Volume Ii Part 19 (1/2)

”Oh, father, do not speak like that! I will do all you wish.”

”Out of your own loving heart?”

”Yes, father, out of my own loving heart!”

”Swear it!” he cried, in a loud, commanding tone, pus.h.i.+ng his dead wife's prayer-book to the guileless girl. ”Kiss your mother's prayer-book, and prove to me whether you are lying or speaking the truth!”

In an impulse of fervour and self-reproach she kissed the prayer-book.

He took it from her hands.

”You are a witness, Jeremiah,” he said.

”I am a witness, sir,” said Jeremiah.

”You have sworn,” said Miser Farebrother to his daughter, ”that you will not leave Parksides while I live, unless I drive you forth. That is your oath.”

”Yes, father.” But she said it with a sinking heart. It seemed to her as if a net were being spread around her, from which it was impossible to escape.

In her bed that night this impression of a forced, inexorable imprisonment became accentuated by a review of what had pa.s.sed between herself and her father. For what other reason had he made her swear upon her dead mother's prayer-book that she would not leave Parksides without his permission? Could he not have taken her word? Was she to regard all that he had said as of equal value with Mrs. Pamflett's false statements? Were they all leagued against her? and what would be the end of the plot? Could they now compel her to marry Jeremiah Pamflett? No; she would endure a thousand deaths first. But she was imprisoned here in Parksides; she had no longer a will of her own. Her father had turned her only friends from his house, and he and they were the bitterest enemies; he had turned her lover from his house; she was cut off from all she held dear, and was here unprotected, at the mercy of Mrs.

Pamflett and her son, and of her father, whose inexplicable behaviour toward her afflicted her with shuddering doubts. Had she been aware of what transpired between her aunt Leth and her father after she had fainted in the earlier part of the day, she would not so readily have fallen into the trap her father had set for her.

When she fell to the ground Aunt Leth and Fred Cornwall started forward with sympathizing eagerness to a.s.sist her, but they were motioned sternly back by Miser Farebrother.

”I have ordered you to leave my house,” he said. ”I can attend to my daughter.”

Sadly they turned to the door, but Aunt Leth came swiftly back.

”Listen to me, my dead sister's husband,” she said, in a quick, trembling voice. ”At my sister's death-bed, in this very room, I promised her to look after her child, my poor niece lying here at our feet, as tenderly as though she were one of my own. I love her as my own child, and I shall redeem my promise to my dead sister. This person”--she pointed to Jeremiah Pamflett--”to whom you say you have promised your daughter's hand, is utterly unworthy of her. She loves an honourable gentleman, and what I can do to bring about her happiness shall be done. If you have a plot against her welfare I will endeavour to circ.u.mvent it. My heart and the hearts of my husband and children are ever open to her. Our home is hers; she can come to us at any moment, and we will receive her with joy. In this house there was never for her nor for her dead mother the slightest sign of love.”

”My daughter has told you so?” demanded Miser Farebrother.

”She has not told me so,” said the indignant woman. ”She has always spoken of you with tenderness and gentleness. You know best how you deserved it at her hands. If she cannot find love and protection here, she can find them with me and mine!” She knelt and kissed Phoebe's pale face. ”My sweet child! so happy but an hour ago! Come to me if they oppress you here--my child! my daughter!”

”Bundle them out,” cried Miser Farebrother, ”neck and crop!”

They had no right to stay, and they left the place mournfully.

”Do not be false to Phoebe,” said Aunt Leth to Fred.

”No need to say that to me, Aunt Leth,” said the young fellow.

”Phoebe, and no other woman, shall be my wife.”

This encounter it was between Aunt Leth and Miser Farebrother which had caused the miser to extract a binding oath from Phoebe that she would not leave Parksides without his permission.

”How was that done, Jeremiah?” he asked, when his daughter left the room.

”Capitally! capitally, sir!” said Jeremiah. ”What an actor you would have made!”