For Woman's Love Part- 2 by Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth (i love reading books txt) 📕
- Author: Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth
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Constantly Assured His Girl-Wife That The Expected Epistle Would Surely
Come In Time, For He Was The 'Old Man's' Only Son, Whom He Would Not Be
Likely To Discard.
"Meanwhile Their Money Was Running Low. The Youth Was Anxious To Travel
And See The New World, And To Take His Bride With Him, But He Could Not
Do So Without Funds. At The End Of Six Weeks After He Had Written The
First Letter To His Father He Wrote A Second, But Received No Answer;
Later Still He Wrote A Third, With No Better Success.
"They Had Gone A Little Into Debt, In Order To Eke Out Their Little
Ready Money Until The Longed-For Letters Of Credit Should Come From
England; But At The End Of Six Months Credit And Cash Were Nearly
Exhausted.
"One Morning In May The Boy-Husband Took Leave Of The Girl-Wife, Saying,
As He Kissed Her Good-By, That He Was Going Down Into The City To See If
He Could Get Some Work To Do.
"Without The Least Misgiving, She Received His Farewell Kiss, And Saw
Him Depart--Watched Him All The Way Down The Street, Until He Got To
Second Avenue And Boarded A Down-Town Car.
"Then She Re-Entered The Little Gate, And Began To Tend The Jonquils And
Hyacinths That Were Just Coming Into Bloom In Her Little Flower Garden.
She Did Not Expect To See Him Until Night, Nor--Did She See Him Even
Then. When The Little Gate Opened At Eight O'clock And A Man Came Up The
Walk Leading To The Front Door At Which She Stood, He Was Not Her
Husband, But The Letter Carrier, Who Put A Letter In Her Hand And Went
Away.
"She Ran Into The House, And Lighted The Gas To Read Her Letter. Though
It Gave Her A Shock, It Did Not Shake Her Faith In Her Boy.
"The Letter Told Her, In Effect, That Alfred Whyte, When He Left Her
That Morning, Had Started To Go To England In The Only Way By Which He
Could Get There--That Is, By Working His Passage As A Deck Hand On Board
An Outward Bound Ship; That He Had Decided On This Course So As To Get A
Personal Interview With His Father, To Whom He Would Go As A Penitent
Prodigal Son; For He Was Sure Of Obtaining By This Means Forgiveness,
And Assistance That Would Enable Him To Return And Bring His Little Wife
Back To England, Where They Would Thenceforth Live In Comfort And
Luxury; That The Reason He Had Not Confided To Her His Intention Of
Making The Voyage Was Because He Dreaded Opposition From Her That Might
Have Led Him To Abandon The One Plan By Which He Hoped To Better Their
Condition.
"He Concluded By Entreating Her Not To Think For One Instant That He
Intended To Desert Her, Who Was Dearer To Him Than His Own Life, But To
Trust In Him As He Trusted In Her. In A Postscript He Told Her Where To
Find The Small Balance Of Money They Had Left, As He Had Only Taken
Enough For His Car Fare To The City. In A Second Postscript He Promised
Part 2 Chapter 21 (Who Was Rose Flowers) Pg 57To Write By Every Opportunity. In A Third And Last Postscript He Begged
Her To Keep Up Her Heart.
"It Seemed A Frank Letter, Yet It Was Reticent Upon One Point--The Name
Of The Ship On Which He Had Sailed. This Omission Might Have Been
Accidental. It Certainly Did Not Raise Any Doubt Of The Boy's Good Faith
In The Mind Of The Girl.
"She Cried A Great Deal Over The Separation From Her Lad, And She Made A
Confidant Of The Elderly Irishwoman Who Was Her Sole Servant.
"After Two Weeks, Ann Began To Watch Daily For The Letter Carrier, In
Hope Of Getting A Letter From Alfred; But Day After Day, Week After
Week, Passed And None Came. But There Came News Of The Wreck Of The
Porpoise, Which Had Sailed From New York For London On The Very Day That
Alfred Whyte Had Left The Country--And Which Had Gone Down In A Storm In
Mid-Ocean With All On Board.
"But As Numerous Ships Had Left New York On That Day Bound For Various
British Ports, It Was Impossible To Discover Whether The Boy Was On
Board, Or If He Shipped Under His Own Name Or An Assumed One.
"Ann Cried More Than Ever For A Few Days, But Then Seemed To Give Up Her
Lad For Lost, And To Resign Herself To The 'Inevitable.'
"She Wrote To Mr. Alfred Whyte, Senior, But Got No Reply To Her Letter;
Again And Again She Wrote With No Better Success. The Little Balance Of
Money Left By Her Boy-Husband Was All Gone. She Began To Sell Off The
Trifles Of Jewelry That He Had Given Her.
"One Morning The Letter Carrier Left A Letter With A London Postmark
Containing A Bill Of Exchange For A Hundred Pounds, And Not One Word
Besides.
"Had It Come From Her Boy-Husband, Or From His Father? She Could Not
Tell.
"Well, To Be Brief, She Never Saw Nor Heard Of Him Again. She Lived
Comfortably With Her Motherly Old Servant, Enjoyed Life Thoroughly And
Grew More Beautiful Every Day, And This Fool's Paradise Lasted As Long
As Her Money Did. Before Her Last Dollar Was Gone, She Saw The
Advertisement In The _Pursuivant_ For A Nursery Governess, And Answered
It, As Has Been Told.
"This, My Dear Cora, Is The Substance Of The Story Told Me By Ann White
On The Day That I Called On Her In Answer To Her Letter. What Do You
Think Of It?" Inquired Mr. Fabian When He Had Finished His Narrative.
"I Think The Cruel Neglect Of Her Step-Parents And The Sufferings Of Her
Childhood Accountable For All Her Faults, And I Feel Very Sorry For
Her, Notwithstanding That She Seems To Be A Very Heartless Animal,"
Replied Corona.
"That Is The Secret Of The Wonderful Preservation Of Her Youth And
Part 2 Chapter 21 (Who Was Rose Flowers) Pg 58Beauty Even Up To This Present Time. Nothing Wears A Woman Out As Fast
As Her Own Heart."
"You Engaged Her As You Promised To Do, But Why Did You Introduce Her At
Rockhold As A Single Girl, And Why Under An Alias?" Gravely Inquired
Corona.
"I Introduced Her As A Single Girl At Her Own Request Because Of Her
Extreme Youth And Her Timidity. She Naturally Shrank From Being Known As
A Discarded Wife Or A Doubtful Widow. Besides, I Never Did Say She Was A
Single Girl. I Merely Presented Her As Rose Flowers, And Left It To Be
Inferred From Her Baby Face That She Was So."
"But Why Rose Flowers When Her Name Was Ann White?"
"What A Cross-Questioner You Are, Corona! But I Will Answer You. Again
It Was By Her Own Desire That I Presented Her As Rose Flowers, Which Was
Not An Alias, As She Explained To Me, But A Part Of Her True Name. She
Had Been Baptized As Rose Anna Flowers, Which Was The Maiden Name Of Her
Grandmother, Her Father's Mother."
Cora Might Have Asked Another Question, Not So Easily Answered, If She
Had Known The Circumstances To Which It Related, Namely: Why Mr. Fabian
Had Fabricated That False Story Of The Young Governess Which He Palmed
Upon His Parents; But, In Fact, Cora, At That Time A Child Seven Years
Old, Had Never Heard Of It. But She Made Another Inquiry.
"What Became Of Rose Flowers After She Left Us? Did She Really Go To
Another Place? Who Was--Captain Stillwater?"
"Mr. Fabian Drove Slowly And Thoughtfully On Without Answering Her
Question Until She Had Repeated It. Then He Said:
"Cora, My Dear, That Is A Story I Cannot Tell You. Let It Be Enough For
Me To Say, The Stillwater Episode In The Life Of This Lady Is The Ground
Upon Which I Forbid My Wife To Visit Her And Object To My Niece
Associating With Her."
"Does Violet Know The Stillwater Story?"
"No; Not So Much Of It Even As You Have Heard. Now, Look Here, Cora, You
Think It Inconsistent Perhaps That I Should Have Brought This Woman To
Rockhold Years Ago To Become Your Governess, And Now, When She Is My
Father's Wife, Object To Your Intimacy With Her. In The First Instance
She Has Been Far, Very Far, 'More Sinned Against Than Sinning;' She Had
Been Very Imprudent, That Was All. She Was Really The Wife, By Scotch
Law, Of The Boy She Ran Away With And Then Lost. I Saw Nothing In Her
Case That Ought To Prevent Her Entrance Into A Respectable Family, And
Heaven Knows I Pitied Her And Tried To Save Her By Bringing Her To
Rockhold. I Saved Her Only For A Few Years. After She Left Us--But
There, I Cannot Tell You That Story! You Must Not Be Intimate With Her."
"Yet She Is My Grandfather's Wife!"
Part 2 Chapter 21 (Who Was Rose Flowers) Pg 59
"An Irreparable Misfortune. I Can't Expose Her Life To Him; Such A Blow
To His Pride Might Be His Death, At His Age. No! Events Must Take Their
Course; But I Hope He Will Not Take Her To Any Place Where She Is Likely
To Be Recognized. Nor Do I Think He Will. He Is Aging Fast, And Will Be
Likely To Live Quietly At Rockhold."
"And I Think She Also Would Avoid Such Risks. She Was Terribly
Frightened When She Recognized The Dean Of Olivet. Was He Really Her
Stepfather, The Once Poor Curate?"
"Yes. You See While They Were Lionizing Him In The Eastern Cities, His
Portrait, With A Short Biographical Notice, Was Published In One Of The
Illustrated Weeklies, Where I Read Of Him, And Identified Him By
Comparing Notes With What I Had Heard."
"How Came He To Rise So High?"
"Oh, He Was A Learned Divine And Eloquent Orator. He Was Well Connected,
Too. It Would Seem That A Very Few Months After His Step-Daughter's
Flight He Was Inducted Into That Rich Living For Which He Had Been
Waiting So Many Years. From That Position His Rise Was Slow Indeed,
Covering A Period Of Twenty Years, Until A Few Months Ago, When He Was
Made Dean Of Olivet."
"To Think That A Man Capable Of Quarreling With His Wife And Ill-Using
Their Step-Child Should Fill So Sacred A Position In The Church!"
Exclaimed Cora.
"Yes; But You See, My Dear, The Church Is His Profession, Not His
Vocation. He Is A Brilliant
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