CHAPTER LXXIII.
Lord Stuart went up to Norman de Vere, and said gravely:
“Do you understand what I have been saying?”
“I have heard every word,” Norman answered; but he had a dazed look, as if his joy was too sudden and too great for comprehension.
Lord Stuart gravely said:
“When you married the woman who called herself Miss Acton, she had a husband already living, so her marriage to you was void in law, and your marriage with my niece was, therefore, lawful. Sweetheart is your wife still, and your boy has no stain on his name to prevent him from inheriting honors from an ancestry that was noble on both sides.”
“My God, it is true; I thank Thee!” Norman cried, fervently.
He was hastening toward Sweetheart, but when he saw her resting with her golden head on her mother’s breast, he drew back, feeling that the scene was too holy and sacred to be disturbed even by a husband’s yearning love.
“You understand now, Norman, that I was moved by interest for yourself when I let you think you had cause to be jealous of me. I did not want to betray her sin if I could avoid it, but I did not mean that you should ever live with her again,” Lord Stuart added.
Norman stood perfectly silent. He said to himself that now he need never betray what he knew of Camille’s sin. He was glad of it. The man’s noble heart was fain to shield her for the old love’s sake. Retribution had overtaken her in her guilty, shameless career. Needless for him to lift his hand to cast a single stone. She was crouching in her chair, terrified and shame-stricken for once, forgetting all her passionate defiance, livid with the thought that Lord Stuart knew all her sin, all her shame. Oh, why had she not taken his kind advice long ago? Why had she brazened it out like this?
“What are they going to do with me, Finette?” she asked, in a hollow, frightened tone.
“Put you in prison, I suppose. I am sure you deserve it,” was the sullen reply.
Lord Stuart heard the faltering question and the insolent reply. He turned to Camille.
“I think you will go quietly away, so that the law will not touch you. Am I right?” he said.
“Yes, I will go,” she said, with a shudder. “Come, Finette, you must pack my things.”
She dragged herself up from her chair and made an unsteady movement toward the door, cowed at last by the fate that lowered above her head. To be shut up alone in prison,away from Finette, the only friend she had left on earth; to see night and day the mocking face of her murdered husband grinning in the awful solitude—why, it was too horrible to contemplate. She was ready to crawl in the dust at Lord Stuart’s feet to avoid her threatening fate.
“I will go,” she muttered, abjectly again, as she strove to move; but just then she caught sight of something that still had power to turn the blood in her veins to liquid fire.
Thea had lifted her golden head at last from her mother’s breast, and Norman, who had watched most eagerly for that moment, had hastened to infold his darling in his yearning arms.
Camille’s abject submission gave way at that torturing sight. She forgot everything but her rage at the reunion of those two she had tried most eagerly and wickedly to put asunder. She threw up her arms, and, with maddening shrieks, fell writhing upon the floor.
Dr. Hinton hastened to her assistance, and said, a minute later:
“It is an attack of hysteria. I think, if you will all adjourn to the library, I can assist her maid to bring her around quicker.”
They went gladly enough, and presently Camille was far enough recovered to go upstairs to dress for her final departure from Verelands.