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Countess Vera; or, The Oath of Vengeance. Alex. McVeigh MillerЧитать онлайн книгу.

Countess Vera; or, The Oath of Vengeance - Alex. McVeigh Miller


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You, sir, look at me lovingly and kindly. Can it be–"

      "That I am your father—yes, my precious Vera," he answers, pressing a father's holy kiss on the sweet, wistful lips.

      Her dark, dreamy eyes look searchingly up into the handsome, noble face.

      "Ah, I am so glad," she murmurs, "and you are good and true and noble. I cannot understand why you went away from mamma, but I can tell by your face that you are not the bad and wicked wretch that woman pretended."

      "Mrs. Cleveland?" he asks, a spasm of rage and hatred distorting his pallid features.

      "Perhaps it will be best not to excite the young lady by talking to her just at first," the sexton interposes, anxiously and respectfully. "She must be very weak, having taken no nourishment for so long. I will go out and prepare a little warm broth for her."

      "You must lie still and rest, darling," Lawrence Campbell whispers, pouring a little more of the stimulant between her pale lips—paler now from exhaustion than they were when she lay sleeping in the coffin, and with a faint sigh of assent she closes her eyes and lies silent, while the sexton goes out on his kindly meant errand.

      The moments pass, Lawrence Campbell sits still with his head bowed moodily on his hand, his thoughts strangely blended, joy for his daughter's recovery, despairing grief for his wife's loss, and unutterable hate for Marcia Cleveland all mixed inextricably together. All that he has lost by that woman's perjury rushes bitterly over him. In the stillness, broken only by the crackle of the fresh coals upon the fire, and the monotonous ticking of the clock upon the mantel, he broods over his wrongs until they assume gigantic proportions.

      And Vera—so strangely rescued from the coffin and the grave—she is very silent also, but none the less is her brain active and her mind busy. One by one she is gathering up the links of memory.

      Her strange marriage, her mother's death, her terrible defeat in the triumph she had anticipated over the Clevelands—all come freshly over her memory, with that crowning hour in which wounded to the heart and filled with a deadly despair, she had crept away to die because she could not endure the humiliation and shame of the knowledge she had gained.

      "I remember it all now; I could not decide upon the right vial, and by chance I took the wrong one. It was the sleeping potion. How long have I been asleep, and how came I here?"

      Unclosing her languid eyes, she repeats the question aloud:

      "Father, how came I here?"

      He starts, nervously, at the unexpected question.

      "My dear, you must not ask questions," he answers. "At least—not yet."

      "But just this one, father. It keeps ringing itself in my head. I am filled with wonder. I drank a vial of what I imagined contained death, and lay down on my bed to die. But I only slept, and my dreams were wild. Then I awoke in this strange room, and saw you looking at me so kindly, and I knew you in my heart for my father. My wonder is so great that I cannot rest. Suspense is worse than knowledge. Only tell me how I came to be here?"

      He looks at the beautiful, eloquent lips and pleading eyes, looking so dark with the purple shadows around them, and the pale, pale face.

      "I must not tell her the truth," he said to himself. "She looks too slight and frail to bear the shock of hearing it. She need not ever know that she had been buried alive, and rescued out of the blackness of the grave. The horror of it would be enough to unhinge her reason."

      "The last that I remember," she continues, "I was lying on my bed at Mrs. Cleveland's, waiting for death to come. I awoke here in this strange place. How did it happen?"

      "I had you conveyed here in your sleep," he answers. "My dear, I see that you have all of woman's proverbial curiosity. But there is no mystery here. The simple truth is, that I went to Mrs. Cleveland's to seek my wife and child. I found that your mother was dead, and you were locked in a strange, narcotic sleep, almost as deep as death. I had you conveyed here, and watched over you until you awakened from your long slumber. That is all, my dear little daughter. Now, can you rest satisfied?"

      The dark eyes seek his, still wistfully, and with dawning tenderness.

      "Father, you do not know how I love the sound of your voice," she murmurs. "It does not excite nor weary me. It is full of soothing, calming power. It falls on my thirsty, yearning heart like the dew upon flowers. I wish that you would talk to me. Nothing you can say would weary me so much as my own tumultuous thoughts."

      He sighs, and smooths back the soft waves of gold that stray over the blue-veined temples.

      "What shall I talk of, little one?" he inquires.

      "Tell me where you have been all these long years, father, and why you never came for mamma and I when you were so unhappy?" she sighs.

      Tears that do not shame his manhood crowd into his dark, sad eyes.

      "Vera, you will hate me when I tell you that it was a mad, unreasoning jealousy, aroused and fostered by Marcia Cleveland, that led me to desert my innocent wife, and you, my little child, before you were born," he answers, heavily.

      Vera's dark eyes flash with ominous light. She lies silent a moment, brooding over her mother's terrible wrongs.

      "I have been a lonely wanderer from land to land ever since," he goes on, slowly. "God only knows what I suffered, Vera, for I could never tear the image of my wife from my breast, although I believed her false and vile. But I was too proud to go back to her. I never knew how she was breaking her heart in silent sorrow for me, her life made doubly wretched by the abuses of the false sister who hated her because I loved her. At last I was recalled from my wanderings. I had fallen heir to a title I had never dreamed of inheriting, and which only filled me with bitterness. I reflected that, but for Edith's falsity, she might have been my countess; as fair a lady as ever reigned in my ancestral halls."

      "Poor mamma, leading her slavish life in Mrs. Cleveland's house," the girl murmurs, in vain regret.

      "Poor martyr to the sins of others," the man echoes, heavily.

      "Yet you came back at last," Vera murmurs. "Had you repented of your hasty desertion?"

      "I had learned the truth, Vera, through the dying confession of Mrs. Cleveland's weak tool. I had learned how terribly I had been deceived, and that I had deserted my angel wife for naught. Vera, did she curse my memory when she lay dying of a broken heart?"

      "She never named you either in praise or blame, father. I had some vague impression that you were dead. I knew no better until I overheard Mrs. Cleveland telling some one that you had deserted my mother before I was born, and that you were a low, drunken, brutal wretch, who had abused and maltreated her from the first."

      "Oh, my God, my God! that such demons should walk the earth!" the man groans through his clenched teeth.

      He rises and walks up and down the floor, struggling with his strong, overmastering agitation.

      "Vera, we three—you and I, and our lost loved one—have been wronged as, it seems to me, never mortals were before. My heart is on fire with rage and hate for the devil who has so blasted our lives. It seems to me that I can never rest until I strike back. Vera, shall we not avenge ourselves?"

      His dark, passionate eyes fill with the fire that rages in his soul. Vera looks up at him, half-fearfully.

      "How, father?" she queries, slowly.

      The heavy gloom deepens in his night-black eyes.

      "How—I cannot tell!" he says, hoarsely. "But I will bide my time. I will wait and watch. Edith's wrongs shall not go unavenged."

      The beautiful young face on the pillow softens and saddens.

      "Mother was very gentle and forgiving," she murmurs. "She would have said, leave it to Heaven."

      "She was an angel—I am but human," he answers. "Vera, we must work together for vengeance. The time will come when we will make Marcia Cleveland bite the dust—when she shall curse the stars that shone over her ill-fated birth."

      So the wronged man raves, and Vera's passionate heart is kindled into flames by his burning eloquence.


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