OC HOLLAR PER ANNUM, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA : * Satnriwn fllorniitn, Hlnn 24, 185 H. Stlcctcb l-lotirir. bOOK AT HOME. pj |0 „M you foi l inclined to censure Faults you may in others view. ,Vk vour own heart, ere you venture, If that has not failings too. M not ft rrnlly vows lx> broken, lather strive a friend to gain ; gaitv a word in anger spoken Finds its passage home again. jin not, then, in idle pleasnse. Trifle with a brothers fame ; Cuard it as a valued treasure— Sacred as your own good name. Do not form opinions blindly— Hastiness to trouble tends ; Tho-e of whom we've thought unkindly Oft become our warmest friends. jsttltritb Kith. MILLICENT AND PHILIP CRANE?" r,Y THE AFTHOR OK THE UNHOLY WISH. T'HAITER I. The day had been wet and dreary, fit em blem of its month, November ; and as the evening postman splashed through the mnd.on his rounds in a certain suburb of a manufactur ing town in England, the family groups looked from their warm, cozy sitting-rooms, aud said tlicy would rather he had his walk than they, in the wintry weather. lie left letters at many houses, but not at all. as lie would have done iu the manufactur ing districts of the town ; and whilst lie is knocking at tine door, that of a well kept, jiretty house standing iu a small garden. Let us glance into its front parlor, preceding by a minute, the letter that will soon be there. The family are at dinner there. Two ladies only, (hie, young still, and handsome, sits at the head of the table, the other, much younger aud equally uell-looking, though in a different style, >its opposite to her, facing the window. Surely they cannot be mother and child ! It is nut only that there appears scarcely sufficient contrast in the age, but they are so totally un like in face, form and expression ; the elder all lire and pride, the younger all grace and sweet ness. No, they are only step-mother and daughter. " Make haste, Nancy," said tin? young lady to the servant in waiting, " there's the postman coming here." Her accent was exceedingly gay and joyful. She expected, perhaps some pleasant news, juxir girl ; aud the maid left the room with alacrity. "Ferine?" she questioned, as the girl re turned with a letter. "Not for you, tuiss," was the servant's an swer. " For my mistress." She put the letter on the tablecloth by the side of Mrs. Crane, and the latter laid down the -poon with which she was eating some rice padding, and took it up. " \\ iiom is it from, mamma ?" "How can 1 tell,Millicent, before itisopencd? It Wiks like sonic business letter, or a circular. A large-sized sheet of blue paper, and no en vvlope. It eau wait. Will you take some more [wlding ?" IMiilip sometimes writes on those business •:wt.-."cried Miss Crane, eagerly. "Is it his Land-writing, mamma ?" " Tliilip ! nothing but Fhilip ! Your tbo'ts tre forever running upon him. I ask you about I'tiding, and you reply with Philip ! Were I Mr Crauford, I should be jealous." " No more, thank yon," was the rtjoindcr of die young lady, while a smile and a bright Mudi rose to Iter candid face. " Mamma, you Lave never appreciated Philip," she said. But "r elder lady had opened her letter, and was dei'|i in its contents, Nancy," cried out Mrs. Crane, in a sharp, '"ity tone, as she folded the letter together,in * 'at seemed a movement of anger, " take all ■ w ay and put the desert on. No cheese for me j and Miss Millicent docs not care for it. '• * quick. 1 want the room cleared. Ring for ■ ,rT| ct to help you." I t Mr-. Crane's impatient moods shebrook '! dilatory serving, and the domestics :: Luew it. ,So that her wish, in this in ■ wee, was executed with all despatch, and " and Iter step-daughter were left alone to cher. i have- never appreciated Philip, you say," ' M -an, as the door closed. " Not as you "J am aware. I have always told you, • -oeent, that your exalted opinion of itiin, r exaggerated love, would some time re . a check. This letter is from his etnploy hesitated Millicent, for there was |, an j defiant a!K ] triumphant iu her Another's accent and words, and it terrified her ' ... ' ias ' ,pou robbing them and has now '"iiied. They warn me to give him up to r! **, if ! ,c should eoine hiding here." ' hie first shock of this terrible assertion, "flt ( ratie gasped for breath, so that the ••m il denial she sought to utter would ~,'. COmc - * or her confidence in her brother , >tr " n g, and her heart whispered to her j"' accusation was not true. ~ " Te is some mistake," she said recovcr - l ,' r agitation, and speaking quite calmly. "•"1 the letter," returned Mrs. Crane, ?[ 1, " ovp r the table towards her ; and ™ U( *' ker confidence aud her hoi>e r o\< " Crane had been ten and her eight, they were left motherless. Mr. a .-hort lapse of time, married again ■,, " " did not talk kindly to the ''"lren, o r they to her. She used to say "ft that they were so wrapt up in -• -hi y had no love to give her. But THE BRADFORD REPORTER. tlio children themselves, knew that their new mother disliked them, in her inmost heart ; that had they loved her, with a true and entire love, she c ould never have returned it—for who so quick as children, in detecting where their affections may securely be placed? To an open rupture with the children she ucver came, as she might have done had a family of her own !>een born to her. She encouraged herself in her antipathy to the children, and towards Philip it grew into a positive hatred. He was a generous, high-spirited, but tiresome boy, as boys, who are worth anything, are apt to be. He kept the house in commotion, and the drawing-room in a litter, spinning tops on its carpet, and breaking its windows with his in dia-rubber ball. Mrs. Crane was perpetually slipping upou marbles, and treacherous hooks and fishing tackle were wont to entangle them selves in her stockings and feet. She invoked no end of storms on his head, and the boy would gather his playthings together and de camp with them ; but, the next day they, or others more troublesome would be laying about again. What provoked Mrs. Crane worse tliau all was, that she could not put Philip out of temper. When she attacked him with pas sionate anger, he replied by a laugh and a mer ry word, sometimes an impertiueut one, for, if the truth must be avowed, Philip was not al- j ways deferent towards his step-mother. She had the ear of their father, not they ; and she got the children put to school. Millicent was eighteen and Philip sixteeu before they return ed home, and then Mr. Crane was dead, and the money, which ought to have been theirs, was left to the widow for her life, and to them afterwards—and she but twelve or fourteen years older they were ! Mrs. Crane was charg ed to pay them £SO a year each, during her life ; an additional fifty to Philip till he at tained the age of twenty-one, then to cease ; and Millicent was to have her home with her step-mother, until removed from it by mar riage. ■" It's * wicked will,'' burst forth Philip in the height of his indignation ; " my father must have lost his senses before he made such a will.'" " We must make the best of it, Philip," whispered his gentle sister, soothingly ; " it is done, and there is no remedy. You shall have mv £SO as well as vour own. I shall not want it." " Don't talk nonsense, Millicent, returned ! the boy. " You'll want your £SO for clothes and [KKrket-money ; do not flatter yourself that deceitful old crocodile will furnish tlicm. Aud if she did, do you think I would take the pal try pittance from you ?" Philip said he would go to sea, but Milli ceut cried and sobbed, and entreated that he would not ; for she possessed the dread of a sea life, indigenous in many women ; and Phil ip, who loved her dearly, yielded to her. Then he said he would go into the army ; but where was his commission to conic from ? Mrs. Crane declined to furnish funds for it At length an old friend of his father's obtained for him an admission into one of the London baukiug bouses. He was then seventeen ; but he was not to expect a salary for ever so long a period after admission, and his £IOO a year was all he had to keep him, in every way.— " Kuough, too ! as Mrs. Crane said, and as many others may say. Yes, amply enough, when a young man lias the mora! strength to resist expensive temptations, but very little to encounter those which babble up in the vortex of London life. From five o'clock in the even ing, about which hour he left business, was Philip Crane his own master, without a home, save his solitary lodgings, and without relatives. Friends (as they arc so called) he made for himself, but they were friends that he had bet ter have been without; for they were mostly young men of expensive habits, and of means superior to his. As the years weut on, debt came ; embarrassments came ; despair came ; and, in an evil hour, it was on his twenty-sec ond birthday, Philip Crane took what did not belong to him, and detection followed. Hence the letter which the reader has seen address ed to Mrs. Crane by the firm, in which they gave free vent to the fullness of their indigna tion. Millicent sat with her eves and thoughts concentrated on the letter ; and a slow con viction of its truth came to her. "Oh Philip! Philip!'' she walled forth, "anything but this! I would have worked to save you from dishon or—l would have died to save yon from crime. Mrs. Crane ! mamma ! what he has taken must lie instantly replaced." " Not by nie," was the harsh reply. " You will never find me offering a premium for theft. He deserves punishment, and I trust he will meet it. If he attempts to come here, I shall assuredly give him up to justice." Millicent did not answer, did not remon strate, hut sat with her head bowed in her clasped hands. She knew how resolute was Mrs. Crane, where her dislike was concerned, and she knew, now, that she hated Philip; she had long susjected it. A knock at the house , door aroused Millicent. " Mamuia," she exclaimed, starting up, " that j is Mr. Craoford. He must be told this. Per- j haps—when he knows—he will not —I am go-; ing up stairs," she added, more hurriedly, as she heard a servant advancing to admit the visitor. "Do you tell him." How many phases of thought pass through the mind in an instant of time ! In the inter val of Millicent's escaping from the room, and Mr. Crauford's entrance to it, Mrs. Crane had run over the matter with herself and taken her resolution. She would NOT tell Mr. Crau'ord. He was on the joint (within a few inonths.for it was to be iti spring) of marriage with Milli cent ; she desired the latter married with all heart and wish, and certainly she would not give information of any kind, which might tend to stop that marriage. Mrs. Crane was a vain woman, fond of admiration ; her head had latterly been running on the possibility of a second marriage ; she wanted Millicent gone, that herself ami her movements might be left without incumbrance. Mr. Crauford entered, a gentlemanly man of about thirty. His manners were pleasing, and his ' ouuteuanec was handsome, but its chief PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNW, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. " REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." expression was that of resolute pride, lie was in business with his father, a flourishing manu facturer of the town, and was much attached to Millicent. People said how fortunate she had been, what a desirable man he was, and what a good match He sat with Mrs. Crane the whole evening, and took tea with her. Millicent never came down. Mrs. Crane told him Millicent was not well, and she belL-ved, had retired to rest.— W hen he left the house, Milliceut came shiver ing into the parlor, and crept close to the fire, for she was very cold. " Mamma, how is it ? What does he say ?" " Millicent," said the elder lady, turning away her face, which was blushing" hotly fur her untruth, to tell which, was not one of Mrs. Crane's frequent faults, " it will make no difference in his attentions toward you. He must feel the degradation Philip has brought, but he will not visit it on you—upon one con dition." " \\ hat condition ?" asked Millicent, raising her eyes to her step-mother. " That you never speak of your brother to him ; that you never, directly or indirectly al lude to him in his presence; and should Mr. Crauford, in a moment of forget fulness, men tion Philip's name before you, that you will not notice it, but turn the conversation to another subject." " Aud is this restriction to continue after our marriage ?" inquired Millicent. " I know nothing about that. When peo ple arc married they soon find out what mat ters they may, or may not, enter upou with each other. It is enough, Millicent that you observe it for the present." "It is no difficult restriction," mused Milli cent. " For what could I have to say note about Philip that I should wish to talk of to him ?" She laid her head against the side marble of the mantel-piece as she sj>oke, and a sort of half-sigh, half moan escaped her. — Mrs. Crane looked at her troubled ceuntenanee, at her eyes closed in pain, at the silent tears trickling down. " Aud for an ungrateful rake!" she contemptuously uttered. CHAPTER 11. The weeks went on, several, and, with them, the preparation for Millicent Crane's marriage with Mr. Crauford. For once—rare occur rence !—it was a union of love, and Millicent's happiness would have been unclouded but for the agitating suspense she was iu about her brother. His hiding place had not been trac ed, but it was the opinion of the banking-firm, that he had escaped to America. And there they quietly suffered him to remaiu, for his de falcation had not been great—not sufficient for them to go to the expense and trouble of tracking him there. Millicent's days were anx ious and her nights weary ; she loved this bro ther with a lively, enduring love ; like as a mother clings to her child ; so did Millicent cling to him. She pictured him waudcring the earth, homeless, friendless, destitute ; over whelmed with remorse, for she knew that an honorable nature, like Philip's, could not com mit a crime and then forget it ; or she pictur ed him revelling with dissolute companions, sinking deeper into sin, day by day. Before Mr. Crauford alone she strove to appear cheer ful and happy, not wishing him, after his re striction, to think she dwelt too much on this erring brother. One day, in the beginning of February, she was walking unaccompanied into the town, when a man, dressed loosely in the garb of a sailor, wearing a large, shabby pilot-jacket, and with huge I Hack whiskers, stepped up to her aud put a note into her hand without speak ing, touched his hat and disappeared down a side-street. Millicent, much surprised, started after the man and opened it " MY DEAR SISTER.—Come to me this even ing at dusk, if you can do so without suspicion at home. I have been days on the watch,and have not been able to get speech of you. I am now writing this, hoping to give it to you. if not to-day, some other. Be very cautious ; the police are no doubt on the look-out for me here, as they have been in London. lam at 24, Port street: the house is mean and low, and you must come np to the top story,and en ter the door on your right hand. Will you dare this for my sake ? " P. C." Millicent had unconsciously stood still while she read the note, and her face was turning as white as death. So intent was she as not to perceive Mr. Cranford, who happened, by ill luck to be passiug through the street—an un usual part of the town for him to be in, at that hour of the day. He crossed over the road, and touched heron the shoulder, and Millicent, whose head was full of officers of justice look ing after Philip, positively screamed in alarm, and crumbled the note up in her hand ; and thrust it into her bosom. " What is the matter ?" cried Mr. Crauford, looking at her in astonishment. " I thought—l—is it ouly you ?" stammer ed Millicent. " Only me ! Whom did yon expect it was ? What has happened, Millicent, to drive away your color, like this ? What is that letter you have just hidden, with as much terror as if it were a forged banknote ?" " The letter's—nothing," she gasped, her teeth chattering with agitation and fright. "It must be something," persisted Mr. Crau ford. " I saw a sailor come up and give it to you. Very strange !" " Indeed it is nothing," repented Millicent— " nothing that I can tell you." " Do you want to make me jealous, Millicent?" he asked, in a tone that she might take for ei ther jest or earnest. " I will tell you all about it sometime," she said, endeavoring to assume a careless, playful tone. " I promise it, Richard." He left her as she spoke, for he was in pur suit of hasty business ; but as he walked on, he pondered over what he had seen, and Milli cent's agitation ; and repeated to himself that it was ' very strange.' Evening came, and Millicent, arrayed in the plainest garb she could muster, a cloth cloak and dark winter liouuct, and making an ex cuse to Mrs. Crane that she was going to spend an honr with some friend who lived near started forth to meet her brother. She knew, perfectly well the locality of the street he had mentioned, Port street, but never remembered to have been in it; it was tenanted by the very poor, and partly let out iu low lodgiug houses. As she turned rapidly into it, she saw, bv the light of the dim evening, that jit was an unwholesome, dirty street, garbage and offal ly ing about, in company of half-naked children"; squalid men were smoking pijies. and women with uncombed hair, tattered clothing, aud loud and angry tongues, stood by them. Millicent drew her black veil tighter over her face as she peered for No. 24. To turn into the house and up the two flights of stairs, was the work of a moment. Peeping out of the door indicated, and holding a light iu his hand, was the same man who had given her the note. He retreated into the room be fore Milliceut, and held the door open for her. She stood iu hesitation. " Millicent, don't you know mc V he whisp ered, pulling her in and bolting the door lie hind her. And whilst she was thing it could not be Philip, she saw that it was. For one sin gle instant he took off the black curls, like a sailor's, and the false black whiskers ; and his own auburn hair, his fair face, with its open gay expression aud its fresh color, appeared to view. " Oh Philip ! dear Philip !" she exclaimed, bursting into tears, " that it should come to this I" He sat down beside her and told her all.— How the temptations of his London life had overwhelmed him,its embarrassment had drown ed his reason and his honor, and, in a fatal mo ment of despair, he had taken a bank-note which he could not replace. Not for an hour since had he known peace, and had it not been for the disgrace to her of having her only bro ther at the felon's bar, he should have twenty times over given himself up to justice. He had been in hiding ever since in poverty, aud was now in scanty clothing, for his clothes, what few he had brought with him when he took flight, had gone article after article to procure food. He had made up his mind to leave the country for Australia, if Millicent could help him with the passage-money, the lowest amount that the lowest passenger could be conveyed for, and clothe hiui with a few necessaries for the voyage. " I would not ask it, Millicent," he said, " for I do not deserve help from you ; I would not, on my word of honor, but that that coun try holds out a hope of my redeeming what I have done ; and for your sake, if not for my own, I would endeavor to redeem the past and atone for it, for I well know the 6evcre trial this has been to you. Large fortunes are made there by the cultivation of land—don't look incredulous, aud stop me, Milliceut, they are. If I can gain money, ray first step shall "be to refund what I took, and perhaps in time, Mil licent—you may acknowledge a brother again. Should this luck not be mine, I can at least work honestly for the bread I eat, work and rough it—and I have had enough of crime.— Here work is deuied me, for I may not show myself in the face of day." Millicent, good, forgiving and full of love, promised with alacrity, all he wished. She had not the money at command, but determined to procure it. After her own wants were supplied out of her yearly £SO, she had always forward ed the remainder to Philip, and latterly her spare cash had been spent iu making prepara tions for her wedding. " I will come here to-morrow evening, Phil ip," she said, " and bring what I can with me, that yon may be getting some clothes togeth er. I will get it all for you in a few days. Is— is there nowhere else that we could meet in stead of here ?" "Of course there's not," he answered. "It will not do for us to be meeting in the street, lest the officers should catch the scent. No thing will harm you here, my darling sister.— If the house is poor, it is honest, aud the way to it, though filthy with poverty, is not de praved." " No, no, there's nothing to harm mc," she pleasantly acquiesced. " I will be here again to morrow night, Philip." The next evening circumstances apjioared to favor Millicent. She was invited without Mrs. Crane, to take tea at a friend's house, and no thing would be easier, she thought, than to go out ostensibly to pay the visit, and run first to Philip. So she attired herself in the same dark cloak and bonnet, and when ready, went in to say adieu to Mrs. Crane. " You are going very early !" exclaimed the latter. " And what a dowdy you have made of yourself, Millicent ! I thought that old coal-scuttle of a bonuct was discarded last win ter." " It is raining fast, mamma." " Is it ? I hope you have got your dress up. Where's Nancy ?" They went out together, Miss Crane and Nancy. Soon Millicent dismissed the latter, saying she wished to proceed alone, but that Nancy need not mention this to her mistress. The girl promised ; she was pleased to have an hour for herself, and went gossiping off to some of her acquaintance, and she only thought her young lady was going to steal a walk with Mr. Crauford. Millicent walked swiftlty, heedless of the dirt and the rain. It was a windy night, and as she was turning the corner of the ally, which led from the broad, lighted street to Port-st., her umbrella, a light one, turned inside out. So Millicent had to make a stand there, and bat tle with it. On the other side of the wide street, picking his way, that he might not soil, more than ne cessary, his eveuing boots, was advancing a gentleman, likewise under of an umbrella. He glanced at the fignre opposite, struggling and lighting with hers, and a smile at her efforts came to his eyes aud his lips ; but it was speedily superseded by astonishment, for as the figure threw its face upwards, in the cou test with this obstinate umbrella, the rays of a street gas-light fell on it, and disclosed the fea tures of his own betrothed wife. It was Ri chard Crawford Millicent and the umbrella disappeared down the alley, and Mr. Crauford, after a short men tal debate, strode after her. He traced her into Port strict, and saw her enter the house No. 24. Mr. Crauford, his senses turned up side down with wonder and perplexity, took his standing within the entrance door'of one opposite and watched. It was half an hour before she came out, and she went quickly up the street iu the rain, without putting up her umbrella, fearful per haps of another collision with the wind. Mr. Crauford came from his hiding-place, and kept her in view till she was knocking, heated and out of breath, at the house of their frieuds, where he had likewise an invitation. He went up, as she stood there waiting for admission, but said nothing of what he had seen, not a word : he had resolved to watch her future movements and pursue the matter up. But he was pointedly cool to Millicent, and did not sec her home in the evening. He was a proud, vain man, and to have any doubt or suspicion cast upou his future wife, was to his spirit as wormwood. And yet to donbt Millicent Crane !—open, honorable, right-minded Milli cent Crane ! Mr. Crauford was sorely per plexed, and worried himself on his sleepless bed that night. Several days elapsed before Millicent got to gether the necessary money for her brother, borrowing iu secret, a few pounds from one aud a few pounds from another ; for Mrs. Crane she did not dare to ask or coufidc in, aud nearly every evening she contrived to see him. But never did she enter that low street and its No. 24, but she was watched by Rich ard Crauford. He made inquiries. A hand some young sailor, just come off a voyage, was lodging in the honse, and the young woman came to see him—Richard Crauford could not fathom it, but his heart waxed w roth against Millicent. One evening, when the time of Philip's de parture was drawing near, as Milliceut was returning through Port Street, from one of those stolen visits, she heard a haughty stride behind her, and the voice of one she knew well. " Millicent! Miss Crane." She was obliged to turn, shaking all over with apprchensiou and debating how she could account for her appearance in such a locality. "What have you been doing here?" de manded Mr. Crauford. "Tell inc." " I—Richard—it was an errand. 11 is done now, and 1 am going home." " You can have no ligitiuiatc errand in this part of the town," lie retorted, " and your vi sits here of late, have been pretty frequent.— Will you impart to me the cause of your ex traordinary conduct, Millicent?" " Richard," she cried, with tears of agita tion, " you have known me for years ; you have chosen me for your wife ; you cannot suspect of me anything wrong !" "My wife ; yes, I did choose vou. But do you think a wife, actual or promised, should hold a disgraceful secret and keep it from her husband ?" " I trust, Richard, when I am your wife— that we shall have no concealments from each other," she panted forth. " I will not from you." " Will yon tell me what brings you to this place of an evening, and who it is you come to visit ?" " Later I will tell you—if you allow me," she answered. " I may not now." " What d> you call later? When wc are married ?" " Yes." " And not before ?" " You would not hear me, Richard," she returned, her mind reverting to his interdic tion, " and perhaps not forgive inc." " You must thiuk my confidence in you will stretch to any limit," he haughtily rejoined, " A man does not usually marry with a doubt on his mind. I must know what this mystery is, and without subterfuge." " I may not tell you now," she answered iu a deprecating tone ; " I do not know what the cousequeuces would be. I will ask per mission." "Of your sailor friend at No. 24 ?" he re turned, his lip curling with ineffable scorn.— And Milliceut could not suppress a cry of ter ror. " O, Richard, don't ask me ! don't try to fathom this ! On my word of honor, as your future wife, I am doing nothing wrong ; noth ing disgraceful ; nothing of which I need be ashamed." "If you wish nic to believe this, you must tell me what it is, aud let me judge what you call " disgraceful." "Indeed, I cannot to-night. But—perhaps to-morrow night—l will if I can." " Very well," ho replied. " I will afford yen the opportunity to-morrow night. And he continued to walk by Millicent's side till she reached her home. But he did not offer her his arm, and observed a stern silence. " You will conic in ?" she said to him, when the door was opened. " No. Good night to you," he answered, and turned and strode away. It seemed as if he had but constrained himself to walk with her for her protection. The next time Millicent saw her brother she spoke of Mr. Crauford, and asked if she might impart the secret to him. " You could not betray it to a worse man, lover of yours though he is," was Philip's re joinder. " lie is one of your cold, upright men, Millecent—who would deem it deroga tory to his high mercantile character not to deliver me up to justice if lie knew I was here. When I am gone, I and the good ship which will bear me out of danger, then tell him." " That may not be for a week or fortnight," she observed. " Before a fortuight, I hope. I shall go by the first that sails from Liverpool, and yon shall have notice of my departure. But, Mil licent, if yon think the delay will cause ser ious unpicasantucss between yon and Richard Crauford, tell him at once. I will risk it.—- And better that a worthless vagaltond, as I have proved myself should be sacrificed, than that your peace should be endangered." Millicent's heart sank within her ; but she VOL. XVI.—NO. 50. felt that her duty to her uufortuuatc brother must le paramount over all things. She re flected, too, that Richard Crauford loved her, and hoj)cd she should find little difficulty in appeasing him when the time for declaring all should come. Besides* she believed that he could not hint at such iu his high and haugh ty sense of honor. Ife sought her that evening. He had watch ed her to the old haunt, and he watched her out again, and then strode after her and over took her in the street as he had done the pre ceding one. " I said I wonld afford you an opportunity of speaking to rac to-night," he begun, without any previous salutation, and in a tone almost of repulsion. "I am here to do it." " And I cannot yet, Richard. You must accord me a little while longer ; a few days." "Not a day, not another hour," he burst forth. "If we part to night without full con fidence between us, wc part for the last time." " Richard," she uttered, clasping her hands together and lying them on his aria in her agi tation, "do not be so harsh with me, do not be so cruel! I assure you, as I would assert it in the hearing of heaven, that ray going as I have done to that house in Fort street, is no just cause for your breaking with me. You taught me to love you. Richard ; if you de sert mc, you remove all I now have to live for." " Fine words, flowery sentiments," he re torted, " but tliey possess more sophistry than reason. Ido not desert you, nor do I wish to do so ; I ask but for your confidence, Mil licent. If you will not give it me, you drive me from you." " I will give it you, Richard—after a lit tle while. I would give much to be able to give it you now." " What prevents you ?" " Have confidence in me," she implored, evading his question ; " accord me yet a few days' delay. I)o not see me before then, if yon would so wish it. But cherish 110 harsh ness against me, for I do not deserve it." " I am not a fool, Millicent," lie Iritterly said. " You ask to be freed from my compr uy that you may pursue these iniquitous visits ; it is impossible that they can be for any good. And it is equally impossible that you can be called upon to indulge in any line of conduct which may not be told to your,future husband. I think a species of madness must have overta ken you." " Sorrow has overtaken me," she murmur ed, " nothing else. Can you not understand Richard ? There is a secret iu this matter which is not mine." " What if I promise to keep ? What is en trusted to you may lie entrusted to me." " May I trust him V* she asked herself.— With perfect safety to Philip ?" "Ifit—iuvolved criminality!" she hesitat ed, looking at liirn, and speaking timidly.— " Criminality in another," she hastily added, " not in me. Would you promise to keep it then ?" " I am not in the habit of being made the confident of crime," he imperiously rejoined. " I did not know that you were." And Millicent felt that her momentary hope of telling him then must not be indulged.— She stood, looking the image of trouble and despair, her cheeks pale, and her eyes cast down. Mr. Crauford may be forgiven for mistaking the signs for those of deceit aud guilt. " Then you refuse to tell mc, Milliecut Crane ?" he resumed. " For the present ; for a few days. I have no other resource. Indeed 1 will tell vou la ter." " Xo," he said, " I shall never give you an other opportunity. Wc part now forever.' '• Oh, ilichard you cannot mean it ?" she ut tered, her voice shaking with emotion. " Sure ly you will not cast mo off, and we so near the time of being mau and wife !" " I will send you your letters back to-mor row," be coldly rejoined, " to-night it is too late ; and I desire that you will return ine mine. Adieu. Your way now lies one road and mine another." • " But it must not be," she sobbed clasping h's arm in her anguish. " I am to be your wife ; yon have said it." " Yes," he answered, remaining quite still, and not seeking to push her hand away. "If you will explaiu your conduct, and I find you have done nothing unworthy the future wife of an houorable mau. Can you do this, Milli cent !" She pressed ljoth her hands upon her throb bing temples, and again debated the question with herself. Her brother's safety ; and her own happiness and the good opinion of Rich ard Crauford ; should she risk the former for the latter ? Mr. Crauford watched her counte nance and its signs of despair. Slowly she removed her hands, and raised her eyes to his, and essayed twice to speak be fore she could get out the words. " Were appearances against you, Ilichard," she said, " and you bid me wait and trust you, I would wait for any length of time, and trust you—l would wait for any length of time and trust you still ; for years, if you so wished it. I only ask for a few davs." " Then you decline to explain," he answered. " That is your final answer ?" "Itis so ; against uiv will. It is obliged to be." " Farewell to you," he sternly rcjoiucd.— Henceforth we are strangers." He strode away rapidly in the direction of his home he had prepared for Millicent, and she .sought hers with a bursting heart. Two days after that, Philip quitted the town for Liverpool, and in about ten more, Millicent re ceived news of his departure for Melbourne. She then sent the following note to Mr. Crau ford : " The time has now come when I am releas ed from my obligation of secrecy. Give tne an opportunity of clearing myself in your mind, whatever you may then decide as to our future I am ill and unhappy ; do not continue to cherish resentment against me. " MIT.T.UXXT CHAM;"