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Yes, Dorothy's sight had been restored to her as miraculously as it had been taken from her.
But even in the midst of her great joy the dregs of woe still lingered as memory brought back to her the terrible ordeal through which she had pa.s.sed.
With bated breath she turned and crept swiftly back to the house and up to the long windows that opened out on the porch, sobbing bitterly to herself that she would see at last if her lover was true or false to her.
CHAPTER XX.
With her heart throbbing with the most intense excitement, Dorothy pushed aside the great cl.u.s.ters of crimson creepers and thick green leaves, pressed her white face close against the window-pane, and gazed in upon the gorgeous scene.
For an instant the great blaze of light dazzled her weak eyes, and everything seemed to swim before her.
But gradually, little by little, she began to distinguish objects, and at last her eyes fell upon the face of Harry Kendal.
With a great cry, the girl clutched her hands tightly over her heart.
She never thought that she would look upon his face again in this world.
It was _his_ face--the face of her hero, her king, before which all else paled as the moonbeams pale before the glaring light of the rising sun.
Then suddenly she saw the face beside him into which he was gazing, and it was then that the heart in her bosom almost turned to stone.
Never in all her life had she beheld such a vision of loveliness, and she knew in an instant that the proud beauty must be Iris Vincent.
Slowly Dorothy crept around to the other side of the porch, up to the window, that she might have a better view of them, and perhaps she could hear what they were saying.
But as she reached it, to her great disappointment she saw them link arms and stroll out of the ball-room toward the conservatory, and thither she bent her steps, intent upon reaching it before they did.
She had barely screened herself behind a tall _jardiniere_ of roses and flowering plants, ere, laughing and chattering, the two entered the floral bower.
"The ball is a grand success, Iris," he was saying, gayly; "they all seem to be enjoying themselves immensely. How is it with you?"
"It is a night that will stand out forever in my life," she responded, glancing up at him with those dangerously dark eyes, and a smile on her red lips.
The girl who watched them breathlessly from behind the roses clutched her hands over her heart.
The sight maddened her. They were so near each other, their heads bent so close; and while she gazed, suddenly Kendal bent still closer and kissed the girl's lips.
Dorothy tried to cry aloud, to spring out and confront them. Her brain reeled; the blood, chill as ice, stood still in her veins, and without a cry, or even a moan she sank down unconscious in her hiding-place.
"What is that sound?" cried Iris, with a start.
"Only some of the clumsy servants in the corridor without," replied Kendal. "But, Iris, are you trying to avoid me? I have brought you here to tell you something, and you must listen. The time has come when we must fully understand each other. You know quite as well as I that the life we are leading, Iris, can not go on like this forever. From the first moment we met the attraction I felt toward you changed the whole current of my life."
Iris hid her face in the bouquet of white hyacinths which she carried.
"It is too late to talk of that now," she murmured. "Your heart went out to another before--before I met you."
"There is such a thing as affections waning when one discovers that one's heart is not truly mated, Iris," he cried.
She did not answer; and thus emboldened by her silence, he went on, huskily:
"Let me give you the whole history of my meeting with Dorothy Glenn, from first to last, and you will understand the situation better. You can realize, Iris, that an acquaintance which commences through a flirtation, as it were, can never end in true love. Such an acquaintance is not a lasting one. Come and sit down on this rustic seat, Iris, and listen; and as we sit here in the dim, mellow light, you shall judge me, and your decision shall seal my fate."
At the self-same moment in which Harry Kendal was beginning his narrative, there was quite a commotion at the outer gate which guarded the main entrance of Gray Gables.
One of the servants, lounging lazily at his post of duty, was suddenly startled out of the doze into which he had fallen by the shadow of a woman flitting hurriedly past him.
"Hold on, there! Hold on, I say! Who are you, and what do you want?"
A figure clad in a long dark cloak, hooded and veiled, stopped short with a little exclamation, which he could not quite catch.
"Hold on, there! Where are you going?" he repeated, springing to her side. "There is something going on here to-night. You can't enter these grounds until I know who you are and what your business is."
"This is Gray Gables, is it not?" exclaimed a tremulous voice from behind the veil.
"I should have supposed you would have found that out before you entered the grounds," declared the man, suspiciously.
She saw her mistake, and started.
"I only wanted to make sure that I was right," she said, apologetically.
"I--I have business with the housekeeper; I want to see her."
Before she could utter another word he whistled sharply. His call brought a small lad to his side.
"Tell Mrs. Kemp there's a young woman here who would like to see her.
What name, please?" he asked, abruptly, turning to the veiled figure.
"I--I am afraid she wouldn't know; but you might, mention the name--Miss Mead"--this rather stutteringly.
Very soon the answer came back that the housekeeper did not know Miss Mead, and hadn't time to see strangers.
"But I must see her!" implored the excited voice from behind the thick veil. "Do let me go to the house to her. I will detain her but a moment, I a.s.sure you. She would be so sorry if she missed seeing me."
With no suspicion of the terrible catastrophe that was to follow on the heels of it, the man without further ado allowed her to pa.s.s.
The stranger sped quickly up the graveled walk, and, as Dorothy had done but a short time before, drew cautiously up to the brilliantly lighted window, threw back her veil, and peered breathlessly in upon the gorgeous scene.
As the light fell athwart her, you and I, dear reader, can easily recognize the marble-white face of--Nadine Holt.
"So!" she muttered, between her clinched teeth, "I have tracked my false, perfidious lover to his home at last. When Harry Kendal lighted the fire of love in my heart, he little knew that the blaze would in time consume himself. I am not one to be made love to and cast off at will, as he shall soon see.
"From the hour that he eloped with Dorothy Glenn, on that memorable Labor Day, life lost all its charms for me, and I vowed to Heaven that I would find them, and deal out vengeance to them. They crushed my heart, and now I shall crush theirs. Ah, how I watched for him in the crowded streets, the ferries, and on the elevated roads!
"I believed sooner or later that I should find him, and I was right.
Only a week ago I met him face to face, but he did not know me because of the thick veil I wore. I might have raised my veil and he would never have recognized in the pinched and haggard features the countenance of Nadine Holt, whose beauty he was wont to praise so lavishly. Ah, the traitor!
"He turned into a florist's shop, and he never dreamed who the woman was who entered the place and stood silently beside him while he gave the order for the great decorations for the grand ball which was to take place at his home in Gray Gables, in Yonkers, a fortnight from that date.