The New Mistress: A Tale. George Manville Fenn

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The New Mistress: A Tale - George Manville Fenn

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he whispered, “I have come down on purpose. I must—I will see you after church.”

      “I beg your pardon,” she said coldly; “our acquaintance is at an end.”

      “End! No. I have come to my senses. It must not—it shall not be.”

      “It must and shall, Mr. Graves,” she said, turning away.

      “For Heaven’s sake, why?” he whispered excitedly, as she was going.

      “Times are changed, sir. I am only a schoolmistress now.”

      Just then Mr. Chute entered with the boys, and he turned white as he saw the stranger there.

       Table of Contents

      Hazel’s Troubles.

      About a year and a half before Hazel Thorne had the task of conducting her school for the first time to Plumton church, she was in her home at Kensington, leading the every-day pleasant life of the daughter of a stockbroker, who was reputed among his friends as being “warm,” that being the appropriate term for a man who is said to have a pretty good store of money well invested in solid securities.

      “Fred Thorne will buy mining shares for you, or shares in any bubble that is popular at the time; but catch him putting his coin in anything doubtful.”

      That is what people said; and as he had a good home at Kensington, and gave nice, quiet little dinners, he and his were pretty well courted.

      “Well, yes, I don’t mind, Archy,” said old Graves, the wholesale cork merchant of Tower Hill. “Hazel Thorne is a very nice girl—very pretty and ladylike, so I suppose we must swallow the mother for her sake.”

      The boa-constrictor-like proposition was naturally enough taken by Archibald Graves in its slango-metaphorical sense, and slango-metaphorically Mrs. Frederick Thorne was swallowed by the whole of the Graves family, and she did not agree with them.

      For Mrs. Thorne was not a pleasant woman. Tall, handsome, and thoroughly ladylike in appearance, she was very proud of having been considered a beauty, and was not above reminding her husband of the fact that she might have married So-and-so and What’s-his-name, and You-know-whom, all of which gentlemen could have placed her in a better position than that she occupied; and as she grew older these references were more frequent. Each child she had seemed to be looked upon by her as a fresh grievance—a new cause for tears, and tears she accordingly shed to an extent that might have made any one fancy this was the reason why the Thorne home generally seemed damp and chilly, till Hazel entered the room like so much sunshine, when the chill immediately passed away.

      Gradually growing weaker in act and speech, the unfortunate woman received a shock which completed the change that had been gradually heretofore advancing, for Fred Thorne—handsome, bright, cheery, and ever ready to laugh at mamma’s doldrums, as he called them—went out as usual one morning to the City, saying that he should be back a little earlier to dinner that day, as he had stalls for the opera.

      “I’ll come back through Covent Garden, Hazel, and bring you a bouquet,” he cried merrily.

      “You need not bring flowers for me, Frederick,” said Mrs. Thorne, in an aggrieved tone. “I am growing too old for flowers now.”

      “Too old? Ha, ha, ha!” he cried. “Why, you look younger than ever. Smithson asked me the other day if you and Hazel were my daughters.”

      “Did he, Frederick,” said Mrs. Thorne, in a rather less lachrymose tone.

      “To be sure he did; and of course I am going to bring you a bouquet as well.”

      He bought the two bouquets, and they were kept fresh in water, taken to pieces, and spread over his breast, as he lay cold and stern in his coffin: for as he was carefully bearing the box containing the flowers across Waterloo Place on his way home that evening, there was a cry, a shout, the rush of wheels, and the trampling of horses; a barouche came along Pall Mall at a furious rate, with two ladies therein clinging to the sides, and the coachman and footman panic-stricken on the box. One rein had broken, and the horses tore round the corner towards Regent Street as if mad with fear.

      It was a gallant act, and people said at the inquest that it saved the ladies and the servants, but it was at the sacrifice of his own life. For, dropping the box he was carrying, Fred Thorne, a hale strong man of five-and-forty, dashed at the horses’ heads, caught one by the bit and held on, to be dragged fifty or sixty yards, and crushed against the railings of one of the houses.

      He stopped the horses, and was picked up by the crowd that gathered round.

      “Stop a moment, he wants to say something—he is only stunned—here, get some water—what say, sir!”

      “My—poor—darlings!”

      They were Fred Thorne’s last words, uttered almost with his last breath.

      The shock was terrible.

      Mrs. Thorne took to her bed at once, and was seriously ill for weeks, while Hazel seemed to have been changed in one moment from a merry thoughtless girl to a saddened far-seeing woman.

      For upon her the whole charge of the little household fell. There was the nursing of the sick mother, the care and guidance of Percy, a clever, wilful boy of sixteen, now at an expensive school, and the management of the two little girls, Cissy and Mabel.

      For the first time in her life she learned the meaning of real trouble, and how dark the world can look at times to those who are under its clouds.

      The tears had hardly ceased to flow for the affectionate indulgent father, when Hazel had to listen to business matters, a friend of her father calling one morning, and asking to see her.

      This was a Mr. Edward Geringer, a gentleman in the same way of business as Mr. Thorne, and who had been fully in his confidence.

      He was a thin, fair, keen-looking man of eight-and-thirty or forty, with a close, tight mouth, and a quick, impressive way of speaking; his pale-bluish eyes looking sharply at the person addressed the while. He looked, in fact, what he was—a well-dressed clear-headed man, with one thought—how to make money; and he found out how it was done.

      That is hardly fair, though. He had another thought, one which had come into his heart—a small one—when the late Mr. Thorne had brought him home one day to dinner and to discuss some monetary scheme. That thought had been to make Hazel Thorne his wife, and he had nursed it in silence till it grew into a great plant which overshadowed his life.

      He had seen Hazel light and merry, and had been a witness, at the little evenings at the house in Kensington, of the attentions to her paid by Archibald Graves. He knew, too, that they pleased Hazel; and as he saw her brightened eyes and the smiles she bestowed, the hard, cold City man bit his lips and felt sting after sting in his heart.

      “Boy-and-girl love,” he muttered though, when he was alone. “It will not last, and I can wait.”

      So Edward Geringer waited, and in his visits he was in Hazel’s eyes

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