WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The curse of gold cover

The curse of gold

Chapter 32: CHAPTER XXXI. THE YOUNG MAN’S RETURN.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The narrative opens in a hospital ward where two young women and a pair of infants become the focus of unfolding secrets about poverty, charity, and avarice. A stingy, wealthy woman hoards jewelry and gold that links several families; through misplaced earrings, a vial of medicine, and disputed identities, children are separated, adopted, and sheltered by charitable women. Brothers and lovers probe a past marriage and a hidden confession, while one woman’s mental collapse and another’s devoted motherhood test loyalties. Deathbeds, revelations, and a late confession resolve mistaken claims, restore family ties, and lead to marriage and guardianship that repair earlier wrongs.

CHAPTER XXXI.
THE YOUNG MAN’S RETURN.

Directly Madame De Marke unlocked the door, and a tall young man of stately presence and a grave cast of countenance entered. He reached forth his hand, with a sort of painful reservation, toward the singular old creature whom he found there.

“So, it is you at last!” said the latter, in a soft, cajoling voice. “I began to think you had forgotten your poor old mother.”

“Forgotten you! No, no, that were impossible,” was the hasty reply. “But you are alone, you seem to be living quite alone. Where is Catharine?”

“Catharine? Oh, yes, the girl. She hasn’t been here this year or more. A hard case that, George.”

He started, and looked at her sternly.

“What do you mean, madame?” he said. “Where, I say, where is Catharine? I left her with you! I demand her of you again.”

“You left her with me, of course you did. Wasn’t she my own help, bound to me till she was eighteen by the city authorities? Of course you left her here, why not?”

The young man grew pale, and his eyes darkened with intense anxiety; but he restrained his impetuous feelings, and spoke in a voice so low, that it was almost a whisper.

“Tell me, I entreat, madame, where is this girl now?”

“How should I know? She ran away after you sailed.”

“Ran away? where? Where?”

“You needn’t ask me. How should I know? What carries a wild girl into the streets?”

“The streets!” cried the young man, in a husky whisper. “The streets!”

“I believe,” said the old woman, unfeelingly, “she brought up at the prison or Almshouse, at last.”

“Prison! Almshouse! Madame, woman, how dare you confess that she was so far deserted, the poor, poor girl. Was she ill? Was she wronged? Tell me why this destitution fell upon her!”

The old woman fixed her keen eyes on the excited and stern face of the young man, with a hard, determined look that made the heart tremble in his bosom; and he shrunk back with mortal dread, as if a rattlesnake were about to spring upon him.

“She had disgraced my house, sir, and I sent her out of it.” The young man started back, and turned white to the very lips.

“Not, not!—woman, tell me what this means!”

The woman was ruthless. The glitter grew sharper and keener in her eyes. She had no compassion on the terrible agitation that shook the young man.

“Go up to the Almshouse, if you want to know more. She may be there yet with her child!”

“With her child, her child? my wife, my poor, poor wife! I tell you, woman, she was my wife. Before God and man, she is my wife—mine, mine—do you hear?”

“Yes, I hear; she said the same thing. I didn’t believe her. I don’t believe you. It is the old crazy blood up. You would cover her shame with your own. Like father, like son.”

“Woman, you insult me, you wrong that dear girl!” cried the young man, trembling with passion, “I repeat again, she was my wife!”

“Perhaps you can give me the proof?” said the old woman, holding out her hand, while a quiet sneer stole across her lips. “She had nothing to show—you may be better off!”

“Catharine has the proofs. I left them with her.”

The old woman laughed, or rather hissed out her satisfaction.

“She was a careless thing to lose them, I must say that. All I asked was some written proof of her story. If she had a certificate, why not show it? I wouldn’t have let her go to the Almshouse, if she had!”

The old woman seemed to love the repetition of this hateful word, the Almshouse, for she saw that it made the young man wince; and this was a joy to her.

The poor youth made no reply, but sat down, faint with suffering; for now he began to comprehend the utter misery of his position. Months had passed since his poor young wife could have known the shelter of a respectable home. What might she not have endured, so young, so helpless, a mere child in years! How terribly she must have suffered. The cruelty of his miserable old stepmother was lost in the rush of remorseful compassion that filled his soul. With all this flood of sorrow came a new birth of feeling, so strong, so intense, that it thrilled him from head to foot. He scarcely recognized it as a joy, it was so strange, burning like a drop of elixir through all the pain and disappointment that had fallen upon him.

He was a father! A living soul had started from the immortal life within him; and the thought swept like solemn music through his stormy passions, giving dignity and depth to his manner.

He turned from the old woman with new-born gentleness. His white lips quivered with tender emotion, his eyes grew dark and misty, he forgot that the creature before him had trampled all that he loved in the dust. Thoughts of his wife and child filled his whole being. He turned away, and was passing through the door, when Madame De Marke addressed him.

“Where are you going?” she said.

“In search of my wife and child!”

The last word thrilled through and through his whole being. His face, that had been pale till now, flushed to the temples, and a smile of ineffable sweetness broke over his lips, as the word, “My child,” left them. He even looked at the wicked old woman as if demanding sympathy for his new joy from her.

“If they are upon earth, I shall find them,” he said, “by to-morrow, at the furthest, I shall find them.”

“And what will you do with them when they are found?” demanded the old woman, maliciously.

“What will I do?” said the youth, “what will I do? Why, give up my strong manhood to their support; for I am strong now.”

And so he was. Youth and hope and earnest feeling gave to his nature the energy of middle age.

He went down those flights of winding stairs, with every nerve of his body awake to the joy singing at his heart. What cared he that his child was born in an Almshouse? Was it not his child, was not Catharine alive? Was he not young, and strong to work, to suffer, to be her protector, body and soul forever? For he could imagine no time when his love for the sweet girl would cease to be immortal.

What cared he, that, by his father’s will, Madame De Marke had power to withhold his inheritance for a time? Let her have it. The West was broad and land plenty; a log house among the prairies, with Catharine and her child, would be heaven enough for him. While these hopeful thoughts floated through his brain, the old woman listened to his light footsteps, grasping the door with one hand, while her witch-like face peered through into the dark passage. When his footsteps died away, she drew back, and closed herself in, with a low chuckle.

She sat down, dropping one hand on her lap with a quickness that impressed the cat as a signal; and leaping upon the old woman’s knee, the animal sat there, gazing into the evil brightness of her eyes with a look of kindred intelligence.

The woman smoothed the ragged back of her favorite with one hand, while a grin of satisfaction disturbed her mouth.

“I hope he will find ’em, Peg, don’t you?”

The cat crept upward, and laid her paws on the old woman’s shoulder; then with a leap that made her mistress give forth a cowardly scream, she sprang over, and seizing a poor little mouse that was attempting to escape under the door, began to torture it with her paws.

Madame De Marke sat up half an hour later than usual that night, watching the cat as she prolonged her malicious enjoyment, looking away from its trembling victim now and then as if to claim her sympathy.

“That’ll do! that’ll do, Peg!” said the old woman at last, waving her hand as if to command an execution; “I’m getting sleepy, Peg, kill the thing.”

The cat turned her head, holding down the victim with one claw.

“Don’t you hear, Peg?” said the old woman, starting up, “kill it, I say!”

The cat made a quick movement, and away darted the mouse through a crevice between the door and the threshold. The old woman laughed with great glee, while Peg slunk away under the bed, looking very much ashamed of her bungling; but when the tallow candle was put out, and Madame safe in bed, she ventured to creep out and coil herself up over the old woman’s feet; and with this companionship alone was Madame de Marke left, not only that night, but for months after.