The Mysterious Key And What It Opened
nds and Tr
iress e'er
, till, spi
ound in Tr
m, Richard? Not its poetry I fancy." And the young wife laid a slender hand on the
er, and, sitting in a low chair beside her, said in a cheerful tone, though his eyes betrayed some hidden care, "My love, that book is a history of our family for centuries, and that old prophecy has never yet
at the old book, "I read that history once, and fancied it must be a rom
e stormy nature came in with old Sir Ralph, the fierce Norman knight, who killed his only son in a fi
e during a siege, and married her cousin, Count Hugo. 'Tis
kept to ourselves till idiots and lunatics began to appear. My father was the first who broke the law among us, and
I never forget that you took me from a very humble h
d to leave your hills and come to cheer the long-deserted
the boldest, handsomest man in Warwickshire. But lately you loo
my natural anxiety for you-Wel
smile on his lips vanished, leaving them dry and white as he glanced at the card
librar
l co
fore he spoke, with averted eyes: "Only some annoying business,
expression of intense excitement in his face. She said nothing, and lay mo
me; I have a right to know, and he'll forg
committing. A murmur of voices met her ear. Her husband spoke oftenest, and suddenly some word of his dashed the smile from her face as if with a blow. She started, shrank, and shivered, bending lower with set teeth, white cheeks, and pa
ter, the maid, as her mistress glided into the
lp me to my bed, but do
ho never cared to lift it up again. Hester, a sharp-eyed, middle-aged woman, watched the pale creature for a moment, then left
d without waiting to knock she went in, fearing she knew not what. Sir Richard sat at his writing table pen in ha
ady is ill. Shall
his head, saw that he was unconscious, and rang for help. But Richard Trevlyn was past help, though
e can come," sai
she gave the message, Lady Trevlyn answered sternly, "Tell him I will not come," and turned
aring to utter it aloud, but Sir Richard heard it, an
ed herself the happiest woman in England. They thought her dying, and at her own command gave her the sealed letter bearing her address which her husband left behind him. She read
ength. Evening came, and the house was very still, for all the sad bustle of preparation for Sir Richard's funeral was over, and he lay for the last night under his own roof. Hester sat in the darkened chamber of her mistr
watching the feverish glitter of her mistress's eye, the fl
go there; I
began the woman; but Lady Trevlyn seemed not to hear her, and somet
arm cloak, Hester half-led, half-carried her to
, but wait for me here," she said
when she reappeared with no s
id, with a shuddering sigh, as the faithful servan
he ivory oval from the gold case, she locked the former in a tiny drawer of the casket, replaced the empty locket in her br
grieve all your days, even for so good a man as my blessed master.
all the answer as Lady Trevlyn drew
his death died for want of food, for the only person who could have exp
passed in a state of apathy sad to witness. She seemed to have forgotten everything, even the shock which had so sorely stricken her. The sight of her
Lady Trevlyn and no clue could be got from her. Sir Richard had died of heart disease, the physicians said, though he might have lived years had no sudden shock assailed him. There were fe