Part 4 (1/2)

It was a wondrously beautiful face which met her view--the face of a young girl, whose golden curls rippling softly over her white shoulders, and whose eyes of l.u.s.trous blue, reminded Edith of the angels about which Rachel sang so devoutly every Sunday. To Edith there was about that face a nameless but mighty fascination, a something which made her warm blood chill and tingle in her veins, while there crept over her a second time dim visions of something far back in the past--of purple fruit on vine-clad hills--of music soft and low--of days and nights on some tossing, moving object-- and then of a huge white building, embowered in tall green trees, whose milk-white blossoms she gathered in her hand; while distinct from all the rest was this face, on which she gazed so earnestly.

It is true that all these thoughts were not clear to her mind; it was rather a confused mixture of ideas, one of which faded ere another came, so that there seemed no real connection between them; and had she embodied them in words, they would have been recognized as the idle fancies of a strange, old-fas.h.i.+oned child.

But the picture--there WAS something in it which held Edith motionless, while her tongue seemed struggling to articulate a NAME, but failed in the attempt; and when, at last, her lips did move, they uttered the word MARIE, as if she too, were a.s.sociated with that sweet young face.

”Oh, but she's jolly,” Edith said, ”I don't wonder Mr. Arthur loves her,” and she felt her own heart throb with a strange affection for the beautiful original of that daguerreotype.

In the hall without there was the sound of a footstep. It was coming to that room. It was Grace herself, Edith thought; and knowing she would be censured for touching what did not belong to her, she thrust the locket into her bosom, intending to return it as soon as possible, and springing out upon the piazza, scampered away, leaving the water pail to betray her recent presence.

It was NOT Grace, as she had supposed, but Arthur St. Claire himself come to put away the locket, which he suddenly remembered to have left upon the table. Great was his consternation when he found it gone, and that no amount of searching could bring it to light. He did not notice the empty pail the luckless Edith had left, although he stumbled over it twice in his feverish anxiety to find his treasure. But what he failed to observe was discovered by Grace, whom he summoned to his aid, and who exclaimed:

”Edith Hastings has been here! She must be the thief!”

”Edith, Grace, Edith--it cannot be,” and Arthur's face indicated plainly the pain it would occasion him to find that it was so.

”I hope you may be right, Arthur, but I have not so much confidence in her as you seem to have. There she is now,”

continued Grace, spying her across the yard and calling to her to come.

Blus.h.i.+ng, stammering, and cowering like a guilty thing, Edith entered the room, for she heard Arthur's voice and knew that he was there to witness her humiliation.

”Edith,” said Mrs. Atherton, sternly, ”what have you been doing?”

No answer from Edith save an increase of color upon her face, and with her suspicions confirmed, Grace went on,

”What have you in your pocket?”

”'Taint in my pocket; it's in my bosom,” answered Edith, drawing it forth and holding it to view.

”How dare you steal it,” asked Grace, and instantly there came into Edith's eyes the same fiery, savage gleam from which Mrs.

Atherton always shrank, and beneath which she now involuntarily quailed.

It had never occurred to Edith that she could be accused of theft, and she stamped at first like a little fury, then throwing herself upon the sofa, sobbed out, ”Oh, dear--oh, dear, I wish G.o.d would let me die. I don't want to live any longer in such a mean, nasty world. I want to go to Heaven, where everything is jolly.”

”You are a fit subject for Heaven,” said Mrs. Atherton, scornfully, and instantly the pa.s.sionate sobbing ceased; the tears were dried in the eyes which blazed with insulted dignity as Edith arose, and looking her mistress steadily in the face, replied,

”I suppose you think I meant to steal and keep the pretty picture, but the one who was in here with me knows I didn't.”

”Who was that?” interrupted Grace, her color changing visibly at the child's reverent reply.

”G.o.d was with me, and I wish he hadn't let me touch it, but he did. It lay on the writing desk and I took it to the window to see it. Oh, isn't she jolly?” and as she recalled the beautiful features, the hard expression left her own, and she went on, ”I couldn't take my eyes from her; they would stay there, and I was almost going to speak her name, when I heard you coming, and ran away. I meant to bring it back, Mr. Arthur,” and she turned appealingly to him. ”I certainly did, and you believe me, don't you? I never told a lie in my life.”

Ere Arthur could reply, Grace chimed in.

”Believe you? Of course not. You stole the picture and intended to keep it. I cannot have you longer in my family, for nothing is safe. I shall send you back at once.”

There was a look in the large eyes which turned so hopelessly from Arthur to Grace, and from Grace back to Arthur, like that the hunted deer wears when hotly pursued in the chase. The white lips moved but uttered no sound and the fingers closed convulsively around the golden locket which Arthur advanced to take away.

”Let me see her once more,” she said.

He could not refuse her request, and touching the spring he held it up before her.