Unprepared for the apparition that confronted him, Luke Darrington bowed low, surveyed her intently, then pointed to a chair opposite his own.
“Walk in, Madam; or perhaps it may be Miss? Will you take a seat, and excuse the feebleness that forces me to receive visits in my bed-room?”
As he reseated himself, Beryl advanced and stood beside him, but for a moment she found it impossible to utter the words, rehearsed so frequently during her journey; and while she hesitated, he curiously inspected her face and form.
Her plain, but perfectly fitting bunting dress, was of the color, popularly dominated “navy-blue,” and the linen collar and cuffs were scarcely whiter than the round throat and wrists they encircled. The burnished auburn hair clinging in soft waves to her brow, was twisted into a heavy coil, which the long walk had shaken down till it rested almost on her neck; and though her heart beat furiously, the pale calm face might have been marble, save for the scarlet lines of her beautiful mouth, and the steady glow of the dilated pupils in her great gray eyes.
“Pray be seated; and tell me to whom I am indebted for the pleasure of this visit?”
“I am merely the bearer of a letter which will explain itself, and my presence, in your house.”
Mechanically he took the preferred letter, and with his eyes still lingering in admiration upon the classic outlines of her face and form, leaned back comfortably against the velvet lining of his armchair.
“Are you some exiled goddess travelling incognito? If we lived in the ‘piping days of Pan’ I should flatter myself that ‘Ox-eyed Juno’ had honored me with a call, as a reward for my care of her favorite bird.”
Receiving no reply he glanced at the envelope in his hand, and as he read the address—“To my dear father, Gen’l Luke Darrington”—the smile on his face changed to a dark scowl and he tossed the letter to the floor, as if it were a red-hot coal.
“Only one living being has the right to call me father—my son, Prince Darrington. I have repeatedly refused to hold any communication with the person who wrote that letter.”
Beryl stooped to pick it up, and with a caressing touch, as though it were sentient, held it against her heart.
“Your daughter is dying; and this is her last appeal.”
“I have no daughter. Twenty-three years ago my daughter buried herself in hopeless disgrace, and for her there can be no resurrection here. If she dreams that I am in my dotage, and may relent, she strangely forgets the nature of the blood she saw fit to cross with that of a beggarly foreign scrub. Go back and tell her, the old man is not yet senile and imbecile; and that the years have only hardened his heart. Tell her, I have almost learned to forget even how she looked.”
His eyes showed a dull reddish fire, like those of some drowsy caged tiger, suddenly stirred into wrath, and a grayish pallor—the white heat of the Darringtons—settled on his face.