Part 31 (1/2)

After all, Lord Arleigh had a perfect right to please himself--to do as he would; if he did not think Madaline's birth placed her greatly beneath him, no one else need suggest such a thing. From being a violent opponent of the marriage, Lady Peters became one of its most strenuous supporters. So they went away to St. Mildred's, where the great tragedy of Madaline's life was to begin.

On the morning that she went way, the d.u.c.h.ess sent for her to her room.

She told her all that she intended doing as regarded the elaborate and magnificent _trousseau_ preparing for her. Madaline was overwhelmed.

”You are too good to me,” she said--”you spoil me. How am I to thank you?”

”Your wedding-dress--plain, simple, but rich, to suit the occasion--will be sent to St. Mildred's,” said the d.u.c.h.ess--”also a handsome traveling costume; but all the rest of the packages can be sent to Beechgrove. You will need them only there.”

Madaline kissed the hand extended to her.

”I shall never know how to thank you,” she said.

A peculiar smile came over the darkly-beautiful face.

”I think you will,” returned the d.u.c.h.ess ”I can imagine what blessings you will some day invoke on my name.”

Then she withdrew her hand suddenly from the touch of the pure sweet lips.

”Good-by, Madaline,” she said; and it was long before the young girl saw the fair face of the d.u.c.h.ess again.

Just as she was quitting the room Philippa placed a packet in her hand.

”You will carefully observe the directions given in this?” she said; and Madaline promised to do so.

The time at St. Mildred's soon pa.s.sed. It was a quiet, picturesque village, standing at the foot of a green hill facing the bay. There was little to be seen, except the s.h.i.+ning sea and the blue sky. An old church, called St. Mildred's, stood on the hill-top. Few strangers ever visited the little watering-place. The residents were people who preferred quiet and beautiful scenery to everything else. There was a hotel, called the Queen's, where the few strangers that came mostly resided; and just facing the sea stood a newly-built terrace of houses called Sea View, where other visitors also sojourned.

It was just the place for lovers' dreams--a s.h.i.+ning sea, golden sands, white cliffs with little nooks and bays, pretty and shaded walks on the hill-top.

Madaline's great happiness was delightful to see. The fair face grew radiant in its loveliness; the blue eyes shone brightly. There was the delight, too, every day of inspecting the parcels that arrived one after the other; but the greatest pleasure of all was afforded by the wedding-dress. It was plain, simple, yet, in its way, a work of art--a rich white silk with little lace or tr.i.m.m.i.n.g, yet looking so like a wedding-dress that no one could mistake it. There were snowy gloves and shoes--in fact everything was perfect, selected by no common taste, the gift of no illiberal hand. Was it foolish of her to kiss the white folds while the tears filled her eyes, and to think of herself that she was the happiest creature under the sun? Was it foolish of her to touch the pretty bridal robes with soft, caressing fingers, as though they were some living thing that she loved--to place them where the sunbeams fell on them, to admire them in every different fold and arrangement?

Then the eventful day came--Lord Arleigh and Madaline were to be married at an early hour.

”Not,” said Lord Arleigh, proudly, ”that there is any need for concealment--why should there be?--but you see, Lady Peters if it were known that it was my wedding-day, I have so many friends, so many relatives, that privacy would be impossible for us; therefore the world has not been enlightened as to when I intended to claim my darling for my own.”

”It is a strange marriage for an Arleigh,” observed Lady Peters--”the first of its kind, I am sure. But I think you are right--your plan is wise.”

All the outward show made at the wedding consisted in the rapid driving of a carriage from the hotel to the church--a carriage containing two ladies--one young, fair, charming as a spring morning, the other older, graver, and more sedate.

The young girl was fair and sweet, her golden hair s.h.i.+ning through the marriage vail, her blue eyes wet with unshed tears, her face flushed with daintiest rose-leaf bloom.

It was a pleasant spectacle to see the dark, handsome face of her lover as he greeted her, the love that shone in his eyes, the pride of his manner, as though he would place her before the whole world, and defy it to produce one so graceful or so fair. Lady Peters' face softened and her heart beat as she walked up to the altar with them. This was true love.

So the grand old words of the marriage-service were p.r.o.nounced--they were promised to each other for better for worse, for weal for woe--never to part until death parted them--to be each the other's world.

It was the very morning for a bride. Heaven and earth smiled their brightest, the suns.h.i.+ne was golden, the autumn flowers bloomed fair, the autumn foliage had a.s.sumed its rich hues of crimson and of burnished gold; there was a bright light over the sea and the hill-tops.

Only one little _contretemps_ happened at the wedding. Madaline smiled at it. Lord Arleigh was too happy even to notice it, but Lady Peters grew pale at the occurrence; for, according to her old-fas.h.i.+oned ideas, it augured ill.