4 4 IK- tfttfif lit 'KiS"' j AN INDEPENDENT FAMILY NEWSPAPER. jk1riS" Vol. "V. IN'ow BlooiuflcM, Ph., rTiiOHany, .Tuly 35, 1871. IVo. 30. J Fnbllshcd Weekly, At New Bloomfleld, renn'a. BY FRANK MORTIMER. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. ONE DOLLAR 1'EJl YEAR ! GO Cents for 0 Months 40 Cents for 3 Months, IN ADVANCE. Intercepted Letters. fields wcro turning brown; tlio plt- . iloss wind was stripping tho trees of their gay dresses, ono melancholy robin piped plaintively from the tall elm at tho foot of the garden. Tho whole world was putting on sackcloth and ashes, it seemed to Syl, as she stood at the garden gato bid ding Stephen Lawrence good-by. " It will only be for a littlo while," ho said, looking tenderly down into tho tear brimmed eyes. "Before you begin to think of spring, I shall como back come back to claim my wife ! Syl, darling, be true to me, whatever they say, whatever happens 1" "I will," answered Syl. "I will," she murmured, over aud over again to herself, watching him until the turn in tho road hid bim from her sight, "whatever happens, whatoverthey say!" "They" meant her mother and Aunt Jano j Aunt Jane, especially. The sitting room door was ajar, and Syl heard hor voice as sho went into tho house. "You have been very imprudent to al low hor to go with him so much, Susan," she said. "I never had any opinion of theso city young men that como along as sure as tho summer docs, to turn all tho girls' heads, and artists are always poor as church mice, overybody knows. As for tho notion he has got into Sylvia's head that sho has a wonderful talent for draw ing, It is all sneer nonsenso, oi course. She's got no money to pay to learn, and if she bad, and could bo a great artist, sho couldn't make so much money as sho'U have whon she is Derrick Hurst's wife, without tho trouble of earning it. For my part, I am very glad that dreadful smooth spoken Mr. Stephen Lawrence is going away, and I hopo Sylvia has got a littlo common seuso left, and wont insist upon writing to him. Wo must get her safely married to Derrick Hurst boforo Christ mas 1 But I cm suro I don't know where her wedding outfit is to como from. Oh, that wo should huvocomo to such poverty '" Syl didn't care to hear any more. She stole softly up stairs to her room, aud shut the door to put out tho sound of tho voices down staiis that it mado her almost frantic to hear. It was not that she cared so much for what Aunt Jane said, for sho was al ways suro to have something to worry and complain about ; the slightest thing would do. Syl remembered, wondering when sho was a very littlo girl, what Aunt Jano would do when sho got to heaven, where thero would bo nothing to fret about. Aud that was before she bad any real trouble Now sho woio w idow's weeds, and there wo 10 traces of suiVering in her face. Six years before her husband had gono to Cali fornia to seek his fortune. lie was suc cessful even beyond h is expectations, and in a year started for homo with money enough, so ho wrote, to make them all in dependent for lifo. But ho never reached home. Ho was seen at Allston, a town on ly ten miles distant, on a stormy winter night, and be was never soon again. Ho seemed to drop out of existence complete ly, then, leaving not tho shadow of a traco behind ; whilo at home they waited and watched for him in vain. Tho road from Allston was long and lonely, to bo sure, aud ho was a careless man, and might have boasted of the money ho was carrying home, but robbers were very uncommon thero, and nobody had seen any strangers about. His disappearance created a great excitement for a time, and then was forgot ten, as such things are, except by his wife and sistor Syl's mother who waited and watched, and caught their breath at tho sound of every footstep, In the long, dreary nights and days, and grow sick at heart as the suspense settled down into a certainty that he would never come ; and yot, not nultn certainty, for even now a sudden knock at the door, or a loiter in au un- known handwriting, would mako their hearts thrill. So, remembering Aunt Jane's troublo, Syl tried to be patient with her continual complaints and her interforenco with all her affairs. But she did think sho might be allowed to marry without her consent. Aunt Jano had a horror of poverty, and so had Syl's mother, and poverty was knock ing loudly at thoir door. Syl's father bad died when sho was a baby, leaving his wife and child littlo besido tho farm they lived on ; and, wanting shrewd brains to tako caro of it, that littlo bad dwindled rapidly away. Of late, the harvest had proved a failure every year, the farm was mortgaged at first, then passed entirely out of thoir hands, and Aunt Jano declared they should all go the poor house unless Syl married Derrick Hurst. Her mother said less, but Syl knew that her heart was as firmly set upon her marrying Derrick Hurst, as Aunt Jano was. Before Stophen Lawrence camo, sho had thought that she might somo day do as they wishod, if thero woro really no other way to kcop them from starving, but now, not for worlds ! not if they all had to beg thoir bread, she said to herself, every timo sho heard his namo mentioned. She had never liked Derrick Hurst. Sho remembered him as a surly, ill-natured boy when they went to school together; she had always preferred auy one of the other boys for a cavalier, and been annoyed and indignant when the girls teased her about him, for ho always insisted upon drawing her sled and brought her applos and candy, aud mado himself her devoted slavo. Ho. had never been a favorite iu the villago until of lato his evi dent prosperity aud wealth had mado him popular. Whon his father died, seven or eight years before, they had been poor, ov erybody said ; tho farm on which they lived three miles out of tho villago, was all "run ning down," and the house going to decay; and for two or threo years afterward Der rick had sceinod to have no ambition to make things bettor. But all at once there was a change. Derrick went away to tho city, and stayed nearly a year, and mado money in fortunate speculations, people said. At any rate, tho farm soon began to hold its own with the best farms in the country ; and it was no wonder, the old farmers said, considering the money that was spent on it. The bouso was repaired, too, but now that was not fine enough for Derrick. His new house in tho villago was almost done a stately mansion, witli a French roof, and bay windows, and all mod ern appurtenances, finer than any body in Densboro had ever dreamed of having. And of this fair mansion Syl was invited to bo mistress. A lucky girl, everybody said. Thero wasu't another girl in Dens boro who wouldn't jump at tho chance, even if there were some who woidd consid er Derrick an incumbrance Ouo couldn't expect to have such a position in life with out some drawbacks. And Dorrick was a fine fellow, with the dress and manners of a gentleman, aud, if the Hursts had been a rather worthless drinking set, tho Der ricks, his ancestors on his mother's side, j wero the first people in the country. Of course Syl had only leen flirting with that artist from the city to teaso Derrick ; she was always a bit of a coquette. Sho would novor bo such a fool as to refuse Derrick. Syl had refused Mr. Derrick Hurst, but ho did not seem able to realize, any moro than tho rest of tho villago people, that sho could bo in earnest iu declining such a position in life as ho offo red her, or else, as his face indicated, ho was not tho ono to tako no for an answer, not tho ono to ac cept defeat whilo there was a shadow of a chance of victory. And ho said to himself now, that ho had moro than tho shadow of a chance of viutory, with Aunt Jano and Syl's mother, on his side, and their farm in his hands. Syl walked her chambor floor, that after noon, and considered what sho should do. " Oct hor married to Derrick Hurst before Christinas, indeed !" Aunt Jane would see 1 And they would not go to the poor house, either. For had not Stophen Law rence declared that sho had wonderful tal ent, and, with tho instruction he had, giv en her, might paint pictures that would sell, might become in time, a famous ar tist? Already Syl fancied herself present ing the deed of the farm to hor mothor on hor own wedding day the day whon she should be married to Stephen Lawrence, with scarcely a remonstrance even from Aunt Jane. For when she should be a millionaire, by her own labors, who would presume to dictate to her ? And so Syl reared her stately castle, and its founda tions, in the talent that she felt and know she possessed, looked so solid, that sho would have laughed at any body who call ed it a castle in the air. ' It scorns to mo you were out a good while," said Aunt Jano, whon Bite went down stairs. " Mr. Hurst was up hero to see you. I guess he'll como again this evening. I suppose you know that tho rent is due, and there s no way that I know of to pay it. It isn't vory pleasant to bo dependent on anybody that you treat as you do Dorrick Hurst !" " We are not going to bo dependent on Dorrick Hurst. I have a way to pay tho rent, and I don't think ho will have to wait for it more than a month, at the most." Aunt Jano opened her eyes wido. " O, you expect to earn the money by tho exercise of your talent, I suppose 1" sho said, scornfully. "Yes," said Syl, with provoking cool ness. ' Well," said Aunt Jano after a pauso, making a feint of wiping hor eyes with her handkerchief, "If John had only lived, your mother and I shouldn't bo obliged to depend upon a silly heartless chit of a girl like you. Talent, fiddlesticks 1" she cried removing hor handkerchief as her wrath began to rise again" I'd rather have com mon sense enough to see which sido my broad was buttered on, thau all the talent in the world 1" Syl withdrew from the contest thon, for however long it might last, Aunt Jano was always suro to have the last word. Derrick Hurst mado his appearance that evening, with his black brows a littlo un bent from their usual frown ; now that tho coast was clear ho was sure of winning. But tho reception Syl gave him was an y- thing but promising. " We shall ask you to wait only a little while longer for your your rent, Mr. Hurst," sho said,with some thing of a grand air, and a touo that said, "of course, you could have como hero only on business 1" "Rent! don't talk to mo of rent!" said ho, impatiently. " You kuow I am glad and happy to have you live hero as long as until you come to live iu my new house, with me, Syl !" Tho angry blood mounted to Syl's fore head, and hor eyes flashed. " That will novor bo !" she said, and left him for her mothor and Aunt Jano to entertain, whilo sho went to her own room, aud tried to for- cot her aiiL'er iu tho delights of canniuo and cobalt. While Mr. Dorrick Hurst, taking his homeward way, said to himself, with an ex clamation which he would not linvo cared to havo Syl hear : " It will be ! it shall bo ! and soon, too Syl's first picture was soon finished, for sho put her whole soul into it, and worked night and day. Sho sent it to an art deal er iu the nearest largo city, and waited in anxious suspense to learn its fato, on which all her hopes depended. Stephen Law rence had askod her to send it to him to sell, but bIio know that if he wero unablo to sell it ho would by it himself to save her from disappointment, and let her think she had been successful. So sho dotorminod to win her way without help. It seemed an ago to her before sho heard from her pic ture. Then a brief discouraging letter camo. Her picture was bold aud some what original, but showed an unskilled hand. By years of study and practico sho might win success, but now the market was lilleil with pioturos like hers, which could find no sale. So Syl's castlo crumbled, before her eyes, utterly into ruins, soon, for Stephen Law rence's letters suddenly ceased. Syl was was sure at first that that ho must be ill or dead, and kopt on writing to him, in vain Aunt Jano and hor mother wero loud in proclaiming that they had known, all tho time, he was only flirting with Syi ; ho was on the lookout for a rich wife : there wero girls enough who could be fooled into mar rving him, by his handsomo face and his soft speeches. It was long before Syl doubted him ; sho conjured up a thousand things, probable, and improbable, that might havo prevent ed his writing. Sho never quite lost faith in him. But what was she to do? Her "mithcr pressod hnr sair," as in tho ' old song; disappointment and suspense had made hor pale and ilk and tho village poo pie began now to shako their heads, aud say that Syl Shepard was iu love with that artist, after all, aud was pining away on his account, and Syl was proud, and that was hard to bear ; and, more than all, they were dependent on Dorrick Hurst for shelter by-and-by what would keep them from starving, now that her talent had failed her, So it camo to pass that Dorrick Hurst went homo ono night.triumphant, leaving his betrothal ring on Syl's finger. Tho new house was finished and ready for its mistress, and tho wedding was arranged to tako placo in the last of January. Aunt Jano and Syl's mother, and Dorrick had arranged it, and Syl did not oven hint at a delay. She feigned an interest in hor wed ding preparations, and tried her best to bo cheerful, even gay, for Syl was not ono to wear her heart upon her slcevo. Sho knew that sho could never forget Stephen Law rence, and that happy sunimor past, but sho banished all thought of them, ns much as possible, from her mind. But she could not give up her painting, though that re called her teacher consolation ; the only way in which sho could forget her sorrow, for a moment. It was only three weeks before tho wed ding day. Thero was to bo a ball at Alls- ton, and, after repeated urging from Der rick, Syl had consented to go. Sho was tho prettiest girl in Densboro', and Derrick liked to display his conquest. To Syl, now, such gayet ies wero torturo, and she was glad enough to find it a stormy day when she awoke. "La," said Aunt Jane, "the storm wont hurt you ! You may be sure that Derrick wont mind it, for he is determined to show you to the Allston folks." And Derrick didn't mind, though tho Btorm raged still moro fiercely, as it drew towards night. Syl had been strangely ner vous and excited all day. She felt a pre sentiment of something going to happen, whothor good or ill she could not. And, though sho laughed at hor own folly, she could not rid herself of it. Sho was gay without an effort, and Aunt Jano and her mother agreed with Dorrick Hurst that she had never looked so well In her lifo. Sho woro a whito muslin dross, caught up with cherry ribbons over a cherry silk petticoat that had boon Aunt Jano's, in the days of her youthful gayoties, and tho ribbons were not so bright as hor cheeks. Even the long dreary rido through the storm to Allston, with Derrick Hurst besido her, could not tako away her spirits. When they passed the Hurst farm, which was out on the road to Allston, tho great lonely old house mado Syl shudder. Thero were pine trees around it, and they mado such a lonesome moaning as the wind swept through them !" She felt a thrill of thankfulness that that was not to bo her homo. Derrick s mother was to live there still, after he was married and gono to his new house. She was very old, and never went outside tho door. There wcro stories about that sho had lost hor mind, or was insano ; nobody knew exactly what was tho matter, for nobody except Dorrick and his aunt had seen her for years. The aunt, his father's sister, was to live with her still ; she was a stern, hard- featured old woman, who never had lived aud never would livo in any house where she could not bo mistress. Syl had only soen hor once or twice the Hursts had al ways lived in a solitary way having very lit tlo to do with tho village peopU) but from that slight acquaintance sho had decided sho could readily excuse her from living with her. Syl was the gayest of tho gay at tho ball, but it was only bocauso of a nervous rest- lossncss that had nothing to do with hap pincss. The storm had Increased witli every hour after nightfall, and when they set out on their return it raged fearfully ; the rain and sleet drove into tho carriago so that Syl was drenched, the darkness was intonso, and tho horse stopped entirely every now and thon, unablo to struggle against the fu rious wind. " Wo may bo able to got as far as my house," Derrick said. " ou cannot possi bly get home to-night. Aunt Joanna will tako care of you and give you somo dry clothing." Any other timo the thought of passing tho night in that house, that had always looked so dreary and ghostly to her, would have been insupportable to Syl, but now in tho storm and darkness the light that streamed from its windows looked cheery and Inviting. Still, if it had been possible, she would have preferred to go homo, and she was sure Derrick would have preferred to have hor, for ho always soemod averse to having her enter that houso. But Aunt Joanna mado an effort to relax hor grim features into a smile, as she greet ed her, and bustled about, with quite show of hospitality, to get her some hot tea and dry clothing. But when she usher ed her Into tho room where she was to sleep, Byl's heart almost failed her. It was great desolate room on the ground floor, with a damp uninhabitable fooling, and looking as if nobody had entered it for years. The dust lay thick on the clumsy old-fashioned furniture, and the spiders had festooned their webs over tho windows. Miss Joanna mado somo half-muttered apology for tho uninviting aspect of tho room ; they so seldom had company that she had got into tho habit of neglecting tho rooms which they did not use. Even tho wood-fire, burning in tho open fireplace, did not take away anything of tho dreary, uncanny look of the apartment. The shadows of the firelight took ehastly shapes on the walls; outside the wind moaned and wailed through tho pines like a human voico. Sleep would not come at Syl's bidding. She lay and listened to tho wind, and watched the wavering shadows on the wall that now wero ghastly faces, and now ghost ly beckoning bands, while the night woro slowly away. How could it bo so long, sho wondered, ten was almost gono when she left tho ball-room in the Allston Hotel? Suddenly the heard slow soft footfalls iu the hall, then tho door of her room swung noiselessly open. Syl was not sure wheth er sho was awako or dreaming, wheu she saw the figure that entered a littlo old woman with a yellow wrinkled face, and white hair falling around it. As sho came before the fire, so that its light fell on her faco, Syl recognized hor. It was Derrick's mother. She had seen hor often iu child hood, but she had changed fearfully sinco then. If sho had seen her anywhere else sho would not have known hor, Syl said to herself. She went up to the bed and looked keen ly, yet with a sort of terror in her face, nt Syl. The blood grew cold in Syl's veins, she had no strength to move or cry out. . It isn't him nor his ghost," the old woman murmured. " 1 ou ncedii t be afraid ; they wouldn't kill a little girl like you. But thero has boon blood spilled in this house iu this vory room !" Her voice sank to tragic- whisper ou tho last words, and then sho moanod and rung her hands, and paced up and down tho room. Syl felt as if somo horrible nightman) were upon her. And yet sho know it was reality ; she was alouo with this mad woman, and with no power to call for help. She camo back to the bod soon, and bent her lips to Syl's ear. " There's blood on those walls besido the bed ! They had it paporcd over, but paper wont stay on it ; you can seo how It has started off. I pulled up one cornor the other day, and I saw tho blood ! Joanna doesn't know that I eome hore ; sho would kill me if she did ! she doesn't like to como horsolf, and sho isn't afraid of anything earthly. But this room is full of ghosts ! they are walking around horo, and crying and groaning all night. I thought you wcro ono of them, at first. Ho is hore John Lyford, with that great gash iu his throat, and tho blood streaming out riv ers and rivers of blood ! Is it not very strange that ho can como back when he is buried so deep ? way down at tho bot tom of tho old well ; you kuow where tho old well is, out by tho piuo-grovo. They carried him out there Derrick and Joan na. It was bard, whon ho was only three miles from homo wasn't it ? But tho old well is deep, and no body will over know it. And Derrick is a rich man, now, you know, and nobody will ever know whero John Lyford is. Derrick has built a new house ; he don't liko to livo horo, bocauso John Lyford's ghost comes here, and ho is going to marry John Lyford's uioco littlo Syl Shepard. She don't see tho blood on his hands ; nobody can see it but me, Joanna says ; but there it is, dripping, dripping all the time 1" Sho moaned and wrung her hands franti cally,tind thon talked iucohorentlyland exci tedly. Syl, straining her oars to tho ut most could not catch an intelligiblo word. All hor terror had vanished in tho oxcite moet of tho fearful discovery she had mado. Was it truth, or only the fancies of this dis ordered brain ? The gray light of dawn was just begin ning to stream into tho window, and the old woman took hor doparturo, firht coming to tlio bedsido again, and looking, with that same tetriliod expression, at Syl, as if not yet sure that sho was not a ghost. Syl waa not bewildered nor frightened, now. Sho was filled with amazemont and horror, but her brain had never been clear er. How plainly the story had bean told. And thore was not a shadow of doubt of its truth In her mind. A hundred trifles that she had scaroely noticed before,erowd ed up In hor memory to confirm the story. Derrick's nervousness at unoxpooted foot steps and sounds, the sudden palor that