Tempest and Sunshine - Page 108/234

"But why harrow my feelings by awakening the past? Suffice it to say that

he whom I loved is dead. We both saw him die, and I received upon my lips

his last breath. Truly if he were Julia's in life, he was mine in death.

Did you never suspect how truly I loved Mr. Wilmot? You were blinded by

your misplaced affection for me, if you did not. Julia, my noble-hearted

sister Julia, knew it all. I confessed my love to her, and on my knees

begged her not to go to him, but to let me take her place at his bedside.

She complied with my request, and then bravely bore in silence the

reproaches of the world for her seeming coldness.

"Dear Julia! She seems strangely changed recently, and you would hardly

know her, she is so gentle, so obliging, so amiable. You ought to have

heard her plead your cause with me. She besought me almost with tears not

to prove unfaithful to you, and when I convinced her that 'twas impossible

for me to love another as I had Mr. Wilmot, she insisted on my writing,

and not keeping you in suspense any longer.

"Dr. Lacey, if you could transfer your affection from me--, but no, why

should I speak of such a thing! You will probably despise all my family.

Yet do not, I beseech you, cast them off for your poor Fanny's sin. They

respect you highly, and Julia would be angry if she knew that I am about

to tell you how she admires a certain Southern friend, who probably, by

this time, thinks with contempt of little "FANNY MIDDLETON."

There was no perceptible change in Dr. Lacey's manner after reading the

heartless forgery, but the iron had entered his soul, and for a time he

seemed benumbed with its force. Then came a moment of reflection. His love

had been trampled upon, and thrown back as a thing of naught by her who

had fallen from the high pedestal on which he had enthroned the idol of

his heart's deepest affection.

"I could have pitied, and admired her, too," thought he, "had she candidly

confessed her love for Mr. Wilmot; but to be so basely deceived by one

whom I thought incapable of deception is too much."

Seizing the letter, he again read it through, and this time he felt his

wounded pride somewhat soothed by thinking that the beautiful Julia

admired and sympathized with him. "But pshaw!" he exclaimed, "most likely

Julia is as hollow-hearted as her sister, and yet many dark spots on her

character seem wiped away by Fanny's confession." Throwing the letter

aside he rang the bell, and ordered his breakfast to be sent up to him.