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His Heart's Queen.
by Mrs. Georgie Sheldon.
CHAPTER I.
A FRIGHTFUL ACCIDENT.
Just at sunset, one bright spring day, the car that plies up and down the inclined plane leading from the foot of Main street up the hills to the Zoological Gardens, of Cincinnati, started to make the ascent with its load of precious human freight.
The car was full of pa.s.sengers, though not crowded, while among the occupants there were several young people, whose bright faces and animated manner bespoke how light of heart and free from care they were--what a gladsome, delightful place the world seemed to them.
One young lady, who was seated about midway upon one side of the car, attracted especial attention.
She was, perhaps, seventeen years of age, slight and graceful in form, with a lovely, piquant face, merry blue eyes, and a wealth of curling golden hair, that cl.u.s.tered about her white forehead in bewitching little rings.
She was richly dressed in a charming costume of tan-brown, trimmed with a darker shade of the same color. Upon her head she wore a jaunty hat of fine brown straw, with a wreath of pink apple-blossoms partially encircling it, and fastened on one side with a pretty bow of glossy satin ribbon, also of brown. A dainty pair of bronze boots incased her small feet, and her hands were faultlessly gloved in long suede gauntlets. A small, brown velvet bag, with silver clasps, hung at her side, and in her lap lay an elegant music-roll of Russian leather.
Everything about her indicated that she was the petted child of fortune and luxury. Her beautiful eyes were like limpid pools of water reflecting the azure sky; her lips were wreathed with smiles; there was not a shadow of care upon her delicate, clear-cut face.
Directly opposite her sat a young man whose appearance indicated that his circ.u.mstances were just the reverse, although no one could ever look into his n.o.ble face without feeling impelled to take a second glance at him.
He was tall and stalwart of form, broad-shouldered, full-chested, straight of limb, with a ma.s.sive head set with a proud poise above a well-shaped neck. He looked the personification of manly beauty, strength, and health.
His face was one that, once seen, could never be forgotten. It was grave and sweet, yet having a certain resolute expression about the mouth which might have marred its expression somewhat had it not been for the mirthful gleam which now and then leaped into his clear, dark-brown eyes, and which betrayed that, beneath the gravity and dignity which a life of care and the burden of poverty had chiseled upon his features and imparted to his bearing, there lurked a spirit of quiet drollery and healthy humor.
His features were strong and regular; the brow full and shapely, the nose aquiline, the mouth firm, the chin somewhat ma.s.sive. It was a powerful face--a good face; one to be trusted and relied on.
The young man was, perhaps, twenty-three or twenty-four years of age, though at first his dignified bearing might lead one to imagine him to be even older than that.
He was clad in a very common suit, which betrayed his poverty, while at his feet, in a basket, lay a plane and saw, which indicated that he belonged to the carpenters' guild.
The pretty girl opposite stole more than one curious and admiring look at this poor young Apollo, only to encounter a similar, though wholly respectful glance from his genial and expressive eyes, whereupon the lovely color would come and go on her fair, round cheek, and her eyes droop shyly beneath their white lids.
When the car left its station at the base of the plane and began to make its ascent, not one among all its pa.s.sengers had a thought of the terrible experience awaiting them--of the tragedy following so closely in their wake.
It had nearly reached the top; another minute, and it would have rolled safely into the upper station and have been made fast at the terminus.
But, suddenly, something underneath seemed to let go; there was an instant's pause, which sent a thrill of terror through every heart; then there began a slow retrograde movement, which rapidly increased, until, with a feeling of terror that is utterly indescribable the ill-fated people in that doomed car realized that they were being hurried swiftly toward a sure and frightful destruction.
Cries and shrieks and groans filled the place. There was a frantic rush for the door, the doomed victims seeking to force their way out of the car to leap recklessly from the flying vehicle, and trust thus to the faint hope of saving their lives.
But both doors were securely fastened--they were all locked within their prison; there was no hope of escape from it and the terrible crash awaiting them.
When the beautiful girl whom we have described realized the hopeless situation, she gave one cry of horror, then seemed to grow suddenly and strangely calm, though a pallor like that of death settled over her face, and a look of wild despair leaped into her eyes.
Involuntarily she glanced at the young man opposite her, and she found his gaze riveted upon her with a look of intense yearning, which betrayed that he had no thought for himself; that all his fear was for her; that the idea of seeing her, in all her bright young beauty, dashed in pieces, crushed and mangled, had overpowered all sense of his own personal doom.
She seemed to read his thoughts, and, like one in a dream or nightmare, she almost unconsciously stretched forth her hands to him with a gesture which seemed to appeal to him to save her.
Instantly he arose to his feet, calm, strong, resolute.
His face was as pale as hers, but there was a gleam in his eyes which told her that he would not spare himself in the effort to save her.
"Will you trust me?" he murmured hoa.r.s.ely in her ear, as he caught her trembling hands in his.
Her fingers closed over his with a frantic clutch; her eyes sought his in desperate appeal.
"Yes! yes!" Her white lips framed the words, but no sound issued from them.
The car had now attained a frightful velocity; a moment or two more and all would be over, and there was not an instant to lose.
The young man reached up and grasped with his strong, sinewy hands the straps which hung from the supports above his head.
"Quick now!" he said to his almost paralyzed companion; "stand up, put your arms about my neck, and cling to me for your life."
She looked helplessly up into his face; it seemed as if she had not the power to move--to obey him.
With a despairing glance from the window and a groan of anguish, he released his hold upon the straps, seized her hands again, and locked them behind his neck.
"Cling! Cling!" he cried, in a voice of agony.
The tone aroused her; strength came to her, and she clasped him close--close as a person drowning might have done.
He straightened himself thus, lifting her several inches from the floor of the car, seized again the straps above, and swung himself also clear, hoping thus to evade somewhat the terrible force of the shock which he knew was so near.
He was not a second too soon; the crash came, and with it one frightful volume of agonizing shrieks and groans; then all was still.
The car had been dashed into thousands of pieces, burying beneath the _debris_ twenty human beings.
A group of horrified spectators had gathered in the street at the base of the plane when it was rumored that the car had lost its grip upon the cable, and had watched, with quaking hearts and bated breath, the awful descent.
When all was over, kind and reverent hands began the sad work of exhuming the unfortunate victims of the accident.
It was thought at first that all were dead--that not one had escaped; that every soul had been hurled, with scarcely a moment's warning, into eternity.
The brave young carpenter was found lying beneath two mangled bodies, with the beautiful girl whom he had tried to save clasped close in one of his arms; the other lay crushed beneath him.
"Brother and sister," some one had said, as, bending over them, he had tried to disengage the lovely girl from his embrace.
He had only been stunned, however, by the shock, when the car struck, and he now opened his great brown eyes, drawing in a deep, deep breath, as if thus taking hold anew of the life that had so nearly been dashed out of him.
This was followed by a groan of pain, and he became conscious that he had not escaped altogether unscathed.
"Is she safe?" he gasped, his first thought, in spite of his own sufferings, being for the girl for whom he had braved so much, while he tried to look into the white, still face hidden upon his breast.
They tried to lift her from him, but her little hands were so tightly locked at the back of his neck that it was no easy task to unclasp them.