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The Mystic Krewe
by
Coleman stood amazed for a few moments before going to the door, which he found immovable. He groped around the wall only to discover that there was no other outlet.
CHAPTER III.
Judge Favart de Caumartin’s residence was a large, rambling structure, more like a hotel than like a private house. Considering that his wife was dead and that he had but one living child, a daughter of seventeen, it was strange that he kept up such an extensive establishment, in which, perhaps, twenty rooms stood richly furnished but unoccupied. It was his pleasure, however, and his pleasure was law.
Mlle. Olympe de Caumartin was greatly surprised when by merest chance she discovered Hepworth Coleman making himself quite at home in a remote room of the house. We have seen how she showed her confusion as she stepped into the doorway and found herself face to face with the young man. The glance that passed between them wrought a wonder in the heart of each. I shall not say that they fell in love at first sight. Love cannot be so accurately traced that its origin can be exactly found out in any particular case. It is enough to record that Mlle. Olympe de Caumartin caught something new, something sweet from that momentary gaze, and shut it up in her heart involuntarily, with a thrill that never again quite left her breast. She was back through halls and rooms to her own boudoir, her cheeks and lips rosy with excitement, and a gentle tremor in her limbs.
That evening in the library the Judge told his daughter that he had given a suit of rooms in the farthest wing of the mansion to a wealthy young gentleman from New York.
“I have had letters from Mr. Cartwright, my banker there, asking me to take care of him, and this seemed the best I could do under the circumstances. I did not see my way to bringing him any nearer to us. We don’t care to have another member added to our family, eh, Olympe, dear?”
Mlle. de Caumartin blushed. She may have felt a touch of guilt because she could not muster courage to tell her father that she had already visited Mr. Coleman.
“I have not seen him yet,” continued the Judge; “I thought it best to let him have some rest before calling upon him. Cartwright advises me that he is of an excellent family–a man to be given the greatest attention, and for my banker’s sake, if for nothing else, I must meet the demand upon my hospitality. He came a fortnight earlier than I expected; but I had Jules watching for him, and you know Jules never fails.”
“But you should have told me before, father dear,” said Mlle. Olympe. “Only a while ago, while wandering through the distant wing of the house, I invaded this young gentleman’s apartment. It surprised him evidently as much as it abashed me.”
“The obvious moral of which is,” replied the Judge quickly, “that you are hereafter to be more careful about what rooms you are stumbling into.” As he spoke his dark oval face, with its fine, grave smile, was almost like a boy’s. The flush that lay under the skin shone through with a suggestion of some repressed stimulus, as if a great passion had forced it up. In his eyes an underglow, so to call it, smoldered with fascinating vagueness.
Mlle. Olympe sat for a moment on his knee and stroked his long black hair.
“You will stay with me to-night, father, dear,” she presently murmured, coaxingly; “you will not go out to-night.”
“I must be gone a little while,” he said, rising at once, “but just a little while.”
She clung close to him.
“Not this night, please,” she urged, with a touching tremor in her voice. “Oh! you remember this night a year ago you had that dreadful adventure in the dark room. You must not go out; please, for my sake, do not.”