Tracy Park eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 686 pages of information about Tracy Park.

Tracy Park eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 686 pages of information about Tracy Park.

‘Oh, Maude, Maude, you are mistaken.  I—­,’ came from Harold like a cry of horror as he wrenched away his hand lying between hers, and to which her slender fingers hung caressingly.

What could she mean?  How had she understood him? he asked himself, while great drops of sweat gathered upon his forehead and in the palms of his hands, as like lightning the past came back to him, and he could see as in a printed page that what he had thought mere friendship for himself was a far different and deeper feeling, while he unwittingly had fanned the flame; and was now reaping the result.

‘What can I do?’ he said aloud, unconsciously, while from the depths of the chair on which Maude was leaning back so wearily came a plaintive voice like that of a child: 

‘Ring the bell, and give me my handkerchief.’

He was at her side in a moment, bending over her, and looking anxiously into the pallid face from which the bright color had faded, leaving it gray, and pinched, and drawn, it seemed to him.  Had he killed her by blurting out so roughly that she was mistaken; and thus filling her with mortification and shame?  No, that could not be, for as he brought her handkerchief and bent still closer to her, she whispered to him: 

’I am not mistaken, Hally.  I am going to die, but you have made the last days of my life very, very happy.’

She thought he was referring to herself and her situation when he told her she was mistaken, and with a smothered groan he was starting for the camphor, as she bade him do, when the door opened, and Mrs. Tracy herself appeared.

‘What is it?’ she asked, sharply; then, as she saw Maude’s face she knew what it was, and going swiftly to her, said to Harold: 

’Why did you allow her to talk and get excited?  What were you saying to her?’

Instantly Maude’s eyes went up to Harold’s with an appealing look, as if asking him not to tell her mother then—­a precaution which was needless, as he had no intention to tell Mrs. Tracy, or any one, of the terrible blunder he had made; and with a hope that the reality might dawn upon Maude, he answered, truthfully: 

‘I was talking to her of Jerrie.  I am very sorry.’

If Maude heard she did not understand, for drops of pinkish blood were oozing from her lips, and she looked as if she were already dead, as in obedience to Mrs. Tracy’s command, Harold took her in his arms and carried her to the couch near the open window, where he laid her down as tenderly as if she were indeed his affianced wife.

‘Thanks,’ she sighed, softly, and her bright, beautiful eyes looked up at him with an expression which half tempted him to kiss the quivering lips from which he was wiping the stains so carefully, while Mrs. Tracy, at the door, gave some orders to a servant.

‘You can go now,’ she said, returning to the couch, and dismissing him with her usual hauteur of manner; while Maude put up her hand and whispered: 

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Project Gutenberg
Tracy Park from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.