She heard a great deal that afternoon, for the ladies at the end of the

hall did not speak very low, and when at last she was released from her

bandages and had made her afternoon toilet, she hastened round to Miss

Bigelow's to report what she had heard. Tired with her vigils of the

previous night, Ethie was lying down, but she bade Mrs. Pry come in, and

then kept very quiet while the good woman proceeded to ask if she had

heard the news. Ethie had not, but her heart stood still while her

visitor, speaking in a whisper, asked if she was sure Governor Markham

could not hear. That the news concerned herself Ethelyn was sure, and

she was glad that her face was in a measure concealed from view as she

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listened to the story.

Governor Markham's wife was not dead, as they had supposed. She was a

shameless creature, who eight or ten years before eloped with a man a

great deal younger than herself. She was very beautiful, people said,

and very fascinating, and the governor worshiped the ground she trod

upon. He took her going off very hard at first, and for years scarcely

held up his head. But lately he had seemed different, and had been more

favorable to a divorce, as advised by his friends. This, however, was

after he met Miss Sallie Morton, whose father was a millionaire in

Chicago, and whose pretty face had captivated the grave governor. To get

the divorce was a very easy matter there in the West, and the governor

was now free to marry again. As Miss Morton preferred Davenport to any

other place in Iowa, he had built him a magnificent house upon a bluff,

finishing it elegantly, and taking untold pains with the suite of rooms

intended for his bride. As Miss Sallie objected to marrying him while he

was so much of an invalid, he had come to Clifton, hoping to reestablish

his health so as to bring home his wife in the autumn, for which event

great preparations were making in the family of Miss Sallie.

This was the story as told by Mrs. Pry, and considering that it had only

come to her through eight or ten different persons, she repeated the

substance of it pretty accurately, and then stopped for Ethie's comment.

But Ethie had nothing to say, and when, surprised at her silence, Mrs.

Pry asked if she believed it at all, there was still no reply, for

Ethelyn had fainted. The reaction was too great from the bright

anticipations of the hour before, to the crushing blow which had fallen

so suddenly upon her hopes. That a patient at Clifton should faint was

not an uncommon thing. Mrs. Pry had often felt like it herself when just

out of a pack, or a hot sulphur bath, and so Ethie's faint excited no

suspicion in her mind. She was fearful, though, that Miss Bigelow had

not heard all the story, but Ethie assured her that she had, and then

added that if left to herself she might possibly sleep, as that was what

she needed. So Mrs. Pry departed, and Ethie was alone with the terrible

calamity which had come upon her. She had been at the Water Cure long

enough to know that not more than half of what she heard was true, and

this story she knew was false in the parts pertaining to herself and her

desertion of her husband. She had never heard before that she was

suspected of having had an associate in the flight, and her cheeks

crimsoned at the idea, while she wondered if Richard had ever thought

that of her. Not at first, she knew, else he had never sought for her so

zealously as Aunt Barbara had intimated; but latterly, as he had heard

no tidings from her, he might have surmised something of the kind, and

that was the secret of the divorce.




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