il Ajsmm ai mm I It 'J I' l I ""51 VOL. XIV. IsTHTVV BLOOMFIELD, 1JV., TUESDAY, FEBEUAKY 17, 1880. NO. 8. THE TIMES. in Independent Family Kewspnper, IB P0BU8HBD KVERT TUBSD1T BT F. MORTIMER & CO. TKltMHt INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. One vear ( Postage Free) 11 M six Mouths " " 80 To Subscribers In this County Who pay In AnvANre. a Discount ot 21 Onts will be made from the above term, making subscription wuhin the County, When l'uld In Advance, 91.25 Ter Year. V Advertising rates furnished uponappll eatlou. The Battle for the Cedars. BY FREBSLY '. MORRIS. CONTINUED. WE NOW return to the man left as a prisoner. Lionel Cashel became conscious of a dull sensation of pain, and then he tried to struggle loose from some power that held him In Its bonds. Was he dream ing, or was this fearful oppression real? Slowly a sense of his position came to him. He Mas not dreaming. He realized that he was awake, and bound and gagged. All about him was thick darkness. " Where am I ?" was his mental ejac ulation. Then he remembered his interview with Valasquez , how he had retired to the crimson room ; his feeling of secur ity ; he had slept. After that all was blank. But Lionel knew that he was once more in the power of his foe. At that thought he struggled fiercely in his bonds, and tried to free himself. His efforts were all In vain. He wearied himself, and was forced to lie still in despair, not knowing for what fate he was reserved. Death in some measure seemed certain, for he felt that he was as helpless as a new born babe, and ValttBquez would never let him escape alive, he knew. How long lie had lain there thinking, when there came a loud noise close at hand that echoed through the apart ment, he could form scarcely an idea. At the sound he Instinctively tried to cry out, but no utterance could he give forth. That he could not shriek seemed maddening, for he knew not but that the person making those sounds might rescue him. The echoes died away to quietness, a quiet as profound as that of the grave. What appeared to Lionel a long period of time passed. I reality it was the space between the departure of Valasquez from the door, and his return with the Blave, Varcor. Then Lionel heard the noises made in laying the brick to wall up the doorway. At first he did not comprehend, but presently his horrified brain took In the fact that he was being shut up between walls. Occasionally he heard a sup pressed voice that he knew belonged to Valasquez. Once more Lionel' struggled to free himself, struggled fiercely till the .Cords with which he was bound cut into his limbs. But he did not release himself, and he stopped at last. lie was not aware of it, in his numbed condition, but his powerful struggles had partially loosened the cords that held him, so that his next fierce effort would iu all probability give him the use of his limbs. The work outside went on. It was completed. Lionel heard his enemies depart, and once more silence reigned. Despair overwhelmed Lionel Cashel. A thousand lights seemed to flash before his eyes. Thrills of agony shot through his frame. " Am I dying!"' he thought wildly. He gave one last mad effort, and his bands were freed from the bonds that held them. He felt that he had a new lease of life. He sat up, and tore the gag from his mouth. "Thank heaven I" he cried. Then he unbound his feet, and rose upright. He was so stiff and sore that he could not remain standing at first. But presently he was able to grope his way about the apartment. Lionel thought it must be past morning,' long past, but not a elngle ray of light enter ed the room. All was darkness. Lionel reached the solid walls, and felt about tliem. What availed It 1 He hud released himself from a pain ful position of body ; but, farther than that, what availed his freedom from bonds ? Was he any nearer to actual liberty ? He could not feel that he was. '" " I am shut out from light aud life and hope," he cried agonizingly. " Oh the devilish malignity of that villain 1" What should his prison be but a living tomb? He was to die a slow, torturing death between these walls, according to the purpose of Valasquez. He shouted loudly for help; but the sounds only came back to him, mock logs of despair. Long Lionel continued to grope about, but at length he sank upon the floor, hungry, fatigued, and utterly despairing. Bleep overcame him, and for some hours he lay locked in Us embrace. He awoke to renew his groping about the walls. " Would he continue that, only to drop down exhausted at last, and die ?" he asked himself. Probably his action was instinctive, like that of the prisoned bird that flut ters Its wings against the bars of its cage. Perhaps he had given over all hopes of escape; but for all that, he could not lie down calmly and perish 1 But Lionel Cashel was not to die in this manner. At last a secret that the false master of The Cedars had never discovered, of which he bad no idea, was made appar ent. Lionel's blind groplngs were not in vain I Suddenly there was a harsh grating sound, and he felt the rush of fresh air. He had troubled a spring, and had caused a square In the seemingly solid wall to swing away. After that it was but the work of an Instant to find the aperture. He found th opening abundantly large for him to crawl through. He raised himself slowly to it,' and in another moment was out of the prison room. Lionel looked about. A short distance away, he saw outlined a faint square of light. He made his way to it, and found it to be, as he had supposed, a window. It looked out upon the grounds behind the stone mansion. Lionel returned to the secret door. He closed it, and that which had been intended for his tomb was sealed again. He cautlously removed the sash of the window. Just to one side of it were the clambering branches of a huge grape-vine. It took Lionel but a few seconds to lower himself to the earth. It was night, and it had been twenty four hours, fully, since he had been carried from the crimson room by his foe. All was quiet. The stars twinkled in the heavens. The great mansion Btood outlined against the sky. Not even a breeze rustled the foliage of the trees. How fearfully calm the scene was I " Heaven cannot always smile on that villain," thought Lionel. "His day of doom will come some time." It was the wedding eve of Victoria De Vere and Vincent Sherwood. The De Vere mansion was brilliantly light ed, aud it was a gay scene on which the lamps shone. There was quite a crowd of people, some of them from the neigh borhood, but most of them invited from Baltimore. The false muster of The Cedars was iu attendance. It was part of a plot that he should be there. Other wise his anger at Barbara LIndsley would have kept him away. The solemn ceremony that made the twain one flesh had occurred, at the appointed hour. The guests presently repaired to the dining-room, where a eumptuous repast was awaiting them of which they pro ceeded to partake. It was nearly finish ed when Valasquez, glancing down the long table, beheld a' face that startled him some. " I am a fool still," he thought. " I saw that man once before, and let Lis resemblance to him frighten me!" But after supper Valasquez sought out Eobert De Vere. ." You have a guest here whose name I wish to know," he said. ' "Well?" Robert returned. " He Is a tall man, and has a long red beard. Do you remember him 1"' "Yes ; his name Is Victor." ' "From where V" continued Valas quez. " Oh I there he Is now." " The same," said Robert. " He Is from Baltimore, I believe, Mr. Cashel. To tell the truth, I kuow very little about hi 11. He Is a friend of MIbs LIndsley. Shall I Introduce you V" "It Is not necessary," replied Valas quez. A few feet away, Victor turned to one side. To ell appearances he bad not seen the false master of The Cedars. Victor continued on through the par lors, making his way slowly through the gay and fluttering assembly. Evi dently, he was searching for some one. It was Barbara LIndsley ) and he dis covered her presently, unattended. " Miss LIndsley," he said, " will you promenade with me on the piazza?" " Certainly," Barbara replied. " I will not promlsa to remain out here long, Mr. Victor," she said gayly, when they reached the piazza. For a full minute Victor did not speak, Barbara keeping silent too. Of what was this silence augury ? Suddenly Victor laid his hand upon the one resting bo lightly upon his arm. " Miss LIndsley, I was not without an object In wishing you to come out here," he said, while his voice trembled a little ; " an object of the very greatest importance to me." The girl's heart throbbed with delight. That beginning could lead iu but one direction. " Miss LIndsley you know but very little about me," Victor continued. " Perhaps you consider me as merely an adventurer. Still" "No, not that, Mr. Victor," Barbara said. " Please do not speak so." "Iam under a cloud at present," proceeded Victor, feeling that he was making a stammering effort; "but I hope aud believe It will clear away ere long." If a man's success in love aftalrs de pended on the cleverness with which ha could express himself, how ill the best men would fare 1 Victor paused, seem ingly at a loss how to continue. " Go on," whispered Barbara softly. What a blessed aid were those two little words ! "Oh Miss LIndsley 1" Victor said pas sionately, "I love you with all my heart. I do not ask you now .to say that you love me; but, if you feel that there Is a possibility of your ever doing so, please tell me that I may hope." " Mr. Victor, you may hope," said Barbara. The two stood there, uttering no other word. Victor felt the hand that he held in his tremble a little. And that clasping of hand was enough for them then. " Let us go in," whispered Barbara presently. " We shall be missed." So they went in, a new-found happi ness in each heart. Victor could not appropriate Barbara, and he was content to let her mingle with the other guests. A few hours sped. . Barbara wondered if the master of The Cedars was watch ing her; for it appeared to her that she could not get out of his view. Yet he did not approach near enough at any time to converse with her. At length, feeling that his very gaze was hateful, and anxious to get out of his sight if only for a few moments, and wishing also to be alone with her happi ness for a short time, Batbara sought the conservatory, which was near. A colored lamp cast a dim light around. Barbara found the place deserted, and she seated herself on a rustlo bench, while the spicy fragrance of the flowers refreshed her senses. Scarcely, however had she taken her seat, when she heard a step, and the false master of Tho-Cedars entered. "Fulrest of the flowers, Miss LInd sley," he cried. " Mr. Cashel, compliments are un necessary at present," said Barbara, as she rose to go. "Stay, Miss LIndsley," the man said, in a low, smooth tone ; "I wish a word with you. I beg your pardon for what said that was offensive the other day. If you will promise to say nothing about my proposal, I will give you my word to trouble you no more on that sub ject." . , " Your request Is a strange one," the girl said freezlngly. " However, I will state, for your satisfaction, that I have not mentioned it nor do I expect to." In view of a wicked plan that he bad devised, those were the very words that the villain wished to draw from the girl. He had realized that he should scarcely dare put his plan In execution if she had mentioned to any one his proposal and her refusal. But she had acted in that matter as he had hoped and believed she would, and he felt that he could proceed without any danger of suspicion falling upon him. Barbara turned away. As she did bo Valasquez sprang forward, and, seizing her, placed his hand over her mouth. She tried to scream, but could not ; for that cruel presure kept her silent. " Silence, or you shall diet" hissed the villain in her ear. Barbara sank cold and white in his arms. She had minted with fright. He tied a handkerchief about, her mouth, and with another bound her hands. Then he lifted her, and carried her out into the night. There was no moon, aud clouds were sailing across the heavens. It seemed as though nature, even, was favoring the dark plans of the villain. Valasquez was In the rear of the De Vere residence, aud evidently there was nothing to hinder him from carrying away Barbara LIndsley. He hastened rapidly along. Suddenly he darted away from the house into the shadow of some trees. H4 paused beneath one with low brandies. The mournful cry of the whip poor-will sang out upon the night air. The sound was a signal. It was an swered, repeated, and answered again. Then a crouchiug figure crept up to Valasquez. " Varcor," he said in a cautious whis per. " Massa Cashel," was the equally cautious reply. " Here she is, Varcor. Be careful." And Varcor, the slave, received Bar baraLindsley in his arms. In a few minutes, Valasquez was back in the brilliantly lighted parlors. He entered from the piazza. His absence had not been noticed by any one. " I scarcely dared hope for such suc cess," was his triumphant thought as he mingled in the gay scene. " I feared fate would give me no opportunity to ac complish my purpose ; but I could have wished for no better luck. If I had had the arraaglng of it all beforehand, I could not have managed matters better." The bride and groom were, according to arrangement, to depart for Baltimore on a train at a little past midnight, most of the guests accompanying them. It was not till preparations began to be made for this departure, that the absence of Barbara LIndsley was discovered. At first no great alarm was felt, for It was thought that she would yet appear in time. But she had utterly disappeared, and no trace could be found ot her about the residence or grounds. " What can have become of her ?" was the question that was asked frequent ly, but remained unanswered. The Baltimore guests could not re main, and took the train at the appoint ed hour, pale with alarm at the startling and tragical termination of the evening's gayetles. Of course, Victoria and her husband did not now dream of leaving. Valasquez played his part well. He seemed anxious and excited about Bar bara, but still he did not carry his acting far enough to cause suspicion that it was false. . " The last I beheld of her," he remark ed to Robert De Vere, seemingly inci dentally, "was to see her go out on the piazza with that stranger whose name is Victor, as you informed me this even ing." "With whom ?" cried Robert. " With that tall, red-whiskered fellow who you said was from Baltimore. I have not noticed either one of them since." " By heaven I Cashel," cried Robert excitedly. " I have not beheld him for some time, either. If he has wrought any harm to her he shall rue it" " But I can scarcely lay her disappear ance at his door," Robert added. " He seemed too frank and noble to be'guilty of suoh a crime." But Victor had disappeared, too, as well as Barbara, and his absence was not lu his favor at that. ' The hours of the night wore away, and still there was no sign of Barbara LIndsley. What cjuld be done? Literally, noth lug. Poor Victoria's bridal eve was clouded by the darkness of this mystery. She, poor girl, wept long and violently on her young husband's breast. What dreadful secret might be hidden under Barbara's disappearance! Perhaps, O dreadful thought 1 she had been murder ed, and was lying somewhere under the black night, cold, aud stained with blood. But Victoria's paroxysm of fright and grief passed away after a while, and she became calm enough, but was pale and troubled. The fact that no Idea could be formed as to what had become of Barbara, rendered his disappearance the more sad to her friends. The very mystery of her fate would cause the imagination to con jure up possibilities the most torturing. Morning dawned. Henri Valasquez went to The Cedars. What could be done ? Must Barbara's friends sit calmly down and await a de velopment ? Would the mystery ever be explained? The girl might as well have been carried to an invisible world by some strange power, for all the conjecture that could be made of her whereabouts. " I shall go to Fairmount and notify the sheriff of Barbara's disappearance," Robert answered. " Perhaps the officers of the law may be able to aid us in our search for her." And, after partaking of a hasty break fast, he mounted a horse, and rode rapid ly away toward Fairmount. Reaching the town, he performed the duty he had Imposed upon himself, and then sought out the Mountain City House, the best hotel in the place. " Hat a young man by the name of Victor been stopping here lately?" he asked of the clerk. ' " He has," was the answer. " Where is he now ?" " He went to Baltimore this morning, on the 3.30 express." This seemed to Bobert De Vere a con firmation of the vague suspicion he had before entertained. He had been mis taken in Victor, he feared. After all, he was a villian, and to him could be traced the cause of Barbara's disappearance. " What could be bis object ?" was the query that suggested itself to Robert. Several possibilities suggested them selves. The most plausible idea was that Victor had been Barbara's suitor, and had been refused. Then, ah! if bis suspicions were correct, this then was easily followed to a conclusion. " I will follow him to Baltimore," was Robert's hasty thought. " I will pursue him, and if he or any of bis" tools have abducted or otherwise harmed ber, let them beware I" As these thoughts passed through his mind, Robert had been standing in the office of the hotel. " When is there another train for Bal timore ?" he now asked of the clerk. " At eighteen minutes past ten, about an hour hence," was the reply. Robert wrote a note explaining his continued absence, and gave it to the sheriff, whom he found upon the eve of departing with s posse for the scene of the mystery. Of course, Robert had no intention of detaining him from proceed ing. All means possible must be used for the discovery of Barbara. The train thundered along at the ap pointed moment, and Boon Robert was going as rapidly toward Baltimore as steam and iron could bear him. Mr. Victor had gone to Baltimore, as the clerk had stated ; but when Robert De Vere had nearly reached the city a train passed speeding westward swiftly. Victor was on the tmin. He was ac companied by a couple of experienced detectives. But he knew naught of the disappear ance of Barbara LIndsley. v The motion of a carriage, and the cool night air blowing upon ber, brought Barbara LIndsley to consciousness. She opened her eyes to find herself bound hand and foot, with a bandage tied over her mouth. At first she thought she was in total darkness, but she soon perceived an opening ahead, and, outlined in that, the head aud shoulders of a man. To be continued.