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 47. 
CHAPTER XLVII. BELL BURLEIGH.
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47. CHAPTER XLVII.
BELL BURLEIGH.

THERE was to be a wedding in St. James's Church,
Boston, and the persons most interested were Isabella
Helena Burleigh and B. Franklin Irving, whose bridal
cards were sent to Beechwood one morning a few weeks
after Laura's death. It was to be a most brilliant affair, and
was creating considerable excitement both in Belvidere and in
Boston, where by virtue of her boasted blood, which she traced
back to Elizabeth's time, and by dint of an indomitable will,
Miss Burleigh was really quite a belle. It was her blood
which had won upon Mrs. Walter Scott, who said she thought
more of family pedigree than money, and Miss Burleigh's pedigree
was without taint of any kind. So Mrs. Walter Scott was
pleased, or feigned to be so, and went to Boston, and took


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rooms at the Revere, at fifteen dollars per day, and had her
meals served in her private parlor; and Frank brought down
his own horses and carriage, and took another suite of rooms,
and paid at the rate of twenty dollars per day for all his extravagances
in the way of cigars and wine, and friends invited
to dinner. His evenings he spent with his bride-elect in her
home on Beacon Street, where everything betokened that the
proprietors were not rich in worldly goods, if they were in
blood.

The Burleighs were very poor, else the spirited Bell, who
had more brains than heart, had never accepted Frank Irving.
She knew just what he was, and, alone with her young sister
Grace, mimicked him, and called him “green,” and when she
was with him in company, shivered, and grew hot and cold,
and angry at some of his remarks, which betokened so little
sense.

He was gentlemanly to a certain extent, and knew all the
ins and outs of good society; but he was not like the men
with whom Bell Burleigh had associated all her life; not like
the men she respected for what was in their heads rather than
in their purse. But as these men had thus far been unattainable,
and the coffers at home were each year growing lower and
lower as her father grew older and older, Bell swallowed all sentiment,
and the ideas she had once had of a husband to whom
she could look up, and accepted Frank Irving and Millbank.

But not without her price. She made Frank pay for her
blood and charms, and pay munificently, too. First, one hundred
thousand dollars were to be settled on herself, to do with
as she pleased. Next, sister Grace and her father were both
to live with her at Millbank, and Frank was to clothe and support
Grace as if she were his own sister. Then, her brother
Charlie's bills at college must be paid, and after he was graduated
he must come to Millbank as his home until he went
into business.

These were Bell's terms, and Frank winced a little and hesitated,
and when she had told him to take time to consider, he


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took it and did consider, and decided that it would not pay,
and went for a few weeks to New York, where at the Fifth
Avenue Hotel he came again upon the Burleighs. Bell
knew just how to manage him, and ere he had been there three
days he was as much in love with her as ever, and madly jealous
of every one who paid her marked attentions. The price
she asked seemed as nothing compared with herself, and one
evening after she had been unusually fascinating and brilliant,
and had snubbed him dreadfully, he wrote a note accepting
her terms, and begging her to name an early day and put him
out of torture. In her dressing-gown, with her own hair falling
about her shoulders and her braids and curls of false hair lying
on the bureau, Bell read the note, and felt for a moment that
she despised and hated the man who wrote it, just because he
had acceded to her unreasonable demands.

“I wish he had decided otherwise. I would almost rather
die than marry him,” she thought, while her eyes put on a
darker look and her face a paler hue.

Then she thought of the home on Beacon Street, of the
pinching poverty, the efforts to keep up appearances, of her
father growing so old, and of herself, not so young as she was
once, — twenty-eight, the Bible said, though she passed for
twenty-five; then she thought of Charlie, her young brother,
and glanced at Grace, her only sister, who lay sleeping so
quietly before her. All the love Bell Burleigh had was centred
in her father, her brother, and in Grace, the fair young girl, with
soft blue eyes and golden hair, who was as unlike her sister as
possible, and who was awakened by Bell's tears on her face,
and Bell's kisses on her brow.

“What is it, Bell?” she asked, sitting up in bed, and rubbing
her eyes in a sleepy kind of way.

Bell did not say, “I have sold myself for you.” But — “Rejoice,
Grace, that we are never again to know what poverty
means; never to pinch and contrive and save and do things we
are ashamed of in order to keep up. I am going to marry
Mr. Irving, and you are all to live with me at Millbank.


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Grace was wide awake now, and looking earnestly in her
sister's face for a moment, said:

You marry that Mr. Irving, you, Bell? There is not a thing
in common between you, unless you love him. Do you?”

“Hush, Grace; don't speak of love to me,” and Bell's voice
had in it a hard, bitter tone. “I parted company with that
sentiment years ago, before you could understand. You have
heard — of — Dr. Patterson, missionary to India? I would
once have gone with him to the ends of the earth, but mother
said I was too young, too giddy, and the Board thought so, too.
I was not quite seventeen, and I defied those old fogy ministers
to their faces, and when they asked me so coldly if I supposed
myself good enough to be a missionary, I answered that I was
going for the love I bore to Fred, and not to be a missionary,
or because I thought myself good as they termed goodness.
And so it was broken off, and Fred went without me, and as
they said he must have a wife, he took a tall, red-haired woman,
many years his senior, but who, to her other qualifications,
added the fact that she was a professor, and believed herself
called to a missionary life. She is dead now, and her grave is
on the banks of the Ganges. But Fred's life and mine have
drifted widely apart; I am no wife for him now. I have grown
too hard, and reckless, and selfish, and too fond of the world,
to share his home in India. And so all I have to remind me
of the past as connected with him is one letter, the last he ever
wrote me, and a lock of his hair, — black hair, not tow color,
and Bell smiled derisively, while Grace knew that she was
thinking of Frank, whose hair, though not exactly tow color,
was far from being black.

Bell paused a moment, and then went on:

“You know how poor we are, and how we struggle to keep
up, and how much father owes. Our home is mortgaged for
more than it is worth, and so is every article of any value in it.
I should like brains if I could get them set off with money, but
as I cannot, I have concluded to take the money. I have
counted the cost. I know what I am about. I shall be Mrs.


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Franklin Irving, and pay our debts, and keep you all with me,
— and — be — happy.”

She said the last very slowly, and there was a look of pain in
the eyes of this girl who had once thought to be a missionary's
wife, and who had in her many elements of a noble woman.
She did not tell Grace the price she had put upon herself.
That was something she would rather her young sister should
not know, and when Grace, whose ideas of marriage were more
what Bell's had been in the days of the Fred Patterson romance,
tried to expostulate, she stopped her short with, — “It's of no
use; my mind is made up. I have told you what I have because
I knew you would wonder at my choice, and I wanted
you to know some of the causes which led me to make it. I
want your love, your respect, your confidence, Grace, I want —”

Bell's lip quivered a little, and she bowed her dark head over
her sister's golden one, and cried a little; then sat erect, and
the old proud, independent look came back to her face, and
Bell Burleigh was herself again, — the calm, resolute, cool headed
woman of the world, who had sold herself for money and a
home.

They met in the wide entrance hall to the dining-room next
morning, Frank and Bell, and while he stood for a moment,
waiting for his paper, she said a word to him, and they walked
together into breakfast an engaged pair, with quite as much
love and sentiment between them as exists in many and many
an engagement which the world pronounces so eligible and
brilliant.

Bell had some shopping to do that morning, and Frank did not
see her again till just before dinner, when he met and escorted
her to his mother's private parlor, where she was to receive the
priceless boon of Mrs. Walter Scott's blessing. That lady had
heard the news of her son's engagement with a good deal of
equanimity, considering there was no money to be expected.
Like many people of humble birth, Mrs. Walter Scott set a high
value on family and blood, and, as Bell's were both of the first


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water, she accepted her as her future daughter-in-law, wishing
to herself that she was not quite so independent, and resolute,
and strong-minded, as the absence of these qualities would
render her so much more susceptible to subjugation, for Mrs.
Walter Scott meant to subjugate her.

As Mrs. Franklin Irving, she would, of course, be the nominal
mistress of Millbank; but it would be only nominal. Mrs.
Walter Scott would be the real head; the one to whom everybody
would defer, even her daughter-in-law. But she said
nothing of this to Frank. She merely told him she was willing,
that Miss Burleigh was a girl of rare talent and attainments;
that she had a great deal of mind, and intellect, and literary
taste, and would shine in any society.

Frank did not care a picayune for Bell's talents, or attainments,
or literary taste. Indeed he would rather of the two
that she had less of these virtues, and did not overshadow
him so completely as he knew she did. Still he was in love
with her, or thought he was, and extolled her to his mother,
but did not speak of the hundred thousand dollars as a marriage
settlement, or of the arrangement about the Judge and
Charlie and Grace. He would let these things adjust themselves;
and he had faith in Bell's ability to manage her own
matters quietly, and without his aid.

She was looking very beautiful when he led her to his
mother, arrayed in her heavy purple silk with the white ermine
on the waist and sleeves, and Mrs. Walter Scott thought what a
regal-looking woman she was. There was a deep flush on her
cheek and a sparkle in her black eyes, and her white teeth
glittered between the full, pouting lips which just touched
Mrs. Walter Scott's hand, as she stood to receive the blessing.

When they went into dinner that night after the blissful interview,
there was about Frank a certain consciousness of
ownership in the beautiful girl who walked beside him and on
whose finger a superb diamond was shining, the seal of her
engagement, and those who noticed them particularly, and to


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whom Miss Burleigh was known, guessed at the new relations
existing between the two.

This was in the winter, and before Magdalen's parentage was
discovered. Since then the course of true love had run pretty
smoothly for once, and Frank had only felt a single pang, and
that when he heard who Magdalen Lennox was. Then for a
moment all his former love for her came back, and Bell Burleigh,
who chanced to be at Millbank for a day or so, wondered
what had happened to him that he was so absent-minded and
indifferent to her blandishments. She was very gracious to
him now, feeling that there was something due him for all his
generosity to her, and as she could not give him love in its
truest sense, she would give him civility at least and kindliness
of manner and a show of affection. So when she saw the
shadow on his face, and with a woman's intuition felt that something
more than mere business matters had brought it there, she
spoke to him in her softest manner and sang him her sweetest
songs and wore his favorite dress, and twice laid her hand on
his, and asked what was the matter that he looked so gloomy;
had he heard, bad news? He told her no, and kissed her forehead,
and felt his blood tingle a little at this unusual demonstration
from his fiancée, and so fickle and easily soothed was he,
that beneath the influence of Bell's smile the shadow began to
lift, and in the letter of congratulation which he wrote to Magdalen
there was nothing but genuine sympathy and rejoicing
that she had found her home at last and a sister like Alice Grey.

He did not tell of his engagement; he was a little ashamed
to have Magdalen know that he was so soon “off with the old
love and on with the new;” and so she did not suspect it until
every arrangement was complete and the day for the bridal
fixed. Great was the expenditure for silks and satins and laces
and jewelry, and not only New York and Boston, but Paris,
too, was drawn upon to furnish articles of clothing rare and expensive
enough for a bride of Bell Burleigh's fastidious taste
and extravagant notions. Frank, who grew more and more
proud of his conquest, and consequently more and more in


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love with his bride-elect, insisted upon furnishing the bridal
trousseau, and bade her spare neither money nor pains, but
get whatever she wanted at whatever cost. And Bell accepted
his money, and spent it so lavishly that all Boston was alive
with gossip and wonder. There were to be six bridesmaids,
and three of them were to accompany the happy pair for a
week or so at Frank's expense; and Frank never flinched a
hair, even when presented with the Paris bill, in which were
charges of one hundred dollars and more for just one article of
underclothing. All Bell's linen came ready made from Paris,
and such tucks and ruffles and puffs and flutings and laces had
never been seen before in Boston in so great profusion. And
Bell bore herself like a queen, who had all her life been accustomed
to Parisian luxury. There was no doubt of her gracing
Millbank or any other home, and Frank each time he saw her
felt more than repaid for the piles and piles of money which
he paid out for her.

At Millbank there was also dressmaking proceeding on a
grand scale, and though Mrs. Walter Scott's wardrobe differed
somewhat from Bell's, inasmuch as it was soberer and older, —
the silks were just as heavy and rich, and the laces just as
expensive. New furniture, new table-linen, and new silver
came almost daily to Millbank, together with new pictures, for
one of which the sum of two thousand dollars was paid. When
old Hester Floyd heard of that she could keep quiet no longer,
but vowed “she would go to Belvidere and visit Mrs. Peter
Slocum, who was a distant connection, and would be glad to
have her a spell, especially as she meant to pay her way.”

When Hester resolved to do a thing she generally did it,
and as she was resolved to go to Belvidere she at once set
herself to prepare for the journey.