Capitolas Peril - Page 207/218

Old Hurricane was deeply moved by the sympathy of his little madcap,

and pressed her to his bosom, saying: "Cap, my dear, if you had not set your heart upon Herbert, I would

marry you to my son Traverse, and you two should inherit all that I

have in the world! But never mind, Cap, you have an inheritance of your

own. Cap, Cap, my dear, did it ever occur to you that you might have

had a father and mother?"

"Yes! often! But I used to think you were my father, and that my mother

was dead."

"I wish to the Lord that I had been your father, Cap, and that Marah

Rocke had been your mother! But Cap, your father was a better man than

I, and your mother as good a woman as Marah. And Cap, my dear, you

vagabond, you vagrant, you brat, you beggar, you are the sole heiress

of the Hidden House estate and all its enormous wealth! What do you

think of that, now? What do you think of that, you beggar?" cried Old

Hurricane.

A shriek pierced the air, and Capitola starting up, stood before Old

Hurricane, crying in an impassioned voice: "Uncle! Uncle! Don't mock me! Don't overwhelm me! I do not care for

wealth or power; but tell me of the parents who possessing both, cast

off their unfortunate child--a girl, too! to meet the sufferings and

perils of such a life as mine had been, if I had not met you!"

"Cap, my dear, hush! Your parents were no more to blame for their

seeming abandonment of you, than I was to blame for the desertion of my

poor wife. We are all the victims of one villain, who has now gone to

his account, Capitola. I mean Gabriel Le Noir. Sit down, my dear, and I

will read the copy of his whole confession, and afterwards, in

addition, tell you all I know upon the subject!"

Capitola resumed her seat, Major Warfield read the confession of

Gabriel Le Noir, and afterwards continued the subject by relating the

events of that memorable Hallowe'en when he was called out in a snow

storm to take the dying deposition of the nurse who had been abducted

with the infant Capitola.

And at the end of his narrative Cap knew as much of her own history as

the reader has known all along.

"And I have a mother, and I shall even see her soon! You told me she

was coming home with the party--did you not, Uncle?" said Capitola.