"And now, O my beloved, good-bye! I cannot even tell to you the

anguish which is wringing my heart. It is all summed up in this. I

love you! I love you! and we must say forever a farewell!

"THEODORA.

"P.S.--I am sending this to your home."

As he read the last words the paper slipped from Josiah's nerveless

hands, and for many minutes he sat as one stricken blind and dumb. Then

his poor, plebeian figure seemed to crumple up, and with an inarticulate

cry of rage and despair he fell forward, with his head upon his

out-stretched arms across the breakfast-table.

How long he remained there he never knew. It seemed a whole lifetime

later when he began to realize things--to know where he was--to

remember.

"Oh, God!" he said. "Oh, God!"

He picked up the letter and read it all over again, weighing every word.

Who was this thief who had stolen his wife? Hector? Hector? Yes, it was

Lord Bracondale; he remembered now he had heard him called that at

Beechleigh. He would like to kill him. But was he a thief, after all? or

was not--he--Josiah the thief? To have stolen her happiness, and her

life. Her young life that might have been so fair, though how did he

know that at the time! He had never thought of such things. She was what

he desired, and he had bought her with gold. No, he was not a thief, he

had bought her with gold, and because of that she was going to keep to

her bargain, and make him a true and faithful wife.

"Oh, God!" he said again. "Oh, God!"

Presently the business method of his life came back to him and helped

him. He must think this matter over carefully and see if there was any

way out. It all looked black enough--his future, that but an hour ago

had seemed so full of promise. He rang for the waiter and gave orders to

have the breakfast things taken away. That accomplished, he requested

that he should not be disturbed upon any pretext whatsoever. And then,

drawn up to his writing-table, he began deliberately to think.

Yes, from the beginning Theodora had been good and meek and docile. He

remembered a thousand gentle, unselfish things she had done for him. Her

patience, her kindness, her unfailing sympathy in all his ills, the

consideration and respect with which she treated him. When--when could

this thing have begun? In Paris? Only these short weeks ago--was love so

sudden a passion as that? Then he turned to the letter again and once

more read it through. Poor Theodora, poor little girl, he thought. His

anger was gone now; nothing remained but an intolerable pain. And this

lord--of her own class--her own class! How that thought hurt. What of

him? He was handsome and young, and just the mate for Theodora. And she

had said good-bye to him, and was going to do her best to make

him--Josiah--happy. He gave a wild laugh. Oh, the mockery of it all, the

mockery of it all! Well, if she could renounce happiness to keep her

word, what could he do for her in return? She must never know of the

mistake she had made in putting the letters into the wrong envelopes.

That he could save her from. But the man? He would know--for he must

have got the note intended for him--Josiah. What must be done about

that? He thought and thought. And at last he drew a sheet of paper

forward and wrote, in his neat, clerklike hand, just a few lines.




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