The Mystery of the Hasty Arrow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 344 pages of information about The Mystery of the Hasty Arrow.

The Mystery of the Hasty Arrow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 344 pages of information about The Mystery of the Hasty Arrow.

“Do not blame me too much for this final blow I gave him.  He had already seen the truth in that mirror over there.  His face—­look at it and then at this picture of her taken after death, and see the resemblance!  It is showing plainer every minute.  It was the something which had worried and eluded him.  Nothing could have kept back the truth from him after that one glimpse he caught of himself and her in the mirror.  I loved him.  Mine is the grief; you will let me stay here with him to-night.  To-morrow I will answer all questions.”

XXXIV

THE BUD—­THEN THE DEADLY FLOWER

You who have read thus far will care little for the legalities which followed the events just related, but you may wish to know to a fuller extent some of the facts in Ermentrude Taylor’s life which led to this tragic end of all her hopes.

Her story is twofold, the portion connecting her with Carleton Roberts being entirely dissociated from that which made her the debtor of Antoinette Duclos.  Let me tell the latter first, as it preceded the other, and tell it in episodes.

* * * * *

Two girls stood at one end of a long walk of immemorial yews.  At the other could be seen the advancing figure of a man, young, alert, English-clad but unmistakably foreign.  They were school girls and bosom friends; he their instructor in French; the walk one attached to a well-known seminary.  When they had entered this walk, it had been empty.  Now it held for one of them—­and possibly for the other, too—­a world of joy and promise;—­the world of seventeen.  Innocent and unthinking, neither of them had known her own heart, much less that of her fellow.  But when in face of that approach, eye met eye with an askance look of eager question, revelation came, crimsoning the cheeks of both, and marking an epoch in either life.

Noble of heart and tender each toward the other, they were yet human.  Arm fell from arm, and with an equally spontaneous movement, they turned to search each the other’s countenance, not for betrayal,—­for that had already been made—­but for those physical charms or marks of mental superiority which might attract the eye or win the heart of a man of the ideality of this one.

Alas! these gifts, for gifts they are, were much too unequally distributed between these two to render the balance at all even.

Ermentrude was handsome; Antoinette was not.

Ermentrude had besides, what even without beauty would have made her conspicuous to the eye, the figure of a goddess and the air of a queen.  But Antoinette was small and had to feel secure and in a happy mood to show the excellence of her mind and the airy quality of her wit.

Then, Ermentrude had money and could dress, while Antoinette, who was dependent upon an English uncle for everything she possessed, wore clothes so plain that but for their exquisite neatness, one would never dream that she came from French ancestry, and that ancestry noble.

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The Mystery of the Hasty Arrow from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.