LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. Class ^5-5" SUNRISE BY WILLIAM BLACK. Author of " Shandon Bells" " Yolande" "Strange Adventures cf a PJiaeton," "Madcap Violet," etc., etc. NEW YORK: JOHN B. ALDEN, PUBLISHER, 1883. CONTENTS. CHAPTER PAGE I. A FIRST INTERVIEW I II. PLEADINGS 8 III. IN A HOUSE IN CURZON STREET H IV. A STRANGER. 23 V. PIONEERS; 29 VI. BON VOYAGE ! 37 VII. IN SOLITUDE. 44 VIII. A DISCOVERY $1 IX. A NIGHT IN VENICE 58 X. VACILLATION . 64 XI. A COMMISSION 72 XII. JACTA EST ALEA 79 XIII. SOUTHWARD 86 XIV. A RUSSIAN EPISODE 94 XV. NEW FRIENDS IOI XVI. A LETTER Io8 XVII. CALABRESSA. . 115 XVIII. HER ANSWER 1 23 XIX. AT THE CULTURVEREIN 129 XX. FIDELIO 137 XXI. FATHER AND DAUGHTER 144 XXII. EVASIONS 151 XXIII. A TALISMAN 158 XXIV. AN ALTERNATIVE 165 XXV. A FRIEND'S ADVICE '. 172 XXVI. A PROMISE 179 XXVII. KIRSKI 1 86 XXVIII. A CLIMAX , 1 93 XXIX. A GOOD-NIGHT MESSAGE 2OI XXX. SOME TREASURES 2o8 XXXI. IN A GARDEN AT POSILIPO 21$ XXXII. FRIEND AND SWEETHEART 223 iv CONTENTS. CHAPTER PAGE XXXIII. INTERVENTION 230 XXXIV. AN ENCOUNTER 237 XXXV. THE MOTHER 245 XXXVI. THE VELVET GLOVE 252 XXXVII. SANTA GLAUS 259 XXXVIII. A SUMMONS 266 XXXIX. A NEW HOME 274 XL. A GONCLAVE 280 XLI. IN THE DEEPS 288 XLIL A COMMUNICATON 295 XLIII. A QUARREL 302 XLIV. A TWICE-TOLD TALE 308 XLV. SOUTHWARD 316 XLVI. THE BEECHES 321 XLVII. AT PORTICI 329 XLVIII. AN APPEAL 337 XLIX. AN EMISSARY 345 L. A WEAK BROTHER 352 LI. THE CONJURER 359 LII. FIAT JUSTITIA 366 LIII. THE TRIAL 373 LIV. PUT TO THE PROOF 380 LV. CONGRATULATIONS 387 LVI. A COMMISSION 394 LVIL FAREWELL ! 4OI LVIII. A SACRIFICE . 409 LIX. NATALIE SPEAKS 416 LX. NEW SHORES 424 SUNRISE CHAPTER I. A FIRST INTERVIEW. ONE chilly afternoon in February, while as yet the London season had not quite begun, though the streets were busy enough, an open barouche was being rapidly driven along Piccadilly in the direction of Coventry Street ; and its two occupants, despite the dull roar of vehicles around them, seemed to be engaged in eager conversation. One of these two was a tall, handsome, muscular-looking man of about thirty, with a sun-tanned face, piercing gray eyes, and a red- dish-brown beard cropped in the foreign fashion ; the other, half hidden among the voluminous furs of the carriage, was a pale, humpbacked lad, with a fine, expressive, intellectual face, and large, animated, almost woman-like eyes. The for- mer was George Brand, of Brand Beeches, Bucks, a bachelor unattached, and a person of no particular occupation, except that he had tumbled about the world a good deal, surveying mankind with more or less of interest or indifference. His companion and friend, the bright-eyed, beautiful-faced, hump- backed lad, was Ernest Francis D'Agincourt, thirteenth Baron Evelyn. The discussion was warm ; though the elder of the two friends spoke deprecatingly, at times even scornfully. " I know what is behind all that," he said. " They are making a dupe of you, Evelyn. A parcel of miserable Lei- cester Square conspirators, plundering the working-man of all countries of his small savings, and humbugging him with promises of twopenny-halfpenny revolutions 1 That is not the sort of thing for you to mix in. It is not English, all that dagger and dark-lantern business, even if it were real ; but when it is only theatrical when they are only stage dag- gers when the wretched creatures who mouth about assas- 2 SUNXtSE. sination and revolution are only swaggering for half-pence bah ! What part do you propose to play ? " " I tell you it has nothing to do with daggers and dark lanterns," said the other with even greater warmth. " Why will you run your head against a windmill ? Why must you see farther into a mile-stone than anybody else ? I wonder, with all your travelling, you have not got rid of some of that detestable English prejudice and suspicion. I tell you that when I am allowed, even as an outsider, to see something of this vast organization for the defence of the oppressed, for the protection of the weak, the vindication of the injured, in every country throughout the globe when I see the splen- did possibilities before it when I find that even a useless fellow like myself may do some little thing to lessen the mighty mass of injustice and wrong in the world well, I am not going to stop to see that every one of my associates is of pure English birth, with a brother-in-law on the Bench, and an uncle in the House of Lords. I am glad enough to have something to do that is worth doing ; something to believe in ; something to hope for. You what do you believe in ? What is there in heaven or earth that you believe in ? " " Suppose I say that I believe in you, Evelyn ? " said his friend, quite good-naturedly ; " and some day, when you can convince me that your newly discovered faith is all right, you may find me becoming your meek disciple, and even your apostle. But I shall want something more than Union speeches, you know." By this time the carriage had passed along Coventry Street, turned into Prince's Street, and been pulled up opposite a commonplace-looking house in that distinctly dingy thorough- fare, Lisle Street, Soho. " Not quite Leicester Square, but near enough to serve," said Brand, with a contemptuous laugh, as he got out of the barouche, and then, with the greatest of care and gentleness, assisted his companion to alight. They crossed the pavement and rang a bell. Almost in- stantly the door was opened by a stout, yellow-haired, blear- eyed old man, who wore a huge overcoat adorned with masses of shabby fur, and who carried a small lamp in his hand, for the afternoon had grown to dusk. The two visitors were evi- dently expected. Having given the younger of them a deep- ly respectful greeting in German, the fur-coated old gentle- man shut the door after them, and proceeded to show the way up a flight of narrow and not particularly clean wooden stairs. A FIRST INTER VIE W. 3 " Conspiracy doesn't seem to pay,' remarked George Brand, half to himself. On the landing they were confronted by a number of doors, one of which the old German threw open. They entered a large, plainly furnished, well-lit room, looking pretty much like a merchant's office, though the walls were mostly hung with maps and plans of foreign cities. Brand looked round with a supercilious air. All his pleasant and friendly manner had gone. He was evidently determined to make himself as desperately disagreeable as an Englishman can make him- self when introduced to a foreigner whom he suspects. But even he would have had to confess that there was no sugges- tion of trap-doors or sliding panels in this ordinary, business- like room ; and not a trace of a dagger or a dark lantern anywhere. Presently, from a door opposite, an elderly man of middle height and spare and sinewy frame walked briskly in, shook hands with Lord Evelyn, was introduced to the tall, red- bearded Englishman (who still stood, hat in hand, and with a portentous stiffness in his demeanor), begged his two guests to be seated, and himself sat down at an open bureau, which was plentifully littered with papers. " I am pleased to meet you, Mr. Brand," he said, speaking carefully, and with a considerable foreign accent. " Lord Evelyn has several times promised me the honor of making your acquaintance." Mr. Brand merely bowed : he was intent on making out what manner of man this suspected foreigner might be ; and he was puzzled. At first sight Ferdinand Lind appeared to be about fifty or fifty- five years of age ; his closely cropped hair was gray ; and his face, in repose, somewhat care-worn. But then when he spoke there was an almost youthful vivacity in his look ; his dark eyes were keen, quick, sympathetic ; and there was even a certain careless ease about his dress about the turned-down collar and French-looking neck-tie, for example that had more of the air of the student than of the pedant about it. All this at the first glance. It was only afterward you came to perceive what was denoted by those heavy, seamed brows, the firm, strong mouth, and the square line of the jaw. These told you of the presence of an indomitable and inflexible will. Here was a man born to think, and control, and command. " With that prospect before me," he continued, apparently taking no notice of the Englishman's close scrunity, " I must ask you, Mr. Brand well, you know, it is merelv a matter of 4 SU&KIS&. form but I must ask you to be so very kind as to give me your word of honor that you will not disclose anything you may see or learn here. Have you any objection ? " Brand stared, then said, coldly, " Oh dear, no. I will give you that pledge, if you wish it." " It is so easy to deal with Englishmen," said Mr. Lind, politely. " A word, and it is done. But I suppose Lord Evelyn has told you that we have no very desperate secrets. Secrecy, you know, one must use sometimes ; it is an induce- ment to many most people are fond of a little mystery ; and it is harmless." Brand said nothing ; Lord Evelyn thought he might have been at least civil. But when an Englishman is determined on being stiff, his stiffness is gigantic. " If I were to show you some of the tricks of this very room," said this grizzled old foreigner with the boyish neck- tie, " you might call me a charlatan ; but would that be fair ? We have to make use of various means for what we consider a good end, a noble end ; and there are many people who love mystery and secrecy. With you English it is different you must have Everything above-board." The pale, fine face of the sensitive lad sitting there became clouded over with disappointment. He had brought this old friend of his with some vague hope that he might become a convert, or at least be sufficiently interested to make inqui- ries ; but Brand sat silent, with a cold indifference that was only the outward sign of an inward suspicion. " Sometimes, it is true," continued Mr. Lind, in nowise disconcerted, " we stumble on the secrets of others. Our association has innumerable feelers ; and we make it our business to know what we can of everything that is going on. For example, I could tell you of an odd little incident that occurred last year in Constantinople. A party of four gentle- men were playing cards there in a private 'room." Brand started. The man who was speaking took no no- tice. " There were two Austrian officers, a Roumanian count, and an Englishman," he continued, in the most matter-of-fact way. " It was in a private room, as I said. The Englishman was, after a time, convinced that the Roumanian was cheat- ing ; he caught his wrist showed the false cards ; then he man- aged to ward off the blow of a dagger which the Roumanian aimed at him, and by main force carried him to the door and threw him dosvn-stairs. It was cleverly done, but the Eng- A FIRST INTER VIE W. 5 lishman was very big and strong. Afterward the two Austrian officers, who knew the Verdt family, begged the Englishman never to reveal what had occurred ; and the three promised secrecy. Was not that so ? " The man looked up carelessly. The Englishman's apathy was no longer visible. " Y-yes," he stammered. " Would you like to know what became of Count Verdt ? " he asked, with an air of indifference. " Yes, certainly," said the other. " Ah ! Of course you know the Castel' del Ovo ? " "At Naples? Yes." " You remember that out at the point, beside the way that leads from the shore to the fortress, there are many big rocks, and the waves roll about there. Three weeks after you caught Count Verdt cheating at cards, his dead body was found float- ing there." " Gracious heavens ! " Brand exclaimed, with his face grown pale. And then he added, breathlessly, " Suicide ? " Mr. Lind smiled. " No. Reassure yourself. When they picked out the body from the water, they found the mouth gagged, and the hands tied behind the back." . Brand stared at this man. "Then you ? " He dared not complete the question. " I ? Oh, I had nothing to do with it, any more than your- self. It was a Camorra affair." He had been speaking quite indifferently ; but now a sin- gular change came over his manner. "And if I had had something to do with it ? " he said, vehe- mently ; and the dark eyes were burning with a quick anger under the heavy brows. Then he spoke more slowly, but with a firm emphasis in his speech. " I will tell you a little story ; it will not detain you, sir. Suppose that you have a prison so overstocked with political prisoners that you must keep sixty or seventy in the open yard adjoining the outer wall. You have little to fear ; they are harmless, poor wretches ; there are several old men two women. Ah ! but what are the poor devils to do in those long nights that are so dark and so cold? However they may huddle together, they freeze; if they keep not moving, they die ; you find them dead in the morning. If you are a Czar you are glad of that, for your prisons are choked ; it is very convenient. And, then sup- pose you have a clever fellow who finds out a narrow passage between the implement-house and the wall ; and he savs. 6 SUNRISE. 1 There, you oan work all night at digging a passage out ; and who in the morning will suspect ? ' Is not that a fine discov- ery, when one must keep moving in the dark to prevent one's self stiffening into a corpse ? Oh yes ; then you find the poor devils, in their madness, begin to tear the ground up ; what tools have they but their fingers, when the implement-house is locked ? The poor devils ! old men, too, and women ; and how they take their turn at the slow work, hour after hour, week after week, all through the long, still nights ! Inch by inch it is ; and the poor devils become like rabbits, burrow- ing for a hole to reach the outer air ; and do you know that, after a time, the first wounds heal, and your fingers become like stumps of iron " He held out his two hands ; the ends of the fingers were seamed and corrugated, as if they had been violently scalded. But he could not hold them steady they were trembling with the suppressed passion that made his whole frame tremble. "Relay after relay, night after night, week after week, month after month, until those poor devils of rabbits had ac- tually burrowed a passage out into the freedom of God's world again. And some said the Czar himself had heard of it, and would not interfere, for the prisons were choked ; and some said the wife of the governor was Polish, and had a kind heart ; but what did it matter when the time was draw- ing near ? And always this clever fellow do you know, sir, his name was Verdt too? encouraging, helping, goading these poor people on. Then the last night how the misera- ble rabbits of creatures kept huddled together, shivering in the dark, till the hour arrived ! and then the death-like still- ness they found outside ; and the wild wonder and fear of it ; and the old men- and the women crying like children to find themselves in the free air again. Marie Falevitch that was my sister-in-law she kissed me, and was laughing when she whispered, * Eljen ahaza /' I think she was a little off her head with the long, sleepless nights." He stopped for a second ; his throat seemed choked. " Did I tell you they had all got out ? the poor devils all wondering there, and scarcefy knowing where to go. And now suppose, sir ah ! you don't know anything about these things, you happy English people suppose you found the black night around you all at once turned to a blaze of fire a red hell opened on all sides of you, and the bullets plow- ing your comrades down ; the old men crying for mercy, the young ones falling only with a groan ; the women my God ! Did you ever hear a woman shriek when she was struck A FIRST INTERVIEW. 7 through the heart with a bullet ? Marie Falevitch fell at my feet, but I could not raise her I was struck down too. It was a week after that I came to my senses. I was in the prison, but the prison was not quite so full. Czars and governors have a fine way of thinning prisons when they get too crowded." These last words were spoken in a calm, contemptuous way; the man was evidently trying' hard to control the fierce passion that these memories had stirred up. He had clinched one hand, and put it firmly on the desk before him, so that it should not tremble. " Well, now, Mr. Brand," he continued, slowly, " let us sup- pose that when you come to yourself again, you hear the ru- mors that are about : you hear, for example, that Count Verdt that exceedingly clever man has been graciously pardoned by the Czar for revealing the villanous conspiracy of his fellow-prisoners ; and that he has gone off to the South with a bag of money. Do you not think that you would re- member the name of that clever person ? Do you not think you would say to yourself, * Well, it may not be to-day, or to- morrow, or the next day : but some day ? ' ' Again the dark eyes glowed ; but he had a wonderful self- control. " You would remember the name, would you not, if you had your sister-in-law, and your only brother, and six or seven of your old friends and comrades all shot on the one night ? " " This was the same Count Verdt ? " Brand asked, eagerly. " Yes," said the other, after a considerable pause. Then he added, with an involuntary sigh, " I had been following his movements for some time ; but the Camorra stepped in. They are foolish people, those Camorristi foolish and igno- rant. They punish for very trifling offences, and they do not make sufficient warning of their punishments. Then they are quite imbecile in the way they attempt to regulate labor." He was now talking in quite a matter-of-fact way. The clinched hand was relaxed. " Besides," continued Ferdinand Lind, with the cool air of a critic, " their conduct is too scandalous. The outer world believes they are nothing but an association of thieves and cut-throats ; that is because they do not discountenance vul- gar and useless crime ; because there is not enough authority, nor any proper selection of members. In the affairs of the world, one has sometimes to make use of queer agents that 8 SUNK/SB. is admitted ; and you cannot have any large body of people without finding a few scoundrels among them. I suppose one might even say that about your very respectable Church of England. But you only bring a society into disrepute you rob it of much usefulness you put the law and society against it when you make it the refuge of common murder- ers and thieves." " I should hope so," remarked George Brand. If this sus- pected foreigner had resumed his ordinary manner, so had he : he was again the haughty, suspicious, almost supercil- ious Englishman. Poor Lord Evelyn ! The lad looked quite distressed. These two men were so obviously antipathetic that it seemed altogether hopeless to think of their ever coming together. " Well," said Mr. Lind, in his ordinary polished and easy manner, "I must not seek to detain you; for it is a cold night to keep horses waiting. But, Mr. Brand, Lord Evelyn dines with us to-morrow evening : if you have nothing better to do, will you join our little party ? My daughter, I am sure, will be most pleased to make your acquaintance." " Do, Brand, there's a good fellow ! " struck in his friend. " I haven't seen anything of you for such a long time." " I shall be very happy indeed," said the tall Englishman, wondering whether he was likely to meet a goodly assem- blage of sedition-mongers at this foreign person's table. . " We dine at a quarter to eight. The address is No. Curzon Street ; but perhaps you had better take this card." So they left, and were conducted down the staircase by the stout old German; and scrambled up into the furs of the ba- rouche. " So he has a daughter ? " said Brand, as the two friends together drove down to Buckingham Street, where they were to dine at his rooms. " Oh, yes ; his daughter Natalie," said Lord Evelyn, eagerly. " I am so glad you will see him to-morrow night ! " " And they live on Curzon Street," said the other, reflect- ively. " H'm ! Conspiracy does pay, then ! " CHAPTER II. PLEADINGS. " BROTHER SENIOR WARDEN, your place in the lodge ? " said Mr. Brand, looking at-the small dinner-table. PLEADINGS. 9 " You forget," his companion said. " I am only in the nursery as yet an Illuminatus Minor, as it were. However, I don't think I can do better than sit where Waters has put me ; I can have a glimpse of the lights on the river. But what an extraordinary place for you to come to for rooms ! " They had driven down through the glare of the great city to this silent and dark little thoroughfare, dismissed the car- riage at the foot, climbed up an old-fashioned oak staircase, and found themselves at last received by an elderly person, who looked a good deal more like a bronzed old veteran than an ordinary English butler. " Halloo, Wafers ! " said Lord Evelyn. " How are you ? I don't think I have seen you since you threatened to mur- der the landlord at Cairo." "No, my lord," said Mr. Waters, who seemed vastly pleased by this reminiscence, and who instantly disappeared to summon dinner for the two young men. " Extraordinary ? " said Brand, when they had got seated at table. " Oh no ; my constant craving is for air, space, light and quiet. Here I have all these. Beneath are the Embankment gardens ; beyond that, you see, the river those lights are the steamers at anchor. As for quiet, the lower floors are occupied by a charitable society ; so I fancied there would not be much traffic on the stairs." The jibe passed unheeded ; Lord Evelyn had long ago be- come familiar with his friend's way of speaking about men and things. " And so, Evelyn, you have become a pupil of the revolu- tionaries," George Brand continued, when Waters had put some things before them and retired " a student of the fine art of stabbing people unawares ? What an astute fellow that Lind must be I will swear it never occured to one of the lot before to get an English milord into their ranks ! A stroke of genuis ! It could only have been projected by a great mind. And then look at the effect throughout Europe if an English milord were to be found with a parcel of Orsini bombs in his possession ! every ragamuffin from Naples to St. Petersburg would rejoice ; the army of cutthroats would march with a new swagger." His companion said nothing ; but there was a vexed and impatient look on his face. " And our little daughter is she pretty ? Does she coax the young men to play with daggers ? the innocent little thing ! And when you start with your dynamite to break open a jail, she blows you a kiss ? the charming little fairy ! What ro SUNRISE. is it she has embroidered on the ribbons round her neck ? ' Mort aux rois ? ' ' Sic semper tyrannis ? ' No ; I saw a much prettier one somewhere the other day : ' Ne si pasce di fresche ruggiade, ma di sangue di membra di re? Isn't it charming? It sounds quite idyllic, even in English: ' Not for you the nourishment of freshening dews, but the blood of the limbs of kings /' The pretty little stabber is she fierce ? " " Brand, you are too bad ! " said the other, throwing down his knife and fork, and getting up from the table. " You be- lieve in neither man, woman, God, nor devil ! " " Would you mind handing over that claret jug ? " " Why," he said, turning passionately toward him, " it is men like you, who have neither faith, nor hope, nor regret, who are wandering aimlessly in a nightmare of apathy and indolence and indifference, who ought to be the first to wel- come the new light breaking in the sky. What is life worth to you? You have nothing to hope for nothing to look for- ward to nothing you can kill the aimless with. Why should you desire to-morrow ? To-morrow will bring you nothing different from yesterday; you will do as you did yesterday and the day before yesterday. It is the life of a horse or an ox not the life of a human being, with the sympathies and needs and aspirations of a man. What is the object of living at all ? " " I really don't know," said the other, simply. But this pale hump-backed lad, with the fine nostrils, the sensitive mouth, the large forehead, and the beautiful eyes, was terribly in earnest. He forgot about his place at table. He kept walking up and down, occasionally addressing his friend directly, at other times glancing out at the dark river and the golden lines of the lamps. And he was an eloquent speaker, too. Debarred from most forms of physical exer- cise, he had been brought up in a world of ideas. When he went to Oxford, it was with some vague notion of subse- quently entering the Church ; but at Oxford he became speedily convinced that there was no Church left for him to enter. Then he fell back on sestheticism worshipped Car- paccio, adored Chopin, and turned his rooms at Merton into a museum of old tapestry, Roman brass-work, and Venetian glass. Then he dabbled a little in Comtism ; but very soon he threw aside that gigantic make-believe at believing. Nevertheless, whatever was his whim of the moment, it was for him no whim at all, but a burning reality. And in this enthusiasm of his there was no room left for shyness. In fact, these two companions had been accustomed to talk PLEADINGS, 1 1 frankly; they had long ago abandoned that self-conscious- ness which ordinarily restricts the conversation of young Englishmen to monosyllables. Brand was a good listener and his friend an eager, impetuous, enthusiastic speaker. The one could even recite verses to the other : what greater proof of confidence ? And on this occasion all this prayer of his was earnest and pathetic enough. He begged this old chum of his to throw aside his insular prejudices and judge for himself. What object had he in living at all, if life were merely a routine of food and sleep ? In this selfish isolation, his living was only a process of going to the grave only that each day would become more tedious and burdensome as he grew older. Why should he not examine, and inquire, and believe if that was possible ? The world was perishing for want of a new faith : the new faith was here. At this phrase George Brand quickly raised his head. He was accustomed to these enthusiasms of his friend ; but he had not yet seen him in the character of on apostle. " You know it as well as I, Brand ; the last great wave of religion has spent itself ; and I suppose Matthew Arnold would have us wait for the mysterious East, the mother of religions, to send us another. Do you remember 'Ober- mann ? ' " * In his cool hall, with haggard eyes, The Roman noble lay ; He drove abroad, in furious guise, Along the Appian Way ; " ' He made a feast, drank fierce and fast, And crowned his head with flowers No easier nor no quicker passed The impracticable hours. ' ' The brooding East with awe beheld Her impious younger world. The Roman tempest swelled and swelled, And on her head was hurled. ' The East bowed low before the blast, In patience, deep disdain ; She let the legions thunder past, And plunged in thought again." The lad had a sympathetic voice ; and there was a curi- ous, pathetic thrill in the tones of it as he went on to describe the result of that awful musing the new-born joy awakening in the East the victorious West veiling her eagles and snap- 12 SUNRISE. ping her sword before this strange new worship of the Child " And centuries came, and ran their course, And, unspent all that time, Still, still went forth that Child's dear force, And still was at its prime." But now in these later days around us ! " Now he is dead ! Far hence He lies In the lorn Syrian town ; And on his grave, with shining eyes, The Syrian stars look down." The great divine wave had spent itself. But were we to sit supinely by this was what he asked, though not precisely in these consecutive words, for sometimes he walked to and fro in his eagerness, and sometimes he ate a bit of bread, or sat down opposite his friend for the purpose of better confront- ing him to wait for that distant and mysterious East to send us another revelation ? Not so. Let the proud-spirited and courageous West, that had learned the teachings of Chris- tianity but never yet applied them let the powerful West establish a faith of her own : a faith in the future of humanity itself a faith in future of recompense and atonement to the vast multitudes of mankind who had toiled so long and so grievously a faith demanding instant action and endeavor and self-sacrifice from those who would be its first apostles. " The complaining millions of men Darken in labor and pain.'* And why should not this Christianity, that had so long been used to gild the thrones of kings and glorify the cer- emonies of priests that had so long been monopolized by the rich and the great and the strong, whom its Founder de- spised and denounced why should it not at length come to the help of those myriads of the poor and the weak and the suffering whose cry for help had been for so many centuries disregarded ? Here was work for the idle, hope for the hope- less, a faith for them who were perishing for want of a faith. " You say all this is vague a vision a sentiment ? " he said, talking in the same eager way. " Then that is my fault. I cannot explain it all to you in a few words. But do not run away with the notion that it is mere words a St. Simonian dream of perfectibility, or anything like that. It is practical ; PLEADINGS. 13 it exists ; it is within reach of you. It is a definite and im- mense organization ; it may be young as yet, but it has cour- age and splendid aims,; and now, with a great work before it, it is eager for aid. You yourself, when you see a child run over, or a woman starving of hunger, or a blind man wanting to cross a street, are you not ready with your help the help of your hands or of your purse ? Multiply these by millions, and think of the cry for help that comes from all parts of the world. If you but knew, you could not resist. I as yet know little I only hear the echo of the cry; but my veins are burning ; I shall have the gladness of answering ' Yes/ how- ever little I can do. And after all, is not that something ? For a man to live only for himself is death." "But you know, Evelyn," said his friend, though he did not quite know what to answer to all this outburst, " you must be more cautious. Those benevolent schemes are very noble and very captivating ; but sometimes they are in the hands of rather queer people. And besides, do you quite know the limits of this big society ? I thought you said something about vindicating the oppressed. Does it include politics ? " " I do not question ; I am content to obey," said Lord Evelyn. "That is not English ; unreasoning and blind obedience is mere folly." " Perhaps so," said the other, somewhat absently ; " but I suppose a man accepts whatever satisfies the craving of his own heart. And and I should not like to go alone on this new thing, Brand. Will you not come some little way with me ? If you think I am mistaken, you may turn back ; as for me well, if it were only a dream, I think I would rather go with the pilgrims on their hopeless quest than stay with the people who come out to wonder at them as they go by. You remember '* c Who is your lady of love, oh ye that pass Singing i And is it for sorrow of that which was That ye sing sadly, or dream of what shall be ? For gladly at once and sadly it seems ye sing. Our lady of love by you is unbeholden ; For hands she hath none, nor eyes, nor lips, nor golden Treasure of hair, nor face nor form ; but we That love, we know her more fair than anything.' " Yes ; he had certainly a pathetic thrill in his voice ; but now there was something else something strange in the slow and monotonous cadence that caught the acute ear of 14 SCSAHtlSE. his friend. And again he went on, but absently, almost as if he were himself listening " Is she a queen, having great gifts t'o give ? Yea, these ; that whoso hath seen her shall not live Except he serve her sorrowing, with strange pain, Travail and bloodshedding and bitterest tears ; And when she bids die he shall surely die. And he shall leave all things under the sky, And go forth naked under sun and rain, And work and wait and watch out all his years." " Evelyn," said George Brand, suddenly, fixing his keen eyes on his friend's face, "where have you heard that? Who has taught you ? You are not speaking with your own voice." " With whose, then ? " and a smile came over the pale, calm, beautiful face, as if he had awakened out of a dream. " That," said Brand, still regarding him, " was the voice of Natalie Lind." CHAPTER III. IN A HOUSE IN CURZON STREET. ARMED with a defiant scepticism, and yet conscious of an unusual interest and expectation, George Brand drove up to Curzon Street on the following evening. As he jumped out of his hansom, he inadvertently glanced at the house. " Conspiracy has not quite built us a palace as yet," he said to himself. The door was opened by a little German maid-servant, as neat and round and rosy as a Dresden china shepherdess, who conducted him up-stairs and announced him at the draw- ing-room. It was not a large room ; but there was more of color and gilding in it than accords with the severity of mod- ern English taste ; and it was lit irregularly with a number of candles, each with a little green or rose-red shade. Mr. Lind met him at the door. As they shook hands, Brand caught a glimpse of another figure in the room apparently that of a tall woman dressed all in cream-white, with a bunch of scar- let geraniums in her bosom, and another in her raven-black hair. " Not the gay little adventuress, then ? " was his instant and internal comment. "Better contrived still. The insnireH IN A HOUSE IN CURZON STREET. 15 prophetess. Obviously not the daughter of this man at all. Hired." But when Natalie Lind came forward to receive him. he was more than surprised ; he was almost abashed. During a sec- ond or two of wonder and involuntary admiration, he was startled out of his critical attitude altogether. For this tall and striking figure was in reality that of a young girl of eight- een or nineteen, who had the beautifully formed bust, the slender waist, and the noble carriage that even young Hun- garian girls frequently have. Perhaps the face, with its intel- lectual forehead and the proud and firmly cut mouth, was a trifle too calm and self-reliant for a young girl ; but all the softness of expression that was wanted, all the gentle and gra- cious timidity that we associate with maidenhood, lay in the large, and dark, and lustrous eyes. When, by accident, she turned aside, and he saw the outline of that clear, olive-com- plexioned face, only broken by the outward curve of the long black lashes, he had to confess to himself that, adventuress or no adventuress, prophetess or no prophetess, Natalie Lind was possessed of about the most beautiful profile he had ever beheld, while she had the air and the bearing of a queen. Her father and he talked of the various trifling things of the moment ; but what he was chiefly thinking of was the sin- gular calm and self-possession of this young girl. When she spoke, her dark, soft eyes regarded him without fear. Her manner was simple and natural to the last degree ; perhaps with the least touch added of maidenly reserve. He was forced even to admire the simplicity of her dress cream or canary white it was, with a bit of white fur round the neck and round the tight wrists. The only strong color was that of the scarlet geraniums which she wore in her bosom, and in the splendid masses of her hair ; and the vertical sharp line of scarlet of her closed fan. Once only, during this interval of waiting, did he find that calm serenity of hers disturbed. He happened to observe the photograph of a very handsome woman near him on the table. She told him she had had a parcel of photographs of friends of hers just sent over from Vienna ; some of them very pretty. She went to another table, and brought over a hand- ful. He glanced at them only a second or two. " I see they are mostly from Vienna ; are they Austrian ladies? " he asked. " They live in Austria, but they are not Austrians," she an- swered. And then she added, with a touch of scorn about 1 6 SUNKISE. the beautiful mouth, " Our friends and we don't belong to the women-floggers ! " " Natalie ! " her father said ; but he smiled all the same. " I will tell you one of my earliest recollections," she said : " I remember it very well. Kossuth was carrying me round the room on his shoulder. I suppose I had been listening to the talk of the gentlemen ; for I said to him, * When they burned my papa in effigy at Pesth, why was I not allowed to go and see ? ' And he said I remember the sound of his voice even now ' Little child, you were not born then. But if you had been able to go, do you know what they would have done to you ? They would have flogged you. Do you not know that the Austrians flog women ? When you grow up, little child, your papa will tell you the story of Madame von Maderspach.' " Then she added, " That is one of my valued recollections, that when I was a child I was carried on Kos- suth's shoulders." " You have no similar reminiscence of Gorgey, I suppose ? " Brand said, with a smile. He had spoken quite inadvertently, without the slightest thought in the world of wounding her feelings. But he was surprised and shocked by the extraordinary effect which this chance remark produced on the tall and beautiful girl stand- ing there ; for an instant she paused, as if not knowing what to say. Then she said proudly, and she turned away as she did so, " Perhaps you are not aware that there are some names you should not mention in the presence of a Hungarian woman." What was there in the tone of the voice that made him rap- idly glance at her eyes, as she turned away, pretending to carry back the photographs ? He was not deceived. Those large dark eyes were full of sudden, indignant tears ; she had not turned quite quickly enough to conceal them. Of course, he instantly and amply apologized for his igno- rance and stupidity ; but what he said to himself was, " That child is not acting. She may be Lind's daughter, after all. Poor thing ! she is too beautiful, and generous, and noble to be made the decoy of a revolutionary adventurer." At this moment Lord Evelyn arrived, throwing a quick glance of inquiry toward his friend, to see what impression, so far, had been produced. But the tall, red-bearded Englishman maintained, as the diplomatists say, an attitude of, the strictest reserve. The keen gray eyes were respectful IN A HOUSE IN CURZON STREET. 17 attentive, courteous especially when they were turned to Miss Lind ; beyond that, nothing. Now they had not been seated at the dinner-table more than a few minutes before George Brand began to ask him- self whether it was really Curzon Street he was dining in. The oddly furnished room was adorned with curiosities to which every capital in Europe would seem to have con- tributed. The servants, exclusively women, were foreign ; the table glass and decorations were all foreign ; the unosten- tatious little banquet was distinctly foreign. Why, the very bell that had summoned them down what was there in the soft sound of it that had reminded him of something far away ? It was a haunting sound, and he kept puzzling over the vague association it seemed to call up. At last he frankly mentioned the matter to Miss Lind, who seemed greatly pleased. "Ah, did you like the sound ? " she said, in that low and harmonious voice of hers. " The bell was an invention of my own ; shall I show it to you ? " The Dresden shepherdess, by name Anneli, being de- spatched into the hall, presently returned with an object somewhat resembling in shape a Cheshire cheese, but round at the top, formed of roughly filed metal or a lustrous yellow- gray. Round the rude square handle surmounting it was carelessly twisted a bit of old orange silk ; other decoration there was none. " Do you see what it is now ? " she said. " Only one of the great bells the people use for the cattle on the Campagna. Where did I get it ? Oh, you know the Piazza Montenara, in Rome, of course ? There is a place there where they sell such things to the country people. You could get one with- out difficulty, if you are not afraid of being laughed at as a mad Englishman. That bit of embroidered ribbon, though, I got in an old shop in Florence." Indeed, what struck him further was, not only the foreign look of the little room and its belongings, but also the ex- traordinary familiarity with foreign cities shown by both Lind and his daughter. As the rambling conversation went on (the sonorous cattle-bell had been removed by the rosy- cheeked Anneli), they appeared to be just as much at home in Madrid, in Munich, in Turin, or Genoa as in London. And it was no vague and general tourist's knowledge that these two cosmopolitans showed ; it was rather the knowledge of a resident an intimate acquaintance with persons, streets, shops, and houses. George Brand was a bit of a globe-trot- 1 8 SUNKISE. ter himself, and was entirely interested in this talk about places and things that he knew. He got to be quite at home with those people, whose own home seemed to be Europe. Reminiscences, anecdotes flowed freely on ; the dinner passed with unconscious rapidity. Lord Evelyn was delighted and pleased beyond measure to observe the more than courteous attention that his friend paid to Natalie Lind. But all this while what mention was there of the great and wonderful organization a mere far-off glimpse of which had so captured Lord Evelyn's fervent imagination ? Not a word. The sceptic who had come among them could find nothing either to justify or allay his suspicions. But it might safely be said that, for the moment at least, his suspicions as regarded one of those two were dormant. It was difficult to associate trickery, and conspiracy, and cowardly stabbing, with this beautiful young Hungarian girl, whose calm, dark eyes were so fearless. It is true that she appeared very proud- spirited, and generous, and enthusiastic ; and you could cause her cheek to pale whenever you spoke of injury done to the weak, or the suffering, or the poor. But that was different from the secret sharpening of poniards. Once only was reference made to the various secret as- sociations that are slowly but eagerly working under the ap- parent social and political surface of Europe. Some one mentioned the Nihilists. Thereupon Ferdinand Lind, in a quiet and matter-of-fact way, without appearing to know any- thing of the personnel of the society, and certainly without expressing any approval of its aims, took occasion to speak of the extraordinary devotion of those people. " There has been nothing like it," said he, " in all the history of what men have done for a political cause. You may say they are fanatics, madmen, murderers ; that they only provoke further tyranny and oppression ; that their efforts are wholly and solely mischievous. It may be so ; but I speak of the individual and what he is ready to do. The sacrifice of their own life is taken almost as a matter of course. Each man knows that for him the end will almost certainly be Siberia or a public execution ; and he accepts it. You will find young men, well-born, well-educated, who go away from their friends and their native place, who go into a remote village, and offer to work at the commonest trade, at apprentices' wages. They settle there ; they marry ; they preach nothing but the value of honest work, and extreme sobriety, and respect for superiors. Then, after some years, when they are regarded as beyond all suspicion, they begin, IN A HOUSE IN CURZON STREET. ig cautiously and slowly, to spread abroad their propaganda to teach respect rather for human liberty, for justice, for self- sacrifice, for those passions that prompt a nation to advent- ure everything for its freedom. Well, you know the end. The man may be found out banished or executed ; but the association remains. The Russians at this moment have no notion how wide-spread and powerful it is." " The head-quarters, are they in Russia itself ? " asked Brand, on the watch for any admission. " Who knows ? " said the other, absently. " Perhaps there are none." " None ? Surely there mus tbe some power to say what is to be done, to enforce obedience ? " " What if each man finds that in himself ? " said Lind, with something of the air of a dreamer coming over the firm and thoughtful and rugged face. " It may be a brotherhood. All associations do not need to be controlled by kings and priests and standing armies." " And the end of all this devotion, you say is Siberia or death ? " " For the man, perhaps ; for his work, not. It is not personal gain or personal safety that a man must have in view if he goes to do battle against the oppression that has crushed the world for centuries and centuries. Do you not remember the answer given to the Czar by Michael Bestoujif when he was condemned ? It was only the saying of a peas- ant ; but it is one of the noblest ever heard in the world. ' I have the power to pardon you,' said the Czar to him, * and I would do so if I thought you would become a faithful sub- ject.' What was the answer ? * Sire,' said Michael Bestoujif, * that is our great misfortune, that the Emperor can do every- thing, and that there is no law.' " " Ah, the brave man ! " said Natalie Lind, quickly and passionately, with a flash of pride in her eyes. " The brave man ! If I had a brother, I would ask him, 4 When will you show the courage of Michael Bestoujif ? ' ' Lord Evelyn glanced at her with a strange, admiring, proud look. " If she had a brother ! " What else, even with all his admiration and affection for her, could he hope to be? Presently they wandered back into other and lighter subjects ; and Brand, at least, did not notice how the time was flying. When Natalie Lind rose, and asked her father whether he would have coffee sent into the smoking-room, or have tea in the drawing-room, Brand was quite astonished 2 SUNRISE. and disappointed to find it so late. He proposed they should at once go up to the drawing-room ; and this was done. They had been speaking of musical instruments at dinner ; and their host now brought them some venerable lutes to examine curiosities only, for most of the metal strings were broken. Beautiful objects, however, they were, in inlaid ivory or tortoise-shell and ebony ; made, as the various in- scriptions revealed, at Bologna, or Padua, or Venice ; and dating, some of them, as far back as 1474. But in the midst of all this, Brand espied another instrument on one of the small tables. " Miss Lind," said he, with some surprise, " do you play the zither ? " " Oh yes, Natalie will play you something," her father said, carelessly ; and forthwith the girl sat down to the small table. George Brand retired into a corner of the room. He was passionately fond of zither music. He thought no more about that examination of the lutes. " Do you know one who can play the zither well ? " says the proverb. " If so, rejoice, for there are not two in the world" However that might be, Natalie Lind could play the zither, as one eager listener soon discovered. He, in that far cor- ner, could only see the profile of the girl (just touched with a faint red from the shade of the nearest candle, as she leaned over the instrument), and the shapely wrists and fingers as they moved on the metallic strings. But was that what he really did see when the first low tremulous notes struck the prelude to one of the old pathetic Volkslieder that many a time he had heard in the morning, when the fresh wind blew in from the pines ; that many a time he had heard in the evening, when the little blue-eyed Kathchen and her mother sung together as they sat and knitted on the bench in front of the inn ? Suddenly the air changes. What is this louder tramp ? Is it not the joyous chorus of the home-returning huntsmen ; the lads with the slain roedeer slung round their necks ; that stalwart Bavarian keeper hauling at his mighty black hound ; old father Keinitz, with his three beagles and his ancient breech-loader, hurrying forward to get the first cool, vast, splendid bath of the clear, white wine ? How the young fellows come swinging along through the dust, their faces ablaze against the sunset ! Listen to the far, hoarse chorus ! IN A HOUSE IN CURZON STREET. 21 " Dann kehr' ich von der Haide, Zur hauslich stillen Freude, Ein frommer Jagersmann ! Ein frommer Jagersmann ! Halli, hallo ! halli, hallo I Ein frommer Jagersmann ! " | White wine now, and likewise the richer red ! for there is a great hand-shaking because of the Mr. Englishman's good fortune in having shot three bucks ; and the little Kathchen's eyes grow full, because they have brought home a gentle - faced hind, likewise cruelly slain. . And Kathchen's mother has whisked inside, and here are the tall schoppen on the table ; and speedily the long, low room is filled with the to- bacco-smoke. What ! another song, you thirsty old Keinitz, with the quavering voice ? But there is a lusty chorus to that too ; and a great clinking of glasses ; and the English- man laughs and does his part too, and he has called for six more schoppen of red. . . . But hush, now ! Have we come out from the din and the smoke to the cool evening air? What is that one hears afar in the garden .? Surely it is the little Kathchen and her mother singing together, in beautiful harmony, the old, familiar, tender Lorelei ! The zither is a strange instrument it speaks. And when Natalie Lind, coming to this air, sung in a low contralto voice an only half-suggested second, it seemed to those in the room that two women were singing the one with a voice low and rich and penetrating, the other voice clear and sweet like the sing- ing of a young girl. " Die Luft ist kuhl und es dunkelt, und ruhig fliesset der Rhein" Was it, indeed, Kathchen and her mother ? Were they far away in the beautiful pine-land, with the quiet evening shining red over the green woods, and darkness coming over the pale streams in the hollows ? When Natalie Lind ceased, the elder of the two guests mur- mured to himself, " Wonderful ! wonderful ! " The other did not speak at all. She rested her hands for a moment on the table. " Natalushka," said her father, " is that all ? " " I will not be called Natalushka, papa," said she ; but again she bent her hands over the silver strings. And these brighter and gayer airs now surely they are from the laughing and light-hearted South ? Have we not heard them under the cool shade of the olive-trees, with the hot sun blazing on the garden-paths of the Villa Reale ; and the children playing ; and the band busy with its dancing canzoni, the ay notes drowning the murmur and plash of the 2* SU2WISE. fountains near ? Look now ! far beneath the gray shadow of the olive-trees the deep blue band of the sea ; and there the double-sailed barca, like a yellow butterfly hovering on the water ; and there the large martingallo, bound for the cloud-like island on the horizon. Are they singing, then, as they speed over the glancing waves ? . . . . " O doke Na- poli ! O suol beato /" . . . . for what can they sing at all, as they leave us, if they do not sing the pretty, tender, tink- ling " Santa Lucia ? " " Venite all' agile Barchetta mia ! Santa Lucia ! Santa Lucia ! " . . . .The notes grow fainter and fainter. Are the tall maidens of Capri already looking out for the swarthy sailors, that these turn no longer to the shores they are leaving ? "O dolce Napoli ! O suol beato /". . . . Fainter and fainter grow the notes on the trembling string, so that you can scarely tell them from the cool plashing of the fountains. ..." Santa Lucia J . . . . Santa Lucia !". . . . " Natalushka," said her father, laughing, " you must take us to Venice now." The young Hungarian girl rose, and put the zither aside. " It is an amusement for the children," she said. She went to the piano, which was open, and took down a piece of music it was Kucken's " Maid of Judah." Now, hitherto, George Brand had only heard her murmur a low, harmonious second to one or other of the airs she had been playing ; and he was quite unprepared for the passion and fer- vor which her rich, deep, resonant, contralto voice threw into this wail of indignation and despair. This was the voice of a woman, not of a girl ; and it was with the proud passion of a woman that she seemed to send this cry to Heaven for repar- ation, and justice, and revenge. And surely it was not only of the sorrows of the land of Judah she was thinking ! it was a wider cry the cry of the oppressed, and the suffering, and the heart-broken in every clime " O blest native land ! O fatherland mine ! How long for thy refuge in vain shall I pine ? " He could have believed there were tears in her eyes just then ; but there were none, he knew, when she came to the fierce piteous appeal that followed A STRANGER. 23 " Where, where are thy proud sons, so lordly in might ? All mown down and fallen in blood-welling fight ! Thy cities are ruin, thy valleys lie waste, Their summer enchantment the foe hath erased. O blest native land ! how long shalt decline ? When, when will the Lord cry, Revenge, it is Mine ! ' " The zither speaks ; but there is a speech beyond that of the zither. The penetrating vibration of this rich and pathetic voice was a thing not easily to be forgotten. When the two friends left the house, they found themselves in the chill darkness of an English night in February. Surely it must have seemed to them that they had been dwelling for a period in warmer climes, with gay colors, and warmth, and sweet sounds around them. They walked for some time in silence. " Well," said Lord Evelyn, at last, " what do you think of them ? " "I don't know," said the other, after a pause. "I am puzzled. How did you come to know them ? " " I came to know Lind through a newspaper reporter called O'Halloran. I should like to introduce you to him too." George Brand soon afterward parted from his friend, and walked away down to his silent rooms over the river. The streets were dark and deserted, and the air was still ; yet there seemed somehow to be a tremulous, passionate, distant sound in the night. It was no tinkling " Santa Lucia " dying away over the blue seas in the south. It was no dull, sonor- ous 'bell, suggesting memories of the far Campagna. Was it not rather the quick, responsive echo that had involuntarily arisen in his own heart, when he heard Natalie Lind's thrill- ing voice pour forth that proud and indignant appeal, " When, when will the Lord cry, ' Revenge, it is Mine I ' " CHAPTER IV. A STRANGER. FERDINAND LIND was in his study, busy with his morning letters. It was a nondescript little den, which he also used as library and smoking-room ; its chief feature being a col- lection of portraits a most heterogeneous assortment of en- gravings, photographs, woodcuts, and terra-cotta busts. Wher- ever the book-shelves ceased, these began ; and as there were 24 SUNKISE. a great number of them, and as the room was small, Mr. Lind's friends or historical heroes sometimes came into odd juxta- position. In any case, they formed a strange assemblage Arndt and Korner ; Stein ; Silvio Pellico and Karl Sand cheek by jowl ; Festal, Comte, Cromwell, Garibaldi, Marx, Mazzini, Bern, Kossuth, Lassalle, and many another writer and fighter. A fine engraving of Napoleon as First Consul was hung over the mantel-piece, a pipe-rack intervening be- tween it and a fac-simile of the warrant for the execution of Charles I. Something in his correspondence had obviously annoyed the occupant of this little study. His brows were bent down, and he kept his foot nervously and impatiently tapping on the floor. When some one knocked, he said, " Come in ! " al- most angrily, though he must have known who was his visitor. " Good-morning, papa ! " said the tall Hungarian girl, com- ing into the room with a light step and a smile of welcome on her face. " Good-morning, Natalie ! " said he, without looking up. " I am busy this morning." " Oh, but, papa," said she, going over, and stooping down and kissing him, " you must let me come and thank you for the flowers. They are more beautiful than ever this time." " What flowers ? " said he, impatiently. " Why," she said, with a look of astonishment, " have you forgotten already ? The flowers you always send for my birthday morning." But instantly she changed her tone. " Ah ! I see. Good little children must not ask where the fairy gifts come from. There, I will not disturb you, papa." She touched his shoulder caressingly as she passed. " But thank you again, papa Santa Claus." At breakfast, Ferdinand Lind seemed to have entirely re- covered his good-humor. " I had forgotten for the moment it was your birthday, Nata- lie," said he. " You are quite a grown woman now." Nothing, however, was said about the flowers, though the beautiful basket stood on a side-table, filling the room with its perfume. After breakfast, Mr. Lind left for his office, his daughter setting about her domestic duties. At twelve o'clock she was ready to go out for her accus- tomed morning walk. The pretty little Anneli, her compan- ion on these excursions, was also ready ; and together they set forth. They chatted frankly together in German the A STRANGER. 25 ordinary relations between mistress and servant never having been properly established in this case. For one thing, they had been left to depend on each other's society during many a long evening in foreign towns, when Mr. Lind was away on his own business. For another, Natalie Lind had, somehow or other, and quite unaided, arrived at the daring conclusion that servants were human beings ; and she had been taught to regard human beings as her brothers and sisters, some more fortunate than others, no doubt, but the least fortunate having the greatest claim on her. " Fraulein," said the little Saxon maid, " it was I myself who took in the beautiful flowers that came for you this morn- ing." "Yes?" " Yes, indeed ; and I thought it was very strange for a lady to be out so early in the morning." " A lady ! " said Natalie Lind, with a quick surprise. " Not dressed all in black ? " " Yes, indeed, she was dressed all in black." The girl was silent for a second or two. Then she said, with a smile, " It is not right for my father to send me a black messen- ger on my birthday it is not a good omen. And it was the same last year when we were in Paris; the concierge told me. Birthday gifts should come with a white fairy, you know, Anneli all silver and bells." " Fraulein," said the little German girl, gravely, " I do not think the lady who came this morning would bring you any ill fortune, for she spoke with such gentleness when she asked about you." " When she asked about me ? What was she like, then, this black messenger ? " " How could I see, Fraulein ? her veil was so thick. But her hair was gray ; I could see that. And she had a beauti- ful figure not quite as tall as you, Fraulein ; I watched her as she went away." " I am not sure that it is safe, Anneli, to watch the people whom Santa Glaus sends," the young mistress said, lightly. " However, you have not told me what the strange lady said to you." " That will I now tell you, Fraulein," said the other, with an air of importance. " Well, when I heard the knock at the door, I went instantly ; I thought it was strange to hear a knock so early, instead of the bell. Then there was the lady ; and she did not ask who lived there, but she said, ' Miss Lind 26 SUNJtISE. is not up yet ? But then, Fraulein, you must understand, she did not speak like that, for it was in English, and she spoke very slowly, as if it was with difficulty. I would have said, ' Will the gnadige Frau be pleased to speak German ? ' but I was afraid it might be impertinent for a maid-servant to ad- dress a lady so. Besides, Fraulein, she might have been a French lady, and not able to understand our German." " Quite so, Anneli. Well ? " "Then I told her I believed you were still in your room. Then she said, still speaking very slowly, as if it was all learned, 'Will you be so kind as to put those flowers just out- side her room, so that she will get them when she comes out ? ' And I said I would do that. Then she said, ' I hope Miss Lind is very well ; ' and I said, ' Oh yes.' She stood for a moment just then, Fraulein, as if not knowing whether to go away or not ; and then she asked again if you were quite well and strong and cheerful, and again I said, * Oh yes ; ' and no sooner had I said that than she put something into my hand and went away. Would you believe it, Fraulein ? it was a sovereign an English golden sovereign. And so I ran after her and said, * Lady, this is a mistake,' and I offered her the sovereign. That was right, was it not, Fraulein ? " " Certainly." " Well, she did not speak to me at all this time. I think the poor lady has less English even than I myself ; but she closed my hand over the sovereign, and then patted me on the arm, and went away. It was then that I looked after her. I said to myself, * Well, there is only one lady that I know who has a more beautiful figure than that that is my mistress.' But she was not so tall as you, Fraulein." Natalie Lind paid no attention to this adroit piece of flat- tery on the part of her little Saxon maid. " It is very extraordinary, Anneli," she said, after awhile ; then she added, " I hope the piece of gold you have will not turn to dust and ashes." " Look at it, Fraulein," said Anneli, taking out her purse and producing a sound and solid English coin, about which there appeared to be no clemonology or witchcraft whatsoever. They had by this time got into Park Lane ; and here the young mistress's speculations about the mysterious messenger of Santa Claus were suddenly cut short by something more immediate and more practical. There was a small boy of about ten engaged in pulling a wheelbarrow which was heav- ily laden with large baskets probably containing washing ; and he was toiling manfully with a somewhat hopeless task. A STRANGER, 27 How he had got so far it was impossible to say ; but now that his strength was exhausted, he was trying all sorts of in- effectual dodges even tilting up the barrow and endeavor- ing to haul it by the legs to get the thing along. ** If I were a man," said Natalie Lind, "I would help that boy." Then she stepped from the pavement. " Little boy," she said, " where are you taking that bar- row ? " The London gamin, always on the watch for sarcasm, stopped and stared at her. Then he took off his cap and wiped his forehead ; it was warm work, though this was a chill Feb- ruary morning. Finally he said, " Well, I'm agoin' to Warrington Crescent, Maida Vale. But if it's when I am likely to git there bust me if I know." She looked about. There was a good, sturdy specimen of the London loafer over at the park railings, with both hands up at his mouth, trying to light his pipe. She went across to him. " I will give you half a crown if you will pull that barrow to Warrington Crescent, Maida Vale." There was no hesi- tation in her manner ; she looked the loafer fair in the face. He instantly took the pipe from his mouth, and made some slouching attempt .at touching his cap. "Thank ye, miss. Thank ye kindly " and away the bar- row went, with the small boy manfully pushing behind. The tall, black-eyed Hungarian girl and her rosy-cheeked attendant now turned into the Park. There were a good many people riding by fathers with their daughters, elderly gentlemen very correctly dressed, smart young men with a little tawny mustache, clear blue eyes, and square shoulders. " Many of those Englishmen are very handsome," said the young mistress, by chance. " Not like the Austrians, Fraulein," said Anneli. " The Austrians ? What do you know about the Aus- trians ? " said the other, sharply. " When my uncle was ill at Prague, Fraulein," the girl said, " my mother took me there to see him. We used to go out to the river, and go half-way over the tall bridge, and then down to the 4 Sofien-Insel.' Ah, the beautiful place ! with the music, and the walks under the trees ; and there we used to see the Austrian officers. These were handsome, with there beautiful uniforms, and waists like a girl ; and the beau- tiful gloves they wore, too ! even when they were smoking cigarettes." 28 SUNRISE. Natalie Lind was apparently thinking of other things. She neither rebuked nor approved Anneli's speech ; though it was hard that the little Saxon maid should have preferred to the sturdy, white-haired, fair-skinned warriors of her native land the elegant young gentlemen of Francis Joseph's army. "They are handsome, those Englishmen," Natalie Lind was saying, almost to herself, " and very rich and brave ; but they have no sympathy. All their fighting for their liberty is over and gone ; they cannot believe there is any oppression now anywhere ; and they think that those who wish to help the sufferers of the world are only discontented and fanatic a trouble an annoyance. And they are hard with the poor people and the weak ; they think it is wrong that you have done wrong if you are not well off and strong like them- selves. I wonder if that was really an English lady who wrote the ' Cry of the Children.' " " I beg your pardon, Fraulein." " Nothing, Anneli. I was wondering why so rich a nation as the English should have so many poor people among them and such miserable poor people ; there is nothing like it in the world." They were walking along the broad road leading to the Mar- ble Arch, between the leafless trees. Suddenly the little Saxon girl exclaimed, in an excited whisper, "Fraulein! Fraulein!" " What is it, Anneli ? " " The lady the lady who came with the flowers she is be- hind us. Yes; I am sure." The girl's mistress glanced quickly round. Some distance behind them there was certainly a lady dressed altogether in black, who, the moment she perceived that these two were re- garding her, turned aside, and pretended to pick up some- thing from the grass. "Fraulein, Fraulein," said Anneli, eagerly; "let us sit down on this seat. Do not look at her. She will pass." The sudden presence of this stranger, about whom she had been thinking so much, had somewhat unnerved her ; she obeyed this suggestion almost mechanically ; and waited with her heart throbbing. For an instant or two it seemed as if that dark figure along by the trees were inclined to turn and leave ; but presently Natalie Lind knew rather than saw that this slender and graceful woman with the black dress and the deep veil was approaching her. She came nearer; for a second she came closer ; some little white thing was dropped into the girl's lap, and the stranger passed quickly on. PIONEERS. 29 "Anneli, Anneli," the young mistress teaid, "the lady has dropped her locket ! Run with it quick ! " " No, Fraulein," said the other, quite as breathlessly, " she meant it for you. Oh, look, Fraulein ! look at the poor lady she is crying." The sharp eyes of the younger girl were right. Surely that slender figure was being shaken with sobs as it hurried away and was lost among the groups coining through the Marble Arch ! Natalie Lind sat there as one stupefied breathless, silent, trembling. She Jiad not looked at the locket at all. " Anneli," she said, in a low voice, " was that the same lady ? Are you sure ? " " Certain, Fraulein," said her companion, eagerly. " She must be very unhappy," said the girl. " I think, too, she was crying." Then she looked at the trinket that the stranger had dropped into her lap. It was an old-fashioned silver locket formed in the shape of a heart, and ornamented with the most delicate filagree work ; in the centre of it was the letter N in old German text. When Natalie Lind opened it, she found inside only a small piece of paper, on which was written, in foreign-looking characters, "From Natalie to Natal ushka" " Anneli, she knows my name ! " the girl exclaimed. " Would you not like to speak to the poor lady, Fraulien ? " said the little German maid, who was very much excited, too. " And do you not think she is sure to come this way again to morrow, next day, some other day ? Perhaps she is ill or suf- fering, or she may have lost some one whom you resemble how can one tell ? " CHAPTER V. PIONEERS. BEFORE sitting down to breakfast, on this dim and dreary morning in February, George Brand went to one of the win- dows of his sitting-room and looked abroad on the busy world without. Busy indeed it seemed to be the steamers hurry- ing up and down the river, hansoms whirling along the Em- bankment, heavily laden omnibuses chasing each other across Waterloo Bridge, the underground railway from time to time rumbling beneath those wintry-looking gardens, and always and everywhere the ceaseless murmur of a great city. In the midst of all this eager activity, he was only a spectator. Busv 3 o enough the world around him seemed to be ; he alone was idle. Well, what had he to look forward to on this dull day, when once he had finished his breakfast and his newspapers ? It had already begun to drizzle ; there was to be no saunter up to the park. He would stroll along to his club, and say " Good morning " to one or two acquaintances. Perhaps he would glance at some more newspapers. Perhaps, tired of reading news that did not interest, and forming opinions never to be translated into action, he would take refuge in the library. Somehow, anyhow, he would desperately tide over the morn- ing till lunch-time. Luncheon would be a break ; but after ? Fie had not been long enough in England to become familiar with the whist-set ; similarly, he had been too long abroad to be pro- ficient in English billiards, even if he had been willing to make either whist or pool the pursuit of his life. As for af- ternoon calls and tea-drinking, that may be an interesting oc- cupation for young gentlemen in search of a wife, but it is too ghastly a business for one who has no such views. What then ? More newspapers ? More tedious lounging in the hushed library ? Or how were the " impracticable hours " to be disposed of before came night and sleep ? George Brand did not stay to consider that, when a man in the prime of health and vigor, possessed of an ample for- tune, unfettered by anybody's will but his own, and burdened by neither remorse nor regret,- nevertheless begins to find life a thing too tedious to be borne, there must be a cause for it. On the contrary, instead of asking himself any questions, he set about getting through the daily programme with an Eng- lishman's determination to be prepared for the worst. He walked up to his club, the Waldegrave, in Pall Mall. In the morning-room there were only two or three old gentlemen, seated in easy-chairs near the fire, and grumbling in a loud voice for apparently one or two were rather deaf about the weather. Brand glanced at a few more newspapers. Then a happy idea occurred to him ; he would go up to the smoking-room and smoke a cigarette. In this vast hall of a place there were only two persons one standing with his back io the fire, the other lying back in an easy-chair. The one was a florid, elderly gentleman, who was first cousin to a junior Lord of the Treasury, and therefore claimed to be a profound authority on politics, home and foreign. He was a harmless poor clevil enough, from whom a merciful Providence had concealed the fact that his PIONEERS. 31 brain-power was of the smallest. His companion, reclining in the easy-chair, was a youthful Fine Art Professor ; a gela- tinous creature, a bundle of languid affectations, with the ad- ded and fluttering self-consciousness of a school-miss. He was absently assenting to the propositions of the florid gen- tleman ; but it is probable that his soul was elsewhere. These propositions were to the effect that leading articles in a newspaper were a mere impertinence ; that he himself never read such things ; that the business of a newspaper was to supply news ; and that an intelligent Englishman was better capable of forming a judgment on public affairs than the hacks of a newspaper-office. The intelligent Englishman then proceeded to deliver his own judgment on the question of the day, which turned out to be to Mr. Brand's great sur- prise nothing more nor less than a blundering and inaccurate resume of the opinions expressed in a leading article in that morning's Times. At length this one-sided conversation be- tween a jackanapes and a jackass became too intolerable for Brand, who threw away his cigarette, and descended once more into the hall. " A gentleman wishes to see you, sir," said a boy ; and at the same moment he caught sight of Lord Evelyn. " Thank God ! " he exclaimed, hurrying forward to shake his friend by the ""hand. "Come, Evelyn, what are you up to ? I can't stand England any longer ; will you take a run with me ? Algiers, Egypt, anywhere you like. Let us drop down to Dover in the afternoon, and settle it there. Or what do you say to the Riviera ? we should be sure to run against some people at one or other of the towns. Upon my life, if you had not turned up, I think I should have cut my throat before lunch-time." " I have got something better for you to do than that," said the other ; " I want you to see O'Halloran. Come along ; I have a hansom here. We shall just catch him at Atkinson's, the book-shop, you know." " Very well ; all right," Brand said, briskly : this seemed to be rather a more cheerful business than cutting one's throat. " He's at his telegraph-wire all night," Lord Evelyn said, in the hansom. " Then he lies down for a few hours' sleep on a sofa. Then he goes along to his rooms in Pimlico for breakfast ; but at Atkinson's he generally stops for awhile on his way, to have his morning drink." " Oh, is that the sort of person ? " " Don't make any mistake. O'Halloran may be eccentric 32 S in his ways of living, but he is one of the most remarkable men I have ever run against. His knowledge, his reading politics, philosophy, everything, in short the brilliancy of his talking when he gets excited, even the extraordinary va- riety of his personal acquaintance why, there is nothing go- ing on that he does not know about." " But why has this Hibernian genius done nothing at all ? " " Why ? You might as well try to kindle a fire with a flash of lightning. He has more political knowledge and more power of brilliant writing than half the editors in Lon- don put together ; but he would ruin any paper in twenty-four hourS. His first object would probably be to frighten his readers out of their wits by some monstrous paradox ; his next to show them what fools they had been. I don't know how he has been kept on so long where he is, unless it be that he deals with news only. 1 believe he had to be with- drawn from the gallery of the House ; he was very impatient over the prosy members and his remarks about them began to reach the Speaker's ear too frequently." " I gather, then, that he is merely a clever, idle, Irish vag- abond, who drinks." " He does not clrink. And as for his Irish name I suppose he must be Irish either by descent or bgrth ; but he is con- tinually abusing Ireland and the Irish. Probably, however, he would not let anybody else do so." Mr. Atkinson's book-shop in the Strand was a somewhat dingy-looking place, filled with publications mostly of an ex- ceedingly advanced character. Mr. Atkinson himself claimed to be a bit of a reformer ; and had indeed brought himself, on one or two occasions, within reach of the law by issuing pamphlets of a somewhat too fearless aim. On this occasion he was not in the shop ; so the two friends passed through, ascended a dark little stair, and entered a room which smelled strongly of tobacco-smoke. The solitary occupant of this chamber, to whom Brand was immediately introduced, was a man of about fifty, carelessly if not even shabbily dressed, with large masses of unkempt hair, and eyes, dark gray, deep-set, that had very markedly the look of the eyes of a lion. The face was worn and pallid, but when lit up with excitement it was capable of much ex- pression ; and Mr. O'Halloran, when he did become excited, got very much excited indeed. He had laid aside his pipe, and was just finishing his gin and soda-water, taken from Mr. Atkinson's private store. However, the lion so seldom roars when it is expected to PIONEERS 33 roar. Instead of the extraordinary creature whom Lord Eve- lyn had been describing, Brand found merely an Irish news- paper-reporter, who was either tired, or indifferent, or sleepy. They talked about some current topic of the hour for a few minutes ; and then Mr. O'Halloran, with a yawn, rose and said he must go home for breakfast. " Stay a bit, O'Halloran," Lord Evelyn said, in despair ; " I I wanted the fact is, Mr. Brand has been asking me about Ferdinand Lind " " Oh," said the bushy-headed man, with a quick glance of scrutiny at the tall Englishman. " No, no," he a Icled, with a smile, addressing himself directly to Brand. "It is no use your touching anything of that kind. You would want to know too much. You would want to have the earth dug away from over the catacombs before you went below to fol- low a solitary guide with a bit of candle. You could never be brought to understand that the cardinal principle of all secret societies has been that obedience is an end and aim in itself, and faith the chiefest of all the virtues. You wouldn't take anything on trust ; you have the pure English tempera- ment." Brand laughed, and said nothing. But O'Halloran sat down again, and began to talk in an idle, hap-hazarcl sort of fashion of the various secret societies, religious, social, polit- ical that had become known to the world ; and of their aims, and their working, and how they had so often fallen away into the mere preservation of mummeries, or declared them- selves only by the commission of useless deeds of revenge. "Ah," said Brand, eagerly, "that is precisely what I have been urging on Lord Evelyn. How can you know, in joining such an association, that you are not becoming the accom- plices of men who are -merely planning assassination ? And what good can come of that ? How are you likely to gain anything by the dagger ? The great social and political changes of the world come in tides ; you can neither retard them nor help them by sticking pins in the sand." " I am not so sure," said the other, doubtfully. " A little wholesome terrorism has sometimes played its part. The 1868 amnesty to the Poles in Siberia was not so long after not more than a year after, I think that little business of Berezowski. Faith, what a chance that man had ! " " Who ? " " Berezowski," said he, with an air of contemplation. " The two biggest scoundrels in the world in one carriage ; 3 34 SUNRISE. and he had two shots at them. Well, well, Orsini succeeded better." " Succeeded ? " said George Brand. " Do you call that suc- cess ? He had the reward that he richly merited, at all events." " You do not think he was successful ? " he said, calmly. " Then you do not know how the kingdom of Italy came by its liberty. Who do you think was the founder of that king- dom of Italy ? which God preserve till it become something better than a kingdom ! Not Cavour, with all his wiliness ; not your Galantuomo, the warrior who wrote up Aspromonte in the face of all the world as the synonym* for the gratitude of kings ; not Garibaldi, who, in spite of Aspromonte, has become now merely the concierge to the House of Savoy. The founder of the kingdom of Italy was Felix Orsini and whether heaven or hell contains him, I drink his health ! " He suited the action to the word. Brand looked on, not much impressed. " That is all nonsense, O'Halloran ! " Lord Evelyn said, bluntly. " I tell you," O'Halloran said, with some vehemence, " that the i4th of January, 1858, kept Louis Napoleon in such a state of tremor, that he would have done a good deal more than lend his army to Sardinia to sweep the Austrians out rather than abandon himself to the fate that Cavour plainly and distinctly indicated. Bat for the threat of another dose of Orsini pills, do you think you would ever have heard of Magenta and Solferino ? " He seemed to rouse himself a bit now. " No," he said, " I do not approve of assassination as a political weapon. It seldom answers. But it has always J3een the policy of absolute governments, and of their allies the priests and the police, to attribute any murders that might occur to the secret societies, and so to terrify stupid people. It is one of the commonest slanders in history. Why, every- body knows how Fouche humbugged the First Napoleon, and got up vague plots to prove that he, and he alone, knew what was going on. When Karl Sand killed Kotzebue oh, of course, that was a fine excuse for the German kings and princes to have another raid against free speech, though Sand declared he had nothing in the world to do with either the Tugendbund or any such society. Who now believes that Young Italy killed Count Rossi ? Rossi was murdered by the agents of the clericals ; it was distinctly proved. But any stick is good enough to beat a dog with. No matter what PJOA'EEKS. 35 the slander is, so long as you can get up a charge, either for the imprisoning of a dangerous enemy or tor terrifying the public mind. You yourself, Mr. Brand I can see that your only notion of the innumerable secret societies now in Europe is that they will probably assassinate people. That's what they said about the Carbonari too. The objects of the Car- bonari were plain as plain could be ; but no sooner had Gen- eral Pepe kicked out Ferdinand and put in a constitutional monarch, than Austria must needs attribute every murder that was committed, to those detestable Carbonari, so that she should call upon Prussia and Russia to join her in strangling the infant liberties of Europe. You see, we can't get at those Royal slanderers. We can get at a man like Sir James Graham, when we force him to apologize in the House of Commons for having said that Mazzini instigated the assassination of the spies Emiliani and Lazzareschi." " But, good heavens ! " exclaimed Brand, " does anybody doubt that that was a political double murder ? " O'Halloran shrugged his shoulders, and smiled. " You may call it murder if you like ; others might call it a fitting punishment. But all I was asking you to do was to remove from your mind that bugbear that the autocratic governments of Europe have created for their own uses. No secret society if you except those Nihilists, who appear to have gone mad altogether I say, no secret society of the present day recognizes political assassination as a normal or desirable weapon ; though it may have to be resorted to in extreme cases. You, as an individual, might, in certain cir- cumstances, lawfully kill a man ; but that is neither the cus- tom, nor the object, nor the chief thought of your life." " And are there many of these societies ? " Brand asked. O'Halloran had carelessly lit himself another pipe. " Europe is honey-combed with them. They are growing in secret as rapidly as some kindred societies are growing in the open. Look at the German socialists in 1871 they polled only 120,000 votes; in 1874 they polled 340,000: I imagine that Herr Furst von Bismarck will find some diffi- culty in suppressing that Frankenstein monster he coquetted so long with. Then the Knights of Labor in America : you will hear something of them by-and-by, or I am mistaken. In secret and in the open alike there is a vast power growing and growing, increasing in volume and bulk from hour to hour, from year to year ; God only knows in what fashion it will reveal itself. But you may depend on it that when the spark does spring out of the cloud when the clearance of the 36 SUNRISE. atmosphere is due people will look back on 1688, and 1798, and 1848 as mere playthings. The Great Revolution is still to come ; it may be nearer than some imagine." He had grown more earnest, both in his manner and his speech. "Well," George Brand said, "timid people may reassure themselves. Where there are so many societiets, there will be as many different aims. Some, like the wilder German socialists, will want a general participation of property ; others a demolition of the churches and crucifixion of the priests ; others the establishment of a Universal Republic. There may be a great deal of powder stored up, but it will all go off in different directions, in little fireworks." A quick light gleamed in those deep-set, lion-like eyes. " Very well said ! " was the scornful comment. " The Czar himself could not have expressed his belief, or at least his hope, more neatly. But let me tell you, sir, that the masses of mankind are not such hopeless idiots as are some of the feather-headed orators and writers who speak for them ; and that you will appeal to them in vain if you do not ap- peal to their sense of justice, and their belief in right, and in the eternal laws of God. You may have a particular crowd go mad, or a particular city go mad; but the heart of the people beats true, and if you desire a great political change, you must appeal to their love of fair and honest dealing as between man and man. And even if the aims of these soci- eties are diverse, what then ? What would you thinkfhow, if it were possible to construct a common platform, where certain aims at least could be accepted by all, and become bonds to unite those who are hoping for better things all over the earth ? That did not occur to you as a possible thing, perhaps ? You have only studied the ways of kings and gov- ernments each one for itself. * Come over my boundary, and I will cleave your head ; or, rather, I will send my com- mon people to do it, for a little blood-letting from time to time is good for that vile and ignorant body.' But the vile and ignorant body may begin to tire of that recurrent blood- letting, and might perhaps even say, * Brother across the boundary, I have no quarrel with you. You are poor and ig- norant like myself ; the travail of the earth lies hard on you ; I would rather give you my hand. If I have any quarrel, surely it is with the tyrants of the earth, who have kept both you and me enslaved ; who have taken away our children from us; who have left us scarcely bread. How long, O Lord, how long? We are tired of !he reign of Caesar; we BON VOYAGE! 37 are beaten down with it ; who will help us now to establish the reign of Christ ? " He rose. Despite the unkempt hair, this man looked quite handsome now, while this serious look was in his face. Brand began to perceive whence his friend Evelyn had de- rived at least some of his inspiration. "Meanwhile," O'Halloran said, with a light, scornful laugh, " Christianity has been of excellent service to Caesar ; it has been the big policeman of Europe. Do you think these poor wretches would have been so patient if they had not be- lieved there was some compensation reserved for them be- yond the grave ? They would have had Caesar by the throat by this time." " Then that scheme of co-operation you mentioned," Brand said, somewhat hastily for he saw that O'Halloran was about to leave " that is what Ferdinand Lind is work- ing at ? " The other started. I cannot give you any information on that point," said O'Halloran, gravely. " And I do not think you are likely to get much anywhere if you are only moved by curiosity, how- ever sympathetic and well-wishing." He took up his hat and stick. " Good-bye, Mr. Brand," said he ; and he looked at him with a kindly look. " As far as I can judge, you are now in the position of a man at a partly opened door, half afraid to enter, and too curious to draw back. Well, my advice to you is Draw back. Or at least remember this : that before you enter that room you must be without doubt and without fear." CHAPTER VI. BON VOYAGE ! FEAR he had none. His life was not so valuable to him that he would have hesitated about throwing himself into any forlorn-hope, provided that he was satisfied of the jus- tice of the cause. He had dabbled a little in philosophy, and not only believed that the ordinary altruistic instincts of mankind could be traced to a purely utilitarian origin, but also that, on the same theory, the highest form of personal gratification might be found in the severest form, of self-sac- rifice. He did not pity a martyr ; he envied him. But be- 3 S&WX7S3. fore the martyr's joy must come the martyr's faith. Without that enthusiastic belief in the necessity and nobleness and value of the sacrifice, what could there be but physical pain and the despair of a useless death ? " But, if he had no fear, he had a superabundance of doubt. He had not all the pliable, receptive, imaginative nature of his friend, Lord Evelyn. He had more than the ordinary Englishman's distrust of secrecy. He was not to be won over by the visions of a St. Simon, the eloquence of a Fourier, the epigrams of a Proudhon : these were to him but intellectual playthings, of no practical value. It was, doubtless, a nov- elty for a young man brought up as Lord Evelyn had been to associate with a gin-drinking Irish reporter, and to regard him as the mysterious apostle of a new creed ; Brand only saw in O'Halloran a light-headed, imaginative, talkative per- son, as safe to trust to for guidance as a will-o'-the-wisp. It is true that for the time being he had been thrilled by the pas- sionate fervor of Natalie Lind's singing ; and many a time since he could have fancied that he heard in the stillness of the night that pathetic and vibrating appeal " When, when will the Lord cry, ' Revenge, it is mine ? ' " But he dissociated her from her father's schemes altogether. No doubt she was moved by the generous enthusiasm of a young girl. She had a warm, human, sympathetic heart; the "cry of the poor and the suffering appealed to her ; and she was confident in the success of projects of which she had been prudently kept ignorant. This was George Brand's reading. He would not have Natalie Lind associated with Liecester Square and a lot of garlic-eating revolutionaries. " But who is this man Lind ? " he asked, impatiently, of Lord Evelyn. He had driven up to his friends house in Clarges Street, had had luncheon with him, and they were now smoking a cigarette in the library. " You mean his nationality ? " said his friend, laughing. " That has puzzled me, too. He seems, at all events, to have had his linger in a good many pies. He escaped into Tur- key with Bern, I know ; and he has been imprisoned in Rus- sia ; and once or twice 1 have heard him refer to the amnesty that was proclaimed when Louis Napoleon was presented with an heir. But whether he is Pole, or Jew, or Slav, there is no doubt about his daughter being a thorough Hungarian." " Not the least," said Brand, with decision. " I have seen lots of women of that type in Pesth, and in Vienna, too : if BON I'OYAGE you are walking in the Prater you can rian women as they drive past. But beautiful as she is." After awhile Lord Evelyn said, "This is Natalie's birthday. By-and-by I am going along to Bond Street to buy some little thing for her." " Then she allows you to make her presents ? " Brand said, somewhat coldly. " She and I are like brother and sister now," said the pale, deformed lad, without hesitation. " If I were ill, I think she would be glad to come and look after me." "You have already plenty of sisters who would do that." " By-the-way, they are coming to town next week with my mother. You must come and dine with us some night, if you are not afraid to face the chatter of such a lot of girls." " Have they seen Miss Lind ? " " No, not yet." " And how will you explain your latest craze to them, Eve- lyn ? They are very nice girls indeed, you know ; but but when they set full cry on you I suppose some day I shall have to send them a copy of a newspaper from abroad, with this kind of thing in it : * Compeared yesterday before the Cor- rectional Tribunal, Earnest Francis L? Agincourt, Baron Eve- lyti, charged with having in his possession two canisters of an ex- plosive compound and fourteen empty missiles. Further, among the correspondence of the accused was found ' " - " ' A letter from an Englishman named Brand] " continued Lord Evelyn, as he rose and went to the window, " * appar- ently written under the influence of nightmare' Come, Brand, I see the carriage is below. Will you drive with me to the jeweller's ? " " Certainly," said his friend ; and at this moment the car- riage was announced. " I suppose it wouldn't do for me to buy the thing ? You know I have more money to spend on trinkets than you have." They were very intimate friends indeed. Lord Evelyn only said, with a smile, " I am afraid Natalie wouldn't like it." But this choosing of a birthday present was a terrible busi- ness. The jeweller was as other jewellers ; his designs were mostly limited to the representation of two objects a butterfly for a woman, and a horseshoe for a man. At last Brand, who had been walking about from time to time, espied, in a dis^ tant case, an object which instantly attracted his attention. It was a flat piece of wood or board, covered with blue velvet; 40 SUNRISE. and on this had been twined an unknown number of yards of the beautiful thread-like gold chain common to the jewellers' shop-windows in Venice. " Here you are, Evelyn," Brand said at once. " Why not buy a lot of this thin chain, and let her make it into any sort of decoration that she chooses ? " " It is an ignominious way out of the difficulty," said the other : but he consented ; and yard after yard of the thread- like chain was unrolled. When allowed to drop together, it seemed to go into no compass at all. They went outside. " What are you going to do now, Brand ? " The other was looking cheerless enough. " I ? " he said, with the slightest possible shrug. " I suppose I must go down to the club, and yawn away the time till din- ner." "Then why not come with me ? I have a commission or two from my sisters one as far out as Notting Hill ; but after that we can drive back through the Park and call on the Linds. I dare say Lind will be home by that time." Lord Evelyn's friend was more than delighted. As they drove from place to place he was a good deal more talkative than was his wont ; and, among other things, confessed his belief that Ferdinand Lind seemed much too hard-headed a man to be engaged in mere visionary enterprises. But some- how the conversation generally came round to Mr. Lind's daughter ; and Brand seemed very anxious to find out to what degree she was cognizant of her father's schemes. On this point Lord Evelyn knew nothing. At last they arrived at the house in Curzon Street, and found Mr. Lind just on the point of entering. He stayed to receive them; went up-stairs with them to the drawing- room, and then begged them to excuse him for a few min- utes. Presently Natalie Lind appeared. How this man envied his friend Evelyn the frank, sister- like way in which she took the little present, and thanked him, for that and his kind wishes ! . " Ah, do you know," she said, " what a strange birthday gift I had given me this morning ? See ! " She brought over the old-fashioned silver locket, and told them the whole story. " Is it not strange ? " she said. " 'From Natalie to Nata lushka: 'that is, from myself to myself. What can it mean ? " " Have you not asked your father, then, about his mysteri- ous messenger?" Brand said. He was always glad to ask BON VOYAGE! 41 this girl a question, for she looked him so straight in the face with her soft, dark eyes, as sjie answered, " He has only now come home. I will directly." " But why does your father call y,ou Natalushka, Natalie ? " asked Lord Evelyn. There was the slightest blush on the pale, clear face. " It was a nickname they gave me, I am told, when I was child. They used to make me angry." " And now, if one were to call you Natalushka? " " My anger would be too terrible," she said, with a smile. " Papa alone dares to do that." Presently her father came into the room. " Oh, papa," said she, " I have discovered who the lady is whom you got to bring me the flowers. And see ! she has given me this strange little locket. Look at the inscription 'From Natalie to Natalushka' " Lind only glanced at the locket. His eyes were fixed on the girl. " Where did you see the the lady ? " he asked, coldly. " In the Park. But she did not stay a moment, or speak ; she hurried on, and Anneli thought she was crying. I almost think so too. Who was it, papa ? May I speak to her, if I see her again ? " Mr. Lind turned aside for a moment. Brand, who was nar- rowly watching him, was convinced that the man was in a pas- sion of rage. But when he turned again he was outwardly calm. "You will do nothing of the kind, Natalie," he said in measured tones. " I have warned you before against making indiscriminate acquaintances ; and Anneli, if she is constantly getting such stupidities into her head, must be sent about her business. I do not wish to hear anything more about it. Will you ring and ask why tea has not been sent up ? " The girl silently obeyed. Her father had never spoken to her in this cold, austere tone before. She sat down at a small table, apart. Mr. Lind talked for a minute or two with his guests ; then he said, " Natalie, you have the zither there ; why do you not play us something ? " She turned to the small instrument, and, after a second or two, played a few notes : that was all. She rose and said, " I don't think I can play this afternoon, papa ; " and then she left the room. Mr. Lind pretended to converse with his guests as before ; 42 SUNRISE. and tea came in ; but presently he begged to be excused for a moment, and left the room. George Brand rose, and took a turn or two up and down. " It would take very little," he muttered for his teeth were set " to make me throw' that fellow out of the window ! " " What do you mean ? " Lord Evelyn said, in great surprise. "Didn't you see? She left the room to keep from crying. That miserable Polish cutthroat I should like to kick him down-stairs ! " But at this moment the door opened, and father and daughter entered, arm-in-arm. Natalie's face was a little bit flushed, but she was very gentle and affectionate ; they had made up that brief misunderstanding, obviously. And she had brought in her hand a mob-cap of black satin : would Lord Evelyn allow her to try the effect of twisting those beau- tiful golden threads through it ? " Natalushka," said her father, with great good-humor, " it is your birthday. Do you think you could persuade Lord Evelyn and Mr. Brand to come to your dinner-party ? " It was then explained to the two gentlemen that on this great anniversary it was the custom of Mr. Lind, when in London, to take his daughter to dine at some French or Ital- ian restaurant in Regent Street or thereabouts. In fact, she liked to play at being abroad for an hour or two ; to see around her foreign faces, and hear foreign tongues. " I am afraid you will say that it is very easy to remind yourself of the Continent," said Mr. Lind, smiling " that you have only to go to a place where they give you oily food and bad wine." " On the contrary," said Brand, " I should thing it very difficult in London to imagine yourself in a foreign town ; for London is drained. However, I accept the invitation with pleasure." "And I, "said Lord Evelyn. "Now, must we be off to dress ? " " Not at all," said Natalie. " Do you not understand that you are abroad, and walking into a restaurant to dine ? And now I will play you a little invitation not to dinner ; for you must suppose you have dined and you come out on the stairs of the hotel, and step into the black gondola." She went along to the small table, and sat down to the zither. There were a few notes of prelude; and then they heard the beautiful low voice added to the soft tinkling sounds. What did they vaguely make out from that melodi- ous murmur of Italian ? BON VOYAGE! 43 Behold the beautiful night the wind sleeps drowsily the silent shores slumber in the dark : " Sul placido elemento Vien meco a navigar ! " The soft wind moves as it stirs among the leaves it moves and dies among the murmur of the water : " Lascia Tamico tetto Vien meco a navigar ! " Now on the spacious mantle of the already darkening heavens see, oh, the shining wonder how the white stars tremble : " Ai raggi della luna Vien meco a navigar ! " Where were they ? Surely they have passed out from the darkness of the narrow canal, and are away on the broad bosom of the lagoon. The Place of St. Mark is all aglow with its golden points of fire; the yellow radiance spreads out into the night. And that other wandering mass of gold the gondola hung round with lamps, and followed by a dark procession through the silence of the waters does not the music come from thence ? Listen, now : "Sul i'onde addormentate Vien meco a navigar ! " Can they hear the distant chorus, in there at the shore where the people are walking about in the golden glare of the lamps ? *' Vien meco a navigar ! Vien meco a navigar ! " Or can some faint echo be carried away out to yonder island, where the pale blue-white radiance of the moonlight is begin- ning to touch the tall dome of San Giorgio ? " a navigar ! a navigar! " " It seems to me," said Lord Evelyn, when the girl rose, with a smile on her face,. " that you do not need to go into Regent Street when you want to imagine yourself abroad." Natalie looked at her watch. " If you will excuse me, I will go and get ready now." Well, they went to the big foreign restaurant ; and had a small table all to themselves, in the midst of the glare, and 44 SUNRISE. the heat, and the indiscriminate Bable of tongues. And, under the guidance of Mr. Brand, they adventured upon numerous articles of food which were more varied in there names than in their flavor ; and they tasted some of the com- pounds, reeking of iris-root, that the Neapolitans call wine, until they fell back on a flask of Chianti, and were content ; and they regarded their neighbors, and were regarded in turn. In the midst of it all, Mr. Lind, who had been somewhat pre- occupied, said suddenly. " Natalie, can you start with me for Leipsic to-morrow afternoon ? " She was as prompt as a soldier. " Yes, papa. Shall I take Anneli or not ?" " You may if you like." After that George Brand seemed to take very little interest in this heterogeneous banquet ; he stared absently at the foreign-looking people, at the hurrying waiters, at the stout lady behind the bar. Even when Mr. Lincl told his daughter that her black satin mob-cap, with its wonderful intertwistings of Venetian chain, looked very striking in a mirror opposite, and when Lord Evelyn eagerly gave his friend the credit of having selected that birthday gift, he did not seem to pay much heed. When, after all was over, and he had wished Natalie " Bon voyage " at the door of the brougham, Lord Evelyn said to him, " Come along to Clarges Street now and smoke a cigar." " No, thanks ! " he said. " I think I will stroll down to my rooms now." " What is the matter with you, Brand ? You have been look- ing very glum." " Well, I have been thinking that London is a depressing sort of a place for a man to live in who does not know many people It is very big, and very empty. I don't think I shall be able to stand it much longer." CHAPTER VII. IN SOLITUDE. A BLUSTERING, cold morning in March ; the skies lowering, the wind increasing, and heavy showers being driven up from time to time from the black and threatening south-west. This was strange weather to make a man think of going to IN SOLITUDE. 45 the seaside ; and of all places at the seaside to Dover, and of all places in Dover to the Lord Warden H :lel, which was sure to be filled with fear-stricken foreigners, waiting for the sea to calm. Waters, as he packed the small portmanteau, could not ,t all understand this freak on the part of his mas- ter. " If Loi \ Evelyn calls, sir," he said at the station, " when shall I sa; you will be back ? " " In a 1 w days, perhaps. I don't know." He had a compartment to himself; and away the train went through the wet and dismal and foggy country, with the rain pouring down the panes of the carriage. The dismal prospect outside, however, did not matter much to this soli- tary traveller. He turned his back to the window, and read all the way down. At Dover the outlook was still more dismal. A dirty, yel- low-brown sea was rolling heavily in, springing white along the Admiralty Pier ; gusts of rain were sweeping along the thoroughfare between the station and the hotel ; in the hotel itself the rooms were occupied by a miscellaneous collection of dissatisfied folk, who aimlessly read the advertisements in Bradshaw, or stared through the dripping windows at the yellow waves outside. This was the condition of affairs when George Brand took up his residence there. He was quite alone ; but he had a sufficiency of books with him ; and so deeply engaged was he with these, that he let the ordi- nary coffee-room discussions about the weather pass abso- lutely unheeded. On the second morning a number of the travellers plucked up heart of grace and embarked, though the weather was still squally. George Brand was not in the least interested as to the speculations of those who remained about the re- sponsibilities of the passage. He drew his chair toward the fire, and relapsed into his reading. This day, however, was varied by his making the acquaint- ance of a little old French lady, which he did by means of her two granddaughters, Josephine, and Veronique. Veronique, having been pushed by Josephine, stumbled against Mr. Brand's knee, and would inevitably have fallen into the fire- place had he not caught her. Thereupon the little old lady, hurrying across the room, and looking very much inclined to box the ears of both Josephine and Veronique, most pro- fusely apologized, in French, to monsieur. Monsieur reply- ing in that tongue, said it was of no consequence whatever. Then madame. greatly delighted at finding some one. not a 46 SUA'RISE. waiter, to whom she could speak in her own language, con- tinued the conversation, and very speedily made monsieur the confident of all her hopes and fears about that terrible business the Channel passage. No doubt monsieur was also waiting for this dreadful storm to abate ? Monsieur quickly perceived that so long as this voluble lit- tle old lady who was as yellow as a frog, and had beady black eyes, but whose manner was exceedingly charming chose to attach herself to him, his pursuit of knowledge was not likely to be attended with much success, so he shut the book on his finger, and pleasantly said to her, " Oh no, madame ; I am only waiting here for some friends." Madame was greatly alarmed : surely they would not cross in such frightful weather ? Monsieur ventured to think it was not so very bad. Then the little French lady glanced out at the window, and threw up her hands, and said with a shudder. " Frightful ! Truly frightful. What should I do with those two little ones ill, and myself ill ? The sea might sweep them away ! " Mr. Brand, having observed something of the manners of Josephine and Veronique, was inwardly of opinion that the sea might be worse employed ; but what he said was "You could take a deck-cabin, madame/' Madame again shuddered. " Your friends are English, no doubt, monsieur ; the English are not so much afraid of storms." " No, madame, they are not English ; but I do not think they would let such a clay as this, for example, hinder them. They are not likely, however, to be on their way back for a day or two. To-morrow I may run over to Calais, just on the chance of crossing with them again." Here was a mad Englishman, to be sure ! When, people, driven by dire necessity, had their heart in their mouth at the very notion of encountering that rough sea, here was a person who thought of crossing and returning for no reason on earth a trifling compliment to his friends a pleasure excursion a break in the monotony of the day ! " And I shall be pleased to look after the little ones, mad- ame," said he, politely, "if you are going over." " Madame thanked him very profusely ; but assured him that so long as the weather looked so stormy she could not think of intrusting Josephine and Veronique to the mercy of the waves. IN SOLITUDE. 47 Now, if George Brand had little hope of meeting his friends that day, he acted pretty much as if he were expecting some one. First of all, he had secured a saloon-carriage in the afternoon mail-train to London an unnecessary luxury for a bachelor well accustomed to the hardships of travel. Then he had managed to procure a handsome bouquet of freshly- cut flowers. Finally, there was some mysterious arrangement by which fruit, cakes, tea, and wine were to be ready at a moment's notice in the event of that saloon-carriage being required. Then, as soon as the rumor went through the hotel that the vessel was in sight, away he went down the pier, with his coat-collar tightly buttoned, and his hat jammed down. What a toy-looking thing the steamer was, away out there in the mists or the rain, with the brown line of smoke stretching back to the horizon ! She was tossing and rolling a good deal among the brown waves : he almost hoped his friends were not on board. And he wished that all the more when he at length saw the people clamber up the gangway a miserable procession of half-drowned folk, some of them scarcely able to walk. No ; his friends were not there. He returned to the hotel, and to his books. But the attentions of Josephine and Veronique had become too pressing ; so he retired from the reading-room, and took refuge in his own room up-stairs. It fronted the sea. He could hear the long, monotonous, continuous wash of the waves : from time to time the windows rattled with the wind. He took from his portmanteau another volume from that he had been reading, and sat down by the window. But he had only read a line or two when he turned and looked absently out on the sea. Was he trying to recall, amidst all that con- fused and murmuring noise, some other sound that seemed to haunt him ? " Who is your lady of love, oh ye that pass Singing ? " Was he trying to recall that pathetic thrill in his friend Eve- lyn's voice which he knew was but the echo of another voice ? He had never heard Natalie Lincl read ; but he knew that that was how she had read, when Evelyn's sensitive nature had heard and been permeated by the strange tremor. And now, as he opened the book again, whose voice was it he seemed to hear, in the silence of the small room, amidst the low and constant murmur of the waves ? 4-S SUNRISE. 11 And ye shall die before your thrones be won. Yea, and the changed world and the liberal sun Shall move and shine with out us, and we lie Dead ; but if she too move on earth and Jive But if the old world, with all the old irons rent, Laugh and give thanks, shall we be not content ? Nay, we shall rather live, we shall not die, Life being so little, and death so good to give. ****** " But ye that might be clothed with all things pleasant, Yc are foolish that put off the fair soft present, That clothe yourselves with the coicl future air; When mother and father, and tender sister and brother, And the old live love that was shall be as ye, Dust, and no fruit of loving life shall be. She shall be yet who is more than all these were, Than sister or wife or father unto us or mother." He turned again to the window, to the driven yellow sea, and the gusts of rain. Surely there was no voice to be heard from other and farther shores ? " Is this worth life, is this to win for wages ? Lo, the dead mouths of the awful gray-grown ages, The venerable, in the past that is their prison, In the outer darkness, in the unopening grave, Laugh, knowing how many as ye now say have said How many, and all are fallen, are fallen and dead: Shall ye dead rise, and these dead have not risen ? Not we but she, who is tender and swift to save. " Are ye not weary, and faint not by the way, Seeing night by night devoured of day by clay, Seeing hour by hour consumed in sleepless fire ? Sleepless : and ye too, when shall ye too sleep ? We are weary in heart and head, in hands and feet, And surely more than all things sleep were sweet, Than all things save the inexorable desire Which whoso knoweth shall neither faint nor weep." He rose, and walked up and down for a time. What would one not give for a faith like that ? " Is this so sweet that one were fain to follow ? Is this so sure where all men's hopes are hollow, Even this your dream, that by much tribulation Ye shall make whole flawed hearts, and bowed necks straight ? Nay, though our life were blind, our death were fruitless, Not therefore were the whole world's high hope rootless ; But man to man, nation would turn to nation, And the old life live, and the old great world be great." With such a faith with that " inexorable desire " burning \ 7A r SOLITUDE. 49 in the heart and the brain surely one could find the answer easy enough to the last question of the poor creatures who wonder at the way-worn pilgrims, " Pass on then, and pass by us and let us be, For what light think ye after life to see ? And if the world fare better will ye know : And if man triumph who shall seek you and say ? " That he could answer for himself, at any rate. He was not one to put much store by the fair soft present ; and if he were to enter upon any undertaking such as that he had had but a glimpse of, neither personal reward nor hope of any immediate success would be the lure. He would be satisfied to know that his labor or his life had been well spent. But whence was to come that belief ? whence the torch to kindle the sacred fire ? The more he read, during these days of waiting, of the books and pamphlets he had brought with him, the less clear seemed the way before him. He was struck with admiration when he read of those who had forfeited life or liberty in this or the other cause ; and too often with despair when he came to analyze their aims. Once or twice, indeed, he was so moved by the passionate eloquence of some socialist writer that he was ready to say, " Well, the poor devils have toiled long enough ; give them their turn, let the revolution cost what it may ! " And then immediately afterward : " What ! Stir up the unhappy wretches to throw themselves on the bay- onets of the standing armies of Europe? There is no emancipation for them that way." But when he turned from the declamation and the impractica- ble designs of this impassioned literature to the vast scheme of co-operation that had been suggested rather than described to him, there seemed more hope. If all these various forces that were at work could be directed into one channel, what might they not accomplish? Weed out the visionary, the impracticable, the anarchical from their aims ; and then what might not be done by this convergence of all these eager social movements ? Lind, he argued with himself, was not at all a man likely to devote himself to optimistic dreams. Further than that and here he was answering a suspicion that again and again recurred to him what if, in such a great social movement, men were to be found who were only playing for their own hand ? That was the case in every such combination. But false or self-seeking agents neither destroved the nobleness of the work nor could defeat it in the 50 SUNRISE. end if it were worthy to live. They might try to make for themselves what use they could of the current, but they too were swept onward to the sea, So he argued, and communed, and doubted, and tried to be- lieve. And all through it whether he paced up and down by the sea in the blustering weather, or strolled away through the town and up the face of the tall white cliff, or lay awake in the dark night, listening to the rush and moan of the waves all through these doubts and questions there was another and sweeter and clearer sound, that seemed to come from afar " She shall be yet who is more than all these were, Than sister or wife or father unto us or mother." However loud the sea was at night, that was the sound he heard, clear and sweet the sound of a girl's voice, that had joy in it, and faith in the future, and that spoke to him of what was to be. Well, the days passed ; and still his friends did not come. He had many trips across, to while away the time ; and had become great friends with the stout, black-haired French cap- tain. He had conveyed Josephine and Veronique and their little grandmother safely over, and had made them as com- fortable as was possible under trying circumstances. And always and every day there were freshly-cut flowers and re- newed fruit, and a re-engaged saloon-carriage waiting for those strangers who did not come ; until both hotel people and railway people began to think Mr. Brand as mad as the little French lady assured herself he was, when he said he meant to cross the Channel twice for nothing. At last at last ! He had strolled up to the Calais station, and was standing on the platform when the train came in. But there was no need for him to glance eagerly up and down at the now opening doors ; for who was this calmly regarding him or rather regarding him with a smile of surprise ? De- spite the big furred cloak and the hood, he knew at once ; he darted forward, lifted the lower latch and opened the door, and gave her his hand. " Oh, how do you do, Mr. Brand ? " said she, with a pleas- ant look of welcome. " Who could have expected to meet you here ? " He was confused, embarrassed, bewildered. This voice so strangely recalled those sounds that had been haunting him for days. He could only stammer out, " I I happened to be at Dover, and thought I would run A DISCOVERY. 51 over here for a little bit. How lucky you are it is such a beautiful day for crossing/' " That is good news ; I must tell papa," said Natalie, cheer- fully, as she turned again to the open door. CHAPTER VIII. A DISCOVERY. " AND you are going over too ? And to London also ? Oh, that will be very nice." It seemed so strange to hear this voice, that had for days sounded to him as if it were far away, now quite close, and talk- ing in this friendly and familiar fashion. Then she had brought the first of the spring with her. The air had grown quite mild ; the day was clear and shining; even the little harbor there seemed bright and picturesque in the sun. He had never before considered Calais a very beautiful place. And as for her ; well, she appeared pleased to have met with this unexpected companion ; and she was very cheerful and talkative as they went down to the quay, these two to- gether. And whether it was that she was glad to be relieved from the cramped position of the carriage, or whether it was that his being taller than she gave countenance to her height, or whether it was me*rely that she rejoiced in the sweet, air and the exhilaration of the sunlight, she seemed to walk with even more than her usual proudness of gait. This circum- stance did not escape the eye of her father, who was immedi- ately behind. "Natalie," said he, peevishly, "you are walking as if you wore a sword by your side." She did not seem sorely hurt. " ' Du Schwert an meiner Linken ! ' " she said, with a laugh. " It is my military cloak that makes you think so, papa." Why, even this cockle-shell of a steamer looked quite invit- ing on so pleasant a morning. And there before them stretched the blue expanse of the sea, with every wave, and every ripple on every wave, flashing a line of silver in the sunlight. No sooner were they out of the yellow-green waters of the harbor than Mr. Brand had his companions conducted on to the bridge between the paddle-boxes ; and the little crop- haired French boy brought them camp-stools, and their faces were turned toward England. 52 SUNRIS1-. "Ah !" said Natalie, " many a poor wretch has breathed more freely when at last he found himself looking out for the English shore. Do you remember old Anton Pepczinski and his solemn toast, papa ? " She turned to George Brand. " He was an old Polish gentleman, who used to come to our house in the evening, he and a few others of his countrymen, to smoke and play chess. But always, some time during the evening, he would say, ' Gentlemen^ a Pole is never ungrateful. I call on you to drink this toast : To the white chalk-line beyond the sea ! ' ' And then she added, quickly, " If I were English, how proud I should be of England ! ' ' " But why ? " he said. " Because she has kept liberty alive in Europe," said the girl, proudly ; " because she offers an exile to the oppressed, no matter from whence they come ; because she says to the ty- rant, ' No, you cannot follow.' Why, when even your beer-men your dray-men know how to treat a Haynau, what must the spirit of the country be ? If only those fine fellows could have caught Windischgratz too ! " Her father laughed at her vehemence; Brand did not. That strange vibration in the girl's voice penetrated him to the heart. " But then," said he, after a second or two, " I have been amusing myself for some days back by reading a good deal of political writing, mostly by foreigners ; aifd if I were to believe what they say, I should take it that England was the most superstitious, corrupt, enslaved nation on the face of the earth ! What with its reverence for rank, its worship of the priest- hood oh, I cannot tell you what a frightful country it is ! " " Who were the writers ? " Mr. Lind asked. Brand named two or three, and instantly the attention of the others seemed arrested. "Oil, that is the sort of literature you have been reading ? " he said, with a quick glance. " I have had some days' idleness." " Excuse me," said the other, with a smile ; " but I think you might have spent it better. That kind of literature only leads to disorder and anarchy. It may have been useful at one time ; it is useful no longer. Enough of ploughing has been done ; we want sowing done now we want writers who will build up instead of pulling do\\n. Those Nihilists," he added, almost with a sigh, " are becoming more and more impracti- cable. They aim at scarcely anything beyond destruction," A DISCOVERY. 53 Here Natalie changed the conversation. This was too bright and beautiful a day^ to admit of despondency. " I suppose you love the sea, Mr. Brand ? " she said. " All Englishmen do. And yachting I suppose you go yacht- ing?" " I have tried it; but it is too tedious for me," said Brand. " The sort of yachting I like is in a vessel of five thousand tons, going three hundred and eighty miles a day. With half a gale of wind in your teeth in the * rolling Forties,' then there is some fun." " I must go over to the States very soon," Mr. Lind said. " Papa ! " "The worst of it is," her father said, without heeding that exclamation of protest, " that I have so much to do that can only be done by word of mouth." " I wish I could take the message for you," Brand said, lightly. " When the weather looks decent, I very often take a run across to New York, put up for a few days at the Bre- voort House, and take the next ship home. It is very enjoya- ble, especially if you know the officers. Then the bag- man I have acquired a positive love for the bagman." " The what ? " said Natalie. " The bagman. The i commy ' his friends call him. The commercial traveller, don't you know ? He is a most capital fellow full of life and fun, desperately facetious, delighting in practical jokes : altogether a wonderful creature. You be- gin to think you are in another generation before England became melancholy the generation, for example, that roared over the adventures of Tom and Jerry." Natalie did not know who Tom and jerry were ; but that was of little consequence ; for at this moment they began to de- scry " the white chalk-line beyond the sea " the white line of the English coast. And they went on chatting cheerfully ; and the sunlight flashed its diamonds on the blue waters around them, and the white chalk cliffs became more distinct. " And yet it seems so heartless for one to be going back to idleness," Natalie Lind said, absently. " Papa works as hard in England as anywhere else ; but what can I do ? To think of one going back to peaceful days, and comfort, and pleas- ant friends, when others have to go through such misery, and to fight against such persecution ! When Vjera Sassulitch offered me her hand " She stopped abruptly, with a quick, frightened look, first at George Brand, then at her father. "You need not hesitate, Natalie," her father said, calmly. 54 SUNRISE. " Mr. Brand has given me his word of honor he will reveal nothing he may hear from us*" "I do not think you need be afraid," said Brand ; but all the same he was conscious of a keen pang of mortification. He, too, had noticed that quick look of fright and distrust. What did it mean, then ? " You are beside us, you are near to us ; but you are not of us, you are not with us." He was silent, and she was silent too. She seemed ashamed of her indiscretion, and would say nothing further about Vjera Sassulitch. " Don't imagine, Mr. Brand," said her father, to break this awkward silence, " that what Natalie says is true. She is not going to be so idle as all that. No ; she has plenty of hard work before her at least, I think it hard work trans- lating from the German into Polish." " I wish I could help," Brand said, in a low voice. " I do not know a word of Polish." "You help ?" she said, regarding him with the beautiful dark eyes, that had a s^udden wonder in them. " Would you, if you knew Polish ? " He met that straight, fearless glance without flinching ; and he said "Yes," while they still looked at each other. Then her eyes fell ; and perhaps there was the slightest flush of embarrassment, or pleasure, on the pale, handsome face. But how quickly her spirits rose ! There was no more talk of politics as they neared England. He described the suc- cessive ships to her ; he called her attention to the strings of wild-duck flying up Channel; he named the various head- lands to her. Then, as they got nearer and nearer, the lit- tle Anneli had to be sought out, and the various travelling im- pedimenta got together. It did not occur to Mr. Lincl or his daughter as strange that George Brand should be travelling without any luggage whatever. But surely it must have occurred to them as remarkable that a bachelor should have had a saloon-carriage reserved for himself unless, indeed, they reflected that a rich Eng- lishman was capable of any whimsical extravagance. Then, no sooner had Miss Lind entered this carriage, than it seemed as though everything she could think of was being brought for her. Such flowers did not grow in railway-stations especially in the month of March. Had the fruit dropped from the telegraph-poles ? Cakes, wine, tea, magazines and newspapers appeared to come without being asked for. " Mr. Brand," said Natalie, "you must be an English A DISCOVERY. 55 Monte Cristo : do you clap your hands, and the things ap- pear?" But a Monte Cristo should never explain. The conjuror who reveals his mechanism is no longer a conjuror. George Brand only laughed, and said he hoped Miss Lind would always find people ready to welcome her when she reached English shores. As they rattled along through those shining valleys the woods and fields and homesteads all glowing in the afternoon sun she had put aside her travelling-cloak and hood, for the air was quite mild. Was it the drawing off of the hood, or the stir of wind on board the steamer, that had somewhat dis- arranged her hair? at all events, here and there about her small ear or the shapely neck there was an escaped curl of raven-black. She had taken off her gloves, 'too: her hands, somewhat large, were of a beautiful shape, and transparently white. The magazines and newspapers received not much at- tention except from Mr. Lind, who .said that at last he should see some news neither a week old nor fictitious. As for these other two, they seemed to find a wonderful lot to talk about, and all of a profoundly interesting character. With a sudden shock of disappointment George Brand found that they were almost into London. His hand-bag was at once passed by the custom-house peo- ple ; and he had nothing to do but say good-bye. His face was not over-cheerful. " Well, it was a lucky meeting," Mr. Lind said. " Natalie ought to thank you for being so kind to her." "Yes; but not here," said the girl, and she turned to him. " Mr. Brand, people who have travelled so far together should not part so quickly : it is miserable. Will you not come and spend the evening with us ? " " Natalie will give us something in the way of an early din- ner," said Mr. Lind, " and then you can make her play the zither for you." Well, there was not much hesitation abont his accepting. That drawing-room, with its rose-and-green-shaded candles, was not as other drawing-rooms in the evening. In that room you could hear the-fountains plashing in the Villa Reale, and the Capri fishermen singing afar, and the. cattle-bells chiming on the Campagna, and the gondolas sending their soft chorus across the lagoon. When Brand left his bag in the cloak-room at the station he gave the porter half a crown for earring it thither, which was unnecessary. Nor was there #ny hopeless apathy on his face as he drove away with these 56 SUXKISE. two friends through the darkening afternoon, in the little hired brougham. When they arrived in Curzon Street, he was even good enough to assist the timid little Anneli to descend from the box ; but this was in order that he might slip a tip into the hand of the coachman. The coachman scarcely said " Thank you." It was not until afterward that he discovered he had put half a sovereign into his breeches- pocket as if it were an ordinary sixpence. Natalie Lind came down to dinner in a dress of black vel- vet, with a mob-cap of jose-red silk. Round her neck she wore a band of Venetian silver-work, from the centre of which was suspended the little old-fashioned locket she had received in Hyde Park. George Brand remembered the story, and perhaps was a trifle surprised that she should wear so conspicuously the gift of a stranger. She was very friendly, and very cheerful. She did not seem at all fatigued with her travelling ; on the contrary, it was probably the sea-air and the sunlight that had lent to her cheek a faint flush of color. But at the end of dinner her father said. " Natalushka, if we go into the drawing-room, and listen to music, after so long a day, we shall all go to sleep. You must come into the smoking-room with us." " Very well, papa." " But, Miss Lind," the other gentleman remonstrated, " a velvet dress tobacco-smoke " " My dresses must take their chance," said Miss Lind. " I wear them to please my friends, not to please chance acquaint- ances who may call during the day." And so they retired to the little den at the end of the pas- sage ; and Natalie handed Mr. Brand a box of cigacs^ to choose from, and got down from the rack her father's long- stemmed, red-bowled pipe. Then she took a seat in the corner by the fire, and listened. The talk was all about that anarchical literature that Brand had been devouring down at Dover ; and he was sur- prised to find how little sympathy Lind had with writing of that kind, though he had to confess that certain of the writ- ers were personal friends of his own. Natalie sat silent, listening intently, and staring into the fire. At last Brand said, " Of course, I had other books. For example, one I see on your shelves there." He rose, and took down the " Songs before Sunrise." " Miss Lind," he said, " I am afraid you will lau^h at rne ; but I have been haunted with the notion A DISCOVERY. 57 that you have been teaching Lord Evelyn how to read poetry, or that he has been unconsciously imitating you. I heard him repeat some passages from * The Pilgrims,' and I was convinced he was reproducing something he had heard from you. Well I am almost ashamed to ask you A touch of embarrassment appeared on the girl's face, and she glanced at her father. " Yes, certainly, Natalie ; why not ? " " Well," she said, lightly, " I cannot read if I am stared at. You must remain as you are." She took the book from him, and passed to the other side of the room, so that she was behind them both. There was silence for an instant or two as she turned over the leaves. Then the silence was broken ; and if Brand was instantly assured that his surmise was correct, he also knew that here was a more pathetic cadence a prouder ring than any that Lord Evelyn had thrown into the lines. She read at random a passage here, a passage there but always it seemed to him that the voice was the voice of a herald pro- claiming the new awakening of the world the evil terrors of the night departing the sunlight of liberty and right and justice beginning to shine over the sea. And these appeals to England 1 " Oh thou, clothed round with raiment of white waves, Thy brave brows lightening through the gray wet air, Thou, lulled with sea-sounds of a thousand caves, And lit with sea-shine to thy inland lair, Whose freedom clothed the naked souls of slaves And stripped the muffled souls of tyrants bare, Oh, by the centuries of thy glorious graves, By the live light of the earth that was thy care, Live, thou must not be dead, Live ; let thy armed head Lift itself up to sunward and the fair Daylight of time and man, Thine head republican, With the same splendor on thine helmless hair That in his eyes kept up a light Who on thy glory gazed away their sacred sight." The cry there was in this voice ! Surely his heart answered, " Oh Milton's land, what ails thee to be dead ! " Was it in this very room, he wondered, that the old Polish refugee was used to lift up his trembling hand and bid his compatriots drink to " the white chalk-line beyond the sea ? '* 5? SUNRISE. How could he forget, as he and she sat together that morn- ing, and gazed across the blue waters to the far and sunlit line of coast, the light that shone on her face as she said, " If I were English, how proud I should be of England ! " And this England of her veneration and her love did it not con- tain some, at least, who would answer to her appeal ? Presently Natalie Lind shut the book and gently laid it down, and stole out of the room. She was gone only for a few seconds. When she returned, she had in her hand a volume of sketches, of which she had been speaking during dinner. He did not open this volume at once. On the contrary, he was silent for a little while ; and then he looked up, and addressed Natalie, with a strange grave smile on his face. " I was about to tell your father, Miss Lind, when you came in, that if I could not translate for you, or carry a mes- sage across the Atlantic for him, he might at least find some- thing else that I can do. At all events, may I say that I am willing to join you, if I can be of any help at all ? " Ferdinand Lind regarded him for a second, and said, quite calmly, " It is unnecessary. You have already joined us." CHAPTER IX. A NIGHT IN VENICE. THE solitary occupant of this railway-carnage was appar- ently reading ; but all the same he looked oftener at his watch than at his book. At length he definitely shut the volume and placed it in his travelling-bag. Then he let down the carriage-window, and looked out into the night. The heavens were clear and calm ; the newly-risen moon was but a thin crescent of silver ; in the south a large planet was shining^, All around him, as it seemed, stretched a vast plain of water, as dark and silent and serene as the overarch- ing sky. Then, far ahead, he could catch a glimpse of a pale line stretching across the watery plain a curve of the many- arched viaduct along which the train was thundering ; and beyond that again, and low down at the horizon, two or three minute and dusky points of orange. These lights were the lights of Venice. This traveller was not much hampered with luggage. A NIGHT IN VENICE. 59 When finally the train was driven into the glare of the station, and the usual roar and confusion began, he took his small bag in his hand and rapidly made his way through the crowd ; then out and down the broad stone steps, and into a gondola. In a couple of minutes he was completely away from all that glare and bustle and noise ; nothing around him but dark- ness and an absolute silence. The city seemed as the City of the Dead. The tall and sombre buildings on each side of the water-highway were masses of black blackest of all where they showed against the stars. The ear sought in vain for any sound of human life ; there was nothing but the lapping of the water along the side of the boat, and the slow, monotonous plash of the oar. Father and farther into the silence and the darkness ; and now here and there a window, close down to the water, and heavily barred with rectangular bars of iron, shows a dull red light ; but there is no sound, nor any passing shadow within. The man who is standing by the hearse-like cabin of the gondola observes and thinks. These black buildings ; the narrow and secret canals ; the stillness of the night : are they not suggestive enough of revenge, a quick blow, and the silence of the grave ? And now, as the gondola still f'ides on, there is heard a slow and distant tolling of bells, he Deed is done, then ? no longer will the piteous hands be thrust out of the barred window no longer will the wild cry for help startle the passer-by in the night-time. And now again, as the gondola goes on its way, another sound still more muffled and indistinct the sound of a church organ, with the solemn chanting of voices. Are they praying for the soul of the dead ? The sound becomes more and more distant ; the gondola goes on its way. The new-comer has no further time for these idle fancies. At the Rialto bridge he stops the gondola, pays the man, and goes ashore. Then, rapidly ascending the steps, he crosses the bridge, descends the other side, and again jumps into a gondola. All this the work of a few seconds. But it was obvious he had been expected. He gave no instructions to the two men in this second gondola. They instantly went to work, and with a rapid and powerful stroke sent the boat along with an occasional warning cry as they swept by the entrance to one or other of the smaller canals. Finally, they abruptly left the Grand Canal, close by the Corte d'Appello, and shot into a narrow opening that seemed little more than a slit between th^ buildings. 60 SUA'R/SE. Here they had to go more cautiously ; the orange light of their lamp shining as they passed on the empty archways, and on the iron-barred windows, and slimy steps. And al- ways this strange silence in the dead or sleeping city, and the monotonous plash of the oars, and the deep low cry of " Sia premi ! " or "Sia stall!" to give warning of their ap- proach. But, indeed, that warning was unnecessary; they were absolutely alone in this labyrinth of gloomy water-ways. At length they shot beneath a low bridge, and stopped at some steps immediately beyond. Here one of the men, get- ting out, proceeded to act as guide to the stranger. They had not far to go. They passed first of all into a long, low, and foul-smelling archway, in the middle of which was a narrow aperture protected by an iron gate. The man lit a candle, opened the gate, and preceded his companion along a passage and up a stone staircase. The atmosphere of the place was damp and sickly ; the stair-case was not more than three feet in width ; the feeble glimmer of the candle did but little to dispel the darkness. Even that was withdrawn ; for the guide, having knocked thrice at a door, blew out the can- dle, and retreated down-stairs. " The night is dark, brother:' " The daiun is near" Instantly the door was thrown open ; the dark figure of a man was seen against the light ; he said, " Come in ! come in ! " and his hand was outstretched. The stranger seemed greatly surprised. *' What, you, Calabress'a ! " he exclaimed. " Your time has not yet expired ! " "What, no? My faith, I have made it expire!" said the other, airily, and introducing a rather badly pronounced French word or two into his Italian. " But come in, come in ; take a seat. You are early ; you may have to wait." He was an odd-looking person, this tall, thin, elderly man, with the flowing yellowwvhite hair and the albino eyes. There was a semi-military look about his braided coat ; but, on the other hand, he wore the cap of a German student of purple velvet, with a narrow leather peak. He seemed to be proud of his appearance. He had a gay manner. "Yes, I am escaped. Ah, how fine it is! You walk about all day as you please ; you smoke cigarettes ; you have your coffee ; you go to look at the young English ladies who come to feed the pigeons in the place." He raised two ringers to his lips, and blew a kiss to all the world. A NIGHT IN VENICE. 61 " Such complexions ! A wild rose in every cheek ! But listen, now ; this is not about an English young lady. I go up to the Church of St. Mark besides the bronze horses. I am enjoying the air, when I hear a sound ; I turn ; over there I see open windows ; ah ! the figure in the white dress- ing-gown ! It is the diva herself. They play the Barbiere to-night, and she is practicing as she dusts her room. Una vocepocofa it thrills all through the square. She puts the ornaments on the mantel-piece straight. Lo giurai, la vincero ! she goes to the mirror and makes the most beautiful atti- tude. Ah, what a spectacle the black hair all down the white dressing-gown In sono docile " and again he kissed his two fingers. Then he said, " But now, you. You do not look one day older. And how is Natalie ? " " Natalie is well, I believe," said the other, gravely. " You are a strange man. You have not a soft heart for the pretty creatures of the world ; you are implacable. The little Natalushka, then ; how is she ? " " The little Natalushka is grown big now ; she is quite a woman." " A woman ! She will marry an Englishman, and become very rich : is not that so? " " Natalie I mean, Natalushka will not marry," said the other coldly. " She knows she is very useful to me. She knows I have no other." " Maintenant : the business how goes that ? " " Elsewhere, well ; in England, not quite so well," said Ferdinand Lind. " But what can you expect ? The English think they have no need of co-operation, except to get their groceries cheap. Why, everything is done in the open air there. If a scoundrel gets a lash too many in prison, you have it before Parliament next week. If a school-boy is kicked by his master, you have all the newspapers in the country ablaze. The newspapers govern England. A penny journal has more power than the commander-in-chief." " Then why do you remain in England ? " " It is the safest for me, personally. Then there is most to be done there. Again, it is the head-quarters of money. Do you see, Calabressa? One must have money, or one cannot work." The albino-looking man lit a cigarette. " You despair, then, of England ? No, you never despair." " There is a prospect. The Southern Englishman is apa- thetic ; he is interested only, as I have said, in getting his 62 SUNRISE. tea and sugar cheap. But the Northern Englishman is vig- orous. The trades' associations in the North are vast, pow- erful, wealthy ; but they are suspicious of anything foreign. Members join us ; the associations will not. But what do you think of this, Calabressa : if one were to have the assist- ance of an Englishman whose father was one of the great iron-masters ; whose name is well known in the north ; who has a large fortune, and a strong will ? " " You have got such a man ? " " Not yet. He is only a Friend. But if I do not misjudge him, he will be a Companion soon. He is a man after my own heart ; once with us, all the powers of the earth will not turn him back." " And his fortune ? " " He will help us with that also, no doubt." " But how did it occur to Providence to furnish you with an assistant so admirably equipped ? " " Do you mean how did I chance to find him ? Through a young English lord an amiable youth, who is a great friend of Natalie's of Natalushka's. Why, he has joined us, too " " An English milord ! " " Yes ; but it is merely from poetical sympathy. He is pleasant and warm-hearted, but to us not valuable ; and he is poor." At this moment a bell rung, apparently in the adjoining apartment. Calabressa jumped from his chair, and hastened to a door on his left, which he opened A portiere prevented anything being seen in the chamber beyond. " Has the summons been answered ? " a voice asked, from the other side. " Yes, sir," said Calabressa. " Brother Lind is here." " That is well." The door was again shut, and Calabressa resumed his seat. " Brother Lind," said he, in a low voice, though he leaned back in his chair, and still preserved that gay manner, " I suppose you do not know why you have been summoned ? " " Not I." " Bien. But suppose one were to guess ? Suppose there is a gentleman somewhere about who has been carrying his outraging of one's common notions of decency just a little too far ? Suppose it is necessaiy to make an example ? You may be noble, and have great wealth, and honor, and smiles from beautiful women ; but if some night you find a little bit of steel getting into your heart, or if some morning you find A NIGHT IN VENICE. 63 your coffee as you drink it burn all the way down until you can feel it burn no more what then ? You must bid good- bye to your mistresses, and to your gold plates and feasts, and your fountains spouting perfumes, and all your titles ; is not that so ? " " But who is it ? " said Lind, suddenly bending forward. - The other regarded him for a moment, playfully. "What if I were to mention the ' Starving Cardinal'} ' ' " Zaccatelli ! " exclaimed Lind, with a ghastly pallor ap- pearing for a moment in the powerful iron-gray face. Calabressa only laughed. " Oh yes, it is beautiful to have all these fine things. And the unhappy devils who are forced to pawn their last sticks of furniture at the Monte di Pieta, rather than have their, children starve when bread is dear; how it must gratify them to think of his Eminence seizing the funds of that flourishing institution to buy up the whole of the grain in the Papal States ! What an admirable speculation ! How kind to the poor, on the part of the Secretary to the Vicar of Christ ! What ! do you think because I am a cardinal I am not to make a profit in corn ? I tell you those people have no business to be miserable they have no business to go and pawn their things ; if I am allowed to speculate with the funds, why not ? Allans done! It is a devilish fine world, merry gentlemen ! " " But but why have they summoned me ? " Lind said, in the same low voice. " Who knows ? " said the other, lightly. " I do not. Come, tell me more about the little Natalushka. Ah, do I not remember the little minx, when she came in, after din- ner, among all those men, with her ' Eljen a haza ! ' What has she grown to ? what has she become ? " "Natalie is a good girl," said her father; but he was thinking of other things. " Beautiful ? " " Some would say so." " But not like the English young ladies ? " " Not at all. 3 ' " I thought not. I remember the black-eyed little one with her pride in Batthyany, and her hatred in Gorgey, and all the rest of it. The little Empress ! with her proud eyes, and her black eyelashes. Do you remember at Dunkirk, when old Anton Pepe?inski met her for the first time ? ' Little Natalushka, if I wait for you, will you marry me when you grow up 1 ' Then the quick answer, ' / am not to be 64 SUNXISE. called any longer by my nursery name ; but if you will fight for my country, I will marry you when I grow up? " Light-hearted as this man Calabressa was, having escaped from prison, and eagerly inclined for chatter, after so long a spell of enforced silence, he could not fail to perceive that his companion was hardly listening to him. " Mais, mon frere, a quoi bon le regarder ? " he said, peev- ishly. " If it must come, it will come. Or is it the poor cardinal you pity ? That was a good name they invented for him, anyway ilcardinale affamatore" Again the bell rung, and Ferdinand Lind started. When he turned to the door, it was with a look on his face of some anxiety and apprehension a look but rarely seen there. Then the portiere was drawn aside to let some one come through : at the same moment Lind caught a brief glimpse of a number of men sitting round a small table. The person who now appeared, and whom Lind saluted with great respect, was a little, sallow-complexioned man, with an intensely black beard and mustache, and a worn ex- pression of face. He returned Lind's salutation gravely, and said, " Brother, the Council thank you for your prompt answer to the summons. Meanwhile, nothing is decided. You will attend here to-morrow night." " At what hour, Brother Granaglia ? " " Ten. You will now be conveyed back to the Rialto steps ; from thence you can get to your hotel." Lind bowed acquiescence ; and the stranger passed again through the portiere and disappeared. CHAPTER X. VACILLATION. " EVELYN, I distrust that man Lind." The speaker was George Brand, who kept impatiently pac- ing up and down those rooms of his, while his friend, with a dreamy look on the pale and line face, lay back in an easy- chair, and gazed out of the clear panes before him. It was night ; the blinds had not been drawn ; and the row of win- dows, framed by their scarlet curtains, seemed a series of dark-blue pictures, all throbbing with points of golden fire. " Is there any one you do not distrust ? " said Lord Evelyn, absently. VACILLATION. 65 " I hope so. But with regard to Lind : I had distinctly to let him know he must not assume that I am mixed up in any of his schemes until I definitely say so. When, in an- swer to my vague proposal, he told me I had already pledged myself, I confess I was startled for a moment. Of course it was all very well for him afterward to speak of my declared sympathy, and of my promise to reveal nothing, as being quite enough, at least for the earlier stage. If that is so, you may easily acquire adherents. But either I join with a defi- nite pledge, or not at all." "I am inclined to think you had better not join," said Lord Evelyn, calmly. After that there was silence ; and Brand's companion lay and looked on the picture outside, that was so dark and solemn and still. In the midst of all that blaze of various and trem- bling lights was the unseen river unseen but for the myriad reflections that showed the ripples of the water ; then the far- reaching rows of golden stars, spanning the bridges, and marking out the long Embankment sweep beyond St. Thomas's Hospital. On the other side black masses of houses all their commonplace detail lost in the mysterious shadow ; and over them the silver crescent of the moon just strong enough to give an edge of white to a tall shot-tower. Then far away in the east, in the clear dark sky, the dim gray ghost of a dome ; scarcely visible, and yet revealing its pres- ence ; the great dome of St. Paul's. This beautiful, still scene the silence was so intense that the footfall of a cab-horse crossing Waterloo Bridge could be faintly heard, as the eye followed the light slowly moving between the two rows of golden stars seemed to possess but little interest for the owner of these rooms. For the moment he had lost altogether his habitual air of proud re- serve. "Evelyn," he said, abruptly, "was it not in these very rooms you insisted that, if the work was good, one need not be too scrupulous about one's associates ? " " I believe so," said the other, indifferently : he had al- most lost hope of ever overcoming his friend's inveterate suspicion. " Well," Brand said, " there is something in that. I be- lieve in the work that Lind is engaged in, if I am doubtful about him. And if it pleases you or him to say that I have joined you merely because I express sympathy, and promise to say nothing, well and good. But you : you are more than that ? " 66 SUNRISE. The question somewhat startled Lord Evelyn ; and his pale face flushed a little. " Oh yes," he said ; " of course. I I cannot precisely explain to you." " I understand. But, if I did really join, I should at least have you for a companion." Lord Evelyn turned and regarded him. " If you were to join, it might be that you and I should never see each other again in this world. Have I not told you ? Your first pledge is that of absolute obedience ; you have no longer a right to your own life ; you become a slave, that others may be free." " And you would have me place myself in the power of a man like Lind ? " Brand exclaimed. " If it were necessary," said Lord Evelyn, " I should hold myself absolutely at the bidding of Lind ; for I am con- vinced he is an honest man, as he is a man of great ability and unconquerable energy and will. But you would no more put yourself in Lind's power than in mine. Lind is a ser- vant, like the rest of us. It is true he has in some ways a sort of quasi-independent position, which I don't quite un- derstand ; but as regards the Society that I have joined, and that you would join, he is a servant, as you would be a servant. But what is the use of talking ? Your temperament isn't fitted for this kind of work." " I want to see my way clear," Brand said, almost to him- self. " Ah, that is just it ; whereas, you must go blindfold." Thereafter again silence. The moon had risen higher now ; and the paths in the Embankment gardens just below them had grown gray in the clearer light. Lord Evelyn lay and watched the light of a hansom that was rattling along by the side of the river. " Do you remember," said Brand, with a smile, " your re- peating some verses here one night ; and my suspecting you had borrowed the inspiration somewhere ? My boy, I have found you out. What I guessed was true. I made bold to ask Miss Lind to read, that evening I came up with them from Dover." " I know it," said Lord Evelyn, quietly. " You have seen her, then ? " was the quick question. " No ; she wrote to me." " Oh, she writes to you ? " the other said. " Well, you see, I did not know her father had gone abroad, and I called. As a rule, she sees no one while her father is VACILLATION. 67 away ; on the other hand, she will not say she is not at home if she is at home. So she wrote me a note of apology for re- fusing to see me ; and in it she told me you had been very kind to them, and how she had tried to read, and had read very badly, because she feared your criticism " " I never heard anything like it ! " Brand said ; and then he corrected himself. " Well, yes, I have ; I have heard you, Evelyn. You have been an admirable pupil." " Now when I think of it," said his friend", putting his hand in his breast-pocket, " this letter is mostly about you, Brand. Let me see if there is anything in it you may not see. No ; it is all very nice and friendly." He was about to hand over the letter, when he stopped. " I do believe," he said, looking at Brand, " that you are capable of thinking Natalie wrote this letter on purpose you should see it." " Then you do me a great injustice," Brand said, without anger. " And you do her a great injustice. I do not think it needs any profoundj udge of character to see what that girl is." " For that is one thing I could never forgive you, Brand." " What ? " " If you were to suspect Natalie Lind." This was no private and confidential communication that passed into Brand's hand, but a frank, gossiping, sisterly note, stretching out beyond its initial purpose. And there was no doubt at all that it was mostly about Brand himself ; and the reader grew red as he went on. He had been so kind to them at Dover ; and so interested in her papa's work ; and so anxious to be of service and in sympathy with them. And then she spoke as if he were definitely pledged to them ; and how proud she was to have another added to the list of her friends. George Brand's face was as red as his beard when he folded up the letter. He did not immediately re- turn it. " What a wonderful woman that is ! " said he, after a time. " I did not think it would be left for a foreigner to teach me to believe in England." Lord Evelyn looked up. j " Oh," Brand said, instantly, " I know what you would ask : * What is my belief worth ? ' ( How much do I sym- pathize ? ' Well, I can give you a plain answer : a shilling in the pound income-tax. If England is this stronghold of the liberties of Europe if it is her business to be the lamp-bearer of freedom if she must keep her shores inviolate as the 68 refuge of those who are oppressed and persecuted, well, then, I would pay a shilling income-tax, or double that, treble that, to give her a navy that would sweep the seas. For a big army there is neither population, nor sustenance, nor room ; but I would give her such a navy as would let her put the world to defiance." " I wish Natalie would teach you to believe in a few other things while she is about it," said his friend, with a slight and rather sad smile. " For example ? " " In human nature a little bit, for example. In the possi- bility of a woman being something else than a drawing-room peacock, or worse. Do you think she could make you be- lieve that it is possible for a woman to be noble-minded, un- selfish, truth-speaking, modest, and loyal-hearted ? " " I presume you are describing Natalie Lind herself." " Oh," said his friend, with a quick surprise, " then you admit there may be an exception, after all ? You do not con- demn the whole race of them now, as being incapable of even understanding what frank dealing is, or honor, or jus- tice, or anything beyond their own vain and selfish ca- prices ? " George Brand went to the window. " Perhaps," said he, " my experience of women has been unfortunate, unusual. I have not had much chance, espe- cially of late years, of studying them in their quiet domestic spheres. But otherwise I suppose my experience is not un- usual. Every man begins his life, in his salad days, by be- lieving the world to be a very fine thing, and women particu- larly to .be very wonderful creatures angels, in short, of goodness, r and mercy, and truth, and all the rest of it. Then, judging by what I have seen and heard, I should say that about nineteen ^men out of twenty get a regular facer just at the most sensitive period of their life ; and then they sud- denly believe that women are devils, and the world a delu- sion. It is bad logic; ?but they are not in a mood for reason. By-and-by the process of recovery begins : with some short, with others long. But the ._ .spring-time of belief, and hope, and rejoicing I doubt whether t^at ever comes back." He spoke without any bitterness. >ff the facts of the world were so, they had to be. accepted.' " I swallowed my dose, of experience, a, good many years ago," he continued, "but I haven't got it* p.ut of my blood yet. However, I will admit to you the possibility of there be- ing a few women like Natalie Lind." VACILLATION. 69 " Well, this is better, at all events," Lord Evelyn said, cheerfully. " Beauty, of course, is a dazzling and dangerous thing," Brand said ; " for a man always wants to believe that fine eyes and a sweet voice have a sweet soul behind them. And very often he finds behind them something in the shape of a soul that a dog or a cat would be ashamed to own. But as for Natalie Lind, I don't think one can be deceived. She shows too much. She vibrates too quickly too inadver- tently to little chance touches. I did suspect her, I will con- fess. I thought she was hired to play the part of decoy. But I had not seen her for ten minutes before I was con- vinced she was playing no part at all." " But goodness gracious, Brand, what are we coming to ? " Lord Evelyn said, with a laugh. "What ! We already be- lieve in England, and patriotism, and the love of freedom ? And we are prepared to admit that there is one woman positively, in the world, one woman who is not a cheat and a selfish coquette ? Why, where are we to end ? " " I don't think I said only one woman," Brand replied, quite good-naturedly ; and then he added, with a smile, u You ask where we are to end. Suppose I were to accept your new religion, Evelyn ? Would that please you ? And would it please her, too ? " " Ah ! " said his companion, looking up with a quick glance of pleasure. But he would argue no more. M Perhaps I have been too suspicious. It is a habit ; I have had to look after myself pretty much through the world ; and I don't overvalue the honesty of people I don't know. But when I once set my hand to the work, I am not likely to draw back." " You could be of so much more value to them than I can," said Lord Evelyn, wistfully. " I don't suppose you spend more than half of your income." " Oh, as to that," said Brand, at once, " that is a very dif- ferent matter. If they like to take myself and what I can do, well and good ; money is a very different thing." His companion raised himself in his chair ; and there was surprise on ihis face. " How can you help them so well as with your money ? " he cried. " Why, it is the very thing they want most." " Oh, indeed I " said Brand, coldly. " You see, Evelyn, my father was a business man ; and I may have inherited a commercial way of looking at things. If I were to give away a lot of money to unknown people, for unknown purposes, 70 I should say that I was being duped, and that they were put- ting the money in their own pocket." " My dear fellow ! " Lord Evelyn protested ; " the need of money is most urgent. There are printing-presses to be kept going ; agents to be paid ; police-spies to be bribed there is an enormous work to be done, and money must be spent." " All the same," said Brand, who was invariably most re- solved when he was most quiet in his manner, " I shall pre- fer not running the chance of being duped in that direction. Be- sides, I am bound in honor not to do anything of the kind. I can fling myself away this is my own lookout; and my life, or the way I spend it, is not of great consequence to me. But my father's property, if anything happens to me, ought to fo intact to my sister's boys, to whom, indeed, I have left it y will. I will say to Lind, * Is it myself or my money that is wanted : you must choose.' " " The question would be an insult." " Oh, do you think so ? Very well ; I will not ask it. But that is the understanding." Then he added, more light- ly, " Why, would you have the Pilgrim start with his pocket full of sovereigns ? His staff and his wallet are all he is entitled to. And when one is going to make a big plunge, shouldn't one strip ? " There was no answer ; for Lord Evelyn's quick ear had caught the sound of wheels in the adjacent street. " There is my trap," he said, looking at his watch as he rose. Waters brought the young man his coat, and then went out to light him down-stairs. " Good-night, Brand. Glad to see you are getting into a wholesomer frame of mind. I shall tell Natalie you are now prepared to admit that there is in the world at least one wo- man who is not a cheat." " I hope you will not utter a word to Miss Lind of any of the nonesense we have been talking," said Brand, hastily, and with his face grown red. " All right. By-the-way, when are you coming up to see the girls ? " " To-morrow afternoon : will that do ? " "Very well ; I shall wait in." " Let me see if I remember the order aright," said Brand, holding up his fingers and counting. " Rosalys, Blanche, Ermentrude, Agnes, Jane, Frances, Geraldine : correct ? " VACILLATION. 71 " Quite. I think their mother must forget at times. Well, good-night." " Good-night good-night ! " Brand returned to the empty room, and threw wide open one of the windows. The air was singularly mild for a night in March ; but he had been careful of his friend. Then he dropped into an easy-chair, and opened a letter. It was the letter from Natalie Lind, which he had held in his hand ever since, eagerly hoping that Evelyn would forget it as, in fact, he had done. And now with what a strange interest he read and re-read it ; and weighed all its phrases ; and tried to picture her as she wrote these lines ; and stud- ied even the peculiarities of the handwriting. There was a quaint, foreign look here and there the capital B, for ex- ample, was written in German fashion ; and that letter occur- red a good many times. It was Mr. Brand, and Mr. Brand, over and over again in this friendly and frank gossip, which had all the brightness of a chat over a new acquaintance who interests one. He turned to the signature. " Your friend, Natalie." Then he walked up and down, slowly and thoughtfully ; but ever and again he would turn to the letter to see that he had quite accurately remembered what she had said about the de- light of the sail from Calais, and the beautiful flowers at Dover and her gladness at the prospect of their having this new asso- ciate and friend. Then the handwriting again. The second stroke of the N in her name had a little notch at the top German fashion. It looked a pretty name, as she wrote it. Then he went to the window, and leaned on the brass bar, and looked out on the dark and sleeping world, with its count- less golden points of fire. He remained there a long time, thinking of the past, in which he had fancied his life was buried ; of the present, with its bewildering uncertainties ; of the future, with its fascinating dreams. There might be a future for him, then, after all ; and hope ; and the joy of com- panionship ? Surely that letter meant at least so much. But then the boundlessness, the eager impatience, of human wishes ! Farther and farther, as he leaned and looked out, without seeing much of the wonderful spectacle before him, went his thoughts and eager hopes and desires. Companion- ship ; but with whom ? And might not the spring-time of life come back again, as it was now coming back to the world in the sweet new air that had begun to blow from the South ? And what message did the soft night-wind bring him but the name of Natalie ? And Natalie was written in the clear and 72 SUNRISE. shining heavens, in letters of fire and joy ; and the river spoke of Natalie ; and the darkness murmured Natalie. But his heart, whispering to him there, in the silence of the night, in the time when dreams abound, and visions of what may be his heart, whispering to him, said " Nata- lushka ! " CHAPTER XI. A COMMISSION. WHEN Ferdinand Lind looked out the next day from the window of his hotel, it was not at all the Venice of chromo- lithography that lay before him. The morning was wild, gray, and gloomy, with a blustering wind blowing down from the north ; the broad expanse of green water ruffled and lashed by continual squalls ; the sea-gulls wheeling and dipping over the driven waves ; the dingy masses of shipping huddled along the wet and deserted quays ; the long spur of the Lido a thin black line between the green sea and purple sky ; and the domed churches over there, and the rows of tall and narrow and grumbling palaces overlooking the canals nearer at hand, all alike dismal and bedraggled and dark. When he went outside he shivered ; but at all events these cold, damp odors of the sea and the rainy wind were more grateful than the mustiness of the hotel. But the deserted look of the place ! The gondolas, with their hearse-like coverings on, lay empty and untended by the steps, as if waiting for a fu- neral procession. The men had taken shelter below the arch- ways, where they formed groups, silent, uncomfortable, sulky. The few passers-by on the wet quays hurried along with their voluminous black cloaks wrapped round their shoulders, and hiding most of the mahogany-colored faces. Even the plague of beggars had been dispersed ; they had slunk away shiver- ing into the foul-smelling nooks and crannies. There was not a soul to give a handful of maize to the pigeons in the Place of St. Mark. But when Lind had got round into the Place, what was his surprise to find Calabressa having his breakfast in the open air at a small table in front of a cafe. He was quite alone there ; but he seemed much content. In fact, he was laugh- ing heartily, all to himself, at something he had been reading in the newspaper open before him. " Well," said Lind, when they had exchanged salutations, A COMMISSION. 73 " this is a pleasant sort of a morning for one to have one's breakfast outside ! " " My faith," said Calabressa, " if you had taken as many breakfasts as I have shut up in a hole, you would be glad to get the chance of a mouthful of fresh air. Sit down, my friend." Lind glanced round, and then sat down. My good friend Calabressa," he said presently, " for one connected as you are with certain persons, do you not think now that your costume is a little conspicuous ? And then your sitting out here in broad daylight " " My friend Lind," said he, with a laugh, " I am as safe here as if I were in Naples, which I believe to be the safest place in the world for one not in good odor with the author- ities. And if there was a risk, would I not run it to hear my little nightingale over there when she opens the casements ? Ah ! she is the most charming Rosina in the world." " Yes, yes," said Lind. " I am not speaking of you. But the others. The police must guess you are not here for nothing." "Oh, the others ? Rest assured. The police might as well try to put their fingers on a globule of quicksilver. It is but three days since they left the Piazza del Popolo, Torre del Greco. To-morrow, if their business is finished to-night, they will vanish again ; and I shall be dismissed." " If their business is finished ? " repeated Lind, absently. " Yes ; but I should like to know why they have summoned me all the way from England. They cannot mean " "My dear friend Lind," said Calabressa, "you must not look so grave. Nothing that is going to happen is worth one's troubling one's self about. It is the present moment that is of consequence ; and at the present moment I have a joke for you. You know Armfelclt, who is now at Berne : they had tried him only four times in Berlin ; and there was only a little matter of nine years' sentence against him. Listen." He took up the Osservatore, and read out a paragraph, stat- ing that Dr. Julius Armfeldt had again been tried in contuma- ciam, and sentenced to a further term of two years' imprison- ment, for seditious writing. Further, the publisher of his latest pamphlet, a citizen of Berne, had likewise been sen- tenced in his absence to twelve months' imprisonment. "Do they think Armfeldt will live to be a centenarian, that they keep heaping up those sentences against him ? Or is it as another inducement for him to go back to his native coun- 74 SUNRISE. try and give himself up ? It is a great joke, this childish pro- ceeding; but a Government should not declare itself impo- tent. It is like the Austrians when they hanged you and the others in effigy. Now I remember, the little Natalushka was grieved that she was not born then ; for she wished to see the spectacle, and to have killed the people who insulted her father." " I am afraid it is no joke at all," Lind said, gloomily. " Those Swiss people are craven. What can you expect from a nation of hotel-waiters ? They cringe before every bully in Europe ; you will find that, if Bismarck insists, the Federal Council will expel Armfeldt from Switzerland directly. No ; the only safe refuge nowadays for the reformers, the Protestants the pioneers of Europe, is England ; and the English do not know it ; they do not think of it. They are so accustomed to freedom that they believe that is the only possible condition, and that other nations must necessarily enjoy it. When you talk to them of tyranny, of political persecution, they laugh. They cannot understand such a thing existing. They fancy it ceased when Bomba's dungeons were opened." " For my part," said Calabressa, lighting a cigarette, and calling for a small glass of cognac, " I am content with Na- ples." " And the protection of pickpockets ? " " My friend," said the other, coolly, " if you refer to the most honorable the association of the Camorristi, I would advise you not to speak too loud." Calabressa rose, having settled his score with the waiter. " Allons ! " said he. " What are you going to do to day ? " "I don't know," said Lind, discontentedly. "May 'the devil fly away with this town of Venice ! I never come here but it is either freezing or suffocating." " You are in an evil humor to-day, friend Lind ; you have caught the English spleen. Come, I have a little business to do over at Murano ; the breeze will do you good. And I will tell you the story of my escape." The time had to be passed somehow. Lind walked with his companion along to the steps, descended, and jumped into a gondola, and presently they were shooting out into the turbulent green water that the wind drove against the side of the boat in a succession of sharp shocks. Seated in the little funereal compartment, they could talk without much fear of being heard by either of the men ; and Calabressa began his tale. It was not romantic. It was simply a case of bribery ; the money to effect which had certainly not come out of A COMMISSION. 75 Calabressa's shallow pockets. In the midst of the story or, at least, before the end of it Lind said, in a low voice, " Calabressa, have you any sure grounds for what you said about Zaccatelli ? " His companion glanced quickly outside. " It is you are now indiscreet," he said, in an equally low voice. " But yes ; I think that is the business. However," he added, in a gayer tone, " what matter ? To-day is not to- morrow ; to-morrow will shift for itself." And therewith he continued his story, though his listener seemed singularly preoccupied and thoughtful. They arrived at the island, got out, and walked into the courtyard of one of the smaller glass-works. There were one or two of the workmen passing ; and here something oc- curred that seemed to arrest Lind's attention. " What, here also ? " said he, in a low voice. " Every one ; the master included. It is with him I have to do this little piece of business. Now you will be so good as to wait for a short time, will you not ? and it is warm in there ; I will be with you soon." Lind walked into the large workshop, where there were a number of people at work, all round the large, circular, covered caldron, the various apertures into which sent out fierce rays of light and heat. He walked about, seemingly at his ease ; looking at the apprentices experimenting ; chat- ting to the workmen. And at last he asked one of these to make for him a little vase in opalescent glass, that he could take to his daughter in England ; and could he put the letter N on it somewhere ? It was at least some occupation, watch- ing the quick and dexterous handling under which the little vase grew into form, and had its decoration cleverly pinched out, and its tiny bits of color added. The letter N was not very successful ; but then Natalie would know that her father had been thinking of her at Venice. This excursion at all events tided over the forenoon ; and when the two companions returned to the wet and disconso- late city, Calabressa was easily persuaded to join his friend in some sort of mid-day meal. After that, the long-haired albino-looking person took his leave, having 'arranged how Lind was to keep the assignation for that evening. The afternoon cleared up somewhat ; but Ferdinand Lind seemed to find it dull enough. He went out for an aimless stroll through some of the narrow back streets, slowly mak- ing his way among the crowd that poured along these vari- ous ways. Then he returned to his hotel, and wrote some 76 SUNRISE. letters. Then he dined early ; but still the time did not seem to pass. He resolved on getting through an hour or so at the theatre. A gondola swiftly took him away through the labyrinth of small and gloomy canals, until at length the wan orange glare shining out into the night showed him that he was drawing near one of the entrances to the Fenice. If he had been less preoccupied less eager to think of nothing but how to get the slow hours over he might have noticed the strangeness of the scene before him : the successive gondolas stealing silently up through the gloom to the palely lit stone steps ; the black coffins appearing to open ; and then figures in white and scarlet opera-cloaks getting out into the dim light, to ascend into the brilliant glare of the theatre stair- case. He, too, followed, and got into the place assigned to him. But this spectacular display failed to interest him. He turned to the bill, to remind him what he had to see. The blaze of color on the stage the various combinations of movement the resounding music all seemed part of a dream ; and it annoyed him somehow. He rose and left. The intervening time he spent chiefly in a cafe close by the theatre, where he smoked cigarettes and appeared to read the newspapers. Then he wandered away to the spot appointed for him to meet a particular gondola, and arrived there half an hour too soon. But the gondola was there also. He jumped in and was carried away through the silence of the night. When he arrived at the door, which was opened to him by Calabressa, he contrived to throw off, by a strong effort of will, any appearance of anxiety. He entered and sat down, saying only, Well ! what news ? " Calabressa laughed slightly ; and went to a cupboard, and brought forth a bottle and two small glasses. " If you were Zaccatelli," he said, " I would say to you, ' My Lord,' or ' Your Excellency,' or whatever they call those flamingoes with the bullet heads, ' I would advise you to take a little drop of this very excellent cognac, for you are about to hear something, and you will need steady nerves.' Meanwhile, Brother Lind, it is not forbidden to you and me to have a glass. The Council provide excellent liquor." " Thank you, I have no need of it," said Lind, coldly. " What do you mean about Zaccatelli ? " " This," said the other, filling himself out a glass of the brandy, and then proceeding to prepare a cigarette. " If A COMMISSION. 77 the moral scene of the country, too long outraged, should determine to punish the Starving Cardinal, I believe he will get a good year's notice to prepare for his doom. You per- ceive ? What harm does sudden death to a man ? It is nothing. A moment of pain ; and you have all the happi- ness of sleep, indifference, forgetfulness. That is no punish- ment at all : do you perceive ? " Calabressa continued, airily " People are proud when they say they do not fear death. The fools ! What has any one to fear in death ? To the poor it means no more hunger, no more imprisonment, no more cold and sickness, no more watching of your children when they are suffering and you cannot help ; to the rich it means no more triumph of rivals, and envy, and jealousy ; no more sleepless nights and ennui of days ; no more gout, and gravel, and the despair of growing old. Death ! It is the great emancipation. And people talk of the punishment of death ! " He gave a long whistle of contempt. " But," said he, with a smile, " it is a little bit different if you have to look forward to your death on a certain fixed day. Then you begin to overvalue things a single hour of life becomes something." He added, in a tone of affected condolence " Then one wouldn't wish to cause any poor creature to say his last aclieux without some preparation. And in the case of a cardinal, is a year too little for repentance ? Oh, he will put it to excellent use." " Very well, very well," said Ferdinand Lind, with an im- patient frown gathering over the shaggy eyebrows. " But I want to know what I have to do with all this ? " "Brother Lind," said the other, mildly, "if the Secretary Granaglia, knowing that I am a friend of yours, is so kind as to give me some hints of what is under discussion, I listen, but I ask no questions. And you I presume you are here not to protest, but to obey." " Understand me, Calabressa : it was only to you as a friend that I spoke," said Lind. gravely. And then he ad- ded, "The Council will not find, at all events, that I am recusant." A few minutes afterward the bell rung, and Calabressa jumped to his feet ; while Lind, in spite of himself, started. Presently the portiere was drawn aside, and the little sallow- complexioned man whom he had seen on the previous even- ing entered the room. On this occasion, however, Calabressa 78 SUNRISE. was motioned to withdraw, and immediately did so. Lind and the stranger were left together. " I need scarcely inform you, Brother Lind," said he, in a slow and matter-of-fact way, " that I am the authorized spokesman of the Council." As he said this, for a moment he rested his hand on the table. There was on the forefinger a large ring, with a red stone in it, engraved. Lind bowed acquiescence. " Calabressa has no doubt informed you of the matter be- fore the Council. That is now decided ; the decree has been signed. Zaccatelli dies within a year from this day. The motives which have led to this decision may hereafter be ex- plained to you, even if they have not already occurred to you ; they are motives of policy, as regards ourselves and the prog- ress of our work, as well as of justice." Ferdinand Lind listened, without response. " It has further been decided that the blow be struck from England. " " England ! " was the involuntary exclamation. "Yes," said the other, calmly. "To give full effect to such a warning it must be clear to the world that it has noth- ing to do with any private revenge or low intrigue. Assas- sination has been too frequent in Italy of late. The doubting throughout the world must be convinced that we have agents everywhere ; and that we are no mere local society for the revenging of private wrongs." Lind again bowed assent. " Further," said the other, regarding him, " the Council charge you with the execution of the decree." Lind had almost expected this : he did not flinch. "After twelve months' grace granted, you will be pre- pared with a sure and competent agent who will give effect to the decree of the Council ; failing such a one, the duty will devolve on your own shoulders." " On mine ! " he was forced to exclaim. " Surely " " Do you forget," said the other, calmly, "that sixteen years ago your life was forfeited, and given back to you by the Council ? " " So I understood," said Lind. " But it was not my life that was given me then ! only the lease of it till the Coun- cil should claim it again. However ! " He drew himself up, and the powerful face was full of de- cision. " It is well," said he. " I do not complain. If I exact JACTA EST ALEA. 79 obedience from others, I, too, obey. The Council shall be served." " Further instructions shall be given you. Meanwhile, the Council once more thank you for your attendance. Fare- well, brother ! " " Farewell, brother ! " When he had gone, and the bell again rung, Calabressa reappeared. Lind was too proud a man to betray any con- cern. " It is as you told me, Calabressa," said he, carelessly, as his friend proceeded to light him down the narrow staircase. " And I am charged with the execution of their vengeance. Well ; I wish I had been present at their deliberations, that is all. This deed may answer so far as the continental countries are concerned ; but, so far as England is concerned, it will undo the work of years." " What ! England ! " exclaimed Calabressa, lightly " where they blow up a man's house with gunpowder, or dash vitriol in his face, if he works for a shilling a day less wages ? where they shoot landlords from behind hedges if the rent is raised ? where they murder policemen in the open street, to release political prisoners ? No, no, friend Lind; I cannot believe that." " However, that is not my business, Calabressa. The Council shall be obeyed. I am glad to know you are again at liberty; when you come to England you will s'ee how your little friend Natalie has grown." ''Give a kiss from me to the little Natalushka," said he, cheerfully ; and then the two parted. CHAPTER XII. JACTA EST ALEA. " NATALIE," said her father, entering the breakfast-room, " I have news for you to-day. This evening Mr. Brand is to be initiated." The beautiful, calm face betrayed no surprise. . " That is always the way," she answered, almost absently. " One after the other they go in ; and I only am left out, alone." " What," he said, patting her shoulder as he passed, " are you still dreaming of reviving the Giardiniere ? Well, it So SUNXISE. was a pretty idea to call each sister in the lodge by the name of a flower. But nowadays, and in England especially, if women intermeddled in such things, do you know what they would be called ? Petrolettses/" " Names do not hurt," said the girl, proudly. " No, no. Rest content, Natalie. You are initiated far enough. You know all that needs to be known ; and you can work with us, and associate with us like the rest. But about Brand ; are you not pkasecl ? " " I am indeed pleased, papa." " And I am more than pleased," said Lind, thoughtfully, " He will be the most important accession we have had for many a day. Ah, you women have sharp eyes ; but there are some things you cannot see there are some men whose character you cannot read." Natalie glanced up quickly ; and her father noticed that surprised look. " Well," said he, with a smile, " what now is your opinion of Mr. Brand ? " Instantly the soft eyes were cast down again, and a faint tinge of color appeared in her face. " Oh, my opinion, papa ? " said she, as if to gain time to choose her words. " Well, I should call him manly, straight- forward and and very kind and and very English " "I understand you perfectly, Natalie," her father said, with a laugh. " You and Lord Evelyn are quite in accord. Yes, and you are both thoroughly mistaken. You mean, by his being so English, that he is cold, critical, unsympathetic : is it not so ? You resent his being cautious about joining us. You think he will be but a lukewarm associate suspecting everything fearful about going too far a half-and-half ally. My dear Natalie, that is because neither Lord Evelyn nor you know anything at all about that man." The faint color in the girl's cheeks had deepened ; and she remained silent, with her face downcast. " The pliable ones," her father continued, " the people who are moved by tine talking, who are full of amiable senti- ments, and who take to work like ours as an additional sen- timent you may initiate a thousand of them, and not gain an atom of strength. It is a hard head that I want, and a strong will ; a man determined to have no illusions at the outset ; a man who, once pledged, will not despair or give up in the face of failure, difficulty, or disappointment, or any- thing else. Brand is such a man. If I were to be disabled JACTA EST ALEA. Si to-morrow, I would rather leave my work in his hands than in the hands of any man I have seen in this country." Was it to hide the deepening color in her face that the girl went round to her father, and stood rather behind him, and put her hand on his shoulder, and stooped down to his ear. " Papa," said she, " I I hope you don't think I have been saying anything against Mr. Brand. Oh no. How could I do that when he has been so kind to us and and just now especially, when he is about to become one of us ? You must forget what I said about his being English, papa ; after all, it is not for us to say that being English is anything else than being kind, and generous, and hospitable. And I am exceedingly pleased that you have got another associate, and that we have got another good friend, in England." " Alors, as Calabressa would say, you can show that you are pleased, Natalie," her father said/lightly, " by going and writing a pretty little note, asking your new friend, Mr. Brand, to dine with us to-night, after the initiation is over, and I will ask Evelyn, if I see him." But this proposal in no wise seemed to lessen the girl's embarrassment. She still clung about the back of her father's chair. " I would rather not do that, papa," said she, after a second. " Why ? why ? " said he. " Would it not look less formal for you to ask him, papa ? You see, it is once or twice that we have asked him to dine with us without giving him proper notice " " Oh, that is nothing nothing at all. A bachelor with an evening disengaged is glad enough to fill it up anyhow. Well, if you would rather not write, Natalie, I will ask him myself." " Thank you, papa," said she, apparently much relieved ; and therewith she went back to her seat, and her father turned to his newspaper. The day passed, and the evening came. As six o'clock was striking, George Brand presented himself at the little door in Lisle street, Soho, and was admitted. Lind had al- ready assured him that, as far as England .was concerned, no idle mummeries were associated with the ceremony of initia- tion ; to which Brand had calmly replied, that if mummeries were considered necessary, he was as ready as any one to do his part of the business. Only he added that he thought the unknown powers had acted wisely so far as England was concerned in discarding such things. 6 82 SUNKISE. When he entered the room, his first glance round was re- assuring. There were six persons present besides Lind, and they did not at all suggest the typical Leicester Square for- eigner. On the contrary, he guessed that four out of the six were either English or Irish ; and two of them he recognized, though they were unknown to him personally. The one was a Home Rule M. P., ferocious enough in the House of Com- mons, but celebrated as the most brilliant, and amiable, and fascinating of diners-out ; the other was an Oxford don, of large fortune and wildly Radical views, who wrote a good deal in the papers. There was a murmur of conversation going on, which ceased as Lind briefly introduced the new-comer. The ceremony, if ceremony it could be called, was simple enough. The candidate for admission was required to sign a printed document, solemnly pledging himself to devote his life, and the labor of his hands and brain, to the work of the association ; to implicitly obey any command reaching him from the Council, or communicated through an officer of the first degree ; and to preserve inviolable secrecy. Brand read this paper through twice, and signed it. It was then signed by the seven witnesses. He was further required to inscribe his signature in a large volume, which contained a list of members of a particular section. That done, the six strangers present shook him by the hand, and left. He looked round surprised, Had he been dreaming during these brief five minutes? Yet he could hear the noise of their going down-stairs. " Well," said Mr. Lind, with a smile, " it is not a very terri- ble ceremony, is it ? Did you expect prostrations at the altar ; and blindfold gropings, and the blessing of the dagger ? When you come to know a little more of our organization, of its extent and its power, you will understand how we can afford to dispense with all those theatrical ways of frightening people into obedience and secrecy." " I expected to find Evelyn here," said George Brand. He was in truth, just a little bit bewildered as yet. He had been assured that there would be no foolish mummeries or fantastic rites of initiation ; but all the same he had been much occu- pied with this step he was about to take ; he had been think- ing of it much ; he had been looking forward to something unknown ; and he had been nerving himself to encounter whatever might come before him. But that five minutes of silence ; the quick reading and signing of a paper ; the sud- den dispersion of the small assemblage : he could scarcely believe it was all real. JACTA EST ALEA. 83 " No," Lind said, " Lord Evelyn is not yet an officer. He is only a Companion in the third degree, like yourself." " A what ? " " A Companion in the third degree. Surely you read the document that you signed ? " It was still lying on the table before him. He took it up ; yes, he certainly was so designated there. .Yet he could not remember seeing the phrase, though he had, before signing, read every word twice over. "And now, Mr. Brand," his companion said, seating him- self at the other side of the table, " when you have got over your surprise that there should be no ceremony, it will become my duty to give you some idea some rough idea of the mechanism and aims of our association, and to show you in what measure we are allied with other societies. The details you will become acquainted with by-and-by ; that will be a labor of time. And you know, of course, or you have guessed, that there are no mysteries to be revealed to you, no profound religious truths to be communicated, no dogmas to be ac- cepted. I am afraid we are very degenerate descendants of the Mystics, and the Illuminati, and all the rest of them ; we have become prosaic; our wants are sadly material. And yet we have our dreams and aspirations, too ; and the virtues that we exact obedience, temperance, faith, self-sacrifice are not ignoble. Meanwhile, to begin. I think you may pre- pare yourself to be astonished." But astonishment was no word for the emotion experienced by the newly admitted member when Ferdinand Lind pro- ceeded to give him, with careful facts and sober computations, some rough outline of the extent and power of this intricate and far-reaching organization. Hitherto the word " Interna- tional " had with him been associated with the ridiculous fiasco at Geneva ; but here was something, not calling itself international, which aimed at nothing less than knitting to- gether the multitudes of the nations, not only in Europe, but in the English and French and German speaking territories beyond the seas, in a solemn league a league for self-pro- tection and mutual understanding, for the preservation of in- ternational peace, the spread of knowledge, the outbraving of tyranny, the defiance of religious intolerance, the relief of the oppressed, the help of the poor, and the sick, and the weak. This was no cutthroat conspiracy or wild scheme of confisca- tion and plunder ; but a design for the establishment of wide and beneficent law a law which should protect, not the am- bition of kings, not the pride of annies, not the revenues of 84 SUNRISE. priests, but the rights and the liberties of those who were " darkening in labor and pain." And this message, that could go forth alike to the Camorristi and the Nihilists ; to the Free Masons and the Good Templars ; to the Trades-unionists and the Knights of Labor to all those masses of men moved by the spirit of co-operation " See, brothers, what we have to show you. Some of you are aiming at chaos and perdition ; others putting wages as their god and sovereign ; others con- tent with a vague philanthropy almost barren of results. This is all the help we want of you to pledge yourselves to asso- ciate with us, to accept our modest programme of actual needs, to give help to those who are in want or trouble, to promise that you will stand by us in the time to come. And when the time does come ; when we are combined ; when knowledge is abroad, and mutual trust, who will say * yes ' if the voice of the people in every nation murmurs ' No ? ' What priest will re- impose the Inquisition on us ; what king drive us to shed blood that his robes may have the richer dye ; what policeman in high places endeavor to stamp out our God-given right of free speech ? It ,is so little for you to grant ; it is so much for you, and for us, to gain ! " These were not the words he uttered for Lincl spoke Eng- lish slowly and carefully but they were the spirit of his words. And as he went on describing to this new member what had already been done, what was being done, and the great possi- bilities of the future, Brand began to wonder whether all this gigantic scheme, with its simple, bold, and practical outlines, were the work of this one man. He ventured by-and-by to hint at some such question. "Mine?" Lind said, frankly, "Ah no! not the inspira- tion of it. I am only the mechanic putting brick and brick together ; the design is not mine, nor that of any one man. It is an aggregate project a speculation occupying many a long hour of imprisonment a scheme to be handed from one to the other, with alterations and suggestions." " But even your share of it how can one man control so much ? " Brand said ; for he easily perceived what a mass of detail had to pass through this man's hands. "I will tell you," said the other. "Because every stone added to the building is placed there for good. There is no looking back. There are no pacifications of revolt. No questions ; but absolute obedience. You see, we exact so little : why should any one rebel ? However, you will learn more and more as you go on ; and soon your work will be ap- pointed you. Meanwhile, I thank you, brother." JACTA EST ALEA. 85 Lind rose and shook his hand. " Now," said he, " that is enough of business. It occurred to me this morning that, if you had nothing else to do this evening, you might come and dine with us, and give Natalie the chance of meeting you in your new character." " I shall be most pleased," said Brand ; and his face flushed. " I telegraphed to Evelyn. If he is in town, perhaps he will join us. Shall we walk home ? " " If you like." So the)^ went out together into the glare and clamor of the streets. George Brand's heart was very full with various emotions ; but, not to lose altogether his English character, he preserved a somewhat critical tone as he talked. " Well, Mr. Lind," he said, " so far as I can see and hear, your scheme has been framed not only with great ability, but also with a studied moderation and wisdom. The only point I would urge is this that, in England, as little as pos- sible should be said about kings and priests. A great deal of what you said would scarcely be understood here. You see, in England it is not the Crown nowadays which instigate or insists on war; it is- Parliament and the people. Dynastic ambitions do not trouble us. There is no reason whatever why we here should hate kings when they are harmless." " You are right ; the case is different,''' Lind admitted. " But that makes adhesion to our programme all the easier." " I was only speaking of the police of mentioning things which might alarm timid people. Then as for the priests ; it may be the interest of the priests in Ireland to keep the peasantry ignorant ; but it is certainly not so in England. The Church of England fosters education " " Are not your clergymen the bitterest enemies of the School Board schools ? " " Well, they may dislike seeing education dissociated from religion that is natural, considering what they believe ; but they are not necessary enemies of education. Perhaps I am a very young member to think of making such a suggestion. But the truth is, that when an ordinary Englishman hears anything said against kings and priests, he merely thinks of kings and priests as he knows them and as being mostly harmless creatures nowadays and concludes that you are a Communist wanting to overturn society altogether." " Precisely so. I told Natalie this morning that if she were to be allowed to join our association her English friends would imagine u ^^ to be ?ipetroleuse" 86 SUNRISE. " Miss Lind is not in the association ? " Brand said, quickly. " As yet no women have been admitted. I f is a difficulty ; for in some societies with which we are partly in alliance women are members. Ah, such noble creatures many of them are, too ! However, the question may come forward by-and-by. In the mean time, Natalie, without being made aware of what we are actually doing that, of course, is for- bidden knows something of what our work must be, and is warm in her sympathy. She is a good help, too : she is the quickest translator we have got." " Do you think," Brand said, somewhat timidly, but with a frown on his face, " that it is fair to put such tedious labor on the shoulders of a young girl ? Surely there are enough of men to do the work ? " " You shall propose that to her yourself," Lind said laugh- ing. Well, they arrived at the house in Curzon Street, and, when they went up-stairs to the drawing-room, they found Lord Evelyn there. Natalie Lind came forward with less than usual of her graciously self-possessed manner and shook hands with him briefly, and said, with averted look, " I am glad to see you, Mr. Brand." Now, as her eyes were cast down, it was impossible that she could have noticed the quick expression of disappoint- ment that crossed his face. Was it that she herself was instantly conscious of the coldness of her greeting, and anxious to atone for that ? Was it that she plucked up heart of grace ? At all events, she suddenly offered him both her hands with a frank courage ; she looked him in the face with the soft, tender, serious eyes ; and then, before she turned away, the low voice said, " Brother, I welcome you ! " CHAPTER XIII. SOUTHWARD. AFTER a late, cold, and gloomy spring, a glimpse of early summer shone over the land ; and after a long period of anxious and oftentimes irritating and disappointing travail in wet and dismal towns, in comfortless inns, with associates not always to his liking George Brand was hurrying to the SOUTHWARD. 87 South. Ah, the thought of it, as the train whirled < along on this sunlit morning ! After the darkness, the light ; after fighting, peace ; after the task-work, a smile of reward ! No more than that was his hope ; but it was a hope that kept his heart afire and glad on many a lonely night. At length his companion, who had slept steadily on ever since they had entered the train at Carlisle, at about one in the morning, awoke, rubbed his eyes, and glanced at the window. " We are going to have a fine day at last, Humphreys," said Brand. "They have been having better weather in the South, sir." The man looked like a well-dressed mechanic. He had an intelligent face, keen and hard. He spoke with the New- castle burr. " I wish you would not call me * sir,' " Brand said, impatiently. "It comes natural, somehow, sir," said the other, with great simplicity. "There is not a man in any part of the country, but would say ' sir ' to one of the Brands of Darling- ton. When Mr. Lind telegraphed to me you were coming down, I telegraphed back, * Is he one of the Brands of Dar- lington ? ' and when I got his answer I said to myself, ' Here is the man to go to the Political Committee of the Trades- union Congress : they won't fight shy of him.' " "Well, we have no great cause to grumble at what has been done in that direction ; but that infernal Internationale is doing a deal of mischief. There is not a trades-unionist in the country who does not know what is going on in France. A handful of irresponsible madmen trying to tack themselves on to the workmen's association well, surely the men will have more sense than to listen. The congres ouvrier to change its name, and to become the congres revolutionnaire ! When I first went to Jackson, Molyneux, and the others, I found they had a sort of suspicion that we wanted to make Communists of them and tear society to pieces." " You have done more in a couple of months, sir, than we all have done in the last ten years," his companion said. " That is impossible. Look at " He named some names, certain of them well known enough. The other shook his head. " Where we have been they don't believe in London pro- fessors, and speech-makers, and chaps like that. They know that the North is the backbone and the brain of England, 88 SUNRISE. and in the North they want to be spoken to by a North-coun- tryman." " I am a Buckinghamshire man." " That may be where you live, sir ; but you are one of the Brands of Darlington," said the other, doggedly. By-and-by they entered the huge, resounding station. " What are you going to do to-night, Humphreys ? Come and have some dinner with me, and we will look in afterward at the Century." Humphreys looked embarrassed for a moment. " I was thinking of gding to the Coger's Hall, sir," said he, hitting upon an excuse. " I have heard some good speaking there." " Mostly bunkum, isn't it ? " " No, sir." " All right. Then I shall see you to-morrow morning in Lisle Street. Good-bye." He jumped into a hansom, and was presently rattling away through the busy streets. How sweet and fresh was the air, even here in the midst of the misty and golden city ! The early summer was abroad ; there was a flush of green on the trees in the squares. When he got down to the Em- bankment, he was quite surprised by the beauty of the gar- dens ; there were not many gardens in the towns he had chiefly been living in. He dashed up the narrow wooden stairs. " Look alive now, Waters : get my bath ready." " It is ready, sir." " And breakfast ! " " Whenever you please, sir." He took off his dust-smothered travelling-coat, and was about to fling it on the couch, when he saw lying there two pieces of some brilliant stuff that were strange to him. " What are these things ? " " They were left, sir, by Mr. , of Bond Street, on ap- proval. He will call this afternoon." " Tell him to go to the devil ! " said Brand, briefly, as he walked off into his bedroom. Presently he came back. " Stay a bit," said he ; and he took up the two long strips of silk-embroidered stuff Florentine work, probably, of about the end of the sixteenth century. The ground was a delicate yellowish-gray, with an initial letter worked in various colors over it. Mr. , of Bond Street, knew that Brand had often amused his idle hours abroad in picking up things like \ SOUTHWARD. 89 this, chiefly as presents to lady friends, and no doubt thought they would be welcome enough, even for bachelors' rooms. " Tell him I will take them." " But the price, sir ? " " Ask him his price ; beat him down ; and keep the differ- ence." After bath and breakfast there was an enormous pile of correspondence awaiting him ; for not a single letter referring to his own affairs had been forwarded to him for over two months. He had thrown his entire time and care into his work in the North. And now that these arrears had to be cleared off, he attacked the business with an obvious impa- tience. Formerly he had been used to dawdle over his let- ters, getting through a good portion of the forenoon with them and conversations with Waters about Buckinghamshire news. Now, even with that omniscient factotum by his side, his progress was slow, simply because he was hurried. He made dives here and there, without system, without settle- ment. At last, looking at his watch, he jumped up: it was half-past eleven. " Some other time, Waters some other time ; the man must wait," he said to the astonished but patient person be- side him. " If Lord Evelyn calls, tell him I shall look in at the Century to-night." " Ye : s, sir." Some half-hour thereafter he was standing in Park Lane, his heart beating somewhat quickly, his eyes fixed eagerly on two figures that were crossing the thoroughfare lower down to one of the gates leading into Hyde Park. These were Natalie Lind and the little Anneli. He had known that he would see her thus ; he had imagined the scene a thousand times ; he had pictured to himself every detail the trees, the tall railings, the spring flowers in the plots, and the little rosy-cheeked German girl walking by her mistress's side ; and yet, now that this familiar thing had come true, he trembled to behold it ; he breathed quickly ; he could not go forward to her and hold out his hand. Slowly, for they were walking slowly, he went along to the gate and entered after them ; cau- tiously, lest she should turn suddenly and confront him with her eyes ; drawn, and yet fearing to follow. She was talking with some animation to her companion ; though even in this profound silence he could not hear the sound of her voice. Bnt he could see the beautiful oval of her face ! and some- times, when she turned with a laugh to the little Anneli, he caught a glimpse of the black eyes and eyelashes, the smiling 90 SUNKISE. lips and brilliant teeth ; and once or twice she put out the palm of her right hand with a little gesture which, despite her English dress, would have told a stranger that she was of for- eign ways. But the look of welcome, the smile of reward that he had been looking forward to ? Well, Mr. Lind was in America ; and during his absence his daughter saw but few visitors. There was no particular reason why, supposing that George Brand met Natalie in the i street, he should not go up and shake hands with her ; and many a time, in these mental pictures of his of her morning walk with the rosy-cheeked Anneli, he imagined himself con- fronting her under the shadow of the trees, and perhaps walk- ing some way with her, to listen once more to the clear, low vibrations of her musical voice. But no sooner had he seen her come into Park Lane the vision became real than he felt he could not go up and speak to her. If he had met her by accident, perhaps he might ; but to watch her, to entrap her, to break in on her wished-for isolation under false pre- tences all that he suddenly felt to be impossible. He could follow her with his heart ; but the sound of her voice, the touch of her hand, the smile of her calm, beautiful, dark eyes, were as remote for him as if she, too, were beyond the broad Atlantic. He was not much given to introspection and analysis; dur- ing the past two months more especially he had been far too busy to be perpetually asking " Why ? why ? " the vice of indolence. It was enough that, in the cold and the wet, there was a fire in his heart that kept him glad with thinking of the fair days to come ; and that, in the foggy afternoons or the lonely nights when he was alone, and perhaps despondent or impatient over the stupidity or the contumacy he had had to encounter, there came to him the soft murmur of a voice from far away proud, sad, and yet full of consolation and hope : " But ye that might be clothed with all things pleasant, Ye are foolish that put off the fair soft present, That clothe yourself with the cold future air ; When mother and father, and tender sister and brother, And the old live love that was shall be as ye, Dust and no fruit of loving life shall be. She shall be yet who is more than all these were, Than sister or wife or father unto us, or mother." He could hear her voice ; he could see the beautiful face grow pale with its proud fervor ; he could feel the soft touch SOUTHWARD. 91 of her hand when she came forward and said, " Brother, I welcome you ! " And now that she was there before him, the gladness in his heart at the mere sight of her was troubled with a trem- bling fear and pain. She was but a stone's-throw in front of him ; but she seemed far away. The world was young around her ; and she belonged to the the time of youth and of hope ; life, that he had been ready to give up as a useless and aimless thing, was only opening out before her, full of a thousand beauties, and wonders, and possibilities. If only he could have taken her hand, and looked into her eyes, and claimed that smile of welcome, he would have been nearer to her. Surely, in one thing at least they were in sympathy. There was a bond between them. If the past had divided them, the future would bring them more together. Did not the Pilgrims go by in bands, until death struck down its vic- tims here and there ? Natalie knew nothing of all this vague longing, and doubt, and pain in the breast of one who was so near her. She was in a gay mood. The morning was beautiful ; the soft wind after the rain brought whiffs of scent from the distant rose- red hawthorn. Though she was here under shadow of the trees, the sun beyond shone on the fresh and moist grass ; and at the end of the glades there were glimpses of brilliant color in the foliage the glow of the laburnum, the lilac blaze of the rhododendron bushes. And how still the place was ! Far off there was a dull roar of -carriages in Piccadilly; but here there was nothing but the bleating of the sheep, the chirp of the young birds, the stir of the wind among the elms. Some- time's he could now catch the sound of her voice. She was in a gay humor. When she got to the Serpentine the north bank was her favorite promenade ; she could see on the other side, just below the line of leaves, the people passing and repassing on horseback ; but she was not of them she found a number of urchins wading. They had no boat ; but they had the bung of a barrel, which served, and that they were pushing through the water with twigs and sticks; their shapeless boots they had left on the bank. Now, as it seemed to Brand, who was watching from a dis- tance, she planned a scheme. Anneli was seen to go ahead of the boys, and speak to them. Their attention being thus distracted, the young mistress stepped rapidly down to the tattered boots, and dropped something in each. Then she withdrew, and was rejoined by her maid ; they walked away without waiting to see the result of their machinations. But 9 2 George Brand, following by-and-by, heard one of the urchins call out with wonder that he had found a penny in his shoe ; and this extraordinary piece of news brought back his com- rades, who rather mechanically began to examine their foot- gear too. And then the amazement ! and the looks around ! and the examination of the pence, lest that treasure should vanish away ! Brand went up to them. " Look hear you young stupids ; don't you see that tall lady away along there by the boat-house why don't you go and thank her ? " But they were either too shy or too incredulous ; so he left them. He did not forget the incident. Perhaps it was that the heavens had grown dark in the southwest, threatening a shower ; but, at all events, Natalie soon returned and set out on her homeward way, giving this unknown spy some trouble to escape observation. But when she had passed, he again followed, now with even greater unrest and pain at his heart. For would not she soon disappear, and the outer world grow empty, and the dull hours have to be faced ? He had come to London with such hope and glad- ness ; now the very sunlight was to be taken out of his life by the shutting of a door in Curzon Street. Fate, however, was kinder to him than he had dared to hope. As Natalie was returning home, he ventured to draw a little nearer to her, but still with the greatest caution, for he would have been overcome with shame if she had detected him dogging her footsteps in this aimless, if innocent manner. And now that she had got close to her own door, he had drawn nearer still on the other side of the street ; he so longed to catch one more glimpse of the dark eyes smiling, and the mobile, proud mouth. But just as the door was be- ing opened from within, a man who had evidently been watch- ing his chance thrust himself before the two women, barring their way, and proceeded to address Natalie in a vehement, gesticulating fashion, with much clinching of his fists and throwing out of his arms. Anneli had shrunk back a step, for the man was uncouth and unkempt ; but the young mis- tress stood erect and firm, confronting the beggar, or madman, or whoever he was, without the slightest sign of fear. This was enough for George Brand. He was not thrusting himself unfairly on her seclusion if he interposed to protect her from menace. Instantly he crossed the road. " Who are you ? What do you want ? " This was what he said ; but what he did was to drive the man back a couple of yards. SOUTHWARD. 93 A hand was laid on his arm quickly. " He is in trouble," Natalie said, calmly. " He wants to see papa ; he has come a long way ; he does not understand that papa is in America. If you could only convince him But you do not talk Russian." " I can talk English," said Brand, regarding the maniac- looking person before him with angry brows. " Will you go indoors, Miss Lind, and leave him to me. I will talk an English to him that he will understand." " Is that the way you answer an appeal for help ? " said she, with gentle reproof. " The man is in trouble. If I per- suade him to go with you, will you take him to papa's cham- bers ? Either Beratinsky.or Heinrich Reitzei will be there." " Reitzei is there." " He will hear what this man has to say. Will you be so kind ? " " I will do anything to rid you of this fellow, who looks more like a madman than a beggar." She stepped forward and spoke to the man again her voice sounded gentle and persuasive to Brand, in this tongue which he could not understand. When she had finished, the uncouth person in the tattered garments dropped om both knees on the pavement, and took her hand in his, and kissed it in passionate gratitude. Then he rose, and stood with his cap in his hand. " He will go with you. I am so sorry to trouble you, Mr. Brand ; and I have not even said, ' How do you do ? ' ' To hear this beautiful voice after so long a silence to find those calm, dark, friendly eyes regarding him bewildered him, or gave him, courage, he knew not which. He said to her, with a quick flush on his forehead, " May I come back to tell you how I succeed ? " She only hesitated for a second. " If you have time. If you care to take the trouble." He carried away with him the look of her face that filled his heart with sunlight. In the hansom, into which he bun- dled his unkempt companion, if only he had known enough Russian, he would have expressed gratitude to him. Beggar or maniac, or whatever he was, had he not been the means of procuring for George Brand that long-coveted, long- dreamed-of smile of welcome ? 94 SUNRISE. CHAPTER XIV. A RUSSIAN EPISODE. " Is that the way you answer an appeal for help ? " With that gentle protest still lingering in his ear, he was not in- clined to be hard on this unfortunate wretch who was in the cab with him ; and yet at the same time he was resolved to prevent any repetition of the scene he had just witnessed. At the last he discovered that the man had picked up in his wanderings a little German. His own German was not first- rate ; it was fluent, forcible, and accurate enough, so far as hotels and railway-stations were concerned ; elsewhere it had a tendency to halt, blunder, and double back on itself. But, at all events, he managed to convey to his companion the distinct intimation that any further troubling of that young lady would only procure for him ? broken head. The dull, stupid, savage-looking face betrayed no sign of intelligence. He repeated the warning again and again ; and at last, at the phrase "that young lady," the dazed small eyes lit up somewhat, and the man clasped his hands. " Ein Engel ! " he said, apparently to himself. " Ein En- gel ein Engel ! Ach Gott wie schon wie gemuthlich ! " " Yes, yes, yes," Brand said, " that is all very well ; but one is not permitted to annoy angels to trouble them in the street. Do you understand that that means punishment one must be punished if one returns to the house of that young lady ? Do you understand ? " The man regarded him with the small, deep-set eyes again sunk into apathy. " Ihr Diener, Herr," said he, submissively. " You understand you are not to go back to the house of the young lady ? " " Ihr Diener, Herr." There was nothing to be got out oi him, or into him ; so Brand waited until he should get help of Heidrich Reitzei, Lind's locum tenens. Reitzei was in the chambers at Lind's table, in fact. He was a man of about twenty-eight or thirty, slim and dark, with a perfectly pallid face, a small black mustache carefully waxed, and an affectedly courteous smile. He wore a pince- nez ; was fond of slang, to show his familiarity with English ; and aimed at an English manner, too. He seemed bored. A RUSSIAN EPISODE. 95 He regarded this man whom Brand introduced to him with- out surprise, with indifference. " Hear what this fellow has to say," Brand said, " will you ? and give him distinctly to understand that if he tries again to see Miss Lind, I will break his head for him. What idiot could have given him Lind's private address ? " The man was standing near the door, stolid apparently, but with his small eyes keenly watching. Reitzei said a word or two to him. Instantly he went he almost sprung forward; and this movement was so unexpected that the equanimity of the pallid young man received a visible shock, and he hastily drew out a drawer a few inches. Brand caught sight of the handle of a revolver. But the man was only eager to tell his story, and presently Reitzei had resumed his air of indifferenqe. As he pro- ceeded to translate for Brand's benefit, in interjectional phrases, what this man with the trembling hands and the burning eyes was saying, it was strange to mark the contrast between the two men. " His name Kirski," the younger man was saying, as he eyed, with a cool and critical air, the wild look in the other's face. " A carver in wood, but cannot work now, for his hands tremble, through hunger and fatigue through drink, I should say native of a small village in Kiev had his share of the Communal land but got permission from the Com- mune to spend part of the year in Kiev itself sent back all his taxes duly, and money too, because oh, this is it? daughter of village Elder young, beautiful, of course left an orphan, with three brothers and their share of the land too much for them. Ah, this is the story, then, my friend ? Married, too young, beautiful, good yes, yes, we know all that There were tears running down the face of the other man. But these he shook away ; and a wilder light than ever came into his eyes. " He goes to Kiev as usual, foolish fellow ; now I see what all the row is about. When he returns, three months after, he goes to his house. Empty. The neighbors will not speak. At last one says something about Pavel Michaieloff, the great proprietor, whose house and farm are some versts away my good fellow, you have got the palsy, or is it drink ?--he goes and seeks out the house of Pavel yes, yes, the story is not new Pavel is at the open window, smoking he goes up to the window there is a woman inside when she sees him 96 SUNRISE. she utters a loud scream, and rushes for protection to the man Michaieloff then all the fat is in the fire naturally " The Russian choked and gasped ; drops of perspiration stood on his forehead ; he looked wildly around. " Water ? " said Reitzei. " Poor devil, you need some water to cool down your excitement. You are making as much fuss as if that kind of thing had never happened in the world before." But he rose and got him some water, which the man drained eagerly ; then he continued his story with the same fierce and angry vehemence. " Well, yes, he had something to complain of, certainly," Reitzei said, translating all that incoherent passion into cool little phrases. " Not a fair fight. Pavel summons his men from the court-yard men with whips dogs, too he is lashed and driven along the roads, and the dogs tear at him ! Oh yes, my good friend, you have been badly used ; but you have come a long way to tell your story. I must ask him how the mischief he got here at all." But here Reitzei paused and stared. Something the man said in an eager, low voice, with his sunken small eyes all afire startled him out of his critical air. " Oh, that is it, is it ? " he said, eyeing him. " He will do any thing for us he will commit a murder ten murders if only we give him money, a knife, and help to kill the man Michaieloff. Well, he is a lively sort of person to let loose on society." " The man is clearly mad," Brand said. " The man was madder who sent him to us," Reitzei an- swered. " I should not like to be in his shoes if Lind hears that this maniac was allowed to see his daughter." The wretched creature standing there glanced eagerly from one to the other, with the eyes of a wild animal, seeking to gather something from their looks ; then he went forward to the table, and stooped down and spoke to Reitzei still further, in the same low, fierce voice, his whole frame meanwhile shak- ing with his excitement. Reitzei said something to him in reply, and motioned him back. He retired a step or two, and then kept watching the faces of the two men. " What are you going to do with him ? " Brand said. Reitzei shrugged his shoulders. " I know what I should like to do with him if I dared," he said, with a graceful smile. " There is a friend of mine not a hundred miles away from that very Kiev who wants a little admonition. Her name is Petrovna, she is the jail- A RUSSIAN EPISODE. 97 matron of a female penitentiary; she is just a little to fierce at times. Murderers, thieves, prostitutes : oh yes, she can be civil enough to them ; but let a political prisoner come near her one of her own sex, mind- and she becomes a devil, a tigress, a vampire. Ah, Madame Petrovna and I may have a little reckoning some day. I have asked Lind again and again to petition for a decree against her ; but no, he will not move ; he is becoming Anglicized, effeminate." " A decree ? " Brand said. The other smiled, with an affectation of calm superiority. " You will learn by-and-by. Meanwhile, if I dared, what I should like to do would be to give our friend here plenty of money, and not one but two knives, saying to him, ' My good friend, here is one knife for Michaieloff, if you like ; but first of all here is this knife for that angel in disguise, Madame Petrovna, of the Female Penitentiary in Novolevsk. Strike sure and hard ! ' ' For one instant his affectation forsook him, and there was a gleam in his eyes. This was but a momentary relapse from his professed indifference. " Well, Mr. Brand, I suppose I must take over this mad- man from you. You may tell Miss Lind she need not be frightened." " I should not think Miss Lind was in the habit of being frightened," said Brand, coldly. " Ah, no ; doubtless not. Well, I shall see that this fellow does not trouble her again. What fine tidings we had of your work in the North! You have been a power; you have moved mountains." " I have moved John Molyneux," said Brand, with a laugh, " and in these days that is a more difficult business." "Fine news from Spain, too," said Reitzei, glancing at some letters. " From Valladolid, Barcelona, Ferrol, Sara- gossa all the same story : coalition, coalition. Salmero will be in London next week." " But you have not told me what you are going to do with this man yet ; you must stow the combustible piece of goods somewhere. Poor devil, his sufferings have made a pitiable object of him." " My dear friend," said Reitzei, " You don't suppose that a Russian peasant would feel so deeply a beating with whips, or the worrying of dogs, or even the loss of his wife ? Of course, all together, it was something of a hard grind. He must have been constitutionally insane, and that woke the whole thing up." 7 98 SUNRISE. " Then he should be confined. He is a lunatic at large." " I don't think he would harm anybody," Reitzei said, re- garding the man as if he were a strange animal. " I would not shut up a dog in a lunatic asylum ; I would rather put a bullet through his head. And this fellow if we could hum- bug him a little, and get him to his work again I know a man in Wardour Street who would do that for me and see what effect the amassing of a little English money might have on him. Better a miser than a wild beast. And he seems a submissive sort of creature. Leave him to me, Mr. Brand." Brand began to think a little better of Reitzei, whom hith- erto he had rather disliked. He handed him five pounds, to get some clothes and tools for the man, who, when he was told of this generosity, turned to Brand and said something to him in Russian which set Reitzei laughing. " What is it he says ? " " He said, ' Little Father, you are worthy to become the husband of the angel : may the day come soon ! ' I suppose the angel is Miss Lind ; she must have been very kind to the man." " She only spoke to him ; but her voice can be kind," said Brand, rather absently, and then he left. Away went the hansom back to Curzon Street. He said to himself that it was not for nothing that this unfortunate wretch Kirski had wandered all the way from the Dnieper to the Thames. He would look after this man. He would do something for him. Five pounds only ? And he had been the means of securing this interview, if only for three of four minutes ; after the long period of labor and hope and waiting he might have gone without a word at all but for this over- troubled poor devil. And now now he might even see her alone for a couple of minutes in the hushed little drawing-room ; and she might say if she had heard about what had been done in the North, and about his eagerness to return to the work. One look of thanks ; that was enough. Sometimes, by himself up there in the solitary inns, the old fit had .come over him ; and he had laughed at himself, and wondered at this new fire of occu- pation and interest that was blazing through his life, and asked himself, as of old, to what end to what end ? But when he heard Natalie Lind's voice, there was a quick good-bye to all questioning. One look at the calm, earnest eyes, and he drank deep of faith, courage, devotion. And surely this story of the man Kirski what he could tell her of it would be suffi- cient to fill up five minutes, eight minutes, ten minute*, while A RUSSIAN EPISODE. 99 all the time he should be able to dwell on her eyes, whether they were downcast, or turned to his with their frank, soft glance. He should be in the perfume of the small drawing- room. He would see the Roman necklace Mazzini had given her gleam on her bosom as she breathed. He did not know what Natalie Lind had been about dur- ing his absence. "Anneli, Anneli hither, child!" she called in German. " Run up to Madame Potecki, and ask her to come and spend the afternoon with me. She must come at once, to lunch with me ; I will wait." " Yes, Fraulein. What music, Fraulein ? " " None ; never mind any music. But she must come at once." " Schon, Fraulein," said the little Anneli, about to depart. Her young mistress called her back, and paused, with a little hesitation. " You may tell Elizabeth," said she, with an indifferent air, " that it is possible it is quite possible it is at least pos- sible I may have two friends to lunch with me ; and she must send at once if she wants anything more. And you could bring me back some fresh flowers, Anneli? " " Why not, Fraulein ? " " Go quick, then, Anneli fly like a roe durch Wald und aufderHaide!" And so it came about that when George Brand was ushered into the scented little drawing-room so anxious to make the most of the invaluable minutes he found himself introduced first of all to Madame Potecki, a voluble, energetic little Pol- ish gentlewoman, whose husband had been killed in the War- saw disturbances of '61, and who now supported herself in London by teaching music. She was eager to know all about the man Kirski, and hoped that he was not wholly a maniac, and trusted that Mr. Brand would see that her dear child her adopted daughter, she might say was not terrified again by the madman. "My dear madame," said Brand, " you must not imagine that it was from terror that Miss Lind handed over the man to me it was from kindness. That is more natural to her than terror." " Ah, I know the dear child has the courage of an army," said the little old lady, tapping her adopted daughter on the shoulder with the fan. " But she must take care of herself while her papa is away in America." Natalie rose ; and of course Brand rose also, with a sudden ioo SUNRISE. qualm of disappointment, for he took that as the signal of his dismissal ; and he had scarcely spoken a word to her. "Mr. Brand," said she, with some little trifle of embarrass- ment, " I know I must have deprived you of your luncheon. It was so kind of you to go at once with the poor man. Would it save you time if you are not going anywhere I thought perhaps you might come and have something with maclame and myself. You must be dying of hunger." He did not refuse the invitation. And behold ! when he went down-stairs, the table was already laid for three ; had he been expected, he asked himself ? Those flowers there, too : he knew it was no maid-servant's fingers that had ar- ranged and distributed them so skilfully. How he blessed this little Polish lady, and her volubility, and her extravagant, subtle, honest flattery of her dear adopted daughter ! It gave him liberty to steep himself in the rich consciousness of Natalie's presence ; he could listen in silence for the sound of her voice he could covertly watch the beauty of her shapely hands without being considered pre- occupied or morose. All he had to do was to say, " Yes, ma- dame," or " Indeed, madame," the while he knew that Nata- lie Lind was breathing the same air with him that at any moment the large, lustrous dark eyes might look up and meet his. And she spoke little, too ; and had scarcely her usual frank self-confidence : perhaps a chance reference of Madame Potecki to the fact that her adopted daughter had been brought up without a mother had somewhat saddened her. The room was shaded in a measure, for the French silk blinds were down ; but there was a soft golden glow prevail- ing all the same. For many a day George Brand remembered that little luncheon-party ; the dull, bronze glow of the room ; the flowers ; the soft, downcast eyes opposite him ; the bright, pleasant garrulity of the little Polish lady ; and always ah, the delight of it! that strange, trembling, sweet conscious- ness that Natalie Lind was listening as he listened that almost he could have heard the beating of her heart. And a hundred and a hundred times he swore that, whoever throughout the laboring and suffering world might regret that day, the man Kirski should not. NEW FRIENDS. IOI CHAPTER XV. NEW FRIENDS. IT was a Sunday aftenoon in Hyde Park, in this pleasantly opening summer ; and there was a fair show of " the quality " come out for their accustomed promenade, despite the few thun- der-showers that had swept across from the South. These, in fact, had but served to lay the dust, and to bring out the scent of the hawthorns and lilacs, so that the air was sweet with per- fume ; while the massive clouds, banking up in the North, formed a purple background to show up the young green foli- age of the trees, all wet with rain, 'and shimmering tremulously in the sunlight. George Brand and his friend Evelyn sat in the back row of chairs, watching the people pass and repass. It was a som- bre procession, but that here and there appeared a young Eng- lish girl in her pale spring costume paler than the fresh glow of youth and health on her face, and that here and there the sunlight, wandering down through the branches, touched a scarlet sunshade just then coming into fashion until that shone like a beautiful spacious flower among the mass of green. When they had been silently watching the people for some little time, Brand said, almost to himself, "How very unlike those women she is ! " "Who? Oh, Natalie Lind," said the other, who had been speaking of her some minutes before. " Well, that is natural and I don't say it to their disadvantage. I believe most girls are well-intended enough ; but, of course, they grow up in a particular social atmosphere, and it depends on that what they become. If it is rather fast, the girl sees nothing objec- tionable in being fast too. If it is religious, the god of her idolatry is a bishop. If it is sporting, she thinks mostly about horses. Natalie is exceptional, because she has been brought up in exceptional circumstances. For one thing, she has been a good deal alone ; and she has formed all sorts of beautiful idealisms and aspirations " The conversation dropped here ; for at the moment Lord Evelyn espied two of his sisters coming along in the slow pro- cession. " Here come two of the girls," he said to his friend. " How precious demure they look ! " 102 SUNRISE. Brand at once rose, and went out from the shadow of the trees, to pay his respects to the two young ladies. " How do you do, Miss D'Agincourt ? How do you do, Miss Frances ? " Certainly no one would have suspected these two very grace- ful and pleasant-looking girls of being madcap creatures at home. The elder was a tall and slightly-built blonde, with large gray eyes set wide apart ; the younger a gentle little thing, with brownish eyes, freckles, and a pretty mouth. " Mamma ? " said the eldest daughter, in answer to his in- quires. " Oh, she is behind, bringing up the rear, as it were. We have to go in detachment, or else the police would come and read the riot act against us. Francie and I are the van- guard ; and she feels such a good little girl, inarching along two and two, just as if she were back at Brighton." The clear gray eyes quite demure glanced in toward the shadows of the trees. " I see you have got Evelyn there, Mr. Brand. Who is the extraordinary person he is always talking about now the Maid of Saragossa, or Joan of Arc, or something like that ? Do you know her ? " " I suppose you mean Miss Lind." " I know he has persuaded mamma to go and call on her, and get her to dine with us, if she will come. Now, I call that kind." " If she accepts, you mean ? " " No, I mean nothing of the sort. Good-bye. If we stay another minute, we shall have the middle detachments over- lapping the vanguard. En avant, Francie ! Vorwarts ! " She bowed to him, and passed on in her grave and stately manner : more calmly observant, demurer eyes were not hi the Park. He ran the gauntlet of the whole family, and at last encoun- tered the mamma, who brought up the rear with the youngest of her daughters. Lady Evelyn was a tall, somewhat good- looking, elderly lady, who wore her silver-white hair in old-fash- ioned curls. She was an amiable but strictly matter-of-fact per- son, who beheld her daughters' mad humors with surprise as well as alanr. What were they forever laughing at ? Be- sides, it was indecorous. She had not conducted herself in that manner when she lived in her father's home. Lady Evelyn, who was vaguely aware that Brand knew the Linds, repeated her daughter's information about the proposed visit, and said that if Miss Lind would come and spend the evening with them, she hoped Mr. Brand would come too. NE W FRIENDS. 1 03 " These girls do tease dreadfully, I know," said their mamma; " but perhaps they will behave a little better before a stran- ger." Mr. Brand replied that he hoped Miss Lind would accept the invitation for during her father's absence she must be somewhat dull but that even without the protection of her presence he was not afraid to face those formidable young ladies. Whereupon Miss Geraldine who was generally called the baby, though she was turned thirteen -glanced at him with a look which said, " Won't you catch it for that ! " and the mamma then bade him good-bye, saying that Rbsalys would write to him as soon as the evening was arranged . He had not long to wait for that expected note. The very next night he received it. Miss Lind was coming on Thurs- day ; would that suit him ? A quarter to eight. He was there punctual to the moment. The presence of the whole rabble of girls in the drawing-room told him that this was to be a quite private and domestic dinner-party ; on other occasions only two or three of the phalanx as Miss D'Agincourt described herself and her sisters were chosen to appear. And, on this especial occasion, there was a fine hubbub of questions and raillery going on which Brand vainly endeavored to meet all at once when he was suddenly res- cued. The door was opened, and Miss Lind was announced. The clamor ceased. She was dressed in black, with a red camellia in her bosom, and another in the magnificent black hair. Brand thought he had never seen her look so beautiful, and at once so gra- ciously proud and gentle. Lady Evelyn went forward to meet her, and greeted her very kindly indeed. She was intro- duced to one or two of the girls. She shook hands with Mr. Brand, and gave him a pleasant smile of greeting. Lady Eve- lyn had to apologize for her son's absence ; he had only gone to wnte a note. The tall, beautiful Hungarian girl seemed not in the least embarrassed by all these curious eyes, that occasion- ally and covertly regarded her while pretending not to do so. Two of the young ladies there were older than she was, yet she seemed more of a woman than any of them. Her self- possession was perfect. She sat down by Lady Evelyn, and submitted to be questioned. The girls afterward told their brother they believed she was an actress, because of the clever manner in which she managed her train. But at this moment Lord Evelyn made his appearance in great excitement, and with profuse apologies. 104 SUNRISE. " But the fact is," said he, producing an evening paper, " the fact is just listen to this, Natalie : it is the report of a police case." At his thus addressing her by her Christian name the mother started somewhat, and the demure eyes of the girls were turned to the floor, lest they should meet any conscious glance. " Here is a fellow brought before the Hammersmith magis- trate for indulging in a new form of amusement. Oh, very pretty ! very nice ! He had only got hold of a small dog and he was taking it by the two forelegs, and trying how far he could heave it. Very well ; he is brought before the mag- istrates. He had only heaved the dog two or three times ; nothing at all, you know. You think he will get off with a forty shillings fine, or something like that. Not altogether ! Two months' hard labor two solid months' hard labor ; and if I had my will of the brute," he continued, savagely, " I would give ten years' hard labor, and bury him alive when he came out. However, two months' hard labor is something. I glory in that magistrate ; I have just been up-stairs writing a note asking him to dine with me. I believe I was introduced to him once." " Evelyn quite goes beside himself," his mother said to her guest, with half an air of apology, " when he reads about cruelty like that." " Surely it is better than being callous," said Natalie, speaking very gently. They went in to dinner ; and the young ladies were very well behaved indeed. They did not at all resent the fashion in which the whole attention of the dinner-table was given to the stranger. " And so you like living in England ? " said Lady Evelyn to her. " I cannot breathe elsewhere," was the simple answer. " Why," said the matter-of-fact, silver-haired lady, " if this .country is notorious for anything, it is for its foggy atmos- phere ! " " I think it is famous for something more than that," said the girl, with just a touch of color in the beautiful face ; for she was not accustomed to speak before so many people. " Is it not more famous for its freedom ? It is that that makes the air so sweet to breathe." " Well, at all events, you don't find it very picturesque as compared with other countries. Evelyn tells me you have travelled a great deal." NE W FRIENDS. 1 05 " Perhaps I am not very fond of picturesqueness," Natalie said, modestly. " When I am travelling through a country I would rather see plenty of small farms, thriving and prosperous, than splendid ruins that tell only of oppression and extrava- gance, and the fierceness of war." No one spoke ; so she made bold to continue but she ad- dressed Lady Evelyn only. " No doubt it is very picturesque, as you go up the Rhine, or across the See Kreis, or through the Lombard plains, to see every height crowned with its castle. Yes, one cannot help admiring. They are like beautiful flowers that have blos- somed up from the valleys and the plains below. But who tilled the land, that these should grow there on every height ? Are you not forced to think of the toiling wretches who la- bored and labored to carry stone by stone up the crest of the hill ? They did not get much enjoyment out of the grandeur and picturesqueness of the castles." " But they gave that labor for their own protection," Lady Evelyn said, with a smile. " The great lords and barons were their protectors." " The great lords and barons said so, at least," said the girl, without any smile at all, " and I suppose the peasantry believed them ; and were quite willing to leave their vineyards and go and shed their blood whenever the great lords and barons quarrelled among themselves." " Well said ! well said ! " Brand exclaimed, quickly ; though, indeed, this calm, gentle-eyed, self-possessed girl was in no need of any champion. " I am afraid you are a great Radical, Miss Lind," said Lady Evelyn. " Perhaps it is your English air, Lady Evelyn," said the girl, with a smile. Lord Evelyn's mother, notwithstanding her impassive, unim- aginative nature, soon began to betray a decided interest in this new guest, and even something more. She was attracted, to begin with, by the singular beauty of the young Hungarian lady, which was foreign-looking, unusual, picturesque. She was struck by her perfect self-possession, and by the ease and and grace of her manner, which was rather that of a mature woman than of a girl of nineteen. But most of all she was in- terested in her odd talk and opinions, which she expressed with such absolute simplicity and frankness. Was it, Lady Evelyn asked herself, that the girl had been brought up so much in the society of men that she had neither mother nor sisters that she spoke of politics and such matters as if it 106 the most natural thing in the world for women, of whatever age, to consider them as of first importance ? But one chance remark that Natalie made, on the impulse of the moment, did for the briefest possible time break down that charming self-confidence of hers, and show her to the wonderment of the English girls the prey of an alarmed embarrassment. George Brand had been talking of patriot- ism, and of the scorn that must naturally be felt for the man who would say of his country, " Well, it will last my time. Let me enjoy myself when I can. What do I care about the future of other people ? " And then he went on to talk of the larger patriotism that concerned itself not merely with one's fellow-countrymen but with one's fellow-mortals ; and how the stimulus and enthusiasm of that wider .patriotism should be proportionately stronger ; and how it might seek to break down artificial barriers of political systems and religious creeds. Patriotism was a beautiful flame a star; but here was a sun. Ordinary, to tell the truth, Brand was but an indiffer- ent speaker he had all an Englishman's self-consciousness ; but now he spoke for Natalie alone, and minded the others but little. Presently Lady Evelyn said, with a smile, " You, too, Miss Lind, are a reformer, are you not ? Eve- lyn is very mysterious, and I can't quite make out what he means ; but at all events it is very kind of you to spare us an evening when you must be so deeply engaged." " I ? " said Natalie. " Oh no, it is very little that I can do. The work is too difficult and arduous for women, perhaps. But there is one thing that women can do they can love and honor those who are working for them." It was spoken impulsively probably the girl was thinking only of her father. But at the moment she happened to look up, and there were Rosalys D'Agincourt's calmly observant eyes fixed on her. Then some vague echo of what she had said rushed in upon her ; she was bewildered by the possible interpretation others might put on the words ; and the quick, sensitive blood mounted to her forehead. But fortunately Lady Evelyn, who had missed the whole thing, happened at this very instant to begin talking of orchids, and Natalie struck in with great relief. So that little episode went by. And, as dinner went on, Brand became more and more con- vinced that this family was the most delightful family in Eng- land. Just so much restraint had left'their manner as to render those madcap girls exceedingly frank and good-natured in the courtesy they showed to their guest, and to admit her as a confidante into their ways of bantering each other. And NEW FRIENDS. 107 one would herself come round to shift the fire-screen behind Miss Lind to precisely the proper place ; and another said that Miss Lind drank water because Evelyn had been so monstrously stupid as not to have any Hungarian wine for her ; and another asked if she might call on Miss Lind the fol- lowing afternoon, to take her to some place where some mar- vellous Japanese curiosities were on view. Then, when they left for the drawing-room, the eldest Miss D'Agincourt put her arm within the arm of their guest, and said, "Now, dear Miss Lind, please understand that, if there was any stranger here at all, we should not dream of asking you to sing. Ermentrude and I take all that on our shoul- ders ; we squawk for the whole of the family. But Evelyn has told us so much about your singing " " Oh, I will sing for you if you wish it," said Natalie, with- out hesitation. Some little time thereafter Brand was walking up and down the room below, slowly and thoughtfully : he was not much of a wine-drinker. " Evelyn," he said, suddenly, " I shall soon be able to tell you whether I owe you a life-long gratitude. I owe you much already. Through you I have got some work to do in the world ; I am busy, and content. But there is a greater prize." " I think I can guess what you mean." his companion said, calmly. " You do ? " said the other, with a quick look. " And you do not think I am mad ? to go and ask her to be my wife before she has given me a single word of hope ? " " She has spoken to others about you : I know what she thinks of you," said Lord Evelyn. Then the fine, pale face was slightly flushed. "To tell you the truth, Brand, I thought of this before you ever saw her." " Thought of what ? " said the other, with a stare of surprise. " That you would be the right sort of man to make a hus- band for her : she might be left alone in the world at any mo- ment, without a single relation, and scarcely a friend/' "Women don't marry for these reasons," said the other, somewhat absently. " And yet, if she were to think of it, it would not be as if I were withdrawing her from everything she takes an interest in. We should be together. I am eager to go forward, even by myself ; but with her for a companion think of that!" " I have thought of it," said Lord Evelyn, with something of a sad smile. " Often. And there is no man in England io8 SUNRISE. more heartily wishes you success than I do. Come, let us go up to the drawing-room." They went out into the hall. Some one was playing a noisy piece up-stairs ; it was safe to speak. And then he said, " Shall I tell you something, Brand ? something that will keep you awake all this night, and not with the saddest of thinking ? If I am not mistaken, I fancy you have already 'stole bonny Glenlyon away.' " CHAPTER XVI. A LETTER. BLACK night lay over the city, and silence ; the river flowed unseen through the darkness ; but a thousand golden points of fire mapped out the lines of the Embankment and the long curves of the distant bridges. The infrequent sounds that could be heard were strangely distinct, even when they were faint and remote. There was a slight rustling of wind in the trees below the window. But the night and the silence brought him neither repose nor counsel. A multitude of bewildering, audacious hopes and distracting fears strove for mastery in his mind, upsetting altogether the calm and cool judgment on which he prided himself. His was not a nature to harbor illusions ; he had a hard way of looking at things ; and yet and yet might not this chance speech of Lord Evelyn have been something more than a bit of good-humored raillery 7 ? Lord Evelyn was Natalie's intimate friend ; he knew all her surroundings ; he was a quick observer ; he was likely to know if this thing was possible. But, on the other hand, how was it possible that so beautiful a creature, in the perfect flower of her youth, should be without a lover ? He forced himself to remember that she and her father seemed to see no society at all. Perhaps she was too useful to him, and he would not have her entangle herself with many friends. Perhaps they had led too no- madic a life. But even in hotels abroad, how could she have avoided the admiration she was sure to evoke ? And in Flor- ence, mayhap, or Mentone, or Madrid ; and here he began to conjure up a host of possible rivals, all foreigners, of course, and all equally detestable, and to draw pictures for him of tables d'hote, with always the one beautiful figure there, un- conscious, gentle, silent, but drawing to her all men's eyes. A LETTER. 109 There was but the one way of putting an end to this madden- ing uncertainty. He dared not claim an interview with her ; she might be afraid of implying too much by granting it; various considerations might dictate a refusal. But he could write ; and, in point of fact, writing-materials were on the table. Again and again he had sat down and taken the pen in his hand, only to get- up as often and go and stare out into the yellow glare of the night. For an instant his shadow would fall on the foliage of the trees below, and then pass away again like a ghost. At two-and-twenty love is reckless, and glib of speech ; it takes little heed of the future ; the light straw-flame, for however short a period, leaps up merrily enough. But at two- and-thirty it is more alive to consequences ; it is not the pres- ent moment, but the duration of life, that it regards ; it seeks to proceed with a sure foot. And at this crisis, in the midst of all this irresolution, that was unspeakably vexatious to a man of his firm nature, Brand demanded of himself his utmost power of self-control. He would not imperil the happiness of his life by a hasty, importunate appeal. When at length he sat down, determined not to rise until he had sent her this message, he forced himself to write at the beginning, at least in a roundabout and indifferent fashion, so that she should not be alarmed. He began by excusing his writing to her, saying he had scarcely ever had a chance of talking to her, and that he wished to tell her something of what had hap- pened to him since the memorable evening on which he had first met her at her father's house. And he went on to speak to her of a friend of his, who used to amuse himself with the notion that he would like to enter himself at a public school and go through his school life all over again. There he had spent the happiest of his clays; why should he not repeat them ? If only the boys would agree to treat him as one of themselves, why should he not be hail-fellow-well-met with them, and once more enjoy the fun of uproarious pillow-battles and have smuggled tarts and lemonade at night, and tame rabbits where no rabbits should be, and a profound hero- worship for the captain of the school Eleven, and excursions out of bounds, when his excess of pocket-money would enable him to stand treat all round ? " Why not ? " this friend of his used to say. " Was it so very impossible for one to get back the cares and interests, the ambitions, the amusements, the high spirits of one's boyhood ? " And if he now were to tell her that a far greater miracle had happened to himself? That at an age when he had fancied he had done and seen no SC/AW/S&. most things worth doing and seeing j when the past seemed to contain everything worth having, and there was nothing left but to try how the tedious hours could be got over; when a listless ennui was eating his very heart out that he should be presented, as it were, with a new lease of life, with stirring hopes and interests, with a new and beautiful faith, with a work that was a joy in itself, whether any reward was to be or no ? And surely he could not fail to express to Lord Eve- lyn and to herself his gratitude for this strange thing. These are but the harsh outlines of what, so far, he wrote ; but there was a feeling in it a touch of gladness and of pathos here and there that had never before been in any of his writing, and of which he was himself unconscious. But at this point he paused, and his breathing grew quick. It was so difficult to write in these measured terms. When he resumed, he wrote more rapidly. What wonder, he made bold to ask her, if amidst all this bewildering change some still stranger dream of what might be possible in the future should have taken possession of him ? She and he were leagued in sympathy as regarded the chief object of their lives ; it was her voice that had inspired him ; might he not hope that they should go forward together, in close friendship at least, if there could be nothing more ? And as to that something more, was there no hope? He could give himself no grounds for any such hope ; and yet so much had happened to him, and mostly through her, that he could set no limit to the possibilities of happiness that lay in her generous hands. When he saw her among others, he despaired ; when he thought of her alone, and of the gentle- ness of her heart, he dared to hope. And if this declaration of his was distressing to her, how easy it was for her to dis- miss and forget it. If he had dared too much, he had him- self to blame. In any case, she need not fear that her re- fusal should have the effect of dissociating them in those wider interests and sympathies to which he had pledged himself. He was not one to draw- back. And if he had .ilarmed or offended her, he appealed to her charity to that great kindness which she seemed eager to extend to all living creatures. How could such a vision of possible happiness have arisen in his mind without his making one effort, how- ever desperate, to realize it ? At the worst, she would for- give. This was, in brief, the substance of what he wrote ; but when, after many an anxious re-reading, he put the letter in an envelope, he was miserably conscious how little it conveyed of A LETTER. ill all the hope and desire that had hold of his heart. But then, he argued with himself, if she inclined her ear so far, surely he would have other and better opportunities of pleading with her ; whereas, if he had been dreaming of impossibilities, then he and she would meet the more easily in the future that he had not given too vehement an expression to all the love and admiration he felt for her. He could not sacrifice her friend- ship also her society the chances of listening from time to time to the musical, low, soft voice. Carrying this fateful letter in his hand, he went down- stairs and out into the cool night air. And now he was haunted by a hundred fears. Again and again he was on the point of turning back to add something, to alter something, to find some phrase that would appeal more closely to her heart. And then all of a sudden he convinced himself that he should not have written at all. Why not have gone to see her, at any risk, to plead with herself ? But then he would have had to write to beg for a tete-a-tete interview ; and would not that be more distinctly alarming than this roundabout epistle, which was meant to convey so much indirectly ? Finally, he arrived at the pillar letter-box ; and this indisputable fact brought an end to his cogitations. If he had gone walking onward he would have wasted the night in fruitless counsel. He would -have repeated again and again the sentences he had used ; striven to picture her as she read ; wondered if he ought not still ^to go back and strengthen his prayer. But now it was to b'e yes or no. Well, he posted the letter; and then he breathed more freely. The die was cast, for good or ill. And, indeed, no sooner was the thing done than his spirits rose considerably, and he walked on with a lighter heart. This solitary London, all lamp-lit and silent, was a beautiful city. " Schlaf sdigund suss" the soft stirring of the night- wind seemed to say : let her not dread the message the morn- ing would bring ! He thought of the other cities she must have visited ; and if ah, the dream of it ! if he and she were to go away together to behold the glories of the moon- light on the lagoon, and the wonders of the sunrise among the hills ! He had been in Rome, he remembered, a wonderful coronet of rubies : would not that do for the beautiful black masses of hair ? Or pearls ? She did not appear to have much jewellery. Or rather seeing that such things are pos- sible between husband and wife would she not accept the value, and far more than the value, of any jewellery she could desire, to be given away in acts of kindness ? That would be more like Natalie. H2 SUNRISE. He walked on, his heart full of an audacious joy ; for now this was the picture before him ; a Buckinghamshire hill ; a red and white house among the beeches ; and a spacious lawn looking out on the far and wooded plain, with its villages, and spires, and tiny curls of smoke. And this foreign young lady become an English house-mistress ; proud of her necta- rines and pineapples ; proud of her Hungarian horses ; proud of the quiet and comfort of the home she can offer to her friends, when they come for a space to rest from their labors " Schlaf ' selig und suss ! " the night-wind seemed to say : " The white morning is bringing with it a message ! " To him the morning brought an end to all those golden dreams of the night. There action had set in. His old mis- givings returned with redoubled force. For one thing, there was a letter from Reitzei, saying that the man Kirski had at length consented to begin to work at his trade, and that Miss Lincl need fear no further annoyance ; and somehow he did not like to see her name written in this foreign way of writing. She belonged to these foreigners ; her cares and interests were not those of one who would feel at home in that Buck- hamshire home ; she was remote. And, of course, in her manifold wanderings in those hotels in which she had to pass the day, when her father was absent at his secret inter- views how could she avoid making acquaintances ? Even among those numerous friends of her father's there must have been some one here or there to accompany her in her drives in the Prater, in her evenings at La Scala, in her morning walk along the Chiaja. He remembered how seldom he had seen her ; she might have many more friends in Lon- don than he had dreamed of. Who could see her, and remain blind to her beauty ? Who could know her, and remain in- sensible to the fascination of her enthusiasm, her faith in the right, her courage, her hope, her frank friendship with those who would help ? He was impatient with the veteran W 7 aters this morning ; and Waters was himself fractious, and inclined to resent sar- casm. He had just heard from Buckinghamshire that his substitute had, for some reason or other, intrusted the keys of the wine-cellar to one of the house-maids ; and that that industrious person had seized the opportunity to tilt up all the port-wine she could lay her hands on in order to polish the bottles with a duster. "Well," said his master, " I suppose she collected the cob- webs and sold them to a wine-merchant : they would be in- valuable." A LETTER. 113 Waters said nothing, but resolved to have a word with the young woman when he went down. The morning was fine ; in any case, Brand could not have borne the distress of waiting in all day, on the chance of her reply coming. He had to be moving. He walked up to Lisle Street, and saw Reitzei, on the pretext of talking about Kirski. " Lind will be back in a week," said the pallid-faced smart young man. " He writes with great satisfaction, which al- ways means something in his case. I should not wonder if he and his daughter went to live in the States." " Oh, indeed," said Brand, coldly ; but the words made his heart tremble. " Yes. And if you would only go through the remaining degrees, you might take his place who knows ? " " Who knows, indeed ? " said Brand. " But I don't covet the honor." There was something in his tone which made the other look up. " I mean the responsibility," he said, quickly. " You see," observed Reitzei, leaning back in his chair, " one must admit you are having rather hard lines. Your work is invaluable to us Lind is most proud of it but it is tedious and difficult, eh ? Now if they were to give you something like the Syrian business " "What is that?" " Oh, only one of the many duties the Society has under- taken," said Reitzei, carelessly. " Not that I approve be- cause the people are Christians ; it is because they are numer- ically weak ; and the Mahommedans treat them shamefully. There is no one knows about it ; no one to make a row about it ; and the Government won't let the poor wretches import arms to defend themselves. Very well : very well, messieurs ! But your Government allow the importation of guns for sport. Ha ! and then, if one can find money, and an ingenious Eng- lish firm to make rifle-barrels to fit into the sporting-gun stock can you conceive any greater fun than smuggling these bar- rels into the country ? My dear fellow, it is glorious : we could have five hundred volunteers ! But at the same time I say your work is more valuable to us. No one but an Eng- lishman could do it. Every one knows of your success." Brand thanked Reitzei for his good opinion, and rather absently took up his hat and left. Instinctively he made his way westward. He was sure to see her, at a distance, taking this morning stroll of hers : might he not guess something 8 ii4 S&NRISE. from her face as to what her reply would be ? She could not have written so soon ; she would take time to consider ; even a refusal would, he knew, be gently worded. In any case, he would see her ; and if her answer gave no hope, it would be the last time on which he would follow that graceful figure from afar with his eyes, and wonder to himself what the low and musical voice was saying to Anneli. And as he walked on, he grew more and more downhearted. It was a certainty that, out of all those friends of her father's some one must have dreamed of possessing this beautiful prize for his own. When, after not much waiting, he saw Natalie and Anneli cross into the Park, he had so reasoned himself into despair that he was not surprised at least he tried to convince him- self that he was not surprised to perceive that the former was accompanied by a stranger, the little German maid-serv- ant walking not quite with them, and yet not altogether be- hind them. He could almost have expected this ; and yet his eyes seemed hot, and he had some difficulty in trying to make out who this might be. And at this great distance he could only gather that he was foreign in appearance, and that he wore a peaked cap in place of a hat. He dared not follow them now ; and he was about to turn away when he saw Natalie's new companion motion to her to sit down on one of the seats. He sat down, too ; and* he took her hand, and held it in his. What then ? This man looking on from a distance, with a bitter heart, had no thought against her. Was it not natural for so beau- tiful a girl to have a lover ? But that this fellow this for- eigner should degrade her by treating her as if she were a nursery-maid flirting with one of the soldiers from the bar- racks down there, this filled him with bitterness and hatred. He turned and walked away with a firm step. He had no ill thoughts of her, whatever message she might send him. At the worst, she had been generous to him ; she had filled his life with love and hope ; she had given him a future. If this dream were shattered, at least he could turn elsewhere, and say, " Labor, be thou my good." Meanwhile, of this stranger ? He had indeed taken Nata- lie Lind's hand in his, and Natalie let it remain there without hesitation. " My little daughter," said he to her in Italian, " I could have recognized you by your hands. You have the hands of your mother : no one in the world had more beautiful hands CALABRESSA. 115 than she had. And now I will tell you about her, if you prom- ise not to cry any more." It was Calabressa who spoke. CHAPTER XVII. CALABRESSA. WHEN Calabressa called at the house in Curzon Street he was at once admitted ; Natalie recognizing the name as that of one of her father's old friends. Calabressa had got him- self up very smartly, to produce an impression on the little Natalushka whom he expected to see. His military-looking coat was tightly buttoned ; he had burnished up the gold braid of his cap ; and as he now ascended the stairs he gath- ered the ends of his mustache out of his yellow-white beard ^and curled them round and round his fingers and pulled *them out straight. He had already assumed a pleasant smile. But when he entered the shaded drawing-room, and beheld this figure before him, all the dancing-master's manner in- stantly fled from him. He seemed thunderstruck ; he shrunk back a little ; his cap fell to the floor ; he could not utter a word. " Excuse me excuse me, mademoiselle," he gasped out at length, in his odd French. " Ah, it is like a ghost like other years come back " He stared at her. " I am very pleased to see you, sir," said she to him, gently, in Italian. " Her voice also her voice also ! " he exclaimed, almost to himself, in the same tongue. " Signorina, you will forgive me but when one sees an old friend you are so like ah, so like" "You are speaking of my mother ? " the girl said, with her eyes cast down. " I have been told that I was like her. You knew her, signore ? " Calabressa pulled himself together somewhat. He picked up his cap ; he assumed a more business-like air. " Oh yes, signorina, I knew her," he said, with an apparent carelessness, but he was regarding her all the same. " Yes, I knew her well. We were friends long before she married. What, are you surprised that I am so old ? Do you know u6 SUNRISE. that I can remember you when you were a very little thing at Dunkirk it was and what a valiant young lady you were, and you would go to fight the Russians all by yourself ! And you you do not remember your mother?" "I cannot tell," she said, sadly. "They say it is impossi- ble, and yet I seem to remember one who loved me, and my grief when I asked for her and found she would never come back or else that is only my recollection of what I was told by others. But what of that ? I know where she is now : she is my constant Companion. I know she loved me ; I know she is always regarding me ; I talk to her, so that I am never quite alone ; at night I pray to her, as if she were a saint " She turned aside somewhat ; her eyes were full of tears. Calabressa said quickly, " Ah, signorina, why recall what is so sad ? It is so useless. Allans done f shall I tell you of my surprise when I saw you first? A ghost that is nothing! It is true, your father warned me. He said, 'The little Natalushka is a woman now.' But how could one believe it ? " She had recovered her composure ; she begged him to be seated. "Bien! One forgets. Then my old mother my dear young lady, even I, old as I am, have a mother what does she do but draw a prize in the Austro-Hungarian lottery a huge prize enough to demoralize one for life five thousand florins. More remarkable still, the money is paid. Not so remarkable, my good mother declares she will give half of it to an undutiful son, who has never done very well with money in this world. We come to the denouement quickly. ' What,' said I, * shall I do with my new-found liberty and my new-found money ? To the devil with banks ! I will be off and away to the land of fogs to see my little friend Natalush- ka, and ask her what she thinks of the Russians now.' And the result ? My little daughter, you have given me such a fright that I can feel my hands still trembling." " I am very sorry," said she, with a smile. This gay man- ner of his had driven away her sad memories. It seemed quite natural to her that he should address her as " My little daughter." " But where are the fogs ? It is a paradise that I have reached the air clear and soft, the gardens beautiful. This morning I said to myself, * I will go early. Perhaps the little Natalushka will be going out for a walk ; perhaps we will go together.' No, signorina," said he, with a mock- CALABRESSA. 117 heroic bow, " it was not with the intention of buying you toys. But was I not right? Do I not perceive by your costume that you were about to go out ? " "That is nothing, signore," said she. " It would be very strange if I could not give up my morning walk for an old friend of my father's." " Au contraire, you shall not give up your walk," said he, with great courtesy. " We will go together ; and then you will tell me about your father." She accepted this invitation without the slightest scruple. It did not occur to her as it would naturally have occurred to most English girls that she would rather not go walking in Hyde Park with a person who looked remarkably like the leader of a German band. But Calabressa had known her mother. " Ah, signore," said she, when they had got into the outer air, " I shall be so grateful to you if you will tell me about my mother. My father will not speak of her; I dare not awaken his grief again ; he must have suffered much. You will tell me about her." " My little daughter, your father is wise. Why awaken old sorrows ? You must not spoil your eyes with more cry- ing." And then he went on to speak of all sorts of things, in his rapid, interjectional fashion of his escape from prison mostly until he perceived that she was rather silent and sad. " Come then," said he, " we will sit down on this seat. Give me your hand." She placed her hand in his without hesitation ; and he patted it gently, and said how like it was to the hand of her mother. " You are a little taller than she was," said he ; " a little not much. Ah, how beautiful she was! She had many sweethearts." He was silent for a minute or two. " Some of them richer, some of them of nobler birth than your father ; and one of them her own cousin, whom all her family wanted her to marry. But you know, little daughter, your father is a very determined man " " But she loved him the best ? " said the girl, quickly. "Ah, no doubt, no doubt," said Calabressa. "He is very kind to you, is he not ? " " Oh yes. Who could be kinder ? But about my mother, signore ? " 1 18 SUNRISE. Calabressa seemed somewhat embarrassed. " To say the truth, little daughter, how am I to tell you ? I scarcely ever saw her after she married. Before then, you must imagine yourself as you are to think of her picture : and she was very much beloved and very fond of horses. Is not that enough to tell ? Ah, yes, another thing : she was very brave when there was any danger ; and you know all the fam- ily were strong patriots ; and one or two got into sad trouble. When her father that is your grandfather, little daughter when he failed to escape into Turkey after the assassina- tion" Here Calabressa stopped, and then gave a slight wave of his hand. " These are matters not interesting to you. But when her father had to seek a hiding-place she went with him in de- spite of everybody. I do not suppose he would be alive now but for her devotion." " Is my mother's father alive ? " the girl said, with eyes wide open. " I belive so ; but the less said about it the better, little daughter." " Why has my father never told me ? " she asked, with the same almost incredulous stare. " Have I not hinted ? The less said the better. There are some things no government will amnesty. Your grand- father was a good patriot, little daughter." Thereafter for some minutes silence. Slight as was the in- formation Calabressa had given her, it was of intensest interest to her. There was much for her to think over. Her mother, whom she had been accustomed to regard as a beautiful saint, placed far above the common ways of earth, was suddenly presented to her in a new light. She thought of her young, handsome, surrounded with lovers, proud- spirited and patriotic a devoted daughter, a brave woman. " You also loved her ? " she said to Calabressa. The man started. She had spoken quite innocently al- most absently : she was thinking that he, too, must have loved the brave young Hungarian girl as all the world loved her. "I?" said Calabressa. "Oh yes, I was a friend of hers for many years. I taught her Italian ; she corrected my Magyar. Once her horse ran way ; I was walking, and saw her coming ; there was a wagon and oxen, and I shouted to the man ; he drew the oxen right across the road, and barred the way. Ah, how angry she used to be she pretended to CALABRESSA. 119 b e when they told her I had saved her life ! She was a bold rider." Presently Calabressa said, with a lighter air, "Come, let us talk of something else of you, par exemple. How do you like the English ? You have many sweethearts among them, of course." " No, signore, I have no sweethearts," said Natalie, with- out any trace of embarrassment. "What! Is is possible ? When I saw your father in Venice, and he told me the little Natelushka had grown to be a woman, I said to him, ' Then she will marry an Englishman.' ' " And what did he say ? " the girl asked, with a startled look on her face. " Oh, little, very little. If there was no possibility, why should he say much ? " " I have no sweethearts," said Natalie, simply ; " but I have a friend who wishes to be more than a friend. And it is now, when I have to answer him, it is now that I know what a sad thing it is to have no mother." The pathetic vibration that Brand had noticed was in her voice ; her eyes were downcast, her hands clasped. For a second or two Calabressa was silent. " I am not idly curious, my little daughter," he said at length, and very gently ; " but if you knew how long your mother and I were friends, you would understand the interest I feel in you, and why I came all this way to see the little Natalushka. So, one question, dear little one. Does your father approve ? " " Ah, how can I tell ? " He took her hand, and his face was grave. " Listen now," said he ; "I am going to give you advice. If your mother could speak to you, this is what she would say : Whatever happens whatever happens do not thwart your father's wishes." She wished to withdraw her hand, but he still held it. " I do not understand you," she said. " Papa's wishes will always be for my happiness ; why should I think of thwarting them ? " " Why, indeed ? And again, why ? It is my advice to you, my little daughter, whether you think your father's wishes are for your happiness or not because, you know, sometimes fathers and daughters have different ideas do not go against his will." The hot blood mounted to Natalie's forehead for the first time during this interview. 120 SUNRISE. " Are you predicting strife, signore ? I owe obedience to my father, I know it ; but I am not a child. I am a woman, and have my own wishes. My papa would not think of thwarting them." " Natalushka, you must not be angry with me." " I am not angry, signore ; but you must not suppose that I am quite a child." " Pardieu, non ! " said Calabressa. " I expected to find Natalushka ; I find Natalie ah, Heaven ! that is the wonder and the sadness of it to me ! I think I am talking to your mother : these are her hands. I listen to her voice : it seems twenty years ago. And you have a proud spirit, as she had : again I say do not thwart your father's wishes, Natalie rather, Natalushka ! " He spoke with such an obvious kindness and earnestness that she could not feel offended. " And if you want any one to help you at any time, my lit- tle daughter for who knows the ways of the world, and what may happen ? if your father is sent away, and you are alone, and you want some one to do something for you, then this is what you will say to yourself : * There is that old fool Cala- bressa, who has nothing in the world to do but smoke cigar- ettes and twirl his mustache I will send for Calabressa.' And this I promise, little one, that Calabressa will very soon be at your feet." " I thank you signore." "It is true, I may be away on duty, as your father might be ; but I have friends at head-quarters ; I have done some service. And if I were to say, * Calabressa wishes to be relieved from duty ; it is the daughter of Natalie Berezolyi who demands his presence,' I know the answer : ' Calabressa will proceed at once to obey the commands of the daughter of Natalie Berezolyi.' " " But who" " No, my little daughter, you must not ask that. I will tell you only that they are all-powerful ; that they will pro- tect you with Calabressa as their agent ; and before I leave this city I will give you my address, or rather I will give you an address where you will find some one who will guide you to me. May Heaven grant that there be no need. Why should harm come to one who is so beautiful and so gentle ? " " My mother was she happy ? " she said quickly. "Little daughter," said he, sharply, and he threw away her hand, " if you ask me any more questions about your mother you will make my heart bleed. Do you not understand so CALABRESSA. 121 simple a thing as that, you who claim to be a woman ? You have been stabbing me. Come, come : allons ! let us talk of something else of your friend who wishes to be more than a friend you wicked little one, who have no sweet- heart ! And what are those fools of English about ? What ? But tell me is he one of us ? " " Oh yes, signore," said she ; and instead of showing any shamefacedness, she turned toward him and regarded him with the fearless, soft dark eyes. " How could you think otherwise ? And he is so brave and noble : he is not afraid of sacrificing those things that the English put such store by" " English ? " said Calabressa. " Yes," said Natalie ; and now she looked down. " And what does your heart say ? " She spoke very gently in reply. " Signor, I have not answered him yet ; you cannot expect me to answer you." " A la bonne heure ! Little traitress, to say she has no sweethearts ! Happy Englishman ! What, then, do I dis- tress you ? It is not so simple ! It is an embarrassment, this proposal that he has made to you ! But I will not trouble you further with my questions, little daughter: how can an old jail-bird like myself understand a young linnet- thing that has always been flying and fluttering about in hap- piness and the free air ? Enfin, let us go ! I perceive your little maid is tired of standing and staring ; perhaps it is time for you to go back." She rose, and the three of them slowly proceeded along the gravelled path. " Your father does not return until next week : must I wait a whole week in this desert of a town before seeing you again, petite ?" " Oh no," said Natalie, smiling ; " that is not necessary. If my papa were here now he would certainly ask you to dine with us to-night ; may I do so in his place ? You will not find much amusement ; but Madame Potecki you knew her husband, perhaps ? " " Potecki the Pole, who was killed ? " " Yes. She will play a little music for you. But there are so many amusements in London, perhaps you would rather not spend your evening with two poor solitary creatures like us." " My -little daughter, to hear you speak, that is all I want; it takes twenty years away from my life ; I do not know 122 SUNRISE. whether to laugh or to cry. But courage ! we will put a good face on our little griefs. This evening this evening I will pretend to myself something I am going to live my old life over again for an hour ; I will blow a horn as soon as I have crossed the Erlau, and they will hear it up at the big house among the pines, where the lights are shining through the dark, and they will send a servant down to open the gates ; and you will appear at the hall-door, and say, ' Signor Calabressa, why do you make such a noise to awaken the dogs ? ' And I will say, ' Dear Miss Berezolyi, the pine- woods are frightfully dark ; may I not scare away the ghosts ? " " It was my mother who received you," the girl said, in a low voice. " It was Natalie then ; to-night it will be Natalushka." He spoke lightly, so as not to make these reminiscences too serious. But the conjunction of the two names seemed suddenly to startle the girl. She stopped, and looked him in the face. "It was you, then,'' she said, " who sent me the locket ? " " What locket ? " he said, with surprise. "The locket the lady dropped into my lap * From Natalie to Natalushka: " " I declare to you, little daughter, I never heard of it." The girl looked bewildered. " Ah, how stupid I am ! " she exclaimed. " I could not understand. But if they always called her Natalie, and me Natalushka" She paused for a moment to collect her thoughts. " Signor Calabresste, what does it mean ? " she said, almost wildly. " If one sends me a locket ' From Natalie to Nata- lushka ' was it my mother's ? Did she intend it for me ? Did she leave it for me with some one, long ago ? How could it come into the hands of a stranger ? " Calabressa himself seemed rather bewildered almost alarmed. " My little daughter, you have no doubt guessed right," he said, soothingly. " Your mother may have meant it for you and and perhaps it was lost and just recovered " " Signor Calabressa," said she and he could have fancied it was her mother who was speaking in that low, earnest, al- most sad voice " you said you would do me an act of friend- ship if I asked you. I cannot ask my father ; he seems too grieved to speak of my mother at any time ; but do you think you could find out who the lady was who brought that locket to me ? That would be kind of you, if you could do that." HER ANSWER. 123 CHAPTER XVIII. HER ANSWER. HUMPHREYS, the delegate from the North, and O'Halloran, the Irish reporter, had been invited by George Brand to dine with him on this evening Humphreys having to start for Wolverhampton next day and the three were just sitting down when Lord Evelyn called in, uninvited, and asked if he might have a plate placed for him. Humphreys was anxious that their host should set out with him for the North in the morning ; but Brand would not promise. He was obviously thinking of other things. He was at once restless, preoccu- pied, and silent. " I hope, my lord, you have come to put our friend here in better spirits," said Humphreys, blushing a little as he ven- tured to call one of the Brands of Darlington his friend. " What is the matter ? " At this moment Waters appeared at the door with a letter in his hand. Brand instantly rose, went forward to him and took the letter, and retired into an adjoining room. Without looking, he know from whom it had come. His hand was shaking as he opened the envelope ; but the words that met his eyes were calm. " MY DEAR FRIEND, Your letter has given me joy and pain. Joy that you still adhere to your noble resolve ; that you have found gladness in your life ; that you will work on to the end, whatever the fruit of the work may be. But this other thought of yours that only distresses me ; it clouds the future with uncertainty and doubt, where there should only be clear faith. My dear friend, I must ask you to put away that thought. Let the feu sacre of the regenerator, the liberator, have full possession of you. How I should blame myself if I were to distract you from the aims to which you have devoted your life. I have no one to advise me ; but this I know is right. You will, I think, not misunderstand me you will not think it unmaidenly of me if I confess to you that I have written these words with some pain, some touch of regret that all is nc* possible to you that you may desire. But for one soul on : devotion. Do I express myself clearly ? you know Englisl s not my native tongue. If we may not go through life toge her, in the sense that you mean, we need not be far apart ; and you will know, as you go for- 124 ward in the path of a noble duty, that there is not any one who regards you and the work you will do with a greater pride and affection than your friend, NATALIE." What could it all mean ? he asked himself. This was not the letter of a woman who loved another man ; she would have been more explicit; she would have given sufficient reason for her refusal. He read again, with a beating heart, with a wild hope, that veiled and subtle expression of regret. Was it not that she was prepared to sacrifice forever those dreams of a secure and happy and loving life, that come naturally to a young girl, lest they should interfere with what she regarded as the higher duty, the more imperative devo- tion ? In that case, it was for a firmer nature than her own to take this matter in hand. She was but a child ; knowing nothing of the sorrows of the world, of the necessity of pro- tection, of the chances the years might bring. Scarcely con- scious of what he did so eagerly was his mind engaged he opened a drawer and locked the letter in. Then he went hastily into the other room. " Evelyn," said he, " will you take my place, like a good fellow ? I shall be back as soon as I can. Waters will get you everything you want." " But about Wolverhampton, Mr. Brand ? " shouted Hum- phreys after him. There was no answer ; he was half-way down the stairs. When the hansom arrived in Curzon Street a hurried glance showed him that the dining-room was lit up. She was at home, then : that was enough. For the rest, he was not going to trouble himself with formalities when so beautiful a prize might still be within his reach. He knocked at the door ; the little Anneli appeared. " Anneli," said he, " I want to see Miss Lind for a moment say I shall not detain her, if there is any one with her " " They are in the dining-room, sir ; Madame Potecki, and a strange gentleman " " Ask your mistress to let me see her for one moment ; don't you understand ? " " They are just finishing dinner, sir : if you will step up to the drawing-room they will be there in a minute or two." But at last he got the little German maid to understand that he wished to see Miss Lind alone for the briefest possi- ble time ; and that she was to carry this message in an un- dertone to her mistress. By himself he made his way up- stairs to the drawing-room : the lamps were lit. HER ANSW&K. 125 Me lifted books, photographs, and what not, with trembling ringers, and put them down again without knowing ii. lie was thinking, not looking. And he was trying to force him- self into a masterful mood. She was only a child, he kept repeating to himself only a child, who wanted guidance, in- struction, a protecting hand. It was not her fancies, how- ever generous and noble, that should shape the destinies of two lives. A beautiful child, ignorant of the world and its evil : full of dreams of impossible and unnecessary self- sacrifice, she was not one to ordain ; surely her way in life was to be led, and cherished, and loved, trusting to the stronger hand for guidance and safety. There was a slight rustle outside, and presently Natalie entered the room. She was pale perhaps she looked all the paler that she wore the long, sweeping black dress she had worn at Lady Evelyn's. In silence she gave him her hand ; he took it in both his. " Natalie ! " It was a cry of entreaty, almost of pain ; for this fond vision of his of her being only a child, to be mastered and guided, had fled the moment he caught sight of this tall and beautiful woman, whose self-command, despite that paleness and a certain apprehension in the dark eyes, was far greater than his own. " Natalie, you must give me a clearer answer." He tried to read the answer in her eyes ; but she lowered them as she spoke. " Was not my answer clear? " she said, gently. " I wished not to give you pain." " But was all your answer there ? " he said quickly. " Were there no other reasons ? Natalie ! don't you know that, if you regretted your decision ever so little if you thought twice about it if even now you can give me leave to hope that one day you will be my wife there were no reasons at all in your letter for your refusing none at all ? If you love me even so little that you regret " " I must not listen to you," she said hurriedly. " No, no. My answer was best for us both. I am sorry if it pains you ; but you have other things to think of ; we have our separate duties in the world duties that are of first importance. My dear friend," she continued, with an air of appeal, " don't you see how I am situated ? I have no one to advise me not even my father, though I can guess what he would say. I know what he would say ; and my heart tells me that I have done right." 126 SUNRISE. " One word," said he. " This you must answer me frankly. Is there no other reason for your refusal ? Is your heart free to choose ? " She looked up and met his eyes for a moment : only for a moment. " I understand you," she said, with some slight color mounting to the pale clear olive of her brow. " No, there is not any reason like that." A quick, proud light leaped into his eyes. " Then," said he, " I refuse to accept your refusal. Natalie, you will be my wife ! " " Oh, do not say that do not think of it. I have done wrong even to listen, to let you speak " " But what I say is true. I claim you, as surely as I now hold your hand " " Hush ! " There were two people coming into the room ; he did not care if there were a regiment. He relinquished her hand, it is true ; but there was a proucl and grateful look on his face ; he did not even turn to regard the new-comers. These were Madame Potecki and Calabressa. The little Polish lady had misconstrued Natalie's parting words to mean that some visitors had arrived, and that she and Cala- bressa were to follow when they pleased. Now that they had appeared in the drawing-room, they could not fail to per- ceive how matters stood, and, in fact, the little gentlewoman was on the point of retiring. But Natalie was quite mistress of the situation. She reminded Madame Potecki that she had met Mr. Brand before. She introduced Calabressa to the stranger, saying that he was a friend of her father's. " It is opportune it is a felicitous circumstance," said Calabressa, in his nasal French. " Mademoiselle, behold the truth. If I do not have a cigarette after my food, I die veritably I die ! Now your friend, the friend of the house, surely he will take compassion on me ; and we will have a cigarette together in some apartment." Here he touched Brand's elbow, having sidled up to him. On any other occasion Brand would have resented the touch, the invitation, the mere presence of this theatrical-looking albino. But he was not in a captious mood. How could he refuse when he heard Natalie say, in her soft, low voice, " Will you be so kind, Mr. Brand ? Anneli will light up papa's little smoking-room." Directly afterward he found himself in the small study, alone with this odd-looking person, whom he easily recog- HER ANSWER. 127 nized as the stranger who had been walking in the Park with Natalie in the morning. Closer inspection rendered him less afraid of this rival. Calabressa rolled a cigarette between his ringers, and lit it. " I ask your pardon, monsieur. I ask your pardon before- hand. I am about to be impertinent; it is necessary. If you will tell me some things, I will tell you some things which it may be better for you to know. First, then, I assume that you wish to marry that dear child, that beautiful young lady up-stairs." " My good friend, you are a little bit too outrageous," said Brand. " Ah ! Then I must begin. You know, perhaps, that the mother of this young lady is alive ? " " Alive ! " " I perceive you do not know," said Calabressa, coolly. " I thought you would know I thought you woukl guess. A child might guess. She told me you had seen the locket Natalie to Natalushka was not that enough ? " " If Miss Lind herself did not guess that her mother was alive, how should I ? " " If you have been brought up for sixteen or eighteen years to mourn one as dead, you do not quickly imagine that he or she is not dead : you perceive ? " " Well, it is extraordinary enough," said Brand, thought- fully. "With such a daughter, if she has the heart of a mother at all, how could she remain away from her for six- teen years ? " A thought struck him, and his forehead colored quickly. " There was no disgrace ? " At this word Calabressa started, and the small eyes flashed fire. " I tell you, monsieur, that it is not in my presence that any one must mention the word disgrace and also the name of Natalie Berezolyi. No ; I will answer I myself I will an- swer for the good name of Natalie Berezolyi, by the bounty of Heaven ! " He shrugged his shoulders. " You are ignorant you made a mistake. And I well, you perceive, monsieur, that I am not ashamed to confess I loved her ; she was the radiant light, the star of my life ! " " La lumiere rayonnante, Fetoile de ma vie ! " the phrases sounded ridiculous enough when uttered by this histrionic person ; but even his self-conscious gesticulation did not of- 1 28 SUNRISE. fend Brand. This man, at all events, had loved the mother of Natalie. " Then it was some very powerful motive that kept mother and daughter apart ? " said he. " Yes ; I cannot explain it all to you, if I quite know it all. But every year the mother comes with a birthday present of flowers for the child, and watches to see her once or twice ; and then away back she goes to the retreat of her father. Ah, the devotion of that beautiful saint ! If there is a heaven at all, Natalie Berezolyi will be among the angels." " Then you have come to tell Natalie that her mother is alive. I envy you. How grateful the girl will be to you ! " " I ? What, I ? No, truly, I dare not. And that is why I wish to speak to you": I thought perhaps you would guess, or find out : then I say, do not utter a word ! Why do 1 give you this secret ? Why have I sought to speak with you, mon- sieur? "Well, if you will not speak, I will. Something the little Natalushka said to me she must always be the little Natalushka in name, though she is so handsome a woman now something she said to me revealed a little secret. Then I said, * Perhaps Natalushka will have a happier life than Natalie has had, only her husband must be discreet.' Now, monsieur, listen to me. What I said to Natalushka I say to you : do not thwart her father's wishes. He is a de- termined man, and angry when he is opposed." " My good sir, other people may have an ounce or two of determination also. You mean that I must never let Natalie know that her mother is alive, for fear of Lind? Is that what you mean ? Come, then ! " He strode to the door, and had his hand on the handle, when Calabressa jumped up and caught him, and interposed. " For Heaven's sake for Heaven's sake, monsieur, why be so inconsiderate, so rash ? " " Has the dread of this man frightened you out of vour wits ? " " He is invulnerable and implacable," said Calabressa. " But he is a good friend when he has his own way. Why not be friends ? You will have to ask him for his daughter. Consider, monsieur, that is something." "Well, there is reason in that," Brand said, reflectively. " And I am inclined to be friendly with every one to-night, Signer Calabressa. It may be that Lind has his reasons ; and he is the natural guardian of his daughter at present. But she might have another guardian, Signor Calabressa ? " A T THE CUL TUR VEREIN. \ 29 " The wicked one ! she has promised herself to you ? And she told me she had no sweethearts, the rogue ! " " No, she has riot promised. But what may not one dare to hope for, when one sees her so generous and kind ? She is like her mother, is she not ? Now 1 am going to slip away, Signer Calabressa ; when you have had another cigarette, will you go up-stairs and explain to the two ladies that I have three friends who are now dining at my house, and I must get back to them ? " Calabressa rose, and took the taller man's hand in his. " I think our little Natalushka is right in trusting herself to you ; I think you will be kind to her ; I know you will be brave enough to protect her. All very well. But you English are so headstrong. Why not a little caution, a little prudence, to smooth the way through life ? " Brand laughed: but he had taken a liking to this odd- looking man. " Now, good-night, Signer Calabressa. You have done me a great service. And if Natalie's mother wishes to see her daughter well, I think the opportunity will come. In the mean time, I will be quite cautious and prudent, and com- promise nobody; even if, I cannot wholly promise to tremble at the name of the Invulnerable and the Implacable." " Ah, monsieur," said Calabressa, with a sigh, his gay ges- ticulation having quite left him, " I hope I have done no mis- chief. It was all for the little Natalushka. It will be so much better for you and for her to be on good terms with Ferdinand Lind." " We will see," Brand said, lightly. " The people in this part of the world generally do as they're done by." CHAPTER XIX. AT THE CULTURVEREIN. ON calm reflection, Calabressa gave himself the benefit of his own approval ; and, on the whole, was rather proud of his diplomacy. He had revealed enough, and not too much ; he had given the headstrong Englishman prudent warnings and judicious counsel ; he had done what he could for the future of the little Natalushka, who was the daughter of Natalie Berezolyi. But there was something more. He went up-stairs. 130 SUNRISE. " My dear little one," he said, in his queer French, " be- hold me I come alone. Your English friend sends a thou- sand apologies he has to return to his guests : is it an Eng- lish custom to leave guests in such a manner ? Ah, Madame Potecki, there is a time in one's life when one does strange things, is there not ? When a farewell before strangers is hateful impossible ; when you rather go away silently than come before strangers and shake hands, and all the rest. What, wicked little one, you look alarmed ! Is it a secret, then ? Does not madame guess anything ? " " I entreat you, Signor Calabressa, not to speak in riddles," said Natalie, hastily. " See, here is a telegram from papa. He will be back in London on Monday next week. You can stay to see him, can you not ? '.' " Mademoiselle, do you not understand that I am not my own master for two moments in succession ? For this pres- ent moment I am ; the next I may be under orders. But if my freedom, my holiday, lasts yes, I shall be glad to see your father, and I will wait. In the mean time, I must use up my present moment. Can you give me the address of Vincent Beratinsky ? " She wrote it down for him ; it was a number in Oxford Street. " Now I will add my excuses to those of the tall English- man," said he, rising. " Good-night, madame. Good-night, mademoiselle truly, it is a folly to call you the little Nata- lushka, who are taller than your beautiful mother. But it was the little Natalushka I was thinking about for many a year. Good-night, wicked little one, with your secrets ! " He kissed her hand, bowed once more to the little Polish lady, and left. When, after considerable difficulty for he was exceedingly near-sighted he made out the number in Oxford Street, he found another caller just leaving. This stranger glanced at him, and instantly said, in a low voice, " The night is dark, brother." Calabressa started ; but the other gave one or two signs that reassured him. " I knew you were in London, signore, and I recognized you ; we have your photograph in Lisle Street. My name is Reitzei " "Ah ! " Calabressa exclaimed, with a new interest, as he looked at the pallid-faced young man. " And if you wish to see Beratinsky, I will take you to him. A T THE CUL TUR VEKEIN. 131 I find he is at the Culturverein : I was going there myself." So Calabressa suffered himself to be led away. At this time the Culturverein used to meet in a large hall in a narrow lane off Oxford Street. It was an association of persons, mostly Germans, connected in some way or other with art, music, or letters a merry-hearted, free-and-easy little band of people, who met every evening to laugh and talk and joke and generally forget the world and all its cares. The evening usually began with Bavarian beer, sonatas, and comic lectures ; then Rhine wines began to appear, and of course these brought with them songs of Love, and friendship, and patriotism ; occasionally, when the older and wiser folk had gone, sweet champagne and a wild frolic prevailed until daylight came to drive the revellers out. Beratinsky belonged to the Verein by reason of his having at one time betaken himself to water-color drawing, in order to keep himself alive. When Calabressa entered die large, long hall, the walls of which were plentifully hung with sketches in color and car- toons in black and white, t\\efertig ! los ! period had not ar- rived. On the contrary, the meeting was exceedingly demure, almost dull ; for a German music professor, seated at the piano on the platform, was playing one of his own composi- tions, which, however beautiful, was of considerable length ; and his audience had relapsed into half-hushed conversation over their light cigars and tall glasses of Bairisch. Beratinsky had to come along to the entrance-hall to enter the names of his visitors in a book. He was a little man, somewhat corpulent, with bushy black eyebrows, intensely black eyes, and black closely-cropped beard. The head was rather handsome ; the figure not. " Ah, Calabressa, you have come alive again ! " he said, speaking in pretty fair Italian. " We heard you were in Lon- don. What is it ? " The last phrase was uttered in a low voice, though there was no by-stander. But Calabressa, with a lofty gesture, re- plied, " My friend, we are not always on commissions. Some- times we have a little liberty a little money a notion in our head. And if one cannot exactly travel en prince, rtimporte ! we have our little excursion. And if one has one's sweet- heart to see ? Do you know, friend Beratinsky, that I have been dining with Natalie the little Natalushka, as she used to be called ? " Beratinsky glanced quickly at him with the black, piercing eyes. 132 SUNRISE. " Ah, the beautiful child ! the beautiful child ! " Calabressa exclaimed, as if he was addressing some one not present. " The mouth sweet, pathetic, like that in Titian's Assump- tion : you have seen the picture in the Venice Academy ? But she is darker than Titian's Virgin ; she is of the black, handsome Magyar breed, like her mother. You never saw her mother, Beratinsky ? " " No," said the other, rather surlily. " Come, sit down and have a cigar." " A cigarette a cigarette and a little cognac, if you please," said Calabressa, when the three companions had gone along to the middle of the hall and taken their seats. " Ah, it was such a surprise to me : the sight of her grown to be a woman, and the perfect, beautiful image of her mother the very voice too I could have thought it was a dream." " Did you come here to talk of nothing but Lind's daugh- ter ? " said Beratinsky, with scant courtesy. " Precisely," remarked Calabressa, in absolute good-humor. " But before that a word." He glanced round this assemblage of foreign-looking per- sons, no doubt guessing at the various nationalities indicated by physique and complexion Prussian, Pole, Rhinelander, Swiss, and what not. If the company, in English eyes, might have looked Bohemian that is to say, unconventional in manner and costume the Bohemianism, at all events, was of a well-to-do, cheerful, good-humored character. There was a good deal of talking besides the music. "These gentlemen," said Calabressa, in a low voice, "are they friends are they with us ? " " Only one or two," said Beratinsky. " You do not come here to proselytize, then ? " " One must amuse one's self sometimes," said the little, fat, black-haired Pole, somewhat gruffly. " Then one must take care what one says ! " " I presume that is generally the case, friend Calabressa." But Calabressa was not offended. He was interested in what was going on. " Par exemple," he said, in his airy way, " que vient faire lale drole?" The music had come to an end, and the spectacled pro- fessor had retired amidst a thunder of applause. His suc- cessor, who had attracted Calabressa's attention, was a gentleman who had mounted on a high easel an immense portfolio of cartoons roughly executed in crayon ; and as he exhibited them one bv one, he pointed out their character- AT THE CULTURVEREIN. 133 istics with a long stick, after the manner of a showman. His demeanor was serious ; his face was grave ; his tone was simple and business-like. But as he unfolded these rude drawings, Calabressa, who understood but little German, was more and more astonished to find the guttural laughter around him increase and increase until the whole place re- sounded with roars, while some of the old Herren held their sides in pain, as the tears of the gigantic mirth streamed down their cheeks. Those who were able hammered loud applause on the table before them ; others rolled in their chairs ; many could only lie back and send their merriment up to the reverberating roof in shrill shrieks and yells. " In the name of Heaven, what is it all about ? " said Calabressa. " Have the people gone mad ? " " Illustrations of German proverbs," said Beratinsky, who, despite his surly manner, was himself forced to smile. Well, Calabressa had indeed come here to talk about Lind's daughter ; but it was impossible, amidst this wild surging to and fro of Olympian laughter. At last, however, the showman came to an end of his cartoons, and solemnly made his bow, and amidst tumultuous cheering resumed his place among his companions. There was a pause, given over to chatter and joking, and Calabressa quickly embraced this opportunity. " You are a friend of the little Natalushka of the beauti- ful Natalie, I should say, perhaps ? " " Lind's daughter does not choose to have many friends," said Beratinsky, curtly. This was not promising ; and, indeed, the corpulent little Pole showed great disinclination to talk about the young lady who had so laid hold of Calabressa's heart. But Calabressa was not to be denied, when it was the welfare of the daugh- ter of Natalie Berezolyi that was concerned. " Yes, yes, friend Beratinsky, of course she is very much alone. It is rather a sad thing for a young girl to be so much alone." ' " And if she chooses to be alone ? " said Beratinsky, with a sharpness that resembled the snarl of a terrier. Perhaps it was to get rid of the topic that Beratinsky here joined in a clamorous call for " Nageli ! Nageli ! " Presently a fresh-colored young Switzer, laughing and blushing tre- mendously, went up to the platform and took his seat at the piano, and struck a few noisy chords. It was a Tyrolese song he sung, with a jodel refrain of his own invention : 134 SUNRISE. " Hat einer ein Schatzerl, So bleitbt er ciabei, Er nimmt sie ziim Weiberl, Und liebt sie rccht trcn. Dann fangt man die Wirthschaft Gemeinschaftlich an, Und leibt sich, und herzt sich So sehr als man kann ! " Great cheering followed the skilfully executed jodel. In the midst of it, one of the members rose and said, in German, ; ' Meine Herren ! You know our good friend Nageli is go- ing to leave us ; perhaps we shall not see him again for many years. I challenge you to drink this toast : ' Nageli, and his quick return ! ' I say to him what some of the shop- keepers in our Father-land say to their customers, * Koinmen Sie bald wieder ! ' ' Here there was a great shouting of " Nageli ! Nageli ! " until one started the chorus, which was immediately and sonorously sung by the whole assemblage, " Hoch soil er leben ! Hoch soil er leben ! Dreimal hoch ! " Another pause, chiefly devoted to the ordering of Hochhei- mer and the lighting of fresh cigars. The souls of the sons of the Father-land were beginning to warm. " Friend Beratinsky," said the anxious-hearted albino, " perhaps you know that many years ago I knew the mother of Natalie Lind ; she was a neighbor a companion of mine ; and I am interested in the little one. A young girl sometimes has need of friends. Now, you are in a position " " Friend Calabressa, you may save your breath," said the other, coldly. " The young lady might have had my friend- ship if she had chosen. She did not choose. I suppose she is old enough and proud enough to choose her own friends. Yes, yes, friend Calabressa, I have heard. But we will say nothing more : now listen to this comical fellow." Calabressa was not thinking of the young Englishman who now sat down at the piano ; a strange suspicion was begin- ning to fill his mind. Was it possible, he began inwardly to ask, that Vincent Beratinsky had himself aspired to marry the beautiful Hungarian girl ? This good-looking young English fellow, with a gravity .equal to that of the sham showman, explained to his audi- ence that he was composing an operetta, of which he would AT THE CULTURVEREIN. . 135 give them a few passages. He was a skilful pianist. He explained, as his fingers ran up and down the keys, that the scene was in Ratclifre Highway. A tavern : a hornpipe. Jack ashore. Unseemly squabbles : here there were harsh discords and shrill screams. Drunkenness : the music get- ting very helpless. Then the daylight comes the chirping of sparrows Jack wanders out the breath of the morning- stirs his memories he thinks of other days. Then comes in Jack's song, which neither Calabressa nor any one else pres- ent could say was meant to be comic, or pathetic, or a de- moniac mixture of both. The accompaniment which the handsome young English fellow played was at once rhythmi- cal, and low and sad, like the wash of waves : " Oh, the days were long, And the summers were long, When Jane and I went courtin' ; The hills were blue beyond the sky ; The heather was soft where we did lie ; We kissed our fill, did Jane and I, When Jane and I went courtin'. " When Jane and I went courtin', Oh, the days were long, And the summers were long ! We walked by night beyond the quay ; Above, the stars ; below, the sea ; And I kissed Jane, and Jane kissed me, When Jane and I went courtin'. " But Jane she married the sodger-chap ; An end to me and my courtin'. And I took ship, and here I am ; And where I go, I care not a damn Rio, Jamaica, Seringapatam Good-bye to Jane and the courtin'." This second professor of gravity was abundantly cheered too when he rose from the pfano ; for the music was quaint and original, with a sort of unholy, grotesque pathos running through it. Calabressa resumed : " My good Beratinskv, what is it that you have heard ? " No matter. Natalie Lind has no need of your good offices, Caiabressa. She can make friends for herself, and quicklv enough, too." Calabressa's eyes were not keen, but his ears were ; he detected easily the personal rancor in the man s tone You are speaking of some one : the Englishman ? Beratinsky burst out laughing. 136 SUAWISE. " Listen, Reitzei ! Even my good friend Calabressa per- ceives. He, too, has encountered the Englishman. Oh yes, we must all give way to him, else he will stamp on our toes with his thick English boots. You, Reitzei : how long is he to allow you to retain your office ? " " Better for him if he does not interfere with me," said the younger man. " I was always against the English being allowed to become officers. They are too arrogant ; they want everything under their direction. Take their money, but keep them outside : that would have been my rule." " And this Englishman," said Beratinsky, with a smile, though there was the light of malice in his eye, " this English- man is not content with wanting to have the mastery of poor devils like you and me ; he also wishes to marry the beauti- ful Natalie the beautiful Natalie, who has hitherto been as proud as the Princess Brunhilda. Now, now, friend Cala- bressa, do not protest. Every one has ears, has eyes. And when papa Lind comes home when he finds that this Eng- lishman has been making a fool of him, and professing great zeal when he was only trying to steal away the daughter what then, friend Calabressa ? " " A girl must marry," said Calabressa. " I thought she was too proud to think of such things," said the other, scornfully. " However, I entreat you to say no more. What concern have I with Natalie Lind ? I tell you, let her make more new friends." Calabressa sat silent, his heart as heavy as lead. He had come with some notion that he would secure one other pow- erful, and in all of Lind's secrets on whom Natalie could rely, should any emergency occur in which she needed help. But these jealous and envious taunts, these malignant proph- ecies, only too clearly showed him in what relation Vincent- Beratinsky stood with regard to the daughter of Natalie Ber- ezolyi and the Englishman, her lover. Calabressa sat silent. When some one began to play the zither, he was thinking not of the Culturverein in London, but of the dark pine woods above the Erlau, and of the house there, and of Natalie Berezolyi as she played in the evening. He would ask Natalushka if she, too, played the zither. FIDELIO. 137 CHAPTER XX. FIDELIO. GEORGE BRAND walked away from the house in Curzon Street in a sort of bewilderment of hope and happiness and gratitude. He would even try to accept Calabressa's well- meant counsel : why should he not be friends with everybody ? The world had grown very beautiful ; there was to be no more quarrelling in it, or envy, or malice. In the dark he almost ran against a ragged little child who was selling flowers. " Will you buy a rose-bud, sir ? " said she. " What ? " he said, severely, " selling flowers at this time of night ? Get away home with you and get your supper, and go to bed ; " but he spoiled the effect of his sharp admonition by giving the girl all the silver he had in his pocket. He found the little dinner-party in a most loquacious mood. O'Halloran in especial was in full swing. The internal, economy of England was to be readjusted. The capital must be transferred to the centre of the real wealth and brain-power of the country that is to say, somewhere about Leeds or Manchester. This proposition greatly pleased Humphreys, the man from the North, who was quite willing to let the Royal Academy, the South Kensington and National Galleries, and the British Museum remain in London, so long as the seat of government was transferred to Huddersfield or thereabouts. But O'Halloran drew such a harrowing picture of the effect produced on the South of England intellect by its notorious and intense devotion to the arts, that Humphreys was almost convicted of cruelty. However, if these graceless people thought to humbug the hard-headed man from the North, he succeeded on one oc- casion in completely silencing his chief enemy, O'Halloran. That lover of paradox and idle, speculation was tracing the decline of superstition to the introduction of the use of steam, and was showing how, wherever railways went in India, ghosts disappeared ; whereupon the Darlington man calmly retorted that, as far as he could see, the railways in this country were engaged in making as many ghosts as they could possibly disperse in India. This flank attack completely surprised and silenced the light skirmisher, who sought safety in light- ing another cigar. More serious matters, however, were also talked about, and 138 SUNRISE. Humphreys was eager that Brand should go down to Wolver- hampton with him next morning. Brand pleaded but for one day's delay. Humphreys reminded him that certain members of the Political Committee of the Trades-union Congress would be at Wolverhampton, and that he had promised to see them. After that, silence. At last, as Humphreys and O'Halloran were leaving, Brand said, with an effort, " No, it is no use, Humphreys. I must remain in London one more day. You go down to-morrow ; I shall come by the first train next morning. Molyneux and the others won't be leaving for some days." " Very well, sir ; good-night, sir." Brand returned into the room, and threw himself into an easy-chair ; his only companion now was his old friend Evelyn. The younger man regarded him. " I can tell the whole story, Brand ; I have been reading it in your face. You were troubled and perplexed before you got that letter. It gave some hope. Off you went to see Natalie ; you came back with something in your manner that told me you had seen her and had been received favorably. Now it is only one more day of happiness you hunger for, be- fore going up to the hard work of the North. Well, I don't wonder. But, at the same time, you look a little too restless and anxious for a man who has just won such a beautiful sweetheart." " I am not so lucky as that, Evelyn," said he, absently. " What, you did not see her ? " " Oh yes, I saw her ; and I hope. But of course one craves for some full assurance when such a prize is within reach ; and and I suppose one's nerves are a little excited, so that you imagine possibilities and dangers " He rose, and took a turn up and down the room. " It is the old story, Evelyn. I distrust Lind." " What has that to do with it ? " " As you say, what has that to do with it ? If I had Natalie's full promise, I should care for nothing. She is a woman ; she is not a school girl, to be frightened. If I had only that, I should start off for the North with a light heart." " Why not secure it, then ? " " Perhaps it is scarcely fair to force myself on her at pres- ent until her father returns. Then she will be more her own mistress. But the doubt I don't know when I may be back from the North At last he stopped short. " Yes, I will see her to-morrow at all hazards." FIDELIO. 139 Ey-and-by he began to tell his friend of the gay-hearted old albino he had encountered at Lind's house ; though in the mean time he reserved to himself the secret of Natalie's mother being alive. " Lind must have an extraordinary faculty," he said at length, " of inspiring fear, and of getting people to obey him." " He does not look a ferocious person," Lord Evelyn said, with a smile. " I have always found him very courteous and pleasant frank, amiable, and all the rest of it." " And yet here is this man Calabressa, an old friend of his ; and he talks of Lind with a sort of mysterious awe. He is not a man whom you must think of thwarting. He is the In- vulnerable, the Implacable. The fact is, I- was inclined to laugh at my good friend Calabressa ; but all the same, it was quite apparent that- the effect Lind had produced on his mind was real enough." " Well, you know," said Lord Evelyn, " Lind has a great organization to control, and he must be a strict disciplinarian. It is the object of his life ; everything else is of minor impor- tance. Even you confess that you admire his tremendous power of work." " Yes, I do. I admire his administrative capacity ; it is wonderful. But I don't believe for a moment that it was his mind that projected this big scheme. That must have been the work of an idealist, perhaps of a dozen of them, all add- ing and helping. I think he almost said as much to me one night. His business is to keep the machinery in working order, and he does it to perfection." " There is one thing about him : he never forgets, and he never forgives. You remember the story of Count Verdt ? " " I have cause to remember it. I thought for a moment the wretch had committed suicide because I caught him cheating." " I have been told that Lind played with that fellow like a cat with a mouse. Verdt got hints from time to time that his punishment as a traitor was overtaking him ; and yet he was allowed to live on in constant fear. And it was the Camorra, and not Lind, or any of Lind's friends, who finished him after all." " Well, that was implacable enough, to be sure ; to have death dogging the poor wretch's heels, and yet refusing to strike." " For myself, I don't pity him much," said Lord Evelyn, as he rose and buttoned his coat. " He was a fool to think he could .play such a trick and escape the consequences. 140 SUNRISE. Now, Brand, how am I to hear from you to-morrow ? You know I am in a measure responsible." " However it ends, I am grateful to you, Evelyn ; you may be sure of that. I will write to you from Wolverhampton, and let you know the worst, or the best." " The best, then : we will have no worsts." He said good-bye, and went whistling cheerfully down the narrow oak staircase. He at least was not very apprehen- sive about the results of the next day's interview. But how brief was this one day, with its rapidly passing op- portunities ; and then the stern necessity for departure and absence. He spent half tine night in devising how best he could get speech of her, in a roundabout fashion, without the dread of the interference of friends. And at last he hit upon a plan which might not answer ; but he could think of noth- ing else. He went in the morning and secured a box at Covent Gar- den for that evening. Then he called at Lisle Street, and got Calabressa's address. He found Calabressa in his lodg- ings, shivering and miserable, for the day was wet, misty, and cold. " You can escape from the gloom of our climate, Signor Calabressa," said he. " What do you say to going to the opera to-night ? " " Your opera ? " said he, with a gesture indicative of still deeper despair. " You forget I come from the home, the nursery of opera." "Yes," said Brand, good-naturedly. "Great singers train in your country, but they sing here : that is the difference. Do not be afraid ; you will not be disappointed. See, I have brought you a box ; and if you want companions, why not ask Miss Lind and Madame Potecki to go with you and show you the ways of our English opera-houses ? " " Ah, the little Natalushka ! " said Calabressa, eagerly. " Will she go ? Do you think she will go ? Mafoi, it is not often I have the chance of taking such a beautiful creature to the opera, if she will go ! What must I do ? " " You will have to go and beg her to be kind to you. Say you have the box you need not mention how : ask if she will escort you, she and Madame Potecki. Say it is a kind- ness : she cannot help doing a kindness." " There you are right, monsieur : do not I see it in her eyes ? can I not hear it in her voice ? " " Well, that you must do at once, before" she goes out for her walk at noon." FIDELIO. 141 " To go out walking on a day like this ? " " She will go out, nevertheless ; and you must go and in- tercept her, and pray her to do you this kindness." " Apres ? " " You must come to me again, and we will get an English evening costume for you somehow. Then, two bouquets; I will get those for you, and send them to them to the box o await you." "But you yourself, monsieur; will vou not be of the party ? " " Perhaps you had better say nothing about me, signore ; for one is so busy nowadays. But if I come into the stalls ; if I see you and the ladies in the box, then I shall permit myself to call upon you ; do you understand ? " " Parfaitement," said Calabressa, gravely. Then he laughed slightly. "Ah, monsieur, you English are not good diploma- tists. I perceive that you wish to say more ; that you are afraid to say more ; that you are anxious and a little bit de- mure, like a girl. What you wish is this, is it not : if I say to Madame Potecki, 'Madame, I am a stranger; will you show me the promenade, that I may behold the costumes of the beautiful English ladies ? ' madame answers, * Willingly.' We go to see the costumes of the beautiful English ladies. Why should you come ? You would not leave the young lady all alone in the box ? " " Calabressa," he said, frankly, " I am going away to-mor- row morning : do you understand that ? " Calabressa bowed gravely. " To comprehend that is easy. Allons, let us play out the little plot for the amusement of that rogue of a Natalushka. And if she does not thank me eh bien ! perhaps her papa will : who knows ? " Before the overture began that evening, Brand was in his seat in the stalls ; and he had scarcely sat down when he knew, rather than saw, that certain figures were coming into the box which he had been covertly watching. The opera was Fidelia that beautiful story of a wife's devotion and courage, and reward. As he sat and listened, he knew she was listening too ; and he could almost have believed it was her own voice that was pleading so eloquentlv with the jailer to let the poor prisoner see the light of day for a few minutes in the garden. Would not that have been her prayer, too, in similar circumstances ? Then Leonora, disguised as a youth, is forced to assist in the digging of her own husband's grave. Pizarro enters ; the unhappy prisoners are driven back to their 142 SUNRISE. cells and chains, and Leonora can only call down the venge- ance of Heaven on the head of the tyrant. At the end of the act Brand went up to the box and tapped outside. It was opened from within, and he entered. Natalie turned to receive him ; she was a little pale, he thought ; he took a seat immediately behind her ; and there was some gen- eral talk until the opening of the second act restored silence. For him it was a strange silence, that the music outside did not disturb. Sitting behind her, he could study the beau- tiful profile and the outward curve of her dark eyelashes ; he could see where here and there a delicate curl of the raven- black hair, escaping from the mob-cap of rose-red silk, lay about the small ear or wandered down to the shapely white neck ; he could almost, despite the music, fancy he heard her breathe, as the black gossamer and scarlet flowers of an In- dian shawl stirred over the shining satin dress. Her fan and handkerchief were perfumed with white-rose. And to-morrow he would be in Wolverhampton, amidst grimy streets and dirty houses, in a leaden-hued atmosphere laden with damp and the fumes of chimneys, practically alone, with days of monotonous work before him, and solitary even- ings to be spent in cheerless inns. What wonder if this seemed some brief vision of paradise the golden light and glowing color, the soft strains of music, the scent of white- rose ? Doubtless Natalie had seen this opera of Fidelio many a rime before ; but she was always intently interested in music ; and she had more than once expressed in Brand's hearing her opinion of the conduct of the ladies and gentlemen who make an opera, or a concert, or a play a mere adjunct to their own foolish laughter and tittle-tattle. She recognized the serious aims of a great artist ; she listened with deep atten- tion and respect ; she could talk idly elsewhere and at other times. And so there was scarcely a word said except of in- voluntary admiration as the opera proceeded. But in the scene where the disguised wife discovers her husband in the prison where, as Pizarro is about to stab him, she flings her- self between them to protect him Brand could see that Nat- alie Lind was fast losing her manner of calm and critical at- tention, and yielding to a profounder emotion. When Le- onora reveals herself to her husband, and swears that she will save him, even such a juncture, from his vindictive enemy " Si, si, mio dolce amico, La tua Eleonora ti salvera; Affronto il suo furor ! " FIDE LIC. 143 the girl gave a slight convulsive sob, and hef hands were in- voluntarily clasped. Then, as every one knows, Leonora draws a pistol from her bosom and confronts the tyrant ; a trumpet is heard in the distance ; relief is near ; and the act winds up with the joyful duet between the released husband and the courageous wife " Destin, destin ormaifelice ! " Here it was that Calabressa proposed he should escort Madame Potecki to the cooler air of the large saloon ; and madame, who had been young herself, and guessed that the lovers might like to be alone for a few minutes, instantly and graciously acquiesced. But Natalie rose also, a little quickly, and said that Madame Potecki and herself would be glad to have some coffee ; and could that be got in the saloon ? Madame Potecki and her companion led the way ; but then Brand put his hand on the arm of Natalie and detained her. " Natalie ! " he said, in a low and hurried voice, "I am go- ing away to-morrow. I don't know when I sfeall see you again. Surely you will give me some assurance some prom- ise j something I can repeat to myseHv"^$atalie, I know the value of what I am asking ; you will-give yourself to me ? " She stood by the half-shut door, pale, irresolute, and yet outwardly calm. Her eyes were cast down ; she held her fan firmly with both hands. " Natalie, are you afraid to answer ? " Then the young Hungarian girl raised her eyes, and bravely regarded him, though her face was still pale and ap- prehensive. " No," she said, in a low voice. " But how can I answer you more than this that if I am not to give myself to you I will give myself to no other ? I will be your wife, or the wife of no one. Dear friend, I can' say no more." " It is enough." She went quickly to the front of the box ; in both bouquets there were forget-me-nots. She hurriedly selected some, and returned and gave them to him. " Whatever happens, you will remember that there was one who at least wished to be worthy of your love." Then they followed their friends into the saloon, and sat down at a small table, though Natalie's hands were trembling so that she could scarcely undo her gloves. And George Brand said nothing ; but once or twice he looked into his wife's eyes. 144 SUNRISE. CHAPTER XXI. FATHER AND DAUGHTER. ^ WHEN Ferdinand Lind told Calabress'a that Natalie had grown to be a woman, he no doubt meant what he said ; but he himself had not the least notion what the phrase implied. He could see, of course, that she had now a woman's years, stature, self-possession ; but, for all that, she was still to him only a child only the dark-eyed, gentle, obedient little Nata- lushka, who used to be so proud when she was praised for her music, and whose only show of resolution was when she set to work on the grammar of a new language. Indeed, it is the commonest thing in the world for a son, or a daughter, or a friend to grow in years without those nearest them being aware of the fact, until some chance circumstance, some cri- sis, causes a revelation, and we are astounded at the change that time has insidiously made. Such a discovery was now about to confront Ferdinand Lind. He was to learn not only that his daughter had left the days of her childhood behind her, but also that the woman- hood to which she had attained was of a fine and firm charac- ter, a womanhood that rung true when tried. And this is how the discovery was forced on him : On his arrival in London, Mr. Lind drove first to Lisle Street, to pick up letters on his way home. Beratinsky had little news about business matters to impart ; but, instead, he began as Lind was looking at some of the envelopes to drop hints about Brand. It was easy to see now, he said, why the rich Englishman was so eager to join them, and give up his life in that way. It was not for nothing. Mr. Lind would doubtless hear more at home ; and so forth. Mr. Lind was thinking of other things ; but when he came to understand what these innuendoes meant, he was neither angry nor impatient. He had much toleration for human weakness, and he took it that Beratinsky was only a little off his head with jealousy. He was aware that it had been Beratinsky's ambition to become his son-in-law : a project that swiftly came to an end through the perfect unanimity of father and daughter on that point. " You are a fool, Beratinsky," he said, as he tied the bundle of letters together. " At your time of life you should not imagine that every one's head is full of philandering nonsense. FATHER AND DAUGHTER. 145 Mr. Brand has something else to think of ; besides, he has been in the midland counties all this time." " Has he ? Who, then, was taking your daughter to dinner- parties, to theatres I don't know what ? " Lind dealt gently with this madness. "Who told you?" " I have eyes and ears." " Put them to a better use, Beratinsky." Then he left, and the hansom carried him along to Curzon Street. Natalie herself flew to the door when she heard the cab drive up : there she was to receive him, smiling a wel- come, and so like her mother that he was almost startled. She caught his face in her two hands and kissed him. " Ah, why did you not let me come to meet you at Liver- pool ? " " There were to many with me, Natalie. I was busy. Now get Anneli to open my portmanteau, and you can find out for yourself all the things I have brought for you." " I do not care for them, papa ; I like to have you yourself back." " I suppose you were rather dull, Natalushka, being all by yourself ? " " Sometimes. But I will tell you all that has happened when you are having breakfast." " I have had breakfast, child. Now I shall get through my letters, and you can tell me all that has happened afterward." This was equivalent to a dismissal ; so Natalie went up- stairs, leaving her father to go into the small study, where lay another bundle of letters for him. Almost the first that he opened was from George Brand ; and to his amazement he found, not details about progress in the North, but a simple, straightforward, respectful demand to be permitted to claim the hand of Natalie in marriage. He did not conceal the fact that this proposal had already been made to Natalie herself ; he ventured to hope that it was not distasteful to her ; he would also hope that her father had no objections to urge. It was surely better that the future of a young girl in her position should be provided for. As re- garded by himself, Mr. Lind's acquaintance with him was no doubt but recent and comparatively slight ; but if he wished any further and natural inquiry into the character of the man to whom he was asked to intrust his daughter, Lord Evelyn might be consulted as his closest friend. And a speedy an- swer was requested. This letter was, on the whole, rather a calm and business- 146 SUNRISE. like performance. Brand could appeal to Natalie, and that earnestly and honestly enough ; he felt he could not bring himself to make any such appeal to her father. Indeed, any third person reading this letter would have taken it to be more of the nature of a formal demand, or something required by the conventionalities ; a request the answer to which was not of tremendous importance, seeing that the two persons most interested had already come to an understanding. But Mr. Lind did not look at it in that light at all. He was at first surprised ; then vexed and impatient, rather than angry; then determined to put an end to this nonsense at once. If he had deemed the matter more serious, he would have sat down and considered it with his customary fore thought ; but he was merely irritated. " Beratinsky was not so mad as I took him to be, after all," he said to himself. " Fortunately, the affair has not gone too far." He carried the open letter up-stairs, and found Natalie in the drawing-room, dusting some pieces of Venetian glass. " Natalie," he said, with an abruptness that startled her, and in a tone of anger which was just a little bit affected " Natalie, what is the meaning of this folly ? " She turned and regarded him. He held the open letter in his hand. She said, calmly, " I do not understand you." This only vexed him the more. " I ask you what you have been doing in my absence ? " he said, angrily. "What have you been doing to entitle any man to write me such a letter as this ? His affection ! your future ! has he not something else to think of ? And you you seem not to have been quite so dull when I was away, after all ! Well, it is time to have an end of it. Whatever nonsense may have been going on, I hope you have both of you come to your senses. Let me hear no more of it ! " Now she saw clearly what the letter must contain what had stirred her father to such an unusual exhibition of wrath. She was a little pale, but not afraid. There was no tremor in her voice as she spoke. " I am sorry, papa, you should speak to me like that. I think you forget that I am no longer a child. I have done nothing that I am ashamed of ; and if Mr. Brand has written to you, I am willing to share the responsibility of anything he says. You must remember, papa, that I am a woman, and that I ought to have a voice in anything that concerns my own happiness." FATHER AND DAUGHTER. 147 He looked at her almost with wonder, as if he did not quite recognize her. Was this the gentle-natured little Natalushka, whose eyes would fill with tears if she was scolded even in fun ? this tall, self-possessed girl with the pale face, and the firm and even tones ? " Do you mean to tell me, Natalie, that it is with your con- sent Brand has written to me ? " her father asked, with frown- ing brows. " I did not know he would write. I expected he would." " Perhaps," said he, with an ironical smile, " perhaps you have taken time by the forelock, and already promised to be his wife ? " The answer was given with the same proud composure. " I have not. But I have promised, if I am not his wife, never to be the wife of any other man." It was now that Lind began to perceive how serious this matter was. This was no school-girl, to be frightened out of a passing fancy. He must appeal to the reason of a woman ; and the truth is, that if he had known he had this to under- take, he would not so hastily have gone into that drawing- room with the open letter in his hand. " Sit down Natalie," he said, quite gently. " I want to talk to you. I spoke hastily ; I was surprised and angry. Now let us see calmly how matters stand ; I dare say no great harm has been done yet." She took a seat opposite him ; there was not the least sign of any girlish breaking down, even when he spoke to her in this kind way. " I have no doubt you acted quite rightly and prudently when I was away ; and as for Mr. Brand, well, any one can see that you have grown to be a good-looking young woman, and of course he would like to have a good-looking young wife to show off among the country people, and to go riding to hounds with him. Let us see what is involved in your be- coming his wife, supposing that were ever seriously to be thought of. You give up all your old sympathies and friends, your interest in the work we have on hand, and you get trans- ferred to a Buckinghamshire country-house to take the place of the old house-keeper. If you do not hear anything of what is going on of our struggles of your friends all over Europe what of that ? You will have the kitchen-garden to look after, and poultry to feed ; and your neighbors will talk to you at dinner about foxes and dogs and horses and the clergyman's charities. It will be a healthy life, Natalie ; 148 SUNRISE. perhaps you will get stout and rosy, like an English matron. But your old friends you will have forgotten them." " Never ! never ! " she said, vehemently ; and, despite herself, her eyes filled with tears. " Then we will take Mr. Brand. The Buckinghamshire house is open again. An Englishman's house is his castle ; there is a great deal of work in superintending it, its enter- tainments, its dependents. Perhaps he has a pack of fox- hounds ; no doubt he is a justice of the peace, and the terror of poachers. But in the midst of all this hunting, and giving of dinner-parties, and shooting of pheasants, do you think he has much time or thought for the future of the millions of poor wretches all over Europe who once claimed his care ? Not much ! That was in his days of irresponsible bachelor- hood. Now he is settled down he is a country gentleman. The world can set itself right without him. He is anxious about the price of wheat." " Ah, how you mistake him, papa ! " said she, proudly. And there was a proud light on her face too as she rose and quickly went to a small escritoire close by. A few seconds sufficed her to write a short note, which she brought back to her father." " There," said she, " I will abide by that test. If he says ' yes,' I will never see him again never speak one word to him again." Her father took the note and read it. It was as follows : " MY DEAR FRIEND, 1 am anxious about the future for both of us. If you will promise me, now and at once, to give up the work you are engaged in, I will be your wife, when and where you will. NATALIE." " Send it ! " she said, proudly. " I am not afraid. If he says ' yes,' I will never see him again." The challenge was not accepted. He tore the note in two and flung it into the grate. " It is time to put an end to this folly," he saicl impatiently. " I have shown you what persistence in it would bring on yourself. You would be estranged from everything and every one you have hitherto been interested in ; you would have to begin a new life, for which you are not fitted ; you would be the means of doing our cause an irreparable injury. Yes, I say so frankly. The withdrawal of this man Brand, which would certainly follow, sooner or later, on his marriage, would be a