All doubt in regard to the presence
of Mr. Lyon in the neighborhood, as affirmed by Mr.
Lamar and others, had, as we have seen, passed from
the mind of Markland. He was entirely satisfied
that the individual seen by these men was Mr. Willet.
But since the refusal of Brainard, regarded as one
of the shrewdest men in the city, to enter into a
speculation to him so full of promise, he did not feel
altogether easy in mind. He had spoken more from
impulse than sound judgment, when he declared it to
be his purpose to risk forty thousand dollars in the
scheme, instead of twenty thousand. A cooler
state left room for doubts. What did he really
know of Mr. Lyon, on whose discretion, as an agent,
so much would depend? The question intruded itself,
like an unwelcome guest; and his effort to answer
it to his own satisfaction was in vain. Had he
been in possession of his daughter’s secret,
all would have been plain before him. Not for
an instant would he have hesitated about keeping faith
with a man who could so deceive him.
“I must see Mr. Fenwick again,”
he said, in his perplexity, after leaving the office
of Mr. Brainard.
“Forty thousand dollars is a
large sum to invest; and I shall have to sell some
of my best property to raise it property yearly increasing
in value. Twenty thousand I could have managed
by parting with stocks. What folly in Brainard!
I’m sadly out with him. Yes, I must see
Mr. Fenwick immediately.”
In the next train that left for New
York, Mr. Markland was a passenger. A hurried
note, received by his family that evening, announced
the fact of his journey, and threw a deeper shadow
on the heart of his troubled wife.
Vainly had Mrs. Markland striven to
gain the unreserved confidence of Fanny. The
daughter’s lips were sealed. Pressing importunity
plainly wrought something akin to estrangement; and
so, with tears in her eyes and anguish in her heart,
the mother turned from her pale-faced child, and left
her alone. An hour after being surprised by her
mother at the Fountain Grove, Fanny glided into her
own room, and turned the key. The letter of Mr.
Lyon was still in her bosom, and now, with eager hands,
she drew it forth, and read to the end—
—“Beloved one!
How often have I blessed the kind Providence that
led me into your presence. How strange are these
things! For years I have moved amid a blaze of
beauty, and coldly turned away from a thousand glittering
attractions. But, when my eyes first saw you,
there was a pause in my heart’s pulsations.
I felt that my soul’s companion was discovered
to me; that, henceforth, my life and yours were to
blend. Ah, dear one! wonder not that, from a hasty
impulse, I decided to return and see your father.
I fear, now, that the cause most strongly influencing
me was the desire to look upon your face and feel
the thrilling touch of your hand once more. Perhaps
it is well he was absent, for I am not so sure that
his cooler judgment would have seen sufficient cause
for the act. All is going on now just as he,
and I, and all concerned, could wish; and not for the
world would I have him know, at present, our
secret. Stolen waters, they say, are sweet.
I know not. But that brief, stolen interview
at the fountain, was full of sweetness to me.
You looked the very Naiad of the place—pure,
spiritual, the embodiment of all things lovely.
Forgive this warmth of feeling. I would not wound
the instinctive delicacy of a heart like yours.
Only believe me sincere. Will you not write to
me? Direct your letters, under cover, to D. C.
L., Baltimore P. O., and they will be immediately forwarded.
I will write you weekly. The same hand that conveys
this, will see that my letters reach you. Farewell,
beloved one!
Lee Lyon.”
Five times did Fanny attempt to answer
this, and as often were her letters destroyed by her
own hands. Her sixth, if not more to her own
satisfaction, she sealed, and subscribed as directed.
It read thus:
“Mr. Lee Lyon:—My
dear sir—Your unexpected visit,
and equally unexpected letter, have bewildered and
distressed me. You enjoin a continued silence
in regard to your return from the South. Oh, sir!
remove that injunction as quickly as possible; for
every hour that it remains, increases my unhappiness.
You have separated between me and my good mother,—you
are holding me back from throwing myself on her bosom,
and letting her see every thought of my soul.
I cannot very long endure the present. Why not
at once write to my father, and explain all to him?
He must know that you came back, and the sooner, it
seems to me, will be the better. If I do not betray
the fact, waking, I shall surely do it in my sleep;
for I think of it all the time. Mother surprised
me while reading your letter. I am afraid she
saw it in my hand. She importuned me to give her
my full confidence; and to refuse was one of the hardest
trials of my life. I feel that I am changing
under this new, painful experience. The ordeal
is too fiery. If it continues much longer, I shall
cease to be what I was when you were here; and you
will find me, on your return, so changed as to be
no longer worthy of your love. Oh, sir! pity
the child you have awakened from a peaceful, happy
dream, into a real life of mingled pain and joy.
From the cup you have placed to my lips, I drink with
an eager thirst. The draught is delicious to
the taste, but it intoxicates—nay, maddens
me!
“Write back to me at once, dear
Mr. Lyon! I shall count the minutes as hours,
until your letter comes. Let the first words be—’Tell
all to your mother.’ If you cannot write
this, we must be as strangers, for I will not bind
myself to a man who would make me untrue to my parents.
You say that you love me. Love seeks another’s
happiness. If you really love me, seek my happiness.
Fanny.”
Many times did Fanny read over this
letter before resolving to send it. Far, very
far, was it from satisfying her. She feared that
it was too cold—too repellant—too
imperative. But it gave the true alternative.
She was not yet ready to abandon father and mother
for one who had thrown a spell over her heart almost
as strong as the enchantment of a sorcerer; and she
wished him distinctly to understand this.
Mr. Lyon was in a southern city when
this letter came into his hands. He was sitting
at a table covered with various documents, to the
contents of which he had been giving a long and earnest
attention, when a servant brought in a number of letters
from the post-office. He selected from the package
one post-marked Baltimore, and broke the seal in a
hurried and rather nervous manner. As he opened
it, an enclosure fell upon the table. It was superscribed
with his name, in the delicate hand of a woman.
This was Fanny’s letter.
A careful observer would have seen
more of selfish triumph in the gleam that shot across
his face, than true love’s warm delight.
The glow faded into a look of anxiety as he commenced
unfolding the letter, which he read with compressed
lips. A long breath, as if a state of suspense
were relieved, followed the perusal. Then he sat,
for some moments, very still, and lost in thought.
“We’ll see about that,”
he murmured at length, laying the letter of Fanny
aside, and taking up sundry other letters which had
come by the same mail. For more than an hour
these engrossed his attention. Two of them, one
from Mr. Markland, were answered during the time.
“Now, sweetheart,” he
said, almost lightly, as he took Fanny’s letter
from the table. Every word was read over again,
his brows gradually contracting as he proceeded.
“There is some spirit about
the girl; more than I had thought. My going back
was a foolish blunder. But the best will have
to be made of it. Not a whisper must come to
Mr. Markland. That is a settled point. But
how is the girl to be managed?”
Lyon mused for a long time.
“Dear child!” He now spoke
with a tender expression. “I have laid
too heavy a weight on your young heart, and I wish
it were in my power to remove it; but it is not.”
He took a pen, as he said this, and
commenced writing an answer to Fanny’s letter:—
“DEAREST one:—Tell
all to your mother; but, in doing so, let it be clearly
in your mind that an eternal separation between us
must follow as a consequence. I do not say this
as a threat—ah, no! Nor are you to
understand that I will be offended. No—no—no—nothing
of this. I only speak of what must come as the
sure result. The moment your father learns that
I was at Woodbine Lodge, and had an interview with
his daughter, at a time when he thought me far distant,
our business and personal relations must cease.
He will misjudge me from evidence to his mind powerfully
conclusive; and I shall be unable to disabuse him
of error, because appearances are against me.
But I put you in entire freedom. Go to your mother-confide
to her every thing; and, if it be possible, get back
the peace of which my coming unhappily robbed you.
Think not of any consequences to me—fatal
though they should prove. The wide world is before
me still.
“And now, dear Fanny! If
our ways in life must part, let us hold each other
at least in kind remembrance. It will ever grieve
me to think that our meeting occasioned a ripple to
disturb the tranquil surface of your feelings.
I could not help loving you—and for that
I am not responsible. Alas! that, in loving, I
should bring pain to the heart of the beloved one.
“But why say more? Why
trouble your spirit by revealing the disturbance of
mine? Heaven bless you and keep you, Fanny; and
may your sky be ever bathed in sunshine! I leave
my destiny in your hands, and pray for strength to
bear the worst.
Adieu.
L. L.”
There was a flitting smile on the
lips of the young Englishman, as he folded and sealed
this letter, and a look of assurance on his face,
that little accorded with the words he had just written.
Again he took up his pen and wrote—
“My dear D. C. L.:—Faithful
as ever you have proved in this affair, which is growing
rather too complicated, and beginning to involve too
many interests. Miss Markland is fretting sadly
under the injunction of secresy, and says that I must
release her from the obligation not to mention my
hasty return from the South. And so I have written
to her, that she may divulge the fact to her mother.
You start, and I hear you say—’Is
the man mad?’ No, not mad, my friend; or, if
mad, with a method in his madness. Fanny will
not tell her mother. Trust me for that.
The consequences I have clearly set forth—probable
ruin to my prospects, and an eternal separation between
us. Do you think she will choose this alternative?
Not she. ‘Imprudent man! To risk so
much for a pretty face!’ I hear you exclaim.
Not all for a pretty face, my grave friend. The
alliance, if it can be made, is a good one. Markland,
as far as I can learn, is as rich as a Jew; he has
a bold, suggestive mind, a large share of enthusiasm,
and is, take him all in all, just the man we want
actively interested in our scheme. Brainard, he
writes me, has backed out. I don’t like
that; and I like still less the reason assigned for
his doing so. ’A foolish report that you
were seen in the city some days after your departure
for the South, has disturbed his confidence, and he
positively refuses to be a partner in the arrangement.’
That looks bad; doesn’t it? Markland seems
not to have the slightest suspicion, and says that
he will take the whole forty thousand interest himself,
if necessary. He was going, immediately, to New
York, to consult with Mr. Fenwick. A good move.
Fenwick understands himself thoroughly, and will manage
our gentleman.
“Get the enclosed safely into
the hands of Fanny, and with as little delay as possible.
I am growing rather nervous about the matter.
Be very discreet. The slightest error might ruin
all. If possible, manage to come in contact with
Brainard, and hear how he talks of me, and of our
enterprise. You will know how to neutralize any
gratuitous assertions he may feel inclined to make.
Also get, by some means, access to Mr. Markland.
I want your close observation in this quarter.
Write me, promptly and fully, and, for the present,
direct to me here. I shall proceed no farther
for the present.
As ever, yours,
L. L.”