“Much, every way. Does it not so absorb your mind that you cannot think clearly on any other subject? And does not your business connection with Mr. Lyon bias your feelings unduly in his favour?”
Mr. Markland shook his head.
“But think more earnestly, Edward. Review what this man has done. Was it honourable for him so to abuse our hospitality as to draw our child into a secret correspondence? Surely something must warp your mind in his favour, or you would feel a quick indignation against him. He cannot be a true man, and this conviction every thing in regard to him confirms. Believe me, Edward, it was a dark day in the calendar of our lives when the home circle at Woodbine Lodge opened to receive him.”
“I trust to see the day,” answered Mr. Markland, “when you will look back to this hour and smile at the vague fears that haunted your imagination.”
“Fears? They have already embodied themselves in realities,” was the emphatic answer. “The evil is upon us, Edward. We have failed to guard the door of our castle, and the enemy has come in. Ah, my husband! if you could see with my eyes, there would stand before you a frightful apparition.”
“And what shape would it assume?” asked Mr. Markland, affecting to treat lightly the fears of his wife.
“That of a beautiful girl, with white, sunken cheeks, and hollow, weeping eyes.”
An instant paleness overspread the face of Mr. Markland.
“Look there!” said Mrs. Markland, suddenly, drawing the attention of her husband to a picture on the wall. The eyes of Mr. Markland fell instantly on a portrait of Fanny. It was one of those wonders of art that transform dead colours into seeming life, and, while giving to every lineament a faultless reproduction, heightens the charm of each. How sweetly smiled down upon Mr. Markland the beautiful lips! How tender were the loving eyes, that fixed themselves upon him and held him almost spell-bound!
“Dear child!” he murmured, in a softened voice, and his eyes grew so dim that the picture faded before him.
“As given to us!” said Mrs. Markland, almost solemnly.
A dead silence followed.
“But are we faithful to the trust? Have we guarded this treasure of uncounted value? Alas! alas! Already the warm cheeks are fading; the eyes are blinded with tears. I look anxiously down the vista of years, and shudder. Can the shadowy form I see be that of our child?”
“Oh, Agnes! Agnes!” exclaimed Mr. Markland, lifting his hands, and partly averting his face, as if to avoid the sight of some fearful image.
There was another hushed silence. It was broken by Mrs. Markland, who grasped the hand of her husband, and said, in a low, impressive voice—
“Fanny is yet with us—yet in the sheltered fold of home, though her eyes have wandered beyond its happy boundaries and her ears are hearkening to a voice that is now calling her from the distance. Yet, under our loving guardianship, may we not do much to save her from consequences my fearful heart has prophesied?”
“What can we do?” Mr. Markland spoke with the air of one bewildered.
“Guard her from all further approaches of this man; at least, until we know him better. There is a power of attraction about him that few so young and untaught in the world’s strange lessons as our child, can resist.”
“He attracts strongly, I know,” said Mr. Markland, in an absent way.
“And therefore the greater our child’s danger, if he be of evil heart.”
“You, wrong him, believe me, Agnes, by even this intimation. I will vouch for him as a man of high and honourable principles.” Mr. Markland spoke with some warmth of manner.
“Oh, Edward! Edward!” exclaimed his wife, in a distressed voice. “What has so blinded you to the real quality of this man? ‘By their fruit ye shall know them.’ And is not the first fruit, we have plucked from this tree, bitter to the taste?”
“You are excited and bewildered in thought, Agnes,” said Mr. Markland, in a soothing voice. “Let us waive this subject for the present, until both of us can refer to it with a more even heart-beat.”
Mrs. Markland caught her breath, as if the air had suddenly grown stifling.
“Will they ever beat more evenly?” she murmured, in a sad voice.
“Why, Agnes! Into what a strange mood you have fallen! You are not like yourself.”
“And I am not, to my own consciousness. For weeks it has seemed to me as if I were in a troubled dream.”
“The glad waking will soon come, I trust,” said Mr. Markland, with forced cheerfulness of manner.
“I pray that it may be so,” was answered, in a solemn voice.
There was silence for some moments, and then the other’s full heart overflowed. Mr. Markland soothed her, with tender, hopeful words, calling her fears idle, and seeking, by many forms of speech, to scatter the doubts and fears which, like thick clouds, had encompassed her spirit.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
FROM that period, Mr. Markland not only avoided all conference with his wife touching their daughter’s relation to Mr. Lyon, but became so deeply absorbed in business matters, that he gave little earnest thought to the subject. As the new interests in which he was involved grew into larger and larger importance, all things else dwindled comparatively.
At the end of six months he was so changed that, even to his own family, he was scarcely like the same individual. All the time he appeared thinking intensely. As to “Woodbine Lodge,” its beauties no longer fell into thought or perception. The charming landscape spread itself wooingly before him, but he saw nothing of its varied attractions. Far away, fixing his inward gaze with the fascination of a serpent’s eye, was the grand result of his new enterprise, and all else was obscured by the brightness of a vortex toward which he was moving in swiftly-closing circles. Already two-thirds of his handsome fortune was embarked in this new scheme, that was still growing in magnitude, and still, like the horse-leech, crying “Give! give!” All that now remained was “Woodbine Lodge,” valued at over twenty-five thousand dollars. This property he determined to leave untouched. But new calls for funds were constantly being made by Mr. Fenwick, backed by the most flattering reports from Mr. Lyon and his associates in Central America, and at last the question of selling or heavily mortgaging the “Lodge” had to be considered. The latter alternative was adopted, and the sum of fifteen thousand dollars raised, and thrown, with a kind of desperation, into the whirlpool which had already swallowed up nearly the whole of his fortune.
With this sum in his hands, Mr. Markland went to New York. He found the Company’s agent, Mr. Fenwick, as full of encouraging words and sanguine anticipations as ever.
“The prize is just within our grasp,” said he, in answer to some close inquiries of Markland. “There has been a most vigorous prosecution of the works, and a more rapid absorption of capital, in consequence, than was anticipated; but, as you have clearly seen, this is far better than the snail-like progress at which affairs were moving when Mr. Lyon reached the ground. Results which will now crown our efforts in a few months, would scarcely have been reached in as many years.”
“How soon may we reasonably hope for returns?” asked Mr. Markland, with more concern in his voice than he meant to express.
“In a few months,” was answered.
“In two, three, or four months?”
“It is difficult to fix an exact period,” said Mr. Fenwick, evasively. “You know how far the works have progressed, and what they were doing at the latest dates.”
“There ought to be handsome returns in less than six months.”
“And will be, no doubt,” replied the agent.
“There must be,” said Mr. Markland, betraying some excitement.
Mr. Fenwick looked at him earnestly, and with a slight manifestation of surprise.
“The assessments have been larger and more frequent than was anticipated. I did not intend embarking more than twenty thousand dollars in the beginning, and already some sixty thousand have been absorbed.”