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“Gone to New York,” answered the coachman, at the same time handing a letter.

“To New York! When did he go?” Mrs. Markland’s thoughts were thrown into sudden confusion.

“He went at five o’clock, on business. Said he must be there to-morrow morning. But he’ll tell you all about it in the letter, ma’am.”

Recovering herself, Mrs. Markland stepped from the side of the carriage, and as it passed on, she broke the seal of her letter, which she found to contain one for Fanny, directed in a hand with which she was not familiar.

“A letter for you, dear,” she said; for Fanny was now by her side.

“Who is it from? Where is father?” asked Fanny in the same breath.

“Your father has gone to New York,” said Mrs. Markland, with forced composure.

Fanny needed no reply to the first question; her heart had already given the answer. With a flushed cheek and quickening pulse, she bounded away from her mother’s side, and returning into the house, sought the retirement of her own chamber.

“Dear Agnes,”—so ran the note of Mr. Markland to his wife,—”I know that you will be surprised and disappointed at receiving only a letter, instead of your husband. But some matters in New York require my attention, and I go on by the evening train, to return day after to-morrow. I engaged to transact some important business for Mr. Lyon, when he left for the South, and in pursuance of this, I am now going away. In a letter received from Mr. Lyon, to-day, was one for Fanny. I do not know its contents. Use your own discretion about giving it to her. You will find it enclosed. My mind has been so much occupied to-day, that I could not give the subject the serious consideration it requires. I leave it with you, having more faith in your intuitions than in my own judgment. He did not hint, even remotely, at a correspondence with Fanny, when he left; nor has he mentioned the fact of enclosing a letter for her in the one received from him to-day. Thus, delicately, has he left the matter in our hands. Perhaps you had better retain the letter until I return. We can then digest the subject more thoroughly. But, in order to furnish your mind some basis to rest upon, I will say, that during the time Mr. Lyon was here I observed him very closely; and that every thing about him gave me the impression of a pure, high-minded, honourable man. Such is the testimony borne in his favour by letters from men of standing in England, by whom he is trusted with large interests. I do not think an evidence of prepossession for our daughter, on his part, need occasion anxiety, but rather pleasure. Of course, she is too young to leave the home-nest for two or three years yet. But time is pressing, and my mind is in no condition, just now, to think clearly on a subject involving such important results. I think, however, that you had better keep the letter until my return. It will be the most prudent course.”

Keep the letter! Its contents were already in the heart of Fanny!

“Where’s Edward? What’s the matter?” queried Aunt Grace, coming up at this moment, and seeing that all colour had left the cheeks of Mrs. Markland.

Scarcely reflecting on what she did, the latter handed her husband’s letter in silence to her sister-in-law, and tottered, rather than walked, to a garden chair near at hand.

“Well, now, here is pretty business, upon my word!” exclaimed Aunt Grace, warmly. “Sending a letter to our Fanny! Who ever heard of such assurance! Oh! I knew that some trouble would come of his visit here. I felt it the moment I set my eyes on him. Keep the letter from Fanny? Of course you will; and when you have a talk with Edward about it, just let me be there; I want my say.”

“It is too late,” murmured the unhappy mother, in a low, sad voice.

“Too late! How? What do you mean, Agnes?”

“Fanny has the letter already.”

“What!” There was a sharp, thrusting rebuke in the voice of Aunt Grace, that seemed like a sword in the heart of Mrs. Markland.

“She stood by me when I opened her father’s letter, enclosing the one for her. I did not dream from whence it came, and handed it to her without a thought.”

“Agnes! Agnes! What have you done?” exclaimed Aunt Grace, in a troubled voice.

“Nothing for which I need reproach myself,” said Mrs. Markland, now grown calmer. “Had the discretion been left with me, I should not have given Fanny the letter until Edward returned. But it passed to her hands through no will of mine. With the Great Controller of events it must now be left.”

“Oh dear! Don’t talk about the Controller of events in a case of this kind. Wise people control such things through the wisdom given them. I always think of Jupiter and the wagoner, when I hear any one going on this way.”

Aunt Grace was excited. She usually was when she thought earnestly. But her warmth of word and manner rarely disturbed Mrs. Markland, who knew her thoroughly, and valued her for her good qualities and strong attachment to the family. No answer was made, and Aunt Grace added, in a slightly changed voice,—

“I don’t know that you are so much to blame, Agnes, seeing that Fanny saw the letter, and that you were ignorant of its contents. But Edward might have known that something like this would happen. Why didn’t he put the letter into his pocket, and keep it until he came home? He seems to have lost his common sense. And then he must go off into that rigmarole about Mr. Lyon, and try to make him out a saint, as if to encourage you to give his letter to Fanny. I’ve no patience with him! Mr. Lyon, indeed! If he doesn’t have a heart-scald of him before he’s done with him, I’m no prophet. Important business for Mr. Lyon! Why didn’t Mr. Lyon attend to his own business when he was in New York? Oh! I can see through it all, as clear as daylight. He’s got his own ends to gain through Edward, who is blind and weak enough to be led by him.”

“Hasty in judgment as ever,” said Mrs. Markland, with a subdued, resigned manner, as she arose and commenced moving toward the house, her sister-in-law walking by her side,—”and quick to decide upon character. But neither men nor women are to be read at a glance.”

“So much the more reason for holding strangers at arms’ length,” returned Aunt Grace.

But Mrs. Markland felt in no mood for argument on so fruitless a subject. On entering the house, she passed to her own private apartment, there to commune with herself alone.

CHAPTER VII.

ONLY a few minutes had Mrs. Markland been in her room, when the door opened quietly, and Fanny’s light footfall was in her ears. She did not look up; but her heart beat with a quicker motion, and her breath was half-suspended.

“Mother!”

She lifted her bowed head, and met the soft, clear eyes of her daughter looking calmly down into her own.

“Fanny, dear!” she said, in half-surprise, as she placed an arm around her, and drew her closely to her side.

An open letter was in Fanny’s hand, and she held it toward her mother. There was a warmer hue upon her face, as she said,—

“It is from Mr. Lyon.”

“Shall I read it?” inquired Mrs. Markland.

“I have brought it for you to read,” was the daughter’s answer.

The letter was brief:

“To MISS FANNY MARKLAND:

“As I am now writing to your father, I must fulfil a half promise, made during my sojourn at Woodbine Lodge, to write to you also. Pleasant days were those to me, and they will ever make a green spot in my memory. What a little paradise enshrines you! Art, hand in hand with Nature, have made a world of beauty for you to dwell in. Yet, all is but a type of moral beauty—and its true enjoyment is only for those whose souls are attuned to deeper harmonies.