MR. MARKLAND’S determination
to visit the scene of the Company’s operations
was no suddenly-formed impulse; and the manifest desire
that he should not do so, exhibited by Mr. Fenwick,
in no way lessened his purpose to get upon the ground
as early as possible, and see for himself how matters
were progressing. His whole fortune was locked
up in this new enterprise, and his compeers were strangers,
or acquaintances of a recent date. To have acted
with so much blindness was unlike Markland; but it
was like him to wish to know all about any business
in which he was engaged. This knowledge he had
failed to obtain in New York. There his imagination
was constantly dazzled, and while he remained there,
uncounted, treasure seemed just ready to fall at his
feet. The lamp of Aladdin was almost within his
grasp. But, on leaving Fenwick and his sanguine
associates, a large portion of his enthusiasm died
out, and his mind reached forth into the obscurity
around him and sought for the old landmarks.
On returning home from this visit
to New York, Mr. Markland found his mind oppressed
with doubts and questions, that could neither be removed
nor answered satisfactorily. His entire fortune,
acquired through years of patient labour, was beyond
his reach, and might never come back into his possession,
however desperately he grasped after it. And
“Woodbine Lodge,”—its beauty
suddenly restored to eyes from which scales had fallen—held
now only by an uncertain tenure, a breath might sweep
from his hand.
Suddenly, Markland was awakened, as
if from a dream, and realized the actual of his position.
It was a fearful waking to him, and caused every nerve
in his being to thrill with pain. On the brink
of a gulf he found himself standing, and as he gazed
down into its fearful obscurity, he shuddered and
grew sick. And now, having taken the alarm, his
thoughts became active in a new direction, and penetrated
beneath surfaces which hitherto had blinded his eyes
by their golden lustre. Facts and statements
which before had appeared favourable and coherent
now presented irreconcilable discrepancies, and he
wondered at the mental blindness which had prevented
his seeing things in their present aspects.
It was not possible for a man of Mr.
Markland’s peculiar temperament and business
experience to sit down idly, and, with folded hands,
await the issue of this great venture. Now that
his fears were aroused, he could not stop short of
a thorough examination of affairs, and that, too,
at the chief point of operations, which lay thousands
of miles distant.
Letters from Mr. Lyon awaited his
return from New York. They said little of matters
about which he now most desired specific information,
while they seemed to communicate a great many important
facts in regard to the splendid enterprise in which
they were engaged. Altogether, they left no satisfactory
impression on his mind. One of them, bearing
a later date than the rest, disturbed him deeply.
It was the first, for some months, in which allusion
was made to his daughter. The closing paragraph
of this letter ran thus:—
“I have not found time, amid
this pressure of business, to write a word to your
daughter for some weeks. Say to her that I ever
bear her in respectful remembrance, and shall refer
to the days spent at Woodbine Lodge as among the brightest
of my life.”
There had been no formal application
for the hand of his daughter up to this time; yet
had it not crossed the thought of Markland that any
other result would follow; for the relation into which
Lyon had voluntarily brought himself left no room
for honourable retreat. His letters to Fanny
more than bound him to a pledge of his hand. They
were only such as one bearing the tenderest affection
might write.
Many weeks had elapsed since Fanny
received a letter, and she was beginning to droop
under the long suspense. None came for her now,
and here was the cold, brief reference to one whose
heart was throbbing toward him, full of love.
Markland was stung by this evasive
reference to his daughter, for its meaning he clearly
understood. Not that he had set his heart on
an alliance of Fanny with this man, but, having come
to look upon such an event as almost certain, and
regarding all obstacles in the way as lying on his
side of the question, pride was severely shocked by
so unexpected a show of indifference. And its
exhibition was the more annoying, manifested, as it
was, just at the moment when he had become most painfully
aware that all his worldly possessions were beyond
his control, and might pass from his reach forever.
“Can there be such baseness
in the man?” he exclaimed, mentally, with bitterness,
as the thought flitted through his mind that Lyon
had deliberately inveigled him, and, having been an
instrument of his ruin, now turned from him with cold
indifference.
“Impossible!” he replied,
aloud, to the frightful conjecture. “I
will not cherish the thought for a single moment.”
But a suggestion like this, once made
to a man in his circumstances, is not to be cast out
of the mind by a simple act of rejection. It
becomes a living thing, and manifests its perpetual
presence. Turn his thought from it as he would,
back to that point it came, and the oftener this occurred,
the more corroborating suggestions arrayed themselves
by its side.
Mr. Markland was alone in the library,
with Mr. Lyon’s hastily read letters before
him, and yet pondering, with an unquiet spirit, the
varied relations in which he had become placed, when
the door was quietly pushed open, and he heard light
footsteps crossing the room. Turning, he met
the anxious face of his daughter, who, no longer able
to bear the suspense that was torturing her, had overcome
all shrinking maiden delicacy, and now came to ask
if, enclosed in either of his letters, was one for
her. She advanced close to where he was sitting,
and, as he looked at her with a close observation,
he saw that her countenance was almost colourless,
her lips rigid, and her heart beating with an oppressed
motion, as if half the blood in her body had flowed
back upon it.
“Fanny, dear!” said Mr.
Markland, grasping her hand tightly. As he did
so, she leaned heavily against him, while her eyes
ran eagerly over the table.
Two or three times she tried to speak,
but was unable to articulate.
“What can I say to you, love?”
Her father spoke in a low, sad, tender voice, that
to her was prophetic of the worst.
“Is there a letter for me?”
she asked, in a husky whisper.
“No, dear.”
He felt her whole frame quiver as if shocked.
“You have heard from Mr. Lyon?”
She asked this after the lapse of a few moments, raising
herself up as she spoke, and assuming a calmness of
exterior that was little in accord with the tumult
within.
“Yes. I have three letters of different
dates.”
“And none for me?”
“None.”
“Has he not mentioned my name?”
A moment Mr. Markland hesitated, and then answered—
“Yes.”
He saw a slight, quick flush mantle
her face, that grew instantly pale again.
“Will you read to me what he says?”
“If you wish me to do so.”
Mr. Markland said this almost mechanically.
“Read it.” And as
her father took from the table a letter, Fanny grasped
his arm tightly, and then stood with the immovable
rigidity of a statue. She had already prophesied
the worst. The cold, and, to her, cruel words,
were like chilling ice-drops on her heart. She
listened to the end, and then, with a low cry, fell
against her father, happily unconscious of further
suffering. To her these brief sentences told
the story of unrequited love. How tenderly, how
ardently he had written a few months gone by! and now,
after a long silence, he makes to her a mere incidental
allusion, and asks a “respectful remembrance!”
She had heard the knell of all her dearest hopes.
Her love had become almost her life, and to trample
thus upon it was like extinguishing her life.
“Fanny! Love! Dear
Fanny!” But the distressed father called to her
in vain, and in vain lifted her nerveless body erect.
The oppressed heart was stilled.
A cry of alarm quickly summoned the
family, and for a short time a scene of wild terror
ensued; for, in the white face of the fainting girl,
all saw the image of death. A servant was hurriedly
despatched for their physician, and the body removed
to one of the chambers.
But motion soon came back, feebly,
to the heart; the lungs drew in the vital air, and
the circle of life was restored. When the physician
arrived, nature had done all for her that could be
done. The sickness of her spirit was beyond the
reach of any remedy he might prescribe.