<p><SPAN name="linklink2HCH0005" id="linklink2HCH0005"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER V. A NEW YORK BELLE </h2>
<p>Meanwhile all our efforts to obtain information in regard to the fate or
whereabouts of the missing girl, had so far proved utterly futile. Even
the advertisements inserted by Mrs. Daniels had produced no effect; and
frustrated in my scheme I began to despair, when the accounts of that same
Mrs. Daniels' strange and unaccountable behavior during these days of
suspense, which came to me through Fanny, (the pretty housemaid at Mr.
Blake's, whose acquaintance I had lately taken to cultivating,) aroused
once more my dormant energies and led me to ask myself if the affair was
quite as hopeless as it seemed.</p>
<p>"If she was a ghost," was her final expression on the subject, "she
could'nt go peramberlating this house more than she does. It seems as if
she could'nt keep still a minute. Upstairs and down, upstairs and down,
till we're most wild. And so white as she is and so trembling! Why her
hands shake so all the time she never dares lift a dish off the table. And
then the way she hangs about Mr. Blake's door when he's at home! She never
goes in, that's the oddest part of it, but walks up and down before it,
wringing her hands and talking to herself just like a mad woman. Why, I
have seen her almost put her hand on the knob twice in an afternoon
perhaps, then draw back as if she was afraid it would burn her; and if by
any chance the door opened and Mr. Blake came out, you ought to have seen
how she run. What it all means I don't know, but I have my imaginings, and
if she is'nt crazy, why—" etc., etc.</p>
<p>In face of facts like these I felt it would be pure insanity to despair.
Let there be but a mystery, though it involved a man of the position of
Mr. Blake and I was safe. My only apprehension had been that the whole
affair would dissolve itself into an ordinary elopement or some such
common-place matter.</p>
<p>When, therefore, a few minutes later, Fanny announced that Mr. Blake had
ordered a carriage to take him to the Charity Ball that evening, I
determined to follow him and learn if possible what change had taken place
in himself or his circumstances, to lead him into such an innovation upon
his usual habits. Though the hour was late I had but little difficulty in
carrying out my plan, arriving at the Academy something less than an hour
after the opening dance.</p>
<p>The crowd was great and I circulated the floor three times before I came
upon him. When I did, I own I was slightly disappointed; for instead of
finding him as I anticipated, the centre of an admiring circle of ladies
and gentlemen, I espied him withdrawn into a corner with a bland old
politician of the Fifteenth Ward, discussing, as I presently overheard,
the merits and demerits of a certain Smith who at that time was making
some disturbance in the party.</p>
<p>"If that is all he has come for," thought I, "I had better have stayed at
home and made love to the pretty Fanny." And somewhat chagrined, I took up
my stand near by, and began scrutinizing the ladies.</p>
<p>Suddenly I felt my heart stand still, the noise of voices ceasing the same
instant behind me. A lady was passing on the arm of a foreign-looking
gentleman, whom it did not require a second glance to identify with the
subject of the portrait in Mr. Blake's house. Older by some few years than
when her picture was painted, her beauty had assumed a certain defiant
expression that sufficiently betrayed the fact that the years had not been
so wholly happy as she had probably anticipated when she jilted handsome
Holman Blake for the old French Count. At all events so I interpreted the
look of latent scorn that burned in her dark eyes, as she slowly turned
her richly bejeweled head towards the corner where that gentleman stood,
and meeting his eyes no doubt, bowed with a sudden loss of self-possession
that not all the haughty carriage of her noble form, held doubly erect for
the next few moments, could quite conceal or make forgotten.</p>
<p>"She still loves him," I inwardly commented and turned to see if the
surprise had awakened any expression on his uncommunicative countenance.</p>
<p>Evidently not, for the tough old politician of the Fifteenth Ward was
laughing, at one of his own jokes probably, and looking up in the face of
Mr. Blake, whose back was turned to me, in a way that entirely precluded
all thought of any tragic expression in that quarter. Somewhat disgusted,
I withdrew and followed the lady.</p>
<p>I could not get very near. By this time the presence of a live countess in
the assembly had become known, and I found her surrounded by a swarm of
half-fledged youths. But I cared little for this; all I wanted to know was
whether Mr. Blake would approach her or not during the evening. Tediously
the moments passed; but a detective on duty, or on fancied duty, succumbs
to no weariness. I had a woman before me worth studying and the time could
not be thrown away. I learned to know her beauty; the poise of her head,
the flush of her cheek, the curl of her lip, the glance—yes, the
glance of her eye, though that was more difficult to understand, for she
had a way of drooping her lids at times that, while exceedingly effective
upon the poor wretch toward whom she might be directing that half-veiled
shaft of light, was anything but conducive to my purposes.</p>
<p>At length with a restless shrug of her haughty shoulders she turned away
from her crowd of adorers, her breast heaving under its robing of garnet
velvet, and her whole face flaring with a light that might mean resolve
and might mean simply love. I had no need to turn my head to see who was
advancing towards her; her stately attitude as countess, her thrilling
glance as woman, betrayed only too readily.</p>
<p>He was the more composed of the two. Bowing over her hand with a few words
I could not hear, he drew back a step and began uttering the usual
common-place sentiments of the occasion.</p>
<p>She did not respond. With a splendor of indifference not often seen even
in the manner of our grandest ladies, she waited, opening and shutting her
richly feathered fan, as one who would say, "I know all this has to be
gone through with, therefore I will be patient." But as the moments
passed, and his tone remained unchanged, I could detect a slight gleam of
impatience flash in the depths of her dark eyes, and a change come into
the conventional smile that had hitherto lighted, without illuminating her
countenance. Drawing still further back from the crowd that was not to be
awed from pressing upon her, she looked around as if seeking a refuge. Her
glance fell upon a certain window, with a gleam of satisfaction. Seeing
they would straightway withdraw there, I took advantage of the moment and
made haste to conceal myself behind a curtain as near that vicinity as
possible. In another instant I heard them approaching.</p>
<p>"You seem to be rather overwhelmed with attention to-night," were the
first words I caught, uttered in Mr. Blake's calmest and most courteous
tones.</p>
<p>"Do you think so?" was the slightly sarcastic reply. "I was just deciding
to the contrary when you came up."</p>
<p>There was a pause. Taking out my knife, I ripped open a seam in the
curtain hanging before me, and looked through. He was eyeing her intently,
a firm look upon his face that made its reserve more marked than common. I
saw him gaze at her handsome head piled with its midnight tresses amid
which the jewels, doubtless of her dead lord, burned with a fierce and
ominous glare, at her smooth olive brow, her partly veiled eyes where the
fire passionately blazed, at her scarlet lips trembling with an emotion
her rapidly flushing cheeks would not allow her to conceal. I saw his
glances fall and embrace her whole elegant form with its casing of ruby
velvet and ornamentation of lace and diamonds, and an expectant thrill
passed through me almost as if I already beheld the mask of his reserve
falling, and the true man flash out in response to the wooing beauty of
this full-blown rose, evidently in waiting for him. But it died away and a
deeper feeling seized me as I saw his glances return unkindled to her
countenance, and heard him say in still more measured accents than before:</p>
<p>"Is it possible then that the Countess De Mirac can desire the adulation
of us poor American plebeians? I had not thought it, madame."</p>
<p>Slowly her dark eyes turned towards him; she stood a statue.</p>
<p>"But I forget," he went on, a tinge of bitterness for a moment showing
itself in his smile: "perhaps in returning to her own country, Evelyn
Blake has so far forgotten the last two years as to find pleasure again in
the toys and foibles of her youth. Such things have been, I hear." And he
bowed almost to the ground in his half sarcastic homage.</p>
<p>"Evelyn Blake! It is long since I have heard that name," she murmured.</p>
<p>He could not restrain the quick flush from mounting to his brow. "Pardon
me," said he, "if it brings you sadness or unwelcome memories. I promise
you I will not so transgress again."</p>
<p>A wan smile crossed her lips grown suddenly pallid.</p>
<p>"You mistake," said she; "if my name brings up a past laden with bitter
memories and shadowed by regret, it also recalls much that is pleasant and
never to be forgotten. I do not object to hearing my girlhood's name
uttered—by my nearest relative."</p>
<p>The answer was dignity itself. "Your name is Countess De Mirac, your
relatives must be proud to utter it."</p>
<p>A gleam not unlike the lightning's quick flash shot from the eyes she
drooped before him.</p>
<p>"Is it Holman Blake I am listening to," said she; "I do not recognize my
old friend in the cool and sarcastic man of the world now before me."</p>
<p>"We often fail to recognize the work of our hands, madame, after it has
fallen from our grasp."</p>
<p>"What," she cried, "do you mean—would you say that—"</p>
<p>"I would say nothing," interrupted he calmly, stooping for the fan she had
dropped. "At an interview which is at once a meeting and a parting, I
would give utterance to nothing which would seem like recrimination. I—"</p>
<p>"Wait," suddenly exclaimed she, reaching out her hand for her fan with a
gesture lofty as it was resolute. "You have spoken a word which demands
explanation; what have I ever done to you that you should speak the word
recrimination to me?"</p>
<p>"What? You shook my faith in womankind; you showed me that a woman who had
once told a man she loved him, could so far forget that love as to marry
one she could never respect, for the sake of titles and jewels. You showed
me—"</p>
<p>"Hold," said she again, this time without gesture or any movement, save
that of her lips grown pallid as marble, "and what did you show me?"</p>
<p>He started, colored profoundly, and for a moment stood before her unmasked
of his stern self-possession. "I beg your pardon," said he, "I take back
that word, recrimination."</p>
<p>It was now her turn to lift her head and survey him. With glance less cool
than his, but fully as deliberate, she looked at his proud head bending
before her; studying his face, line by line, from the stern brow to the
closely compressed lips on which melancholy seemed to have set its
everlasting seal, and a change passed over her countenance. "Holman," said
she, with a sudden rush of tenderness, "if in the times gone by, we both
behaved with too much worldly prudence for it now to be any great pleasure
for either of us to look back, is that any reason why we should mar our
whole future by dwelling too long upon what we are surely still young
enough to bury if not forget? I acknowledge that I would have behaved in a
more ideal fashion, if, after I had been forsaken by you, I had turned my
face from society, and let the canker-worm of despair slowly destroy
whatever life and bloom I had left. But I was young, and society had its
charms, so did the prospect of wealth and position, however hollow they
may have proved; you who are the master of both this day, because twelve
months ago you forsook Evelyn Blake, should be the last to reproach me
with them. I do not reproach you; I only say let the past be forgotten—"</p>
<p>"Impossible," exclaimed he, his whole face darkening with an expression I
could not fathom. "What was done at that time cannot be undone. For you
and me there is no future. Yes," he said turning towards her as she made a
slight fluttering move of dissent, "no future; we can bury the past, but
we can not resurrect it. I doubt if you would wish to if we could; as we
cannot, of course you will not desire even to converse upon the subject
again. Evelyn I wanted to see you once, but I do not wish to see you
again; will you pardon my plain speaking, and release me?"</p>
<p>"I will pardon your plain speaking, but—" Her look said she would
not release him.</p>
<p>He seemed to understand it so, and smiled, but very bitterly. In another
moment he had bowed and gone, and she had returned to her crowd of adoring
sycophants.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />