Columbus daily enquirer. (Columbus, Ga.) 1874-1877, August 12, 1877, Image 1
VOL. XIX. COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY, AUGUST 12, 1877. NO. 191 ‘•IT IS I—BE MOT AFRAID.*’ Matt. Xiv. 27. BY REV, 0. 8. BIRD. The storm is high; lJ«rk is th<* night; And from the aky No friendly light Shineis on the toilers at the osr, Who strive to reach the other (bore. They toil aDd pray, Those temp st tossed, And wish for day, For all seems lost— As harder blows the liowlinggale, And strength and hope and courage fail. Out through the storm, ^ And on the sea, There moves a Form In majeaty, With face Serene, and tranquil air— The toilers are overwhelmed with fear. Soft, nwett, and clear, Above the roar, TIiomc worda of cheer Their hearts assure: “No spirit speaks ; I heard your cry Upon the monnl—!o! it is X; “Bo not afraid, For it is I.” The storm is lai I; The starry sky Bends bright and fair above the sea, And calmness rusts on Galilee. So, from Thy throne. Above tile sky, Thou hear’st thegroai, The prayer, the sigh, From troubled hearts that faint from fear, While tempests shake the darkened air. 0! to us, too, Say, “It is I;” For Thou art true, And though the sky Be black with clouds, aud the mad wavo liasheH aud roars, O, Thou can’st save! 0, come and save; Hush the wild roar. And calm the wave; Aud to the shore Our foundered bark all safe convey, For wiud aud wave thy word obey. O Christ, 'tia thou! Thou stiU’st the storm; We se > Thee now— Thy radiant form Comes moving o’er the crested wave, And comes to succor and to save. A WORK OF RETRIBUTION. BY CHRISTIAN BEID. [From Appleton’s Journal.] <11 AFTER V. CONCLUSION. A very safe and delightful retreat this cave seemed to them when they found themselves sheltered within it—notwith standing the fact that they were in deep darkness, and wet almost to the skin. “Stand still,” said Thurston, releasing Miss Loring's hand for the first time, “and I will strike a match.” “Is it possible you have matches with yon?” she asked. “I am an old soldier, and an inveter ate smoker,” he answered. “I am never caught without matches, and I carry my case wrapped in leather, so that dampness cannot affect them. See here!” The next instant a feeble short lived blaze lighted np their place of refuge, and showed Miss Loring a stone, on which she immediately sat down. “We are at least sheltered from the rain,” said Thurston, as the temporary illumination died away, “and safe from the eleotricity, since water is a non-con- conductor. Now, if yon can possess your soul in patience for awhile, I hope that the storm will exhaust itself and we may go home by moonlight after all.” “I can possess my sonl in patience very easily,” she answered. “It is better to be here than to be riding along a forest road in such a storm as this. How the rain pours ! ‘And lightnings, ns they play, But show where rocks our path have crossed, Or gild the torrent’s spray.” “Von cannot be very nervous, Miss Loring, or you would not be able to quote poetry.” “I am not at all nervous.” she replied. “Pray set your mind at rest on that »"'int. I havo always felt that if I were called upon to face death itself—I mean •loath in some sudden and violent form— 1 should be as calm and collected as I am at this moment." “You might find yourself mistaken. Facing death is not such an easy matter as you think. I, who have faced it many tim<*8, know whereof I speak.” “But there was always doubt in that, was there not? If you were absolutely certain that death was before you—say, for instance, that you were on a sinking ship in mid ocean—you would have no fear of losing your composure, would you?” “I suppose not—the inevitable is said to have always a sustaining power. Un der some circumstances, however, I can imagine that, apart from courage, a man might shrink from the prospect of leav ing those whom he loved helpless behind him.” “And would that be your oase?” The abrupt question did not sonnd as it would have sounded at another time and in another place. So utterly unconven tional were their surroundings, so strange the darkness encompassing them, that the ordinary rules governing social life seemed for the present laid aside, and Ihurston replied without a moment's thought; “Not at all. If this stream before us were able to rise and overwhelm ns, I should have the satisfaction of feeling 'hat I left no human being in the world ^rse for my death, and but one person v ho would feel any active sentiment of regret.” She laughed slightly—not a mirthful laugh by any means. “Then you have the advantage over me in the possession of that one person. I should leave several human beings bet ter for my death, inasmuoh as my fortune Would be divided among them, and not one who would mourn me beyond a Week. ” The instinct of distrust was so strong in him with regard to everything which ahe said or did, that he set this speech down to mere striving after effect, and answered more lightly than he otherwise would have done. “You have surely forgotten all your admirers.” “Thank you for reminding me of them, ” she said, but* her tone changed from earnestness to mookery. “I wonder how many among them would mourn me a week! Well, we reap as we have sow ed, I suppose. People call me brilliant, beautiful and fascinating, but many a commonplace woman is richer in love than I am.” It was impossible even for Thurston to doubt the sincerity with which these words were uttered. Half bitter, and wholly sad, the magnetio voice sounded, and he felt his heart strongly stirred by its tones. A doubt of himself—of his own capabilities of resisting this woman’s power—began for the first time to cross his mind. Had Mrs. Jennings been right? Was he, after all, playing with fire? “If you are poor in love,” he said, “it is because you have flung it away from you iu carelessness or scorn. I know, Miss Loring, that devotion the most pas sionate and true has been poured out like water at your feet.” “Do you know it?” she asked; and there was not a little skepticism in her tone. “Then you are wiser than I am. But I confess I have always been incred ulous whore protestations of passion were involved. Perhaps I did not feel interest enough to put them to any test. Lite is a riddle to which I have never found a key, and I have often thought that it in not worth searching for.” There was something so pathetic in the half-weary, half-reckless ring of her voice that Thurston said, involuntarily: “You are too young, and far too liber ally endowed with every good gift of na ture to feel anything like that. Surely you cannot seriously do so.” She did not answer, for as he spoke the most vivid flash of lightning which they had yet seen illuminated the whole wild scene with an unearthly glare, leap ing from point to point among the crags while the roar of the thunder overhead seemed to shake the solid rocks around them. When darknesss again fell, veiling from sight the white sheets of rain, the surging, whirling torrents, Agatha said: “Can we not go farther back? The rain or the spray from the Btream is fall ing over me.” “Certainly we can,” he answered. “Let me strike a match. Now give me your hand.” In the farthest corner of the rock re cess he placed her, and then established himself before her so as to shield her as much as possible from the blast and dri- ing spray which even here sought them ont. “I am afraid yon are very uncomforta ble, ” he said. “That ledge on which you are sitting is a tilting perch, I suspect. If you will rest one hand on my shoul der, you may be able to steady yourself better.” “It is not necessary,” she answered. “I can steady myself very well without trou bling you further. Then she added ab ruptly: “It is very kind of you to take as much care of me as if—as if you liked me, Colonel Thurston. I assure you I appreciate it.” There was a minute’s pause before Thurston said, in a voice which sounded constrained: “Why should you think that I do not like you, Miss Loring?” “Pray do not ask such a foolish ques tion,” she answered. “You know as well as or better than I do that you do not like me; and you are very straightforward and thorough, Colonel Thurston—far too much so to pretend to be what you are not. On that account I liked you from the first,” she added. “Don’t be fright ened because I say so—I mean don’t think that I am on your conquest. I would not add you to the list of my cap tives if I could; but I should like to win you for a friend if such a thing were pos sible.” “It is not possible,” he answered hoarsely. “It is absolutely impossible. So far from being your friend, Miss Lor ing, I have never felt such deep and bit ter enmity toward any human creature as I felt toward you before I ever saw your face.” He saw that face the next instant, for another vivid lightning-flash showed it turned toward him with an expression of astonishment on its pale, clear-cut fea tures. “Deep and bitter enmity!” she repeat ed. “Did what you felt go as far as that? Enmity is generally associated with the desire to injure—did you wish to injure me, Colonel Thurston?” Even in the darkness Thnrston was con- scions of a flush to his faoe. At that moment he felt as if his desire that Ber tie's wrong might be avenged had been a very paltry thing. “If you will allow me to waive that question, Miss Loring—” he began, but she interrupted him impetuously: “I cannot allow it. I would rather —much rather—hear the truth if you will tell it. Dislike is one thing, enimity an other. Why should you have enmity to ward me?” Then he told her, with the accompa- niament of the raging storm, in the ob- scnrify which shielded their faces from sight, save when the fitful glare of the lightning revealed them for a moment. Who has not observed what strange capa bilities of expression the voice develops in circumstances like these? Is it be cause our attention is not distracted by the play of the eye and lip, that the ca dences of tone reveal so much when we listen to them in darkness? Certainly Thurston’s revealed a great deal to Agatha Loring. To make her understand how much more than an ordinary brother Ber tie was to him, he touched briefly on the history of his childhood; he told her how his father’s early death left his mother al most destitute of fortuoe; how her sec ond husband hid been a wealthy, gener ous man, whose kindness to him (Thurs ton) had been unvarying; how he was killed in battle, and with his dying lips commended Bertie to his step-son’s care; how his mother repeated the charge when she died soon after, and how near his heart the boy’s happiness had always been. Simply as the story was told, all its details were made very dear to the woman who listened. “I was forced to go to Egypt,” Thnrs ton went on. “A career there was the only one which opened to me; but when I turned my face homeward at last, after five years’ absence, it was to Bee Bertie —Bertie alone—and renew for a few months our old association. My thoughts were full of the sunny-hearted boy I left, aud I found instead a man whose whole nature had been wrecked by passion, for whom all the hopes of life had been turn ed to ashes, and whose reckless misery was pitiable to witness. He could not endure even my Bociety; aud when I came here I had just seen him start alone with his wretchedness to Europe. Consider ing this, you may judge how charitably I felt toward you, Miss Loring, who from the beginning to the end had wrought the work.” “So Bertie Egerton is your brother,” she said, slowly, after a moment’s pause. “No one told me—I had no idea of it. Not,” she added, “that Bertie Egerton is more to me than any other man, except that I knew him and liked him nntil—” “Until, like Mr. Virien, he ceased to amuse you,” said Thurston, bitterly. “I am sorry we began to speak on this sub ject. It can do no good, and, however cruel and heartless one may think a wo man, one is in courtesy bound not to speak according to one’s thoughts.” Silence for a fnll minute. The storm by this time began to abate in violence, the lightning grew less frequent and viv id, the thunder rolled more remotely. One of the peals was dying away with many distant reverberations,when Agatha spoke: “You have only heard your brother's story, so I cannot blame you for thinking of me in this way—nor have I any in tention of trying to change yonr opinion. I have bever believed in men’s hearts, as I told you once before—so, perhaps I have not treated them very tenderly. Your brother seemed to me a pleasant, impulsive, undisciplined boy, who mistook fancy for passion, and who troubled me not a little before I dismissed him. I am sorry that I should have caused him so much pain, but I could not help it.” “I do not arraign you,” said Thurston. “Your own conscience may some day do that—some day when even your heart Miss Loring, has been awakened to a sense of suffering.” “I thought you were convinced that I no heart?” said she, quietly. “How can I tell?” asked he, quickly. “Women are enigmas. God only knows what you are. I only know that you have ruined Bertie’s life—and that you would ruin mine if I gave you the chance.” He nttored the last words impetuously —uttered them without thought or calcu lation—and, if there had been a flash of light at that moment, he might have been surprised at their effect upon Agatha. She started aud clasped her hands tightly together, while for the first time in her life she lost her readiness of speech alto gether. She desired to speak, but no fit ting words occurred to her, and so it was be went on: “I did not mean to say that, but since it has been said, I owe you au explana tion. I am not iu love with you, Miss Loring, but since I have known you I have appreciated for the first time how a man might be fascinated by the charm of such a women as you are, even while—” He paused, but she finished his sen tence calmly and clearly: “Even while you do not respect her. Thank you for being frank to the last, Colonel Thurston.” “You misunderstand me,” he said. “I did not mean to be so rude as that. If I had completed my sentence I should have said, ‘even while it would be madness to trust her’ — madness to suffer one’s peace of mind and heart to be wrecked in order that a coquette might add one more victim to her list.” Silence again. The rain had ceased now, and the distant roll of thunder proved that the clouds were drawing off like snllen battalions who fire as they re treat. Agatha’s hand involuntarily went to her heart. It may be that Bertie and many another were avenged in what she suffered at that moment. But woman's pride is equal to most emergen cies, aud her s steadied her voice when at length she spoke: “It is as well, no doubt, that you are not ‘in love' with me. I hardly think I am the kind of woman to make a man happy, even—even if I loved him. My nature is not likely to prove a soil in which the domestic virtues could ever flourish, and a woman without domestic virtues is—what shall I say?—only fit to live and die a coquette, tor whom admi ration takes the place of love, flattery of respect. Well!”—what a low, soft, bit ter laugh it was she uttered!—“one must pay a price for all empire, but you may rest satisfied that I am not a bBppy wo man, Colonel Thurston.” Strange to spa—considering how ar dently he had desired that she might suffer—this assurance did not satisfy Thurston. Mad though he knew the im pulse to be, he would at that moment have given a great deal to make Agatha Loring happy—granting that it was in his power to do so. “I am sorry—” he began, but she in terposed hastily: “Do not think there is any necessity to express what yon oannot possibly feel’ Extorted sympathy is not worth mnch— and I only mentioned the fact because yon seemed to desire so mnch that I should suffer. The feeling is very natu ral, no doubt, and I do not blame yon. Meanwhile I think it has ceased raining. Can we not leave here?” “I am afraid we shall find it very diffi cult to do so,” he answered. “The stream has probably increased in volume and if it fills the gorge—as it may do— we shall be forced to stay here until it runB down.” “That is a pleasant prospect; bat do yon mean to take it for granted that it has filled the gorge?” “So far from that”—he rose as he spoke—“I mean to go and explore the passage. I am sorry to leave you here alone, bat there is no help for it. I can not take you until I have ascertained whether or not it is safe to dp so.” “Oh, pray do not leave me behind!” she pleaded. Let me go with you. I will be very cautious, and surely if it is safe for you it is safe for me.” “By no means,” he answered, “To have yon on my hands would embarrass me greatly, and in ease of danger might be fatal to us both.” “Then do not you go.” It is better to stay here and wait for daylight than to risk anything.” He put out his hand and touched her dress. “I thought so,” he said. “You are as wet as possible, and yet you talk of stay ing here until daylight. We may be forced to do so, but I shall not think of snch a thing unless it is a matter of ne cessity. Yon have a stout heart, Miss Loring, I know, but do you think it is stout enough to stay here iu the darkness alone?” - “Yes,” she answered. “If you insist upon going without me, I am not afraid to remain; but I hope you will not be rash.” “I shall certainly endeavor not to be drowned, since it wonld be very unpleas ant for you to be left here iu absolute solitude—a feminine Robinson Crusoe. I will leave some matches with you but I beg you not to venture near the waterfall nntil I return.” He gave her the matches, made her close her palm over them to preserve them from dampness, then strnck one himself, reconoitered in the neighbor hood of the fall, reported that the stream did not appear to have risen very much, stepped aronnd the angle of the rock and disappeared. A stout heart, as she had said, Agatha possessed, but it challenged all its stout ness to keep nervousness at bay in the position in which she now found herself. Nor was this to be wondered at. Let any reader of moderate imagination figure to himself the situation, and he will be like ly to decide that it was not conducive to serenity of feeling. Of course, the time of Thurston’s absence seemed immeasur ably long, and she had quite decided that he must have been drowned, when—by the light of a match struck at the en trance of the cave—she saw his figure. “I could manage to take you out, Miss Loring,” he said, “but it would be quite useless to do so since the horses are gone. “The horses gone!” “Yes. I went to the place where they were fastened, and found that they had evidently broken loose—frightened, I presume, by the thunder-storm. With Sans-Souci ten miles distant, can you suggest anything better for us to do than to stay here?” “But there are houses nearer than Sans-Sonci. We passed two or three.” “We did, but the nearest is four miles distant. Can you walk four miles?” “I think I can—at least I can try, and it will be better than sitting here in wet clothes. ” He felt that this was true; so, having safely made their way through the gorge —a much more difficult matter after the late flood than Agatha had at all reckon ed upon—they set out upon a four mile walk. It was a walk which neither of them was ever likely to forget. The clouds had by this time parted, and the moon shone forth sufficiently to guide them on their way and prevent their wandering from the road—sufficiently, also, to re veal the loneliness and mystery which surrounded them. Everything above and below as wet as wet could be; but they walked on courageously, endeavoring the while to sustain their spirits by cheerfu 1 conversation. This conversation ranged over a very wide field, but it did not again touch in the remotest manner on the personal topics discussed in the cave. It was past midnight when they reach ed their destination. During the last mile Agatha had not declined Thurston’s as sistance, and many a long day afterwards he was haunted by the picture of that moonlit forest-road, and by the memory of the lithesome figure that hung in weari ness on his arm, of the pale fair face on which the soft light fell through over shadowing boughs. All things end at last, and this ended when they emerged into an open space aud saw before them a substantial farm house standing in the moonlight, with that supreme air of quietude which houses wear at night when the inhabitants are wrapped in slumber. So deeply wrapped in slumber were these inhabitants, that Thurston thundered at the door until he was nearly exhausted before he succeed ed in rousing them. When once fairly waked, however, they were more hospita ble than might have been expected under the circumstances. Having heard who the visitors were, the farmer volunteered to hitch up his horses and drive them to Sans-Souci, while his sons kindled a fire and his wife made some coffee. All of these offers were gladly accepted, and af ter Agatha had somewhat dried herself, and the coffee had been made and drunk, they entered the obliging farmer's jersey and were driven away. Sans-Sonci presented no appearance of life as they approached in the white moonlight, and Agatha said, smiling: “Oar friends certainly do not seem to be suffering any anxiety on our account.” “I suppose they quieted their minds by fancying that we took refuge at some wayside house,” Thurston answered, “and the horses have probably not ar rived.” After they had alighted at the door and the worthy farmer had been dismissed with many thanks, Thnrston turned to his companion. “Before we part, Miss Loring,” he said, abruptly, “I should like to hear you say that you pardon—that is if you can hon estly do so—the many harsh speeches I have uttered to you. I had no right whatever to ntter them, and 1 should be glad if yon would promise to forget them.” She looked up with a sort of startled wistfulness on her face and in her eyes. “You have uttered no harsh speeches that were not honest speeches, Colonel Thurston,” she said, simply—“none which I have not already pardoned. But why do you ask this—now?” “Because now is my opportunity,” be answered. “Before you wake to-morrow —nay, this morning—I shall leave Sans- Sonci. I made all my arrangements to do so before we started on our excur sion.” She did not heed the last words—in fact she did not hear them, And he said, “I shall have left Sans-Sonci,” a change swift a3 thought came over her face—an expression of wonder, appeal, and, above all, pain—which no art on earth could have simulated, and which, like a flash of lightning, laid bare her heart before the man who looked at her. In that instant it was borne to him with the force of a revelation that his revenge was more complete than he had ever dreamed to make it. For one wild moment his heart leaped up madly—but it was only for a moment. He was one of the men who in an emergency cannot only think bnt act promptly, aod as he was about to speak again, the door open ed, and on the threshold appeared Mr. Jennings, arrayed in a dressiDg-gown, with a lamp in his hand. “By Jove!” he said. “So yon are here! Lucy insisted that she heard the sound of horses’ feet. Where on earth have have you been all this time?” “In tbe Devil’s Gorge, where you were kind enough to leayg us,” Thurston an swered, dryly. “I will give you an ac count of our adventures, but we will not detain Miss Loring, who is very mnch fa tigued. Good-night,” he added, taking the hand of the latter, as they entered the hall. “I hope you will feel no ill effects from yonr drenching and exercise.” “Is it good-by ?” she asked, in a low voice. “It is good-bye,” he answered. If his life had depended on the effort, he could have said no more, nor did she utter another word. She only drew her cold, slender hand from his clasp, and, with a slight salutation to Mr. Jennings, passed up the broad staircase aud out of eight. CHAFFER VI. By the time the inmates of Sans-Souci were assembled round the breakfast-ta ble, discussing their adventurous expedi tion, Thurston was many miles away traveling as fast as steam conld take him from the scene of it. He hardly knew—he certainly did not care—where he was going. He had spo ken truly when be told Miss Loring that he had decided to leave Sans-Sonci after Mrs. Jennings had altered her warning the day before; bat since that determina tion was taken, an age seemed to have passed, so entirely do we “live in feeling, not in figures on a dial.” Those hours in the storm, the lonely midnight walk, above all that glance of Agatha’s which revealed so mnch of which he had not dreamed—these things made a gap be tween his life as it had been and his life as it was, which even his thoughts could scarcely bridge. It is not to be supposed that, in the course of thirty-three years, he had not suffered more or less in matters of the heart, yet he now found himself for the first time under the dominion of a pas sion—no fancy or sentiment, but a feel ing strong as death and overmastering life. Agatha Loring’s face was constant ly before him, the music of her voice dominated every sound that he could find a cure for the infatuation in absence, as he had found a cure for the fever fits of his younger days. The idea of yielding, as many men would have yielded, did not for a mo ment occur to him. He knew that with his whole soul he loved the woman who had ruined Bertie’s happiness, and who would ruin (he felt assured) the happi ness of any man who trusted his life in her hands; but he said to himself that this love was a mere temporary madness, since no deep passion could flourish where trust was lacking. “It is an insanity which will pass as quickly as it has come,” he thought. “As for that expression in her eyes last night, I must have imagined it—it is simply im possible that such a woman could find her heart for such a man as I am!” But to think this was one thing, and to feel it another. Trust her? No, he did not trust her. He believed her to be a coquette and actress through all her nature; bnt nevertheless her face as be saw it last—pale, appealing, with eyes that revealed a hnndred fold more than speech could ntter—haunted him, turn where he wonld. Nor was this the record of one day, one week, one month. He pnt the breadth of States between himself and Sans-Sonci; he plnnged into the business which partly brought him to Amerioa; he sought social distractions; bnt the end was as the beginning. “When Agatha Loring is done with a man he is fit for nothing bnt to go to the devil as fast as may be,” Bertie had said in the mad recklessness of his passion; and this in lesser degree Thnrston felt now. He was not ready to go to the devil; but he found existence robbed of its savor aa it had never been robbed before. Tor mented by passion, by longing, by regret, by self-contempt—what wonder that all things seemed to him worse than empty, less than uninteresting? If Agatha Lor ing had treated him as she, had treated many another, had flirted with and dis carded him, he fancied that his cure wonld have been rapid and complete. Bat he could not forget that she had showed him glimpses of her nature which he felt sure she had showed to no other man—of its weariness, of its yearning, of its ca pabilities for higher things—and so, be tween opposing opinions and wavering feelings, the figW went on. Nothing on earth is more weary than snch a combat, and it was no slight addi tion to Thurston’s trouble that he shrank from meeting Bertie, though the cause of this shrinking would not bear analy sis. His affection had not altered in the least; bnt he felt as if the influence which had entered the lives of both with snch fatefal result would stand as an es tranging shadow between them. So the months slipped away, and November found him still lingering in Amerioa. By this time he determined he must leave the conntry. He had exhausted his last excuse for remaining, and Bertie, who had been waiting in Paris for weeks, was growing restless and inquisitive. De siring to go direcot to France, Thurston, therefore, took passage on a French steamer, which chanced to be that vessel of tragio fate, the Ville da Havre. Before taking his departure he had one last struggle with himself. Since he left Sans-Souci he had heard nothing of Aga tha Loring; aud it cost him no slight ef fort to go away frith the silence around her name unbroken. That it was better so he was well aware—for what good end could knowledge serve?—but what is there on earth cau so persistently ignore wisdom as the human heart? Thurston, however, turned a deaf ear to all that it conld urge, and, being a man who held bis desires in a strong lash of control, he found himself at last on shipboard with out having received a single item of in formation regarding the woman whom he bad vainly tried to banish from memory. There is no donbt that Fate seems sometimes to take a malignant pleasure in baffling ns when we feel ourselves most secure. So Thurston felt—though it was a very dreary kind of security—as he paced the deck of the Ville du Havre, aud saw the great expanse of ocean in front, the land receding far and faint be hind. “The fight is over, the victory won,” he said to himself, and at that mo ment a woman’s langh floated to him. A woman's langh! There was surely nothing remarkable in such a sound, yet as it fell on his ear, his heart seemed to stand still. He turned abruptly and fonnd himself face to face with Agatha Loring. "She was as much astonished as himself, aud perhaps as much agitated; but beyond a certain change of color and expression perceptible on both faces, nei ther of them betrayed this agitation. To people of their class conventionalities are second nature, and the lookers on had no reason to suppose their meeting to be other than that of two ordinary acquaint ances. They shook hands and uttered a few commonplaces. Then Thurston said: “I had no idea of meeting you here.” “I certainly had not the least idea of meeting you," she answered. “No doubt you are on your way to Egypt?” “I am on my way to Paris at present. I shall not return to Egypt until the end of the year. “You, I suppose, are only going abroad for pleasure?” “For pleasure, yes—and for health, also.” He noticed then that she looked frailer aud more shadowy, than when he saw her last—the alabaster complexion was more transparent, the lines of the face more attenuated, the limpid eyes larger. “Have you been ill?” he asked quickly. “I did not know—I have not heard.” “Do yon remember our drenching in the Devil’s Gorge?” she asked. “I took a cold at that time which cast me a se vere illness, from the effect of which I have never fully recovered. The doctors therefore have ordered me abroad—which is a pleasant prescription.” “I have often wondered if you did not suffer from that adventure,” he said. “But 1 did not fear anything like this. You must have been very seriously ill. If I had known—’’ He stopped abrubtly. If he bad known, what could he have done? Agatha Lor ing might be sick unto death, but what right had he to express more than the concern of a common acquaintance? Per haps she felt this—at least she looked at him with cool^ almost haughty, surprise. “One must pay a price for all diver sions,” said she carelessly, “and some times it is heavier than one anticipates. I hope we shall all have a pleasant voyage, though the season is rather against us. Have you ever crossed the ocean before in November?” After a few more remarks they parted —she to rejoin her party, he to go and control the tumult of his thoughts alone with a cigar. To do so was not easy. One glance from those wonderful eyes, one tone of that magical voice, had been enough to shatter all his fancied victory. What had months of combat availed? He asked the question in a sort of despair, and the answer was less than nothing. The fas cination which controlled him was deeper now than when he left Sans -Souci; tbe passion that he vainly imaged he had crashed was strong enough to defy his utmost efforts to subdue it. A sense of impotence—of being overmastered by a Fate relentless as that of a Greek trage dy—began to possess him. He had thought that the ehapter in his life in which Agatha Loring’s name was written was closed forever, and lo! here on the very ship which was to have borne him from even the memory of his infatuation he found her. What part in his life, and perhaps in Bertie’s life, was she destined yet to play? “One way or another she will come between ns," he said to himself. “Of that I have felt an instinct from the first. Well, it is nseless to straggle against the inevitable. ‘If the gods force him, who can shan his fate?’ ” If he conld not shan his fate, he fonnd, however, that it was easy enough—easier, indeed, than be liked—to shun Miss Lor ing. Unless be songht her attention di rectly, she never seemed conscious of his presence. Here, as elsewhere, she bad a court of cavaliers around her, aud it was with a very sore, jealous feeling that he watched her graceful, subtile coquetry, the long promenade with one, the quiet flirtation with another, the seductive charm with all. Plainly Agatha Loring was Agatha Loring still, aud had not lost a single attribute of her distinctive char acter. The realization of this might have cured Thnrston, bnt—bnt it did not do so. He felt sore that he had been worse than a fool ever to dream that she had given him a deepor thought than she gave any other victim of her caprice; bnt the assurance was by no means consoling. In fact, he had reach ed that stage of passion when reason forsakes a man, and he is ready to act with a recklessness to which be often looks back as veritable madness. Several days passed, and the steamer was in mid-ocean, before there came any change in the situation. Then toward sunset one evening, Thurston, by a rare ohanoe, fonnd Agatha on deck alone. She was leaning over the bulwark, watching the sun sink in the vast expanse of heaving sea—his last rays gliding in the tossing waves with red glory, and as Thnrston drew near, he saw her face in profile before she observed his approach. Seeing it thus, he was strnck by its ex pression of strangely wistful and almost bitter sadness—an expression so new to his knowledge of it, that he hesitated for an instant before advancing to her side. “I hope I do not disturb you, Miss Loring, ” he said, “but your attention is usually so much engrossed that I have seen very little of you; therefore you must pardon me if I grasp au opportune ty like the present.” “Why should you grasp it?” she asked, turning toward him. “What is there that you and I can say to eaoh other, Colonel Thurston? I supposed that yon held aloof from me becaose you were too hon est to talk society platitudes to a woman whom you have never forgiven, never learned to respect. Pray leave me in that opinion to the last.” “I oannot leave yon in an utterly mis taken opinion,” he said. “It is no such reason as that which has made me hold aloof from yon; it is beceuse I distrust my own strength of mind and purpose. See here, Miss Loring, if yon care for one more triumph, I will give it to you— the only thing on earth I can give yon. Do yon remember that night in the Dev il’s Gorge, when I told you that you had ruined Bertie’s life, and that you would ruin mine if I gave yon the chance? Well, yon have rained it. Since I parted with yon I have never known a day, hardly an hoar of peace. Do not suppose”—as her lips partly unolosed—“that I blame you for this. I blame nothing save my own folly. Bat the fact remains—I have lin gered in America because I dreaded to go and meet Bertie with this madness upon me. I fought against the overwhelming desire to see you again, as if that desire had been a personal enemy. I forced myself to enter this ship without having gratified it, and almost the first face I met was yourH !” She looked np at him, and something in her appealing eyes recalled to his memory the nnforgotten expression with which those eyes met his when they part ed at Sans-Souci. “It was not my fault,” she said. “How conld I know?” “Your fault!” he repeated. “Have I implied such a thing ? Do not think me more of a brute than I am. Ten minutes ago I never dreamed that I should ever talk to you like this—but you will pardon me. The consciousness of power is al ways sweet to a woman, aud in all your career of conquest you have never tested —you never can test—that power more thoroughly than you have tested it with me.” She was sileut; her faoe bent down ward, so that he conld not see it, her hand clasping the scarlet drapery of her shawl closer aronnd her slender figure. The Bun was gone, and twilight began to fall over the wide waste of tossing wa ters, when she spoke: “Will you believe me if I say I am surprised aud sorry? I never dreamed of testing my power on you; I never imag ined for a moment that I conld sncceed if I attempted to do so. But surely one whom you dislike aud despise cannot harm yon much” He uttered a short laugh. “That depends on your definition of ‘mnch.’ If I were wise, I should not let you ham me, certainly; bnt I am not wise. You are mistaken, however, in thinking that I ‘dislike and despise’ you; though if ^ had ever doubted how little the love of one man is to you, I should have been convinced daring the past few days. Enough of this, however! It is unpardonable of me to talk to you iu such a strain. Now that the snu has gone, I fear that you must find the air very chilly. Shall I take yon below?” “Not yet,” she answered. “Listen to me for a moment, and believe that your brother and yourself are both well aveng ed. Look here! ”—she drew off her glove and showed her hand and wrist wasted to a shadowy degree of thinness—“I have not told the doctors, but I tell you that suffering of mind, not illness of body, has wrought this. I was intangibly wea ry and restless when I met yon at Sans- Sonci, bnt since then I have been con sumed by a fever of the soul, which has made me what you see. Do you know what I was thinking when yon oame to my side? I was wondering if down •re”—she pointed to the sea—“I might | not find rest and forgetfulness. Life has held for me so mnch outward triumph, so little inward peace, that the thought of death has no terror for me. If it came this moment I think I conld hold ont my arms and welcome it.” Not even Thnrston conld doubt the sin cerity in her voice, the passionate earn estness on her face as she spoke. She could not have been less artificial if death had been indeed before her, and recog nizing this, he recognized also all that it signified. Involuntarily his hand fell on the one which she had ungloved, and closed over it. “Tell me,” he said, “why such a change has come over you since we parted at Sans-Souci? Agatha”—as she strove to draw away from him—“your eyes told me something when we said good by, which your lips must tell me now.” “Let me go!” she gasped. This is madness, for which—if I answered you— no one would be so sorry as yourself. Let me go—you must let me go! ” “Not until you tell me whether I am wrong or right. Agatha, can it be possi ble that you loved me then? that you love me now?” Gray and deep had twilight fallen over the sea, but not so gray and deep bnt that when she lifted her face he read his an swer on it. “Yon are mad,’’she said. “Remember that this binds yon to nothing—nothing! Everything stands between us—your brother, my past life, your deep distrust of me—everything! But you are right. I loved you then, as I love you now. It is retribution, I suppose—you know you hoped that it might fall upon me, and yon onght to be glad that it has done so.” “Glad!” he repeated, passionately. “Yes, I am glad, thongh God only knows whether it means happiness or misery." If he had known the fate toward which they were hastening, he might have spar ed himself that donot. It meant happi ness for a few short honrs, and these hoars comprised all their span of life. “After long grief and pain,” the end which neither had anctioipated was given them as a gracious boon of heaven, while the ship went forward to meet her doom. Those m whose memory that tragedy has not been effaced by later calamities will remember that the collision which sunk the Ville du Havre in less than twelve minntes occurred at two o’clock in the momiDg, when the passengers were all wrapped in slumber. It chanced, however, that Thnrston was not among the number of these sleepers. He had turned into his berth not long before and was lying awake when the ship struck. A knowledge of the danger instantly flashed upon him, and springing to his feet he threw on his clothes and went on deck. Here his worst forebodings were confirmed by the terror and confusion which reigned supreme. He took in the situation in all its hopelessness at once, and after a minnte spent in trying to learn what chance there was of launching tbe boats, he hastened back to the cabin, and made his way to Agatha Loring’s state room. As he reached the door, it opened, and she came out—pale, but perfectly com posed. There was no time for questions or assurances. The ship was sinking fast and their only hope was in gaining the deck. By dint of struggling, Thurston gain ed it before the vessel went down. Then they had one minnte—only one minnte —for last words. “If you can save yourself, don’t think of me, Agatha said. “I will try and not cliDg to you as women are said to do.” He smiled a little. “Do you think I will ever let yon go?” he said. “We are together now for life or death.” He olasped her in his arms, and their lips met in the first, last kiss of love. So they went down together—to death. [the end.] —Song of the baker—“I knead thee every hour. ” —A cross-eyed minister should never get np and read the hymn, “I will gnide thee with mine eye.” —If Mrs. Potaphar had adopted Judge Hilton’s rule excluding Jew boarders, the whole course of history might have been changed. —A dentist advertises that he inserts teeth cheaper than anybody else. He might find a bull dog that would do it still cheaper. —What is the difference between a girl aud a night cap? One is born to wed aud the other is worn to bed. —The person who advertised for a young man to take care of a span of horses of a religious turn of mind, now wants a cook to work in a kitchen of a pious character. —A Western paper, in an obitnary no tice of a subscriber’s son, says: “He was an uncommon smart boy. Had a lit tle too mnch curiosity, or be wouldn't have peered so fatally into the muzzle of his father’s shot gun.” —Little boy—“Please, I want the doc tor to come and see mother.” Servant— “Dootor’s ont. Where do you come from?” Little boy—“What! don’t you know me? Why, we deal with you. We had a baby from here last week!” —The Kev. Mrs. Van Oott wants somebody to “stand on the battlements of hell and Bhake her glorified white robes at old Satan.” Why, yoa dear old girl, Satan isn’t afraid of an empty night gown. —“I don’t believe in fashionable churches,” said a lady, reoently; “bnt af ter all, considering that we are all to go to the same heaven, perhaps it’s better to keep up the social distinctions as long as we can.” —“My dear,” said an affectionate wife to her husband, as she looked ont of the window, “do yon notice how green and beautiful the grass looks on the neigh boring hills?” “Well,” was tbe nnpoetio response, “what other color would you have it at this time of year?” —W T hy is it that none of the cuts of the magnificent dining cars on the great railway lines represent a man ponriDg a onp of hot coffee down his shirt front, while the lady opposite him pours a pint of milk into her neighbor’s lap? The ar tists appear to misa all the thrilling incii den Vi,