UANLON UHH ONILAGN VAAN MYRA: CHILD OF ADOPTION. ROMANCE OF REAL LIFE. BY MRS. ANN S§, STEPHENS, AUTHOR OF “ FASHION AND FAMINE,” “ MALAESKA,” ETC., ETC. ~ BEADLE AND COMPANY, LONDON: 44, PATERNOSTER ROW; NEW YORK: 141, WILLIAM STREET- —— a S Pee MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. CHAPTER I. MOTHER AND CHILD. “ One look upon thy face ere thou depart! My daughter ! it is soon to let thee go! My daughter! with thy birth has gushed a spring I knew not of—filling my heart with tears, And turning with strange tenderness to thee— A love, O God! it seems so—that must flow Far as thou fleest, and wrap my soul and thee. Henceforth thy love must be a yearning charm Drawing me after thee. And so farewell !”—Wixus. THE windows were all open, but shaded fold after fold with muslin transparent as dew drops, and snowy as the drifts of a summer cloud. The floor was spread with East India matting, and in a corner of a chamber stood a couch shaded with clouds of delicate lace and clad in snow white even to the floor—a great easy chair, covered with chaste dimity, stood close by the bed, and further off a miniature couch, snow white also, save where the soft rose tints of an inner curtain, light and silken, broke through the waves of snowy gossamer that flowed over it. Upon the pillow of this pretty couch lay a bouquet of flow- ers tied loosely by an azure-colored ribbon, and nfore beautiful still a sleeping infant, with one tiny hand resting like a torn peach- blosom, on its little bosom and its sweet lips parted smilingly,asa bud uncloses to the warm sunbeam. There, in its snowy nest, with the fragrant flowers sending their breath in and out through 6 MYRA, the misty draperies, and half smothered in delicate lace, lay the beautiful infant; and a little way off, upon the larger couch re- posed another being in the first bud and bloom of womanly beauty, not asleep, but with her large eyes wandering tenderly toward the infant, and from that to a bouquet of orange-blossoms and moss-roses that, feebly clesped ia her delicate fingers, was yet falling apart and dropping its blossoms over the counterpane. An air of gentle languor lay upon this young creature, and there was something more than that affectionate tenderness with which a mother regards her young child, in the look that she, from time to time, cast upon the slumbering infant—a shade of sadness, that but for her feeble state, might have ta- ken the strength of passionate regret, seemed ready to break from her eyes in a flood of tears, whenever they dwelt longer than usual upon the babe. But when her grief was ready to break forth, she would allow her eyes to droop toward the flowers that seemed to have some pleasant association con- nected with their fragrance, and a sweet smile—not the less sweet that there was sadness in it—would part her lips while a faint sigh floated through them. All at once the infant began to nestle in its crib, and open- ing its large brown eyes, turned them upon the recumbent fe- male. As if her tears lay so near the surface as to require only this motion to set them flowing, the young mother, as she encountered the infantile glance, shuddered faintly, and large drops gathered in her eyes, and fell one by one over her full but pale cheeks, “I must not look at it, I must not learn to love it so,” she murmured, turning her head away, and shading her tearful eyes with onehand. “Ah! why should I, a mother so young, and with a husband like him, always find every feeling, every impulse shackled as it springs from my heart? Why was there no one to shield my youth from the blight, that I feel, too surely, will cling around me to the end 2” The infant began to cry, and there came into the room a colored woman, tall and with that superb luxuriance of form that so frequently characterizes the dusky-hued woman of the South. She approached the crib and took the child in her arms, hushing it with a sort of cajoling attempt at tenderness, that seemed to annoy the young mother not a little. a THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. % * Give the babe to me!” she said, feebly reaching forth her arms. “ Better not, better not, missus,” replied the woman, press- ing her full lips upon the velvet cheek resting on her bosom— a most unnatural pillow, as the unhappy mother felt all too keenly. “Nurse said last night that young missus must be kept quiet, and the baby not left to fret her so much.” “Fret me! my child fret me! Give it to me, I say,” cried the young mother so passionately that the color broke over her pale cheek, like the abrupt opening of a rose-bud. “TI tis cruel, it is unkind, thus to keep a babe from its mother’s bosom. He never ordered it. I know well enough it is not his wish that I should be tortured in this manner.” “Take the child to its mother. Why do you hesitate in obeying your mistress ?” cried a firm and manly voice from the door ; and with his lofty step somewhat subdued, a gentleman entered the chamber, whose air of authority awed the negress at once. He approached the young female, who had started eagerly up from her pillow, with every manifestation of deep tenderness in her voice and manner. “ Have you been waiting for me, Zulima ?” he said, bending down to kiss the fair forehead of his wife. “I was kept longer than usual at the counting-house this morning.” “Oh! I knew that you would be here soon,” replied the young wife, taking his hand between both hers, and kissing it with a degree of passionate tenderness that thrilled through her feeble frame, till, in her weak state, excess of feeling be- came almost painful. “What! because Is cattered my path to your bedside with the flowers you have been wasting ?” was the smiling reply. “They were welcome and very sweet, for they told me that you were soon to follow,” said the young wife, gathering the scattered flowers together with her hand. “See! your little daughter has kept hers in better condition. She is not old enough to tear her flowers to pieces the moment they come within reach !” “ Like her mother, ha! Zulima !” said the gentleman, shaking his head, but smiling fondly all the time. “She must have more patience and less pride than her mother, this pretty child—or she will be”— “ As unfortunate and as unhappy as her mother has been,” said the young wife, and her eyes filled with tears. “T only hope she will be as lovely and as innocent, what- ever her lot may prove, and as truly beloved, Zulima,” he ad- ded, after a moment’s pause; and with an expression of deep feeling, mingled with a shade of sadness, the proud husband gazed upon his wife and child till the tears clouded his own fine eyes. For a moment there was silence between the husband and wife. Both were gazing upon the infant, and both were occu- pied with thoughts where pain and tenderness were almost equally blended. Pride, stern and lofty pride, tinged the sweet current of his reflections, and she—impulsive young crea- ture—thought of nothing but her sufferings, her passionate love for him, and of the beautiful child she was sheltering upon her bosom with one fairy arm, from which she had impatiently flung back the loose sleeve of her night-dress, as if detesting the del- icate lawn for coming between her and that little form. “You will not send her away!” said the young creature, lifting her eyes to the face of her husband, which wes becom- ing more and more thoughtful each moment. “ Ah? if you knew how much I love her!” “T know—I know, Zulima,” said the husband, interrupting the beautiful pleader with an accent which, though not 4n- kind, told how the slightest oppositiion chafed his proud na- ture. “It is natural. You must love the child; who could help it? but do you not love me better ?—do you not love its future fame? its father’s fame?—your own reputation, well enough to relinquish her for a time 2” “T have thought of it all—I know what the world will say of me—but I cannot give her up—indeed, indeed I cannot.” The young mother rose in the bed, and with her child folded to her bosom with one arm, cast the other round the proud man’s neck, and drew his face down till it touched the infant, as she covered his forehead with kisses. “ You will keep us both—you will not take our child from me!” “Zulima, it must be,” said the husband, drawing gently back, and freeing himself from her fond embrace, while his fine features bespoke the terrible pain which it cost him to be firm. “While the man who has once claimed you for his THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. 0 wife remains unpunished, I cannot acknowledge you mine, segally, innocently mine, as in the sight of Heaven you are.” “T do not ask it. Let the world think of me as it likes. I will submit to reproach—to suspicion—any Sada leave my child—never ?” “ Zulima !” was the firm and almost reproachful saeiyl “do you think that your reputation is separate from mine? Shall I cast a stain upon my wife which no after time can efface, and then produce her, wronged and sullied, to society ? Listen to me, Zulima; cease weeping and listen! The man is yet altve who has called you wife ”— “IT know—I know!” cried the poor young creature, shud- dering from head to foot, and burying her face in the pillows; “Oh say no more! I will give up the child—but spare me that subject !” “No, Zulima. Let us speak of it this once, and then it shall be banished our lips forever. Think yon that it is not painful to me as to you?” ; How painful it was might be guessed by the colorless cheeks and the quivering of that proud man’s lips while he was speak- ing. “While a mere child you became the dupe and victim of this vile man, De Grainges. He wronged your confidence, wronged your love’— a “No, no! I did not love him—I was a child—I knew not - what love was!” broke in passionate murmurs from the pillow where Zulima’s face was buried. “Do not say I loved that man !” : “My poor wife! I know that you did not love him. I know quite as well that you do love me. Look up, sweet child! I would give worlds that I could speak of all this with- out distressing you thus. Bear with me only a minute longer. My only wish is to reconcile you, if possible, to tie inevitable.” “J will listen,” replied the tortured young mother. : “T know, Zulima, that you were deceived by this bad man— that he wedded you while his wife was living, and that you fled from his home the moment this truth was made known. Of all this I was thoroughly convinced before you became my wife; but until this man is convicted in open court and before the whole world, how can I conyince society of that which to 10 MYRA, me is a sacred truth? how, before the fact of his previous mar- riage is thus publicly substantiated, can I proclaim the union which has made me more than happy? Zulima, I am a proud man—sensitive to public opinion—careful of my standing in the world. Were a breath of suspicion to rest upon the fame -of my wife, I should never be happy again. You are young— ~ supposed to be unmarried—living here under the roof of my dearest friend, who, with one exception, is alone in my confi- dence. Ina few months this man, now in prison, will receive the punishment of his crime. Do you not see the peril of keeping this child with you till after that event enables me to claim my wife before the world? Zulima! look up—say that you forgive me the pain I am causing—say, that, for my sake, -you will submit to have this little one sent from you for a sea- son—only for a season.” , Subdued and touched to the heart by the depth of feeling with which this appeal was made, Zulima arose from the pil- low where she had been striving te subdue her grief, and tak- ing the infant in her trembling arms, motioned her husband to receive it. The moment she. was relieved from the sweet bur- den, the young creature fell back, and closing her eyes, tried to check the grief that, however suppressed, still clamored at cher heart. It was allin vain: the tears gushed like shattered diamonds though the thick and silky lashes, and she grasped the counterpane nervously with one hand, in a terrible strife to force back the agony that was choking her. Poor young mother! she felt with that keen intuition, which is like a proph- ecy, that she was not parting from her child for a season, but forever. “You consent, Zulima? ‘You will give up our little one with no anger, and without all this bitter grief?” cried the strong man, pale as death, and bending over the young mother, with the child pressed to his bosom. “TY will, I do,” burst from those pale and trembling lips. The husband turned away; his limbs trembled, his eyes were blinded with moisture, and the weight of that little babe seemed to bend and sway his strong frame, as if he had been a reed, He looked back upon the mother. There she lay, the wet eyelids closed and quivering—her white lips pressed together, and so pale, that but for the agitation of her features Ae THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. 11 she might have seemed stricken dead in the midst of her an- guish. He returned to the couch. “Zulima, would you kiss the babe before it goes !” “JT dare not—I dare not,” broke from those pale lips; then Zulima held back her sobs, for his footsteps were departing—a door closed—husband and child both were gone. Then the mother’s anguish broke forth, her arms were flung upward, her quivering hands clasped wildly together—a moment and they fell heavily upon the orange flowers that still littered the bed, crushing them in her utter insensibility. Then, while the young wife lay so pale and deathly there stole toward the bed that negro woman, who bent down till the bright Madras ’kerchief turbaning her forehead mingled with the chestnut tresses that lay scattered over the shoulder and bo- som of the sufferer. She listened a moment, as if to make her- self quite certain that what seemed so deathly was not death itself, and then glided from the chamber. The negress stole softly through the open hall, and into a spacious garden; a row of small white buildings stood at the farther extremity, gleaming in snowy patches through the vines and trees that embowered that portion of the garden. These were the slave dwellings belonging to a rich plantation some three miles from New Orleans—belonging to the husband of Zulima, and occupied for a season by his bosom friend that the infancy of his child might be honorably sheltered. And here in a little whitewashed room of the slave dwelling this bo- som friend was impatiently watching the approach of the fe- male slave whom he had placed—a dark spy—in the bed-cham- ber of that helpless young wife. With his face close to one of the four panes of glass that admitted light to the humble room, he watched the fiery colors of the Madras turban, which the woman always wore, as it glided like some gorgeous bird through the thick foliage, nearer and nearer to the den where he had for two hours been waiting for news from the sick- chamber, The slave entered her dwelling, and sat down be- fore her master, full of that consequential assumption that a lit- tle power is certain to call forth in one of her ignorant and de- graded class. . “ Well, Louisa,” said the master, with a show of careless in- Sgerene, for he was of a cool and subtle temperament, with . MYRA, passions slow and calculating, but all the more grasping for the deliberation, with which, like well-trained hounds, they were let free from the leash of his strong will; “ Well, Louisa, how is the lady this morning ?” “ Oh, she am about.de same, Massa Ross—no danger of her going off dis bout anyhow,” replied the negress, turning her head on one side and moving a palm-leaf fan before her face, with an air of self-conceit that made her auditor smile, spite of his pre-occupation, “She just had a little fainting spell when I come out, but it won't last long—no danger !” “Has she had any visitors this morning—has /e been there, Louisa ?” “Dar, now, you ask me dat, Massa Ross, just as if he didn’t come ebery morning of him life.” “Then he has been there,” rejoined the man, “and left her fainting. Tell me, Louisa,—oh here is the Napoleon that I promised.” “There, that am something like Massa Ross,” and the ne- gress tied the gold in a corner of her handkerchief, and thrust it into her bosom. “ Yes, he was there a long time.” “Well,” interrupted Ross, evidently getting inpatient, “ tell me all that passed, word for word; do not forget alook ora syllable—and another gold piece is ready when you have done.” And the negress, thus stimulated, told him all. That scene of tender anguish—the struggle of love and pride which she had witnessed in the sick chamber—all was related; and oh! how its exquisite pathos, its touching dignity was desecrated by the vulgar mind and coarse speech of that slaye woman! Ross listened to it all, his face changing with every sentence; _ for, with only that coarse witness, he did not think it necessary to control his features with the dissimulation that had become a habit. He listened, and as he felt, thus the evil man looked. When the woman ceased speaking the exultation of a fiend was in the smile that curled his lip. “ And he was determined—spite of her caresses, spite of her tears. I knew that it would be so. He is not a man to waver, having once taken a resolution—but the child, Louisa ? I have recommended a woman up the river to take charge of . THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. 13 it, but you, my good Louisa, must still be its nurse. It seems a feeble little thing; do you not think so, Louisa ? “Feeble! Lor amassa! No; it’s the best-natured, healthy littie thing I ever see,” was the reply, and Louisa agitated her palm-leaf fan with considerable violence. “But away from you, Louisa, with some one less kind, it may become sickly in a very little time yon know.” “Sure enough !”. and Louisa half suspended the action of her fan, as she fell into a fit of profound contemplation, “With you to give it medicine and superintend, if it were ill, I should feel quite safe,” said Ross, and a strange, fiendish smile crept over his lips. ‘“ Of course, I should come and see you very often.” ‘ “Oh! you would. Well, den, I haven't nothing to say against going with the baby.” “Wherever I send you, Louisa ?” “Well, yes, I don’t care, if it isn’t so far off that you can’t come once a week or so to see us, Massa Ross; but I won't go far, now I tell you.” “ Well, now, go to your charge. I will see you again to- morrow.” The negress arose, and with an insolent twist of her head to the left shoulder, stood in the door-way fanning herself. “Well,” said Ross, impatiently, “well, what are you wait- ing for now !” “Dis piece of gold in my bosom, Massa Ross,” and the ne+ gress placed a plump ebony hand upon her heart. “It is’gun beginning to feel lonesome.” “Oh! I had forgotten ; here, here.” Louisa drew forth the pocket handkerchief, which, from its embroidery and exquisite lace, must have been purloined from her mistress, and a second Napoleon was nested in her bosom. “Stop,” said Ross, as she was going out; “ You said that the lady was fainting—that he took the child forth in his arms. Where is it now ?” “How should I know? Is’pose he took the baby to your wife. She was in the back parlor, and he turned that way.” “There he is now. Go back into the room, Louisa, go back! Ross seized his hat as he spoke, and leaving the slave-house, wound through a grove of fruit.trees that sheltered MYKA, him from sight, and taking a serpentine path, came leisurely forth into that part of the garden, where he had seen Mr. Clark. The proud man was walking hurriedly forward, his arms folded, and one white aristocratic hand thrust into the bosom of his black dress. He was very pale, and his finely ° cut features bore traces of great internal anguish, He saw Ross, and turned quickly toward him. “Tt is over, my friend; it is all over,” he said, grasping the hand which Ross extended, and wringing it hard. A smile, “ull of proud anguish, broke the firm and classical beauty of nis mouth, and his eyes spoke volumes of suffering. “What is over? what has happened ?” inquired Ross, start- led and turning almost as white as his friend. “My wife! my child!” “What of them? what has happened to them, my friend ?” “Nothing but that which was inevitable. But Zulima, my poor, poor wife! It would wring your heart to see how she suffers from the separation from her child.” “But the child; is it yet with her?” “Wark!” said the other, lifting his hand. “Do you not hear ?” It was the sound of a carriage driving rapidly from the house. Mr. Clark seemed listening to the sound as if his life was departing with it—fainter and fainter from his bosom. There was something in his countenance which Ross dared not disturb, though his soul was burning with curiosity to Imow why the common sound of carriage-wheels grinding through the gravelly soil should so profoundly agitate his benefactor. The sound grew distant, and died away before another word was spoken, then Mr. Clark turned toward his false friend, his nerves hitherto drawn to their most rigid ten-. sion relaxed, and his eye met the gaze with which Ross was curiously regarding him with an appeal for sympathy, that would have touched a heart for stone. “Tt is gone!’ he said, ina broken voice. “My child is gone!” “Your child gone? when, where?’ cried Ross, fearfully excited. “Surely you have not sent the infant from its mother so abruptly—and—sid without consulting—I mean without informing your best find.” P-L A WOUNDED FAWN, 15 “That carriage—you heard it—bore away Zulima’s child !” said the unhappy father, mournfully. “But where has it gone? With whom is it placed 2?” “Tt is placed with one whom I haye long known, the noble and childless wife of an old and dear friend. Myra will be to them as an own child, till I claim her again.” “ And may I not know the people, and the place?” inquired the false friend. “The child of my benefactor is dear to me as my own.” “T have pledged myself to secrecy in this. It was the desire of my friend,” repeated Mr. Clark; “but for that you should know every thing. All this concealment will soon be over; a few weeks and this man must be sentenced. Then wife and child shall take possession of their home before the world. In this you can help me. I can not well appear in person to press forward this man’s conviction, but you, my friend, will use every effort to relieve me from this painful position. My poor wife scarcely suffers more than I do?” “TJ will do every thing that you desire. Indeed, the com- monest gratitude should insure that,” said Ross, pressing hi patron’s hand, but with restless and nervous haste in his man: ner. “Shall I set out for the city at once ?” “No, no; seek your wife first; tell her to comfort my poor Zulima. Ican not see her now; without wishing to reproach me, she could not help it. I tell you, Ross, I would rather encounter a squadron of armed men, than the look of those soft eyes, as they followed her child this morning, when I took it from her. It was the glance of a wounded fawn, as we haye often seen it, turned upon the hunter.” “TI will see my wife at once,” replied Ross, unable with all his duplicity to conquer the disappointment that was consuming him; “then I will depart for the city, and make a strong effort to bring De Grainges to his trial.” “Tt is strange,” said Mr. Clark; “but some influence that Ican not fathom seems to keep back this man’s sentence.” The court, as if it were trifling with his case only to perpet- uate my troubles, keeps putting off his sentence from day tv day with cruel pertinacity. Bt now I am resolved that it shall be more prompt; this hi .en influence must and shall be revealed.” MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. Ross listened to the first portion of this speech with a cold and crafty smile playing and deepening about his mouth, buf at the close this smile died away, and with it every vestige of color—his eyes wandered rapidly from object to object, ayoid- ing the face of his benefactor, and when Mr. Clark would have spoken again, he forgot all the habitual deference of his man- ner and interrupted him. ; “Haye no trouble about this man, De Grainges; I will at- vend to him at once. The cause of this unaccountable delay in the court shall be ascertained and remedied. Now that I see how deeply your happiness is involved, no effort shall be wanting on my part to bring the trial to an issue, To this end, I must start for the city at once,” Ross held out his hand, and grasped that of his patron. “Accomplish this for me, Ross, and no being eyer lived more grateful than I shall be,” said the generous man. “TI de- pend on you.” “You may, most positively,” was the emphatic reply; and wringing the hand he held, Ross left the garden. He meta servant in the hall, and accosted him with the sharp command to have a horse saddled. Then, passing into the inner room, he spoke a few hasty words, not to his wife, but to the black woman, Louisa, and then hurried to the stable. With the sluggish habits of his race, the negro was lazily dragging forth a saddle from its repository, when his master came up booted, and with a riding whip in his hand. “Walk quick, you scoundrel!” he said, laying the whip over the sleek negro with a force that made the old fellow start into something resembling haste; but eyen this unheard- of activity did not satisfy the master; he snatched the saddle, flung it over the horse, and set his teeth firmly together, as he buckled the girth. Sharply ordering the man out of his way, he sprang upon the horse and dashed toward the city, at first in-a light canter; but the moment he was out of sight, the high-spirited animal was put to the top of his speed, and horse and man flew like lightning along the road. At each turn of the road, Ross would lean forward on his saddle and take a new survey of the distance, muttering his disappointment in half-gasped sentences, as he sped along. “Oh, if I could but overtake the carriage before it reaches THE CITY PRISON. . Bae the city! A single glimpse of it might be enough-nothing should take me from the track; nothing, nothing. Ha! that is it—no, only a sugar-cart. Why did I let him keep me? I . must, I will know who these people are—no, no, I am foiled at last !” ; This exclamation was followed by a sharp check to the horse, who was still bounding forward at the top of his speed. The city lay before him; but along the winding highway, over which his eye ran like lightning, there was no carriage at all resembling the one that Louisa had described to him as that which had borne her young charge away. : At a slow pace, but with his horse reeking with the effects of his former hot speed, Ross rode into the city. He took a circuitous route, to his own counting-house, and held a long consultation with a young man whom he found there. This lasted several hours; and then the two walked arm-in-arm toward the city prison. Through the gloomy labyrinths of this prison the two men made their way, conversing together in low voices; a turnkey went before them, humming a tune to himself, and sometimes raising an accompaniment by playfully dashing a huge iron key, which he held in one hand, against the door of some prisoner's cell, smiling grimly as he heard the poor inmate spring forward, in the vain hope that some friend had come to break the gloom of his bondage. From time to time, the two visitcrs seemed to study this man’s face with close scru- tiny; and as some new manifestation of character broke forth in his manner or his song, they would exchange glances that were full of meaning. “ Offer him gold!” whispered Ross to his cempanion; “say that is for his trouble; we can judge something by the man- ner in which he receives it.” “True,” was the emphatic but whispered reply, “ it will be a sure test.” The officer paused at the entrance of a cell, and placed his key in the lock. “ This is De Grainges’ cell, gentlemen ; how loug will you wish to stay with him ?” “We may wish to remain so long that you will suffer some inconyenience,” said Ross's companion, dropping his hand into a pocket with that easy grace which renders the most singular MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. acts of some men perfectly natural in their seeming. “ Here is something to repay the trouble we may occasion.” The turnkey reached forth his hand eagerly for the silver coin which he supposed the stranger was about to offer him, but when he saw a bright piece of gold glittering in his palm, the sudden joy of his heart broke with a sort of gloating fero- city over his face, and with a low chuckle he folded his other hand over the gold, and began to rub the palms together, with the coin between them in a warm clasp, as if he thought thus to infuse some portion of the precious metal into his own person. Ross and his companion had stepped within the cell, and thus, clouded with semi-darkness themselves, watched the man, whose face was fully revealed in the broadly-lighted corridor. “Tt will do,” whispered Ross, smiling, “ it will do.” “Yes,” said the other thoughtfully ; “he is one of those who would sell his soul for money.” The man said this with the air of one who reflected sadly upon the infirmities of human nature, and really felt shocked at the gross cupidity that himself had tempted; and so it was. He did not reflect that he himself was there for no purpose on earth, but to barter zs own soul for the very yellow dross, only in a larger amount; that he was ready to yield to this man’s bartered treachery ; that all the difference between him- self and the man he tempted, lay in the price which each set upon his integrity. But the great villain despised the lesser sincerely, and sighed that human nature could be so degraded. So it is all over the world. Those who shroud their crimes in purple and fine linen, ever do and ever will look down with benign contempt on those who fold lesser crimes scantily in poverty and rags; so scantily that the world sees them as they are, coarse, rude, and glaring. Thus, shaking their heads and sighing over the degeneracy of the human heart, these two arch-villains entered the cell of De Grainges, the bigamist, leaving the officer without to gloat over his piece of gold. A tall man, pale from confinement, and yet possessed of a certain air of languid elegance, sat within the cell writing. He looked up, as the two visitors entered, and regarded them with CONFESSION OF GUILT. 19 an expression of nervous surprise, but observing that they were gentlemen in appearance, arose courteously, and placed the chair, in which he had been sitting, for Ross. The cell con- tained but two seats, and the prisoner stood up with his arms folded, and leaning in a position that had much grace in it against the wall. “You have come, gentlemen,” said the prisoner, in a low, sad voice—‘ you have doubtless come to tell me that the time of my sentence has arrived ?” “No,” said Ross; “that would be a painful task, and one from which we are happily saved. We come, as friends, to ask some questions regarding this singular case. Perhaps we may have the power—we certainly have the will—to serve you.” “Tt is too late,” replied the prisoner, sadly. ‘ My trial is over. Why they have not sentenced me before this is incom- prehensible.” “To you, perhaps, but not to us. You have strong friends outside; those who have done something in keeping back the sentence, and may do more—obtain, for instance, a new trial.” 5 “To what end?” questioned the prisoner. “I am guilty. I have confessed it. In the wild delirium of a passion that was never equaled in the heart of man, I married the most confiding and lovely creature that ever lived. The fraud was detected. My wife—my living wife forced herself into the home where I had sheltered my fulsely-won bride. Zulima would not love the villain who had wronged her. She left me; and without her I care very little whether it is to a prison or a grave.” “But what if Zulima loved you yet? ‘What if she only desired that in this trial your right to her could be estab- lished ?” The prisoner shook his head. “T only say,” continued Ross, “if this were the case; if a new trial were granted, if there was no lack of funds to pave the way through court, would you not, having a new trial, suppress the procfs of this former marriage? Might not your wife herself be persuaded to aid in clearing you ?” “ No,” replied the prisoner, firmly. “It could not be. My MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. wife pursues me with that strong hate which is born of baffled passion. Zulima ceased to love me.” “ Because she believed her marriage unlawful,” said Ross. “Tt was unlawful. I have acknowledged it again and again. Zulima had nothing left—nothing but her freedom from the man that had wronged her to hope for. I would not deprive her of that.” “And if the means were before you? If you could obtain a new trial, this first marriage, you are certain, would be proven against you ?” “Tam very certain,” replied the prisoner. “ Remember, if they fail to prove the first marriage, you are free foreyer, and Zulima is your lawful wife. Is not this worth an effort ?” The unhappy man clasped his hands, and for a moment there broke through his sad eyes a luster that was perfectly dazzling. “Worth an effort!” he said. ‘Oh, heavens! I would die but to see her look upon me again with love for a single mo- ment.” “Then why not make the effort ?” “ Because I know that Zulima has ceased to love me. She is young, beautiful. I feel that she has brought me here, not for revenge, but that herself may attain honorable freedom, J would not raise my hand to thwart her in the just object.” The two men looked anxiously at each other. They were astounded by the strange magnanimity of the prisoner. “T tell you,” said Ross, earnestly “this thing can be brought about. Your counsel have seen the witnesses. Gold is a potent agent. Even your wife yields; she will not appear. You can be cleared of this charge; you can claim Zulima as your lawful wife. We pledge ourselves to accomplish all that we have proposed.” “ Gentlemen, you seem kind, and I thank you; but I know that the wrong which I inflicted on that young girl has been followed by her aversion; she has told meso. She is not my lawful wife; without her love—her firm, earnest love, I would not claim her if she were. All that she desires is freedom ; that she shall have, though it cost my life instead of a few . years’ imprisonment.” 4 PLAN FOR ESCAPE. 21 Ross arose and went into the corridor, where he conversed in a low voice and very earnestly with the turnkey. Mean- time the prisoner sat down in the empty chair, and burying his face in his hands, seemed to be lost in bitter thought. When Ross returned he arose and stood up, but his face was haggard, and he seemed to suffer much from the struggle that had been aroused in his breast. ~ “Then you are determined not to claim a new trial ?” “T am,” was the reply. “ Perhaps it is as well; but we are the friends of Zulima, She suffers, she shrinks from the thought of your imprison- ment. This new appeal may be impossible, but there is an- other way. Your trial has done all for Zulima that can be accomplished ; it sets her free. Now she would give that to you, which your self devotion will secure to her—freedom. To-night, De Grainges, the means of escape will be provided ; at day-break, to-morrow, a wie sails for Europe; you must become one of her passengers.” “ And does she desire this ?” asked the prisoner, aroused all at once from the stubborn resolve of self-sacrifice that had possessed him. “She does; we are her messengers.” “ To-night—this is sudden! and she desires it? She deems the trial that has taken place sufficient for her emancipation from the hateful bonds that made her mine. You are certain of this ?” “Most certain.” “ And the means of escape ?” “Leave that to us. The time, midnight; be ready. That is all we desire of you.” “J will be ready,” said the young man, falling into the chair which Ross had just left, and overcome with a sudden sense of freedom—freedom given by the woman whom he had so deeply wronged. His nerves, hitherto so firm, began to tremble, and covering his face with both hands, he burst into tears. When he looked up the two strangers had left the cell, The next morning, when Ross entered his counting-room, he found the turnkey talking with his partner. Just then Mr. Clark entered also, but with a harassed and anxious ex- @ression of countenance. MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. “My friend,” said Ross, advancing toward him, “ you have come at the right moment to hear this man’s news from his own lips. I fear it will give you pain. No, I had better tell it myself; he is a stranger, and knows nothing of your inter- est in the mother. Step this way, sir.” “What is this? For what would you prepareme? Zu- lima—” “Ts well, and becoming reconciled to her loss; but De Grainges—” “What of him, sir? what of that unhappy man?” inquired Mr. Clark, sternly. “He has broken prison; he escaped last night.” Mr. Clark staggered. The color left his lip, and he leaned heavily on the back of a chair. ‘“ My poor, poor wife! will her trials never have an end?” he exclaimed with deep feeling, and, turning hastily, he left the counting-room. “*Tt will be some time before he acknowledges her now,” said Ross, in a low voice, to his partner. “See how his step wavers.” “That may waver, but his pride never will,” was the low reply. “ Never!” said Campbell. And he was right. Poor, poor Zulima ! vy oh rw rh POOR, POOR ZULIMA ! CH AP Tea 0k. Trifles, light as air, Are, to the jealous, confirmations strong As proofs of holy writ.—OrTHELLO, Ir was spring-time in the South—that rich, bright season more luxurious in foliage and profuse in fragrance than our warm and mellow summers ever are. The orange-trees were all in flower; carnations blushed warm and glowing upon the garden banks; the grass was mottled with tiny blossoms, gor- geous and sweet as the air they breathed. All around the house which Zulima occupied was hedged in with honey- suckles and prairie-roses, that sheltered the grounds and leap- ed up here and there among the magnolia-trees, lacing them together in festoons and arcades of fantastic beauty. Poor, poor Zulima! ‘With this beautiful paradise to wander in, with the sweet air, the warm sky, and all that world of flowers, how unhappy she was! Alone—utterly alone !—her child slept in the bosom of another; her husband had been months away in the far North; an unacknowledged wife, a bereaved parent, how could she choose but weep? Weeks had gone by and no letter reached her; at first her husband had written every day; and with his letters, eloquent of love, lying against her heart, she could not be wholly miserable ; thinking of him she sometimes forgot to mourn for her child. At first she had been greatly distressed by the impediments which the flight of De Grainges had multiplied against the ac- knowledgment of her marriage, but this event had in no de- gree shaken the holy trust which that young heart placed in the object of its love. Singularly unambitious in her desires, but impetuous in feeling, she only felt the continued secrecy maintained regarding her marriage, because it separated her from the babe she had learned to love so intensely. True, it seryed as a restraint upon her husband, and frequently de- MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION, prived her of his presence, but with her imaginative nature, the slight romance of this privacy only served to keep her affections more vivid and her fancy more restless. She was all impulse, all feeling, and sometimes, like a caged bird, she grew wild and restive under the restraints that necessity had placed upon her. Weeks went by, one after another, and now Zulima grew wild with vague fears. Why was he silent? where could he be wandering thus to forget her so completely? Her nights were sleepless; her eyes grew bright and wild with feverish anxiety. That young heart was in every way prepared for the poison which was to be poured into it drop by drop, till jealousy, that most fierce and bitter of all the passions, should break forth in its might and change her whole being. Zalima had gone forth alone, not into the garden to sigh among its wilderness of blossoms, but away, with an aching heart and pale forehead, to suffer among the wild nooks of the neighboring hollows. Here nature started to life in harsh- er beauty, and sent forth her sweets with a sort of rude way- wardness, forming a contrast to the voluptuous air and over cultivation that closed in her home, as it were, from the rough and true things of the world. Another day was to be passed in that agony of impatience which none but those of a highly imaginative nature can ever dream of—a weary night had been spent, the morning had come—surely, surely that day must bring a letter from th absent one. The air of her chamber—that chamber where her child had slept in her bosom, where he had been so often—she would not wait there; all the associations were so vivid, they goaded her on to keener impatience. ~ She could not draw a deep breath in that room, thinking of him and 7. So, as I have said, Zulima stole forth and wandered away where all was wild as her own feelings, and a thousand times more tranquil. Ross had promised her to return very early from the city that day, when he hoped—the villain could not look into her eyes as he said it—when he hoped to bring a letter that would make his sweet guest smile again. Zulima knew a place near the highway which led to the city, and yet sheltered from any ‘traveler that might ANXIBTY. 25 pass, by the broken banks of a rivulet. Thick trees fell over it, and in some places the water was completely embowered by their branches. She could hear the tread of a horse from the spot, should one pass up from the city; and so, with a cheek that kindled and a heart that leaped to each sound, the young creature sat down to wait. To wait! oh, how hard a task for her untamed spirit, her eager wishes! Never till her marriage with Mr. Clark had Zulima’s vivid nature been fully aroused; never before had she been capable of the exquisite joy, the intense suffering that marked every stage of her at- tachment to that lofty and singular man. As she sat then by the lonely brook, the young creature gave herself up to a reverie that embraced all her life, for life with her seemed to have commenced only since she had met him. She drew forth his letters and read them again and again; tears blinded her sometimes, but she swept them away with her fingers, and read on, kissing here and there a line that spoke most eloquently to her heart. She came to the last letter ; that was more ardent in its language, and warmer in its expression of love, than any of the others had been. Why was this the last? What had happened to check a pen so eloquent, to chill a heart so warm? Was he dead? This was Zulima’s thought ; she never doubted his faith or distrusted his honor for a single moment. When the serpent jealousy reaches a heart like hers, it comes with a fling, striking his fang sud- denly and at once. Zulima was not jealous, but that fierce pain lay coiled close by her heart, ready to make a leap that should envenom her whole being. More than once Zulima had started from her seat at some slight sound, which proved to be only a bird rising from the overhanging bank, or a rab- bit leaping across the thick sward, and thus, between hope and despondency, dreams and thoughts of the stern real, the time crept by till noon. A wooden bridge scarcely lifted above the water, spanned the brook only a few yards from where Zulima was sitting. Here the bank fell abruptly, giving de- scent toa pretty cascade half swept by a sheet of pendant willow-branches. ‘Their delicate shadows, broken with long gleams of sunshine falling aslant the water, told Zulima that the time of Ross’s return was fast drawing near. Now she became cruelly restless. Like some bright spirit sent down 26 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. to trouble the waters at her feet, she wandered along the . broken bank, gathered quantities of wild-flowers but to cast them away at the least noise, and frightening the ground- birds from their nests with reckless inattention to their cries, always listening, and half the time holding her breath with impatient longing for something to break the entire solitude that encompassed her. It came at last—the distant tread of a horse—more than one—Zulima’s quick ear detected that in an instant. Still she could not be mistaken in the hoof-tread; she had heard it a hundred times when her heart was beating tumultuously as then, but without the sharp anxiety that now sent the blood from her cheek and lips while she listened. Ross had ridden her husband’s horse to the city that day, and she would have been sure of his approach though a troop of cavalry had blended its tramp with the well-known tread. Zulima started from her motionless attitude, and springing up the bank, stood sheltered by the willow-branches, waiting for Ross to pass the bridge, when she would demand her let- ter. There she stood, trembling with keen impatience, eager and yet afraid of the sharp disappointment that might follow. How leisurely those two horsemen rode toward the bridge! They were conversing earnestly, and the animals they rode moved close together, as if the riders were intent on some subject to which they feared giving full voice even in that profound solitude. They crossed the bridge at a walk, and without seeming quite conscious how it happened, the two men checked their horses close by the willows, and continued their conversation. E Bows With one foot strained back and the other just lifted from the turf, ready to spring forward, Zulima had watched them coming, but somehow her heart sunk as they drew near, and without knowing it, she allowed that eager foot to sink heay- ily on the turf again, and shrinking timidly within her shelter, she waited with a beating heart for the conversation to be checked, that she might come forward without intrusion. “ Zulima !” they had used that name once, twice, before her agitation permitted the fact to convey any impression to her mind. But with that name was coupled another that would almost have aroused her heart from the apathy of death itself. ate ee BAFFLED HOPE—THE ENVELOPE. 27 “We must convey it to her gradually; she must be sub- dued by degrees,” said Ross, smoothing the mane of his horse with one hand. “ Yes,” replied the other—the same man who had accom panied Ross on his visit to De Grainges’ cell—“ with her inex- perience and impetuous temper, there is no judging what extravagance she might enact. She might even start off in search of him, and then— Here a sensation of faintness came over Zulima, and she lost a few words. When the mist cleared from her brain, Ross was speaking. “He would not see her. You do not know the man— see !” Ross took a letter from his pocket, and the two held it be- tween them, while Ross once or twice pointed out a paragraph with his finger and commented on it in a voice so low that Zulima could only gather what he said from the expression of his face. The first words that she could distinguish were : “This silence has already driven her wild; you will sie a fine time of it when she hears this gossip about a rival.” “Tt may not reach her; indeed, how can it ?” “These things always reach head-quarters sooner or later,” was the reply, so far as it reached Zulima, for that moment the horse which Ross rode became tired of inaction and shied around suddenly ; his rider with difficulty secured the letter, which was crushed in his hand, as he hastened to draw the eurb, while an envelope, which had contained it, fluttered to the ground. “Let it go, let it go. I have all that is important,” cried Ross, checking his companion, who was about to dismount, and reining in his impatient steed with difficulty. The next instant they were both out of sight. Scarcely had they gone, when Zulima sprang from her coy- ert and seized the envelope. It was her husband’s writing, addressed to Ross, the post-mark Philadelphia—a letter from her husband and not to her! Zulima held her breath; she looked wildly around, as if in scarch of something that could explain this mystery ; then her eyes fell to the writing again. Tears, that seemed half fire, flashed down upon the 28 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. paper; her lips began to quiver, she covered the fragment of paper with passionate kisses, and then cast it from her, ex- claiming wildly, “ Not to me—not to me!” Zulima returned home that day as she had never done be- fore, The slow, creeping pace, so eloquent of depression and baffled hope, that had previously marked her return home, was exchanged for a hurried tread and excited demeanor. She was fully aroused to a sense of wrong, to a knowledge that some mystery existed which involved her own future. All her suspicions were vague and wildly combined with such facts as lay before her, but not the less powerful and engrossing. She found Ross in the hall, standing by the back-door, which opened to the garden, and talking to his traveling com- panion. The conference was checked as she came up, and she heard Ross say, quickly, “ Hush! hush! she is here !” Then the two stepped out and sauntered slowly along the garden-walk. Zulima followed their footsteps, ‘and with the wild fire of excitement burning in her cheeks and eyes. Ross turned to meet her. His look was calm, his voice compassionate. ’ “We haye heard nothing, There was no letter,” he said, interpreting the question that hung on her lips. “ No letter to any one ?” Ross looked at her keenly. It was a strange question, and startled him. Could the young creature suspect that he was in correspondence with her husband? She might conjecture, but could not know. With this thought he answered her: “He seems to have forgotten all his friends, for eyen upon business Mr. Clark communicates with no one.” Zulima parted her lips to answer, but checking herself, she turned away and went to her room. Her previous distrust of Ross was fully confirmed by the*false answer that he had given; henceforth she resolved to act for herself, There was a storm that night; the orange-trees and the thick lime-groves were swept by a hurricane that rocked the old mansion house like a cradle. The rain came down in torrents, dashing against the windows, and sweeping out with the wind in waves of dusky silver. All night long the light- ning and the winds wrangled and caroused around the house, kindling up the chamber of Zulima every other moment with LA a, THE STORM. 29 a torrent of white flame. She was writing—always writing, or with impatient hands tearing up that which she had done, dissatisfied that language could not be made more eloquent. She lifted her pale face as the lightning came in, sweep- ing over her loosened hair and her long white robe, and long- ed to dip her pen in the flame, that it might burn the feelings that were heaying her bosom upon the paper, and kindle like feelings in the soul of her husband, Sometimes the lightning found tears upon her cheek, trickling down from her long eyelashes and raining over her paper in torrents that would have quenched the fiery words she so longed’to write; some- times it found a smile parting her lips, and a gleam of ineffable affection glowing in her eyes. Changeful as the storm was that beautiful face, where the tumult of her feelings was writ- ten piainly as the tempest could be traced upon the sky. At last Zulima became wholly absorbed in that which she was writing. Her pen flew across the paper, her eyes grew luminous with ardent light. She no longer startled at some new outbreak of the storm; when the lightning flashed over her, she only wrote the faster, as if inspired by the flame. A great magnolia-tree near the window, with all its garniture of leaves, its massive branches and broad white blossoms, was uprooted and hurled down upon the house, shaking it furious- ly in every timber. That instant Zulima was placing her name to the letter, which in all this whirl of the elements she had written to her husband. She dropped the pen with a scream, and darted toward the window. The sash was . broken and choked up by a great branch of the magnolia, through whose dark leayes and white blossoms, crushed and broken together, the lightning shot like a storm of lurid ar- rows. The broken glass, the rent foliage, white and green, fell around Zulima as she thrust aside the massive bough with both hands, and looked forth. It was completely uptorn, that fine old tree! The fresh earth, matted to its roots, rose high in the air, dripping with rain, and its great trunk crushed the wicker garden-seat into atoms, where she and her husband had sat together the evening before his departure. Heart-sick and faint, Zulima drew back. The letter to her husband lay upon the table, and near it the taper flared, throwing a jet of flame oyer the delicate writing. 30 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. Pale and trembling, for the fall of that old magnolia had terrified her like a prophecy, Zulima folded the paper and di- rected it. But how her hand shook; the name of her hus- band was blurred as she wrote it, and with a deep sigh she took up the sealing-wax and held it in the half-extinguished light. Her hand was very unsteady, and a drop.or two of the hot wax fell upon her palm and wrist, burning into the delicate flesh like a blood-spot. Still, in her sad preoccupa- tion, Zulima felt nothing of the pain, but sealed her letter just as her light flared out, and sat down in the gloom to wait for morning. 2 Two weary hours she spent in that dark stillness, for the hurricane haying done its work, passed off as suddenly as it had arisen, leaving the night hushed and still, like a giant lying down to rest after a hard fight. When the morning came, with its sweet breath and rosy light, Zulima arose. Hastily binding up her hair, and chang- ing her dress, she took up her letter and left the house. All around the old mansion was littered with vestiges of the storm. She was obliged to make her way through branches heavy with drenched blossoms and young fruit; fragments of lusty vines that had cast their grateful shade around the dwelling but a day before; oak boughs wrenched away from the neigh- boring groves, and masses of torn foliage that lay heaped upon the door-step and along the walk, she was compelled to tray- erse on her passage to the highway. Scarcely heeding the ruin around her, Zulima walked on toward the city; her delicate slippers were speedily saturated with wet, and at another time that tenderly-nurtured frame must have yielded to the discomfort and fatigue of her unusual exertion. But she had an object to attain—an object which depended wholly upon herself; and when a woman’s heart and soul is in an effort, when was her strength known to give way? The old cathedral clock was striking six when Zulima entered New Orleans; a few negroes were abroad, go- ing to or from the markets, and around the wharves arose a confused sound as of a hive of bees preparing to swarm. At another time Zulima might have been startled at finding her- self the only white female abroad in a great city, but now she only drew the folds of black lace more closely over her bonnet , THE DREAM—SUSPICION, 81 and walked on. With her own hands she mailed the letter which conveyed, as it were, her soul to the husband who seemed to have forgotten her. A sigh broke up from her heart as the folded paper slid from her hand into the yawning mail-bag, and then, with a feeling of relief born of her own exertions, she turned away. “T have trusted no one; he will get my letter now,” she murmured over and over again during her rapid walk home, and with that vivid reaction so common to imaginative na- tures, she became almost happy in the sweet hopes that this reflectior aroused to life again. Oh, it is so difficult for the young to feel absolute despair or absolute resignation; both are the fruit of good or eyil old age. Unmolested, as she had left it, Zulima stole back to her chamber. Weary, and yet with a heart more free than it had been for weeks, she flung off her damp garments, and lying down, slept sweetly for an hour. Zulima dreamed that she was sitting with her husband beneath the great magnolia- tree; her babe lay upon the turf laughing gleefully, and, with its little hands in the air, grasping after the summer insects as they flashed overhead. All at once a whirlwind rushed out, as it were, from the depths of the sky, overwhelming her with its violence. She strove to reach her child, but fell upon her face to the earth, shrieking wildly to her husband to save her and it. Then fell upon her one of those dark, fantastic clouds that make our dreams so fragmentary. She felt the magnolia upheave under her, and scatter down the fresh earth from its roots till she was half buried. Husband and child both were gone, leaving her prostrate and almost dead, to bat- tle her way through the storm alone—alone! Zulima awoke With these words upon her lips. It was but a dream. Louisa had entered the chamber and was examining the wet garments that her mistress had flung off, muttering suspiciously to herself as she saw the soiled slippers and other evidences of an early walk. “What am de meaning ob all dis? What can de missus be about ?” she mutterec, casting down the raiment that had excited her distrust. The candle almost burned out, the drops of wax on the table, torn fragments of paper on the floor, were new objects of comment: The torn paper was all writ- 82 MYRA, THRE CHILD OF ADOPTION. ten upon, and had been gathered up in a grasp and wrenched asunder. The pieces were large, and might be easily com- bined. The negress could not read, but, with the quick cun- ning of her race, she saw that something unusual had hap- pened, with which these fragments were connected, so gather- ing the papers in her apron, she bore them to her master, whose spy she was. It was the noise that Louisa made going out which aroused Zulima from her wretched vision. The young creature started up, thanking God that it was but a dream. In moving about the room, she approached a window opening upon the garden just in time to see Ross follow her woman, Louisa, into the little slaye-dwelling which we described in our last chapter. Zulima lingered by the window. It was half an hour be- fore Ross came forth again; he was. followed by the slave woman, and stood conversing with her some time in one of the retired walks. Soon after, the young man who had been Ross’s companion from the city the previous day came up, and Louisa seemed to be dismissed. Still the two men con- versed earnestly together, and, after a time, slowly retired into the slave-dwelling. Since the previous day Zulima had grown suspicious, and she remarked all these movements with keen interest. Well she might, for that day and hour, in the low slave-dwelling, was written a letter destined to cast black trouble upon her whole life. There, two fiends, fashioned like men, sat down and concocted a foul slander against that innocent young woman which was to cling around her for years, and which her full strength might struggle against in vain. The very mail which carried out Zulima’s passionate and tender epistle to her husband, bore also a wicked slander framed by these two base men. The pleading words, the endearing expres- sions, that she had folded up fresh from her innermost soul, that he might know how truly she loved him, went jostling side by side with the fiendish assertion that she, Zulima Clark, had been unfaithful to his love. And these two letters reached the husband in one package lying close to'each other. He read the slander first. Zulima waited, but no answer ever came to her letter. Week after week she lived upon that painful hope which THE BURIAL-PLACE. 83 hangs upon the morrow, and still hope mocked her. Then the grew desperate. One day, when Ross came back from fhe city empty-handed as usual, Zulima had left his house with the avowed intention of seeking her husband in the North. “Tet her go,” said the fiend, coolly folding the letter she had left behind. “The mail travels faster than she can; my pretty bird shall find all things prepared for her coming.” Again Ross sat down and wrote to the husband of Zulima, telling him that she fled from his house at night to escape the vigilant watch which had been placed upon her actions. The letter reached its destination and performed its evil work. Zulima had taken passage for the North, but the brig must lie at its wharf a few hours, and the unhappy young creature was far too restless for confinement in the close cabin. A yearning desire possessed her to go and search for her infant. Though enjoined to caution and strict secresy, the place of her child’s residence had been intrusted to her, and she had found means to see it unsuspected, from time to time, before © her husband’s departure. Now, when she was going in agony of spirit to seek the father, she could not depart without em- bracing his child once more, and, with its little hands around her neck, praying God to bless her mission. Urged by these keen desires, Zulima threw a scarf around her, and drawing Jown her yail, entered the streets of New Orleans. The house where her child lived was in the suburbs, and she was obliged to cross the city. With a quick step she threaded the streets, heediess of observation and only desirous of reach- ing her child before the brig was ready to sail. Was it fate, or was it that sublime intuition that belongs to the higher order of feelings, which led poor Zulima by one of those large Catholic burial-places in New Orleans which seem to open the way to eternity through a paradise of flowers It must have been the spiritual essence in her nature, for as the young mother passed this beautiful place of death, she looked eagerly through the gates, and something impelled her to enter. A wildnerness of tombs, draped and garmented with vines all in blossom, and shrubs that exhaled perfume from every leaf, lay before her, and at that moment death looked so 2 34 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. pleasant to poor Zulima that she longed to lic down and let her heart stop beating where so many had found quiet rest. These reflections brought tears to her eyes; she felt them dropping fast beneath her vail, and entered the inclosure that n) one might witness her grief. Slowly and sadly she wand- ered on, forgetful of her purpose and possessed of a vague idea that her errand led no farther. A strange and dreamy sensation crept over her, the vigor of her limbs gave way, and sweeping the purple clusters of a passion flower from one of the marble slabs, she sat down. Zulima put aside her vail, and began to read the inscription upon the tomb while list- lessly passing her finger through the deeply-cut letters. It was an infant’s tomb. A child eighteen months old lay beneath the marble. Eighteen months—that was the age of her child, little Myra. She started up. It seemed as if her weight upon the marble could injure the little sleeper. -Care- fully drawing the passion-yine over the stone again, she turn- ed away and was about to depart. But that instant there came bounding along the vista of a neighboring walk a young child, evidently rejoicing over its escape from some person who might have controlled its actions. In and out through the flowery labyrinth it darted, its chestnut curls floating on the wind, and its blue sash, loose at one end, sweeping the tombs at every turn. The child, at last, felt evidently quite secure from pursuit, for, leaning forward upon one tiny foot, she peered roguishly through the branches and burst into a clear ringing laugh that sounded amid the stillness like the sudden gush of a fountain. Through and through Zulima’s heart rang that silvery shout; eye, lip, and cheek lighted up to the sound; she reach- ed forth her arms— Myra! Myra!” The child heard her name and turned like a startled fawn, still laughing, but afraid that the black nurse had found her. When she saw only a beautiful woman with eyes brimful of tears, and outstretched hands, the laugh fled from her lips, and fixing her large brown eyes wonderingly on the strange face for a moment, she drew timidly toward the tomb by which Zu- lima stood. “My child! my own dear child!” broke from the lips of that young mother, and sinking upon her knees, she snatched A STRANGE MEETING. the little girl to her bosom, covering her lips and forehead with kisses. “Do you love me? Myra, do you love me?” she cried, holding back the face of the infant between both her trembling hands, and gazing fondly on it through her tears; “Do you loye me, Myra?” At first the little girl was startled by the passionate tender- ness of her mother, and she struggled to get away from the yosom that heaved so tumultuously against her form; but, as this touching cry for affection broke from Zulima’s lips, the child ceased to struggle, and lifting her clear eyes with a look of wondering pity, she clasped her little hands over her mother’s neck, and to her trembling lips pressed that little rosy mouth. “Don’t cry so, I do love you!” lisped the child, in its sweet imperfect language. These pretty words unlocked a flood of tender grief in the mother’s heart. She arose, with the child in her arms, and sat down upon the tomb. Smiles now broke through her tears, and during fifteen minutes it seemed to Zulima as if she had passed through that place of tombs into paradise, so sweet was the love that flooded her heart with every lisping tone of her child. But for the poor mother there was no lasting hap- piness. While her bosom was full of these sweet maternal feelings, there came tearing through the shrubbery a negro woman, panting with haste, and shouting in a coarse voice the name of little Myra. “We must part, my child!” murmured Zulima, turning pale as the woman caught sight of her charge from a tomb which she had mounted to command a view of the grounds, and with a degree of self-command that was wonderful even to herself, she arose and led the little girl forward. “Oh, Miss Myra, Miss Myra!” cried the negress, snatching up the little girl and kissing her with a degree of eagerness that made poor Zulima shudder; “what should I have done if you had been lost in earnest ?” Myra struggled to get away, and held out her arms to Zu- lima. How pale the poor mother was! Her eyes sparkled though at this proof of fondness in the child, and taking her from the woman, she kissed ler forchead, and leading her a MYRA,. THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. little way off, bent down with a hand upon those bright ring- lets, and called down a blessing from God upon her daughter. Ah! these blessings, what holy things they are! The sun- shine they pour forth, how certain it is to flow back to the source and fill it with brightness! If “curses are like chick- ens that always come home to roost,” are not blessings like the ringdoyes that coo most tenderly in the nest that shelters their birth? For many a day, while tossed upon the waters, Zulima was the happier for having seen and blessed her child. HE VILE LETTER. 37 CE AP ER Ty Oh, she was like a fawn, chased to the plain, Half blind with grief and mad with sudden pain, That plunges wildly in its first despair, To any copse that offers shelter there. Ir was near midsummer when one of the city postmen of Phil- adelphia entered a large warehouse in the business part of that city. He approached the principal desk with a bundle of papers and letters on one arm, from which he drew a single letter bear- ing the New Orleans post-mark. A young man who stood at the desk writing what appeared to be business notes, of which a pile, damp with ink, lay at his elbow, took the letter, and thrusting his pen back of one ear, prepared to open it. There was an.appearance of great and even slovenly haste about this letter, The paper was folded unevenly. The wax had been dropped upon it in a rude mass, and.was roughly stamped with a blurred impression which it would have been difficult to make out. The address was blotted, and every thing about it bore marks of rough haste. The young merchant broke open the seal with some trepidation, for the singular appear- ance of the letter surprised him not a little. He read half a dozen of the first lines, then looking over his shoulder as if afraid some one might see that which he had read, he turned his back to the desk and was soon wholly absorbed in the contents of the epistle. As he turned over the page, you would have geen the color gradually deepen upon his cheeks, and even flush up to the forehead, as if there was something in the epistle which did not altogether please him. After a little he folded the letter, compressing his lips the while, and fell into deep thought. The service which this letter required of him was one against which every honest feeling of his heart revolted; but his worldly prospects, his hopes of ad: vancement in life, all depended upon the writer. Ross had been his friend; had placed him in the Philadelphia branch 38 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. of a great commercial house; and to thwart one of his wishes might prove absolute ruin. Ross had omitted in that epistle nothing that could persuade or reason into wrong. It was doubtful, he said, even if Clark ever had been married to Zulima; or, being so, if he would not deem it a good service in his friends to relieve him of the obligations imposed by that union. Bitter and cruel were the accusations urged against that poor young wife; and with his interests all with her enemies, joined to a lively desire to think ill of her, in order to justify his conduct to his own heart, this weak and cruel man yielded himself to become the tool of a deeper and far more unprincipled villain than him- self. Again and again he perused that letter, and at length put it carefully away in his breast-pocket, close to a heart which its evil folds were doomed to harden against the secret whisperings of a conscience that would not be entirely hushed. Perhaps, had James Smith been given time for after reflec- tion, he might have become shocked with the part that he was called upon to perform; but the letter which opened this wicked scheme to him had been delayed and carried in a wrong di- rection by the mail, and nearly two weeks had been thus lost after the time when it should have reached him. Smith had scarcely turned from his desk with the evil letter in his bosom, when another man entered the warehouse and placed a little rose-tinted note in his hand. A vague idea that this note had some connection with the slovenly epistle that he had just read took possession of him, before he broke the drop of pale-green wax that sealed it. The conjecture: proved real—Zulima had written that note. She was in Philadelphia, and hoped through her husband's protege to hear some news of him. Smith had no time for reflection; he was called upon to act at once. » He went to the hotel where Zulima was staying. Smith entered the hotel hurriedly, as one who has a painful task to accomplish and wishes it over. He was not villain enough to act with delib- eration, or with that crafty coldness which fitted Ross so singularly for a domestic conspirator. When he found him- self in the presence of this helpless young mother; when he gazed upon her beauty, dimmed—it is true, by all that she had suffered, but obtaining thereby a soft melancholy that was far A SECRET MARRIAGE. 89 more touching than the glow of youth in its full joy can ever be,—his heart smote him for the wrong it had meditated against her. He sat down by her side, trembling and almost as anxious as she was. “My husband,” said Zulima, turning her eloquent eyes upon his downcast face; “you know him, sir—he is your triend; tell me where he is to be found.” “ Your husband, madam! of whom do you speak ?” “Of Mr. Clark—Danicl Clark—your benefactor and my husband,” said Zulima. “Daniel Clark, lady ?” “T wish to see him—I must sce him—tcll me where he is to be found.” Zulima was breathless with impatience; her large eyes brightened, her cheeks took a faint color. She was determined that nothing should keep her from the presence of her husband. eit “ And you—you are the young lady that went South with him the last .time he was here?” said Smith, bending his eyes to the floor and faltering in his speech. “Yes, I went with him—I was his wife !” Smith shook his head; a faint smile crept over his mouth; he seemed to doubt her assertion. Zulima saw it, and her face kindled with indignant passion. “T am his wife !” she said. “The marriage—was it not secret? was it not almost with- out witness ?” “Secret? yes; but not entirely without witnesses. I can prove my marriage.” “You can prove that some ceremony took place; but can you prove that it was a real marriage ceremony? Indeed, have you never had reason to doubt that it was such ?” “ Never, sir,” replied Zulima, turning pale, “never !” “You were very young, very confiding,” replied Smith. “ Yet you had some experience in the perfidy of man: this should have made you cautious.” “Oh, my experience! it had been bitter—terrible !” mur- mured Zulima, clasping her hands, and gazing on the face of her visitor with a look of wild excitement. “And yet you trusted again !” Zulima stood up; her face grew white as death. “ Do you 40 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION, mean to say, sir, that my husband—that Daniel Clark deceive me like the other ?” “JT mean to say nothing,” replied Smith; “ nothing, save that from my heart I pity you, sweet lady. So much beauty so trusting; who could help pitying you ?” “You pity me? Oh, Father of mercies!” cried the excited young creature, bending like a reed and raising her locked hands to her eyes; “if this thing should be true!” She fell upon a chair; her slight figure waved to and fro in the agony of her doubts. “Fas he written—did he send for you ?” questioned Smith, steeling himself against her grief. “No, no !” “Ts he aware of your coming ?” “No; I shall surprise him; I wished to surprise him !” cried the the wretched young creature, dropping her hands. “Tam afraid you will rma pe him, and unpleasantly, too !” said Smith. Zulima turned her ay eyes upon him; her lips parted, but she had no power to utter the qtiestions that arose in her heart. A thousand black doubts possessed her. ‘“ Why— why—?” It was all she could say. Smith hesitated ; he was reluctant to consummate the last act of villainy required of him. It seemed like striking down a lamb, while its soft, trusting eyes were fixed upon his. But he had gone too far, he could not recede now. “Tt is rumored,” he said—“ it is rumored that Mr. Clark is soon to be married !” A sort of spasmodic smile parted Zulima’s pale lips, till her white teeth shone through. She did not attempt to speak, but sat perfectly still gazing upon her visitor. “Had your marriage been real, Mr. Clark would not thus openly commit himself” “Where 7s Mr. Clark ?” said Zulima, sharply, and starting, as if from a dream. “He is in Baltimore now.” “ And—and the lady ?” “She, too, is in Baltimore.” “ And I—I will go there also !” “You! and after that which you know ?” - THE PUBLIC PARLOR. 41 “Tf these things are true, I will have them from the lips of my—of Daniel Clark. If they are not true—Oh, Father of heaven ! then will his wife lie down and die at his feet—die of sorrow that she has ever doubted him.” Smith was startled; he had not anticipated this resolute: strength in a creature so young and child-like. Did she see Daniel Clark, he knew that all was lost to those whose inter- est it was to keep the husband and wife asunder. He at- tempted to dissuade Zulima from her plan, but this he saw only excited her suspicion without in the slightest degree changing her. AJ] the answer that she made to his arguments was, “TI will see my husband; I must have proof of these things !” Smith would have urged his objections further, but.they were interrupted. The room in which they sat was a parlor to which others might claim admission. Just then the door opened, and a young gentleman entered with the easy and confidential air of an old acquaintance. He cast a glance at Zus lima, seemed surprised by the terrible agitation so visible in her face, and then fixed his penetrating eyes searchingly upon Smith. “You do not seem well,” he said, approaching Zulima, and Smith could detect that in his voice which ought to have ~ startled Zulima long before. ‘Has any thing gone amiss ?” and he cast a stern look on Smith. “T am not well!” said Zulima, and tears came into her eyes. “ But you seem worse than ill—you look troubled.” “ Zulima lifted her eyes up with a painful smile, but made no answer. The young man looked distressed ; he stood a moment be- fore Zulima, and then walking toward a window, began to drum on the panes with his fingers, now and then casting furtive glances toward the sofa where Zulima and Smith were sitting. Smith arose to go. A new gleam of light had broken upon him—he saw and understood more than that fated young creature had even guessed at. “Then you are determined to undertake this journey ?” he said, in a low voice. “ Yes r MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. “When will you set out ?” “To-morrow ?” “ Alone ?” Zulima unconsciously glanced toward the young man; he had been very kind to her, and it seemed hard to start off utterly alone. “TJ don’t know,” she faltered ; “yes, I shall take the journcy alone.” “Your health seems delicate, you are so young,” urged Smith, reading her thoughts and hoping that she would be guided by the first imprudent impulse. : “Tam young—I am not well—but I shall go alone,” she answered, with gentle firmness. The young man at the window seemed restless. He walk ed toward a table, and taking up two or three books, cast them back again with an air of impatience. Smith observed this, and smiled quietly within himself, as he went out. Zu- lima saw nothing: she only knew that she was very, very wretched, and casting her arms over the back of the sofa, buried her face upon them and groaned in bitter anguish. 2 Zulima was so lost in the agony of her feelings, that she did not know when the young man placed himself by her side. She was quite unconscious of his approach till her hand was in his, and his voice uttered her name in tones that made her nerves thrill from head to foot. Tenderness had given to that voice an intonation startlingly like the low tones of Daniel Clark when love most softened his proud nature. She started and looked wildly at the young man, her hand trembling in his—her lips parted in a half smile—the delusion had not quite left her. “Zulima, what is it that troubles you? Oh, if you only knew, if you could but guess, how—how it wrings my heart tc see you thus! ‘What has the man been saying to wound you aH “To wound me?” repeated Zulima, recovering from the sort of dream into which his voice had cast her, and drawing her hand away. “Oh, everybody says things to wound me, T think !” 7 “But I never have” “No, I believe not,” replied Zulima, listlessly ; “I believe not.” a DECLARATION OF LOVE. 43 “ And never will,” urged the young man, regarding her with a look of deep tenderness. “T don’t know,” was the faint reply, and Zulima’s face fell back on her folded arms again. The young man arose and began to pace up and down the room; many a change passed over his features meanwhile, and he cast his eye from time to time upon the motionless figure of Zulima, with an expression that revealed all the hid- den love, the wild devotion with which he regarded her. He sat down again and took her passive hand. She did not at- tempt to withdraw it. She did not even seem to know that it was in his. “Do you know how I love you—how, with my whole life and strength, I worship you, Zulima?” he said. “There is nothing on earth that I would not do, could it give you a mo- ment's happiness.” Zulima slowly unfolded her arms, and lifting her head, looked earnestly in his face with her eyes. She did not seem to understand him. “Oh, you must haye seen how I love you,” he said, pas- sionately. Zulima smiled—ohk, what a mocking smile! how full of wild anguish it was! “Another!” she said; “so now an- other loves me.” “No human being ever loyed as I love you, Zulima,” said the young man, in that pure, sweet voice, which had so af- fected her before. “That is a marvel,” said Zulima, with a bitter smile. ‘“Oth- ers have loyed me so well. You do not know how others have loved me.” “T do not wish to know any thing except how I can make you happier than you are, Zulima.” : “Tf you wish to make me happy, do not. even mention love to me again. The very word makes me faint,” said Zulima. “T am ill—I suffer. . Do not, I pray you, talk this way to me. [ can not bear it.” “T will say nothing that can distress you,” replied the young man gently, but with a look of grief. Zulima reached forth her hand. It was cold and trembling. “Farewell!” she said, very kindly; “I shall go away to- morrow. Farewell !” 44 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. He would not release her hand. “You are not going far—you will return in a few days? Promise me that you are not saying farewell forever.” . “I do not know—the Father in heaven only knows what will become of me; but you have been kind to me—very. You have respected my unprotected lot. You did not know how wrong it was to loveme. I can not blame you. When I say farewell thus, I much fear that it is to the only true friend that I have in the world. ‘You could not wish me to feel more regret than I do. Is it not casting away all the unselfish kindness—all the real friendship that I have known for a long, long time ?” “ But this love—this idolatry, rather ?” persisted the young man; “must it be forever hopeless? Shall I never see you again ?” “Tt is wrong, therefore should be hopeless,” replied Zulima. “You do not know what trouble it would bring upon you.” “Why wrong ?—why should it bring trouble upon me ?” “Should we ever meet again, you will know. Everybody will know why it is wrong for you to love me. Now I must go.” Zulima drew away her hand, using a little gentle force; and while the young man was striving to fathom the meaning of her words, she opened the door and disappeared. Every way was poor Zulima beset. ‘The false position in which the concealment of her marriage had placed her, made it- self cruelly felt at all times. She had taken along journey, alone and entirely unprotected. Young and beautiful—to all appear- ance single—she was naturally exposed to all those attentions that a creature so lovely and unprotected was sure to receive, even against her will. In the young man whom she had just left, those attentions gradually took a degree of tender interest which, but for her state of anxious preoccupation, she must have observed long before, as others less interested had not failed to do. But she had literally given the devotion, so ap- parent to others, no thought. Knowing herself to be bound by the most solemn ties to the man who seemed to have for gotten her, she never reflected that others knew nothing of this, or that she might become the object of affectionate, nay, passionate regard, such as the man had just declared. IN BALTIMORE. 45 Now it only served to add another pang to the bitterness of her grief; heart-wounded, neglected as she had been, it was not in human nature to be otherwise than flattered and very grateful for devotion which soothed her pride, and which in its possessor was innocent and honorable. But even these feelings gained but a momentary hold upon her; they were followed by regret and that shrinking dread which every new source of excitement is sure to occasion where the heart has been long and deeply agitated. She went away then with a new cause of grief added to those that had so fatally oppressed her. ee Zualima reached Baltimore in the night. Weary with travel ind faint with anxiety, she took a coach at the stage-house and went in search of the hotel where she learned that her husband was lodged. As she drove up to the hotel a private carriage stood at the entrance; 4 negro in livery was in the seat, and another stood with the carriage door in his hand, watching for some one to come down the steps; the door epened, and by the light that streamed through, Zulima saw her husband richly dressed as if for some assembly. One white glove was held loose in his. hand with an embroidered opera-cap, Which he put upon his head as he came quickly down the steps. Zulima was breathless ; she leaned from the window of her hackney-coach, and would have called to him aloud, but her tongue clove to her mouth; she could only gaze wildly on him, as just touching the step of his carriage with one foot he sprung lightly in. The door closed with a noise that went through Zulima’s heart like an arrow. She saw the negro spring up behind the carriage; the lamps flashed by her eyes, and while every thing recled before her, the coachman of her own humble hack had opened the door. “No, no, I do not wish to get out,” she said, pointing to- ward the receding lamps with her finger. ‘“ Mount again and follow that carriage.” The man hastily closed the door, and mounting his seat, drove rapidly after Mr. Clark’s carriage. Zulima was now wild with excitement; the blood seemed to leap through her heart—her cheeks burned like fire. She gasped for breath, MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. when a turn in the streets took those carriage-lamps an instant from her sight. They came in sight of a fine old mansion-house, standing back from the street and surrounded by tall trees; an aristo- cratic and noble dwelling it was, with the lights gleaming tnrovgh its windows, and those rare old trees curtaining its walis with their black branches, now gilded and glowing with the golden flashes of light that came through all the windows. The house was evidently illuminated for a party—one of those pleasant summer-parties that are half given in the open air. A few lamps hung like stars along the thick branches that curtained the house, and glowed here and there through a honeysuckle arbor, or in a clump of bushes, just lightly enough to reveal the dewy green of the foliage, without break- ing up the quiet evening shadows that lay around them. Mr. Clark’s carriage stopped before this noble mansion, and Zulima saw him pass lightly into the deep old-fashioned portico while her vehicle was yet half a block off. “Do you wish to get out here ?” said the coachman, going again to the door; “the carriage that you ordered me to fol- low does not seem to be going any farther.” “T know, I see,” said Zulima; “not now, I will wait. Draw off to the opposite side of the street, and then we shall be in nobody's way.” The man expressed no surprise at her strange orders, but drove back to the shadowy side of the street and waited, ~ standing by the door a moment, to learn if she had any fur- ther directions to give. Zulima bent from the windew; she was terribly agitated and her voice trembled. “Whose house is this ?” she said, hurriedly. The man told the owner’s name. It was one celebrated in the history of our country; and Zulima remembered with a pang that the daughters of that house were among the most loyely and beautiful women of America. Smith had told her that her husband was about to be married. Was it in that stately old mansion house that she must scarch for a rival ? How her cheek burned, how her lip trembled, as she asked herself the question ! “Did you know,” she said, addressing the man; “did you know the gentleman who just went in yonder ?” + YHE OLD PORTICO. 47 “Oh yes, everybody here knows Mr. Clark,” said the man. “TI guessed well enough where his carriage was driving to, when it started from the hotel. He is going to marry one of the young ladies; at least the papers say so.” Zulima drew back into the carriage; it seemed as if she would never breathe again; she sat like a famished bird, gaz- ing on the house without the wish or power to move. There seemed to be a large party assembled; gayly-dressed people were constantly gliding before the window, and she could see the gleam of rich wines and trays of fruit, as they were borne to and fro by the attendants. Sometimes a couple fyould saunter out into the deep old portico, where she could 4ee more distinctly by the wreath of colored lamps, festooned with trumpet-flowers, roses, and honeysuckles that fell like a curtain overhead. Zulima saw one couple after another glide into the flowery recess, and away again, as if the music that rame pouring through doors and windows were too exciting fpr a prolonged tete-a-tete, Still she kept her eyes fixed upon the spot; she was certain that Mr. Clark would be among those who haunted that flower nook, so like a cloud of butter- flies. She knew his tastes well. Sure exough, while her eyes were fixed on the open doors, through which the back- ground of the portico was flooded with golden light, she saw Mr. Clark come slowly down the hall, not alone—oh, how she had hoped for that—but with a beautiful woman leaning on ‘ais arm—leaning heavily with that air of languid dependence which so often marks the first development of passion. His head was bent, and he seemed to be addressing her in a low voice; and though he smiled while speaking, Zulima could see that in repose his face was grave, almost sad. It only lighted up when those large blue eyes were lifted toward him. They sat down in the portico, and seemed to conyerse earn- estly—ten minutes—half an hour, and hours—thus long did the two sit side by side under that canopy of lighted blossoms, and then Zulima could watch them no longer; a heavy faint- ness crept over her, and ina dull, low voice she asked the coachman to drive her back to the hotel, Poor Zulima! she hoped to see her husband alone in that . portico, if it was only for one minute. How long, how pa- tiently had she waited, and that beautiful woman never left his side for a moment. It was very cruel. 48 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. When Zulima left her room early the next morning, she found Mr. Smith, who seemed to have just left the stage-coach. She knew him at once, and he recognized her with great cor diality. “T have come,” he said, in a low, friendly voice—“I have come in hopes of seeing you with Mr. Clark, He is in the hotel, I hear.” : “ Te is,” said Zulima. “I saw him last night !” Mr. Smith turned pale; but there was a deep depression in Zulima’s voice and manner, that re-assured him the interview could not have been a happy one, to leave that cheek so hue- less, the eyes so heavy—he was not yet too late. “T saw him,” said Zulima, “but he did not know it; to- day, within another hour, I shall know why he has treated me thus; tell me how I can get a message conveyed to him.” “T will convey it; I will urge your cause.” “ Only tell him I am here; I want no one to plead for me with Aim. Only do that, and I will thank you much.” “T will do that, and more,” said Smith, bowing. What influence was it that kept Mr. Clark so wakeful on the night when Zulima, his young wife, slept beneath the same roof with himself? He knew nothing of her presence —he felt not the bitter tears that almost blistered her pale cheek, as she tried to stop thinking of him—the sobs that shook her frame till the bed trembled under it—none of them reached his ear. It was not any remembrance of the lovely young being who had hung upon his arm, and sat beside him in that flower-lit portico, but a short time before: her beauty had pleased him, her conversation had wiled away a little of that time which was often spent in bitter thoughts, since he had begun to receive the letters of Ross and to yield credence to the reports regularly sent him of the estrangement and faithlessness of his young wife. She had fled now—fied from his friend’s roof, and come northward no doubt to obtain greater freedom, and escape the vigilance of those he had placed about her. Thus ran the last letter that Clark had received from hig friend. 5; Clark read the letter over, after he returned home that night, for something seemed constantly whispering of Zulima ; he could not drive her from his mind. It seemed to him as THE LIAR. 49 if some great mistake had arisen, as if he had not read the letters of his friend aright. No; when he perused this letter again, it was clearly written; nothing ambiguous was there, nothing hinted; his wife had ceased to love him; she had fled. Still there was something at his heart that would not be thus appeased; the mysterious presence of this young creature seemed to haunt his room, haunt the innermost cham- bers of his heart; he thought of the letter she had written him, and which he had burned while under the terrible influ- ence of his friend’s epistle. He began to regret now, to wish that he had at least seen the contents of that letter; still his friend was dispassionate, just—why should this calm report be doubted ? a report evidently wrung from him by a strong sense of duty. Mr. Clark slept little that night; his better angel was abroad. Zulima, too, was weeping beneath the same roof; he knew it not, but still he could not sleep ! In the morning Smith came to the chamber where Mr. Clark was sitting at breakfast. His face was sad; he seemed ill at ease. “T thought it best to come and bring this news to you first ; it might save you from great embarrassment.” “What news?—what embarrassment?” said Clark, who had no idea that Smith knew any thing of Zulima, or her connection with him. “Surely nothing has gone wrong in the business ?” “No; but the young lady who says she knew you in New Orleans—that she has claims upon you !” Mr. Clark turned deathly white; this sudden mention of his wife unnerved him. “And is she in Philadelphia ?—where is she ?—how came she to find you out ?” “T do not know; she sent mea note, and I went to her hotel.” “Was she alone—was she alone ?” questioned Mr. Clark, starting up. “No, not quite alone,” replied Mr. Smith, with a meaning smile; “I saw only one person with her, a young and ree markably handsome man.” Mr. Clark sunk to his chair as if a bullet had passed through 50 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION, his heart. “Go on,” he said, after a moment; “go on, Tam listening.” “This lady, sir, seemed determined to see you; she came on here—she is now in Baltimore.” “ And her companion ?” said Mr. Clark, with a ghastly smile. “No,” replied Smith; “I think she would not do that. She wishes to see you; I do not know what her object is.” “J will not see her; I will never see her again,” said Mr. Clark, and his face looked like marble. “If she needs any thing, supply her; she is, sir, the mother of my child; she is —but I will not talk of it; let her want for nothing—she is my wife.” “You will not see her then?” “No, it is enough.” Mr. Clark rang the bell—a man en- tered. “Have my carriage brought up at once; I shall set out for Washington. Mr. Smith, you know how to act. Save me from a repetition of this: you see how it tortures me. I loved that young creature—I thought, fool, madmam, that I was—but she seemed to love me.” Mr. Clark went into another room; he could not endure that other eyes should witness his emotion. The coachman now came up; his proud master understood that every thing was ready, and without speaking a word, left his apartments. He stepped into his carriage; he was gone—gone without hearing the wild shriek that broke from the lips of that poor young wife, who had caught one glimpse of him from her window. She shook the sash—she strove to call after him; but her arms trembled—her voice was choked; with all her effort she made but little noise; those in the next room heard nothing of it, till she fell heavily on the floor. Mr, Smith found her there, lying like a corpse rigid and insensible. Then his heart smote him—then would he have given worlds that the falsehoods which brought all this misery had not been uttered. He had tried to think ill of his victim, to believe that between her and her husband there was neither love nor sympathy; how had the last hour undeceived him. Madden- ed by doubt and jealousy, his benefactor had not eyen at- tempted to conceal the anguish occasioned by what he deemed the perfidy of his wife; and she—was she not there, cold as marble, white as death, prostrate at his feet? oon On A MOURNFUL WEDDING. 51 But he could not go back—his evil work must be fully ac- complished; now to shrink or waver, would be to expose himself; that he could not contemplate for a moment. Zu- lima became sensible, at last. It was a long time, but finally she opened her eyes and sat up. ‘He is gone,” she said lift- ing her heavy eyes to Smith, “he is gone without a word of explanation.” “ What could he explain, but that which he would not wish to say face to face with his victim? He has deceived you with a mock marriage. I knew that it would prove so. You are free, you are wealthy, if you choose. Be resigned; there is no redress.” “No redress!” Zulima repeated the word over and over again. “No redress! I thought myself his wife; I am the mother of his child; O God! Myra, Myra, my poor, poor child—” * * * * * * * x They were parted—Zulima solemnly believed that she had neyer been the wife of Daniel Clark, that she was free—oh, how cruelly free—and another loved her. Wounded in her pride, broken in spirit, outraged, humiliated, utterly alone; was it strange that the poor torn heart of that young creature at length became grateful for the affection that her grief and her desolation had excited? She told him all, and still that young man loyed her, still he besought her to become his wife; and she, unhappy woman—consented. There was to be no secresy—no private marriage now; in the full blaze of day—robed in satin, glossy and white as the leayes of a magnolia, her magnificent tresses bound with white roses, her bridal vail looped to the curls upon her temple with a snowy blossom, and falling over her, wave after waye, like a cloud cf summer mist. Thus went Zulima Clark forth to her last bridal. It was a mournful sight; that young girl so beautiful, so fated, standing before the altar, her large eyes sur- charged with sorrowful remembrances of the past, and her poor heart heaving with a wild presentiment of coming evil, till the rose upon her bosom, and the pearls upon her throat, trembled as if a wind were passing over them. It was a mournful, mournful wedding; for there, Zulima, the wife of Daniel Clark, sealed the perfidy of her enemies, Beautiful bride, innocent woman, thine was a hard destiny ! MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION, OAR: TE Rida « Once again they met, And then they saw, each in the other’s heart, And the black falsehood that had sever’d them Rose palpable and hideous to the thought. Hot tears were shed—sad blessings mutely given! They met, and parted—he went to meet his death, And she to weep o’er bitter memories! ZuLimA made her home in the South, and there also, after years of wandering, came Daniel Clark—weary with excite- ment, and unhappy with a sense of bitter loneliness. In the first moments of his anger against Zulima, he had made his will, giving all his vast possessions to an aged relative, and making the false friends who had caused his misery executors of that will. And this was the deep game for which these men had staked their souls—these possessions and the contrel over them. No matter though the fair wife was crushed to the earth; no matter though that beautiful child, in all her in- fant unconsciousness, was despoiled of her just inheritance. It was for this they had toiled in darkness; it was for this they had heaped falsehood upon falsehood, wrong upon wrong. ‘But Clark had returned to New Orleans, not to pass a week and away again, as before, but to control his own business— and in New Orleans was Zulima. They might meet, still it was unlikely, for she was proud and sensitive as ever, and lived in the bosom of a new family, and was girded around by new and powerful affections. Looking upon Clark as a heart- traitor, one who had betrayed her unprotected state, and trifled alike with her reputation and her love, she shrank from a thought of the past. The wrong that she believed to have been practiced upon her was so terrible, that she shuddered at the retrospection. Without one shadow of hate or hope of revenge, to perpetuate the struggle that had- been so heart- HEH BEAUTIFUL GARDEN. 53 tending at first, the only effort that she made was to obtain forgetfulness. Zulima knew not that Clark had arrived at New Orleans, but a strange inquictude came over her. Thoughts of the sweet and bitter past made her restless day and night; she was haunted by a constant desire to see her child—the child of Daniel Clark; from this innocent creature, wrong and ab- sence in the father had failed to alienate her love. A little out from New Orleans was a pretty country-house, surrounded by ornamental grounds and embowered in tropical trees. It was a small dwelling, secluded and beautiful asa | bower; works of art, rare.books, and light furniture, befitting the climate, gave an air of refinement and grace within; pas- sion-flowers, briery roses, and other clinging vines draped the cottage without. An avenue of orange and lime trees led to the front door, and behind was a small garden, cooled by the rain that fell perpetually from a fountain near the center, and glowing with tea-roses, lilies, and a world of those blossoms that grow most thrifty and fragrant in the warm. South. Among these beautiftl grounds little Myra Clark had been at play since the breakfast-hour. She had chased the hum- ming-birds from their swarming places in the arbors and rose- hedges; she had gathered golden-edged violets from the borders, and leaping up with a laugh to the orange-boughs that drooped over the gravel-walk, had torn down the white blossoms and mellow fruit to crowd with the flowery spoil that she had gathered in the skirt of her muslin dress, And now with her lap full of broken flowers, fruit, torn grass, and pebble-stones, the child cast herself on the rich turf that swell- ed up to the brink of the fountain, and pressing her dimpled hands and warm cheek upon the marble, lay in smiling idle- ness, watching the gold-fish, as they darted up and down the limpid waters, her soft brown eyes sparkling with each new flash of gold or crimson that the restless little creatures im- parted to the waters. Now she would cast a broken rose-bud or a tuft of grass into the fountain, and her laugh rang out wild and clear above the bell-like dropping of the water in the marble basin, if she could detect some fish darting up like a golden arrow to meet her pretty decoy. Thus lay the child; thus fell the bright water-drops around; and thus, a little way 54 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. off, drooped the fruit and flower laden boughs, when the sweet tranquillity was disturbed by a footstep. Down one of the gravel-walks came a man, bearing upon his noble features an air of proud sadness, his very step denoting habitual depres- sion, as he moyed quietly and at a slow pace toward the fountain. It was not a look of ill-health that stamped so forcibly the air and demeanor of this man. His frame was still strongly knit, his step firm as iron, but upon his brow was that deep-settled shadow which a troubled heart casts up to the face, and the locks that shaded it were sprinkled. with. the premature snow which falls early over a brain tor- tured with unspoken regrets. Thus sorrowful, but still un- bowed in his spirit, appeared Daniel Clark, as he moved quietly toward the fountain where his child was at play. Myra was busy with her gold-fish, laughing and coquetting with them through the waves. She saw nothing but their golden flash, she heard nothing but the light drops, that dim- pled and clouded the water around them. Thus for several minutes the proud and saddened man stood gazing upon his daughter. She saw him at last; and then with a faint cry the little creature cast away the contents of her frock, and sprang up. Half in joy, half in timid surprise, she stood gazing upon his face. The pupils of her eyes dilated till they were almost black, her white arms seemed trembling with restraint, as if the suddenness of his appearance had checked the first quick impulse. She was only waiting for one smile to spring like a bird to his bosom. “ Myra pr The firm voice of Daniel Clark gave way as he uttered the name of his child. His eyes grew dim with tears, and he reached forth his trembling arms. She sprang with a single bound to his embrace, she wreathed his neck strongly with her arms, and pressed upon his lips, his cheeks, and his moist eyes, kisses that, from the lips of a beautiful child, seem like the pouring of dew and sunshine from the cup of a flower. “Oh, you are come again!” she said, placing her warm hands on each side his face, and looking with the smiling con- fidence of childhood into his eyes. ‘They told me that you would not come to see us any more for a long, long time.” FATHER AND CHILD. 55 “And are you glad to sce me, darling?” said Mr. Clark, drawing his hand caressingly down the disheveled brightness of her hair, ‘ You seem glad, my little Myra ?” “ Seem—why—I am glad—so very, very glad, my own, own-—” the child hesitated. * Papa—will yon not call me papa, this once?” said the agitated father, and upon his pale cheek there came a flush, as he said this to the child. “Oh, but they tell me that you are my godfather, and that is not a papa, you know,” said the child, shaking her head with an air of pretty thoughtfulness. “Perhaps jt is as well,” murmured the father, and his look grew sad. Myra bent down and looked into his eyes, smiling. “Don’t look so sorry,” she said; “TI will call you papa, if you like. Papa! dear papa! there, now !” But even the childish caress, accompanied as it was by a yoice and look of the most winning sweetness, failed to dispel the sadness that had fallen upon the father’s heart. Perhaps the very loveliness of the child did but deepen that sadness, by reminding him of its mother. Let this be as it may, Mr. Clark sat down by the fountain with the little girl in his arms, but he remained silent, thus chilling the little creature whose arms were about his neck, and she too became hushed, as it were, by the gloom into which he fell. During several min- utes the father and child remained thus wrapped in silence. At last he spoke in a low and troubled voice, kissing the fore- head of the child: “Myra, do you love me?” “ Indeed, indeed I do,” said the little girl, laying her cheek - to his. ‘ Better almost than saytory else in the wide world, if you are only my godfather.” “And whom—” here Mr. Clark’s voice falterea—* and whom can you love better, Myra ?” “ Oh,” said the child, shaking her head with a pretty mys- terious air, “ there is somebody that I love so much, a pretty, beautiful lady, who comes to me so often, and so strangely, just like one of the fairies nurse tells me about. Sometimes she will be a long, long time, and not come at all. Then, while Iam playing among the trees, she will be close to me 56 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. before I think of it. She kisses me just as you do, and once —that, too, was so like—” the child paused, and seemed pon- dering over something in her mind. “ What was so like, Myra ?” said Mr. Clark, in a faint voice, for his heart misgave him. “Why, I was just thinking,” said the child thoughtfully ; “this pretty lady wanted me to call her mamma, just as you wanted me to call you papa, you know, only in fun.” “And did you call her that ?” “Yes, but I never will again—no, never in the world; for, do you think, she began to cry like any thing the moment I put my arms round her neck and said ‘Mamma?! You can’t think how she did cry, and after asking me, too.” Mr. Clark turned away his head; the child’s earnest look troubled him. “She knew well enough that it was all fun,” persisted the child, “and yet she kept on crying all I could do.” “Oh, such words are bitter, bitter fun,” muttered Mr. Clark, tortured by the innocent prattle of the child. “T did not mean any harm; the lady asked me to call her ‘Mamma,’ but I never will again,” said Myra, drooping under what seemed to her the displeasure of her best friend. “Oh yes, Myra, you must love this lady; you must call her any thing she pleases,” said Mr. Clark, with a burst of emotion that startled the little girl “Be good to her; be gentle and loving as if+as if it was not fun when you call her ‘Mamma.’ You will be good to her; promise me, my darling, that you will.” “But she will not ask me again. It is a long, long time since the lady has been here,” answered the child thoughtfully. “Perhaps she will not come any more.” “ Perhaps,” said Mr. Clark, with a voice and look of painful abstraction. A slight noise in a distant part of the garden drew the child’s attention. She started, and bending eagerly forward looked down a winding path sheltered by the orange-trees. “See!” cried the child, pointing down the path with her finger, while her eyes sparkled like diamonds; “ didn’t I say that she always came like a fairy? Didn’t I tell you so 2” Clark followed the child’s finger with his eyes, and there, THE MEETING. : 57 coming up the path rapidly, and with eager haste in her look and manner, he saw Zulima, the wife of his bosom, the mother of his child. For the world, that proud man could not have risen to his feet; his strength utterly forsook him; he at- tempted to remove Myra’s arm from his neck, but even that he failed to accomplish, so profound was his astonishment, so overpowering was his agitation. A tree stood close by the fountain, overrun and shadowed by the conyolutions of a passion-flower vine, that fell like a curtain around it, concealing the father and child as Zulima’ came up. Thus it happened that without any preparation, the wronged wife and the deceived husband stood face to face, breathless and pale as statues in a grayeyard. The child clung to her father’s neck. Her large eyes dilated, and her face grew crimson with fear. She was frightened by the terrible pallor of Zulima’s face. Mr. Clark arose pale as death; and trembling in every limb, he placed the child gently on the grass, and approaching Zulima held forth his hand. She took it, but her fingers were like marble; and like marble was the cold smile that went in a spasm of pain across her lips. ; “Zulima, will you not speak to me?” Oh, what a flood of bitter waters did that gentle voice un- lock in Zulima’s heart. Her limbs began to shake, her hands quivered like aspen leaves, and a look of unutterable distress fell upon her face. “To what end should I speak?” she said, in a low and husky voice. “I have no wish to reproach you, and what but reproaches can you expect from me.” A bitter smile disturbed the pallor of Daniel Clark’s face, and a bitter intonation was blended with the mournful cadence of his voice. “Reproaches, Zulima, are for slight wrongs; but slight or deep, I deserve none at your hands. While you—oh, woman, woman, how have you betrayed the deep love, the honor which I gave you in holy trust. Neither will J reproach; but when I look upon your face, still young, full of beauty, and bearing the old look of innocence, it forces me to think of the vows you have broken, the mockery you have cast upon our merriage.” 58 MYRA, THiS CHILD OF ADOPTION. ‘Our marriage,” repeated Zulima. Again her lips were dis- torted with a smile mournful and bitter, and clasping her bands she wrung them nervously together. “Why do you smile thus? Why do you repeat thus bit- terly the words that I have spoken?” said Clark, regarding her wild agitation with wonder. ‘“ When I speak of our marriage, you do not shrink or tremble as one who has pro- faned a holy rite, but your eye is full of scorn, your lips curl with bitter smiles. Zulima, are you indeed so lost that the mention of ties that bound us once, and that legally bind us yet, ties that you, unhappy woman, haye broken and dishon- ored, can only awake a smile of scorn?” Zulima stood motionless, her hands clasped, her eyes dilat- ing; the truth was struggling to her heart. “Speak to me, speak to me again,” she cried, extending het locked hands imploringly. “That marriage, you know, you know well, it was all false, all a deception. I never was your wife !” Mr. Clark drew back—he breathed with difficulty: the truth was breaking upon his soul also—the cruel, terrible truth. “Speak to me, speak to me,” cried Zulima, in a voice of thrilling anguish; “I never was your wife!” . “The God of heaven, at whose altar we were united, can answer that you were my lawfully wedded wife, that you are so now!” _ A-sharp cry broke from Zulima, she staggered forward a pace, and sat down upon the grass close by her child; cover- ing her face with both hands, she bent it down to her knees, and remained thus motionless and absolutely without breath. Clark stood gazing upon her, every nerve in his body quiy- ering; the horror that her face had exhibited, that.sharp cry, the utter prostration of her energies, all these things were fast unsealing his eyes. He sat down by the unhappy woman and attempted to remove one of the pale hands clasped over her eyes, but she resisted him with a faint shudder, and they through those lashed fringes gushed a flood of tears. “Zulima, try and compose yourself, make one effort; for, on earth, I feel that this must be our last interview. Shrink not thus! Ihave never wronged you, or if it prove so, not knowingly or wilfully.” VILLAINY EXPOSED. 59 Zulima shook her head, and sobbed aloud. “There has been wrong, deep, black wrong, somewhere,” she said; “I was told that you also had deceived me by a false marriage, that the ceremony we went through was a fraud, and I your victim, not a wife. “ And who told you this infamous falsehood ?” said Clark, clasping his hands till the blood left them, in the agony of his impatience. “Ross hinted it; Smith told me so in Philadelphia and in Baltimore. They told me, also, that you were about to marry another; I saw you together with my own eyes. You refused to see me; but for that I had never believed them !” “And Smith told you this; Ross hinted it,” cried Clark, locking his teeth with terrible anger. ‘These two men whom I have fed, whom—” he paused; the violence of his emotion was too great for words. But why should we further describe the harrowing scene? It was long before these two unhappy beings could speak with calmness, but at length all was told—the fraud that had kept back their mutual letters, the slow and subtle poison that had been instilled so assiduously into each proud and passionate nature—all. For the first time, Clark learned the sufferings, the passionate love, that had sent his young wife in search of him, her struggles, her despair. Then his own haughty re- serve gave way; he laid open his whole heart before her, its history and its anguish. He told her of his wanderings, of the deep and harrowing love; which not even a belief in her faith- lessness could wring from his heart; he told her all, and then these proud beings sat again, side by side, looking in cach other’s faces, and yet separated, oh, how irrevocably ! Then came the time for parting. Zulima must go back to her home, and he—where could he seek shelter from the grief of that terrible moment ? They both arose, and face to face, stood gazing on each other for the last time; neither of them doubted that it was for the last time, on this side the grave. A look of mournful despondency was on their features, their hands were clasped for an instant, and then Zulima turned away, and tottering feebly in her walk, passed from the garden. He stood watch- ing her till the last flutter of her garments disappeared under 60 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. the orange-boughs, then he turned away and went forth, a broken-hearted man. Mother and father both went away, leaving the child alone. ‘Terrified by the scene of anguish passing before her, the little creature had neither moyed nor spoken, and in the agony of that last parting she was forgotten. She had no heart for play then. The fish turned up their golden sides in yain, the humming-birds flashed by her quite unheeded; she was gazing after her father, and her eyes were full of tears. All at once, she saw him coming back, walking rapidly; tears were in-his eyes also, and, taking her to his bosom, he kissed her forehead, her hair, and her little hands, Myra began to sob piteously. She could feel the swelling of his heart against her form; the hot fever of his lips.as they touched her forehead, made her tremble, and cling closer t¢ him; it seemed as if the little creature knew that this was the last time that noble heart would ever beat against hers—as if she felt in her whole being that he was her father. Thus, after a brief struggle, the parent and child parted, and forever. That night Daniel Clark spent under the roof of his friend, Ross, the very roof that had sheltered his bridal life with Zulima and the birth of her child. He met his false friend calmly, and without any outbreak of the terrible sense of wrong that ached at his heart. He said truly, that reproaches are for slight wrongs, only his were too mighty for words, He never once hinted to the traitor that he was aware of his treachery. Perhaps the footsteps of coming death were press- ing too heavily upon him, even then, for he whispered to his heart more than once that day, “ Vengeance is mine, saith the Lord, and I will repay it.” There was no vengeance in Daniel Clark’s thoughts; for death was there already, and he felt that the little time given him on earth would scarcely be sufficient to right the wronged. In the very chamber where Zulima had sat, amid the storm, writing her last soul-touching letter to her husband, was that husband at midnight, writing eagerly as she had been. His face was deathly pale one minute, and the next there spread over it a warm red hue, that seemed burning hotly through the flesh. He wrote on, sheet after sheet, linking the pages together as he completed them, with a black ribbon; and, notwithstanding the anguish that shook, and the fever that LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. 61 . brrned him, the writing, as it flowed from his pen, was firm and even as print. Toward daylight the document was finished. Two black seals were placed at the last page, then the whole was folded up and carefully sealed. Weary and haggard was Daniel Clark, as he arose from his task; the bed stood in a corner of the chamber, cool and inviting, but he approached it not. With a heavy and wavering step, he reached the open window, and folding his arms upon the sill, turned his face to the soft night-air, with a faint groan, and thus he remained till morning. The next day, Daniel Clark rode into the city, and was closeted with several of his old and intimate friends. In the house of one of these friends the others met by appointment, and there Daniel Clark read his last will and testament, mak- ing his child, Myra Clark, the heiress to his vast possessions, and there he solemnly declared his marriage with Zulima, that child’s mother. After this he sat down in the presence of his friends and chosen executors, and placed his signature to the will that his own hands had written. When Mr. Clark left them that day, his friends observed that the hand with which he clasped theirs was burning, and that his eyes looked heavy and swollen. They remarked, too, that he had never once smiled during the whole interview; but the occasion was a solemn one, and so they merely gave these things a passing thought, deeming them but the result of some undue excitement. At nightfall Mr. Clark reached the dwelling of Ross. It had been Zulima’s residence, and he yearned to lie down in the room that she had occupied, and to press the same pillow that she had wept upon. All the deep tenderness of his early love for that wronged woman came back to him with a knowl- edge of her blamelessness. Pride, the great sin of his nature, had been prostrated with the knowledge that he, with ail his haughty self-reliance, all his splendor of intellect, had been in- fluenced by base and ungrateful men to wrong the being dearest to him in life. All the manifestation of displeasure that he displayed toward Ross was a desire to ayoid his pres- ence, but even that awoke the ever-vigilant suspicion of the man. He had placed menial spies on the steps of Zulima, bot 62 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. * in hunting down the sterner game Ross played the spy himself. The plantation which Ross occupied was the property of his patron, and in the dwelling Mr. Clark had always kept his own separate apartments. On returning home that night he entered a little library belonging to these apartments, and opening an escritoir had taken from thence an ebony box, in which were his most valuable papers. After placing the will therein he had carefully locked the escritoir and the room before retiring to his chamber for the night. At two o’clock the next morning there shone in this library a faint light. By the escritoir stood Ross softly trying a key in the lock, and behind him upon a table rested a dark lan- tern, so placed that all its rays fell in one direction, leaving most of the room in darkness. WNoiselessly the key was turned, and without a sound was the escritoir opened, and the ebony box dragged forth. The will was the first paper that presented itself on open- ing the box. Ross took it up, seated himself in Mr. Clark’s easy chair, and began to read; nervously glancing over the pages, and starting from time to time if the slightest sound reached his ear. “As I thought!” he said, in a stern, low voice, dashing his hand against the paper till the sheets rustled loud enough to make him start. “Thus has one day undone the work of years. I knew that something had warped his heart against me!” Thoughtfully, and with a frowning brow, Ross folded up the will, laid it in its depository, and secured it as before. At first he was tempted to take the light from his lantern, and consume it at once, but the rash thought was abandoned after a moment’s reflection, for there was danger at any hour that Mr. Clark might detect the fraud and place another will be- yond his reach. With his duplicate key and ready access to all the apartments, there was little to dread while the will remained under that roof. The moment every thing was safe, Ross closed his lantern, and sat for more than an hour musing in the darkness. When he came forth, there was a deep and gloomy cloud upon his brow; the pale moonbeams fell upon it through the windows, as he passed to his own room, but the moonbeams failed to FEVER—DELIRIUM. 63 reveal the black thought ‘that lay hidden beneath that frown. There was more than fraud in that hideous thought. Mr. Clark slept in Zulima’s chamber, upon the couch her ficlicate limbs had pressed, and upon the pillow where her nacad had found its sweetest slumbers. Perhaps the fever- spirit grew riotous and strong on the memory which these objects aroused, or it might have been that, without all these reminiscences, the illness that came upon him that night would have proved more painful still. The morning found the heart-stricken man faint and strengthless as a child. A vague dreaminess hung about him, which did not quite amount to delirium, and yet it could not have been said that he was quite conscious of passing events. He talked in a low voice of his wife and child: there was something sad and broken-hearted in every word that he uttered, totally at variance with his usual proud and lofty reserve. He seemed to take little inter- est in those about him, but murmured gently to himself, and always of them. If this was delirium—and it must have been, so totally was it at variance with his previous manner—there was something éxceedingly touching and mournful in it, for the death-bed of that noble and strong man seemed marked by a degree of solemn tenderness that might have befitted the death-pillow of a loving woman. At first the disease seemed scarcely more than an attack of nervous fever, such as often follows violent excitement, The spirits.of heaven who guarded that death-bed alone can tell if neglect or irritation, or deeper and darker causes com- bined to terminate that slight illness in death. Ross was his attendant; constant and unceasing was the assiduity of his watch. No physician, no friend entered the sick-room, and for three days that noble man lay struggling with death, in the presence of his bitterest enemy, and one faithful old body- seryant, who could only watch and weep over the master who was to him almost more than mortal. Then came the third night, and still the failing man was alone with that one old negro, who would not be sent away; and over him bent the household viper, whose sting had been Worse than death. A dim lamp was in the room, and through the open windows came the night air, in soft, sweet gushes, making the muslin drapery tremble in the flaring lamplight. 64 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION, Daniel Clark turned upon his pillow; his eyes opened wide, and he moved his hands in the air, as if seeking to grasp at something. Ross bent over and spoke to him, but the tying man closed his eyes and motioned the traitor away with his hand. The old negro came up, choking back the tears, and bent his gray head gently over his master. Again Clark opened his eyes; a sudden light came into them, and a smile stole over the whole face. “Bend down,” he whispered, “bend close to me, my old servant, for I am dying.” The old man bent his head still lower, holding his breath, and checking the tears that swelled his faithful heart. “Dear master, I listen.” Clark lifted his hand, and grasped that of the old man with a feeble hold. “My wife—my child! See that no wrong is done them.” The old man looked down upon that ashen face with sur- * prise. “This must be delirium,” he thought, “for my poor master had neither wife nor child.” / The eyes of the dying man were misty, but he saw the doubt in his servant’s face. A look of distress passed over his own, and he made a vain effort to collect the power of speech. But he could only say, “The will—that must tell you—it is below, take it into your own hands the moment I am dead; and take it to—to—” “To Master Ross?” said the old man, observing that his master’s voice was sinking. “No! no!” . These words broke from the dying man with his last breath; he fell back upon the pillow; his hands wan- dered upward for an instant, and then fell heavily upon the bed. Still his eyes were open—still they were fixed with mournful intensity on the old man’s face. “He is gone!” murmured Ross, bending his ashen face over the ashen face of the dead. “He is gone!” cried the poor old servant, wringing his hands and sobbing aloud; “he is gone, and without taking the old man with him!” Then the faithful old creature cast himself upon his knees, and taking the pale hand of the dead between his ebony palms, lifted up his voice and wept. While the voice of his grief filled the room, while his faithful heart A SMELL OF BURNT ‘PAPE. 65 seemed pouring itself out in tears, Ross turned softly and stole from the room. A few brief minutes the old negro gave to his sorrow. Then amid his tears he remembered the last words of the dead. He did but pause to close, with reverent hands, the eyes that still seemed regarding him with earnest command. He did but compose the lifeless limbs, and draw the sheet over those loved features, before he went down to obey the last behest of the dead. The poor old man went forth from the death- chamber, guided by the gray dawn. His tread was slow and mournful. You could scarcely hear him as he passed along, for it seemed to him that the faintest sound might disturb his master, He reached the library; his hand was upon the latch; he turned it with a cautious regard to sound, not with premedita- tion, but because the death-scene he had witnessed made the least noise appear to him like sacrilege. But the door re- mained firm. It was evidently locked within, for through the keyhole streamed a faint light, and with the light came an indistinct sound of rustling papers and the cautious tread of a footstep. The old man bent his eye to the keyhole and looked in. Directly within the range of his vision stood Mr. Clark’s escritoir wide open, and by it was Ross searching among the papers in an ebony box, which the old man knew as the re- pository of his master’s most valuable documents. Ross took from this box a voluminous parcel, thrust it in his bosom, and carefully locking the escritoir, held up the light and look- ed timidly around as if fearful of the very silence. Then, with a quick, noiseless tread, he passed across the room. His face was deathly pale, and the old negro saw that the lamp shook and swaled in his hand. There was a fireplace in the room, but the door commanded no view of it, and the old man strained his sight in vain to secure further knowledge of what was passing within the library. But if his eye was baffied his ear remained keen, and that was directly startled by the sharp rustle of papers apparently torn apart in haste; then the whole room was filled with’a glare of light. There was a sudden and faint crackle as of some hastily kindled flame passing up the chimney. Then all was dark and hush- ed once more. The lamp seemed extinguished ; a little smoke, 3 - 66 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADOPTION. a faint smell of burnt paper, and that was all the poor old negro ever saw of his master’s will. The old man went back to the chamber, knowing too well that his mission was at an end. He knelt down by that death-couch trembling like a culprit, and heart-sick from a consciousness of his own impotence. ‘Oh, master, master! forgive me—forgive me!” cried the gray-headed old servant, bending his wrinkled forehead to the hands he had clasped upon the death-couch. ‘Forgive: me that I stayed to cry when I should have obeyed the last order you can ever give the old man. Ihave seen, I have heard—but who will hbe- lieve me, master? Am I not a slave?” “A slave? Yes; go hence, and forever!” cried a stern voice in the room; “ you who have no more discretion than thus to talk with the dead.” The old man arose and stood up; his keen eyes dwelt firmly upon Ross, and with his right hand he drew the cover- ing from the dead. There was something noble in the look and attitude of that old gray-headed negro as he confronted the false friend, the household traitor, who might yet haye al- most the power of life and death over him. “He is my master; I will not leave him,” said the old man firmly. “You may whip me, you may kill me, but I will never leave him till he is buried. I rocked him in his cradle, I will lay him in his grave. Then sell me, if you like; no matter what becomes of the old man when his master is in the grave.” And turning away with a look of unutterable woe, the old servant cast himself by the death-couch, crying out, “ My master! oh, my master !” A few weeks after, the old man was sold and sent away to a far-off plantation, for he was a part of the property which Daniel Clark had left, and according to the old will, the only one ever found, Ross was the executor of the estate, and had a right to sell the poor old man. ae ee pes ew XOUTHFUL DREAMS. Ss wl CHAPTER VY. A being of beauty she fell to her dreaming— Thought flitted in gleamings of light through her brain, In the ote of her eye it was constantly gleaming, Still lighting her soul with soft visions again. Tue will of Daniel Clark was never found, and the vast in- heritance that should have been his child’s, became the spoil of those who had crept like vipers along his life-path, poison- ing every pure blossom that sprang up to bless him on _ his way to the grave. His wife was bereft of every thing but her sorrowful memories. His child had not even these. To her, father, mother, all was a dream—an idea that had floated through her infant memory and was gone. Years went by—many years—and then in one of the most splendid mansions of Philadelphia, lay a fair young girl, half ar- rayed in her morning costume, and but partially aroused from one of those sweet dreams that of late had made her sleep a vision of love. While lifting the wealth of her brown hair be- tween both her small hands in dressing before her mirror that morning, she had been taken with one of those rich gleams of thought that are the poetry of youth, and allowing the tresses to fall over her slight person again, where, in their wonderful and bright abundance, they fell almost to her feet, she had stolen thoughtfully to a couch in her boudoir and cast herself upon the crimson cushions. There, with some loose drapery gath- ered around her, one fair cheek resting in the palm of her hand, and the white arm half vailed by those loosened tresses, pressed deep in the silken cushions, the young girl fell into a reverie. Perhaps the dream from which she had just been aroused still haunted her mind, but it would have been diffi cult for Myra herself to have said what were the strange and Sweet fancies that floated through her mind at that moment; for her own thoughts were a mystery, her feelings vague as they were pure. These sort of day-dreams, hen they come §8 MYRA, THE CHILD OF ADGPTION. to our first youth, have much of heayen in them; if they could only endure through life always bright, always enveloped in the same rosy mist, “Man might forget to dream of heaven, And yet have the sweet sin forgiven.” Myra was aroused from her day-dream, not rudely as some of our sweetest fancies are broken, but by a light footfall, and a soft voice that called her name from the inner room, The young girl started up— “ Mother—mother, is it you—am I very late this morning ?” “Oh, you are here, daughter,” said a middle-aged and gentle Jady as she entered the boudoir. ‘No, not very late, but do you know that your father has just arrived and is inquiring for you ?” “My father here, and I not half ready to go down!” cried Myra, eagerly gathering up her hair, while, with the wonder- ful mobility natural to her features, the whole tone of her face changed. The dreamy, almost languid expression yanished in an instant. The warm glow of her affectionate nature broke through every feature like flame hidden in the heart of a pearl. Wer cheek, her mouth, her white forehead were full of animation; her brown eyes sparkled with delight. With her whole being she loved the man whom she believed to be her father, and for the gentle woman who stood gazing upon her with so much affection as her toilet was completed, Myra’s devotion was almost more than the natural love of a child for its mother. Scarcely a minute elapsed before the young girl was ready to go down. Another minute and she was in the arms of a fine and noble-looking man who stood by the break- fast-room door eagerly watching for her. During many weeks he had been absent from his home, and he could not feel thoroughly welcomed back again while Myra was not by to greet him. It was a joyous family party that gathered around the breakfast-table that morning. The eyes of that gentle wife wandered, with a look of grateful affection, from the noble face of her husband to meet the sparkling glance of her child; for Myra was more than a child to her. Rejoiced to be once more in the bosom of his family, Mr. D. was more than usu- ally animated and agreeable. There was not a hidden thought or a disunited feeling in the little family group. a eee C= @ AN IMPOSTOh. 69 “ And whom have you had to visit you since I went away, Myra? What new conquest have you made? Tell me all about it, child,” said Mr. D., smiling, as he received the coffee- ~ cup of Sevres china from the hands of his wife. Myra laughed—a clear, ringing laugh, that had more of hearty glee in it than any thing you ever heard. “ Oh, we have had crowds of visitors, gallants without num- ber. Ladies like a swarm of humming-birds, and—and—oh, yes; we had one very singular and romantic person, a name- sake and intimate friend of yours, papa. I wrote you about him, but you never mentioned him at all in your reply.” “Oh, yes; I remember,” said Mr. D.; “a grave, gentle- manly old man, with just gray hairs enough to make him in- teresting, and the most winning manners. He carried a little Bible with a gold clasp in his bosom—I remember the de- scription well. What of him, Myra? You lost your heart, of that the letter told me ;—but who was this mysterious per- son? Pray, enlighten me.” Myra and her mother exchanged glances.