Part 13 (2/2)
When Constantia revived from the state of insensibility into which the suddenness of the a.s.sault had hurried her weak spirits, she found herself in a chaise with Monthault, who watched the return of her senses to pour out some pa.s.sionate encomiums on her beauty, and protestations of his insurmountable, though hopeless love. ”I will speak this once,”
said she, ”and then for ever be silent. Hear, abandoned man and perfidious friend! I would sooner die than yield to your wishes; and I know my father would weep less over my corpse, than if he saw me contaminated by your embraces. Restore me to him; nay, only give me liberty to fly back to his dear arms, and I will never disclose that you were the ravisher; but if you persist in your cruelty, it will be of no other avail than to plunge your soul in additional guilt.”
Alarmed by the determined firmness of her manner, Monthault changed his tone. He protested she misunderstood his expressions; for that, though he never should cease to adore her, he had merely engaged in this enterprize as the agent of Eustace, to whom he was going to carry her.
Hopeless of obtaining her father's consent (since he knew his disgrace had reached Oxford), and incapable of living without her, they had projected this scheme; and he besought her to be calm, as a few hours would bring her to her plighted love. ”Surely, beautiful Constantia,”
said he, ”you would not wish to escape from your faithful, though dishonoured Eustace.” ”The Eustace I knew and loved,” returned she, ”was faithful and honourable. Base seducer, and slanderer of unsuspecting innocence, this subterfuge cannot deceive me a moment; and I once more warn you to let me go, or dread my desperation.”
A disposition like Monthault's is rarely threatened out of its deliberate purpose; but, happily for Constantia, the skill of the driver was not proportioned to the expedition he was commanded to use, and he overturned the carriage at the entrance of a small village. Constantia's cries soon drew several people to her a.s.sistance, who, supposing her distress proceeded from her alarm at the accident, a.s.sured her that the gentleman who lay senseless on the ground was only stunned by the fall, and that the blood which streamed from her own face was caused by a very slight wound. ”It is from him,” said she, ”that I entreat to be preserved; only hide me from him. Let him suppose I escaped in the moment of confusion, and every kind office I can do you in the course of my life will be too little to shew my grat.i.tude. Beside my own prayers, I will promise you those of my dear father, the worthiest and best of men; these he will daily offer to Heaven for the preservers of his only child.”
The rustic witnesses of this scene listened with stupid surprise to this address. The women busied themselves in binding up the deep gash in Constantia's forehead; the men, in raising Monthault, and lifting up the carriage. By this time the out-riders were come up, who, faithful to their commission, prepared to place Constantia on one of the horses, when her loud shrieks, the bustle, and crowd, attracted the attention of two gentlemen who were travelling on the road, to whose inquiries of what was the matter, one of Monthault's gang brutally answered, a carriage had been overturned and a gentleman much hurt. ”But he is quiet enough,” said he; ”whereas his wife, who is only a little scratched, screams as if she would raise the dead.”
”Her distress at least requires tender treatment,” said one of the gentlemen. ”Why are they lifting her on that horse?” ”To take her to a surgeon, your honour.” ”What! from her lifeless husband, while she herself is but slightly injured? Something must be wrong here.” At the moment Constantia thought herself lost, a strenuous hand grasped the bridle of the horse on which she was placed; and a commanding voice called to the man who held her in his arms to stop at his peril. The villain drew his sword, and attempted to hew down his opposer; but at that instant Constantia had sufficient strength to loosen his clasp and throw herself upon the ground, from which she was raised by the other gentleman, who a.s.sured her she should be protected, in a voice which, with rapture, she recognized to be that of the worthy Barton.
”Oh my guardian angel,” said she, ”are you come to save me again? My second father, hold me in your sheltering arms till you can restore me to my kindred. I have been forced away by brutal ravishers. There lies the master ruffian senseless; and,” continued she, waving her hand, ”there are his cruel accomplices.”
By this time the other stranger had disarmed his antagonist, pulled him from his horse, and committed him to custody. ”My Lord,” said Barton to him, ”this is a most providential adventure. We have again rendered a signal good service to one of those pretty maidens whom you a.s.sisted at Halifax.” ”To which of them?” eagerly inquired the young n.o.bleman.
”Mistress Constantia Beaumont,” returned Barton. ”But where is Isabel?”
”Safe at Oxford, and consoling my friends, I trust,” replied Constantia.
”Oh, Sir! I know not by what name to address you; but if you are the pupil of the excellent Barton, you will, like him, defend the friendless who has been forced away from her natural protectors.”
”Most willingly,” answered the unknown; ”but if that man is your husband, how can I take you out of his power?” Constantia then briefly told her story; her morning walk with Isabel; her seizure; Monthault's protestations; the overthrow of the chaise, and the attempt of the myrmidons to force her away. The rest of these wretches had now made their escape, leaving the one who was in custody and their employer, who began to shew signs of life, to answer for their crimes.
Barton then took upon himself the office of restoring Constantia to her friends, and begged his companion to remain with Monthault to see that he had proper treatment, and was secured from escaping. They drove back to Oxford with such rapidity as to precede the return of Isabel, who had the happiness of seeing the beloved friend, whose loss she came to announce, restored to the embraces of her affectionate family.
While Mr. Barton and Dr. Beaumont were exchanging those sentiments of cordial esteem which mutual worth is sure to inspire, Isabel's eyes inquired if the gallant officer, who had so much interested her, had given no signs of reciprocal recollection. She was dissatisfied that he was not her cousin's escort; and though, in wis.h.i.+ng to see him again, she thought she had no other motive than to thank him for past services, she never before felt so much pain from unacknowledged grat.i.tude.
Constance was too much overpowered by the remembrance of her own preservation to attend to the silent perplexity of Isabel, whom a secret consciousness of what she could scarce believe to be a fault restrained from a thousand inquiries which she would not have scrupled to make after one to whom she was wholly indifferent.
The transport which Dr. Beaumont felt at the restoration of his daughter was checked by a discovery of the most agonizing kind. Monthault still continued in a languis.h.i.+ng condition; but his accomplice underwent an examination as to the purpose of his attempt, and the name of his employer. On promise of pardon the miscreant offered to make a full discovery. His conditions were accepted; and he then named Eustace Evellin as the person who was to receive the advantage of the nefarious action. He a.s.serted, that being overcome with despair at the thought of having forfeited his uncle's favour by his bad conduct, Eustace determined to possess his cousin at any hazard, and that Major Monthault had been wrought upon, by his earnest entreaties, to become his agent.
The woman who had personated a trooper's widow, and drawn the two ladies to the retired spot where Eustace was seized, gave such a description of the stranger who bribed her to fabricate a tale of distress as exactly tallied with the person of Eustace, but bore no resemblance to Monthault. Another was brought to swear that he had seen Dr. Beaumont's nephew in Oxford since its surrender to the Parliament. His long silence to his family was an inexplicable mystery; but to visit Oxford without throwing himself at his uncle's feet, and imploring pardon, was such a tacit acknowledgement of conscious unworthiness, as even the candour of Dr. Beaumont could not controvert. In an agony of mind, far exceeding all that he had endured for his despoiled fortunes, and only equalled by what he felt for his persecuted King; he requested Mr. Barton to discharge the accomplices, and hush up the business. He then returned home, clasped the trembling Constantia in his arms, and conjured her never to name her unworthy cousin. ”I would bid you not think of him,”
said he; ”but the viper will be remembered by its sting, after we have discovered it to be a poisonous reptile with a beautiful outside. And much grat.i.tude is due to Heaven, that the base infection of his nature has been fully disclosed, before you were bound to him by indissoluble ties.” Constantia asked if Monthault was the accuser of Eustace.
”Monthault,” replied the Doctor, ”is silent. A chain of evidence confirms, that he was merely an agent in this iniquitous design of tearing you from me.”--”Impossible,” replied Constance, ”never did agent embark with such eager pa.s.sion in the views of another. It was for himself, the monster pleaded; and it was only a mean attempt to quiet my cries for a.s.sistance, when he talked of carrying me to Eustace.--Fortunate dissembler, how well he contrives to throw the guilt of his own treasons on that ill-fated youth.”
”Dear, credulous girl,” returned the Doctor, ”I have often bid you love young Evellin, and do not wonder that you find it hard to unlearn that lesson. Yet, rest a.s.sured, it is not on dubious testimony, that I found my conviction of his being corrupted by the lax morality of these evil times, in which one party deems an attachment to the antient const.i.tution an excuse for debauchery, and the other uses the verbiage of religion as a commutation for obedience to its precepts. It is most true, Eustace was publicly disgraced by Lord Hopton, accused of crimes to which he pleaded guilty, suspected of others which he faintly denied.
With horror I must tell you that his unfortunate honourable father had the anguish of witnessing his shame.”
Constance raised her streaming eyes and clasped hands to Heaven, exclaiming, ”If his crimes have been any thing worse than the precipitation of thoughtless youth, there is no truth in man. Till his fame is cleared I will not name him. But I shall never cease to think of him till this heart ceases to beat, or rather till my intellects are too clouded to discern the difference between error and depravity. You have often said that one of the sorest calamities of this turbulent period is the celebrity acquired by successful wickedness, which encourages offenders to traffic largely in iniquity; but the fate of poor Eustace continues to exhibit the severity of retributive justice. Discarded by both his fathers, and divorced from his love, where has the pennyless outcast funds to feed the craving avarice of criminal a.s.sociates, to suborn accomplices, and to bribe witnesses? A dest.i.tute exile has at least presumptive evidence that he is innocent of stratagems which wealth alone could attempt; and surely wealth is always too selfish to forego the indulgencies which it p.a.w.ns its soul to purchase.”
The sensibility of Constantia Beaumont was as permanent as it was acute; her sense of honour was refined and delicate; but her high-seated love was fixed on those unalterable properties which not only rejected every light surmise to her lover's disadvantage, but also clung to the conviction of his integrity with a confidence which, in the present state of things, looked like obstinate credulity. No chain of circ.u.mstances, no concurring testimony could induce her to think Eustace treacherous or depraved. By his own mouth alone could he be condemned.
She must see his misdeeds and hear his confession before she would determine to recall her vows. With all the vivid hope of youthful inexperience, she continued to believe that he would return and confute his accusers. Months, nay, years, rolled away; the hope grew fainter. No certain tidings of his proceedings reached them after the fatal battle of Dartmoor, when Lord Hopton precipitately doomed him to ignominy. She had heard that his father commanded him to live and redeem his lost fame; and she often fancied he was busily employed in obeying that command. Indulging this idea, she hoped that his glory would burst upon them with such unquestionable splendour, that every tongue would applaud, while she took her hero by the hand, and asked her father to rescind the injunction which forbade her to avow her unchangeable affection.
CHAP. XV.
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