Mrs. Kemp hastened to the door to meet her niece, and the next moment the echo of a gay young voice, bright and joyous, rang through the corridor.
"She must be a very happy girl, and light of heart," sighed Dorothy.
Katy, the maid, had nothing to say. Much to Dorothy's surprise, they did not come to the room in which she was awaiting them, and she heard them go on to the drawing-room, and the door close behind them.
Ten, twenty minutes, half an hour passed, still they did not come to her, though the sound of their merry laughter fell upon her ears from time to time. Katy tried to arouse her mistress' interest, but it was useless—the girl never moved from her position, sitting pale and white in the great arm-chair, with her sightless eyes turned toward the door.
Suddenly she turned to Katy with a great sob.
"They have forgotten me," she said.
Katy had come to this conclusion long before.
"I will tell them you are waiting," she replied, and as she spoke she hurried from the room to the drawing-room. On the threshold she came face to face with Mr. Kendal, and at a glance she could not help but notice the happy, flushed look on his face.
"Miss Dorothy sent me in search of you, sir," shesaid, with a low courtesy. The smile on his lips died away in an instant, giving place to a dark frown of impatience.
"What does she want?" he asked, sharply.
"She says she is so lonesome, sir, and sent me to tell you so."
"Is there a minute of my life that she is not sending for me—expecting me to be at her beck and call?" he said. "I am going out into the conservatory to get some flowers for Miss Vincent. I guess it won't hurt Dorothy to wait a little while, will it?"
"Is that what I shall tell her?" asked the girl, quietly.
"Tell her whatever you like," he said to the girl, hurrying on and leaving her standing there with a very white, sorrowful face.
Slowly she walked back to the breakfast-room, her heart burning with indignation. Dorothy met her eagerly.
"Are they coming?" she asked.
"Very soon now, miss," replied Katy.
"What delayed them?"
"I—I think they were getting a cup of tea for the strange young lady, miss. You know she came quite a long way, and she must be very tired."
"Why, that is very true," said Dorothy. "I wonder that I never thought of that before. It seemed as though I was not missed," and a sigh trembled over the girl's pale lips as she spoke.
A few moments later Kendal's step was heard in the corridor.
Dorothy sprang eagerly to meet him, and threw her arms impulsively around his neck.
Was it only her fancy, or did he draw back from the usual caress as though he did not care to receive it?
Oh! surely not. Since this horrible blindness had come upon her, her imagination was running riot against her judgment. The one great fear of her life was that he might cease to love her, now that this great affliction had come upon her, and she noted every word, every action, and every touch of his dear hand, and weighed it over in her mind, for hours at a time, when she found herself alone.
God pity her if that love should ever fail her!
"Shall Miss Vincent see me soon, Harry?" she asked, nestling her head against his shoulder, her little hands seeking his.
"Very soon now," he responded. Was it her fancy, or did even his voice seem changed?
"Do you like her?" asked Dorothy, wistfully.
"Like her?" he cried. "Why, she is charming!"
"Is she fair of face?" asked Dorothy, slowly.
"The most beautiful girl I have ever seen!" he cried, enthusiastically, all forgetful of the girl by his side, to whom his troth was plighted.
The words struck Dorothy's heart with a cold chill, as a blast of icy winter wind strikes death to the heart of a tender hot-house flower when its chill breath sweeps across it.
"They say you went down to the train to meet her," said Dorothy.
"Yes; Mrs. Kemp wanted me to," he responded; "and I shall never forget that meeting with her niece while life lasts, it was so ludicrous. I arrived at the depot just as the train had stopped, and the passengerswere already pouring from the car. In my haste to reach the throng I slipped upon a banana peel, and the next instant I was plunging headlong forward, bumping straight into an old lady carrying numerous bundles and boxes, who had just alighted from the train.
"There was a crash and a yell, and a roar of laughter from the by-standers; and no wonder, for I had crashed directly into a huge jar of jam which she held in her hand, and in less time than it takes to tell it I was completely besmeared with it from head to foot. For once in my life I got enough jam in my mouth, and as I scrambled to my feet I beheld a young lady standing before me screaming with laughter.
"At a glance I knew it could be none other than Miss Vincent. What I said as I hastily stepped up to her is but a confused memory to me. I managed to articulate that I had been sent from Gray Gables with a carriage for her. The more I said the more she screamed with laughter, in which I could not help joining to have saved my life.
"'What! ride through the town with a jammed-up man like that!' she ejaculated. 'Why, that would be too sweet for anything—so sweet that all the bees in the clover fields we passed would come flying after us to enjoy the sport.'
"The laugh that followed fairly made the rafters of the old depot ring; and at this juncture a friend in need came to my assistance—one of my old chums—and in a trice had stripped off my coat and hat, and replaced them by a new overcoat and Derby hat which he had just purchased. And when the luckless jam was washed from my face 'Richard was himself again.'
"'Now you look something like a respectable human being,' she declared, as I helped her into the carriage.
"And all during the drive home we had the greatest kind of a laugh over my ludicrous mishap. It was forming each other's acquaintance under difficulties, as she phrased it. I can truthfully say that I never was so much embarrassed before a young girl in all my life. But do you know, Dorothy," he went on, "that that laughable incident which happened made us better acquainted with each other during that half hour's ride home than if we had met under ordinary circumstances and known each other for long months?"
Dorothy laughed heartily at the highly amusing scene which he pictured so graphically, and said to herself that now she could understand why Harry and this strange young girl were laughing so gayly together as they came up the graveled walk.
"You will be sure to like her," cried Harry, enthusiastically. "I will go and fetch her to you now."
But just as he was about to put his intention into execution, they heard the voice of Mrs. Kemp and her niece outside, and they entered an instant later.
"Dorothy," said Mrs. Kemp, "my niece, Iris, is here. Iris, this is Dorothy. I am sure you two girls will love each other dearly."
Dorothy, turned hastily toward the direction from whence the sound proceeded, holding out her little white hands nervously, a great hectic flush stealing up into her pale face.
"Welcome to Gray Gables, Miss Vincent—Iris," she said in her sweet, tremulous, girlish voice. "I—I would cross the room to where you are standing, if I could, but I can not. I can not look upon your face to welcome you, for—I am—blind!"
There was afrou-frouof skirts upon the velvet carpet, and the next moment Iris Vincent's arms were about her.
"There could not be a sweeter welcome, Dorothy—if I may call you so—and I am sure we shall get on famously together," murmured Miss Vincent, and a pair of ripe red lips met Dorothy's; but the kiss was as light as the brush of a butterfly's wings against the petals of a rose, and there was no warmth in the clasp of the soft, ringed fingers.
Somehow, although the stranger's voice was sweet as the sound of a silver lute, and her manner caressing, Dorothy did not feel quite at home with her.
"If I should judge by the tone of her voice and the words she utters, my fancy would lead me to believe that she was very beautiful," thought Dorothy. "But then Katy said that she was plain, very plain of face, although Harry has said that she was beautiful. No doubt he wanted to leave a good impression on my mind regarding her."
The evening that followed was a happy one for Dorothy, because, even without being coaxed, Harry signified his intention of remaining in the house, instead of going out to the club, as was his custom.
It had always been a deep grievance of Dorothy's that her musical accomplishments were so meager.
She only knew a few accompaniments that she had picked up, while Miss Vincent played divinely.
And her voice—ah! it sounded like the chiming of silver bells. And then, too, she knew so many beautiful songs, and they were all such tender love songs.
She was so glad that Harry liked them, too, and her poor face would flush scarlet, and her white lids droop over her sightless eyes, as the sweet singer's voice rose and thrilled over some tender love words; for she felt sure that her Harry was looking at her with all love's tender passion in his glorious dark eyes.
It was quite late when the group that was gathered in the drawing-room dispersed that evening; but when the girls found themselves alone in their own room, which they were to share together, they sat down for a comfortable chat ere they retired.
"Do you think you will like Gray Gables?" asked Dorothy.
"It seems pleasant enough," returned Iris, with a yawn; "but it's not the house so much, it's the people in the neighborhood. Are there many young folks hereabouts?"
"Quite a number."
"Are they very jolly, or are they terribly dull?"
"Well, about as jolly as Mr. Kendal," laughed Dorothy. "He's not so very jolly, and yet he is wonderfully good company."
"Yes, he is indeed," assented Miss Vincent. "Is he rich?" she asked, point-blank, in the very next breath.
"No," returned Dorothy; "but he may be well off some day, I hope."
"Handsome and poor! That's too bad—that's a poor combination!" sighed Miss Vincent, her countenance falling. "But tell me about him, Dorothy, and—and how he ever happened to take a fancy to a quiet little mouse like yourself. I have heard that it was your guardian's wish, as he was dying, and that the idea was quite a surprise to him—to Mr. Kendal, I mean. Is that true?"
"Yes," assented Dorothy, thoughtlessly enough.
She would not have answered the question in that way could she have seen the eager anxiety on the face of the girl who asked it.
"Does he make love to you very much?" whispered Iris, laying her soft cheek close against the blind girl's. "Forgive the question, but, do you know, I have always had a longing to know just what engaged people said to each other and how they acted—whether they grew more affectionate, or, after the grand climax of an engagement had been entered into, if—if somehow they did not act a little constrained toward each other."
Dorothy laughed long and merrily at the quaint ideas of her new friend. But, then, no doubt all girls wished to know that. She had done so herself once.
"You do not answer me," murmured Miss Vincent. "Now, please don't be unkind, Dorothy, when I'm just dying to know."
"Well," said Dorothy, waxing very confidential, after the fashion of girls, "I'll tell youmyexperience; but mind, I don't say that it is like every other girl's. Harry has been just a trifle bashful ever since the afternoon that he asked me to—to be his wife, andjust a little constrained; but I always account for it in this way: that he does not want me to think him silly and spoony. He has grown, oh! ever so dignified. Why, he hardly ever says anything more about love—he thinks he has said all there is to say. And his caresses are the same way—just a little bit constrained, you know."
Iris Vincent had learned all she cared to know.
"Thank you, dear, ever so much, for gratifying my curiosity," she said aloud; but in her own heart she said:
"I knew it—I knew it! Handsome Harry Kendal does not love this girl with whom they have forced him into a betrothal. No wonder he looks sad and melancholy, with a prospect before him of marrying a blind wife! Ah, me! it is too dreadful a fate to even contemplate."
She looked complacently in the mirror at her own face. Well might Harry Kendal have remarked that it was as beautiful as a poet's dream.
Nothing could have been more exquisitely lovely than the deep, velvety, violet eyes, almost purple in their glorious depths, and the bronze-gold hair, such as Titian loved to paint, that fell in heavy curls to her slender waist.
One would scarcely meet in a life-time a girl of such wondrous loveliness. Iris was only twenty, but already she had broken hearts by the score.
She had only to smile at a man with those ripe, red, perfect lips, and give him one glance from those mesmeric eyes, and he was straightway her slave. And she gloried in her power.
Thrice she had broken up betrothals, and threeyoung girls were heart-broken in consequence, and had lifted up their anguished voices and cursed her for her fatal beauty. But Iris only laughed her mellow, wicked little laugh when she heard of it, and said:
"Poor little simpletons! Before they engage themselves they ought to have been sure that they held their lovers' hearts completely. It were better for them to realize before than after marriage that the men they meant to stake their all upon could prove fickle at the first opportunity when a pretty girl crossed their paths."
And who could say that there was not some little truth in this?
The two girls whose paths were to cross so bitterly slept peacefully side by side that night; but long after Iris' eyes had closed in slumber, Dorothy lay awake with oh! such a heavy load on her heart.
She wished she was gay and bright, like Iris, and oh! what would she not have given only to see—only to see once again! And she turned her face to where she knew the moonlight lay in great yellow bars on the floor, and sobbed as she had never sobbed since she had become blind, and fell asleep with the tear-drops staining her pale face, a long, deep sigh trembling over her lips.
Both girls awoke early the next morning.
"When do you have breakfast?" asked Iris, with a yawn.
"At eight o'clock," said Dorothy; "so we need not be in a hurry about getting up. It can not be more than six now."
"Oh, dear! then I shall have to get up at once," cried Iris; "for it takes me fully that long to dress."
"Two hours!" cried Dorothy, amazed, adding: "Why, just put on a wrapper. Nobody here ever thinks of making a toilet to appear at the breakfast-table. There is no one but Mrs. Kemp, Harry, you and I."
She could not catch Iris' unintelligible reply, but she noticed that the girl was not to be persuaded.
She commenced dressing at once.
Soon Dorothy detected a strange odor of burning paper in the room.
"What is that?" she cried, in alarm. "Oh, Miss Vincent, the house must be on fire!"
Iris laughed long and loud.
"You delightful, innocent little goose!" she cried. "I am only curling my bangs with an iron heated over the gas, and I'm trying the tongs on paper to see that they are not too hot. I put my curls up in paper last night, but the horrid old things wouldn't curl because of the damp atmosphere, and—" She did not finish the sentence for Dorothy supplied it in her own mind—"her new friend was desirous of looking her best."
Harry was pacing impatiently up and down the breakfast-room when they entered.
"Good-morning, Miss Vincent; good-morning, Dorothy!" he exclaimed, eagerly; and Dorothy's heart gave a quick start, noting that he called her name last.
And another thing struck Dorothy quite forcibly. To her great surprise, she noticed that Iris spoke in quite a different tone from what she did when they were alone together in their own room.
There her accents were drawling, but now they wereso wonderfully sweet and musical that Dorothy was struck with wonder. She never knew that a person could speak in two different tones of voice like this.
At the breakfast-table the conversation was bright and merry, though outside the rain had commenced to patter against the window-pane.
Dorothy felt strangely diffident, for only a small portion of the conversation was directed now and then to her, and Harry and Miss Vincent kept up such a lively chatter that there was scarcely an opportunity to get in a word edgewise.
The conversation turned upon horseback riding, and it brought a strange pang to Dorothy's heart, for that had been the most pleasurable accomplishment she had learned during the first few weeks she had been at Gray Gables, and she loved it passionately.
In the very hour when they told her that she would for evermore be blind—stone-blind—the cry that had sprung to her lips was, "And can I never again ride Black Beauty?" and she bowed her head in a storm of wild and tempestuous grief.
For many a day after Harry would not even have the name of Black Beauty mentioned in her hearing. And now how strange that he should bring up the subject in her presence!
"I am sorry it is raining, Miss Vincent," he said, "for I had promised myself such a pleasure for this morning. I had intended asking you to join me in a canter over the country. This is just the season of the year to enjoy the bracing air. We have a little horse in the stable that would delight you, if you are a judge of equine flesh. Its very name indicates whatit is—Black Beauty. You ride, of course?"—this interrogatively.
"Oh, yes!" declared Iris; "and I always thought it would be the height of my ambition if I could own a horse."
"That would be a very slight ambition to gratify," returned Harry Kendal. "You may have—"
He was about to add, "Black Beauty," but at that instant his eyes fell upon Dorothy. She was leaning forward, her sightless eyes turned in his direction, with a world of anguish in them that would have melted a heart of stone.
Mrs. Kemp saw the storm approaching, and said, hastily:
"I have always been thinking of buying a pony for my niece, and if she is a very good girl, she may get one for Christmas."
Harry looked his thanks to Mrs. Kemp for coming to his rescue so timely.
Dorothy lingered after the others had left the breakfast-room, and called to Harry to wait a minute, as she wished to speak with him.
He had a guilty conscience; he knew what was coming. She meant to ask him if he intended offering Black Beauty to Miss Vincent, and, of course, he made up his mind to deny it.
The long weeks that had passed since the never-to-be-forgotten steamboat incident on Labor Day passed like a nightmare to poor Jack Garner.
Slowly but surely the knowledge had come to him that Dorothy, his little sweetheart, had faded like a dream from his life; and as this became a settled fact in his mind, his whole nature seemed to change.
He grew reckless, morbid, and gay by turns, until his old mother grew terrified, fearing for his reason. His whole heart had been in his work before and his one aim in life had been to make money.
He had saved quite a snug little sum, which he very prudently placed in the bank.
Now, to his mother's horror, his recklessness lost him his position, and he did not have enough ambition to try and secure another place, but commenced to draw his little hoard from the bank, and his money was disappearing like snow before a summer's sun.
He began coming in late at nights, as well, and the widow, who listened for his footsteps, cried out in anguish: "Would to God that I had died ere I had lived to see this horrible change take place in my idolized son!"
His cousin Barbara keenly felt the change in him. It was she who comforted the poor old mother, and who pleaded with Jack to try and take up the duties of life again, and to forget faithless Dorothy.
But he would only shake his head, and answer that he would never cease to love Dorothy and search for her while life lasted. But troubles never seemto come singly. One day, as Jack was pacing restlessly up and down Broadway—the vantage-ground which he always sought at six o'clock each evening, to scan the faces of the working-girls as they passed, with the lingering hope in his heart that some day, sooner or later, his vigilance would be rewarded by seeing Dorothy—a terrible accident happened which almost cost him his life.
An old sign on one of the corner buildings, which had done service many a year, suddenly fell, and Jack—poor Jack, was knocked senseless to the pavement.
Surely it was the workings of Providence that Jessie Staples happened along just at that critical moment.
With a wild, bitter cry she sprang forward, flinging herself upon the prostrate body, shrieking out as she saw his handsome, white face with the stains of blood upon it:
"Oh, Heaven have mercy! It is Jack—Jack Garner!"
Kindly hands raised him. No, he was not dead—only stunned, and terribly bruised.
A cab was hastily summoned, and, accompanied by Jessie, he was taken home.
The girl broke the sad news gently to Jack's mother and to Barbara. It was many and many a day before Jack left his couch; the accident had proved more dangerous than had been at first anticipated, for brain fever had set in.
Every day on her way home from the book-bindery Jessie would go several blocks out of her way to see how Jack was getting along, and Barbara and his mother soon discovered that it was something morethan mere friendship that actuated the girl's visits. Although against their expostulations, every cent that she could scrape together, over and above the cost of the bare necessities of her living, she would expend for fruit to bring to Jack.
"I feel such a great pity for him," she would say; "for he has never, never been the same since Dorothy disappeared so suddenly." And they would look at the girl with wistful eyes, realizing that in her case, surely, pity was akin to love.
They guessed Jessie's secret long before she knew it herself, and they felt sorry for her; for they knew her hopes were useless—that Jack could never return the girl's love.
Jack's mother and Barbara talked the matter over carefully, and concluded that it was best for the girl's peace of mind to break up this infatuation, if they could, at once.
At this epoch an event happened which turned the tide of affairs into a strange channel.
By the death of a relative Jack suddenly found himself possessed of a fortune.
He heard the startling news with a white, calm, unmoved face, while his mother and Barbara almost went wild with joy over it.
"It matters little to me now," he said. "Wealth has no charms for me." And they well knew why.
The intelligence came like a thunderbolt to Jessie Staples.
It was Mrs. Garner who told about it while the family were gathered about the tea-table.
The girl's face grew white as death, and she looked over at Jack with startled eyes.
Before she could ask the question that sprang to her lips, Mrs. Garner added:
"Of course this will make a great change in Jack's prospects. He says that we shall soon leave the little cottage and go out West somewhere—Barbara and I and himself—and that we will leave New York City far behind us, as there is no tie that binds him here now."
Jessie tried to speak, but the words refused to come to her icy lips. She made an effort to raise her eyes to Jack's face, with a careless smile; but it was a failure—a dire failure.
The table seemed to suddenly rise and dance before her.
She rose hastily, with a wild prayer that she might get quickly out of the room, for she felt her throat choking up with great sobs, and realized that in an instant more she would have burst into tears.
Poor Jessie Staples took one step forward, then fell unconscious at Jack's feet.
"Why, what in the world can be the matter with Jessie?" he cried, raising her in his strong arms. "Is she ill? Let us send for a physician—quick!"
"Stay!" said his mother, as he deposited Jessie on the sofa and turned quickly to put this last thought into execution. "Jessie's trouble is one which no physician can alleviate. It is an affair of the heart."
Jack looked at his mother in amazement.
"An affair of the heart?" he repeated. "Surely not, mother. Why, I have known Jessie ever since I can remember, and I never knew her to have a beau."
"Perhaps she has given her heart to some one whodoes not return her love—who may not even know of it," suggested Mrs. Garner, quietly.
"Impossible," declared Jack. "I have known her for years, I say, and if there was an affair of the heart between Jessie and any of the young men at the bindery, I should have known something of it."
Mrs. Garner came nearer and laid her hand on her son's arm.
"Are yousure, Jack?" she asked, in a low voice.
He gave a great start.
"I know of one whom she loves, and who, she knows, never thinks of her. When his life hung in jeopardy her secret was revealed to me."
"Surely youdo not—youcan notmean, mother—that she—that I—"
"Yes, that is what I mean," returned Mrs. Garner, quietly. "Jessie Staples lovesyou, my boy; but do not be hard on the poor girl. Remember, love goes where it is sent. She never intended that you should know it. She did not breathe a word about it to any one. It was by the merest chance that we made the discovery, and she does not dream that we know it."
Jack sank down in the nearest chair, quite overcome with dismay.
His mother came and bent over him, smoothing the fair hair back from his damp brow with a trembling hand, but uttering no word.
At last he broke the deep silence:
"What am I to say—what am I to do, mother, if—if—your surmises be actually true?"
"They are not surmises, my boy," returned his mother; "they are truths."
"You know that I like Jessie," he went on, huskily;"but as for any other sentiment—why, it would be impossible. My life will always be tinged with the bitter sorrow of that other love-dream which was so cruelly shattered. I—I wish to Heaven you had not told me your suspicions about Jessie, mother."
"Her secret fell from my lips in an unguarded moment," she answered, slowly, "and I am sorry you know all. Yet it must be a source of comfort to you to know that although Dorothy Glenn was false to you, there isoneheart which beats only for you."
Jack started to his feet, a dull pallor creeping into his face as he drew back from his mother's touch.
"Dorothy isnot falseto me!" he cried. "If an angel from heaven should tell me so I would not believe it. She is my betrothed bride. She wears my betrothal-ring upon her little hand. No matter where she is, she is true to me—true as God's promise. Shame has caused her to hide herself from me, because she was so foolish as to go with another on an excursion on Labor Day. But I have forgiven all that long ago. Oh, Heaven! if I could but let her know it!"
Mrs. Garner shook her head.
"A young girl who can leave you for months without a word does not care for you, my boy," she answered, sadly. "Surely there is great truth in the words that 'Love is blind,' if you can not be made to see this."
Still the noble lover shook his head. There was no power on earth strong enough to shake his faith in Dorothy's love.
Mrs. Garner had said all that she could say for Jessie, and she bowed her head, and great tears rolleddown her cheeks. She felt great pity for Jessie. Why could not her son love her? She had heard the story of jilted lovers turning to some sympathizing heart for solace, and in time learning to love their consoler, and she wondered if this might not mercifully happen to her darling, idolized boy.
She watched him as he paced excitedly up and down the room. Suddenly he turned to her, and during all the long after years of sorrow and pain she never forgot the expression of his face.
"Mother!" he cried, hoarsely, "if my Dorothy ever proved false to me, I should be tempted to—to—kill her—and—then—kill—myself!"
Thecontretempswhich had been so cleverly averted—of giving the pony, Black Beauty, to Miss Vincent, and Dorothy's keen resentment—should have proved a lesson to Harry Kendal and warned him not to play with edged tools.
He was a little careful of what he said to Iris for the next few days, when Dorothy was present; but gradually this restraint began to wear off, and he grew to be almost reckless in the way he laughed and carried on with the girl, even though hisfiancéewas in the room. This attention was certainly not discouraged by Iris Vincent.
He smiled to see her go in raptures over everything in and about Gray Gables, and she, with her glorious dark eyes, always smiled back at him. Theirchats grew longer and more frequent; they were fast becoming excellent friends.
They had sent for Iris Vincent to become Dorothy's companion, but it was whispered among the old servants of the household that she was proving herself to be more frequently the companion of Mr. Kendal, and they talked about it in alarm, wondering how it would all end. They felt indignant, too, that such a bold flirtation—for it had certainly come to that—should be carried on right in the face of poor, blind Dorothy.
"Some one ought to give her a hint of what is going on," cried indignant little Katy, the maid. But there was no one who could find it in his or her heart to warn her of what was transpiring. The blow would be more than she could bear, for she loved Harry Kendal better than life itself.
They wondered if little Dorothy guessed that he led Iris to the table, while she, blind as she was, groped her way as best she could to her own seat. They hated to see him lavish attentions on the beauty, and it drove them almost out of their self-possession to see their eyes meet in that provoking, mutual smile.
Dorothy was beginning to feel Harry's neglect, but no thought of the true cause of it ever dawned upon her.
Ah! could she have seen how they paced the grounds together arm in arm, and how near they sat together on the step of the front porch, and in what a lover-like manner he bent his dark head over her little, white hands, the sight would have killed Dorothy.
"I wonder if they think we are fools!" whisperedthe servants, indignantly, one to the other; and their blood boiled with rage at this open love-making.
But even the attention of handsome Harry Kendal seemed to pall upon the beauty. Gray Gables was dull; she wanted more life, more gayety.
"Why not give a grand ball," she suggested, "and invite the whole country-side?"
She longed for more hearts to conquer. Iris was one of those vain, shallow girls who must and will have a sentimental flirtation with some young man always on hand. She, like those of her mischievous class, really meant no harm while doing a great deal of wrong. Such a girl, from mere vanity and pastime, will try to outshine a companion and even win the heart of a betrothed lover from his sweetheart, caring little for the broken vows and the ruined lives strewn along her path.
Harry Kendal seized eagerly upon the idea, because it would please Iris. Mrs. Kemp knew no other than her beautiful, willful niece's pleasure. No one consulted Dorothy. She seemed to have been left entirely out of the calculation.
For the first time since Iris Vincent had come to Gray Gables, Dorothy regretted her presence there.
What would be the ball to her? Surely they ought to know that she could take no part in it, for she was blind.
When she found herself alone with Iris she spoke of this, but the girl turned it off with a little laugh.
"Even so," she declared, "Gray Gables ought not to be shut up and barricaded. You need to have a little life to keep your spirits up. You are just dying for some kind of liveliness. And poor Harry! everyone is feeling sorry for him. They say he is growing so dull."
"Do they say that?" cried Dorothy, the color deepening in her cheeks.
"Yes—and more," assented Iris. "And for that reason I would advise you to study appearances, so that every one may know that he is happy—at least, let them think he is."
The words struck Dorothy with a cold chill, as her companion had intended that they should.
"Then let the ball be given, by all means," returned Dorothy, with a little quiver in her voice.
And so the matter was arranged.
For the next week Iris and Harry were busy with the invitations. They sat side by side, comparing them as they made them out, and never once seemed to note Dorothy's presence.
If any one on the list did not quite suit their fancy, they were quickly rejected; but Dorothy noticed that he never once turned to her, his betrothed bride, and asked her opinion.
There was one young girl to whom Dorothy had been quite attached, who lived very near Gray Gables, and who had run over to see her almost every day, up to the time Iris had come. Since then her visits had been less and less frequent; within the last fortnight they had ceased altogether.
Dorothy was very anxious, of course, that this young girl should be invited; but Iris put in a demurrer at once.
"Of all the girls I ever met, I dislike her the most," declared Iris.
She was very careful not to tell the real reason why.
This same young girl had been the first to notice her flirtation with Harry Kendal. They had had quite a stormy little scene over it, for the girl had attempted to rebuke Iris, in her modest way, and she had retorted by flashing out that it was none of her business, anyway, saying that she would flirt with Harry Kendal just as much as she pleased, and that it was a shame for such a handsome young fellow to marry a girl stone blind.
They had parted in anger. No wonder, we repeat, that Iris objected to inviting Dorothy's friend to the grand ball.
"Oh! of course we must invite her," said Dorothy, when her friend's name was brought under discussion. "Mustn't we, Harry?"
He turned away and walked moodily to the window without replying. If Iris did not like her, that settled the matter. He dared not put in one word in the girl's favor, though Dorothy was clamoring for his opinion.
"You must settle the matter, Harry," said Dorothy.
"Let me suggest a better way," he replied, gallantly, as he took his seat at the table again. "You two girls arrange it between yourselves."
"But we do not think we will come to an agreement," pouted Iris. "You will have to choose for Dorothy and me."
He gave her a startled, sweeping look, and she knew by that that he would not dare go against her for Dorothy.
"I must decline," he said again, for he felt nervous with those sightless eyes turned eagerly in his direction.
"You must say 'Yes' or 'No,'" said Dorothy, never dreaming that his answer would be in the negative, for on the week that she had first come to Gray Gables he had said: "I must introduce you at once to Alice Lee, who lives across the way. She is a lovely, quiet girl, and I know you will like her." And Dorothy had liked gentle Alice Lee.
She thought of this now as the question of inviting her to the ball had come up, and never for a moment had she doubted the result of his decision.
"You must answer 'Yes' or 'No,'" pouted Iris, impatiently. "Come, we are wasting time."
Iris leaned over close to his chair—so near that the dark rings of her hair brushed his cheek, thrilling him to the soul.
"You must choose," she whispered; and he knew that it was a challenge as to which he should please—herself or Dorothy.
Closer, closer still she leaned, until his very pulses grew mad with the nearness of her presence, and with child-like confidence her soft little hand crept into his, and nestled there securely.
There was no one to see, though Dorothy—God help her!—sat so near her. The touch of that little hand was magical. In the mad impulse of the moment he raised it to his lips and kissed it, and Iris knew that she had won the battle even before he spoke.
"Alice Lee had better not be invited to the ball," he said, huskily. "That is my decision."
Dorothy sank back in her chair as though a sudden blow had been struck her. She never once dreamed that her betrothed lover would decide against her.
It fairly took her breath away, and a sudden newsensation shot through her heart that had never found lodgment there before.
She drew back and said no more, a deathly pallor overspreading her face. She did not interfere again, and she suffered them to arrange the invitations after that to please themselves.
She rose quietly at length and made her way to the window, great tears rising to her sightless eyes.
They did not even notice her absence, but chatted and laughed quite the same.
After they had finished Harry proposed that they should take the invitations to be mailed. This Iris gayly assented to, and they left the room without once making any excuse to Dorothy for leaving her there alone.
The fact was that they were not even aware that she had seated herself in the bay window behind the great, heavyportières.
For the first time Dorothy wished that Iris had not come. She was already beginning to feel the weight of the iron hand that was soon to crush her—jealousy.
She awaited their coming with the greatest impatience, but it was long hours ere they returned.
Harry Kendal did not intend being untrue to Dorothy when he let himself drift into that platonic friendship with Iris, the beauty, which had developed into such a dangerous flirtation.
Gradually the girl's fascinations seemed to overpower him, and before he quite realized it, Iris had become part and parcel of his life.
On the way to the postoffice a little event had happened which had almost changed the current of his life.
They had taken the short cut from Gray Gables to the postoffice, which lay over the hills, and were walking along arm in arm when suddenly Iris' foot slipped upon a stone, and she stumbled headlong in the path with a little, terrified cry.
In an instant Harry had raised her, and to his utter consternation she clung to him half fainting.
"Oh, Mr. Kendal—Harry—I—I have sprained my ankle! I can not walk!" she said; and a low cry of pain broke from her lips.
He gathered her close in his arms, and did everything in his power to soothe her.
"I am so sorry—so sorry that I let you undertake this trip with me. Let me carry you back to the house."
"My—my ankle is not sprained," she faltered; "it was only wrenched a little as it turned over against that stone. We will sit down on this log a few moments, and after a little rest I will be all right again."
To this Kendal willingly assented, but he did not remove his arm from the slender waist.
"I am so thankful that it is no worse, Iris," he breathed, huskily.
"Would you have cared so very much if I had sprained my ankle?" she faltered, looking up into his face with those great, dark, mesmeric eyes that no one had ever yet been able to resist.
He looked away from her quickly and did not reply.
"Would you?" persisted Iris, in her low, musical voice.
Throwing prudence to the winds, he turned to her suddenly and clasped her still closer in his arms.
"Does not your own heart teach you that, Iris?" he returned, hoarsely.
"Oh! if I could only believe what my heart would fain tell me," she murmured, "I—I would be so happy!"
"If it told you that I—I love you," he cried, "then it would—"
The rest of the sentence died away on his lips for there, directly in the path before him, stood Mrs. Kemp. She might have been blind to all her beautiful niece's short-comings, but she was not a woman to so mix right and wrong as to permit Iris to listen to a word of love from one she knew belonged, in the sight of God, to another.
Iris was equal to the occasion.
"Oh, aunt!" she cried, "I am so glad that you happened along just now. I—I hurt my foot, and it was so painful that I had to sit down and rest; and Mr. Kendal was kind enough to remain here with me a few moments, although—although—besides the invitations we had to mail, he had other important letters to go out to-day."
"Are you quite sure your ankle is not sprained, my dear?" cried Mrs. Kemp, in alarm. "The wisest thing to do will be to come home with me at once, and we will send for a doctor to examine it."
Iris sprang to her feet with a wicked little laugh.
"See, it is better now—almost as good as new,"she declared, "thanks to Mr. Kendal for insisting upon my sitting down here to rest."
Had it been any one else but Iris, Kendal would have said the affair had been a clever little ruse to give him the opportunity to make love to her.
But in this instance it never occurred to him but that Iris was telling the plain facts—that her ankle had been wrenched, and with a few moments' rest it was as good as ever again.
Mrs. Kemp looked greatly relieved.
"We may as well be going," said Iris, hoping that her aunt would pass on and leave them to enjoy thetéte-à-tétewhich she had interrupted at such an inopportune time.
"I will go with you both as far as the postoffice," said Mrs. Kemp; and the good soul did not notice the expression of annoyance on both faces, and, very much against the will of each, she accompanied them there and back.
Iris was bitterly annoyed, but she was diplomatic enough to conceal it; and she could see, too, by Harry's face that he was disappointed in being so ruthlessly cheated out of atéte-à-tétewith her.
They loitered long by the way, trusting that Mrs. Kemp would become impatient with their delay, and excuse herself, to get back to the house in time to superintend dinner, which was quite a feature at Gray Gables.
"You do not seem to be in any hurry to-day," laughed Iris, eyeing her aunt sideways.
"No; for it is not often that I indulge myself in going out for a stroll," answered Mrs. Kemp, "and I need to make the most of it. If I am not back atthe usual time Dorothy will superintend affairs—bless her dear little heart! Why, she's a regular little jewel about the house, even with her affliction."
This praise of Dorothy was anything but pleasant to Iris, especially when Kendal was present, and she turned the conversation at once into another channel.
As they neared the house they met one of the servants hurrying down the road.
"You are the very person I am looking for, ma'am," he cried, breathlessly. "There is something the matter with the range, and they are all in a stew over it, not knowing what to do until you come."
"Good gracious! if I step out of the house for a moment something is sure to happen," cried the good old lady, despairingly. "Say that I will be there directly, John;" and much to Iris' relief, she hurriedly left them.
"Why need we hasten?" said Kendal, in a low voice. "This is the pleasantest part of the afternoon."
"I am in no hurry," assented the girl.
"We will linger here in this delightful spot, and I will gather you some autumn leaves," cried Harry. "Would you like that?"
"Yes," she assented; "if you will help me to weave them into garlands."
"Nothing would give me more pleasure," he declared; "that is, if you are not afraid of the old tradition becoming true."
She looked up into his face, blushing as crimson as the heart of a deep-red rose.
"I have never heard it," she said. "Do tell me what it is."
"Bye and bye, with your permission, while we are weaving the garlands," Harry answered, with a rich, mellow laugh. "If I should tell you beforehand, you might refuse to accept my services altogether."
"Is it so bad as that?" laughed Iris.
"You had better use the wordgoodinstead of bad. The idea would be more pleasant."
"Not knowing what you are talking about, and not possessing the key to solve the riddle of your incomprehensible words, I had better make no further reply, lest I get into deep water," she pouted. "But really you have aroused my curiosity."
"Well, when we have the first wreath made, then, and not until then, will I tell you what they say of the youth and maiden who weave autumn leaves for each other, and together. Come and sit on this mossy ledge. I will spread my overcoat upon it. It shall be your throne."
"I will be a queen, but where will be my king?" laughed Iris, gayly.
"Your king will come a-wooing all in good time," he answered, his dark eyes seeking hers with a meaning glance, which the beauty and coquette understood but too well.
In less time than it takes to tell it, Kendal had gathered about her heaps of the beautiful, shining leaves.
"Oh, aren't they lovely!" cried Iris, delightedly. "I fairly adore autumn leaves."
"I did not know that you had such an eye for the beautiful in nature," he retorted, rather pleased.
"I adore everything that is handsome," she said, ina low voice, returning his look of a few moments ago with interest.
An hour flew by on golden wings, and the wreaths grew beneath their touch.
"Now you look indeed a queen!" cried Harry, raising one gracefully, and laying it on the girl's dark curls. "You remind me just now of pictures I have seen of Undine and the woodland nymphs."
"Ah! but Undine had no heart," declared Iris.
"In some respects you are like Undine," he retorted. "She never knew she had a heart till she was conscious of its loss. Ah, but you do look bewitching, Miss Vincent—Iris, with that wreath of autumn foliage on your head, like a crown of dying sunset. When I see the leaves turn in the autumn, lines that I read somewhere always recur to me: