pursued his object? Could I do so honourably, having promised to
assist his suit?--But it is all over, I and Mareschal have made
up our minds to die like men; it only remains to send you from
hence under a safe escort."
"Great powers! and is there no remedy?" said the terrified
young woman.
"None, my child," answered Vere,
gently, "unless one which you
would not
advise your father to adopt--to be the first to betray
his friends."
"O, no! no!" she answered, abhorrently yet
hastily, as if to
reject the
temptation which the
alternative presented to her.
"But is there no other hope--through flight--through mediation
--through supplication?--I will bend my knee to Sir Frederick!"
"It would be a fruitless
degradation; he is determined on his
course, and I am
equallyresolved to stand the
hazard of my fate.
On one condition only he will turn aside from his purpose, and
that condition my lips shall never utter to you."
"Name it, I
conjure you, my dear father!" exclaimed Isabella.
"What CAN he ask that we ought not to grant, to prevent the
hideous
catastrophe with which you are threatened?"
"That, Isabella," said Vere,
solemnly, "you shall never know,
until your father's head has rolled on the
bloody scaffold; then,
indeed, you will learn there was one sacrifice by which he might
have been saved."
"And why not speak it now?" said Isabella; "do you fear I would
flinch from the sacrifice of fortune for your
preservation? or
would you
bequeath me the bitter
legacy of life-long
remorse, so
oft as I shall think that you perished, while there remained one
mode of preventing the
dreadfulmisfortune that overhangs you?"
"Then, my child," said Vere, "since you press me to name what I
would a thousand times rather leave in silence, I must inform you
that he will accept for
ransom nothing but your hand in marriage,
and that conferred before
midnight this very evening!"
"This evening, sir?" said the young lady, struck with
horror at
the proposal--"and to such a man!--A man?--a
monster, who could
wish to win the daughter by threatening the life of the father
--it is impossible!"
"You say right, my child," answered her father, "it is indeed
impossible; nor have I either the right or the wish to exact such
a sacrifice--It is the course of nature that the old should die
and be forgot, and the young should live and be happy."
"My father die, and his child can save him!--but no--no--my dear
father,
pardon me, it is impossible; you only wish to guide me to
your wishes. I know your object is what you think my happiness,
and this
dreadful tale is only told to influence my conduct and
subdue my scruples."
"My daughter," replied Ellieslaw, in a tone where offended
authority seemed to struggle with parental
affection, "my child
suspects me of inventing a false tale to work upon her feelings!
Even this I must bear, and even from this
unworthysuspicion I
must
descend to vindicate myself. You know the stainless honour
of your cousin Mareschal--mark what I shall write to him, and
judge from his answer, if the danger in which we stand is not
real, and whether I have not used every means to avert it."
He sate down, wrote a few lines
hastily, and handed them to
Isabella, who, after
repeated and
painful efforts, cleared her
eyes and head
sufficiently to
discern their purport.
"Dear cousin," said the billet, "I find my daughter, as I
expected, in
despair at the
untimely and premature urgency of Sir
Frederick Langley. She cannot even
comprehend the peril in which
we stand, or how much we are in his power-- Use your influence
with him, for Heaven's sake, to modify proposals, to the
acceptance of which I cannot, and will not, urge my child against
all her own feelings, as well as those of
delicacy and propriety,
and
oblige your
loving cousin,--R. V."
In the
agitation of the moment, when her swimming eyes and dizzy
brain could hardly
comprehend the sense of what she looked upon,
it is not
surprising that Miss Vere should have omitted to remark
that this letter seemed to rest her scruples rather upon the form
and time of the proposed union, than on a rooted
dislike to the
suitor proposed to her. Mr. Vere rang the bell, and gave the
letter to a servant to be delivered to Mr. Mareschal, and, rising
from his chair, continued to
traverse the
apartment in silence
and in great
agitation until the answer was returned. He glanced
it over, and wrung the hand of his daughter as he gave it to her.
The tenor was as follows:--
"My dear kinsman, I have already urged the
knight on the point
you mention, and I find him as fixed as Cheviot. I am truly
sorry my fair cousin should be pressed to give up any of her
maidenly rights. Sir Frederick consents, however, to leave the
castle with me the
instant the
ceremony is performed, and we will
raise our followers and begin the fray. Thus there is great hope
the
bridegroom may be knocked on the head before he and the bride
can meet again, so Bell has a fair chance to be Lady Langley
A TRES BON MARCHE. For the rest, I can only say, that if she can
make up her mind to the
alliance at all--it is no time for mere
maiden
ceremony--my pretty cousin must needs consent to marry in
haste, or we shall all
repent at
leisure, or rather have very
little
leisure to
repent; which is all at present from him who
rests your
affectionate kinsman,--R. M."
"P.S.--Tell Isabella that I would rather cut the
knight's throat
after all, and end the dilemma that way, than see her constrained
to marry him against her will."
When Isabella had read this letter, it dropped from her hand, and
she would, at the same time, have fallen from her chair, had she
not been supported by her father.
"My God, my child will die!" exclaimed Vere, the feelings of
nature overcoming, even in HIS breast, the sentiments of selfish
policy; "look up, Isabella--look up, my child--come what will,
you shall not be the sacrifice--I will fall myself with the
consciousness I leave you happy--My child may weep on my grave,
but she shall not--not in this instance--reproach my memory." He
called a servant.--"Go, bid Ratcliffe come
hither directly."
During this
interval, Miss Vere became
deadly pale, clenched her
hands, pressing the palms
strongly together, closed her eyes, and
drew her lips with strong compression, as if the severe
constraint which she put upon her
internal feelings
extended even
to her
muscular organization. Then raising her head, and drawing
in her
breathstrongly ere she spoke, she said, with firmness,
--"Father, I consent to the marriage."
"You shall not--you shall not,--my child--my dear child--you
shall not
embrace certain
misery to free me from uncertain
danger."
So exclaimed Ellieslaw; and, strange and
inconsistent beings that
we are! he expressed the real though
momentary feelings of his
heart.
"Father,"
repeated Isabella, "I will consent to this marriage."
"No, my child, no--not now at least--we will
humble ourselves to
obtain delay from him; and yet, Isabella, could you
overcome a
dislike which has no real
foundation, think, in other respects,
what a match!--wealth--rank--importance."
"Father!" reiterated Isabella, "I have consented."
It seemed as if she had lost the power of
saying anything else,
or even of varying the
phrase which, with such effort, she had
compelled herself to utter.
"Heaven bless thee, my child!--Heaven bless thee!--And it WILL
bless thee with
riches, with pleasure, with power."
Miss Vere
faintly entreated to be left by herself for the rest of
the evening.
"But will you not receive Sir Frederick?" said her father,
anxiously.
"I will meet him," she replied, "I will meet him--when I must,
and where I must; but spare me now."