The Hunted Woman eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 340 pages of information about The Hunted Woman.

The Hunted Woman eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 340 pages of information about The Hunted Woman.

“Out of the world my father had left he had kept one friend—­Richard FitzHugh; and this man, with his son, was with us during those terrible days of fever.  I met Mortimer as I had met a thousand other men.  His father, I thought, was the soul of honour, and I accepted the son as such.  We were much together during those two weeks of my despair, and he seemed to be attentive and kind.  Then came the end.  My father was dying.  And I—­I was ready to die.  In his last moments his one thought was of me.  He knew I was alone, and the fear of it terrified him.  I believe he did not realize then what he was asking of me.  He pleaded with me to marry the son of his old friend before he died.  And I—­John Aldous, I could not fight his last wish as he lay dying before my eyes.  We were married there at his bedside.  He joined our hands.  And the words he whispered to me last of all were:  ‘Remember—­Joanne—­thy promise and thine honour!’”

For a moment Joanne stood facing the little lake, and when she spoke again there was a note of thankfulness, of subdued joy and triumph, in her voice.

“Before that day had ended I had displeased Mortimer FitzHugh,” she said, and Aldous saw the fingers of her hands close tightly.  “I told him that until a month had passed I would not live with him as a wife lives with her husband.  And he was displeased.  And my father was not yet buried!  I was shocked.  My soul revolted.

“We went to London and I was made welcome in the older FitzHugh’s wifeless home, and the papers told of our wedding.  And two days later there came from Devonshire a woman—­a sweet-faced little woman with sick, haunted eyes; in her arms she brought a baby; and that baby was Mortimer FitzHugh’s!

“We confronted him—­the mother, the baby, and I; and then I knew that he was a fiend.  And the father was a fiend.  They offered to buy the woman off, to support her and the child.  They told me that many English gentlemen had made mistakes like this, and that it was nothing—­that it was quite common.  Mortimer FitzHugh had never touched me with his lips, and now, when he came to touch me with his hands, I struck him.  It was a serpent’s house, and I left it.

“My father had left me a comfortable fortune, and I went into a house of my own.  Day after day they came to me, and I knew that they feared I was going to secure a divorce.  During the six months that followed I learned other things about the man who was legally my husband.  He was everything that was vile.  Brazenly he went into public places with women of dishonour, and I hid my face in shame.

“His father died, and for a time Mortimer FitzHugh became one of the talked-about spendthrifts of London.  Swiftly he gambled and dissipated himself into comparative poverty.  And now, learning that I would not get a divorce, he began to regard me as a slave in chains.  I remember, one time, that he succeeded in laying his hands on me, and they were like the touch of things that were slimy and poisonous.  He laughed at my revulsion.  He demanded money of me, and to keep him away from me I gave it to him.  Again and again he came for money; I suffered as I cannot tell you, but never once in my misery did I weaken in my promise to my father and to myself.  But—­at last—­I ran away.

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Project Gutenberg
The Hunted Woman from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.