Patricia
Fleming threw the reins to a
groom, and ran up the steps
into the great house, her thin
lips white with rage.
Lord
Eyre followed her heavily. "I'll
be down in half an hour,"
she laughed merrily, "tell
Dawson to bring you a drink!"
Then she went straight through
the house, her girlish eyes
the incarnation of a curse.
For
the third time she had failed
to bring Geoffrey Eyre to her
feet. She looked into her hat;
there in the lining was the
talisman that she had tested
--- and it had tricked her.
What
do I need? she thought. Mut
it be blood?
She
was a maiden of the pure English
strain; brave, gay, honest,
shrewd --- and there was not
one that guessed the inmost
fire that burnt her. For she
was but a child when the Visitor
came.
The
first of the Visits was in a
dream. She woke choking; the
air --- clear, sweet, and wholesome
as it blew through the open
window from the Chilterns ---
was fouled with a musty stench.
And she woke her governess with
a tale of a tiger.
The
second Visit was again at night.
She had been hunting, was alone
at the death, had beaten off
the hounds. That night she heard
a fox bark in her room, She
spent a {125} sleepless night
of terror; in the morning she
found the red hairs of a fox
upon her pillow.
The
third Visit was nor in sleep
nor waking. But she tightened
her lips, and would have veiled
the hateful gleam in her eyes.
It was
that day, though, that she struck
a servant with her riding-whip.
She
was so sane that she knew exactly
wherein her madness lay; and
she set
all her strength not to conquer
but to conceal it.
Two
years later, and Patricia Fleming,
the orphan heiress of Carthwell
Abbey, as the county toast,
Diana of the Chilterns.
Yet
Geoffrey Eyre evaded her. His
dog's fidelity and honesty kept
him true
to the little north-country
girl that three months earlier
had seduced his
simplicity. He did not even
live her; but she had made him
think so for an
hour; and his pledged word held
him.
Patricia's
open favour only made him hate
her because of its very
seduction. It was really his
own weakness that he hated.
Patricia
ran, tense and angry, through
the house. The servants noticed
it.
The mistress has been crossed,
they thought, she will go to
the chapel and get
ease. Praising her.
True,
to the chapel she went; locked
the door, dived behind the altar,
struck a secret panel, came
suddenly into a priest's hiding-hole,
a room large
enough to hold a score of men
if need be.
At the
end of the room was a great
scarlet cross, and on it, her
face to
the wood, her wrists and ankles
swollen over the whip lashes
that bound her,
hung a naked girl, big-boned,
voluptuous. Red hair streamed
over her back.
What,
Margaret! so blue? laughed Patricia.
I am
cold, said the girl upon the
cross, in an indifferent voice.
Nonsense,
dear! answered Patricia, rapidly
divesting herself of her riding-
habit. There is no hint of frost;
we had a splendid run, and a
grand kill. You shall be warm
yet, for all that.
This
time the girl writhed and moaned
a little.
Patricia
took from an old wardrobe a
close-fitting suit of fox fur,
and slipped it on her slim white
body.
Did
I make you wait, dear? she said,
with a curious leer. I am the
keener for the sport, to be
sure!
She
took the faithless talisman
from her hat. It was a little
square of vellum, written upon
in black. She took a hairpin
from her head, pierced the talisman,
and drove the pin into the girl's
thigh.
They
must have blood, said she. Now
see how I will turn the blue
to red! Come! don't wince: you
haven't had it for a month.
Then
her ivory arm slid like a serpent
from the furs, and with the
cutting whip she struck young
Margaret between the shoulders.
A shriek
rang out: its only echo was
Patricia's laugh, childlike,
icy, devilish.
She
struck again and again. Great
weals of purple stood on the
girl's back; froth tinged with
blood came from her mouth, for
she had bitten her lips and
tongue in agony.
Patricia
grew warm and rosy --- exquisitely
beautiful. Her babe-breasts
heaved; her pips parted; her
whole body and soul seemed lapped
in ecstasy.
I wish
you were Geoffrey, girlie! she
panted.
Then
the skin burst. Raw flesh oozed
blood that dribbled down Margaret's
back.
Still
the fair maid struck and struck
in the silence, until the tiny
rivulets met and waxed great
and touched the talisman. She
threw the bloody
whalebone into a corner, and
went upon her knees. She kissed
her friend; she
kissed the talisman; and again
kissed the girl, the warm blood
staining her
pure lips.
She
took the talisman, and hid it
in her bosom. Last of all she
loosened the cords, and Margaret
sank in a heap to the floor.
Patricia threw furs over her
and rolled her up in them; brought
wine, and poured it down her
throat. She smiled, kindly,
like a sister.
"Sleep
now awhile, sweetheart!"
she whispered, and kissed her
forehead.
It was
a very demure and self-possessed
little maiden that made dinner
lively for poor Geoffrey, who
was thinking over his mistake.
Patricia's
old aunt, who kept house for
her, smiled on the flirtation.
it was not by accident that
she left them alone sitting
over the great fire.
"Poor Margaret has her
rheumatism again," she
explained innocently; "I
must go
and see how she is." Loyal
Margaret!
So it
happened that Geoffrey lost
his head. "The ivy is strong
enough" (she had whispered,
ere their first kiss had hardly
died). "Before the moon
is up, be sure!" and glided
off just as the aunt returned.
Eyre
excused himself; half a mile
from the house he left his horse
to his man to lead home, and
ten minutes later was groping
for Patricia in the dark.
White
as a lily in body and soul,
she took him in her arms.
Awaking
as from death, he suddenly cried
out., "Oh God! What is
it? Oh God! my God! Patricia!
Your body! Your Body!"
"Yours!"
she cooed.
"Why,
you're all hairy!" he cried.
"And the scent! the scent!"
From
without came sharp and resonant
the yap of a hound as the moon
rose.
Patricia
put her hands to her body. he
was telling the truth. "The
Visitor!" she screamed
once with fright, and was silent.
he switched the light on, and
she screamed again.
There
was a savage lust upon his face.
"This
afternoon," he cried, "you
called me a dog. I looked like
a dog and thought like a dog;
and, by God! I am a dog. I'll
act like a dog then!"
Obedient
to some strange instinct, she
dived from the bed for the window.
But
he was on her; his teeth met
in her throat.
In the
morning they found the dead
bodies of both hound and fox
--- but how did that explain
the wonderful Elopement of Lord
Eyre and Miss Fleming? For neither
of them were ever seen again.
I think
Margaret understands; in the
convent which she rules to-day
there hangs beside a blood-stained
cutting-whip the silver model
of a fox, with the inscription:
"Patricia
Margaritae vulpis vulpem dedit."
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