The Argosy - Vol. 51, No. 5, May, 1891 by Various
page 78 of 151 (51%)
page 78 of 151 (51%)
|
her husband and shed happy tears. She was his lawful wife, and the
little one was his lawful child. True, there was an elder son; but, compared with what had been feared, that was a slight evil. "We must make them true brothers, Eliza," whispered Philip Hamlyn. "They shall share alike all I have and all I leave behind me. And our own little one must be called James in future." "And you and I will be good friends from henceforth," cried Captain Monk warmly, clasping Philip Hamlyn's ready hand. "I have been to blame in more ways than one, giving the reins unduly to my arbitrary temper. It seems to me, however, that life holds enough of real angles for us without creating any for ourselves." And surely it did seem, as Mrs. Carradyne would have liked to point out aloud, that those chimes had been fraught with messages of evil. For had not all these blessings set in with their removal?--even in the very hour that saw the bells taken down! Harry Carradyne had drawn his uncle from the room; he now came in again, bringing Alice West. Her face was a picture of agitation, for she had been made known to Captain Monk. Harry led her up to Mrs. Hamlyn, with a beaming smile and a whisper. "Eliza, as we seem to be going in generally for amenities, won't you give just a little corner of your heart to _her_? We owe her some reparation for the past. It is her father who lies in that grave at the north end of the churchyard." Eliza started. "Her father! Poor George West her father?" |
|