The Courting of Lady Jane | Page 7

Josephine Daskam Bacon
much, and asked him--oh, I told you how
beautifully he answered me, I will never hurt him so, never!"
"It is disgusting, it is horrible; he is twenty-five years older than
you--he might be your father!" stormed the voice.

"I--I never cared for young people before!"
Could this be Lady, this shy, faltering girl? Moved by an overmastering
impulse, the man behind the summer-house turned his head and looked
through the broken wall.
Lady Jane was blushing and paling in quick succession: the waves of
red flooded over her moved face and receded like the tide at turn. Her
eyes were piteous; her hair fell low over her forehead; she looked
incredibly young.
"Of course," said the young man bitterly, "it is a good match--a fine
match, You will have a beautiful home and everything you want."
She put out her hands appealingly. "Oh, Jack, how can you hurt me so?
You know I would live with you in a garret--on the plains--"
"Then do it."
"I shall never hurt a person so terribly to whom I have freely given my
word," she said, with a touch of her old-time decision.
Colonel Driscoll felt his blood sweeping through his veins like wine.
He was far too excited for finesse, too eager--and he had been so
willing to wait, once!--for the next sweet moment when this almost
tragedy should be resolved into its elements. He strode out into the
open space in front of the little house.
"My dear young people," he said, as they stared at him in absolute
silence, "I am, I am--" He had intended to carry the matter off jocularly,
but the sight of the girl's tear-stained face and the emotion of the
minutes before had softened and awed him. His eyes seemed yet to
hold those gray ones; he felt strangely the pressure of that soft body
against his.
"Ah, my dear," he said gently, "could you not believe me when I told
you that my one wish was to make you happy as long as I lived?
Happiness is not built on mistakes, and you must forgive us if we do

not always allow youth to monopolize them.
"She has always been like a dear child to me, Mr. Morris"--he turned to
the other man--"and you would never wish me to change my regard for
her, could you know it!
"Go with him, Lady dear, and forgive me if I have ever pained
you--believe me, I am very happy to-night."
He raised her softly as she knelt before him weeping, and kissed her
hair.
"But there is nothing to forgive," he assured her.
They went away hand in hand, happy, like two dazed children for
whom the sky has suddenly but not--because they are young--too
miraculously opened, and the shrubbery swallowed them.
He turned and strode back into the shadow. Mrs. Leroy sat crouching
on the fallen timber, her head still bent. Stooping behind her, he drew
her toward him.
"They have forgotten us by now," he whispered, "can I make you forget
them?"

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