A Son of Hagar: A Romance of Our Time. Hall Sir Caine

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complication was new to his consciousness, and it was at this moment conspiring with the first to lure him to consequences that are now to be related. The story which Mr. Bonnithorne had told of the legacy left by Greta's father to a son by one Grace Ormerod had come to him at a time when, owing to disappointment and chagrin, he was peculiarly liable to the temptation of any "honest trifle" that pointed the way he wished to go. If the Grace Ormerod who married Lowther had indeed been his own mother, then – a thousand to one – Paul was Lowther's son. If Paul was Lowther's son he was also half brother of Greta. If Paul was not the son of Allan Ritson, then he himself, Hugh Ritson, was his father's heir.

      In the present whirlwind of feeling he did not inquire too closely into the pros and cons of probability. Enough that evidence seemed to be with him, and that it transformed the world in his view.

      Perhaps the first result of this transformation was that he unconsciously assumed a different attitude toward the unhappy passage in his life wherein Mercy Fisher was chiefly concerned. What his feeling was before Mr. Bonnithorne's revelation, we have already seen. Now the sentiment that made much of such an "accident" was fit only for a "turgid melodrama," and the idea of "atonement" by "marriage" was the mock heroic of those "great lovers of noble histories," the spectators who applaud it from the pit.

      When he passed Mr. Bonnithorne in the hall at the Ghyll he was on his way to the cottage of the Laird Fisher. He saw in the road ahead of him the group which included his father and the charcoal-burner, and to avoid them he cut across the breast of the Eel Crags. After a sharp walk of a mile he came to a little white-washed house that stood near the head of Newlands, almost under the bridge that crosses the fall. It was a sweet place in a great solitude, where the silence was broken only by the tumbling waters, the cooing of pigeons on the roof, and the twittering of ringouzels by the side of the torrent. The air was fresh with the smell of new peat. There was a wedge-shaped garden in front, and it was encompassed by chestnut-trees. As Hugh Ritson drew near he noticed that a squirrel crept from the fork of one of these trees. The little creature rocked itself on the thin end of a swaying branch, plucking sometimes at the drooping fan of the chestnut, and sometimes at the prickly shell of its pendulous nut. When he opened the little gate Hugh Ritson observed that a cat sat sedately behind the trunk of that tree, glancing up at intervals at the sporting squirrel in her moving seat.

      As he entered the garden Mercy was crossing it with a pail of water just raised from the well. She had seen him, and now tried to pass into the house. He stepped before her and she set down the pail. Her head was held very low, and her cheeks were deeply flushed.

      "Mercy," he said, "it is all arranged. Mr. Bonnithorne will see you into the train this evening, and when you get to your journey's end the person I spoke of will meet you."

      The girl lifted her eyes beseechingly to his face.

      "Not to-day, Hugh," she said in a broken whisper; "let me stay until to-morrow."

      He regarded her for a moment with a steadfast look, and when he spoke again his voice fell on her ear like the clank of a chain.

      "The journey has to be made. Every week's delay increases the danger."

      The girl's eyes fell again, and the tears began to drop from them on to the brown arms that she had clasped in front.

      "Come," he said in a softer tone, "the train starts in an hour. Your father is not yet home from the pit, and most of the dalespeople are at the sports. So much the better. Put on your cloak and hat and take the fell path to the Coledaie road-ends. There Mr. Bonnithorne will meet you."

      The girl's tears were flowing fast, though she bit her lip and struggled to check them.

      "Come, now, come; you know this was of your own choice."

      There was a pause.

      "I never thought it would be so hard to go," she said at length.

      He smiled feebly, and tried a more rallying tone.

      "You are not going for life. You will come back safe and happy."

      The words thrilled her through and through. Her clasped hands trembled visibly, and her fingers clutched them with a convulsive movement. After awhile she was calmer, and said quietly:

      "No, I'll never come back – I know that quite well." And her head dropped on her breast and she felt sick at heart. "I'll have to say good-bye to everything. There were Betsy Jackson's children – I kissed them all this morning, and never said why – little Willy, he seemed to know, dear little fellow, and cried so bitterly."

      The memories of these incidents touched to overflowing the springs of love in the girl's simple soul, and the bubbling child-voice was drowned in sobs.

      The man stood with a smile of pain on his face. He came close, and brushed away her tears, and touched her drooping head with a gesture of protestation.

      Mercy regained her voice.

      "And then there's your mother," she said, "and I can't say good-bye to her, and my poor father, and I daren't tell him – "

      Hugh stamped on the path impatiently.

      "Come, come, Mercy, don't be foolish."

      The girl lifted to his the good young face that had once Been bonny as the day and was now pale with weeping and drawn down with grief. She took him by the coat, and then, by an impulse which she seemed unable to resist, threw one arm about his neck, and raised her face to his until their lips all but touched, and their eyes met in a steadfast gaze.

      "Hugh," she said, passionately, "are you sure that you love me well enough to think of me when I am gone? – are you quite, quite sure?"

      "Yes, yes; be sure of that," he said, gently.

      He disengaged her arm.

      "And will you come and fetch me after – after – "

      She could not say the word. He smiled and answered, "Why, yes, yes."

      Her fingers trembled and clung together; her head fell; her cheeks were aglow.

      "Why, of course." He smiled again, as if in deprecation of so much child-like earnestness; then put his arm about the girl's shoulder, dropped his voice to a tone of mingled compassion and affection, and said, as he lifted the brightening face to his, "There, there – now go off and make ready."

      The girl brushed her tears away vigorously, and looked half ashamed and half enchanted.

      "I'm going."

      "That's a good little girl."

      How the sunshine came back at the sound of his words!

      "Good-bye for the present, Mercy – only for the present, you know."

      But how the shadow pursued the sunshine after all!

      Hugh saw the tears gathering again in the lucent eyes, and came back a step.

      "There – a smile – just one little smile!" She smiled through her tears. "There – there – that's a dear little Mercy. Good-day; good-bye."

      Hugh turned on his heel and walked sharply away. As he passed out through the gate he could not help observing that the cat from the foot of the chestnut-tree was walking stealthily off, with something like a dawning smile on its whiskered face, and the brush of the squirrel between its teeth.

      Hugh Ritson had

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