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Works of Ellen Wood

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by Ellen Wood


  “And no wonder,” said Julia. “Did you ever hear anyone talk as she does? She never knows when to stop.”

  Amy thought she never had; but it was amusing and pleasant talk; there could be no dismals where Anne was. It was light talk, but still it was pleasant, and made everyone in a good mood, or at least cheerful.

  “I shall see you early to-morrow, Miss Neville,” said Julia. “I have so much to say to you.”

  “If you do not come to bed, Mag,” said Anne, from the half-opened door, “I declare I will talk in my sleep to vex you.”

  Amy went with them as far as the baize door which separated this wing of the house from the other rooms, and then bid good-night to her visitors.

  As the light from the candle Anne carried vanished, she was surprised at seeing a dim light glimmering through the key-hole of an unoccupied room opposite. It was but momentary, yet while it lasted it threw a long, thin, bright streak of light across the corridor, full against the wall close beside where she stood.

  In some surprise, she retraced her steps, and drew aside the window curtain of her room and tried to look out. But there was no moon; it was one of those dark, pitchy nights, with not a star visible, betokening either rain or another fall of snow.

  Full of conjecture as to whether her eyes had deceived her or not, and feeling too timid to venture out again, Amy went to bed, and tried to imagine all manner of solutions as to the cause of the light, all of which she in turn rejected as utterly improbable. She had satisfied herself it was not the moon’s rays; then what could it be?

  She recalled to memory the day Nurse Hopkins showed her over the house. The picture gallery, with its secret stairs leading into some quaint old unused rooms, with their old worn-out hangings and antique furniture; ghostly-looking, and certainly dismal and solitary, in being so far removed from that part of the house now teeming with life and gaiety; yet Nurse apparently had no fear, but walked boldly on, and appeared in no hurry to emerge into the life beyond, as she talked of the former greatness of the Hall. To Amy, however, the feeling of utter loneliness, the dull, dead sound of the opening and shutting of doors, as they passed through, sent a chill to her heart. Even the jingling of the ponderous bunch of keys Nurse carried jarred against her nerves, so that perhaps her own shadow might have startled and alarmed her.

  But although Nurse, in a loud tone of voice, seemed never tired of recounting the by-gone grandeur, which had been handed down to her from the sayings of former housekeepers, yet her voice had sunk into a whisper, as in passing by that door, she stopped and said, “No one ever goes in there. It was old Mrs. Linchmore’s room,” as if the simple fact of its having been old Mrs. Linchmore’s room forbade further enquiry, and was in itself sufficient to check all idle curiosity.

  Amy passed by the door whenever she went into the long corridor. The room stood at one end, facing the entire length of the passage; but the door was at the side adjoining the door of another room, and opposite the baize door, so that Amy’s dress almost brushed its panels in passing by, and never could she recollect having once seen the door standing open, or the signs of a housemaid’s work near it.

  Perhaps the room was held sacred by Mr. Linchmore as having been his mother’s; perhaps he it was who was there now, although it did seem strange his going at such an hour, being past twelve o’clock by Anne’s watch when they parted. Still, it might be his peculiar fancy to go, when secure from interruption and the remarks of others.

  All people had strange fancies; perhaps this was his. And partly comforted and assured with the conclusion she had arrived at, and partly wearied with the effort, Amy fell asleep.

  CHAPTER XIV.

  MEMORIES OF THE PAST.

  “And the hours of darkness and the days of gloom,

  That shadow and shut out joys are come;

  And there’s a mist on the laughing sea,

  And the flowers and leaves are nought to me;

  And on my brow are furrows left,

  And my lip of ease and smile is reft;

  And the time of gray hairs and trembling limbs,

  And the time when sorrow the bright eye dims,

  And the time when death seems nought to fear,

  So sad is life, — is here, is here!”

  Mary Anne Brown.

  Amy passed a restless night, and awoke oppressed in spirit. It was yet early, but she arose and dressed hastily, determined on seeking the fresh air, hoping that, that, would in a measure restore her drooping spirits.

  It was a bright, clear morning, and Amy felt some of its brightness creep over her as she picked her way across the hard, uneven ground towards the wood. Here the trees glistened with the frost, and birds chirped among the bare boughs, or hopped fearlessly about the path. She walked on heedlessly, striking deeper into the wood, and approached, almost before she was aware of it, Goody Grey’s cottage. How bleak and desolate it looked now the branches of the tall trees stripped of their green foliage waved over it; while the dim, uncertain shadows streamed through them palely, and the wind whistled and moaned mournfully as it rushed past the spot where Amy stood deliberating whether she should continue her walk or not. A moment decided her on knocking lightly at the door, but receiving no reply, she lifted the latch and entered.

  Goody Grey was seated in the high-backed arm chair, but no song issued from her lips; they were compressed together with some strong inward emotion, and she either did not see, or took no notice of Amy’s entrance. The ivory box stood open on the table beside her, while in her hand she held some glittering object, seemingly a child’s coral. On this Goody Grey’s eyes were fixed with an expression of intense emotion. She clasped it in her hands, pressing it to her lips and bosom, while groans and sobs shook her frame, choking the words that now and then rose to her lips, and she seemed to Amy’s pitying eyes to be suffering uncontrollable agony. How lovingly sometimes, in the midst of her anguish, she gazed at the toy! How she fondled and caressed it; rocking her body backwards and forwards in the extremity of her emotion. Amy stood quietly in the doorway, not venturing to speak, although she longed to utter the compassionate words that filled her heart. At length, feeling that under the present circumstances her visit would only be considered an intrusion, and could scarcely be a time to offer or attempt consolation, she turned to go. As she did so, the skirt of her dress became entangled in a chair close by, and overturned it. The noise roused Goody Grey; she hastily thrust the trinket into her bosom, and started up.

  “Who are you?” she exclaimed fiercely. “What do you here? How dare you come?”

  “I did not mean to disturb you,” replied Amy, somewhat alarmed at her voice and manner.

  Goody Grey paid no heed to her words, but walked up and down the small room with hasty steps, her excitement increasing every moment, while her features became convulsed with passion; some of her hair escaped from under her cap, and floated in long, loose locks down her shoulders, while her eyes looked so bright and piercing that Amy shrank within herself as the old woman approached her, and exclaimed passionately —

  “Do you think it possible a woman could die with a lie on her lips, and revenge at her heart? with no repentance! — no remorse! — no pity for one breaking heart! — no thought of an hereafter! — no hope of heaven! Do you think it possible a woman could die so?”

  “No. It is not possible,” replied Amy; striving to speak calmly, “no woman could die so.”

  “True, — true; she was no woman, but a fiend! a very devil in her hate and revenge!”

  “Ah, speak not so,” replied Amy, as the first startling effect of her words and wild looks had passed away. “Say not such dreadful words. If any woman could have lived and died as you say, she deserves your pity, not your condemnation.”

  “Pity! she’ll have none from me. I hated her! she wrecked my happiness when I was a young girl, and for what? but to gratify her insane jealousy. Do you see this?” said she, taking off her cap, and shaking down the thick masses of almost snow-white h
air; “it was once golden, and as fair as yours, but a few short months of — of agony changed it to what you see, and drove me mad; she worked the wreck; she caused the — the madness, and gloried in it. And yet you wonder that I condemn her?”

  Her hair was the silvered hair of an old woman, and as it fell from its concealment down her shoulders almost to her feet, throwing a pale, softened, mournful shadow over her excited features, Amy was struck with the beauty of her face; she must once have been very beautiful; while her face, lighted up as it now was, was not the face of an aged woman. No; it must have been, as she herself said, a sudden, severe sorrow years ago that had helped to change that once luxuriant golden hair to grey. Her figure, as she stood confronting Amy, was slight, and by no means ungraceful; that also bore no trace of age, and although she generally walked with the aid of a thick staff, it was more to steady the weakness of her steps than to support the tottering, uncertain ones of old age.

  Who? and what had caused such a wreck? It must have been some terrible blow to have sent her mad in her youth, and to have left her even now, at times — whenever the dark remembrance of it swept over her — hardly sane in more mature age. Would the divulging of the secret remove the sad weight from her heart, or quiet the agony of her thoughts? It might in a measure do so, but Amy shrank from sustaining alone the frenzy that might ensue, and as Goody Grey repeated her last question of “Do you wonder that I condemn her?” Amy, with the view of soothing her, replied gently —

  “She may have lived hardened in sin, but through the dark shadows remorse must have swept at times, and stung her deeply. Besides, her life and death were most wretched, and deserve your pity more than anger.”

  “Had she known remorse, she never could have died so revengefully. I don’t believe she ever felt its sting, and as for pity, she would have scorned it!” and Goody Grey laughed a wild, bitter laugh at the thought.

  “Did she injure you so very deeply?”

  “How dare you ask me that question? Are not you afraid to? Don’t you know it stirs up all my worst passions within me, and sends me mad, — mad do I say? No, no, I am not mad now; I was once, but that, like the rest, is past — past for ever!” and her voice changed suddenly from its fierceness to an almost mournful sadness.

  “Did you know her well?” Amy ventured to ask, notwithstanding the rebuff her last question had met with.

  “Aye, did I; too well — too well! Would to God I had never seen her, it would have been better had I died first: but I live, if such a life as mine can be called living. And she is dead and I haven’t forgiven her; never will; unless,” said she, correcting herself, “unless — oh God! I dare not think of that; does it not bring sorrow — deep, intense, despairing sorrow, sorrow that scorches my brain?” and either exhausted with her fierce excitement, or overwhelmed with the recollection of the cause of her grief, she sank down in a chair, and covering her face with her hands, moaned and rocked herself about afresh.

  For the moment Amy felt half inclined to leave her — her strange words and wild manner had so unnerved her — but a glance at the sorrow-stricken face, as it was suddenly lifted away from the hands that had screened it, decided her upon remaining for at least a few minutes longer. Perhaps the compassionate feeling at her heart had something to do with the decision, or it might be she hoped to say a few words of comfort to the sorrowing creature so relentless in her bitter feelings towards one who had evidently been remorseless in her revenge, and unforgiving even in her death; one who had injured her, if not irreparably, at least deeply and lastingly.

  As Amy stood deliberating how best to shape her words so as not to irritate her afresh, Goody Grey spoke, and her voice was no longer fierce or passionate, but mournfully sad.

  “I am lonely,” she said, “very lonely. There are days when the thoughts of my heart drive me wild, and are more than I can bear; there are days when I feel as if death would be welcome, were it not for one hope, one craving wish. Will this hope, this wish, ever be realised? Shall I ever be any other than a broken-hearted, despairing woman?”

  “The clouds may clear — sunshine may burst forth when least expected.”

  “May! That’s what I repeat to myself day and night — day and night. The two words, ‘Hope on,’ are ever beating to and fro in my brain, like the tickings of that clock, and sometimes I persuade myself that the time-piece says, ‘Hope on, hope on.’ But only the years roll on — the hope is never realised; and soon my heart will whisper, and the clock will tick, ‘no hope, no hope.’”

  “Do you never earnestly pray that God will lighten the heavy load that weighs on your spirits or that He will bring comfort to your sorrowing heart?”

  “Do I ever cease to pray; or is there not one fervent prayer always on my lips and heart? Day after day I bewail my sins, and ask God’s forgiveness and mercy for my poor, broken, contrite heart, and sometimes I rise from my knees, feeling at peace with — with even her. But then wild thoughts come back; thoughts that utterly distract me, and which I can neither control nor prevent, and then I go mad, and don’t know what I say or think. But enough of my sufferings. You can neither heal nor cure them; even now you have seen too much, and betrayed me into saying more than I ought. Tell me what led you to my cottage so early?”

  “I could not sleep last night,” replied Amy, “and so strolled out, thinking the air would revive me.”

  “It is strange you could not sleep,” replied Goody Grey, speaking as she usually did to strangers, in a half solemn, impressive manner. “You who have health, youth, and innocence to help you. I seldom sleep, but then I am old and careworn. Why could you not sleep?” and she looked as though she would pierce the inmost recesses of Amy’s heart.

  “I can scarcely tell you why, perhaps my fancy misled me; but whatever the cause, I would rather not speak of it.”

  “Well perhaps it were best so, and better still if the parent bird looked after her young, when the kite may find its way to her nest.”

  Amy looked up quickly.

  “I scarcely understand your words,” she replied, “or I am at a loss to understand their meaning.”

  “I meant you no harm, ’twas for your good I spoke. Others have thought like you and been deceived. Others have hoped like you, and been deceived. Others have been as loving and true as you may be, and been deceived. When you think yourself the safest, then remember my words, ‘when you think that you stand, take heed lest you fall.’”

  There was a tone of kindness lurking beneath her words, so that Amy regretted she had spoken so hastily, and felt half inclined to tell her so, when Goody Grey again spoke.

  “Who is that tall, dark, fine-looking man; a Linchmore in his walk, and perhaps his manner and proud bearing, but there the resemblance ceases; the expression of the face is different, the eye has no cunning in it, but looks at you steadily, without fear? He is brave and noble-looking. Who is he?”

  “I think you must mean Mr. Vavasour,” replied Amy.

  “Vavasour,” repeated Goody Grey, thoughtfully, “the name is strange to me, yet — stay — a dim recollection floats across my brain that I have heard the name before; but my memory fails me sadly at times, and my thoughts grow confused as I strive to catch the thread of some long-forgotten, long-buried vision of the past. Well, perhaps it is best so. Life is but a span, and I am weary of it — very weary.”

  “We are all at times desponding,” said Amy; “even I feel so sometimes at the Hall, and there you know the house is filled with visitors, and is one continued round of gaiety.”

  “Yes,” said Goody Grey, as if speaking to herself. “Amidst the gayest scenes the heart is often the saddest. But,” continued she, addressing Amy, “your sweet face looks as though no harsh wind had ever blown across it; may it be long before a cold word or look mars its sunshine. But there is a young girl at the Hall; one amongst the many visiting there who has a proud look that will work her no good. I have warned her, for I can trace her destiny clearly. But she has a spirit; a rev
engeful spirit, that will never bend till it breaks. She scorned my warning and thought me mad; yet evil will overtake her, and that, too, when least she expects it. Have nothing to do with her. Avoid her. Trust her not. And now go you away, and let the events of this morning be buried in your heart. I would not that all should know Goody Grey, as you know her; think of the old woman with pity; not with doubt and suspicion.”

  “I will. I do think of you with pity,” replied Amy. “How can I do otherwise when I have seen the anguish of your heart.”

  “Hush! recall not thoughts that have passed almost as quickly as they came. And now farewell, I am tired and would be alone.”

  As Amy came in sight of the Hall on her way home, she met Mr. Vavasour.

  “Where have you been to so early?” said he; “I have watched you more than an hour ago cross the park and make for the wood, but there I lost sight of you, and have been wandering about ever since in the vain hope of finding you. Where have you been?”

  But Amy was in no mood for being questioned. She felt almost vexed at it, and answered crossly —

  “I should have thought Mr. Vavasour might have found something better to do than to dog my footsteps. I had no idea my conduct was viewed with suspicion.”

  “You are mistaken, Miss Neville, if you think I view any conduct of yours with suspicion; such an unworthy thought never entered my head. If I have unwittingly offended, allow me to apologise for that and my unpardonable curiosity which has led me into this scrape.”

  “Where no offence is meant, no apology is required,” said Amy, coldly. “It would have been better had Mr. Vavasour remained at home instead of venturing abroad to play the spy!”

 

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