Wl lr jfl 1 il ;i fttttltll W I 1 AN INDEPENDENT FAMILY NEWSPAPER. jiJLIT Vol. "V. IYoav DBiooiiiiloia, Xfi., rX1iieKclny, Mny 3, 1S71. IVo. IS. loomfitlb (pure. Is rublished Weekly, At New Bloomfleld, rcnn'n. BY FRANK MORTIMER. flUBSCllirTIOK TEKMS. OXE DOLLAR lyEU YE A It I GO Cents for 6 Months; 40 Cents for 3 Months, IN A.IV-A.IS01i:. MRS. HARTFIELD'S ESCAPE. IT wns not quite a year since Mr. George Ilartfleld, tlio leading solicitor iu tho market-town of Norbury, had returned from his honey-moon tour, bringing with him tlio prettiest little wife that tho good old town had boasted for a long time. George was only thirty years of ago, but his wife looked a mere girl, and was at least cloven years his junior ; much to tho disgust of more mature damsels who would bo very willing to step into tho proprietor ship of tho good-looking young lawyer and his prim, respectable old house, which was ono of tho most conspicuous dwellings iu tho upper and more rural part of High street. Mr. Ilartfleld had inherited an ex cellent business from his father, and was altogether a person of somo importanco in tho opinion of the Norbury world at largo and of himself particularly. Tho wifo was a shy, girlish creaturo, who seemed scarcely fit to be mistress of that big formal house, with its shining wains coted walls and grim old furniture furni ture that had been fashionablo in tho days of George's grandfather-gloomy old mahog any four posters and walnut-wood presses in tho polished panels whereof sentimental little Alice Ilartfleld, whose head was a kind of a branch station of tlio circulating library used to fancy sho saw ghosts in tho gloaming. In honest truth sho did not take much to the house in High street, and looked back with fond rcgrctfulncss to tlio bright country home from which George had won her. But Mr. Ilartfleld boing of an arbitrary temper, and having convinced her that tho old house was perfection, sho had never ventured to hint her dislike. It must be owned that the evenings were long and dull for so girlish a matron. George was often out sometimes at a public dinner at Crown Hotel, sometimes at a social club at tho same prosperous tavern, or playing billiards with bachelor clients all in tho way of business, of course, as bo told his wifo. But tho evening during which ho was absent were not the loss lonely on that ac count. Mr. Ilartfleld employed three clerks ; a gentlemanly young man, who was articled ; a stripling, for copying and out-of-door works ; and a gray haired old man, with a a face upon which there was a look of melancholy. Mr. Bestow, the first men tioned, and Tom. Dreger, the stripling, had christened him Old Dismal, and spoke . of him commonly by that disrespectful sob briquet. If he ever heard the name, it apparently troubled him very little. He rarely spoke, except so far as his business required him to speak ; and in the two years that he had been with Mr. Hartfield he had not advanced so much as ono step towards intimacy with his fellow-workers. lie lived four miles out of Norbury, walking to and fro in all weathers, and no one had seen the inside of his home. Her first year of married life closed in sorrow and disappointment for Alice Hart field. The baby-stranger, from whose coming she bad expected so much pleasure only opened its eyes to close them again forever upon this world. She dwelt upon . this loss with a grief which seemed to her husband just a littlo exaggerated, and it is possible that her tears and sad looks drove him to the club at the Crown rather moro often this year than previously. He fancied she was perfectly happy with hor books, and work and piano, in tho In terval between six and eleven o'olook, at which hour he punctually returned to his abode, as sober as when he left home, well pleased with himself and the world at large, The young cloiks commented very freely upon the solicitor's conduct in his domestic capacity. .,. .. " If I had such a pretty wife I wouldu't leave her alone evening after evening, as our governor does," remarked the stripling pertly ; " I wonder he is not ashamed of himself.'! . ., "He ought to take her more into society certainly," replied Bestow, who was in much request in that brilliant circle which constituted Norbury "society." Mr. Morgan tho old clerk, looked up from his desk with a sigh. ' What my funereal friend cried Bestow; " do you mean to say you are interested in the subject?" "I am very much interested iu Mrs. Ilartfleld," tho old man answered quietly j "she is always kind to me 1 It is a good sign when a woman of her ago takes tho trouble to bo polito to an old man like mo a sign that tho heart's in tho right place. I wish hor husband understood her bettor. I don't think she wants to bo taken to tea parties, Mr. Bestow ; but I do think sho wants a little moro sympathy." This was a long speech for Mr. Morgan. The young men stared at himsupercilouBly and then wont on with their work. From tho first day of hor coming to bo mistress of the old house, William Morgan had shown himself interested in his master's wife. He was always pleased to perform any littlo servico for her, and seemed needlessly grateful for tho smallest kindness at her hands. His way homo took him the wholo length of tho town ; and Mrs. Ilartfleld used to intrust him with her books to change at the circulating library, an oflioe which he porfoimcd with much taste and discretion. " I take tho liberty to carry a volumo homo with mo for the night at odd times," he said to her ono day. "What Mr. Morgan do you read novols?" " No, madame ; but I have a niece living with mo, who is glad to skim the volumes of an evening." " Indeed 1 You never spoke of her before. Is your ucico married 1" " Sho she is a widow, to all intents and purposes. Her husband doserted her three years ago, and left her and hor child, a boy on my hands. But wo are very happy to gether, I thank God !" " The husband must have boon a bad man." i " Ho was a most consummate scoundrel!" answered tho old clerk, with suppressed in tensity. " How hard it must bo for you to work for all three !" said Alice. " It will bo harder for the two that are left when I am gone. My niece is able to earn a little money at her nccdlo, but very littlo. It is a dark lookout for the future." One morning early in the spring, Mr. Ilartfleld came into the office with a very dashing gentleman, a now client, who had just como into a handsome fortune by the death of Squire Comberford of Comberford Hall, seven miles from Norbury. Edgar Comberford, the new proprietor, was a nephew of tho old man, and had boen a school-fellow of Goorge Hartflold's fifteen years before. Sinco that time he had dis appeared from the ken of Norbury, and was supposed to have led a wild life in foreign lands. He was eminently handsome and in high spirits at the accession to tho Comberford Hall estate. " Thoro are thepapors,titlo-docds, leases, and so on," said George'IIartfield, pointing to a japanned box on a shelf in the oflice ; "do you want to see them ?" " Not I George," answered Mr. Comber ford, gaily ; " it is quite enough for me to know that the lands are free from mort gages, and that the rents come in briskly. The papers couldn't be in better hands. Halloa 1 what's that?" It was Mr. Morgan, the old clerk, who had put his head in at the door of the oflice and suddenly withdrew it. "Only one of my clerks," answerod Goorge Ilartfleld. " Come in, Morgan 1" he bawled ; but the clerk did not reply, and the two young men left the oflioe ; Mr. Comberford to be introduced to his friend's wife. ' He was not a little surprised by her grace and beauty, not a little fascinated by her shy, girlish manners. He stayed for dinner, and contrived to make himself em inently agreeable to both his host and hos tess, giving an animated aocount of his advoutures in Mexico during the last two years. " I should nevor have come home from there, George, but for my unole's death," he said. "I was thorougly cleaned out when I left England, and meant to live and die abroad." After this social dinner Mr. Comberford dropped in very often at his friend's house. He seemed to have some perpetual reason for seeing the solicitor on business, and happened by a kind of fatality to call when the master of the house was out. Would he leave statement oi his business with a clerk ? . No, he would wait ; and he stroll ed uuannounccd into the little sitting-room at the back of the office where Mrs. Ilart fleld spent her mornings. It was the pret tiest room in the house, opening into a small garden, at tho end of which there was a narrow crock, an inlet from tho pretty river that flowed through Nasbury. By and by Mr. Comberford took to approach ing tho houso by this way. Ho was an export waterman, and spent a good deal of his time on tho river. So it was an easy an natural thing for him to moor his boat at tho bottom of George Ilartflcld's garden and step lightly on shore. Ho always found Alico in her sitting-room, and ho found a look in her faco which told him his visits were not unwelcome. Ho was a thor ough man of tho world, and knew tho dan ger of tho game ho was playing, nor did ho yield without a strugglo to the tempta tion that had overtaken him. Such a heart as ho had, was hit harder than it had been of lato years. Tho outside world of Nor bury had not yet been awakened to tho scandal of Mr. Conibcrford's frequent vis its to tlio lawyer's houso, nor was tho law yer himself alarmed by them ; but tho younger clerks were quick to remark upon tho length and frequency of these morning calls and on Georgo Ilartflcld's blindness to the fact. Edgar Comberford had been settled in the hall for six months, when George Ilartfleld had occasion to go to Paris on business. IIo had intended to tako his wifo with him for the trip, but tlio weather was sultry and oppressivo, and ho wont alono. Mrs. Ilartfleld seemed very littlo disappointed by this change in his plans. Mr. Comberford had assured her that Paris was utterly unbearable in July. It was upon his business that George Ilartfleld was engaged. Ho wont to mako a settle ment with a Parisian money-lender who had advanced money to the young man iu the days of his insolvency, and who now put in an exorbitant claim for the interest. The first day of Mr. Hartflold's absence wont by without any visit from Mr. Com berford ; but in the evening, when tho clerks wore gone and Alico was sitting alone and very low-spirited, tho peculiar sound of the boat grating against tho wood work at the bottom of tho garden struck upon hor ear, and brought a sudden blush into hor checks. Sho looked up with a movement of surprise as Edgar Comberford came across the garden. Ho came in at open window with tho air of a person who had a perfect right to bo there, and seated himsolf opposite , Alice at the little table where she was drinking tea. " I thought you would give me a cup of tea after my row, Mrs. Haitfleld," ho said, " and I could not pass the croek without bogging for one. I dreaded going homo to the desolations of the Hall droary, empty rooms and cross old housekeeper. I think I shall go back to Mexico before the year is out." Alice gave a little start. " What 1" sho said j "loave the Hall forever?" " Iu all probabilities forever. A man seldom comos hero a second timo from such a place as Mexico." " But why should you go back there why should you got tired of the Hall so soon ?" " Why should I be tlrod of life altogeth er? Why should I try to run away from myself from you I" And then he went on to speak of his love for hor in dark hints rather than plain words. She tried to roprovo hint ; to show that she was angry, but the attempt was a very feeble one. She could only in sist that he should leave hor immediately. Ho did leave her, but not immediately, and not till she had changed resistance into piteous entroaty. The boat had scarcely shot away iu tho twilight when the door between tho sitting room and the oflice opened, and the old clerk, Morgan, appeared on the threshold. "You here, Mr. Morgan 1" exclaimed Alice, making a vain attempt to conceal hor tears ; " I thought all the clerks had gone." " I had some letters to copy, Mrs. Hart field. Can I do anything in the town for you to-night ?" " Nothing, thank you." i He lingered, twisting the brim of his shabby old hat, round in his thin, wrinkled hands. " ' "I wish to Heaven I might speak to you freely," he said, at last, " without offend ing or wounding you." 1 "About what?" , V , " About the man who has Just left you ?" , "Mr. Comberford, my husband's friend?" " Youi husband's direct, deadliest foe and yours," answered the the old, man, passionately. , . u, " What right have you to say that?" asked Alice, trembling with indignation. " Tho right given mo by knowledge of tho world, and, abovtf all, by my knowlcdgo of Edgar Combefford." " What knowlcdgo can you have of Mr. Comberford? Did you ever sco him before ho camo to this oflice?" "Nover, but his name is a word of dire meaning in my life. Ask him what be came of tho girl ho stolo way from an hon orable homo and left in a wretched London lodging-house four years ago. Ask him the fato of Boseio Raynor." " Why should I trouble myself about his affairs ? And who is this Bcssio Raynor?" " Nover mind who sho is, Mrs. Ilartfleld. Sho was a good girl beforo ho met her. Sho will never bo a happy woman again. Ask him about her, if you doubt what I tell you, and you will see by his counte nance whether ho is innocent or guilty. Knowing what I do, I am bound to warn you of his real character." "I do not require any such warning," replied Alice, coolly ; Mr. Comberford is no more to mo than any other cliont of my husband's. And I beg that you will not trouble yourself to dictate my conduct to him." " I see that I have offended you." " I do not liko spies." "I am no spy, Mrs. Ilartfleld. I am an old man, and have had bitter cause to know tho wickencss of the world. Your sweet faco has been a kind of light to mo ever sinco your husband brought you homo to this houso. God forbid tho light should ever be clouded !" He bowed and left her left her standing in a reverie, looking absently out upon tho shadowy fields beyond tho little garden and winding creek. Sho was angry, unhappy, bewildered. " I wish Georgo had taken me to Paris," she thought. " lie ought not to leave me alono in a dreary old houso like this to be insulted by a clerk." After this evening she passed Mr. Mor gan without speaking to him, much to the old man's concern. Tho days wont byand not one passed without a visit from Edgar Comberford, although in the first evening Alico had expressly forbidden him to call again during hor husband's absence He was not easily to be put aside. Ho knew the weakness of tho girl's unschooled na ture, and know how to trado upon it. His tender talk of tho life that might have been, had Alice been l'reo his glowing de scriptions of distant lands which those two might have seen Bido by side, of countries where the commonest lifo was a kind of poetry charmed hor in spito of herself. She knew the guilt involved in this danger ous pleasuro, and hated herself for her weakness, and yet looked forward with a dull sense of dread to her husband's re turn. Nothing could tempt hor to Bin against him, she told Edgar, however un Buited they might be to each othor. She was his wife, and would do hor duty to the end of hor lifo. But the temptor was not convinced. One day she ventured to ask him about Bessie Raynor. He gave a little start at the sound of hor name, but declared that it was strange to him ; and Alice was weak enough to believe his assertion. It had been a mere ruse of the old clerk's to frighten her, she thought. The poor dis mal old creature had tried to make her miserable about the only acquaintance that gave hor any pleasure. Mr. Ilartfleld had been ten days away, when Mr. Comberford camo in upon Alice one morning with a grave countenance. The noat little parlor maid was only just cleaning away the breakfast things when he came in, and lingered inquisitively to bear the meaning of this early visit. "I am sorry to say I have rather bad news of your husband, Mrs. Ilartfleld," he said to ' Alice's expression of surprise. "He has been taken ill with some kind of a low fover, which is a good deal about now. Don't be alarmed ; it is nothing very serious ; but he wants you to go across to him. His doctor, a Frenchman, has writ ton to me, but there Is an enclosure for you from the patient." lb handed hor a slip of foreign paper, on which there were a few lines in her hus band's hand. : ' ' ' 1 ' I, - "Deab Alice Please come to me at once, if you are not afraid of the journey. Comberford can escort you, as he Is want ed over here. Yours, &c, . G. II. " You'll not be afraid of the journey?" asked Mr. Comberford. I "Not at all; I should not mind going alone.", , ,, , . , , . .. "tflut you see, I am due there, so you cannot deny me the pleasure of being your escort." " It is not a very pleasurable occasion," said Alico, with some embarrassment, as bIio twisted tho slip of writing round and round hor finger. Sho was wondering if the strict moralists of Norbury would al together approve of this journey. Mr. Comberford gave her littlo time to think. Ho went into tho clerk's oflice to tell Mr. Bestow of his e mploycr's illness, and to mako inquiries about tho London trains. William Morgan looked up from the desk and watchod him thoughtfully, as ho loungod against tho mantcl-pioco read ing the timo tablo. There was no possibility of going to Par is earlier than by tho night mail. Mrs. Ilartfleld would have to go first to London a three hour's journey. There was n train left Norbury at a quarter to four in the afternoon, "which would tako tho trav elers in amplo timo for tho Dover mail. Mr. Comborford decided upon going by this, and left Alico in order to make "his preparations for the journey. Ho did not, however, go back to the Hall, but fidgeted in and out of tho lawyers house several times in tho course of the day on somo pretence or other, spending the interval at the Crown, where ho drank brandy and so da water to an extent that astonished the waiters. But in spite of all he had drunk, he looked palo and anxious when ho camo at three o'clock ready to take Mrs. Ilartfleld to the station. Alice was just stopping into tho fly whon William Morgan camo out of tho house with a carpet-bag in one hand and a moroc co oflice bag in the other. "Why, whero the deuce are you go ing?" asked Mr. Comberford. " I am your fellow-traveler, sir ; at least, I am going second-class by the same train." " To Loudon?" " No, sir, to Paris. Mr. Bestow sends me across with papers." "Why, what consumato folly of Bos tow's ! Your master is not fit for business. IIo won't bo able to attend to anything for days to como." "I hope he may be hotter than you think, sir. In any case I am bound to obey Mr. Bestow's orders." Ho spoke in a mechanical kind of tone, nor did his countenance express tho faint est interest iu his work Mr. Comborford laughod grimly to him self as they drove away witli tho old man on tho box. ' " That old fool's company can make very little difference," ho muttered, and then grew moodier than ho was wont to bo in Alice Hartflold's company. IIo brightened considerably by and by, when they were alone in a first-class com partment, flying Londonward at express rate ; and he succeeded in making Alice boliove that hor husband's illness was only a trifling matter, and that she had no oc casion to be anxious about him. "Men think so much of the slightest touch of illness," he said, "and are al ways in a hurry to summon their wives. We are such selfish creatures, you see, and so miserable without the comfort of a wo man's presence. And then he wont on to speak of his own solitary position. " What is to become of me in the hour of sickness, Alice," he asked, "with no one but a gloomy old housekeeper to care for me ?" " You will marry by and by, I daresay, and have a wife to care for you." " Never, Alice. There is only one wo man on earth I care for, and if she cannot be my wife, I will go down to my grave a bachelor." " You must not talk to mo like that ; it is taking a meau advantage of our compan ionship You know that I am with you at my husband's wish." " Yes, you have his orders for the jour ney. Poor, doar George, what a fine bold hand he writes, doesn't he ?" Mrs. Ilartfleld did not see the sardonic grin which accompanied this trivial remark, nor did Mr. Comberford again offend hor by any allusion to his hopeless passion. It was pitch dark when they reached Dover, not a star in the sky, and a high wind blow ing! There was considerable confusion in getting on board, and Mrs. Ilartfleld scarce ly knew where she was till she found her self standing on the deck of a steamer arm-in-arm with Edgar Comberford, while the lamps of Dover receded rapidly from her vision. Her companion persuaded her to remain on deck. , . " There is an atmosphere of sickness be low that would inevitably make you ill,", he said. " Let me find you a comfortable corner, where you can sit all night secure from wind and weather." Concluded on second page.