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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 were so 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 pa.s.sionately.
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 what it 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.
CHAPTER XII.
The long weeks that had pa.s.sed since the never-to-be-forgotten steamboat incident on Labor Day pa.s.sed 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 h.o.a.rd 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 G.o.d 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 seem to 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 pa.s.sed, 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 antic.i.p.ated, 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 more than mere friends.h.i.+p that actuated the girl's visits. Although against their expostulations, every cent that she could sc.r.a.pe 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: