anger burned
with an all-consuming flame. For him to yield
was out of the question. His manly pride would
never consent to this. She must fall back into
her true position. He did not return home, as
usual, at dinner-time; but absented himself, in order
to give her time for reflection, as well as to awaken
her fears lest he would abandon her altogether.
Towards night, imagining his wife in a state of penitence
and distressing anxiety, and feeling some commiseration
for her on that account, Mr. Lane went back to his
dwelling. As he stepped within the door, a feeling
of desertion and loneliness came over him; and unusual
silence seemed to pervade the house. He sat down
in the parlour for some minutes; but hearing no movement
in the chamber above, nor catching even a murmur of
his child’s voice, a sound for which his ears
were longing, he ascended the stairs, but found no
one there. As he turned to go down again he met
a servant.
“Where is Mrs. Lane?” he asked.
“I don’t know,”
was answered. “She went out this morning,
and has not returned.”
“Where is Mary?”
“She took Mary with her.”
“Didn’t she say where she was going?”
“No, sir.”
Mr. Lane asked no more questions,
but went back into the room from which he had just
emerged, and, sitting down, covered his face with
his hands, and endeavoured to collect his thoughts.
“Has she deserted me?”
he asked of himself in an audible husky whisper.
His heart grew faint in the pause
that followed. As the idea of desertion became
more and more distinct, Mr. Lane commenced searching
about in order to see whether his wife had not left
some communication for him, in which her purpose was
declared. But he found none. She had departed
without leaving a sign. The night that followed
was a sleepless one to Lane. His mind was agitated
by many conflicting emotions. For hours, on the
next day, he remained at home, in the expectation
of seeing or hearing from Amanda. But no word
came. Where had she gone? That was the next
question. If he must go in search of hers in
what direction should he turn his steps? She
had no relations in the city, and with those who resided
at a distance she had cultivated no intimacy.
The whole day was passed in a state
of irresolution. To make the fact known was to
expose a family difficulty that concerned only himself
and wife; and give room for idle gossip and gross
detraction. Bad as the case was, the public would
make it appear a great deal worse than the reality.
In the hope of avoiding this, he concealed the sad
affair for the entire day, looking, in each recurring
hour, for the return of his repentant wife. But
he looked in vain. Night came gloomily down,
and she was still absent.
He was sitting, about eight o’clock
in the evening, undetermined yet what to do, when
a gentleman with whom he was but slightly acquainted
named Edmondson, called at the door and asked to see
him.
On being shown in, the latter, with
some embarrassment in his manner, said—
“I have called to inform you,
that Mrs. Lane has been at my house since yesterday.”
“At your house!”
“Yes. She came there yesterday
morning; and, since that time, my wife has been doing
her best to induce her to return home. But, so
far, she has not been able to make the smallest impression.
Not wishing to become a party to the matter, I have
called to see you on the subject. I regret, exceedingly,
that any misunderstanding has occurred, and do not
intend that either myself or family shall take sides
in so painful an affair. All that I can do, however,
to heal the difficulty, shall be done cheerfully.”
“What does she say?” asked
Lane, when he had composed himself.
“She makes no specific complaint.”
“What does she propose doing?”
“She avows her intention of
living separate from you, and supporting herself and
child by her own efforts.”
This declaration aroused a feeling
of indignant pride in the husband’s mind.
“It is my child as well as hers,” said
he. “She may desert me, if she will; but
she cannot expect me to give up my child. To
that I will never submit.”
“My dear sir,” said Mr.
Edmondson, “do not permit your mind to chafe,
angrily, over this unhappy matter. That will widen
not heal, the breach. In affairs of this kind,
pardon me for the remark, there are always faults
on both sides; and the duty of each is to put away
his or her own state of anger and antagonism and seek
to reconcile the other, rather than to compel submission.
As a man, you have the advantage of a stronger and
clearer judgment,—exercise it as a man.
Feeling and impulse often rule in a woman’s mind,
from the very nature of her mental conformation; and
we should remember this when we pass judgment on her
actions. There is often more honour in yielding
a point than in contending for it to the end, in the
face of threatened disaster. Let me then urge
you to seek a reconciliation, while there is yet opportunity,
and permit the veil of oblivion to fall, while it
may, over this painful event. As yet, the fact
has not passed from the knowledge of myself and wife.
Heal the breach, and the secret remains where it is.”
“If she will return, I will
receive her, and forgive and forget all. Will
you say this to her from me?”
“Why not go to her at once?
See her face to face. This is the best and surest
way.”
“No,” said Lane, coldly.
“She has left me of her own choice; and, now,
she must return. I gave her no cause for the rash
act. Enough for me that I am willing to forgive
and forget all this. But I am not the man to
humble myself at the feet of a capricious woman.
It is not in me.”
“Mr. Lane, you are wrong!”
said the visitor, in a decided tone. “All
wrong. Do you believe that your wife would have
fled from you without a real or imagined cause?”
“No. But the cause is only in her imagination.”
“Then see her and convince her
of this. It is the same to her, at present, whether
the cause be real or imaginary. She believes it
real, and feels all its effects as real. Show
her that it is imaginary, and all is healed.”
Lane shook his head.
“I have never humbled myself
before a man, much less a woman,” said he.
This remark exhibited to Mr. Edmondson
the whole ground-work of the difficulty. Lane
regarded a woman as inferior to a man, and had for
her, in consequence, a latent feeling of contempt.
He could understand, now, why his wife had left him;
for he saw, clearly, that, with such an estimation
of woman, he would attempt to degrade her from her
true position; and, if she possessed an independent
spirit, render her life wellnigh insupportable.
Earnestly did he seek to convince Lane of his error;
but to no good effect. As soon as all doubt was
removed from the mind of the latter in regard to where
his wife had gone, and touching the spirit which governed
her in her separation from him, his natural pride
and self-esteem—self-respect, he called
it—came back into full activity. No,
he would never humble himself to a woman! That
was the unalterable state of his mind. If Amanda
would return, and assume her old place and her old
relation, he would forget and forgive all. This
far he would go, and no farther. She had left
of her own free will, and that must bring her back.
“You can say all this to her
in any way you please; but I will not seek her and
enter into an humble supplication for her return.
I have too much self-respect—and am too
much of a man—for that. If she finds
the struggle to do so hard and humiliating, she will
be the more careful how she places herself again in
such a position. The lesson will last her a life-time.”
“You are wrong; depend upon
it, you are wrong!” urged Mr. Edmondson.
“There must be yielding and conciliation on both
sides.”
“I can do no more than I have
said. Passive I have been from the first, and
passive I will remain. As for our child, I wish
you to say to her, that I shall not consent to a separation.
It is my child as much as hers; moreover, as father,
my responsibility is greatest, and I am not the man
to delegate my duties to another. Possession of
the child, if driven to that extremity, I will obtain
through aid of the law. This I desire that she
shall distinctly understand. I make no threat.
I do not wish her to view the declaration in that light.
I affirm only the truth, that she may clearly understand
all the consequences likely to flow from her ill-advised
step.”
The more Mr. Edmondson sought to convince
Mr. Lane of his error, the more determinedly did he
cling to it; and he retired at last, under the sad
conviction that the unhappy couple had seen but the
beginning of troubles.
Alone with his own thoughts, an hour
had not elapsed before Mr. Lane half repented of his
conduct in taking so unyielding a position. A
conviction forced itself upon his mind that he had
gone too far and was asking too much; and he wished
that he had not been quite so exacting in his declarations
to Mr. Edmondson. But, having made them, his
false pride of consistency prompted him to adhere to
what he had said.
The night passed in broken and troubled
sleep; and morning found him supremely wretched.
Yet resentment still formed a part of Mr. Lane’s
feelings. He was angry with his wife, whom he
had driven from his side, and was in no mood to bend
in order to effect a reconciliation. At mid-day
he returned from his business, hoping to find her
at home. But his house was still desolate.
With the evening he confidently expected her, but
she was not there. Anxiously he sat, hour after
hour, looking for another visit from Mr. Edmondson,
but he came not again.
In leaving her husband’s house,
Mrs. Lane had gone, as has been seen, to the house
of a friend. Mrs. Edmondson was an old school
companion, between whom and herself had continued to
exist, as they grew up, the tenderest relations.
When she turned from her husband, she fled, with an
instinct of affection and sympathy, to this friend,
and poured her tears in a gild agony of affliction
upon her bosom. In leaving her husband, she was
not governed by a sudden caprice; nor was the act
intended to humble him to her feet. Nothing of
this was in her mind. He had trenched upon her
province as a wife and mother; interfered with her
freedom as an individual; and, at last, boldly assumed
the right to command and control her as an inferior.
The native independence of her character, which had
long fretted under this rule of subordination, now
openly rebelled, and, panting for freedom, she had
sprung from her fetters with few thoughts as to future
consequences.
The first day of absence was a day
of weeping. Mrs. Edmondson could not and did
not approve of what had been done.
“I am afraid, Amanda, that you
have only made matters worse,” said she, as
soon as she could venture to suggest any thing at all
upon the subject. “It is always easier
to prevent than to heal a breach. The day has
not yet closed. There is time to go back.
Your husband need never know what has been in your
mind. This hasty act may be entirely concealed
from him.”
But the long suffering wife had been
roused to opposition. A new current of feeling
was sweeping across and controlling her mind.
She was, therefore, deaf to the voice of reason.
Still her friend, as in duty bound, urged her to think
more calmly on the subject, and to retrace the steps
she had taken. But all was in vain. This
being so, her husband, as has been seen, called upon
Mr. Lane, and informed him that his wife was at his
house. From this interview Mr. Edmondson returned
disheartened, and reported all that had been said
on both sides to his wife.
“My husband saw Mr. Lane last
evening,” said Mrs. Edmondson to Amanda on the
next day.
“He did!” Amanda looked
eagerly into the face of her friend, while she became
much agitated.
“Yes. He called to let him know that you
were here.”
“What did he say?”
“He wishes you to return. All will be forgotten
and forgiven.”
“He said that?”
“Yes.”
“I have done nothing for which
I desire forgiveness,” said Amanda, coldly,
and with the air of one who is hurt by the words of
another. “If he will not have me return
as his wife and equal, I can never go back.”
“For the sake of your child,
Amanda, you should be willing to bear much.”
“My child shall not grow, up and see her mother
degraded.”
“She is his child as well as
yours. Do not forget that,” said Mrs. Edmondson.
“And it is by no means certain that he will permit
you to retain the possession of an object so dear
to him.”
The face of Mrs. Lane instantly flushed
at this, a suggestion which had not before been presented
to her mind.
“Did he refer to this subject
in conversing with your husband?” inquired Amanda,
with forced calmness.
“He did.”
“What did he say?”
“That, in any event, he could
not and would not be separated from his child.
And you know, Amanda, that the law will give to him
its guardianship.”
“The law!” There was a huskiness in Mrs.
Lane’s voice.
“Yes, Amanda, the law.
It is well for you to view this matter in all its
relations. The law regards the father as the true
guardian of the child. If, therefore, you separate
yourself from your husband, you must expect to bear
a separation from your child; for that will be most
likely to follow.”
“Did he speak of the law?”
asked Mrs. Lane, in a still calmer voice, and with
a steady eye.
“It would not be right to conceal
from you this fact, Amanda. He did do so.
And can you wholly blame him? It is his child
as well as yours. He loves it, as you well know;
and, as its father, he is responsible for it to society
and to Heaven. This separation is your act.
You may deprive him of your own society; but, have
you a right, at the same time, to rob him of his child?
I speak plainly; I would not be your friend did I
not do so. Try, for a little while, to look away
from yourself, and think of your husband; and especially
of the consequences likely to arise to your child
from your present act. It will not be a mere
separation with passive endurance of pain on either
side. There will come the prolonged effort of
the father to recover his child, and the anguish and
fear of the mother, as she lives in the constant dread
of having it snatched from her hands. And that
must come, inevitably, the final separation. You
will have to part from your child, Amanda, if not
in the beginning, yet finally. You know your
husband to be of a resolute temper Do not give him
a chance to press you to extremity. If he should
come to the determination to recover his child from
your hands, he will not stop short of any means to
accomplish his purpose.”
Mrs. Lane made no reply to this; nor
did she answer to any further remark, appeal, or suggestion
of her friend, who soon ceased to speak on the subject
and left her to her own reflections, hoping that they
might lead her to some better purpose than had yet
influenced her in the unhappy business. On the
day after, Mr. Edmondson met Lane in the street.
“I was about calling to see
you,” said the latter, “on the subject
of this unhappy difficulty, to which, so reluctantly
to yourself, you have become a party. It may
be that I am something to blame. Perhaps I have
been too exacting—too jealous of my prerogative
as a husband. At any rate, I am willing to admit
that such has been the case; and willing to yield
something to the morbid feelings of my wife.
What is her present state of mind?”
Mr. Edmondson looked surprised.
Remarking this, Lane said quickly, “Is she not
at your house?”
“No,” replied Mr. Edmondson,
“she left us yesterday. We believed that
she had gone home. My wife had a long conversation
with her, in which she urged her, by every consideration,
to return; and we had reason to think, when she left
our house, that she went back to you.”
“Such is not the case,”
said Mr. Lane, with disappointment, and something
of sadness in his tone. “I have not seen
her since the morning of our unhappy difference.
Where can she have gone?”
Mr. Edmondson was silent.
“Did she say that she was going to return home?”
asked Mr. Lane.
“No. But we had reason
to think that such was her intention. Have you
heard nothing from her?”
“Not a word.”
“It is strange!”
Mr. Lane heaved a deep sigh.
A few more brief questions and answers passed, and
then the two men separated. The forsaken husband
went home with a sadder heart than he had yet known.
The absence of his wife and child for several days—both
objects of real affection—and absent under
such peculiar and trying circumstances, had subdued,
to a great extent, his angry feelings. He was
prepared to yield much. He would even have gone
to his wife, and acknowledged that he was partly in
error, in order to have brought about a reconciliation.
Something that she had said during their last, exciting
interview, which he had rejected as untrue, or not
causes of complaint, had represented themselves to
his mind; and in the sober reflecting states that
were predominant, he saw that he had not in all things
treated her as an equal, nor regarded her at all times
as possessing a rational freedom as independent as
his own. Though he did not excuse her conduct,
he yet thought of it less angrily than at first, and
was willing to yield something in order to restore
the old relations.
Anxiety and alarm now took possession
of his mind. The distance between them had become
wider, and the prospect of a reconciliation more remote.
Amanda had gone, he could not tell whither. She
had neither money nor friends; he knew not into what
danger she might fall, nor what suffering she might
encounter. It was plain from the manner of her
leaving the house of Mr. Edmondson, that her resolution
to remain away from him was fixed. He must, therefore,
seek her out, and invite her to return. He must
yield if he would reconcile this sad difficulty.
And he was now willing to do so. But, where was
she? Whither should he go in search of the wanderer?
The very means which her friend had
taken to induce Mrs. Lane to return to her husband,
had driven her farther away. The hint touching
her husband’s legal rights in the child, and
his resolution to assert them, filled her with the
deepest alarm, and determined her to put it beyond
his power, if possible, to deprive her of the only
thing in life to which her heart could now cling.
Toward her husband, her feelings were those of an
oppressed one for an oppressor. From the beginning,
he had almost suffocated her own life by his pressure
upon her freedom of will. She remembered, with,
tears, his tenderness and his love; but soon would
come the recollection of his constant interference
in matters peculiarly her own; his evident contempt
for her intellect; and his final efforts to subdue
her rising independence, and make her little less than
a domestic slave—and the fountain of her
tears would become dry. Added to all this, was
the fact of his resolution to recover his child by
law. This crushed out all hope from her heart.
He had no affection left for her. His love had
changed to hate. He had assumed toward her the
attitude of a persecutor. Nothing was now left
for her but self-protection.
In leaving the home of her husband,
Mrs. Lane had exercised no forethought. She made
no estimate of consequences, and provided for no future
contingencies. She was blind in her faint-heartedness,
that was little less than despair. Any thing was
better than to remain in a state of submission, that
had become, she felt, intolerable. Leaving thus,
Mrs. Lane had taken with her nothing beyond a few
dollars in her purse, and it was only an accident that
her purse was in her pocket. All her own clothes
and those of her child, except what they had on, were
left behind.
Alarmed at the threat of her husband,
Mrs. Lane, a few hours after the conversation with
Mrs. Edmondson, in which his views were made known
to her, took her child and went away. In parting
with her friend, she left upon her mind the impression
that she was going home. This was very far from
her intention. Her purpose was to leave New York,
the city of her residence, as quickly as possible,
and flee to some obscure village, where she would
remain hidden from her husband. She had resided,
some years before, for a short time in Philadelphia;
and thither she resolved to go, and from thence reach
some point in the country. On leaving the house
of her friend, Mrs. Lane hurried to the river and
took passage in the afternoon line for Philadelphia.
As the cars began their swift movement
from Jersey City, a feeling of inexpressible sadness
came over her, and she began to realize more distinctly
than she had yet done, her desolate, destitute, and
helpless condition. After paying her passage,
she had only two dollars left in her purse; and, without
money, how was she to gain friends and shelter in
a strange city? To add to her unhappy feelings,
her child commenced asking for her father.
“Where is papa?” she would
repeat every few minutes. “I want to go
to my papa.”
This was continued until it ended
in fretfulness and complaints at the separation it
was enduring. Tears and sobs followed; and, finally,
the child wept herself to sleep.
A new train of feelings was awakened
by this incident. In leaving her husband, Mrs.
Lane had thought only of herself. She had not
once considered the effect of a separation from its
father upon her child. Little Mary’s heart
was full of affection for the two beings whom nature
prompted her to love. Her father’s return
from business had always been to her the happiest
event of the day; and, when she sprang into his arms,
her whole being would thrill with delight. Days
had passed since she had seen her father, and she was
pining to meet him again to lay her head upon his
bosom—to feel his arms clasped tightly
around her.
All this was realized by the mother,
as the child lay sleeping on her arm, while the swift
rolling cars bore them farther and farther away from
the home she was leaving. Is it just to the child?
Distinctly did this thought present itself in her mind.
For a long time she mused over it, her feelings all
the while growing more and more tender, until something
like repentance for the step she had taken found its
way into her mind—not for what she was herself
suffering, but for the sake of her child. She
had not thought of the effect upon little Mary, until
the pain of absence showed itself in complaint.
This idea arose clearly before her—she
could not push it aside; and, the more she pondered
it, the more troubled did she become, from a new source.
Would not the separation so deeply afflict the child
as to rob her of all happiness?
While these thoughts had full possession
of the mother’s mind, Mary slept on and dreamed
of her father, as was evident from the fact that,
more than once, she murmured his name.
When night came down, its effect upon
Mrs. Lane was more sadly depressing, for it brought
her into a clearer realization of her unhappy condition.
Where was she going? What was the uncertain future
to bring forth? All was as dark as the night that
had closed around her.
At length the cars reached Bristol,
and it became necessary to leave them, and pass into
the boat. In lifting Mary in her arms, to bear
her from the cars, the child again murmured the name
of her father, which so affected Mrs. Lane, that her
tears gushed forth in spite of her efforts to restrain
them. Letting her veil fall over her face to
conceal this evidence of affliction from her fellow-passengers,
she proceeded with the rest; and, in a little while,
was gliding swiftly down the river. It was ten
o’clock when they arrived in Philadelphia.
For an hour previous to this time, the mind of the
fugitive had been busy in the effort to determine what
course she should take on gaining the end of her journey.
But the nearer she came to its termination, the more
confused did she become, and the less clearly did
she see the way before her. Where should she go
on reaching the city? There as no one to receive
her; no one to whom she could go and claim protection,
or even shelter.
This state of irresolution continued
until the boat touched the wharf, and the passengers
were leaving. Mary was awake again, and kept
asking, every few moments, to go home.
“Yes, dear, we will go home,”
the mother would reply, in a tone of encouragement,
while her own mind was in the greatest uncertainty
and distress.
“Why don’t papa come?”
asked the child, as one after another moved away,
and they were left standing almost alone. At this
moment, an Irishman, with a whip in his hand, came
up, and said—
“Want a carriage, ma’am?”
Mrs. Lane hesitated a moment or two,
while she thought hurriedly, and then replied—
“Yes.”
“Very well, ma’am; I’ll attend to
you. Where is your baggage?”
“I have only this basket with me.”
“Ah! well; come along.”
And Mrs. Lane followed the man from the boat.
“Where shall I drive you?”
he asked, after she had entered the carriage.
There was a pause, with apparent irresolution.
“I am a stranger here,”
said Mrs. Lane innocently. “I want to obtain
pleasant accommodations for a day or two. Can
you take me to a good place?”
“Faith, and I can—as
good as the city will afford. Do you wish one
of the tip-top places, where they charge a little fortune
a week; or a good comfortable home at a reasonable
price?”
“I want a comfortable, retired
place, where the charges are not extravagant.”
“Exactly; I understand.”
And the driver closed the door, and,
mounting his box, drove off. At the end of ten
minutes the carriage stopped, the steps were let down,
and Mrs. Lane, after descending, was shown into a small
parlour, with dingy furniture. A broad, red-faced
Irish woman soon appeared, at the summons of the driver.
“I’ve brought you a lady
customer, Mrs. McGinnis, d’ye see? And
you’re just the one to make her at home and comfortable.
She’s a stranger, and wants a quiet place for
a day or two.”
“And, in troth, she’ll
find it here, as ye well say, John Murphy. Will
the lady put off her bonnet? We’ll have
her room ready in a jiffy! Much obleeged to yees,
John Murphy, for remembering us. What a darlint
of a child; bless its little heart!”
“What must I pay you?”
asked Mrs. Lane, hoarsely, turning to the driver.
“One dollar, ma’am,” was replied.
Mrs. Lane drew forth her purse, towards
which the Irishwoman glanced eagerly, and took therefrom
the sum charged, and paid the man, who immediately
retired. The landlady followed him out, and stood
conversing with him at the door for several minutes.
When she returned, she was less forward in her attentions
to her guest, and somewhat inquisitive as to who she
was, where she had come from, and whither she was
going. All these Mrs. Lane evaded, and asked to
have her room prepared as quickly as possible, as
she did not feel very well, and wished to retire.
The room was at length ready, and she went up with
little Mary, who had again fallen to sleep. It
was small, meagerly furnished, and offensive from
want of cleanliness. In turning down the bed
clothes, she found the sheets soiled and rumpled,
showing that the linen had not been changed since being
used by previous lodgers. The first thing that
Mrs. Lane did, after laying her sleeping child upon
the bed, was to sit down and weep bitterly. The
difficulties about to invest her, as they drew nearer
and nearer, became more and more apparent; and her
heart sank and trembled as she looked at the unexpected
forms they were assuming. But a single dollar
remained in her purse; and she had an instinctive
conviction that trouble with the landlady on account
of money was before her. Had she been provided
with the means of independence, she would have instantly
called a servant, and demanded a better room, and
fresh linen for her bed; but, under the circumstances,
she dared not do this. She had a conviction that
the Irishwoman was already aware of her poverty, and
that any call for better accommodations would be met
by insult. It was too late to seek for other
lodgings, even if she knew where to go, and were not
burdened with a sleeping child.
Unhappy fugitive! How new and
unexpected were the difficulties that already surrounded
her! How dark was the future! dark as that old
Egyptian darkness that could be felt. As she sat
and wept, the folly of which she was guilty in the
step she had taken presented itself distinctly before
her mind, and she wondered at her own blindness and
want of forethought. Already, in her very first
step, she had got her feet tangled. How she was
to extricate them she could not see.
Wearied at last with grief and fear,
her mind became exhausted with its own activity.
Throwing herself upon the bed beside her child, without
removing her clothes, she was soon lost in sleep.
Daylight was stealing in, when the voice of little
Mary awakened her.
“Where’s papa?”
asked the child, and she looked with such a sad earnestness
into her mother’s face, that the latter felt
rebuked, and turned her eyes away from those of her
child. “Want to go home,” lisped
the unhappy babe—“see papa.”
“Yes, dear,” soothingly answered the mother.
Little Mary turned her eyes to the
door with an expectant look, as if she believed her
father, whom she loved, was about to enter, and listened
for some moments.
“Papa! papa!” she called
in anxious tones, and listened again; but there was
no response. Her little lip began to quiver, then
it curled grievingly; and, falling over, she hid her
face against her mother and began sobbing.
Tenderly did the mother take her weeping
child to her bosom, and hold it there in a long embrace.
After it had grown calm she arose, and adjusting her
rumpled garments, and those of Mary, sat down by the
windows to await the events that were to follow.
In about half an hour a bell was rung in the passage
below, and soon after a girl came to her room to say
that breakfast was ready.
“I wish my breakfast brought
to me here,” said Mrs. Lane.
The girl stared a moment and then
retired. Soon after, the Irish landlady made
her appearance.
“What is it ye wants, mum?”
said that personage, drawing herself up and assuming
an air of vulgar dignity and importance.
“Nothing,” replied Mrs.
Lane, “except a little bread and milk for my
child.”
“Isn’t yees coming down to breakfast?”
Mrs. Lane shook her head.
“Ye’d better. It’s all ready.”
“I don’t wish any thing.
But if you’ll send me up something for my child,
I will be obliged to you.”
The landlady stood for some moments,
as if undecided what she should do, and then retired.
About half an hour afterwards, a dirty looking Irish
girl appeared with a waiter, on which were the articles
for which she had asked.
“Don’t ye want any thing
for yerself, mum?” asked the girl, with some
kindness in her voice.
“No, I thank you,” was replied.
“You’d better eat a little.”
“I’ve no appetite,”
said Mrs. Lane, turning her face away to conceal the
emotion that was rising to the surface.
The girl retired, and the food brought
for the child was placed before her; but she felt
as little inclined to eat as her mother, and could
not be induced to take a mouthful. Turning from
the offered food, she raised her tearful eyes to her
mother’s face, and in a choking voice said—“Go
home, mamma—see papa.”
The words smote, like heavy strokes,
upon the mother’s heart. How great a wrong
had she done her child! But could she retrace
her steps now? Could she go back and humble herself
under the imperious will of her husband? Her
heart shrunk from the thought. Any thing but
that! it would crush the life out of her. An hour
she sat, with these and kindred thoughts passing through
her mind, when the girl who had brought up Mary’s
breakfast came in and said—“Won’t
yees walk down into the parlour, mum, while I clean
up your room?”
“Is any one down there?” asked Mrs. Lane.
“No, mum,” was answered by the girl.
With some reluctance Mrs. Lane descended
to the small, dingy parlour, which she found adjoining
a bar-room, whence there came the loud voices of men.
From a window she looked forth upon the street, which
was narrow, and crowded with carts, drays, and other
vehicles. Opposite were old houses, in which
business of various kinds was carried on. One
was occupied by a cooper; another used as a storehouse
for fish; another for a grog-shop. Every thing
was dirty and crowded, and all appeared bustle and
confusion. It was plain to her that she had fallen
in an evil place, and that her first business must
be escape. As she sat meditating upon the next
step, there came suddenly, from the bar-room, the
sound of angry voices, mingled with fierce threats
and shocking blasphemy. Springing to her feet
in terror, Mrs. Lane caught up her child, and was about
starting from the door without any covering upon her
head, when the landlady intercepted her.
“What’s the matter with yees? Where
are ye going?”
With quivering lips, and face white
with alarm, Mrs. Lane replied—“Oh,
ma’am! get me my things and let me go.”
“Ye can go when ye pays yer bill, in welcome,”
replied the woman.
“How much is it?”
“It’s a dollar and a half.”
The Irishwoman looked steadily at
Mrs. Lane, and saw, by the change in her countenance,
what she had expected, that she had not as much money
in her possession.
“Won’t a dollar pay you?”
asked Mrs. Lane, after standing with her eyes upon
the floor for some moments. “I’ve
had nothing but my night’s lodging and surely
a dollar will pay for that.”
“Indade and it won’t,
then! Sure, and yer breakfast was got. If
ye didn’t ate it, I’m not to fault.
“Here is a dollar,” said
Mrs. Lane, taking out her purse. “I’m
sure it’s full pay for all I’ve received.”
“And d’ye mane to call
me an ould chate, ye spalpeen, ye!” indignantly
replied the landlady, her face growing red with anger,
while she raised her huge fist and shook it at her
terrified guest, who retreated back into the parlour,
and sank, trembling, into a chair.
“As if I wasn’t an honest
woman,” continued the virago, following Mrs.
Lane. “As if I’d extort on a lone
woman! Give me patience! When ye pays the
dollar and a half, ye can go; but not a foot shall
ye take from my door until then.”
A scuffle took place in the bar-room
at that moment, attended by a new eruption of oaths
and imprecations.
Quickly sprinting from her chair,
Mrs. Lane, with Mary in her arms, glided from the
room, and ran panting up-stairs to her chamber, the
door of which she locked behind her on entering.
Half an hour of as calm reflection
as it was possible for Mrs. Lane to make brought her
to the resolution to leave the house at all hazards.
Where she was to go, was to be an afterthought.
The greatest evil was to remain; after escaping that,
she would consider the means of avoiding what followed.
Putting on her bonnet and shawl, and taking her basket,
she went down-stairs with her child, determined, if
possible, to get away unobserved, and after doing so,
to send back, by any means that offered, the only dollar
she possessed in the world to the landlady. No
one met her on the stairs, and she passed the parlour-door
unobserved. But, alas! the street-door was found
locked and the key withdrawn. After a few ineffectual
attempts to open it, Mrs. Lane went into the parlour,
and, standing there, debated for some moments whether
she should leave the house by passing through the
bar-room, or wait for another opportunity to get away
by the private en-trance. While still bewildered
and undetermined the landlady came in from the bar-room.
The moment she saw her guest, she
comprehended the purpose in her mind.
“Where are ye going?”
said she in a quick sharp voice, the blood rising
to her coarse sensual face.
“I am going to leave your house,”
replied Mrs. Lane, in as firm a voice as she could
command. As she spoke she drew forth her purse,
and taking out the solitary dollar it contained, added—“Unfortunately,
this is all the money I have with me, but I will send
you the other half-dollar.”
But the landlady refused to take the
proffered money, and replied, indignantly,
“A purty how d’you do,
indeed, to come into a genteel body’s house,
and then expect to get off without paying your bill.
But ye don’t know Biddy McGinnis—ye
don’t! If yees wants to go paceable, pay
the dollar and a half. But until this is done,
ye shall not cross my door-stone.”
“I can’t stay here!
What good will it do?” said Mrs. Lane, wringing
her hand. “It’s all the money I’ve
got; and remaining won’t increase the sum, while
it adds to the debt. Better let me go now.”
“Indade, and ye’ll not
go, thin, my lady! I’ll tache yees to come
into a respectable body’s house without as much
money in yer pocket as ’ll pay for the night’s
lodging. I wonder who ye are, any how! No
better than ye should be, I’ll warrint!”
While speaking, the Irishwoman had
drawn nearer and nearer, and now stood with her face
only a few inches from that of her distressed guest,
who, bursting into tears, clasped her hands together,
and sobbed—
“Let me go! let me go!
If you have the heart of a woman, let me go!”
“Heart of a woman, indade!”
returned Mrs. McGinnis, indignantly. “Yer
a purty one to talk to me about the heart of a woman.
Stalein into a body’s house at twelve o’clock
at night, and thin tryin’ to go off without
paying for the lodgings and breakfast. Purty doings!”
“What’s the matter here?”
said a well dressed man, stepping in from the bar-room
and closing the door behind him. “What do
you mean by talking to the lady in this way, Mrs.
McGinnis? I’ve been listening to you.”
There was an instant change in the
Irishwoman. Her countenance fell, and she retreated
a few steps from the object of her vituperation.
“What’s all this about?
I should like to know,” added the man in a decided
way. “Will you explain, madam?” addressing
Mrs. Lane, in a kind voice. “But you are
agitated. Sit down and compose yourself.”
“Let her pay me my money, that’s
all I want,” muttered the landlady.
In a moment the man’s purse
was drawn from his pocket. “What does she
owe you?”
“A dollar and a half, bad luck till her!”
“There’s your money, you
old termagant!” And the man handed her the amount.
“And now, as you are paid, and have nothing more
to say to this lady, please to retire and let her
be freed from your presence.”
“Yees needint call me ill names,
Misther Bond,” said the woman, in a subdued
voice, as she retired. “It doesn’t
become a jentilman like you. I didn’t mane
any harm. I only wanted my own, and sure I’ve
a right to that.”
“Well, you’ve got your
own, though not in a way that does either you or your
house much credit,” returned the man. “The
next time you are so fortunate as to get a lady in
your hotel, I hope you’ll know better how to
treat her.”
Mrs. McGinnis retired without further
remark, and the man turned to Mrs. Lane, and said,
in a kind, respectful manner,
“I am sorry to find you so unhappily
situated, and will do any thing in my power to relieve
you from your present embarrassment. Your landlady
here is a perfect virago. How did you happen to
fall into her hands?”
Encouraged by the kindness of the
man’s address, as well as from the fact that
he had rescued her from a violent woman, Mrs. Lane,
after composing herself, said—
“I came in from New York last
night, and, being a stranger, asked the cabman to
take me to a good hotel. He brought me here.
I happened to have but two dollars in my purse, he
charged one for carriage hire.”
“The extortioner!”
“Finding into what a wretched
place he had brought me, I wished to leave this morning,
but have been prevented because I could not pay a
dollar and a half when I had only a dollar. I
told her to let me go, and I would send her the balance
claimed; but she only met the proposition by insult.”
“The wretch!” exclaimed
the man, indignantly. “I happened to be
passing, and, hearing her loud voice, glanced in at
the window. In an instant I comprehended, to
some extent, the difficulty; and, knowing her of old,
came in to see if something were not wrong. She
is a bad woman, and her house is a snare for the innocent.
It is fortunate for you that I came at the right moment!”
Mrs. Lane shuddered.
“And now, madam,” said
the man, “what can I do for you? Have you
friends in the city?”
“I am an entire stranger here,” replied
Mrs. Lane.
“Were you going farther?
“Yes,” was answered after some hesitation.
“Where do your friends reside?”
“In New York.”
“Ah!”
“This is your child?” was said, after
a pause.
“Yes.”
There was something in the man’s
manner, and in the way he looked at her, that now
made Mrs. Lane shrink from, as instinctively as she
had at first leaned towards him. Beneath his steady
eye her own drooped and rested for some moments on
the floor.
“Is your husband in New York?” pursued
the man.
This question caused the heart of
Mrs. Lane to bound with a sudden throb. Her husband!
She had deserted him, her natural and lawful protector,
and already she was encompassed with difficulties and
surrounded by dangers. What would she not at that
moment have given to be safely back in the home she
had left? To the last question she gave a simple
affirmative.
“Where do you wish to go when
you leave here?” inquired the man, who had perceived
a change in her and understood its nature.
“I wish to be taken to a good
hotel, where I can remain a day or two, until I have
time to communicate with my friends. My being
out of money is owing to an inadvertence. I will
receive a supply immediately on writing home.”
The man drew his purse from his pocket,
and, presenting it, said—
“This is at your service. Take whatever
you need.”
Mrs. Lane thanked him, but drew back.
“Only get me into some safe
place, until I can write to my friends,” said
she, “and you would lay both them and me under
the deepest obligations.”
The man arose at this, and stepping
into the bar room, desired the bar-keeper to send
for a carriage. From a stand near by one was
called. When it came to the door, he informed
Mrs. Lane of the fact, and asked if she were ready
to go.
“Where will you take me?” she asked.
“To the United States Hotel,”
replied the man. “You could not be in a
safer or better place.”
On hearing this, Mrs. Lane arose without
hesitation, and, going from the house, entered the
carriage with the man, and was driven away. Drawing
her veil over her face, she shrank into a corner of
the vehicle, and remained in sad communion with her
own thoughts for many minutes. From this state
of abstraction, the stopping of the carriage aroused
her. The driver left his seat and opened the door,
when her companion stepped forth, saying as he did
so—
“This is the place,” and
offering at the same time his hand.
As Mrs. Lane descended to the street,
she glanced with a look of anxious inquiry around
her. Already a suspicion that all might not be
right was disturbing her mind. Two years before
she had been in Philadelphia, and had stayed several
days at the United States Hotel. She remembered
the appearance of the building and the street, but
now she did not recognise a single object. All
was strange.
“Is this the United States Hotel?” she
asked eagerly.
“Oh, yes, ma’am,”
was the smiling reply. “We are at the private
entrance.”
Her bewildered mind was momentarily
deceived by this answer, and she permitted herself
to be led into a house, which she soon discovered
not to be an hotel. The most dreadful suspicions
instantly seized her. So soon as she was shown
into. a parlour, the man retired. A woman came
in shortly afterwards, who, from her appearance, seemed
to be the mistress of the house. She spoke kindly
to Mrs. Lane, and asked if she would walk up into
her room.
“There has been some mistake,”
said the poor wanderer, her lips quivering in spite
of her efforts to assume a firm exterior.
“Oh, no, none at all,”
quickly replied the woman, smiling.
“Yes, yes there is. I am
not in the hotel where I wished to go. Why have
I been brought here? Where is the man with whom
I came?”
“He has gone away; but will
return again. In the mean time do not causelessly
distress yourself. You are safe from all harm.”
“But I am not where I wished
to go,” replied Mrs. Lane. “Will you
be kind enough to give me the direction of the United
States Hotel, and I will walk there with my child.”
The woman shook her head.
“I could not permit you to go
until Mr. Bond returned,” said she. “He
brought you here, and will expect to find you when
he comes back.”
“I will not remain.”
And as she said this in a firm voice, Mrs. Lane arose,
and, taking her little girl in her arms, made an attempt
to move through the door into the passage. But
the woman stepped before her quickly, and in a mild,
yet decided way, told her that she could not leave
the house.
“Why not?” asked the trembling creature.
“Mr. Bond has placed you in
my care, and will expect to find you on his return,”
answered the woman.
“Who is Mr. Bond? What
right has he to control my movements?”
“Did you not place yourself
in his care?” inquired the woman. “I
understood him to say that such was the case.”
“He offered to protect me from wrong and insult.”
“And, having undertaken to do
so, he feels himself responsible to your friends for
your safe return to their hands. I am responsible
to him.”
“Deceived! deceived! deceived!”
murmured Mrs. Lane, bursting into tears and sinking
into a chair, while she hugged her child tightly in
her arms, and laid its face against her own.
The woman seemed slightly moved at
this exhibition of distress, and stood looking at
the quivering frame of the unhappy fugitive, with a
slight expression of regret on her face. After
Mrs. Lane had grown calm, the woman said to her:
“Is your husband living?”
“He is,” was answered, in a steady voice.
“Where does he reside?” continued the
woman.
“In New York,” replied Mrs. Lane.
“What is his name?”
Mrs. Lane reflected, hurriedly, for
some moments, and then gave a correct answer, adding,
at the same time, that for any attempted wrong, there
would come a speedy and severe retribution. The
next inquiry of the woman was as to her husband’s
occupation, which was also answered correctly.
“And now,” added Mrs.
Lane, with assumed firmness, “you had better
let me retire from this place immediately, and thus
avoid trouble, which, otherwise, you would be certain
to have. My husband is a merchant of influence,
and a man who will not stop at half measures in seeking
to redress a wrong. This man, whoever he may be,
who has so basely deceived me, will find, ere long,
that he has done an act which will hot go unpunished,
and that severely. As for yourself, be warned
in time, and let me go from this place.”
Again Mrs. Lane sought to pass from
the room, but was prevented. The woman was neither
harsh, rude, nor insulting in her manner, but firmly
refused to let her leave the house, saying—“I
am responsible for your safe keeping, and cannot,
therefore, let you go.”
She then urged her to go up-stairs
and lay off her things, but Mrs. Lane refused, in
the most positive manner, to leave the parlour.
“You will be more comfortable
in the chamber we have prepared for you,” said
the woman, coldly; “but you must do as you like.
If you want any thing, you can ring for it.”
And saying this, she turned from the
room, and locked the door through which she retired.
The instant she was gone, Mrs. Lane sprang towards
one of the front windows, threw it up and attempted
to draw the bolt which fastened the shutter; but her
effort was not successful: the bolt remained
immovable. On a closer inspection, she found
that it was locked. The back window was open,
but a glance into the yard satisfied her that it would
be useless to attempt escape in that way. Hopeless
in mind and paralyzed in body, she again sank down
inactive.
Little Mary, who had been left standing
on the floor during this effort to escape, now came
up to where she had thrown herself upon a sofa, and,
laying her little face upon her breast, looked tearfully
at her, and said, in a low, sorrowful voice—“Won’t
papa come? I want my papa—my dear
papa.”
Not a word could the mother reply
to her unhappy child, who, in her folly, she had so
wronged. Oh, what would she not have given at
that moment to see the face of her husband!
Five or six hours had passed.
In a small sitting room, near the parlour in which
Mrs. Lane was still a prisoner, stood the man named
Bond, and the woman who had received her.
“Mrs. Lane did you say she called
herself?” said the man, with a sudden change
of manner—“and from New York?”
“Yes.”
“Did you inquire her husband’s business?”
“She said he was a merchant
of standing, and threatened both you and me with the
severest consequences, if she were not instantly released.”
“Can it be possible!”
remarked the man, and he stood in a musing attitude
for some time. “I’m a little afraid
this affair is not going to turn out quite so pleasantly
as I at first supposed. I think I know her husband.”
“You do!”
“Yes. We have had several
business transactions together, if he is the individual
I suppose him to be.”
“Then you had better get her
off of your hands as quickly as possible; and this
will be no hard matter. Only open the cage-door,
and the bird will fly.”
“Confound that Irish huzzy!
She and her John Murphy have scared up a nice bit
of adventure for me.”
“Both you and they ought to
have known better than to expect any thing but trouble
from a woman with a baby. As it is, the best thing
for you is to get her off of your hands forthwith.”
“I don’t like to give
up after progressing so far. It isn’t my
disposition.”
“A wise man foresees evil, and gets out of its
way.”
“True; and my better course
is to step aside, I suppose. But what shall we
do with her?”
“Open the cage-door, as I said, and let her
escape.”
“Where will she go?”
“Have you any concern on that head?”
“Some. Moreover, I don’t
just comprehend the meaning of her visit here alone
at night, and without money. I wonder if, after
all, there isn’t a lover in the case, who has
failed to meet her.”
“Most likely,” returned the woman.
“In that event, why may not I take his place?”
“It will require her consent.
Better have nothing more to do with her, and thus
keep out of the way of trouble.
“Her husband, if she be the
wife of the man I think she is,” said Bond,
“will hardly stop at half-way measures in an
affair like this.”
“So much the more reason for keeping out of
his way.”
“Perhaps so; and yet I like
adventure, especially when spiced with a little danger.
Upon second thought, I’ll let her remain here
until to-morrow.”
“Just as you like. But
I’ve been unable to get her up-stairs; and she
can’t stay in the parlour all night.”
“No. She must go to the
chamber you have prepared for her.”
“How will we get her there?”
“Use every effort you can to
induce her to comply with our wishes in this respect.
I will come in after nightfall, and, if you have not
been successful, will remove her by force.”
With this understanding, the partners
in evil separated.
Soon after parting with Mr. Edmondson,
who had informed Mr. Lane that his wife was no longer
at his house, and when the latter had begun to feel
exceedingly anxious, he met a gentleman who said to
him, “When do you expect Mrs. Lane back?”
It was with difficulty that the deserted
husband could refrain from the exhibition of undue
surprise at such an unexpected question.
“I was over the river yesterday
afternoon with a friend who was on his way to Philadelphia,”
added the man, “and saw your lady in the cars.”
“Good morning,” said Mr.
Lane, as he looked at his watch, and then turned away
with a hurried manner.
It was half-past eleven o’clock.
At twelve a line started for the South. Lane
was on board the steamboat when it left the dock.
Six hours and a half of most intense anxiety were
passed ere the unhappy man reached Philadelphia.
On arriving, he took a carriage and visited all the
principal hotels, but not a word could he hear of
his wife. He then bethought him to make some inquiries
of the hackman whom he had employed.
“Were you at the wharf last
night when the New York line came in?” he asked,
as he stood with his hand on the carriage-door, after
leaving one of the hotels, again disappointed in his
search.
“I was,” replied the hackman.
“Did you get any passengers?”
“No, sir.”
“Did you see any thing of a lady with a child?”
The hackman thought for a little while, and then replied—
“Yes, I did. There was
a lady and a child, nearly the last on the boat.
John Murphy drove them away.”
“Where can I find John Murphy?” eagerly
enquired Mr. Lane.
“He’s probably on the stand.”
“Drive me there if you please.” And
he sprang into the carriage.
In a few minutes they were at a carriage
stand; and Mr. Lane heard the driver call out, as
he reined up his horses—“Hallo! there,
John Murphy! here’s a gentleman who wants to
see you.”
The person addressed came up as Mr.
Lane descended from the carriage.
“I understand,” said Lane,
“that you received a lady and child in your
carriage, last night, from the New York line.
Where did you take them?”
“Who said that I did?”
boldly inquired the man addressed.
“I said so!” as firmly
replied the driver who had given the information to
Mr. Lane. “What interest have you in denying
it?”
Murphy evinced some surprise at this,
and looked a little dashed, but repeated his denial.
A new fear instantly seized Mr. Lane.
His wife might have been entrapped into some den of
infamy, through means of the driver she had employed
to convey her to an hotel. The thought affected
him like an electric shock.
“You are certain of what you
say?” asked Mr. Lane, turning to the hackman
he had employed.
“Certain,” was answered positively.
“Is there a police officer near
at hand?” was the next inquiry. This was
intended as no threat; and Murphy understood its meaning.
The eyes of Mr. Lane were fixed on
his face, and he saw in it a guilty change. No
reply being made to the question about a police officer,
Mr. Lane said, addressing the accused hackman—
“If you wish to escape trouble,
take me instantly to the house where I can find the
lady you took from the boat last night. She is
my wife, and I will go through fire and water to find
her; and let him who stands in my way take the consequences.”
Murphy now drew Mr. Lane aside, and
said a few words to him hurriedly.
“Can I depend upon what you
say?” eagerly asked the latter.
“Yes, upon honour!” replied the hackman.
“You must go with me,” said Lane.
“I cannot leave the stand.”
“I will call a policeman and
compel you to go with me, if you don’t accompany
me peaceably. As I live, I will not part from
you until I find her! Take your choice—go
quietly, or under compulsion.”
There was a fierce energy in the excited
man that completely subdued the Irish hackman, who,
after a further, though feeble remonstrance, got into
the carriage with Mr. Lane, and was driven off.
The course taken was out—street. Some
distance beyond Washington Square, the carriage stopped
before a house, in which Mr. Lane was informed that
he would find the woman whom Murphy had taken from
the boat the night before. He stepped out quickly,
and, as he sprang across the pavement, Murphy, who
was out of the carriage almost as soon as he was,
glided around the corner of a street, and was beyond
recall. A quick jerk of the bell was answered
by a female servant, who held the door only partly
open, while Lane addressed her.
“Wasn’t there a woman
and child brought here last night?” said he,
in an agitated manner.
“No, sir,” replied the
girl; and, as she spoke, she made an attempt to close
the door, seeing which, Mr. Lane thrust a part of his
body in and prevented the movement.
“Are you certain?” he asked.
“I am,” was positively
answered, while the girl strove to shut the door by
forcing it against Mr. Lane. At this moment something
like a smothered cry from within reached his ears,
when, throwing open the door with a sudden application
of strength that prostrated the girl, he stepped over
her body and entered the vestibule. Just then
there arose a wild cry for help! He knew the
voice; it came from one of the parlours, into which
he rushed. There he saw his wife struggling in
the arms of a woman and a man, while his frightened
child stood near, white and speechless with terror.
As he entered, Amanda saw him.
“Oh, my husband!” she
exclaimed. In a moment she was released, and
the man and woman fled from the room, but not before
the face of the former was fully recognised by Mr.
Lane.
Little Mary had already sprung to
her father, and was quivering and panting on his breast.
“Oh! take me away quickly—quickly!”
cried Mrs. Lane, staggering towards her husband and
falling into his arms.
Without waiting for explanations,
Mr. Lane went from the house with his wife and child,
and, placing them in the carriage at the door, was
driven to an hotel.
The reader doubtless understands the
scene we have just described. The man named Bond
was in the act of carrying out his threat to remove
Mrs. Lane to a chamber by force when her husband appeared.
Of all that passed between the severely-tried
husband and wife after their meeting, it behooves
us not to write. The circumstances we have detailed
were exceedingly painful to the parties most interested;
but their effect, like the surgeon’s knife, was
salutary. Mr. Lane afterwards regarded his wife
from an entirely different point of view, and found
her a very different woman from what he had at first
believed her to be. He saw in her a strength of
character and a clearness of intellect for which he
had never given her credit; and, from looking down
upon her as a child or an inferior, came to feel towards
her as an equal.
His indignation at the treatment she
had received in Philadelphia was extreme. The
man named Bond he knew very well, and he at first
determined to call him to account personally; but as
this would lead to a mortifying notoriety and exposure
of the whole affair, he was reluctantly induced to
keep silence. Bond has never crossed his way
since: it might not be well for him to do so.
Some years have passed. No one
who meets Mr. and Mrs. Lane, at home or abroad, would
dream that, at one time, they were driven asunder
by a strong repulsion. Few are more deeply attached,
or happier in their domestic relations; but neither
trespasses on the other’s rights, nor interferes
with the other’s prerogative. Mutual deference,
confidence, respect, and love, unite them with a bond
that cannot again be broken.