The Evil Guest eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 170 pages of information about The Evil Guest.

The Evil Guest eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 170 pages of information about The Evil Guest.
gleams of hope, however faint and transient, from the distant future—­will not visit him.  With Marston, those thoughts had somehow ever been associated with vague ideas of a reconciliation with the being whom he had forsaken—­good and pure, and looking at her from the darkness and distance of his own fallen state, almost angelic as she seemed.  But she was now dead; he could make her no atonement; she could never smile forgiveness upon him.  This long-familiar image—­the last that had reflected for him one ray of the lost peace and love of happier times—­had vanished, and henceforward there was before him nothing but storm and fear.

Marston’s embarrassed fortunes made it to him an object to resume the portion of his income heretofore devoted to the separate maintenance of his wife and daughter.  In order to effect this it became, of course, necessary to recall his daughter, Rhoda, and fix her residence once more at Gray Forest.  No more dreadful penalty could have been inflicted upon the poor girl—­no more agonizing ordeal than that she was thus doomed to undergo.  She had idolized her mother, and now adored her memory.  She knew that Mademoiselle de Barras had betrayed and indirectly murdered the parent she had so devotedly loved; she knew that that woman had been the curse, the fate of her family, and she regarded her naturally with feelings of mingled terror and abhorrence, the intensity of which was indescribable.

The few scattered friends and relatives, whose sympathies had been moved by the melancholy fate of poor Mrs. Marston, were unanimously agreed that the intended removal of the young and innocent daughter to the polluted mansion of sin and shame, was too intolerably revolting to be permitted.  But each of these virtuous individuals unhappily thought it the duty of the others to interpose; and with a running commentary of wonder and reprobation, and much virtuous criticism, events were suffered uninterruptedly to take their sinister and melancholy course.

It was about two months after the death of Mrs. Marston, and on a bleak and ominous night at the wintry end of autumn, that poor Rhoda, in deep mourning, and pale with grief and agitation, descended from a chaise at the well-known door of the mansion of Gray Forest.  Whether from consideration for her feelings, or, as was more probable, from pure indifference, Rhoda was conducted, on her arrival, direct to her own chamber, and it was not until the next morning that she saw her father.  He entered her room unexpectedly, he was very pale, and as she thought, greatly altered, but he seemed perfectly collected, and free from agitation.  The marked and even shocking change in his appearance, and perhaps even the trifling though painful circumstance that he wore no mourning for the beloved being who was gone, caused her, after a moment’s mute gazing in his face, to burst into an irrepressible flood of tears.  Marston waited stoically until the paroxysm had subsided, and then taking her hand, with a look in which a dogged sternness was contending with something like shame, he said:—­

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The Evil Guest from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.