For Woman's Love Part- 2 - Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth (robert munsch read aloud .TXT) 📗
- Author: Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth
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Coachman's Room.
"Put The Horses To The Carriage Again, And Return To Violet Banks To
Bring Your Mistress Here. Give Her This Note. It Will Explain All," Said
Mr. Fabian, Handing The Note To The Servant.
He Found The Same Group Around The Death Bed. Clarence And The Doctor
Standing On The Left Side, Cora Kneeling By The Right Side, Still
Holding The Hand Of The Dying Man, Whose Fingers Were Closed Upon Hers
And Whose Face Was Turned Toward Hers, But With "No Speculation" In It.
Two Hours Passed Away Without Any Change. The Sound Of Wheels Without
Could Be Heard Through The Profound Stillness Of The Death Chamber. Mr.
Fabian Again Left The Room To Receive His Wife.
He Met Violet In The Hall, Just As Old John Had Admitted Her. She Was
Closely Followed By The Nurse And The Child.
"How Is Father?" She Inquired.
"He Is Very Ill, My Dear, But Resting Quietly Just At Present. Here Is
Martha; She Will Take You To Your Room And Make You And The Baby
Comfortable. Then, As Soon As You Can, Come To The Father's Chamber; You
Know Where To Find It," Said Mr. Fabian, Who Feared To Shock His
Sensitive Wife By Telling Her That He Was Sinking Fast, And Thought That
It Would Be Safer To Let Her Come Into The Room And Join The Group
Around The Bed, And Gradually Learn The Sad Truth By Her Own
Observation.
"Yes; I Can Find My Way Very Well," Answered Violet, As She Handed Her
Bag, Shawl, And Umbrella To Martha, And Followed The Housekeeper Up
Stairs, With The Nurse And Baby.
Mr. Fabian Returned To The Chamber Of The Dying Man, Around Whose Bed
The Group Remained As He Had Left It, And Where In A Very Few Minutes He
Was Joined By Violet. She Entered The Room Very Softly, So That Her
Approach Was Not Heard Until She Reached The Bedside. Then She Took And
Silently Pressed The Hands That Were Silently Held Out By Cora, And
Finally She Knelt Down Beside Her.
More Hours Passed; No One Left The Sick Room, For No One Knew How Soon
The End Might Come. Old John Thoughtfully Brought In A Waiter Of
Refreshments And Set It Down On A Side Table For Any One Who Might
Require It.
Day Declined. Through The Front Windows Of The Death Room The Western
Sky Could Be Seen, Dark, Lowering, And Stormy. A Long Range Of Heavy
Clouds Lay Massed Above The Horizon, Obscuring The Light Of The Sinking
Sun, But Leaving A Narrow Line Of Clear Sky Just Along The Top Of The
Western Ridge.
Presently A Singularly Beautiful Effect Was Produced. The Sun, Sinking
Below The Dark Cloud Into The Clear Gold Line Of Sky, Sent Forth A Blaze
Of Light From The Mountain Heights, Across The River, And Into The
Chamber Of Death! Was It This Sudden Illumination That Kindled The Fire
Of Life In The Dying Man Into A Last Expiring Flame, Or Was It Indeed
The Presence Of A Spiritual Visitant, Visible Only To The Vanishing
Spirit? Who Can Tell?
Suddenly Old Aaron Rockharrt Opened His Eyes--Those Great, Strong Black
Eyes That Had Ever Been A Terror To The Evil Doer--And The Well Doer
Also--And Stared Before Him, Held Up His Hands And Exclaimed:
"Deborah! Deborah!"
And Then He Dropped His Arms By His Side, And With A Long, Deep-Drawn
Sigh Fell Asleep. The Name Of His Old Wife Was The Last Word Upon His
Dying Lips.
No One But The Doctor Knew What Had Happened. He Bent Over The Lifeless
Shell, Gazed On The Face, Felt The Pulse, Felt The Heart, And Then Stood
Up And Said:
"All Is Over, My Dear Friends. His Passage Has Been Quite Painless. I
Never Saw An Easier Death."
And He Drew Up The Sheet Over The Face Of The Dead.
Although All Day They Had Hourly Expected This End, Yet Now They Could
Not Quite Believe That It Had Indeed Come.
The Huge, Strong Man, The Rugged Iron King--Dead? He Who, If Not As
Indestructible As He Seemed, Was At Least Constituted Of That Stern
Stuff Of Which Centenarians Are Made, And Whom All Expected Should Live
Far Up Into The Eighties Or Nineties--Dead? The Father Who Had Lived
Over Them Like Some Mighty Governing And Protecting Power All Their
Lives, Necessary, Inevitable, Inseparable From Their Lives--Dead?
"Come, My Dear," Said Mr. Clarence, Gently Raising Corona And Leading
Part 2 Chapter 34 (It Is The Unexpected That Happens) Pg 159Her Away. "You Have This To Console You: He Died Reconciled To You,
Holding Your Hand In His To The Last."
"Ah, Dear Uncle Clarence, You Have Much More To Console You, For You
Never Failed Even Once In Your Duty To Him, And Never Gave Him One
Moment Of Uneasiness In All Your Life," Replied Corona, As She Left Him
In Front Of Her Old Room.
She Entered And Shut The Door And Gave Way To The Natural Grief That
Overwhelmed Her For A Time.
When She Was Sufficiently Composed She Sat Down And Wrote To Her
Brother, Informing Him Of What Had Occurred, And Telling Him That She
Still Held Her Purpose Of Going Out To Him With The Nevilles.
Part 2 Chapter 35 (Sic Transit Gloria Mundi) Pg 160
If Old Aaron Rockharrt, The Iron King, Had Never Been Generally Loved,
He Was Certainly Very Highly Respected By The Whole Community. The News
Of His Sudden Death Fell Like A Shock Upon The Public. Preparations For
The Obsequies Were On The Grandest Scale.
They Occupied Two Days. On The First Day There Were Funeral Services At
Rockhold, Performed By The Rev. Luke Melville, Pastor Of The North End
Mission Church, And Attended By All The Neighboring Families, As Well As
By All The Operatives Of The Works. After These Were Over, The Whole
Assembly, Many In Carriages And Many More On Foot, Followed The Hearse
That Carried The Remains To The North End Railway Depot, Where The
Coffin Was Placed In A Special Car Prepared For Its Reception, And,
Attended By The Whole Family, It Was Conveyed To The State Capital And
Deposited In The Long Drawing Room Of The Rockharrt Mansion, Where It
Remained Until The Next Day. On The Second Day Funeral Services Were
Held At The Town House By The Bishop Of The Diocese, Assisted By The
Rector Of The Church Of The Lord's Peace, And Attended By A Host Of The
City Friends Of The Family.
After These Services The Long Funeral Procession Moved From The House To
The Cemetery Of The Lord's Peace, Where The Body Was Laid In The
Rockharrt Vault Beside That Of His Old Wife.
On The Return Of The Family To The House They Assembled In The Library
To Hear The Reading Of The Will Of Aaron Rockharrt, Which Had Been
Brought In By His Solicitor, Mr. Benjamin Norris.
There Were Present, Seated Around The Table, Fabian, Violet, And
Clarence Rockharrt, Cora Rothsay, The Doctor And The Lawyer. Standing
Behind These Were Gathered The Servants Of The Family.
Mr. Norris Blew His Nose, Cleared His Throat, Put On His Spectacles,
Opened The Will And Proceeded To Read It.
The Testament May Be Briefly Summed Up As Follows:
First There Were Handsome Legacies Left To Each Of The Old Servants. One
Full Half Of The Testator's Vast Estate Was Left To His Elder Son,
Fabian; One Quarter To His Younger Son, Clarence; And One Quarter To Be
Divided Equally Between His Grandson, Sylvan Haught, And His
Granddaughter, Corona Rothsay.
Fabian Was Appointed Sole Executor.
The Lawyer Folded Up The Document And Handed It To Fabian Rockharrt.
"Clarence, Old Boy, I Hardly Think This Is Altogether Fair To You," Said
Fabian, Good Naturedly, And Ready To Deceive Him Into The Delusion That
He Had Not Schemed For This Unequal Division Of The Enormous Wealth.
"It Is All Right, Fabian. Altogether Right. You Are The Eldest Son, And
Now The Head Of The Firm, And You Have Ten Times Over The Business
Brains That I Have. I Am Perfectly Satisfied, And Even If I Were Not, I
Would Not Dream Of Criticising My Father's Will," Replied Clarence, With
Perfect Good Humor And Sincerity.
The Legacies Were Promptly Paid By Fabian Rockharrt. Mr. Clarence
Decided To Remain As His Brother's Junior Partner In The Firm That Was
Henceforth To Be Known As "Aaron Rockharrt's Sons," And To Leave All His
Share Of The Money Invested In The Works.
When Corona Was Asked When And How She Would Receive Her Own, She Also
Declared That She Would Leave It For The Present Where It Was Invested
In The Works, And The Firm Might Pay Her Legal Interest For Its Use, Or
Make Her A Small Silent Partner In The Business. Sylvan Had Yet To Be
Consulted In Regard To The Disposal Of His Capital.
The Month Of October Was In Its Third Week. It Was High Time For Corona
To Go To Washington And Make The Acquaintance Of The Nevilles, If She
Wished To Go To Travel West Under Their Protection. She Had Several
Times Spoken Of This Purpose In The Presence Of Violet, So As To
Accustom That Emotional Young Woman To The Idea Of Their Separation. But
Violet, Absorbed In Her Grief For The Dead, Paid But Little Attention To
Corona's Casual Remarks.
At The End Of A Few Days Fabian Rockharrt Began To Talk About Going Back
To Violet Banks, And Invited Corona To Accompany His Wife And Himself To
Their, Pleasant Country Home.
Part 2 Chapter 35 (Sic Transit Gloria Mundi) Pg 161
It Was Then That Corona Spoke Decisively. She Thanked Him For His
Invitation And Reminded Him Of Her Unalterable Resolution To Go Out To
Fort Farthermost To Join Her Brother.
When Fabian Rockharrt Tried To Combat Her Determination, She Informed
Him That She Had During The Funeral Week Received A Joint Letter From
Captain And Mrs. Neville, Inviting Her To Join Their Party To The
Frontier. This Letter Had Been Written At The Suggestion Of The Colonel
Of Captain Neville's Regiment, And Had Not Been Mentioned Or Even
Answered Until After The Funeral. She Said That She Had Accepted This
Kind Invitation, And Had Forwarded All Her Baggage, Which Had Been So
Long Stored At North End, To Washington To Wait Her Arrival In That
City.
"Very Well, Then," Said Fabian. "If You Are Set Upon This Expedition, I
Cannot Hinder You, And Shall Not Try To Do So. But I Tell You What I
Will Do. I Will Take Violet To Washington
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