BEAUTY AND
THE BEAST
BY
BAYARD TAYLOR.
CHAPTER NINE
The young Prince had, in reality, become the happy husband of
Helena. His love for her had grown to be a shaping and organizing
influence, without which his nature would have fallen into its
former confusion. If a thought of a less honorable relation had
ever entered his mind, it was presently banished by the respect
which a nearer intimacy inspired; and thus Helena, magnetically
drawing to the surface only his best qualities, loved,
unconsciously to herself, her own work in him. Ere long, she saw
that she might balance the advantages he had conferred upon her
in their marriage by the support and encouragement which she was
able to impart to him; and this knowledge, removing all painful
sense of obligation, made her both happy and secure in her new
position.
The Princess Martha, under some presentiment of her approaching
death, had intrusted one of the ladies in attendance upon her
with the secret of her son's marriage, in addition to a tender
maternal message, and such presents of money and jewelry as she
was able to procure without her husband's knowledge. These
presents reached Boris very opportunely; for, although Helena
developed a wonderful skill in regulating his expenses, the
spring was approaching, and even the limited circle of society in
which they had moved during the gay season had made heavy demands
upon his purse. He became restless and abstracted, until his
wife, who by this time clearly comprehended the nature of his
trouble, had secretly decided how it must be met.
The slender hoard of the old music-master, with a few thousand
rubles from Prince Boris, sufficed for his modest maintenance.
Being now free from the charge of his daughter, he determined to
visit Germany, and, if circumstances were propitious, to secure a
refuge for his old age in his favorite Leipsic. Summer was at
hand, and the court had already removed to Oranienbaum. In a few
weeks the capital would be deserted.
"Shall we go to Germany with your father?" asked Boris,
as he sat at a window with Helena, enjoying the long twilight.
"No, my Boris," she answered; "we will go to
Kinesma."
"But--Helena,--golubchik, mon ange,--are you in
earnest?"
"Yes, my Boris. The last letter from your--our cousin
Nadejda convinces me that the step must be taken. Prince Alexis
has grown much older since your mother's death; he is lonely and
unhappy. He may not welcome us, but he will surely suffer us to
come to him; and we must then begin the work of reconciliation.
Reflect, my Boris, that you have keenly wounded him in the
tenderest part,--his pride,--and you must therefore cast away
your own pride, and humbly and respectfully, as becomes a son,
solicit his pardon."
"Yes," said he, hesitatingly, "you are right. But
I know his violence and recklessness, as you do not. For myself,
alone, I am willing to meet him; yet I fear for your sake. Would
you not tremble to encounter a maddened and brutal mujik?--then
how much more to meet Alexis Pavlovitch of Kinesma!"
"I do not and shall not tremble," she replied. "It
is not your marriage that has estranged your father, but your
marriage with ME. Having been, unconsciously, the cause of the
trouble, I shall deliberately, and as a sacred duty, attempt to
remove it. Let us go to Kinesma, as humble, penitent children,
and cast ourselves upon your father's mercy. At the worst, he can
but reject us; and you will have given me the consolation of
knowing that I have tried, as your wife, to annul the sacrifice
you have made for my sake."
"Be it so, then!" cried Boris, with a mingled feeling
of relief and anxiety.
He was not unwilling that the attempt should be made, especially
since it was his wife's desire; but he knew his father too well
to anticipate immediate success. All threatening POSSIBILITIES
suggested themselves to his mind; all forms of insult and outrage
which he had seen perpetrated at Kinesma filled his memory. The
suspense became at last worse than any probable reality. He wrote
to his father, announcing a speedy visit from himself and his
wife; and two days afterwards the pair left St. Petersburg in a
large travelling kibitka.