mm ENEFIT si .*? v > THE Benefit of The Doubt MARY CLARE SPENSER FIJTH EDITION NEW YORK G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS 27 * 2g WEST 23D STREET 1886 COPYRIGHT BY MARY CLARE SPENSER 1882 CONTENTS. I. ALL ABROAD II. "A VERY FAIR OFFER" .... III. BRETA'S GHOSTS IV. THERE ARE PEOPLE AND PEOPLE . V. "Do HURRY ON" VI. IN THE FOREST-GLOAMING .... VII. " SOMETHING is GOING TO COME OUT OF ALL THIS ' VIII. ELMWOOD IX. MY QUEEN, OR NOT MY QUEEN . X. A STRATEGIC ARRANGEMENT .... XI. A GREAT ADMIRATION FOR SOLDIERS . XII. "Dio I NOT TELL You HE is DEEP?" XIII. ^ESTHETICISM XIV. THE BLACK ART ...... XV. "OPERAS WILL BE LOVELY" .... XVI. THREE KISSES XVII. "So!" XVIII. UNDER ONE ROOF XIX. "ALL WITHIN OURSELVES" .... XX. THE Two-BY-Two ARRANGEMENT XXI. THE DAY OF THE MATINEE . . ' -> ~ XXII. A BOLD STROKE . . . . XXIII. "THE HALF is GREATER THAN THE WHOLE" XXIV. EIGHT MADE FOUR PAGE I II 30 52 69 86 IOO 115 138 158 177 189 209 227 243 253 268 281 290 303 313 334 354 364 r\ The Benefit of the Doubt i. ALL ABROAD. AMONG the many friends, relatives, ac- quaintances, or lovers who met one early evening in the commodious central station of Milan (where order reigns so supreme that, in the bustle of in-coming and out-going trains, to and from all points, none are crowded or jostled) two persons were about to pass each other, each bound on his own way, with but a casual : " Buona sera," when the elder of the two, a man tall and angular, with piercing black eyes full of fire and ardor, with long black hair gray sprinkled, who might have been Paganini himself, but who was not, came suddenly to a halt, exclaiming : " Ola/ signore." 2 The Benefit of the Doubt, As the young man thus hailed turned with a graceful movement and, advancing a step toward the other, stood in a superb attitude de^ noting polite attention, the one who had hailed nim said, still in Italian : " Your pardon, Signer Dunraven. But you have been away from Milan for some weeks, in in London, I think." " Si, signer professore, as you say, in Lon- don," replied Dunraven, meeting the full blaze of the professor's eyes but for a moment only ; his own finely formed, but rather uncertain blue eyes that never seemed to meet any other eyes fairly drifting carelessly off into space. " And I, I am just from Paris," resumed the professor, who, with the first of his keen glances, had fully taken the whole of the six feet and three inches of the other in. "I went to Paris with your uncle, il Signor Whyte, but ebbene / I returned without him." Nothing lighter could well be conceived than the easy grace with which young Dunraven changed his attitude to one that not only showed to still better advantage his tall, ath- letic, and finely-proportioned form, and his somewhat picturesque attire, but also served All Abroad. 3 as a sort of challenge embodying a question, as though he asked : "Is that all ? What more can it be you wish of me ? " "It is of your uncle, the Signer Whyte, I would speak," said the professor, replying as to a spoken interrogation. " Have you heard from him lately ? " he added in a deep voice, and with a significant look full of ominous portent, that, instead of arousing anxiety, fell on the polished surface before him as harmlessly as a bomb-shell on the exterior of an ironclad. " Let me think," replied Dunraven, care- lessly, but still carefully retaining his pose of studied attention. " No, Signer Trapassi, I have not heard from my uncle for full three weeks." " Nor from madamigella, your cousin ? " " Not one word." And Dunraven, with con- summate skill, changed his attitude to one the very apotheosis of tender regret. " Miss Gar- net very seldom favors me with a line. But you mistake, Signer Trapassi, Miss Breta Garnet is not rrty cousin ; Signer Whyte, her own uncle, is my uncle by marriage only. His wife was my mother's sister." 4 The Benefit of the Doubt. 11 Let us go from here, and on into the city," said Trapassi. " It would be better that what I have to say should not be overheard. You walk, do you not, Signer Dunraven ? For my- self I always walk. Per Bacco ! I get enough of sitting in the cars." " Si, signore. By all means let us walk. I have no affection for the societa degli omnibus, or for the musty fiacres," returned Dunraven, laughing lightly. As they passed through the porta Principe Umberto, from the strada belting the city out- side its walls, Trapassi, casting one of his light- ning glances on the impassively handsome blonde face of his companion, said in a startling tone : " I parted from the Signer Whyte in the Rue de Clichy ! Ahime ! The debtor's prison, you know." " The debtor's prison, I know," repeated Dun- raven, turning gracefully and halting a moment to contemplate the professor. " Yes, I know the Clichy of Paris, but, pardon me, maestro, I know nothing of your meaning." " It is, that he himself, the Signer Whyte, is there, incarcerated for quite a large sum." All Abroad. 5 Fairly surprised for an instant out of an atti- tude he had assumed as they proceeded on their way, indicative of respectful attention to the words of one older and wiser than himself, although by no means his equal in point of wealth, Dunraven could only repeat : " Quite a large sum ! " " We went together to Paris, as I said," continued Trapassi, " to see what could be done about your uncle's, the Signer Whyte's, loss of property, and " " The loss of his property ! " again caught up Dunraven. " Corpo di Bacco ! Of every danaro, he is worth ! And no sooner had he set foot in Paris than he was arrested and clapped into that vile prison. All through the failure of the concern in which all his money had been invested." " You take my breath away ! You shock me beyond measure, signor professore ! " re- turned Dunraven (though from the airiness of his tone he might have said : " You delight me beyond measure ! "). " Was it that new enter- prise, the great banking bubble of Marchmont & Guion, in which my uncle was so unfortu- nate as to invest ? " 6 The Benefit of the Doubt. " In which the Signer Gulielmo Waldo in- vested his property for him," said Trapassi sig- nificantly. " Yes, Uncle William has for years managed or mismanaged Mr. Whyte's affairs, who hates business, and cares only for his music and my cousin Breta." " Hundreds besides the Signor Whyte have been ruined by that Marchmont & Guion fail- ure," asserted the professor. " The Signor Gulielmo Waldo himself " " Ha ! has my Uncle William also gone up ? " asked Dunraven, very much as though he was speaking of a balloon ascension. " He also has lost every farthing, and has suddenly disappeared, it being confidently re- ported that he has gone to the United States to seek his fortune on some one of the south- western ranches." " Oh, no fear for Uncle William ! He will speedily retrieve himself in some way. He al- ways does. He is used to it. But something must be done for Uncle Raymond Whyte with- out loss of time." " He must be extricated from that wretched prison at once," broke in the professor. All Abroad. 7 " As you say, signore. It must necessarily be very unpleasant for him." "Unpleasant? Per dio santo ! it is in- tolerable, not to be borne ! " denounced the professor, hotly, with energetic gesture and flashing eyes. "Just think of the Signorina Breta ! How can she " Ah ! tell me when I do not think of her. She is always to be thought of. Faith ! I have thought of nothing else all my life. Breta Gar- net is the embodiment of my creed, of all I believe in or worship." " You are fortunate in possessing a creed in these days of rank unbelief, when to doubt is so much the rage." This the professor said in a tone so dry that bleached chips could not be dryer, adding : " Your worship, signore, is, I be- lieve " The beautiful, always the beautiful," inter- rupted Dunraven airily, unmindful of the point- ed edge to his companion's words. " I live for the day," continued he, walking on in an atti- tude indicative of rapt and subdued enthusi- asm ; " for the day when the inharmonies of our dual existence shall be reconciled and be- come fused into a unity that will cause all man- 8 The Benefit of the Doubt. kind to become as one vibrating soul vibrating to the beautiful, the all-perfect. But I fear we shall not realize this Utopia in my time." " I fear not," returned the professor, with a smile full of malicious humor, and a stronger flavor of the bleached chips in his tone. The professor seemed to take the greatest in- terest in studying the bright, handsome fellow by his side ; in noting the light-hearted pleas- ure he took in himself and his attitudes ; in his "creed" ; his ready knowledge of languages ; and in his faultless pronunciation, occasionally mixing the soft, poetic, consonant-eliding Vene- tian with his purest Tuscan. " Your uncle, the Signer Whyte, has spoken to me of a fine place near Nuova York owned by the Damigella Breta. I suppose she might now like to sell it," suggested the professor. " It is a magnificent place, or was, and is erected on a magnificent site. It is the re- mains, the last of a very large property which should have been hers, the Signorina Breta's, but which that infernal Baron Erlau made way with." " Yes, I have heard, but what of the grand place ? " urged the professor. All Abroad. 9 " It is already, and has been for several years, up for sale," returned Dunraven, " but, unfortunately, the house is full of ghosts, and no one cares to purchase." " Full of benissimo / Full of of what ? " demanded the professor. " Of ghosts," replied Dunraven, as lightly as though the commonest thing in the world was a house full of ghosts. "In what shape do these ghosts manifest themselves?" asked the professor, with an in- credulous smile born of ignorance. " In the shape of noises." "Rats, loose casements, north winds whist- ling down chimneys," suggested the professor. " Very possibly," acquiesced Dunraven, with light indifference. " But to return to your uncle, I myself have a plan by which I feel sure the Signer Whyte can be liberated, and at once." " You ! " exclaimed Dunraven. " Do not imagine, signore, that I, a poor devil of a maestro di musica can command thousands of francs with which to help any one. But the Signor Whyte has many friends who will" io The Benefit of the Doubt. " Your pardon, Signer Trapassi, but this is a duty for me, solamente, to perform. I will see the Signorina Breta at once, and will then start for Paris." " Your pardon, signore. Permit me to say you should start without delay ; in the next train for Paris. The signorina will be better pleased, naturalmente. She has not been a pupil of mine for the last eight years since she was eight years old, and a phenomenal pupil, with that voice of hers without a parallel, for me not to become well acquainted with the fact that her uncle, the Signer Whyte, is the very cynosure of her eyes." " As you say, signer professore," returned Dunraven airily. . And with a graceful bow and an "Addto" he turned into another street. II. A VERY FAIR OFFER. BUT instead of retracing his steps to the station, Dunraven, by a short cut he knew well, soon reached Mr. Whyte's picturesque casa, the door of which he found wide open, and just ready to emerge from it were Mr. Whyte's butler and cook, each bearing immense bundles ; the butler having also a large basket on his arm, through the wicker-work of which Dun- raven saw the gleam of silver. Taking all in at half a glance, he sprang lightly into the passage-way, and so suddenly that he gave to the astonished butler so decided an impetus backward, that he fell against the corpulent cook, she exclaiming in the vile accent of the Milanese people : " Oh, per dio santo ! " Following up his advantage before they had time to recover themselves, Dunraven backed them through the door of a waiting-room at the 1 2 The Benefit of the Doubt. left, and pulling the door shut, he turned the key upon them. This effected, he passed out into the street, and seeing a patrol &g2iardia notturno pass- ing the corner beyond, he hailed him, and soon had the pair under arrest ; the cook vehement- ly protesting that she should never have thought of it but for that bugiardo the diavolo, while the butler said nothing. " Volete venir meco f " demanded the guar- dia notturno politely. Whereupon, leaving their bundles, the two went with him meekly to the lock-up. Turning from the crestfallen culprits with the careless ease that characterized all his move- ments, Dunraven, as the front door closed on them, ascended the stairway, his feet noiseless on the deep pile of the Moquette carpet, and seeking the drawing-room, was arrested at the threshold of its open door by the glimpse of a picture that impressed itself on his vision and haunted him for years after. It was not the still life of the elegantly ap- pointed room, with its rare and costly art- treasures so daintily arranged that nothing seemed out of place or too much, that so affected him. A Very Fair Offer. 13 Nor was it the pose of Madama la Contessa, with her fine aristocratic face, who, seated at the centre-table with- the rays of a large astral lamp blazing full upon her, and so absorbed in a letter she was reading, she did not hear his step, that took away his breath. Of an ancient and impoverished family, Ma- dama the Contessa Romano, as he well knew, for the love she bore Breta's mother and the pity she felt"" for the little five-year-old Breta herself, when that mother died, had taken the full charge of the little orphan, receiving from Mr. Whyte for her invaluable services a hand- some and most respectfully offered yearly sti- pend. Still, noble and estimable as she was, her attitudes, ever conventionally polished, never startled one into excessive admiration. It was at the far end of the room Dunraven's eyes rested in such rapt admiration ; where, framed in by one of the trellised windows, in all the charm of her young beauty, a beauty it was becoming quite the fashion in Milan to ad- mit had not its equal, Breta herself stood ; the yellow, mellow moonlight, streaming down full upon her, and, glinting through the soft waves of her pretty brown hair, formed a golden halo 14 The Benefit of the Doubt. around her lovely head, making her appear, in the fleecy clouds of her white dress, almost like one transfigured. She was gazing, with large solemn eyes, out upon the moonlighted garden. Dunraven had never before seen her look so thoughtful and sad, nor so charming. " How she manages it I cannot see," was his mental comment. " Without effort, without study, she falls into attitudes that would take the most practised of us months to attain. And she, the enshrinement of all beauty, she laughs at it all, and yet, in spite of herself, ex- presses in her every look and motion, a preciousness, the very .ideal of our Renais- sance." How many seconds longer the young disci- ple of the aesthetic cult would silently have de- voured with his eyes the lovely " Ideal," is not known, for Madama la Contessa, looking up from her letter, rising and welcoming him, broke the charm. Breta came forward from out the moonlight, and meeting him halfway in the room, with' the calm serenity of manner so habitual to her, greeted him with the cordiality of a friend of A Very Fair Offer. i5 long standing ; he carrying the hand she offered him to his lips, according to the foreign custom he had learned in his long sojourn abroad. " Have you heard the sad news of Uncle Ray ? " she asked, with unwonted mournfulness of cadence. " I have just received a letter from him. Madama was reading it when you came," she added. " Not an hour ago," returned Dunraven, telling himself that Breta's sadness made her even more beautiful than ever. " I met in the station signer the professore, who had just re- turned from Paris," added he, handing a chair to Breta, near that of Madama the Contessa. And taking a chair himself beside Breta, and assuming a peculiarly graceful position, indica- tive of his excessive admiration for her, he re- counted his interview with the professor, and his adventure with cook and butler. " 111 news travels fast," said the contessa. " They thought the padrone could not look after his property and that they would. But we must not be remiss in his absence. I will go and see to the other servants, and that all is safe." " Rather let me go, madama," urged Breta, rising from her chair as the contessa arose. 1 6 The Benefit of the Doubt, 11 Not so, my dear," objected the contessa, waving Breta back. " Stay with your cousin Noel, whom you have not seen for several weeks." " Madama la Contessa Romano is a lady I most profoundly esteem," said Dunraven to Breta, still speaking- in Italian. He had risen with the ladies and now reseated himself in the most striking attitude of his repertory, after Breta had resumed her chair. " Did Signor Trapassi say when Uncle Ray would be liberated from that dreadful prison ? " asked Breta wistfully, unmindful of Dunraven's flippant speech. " Unfortunately, Breta mia, not until he or some one pays the sum " " Is it a very large sum, Noel ? " interrupted Breta. " Several thousand piastres." " How many thousand ? " " Twenty thousand." " Twenty thousand piastres would not be so very much if Uncle Ray had not lost all his prop- erty. But how can he pay it now ? " asked Breta anxiously. " Twenty thousand dollars is a terrible sum when, for the first time, one feels A Very Fair Offer. 17 the lack of it. Nothing in the house must be sold, Uncle Ray said in his letter, on account of creditors." " Have no anxiety, carissima. It can all be arranged." "Can it? How? Who is to arrange it?" persisted Breta. " Will you give me the privilege, cara Breta?" " Will I give you I do not understand," faltered Breta. And then observing a peculiar gleam in Dunraven's blue eyes, and an un- wonted flush on his blonde face, she stopped short in her speech for a moment. " Will / give you the privilege ? Is not Uncle Ray your uncle ? Can you liberate him ?" " My uncle by marriage only, you know, Breta. But, carissima, I did not come to dis- cuss that, but to ask you if you would make me the happiest man the world contains by The expression gathering in her dark eyes, that were fixed full upon him, confused and for a moment checked him. Rising to his feet he approached her. " Breta, amato bene, will you trust yourself to my keeping ? " he exclaimed, bending with 1 8 The Benefit of the Doubt. infinite grace on one knee before her, and gaz- ing with impassioned eyes into her young face. " You are to me the all-perfect, the all-beauti- ful, the realization of my dream He came to a sudden stop again as Breta, rising from her chair, took a few steps backward, and then, turning from him, walked the length of the room and stood again in the broad moonlight ; making of herself, unconsciously, a charming picture once more framed by the trellised, moonlighted window. Dunraven, with a movement as though he would go over to her, restrained himself, and stood silent and watchful ; his eyes devouring the soft, child-like bloom of her cheek and lips, the graceful waves of her hair so dark in the shade, so golden in the light, that the Septem- ber breeze was gently stirring. He noted the unusual lustre of her dark eyes, that seemed in- tensified by some feeling he was not permitted to share. Presently she turned, walked deliberately toward him again, and standing erect in front of him said, in a tone with no bitterness in it, simply calm, with a charming dignity that aroused in him a still greater admiration for her : A Very Fair Offer. 19 " What you have just said to me would, I suppose, be considered a very fair offer. So much for so much. A condition. If I will ac- cede to your proposition you will pay the twenty thousand dollars to liberate not your but my uncle." Her logical way of putting it caused his pro- posal to seem to him more as though he had made her a declaration of war than a declara- tion of love ; and he was taken completely aback. " Breta ! " he ejaculated pleadingly, " do not, pray do not mistake me ! I make no condi- tions. How can I ? Consider our uncle re- leased the moment I can get to " " Just how much money have you ? " asked she pitilessly. " I never before thought of you as possessing money ; never before gave money a thought in any way. You have a great deal, have you not ? " Dunraven, taken still more aback by the sar- casm conveyed in her words than by her tone so devoid of sarcasm, or her manner so self-con- tained and settled in purpose, was unprepared for a reply. " My only guardian being detained in prison, 2O The Benefit of the Doubt. away from me," continued she, " I have no one to look after my interests, and before deciding it is necessary for me to know just how much you " Breta, for the love of heaven, desist ! Breta carissima, I I do not know you ! You are in an entirely new role ! Breta satirical, a role, in all the diversity of her charming little ways, I have never before seen her assume." " Breta bargained for ! So much for so much ! " said she, a tinge of scorn in the quiet of her tone. " Who ever before has seen her in that role ? " " Breta, cugina mia, let me adjure you to hear me. I repeat, I make no conditions. I simply offer you the devotion of a life. I have always adored you I always shall. All I have is yours all I am." Breta withdrew the hand he attempted to take, but so softly, so quietly, stepping back a few paces again, that she seemed to melt away from him like a dream. " Perhaps it is some one of your other suitors who is more favored," continued he, with bitter- ness. " Do not look surprised ; you thought I did not know. But I know every thing that comes A Very Fair Offer. 21 near you. You see, everybody wants to marry you always will. I wanted to marry you when you were two years old and I was seven, and when you were seven and I twelve, and so on straight through until now that you are sixteen and I twenty-one. If I have never before told you, and if we have always been like brother and sister, it is because I never before could command the courage to tell you how I worship you. Breta, my bellissima, I shall never be happy until until you marry me. Or is it il Conte Buonarotti who is the fortunate he ? " Breta, who had retreated from him but a few steps, was standing with one hand resting on the contessa's chair, while with the other she was lightly turning over the leaves of the book the contessa had been reading before receiving from her her uncle's letter, the occasional illus- trations receiving from her inscrutable eyes an occasional passing glance. She looked up, meeting Dunraven's eyes as he mentioned Buonarotti's name, but vouchsafed no other re- ply. Approaching nearer to her, Dunraven added : " Or it may be the Signer Ludovico Goldoni, or il Duca di Lanasco. You see I know about 22 The Benefit of the Doubt. them all. Breta, will you marry me ? " he con- cluded abruptly, approaching another step nearer to her. " Noel, you are unlike yourself. I do not know you ; you are in an entirely new role," she returned, using his own words with a quiet, deli- cate touch of spirit that made her seem intan- gible as a white flame, as though before him, and yet miles away from him." " Breta," he said with a light laugh, changing his mode of attack, " I always thought I al- ways hoped you had some little cousinly re- gard some little sisterly affection for me. Am I not right ? Is it not so ? " " Not a little, but a great deal sisterly affec- tion for you, Noel, but * " Say no more, Breta mia," and he came so close beside her his breath vibrated the loose threads of her hair, as he bent his tall form over her, gazing down into her face, but not offering to touch her, adding : " I am going, caret Breta, I am going direct to Paris. Remember, you have not refused me. I go with the benefit of the doubt to cheer me. Addio" and he made a graceful exit, stopping at the door an instant to say again : " Addio" A Very Fair Offer. 23 Breta sank back in the contessa's chair, as white as her dress ; and v a few moments after, when Bertrando, the footman, announced : " II Signor Trapassi," she looked up, as she rose to welcome the professor, her eyes moist with tears. The tears had disappeared when she greeted him, but the 'maestro showed a sympathetic appreciation of her trouble by his paternal tone, as he said : " I have come, figlia mia, to bring you good news. Your uncle will be liberated at once, and through you." " Through me, signor professore ! " ex- claimed Breta, in profound astonishment. " Through you, figlia mia, if you so decide. I bear with me, for your acceptance, an offer from " " An offer maestro from ' repeated Bre- ta, with a look of dismay. " Not an offer of marriage, madamigella. Heaven forfend ! " prayed the professor, chuck- ling at her discomfiture, his piercing eyes and quick brain having comprehended the cause of it. He had met Dunraven going out of the house ; he knew of Buonarotti, of Goldoni, of 24 The Benefit of the Doubt. the Duca di Lanasco the latter noble gentle- man himself had told the maestro of his defeat and of his admiration for the charming little Americana, the maestro s pupil. "Not an offer of marriage, grazieadio!" he repeated, with comic gravity. " But an offer from Signer the Director of La Scala, for you to sing as prima donna, upon your own terms, now, this coming season ; the rehearsals to commence at once. Also, you are to receive a sum, a handsome sum, as soon as you sign this contract, and the professor drew from the breast- pocket of his coat a folded paper. "This is very sudden, maestro; am I com- petent to " Competent, madamigella ! I am here with this" and the maestro lightly tapped the paper in his hand. " Is not that sufficient answer ? Per Bacco ! None since Malibran or Sontag can reach you. Signer the Impresario knows what he is about, if any one does." " He ought to, certainly," returned Breta, musingly. " He has heard you, as you know. The great Verdi has heard you and you well know his judgment of your voice and method. What A Very Fair Offer. 25 more would you ? " asked the professor, with great energy, his eyes burning like two coals of fire. " Less fear of the life the publicity of it, and the" " The diavolo ! Go and talk with Madama Verdi, the great Strepponi that was. You know her. She will tell you what the life is." " She is one of the brave ones, while I am a horrible coward, maestro" " And I I taught you to sing. Will that go for something or nothing ? " " And I, if I can sing, owe it all to your teaching," replied Breta, with a charming smile. " Ta, ta ! figlia mia. Nature has done more for you than your old maestro. Nature has given you all, except the method it has been my good fortune to impart to an incomparable intelligence." " That last shot, signor professore, calls for another. You forgot to add that the method you speak of is that of the first maestro in Italy," said Breta in a tone of respectful raillery. " But should I consent " continued she, grow- ing thoughtful. " Which of course you will do," said the pro- fessor, conclusively. 26 The Benefit of the Doubt. " Should I consent, then as to the terms. You say on my own terms. But I I know nothing of terms." " How will these figures answer, madami- gella? I inserted them in pencil myself," and the professor, opening the contract, handed it to her, pointing to a certain clause. " Oh, I cannot be worth all that ! " exclaimed Breta, reading as one in a dream. " Shall I ask the Duca di Lanasco how much he considers you worth ? " maliciously asked the professor. " To the management, I mean, of course," returned Breta, ignoring the jocoseness of the professor, whom all Milan declared could have been a great buffo actor, had he so chosen. "To the management, certainly. Well, we shall see this day six months. Now, will you sign ? " " There is so much to take into considera- tion." " Let me do the considering while you do first the signing and then the singing, madami- gella." " And you say I am to have twenty thousand piastres now, at once. That will just pay back A Very Fair Offer. 27 " here Breta stopped. " Yes, signer pro- fessore, I will sign." The quick gleam that shot down on her from the professor's coal-black eyes, would have re- vealed to her, had she encountered it, that her unspoken words had been divined, as he handed her a pen filled with ink, he had taken from his pocket. "But if I should fail and suffer fiasco ? " asked Breta, with the pen poised in the air. " In that space write your name," said the professor, leaning over the young girl, and pointing with his long finger to the spot. " I predict for you a great success, figlia mia" con- tinued he, as he laid on the table before her a check for the twenty thousand piastres, his eagle eyes softening as he looked down from his height upon her. " It is very kind of you, signer professore, to say so." " You will have the whole world at your feet." " That is the worst of it," returned Breta, with a pretty knotting up of her white forehead. " If one need sing only for the love of it, the pure love of true art ; and not have to undergo 28 The Benefit of the Doubt. the deafening shrieks and thunders of applause that put one in mind of the ragings of a menagerie of wild beasts ; and worse still, if one did not have to undergo the the whole world at one's feet, and all that. Maestro mzo * I shall love I shall live in the singing the music ; but I I shall never like the life." " Ah, my poverina, you will get over all that," replied Trapassi, laughing maliciously. " A gran Diva, as you will be, must take all that without question senza dubbio." The professor was standing, ready to take his leave, still laughing and assuring Breta that she would get over all that, as Madama the Contessa entered. He stopped with Italian politeness to hear her . enlarge on the condition of household affairs. She had found, she said, Bertrando the footman, Luigi the coachman, and all the rest, except Nisida the Signorina Breta's maid, ignorant of the theft and arrest of the butler and cook. Nisida was on her way to give the alarm as the Signor Dunraven entered. The contessa was delighted with Breta's en- gagement to sing, and predicted for her darling a great career. A Very Fair Offer. 29 " And now, although we shall have to re- trench, of course," said she, with a great sigh of relief, " we shall not be compelled to give up this pretty casa. It is such a lovely dwelling, it would be a thousand pities ; and then the Sig- nor Whyte is so much attached to it, and has filled it with so many exquisite gems of artl " III. BRETA'S GHOSTS. AT the conclusion of Breta's " unprecedently successful engagement," as the papers had it, nothing would induce her to accept another engagement at La Scala, or at the opera-houses of any other city, although she had received various most flattering inducements. In vain all the maestri urged. The Signer Trapassi was in the profoundest despair. " Upon my life, madamigella," fumed he, "you are the first successful cantatrice the world has yet seen that ever threw away such a prospect! fame, wealth, every thing, for there is no height you could not reach ; and all because a crowd of fools persecute you with their senseless attentions (for I know that is the cause) that any other woman in the uni- verse, but you, would be proud of." 3 Breta s Glwsts. 3 1 But Breta was inexorable. And when, for reasons of her own, she did not fully divulge, she not only would not sing any more on any stage, but persisted also in quitting Milan and Europe, to sail for the shores of her native land with her uncle, Mr. Whyte (who invariably in- dulged her in her every wish), her old maestro, in the height of his anguish, bade her farewell with broken words and tears in his eyes. Three years had passed since Breta left Milan ; and one lovely morning it was in mid- June a burly gentleman, in black of faultless cut, sought a certain mansion that had been abandoned to decay ; riding through one of the gaps in its evergreen hedge, unmindful of its great iron gates, that, half off their hinges, were ever open. His horse, a superb animal, black as the rider's apparel, picked his way, with loosened rein, through the straggling weeds of the car- riage drive, once so gravel-smooth ; affording his master ample time, on his way, to study sunlight effects through grand vistas, where down in the depths of abrupt and rocky ravines wound a sparkling stream. Or to note in 32 The Benefit of the Doubt. smoother spots (so ample were the grounds) the picturesque confusion of half-tumbled-down summer-houses, voiceless fountains, fishless basins ; broken-nosed Venuses tilted awry on their pedestals ; Cupids shorn of their fat little arms ; dethroned Bacchuses toppling aslant as though overcome by their own wine ; and on a confusion of Naiads, Apollos, Mercuries, Satyrs, and Fauns ; all canting helplessly at odd angles, fantastically crowned or draped by way- ward creepers, anot staring blankly at each other, as though vainly asking what ruthless vandals had converted into an incongruous jumble, a once well-executed design of garden- art, telling certain elaborate mythological stories. Reining up at last in front of the dismantled mansion, gorgeous even in its desolation, and hitching his horse to a broken column of the veranda instead of to any of the ostentatiously carved, hitching-posts, he walked up the broad steps and stood before an opened oriel window, peering in as though he rather expected some startling something to spring out upon him. " Can you inform me, sir, as to the terms of purchase of this property ?" s^id he to the per- son he saw within. Bretas Glwsts. 33 Obtaining no response, he shouted at the top of his lungs : " Ho ! within there ! I wish to make inquiries relative to the purchase of this property." " Excuse me, sir," replied a small-sized, mid- dle-aged gentleman, showing himself at the window. " Pray don't exert your lungs so pain- fully. I am not in the least deaf. I did not know, when you first spoke, but that you might be the ghost in person, and I make it a rule never to reply to IT. But I never know, I get things mixed up so." " Then there is a ghost ? That is what I wish to ascertain." " Go to the front door, sir, and I will let you in. The ghost won't harm you, at least it never has any one yet ; though I never know, I get things mixed up so." Seated in the room of the open window, the stranger in black looked around him. But dis- O covering only legitimate objects elegantly carved old-time chairs, cabinets, and tables of the same antique model, a claw-footed secre- tary of elaborate workmanship, containing books and writing implements, some music on a rack, and a violin on one of the chairs ; also masterly 34 The Benefit of the Doubt. pictures on the walls, his glance reverted to the little gentleman, who had returned to his occupation of grilling, in a dainty, natty way, a small beefsteak over a few coals in the capa- cious, old-fashioned grate. " Then there is a ghost ? " again demanded the black guest, his eyes starting on another voyage around the room, and bringing up in a half-opened, curiously-carved wardrobe, in which were hanging vestments of small size and quaint pattern, the property evidently of his little host. " Before I answer your query, sir, I should like to be certain that you are not the ghost come at last to pounce upon me with a business pretext. IT is up to any dodge. IT has re- peatedly threatened to appear. I have long been expecting IT. But I never know, I get things mixed up so." As the little gentleman said this, in a tone half querulous, half jocose, his visitor demanded with a most unghostly laugh : " Do I look like an IT? Not a pennyweight less than two hundred pounds, I assure you, Mr. " Whyte," returned the other mildly, almost as though his having a name at all required an apology. Br eta's G/iosts. 35 " I am of the legal profession, Mr. Whyte. My client is a speculator in ghosts ; so now for your ghost, if you please," and the legal gentle- man concluded with another expansive laugh, as though the ghost were the best joke of the sea- son. Little Mr. Whyte nodded his head medita- tively, and in response to his visitor's burly laughter, twitched his mouth around into a twisted smile, expressive of mild endurance rather than of mirth, that showed smiles to be but stray waifs on his face. His legal guest, with another searching glance, wished to know at what figure he held the property, including the ghost. Mr. Whyte met the professional eyes fasten- ed on his with a look as clear and steadfast as that of an unhackneyed boy (he had altogether a freshness and innocence about him suggestive of a boy who had forgotten to grow old), and seating himself at the table, upon which he had placed plates and condiments, his grilled steak, coffee-cups, and rolls, he invited his guest, by a quick wave of his little hand, to partake of his cheer, which the guest, by a heavy wave of his ponderous hand, declined. 36 The Benefit of the Doubt. " The price of this property," said he, " is fifty thousand dollars, less, by more than half, than it would be were it not for the ghost, you see, sir. If this poor place were as I knew it years ago, when it had no ghost, it could not be bought for any money. I will show you around as soon as you like. That 's why I am here. I have no responsibility of ownership ; the ghost is sufficient for me. I sometimes think more than sufficient, but I never know, I get things mixed up so." And little Mr. Whyte applied himself to his coffee and rolls in a quaint, self-communing way, as though work- ing out the Infinite Calculus. " Might I ask who is the owner ? " queried his guest. " Certainly, sir, it is no secret. Though I sometimes think it quite possible that the owner does not own it at all, but that the ghost does. But I never know, I " I will make a note of the owner's name," suggested the gentleman in black, taking out his tablets, and nodding a dignified acceptance of the error of his first demand in asking if he might ask, which his little host had so inno- cently corrected. Bret as Ghosts. 37 With an air of profoundest reverence, as a devotee might speak of the Virgin Mother, the little gentleman took from his lips the coffee- cup, and fitting it softly and caressingly into its saucer, as though it were a chalice containing the long-sought typical grail, he replied : " The legal and sole possessor of this property is a young and beautiful lady, beautiful past conception, and good as she is beautiful, whose name is Miss Breta " The legal and sole possessor of this property is a young and beautiful lady, beautiful past conception, and good as she is beautiful, whose name is Miss Breta " sang an unseen person in a rich, full tenor, adapting little Mr. Whyte's words to a grand air from Himmel's " Ossian," and abruptly ending on an augmented second, as though the words were insufficient with which to finish the sequence. " Who 's that? " demanded the guest in black. " Are you a ventriloquist, Mr. Whyte ? " Mr. Whyte not responding, he repeated his question, looking around the room with startled dignity. " Excuse me, sir, I am no ventriloquist. 'J was waiting to hear if IT would not resume the 38 The Benefit of che Doubt. theme and end honestly on the tonic. IT has quite the habit of leading off on the diminished fifth perhaps, or on the minor seventh, or, worse, on the major seventh, leaving you in an uncomfortable state of suspense like being partly hung and then cut down. If IT had half a conscience it would make a point of conclud- ing satisfactorily on the tonic." The stranger gravely ejaculated : " Ah, in- deed ! " but notwithstanding his portly dignity, he looked, speaking in musical parlance, de- cidedly unstrung, as though a tonic might be satisfactory to him also. But he made a great show of being uncon- cerned, and asked : " Does this ghost of yours do any thing be- sides sing, Mr. Whyte ? " " Every thing else ! I sometimes think the house will come down about my ears, when IT or THEY (for the ghost is legion) get so boister- ous as to make me almost fancy myself a ghost along with them. But then I never know, 1 get things mixed up so." " Mixed up, I should think so ! One day of it would do for me. Why, it was right in the room here, over there. But it is just what my client is after." Bretas Ghosts. 39 " We have had many persons looking at this place, on account of its magnificent site, but all object, like yourself, to the ghost. And now, to have an applicant turn up who wants a ghost ! I should say your client must be somewhat eccentric. But then I never know, I ' "In respect to desiring ghosts for society, yes, but otherwise he is in no sort eccentric," interrupted the other. " We all have our peculiarities," replied little Mr. Whyte, with great simplicity. " I some- times think I have mine. But then I " " The young gentleman for whom I am transacting this business," said the stranger, " is singularly endowed by nature, and can afford to have his peculiarities. He has rare gifts which have been highly cultured, is of an exceeding- ly handsome exterior, of an uncommonly gen- erous disposition ; and is the possessor of great wealth. His name is Joslyn de - The last name of the fortunate he, to whom had been vouchsafed so many enviable gifts, was drowned in the sudden crash of brass and the shriek of catgut, followed by a magnifi- cent soprano solo, in a bell-like voice and true operatic style ; the words beginning with, 4O The Benefit of the Doubt. " The young gentleman," and ending with, "Joslyn de being substituted for those of the original score. " It did end on the tonic ! " rapturously ex- claimed little Mr. Whyte, catching up his violin and rendering portions of the melody over again, with a method finished and masterly. A round of applause, the clapping of unseen hands, the shouts of " Bravo! " " Encore! " of unseen voices, following the little gentleman's violin-playing, he took quite as a matter of course. His visitor tried also to look uncon- cerned, as though he had been in the habit of being serenaded and concerted by shadows every month in the year. " I must say, Mr. Whyte," he remarked, " not to enlarge upon your own playing, which is faultless ; just, and broad in style, equal to that of any violinist I ever heard, and I 've heard them all all the public ones I mean, I must say, that if I had been conveyed here blind- folded in the midst of that operatic blast, I should have sworn I had been taken to Rossini's ' Barber.' I never heard a finer rendering of the ' una voce pocofa! or to more curious words. I 've heard Sontag's Rosina, and Malibran's Bret a 's Ghosts. 41 Rosina ; I 've heard Jenny Lind sing the cava- tina inimitably ; have made prima donnas a study from a boy ; and it seems as though years had been wiped out, and that I had just listened again to Malibran. I heard her in Mi- lan when I was fifteen. But let us proceed to business. We will go out, if ycu please, under the trees, if the ghost does not go there. I have heard enough and can report favorably. I have heard quite sufficient." The ghost was of another opinion, for as little Mr. Whyte arose from his seat saying : " IT never leaves the house, we will go " he was interrupted by a perfect diapason of deaf- ening discord ; as though a whole army of the tallest of ancient Titans, and the shortest of modern "short-boys," had clubbed together for a concert called callithumpian. The legal gentleman who came to seek a ghost, having gotten more ghost than he ex- pected, rushed from the house with prodigious strides, little Mr. Whyte trotting unconcernedly after him. "There, I am out of that infernal din! I al- ways detested noise. I get as far from the big drums at the opera as I can. I never go to 42 The Benefit of the Doubt. hear Wagner, as I cannot stand the fusilade of heavy cannon and doubling of blatant brass in- struments (which doubling always produces discordant fifths) in Wagner's late operas. I always go out of town on the Fourth of July, and, but if Joslyn de Grey likes the ghostly racket, he is welcome to it." " We should all follow the bent of our in- clinations if we can ; many of us cannot," said Mr. Whyte. " It is entirely on scientific grounds that Mr. de Grey wishes a house of ghosts. Young as he is, only twenty-six, he is a great scientist, devoted to the advance of natural science. He is aiming to discover I really cannot state exactly what, but he is experimenting with electrical batteries and chemical compounds." " Oh ! " meekly responded Mr. Whyte. " And now that you and I and the ghost have hobnobbed together in so friendly a way," continued he, " I will make bold to ask you by what name I shall address you. When I make the acquaintance of a new ghost I mean indi- vidual, I like to have a handle by which memo- ry can take hold of when thinking of him." " With all pleasure imaginable. My name is Bretas Ghosts. 43 Benjamin Black, at your service ; here is my card." " Bless me!" exclaimed little Mr. Whyte in his fresh, roseate way ; the boy that had forgot- ten to grow old, sticking out prominently. "What a curious collision of colors! Black, white, red, and grey, mingle, mingle, and so on." And he put Mr. Black's card carefully in his wallet. " Where do you get your red, Mr. Whyte? " asked Mr. Black, laughing ponderously. " My niece's name is Garnet, Breta Garnet," replied Mr. Whyte, with another twisted smile. " Now if I were a believer in such things, and I am not," added he, " I should say it meant something. But I never know, I get " " You do well not to believe in any thing, Mr. Whyte." " Any thing supernatural, you mean." " Supernatural, of course," assented Mr. Black. " Except ghosts, of course," interposed Mr. Whyte. " Well, yes, except ghosts," laughingly as- sented Mr. Black, with a new and saving faith in the late demonstrations. " But what a charm- 44 The Benefit of the Doubt. ing spot ! " he exclaimed, recovering from his laugh and looking about him over the land- scape. Mr. Whyte had led the way to a grove of elms on an ascent ; from which point, over an intervening gorge, down whose bank a beauti- ful spring-fed cascade foamed and sparkled, could be seen the pretty village of Lea below, and a vast extent of valley beyond, with moun- tains in the distance. " Why, such a nook as this, with these giant elms overhead and that view in front, is worth its weight in gold," continued Mr. Black, seating himself on the least shattered of the carved oaken benches near the natural fountain, which was the generous source of the cascade. " You may well say that, Mr. Black. And this knoll, and these elms, and this fountain, and these carved oaken seats, have seen grand com- pany, I can tell you. Gentlemen of foreign legations, Presidents of the United States, noblemen with titles nearly as long as the Declaration of Independence, American, Ital- ian, French, Austrian, English ; all were wel- come here ; for Mr. Howard Garnet kept open house in those days." Bretas Ghosts. 45 "Was Mr. Howard Garnet Miss Breta's father?" " Her grandfather," replied little Mr. Whyte. 4< And how did the place come to be left to such utter desolation ? " " That is the story of the house. Every house has its story, more or less ; and that house (and little Mr. Whyte jerked his smal\ thumb over toward the devastated mansion) has its story more, I should judge. But I never know, I "Can the story be told?" asked Mr. Black, looking over toward the house, just discernible through the trees, as though possibly the " le- gion " might be peering at him from its win- dows. " It is involved in mystery, the solution of it being buried with Mr. Howard Garnet, on whom no censure was ever attached, the Gar- nets having all been true gentle-folk as a family. But, always generous and unsuspicious, he per- mitted a dark, wily Austrian, of the name of Erlau, a baron, to gain so unaccountable an as- cendancy over him, that Baron Erlau not only lived here with him, but he managed Mr. Gar- net's affairs. To this Erlau the whole evil was 46 The Benefit of the Doubt. attributed, an ugly rumor being afloat that he had occasioned Mr. Garnet's death. But there was no proof nothing that could be taken hold of legally. The rest can be all told in three words, and as I see you take an interest in it I will tell it to you. After Mr. Howard Garnet's strano-e death the house was abandoned the O ghosts having taken possession, you see. His widow (Breta's grandmother) went abroad with her only son (Breta's father), and there she died. This son, on coming of age, married my sister, and then, for the first time, discovered that the Baron of Erlau had made way with the entire property (such things are, you know), and nothing could be done about it, for the baron himself suddenly died shot himself. Nothing was left of the vast Garnet property but this place, which, being deeded to his son's heirs by Mr. Howard Garnet (Breta proving the sole heir), could not be touched by the rapacious baron. Breta's father, when he found himself worth nothing, was so affected on account of his young wife, that he took sick and died. I then brought my sister (Breta's mother) to the United States for a change, where Breta was born, and where I lost my own dear little wife. Breta was Bretas Ghosts. 47 then two years old, and, heart-broken, I took her and her mother back to Milan, where, when Breta was five years old, her mother (my sister) died. All death, you see, so far ; but it is the way with some families. I owned a handsome property then, left me by my father, and I spared nothing in the education of Breta I had no children of my own. Three and a half years ago my brother-in-law (my wife's youngest brother), acting as my agent (I never had any turn for business), made an unfortunate invest- ment, and I lost every cent." " Stay ! " exclaimed Mr. Black. " Yes, to be sure ! It was the Signorina Breta Garnet, the very name ! I was in Milan about three and a half years ago, on some important busi- ness for a client of mine. A cantatrice, a per- fect marvel of a cantatrice, a debutante, about whom all Milan was going wild, was singing at the time. I heard her every opera night during my stay in the city. She was very young sixteen I think they said, and was a marvel of beauty as well. Was it ,was she ? And here Mr. Black stopped, looking in- tently at Mr. Whyte. " My niece," responded Mr. Whyte, with 48 The Benefit of the Doubt, much simplicity. " She is now teaching in Miss Rutherford's Seminary, on that hill just above the village." And he indicated the spot by a sweep of his small hand. " But I do not understand ; she, a great prima donna, teaching in a seminary ! why, she was creating a perfect furor " Pardon me," mildly interrupted little Mr. Whyte, " but that was the difficulty. She could not stand it, you see, sir." " She could not stand could not stand what ? " " The fuss they made, you know." " I thought prima donnas liked a fuss made over them ; and the more the fuss the better pleased they always were," and Mr. Black laughed ponderously at his own conceit. One of his twisted smiles briefly illumined Mr. Whyte 's fresh, roseate face. " It may be as you say, sir," observed he, " but my niece never liked it ; and, when her engagement was up, she could not be prevailed upon to make any more engagements, and we came here." " And does she like it here ? " " Vastly." Bretas Glwsts. 49 " Strange, very strange to be willing to bury such marvellous gifts as hers and she so young in a little country place like this." " Why, you see, Mr. Black, she had no peace of her life. She was serenaded so constantly she could get no sleep. She had the greatest profusion of costly presents sent her that she would not accept and could not return, as they were anonymous. Everybody was making her offers of marriage, and fighting duels for her, and she was glad enough to get away and to bury herself, as you call it, in the seclusion of" " Yes, yes, I see," said Mr. Black, thought- fully, not waiting for his host to add his last words. " Miss Garnet, with her exquisite voice and method, and her remarkable dramatic talent, and her wonderful beauty, possesses also a cer- tain magnetic charm that is irresistible. I saw that when I heard her. She is like no one else ; yes, yes, I see, I can well understand." " For myself," continued Mr. Whyte, " I play on the organ down there in that pretty Gothic church. You can just see it from here. I could get a very much larger salary in New York, and could run down there on the cars of course 5o The Benefit of the Doubt. every Sunday, but Breta is taking much pleas- ure in singing in the choir they cannot applaud in a church, you know, and I do not like to leave her, her pleasure pleases me." " Naturally," returned Mr. Black. Thanking Mr. White for his narration, he assured him that with his own musical gift and his Stradivarius, a genuine one as he had seen by its form he ought to have been heard from in New York and elsewhere, and by this time reaped a fortune, to compensate for the one he had lost. Little Mr. Whyte, with the greatest simplici- ty, acknowledged that although he had never played in public he had achieved quite a name in Milan, and Paris, and Venice, and in Lon- don also, with his violin, among the dilettanti di musica and even the maestri. " I really care for little else in this world but music, except my niece," added he, and then reverting to the business on hand : " You knew," said he, " that the greater part of the valuable paintings and all the plate had been removed from. the house ? " Mr. Black was acquainted with the fact. " And the greater part of the library also. Bretas Ghosts. 5i But furniture and every thing else remain in- tact, and in a good state of preservation. The interior of the house has suffered little or none in comparison with the exterior. Its strong fastenings protected the house. The grounds suffered the most. If I were sharp, Mr. Black," and little Mr. Whyte gave one of his twisted smiles, " I should double on the price, it being the ghost your client demands. But I will be content with the fifty thousand dollars fixed upon a year ago, when it was ascertained no one would purchase on account of the ghost." " There is much legal justice in that way of putting the question," returned Mr. Black, laughing. He then proposed waiting on Miss Garnet at once for her signature to the deed, which he had with him. Mr. Whyte, acquiescing, proceeded back to the house to lock the doors, and saddling his horse, he rode forth by the side of Mr. Black to make a business call on his niece. Some writing and witnessing and signing were done, and a legal transfer was made to Joslyn de Grey, of Elmwood, with its haunted house. IV. THERE ARE PEOPLE AND PEOPLE. THE hum of lesson -saying was hushed. The patter of little feet and the patter of large feet had ceased making" echoes in the great airy class-rooms of Miss Rutherford's Seminary, devoted to mischief and learning. It was Sunday morning, the day after the sale of Elm wood, and was just before the breakfast hour. Assembled in the pupils' parlor were as many only of the fair owners of the pattering feet as were the regular boarding pupils of the estab- lishment, among whom the possession of that traditionary foot, under whose aristocratic arch the stream of water could flow, had become a standing boast ; while any allusion to the foot of that widely-sung Ethiopian maiden, the hol- low of which made a hole in the ground, gave great offence. There are People and People. 53 Miss Pella Morton, a young lady favored by fortune in being a " red-headed heiress," and a very pretty blonde belle, and who was in her last year, and successfully undergoing the operation of being finished, had just remarked, in a mealy falsetto, that she saw " no way of eluding the impending necessity of church attendance." " For my part," exclaimed Miss Frank Bow- ers (Frank, seldom called by the gentler ab- breviation of Fanny, was also in her last year, but was not being finished, the material refus- ing the finishing polish ; was also an heiress, but of the reverse type from Miss Morton, with jet-black hair, shading into that blue sheen of the raven's wing about which poets used to rave before some hue of red became a fashionable necessity), " for my part, I have an excruciat- ing headache, and shall not go to church," and Miss Bowers pointed her words by a significant nod that sent the shadows rippling down the crimped waves of her long, dark hair, like un- dulating clouds of fleece over a storm-sky. "That means no breakfast," squealed Miss Morton, elevating her pretty, classically-formed nose contemptuously. " I shall not go without my breakfast for all the churches that were ever made." 54 The Benefit of the Doubt. " I could quote Scripture about the advisa- bility of not living by bread alone, and all that, in favor of my argument," returned Frank, " if it were not slightly wicked ; Miss Morton en est I' arbitre" she added, with a humorous defer- ence that created a general laugh. " Slightly wicked, and /the judge ! " sneered Pella Morton, again elevating her nose and drawing down the corners of her prettily-chisel- led mouth. " Friends, lovers, and so forth, lend me your ears," quoted Frank, in dramatic contralto. " Void ! I have, as I said, an excruciating head- ache, and it has attacked me in the form of an apple-pie, a plump pie, deep and broad, like that famous one in the picture-books that B bit." " Stolen ! " proclaimed Pella Morton. "Grand del! Here her stolen! Not stolen ! " tragically rejoined Frank, deepening the rich contralto of her voice to produce as ludicrous a contrast as possible to Pella's piping treble. " Honestly bought, and with an honest tip to the cook big enough to insure secrecy, with a view to this Sunday morning's delecta- tion." TJiere are People and People. 55 " Bribery and corruption ! " ejaculated Pella Morton, in her squeakiest falsetto. " Je suis tout a voiis" returned Frank mock- ingly. " As much bribery and corruption as you like. Que me voulez-vous f " " What I would have of you is English. / never mix languages," retorted Pella Morton. " When / speak French I speak French, and when / speak English, I speak English" " How delightfully dissimilar we are ! " said Frank, with good-humored irony. " I always mix them. I liked them mixed. But to busi- ness. Who will join me in headache and pie ? There is sufficient for three square meals, a perfect gorge ! It won't do for too many to in- dulge in headache, or, to descend to the lan- guage of modern classics, Miss Rutherford would twig and wool us, and worse, the pie would n't hold out. Now who goes in for a pie-ous headache ? " In the midst of the laughter that had to be kept within Sunday lirgits, two of Frank's staunchest friends offered themselves as candi- dates. " ' Ha ! 'T is well ! ' as Victor Hugo senten- tiously remarks. So now ; Pella Morton, s il 56 The Benefit of the Doubt. vous plait, and all assembled, look to it that you do not peach, if you do not apple-pie." During the fresh burst of laughter that fol- lowed Frank's last essay, the door opened and Breta Garnet, exquisitely dressed in white and looking as cool and fresh as a tea-rose, walked, or rather seemed to float, into the room, with such inimitable grace did she move. " Are you not very warm in here this lovely morning ? " asked she, her voice with a wood's robin ring in it, while her large clear eyes took in something strange and not quite harmonious in the faces around her ; as with a tender, sym- pathetic glance, she looked from one to another. " I left the door open for the western breeze that comes in through the windows of the corridor; but if you prefer it, girls, it can be closed again," added Breta, as with a smile, her calm glance, with another questioning survey of the group, rested lovingly on the mischievous face of her friend Frank. " Frank has a violent headache, Miss Breta, and was afraid of the draught," responded Pella, with a winning smile. " For myself," she added, with a little high-treble laugh, " I am fond of the air." There are People and People. 5 7 "Sans doute ; violent, on my z/0-racity," re- turned the ready Frank in as cavernous a con- tralto as she could command without injury to her throat, and with diamond-pointed flashes at Pella from her black eyes that were brimming over with mirth, " The air is delicious, Miss Garnet. It was Pella, by the way, who her- metically sealed us in here, that she might have a comfortable growl about having no headache as pretext for non-church attend- ance. As for mine, it is not dangerous, only slightly apple-plectic, and will readily yield to pie-ous meditation." A soft light shone in Breta's dark gray eyes, and her mouth dimpled into a radiant smile, in sympathetic response to the laughter from the merry group at Frank's bad puns. She seated herself on the sofa beside Frank, who was languidly fanning herself, with half-shut eyes, thereby showing to advantage their long, jet- black lashes ; and Breta was instantly sur- rounded by three or four of the younger girls. One, the youngest of Miss Rutherford's pupils, a pretty child of eleven, and sister to Frank, wedged herself so closely to Breta that Frank uttered the protest : 58 The Benefit of the Doubt, " How can you be so rude, Nelly ? Don't you see you are rumpling Miss Breta's lovely white muslin ? I would not have you all swarming and buzzing around me this hot day, like so many flies, for all the " No one would ever dream of such a thing, sister Frank," interrupted Nelly, with juvenile dignity " You are not one of the kind. You are too much like Shakespeare's fretful porcu- pine, with sharp quills sticking out all around ; instead of being made of super-refined honey, like Miss Breta. Flies love honey," and Nelly gave Breta an emphatic hug. " Nelly, if you won't say sharp things to your sister Frances, I will tell you and Gracie Gay a story." " I hope it will have a moral that Frank can profit from, Miss Breta," said Pella, turning sweetly to Breta. A brilliant light shot into Breta's eyes, as with a significant smile she began : " Once upon a time a great and powerful nation that we might liken to a boarding- school, as from first to last it has had some hard old lessons to learn rebelled against the tyr- anny of its rulers, who were rioting in feasts, There are People and People. 5 9 while the poor people were ground down and starved. But, unfortunately, from listening to false teachers, the poor people went to such a mad extreme that the whole nation was deluded in rivers of blood, and the whole world o was set in a blaze of indignation and dismay. Law and order in that nation were hooted down. Sunday, and all Sunday observances were trampled under foot, as they impeded what was called the growth of Reason. This deity for they made a goddess of the thing they called Reason, which had been nursed into life by the false teachers and the too apt pupils was honored with altars, on which incense was burned, and before whose shrine torches blazed night and day. The days were divided into nine working days (in which very little work was done except cutting off people's heads), and every tenth day was proclaimed a holiday for all kinds of mad revelry a holiday of horrors. At last when the poor people had feasted on blood and terror long enough, they were only too thankful to be forced back into law and order and Sundays and churches and church-going." " A very terse synopsis of the ' Reign of 60 . The Benefit of the Doubt. Terror,' and all aimed at me a regular coup de foudre hitting the heart of the target. I, a rebel to discipline and church-going, am de- clared to embody the whole Jacobin outbreak, guillotine included. Meekly, therefore, in the language called slang our modern classics that I love so well, I can only say : ' Pile up the agony.' ' I acknowledge the corn.' ' And Frank accompanied her words with intonation of voice and look of such droll resignation that the whole crowd of girls, including Pella always her antagonist broke into a peal of irresistible laughter. Breta endeavored to preserve a decorously straight face, but was compelled to give way to laughter with the rest. Frank's quick eye noted this last convert to her power, and her face settled into the contented expression of hav- ing won a highly prized victory. " Mamma tried and tried to break Frank from making funny faces," put in Nelly Bowers, " telling her it was n't refined and lady-like, and all that. She told her that she might as well turn circus clown and done with it, and that the height of her ambition was to make fools laugh. I always noticed, though, that There are People and People. 61 mamma could never finish her lecture without ending with a laugh herself." " Nell, never tell tales out of school. But, allons\ to return to our mutton," resumed Frank. " As the Reign of Terror could be traced back to the false teachers, so, all we board- ing-school victims need to make angels of us, are teachers who have sense enough not to bulldoze us into doing our duty. Now when I " "Very seditious sentiments!" piped in Pella. " Angels, indeed ! and bulldoze too ! Just as though we did not have it all in us and more o too. " Oh, yes ; I know you believe in total de- pravity of infants and all that blue-nosed bosh," returned Frank, her black eyes flashing disdain. " Now let us go back to first principles Who taught Eve a lady who was altogether good and lovely to eat apples before they were made into pies, but the false teacher, Satan ? " " Eve had it all in her ; and I consider it sacrilegious to call her a lady, just as though " Why, Pella, you would n't call her a gentle- man, would you ? " asked Frank, with a pre- tended simplicity that caused a laugh. 62 The Benefit of the Doubt. " As though she were like any one else," continued Pella disdainfully. " But she had it all in her or she would not have listened to Satan," concluded Pella, with spiteful decision. " Don't believe a word of it. Have you nothing to say in defence of our first mother, Miss Garnet ? Sail in, this is a free fight." " Be still, Frank ! You sha' n't drag my Miss Breta into your discussions, as you call them, with Pella," exclaimed little Nelly Bowers, throwing her arms lovingly around Breta, starched muslin included. " You know you never believe a word you are saying, Frank, and only talk to set Pella on." " Miss Breta is fully able to defend herself, Nell," piped up Pella. " Do tell us, Miss Breta, that you consider Frank has entirely the wrong side of the question. And then, too, any one can tell her she has been indulging in very trivi- al behavior for Sunday." With a sweet serenity of manner all her own, Breta said she was strongly reminded of the fable of the chameleon ; "which ends, as you all know," she continued, " with the umpire's producing a specimen of that saurian that by a chance always occurring in stories he hap- There are People and People. 63 pened to have handy in his pocket. Whereby he proved two things : The difficulty of judg- ing from appearances ; and that a conclusion may be both right and wrong." " Aimed at both of us, Pella. Our folly might have been answered by a long, bulldoz- ing moral essay, " Frank would not have lived the night through, if she had not gotten in her favorite word aofain," broke in Pella. o " By a long, bulldozing moral essay," continued Frank, "that would have tired me out and made me determined to stick to my own opinion, es- pecially if a wrong one which it generally is. Now when I leave school I shall set up a model boarding-school with Miss Garnet at the head, for having the hunkiest way of making one in love with duty and self-sacrifice and other disagreeable things. She '11 turn out a whole O O raft of Martha Washingtons, Madame de Staels " " Don't you think, Miss Breta, as a prepara- tory step, Frank had better give up slang ? " asked Pella sweetly. " Girls," said Breta, rising with a smile that, unmistakable in its meaning, was the embodi 64 The Benefit of the Doubt. merit of sunshine, " Miss Rutherford intimated last evening that she intends giving us the whole of one day this week for a picnic to Rocky Glen. We are to take every thing to make the day pleasant, including apple-pies." And, with a significant glance at Frank that re- mained tender and loving in spite of its playful sarcasm, Breta left the room, with a light, easy grace of movement that Pella Morton had been long and vainly endeavoring to imitate. In the midst of the general satisfaction at the prospect of the picnic, Frank exclaimed : " It is all Breta Garnet's doing. Miss Ruther- ford will grant her a favor she would not to the whole school combined." " I hope Miss Rutherford will not fall ill in consequence," sneered Miss Rivers, a tall young lady, also in her last year, and undergo- ing the finishing process. " I am sure," mildly expostulated pretty Sadie Burrill, " Miss Rutherford is much more lenient than " " Who constituted you her defender, Sadie ? " snapped Pella. " Pella means that, Sadie," said Frank, laugh- ing. " Now Breta Garnet/' continued she, TJiere are People and People. 65 " who is so different from every one else, so superior " You could put a Miss to her name if she is," again snapped Pella. " She is our teacher in singing if she is just your age and just my age. And besides she is a great prima donna, if she is here teaching singing. / always call her Miss Breta, although she is no older than I am, and proper respect demands " Proper fiddlesticks ! " elegantly broke in Frank. " When any one is wonderful," she continued, her great velvety black eyes flash- ing, and the rich coloring of her face growing more vivid, as a smile full of playful sarcasm curved her mouth, " we do not not say Miss in speaking of them. Who says Miss Lind, or Miss Arc, or Miss Nightingale, or Miss Patti ? Is n't it always Jenny Lind, Joan of Arc, Flor- ence Nightingale, Adelina Patti ? Now Breta Garnet is wonderful [Frank grew earnest]. She sings as divinely as Malibran Papa has heard them both, and he knows and she would have made as great a name if she had only kept on. She is just too lovely for any thing even to her dress. Which one of us could have a crowd of children hanging around us, as she 66 The Benefit of the Doubt. always has, and keep fit to be seen ? They don't phase her gown " ; Frank threw a glance over at Pella and repeated : "They don't phaze her gown. I think she inherits the gift from Mrs. Radcliffe's heroines, who could travel through underground passages, and be confined in dungeons, and then come out shining in snowy-white costume, ready for a ball or a wedding." " Nothing so marvellous about Miss Breta's gown to-day, if they don't phaze it. Phaze in- deed! Real India mull does n't crease," said Pella loftily. " Though, as every one knows, Miss Breta is a young lady who is superior in every respect." " Miss Breta does every thing exquisitely. Frank exaggerates nothing in calling her won- derful, she being gifted with that rare thing genius," said pretty Sadie Burrill, who, be- sides being a very pretty young lady, a year younger than Frank, was her warmest friend. " And then, too," she continued in her pleasant voice, " Miss Breta Garnet has been thoroughly educated. And as for her dress why, in Paris and Milan, where she has spent so many years of her life, well, in Italy dress is one of the There are People and People. 67 Fine Arts, and in Paris it is one of the Posi- tive Sciences." " There are people and people," exclaimed Frank Bowers, giving Sadie a bright, apprecia- tive look ; " people with their dogmas that offer premiums on deception (I lay the whole of this apple-pie shindy on the Rutherford shoulders, and sha' n't flunk out now I am in for it) ; and then there are people who give you better impulses and make you ashamed of every thing that is not as good and pure as themselves. I know only one such, and she has just gone out of the room in a cloud of white muslin, lacking wings only to make her an angel." " Hear, hear ! " declaimed Pella Morton. " She puts you in mind of the Mona Lisa ; Papa brought a rare copy from Italy, for which he gave a fabulous sum. She has the same tender, mellow eyes, and charm of face, that looks as though , c .he went showering down apple blossoms, cool and fragrant upon the " Hear ! hear ! " broke in Pella again, with a shrill little lauo-h. O But there was no chance to hear, for the din of the breakfast bell started into activity the 68 The Benefit of the Doubt. patter and clatter of the various-sized feet, the half-repentant Frank Bowers being left with only one of her proselytes, the other having deserted her standard. " We shall kill ourselves, Sadie," said she dis- mally to her ally. " You will have to go one half the pie, I the other. They will range our tombstones side by side, with the sacred and appropriate, if ungrammatical, inscription on them of the Latin words : ' Pi-et-as-beat-um? " V. "DO HURRY ON." ALL the church bells of the village were ring- ing, and Miss Marcia Rutherford tow- ering above her sex, like the Roman Marcia was out upon the lawn in front of her seminary, surrounded by her pupils, who, with their fair, fresh faces, and in their pretty summer dresses, looked like a flock of milk-white doves ready for ?. flight ; Miss Rutherford herself appearing like a well-disposed royal eagle, who, instead of eating up all the doves at a meal, was peacefully marshalling them into marching order. Miss Rutherford's Seminary like herself, lofty and imposing in appearance was situ- ated on an elevation of ground at the edge of the village and overlooking it. At the back, and on each side of the school-buildings, was a grove of magnificent trees, among which, con- spicuous, was the Northern species of the 69 ;o The Benefit of the Doubt. giant magnolia, with its stiff, inodorous yel- low blossoms, known as the tulip or cucumber tree. A long, straight row of Lombardy poplars, ranged at measured distances along the entire front of the lawn, before the seminary, gave it a military, well-guarded appearance. Miss Rutherford, liberal in all things consist- ent with her position as head of a young ladies' academy, permitted her pupils to worship at various churches, in accordance with the tenets of their parents ; insisting only in giving in command at least one teacher to each division of pupils, as young ladies of boarding-schools are not proverbial for sedateness. Forsaking the dusty road, their way to the village, by a short cut, lay through a shady lane, and then across a short strip of meadow, along the banks of a stream margined by wil- lows, in all less than a quarter of a mile. The school procession was always a pretty sight as it entered the village ; teachers and pu- pils filing off so orderly to their respective churches, Miss Rutherford heading the largest division, mild Miss Amanda (Miss Rutherford's sister) the next, and so on, down to the two who "Do Hurry On." 71 accompanied Breta to the Gothic Episcopal Church. Breta, on this day, proceeded to her church alone, Frank and Sadie beincr victims to the o Sunday headache Miss Rutherford did not deem it prudent to gainsay. In the picturesque little church-yard, fragrant with vines and roses, Breta passed a number of people, all of whom greeted her effusively ; for, with her beautiful voice and sweet face, she was everywhere a favorite. Going up the aisle to the choir, which was built down on the floor of the church, in the en- closure to the right of the chancel, Breta found her uncle seated at the orcjan, awaiting the last o o toll of the bell to commence his voluntary. He leaned over toward her as she took her usual seat near him, and asked in undertone why Miss Bowers and Miss Burrill were not with her. " They stayed at home to eat apple-pie," re- plied Breta, in the same sotto voce. Mr. Whyte, quite mystified for a moment, then made it apparent, by one of his twisted smiles, that he had taken the situation in. " I am sorry," whispered he, " not to have 72 The Benefit of the Doubt. Miss Bovvers' contralto, as I invited Mr. de Grey to hear the music. That is he on the last of the choir seats. A wonderfully fine face has he not ? He arrived at the old place last even- ing. My dear, as Miss Bowers is not here you cannot sing the Quis est Homo; the Stabat Mater will have to wait. You must sing a solo instead, ' I know that my Redeemer liveth.' ' " Any thing you please, Uncle Ray, dear, but don't let us talk any more, people are beginning to look this way." Little Mr. Whyte, taking a modest survey around the church, with the fresh, innocent way he had, that made him always young, began softly turning over the loose music scores that were lying on the top of the upper manual, one of which he handed to Breta. Breta fastened her eyes determinedly on the score, having found them, in spite of herself, attracted in the direction of de Grey. " Uncle Ray is right, he has a wonderfully fine face," thought she, much as though having contemplated a rare picture. " A face altogether expressive of never having entertained one ig- noble thought, and he does not look in the least like one addicted to ghosts." "Do Hurry On." 73 Unconscious of Breta's scrutiny, de Grey sat looking toward the church entrance, seemingly taking mental notes of the incomers as they entered their pews, his bearing indicating a person of refinement and culture. His forehead was broad ; his chin well defined, cleft and clean- cut, denoting resolution and courage ; with large steadfast eyes that had a dreamy look in them, his mouth gave promise of a warm, genial, mirth-loving nature. He had the dark hair and eyes, and the clear olive complexion that pronounced him a descendant of the Nor- man, rather than the Saxon race. " He is an entirely new type," mused Breta, who, with another glance at his still averted face, resolutely determined to look no more. " As handsome as the Count Buonarotti (the handsomest man I ever saw), this de Grey has a look of having more to him than any one I ever met, more capacity for comprehending every thing, or for suffering, or enjoying. His face, with all its brightness is instinct with sadness, the sadness one sees in the pictures of those old martyrs, the same indescribable sadness one hears in the undertone of all beau- tiful music, that underlies a 11 most grand in 74 The Benefit of the Doubt. nature, a sadness as terrible as it is undefina- ble ; one feels it. And yet he does not look like a melancholy person in the least, but as though it came from the perfect, the rounded-out har- mony of a nature that " Here the organ rolled in on Breta's analyti- cal musings, arousing her to a sense of her sur- roundings. The services had commenced, and the choir were doing wonders, in spite of the absence of the leading contralto. They had been well drilled by the conscientious Mr. Whyte, and the music was well chosen. It was during the Venite Exultimus that Breta, seeing de Grey's hands held no prayer- book, she did not lift her eyes to his face, asked Mr. Blitson, the tenor, in a whisper, at the last chord of the amen, to hand him one. Mr. Blitson, with a bow of assent, handed the book to a pretty young lady who had come with Mrs. Strong, the second soprano ; she ac- cepting it with a brilliant blush. Taking another book from the rack, Breta. not to be balked in her charitable purpose, ad- vanced toward de Grey, while the choir were in the rustle of taking their seats. Half rising, de Grey, in the easiest manner possible, reached "Do Hurry On.'' 7 5 out his hand for the book, which was not a small one, and was metal-clasped and metal- cornered, and, just as his fingers touched it, it fell to the floor with a clang. As Breta instinctively stooped to pick it up, a hand was before her, a hand large and shapely, that securely grasped the book. As hurriedly as she had stooped, she arose again ; her head coming in contact with a hard, unyield- ing substance that could only be de Grey's head. Almost blinded with the tears forced from her eyes by the concussion, Breta cast a hasty glance, not at de Grey, but around the church, through the millions of stars that danced before her eyes, as she retreated to her seat. But she could not see that any one had observed any thing unusual. No one seemed to be at- tempting to conceal behind handkerchiefs or fans the smiles that must not be openly seen in church. This was a solace to her wounded head, to which she now stealthily raised her hand, find- ing to her satisfaction that the new bump lay securely hidden under the fluffy waves of her abundant hair. 76 The Benefit of the Doubt. Breta sane her solo with all her accustomed o maestria ; with tones pure, just, and well sus- tained ; and with accents that showed that the composition of the great composer was not only .rendered with musical exactness, from con- scientious and intelligent study, but that it came, as well, from the singer's heart, as though it might have been an improvisation of her own. It was not until she had finished singing that, feeling her eyes attracted to a certain point, Breta looked past the many strangers (there were always a number of strangers at church, mostly from New York, attracted by the sing- ing) to the right side of the nave, a little back, and encountered the eyes of Noel Dunraven fastened upon her. His being in church was not an unusual cir- cumstance, for during the three years that Breta had been at Miss Rutherford's he was accustomed to spend most of his Sundays at Lea ; to hear his cousin Breta sing, as he said. But the expression in his blue eyes was a new one to Breta, well acquainted as she was with all the looks she had seen his eyes wear ; and it not only puzzled, but troubled her. "Do Hurry On," 77 He had been watching her from the first ; that she understood. He had seen all that had occurred, her confusion and distress (so well concealed from others), noting it all critically, not sympathetically ; that she also understood. What she did not understand was the odd shade, something cold, almost cruel, that had crept into his eyes ; and at intervals, during the rest of the service, her glance reverted uncon- sciously to him, and always to meet the same watchful look. " My dear," said Mr. Whyte, when they were out on the green before the church, " your tones in that inspiration of Handel's actually moved me to tears. However much I may get mixed up on ghosts, I never do in music ; and I declare, as I have many times before, you have the divine gift of song." " It is a source of great consolation to me to be able to cause you to shed tears," returned Breta, mischievously. " But let us hurry on Uncle Ray, dear." In coming out of church Breta had observed that Dunraven, contrary to his wont, had not joined them ; but she forgot to consider on the strangeness of it in her dread of encountering 78 The Benefit of the Doubt. de Grey, to whom her eyes had not once glanced since the dropping of the book, and its consequences. And again she urged her uncle to haste. " I was rather loitering, my dear," replied he, " on de Grey's account, as I wish to make you acquainted with him, for he is an advent in this world of puerilities. As much so as even the immortal Handel's music." " Do not let him hear you, Uncle Ray," urged Breta in a low voice, as she hurried on. " He is back in the church-yard still, looking at the inscriptions on the tombs ; but when he overtakes us " Which I trust will not be. Let us walk faster, Miss Rutherford will be waiting I am cer " " Why, my dear ! " broke in Mr. Whyte, ex- amining his niece's flushed face in astonish- ment. "What has de Grey done that you should wish to avoid him? I saw you hand him a book in the first part of the service." " Oh, don't, Uncle Ray, dear, but do come on," exclaimed Breta, desperately. " Oh, certainly, my dear," acquiesced Mr. Whyte, who, unable to fathom the subtleties of "Do Hurry On" 79 a young lady's motive of action long since, gave up the conundrum in the present instance, and trotted nimbly beside his niece, asking her, with one of his twisted smiles, if she thought of practising for a walking match. " Uncle Ray," was Breta's reply, as she still hastened forward, " you must hold yourself in readiness to attend our picnic ; all the grandees of Lea are invited." Mr. Whyte, accepting the change of subject, made some cheerful remarks about the picnic, and then wondered where Noel could have strolled to ; asking Breta if she had not noticed him in church. " Yes, I saw him," replied Breta, the un- wonted look in his eyes again recurring to her, but for an instant only, she being occupied with another troubling subject for, hearing footsteps, she felt certain that de Grey was just back of them and was gaining upon them, and the bump loomed up in her mind again as promi- nently as it stood on her head, concealed in the fluff of her hair. " If he should have a similar one, with no bang to hide it," irreverently thought she, " on the organ of causality perhaps ! " It was 8o The Benefit of the Doubt. not to be thought of, and yet she continued to let her thought feast upon the harrowing idea. She turned several shades paler as she looked up to acknowledge de Grey's salutation, as, joining them, with no show of haste, he was introduced to her by Mr. Whyte with the courtly air of an old-time gentleman. Meeting only a respectful bow from de Grey, his brow as smooth as alabaster, his look calm to serenity, a look so utterly igno- ring the bumps of this bumping world that Breta, mentally recording him as one posses- sing the soul of a true gentleman, felt all her nervous apprehensions dissipated as by magic ; and she chatted freely with him until they came to the neat little village park where Miss Ruth- erford's teachers and pupils were accustomed to re-assemble. There, beside Miss Rutherford, his tall form conspicuous far above her tall form, stood Dun- raven in a magnificent attitude, the evident ad- miration of her pupils. He was conversing with Miss Rutherford with his customary grace and savoir-vivre ; and when Breta, her uncle, and de Grey joined them, his bow to Breta and his distinguished "Do Hurry On." Si manner in recognizing his uncle's presentation to him of de Grey, threw the quiet, unassuming de Grey entirely into the shade in the opinion of most of the fair pupils, who, sitting on the park benches, or standing in groups, were awaiting the last of their number. o " Is n't he a love ? " whispered Miss Beebe to Miss Rivers. " Which he ? " asked Miss Rivers. "Why, Mr. Dunraven, of course. Such dis- tinguished manners ! Such a bearing so very tall and elegant ! Oh, he 's just too lovely for any thing." " I have heard you make that same remark, Lina Beebe, nearly every Sunday for three years," returned Miss Rivers, scornfully. " For my part," she added, " I think Mr. de Grey is handsomer by far, just tall enough," she was tall herself. " He is what I call quietly ele- gant." Meanwhile, the subjects of this and similar snatches of conversation were making them- selves agreeable. Dunraven, who, after a few words to Breta, finding her occupied with de Grey, having turned to Miss Amanda Ruther- ford, was entertaining her with an account of 82 The Benefit of the Doubt. some Congressional doings during his late visit to Washington"; at the same time keeping his blue eyes on Breta. Miss Rutherford, after several civil speeches to de Grey, seated herself, and began discus- sing some sacred music with Mr. Whyte, in view to her semi-monthly musicale. " I cannot tell you what pleasure your singing gave me to-day, Miss Garnet," said de Grey. Everybody had always gone in raptures over Breta's singing, but there was that in de Grey's tone, so full of an underlying power, causing his words to sound so little like a commonplace compliment, that she felt singularly stirred by them. " I was prepared by what Mr. Black told me, he heard you sing in Milan, Miss Garnet," continued de Grey, " and also by what your un- cle said, to hear a remarkable voice. But I was in nowise prepared for for just what I heard, so excelling every thing I ever thought possible in singing." Again it was the single-hearted candor of tone that made the words seem so sienificant, o and so difficult to respond to. Breta was spared the necessity of reply further than the inclina- "Do Hurry On" 83 tion of head and little smile she had given him, as the expected pupils came up and Miss Rutherford started the procession in motion. Mr. Whyte and de Grey bowed their leave ; but Dunraven walked on with Breta and Miss Rutherford, punctiliously taking the side of the latter. Arriving at the seminary, Dunraven chatted a few moments, in the presence of Miss Ruther- ford, with those of the young ladies to whom he had been introduced at her musicales, thereby causing a severe fluttering of Miss Beebe's very admiring heart. Later on, finding himself alone with Breta, in the seminary parlor, he compelled silent admira- tion from her with his brilliant description of his Washington visit. He confined himself so exclusively to generalities that she was conver- sing unreservedly with him until, rising, he walked across the stately parlor and stood be- fore the grim portrait of a Rutherford ancestor, for a moment. " Breta," said he, returning and seating him- self beside her in elegant pose, " either I am the most patient, long-suffering man in the world, or you the most charming woman. I 84 The Benefit of the Doubt. am persuaded both are true : I, the only man in the universe whose love would not have died a natural death years ago for how can love live with nothing to feed upon ? And that you are the most charming of your sex goes without saying, for, before the vividness of your beauty all other beautiful faces near you grow dim. And notwithstanding all your friendly coldness and cruelty to me I love you more this day than ever before, and my whole life has been one long dream of love for you." " Did you compose that, Noel, as you stood before Miss Rutherford's grandfather ? " asked Breta, with keen irony of tone. " I can wait as long as Jacob that other long-suffering man," continued Dunraven, as though Breta had not spoken. " But I must have my Rachel in the end. There ! Do not reply, Breta, cugina mia. There is no call for a reply." Breta had stirred and had lifted her face again. It was very pale, and there was a cold, unresponsive look in her eyes that visibly affected Dunraven, and he made haste to add, with a light laugh : " Recollect, you have not refused me, Breta. "Do Hurry On" 85 Excuse me, but do not say a word, I entreat." Breta, raising her calm eyes and resting them full upon his face, had parted her lips and drawn her breath as though about to speak. " Much as I love the sound of your sweet voice, cugina mm, I do not care to hear it now. I can get along quite well without a mitten," continued he, with an easy lightness of tone and a light laugh. " I go, as heretofore, with the benefit of a doubt to cheer me." And with this little parting jibe, Dunraven, rising, extended his hand to Breta, and taking hers, carried it to his lips in foreign fashion, and gracefully bowed himself out of the room. VI. IN THE FOREST-GLOAMING. " "\7OLJ must give no lessons this afternoon JL Miss Garnet," said Miss Rutherford the next day after dinner. " You are looking pale, and I see you have eaten almost nothing since yesterday. The sun evidently was too much for you." " The two sons were too much for me," parenthetically thought Breta. " The philosopher has not written," contin- ued Miss Rutherford, " who has explained why our hottest days come on Sunday. By the way, my dear, I invited Mr. Dunraven to our picnic. He is an uncommonly fine young man, of whom any one may well be proud. I was never more impressed by his bearing than I was yesterday." Left to herself, with the afternoon before her, Breta sought the rest she certainly so much needed, in the shade of the woods. And never 86 In the Forest- Gloaming. 87 before had she so well understood the meaning of the sermon preached by bird, bee, blossom, and running water. o She sat on the mossy bank, watching the dace and minnow dart and glide, and now and then a speckled trout rise suddenly up through the clear water, in which the feathery blue gen- tian and delicately articulated brake were mir- rored. Or, reclining against some giant tree, that had stood in stately grandeur for ages, she watched the flickering lights and shadows through its branches, and the time passed lazily and refreshingly by. " I will wait until that splendid brown thrash- er is through his song, and then I will go," thought she. o The thrush and she were both startled by a crunching of dead twigs, and looking around she beheld a huge Newfoundland dog coming rapidly toward her. Rising to her feet she saw the dog came with no hostile intent, but in imperative supplication, as he looked at her with praeter- canine, almost human eyes of entreaty, slowly wagging his great bushy tail, and gently pulling at the skirt of her dress. 88 The Benefit of the Doubt. Following the dog's lead into a bridle-path, a turn in the path revealed a sight that made Breta's heart stand still. " Is he dead ? " she ejaculated. But there was no one to reply but the dog, and he seemed to be asking the same question. After a moment of almost paralyzed terror Breta stooped down and interrogated first the wrist, then the heart of the apparently breath- less form prone on the leafy ground, the form of the very one of whom she had been thinking while listening to the lay of the brown thrasher, and to her inexpressible relief, beneath her own pulsing fingers she felt the slow beats of an almost extinguished life. " Water! " she exclaimed, rising quickly to her feet. " What can I find that will hold water ? " Solemnly and appealingly the great dog, with his honest brown eyes, looked into her face, and then went on licking his master's hands. Breta caught some leaves from the bough of a tree, and crowding them flat -wise into her straw hat, and holding them down tightly with her hand, she managed to bring from the stream close by sufficient water to drench his face and hair. In tke Forest- Gloaming. 89 This she repeated again and again, stopping only to chafe his hands and face, the dog look- ing on intently, with every now and then a low whine, until at last the object of her solicitous efforts opened his eyes. "Thank heaven, Mr. de Grey, you have come to ! " fervently ejaculated Breta, with a great sigh of relief. " I thought you never would revive." " You, Miss Garnet!" and de Grey, rising to a sitting posture, repeated : " You, Miss Gar- net ! Please tell me what it means. I do not seem to recollect myself." " You have been thrown from your horse, Mr. de Grey I see him standing there, and your head struck on that piece of rock," said Breta, stooping down to examine the spot where his head had been. " It is a smoothly-worn stone embedded in the moss, or otherwise it might have cut your head severely." And Breta passed her little ungloved hand softly over the mossy stone again. " I was in the woods close by," continued she, replying to his still asking eyes, " and your dog found me and brought me to you. Tell me, if you can, what I shall do for you. Shall I go for a physician ? " 9O The Benefit of the Doubt. " I think, Miss Garnet," returned he, " you have proved yourself the best physician I could have had, and my opinion is you have saved my life. Let me see what I can do to help myself before accepting- your solicitous offer. You look pale. I am sorry to have been the occasion of such a fright to you. My worst injury is a large protuberance near the back of my head." De Grey, speaking very lightly to make light of his hurt, was now standing on his feet, his hand on that part of his head where phrenologists locate caution. In the midst of her apprehensions for him, Breta felt herself flushing, as, with dismay, she mentally exclaimed : " Another new bump ! " Instantly accusing herself of lightness and in- considerateness, and feeling fearful he was not so far recovered as he wished to make it seem, Breta insistingly proposed going to Elmwood, near at hand, to fetch her uncle. " If, Miss Garnet," replied de Grey, leaning against the trunk of a tree and looking fright- fully pale, " you could bring me a draught of water from 'the same source with which you so mercifully and bountifully baptized my face, I think I could manage to get home. I find this dizziness still hangs over me." In the Forest- Gloaming. 91 " Most gladly. But I have only my hat." And she held it up all dripping. " Hold! I have a leathern drinking-cup in my pocket. You are, then, the veritable Un- dine I thought you when I opened my eyes and beheld you in the forest-gloaming through glis- tening water-drops ? I saw Herr Adrian cook eggs in a felt hat ; but I doubt if even his necro- mancy could make a little straw-hat hold water," said de Grey, as he handed her the cup. When she returned with it filled, de Grey was sitting on a fallen log, looking still very pale, and he again regretted the trouble he was giving her. " I beg you not to speak in that way, Mr. de Grey. I would walk leagues to Mr. de Grey you are looking alarmingly pale." And as Breta relinquished to his grasp the yielding leathern cup, so difficult to manage, her soft, warm fingers were accidentally clasped for an instant by his hand. Breta in that instant felt the blood from her heart rush to her fingers' ends and glow in her cheeks ; and de Grey, as he drank the water, declared himself wonderfully revived. "And no marvel," added he, "that water, 02 The -Benefit of the Doubt. being furnished you by your Uncle Kiihleborn, was enchanted, having oreat magnetic virtue in O O O it. I feel now quite able to walk." Giving no hint of his consciousness that the ^ enchantment lay in the touch of her magnetic fingers, de Grey again assured Breta he was well enough to walk. Her confusion gone, she was able to meet his eyes, and proposed accompanying him to Elmwood. " Uncle Ray will be only too glad to drive me home again," urged she, " and I am really too terrified to think of your going alone." " Your kindness is only exceeded by my gratitude, Miss Garnet," returned de Grey. " And you will ride," said Breta, smiling at his words. " I am quite used to horses and can readily catch yours and bring him to you, Mr. de Grey." " I will walk if you will permit me, Miss Gar- net ; Selim will come to my call and follow like a do." o As they moved on, the horse appearing quite dejected, the Newfoundland, deliberately for- saking his master, went to the other side of Breta, looking from time to time up into her face. In the Forest- Gloaming. 93 " Ulysses will always owe you allegiance, Miss Garnet ; he never forgets a friend or a foe." And de Grey related several anecdotes of the dog's great sagacity. " Your horse, Mr. de Grey, is a beauty. Se- lim do you call him ? He really looks sorry, as though he understood what he had done. But he should have known better than to throw you." " I will tell him so when I get him alone, and he will be ashamed of himself. It is his first offence." And from Selim and Ulysses they went to other topics ; and by the time they reached Elmwood, Breta thought she had never spent so delightful a half hour. " My dear," said Mr. Whyte to her, on their way back to the school, " young de Grey thinks to systematize those ghosts ; but I tell him no philosophy dug out of the past or eliminated from the present, can ever systematize a ghost, the most unreliable, the most " Mr. de Grey is surely of sound mind, Uncle Ray, is he not ? " marvelled Breta. " None sounder. He has studied rosicru- cian lore, young as he is, so deeply, that he fairly makes my head spin to hear him talk of 94 The Benefit of the Doubt. his ' Three Fires,' and 'Dissolvents,' and 'In- ternal Illuminations,' and ' Calcinations.' ' " I can well understand that, Uncle Ray; for when I was studying Harmony, the technical expressions continually posed me. I could comprehend the prohibition of consecutive fifths (unless managed as adroitly as Beethoven and Chopin manage them) both by their sound to the ear as well as by the rule. But speaking of consecutive fifths as the quint succession was at first very puzzling. And also that the Monophonic tone-chain, and the Duophonic, Triphonic, Tetraphonic, and Polyphonic, meant no more than one-voiced, two- voiced, and so on, compositions. And as for the Ecclesiastical keys the Ionian, Dorian, Myxolidian, and the rest, they were a perfect mix, until of a sud- den I saw how simple they really are, al- though differing from our modern quint circle, in which the progression of keys is always a fifth distant from the preceding one." " My dear," it is always the technicalities of science that are more difficult to surmount than the science itself. There must be some boun- dary line hard to cross, or everybody would know as much as the teachers " ; and Mr. Whyte In the Forest- Gloaming. g5 looked at his niece with his twisted smile. " But de Grey seems to have studied them all," continued he, " sciences, arts, and techni- calities. Not that he attempts to show off; he really seems so unconscious of how much he has learned and thought, that it is quite refresh- ing to meet one so little egotistical. But some- how what he knows seems to radiate from him when he is talking with " o " With any one like yourself, Uncle Ray, who also has studied so profoundly. You should hear what Miss Rutherford says. She has great reverence for the mass of information you have acquired on all scientific subjects, especially music," said Breta, proudly. " Except the science of ghosts, Breta. When it comes to ghosts, I but concerning de Grey's philosophy of ghosts, or unseen powers as he calls them. He has based his theory on the opinions taught by Socrates, Plato, and the sub- sequent rosicrucians (not that they taught or wrote about ghosts at all), and has studied Jacob Boehme and all the modern metaphysical writers (not that any of these write about ghosts either, for they do not) ; but the result of all his studies combined, has been to develop a pre- 96 The Benefit of the Doubt. conceived opinion of his own on the subject, which seems to be, that a more rapid develop- ment in religion, science, and art can be at- tained, than has yet been dreamed of in the present crude state of the world, through the co-agency of the unseen world, and by means of some philosophico-scientific process that I can- not exactly comprehend (I always do get mixed up on ghosts), which, causing the spiritual and physical worlds to t coalesce, will produce this happy result. But he needs a house, such as the one he has just purchased, in which to work, you see." " Excuse me, Uncle Ray, I do not see. And I should say Mr. de Grey had better let the unseen world and the unseen powers alone until the time comes for him to see them. A higher development is all the time gradually coming. There is scarcely a day that we do not hear of some grand scientific discovery, or some great invention, such as, only a day or two ago, this wonderful telephone." " My dear, some of the modern philosophers go so far as to assert that every discovery or invention that is effected, proceeds from di- rectly from ghosts ; in short, that we are noth- In the Forest- Gloaming. 97 ing of ourselves, except as ghosts speak, act, and think through us." " Does Mr. de Grey believe any thing so- so preposterous as that ? " exclaimed Breta, aghast. " Far from it, my dear. He believes nothing of that sort. Do not look so shocked. That is no part of his belief. But he goes further than I can when he asserts that ghosts (or un- seen powers) can be systematized and utilized." " Now, Uncle Ray, dear, we all know that many strange things have been, such as the un- accountable occurrences that transpired in the family of John Wesley, for instance " . " And in that Elmwood house we have just left, for instance," interrupted her uncle. " All these are bad enough or good enough, as people think, when they come of themselves," resumed Breta. " But going in search of the supernatural I should think would unfit any one it would me for the natural occurrences of life. Besides all that, we are expressly warned against hunting after signs and wonders. And now that we understand the real significance of the injunction concerning the sign of the prophet Jonah, it should be as much respected by us as 98 The Benefit of the Doubt. it was not by those perverse old Jews to whom it was given." " My dear little niece, your opinion is without doubt a correct one, but your elucidation of it, like those of more profound metaphysicians on other subtle questions, is as clear as mud." " You may laugh at me, Uncle Ray," said Breta, with a bright smile. " My dear, if I laugh," replied Mr. Whyte, with his twisted smile, "it is at the ignorance of the learned, who, in trying to make things clear, make nothing clear but that they do not understand their own subject. Dropping all this, de Grey made me acquainted with the principles of the rosicrucian faith, interesting me beyond measure. Not a word of ghosts, mark you. The Rosy-cross-men were simply philosophers in search of the truth, and they were obliged to conceal the truths at which they arrived under symbols, and numerical figures ; as any ennobling truth divulged in those heathenish days meant to those who permeated these truths persecution, by the besottedly ignorant and prejudiced priests ; for the most part ending in death'. Their philoso- pher's stone, in its fullest interpretation, In the Forest- Gloaming. 99 meant man. Calling it ' gold,' it was typical, in the religious sense, of God's love and wis- dom, also of truth ; and in the scientific sense it was typical of the perfection in chemical and astronomical achievement at which they aimed. That we owe our religious freedom to the inde- fatigable efforts of those martyrs of the her- metic school, is quite certain ; and that the study of hermetic lore should enchant and engross the mind of a young man of intelligence and leisure, like young de Grey, I can well con- ceive. But how he is going to apply those profound teachings of the past toward systema- tizing the capers of the ghosts of the present, is, as I have said, beyond my fathoming. But when it comes to ghosts, as I have so often said, I never do know, I get things mixed up so." VII. " SOMETHING IS GOING TO COME OUT OF ALL THIS." AS Mr. Whyte and Breta drove up the seminary carriage-way after "tea," as the evening meal was called, although every one in the establishment, except the servants, drank milk in preference to the celestial bever- age, Mr. Whyte commented in his roseate way on the various merry groups of girls they passed on the lawn, who were engaged at croquet and lawn tennis. They found Miss Rutherford enjoying the cool breeze on the front veranda ; and Mr. Whyte, being held in high esteem by her as teacher of Harmony and Acoustics in her school, and as adviser and help when she had any musical doings on hand, was cordially greeted by her. He stopped but a moment, and with a parting salutation to her and Breta, " Something is going to come out of all this" i o i and a modest little bow to the young ladies on the lawn, as he passed them, he drove on. Breta, after supping alone, joined a knot of the older girls on the lawn, who were listening to an animated discussion between Frank and Pella. " It 's ghosts we 're talking about, Miss Breta ; does not each particular hair on all our heads stand on end ? " said Sadie Burrill the same who had breakfasted on apple-pie with Frank on Sunday. " I should like to know why we may not talk of them, after the long lecture Miss Rutherford gave us on ghosts this afternoon, while you were away, Miss Breta," exclaimed Frank. " She told us that " A lecture from Miss Rutherford on ghosts ! " said Breta, smiling, as she looked questioningly from one to another. " She said that these things are, and " " That ghosts are ! " again interrupted Breta. " Did Miss Rutherford affirm the actual reality of" " Of course she did not, Miss Breta," said Pella Morton, in high falsetto. " Miss Ruther- ford never mentioned the word ghost during IO2 The Benefit of the Doubt. the few remarks she made, which Frank, with her remarkable faculty for twisting things, affirms. She said that owing to certain electri- cal atmospheric conditions, telephonic sounds from time to time had been produced in certain localities unexplainable to our present compre- hension. And that when these psychical or physical subtleties, which (too well authenticated to doubt) had existed through all the world's history, could be better understood, a natural and scientific explanation would be found for all these seeming marvels. She cited the mirages of the deserts, wherein cities miles off are reflected so perfectly as to deceive and mis- lead travellers, and gave us the scientific eluci- dation of these natural phenomena. She wound up by cautioning us that nothing can be more ruinous to all practical aims in life than to per- mit the mind to get swamped in the mazes and marvels of what is affirmed to be performed by agencies who have departed this life." "There, now! if that is n't ghosts, what is it ? " exclaimed Frank. " I for one am free to say 'that I am afraid of ghosts, and no elucida- tion, however scientific, could ever make me do any thing but shudder at the thought even of " Something is going to come out of all this" 103 hearing sounds for which I cannot account, or of seeing some one all of a sudden appear and then vanish into thin air. The telephone is a wonderful discovery, and when it carries sounds from one human being to another, is very in- teresting. But /*like to know who is at the other end of the wire. Carrying on a tele- phonic conversation with a ghost is not to my mind. I agree with Horace that nee scire fas est omnia. It would be as much as my nee is worth to say nothing of my scire s to have any thing to do with scientific ghosts, or ghosts that do not even know the alphabet. I am glad you have sold your ghosts, Miss Breta, which was the occasion, or were the occasion (bother grammar ! I don't know which it is) of all that has been said." Pella Morton was continuing the subject ; but Frank, twining her arm lovingly around Breta's waist, asked her if she would not go and sit under the willows for a little while, as she had something very particular to say to her. " Just see how Frank manages Miss Breta," said Pella Morton, breaking off from her re- marks and turning up her pretty Greek nose 1O4 The Benefit of the Doubt. contemptuously. "If Miss Breta could only realize how entirely deceitful Frank is " Frank has no more deceit in her than " Than you have, Sadie Burrill," interrupted Pella, with a little spiteful laugh. " If it were not mean to be personal, Pella," returned Sadie, " I could prove who is deceit- ful. I do not consider the little affair of yester- day any test of deceit, as Frank and I did that for a piece of fun, and every one of you all knew of it." " Including Miss Rutherford," said Pella, with another little laugh. " Pella, I won't talk with you any more about it," and as Sadie turned to go, Pella, with an- other little laugh, exclaimed : " Sadie Burrill, I see, is more afraid to face the truth than to perpetrate ' a piece of fun,' as she calls it." But Sadie, without hazarding a reply, walked over toward a group who were playing tennis ; looking admiringly, as she went, down at her handsome friend Frank, who, at that moment, seated on a log beside Breta, with one brown hand paddling in the limpid water of the brook, was saying : " Something is going to come out of all this.' io5 " Now, Breta, darling (Frank always dropped the prefix of Miss to Breta's name, when they were together alone, having told her punningly that she loved her too well to Miss her except when she must), you know, for I Ve said so, often, that you alone can put a head on me. I am glad to be able to swallow pride, and ac- knowledge that I was all wrong yesterday. I am so proud and hateful and obstinate that no one could ever get me to do any thing or learn any thing; and I should have been worse than ever here if it had not been for you, Breta, dear. You influenced me straight along. It has been three years now, you were sixteen and a half and I was sixteen and a half you might have been sixty and I six, for the difference in our ac- quirements. I did not realize it then, but know it now, and mamma fully understands it. She noticed the improvement in me every time I went home." " Why, Frances ; why, dear Frank, how can you ? It was nothing. You have exaggerated it all." "Foolish, am I not?" exclaimed Frank, wiping from her eyes the moisture that had collected in them, and laughing at the same 106 The Benefit of the Doubt. time. " Who ever would have believed it, and of me? But what I say is true, and mamma wished to give you a grand present when you were home with me at Easter. But I would not let her wound you by any thing so patron- izing. I said to her : ' Suppose / should be good and lovely and fond of study and doing the right thing and that, would you like every one to be sending me costly gifts on account of it ? ' And then mamma subsided. And now you Ve had my confession, I can only say that once wild horses could n't have wrung it from me." " I doubt if any thing could wring any con- fession from you, Frank. But pray don't make any more to me." " Agreed, for it is time now for you to con- fess. What is it that has changed you so, since yesterday ? Your whole look is different, Breta." " I know of no change in myself, you absurd Frank. But let me thank you for preventing your mother from making me a costly gift. It would have wounded me." " Whom did you see at church yesterday, Breta ? " abruptly asked Frank. " I mean whom " Something is go-ing to come out of all this" io/ besides your everlasting cousin Noel ? He is always there ; I have no patience with him." " What, for going to church ? " asked Breta. " Poor Noel ! " " Breta, why do you let that why do you permit Noel Dunraven to hang around you so year after year ? " " Is this the confession you wished me to make ? " " Do you intend to marry him ? " " Is that the confession you wished me to make ? " " Breta, you pretend to be my friend are you ? " " Is that the con " For heaven's sake don't say that over again ! You pretend to tell me every thing, and yet, no matter how much I plead, you will say nothing about Noel Dunraven. I know no more of him of your feelings toward him than -. Is he ?" " He is my uncle's nephew." " Do you love him ? " " Should I not love my uncle's nephew ? " " Breta, you are awful. But we '11 drop him. / do not intend you shall marry him any way. io8 The Benefit of the Doubt. Now tell me about the other. Clara Rivers is wild about him. But I Ve no faith in her. Now for the confession." " The other ! What other, Frank ? " " De Grey the gentleman who bought Elm- wood. Was n't he there ? " " Yes, Uncle Ray introduced him to me." " Is Mr. de Grey young or old ? " " He is twenty-six, Uncle Ray told me." " Is he handsome ? " " Remarkably so." " How did the music go ? " " We missed your contralto, but otherwise Uncle Ray said the music went went as usual." " What did you sing ? " " ' I know that my Redeemer liveth.' ' " Ah, I know how that was sung ; and what did Mr. de Grey say ? " " He joined with Uncle Ray in approving the music." " What happened this afternoon when you were out ? Did you see Mr. de Grey again ? " " Frank, you are equal to a whole court of lawyers with your cross-questions. Let us go up to the house." " Something is going to come out of all this." 109 " Breta, why did you come home with your Uncle Ray, and so late in the afternoon, unless you were at the old place, where de Grey un- doubtedly was ? " " Your imagination is entirely too active, Frank, and for fear it may run off in the wrong direction I will set you right. Whilst down in the woods over there a large dog came and asked me to go with him. 'He took me to his master, who had been thrown from his horse and was insensible. I dashed water, in his face and chafed his hands, which revived him. I then accompanied him to the old place, fearing he might need further assistance." " And that was de Grey," said Frank. She scrutinized Breta closely, but as Breta met the look with her clear blue-gray eyes full of the same steadfast, tender light that always shone in them, with no attempt at avoiding her intent look, Frank asked : " Was it Mr. de Grey's proposition to accom- pany him ? " " It was mine, Frank. Is the catechism over ? " " Then you saved Mr. de Grey's life. That seems to be the long and the short of it. The no The Benefit of the Doubt. size of it, I should have said," and Frank threw her eyes mischievously at Breta, with a laugh. " Mr. de Grey said so," said Breta, quietly. " But very possibly he might have revived with- out assistance." " And very probably he would not. Those suspensions of life have to be met very prompt- ly, or " " At all events I was terribly alarmed. And the feeling of relief was unspeakable when he opened his eyes." Both were silent for a few moments. At length Frank asked : " Did you see any thing, or hear any thing from any of your no, Mr. de Grey's " I have never once heard the slightest unac- countable noise in that house, often as I have been there, during the three years I have been back from Europe. I think as Miss Rutherford does about the noises." " And that they are not " " I never thought them disembod I have really never given the subject any serious thought." " Was Mr. de Grey recovered from his fall ? " " He seemed to be, though still fearfully pale. " Something is going to come out of all this'' 1 1 1 He insisted on helping Uncle Ray harness his horse." " Has Mr. de Grey no groom there ? " " No ; his servants refused to go to what they called a ' haunted house.' Mr. de Grey gave me quite an amusing description, on the way there, of their fears. He attends to his horse and helps Uncle Ray cook, and seems to enjoy it highly. Some women are hired by the day to sweep and clean up, and that sort of thing. He and Uncle Ray have taken a great fancy to each other ; they get along admirably to- gether." "I should think your Uncle Ray would have been glad enough to get away after he had sold your place." "It was at Mr. de Grey's urgent request that he remained ; they suit each other exactly. Mr. de Grey has commenced lessons on the violin, or cello, rather, with Uncle Ray. And although he studied in Europe, he considers Uncle Ray's method superior to that of the great master he was with as severe, and at the same time with a broader comprehension of the true art." " Then Mr. de Grey is a musician ? " I 12 The Benefit of the Doubt. " A fine one, Uncle Ray told me. His in- strument is the cello, I believe I said so." " Breta, dear, I have something to say a prophecy to make." " You quite alarm me, Frank, you are so mysterious ; but say on," said Breta, with a laugh. "I am not the seventh daughter of the seventh daughter, and I was n't born with a Baxter's effectual call on my head (I quote Lowell, you know), but I always could tell things. Mamma has often called me a witch, I have told so many things that have come true ; I probably have the divine gift of prophecy. Well, I feel a presentiment that something is going to come out of all this-, and you will see if my prediction is not verified." " Something usually comes out of every thing, I believe," returned Breta, laughing ; " but what is this wonderful thing that is going to come out of all this, and what is all this ? " " You know what I mean, Breta." " Indeed, Frank, I have not the least concep- tion." " Does Mr. de Grey," asked Frank, " expect to work out, to elucidate, or whatever it is " Something is going to come out of all this." 1 1 3 well, to reduce to a science the comings and goings of those what I heard was, that he is a rosicrucian, or sorcerer, or something of that sort," she added, looking mischievously at Breta. " My dear Frank, I have no sympathy with this," said Breta, seriously. " When the time comes for the unseen world to reveal its secrets, it will be done without the aid of " Of alembic, crucible, powwows, and all that fanfarade of magic," interrupted Frank, with one of her heartiest laughs. " But seriously, Breta, if he is in the wrong it is for you to set him right. That is your mission in this world to put a head on people. Everybody grows better where you are, you are so right ar\d true yourself so earnestly simple and so simply in earnest, and " There, Frank, please stop." " May I observe again that the end of all this has not yet come ? " asked Frank, with a brill- iant smile. " Has the end of any thing come? " " Breta, parry it as you will, it is inevitable ! It will end as I predict ! Now mark me." And Frank gave her head a significant series of 1 1 4 The Benefit of the Doubt. nods, expressing volumes more than her words, and which, as they always did, sent lights and shadows playing hide-and-seek in her raven hair. " Frank, you are perfectly absurd." " I always was." " And if I did not at first understand you, I do of course now. Your seventh daughter divination is at fault. Nothing is more unlikely than the end you propose. I have other views for myself, Frank, and am going to devote my- self to doing some good in the world. - I will tell you my project some day, for I have thought a great deal about it of late." " ' The best-laid schemes o' mice and men gang aft a-gley.' I will give you just three weeks to forget all about your project." " I will give the skies just three weeks to fall in," said Breta, laughing, and shaking her wise young head. " Let us go up to the house and get under cover. See, the dew is already falling fast the skies may follow." VIII. ELMWOOD. ELMWOOD, where, according to repute, ghosts held high carnival, lay about three miles farther down the spring-fed stream from that busy hive of yellow-haired and raven- haired bees where Miss Rutherford, a model queen-bee, duly rewarded the workers and punished the drones. Elmwood was, like the seminary, situated on a high hill ; the village of Lea, through which wound the road, lying in the valley below, be- tween the two sites. On the day following, the warm June sun shone down on valley and hills, and all things, trees and flowers, butterflies and birds, feeling its vivifying influence, looked joyous, all save the Cupids and Venuses at Elmwood. They, with their freshly washed faces there had been a shower in the night, were still as aslant and melancholy as ever. "5 1 1 6 The Benefit of the Doubt. Within doors Mr. Whyte with de Grey hav- ing just finished on violin and cello a long symphony, Mr. Whyte was saying : " Not a squeak yet from a ghost ! It is very strange. I should think Sebastian Bach might awaken some response from them if only to accommodate you, de Grey. If those old sorcerers relied on - " Reputed sorcerers, Mr. Whyte. In point of fact, earnest seekers after divine wisdom," in- terposed de Grey. " If those old magi relied on ghosts, the most unreliable " They relied solely on their own indefati- gable labors for their results, and never on the viewless powers of the air." " It is all a myth to me, de Grey, an oblong blur." " It is certainly very intangible," returned de Grey, laughing. " Still, the idea of utilizing to scientific ends unseen forces, that the workers of the world may receive more potent skill that you consider so Utopian, is, I think, feasi- ble, and may be carried out by certain chymical processes, experimental, in a place, such as this, where these phenomena have transpired." Elmwood. 117 " Mr. de Grey, I can really say nothing on that point whether it may or may not be Utopian, as I have never given the subject any careful investigation. But I was going to add that if those old magi did rely on ghosts as their backers in pursuit of wisdom, it is no wonder that many of them got their heads turned and that their wits went wool-gather- ing-" " My dear friend," replied de Grey, breaking out into an irresistible laugh, "you do not view this subject fairly. Go with me to the station, it will be on your way to Miss Rutherford's (did you not tell me two is your hour there ?) and I will give you a few facts that, as you say, you have evidently not studied. I must take the cars to the city, as I wish to see Black, and shall not be back here until to-morrow." And de Grey, as bright and fresh and genial as though he possessed no musty hermetic parchments above-stairs over which he pored though still with that shade of sadness on his face, most visible in the solemn lustre of his large, luminous eyes, commenced his arrange- ments for going, by carefully putting away his cello in its case. 1 1 8 The Benefit of the Doubt. Mr. Whyte, replacing his violin caressingly in its case with still greater care, signified to de Grey how pleased he would be to drive him to the station, and looking at his time, he opened the back of his watch (a handsome repeater), asking de Grey if he recognized the face within. " It is Prince Konigsberg, the great Prussian diplomat, is it not ? " " The same. When he was in Milan he al- most lived at my house," returned Mr. Whyte. " He is extravagantly fond of music, especially of the violin. I could never play enough for him. He sent me this, with the minature within," continued Mr. Whyte, with modest pride. " The painting is by a celebrated Ger- man artist." " With regard to your violin, Mr. Whyte, Konigsberg and I can shake hands," responded de Grey. 1 On their way to the station, instead of talking on the proposed subject, Mr. Whyte, who chanced to relate an anecdote of his niece Bre- ta's early life, was led on by de Grey to tell another and another ; these characteristic epi- sodes of Miss Garnet's juvenile career, seeming Elmwood. 1 1 9 to interest him more than the hermetic philoso- phy that had absorbed so much of his life. " On one occasion," continued little Mr. Whyte, warming with his subject, " I had been wavering between two violins selected from many, both Cremonas, and I was trying first one and then the other, when Breta she was then five years old in her child's way said : ' Uncle Ray, that one sounds just as though you had put your pocket-handkerchief over it, and this one sounds as though you had taken your handkerchief away from it ; I love this one the best/ and the little thing took it in her arms and kissed it. I considered her judgment a good one, and purchased it at once. I after- ward ascertained, by the merest chance, its his- tory : It is a genuine Stradivarius, made at Cre- mona by Stradivarius the father, you know there were only two makers of that name, father and son." . "It is by far the finest-toned instrument I ever heard, Mr. Whyte, and does credit to Miss Breta's choice. I don't marvel that you value it. Can that be my train whistling ? " It could be and was the train, and de Grey had barely time to " catch it," as Mr. Whyte der 1 20 77ie Benefit of the Doubt. clared, by running at full speed the length of the platform, they driving up just as the conductor shouted : " All aboard ! " Having finished with his classes, Mr. Whyte sent up for Breta to take a drive with him. " I had just finished my last lesson," said she, as they drove off. " It was Frank Bowers', and she sang magnificently. But what a handsome horse ! Ah ! I see, if is Mr. de Grey's Selim. He 's a beauty. But what have you done with Flash ? And where 's Mr. de Grey ? " " Flash is in his stable, and de Grey is in New York by this time. We will take Flash with us when we go to New York, my dear, do you not say so ? " " Certainly we will ; Flash is a little darling ; we could not get along without him ; He is one of us. But, Uncle Ray, I do not intend being idle after we get to New York. I have a plan of life, and shall be very busy in carrying it out. I wish to talk with you about it some time that is, more fully than I have ; you know some- thing of it, " Yes, my dear, and approve of it ; and I also have a plan, and we will see who can work the most indefatigably, you or L And while we Elmwood. 1 2 1 are perfecting our plans we can hear all the operas and oratorios you have missed so much." " You also, Uncle Ray. I am so glad you can live once more, somewhat as you were accustomed to, without being compelled to drudge ; working hard at one's bent in life is n't drudgery. Fifty thousand dollars is, of course, a small sum in comparison to what we have lost ; but we can live on it, and there is so much to be done in this world, and there are so many to help who need help ; that has become my one thought." " For one thing, Breta, I shall take a large organ at a high salary ; I have had offers from several of the leading churches of late, when down in the city. For another thing, I intend seeing to the investment of your fifty thousand dollars myself, and not let that go with the rest ; I have gained some wisdom through ad- versity." " I shall hate to leave Miss Rutherford's, I have grown so at home there ; new faces and strange places I always dread. But Frank will be in New York, you know, Uncle Ray; this is her last year. Miss Rutherford's without Frank will be dry enough. Shall you not miss your 1 2 2 The Benefit of the Doubt. wonderful concerts at Elm wood? Now, Uncle Ray, tell me truly, did you not dream all that ghost music ?" " My dear, am I dreaming now ? Tell you truly ? well then, truly I am not sure of any thing where ghosts are concerned. I would say : 4 Yes, I dreamed it all,' but others Mr. Black, you know heard it." " So he said, and yet for me the house has always been as mute as as any other house." " They have been ill behaved to so slight their mistress that is, if they are, and if any thing is." " Why do you turn in here, Uncle Ray ? " asked Breta. " When will Mr. de Grey return ? I would not meet him that is, here for for worlds." " Have no fear, Joslyn de Grey is " Joslyn ? That is his name, then ; I I won- dered what it might be. But as I said, I would not meet him here at Elm wood, for " I assure you, my dear, there is not the slightest danger, as de Grey will not be back until to-morrow. I have his own words for it. I wish to show you some choice old scores that I received from Paris to-day. But I will take Elmwood. 123 them to the school if you prefer, and we will drive on." " As there is no chance of Mr. de Grey's coming, let us look at them here," said Breta, conquering her reluctance. They were deeply engaged in reading the scores, when, in a pause from Mr. Whyte's violin and Breta's voice, a rumbling of carriage wheels was heard. " Bless my soul ! " exclaimed Mr. Whyte, as he looked out of the window. " Here 's a car- riage full of ghosts people I should say ; and the head of one is the head of Joslyn de Grey to a dead certainty! " " Mr. de Grey ! " reiterated Breta, flushing scarlet and then turning pale. " Great heavens! Are you sure, Uncle Ray ? " Breta wished to escape, but sat down again as hastily as she had risen, almost paralyzed with chagrin. " Joslyn de Grey or his ghost," returned her uncle. " The lady beside him is elegantly attired and very handsome. The young wom- an on the front seat is quite plain in features and dress. The carriage stops. The elegantly- attired lady is making curious signs with her ringers to the plain young woman, who is now 1 24 The Benefit of the Doubt. assisted down by the man that sat next the driver, and they are removing boxes from the carriage. The driver is taking trunks from the rack. The beautiful and elegantly-attired lady is coming up on the veranda, followed by de Grey and the plain young woman. Should they all be ghosts " What I fear is, they are not ghosts," said Breta, with energy, her heart half choking her with dismay. " I must admit them whatever they are," re- turned her uncle. " Mr. Whyte, my sister Selma," pronounced de Grey's rich, full voice. Breta heard it from the room where she was sitting and turned still paler. " I met her at the station below Lea and so returned with her. Go in, Selma, with Mr. Whyte, while I see to your baggage." Miss de Grey, on her way through the wide hall, was telling Mr. Whyte that she had come to keep house for her brother while he pursued his studies. " Very kind of you, Miss de Grey. Your brother will appreciate your goodness ; he speaks of you frequently, and I feel myself quite acquainted with you. You will find the Elmwood. 125 house pretty lively at times, I assure you " said Mr. Whyte. " I understand all about that, Mr. Whyte, but that cannot deter me, where I can be of assist- ance to Joslyn," affirmed Selma, enthusiastically, as, with an unaffected naturalness of manner, she entered the room where, pale to whiteness, and silent to immobility, Breta was now stand- ing proud and erect, wishing herself miles away. Miss de Grey looked at Breta with slightly dilated eyes, as though she might be one of the shadows of the house in wait to receive her. " My piece, Miss Garnet," said Mr. Whyte ; " Breta, it is Mr. de Grey's sister, my dear." Advancing with extended hand, her violet eyes beaming and quite restored to their natural size, Selma greeted Breta with effu- sion, kissing her on both cheeks. " I am afraid Joslyn might have fared ill there in the woods," said she in a caressing tone that was irresistible, "had it not been for your timely assistance, my dear. He told me on the way here. I cannot thank you enough. We must be the best of friends." Breta's equanimity returning with Miss de 126 The Benefit of the Doubt. Grey's warmth of manner, they seated them- selves in the chairs Mr. Whyte, in his roseate way, offered them. " I see, Miss Garnet," said Selma, " you are looking at Judith. Having made up my mind to come, I did not rest until I had hunted up Judith and her husband, whose great recom- mendation is they are deaf and dumb." "That their being deaf my uncle will tell you, Miss de Grey, will be a great blessing in this house," replied Breta, laughing, " on ac- count of " " Of the strange noises," caught up Selma, quite seriously. " I could not endure the thought that Mr. Whyte and Joslyn were hav- ing to perform manual labor. Mr. Black told me no servant would stay in the house, and I think my deaf and dumb ones will prove invalu- able." As Selma spoke, de Grey entered the room, the dreamy warmth of his eyes lighting into a look of joyful recognition as his glance fell upon Breta. But he greeted her with a manner so free from surprise at finding her there, that again she blessed him in her heart for his per- fect good -breeding. Elmwood. 127 " I am afraid, Selma," said he, laying his hand on her shoulder with brotherly fondness, as he stood up before her, "you will find the rooms too damp to sleep in without a day's sunshine to air them. Had I only known " That is just what I intended to av6id, Jos- lyn," replied she, in her caressing tone. " Let us make a tour up stairs. Will you go, my dear ? " and Miss de Grey put her arm lovingly around Breta's slender waist, and thus together they ascended the great oaken staircase ; fol- lowed by Mr. Whyte, de Grey, and Judith, to whom Miss de Grey beckoned. Windows were opened, and Selma could not sufficiently admire the massive, old-time furni- ture the light revealed. Great oaken chests of linen and presses of blankets and curtains received attention, and Selma declared that the rooms were not only delightful but in perfect order. Mr. Whyte confessed to having had work- people from time to time brushing and clean- ing ; " always by the day, not one would stay over night," said he with his twisted smile, " but as the mansion is built of stone, and thoroughly well finished throughout with the 128 The Benefit of the Doubt. best material, and is well guarded by locks, bars, and bolts, it has suffered but little in the interior. It is the exterior, as I explained to Mr. Black, that shows the effects of time and mischievous boys." During the investigation and the choice of her rooms by Selma, so many bright remarks were elicited that it seemed quite like an enter- tainment gotten up purposely. When they returned below stairs, Judith was installed in the great kitchen, where her hus- band had built a roaring fire in the huge old- fashioned fireplace, before which the linen was to be aired, and at which Judith was to cook a substantial repast of viands Miss de Grey had taken the precaution to bring with her in cer- tain covered baskets. " But where are your strange noises, my dear Breta; I hear none." Miss de Grey had already dropped the Miss in Breta's favor, mak- ing much of her, as a lady of twenty-seven or eight may a valued friend much younger. " Breta has never heard them, Miss de Grey," said Mr. Whyte. " She considers them merely dreams." " Uncle Ray will tell you where he keeps Elnrwood. 129 these dreams, Miss de Grey," returned Breta, adding : " I was wishing an hour or so ago that I was of the stuff of which dreams are made." " What, when we came, my dear Breta ? " asked Selma. " Just imagine, Miss de Grey : I being in- veigled here with the bait of old music scores just from Paris, and under the solemn seal of assurance that the present owner of the house would not and could not be back here until to- morrow, just imagine my alarm when the car- riage drove up containing " Is the present owner of the house, then, such a very alarming person, Miss Garnet?" asked de Grey, laughing. " Very alarming, on his own grounds," said Breta. " Oh, Joslyn is not at all dangerous, I assure you, my dear Breta," insisted Selma, with a laugh, " and then just think," continued she in her gracious, confiding way, " how much pleasure it has given me to have you here this afternoon. And I have a great request to make of you : That you should come and stay here with me, right along. Will you ? " De Grey, who had been attentively listening, looked intently at Breta, awaiting her reply. 1 30 The Benefit of the Doubt. "It would give me great pleasure, I assure you, Miss de Grey, but I am under engagement to Miss Rutherford for another month." " But if I should send Miss Rutherford some one to fill your place ? " " Oh ! I could not disappoint Miss Ruther- ford," returned Breta. " I see I shall have to be content to come for you in your leisure time, for which I shall plead," said Selma, in a winning tone of appeal. While she was speaking a summons came to dinner, and a more delightful meal was never discussed in any house and by more delightful people than that served in the great dining- room of the haunted house of Elmwood. After the repast was over, Breta volunteering, she and Selma went up stairs, and, assisted by Judith, Selma's sleeping and dressing-rooms were made bright with curtains, draperies, and all the little elegancies and delicate toys for mantel, toilette, bracket, and stand, that make daintily appointed rooms so charming. It was nine o'clock when Mr. Whyte drove back to the school with Breta, and on the way he told her how delighted he was that Miss de Grey had come, and what a superior woman he Elmwood. 131 thought her. "In some respects quite like her brother," said he. " And I consider Joslyn de Grey as grand as Rossini's Stabat Mater, or one of Beethoven's symphonies. He is as har- monious as Gluck's Orpheus, and the Orphee laughs all through it with inspired harmony. He is altogether too fine to be given up to to ghosts," concluded little Mr. Whyte, with a snap of his whip that startled Flash as though one of the apparitions alluded to had risen up before him. Breta found Miss Rutherford in the recep- tion-room with seme of the older pupils and teachers listening to Miss Bowers, who was then sino-Jno- Cherubini's Ave Maria. o o " I must say, Miss Garnet, that Miss Bowers does you great credit. Her voice has been mellowed and improved under your admirable method, until it is a great pleasure to hear her sing. I suppose you have been hard at work trying over those old scores of which your uncle spoke to me." "We tried over some of them, Miss Ruther- ford," returned Breta. " The septette in D mi- nor of Johan Nepomuck Hummel's,for one, with its fine third movement a brilliant scherzo. 132 The Benefit of the Doubt. But we were interrupted," and Breta related the incidents of the afternoon and evening. Miss Rutherford, saying it was very kind and thoughtful of Miss de Grey in coming to keep house for her brother, astonished Breta by asking, as a favor, would she accompany her to Elmwood immediately after breakfast in the morning. " It is necessary that due attention should be shown Miss de Grey," said Miss Rutherford. " I can manage your lessons, my dear Miss Garnet. I shall have baskets of fruit and other edibles prepared to take in the carriage with us, as Miss de Grey will find some difficulty in procuring such things until she gets somewhat acquainted with our markets here. Miss de Grey stands high in New York the whole de Grey family do, in fact. When I found Mr. Joslyn de Grey had purchased your place and was coming among us, I took pains to ascertain who he was, but finding all so unexceptionable, I deem it incumbent upon me to make Miss de Grey feel that she has come among friends. Young Mr. de Grey is, I hear, inclined to be somewhat visionary, but bears a character with- out a flaw." Elmwood. 133 How Miss Rutherford obtained all her infor- mation about the de Greys she did not tell, but Frank Bovvers said in a characteristic aside to Breta, on their way up to the dormitories, that Miss Rutherford had received such a raft of let- ters that morning, the postman had to employ a little boy to help him carry them. " And let me tell you, Breta, Miss Ruther- ford has her own schemes for you. You are the apple of her eye ; and she is resolved to make love while the de Greys shine." The carriage was at the door promptly after breakfast the next morning ; and Miss Ruther- ford, with a basket of choice strawberries in her hand, made room for Breta beside her, the coachman having charge of another large basket in which were some of her cook's famous apple- pies and other dainties. " Miss de Grey must be some punkins, to make Miss Rutherford spread herself so exten- sively," remarked Frank, who was waving her handkerchief to Breta from the veranda, as the carriage drove off. "Miss Rutherford would not have had that lemon meringue made and put in the basket for a nobody." " You had better turn French cook and done 1 34 The Benefit of the Doubt. with it, Frank Bowers," said Pella. " So far as language is concerned you would have nothing to learn. ' Some punkins,' how excessively vulgar ! " " Oh, yes, Pella," retorted Frank, " I should have to learn to say it in French. Punkins, citrouille, feminine gender. But, de la c^tro^lille would not express the American idiom. And then I should have to wear a long white apron and a paper cap. Thanking you for the sug- gestion, on the whole I think I '11 not turn French cook." " Pella and Frank, stop your fighting and go to quarrelling, but first listen to some news," said Sadie Burrill, who had just joined the others on the veranda. " Well ? " snapped Pella. " Only this : Mis.s Amanda " " Miss High-manda, Sadie, Miss High-man- da," interrupted Frank, with a mocking gri- mace. " Be still, Frank, and let me tell," said Sadie, laughing. " A young lady of nineteen, and so rude ! " sneered Pella. " Nineteen or ninety, I leave it to every one Elmwood. 135 if I am not right. Miss High-manda is full as tall as her sister two regular Lombardy pop- lars." " Do go on, Sadie, and don't mind Frank and her poplars," urged Pella. " What did Miss Amanda say ? " " That the picnic is to be put off till this day week," said the laughing Sadie ; " and it is to be a grand affair. Miss de Grey and her broth- er are invited " Her brother! " ejaculated Pella. " Why, he is a young gentleman. He '11 be sure to devour some of us. We 're not even to see a young gentleman, for fear of having our morals cor- rupted, but are to be kept in hermetically sealed school-rooms, and " Well, Mr. de Grey is an hermetic philoso- pher ; I heard Miss Rutherford say so," inter- rupted Frank, with a laugh. " I am sure, Pella, Miss Rutherford is very much more lenient in that respect than the prin- cipals of most boarding-schools," said Sadie, pleasantly. " She thinks society helps form our manners, you know ; and she is constantly in- viting young ladies and their brothers and their gentlemen friends, with the heads of their 136 The Benefit of the DoubL families, to all our musicales, and our readings, and conversazioni " Do let Pella growl, Sadie," said Frank. " How long since you have taken up the cud- gels of defence in behalf of Miss Rutherford, Sadie Burrill ? " demanded Pella, scornfully, ignoring Frank's remark. "Do hear Pella talk slang!" exclaimed Frank. " ' Cudgels of defence ! ' Quite as hor- rible as ' some punkins ' ! But come, Sadie, never mind the young gentlemen and our mor- als, what else did Miss Highmanda say? " " Besides the elite of Lea the Judge Wai- tons, the General Leightons, and so on (the de Greys, of course), your brother, Frank, and yours. Pella " " My brother," snapped Pella, " is in Europe." " And mine has just returned from Europe," said Frank. " Tom will come, for I shall write to him myself, and that will bring him. It will be awfully jolly. I shall wear my new navy- blue flannel, with cardinal bows and no jewelry. There is nothing so out of taste as jewelry on a picnic. Mamma says so, and she knows." "You are so very dark, Frank, that navy- blue and cardinal are the only colors you really Elmwood. 137 can wear. I shall dress in white, with Marie Louise blue bows, and as much jewelry as I choose, out of taste indeed! Your mamma, forsooth ! and I shall crimp my hair and wear it down my " Frank looks handsome in any thing, Pella,!' interrupted Sadie, " and handsomest of all in white. She will not be compelled to waste time in crimping her hair, as it waves so beautifully naturally." " Which, as you well know, Sadie," returned Pella, triumphantly, ' is indicative of a terrible temper." " Le vrai n 'est pas tou jours vraisemblable" mocked Frank, laughing, as with an arm around Sadie's waist she accompanied her to the school- room, the bell for the morning classes loudly ringing. IX. MY QUEEN, OR NOT MY QUEEN. MISS DE GREY and her brother, with little Mr. Whyte, were sitting out on the veranda at Elmwood as the carriage con- taining Miss Rutherford and Bre.ta drove up. As de Grey looked up his face became suddenly illuminated ; he rose hastily to assist them from the carriage, his eyes, as he went forward, meet- ing Breta's in a quick telegraphic signal, so inex- plicable, so unnoticed by others, and yet so full of import to the owners of the two pairs of eyes thus meeting. It was Breta, de Grey helped down first, she being nearest, and then Miss Rutherford, who, good lady, saw nothing, having eyes only to the safety of her baskets. Selma welcomed Breta warmly with a kiss on either cheek, and won Miss Rutherford's favor- able opinion by her admirable finish of manner. 138 My Queen, or Not My Queen. 139 They were all seated on the veranda, as being pleasanter that warm June morning than the drawing-room ; and Selma was interrupted in something she was saying to Miss Rutherford by two women with scrubbing brushes and pails, who came to ask her questions about their work, and were referred to Judith. " They are all very willing to come during the daylight it seems," Selma explained, " and my deaf-and-dumb Judith writes her orders to them on the slate. Nothing makes any differ- ence, it appears, with the unseen residents of the house how many visible people are at work in it. I feared at first that the work-people might interfere with brother Joslyn's projects, until Mr. Whyte assured me to the contrary." " Nothing has ever made any difference," re- turned Mr. Whyte, with his twisted smile. " They the unseen residents, as you call them come and go at their own sweet will that is, if their will can be said to be sweet. It has been amusing to see those I employed take fright and rush from the house like deer. Once, when two women were at work cleaning, we had a merry time. Said one : ' I can stand it, Lize, as long as you kin. It 's only a little talking and noise, and that don't hurt nobody.' 140 The Benefit of the Doubt. " ' It 's only jest some pesky boys the little gen- tleman hires to frighten folks. I ain't afeard.' " 'Jest you stick to that, Lize, like grim death ; noise ain't nothin.' " An Indian war-whoop sounding through the house just then cut off the reply of ' Lize,' and they both rushed down stairs and past me (I was out here noting music), looking like two hunted, wild animals. They came again the next day though, brave as sheep, and hearing nothing, they went home before dark, feeling, as they said, so ' pop-sure ' that some ' dratted boys ' were hidden up stairs, that I found my- self quite imbued with their idea." Miss Rutherford spoke long and learnedly about the just-discovered telephone. As she concluded, de Grey had an admirable oppor- tunity to enlarge upon his own peculiar views, had he chosen to embrace it. But he was so manifestly occupied, eyes, thought, and speech, ostensibly in showing Breta some curios, exquisite Japanese carvings, that he seemed more inclined to embrace her than the oppor- tunity to explain to Miss Rutherford. The carvings were a set of boxes within boxes that he had taken from the window-sill, My Queen, or Not My Queen. 141 where other Japanese bric-a-brac were lying partly unpacked, and were so intricate and deli- cate in workmanship it seemed as though hu- man hands could not have fashioned them. Talking to Breta in low tones that would not disturb the conversation of the others, his words contained the simple description only of how he came across them when in Yokohama. But as it is how words are uttered that furnishes the subtle indication of the feeling lying back of them, so every word of de Grey's that morning revealed to Breta the interest, the intense inter- est, he felt in her. Another of Miss de Grey's women wishing her presence, in her placid, pleasant manner she asked Miss Rutherford if she would not like to see her rooms. " It is just what I wished to propose," replied Miss Rutherford, " as I have never seen the mysterious interior of Elmwood." Miss Rutherford admired the spacious, airy apartments with their large oriel windows, and with Miss de Grey as cicerone went all through the house ; the immense and gorgeously ap- pointed drawing-rooms, library, and dining- rooms especially meeting her approval. 142 The Benefit of the Doubt. While they were gone, de Grey made the most of his time, continuing his conversation with Breta, little Mr. Whyte occasionally drop- ping a quaintly pertinent remark. But Mr. Whyte's presence seemed no check to either ; on the contrary, innocent and fresh himself, up in all topics of interest, and unobtrusive and as- similative in nature, he gave Breta more con- fidence ; and she sustained her part of the con- versation with a brightness and originality that charmed de Grey more and more. It is quite a matter of wonder how much can be said and lived in a short time. When the ladies returned, it seemed to Breta they had been gone for hours, she felt herself so fully re- vealed, and so entirely understood, and she admired so greatly the character that had re- vealed itself to her. Miss Rutherford introducing the picnic, Sel- ma de Grey took it up warmly, wishing to share the trouble and expense. " Let me see to the ices and fruits. I will send to New York for them," said she. " Where are the grounds ? " o " At Rocky Glen, a spot about three miles from the village. We are to be there quite early, at eight o'clock on the children's ac- My Queen, or Not My Queen. 143 count, to start at seven from the seminary, and the day is one week from to-day." "The railroad passes by it, does it not?" asked de Grey. " The railroad runs by the spot at a little dis- tance, but does not mar its attractiveness, rocks and dense foliage screening- it it is one of the most secluded places imaginable." " I was riding through it this morning," ob- served de Grey ; " as picturesque a spot as I re- member ever to have seen ; reminding me of the forest- nooks in Germany." Miss Rutherford incited de Grey to giving some descriptions of German scenery ; and then, rising to go, her coachman, who had been wandering around the grounds and had just re- turned, handed down the baskets at her re- quest ; she concluding her apology for bringing the trifles, by saying : " I knew, Miss de Grey, you must be in more or less confusion for a day or so." 4< Do not apologize, Miss Rutherford, for so acceptable and opportune a gift," responded de Grey ; " Selma has just been lamenting that she could not provide a better dinner for us than she confesses we are to have to-day." 144 The Benefit of the Doiibt. " It is so new to me here as yet ; and, be as philosophic as gentlemen may, I have never found them objecting to a good dinner," said Selma, with a bright laugh. As de Grey assisted Miss Rutherford and Breta back into the carriage, Miss Rutherford handed Selma the addresses of the best bakers, butchers, and grocers in Lea, and- the carriage drove off; Breta carrying back to the school with her a last look from de Grey's dark eyes that made the little commonplaces of Miss Rutherford difficult to follow, although she re- lated in choice language the traditionary legend connected with Rocky Glen. From that time de Grey caused it so to chance that he passed some part of each day in Breta's presence. The programme was a drive every afternoon, his carriage and fine span of horses he having had sent to him from the city, and inviting his sister to accompany him, and suggesting to her the expediency of calling for Miss Garnet on their way Selma's sudden fondness for Breta deepening with each sight of her, all worked harmoniously. On the afternoon of Thursday Miss Ruther- ford accompanied them, and on Friday after- My Qiieen, or Not My Queen. 146 noon the de Greys, having called somewhat ear- lier, heard the conclusion of Frank's singing lesson ; the other pianos of the school being oc- cupied with practising pupils, Breta was hearing her in the parlor. Selma, much struck with Frank's voice and method, spoke of it when she had concluded her lesson ; she had been singing quite effec- tively, Mozart's Agjms Dei in Mass C. " Due entirely to Miss Garnet, I assure you, Miss de Grey, for I sang like a hoot-owl four years ago. She, Miss Garnet, had a time of it in making me understand the difference be- tween pure tones and guttural tones, for I sang all in my throat. I scarcely knew I had a larynx, let alone that I must not permit the air column from the lungs to remain in the larynx, forcing those hideous, howling tones that are so excruci- atingly horrid. I had an awful time in learn- ing how to take my tones above, instead of be- low the glottis, with the glottis-stroke. And as for my tongue, all I knew was how to gabble with it ; and to learn that it must lie easily and naturally on the floor of my mouth, with the tip just touching my front teeth (and not to curl up into a spoon, as I made it), was preposterous to 146 The Benefit of the Doubt. me then. You see, Miss de Grey, I was never one of those fortunate ones who groove into the right way by instinct ; the wrong way is so much easier and pleasanter, at least for one's self. Other people's ears used to be fearfully scorched by my singing, I being the only one who thoroughly enjoyed it." Miss Bowers said this in her off-hand way, leaving Selma, as she left every one, in doubt if she were fully in earnest, but never in doubt whether or not to laugh for the laugh she evoked when she so wished was always in- evitable. " Then I am to infer you regret your present finished style of singing ? " asked Selma. " Miss de Grey, I never nursed a dear ga- zelle, but I nursed a dear monkey once, that papa brought me from Brazil. That monkey was like my voice at that time, making no one ' glad ' but myself. Now that with infinite nursing I have acquired a decent method, why, of course, I value it. But it was the labor, you see, I detesting work." " Miss Bovvers, I wish you would accompany us in our drive this afternoon, and we will discuss the labor question," proposed Selma, smiling. My Queen, or Not My Queen. 147 Frank declined the invitation, thanking Selma in so lady-like a way as showed she could be exceedingly well bred on occasion. " I see, Miss Garnet," said de Grey, who had been turning over music, " you go to the foun- tain source. Do you bring up all your pupils on Mozart, Cherubini, Rossini, Gluck, Handel, and the great masters I find here ? " " Always when I can, and when I cannot I descend to lesser masters," said Breta, with la laugh, adding : " But if you have an idea of entering as a pupil, Mr. de Grey, I will promise not to teach you any thing but the most severely classical " " You will do well to avail yourself of Miss Garnet's instruction," said Frank in a meaning way that caused a laugh. " If I thought Miss Rutherford would take me," hesitated de Grey. " But I am afraid I should be like the rest, Miss Garnet, and stipu- late for an occasional ' tune,' Blumenthal's ' My Queen ' for one." " I doubt if Breta would give it to you, Mr. de Grey ; she has a way of having her own will, and so easily that you knock under, that is, I mean, of course (and Frank laughed at her own 148 The Benefit of the Doubt. expense), you are converted to her views before you know it. I used to rebel against those poky old masses of the old masters, until at last I fairly learned to love them. I was a very troublesome pupil, and Breta being no older than myself but a century in advance of me in acquirement had, as I said, a time of it in forming my taste. I hope you won't be so re- bellious a pupil." " I was always noted for docility, was I not, Selma ? " said de Grey. " Always, Joslyn ; docilly determined to carry your point, and in such a thoroughly docile way I always found you always gained it," replied Selma, with a loving smile. " So I should judge," added Breta, with a quick, responsive laugh. " Mr. de Grey seems to me one more than usually firm of pur- pose, one who would literally go through fire for a sufficient object, and " " And pray proceed, Miss Garnet," urged de Grey, smiling down with a steady look into Breta's eyes ; the very steadiness of his look and the position of his head, that brought out the firm lines of his mouth and chin, proving the correctness of the assertion. My Queen, or Not My Queen. But Breta ventured no more, and Frank ex- claimed : " That being conceded, Mr. de Grey, it will be ' My Queen ' or not ' My Queen ' ; and who yields the point time will show." " Pardon my curiosity, Miss Bowers," said de Grey in his quietest manner, ignoring the point Frank had just made with so much ap- parent innocence. " But on the stairs, as we came in, we encountered a young lady with a Greek face, and a profusion of golden-red hair. In features, like the picture on exhibition, of Garafelia Mohalbi, who, it is said, was bought out of Turkish persecution and adopted as his own daughter by a Boston gentleman, some years ago." " Her name is Pella Morton ; she is con- sidered remarkably handsome," replied Frank. " So I should suppose," assented de Grey. But although his words assented, his tone im- plied a mental reservation that did not escape the observation of either FYank or Breta. " Joslyn," said Selma, tapping her brother's arm lightly with her fan, " we might chat here all the afternoon, and be delightfully enter- tained. Do join with me in prevailing on Miss 1 5o The Benefit of the Doubt. Bowers to accompany us, that we may continue our pleasant talk in the carriage." "It has been hinted that I get my own way, Miss Bowers," urged de Grey, turning from Breta toward Frank. " Now my will is that you accept Selma's invitation, and if Miss Gar- net, who always has her own will, would kindly join me in urging, you certainly must comply." Selma, who, in her gentle, easy way, having risen to go, and was standing beside Breta, and petting her pretty brown hair with her fair, soft hand, looked with a pleasant smile from one to another. " You make me ashamed of my refusal," re- lented Frank. " I knew you could not find it in your heart to persevere in it," declared Breta. " It will be delightful, and I shall be delighted o o with the drive of course, and . But," faltered Frank, " I did not like to feel I owed my invita- tion just to the chance of Miss de Grey's hap- pening on me in the parlor. I will ask Miss Rutherford's permission." The permission gained, Frank appeared with Breta, both hatted and gloved. The drive proved a pleasant one, and as they My Queen, or Not My Queen. i5i were returning, a horseman, overtaking the car- riage and recognizing its inmates, wheeled his horse around and discovered to them the hand- some features of Noel Dunraven. The whole manoeuvre could not have been surpassed in elegance, and Dunraven never showed to better advantage. He was dressed in full riding costume, his abundant waving blonde hair mingling artistically with his blonde beard. And, mounted on a fine spirited horse of the largest size and most perfect proportions, he himself of the largest size and most perfect pro- portions, horse and man looked as though made expressly each for the other. He rode, not in the modern English style of rising in the stirrups, but in the old Grecian method of horsemanship, having achieved by much practice that method as most in accordance with his conception of the needs of the Renaissance. Like the old Gre- cian warriors, who might have been Centaurs, so a part of their horses did they seem, he rode as though all his life he might have dined, supped, breakfasted, and slept in his saddle. " An uncommonly fine rider," commented Selma, as Dunraven, with a sweeping bow, hat in hand, passed on. " Brother Joslyn and Ben- i 52 Tke Benefit of the Doubt. jamin Mr. Black I have always been proud of as good horsemen, but this gentleman's rid- ing can only be called the perfection of eques- trian grace. Pray who is he ? " " He is my cousin, Noel Dunraven," replied Breta, quietly. But though she spoke with so little emotion, a shadow had crossed the bright- ness of her face and left her eyes with a troub- led look in them. De Grey lapsed into almost utter silence, making only an occasional abstracted remark ; the absorbed expression of his face, paler than its wont, deepening as they proceeded. The conversation was carried on quite briskly by Selma and Frank ; de Grey's reticence and Breta's far-off look and manner passing unno- ticed. On arriving at the seminary, they found Noel Dunraven sitting on the veranda in conversa- tion with Miss Rutherford. He came forward with the proportions of Hercules and the grace of the Jeune Apollo toward the carriage, de Grey having just assisted the ladies to alight, and walked up the veranda steps by the side of Breta, leaving de Grey to follow with Frank. Miss de Grey, who had preceded the others, My Queen, or Not My Queen. 163 was asking of Miss Rutherford the pleasure of Breta's company, with that of Frank, for the day on the morrow, it being Saturday, the usual school holiday. " It is very kind of you, Miss de Grey," re- plied Miss Rutherford, suavely. " I am delight- ed that the young ladies should have so pleas- ant a change from the monotony of school life." Being introduced to Dunraven by Breta, Miss de Grey, always bent on making every one happy, included him also in her invitation. " You do not come any more to Elmwood, Mr. Dunraven ; I find your uncle misses you. Pray do not let my being there frighten you off; I am not at all a formidable person, I as- sure you. Shall we not expect you to-mor- row ? " With a gratefully graceful acknowledgment of Miss de Grey's kindness, Dunraven, regret- ting a prior engagement in New York for the morning, expressed himself as being only too happy to avail himself of her invitation, and would certainly be at Elmwood late in the after- noon. The trouble had not left Breta's eyes. She was standing beside de Grey, and they were 1 54 The Benefit of the Doubt. interchanging a few commonplace remarks, when, on a motion to go, from his sister, his eyes meeting those of Breta, a whole volume of unspoken words were uttered by both in one of those sudden mutual glances that come into eyes perhaps once in a lifetime. And de Grey conducted his sister to the car- riage, she telling Miss Rutherford that she should send for the young ladies quite early in the morning. As they drove off, Dunraven, in an exquisite- ly picturesque attitude, was bending his tall form over Breta, saying something in which he was apparently much interested. "It would really be worth while," observed Selma to her brother, " to make a study of this new aesthetic cult new and old, that is if one could realize the ideal in in external grace, the perfect rhythm of movement that Mr. Dun- raven has achieved. His dress and manners are a living protest against the incongruousness, the almost total lack of this age in good taste, in favor of the lost beautiful of the old Renais- sance." " Yes, without doubt," acquiesced de Grey, absently. Recalling his wandering thoughts My Queen, or Not My Queen. i55 from Breta's last look, so significant, to a sense of his sister's remark, he qualified his assent : " That is, if the external grace, the rhythm of movement, and that," said he, with a touch of burlesque in his tone, " be not in ex- cess of the lost beautiful so cherished by the masters of those mediaeval and old Greek times ; which, by the way, always found its choicest expression in the simply natural." " Oh, it is the simply natural you wish," re- turned Selma, laughing. " You have only to go to our farm-houses, where people (of sterling worth certainly) cultivate, corn rather than clas- sical costumes, and potatoes rather than poetic postures. Still, although there can be no genu- ine expression of beauty that does not emanate from faith in nature and earnest seeking after the real, the true, yet the very effort to train the imagination in the outward requirements of this ideal, must raise the standard of moral ex- cellence." " You always were wonderfully logical, Sel- ma. But I suppose now, although your dress and manners are simply perfect, a model for the rising generation of young ladies, we may expect to see you in Boticellian costume and 1 56 The Benefit of the Doubt. stained-glass attitudes, with a choice bouquet of sun-flowers on your breast, and " Certainly," interrupted Selma, laughing, " I always was an extremist, you know. But you must admit that Mr. Dunraven has nothing about him of the extreme of that fashionable ultra-sestheticism. He does not belong to the sun-flower school ; he 's neither Boticellian in dress nor stained glass in attitude." " I admit," conceded de Grey, looking down into his sister's face with a peculiar smile, " Mr. Dunraven is all you say. He is highly cultured, remarkably handsome and well dressed perhaps a little too well dressed. He should receive the title of Admirable the second, suc- cessor to Crichton." " How unlike you, Joslyn, you always so free from unreasonable prejudices. You have taken a most unaccountable dislike to poor Mr. Dunraven. I cannot understand it," said Sel- ma, with much simplicity, regarding her brother wonderingly. De Grey paid great attention to the paces of the high-stepping horses he was driving for a moment, bearing the scrutiny of his sister's eyes without change of muscle. My Queen, or Not My Queen. 167 " I shall look well into this, Selma," said he, seriously. "An unreasonable prejudice is the poorest investment in the world." " He being Mr. Whyte's. nephew too, you know," deprecatingly continued she. " We shall see a great deal of him of course. He comes to-morrow, in the latter part of the day. It will be so pleasant for Breta to meet him at the old place. You know they are not really cousins, although they were almost brought up together, Mr. Whyte thinking so much of his wife's sister's son." " I see," said de Grey, assenting to his sis- ter's plans for making it pleasant for her guests, and listening to her responsively as she still continued the fruitful theme possibly as a self- imposed penance for his " unreasonable preju- dices." X. A STRATEGIC ARRANGEMENT. DURING the day at Elmwood, Frank, de- veloping remarkable strategic powers, contrived to leave Breta and de Grey alone to- gether several times, manoeuvring with such tact that not even Breta suspected her design. In this Frank took the heroic pride of a martyr, immolating on the shrine of friendship that which her self-seeking- instincts would have o prompted, and without the satisfaction of re- ceiving any credit for her sacrifice. They had all taken a long drive in the morn- ing, exploring new and wild regions, little Mr. Whyte accompanying them ; and after return- ing, Frank, becoming suddenly interested in some music scores, induced Selma, ever ready for Mr. Whyte's violin, to go with her to Mr. Whyte's study and hear him play them. And for her reward they were executed so charm- 158 A Strategic Arrangement. i5g ingly that she was intensely interested in spite of herself. The melodious strains floated in through the windows of the drawing-room where Breta and de Grey were sitting, and though conversing delightfully, never once touching on the subject Frank had selected in her own mind for them. It was in the afternoon, after lunch, that, taking a stroll around the tangled grounds, Selma was expatiating with great enthusiasm on the plan she and Joslyn had of restoring the old place to its pristine order, and having arrived at the knoll under the great elms, they seated themselves on the old carved seats, where the cool breezes were forever playing. The vast extent of the prospect before them, bounded by the purple mists and the blue shadowy mountain range ; the varied beauty of the seventy odd miles of valley below them, with its picturesque villages, streams, and for- ests, gave them something always to study. And conversation flagging, Breta, her large, clear eyes shining like stars, seemed to lose herself in contemplation of the view. Selma looked admiringly upon her, and as she chanced to glance from her to Joslyn, she saw in his 160 The Benefit of the Doubt. eyes, which were attentively regarding Breta, a certain inscrutable something that suddenly caused a light to break in on her comprehen- sion. She seemed a little bewildered by it at first, and then evidently recalling many un- heeded little points of the past few days, her face settled into a well-satisfied expression. Frank had watchfully noted and understood Selma's chain of thought, and a few moments after, when Judith, Selma's deaf-and-dumb maid, appeared, intimating that Miss de Grey was needed at the house, she rose to go also. " I am dying for the second volume of this," exclaimed Frank, giving the book she held in her hand, with a slender forefinger shut in as a mark, a graceful little outward sway.- " I have galloped through this first volume between whiles, and I must see how the hero and heroine get out of their troubles, and who gets who in the end." And Frank drew Selma's arm within her own, and sauntered off with her toward the house. Breta was silent for a time, apparently still studying the broad landscape. De Grey was silent also, sufficiently well content to study her, the repose of her exquisitely moulded A Strategic Arrangement. 161 features evidently possessing a rare charm for him. " This view has a wonderful attraction for me ; it always brings up a crowd of half- forgotten recollections and suggestions of future possibilities," observed Breta, quietly, looking up at de Grey. " Such as "- - prompted he. " Oh ! I doubt if I could find words to make them intelligible. It is so easy to think dream I mean and so difficult to put vague dreams into a presentable shape in words." " Then you should sing them, Miss Garnet. There is a world you say when you sing. I thought, on that first Sunday I heard you, that I had never before understood those inspired words. To be able to express the full import of beautiful words, in tones so cultured that the labor of the culture is lost in the spon- taneity of utterance, is the perfection of art, allied to the divine gift of nature." " You at least, Mr. de Grey, are at no loss, I see, for words with which to express your thoughts," said Breta, with a light laugh. " I accept only the flattering letter of your unrhymed epigram, Miss Garnet ; I reject utter- 1 62 The Benefit of the Doubt. ly its satirical spirit," responded de Grey, laugh- ing with a keen relish of her pointed speech and its accompanying smile. " But really, I have been for the past five or six years so de- voted to scientific study that the thoughts and dreams of young ladies have formed but a small part of my life. I confess to some curiosity on the point." " As a matter of scientific study ? " asked Breta, with a bright, upward look. " But it would scarcely pay you for the labor, Mr. de Grey. You had better trust to the physiological and ethical writers. They will tell you with one ac- cord that the feminine brain is incapable of any purely logical train of thought ; that we jump at our conclusions. In short, that we are very shoal and frivolous, and that it is to the massive, powerful, masculine brain the world owes all its wise deductions and and every thing useful or great." " I am at your mercy, Miss Garnet," returne.d de Grey, laughing. " I have nothing to say in defence of the physiologists. I am not certain though but that jumping at a conclusion is the wisest way of arriving at it. Socrates infers it when he tells us that intuition is but a rapid process of reasoning by analogy." A Strategic Arrangement. 163 " Oh, that was centuries ago. Modern ethics are far in advance of Socrates. The modern writers, in giving us intuition as an especially feminine trait, infer, of course, that it is quite a puerile attribute, far beneath the dignity of the masculine brain." " Then you think, Miss Garnet, that the mod- ern ethicists wade sometimes beyond their depth ? The Rosy-cross-men, you know, held intuition and inspiration as one." " I I scarcely know what I really do think," faltered Breta, with a half laugh. Brought sud- denly face to face with her own drolling, she began to have grave misgivings that she might be making a goose of herself before such a young wiseacre as her uncle had represented de Grey to be. " Please understand, Mr. de Grey, if I advance opinions, it is, of course, in a per- fectly reckless, illogical way. I have thought out so little," she added. " You advance opinions in a perfectly in a way that interests me beyond measure," said de Grey, looking down into her eyes with a warm light in his. "And I should say you had done some pretty hard thinking to master the crabbed points of music, just as you have." 164 The Benefit of the Doubt. " A little hard study was all that was necessary to achieve that. Those who made the music did the hard thinking," asserted Breta, lightly, steadying herself under his look. " To interpret the great masters understand- ingly is to be one with them," affirmed de Grey. "It would be pleasant to think so; but brought up as I was in a land of music and art- treasure, where one is reminded on all sides of the great things superior intelligences can achieve, one is apt, I suppose, to think slight- ingly of one's own small powers." This was said with so much simplicity that de Grey, studying Breta's face for a moment, replied quite indirectly : " To the great masters who devoted their lives to the development of art the world owes its best lessons. Those men of the Renaissance those world-renowned painters, with their rare ability, would have been great scientists, statesmen, or musicians under other conditions. Their influence will be felt to the end of time." " Ah, you see, Mr. de Grey, they had the originality to comprehend that nature is the best model, and the courage to forsake the ser- vile copying of foregone methods, and the A Strategic Arrangement. i65 genius to execute new conceptions," said Breta, warmly. " Yes, all those were needed. The persistent departure from worn-out methods into a bold conception of the truth found in nature is what produces the new birth in art, or music, or let- ters, or in religion. It was Luther's originality and genius and courage that created the Ger- man Reformation, which is called, you know, the Renaissance of Christianity, the word Re- naissance being interpreted as ' the conscious- ness of intellectual liberty.' ' " Yes, I see," returned Breta, deeply inter- ested. " And the intellectual liberty of Italy and through Italy that of other nations com- menced with the Renaissance, the Rinascenza, literally the New Birth." " Commenced," added de Grey, smiling at her quiet enthusiasm, " when, in the thirteenth century, the sculptor Niccola Pisano, and close upon him the painter Giotto, and following them Michael Angelo, da Vinci, Titian, Ra- phael, Correggio, and the whole army of great painters and sculptors, turned their backs on the models of the schools to work out their ideas with all nature before them. After Cor- 1 66 The Benefit of the Doubt. reggio, artists began again copying from school models it was now their beloved Raffaele they copied and art declined. Then came the po- litical troubles of the seventeenth century, and art in Italy was threatened with extinction. But pardon me, Miss Garnet, I am growing exten- sively statistic, to say nothing of didactic," con- cluded de Grey, with a laugh at himself. "Then there was the French Renaissance, Mr. de Grey, of which I know positively noth- ing," suggested Breta, with a tentative upward glance and smile. " And the English Renaissance, Miss Garnet, started by Turner and followed up by the pre- Raphaelite brotherhood." " I have the profoundest admiration," return- ed Breta, "for those pre-Raphaelite painters, who have so bravely withstood the howls of the Royal Academy and the press, and have proved by their works that nature to study from is bet- ter than the models of the schools. Those of the old Renaissance had the encouragement of appreciation and sympathy, while these of the new Renaissance these leaders of a forlorn hope have worked on, achieving success, with the discouragement of abuse from all sides." A Strategic Arrangement. 167 De Grey watched the delicate changes of Breta's face, that expressed so much more of generous enthusiasm than even her words. " They have been and are so ably defended by John Ruskin, a host in himself," said he, " that they need no other support. But men so much in earnest as they would work on the same without defence." " And the new social Renaissance of aesthetic London, Mr. de Grey, that has so curiously grown out of the other. My cousin, Noel Dun- raven, has labored diligently to make me see it as he sees it. But he failed utterly, for I could make nothing of it ; at least, that was pleasant." Breta said this in her quietest way, not as im- parting a confidence, but as simply narrating a fact, with the charming candor that formed so large a part of her character. De Grey's spirits rose perceptibly. " Mr. Dunraven has painted some fine pict- ures, Mr. Whyte tells me," said he. " Very fine, and he has written some, mostly verse, and has composed music. (De Grey listen- ed attentively.) No one can find fault with his perspectives, or lights and shades," continued Breta, " or his dactyls or iambics, or detect 1 68 The Benefit of the Doubt. prohibited fifths, faulty progressions, or other irregularities in his nocturnes or idyls. What- ever he does, he does well." De Grey, feeling the Dunraven ground to be a somewhat dangerous one, but wishing to hear Breta still further express herself, said : " My sister admires Mr. Dunraven greatly, and even thinks of working out the aesthetic problem for her own improvement." Breta opened her eyes a little wonderingly as she looked up and met de Grey's incomprehen- sible glance. " We my Uncle Ray and I, ' said she, " spent several weeks in London just before we came to America, after leaving Milan. We were with my aunt, who is the very head and front of the aesthetic offending-. Noel Dun- o raven also was there, and my aunt (she is not his aunt, being my father's sister) depends upon him, when she is fortunate enough to get him in London, to assist her at her conversazioni and other aesthetic gatherings. Her house is large, and the drawing-rooms, connecting, are so arranged as to doors and furniture, to give an idea of space and repose. There are numer- ous curiously contrived vistas, quite labyrin- A Strategic Arrangement. 169 thine in effect, terminating in gorgeous displays of flowers or plants, or in cunningly hung pict- ures, by famous artists, with the light falling on each from unexpected windov/s at just the right angle. It is all very beautiful and very wonder- ful. Her collection of faience and majolica (the majolica of undoubted Majorca origin) is of the finest as are all of her art decorations. And her collection of friends is not to be rivalled. One meets all the celebrities, all the great per- sonages of the day at her entertainments. And the gowns of the most ardent of the aesthetes are truly astonishing. The operatic stage fades into insignificance before their artistically tinted costumes of every century. They (the aesthetes) have attitudes and ohs ! and ahs ! for great sing- ers or fine piano recitals, every shade of ' soul ' and ' intensity ' being expressed ; and they ex- pire with delight, or revive with despair. They made of uie Here Breta came to a sudden pause. " Pray, Miss Garnet, don't leave the part of Hamlet out," urged de Grey, laughing as he looked intently at Breta. " Well, I was the last new craze. You see I had just been singing at Milan, and they set to 170 The Benefit of the Doubt. work calling me names," and Breta lifted her eyes to his with a brilliant look. " Calling you names ? " repeated de Grey. " They called me Raphaelesque, Titianesque, a Correggio, a Millais, Bordone-esque, and the esque of nearly every known painter. If I had been Proteus himself I could not have had more, or more dissimilar, esde Grey, you must be some- whar like Ulysses here (Ulysses had resumed his former position with his head resting on Breta's lap) ; your eyes his and yours are exactly alike," said Breta, with a laugh. " And you, Miss Garnet, I have often thought, are like a deer always a dear, re- treating from disagreeable things shyly and persistently always when you can until brought to bay. I can imagine how desper- ately brave and cool you might be when fairly brought to bay." " You would have had an opportunity of So! 273 testing- your theory this afternoon, for my cousin and I had a quarrel." " So I judged," returned de Grey. " Miss Garnet," continued he, regarding her fixedly, while his tone was very gentle, " is it a part of your creed that reparation should be made for serious injuries ? " " What a strange question, Mr. de Grey." " Do you not feel self-accused, Miss Garnet? That was a terrible blow you gave me on that first Sunday we met in church. I shall never recover from it." His voice, in spite of the lightness of his words, had a repressed passion in its tone that stirred Breta to her heart's core ; and half inclined to laugh at the allusion to the scene of that Sunday, half inclined to cry with the con- flict of her feelings, she remained silent. " You bore it bravely," continued he. " My heart ached for you, and every note of ' I know that my Redeemer ' registered itself there never to be effaced. Miss Garnet, I Breta, my love was was bumped into me. I have seen stars a star ever since." Breta could stand no more. The strange depths of his tone the quietness of his man- 274 The Benefit of the Doubt. ner, shook her until she trembled like a leaf. She first laughed nervously, and then her eyes filled with tears. And somehow Ulysses was swept from his perch and de Grey had gath- ered her into his arms. And the words he ut- tered quieted her, and she gave her future into his keeping, the lovely valley smiling peace- fully before them, and Ulysses, now lying in the road, his great head resting on his forepaws, looking a contented assent. " Breta, darling, will you enlighten me on a point that has perplexed me much ? " asked de Grey, after several moments of silence, looking earnestly down into her face. Breta met his look askingly, but made no other reply. " Why, while you could not help listening to the voice of your heart, have you struggled so hard against it and me ? For you have ; you were irresistibly drawn to me ; that I saw from the first. You were happy only when with me ; that I felt, and still I feared you would get away from me before I could grasp you to have and to hold thus. Now why was it? " " That is the question I thought was coming," returned Breta, laughing, but rather uneasily. "&/" 2 ;5 "Well?" " You cannot divine why ? " " On my soul, no. I have worked over that problem, Breta, as hard as ever I did over the hyperbolic logarithms of Napier, or the differ- ential calculus." " You have asked me and I will answer you. But it will be a hard thing for me to do, and I doubt if it will show me in an amenable, ami- able light. I answered your question, in fact, that Saturday on the knoll at Elmwood ; and Uncle Ray's explanation to you as to why I left Milan arid the opera you can recall also. I could get along, you see, very comfortably with all those I met in Milan, or here, or in New York or anywhere, until they commenced showing me a particular preference and asked me to marry them. And then I hated them or myself, I could not say which. What right had they to presume that I well, they seemed to me like a pack of ravening wolves, they were so so foreign to me and my ways of thought and feeling. When I became acquainted with you it was you were a new revelation to me. I felt at once that I had met my other self. But 'I would not give way to this conviction, 276 The Benefit of the Doiibt. fearing that you might possibly and then that I might hate you also, you see. But it is all over now. I shall never have another doubt or fear of of you in in that way." Breta's broken sentences, uttered in a tremu- lous voice, though apparently neither very lucid nor logical, seemed to de Grey both, and to con- vey also a very subtle meaning. He did not permit himself to respond at once, but quietly took up the neglected lines, backed the horses from the maples by the roadside, where he had headed them to keep them from becoming res- tive, and giving them the road, drove on a few rods before a word was said. " You are so different from others ; so true to yourself; that is what I so love in you,Breta," said he, gently. " You should have been shield- ed from all this, and hereafter you shall will be." Then his tone changing to a lighter one, he added . " The general impression is, I believe, that young ladies are pleased with attentions and offers of marriage ; keeping them for exhibi- tion, as a brave does his scalps so many tro- phies of their prowess." Breta laughed, then grew quite serious. ." So ! " 277 " I have had very few friendships with young ladies," she responded. " Frank is the only one I have ever been at all intimate with I told you I was not an amiable person," and she laughed again. " I can only say that if we would all follow the promptings of our hearts instead of our vanity there would be less misery, fewer unhappy marriages in the world." " You have solved what I consider the great- est problem of life," gravely uttered de Grey. Then after a moment's silence he asked : " But, Breta, darling, what will your uncle say to my having stolen his treasure, when I formally ask him for your hand ? " Breta looked up shyly, and then her eyes grew moist with tears. " I am horribly nervous to-day," apologized she, with a little laugh. " You must pardon me, Mr. de Joslyn, I like your name so much, I have long wanted an excuse to call you by it." " It was my father's name, and his father's, and so on back ; there has always been a Jostyn de Grey," returned he, quietly. " You spoke of my uncle. Uncle Ray is one .in ten thousand. I can never leave him, Jos- lyn." 278 The Benefit of the Doubt. " I esteem him beyond measure for him- self, his music, still more on your account. Is that a sufficient reply, Breta ? " " Every one must love him and his violin. He never had an enemy in the world; not even among those jealous, envious, high-strung, always antagonistic maestri there in Milan and Venice and Paris." They were on their way home again, and were at the point where Dunraven had encoun- tered them, and Breta, feeling less shy and quite as though she and de Grey had been on their present footing for months, had been talking freely, and now once more, of the view spread before them. " You can get a still finer sight of the valley and its surroundings from that pile of rocks way up above us there," remarked de Grey. " Yes, I have seen it several times ; I have been up there with Uncle Ray." " You ! you have been up there, Breta ? " " Yes, I ! I have been up there, Joslyn." " There is but one way of getting there, and it is steep and jagged enough," and de Grey surveyed the almost perpendicular height. " We Uncle Ray and I have climbed more " / 279 stupendous heights than this, searching for plants and views. There is a ledge just around that bend, where, up among the fissures of the rocks, are some of the loveliest ferns I ever saw ; and we have surprised the night-hawks on their rocky nests up there, blinking in the sunshine, and have counted their eggs and little ones." " I was right in my conjecture, I perceive. You are decidedly of the cervus tribe, to de- light so in a promenade among such formi- dable steeps. We will try the ascent together some day. I should like to see how you do it." " Agreed, if you will stop laughing at me." When Selma saw them enter the house (for de Grey had prevailed upon Breta to return to Elmwood with him, promising to get her back to the school by ten o'clock) both looking so bright and so full of the new joy born to them, a well- pleased look came into her own eyes, and she remarked to Mr. Black, who was just about to mount his horse : " My last fear for Joslyn's future is dissipated. I could not have picked out a wife for him more, in every way, suitable. Breta is one of the most harmoniously organized persons I ever met. She is a true child of genius, and withal pos- 280 The Benefit of the Doubt. sesses a fund of good, practical sense. She will wean him entirely from his impractical the- ories." " So ! " uttered Mr. Black, stopping a moment, with his foot in the stirrup, to consider the case, as though it were a legal one. " When did Jos- lyn tell you ? " "Joslyn told me, Benjamin, without telling me. I saw them as they came into the house together." " Selma, I will appoint you my head detec- tive when when the time comes." And Ben- jamin rode off. XVIII. UNDER ONE ROOF. WHAT Mr. Whyte said was : "My dear, I am delighted that you should have made such a choice. I consider Joslyn de Grey the most genuine, the finest young man I ever knew. He is the real thing, way down deep and without any fuss or feathers. I feared so much it might, after all, be Noel. And yet I knew better that you saw him as he is. That it is too much of the post mortem with him." Breta regarded her uncle with a little puz- zled look, repeating : " Post mortem, Uncle Ray?" " It is all very well to unearth Herculaneum and the buried cities of the past ; but to be told how we should feel in viewing these antiqui- ties, and how we should stand in the face of de- funct grandeur and classic art, is proof sufficient the admiration is not genuine." 281 282 The Benefit of the Doubt. " Then you consider Noel superficial, Uncle Ray ? You never said that before." " My dear, Joslyn is not. Suppose two per- sons are contemplating a divine work of art, say the Mona Lisa. One of these persons will see and comprehend the beautiful soul which gives vitality to these exquisite features, while the other will see only the surface beauty and wor- ship it because it is so faultless in line and color, and because a certain order to which he belongs but I have said enough." This was the next day, the 1 5th of July, and Mr. Whyte was conveying his niece to Elm- wood, Miss Rutherford having parted from her pupils for the vacation, and with five or six of them, including Frank, Sadie, and Pella, " for good," as Frank said. Soon after Mr. Whyte drove up with Breta, Selma's coachman stopped at the great hall- door with the carriage containing the three young ladies just named, and Selma busied herself in showing them all to their respective rooms. Their rooms opened from the same corridor, and adjoined each other ; and Frank declared that she should never sleep a wink for fear of Under One Roof. 283 the ghosts, and she selected the room opening into Sadie Burrill's on one side and into Breta's on the other. " Sandwiched in between you two, and your doors into my room both open, I shall be able to survive," averred she, with a series of shudders. " Miss de Grey, don't you believe her. It is all put on. Frank is not one whit more afraid than I am," and in an unusually pleasant humor Pella laughed heartily, selecting the room in preference that had no communicating door, to prove her own superiority ; she being " above all childish fears," she declared. " The gentlemen have been in the city for a few days. Joslyn went this morning for mamma, but I expect them all back here this afternoon," said Selma, as she left them to ar- range their drawers and presses. Frank, after unlocking her trunks and hanging up a gown or two, ran into Breta's room and stationed herself at the window. " Did you know, Breta, Miss de Grey has given us that handy little Angelique to wait on us, and she has a new maid for herself. I never had any thing to do with clothes at home, ex- cept to wear them, and have drudged at Miss 284 The Benefit of the Doubt, Rutherford's as long as I care to in the vain en- deavor of acquiring habits of ' neatness, industry, and order.' " Here Frank imitated Miss Ruther- ford's voice and manner, and having succeeded in making Breta laugh and drop a pile of laces she had in her hand, Frank ur^ed : o " Leave all your things just where they are, as I have. Angelique will fix them. She will be here as soon as Pella gets through mole-ing among her French dresses." " My arrangements are comparatively simple and nearly completed. I could not be tortured with such a scientific complication of wardrobe as Pella has. You know I acquired the habits of ' neatness, industry, and order ' you speak of from my Madama the Contessa Romano, years ago in Milan." " And you are always more tastefully dressed than any of us. But, voild / come over to the window ; here trots up Counsellor Black on his eternal black horse. He is a fine-looking man of the giant pattern. How old do you think he is ? " " Selma told me thirty-seven." " And he is already one of our greatest lawyers and such a quantity of him ! " Under One Roof. 285 " And here comes some one else, and in such an elegant turn-out his own, undoubtedly, for I have seen nothing like it around here. The plot begins to thicken, Frank." " I declare, Breta, Ralph Conynghame is mag- nificent ; just like this new turn-out of his at once elegant and stylish, without being showy. I have a secret to tell you, Breta. I intend to marry Ralph Conynghame." " So I have thought from the first, Frank. He will make you a good, noble husband, for he is a gentleman a gentleman all through." " Is he not, Breta ? " That is what first at- tracted me toward him. To be sure he has not asked me yet, but that is a small obstacle ; the thing was for me to make up my mind. I think he would have been over head and ears in love with you at first, as every one is, but that I would not allow." " Frank, you really shock me." " Oh, yes, I know I am very shocking ; I al- ways was ; mamma and every one says so. But I am in solid earnest ; I mean biz. I was not going to let Ralph Conynghame fall in love with you, for I meant you for quite another per- son. And in trolling him off away from you I 286 The Benefit of the Doubt. began to take so much interest in him myself that I determined to appropriate him." " Frank, you are getting worse every day. And you are so nice when you are good," sug- gested Breta. " I always was. Mamma and every one says so." " As though you had to manoeuvre, when from the first Col. Conynghame was Frank, you know well enough that, if I must say it, he is deeply in love with you." " It is perfectly lovely to hear you say it, Breta." " And he is sincere ; in all respects a man of honor, talented, and genuine." " And I I am not in all respects all those fine things I pity him deeply, and hope he will never regret marrying such a harem-scarem, slangy rantam-scoot as I." " You are certainly powerful on adjectives, Frank," said Breta, laughing. " But if you will look less like a thing uncanny, and listen, I will tell you something that will delight you to hear." " Something I already know, Breta. You told it to me last night, on your return from Under One Roof. 287 Elmwood. I don't mean that you told me in words you need n't look so out and injured ; your face told me. And if two people were ever cut out for each other, those two are you and Joslyn de Grey." And Frank threw her arms around Breta and kissed her. " I shall begin to believe you really are what I have often called you an incantatrice" " Mamma and every one but here comes some one else in his two-horse phaeton. The plot does begin to thicken. Ha ! and now this some one else, who proves to be the young master of Elmwood, looks up to this window, sees you, smiles, and bows. What a lustrous, happy light is in his eyes ! I bow to him also, not that I think he sees me in the least, but to keep you company. And now he helps out of the phaeton that lovely middle-aged lady his mamma, of course, who is the image of him, and does not look like Selma not but that Selma is lovely, too, of another type. Ah ! mon amie, you have a beautiful life before you. I only hope my future mamma-in-law is one half as lovely as this lady whom Selma has rushed out to welcome so warmly. What a pretty pbture the three make. And now they go up 288 The Benefit of the Doubt. the steps of the veranda and into the house. And^ voila>) qui dement interessant ! " rattled on Frank. " It is brother Tom now coming up the drive ; and in a spick and span new turn- out. It is a most gorgeous affair, but does not compare with Col. Conynghame's, for Tom's looks new." Sadie Burrill just then entering through Frank's room joined them, and catching a glimpse through the window of Tom Bowers as he leaped from the vehicle in his careless, dash- ing way, she blushed most eloquently. " Let us go down. Have we gotten on all our war-paint?" demanded Frank. " Sadie, you look perfectly stunnin'. Breta, in that shadowy muslin gown you look just like an angel in a fleecy cloud ; now do, some one, say some- thing fine about me." And Frank commenced inspecting herself in the double mirror. " Frank, you are transcendent ! " exclaimed Sadie, with her gay, girlish laugh. " If you would behave one half as well as you look, Frank, you would take the world by storm," added Breta, laughing, and looking lovingly at Frank. A knock came at the door, and Angelique Under One Roof. 289 entered with a deliciously fragrant basket of flowers. She made them up into exquisite bouquets, and arranged others, she had selected, in the young ladies' hair with artistic skill. And going to Frank's trays and boxes she effected some brilliant changes in her toilette. " I could not come sooner, young ladies," she said in her half French and half English. " Miss Morton kept me. But to-morrow Fanchon, Miss Morton's own maid, comes, and I shall devote myself exclusively to you." Making some changes in Sadie's dress, Angelique surveyed Breta from near and far, and pronounced her perfect, " Ires jolie." " You needed only the flowers, Miss Garnet," she added. Telling them they were the three most beau- tiful young ladies she had ever seen, and hand- ing them their bouquets, Angelique opened the door and ushered them to the stairs. " It is so nice to have it all done for you ; to have your war-paint selected and put on with- out the labor of thinking about it yourself," ob- served Frank, on their way down to the draw- ing-room. XIX. . ALL WITHIN OURSELVES. EVERY one in the house was full of the opera, for it had been decided to rehearse an entire opera, and much discussion ensued. Various operas were suggested by first one and then another, and rejected. " Every opera named so far has a ghost in it," exclaimed Frank, with a stage shiver. " The ghosts of the house would be sure to respond, and it would be nip and tuck who could get up the best demon." " Did you ever hear a young lady use such an expression as that, Count Gueret, ' nip and tuck ' ? " sneered Pella to the count, who was examining some views of the Tuileries with her over at a table. " The Semiramide has not been named," in- timated Breta. " There is the same objection to it ; but Ninus is an intensely respectable shade and " 290 All Within Ourselves. 291 " Sister Frank/' interrupted Bowers, " how would you like to slay your own mother? Think of the dismal scene in the mausoleum of the murdered Ninus. Miss Garnet, consider Frank's nerves, and suggest something less awe- inspiring than the Semiramide." " Brother Tom, living or dead, with nerves or without nerves, whatever other horrible thing you do, don't say Semir^wide. The Italian language, bear in mind, unlike the English, or French, or or Chinese, has no appreciable ac- cent. Then, too, the a is ah, the e is a, and the i is e" " Say-mee-rah-mee-day, will that please your Italian ear ? Unfortunately, /have not studied Hebrew and Chaldaic and Burmese and Choc- taw and Chinese, recollect, as you have. And /am not afraid of ghosts." " The last time I heard the Semiramide" ob- served Conynghame, in his clear, gentlemanly tones, after the laugh evoked by Bowers had subsided, " was in Berlin ; you were with me, Joslyn, and Patti, with her exquisitely-accurate glottis-stroke, was prima donna. The whole cast was fine." Here Count Gueret spoke up from the in- 292 The Benefit of the Doubt. terior of the Tuileries, suggesting several French operas ; but as they did not meet with an enthusiastic acceptance, he went back to the Tuileries. " Suppose we return to our first intention, and select some fine scenes from various operas," suggested Selma; " With tableaux between scenes," proposed Breta, with a view to Pella's benefit, whose Greek face had elongated considerably during the operatic discussion. Pella, at once all animation, spoke up, sweetly, in high treble, of some " lovely designs for tableaux " her brother had sent her from Paris. " No one has heard Miss Burrill's opinion," said Mr. Black, gallantly requesting to know her preference also. Sadie, her delicately pretty face, with its square, intelligent forehead and spirituelle feat- ures, all aglow under the modest excitement of pronouncing an opinion before so many, said she would be delighted to assist in the choruses of the operatic selections, or in the tableaux, and that Miss de Grey must dispose of her where she could be made most avail- able. All Within Ourselves. 293 " The blessed little darling ! " exclaimed Tom in an undertone to Frank. " She is frightened half out of her wits, but she is clear grit." " We will have the quintette from the Semi- ramide, for one thing," pronounced Selma. " Ralph, you to take one of the basso parts, and Mr. Bowers the other." " I was terribly afraid, Miss de Grey," acqui- esced Tom, bowing, " that we might finally fetch up on Wagner's Trilogy ; that has a trill in it thirty-six hours long, and that takes fifteen days and nights without eating or sleeping to enact (the Trilogy I mean, not the trill), and that we would have to impress the Atlantic Ocean, and mermaids, and sirens, and a whole artillery of cannon. And, perhaps, Wagner himself, with his doubled and quadrupled heavy brass in- struments that in doubling always produce diabolical discords and his drums so large and heavy that their stroke can only be heard ten bars after their time in the measure. Or at the very least that we might settle on the Gott-er- tffow-er-ung part ; excuse me, ladies, for being profane, but it is the name, you know. For any thing less heavy and long, you may depend on me, Miss de Grey. I might fall asleep on 294 The Benefit of the Doiibt. the night of the fourteenth day, and that would put out the rest." " Tom, Tom," laughingly exclaimed Frank, " shocking as they say I am, you are worse. Remember, if we should all get suddenly hoarse on the day of the entertainment and not be able to sing, you are to deliver a lecture on music. Et qu en dites vous, Miss de Grey ? Would it not be a sufficient immunity for the audience ? " "Quite sufficient," assented Selma, laugh- ing. Just then a visitor was announced by Bolton, the footman ; and a tall gentleman, with piercing black eyes and heavy black beard and hair mixed with gray, entered the room, and Breta, hastening toward him, exclaimed : " mio caro padre ! " and was lost in his arms, the tall gentle- man concluding his stage embrace by kissing her hand. Little Mr. Whyte also going forward to welcome him, was received by him with ef- fusion in a truly foreign embrace. Breta then leading him to Mrs. de Grey, who, in an arm- chair over by one of the windows, had been engaged in conversation with Mr. Whyte, and at times a much-amused spectator of the oper- All Within Ourselves. 296 atic discussion, was now presented to the Signer Trapassi, " my well-beloved maestro" added Breta. " To take me so by surprise ! " exclaimed Breta, as Selma joined them and was introduced to the maestro. " All owing, figlia mia, to these two ladies from whom I received my invitation to come here," returned the professore, laughing with a malicious enjoyment of Breta's surprise. "I so much feared that Professor Trapassi might not be able to come, that I kept silent on the subject, and enjoined on mamma to do the same," said Selma, beaming on Breta delight- edly. " And I I have long wished to come to the country that contains my well-beloved pupil," returned the maestro, in his imperfect English ; " the country of the martyred Signer Leen- colen, whom I revere with my own Garibaldi. So I determined on taking a holiday, and, grazie a Dio, here I am ! I arrived in Nuovo York to day." Being presented generally, the conversation turned upon ocean trips, the maestro narrating, with much gusto, several amusing incidents of 296 The Benefit of the Doubt. his. Arid from ocean trips, arriving at Niagara, he declared that one inducement for coming to America, besides hearing his divine diva sing once more for which he would have braved a dozen tempestuous oceans, was to see the great Falls of Niagara, the vast Western prai- ries, and the forests of California. When, finally, the intended musical festa was discussed, he entered into the spirit of it like a boy or a great maestro on a holiday. He took in hand the various voices as though they were subjects for dissection ; admiring or criticising .without fear or favor, and in a twinkling, made out the three hours' pro- gramme, leaving spaces between scena or solo for the tableaux. He was very sorry, he declared, that Signer de Grey was not a poor man ; money being, as he averred, a terrible evil. Declaring he should be so delighted to engage him and bring him out as primo uomo, and that he would in- sure for him both fame and fortune. " Brother Joslyn and my cousin Ralph (your basso here, Signer Professore) studied six or seven years while abroad," said Selma. "They ought to sing well." All Within Ourselves. 297 " They ought to, Selma, and one does," re- turned Conynghame. " Our first maestro, poor old Ronaldi, while he listened to Joslyn with delight, used to rave so distractedly at the un- pliable tones of my voice that I own I felt somewhat self-accused when he died." " No one but cousin Ralph himself doubts the excellence of his singing," averred Selma. " I hope, Professor Trapassi," said Bowers, " that as we are to have the quintette in the Say-me-rah-me-day (here Tom looked quizzi- cally at his sister), you will adjudge the part of Assur to Conynghame, and let me take that of the prophet Oroe. I could never achieve that run of Assur's." And Bowers whistled it : " I should be sure to break down and burst a note on that high E," he added. " So I had previously adjudged," the profes- sore replied, with a comprehensive smile and a good-humored flash, vivid as lightning, from the depths of his keen black eyes. " Selma, where shall I find a score of the 298 The Benefit of the Doubt. opera ? " asked Conynghame. " I am not as familiar with the part as Bowers is." " In the library, Ralph, on the shelf near the western bay-window, which contains nearly all the operas that have been written," returned Selma. "Just around the corner, Conynghame, No. 5 20 ; with a green door and brass knocker ; in front of a blue pump ; a lamp-post ^to the left, and a baker's shop opposite. You will be sure to find it." " Tom, be careful," warned Frank. " Every- one won't understand, as I do, that you don't mean any thing by your " But I do mean something, Sis, to guide Conynghame in his search, and see, here he comes with the book in consequence. He never would have found it without." There was something so fresh and sponta- neous in Bowers' up-bubbling drollery, as though he were boiling over with fun ; his ac- companying facial changes and his whimsical gestures, always more irresistible than his words, that no one thought of resisting the laughter he provoked, and Conynghame, so quietly polished, taking to him greatly, extremes met nnrl the likincr seemed tr> he mutual. All Within Ourselves. 299 The professore laughed with the rest, declar- ing him to be a great buffo, and that in picking out for him, as he had, Figaro's solo (putting his finger on the programme), he expected him tt create a great sensation, with his full, deep bari tone, almost basso voice. " We will leave off in the quintette here," added the professore, who had the score of the Semiramide in his hand, " at nel mio terror" " Where we all die off in a smorz, is it not ?" asked Bowers, suiting the action to the word. " Just before the Dun Semidio" continued the professore with a great smile. " And we will conclude with the duo Giorno d' or ore instead of Dun Semidio, and that will give Miss Bowers' contralto fine scope. I should like to hear it sung at La Scala by you two signorini ; Miss Bowers' contralto is much finer than that of the Signora Gabussi who sang with you that winter you sang at the Scala, y^/zVz mia." The latter part of his sentence he addressed to Breta in his own tongue, and finding all understood him, notwithstanding Bowers had averred he had not studied Italian, the maestro now spoke on in his own language, being able to express himself he declared, so much more easily. 300 The Benefit of the Doubt. " Tom is a humbug. He knows Italian as well as I do," said Frank. " II Signer Bowers is a born buffo" returned the professore, with another great smile. " Our chorus, Signer Trapassi, consists of Miss Morton and Miss Burrill, soprani ; myself, contralto ; Count Gueret, tenore, and Mr. Black, basso. I hope you will find us efficient." " I am afraid Signor Trapassi will repent en- listing me, I howl so unmercifully," said Mr. Black with a gallant attempt at Bowers' face- tiousness, " I fear I shall drown out all the rest." " Oh, do not fear, Signor Consigliere," re- turned the maestro, still in Italian, " you have a very full, noble basso. It will be very effective in chorus." " You sing remarkably well, Benjamin, when you do not get too enthusiastic, ".added Selma gently. " As you please, Selma, I am always subject to the commands of the ladies," acquiesced Mr. Black subsiding into his legal manner. " Counsellor Black may consider himself as the ponderous representative of the Great Snubbed ; but snubbed so neatly he feels him- self complimented rather. He should stick to All Witkin Ourselves. 101 O urbane dignity and leave tomfoolery to Tom Bowers," said Frank in a low tone to Bowers. " And to Tom Bowers' sister," retorted Tom. " Listen," said Sadie, laughing, who was be- side them, " Signer Trapassi is asking about our orchestra." They crossed the room in time to hear Selma explain to the maestro that she was daily expect- ing two young cousins who had been studying for the last ten years abroad, one an excelling pianist, the other a flutist and violinist. " Both thorough musicians I assure you, signore," con- tinued Selma. "Then we have Mr. Whyte's violin, and you know, signore, what that is, and in the solos brother Joslyn's cello, and last but not least mamma s harp. Mamma is a wonder- ful harpist I assure you, and so used to playing she never tires. If you think we need more pieces, Signor Trapassi, we can easily engage them from New York, though we did wish to have it all within ourselves." Mrs. de Grey came forward from her chair over by the window, whither she had retired, to say she was very sure the maestro would find the orchestra sufficient, all being such compe- tent musicians. 302 The Benefit of the Doubt. " I quite prefer a small orchestra of sympa- thetic musicians of culture to one composed of very many ordinary musicians. The Signer Whyte's violin is almost an orchestra in itself," returned the maestro. Mrs. de Grey, Selma, and the maestro con- tinued talking for a time, and then he after- wards found himself wandering over the grounds with Breta and reviewing old Milan times. They were sitting on one of the carved oaken benches at the knoll, the maestro contemplating the majestic view, when Mr. Whyte and de Grey joined them. And it was not long before Mr. Whyte, getting into a musical discussion with the maestro, carried him off to his den to play for him some of the scores about which they had been discussing. It was in such hours as the one that followed that Breta lived a whole lifetime of content. And de Grey watching- for them, employed the greatest ingenuity in securing these delightful moments as precious to him as to her. It was not until the gong sounded loudly for dinner, that they made their way to the house and joined the rest. XX. THE TWO-BY-TWO ARRANGEMENT. THE rehearsals went on with great spirit and industry ; the two young Thornes having arrived and proving themselves musi- cians of no common merit. Fred, the pianist, had a touch as soft as velvet, and his runs were so many strings of pearls ; while Carl's violin and flute being also greatly commended, Selma was highly gratified. The count, meantime, being well up in his chorus parts, having sung them, as he declared, at the Marquis d' Alby's, had but little to do ; and as Satan is said to kindly provide occupa- tion for such, he suddenly conceived the idea that it would be prudent to ascertain the exact amount in hard cash owned by the young heiress to whom he had been paying such as- siduous court, and not rely solely on appear- ances. 303 304 The Benefit of the Doubt. He announced one morning after breakfast that he should be obliged to tear himself away from the charming company assembled, for a day or two on business. " Why, Gueret," said Mr. Black, " I thought you of all men had no business cares While I and, by 'the way, I must show myself in court this morning, and will run down to the city with you, after I have rehearsed my parts in the choruses." " I shall be delighted, Black ; the choruses all coming first to-day at my request," returned the count, smiling through his moustache. The count was gone but two days ; the re- sult of his investigations proving so entirely satisfactory, that, paying to the jobber-in-law (Black not having been let into the secret) a certain sum for assisting him in his search into the extent of the Morton property, he at once purchased a baronial-looking buggy, on the panel of which he had hastily painted a sar- coramphus surrounded by hieroglyphics his coat of arms. The artist, who so hastily painted the sar- coramphus, had given the head of the bird a knowing tilt to one side, much as if it were a The Two-by- Two Arrangement. 305 human vulture. And without sensing the pos- sible application of this representation of family emblazonry to his own individual case, he had the vehicle conveyed to the village of Lea in the cars, which also carried him. And there having the handsome horse he had purchased harnessed to it (although feeling the outlay with his limited income inconvenient), he drove with a brave heart to Elmwood. The mornings were now devoted rigidly to rehearsals the count, his mind at ease, work- ing as indefatigably as the rest, and the after- noons to the relaxation of drives or rides. And the order of the drives seemed tacitly un- derstood without any prepared plan ; the count with Pella in the baronial buggy heading the two-by-two arrangement. De Grey had stocked his stables well with a quantity of fine saddle-horses ; and frequently the whole party rode forth, forming quite an imposing cavalcade. The maestro, who seemed to thoroughly enjoy himself, fairly scoured the country far and near on horseback, accompanied only by Mr. Whyte and the two young Thornes, at all times, when the entire party did not ride with them. 306 The Benefit of the Doubt. As the rehearsals progressed, the whole house went wild over Breta's singing, and young Fred Thorne, who lived solely in and for music, made of her a worship. " She alights on her notes like a bird, and rings out those lark-like tones of hers with such ease and purity of intonation, with such a plomb- ness, never obliterating the beat of the measure by faulty slurrings, every note being taken with a clean attack with the true glottis-stroke, and never in the larynx with stiffened jaw and tongue (that horrible voce bianco, we hear from the ma- jority of singers), that every one must feel what the world is losing that she is not out in it as prima donna." This young Thorne said to the maestro, and the reply was the maestro transfixing him with his keen glance that added more force to his words : " You may well rave, youngster. The world does not contain any thing so perfect mind I say perfect in the way of singing as the voice and method of the Madamigella Breta Garnet." The only two not carried away by enthusiasm on the point of Breta's singing were Pella and the count. The Two-by- Two Arrangement. 307 But they had weighty matters of their own on hand to occupy their thoughts. For one thing Pella made it a study to select which of her endless variety of costly French dresses she should wear each day. And one day being, with the help of her French maid, more ele- gantly dressed than usual (it was a masterpiece of Worth's she wore, just sent her by her broth- er), the count could restrain the ardor of his love no longer. He made his declaration, men- tioning casually that as his wife she would have access to all the courts of Europe, and was graciously accepted. Frank congratulated her when Pella, with flushed cheeks, announced to her her tri- umph. " He is the genuine article, Pella, and no humbug. His pedigree, Counsellor Black said, reaches back to the Huguenots. He is poor, and all that, but he is one of the bluest-blooded counts extant. And you you have enough money, you know, for both." " His ancestors were impoverished in the Revolution," returned Pella. " I wrote to my .brother to ascertain all about him, and received his reply yesterday. He assures me the count 308 The Benefit of the Doubt. can have access to every court in Europe, and the count himself says so. As for money, fort- unately I have, as you say, sufficient for both." " Are you sure the count does not seek you just on account of your money, Pella ? " " He is entirely too noble for a thought of that kind. He loves me with the truest affec- tion, for he has told me so." " And you love him ? " " Most certainly I do." " After having- ascertained that he is truly a count, and can carry you into all the courts of Europe with your own money ? " " How perfectly hateful you are, Frank. But you always were that. Of course after I had ascertained all about him. I should not have permitted myself to love him before, as it be- hooves me to protect myself my father and mother both being dead, and my brother, like yours, only three years older than myself." " I was hateful, Pella ; pardon me," exclaimed Frank, thawing out with remorseful sympathy. " You are very much alone, and I should have thought of that I, who have mother, father, brother, and sister. I am truly sorry for you, T/ie Two-by- Two Arrangement. 309 and will be your friend and do what I can to prove it." " I do not know as I shall stand in any need of the commiseration of any one. I shall have the count to protect me ; and shall pass my life in very different scenes from these." " It is always better to take a perfectly prac- tical view of things," returned Frank, freezing up again. " Certainly it is ; for once I agree with you. But please understand that what I have told you is in confidence. When the suitable time comes it shall be imparted to all." Frank promised, and then said : " But, Pella, one should be sure that one loves, you know. I had formed an idea somehow that you cared for Joslyn de Grey." " How very absurd ! " exclaimed Pella. " You know well enough he is engaged to Breta. I certainly think he could have done much better, but it is not for me to tell him so." " Certainly not," assented Frank. Frank had but little time to devote to con- siderations for Pella ; she having an affair of her own that took all her wits to manage. And so far, no Wall Street operator could have 3io The Benefit of the Doubt. manipulated a crooked "corner" more clev- erly. Conynghame more than once had arrived al- most to the point at which he was aiming ; but Frank, with dexterous ingenuity, had always contrived some inopportune remark, teeming with such irresistible drollery, that Ralph, from an extremely sentimental mood, was forced into an extremely jovial one. One afternoon he seemed unusually inspired, and had successfully parried all her whimsical speeches, until, as they were going through a long stretch of woods, dark and silent (the horse, with a loosened rein, rhythmically crunch- ing the fallen leaves), he quietly but boldly took Frank's hand, that had been lying ungloved on her lap, within the firm clasp of his own long, white fingers, and commenced scrutinizing it. " A vast difference between the color of the two hands, is there not, Col. Conynghame ? " said Frank, in a tone of pretended indifference ; " mine so excessively brown, what one might call a brown paw, and yours so " "And yet in the possession of this little brown paw lies all my future happiness," inter- rupted he, clasping it still more firmly. The Two-by- Two Arrangement. 3 1 1 " It seems incredible that a hand more or less can do so much as that for any one. So many people in this world have had their hands ampu- tated and yet have lived and been happy." " A hand more, not a hand less, is what I wish, Frank. Will you vouchsafe me this?" " Colonel Conynghame, when you are done with my hand, I will trouble you to return it. I do not see what any one needs with more than two hands." " But you see, Frances, I am not done with it, and I need, actually need, four. And more than all I need the warm heart accompanying this hand. Will you resign it to my keeping ? " " I am sure, Colonel Conynghame, if you are such a Briareus as all that, you had better make a collection of hands, winding up with clock hands ; as for mine, it is entirely out of my power to give you what you have levied upon. And as for the other article for which you ask, why, that was yours ages ago. But how any one so highly cultured can wish to be bothered with such a slang-y, crude, Colonel Conyng- hame, how did you like your Cousin Fred's improvisation this morning ? " But Ralph would not be put off. He told her, 312 The Benefit of the Doubt. still retaining her hand, how much he loved her, how beautiful he thought her, until, whetting her tongue to a double edge : " What a curious coincidence, Colonel Con- ynghame ! " said she ; " I also consider you per- fectly lovely. Too lovely for any thing! The first time I beheld you I was struck with your commanding appearance and elegant manners. Your eyes are positively divine, and your nose is the most chiselled nose I ever saw. I never could have loved any one less beautiful than you, or less altogether ' She was going on, but unable longer to with- stand the drollery of it, the woods rang with his peals of laughter, and Frank had gained her point, Ralph scarcely knowing whether he had or had not been accepted. XXI. THE DAY OF THE MATINEE. IT was in October ; the two and a half months of rehearsals were over, and the day of the matinee had arrived. Mr. Whyte, bearing in his hand some official papers, was seeking Breta, and found her with Frank and Mrs. de Grey in the little theatre where the gardener and his men were just completing the floral decorations. He requested in his mild way permission to intrude a little business, saying apart to Breta : " It relates to my brother-in-law, William Waldo, my dear Breta." " You darling little uncle," returned Breta, laying her hand tenderly on his arm, " some- thing has greatly disturbed you." " I never have had much patience, my dear, when Waldo who by his scaly, legal tricks contrived to make away with all I owned at one fell sweep turns up., though now he has turned down I should have." 313 3 14 The Benefit of the Doubt. 11 Turned down, Uncle Ray?" repeated Breta. " Dead, my dear. A ghost with the rest, and not a very good ghost either, I fear. He per- formed one act of restitution at the last, leaving me sole heir to all he owned, which in his will he confessed was not only legally mine but actu- ally mine. You see, I was in those days utterly careless of money, and he had the sole management of mine." Breta made no reply, but was looking thought- fully on the floor. " It is a very large property, Breta, and it will all be yours some day." " Oh, don't, Uncle Ray, dear " My dear, I won't at least not now." Signor Trapassi chancing in just then, Mr. Whyte handed him the papers. He took all in with one of his eagle glances, merely re- marking dryly : " The Signor Gulielmo Waldo performed one act of justice in his long life. Let us hope it may profit him hereafter. My dear madama," continued the maestro, turning to Mrs. de Grey, " I am truly sorry to leave Elm wood. I have passed here one of the pleasantest sum- mers of my life. I start to-morrow morning The Day of the Matinee. 315 for the Falls, by way of Watkin's Glen. I shall take a peep from the top of the Catskills, and shall visit, in short, all the places of note in your country before I leave it. I shall steam through the chain of great lakes to the Western prairies, and shall return from California by way of Panama." " You have made yourself well acquainted, I see, with the geography of our country, Sig- nor Trapassi," returned Mrs. de Grey, in her pure Italian accent, looking at the maestro with the good, true look her son had inherited. " We shall hope to have you some time with us on your return before you sail for Europe." The maestro was replying with a qualified affirmative, when Selma, with Miss Rutherford entered, followed by Bowers and the young Thornes. " I came over early, as you see, this morn- ing," said Miss Rutherford, " to offer my as- sistance ; but I find nothing to do but to ad- mire. The decorations are all exquisite, and the wilderness of flowers everywhere makes the whole house look like fairy-land." " Then you, madam, are one of the happy mortals who have been in fairy-land and can 3 1 6 The Benefit of the Doubt. speak from experience," said Bowers, bowing whimsically to Miss Rutherford. " You must excuse Brother Tom, Miss Ruth- erford," apologized Frank. " He is writing a book of travels, and is anxious to get all the in- formation concerning undiscovered countries that he can." Smiling blandly upon both sister and brother, Miss Rutherford wished to know when the mat- inee began. " At two o'clock," replied Selma, " that those of our friends who so wish can return by the evening train." " At two, sharp, the overture in one flat," added Bowers, who was assistant stage-mana- ger. " I begin to feel as though I should prefer being one of the audience, and I know Sadie does. Don't you, Selma and Breta ? " said Frank, languidly seating herself. " My heart fairly palpitates with the agitation of the coming ordeal. I know Joslyn's and Ralph's must. Don't yours, Fred and Carl ? " mimicked Tom in falsetto. " These seats are so comfortable," and he threw himself into one of the luxurious seats for the audience. The Day of the Matinee. 317 The sound of numerous carriages on the gravel drive called Mrs. de Grey and Selma to welcome their guests, Breta, Mr. Whyte, and the maestro going out of the room at the same time with the two ladies. " How large an audience do you expect, Miss Bowers ? " asked Miss Rutherford. " Over five hundred invitations were sent out, and we have received nearly one hundred regrets. We lunch at twelve to-day, to give us all plenty of time ; and we dine at six after it is all over. We have the celebrated Gabriel chef de cuisine, and must expect wonders in the way of lunch and dinner. Excuse me a moment, Miss Rutherford, mamma has just ar- rived ; I hear her voice. I will send one of the maids to show you the way to the dressing- rooms." And Frank was off, her brother hav- ing preceded her. Each one of the five hundred guests pres- ent had that day something to recall in after years ; the whole thing, including the lunch and dinner of the famous Gabriel, being a decided success. The house from garret to cellar was literally a scene of enchantment ; and the sing- ers and orchestra so perfect in their various 318 The Benefit of the Doubt. parts, all executing them with such musical pre- cision, and Breta fairly excelling herself, that, from the first note of the three hours' matinee to the last, the Signer Trapassi was in a state of intense satisfaction. By half-past nine all the guests, save those who remained all night at Elmwood, among whom were Mr. and Mrs. Bowers, had gone to meet down or up trains, or had returned to their homes at Lea. Through the windows of the great drawing- room came the pleasant October air, low fires in the grates removing the evening's chill, while various groups here and there were dis- cussing the various topics the music had awakened. In the deep embrasure of one of the windows Breta, de Grey, and the maestro were hold- ing an animated disquisition on the merits of various composers. The moonlight streaming down on them mistily through the delicate tracery of the lace curtains, partially draped in as they were from the lights of the room by the heavy folds of damask hangings, gave to the maestro s tall form, dark face, and piercing eyes an almost weird look, while it heightened every The Day of the Matinee. 319 charm of Breta's young beauty. And de Grey, sitting a little more in the shade, drank in the loveliness of her ever-varying face, making now and then a remark so pertinently suggestive, that it set the maestro off again at elucidating in his strong, terse language some abstruse point he had well studied. " Leaving abstrusities," said he, "and return- ing to our matinee, Dio santo! but voun