"Death and distraction," said he, stamping, "this is too much.
Rise,
villain, and defend yourself." Belcour
sprang from the bed.
The noise awoke Charlotte; terrified at the
furious appearance
of Montraville, and
seeing Belcour with him in the chamber,
she caught hold of his arm as he stood by the bed-side, and
eagerlyasked what was the matter.
"Treacherous,
infamous girl," said he, "can you ask? How came he here?"
pointing to Belcour.
"As heaven is my witness," replied she
weeping, 'I do not know.
I have not seen him for these three weeks."
"Then you
confess he sometimes visits you?"
"He came sometimes by your desire."
"'Tis false; I never desired him to come, and you know I did not:
but mark me, Charlotte, from this
instant our connexion is at an end.
Let Belcour, or any other of your
favoured lovers, take you and
provide for you; I have done with you for ever."
He was then going to leave her; but starting wildly from the bed,
she threw herself on her knees before him, protesting her
innocenceand entreating him not to leave her. "Oh Montraville," said she,
"kill me, for pity's sake kill me, but do not doubt my
fidelity.
Do not leave me in this
horrid situation; for the sake of your
unborn child, oh! spurn not the
wretched mother from you. "
"Charlotte," said he, with a firm voice, "I shall take care that neither
you nor your child want any thing in the approaching
painful hour;
but we meet no more." He then
endeavoured to raise her from the ground;
but in vain; she clung about his knees, entreating him to believe
her
innocent, and conjuring Belcour to clear up the
dreadful mystery.
Belcour cast on Montraville a smile of
contempt: it irritated him
almost to
madness; he broke from the
feeble arms of the distressed girl;
she shrieked and fell
prostrate on the floor.
Montraville
instantly left the house and returned
hastily to the city.
CHAPTER XXIV.
MYSTERY DEVELOPED.
UNFORTUNATELY for Charlotte, about three weeks before this
unhappy rencontre, Captain Beauchamp, being ordered to Rhode-Island,
his lady had accompanied him, so that Charlotte was deprived
of her friendly advice and consoling society. The afternoon on
which Montraville had visited her she had found herself languid
and fatigued, and after making a very slight dinner had lain down
to
endeavour to
recruit her exhausted spirits, and,
contrary to
her expectations, had fallen asleep. She had not long been lain down,
when Belcour arrived, for he took every opportunity of visiting her,
and striving to
awaken her
resentment against Montraville.
He enquired of the servant where her
mistress was, and being
told she was asleep, took up a book to amuse himself:
having sat a few minutes, he by chance cast his eyes towards the road,
and saw Montraville approaching; he
instantly conceived the diabolical
scheme of ruining the
unhappy Charlotte in his opinion for ever;
he
therefore stole
softly up stairs, and laying himself by her
side with the greatest
precaution, for fear she should awake,
was in that situation discovered by his
credulous friend.
When Montraville spurned the
weeping Charlotte from him, and left
her almost distracted with
terror and
despair, Belcour raised her from
the floor, and leading her down stairs, assumed the part of a tender,
consoling friend; she listened to the arguments he advanced
with
apparentcomposure; but this was only the calm of a moment:
the
remembrance of Montraville's recent
cruelty again rushed
upon her mind: she pushed him from her with some violence,
and crying--"Leave me, Sir, I
beseech you leave me, for much I fear
you have been the cause of my
fidelity being suspected; go, leave me
to the accumulated miseries my own imprudence has brought upon me."
She then left him with precipitation, and retiring to her own
apartment,
threw herself on the bed, and gave vent to an agony of grief which it
is impossible to describe.
It now occurred to Belcour that she might possibly write to Montraville,
and
endeavour to
convince him of her
innocence: he was well aware
of her
pathetic remonstrances, and,
sensible of the
tenderness of
Montraville's heart,
resolved to prevent any letters ever reaching him:
he
therefore called the servant, and, by the powerful persuasion
of a bribe, prevailed with her to promise
whatever letters her
mistress might write should be sent to him. He then left a polite,
tender note for Charlotte, and returned to New-York. His first
business was to seek Montraville, and
endeavour to
convince him
that what had happened would
ultimately tend to his happiness:
he found him in his
apartment,
solitary,
pensive, and wrapped
in
disagreeable reflexions.
"Why how now, whining, pining lover?" said he, clapping him on
the shoulder. Montraville started; a
momentary flush of
resentmentcrossed his cheek, but
instantly gave place to a death-like paleness,
occasioned by
painfulremembranceremembranceawakened by that monitor,
whom, though we may in vain
endeavour, we can never entirely silence.
"Belcour," said he, "you have injured me in a tender point."
"Prithee, Jack," replied Belcour, "do not make a serious matter of it:
how could I refuse the girl's advances? and thank heaven she is
not your wife."
"True," said Montraville; "but she was
innocent when I first knew her.
It was I seduced her, Belcour. Had it not been for me, she had
still been
virtuous and happy in the
affection and protection
of her family."
"Pshaw," replied Belcour, laughing, "if you had not taken advantage
of her easy nature, some other would, and where is the difference, pray?"
"I wish I had never seen her," cried he
passionately, and starting
from his seat. "Oh that cursed French woman," added he with vehemence,
"had it not been for her, I might have been happy--" He paused.
"With Julia Franklin," said Belcour. The name, like a sudden spark
of electric fire, seemed for a moment to
suspend his faculties--
for a moment he was transfixed; but recovering, he caught
Belcour's hand, and cried--'Stop! stop! I
beseech you, name not
the lovely Julia and the
wretched Montraville in the same breath.
I am a seducer, a mean, ungenerous seducer of unsuspecting
innocence.
I dare not hope that
purity like her's would stoop to unite itself
with black, premeditated guilt: yet by heavens I swear, Belcour,
I thought I loved the lost,
abandoned Charlotte till I saw Julia--
I thought I never could
forsake her; but the heart is
deceitful, and I
now can
plainly discriminate between the
impulse of a
youthful passion,
and the pure flame of disinterested
affection."
At that
instant Julia Franklin passed the window, leaning on her
uncle's arm. She curtseyed as she passed, and, with the bewitching
smile of
modest chearfulness, cried--"Do you bury yourselves
in the house this fine evening, gents?" There was something in
the voice! the manner! the look! that was
altogether irresistible.
"Perhaps she wishes my company," said Montraville mentally,
as he snatched up his hat: "if I thought she loved me, I would
confessmy errors, and trust to her
generosity to pity and
pardon me."
He soon
overtook her, and
offering her his arm, they sauntered to pleasant
but unfrequented walks. Belcour drew Mr. Franklin on one side and entered
into a political
discourse: they walked faster than the young people,
and Belcour by some means contrived entirely to lose sight of them.
It was a fine evening in the
beginning of autumn; the last remains
of day-light
faintly streaked the
western sky, while the moon,
with pale and
virgin lustre in the room of
gorgeous gold and purple,
ornamented the
canopy of heaven with silver,
fleecy clouds,
which now and then half hid her lovely face, and, by
partly concealing,
heightened every beauty; the zephyrs whispered
softly through the trees,
which now began to shed their leafy honours; a
solemn silence reigned:
and to a happy mind an evening such as this would give serenity, and calm,
unruffled pleasure; but to Montraville, while it soothed the turbulence
of his passions, it brought increase of
melancholy reflections.
Julia was leaning on his arm: he took her hand in his,
and pressing it
tenderly, sighed deeply, but continued silent.
Julia was embarrassed; she wished to break a silence so unaccountable,
but was
unable; she loved Montraville, she saw he was
unhappy,
and wished to know the cause of his
uneasiness, but that innate
modesty,
which nature has implanted in the
female breast, prevented her enquiring.
"I am bad company, Miss Franklin," said he, at last recollecting himself;
"but I have met with something to-day that has greatly distressed me,
and I cannot shake off the
disagreeableimpression it has made
on my mind. "
"I am sorry," she replied, "that you have any cause of inquietude.