Part 7 (1/2)
Our vigilant duenna had gradually risen to a sitting posture, and drawn nearer and nearer, and as the narrator's voice sank into silence she said with effusion, ”Well, _you_ are a good man, I guess.”
But f.a.n.n.y Meyrick sat as if entranced. The gale had died away, and, to break the spell, I asked her if she wanted to take one peep on deck, to see if there was a star in the heavens.
There was no star, but a light rising and falling with the s.h.i.+p's motion, which was p.r.o.nounced by a sailor to be Queenstown light, shone in the distance.
The Father was to leave us there. ”We shall not make it to-night,”
said the sailor. ”It is too rough. Early in the morning the pa.s.sengers will land.”
”I wish,” said f.a.n.n.y with a deep sigh, as if wakening from a dream, ”that the Church of Rome was at the bottom of the sea!”
CHAPTER VIII.
Arrived at our dock, I hurried off to catch the train for London. The Meyricks lingered for a few weeks in Wales before coming to settle down for the winter. I was glad of it, for I could make my arrangements unhampered. So I carefully eliminated Clarges street from my list of lodging-houses, and finally ”ranged” myself with a neat landlady in Sackville street.
How anxiously I awaited the first letter from Bessie! As the banker's clerk handed it over the counter to me, instead of the heavy envelope I had hoped for, it was a thin slip of an affair that fluttered away from my hand. It was so very slim and light that I feared to open it there, lest it should be but a mocking envelope, nothing more.
So I hastened back to my cab, and, ordering the man to drive to the law-offices, tore it open as I jumped in. It enclosed simply a printed slip, cut from some New York paper--a list of the Algeria's pa.s.sengers.
”What joke is this?” I said as I scanned it more closely.
By some spite of fortune my name was printed directly after the Meyrick party. Was it for this, this paltry thing, that Bessie has denied me a word? I turned over the envelope, turned it inside out--not a penciled word even!
The shadow that I had seen on that good-bye visit to Philadelphia was clear to me now. I had said at Lenox, repeating the words after Bessie with fatal emphasis, ”I am glad, very glad, that f.a.n.n.y Meyrick is to sail in October. I would not have her stay on this side for worlds!”
Then the next day, twenty-four hours after, I told her that I too was going abroad. Coward that I was, not to tell her at first! She might have been sorry, vexed, but not _suspicious_.
Yes, that was the ugly word I had to admit, and to admit that I had given it room to grow.
My first hesitancy about taking her with me, my transfer from the Russia to the later steamer, and, to crown all, that leaf from f.a.n.n.y's pocket-book: ”I shall love him for ever and ever”!
And yet she _had_ faith in me. She had told f.a.n.n.y Meyrick we were engaged. _Had she not_?
My work in London was more tedious and engrossing than I had expected.
Even a New York lawyer has much to learn of the law's delay in those pompous old offices amid the fog. Had I been working for myself, I should have thrown up the case in despair, but advices from our office said ”Stick to it,” and I stayed.
Eating out my own heart with anxiety whenever I thought of my home affair, perhaps it was well for me that I had the monotonous, musty work that required little thought, but only a persistent plodding and a patient holding of my end of the clue.
In all these weeks I had nothing from Bessie save that first cruel envelope. Letter after letter went to her, but no response came. I wrote to Mrs. Sloman too, but no answer. Then I bethought me of Judge Hubbard, but received in reply a note from one of his sons, stating that his father was in Florida--that he had communicated with him, but regretted that he was unable to give me Miss Stewart's present address.
Why did I not seek f.a.n.n.y Meyrick? She must have come to London long since, and surely the girls were in correspondence. I was too proud.
She knew of our relations: Bessie had told her. I could not bring myself to reveal to her how tangled and gloomy a mystery was between us. I could explain nothing without letting her see that she was the unconscious cause.
At last, when one wretched week after another had gone by, and we were in the new year, I could bear it no longer. ”Come what will, I must know if Bessie writes to her.”
I went to Clarges street. My card was carried into the Meyricks'
parlor, and I followed close upon it. f.a.n.n.y was sitting alone, reading by a table. She looked up in surprise as I stood in the doorway. A little coldly, I thought, she came forward to meet me, but her manner changed as she took my hand.