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<h2> Chapter VIII. JASPER </h2>
<p>She led them to the north gallery and, pausing at the door, said merrily,
“The ghost—or ghosts rather, for there were two—which
frightened Patty were Sir Jasper and myself, meeting to discuss certain
important matters which concerned Mr. Treherne. If you want to see spirits
we will play phantom for you, and convince you of our power.”</p>
<p>“Good, let us go and have a ghostly dance, as a proper finale of our
revel,” answered Rose as they flocked into the long hall.</p>
<p>At that moment the great clock struck twelve, and all paused to bid the
old year adieu. Sir Jasper was the first to speak, for, angry with Mrs.
Snowdon, yet thankful to her for making a jest to others of what had been
earnest to him, he desired to hide his chagrin under a gay manner; and
taking Rose around the waist was about to waltz away as she proposed,
saying cheerily, “'Come one and all, and dance the new year in,'” when a
cry from Octavia arrested him, and turning he saw her stand, pale and
trembling, pointing to the far end of the hall.</p>
<p>Eight narrow Gothic windows pierced either wall of the north gallery. A
full moon sent her silvery light strongly in upon the eastern side, making
broad bars of brightness across the floor. No fires burned there now, and
wherever the moonlight did not fall deep shadows lay. As Octavia cried
out, all looked, and all distinctly saw a tall, dark figure moving
noiselessly across the second bar of light far down the hall.</p>
<p>“Is it some jest of yours?” asked Sir Jasper of Mrs. Snowdon, as the form
vanished in the shadow.</p>
<p>“No, upon my honor, I know nothing of it! I only meant to relieve
Octavia's superstitious fears by showing her our pranks” was the whispered
reply as Mrs. Snowdon's cheek paled, and she drew nearer to Jasper.</p>
<p>“Who is there?” called Treherne in a commanding tone.</p>
<p>No answer, but a faint, cold breath of air seemed to sigh along the arched
roof and die away as the dark figure crossed the third streak of
moonlight. A strange awe fell upon them all, and no one spoke, but stood
watching for the appearance of the shape. Nearer and nearer it came, with
soundless steps, and as it reached the sixth window its outlines were
distinctly visible. A tall, wasted figure, all in black, with a rosary
hanging from the girdle, and a dark beard half concealing the face.</p>
<p>“The Abbot's ghost, and very well got up,” said Annon, trying to laugh but
failing decidedly, for again the cold breath swept over them, causing a
general shudder.</p>
<p>“Hush!” whispered Treherne, drawing Octavia to his side with a protecting
gesture.</p>
<p>Once more the phantom appeared and disappeared, and as they waited for it
to cross the last bar of light that lay between it and them, Mrs. Snowdon
stepped forward to the edge of the shadow in which they stood, as if to
confront the apparition alone. Out of the darkness it came, and in the
full radiance of the light it paused. Mrs. Snowdon, being nearest, saw the
face first, and uttering a faint cry dropped down upon the stone floor,
covering up her eyes. Nothing human ever wore a look like that of the
ghastly, hollow-eyed, pale-lipped countenance below the hood. All saw it
and held their breath as it slowly raised a shadowy arm and pointed a
shriveled finger at Sir Jasper.</p>
<p>“Speak, whatever you are, or I'll quickly prove whether you are man or
spirit!” cried Jasper fiercely, stepping forward as if to grasp the
extended arm that seemed to menace him alone.</p>
<p>An icy gust swept through the hall, and the phantom slowly receded into
the shadow. Jasper sprang after it, but nothing crossed the second stream
of light, and nothing remained in the shade. Like one possessed by a
sudden fancy he rushed down the gallery to find all fast and empty, and to
return looking very strangely. Blanche had fainted away and Annon was
bearing her out of the hall. Rose was clinging to Mrs. Snowdon, and
Octavia leaned against her cousin, saying in a fervent whisper, “Thank God
it did not point at you!”</p>
<p>“Am I then dearer than your brother?” he whispered back.</p>
<p>There was no audible reply, but one little hand involuntarily pressed his,
though the other was outstretched toward Jasper, who came up white and
startled but firm and quiet. Affecting to make light of it, he said,
forcing a smile as he raised Mrs. Snowdon, “It is some stupid joke of the
servants. Let us think no more of it. Come, Edith, this is not like your
usual self.”</p>
<p>“It was nothing human, Jasper; you know it as well as I. Oh, why did I
bring you here to meet the warning phantom that haunts your house!”</p>
<p>“Nay, if my time is near the spirit would have found me out wherever I
might be. I have no faith in that absurd superstition—I laugh at and
defy it. Come down and drink my health in wine from the Abbot's own
cellar.”</p>
<p>But no one had heart for further gaiety, and, finding Lady Treherne
already alarmed by Annon, they were forced to tell her all, and find their
own bewilderment deepened by her unalterable belief in the evil omen.</p>
<p>At her command the house was searched, the servants cross-questioned, and
every effort made to discover the identity of the apparition. All in vain;
the house was as usual, and not a man or maid but turned pale at the idea
of entering the gallery at midnight. At my lady's request, all promised to
say no more upon the mystery, and separated at last to such sleep as they
could enjoy.</p>
<p>Very grave were the faces gathered about the breakfast table next morning,
and very anxious the glances cast on Sir Jasper as he came in, late as
usual, looking uncommonly blithe and well. Nothing serious ever made a
deep impression on his mercurial nature. Treherne had more the air of a
doomed man, being very pale and worn, in spite of an occasional gleam of
happiness as he looked at Octavia. He haunted Jasper like a shadow all the
morning, much to that young gentleman's annoyance, for both his mother and
sister hung about him with faces of ill-dissembled anxiety. By afternoon
his patience gave out, and he openly rebelled against the tender guard
kept over him. Ringing for his horse he said decidedly, “I'm bored to
death with the solemnity which pervades the house today, so I'm off for a
brisk gallop, before I lose my temper and spirits altogether.”</p>
<p>“Come with me in the pony carriage, Jasper. I've not had a drive with you
for a long while, and should enjoy it so much,” said my lady, detaining
him.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Snowdon looks as if she needed air to revive her roses, and the pony
carriage is just the thing for her, so I will cheerfully resign my seat to
her,” he answered laughing, as he forced himself from his mother's hand.</p>
<p>“Take the girls in the clarence. We all want a breath of air, and you are
the best whip we know. Be gallant and say yes, dear.”</p>
<p>“No, thank you, Tavie, that won't do. Rose and Blanche are both asleep,
and you are dying to go and do likewise, after your vigils last night. As
a man and a brother I beg you'll do so, and let me ride as I like.”</p>
<p>“Suppose you ask Annon to join you—” began Treherne with
well-assumed indifference; but Sir Jasper frowned and turned sharply on
him, saying, half-petulantly, half-jocosely:</p>
<p>“Upon my life I should think I was a boy or a baby, by the manner in which
you mount guard over me today. If you think I'm going to live in daily
fear of some mishap, you are all much mistaken. Ghost or no ghost, I shall
make merry while I can; a short life and a jolly one has always been my
motto, you know, so fare you well till dinnertime.”</p>
<p>They watched him gallop down the avenue, and then went their different
ways, still burdened with a nameless foreboding. Octavia strolled into the
conservatory, thinking to refresh herself with the balmy silence which
pervaded the place, but Annon soon joined her, full of a lover's hopes and
fears.</p>
<p>“Miss Treherne, I have ventured to come for my answer. Is my New Year to
be a blissful or a sad one?” he asked eagerly.</p>
<p>“Forgive me if I give you an unwelcome reply, but I must be true, and so
regretfully refuse the honor you do me,” she said sorrowfully.</p>
<p>“May I ask why?”</p>
<p>“Because I do not love you.”</p>
<p>“And you do love your cousin,” he cried angrily, pausing to watch her
half-averted face.</p>
<p>She turned it fully toward him and answered, with her native sincerity,
“Yes, I do, with all my heart, and now my mother will not thwart me, for
Maurice has saved my life, and I am free to devote it all to him.”</p>
<p>“Happy man, I wish I had been a cripple!” sighed Annon. Then with a manful
effort to be just and generous, he added heartily, “Say no more, he
deserves you; I want no sacrifice to duty; I yield, and go away, praying
heaven to bless you now and always.”</p>
<p>He kissed her hand and left her to seek my lady and make his adieus, for
no persuasion could keep him. Leaving a note for Sir Jasper, he hurried
away, to the great relief of Treherne and the deep regret of Blanche, who,
however, lived in hopes of another trial later in the season.</p>
<p>“Here comes Jasper, Mamma, safe and well,” cried Octavia an hour or two
later, as she joined her mother on the terrace, where my lady had been
pacing restlessly to and fro nearly ever since her son rode away.</p>
<p>With a smile of intense relief she waved her handkerchief as he came
clattering up the drive, and seeing her he answered with hat and hand. He
usually dismounted at the great hall door, but a sudden whim made him ride
along the wall that lay below the terrace, for he was a fine horseman, and
Mrs. Snowdon was looking from her window. As he approached, the peacocks
fled screaming, and one flew up just before the horse's eyes as his master
was in the act of dismounting. The spirited creature was startled, sprang
partway up the low, broad steps of the terrace, and, being sharply
checked, slipped, fell, and man and horse rolled down together.</p>
<p>Never did those who heard it forget the cry that left Lady Treherne's lips
as she saw the fall. It brought out both guests and servants, to find
Octavia recklessly struggling with the frightened horse, and my lady down
upon the stones with her son's bleeding head in her arms.</p>
<p>They bore in the senseless, shattered body, and for hours tried everything
that skill and sciences could devise to save the young man's life. But
every effort was in vain, and as the sun set Sir Jasper lay dying.
Conscious at last, and able to speak, he looked about him with a troubled
glance, and seemed struggling with some desire that overmastered pain and
held death at bay.</p>
<p>“I want Maurice,” he feebly said, at length.</p>
<p>“Dear lad, I'm here,” answered his cousin's voice from a seat in the
shadow of the half-drawn curtains.</p>
<p>“Always near when I need you. Many a scrape have you helped me out of, but
this is beyond your power,” and a faint smile passed over Jasper's lips as
the past flitted before his mind. But the smile died, and a groan of pain
escaped him as he cried suddenly, “Quick! Let me tell it before it is too
late! Maurice never will, but bear the shame all his life that my dead
name may be untarnished. Bring Edith; she must hear the truth.”</p>
<p>She was soon there, and, lying in his mother's arms, one hand in his
cousin's, and one on his sister's bent head, Jasper rapidly told the
secret which had burdened him for a year.</p>
<p>“I did it; I forged my uncle's name when I had lost so heavily at play
that I dared not tell my mother, or squander more of my own fortune. I
deceived Maurice, and let him think the check a genuine one; I made him
present it and get the money, and when all went well I fancied I was safe.
But my uncle discovered it secretly, said nothing, and, believing Maurice
the forger, disinherited him. I never knew this till the old man died, and
then it was too late. I confessed to Maurice, and he forgave me. He said,
'I am helpless now, shut out from the world, with nothing to lose or gain,
and soon to be forgotten by those who once knew me, so let the suspicion
of shame, if any such there be, still cling to me, and do you go your way,
rich, happy, honorable, and untouched by any shadow on your fame.' Mother,
I let him do it, unconscious as he was that many knew the secret sin and
fancied him the doer of it.”</p>
<p>“Hush, Jasper, let it pass. I can bear it; I promised your dear father to
be your staunch friend through life, and I have only kept my word.”</p>
<p>“God knows you have, but now my life ends, and I cannot die till you are
cleared. Edith, I told you half the truth, and you would have used it
against him had not some angel sent this girl to touch your heart. You
have done your part to atone for the past, now let me do mine. Mother,
Tavie loves him, he has risked life and honor for me. Repay him generously
and give him this.”</p>
<p>With feeble touch Sir Jasper tried to lay his sister's hand in Treherne's
as he spoke; Mrs. Snowdon helped him, and as my lady bowed her head in
silent acquiescence, a joyful smile shone on the dying man's face.</p>
<p>“One more confession, and then I am ready,” he said, looking up into the
face of the woman whom he had loved with all the power of a shallow
nature. “It was a jest to you, Edith, but it was bitter earnest to me, for
I loved you, sinful as it was. Ask your husband to forgive me, and tell
him it was better I should die than live to mar a good man's peace. Kiss
me once, and make him happy for my sake.”</p>
<p>She touched his cold lips with remorseful tenderness, and in the same
breath registered a vow to obey that dying prayer.</p>
<p>“Tavie dear, Maurice, my brother, God bless you both. Good-bye, Mother. He
will be a better son than I have been to you.” Then, the reckless spirit
of the man surviving to the last, Sir Jasper laughed faintly, as he seemed
to beckon some invisible shape, and died saying gaily, “Now, Father Abbot,
lead on, I'll follow you.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<p><br/><br/></p>
<p>A year later three weddings were celebrated on the same day and in the
same church. Maurice Treherne, a well man, led up his cousin. Frank Annon
rewarded Blanche's patient siege by an unconditional surrender, and, to
the infinite amusement of Mrs. Grundy, Major Royston publicly confessed
himself outgeneraled by merry Rose. The triple wedding feast was
celebrated at Treherne Abbey, and no uncanny visitor marred its
festivities, for never again was the north gallery haunted by the ghostly
Abbot.</p>
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