Madeline Payne, the Detective's Daughter. Lynch Lawrence L.
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СКАЧАТЬ been so happy – a bride, beautiful and beloved. Beautiful she was still – with the beauty of shadow; beloved too, but how sadly! Philip Girard had been convicted of a great crime, and for five long years had worn a felon's garb, and borne the anguish of one set apart from all the world.

      The hand that had darkened the life of Olive Girard, and the hand that had turned the young days of the girl Madeline into a burden, was one and the same.

      Afterwards Madeline listened to the pathetic history of Olive's sorrow.

      Sitting in that great lounging chair, Madeline looked very fair, very childlike. Sadly sweet were her large, deep eyes, and her hair, shorn while the fever raged, clustered in soft tiny rings about her slender, snowy neck and blue-veined temples. She had not been permitted to talk much during her convalescence, and Olive had as yet gleaned only a general outline of her story.

      "Mrs. Girard," said the girl, resting her pale cheek in the palm of a thin, tiny hand, "you once said something to me about – about some one who had been wronged by – " Something sadder than tears choked her utterance.

      As Olive turned her grave clear eyes away from the window, and fixed them in expectation upon her; Madeline's own eyes fell. She sat before her benefactress with downcast lids, and the hateful name unuttered.

      "I know," said Olive, after a brief silence; "I referred to a girl now lying in the hospital. She is very young, and has been cruelly wronged by him. She is poor, as you may judge, and earned her living in the ballet at the theater. She was thrown from a carriage which had been furnished her by him, to carry her home from some rendezvous – of course the driver took care of himself and his horses. The poor girl was picked up and carried to the hospital. She was without friends and almost penniless. She sent to him – for him; he returned no answer. She begged for help, for enough to enable her to obtain what was needed in her illness. Message after message was sent, and finally a reply came, brought by a messenger who had been bidden to insist upon receiving an answer. The servant said that his master had directed him to say to any messenger who called, that he was out of town."

      "The wretch! He deserves death!"

      Madeline's eyes blazed, and she lifted her head with some of her olden energy.

      "Softly, my dear: 'Thou shalt do no murder.'"

      "It is not murder to kill a human tiger!"

      Olive made no answer.

      "Is she still very ill, this girl?" questioned Madeline.

      "She can not recover."

      "Shall I see her?"

      "If you wish to; do you?"

      "Yes."

      Another long pause; then Madeline glanced up at her friend, and said listlessly: "What do you intend to do with me?"

      "Do with you?" smiling at her. "Make you well again, and then try and coax you to be my other sister. Don't you think I need one?"

      No answer.

      "Life has much in store for you yet, Madeline."

      "Yes;" bitterly again.

      "You are so young."

      "And so old."

      "Madeline, you are too young for somber thoughts and repining."

      "I shall not repine."

      "Good! You will try to forget?"

      "Impossible!"

      "No; not impossible."

      "I do not wish to, then."

      "And why?"

      "Wait and see."

      "Madeline, you will do nothing rash? You will trust me, and confide in me?"

      The girl raised her eyes slowly, in surprise. "I have not so many friends that I can afford to lose one."

      "Thank you, dear; then we will let the subject drop until we are stronger. And here is the carriage, and Doctor Vaughan."

      Out into the sunny Summer morning went Madeline, and soon she was established in a lovely little room which, Olive said, was hers so long as she could be persuaded to occupy it. Here the girl rested and, ministered unto by gentle hands, she felt life coming back.

      And Lucian?

      Late in the afternoon of the day that saw Madeline depart from his elegant rooms, Mr. Davlin arrived, and found no one to deny him admittance. All the doors stood ajar, and Henry was flitting about with an air of putting things to rights. The bird had flown.

      He gained from Henry the following: "I don't know, sir, where she went. A gentleman came with a carriage, and the young lady and the nurse went away with him."

      Lucian was not aware what manner of nurse Madeline had had in her illness. And Henry, having purposely misled him, enjoyed his discomfiture.

      "She told me to give you this, sir," said he, handing his master a little package.

      Tearing off the wrapper, Lucian held in his hand the little pistol that had inflicted upon him the wounded arm. From its mouth he drew a scrap of paper, and this is what it said:

      When next we meet, I shall have other weapons!

      CHAPTER X.

      BONNIE, BEWITCHING CLAIRE

      Four months. We find Madeline standing in the late Autumn sunset, "clothed and in her right mind," strong with the strength of youth, and beautiful with even more than her olden beauty.

      Fair is the prospect as seen from the grounds of Mrs. Girard's suburban villa, and so, perhaps, Claire Keith is thinking.

      She is looking down the level road, and at the trees on either hand, decked in all their October magnificence of scarlet and brown and gold, half concealing coquettish villas and more stately residences.

      The eyes of Madeline were turned away from the vista of villas and trees, and were gazing toward the business thoroughfare leading into the bustle of the town; gazing after the receding figure of Doctor Clarence Vaughan as he cantered away from the villa; gazing until a turn of the road hid him from her view. Then – and what did she mean by it? – she turned her face toward Claire with a questioning look in her eyes – the question came almost to her lips. But the words were repressed.

      Bonnie Clair was thinking of anything but Clarence Vaughan just then. Presently she turned a bright glance upon her companion, who was gathering clusters of the fallen maple leaves, with face half averted.

      "A kiss for your thoughts, beautiful blonde Madeline. I certainly think it is ten minutes since Doctor Vaughan departed and silence fell upon us."

      She bent down, and taking her companion's head between two dimpled hands, pulled it back, until she could look into the solemn brown eyes.

      "Come, now," coaxingly, "what were you thinking?"

      Madeline extricated herself from Claire's playful grasp, and replied with a half laugh: "It must be mutual confession then, you small highwayman; how do you like my terms?"

      "Only СКАЧАТЬ