The words of kindness died upon her lips, and she turned away with a heart-sick sigh.
"I see that I can hardly get Miss Walsingham to believe that I am not the brutal scoffer who insulted her at Castle Brand, seven months ago," said he, with an ingratiating gentleness; "but I for one have lived to see my mistake, and perhaps you may soon see yours. I have come back in many respects a changed man."
"Changed?" faltered she, raising her wistful eyes to his. "Yes, you are. I should not have known you."
And the shifting, contracting eyeballs answered her by dropping to the carpet, while the olive face whitened to a deathly pallor, and the thin, secret lips twitched suddenly.
Changed? Oh, Heaven! yes; had she been blind to read such nobility in yon ill-favored face?
Changed? By all that was generous, brave, and true, this Colonel Brand had belied her mad belief; no foolish devotee had ever bowed before a more unworthy shrine than had poor Margaret Walsingham.
"One summer in the South, under such disagreeable circumstances, would alter any man's appearance," quoth he, twisting his black mustache with his long, brown fingers, and furtively reading her disdainful face. "What between exposure, wounds, swamp fever, famine, and imprisonment, personal beauty stands but a poor chance at the seat of war. But I hope that what I have lost in personal appearance I have gained in the qualities which a good woman admires most. I believe my heart is bettered, my dear Miss Walsingham."
Hypocrite!
She vowed that she would rather hear that insolent laugh and the brutal exclamation:
"Ye gods! what a Medusa!" than this silly sentimentality from St. Udo Brand.