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The Leopard's Claw: Chapter XXXI: The Honeymoon Tour

The Leopard's Claw
Chapter XXXI: The Honeymoon Tour
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table of contents
  1. Front Matter
    1. Publishers' Foreword
    2. Dedication
    3. Table of Contents
  2. Chapter I: Dubley Castle
  3. Chapter II:Young Montcrief Seeks Aid of Brother
  4. Chapter III: Lord Montroy Meets an Old Friend
  5. Chapter IV: Oliver and Eva Sail for West Africa
  6. Chapter V: Arrival in West Africa
  7. Chapter VI: Oliver Meets Governor of Sierra Leone
  8. Chapter VII: After Eva's First Ball
  9. Chapter VIII: Oliver Meets the African Miner
  10. Chapter IX: Miss Lucretia Montcrief
  11. Chapter X: Death of the Earl of Dubley
  12. Chapter XI: Oliver's Interior Trip
  13. Chapter XII: West African Funeral Rite
  14. Chapter XIII: Jungle Terrors
  15. Chapter XIV: Desertion by Carriers
  16. Chapter XV: Oliver Leaves on Prospecting Tour
  17. Chapter XVI: Eva Starts Search for Her Husband
  18. Chapter XVII: Oliver's Flight
  19. Chapter XVIII: Oliver's Imprisonment and Escape
  20. Chapter XIX: Oliver's Old Enemy Kidnaps Lucretia
  21. Chapter XX: Lucretia's Rescue
  22. Chapter XXI: Oliver Meets Rev. Jones
  23. Chapter XXII: The Valley of Allah
  24. Chapter XXIII: Oliver and Lucretia Arrive at Freetown
  25. Chapter XXIV: Oliver Fails on Search Expedition for Eva
  26. Chapter XXV: Oliver Is Shipwrecked
  27. Chapter XXVI: Marriage and Honeymoon
  28. Chapter XXVII: The Arrival of the Councess
  29. Chapter XXVIII: In the Hands of the White Slaver
  30. Chapter XXIX: The Rescue
  31. Chapter XXX: Elaine's History
  32. Chapter XXXI: The Honeymoon Tour
  33. Chapter XXXII: The Tidings of Lucretia's Death Reach Lord Winslow
  34. Chapter XXXIII: The Meeting of Mother and Daughter
  35. Chapter XXXIV: Oliver's Rescue
  36. Chapter XXXV: The Flight
  37. Chapter XXXVI: The Reunion

Chapter XXXI:
The Honeymoon Tour

MR. WILSON and Elaine were quietly married at the office of the American Embassy on the following afternoon.

That evening they took a train with Lucretia, Zina, and Elaine's Russian maid and passed through and over Jura and the Jura Mountains into Switzerland and stopped at Zurich, where they spent a short while enjoying the sights of the quaint mediaeval-looking prosperous city.

From there they travelled by train to Trieste and remained at the important Austria-Hungarian seaport town, with its Italian-speaking population. They remained there until near the middle of summer, when Lucretia's cheeks had begun to regain their naturally rosy complexion, when they crossed the Gulf of Venice and landed at Venice.

From thence they took a train to Rome. As the summer had now advanced, Mr. Wilson decided they would entrain for Genoa and spend the rest of the summer, when they would embark from that city for America on the first of September.

On the afternoon of their last day in Rome, they visited the Saint Maria della Pace, and were seeking their favorite paintings, when she recognized Lord Winslow standing in a very pensive mood looking upon one of Raphael's paintings with his hands crossed behind his back. He looked so sad and altered that she forgot all of her past doubts and jealousies and wanted to take him in her arms and mother him as if he were a little child. She left her companions abruptly and hastened towards him. But as fate would have it, the Countess was also among the visitors inspecting the paintings, and she saw Lord Winslow at the same time Lucretia did. Since she was nearer she reached his side and familiarly took his arm before Lucretia could reach or attract his attention.

Elaine was searching for Lucretia and just reached her side in time to save her from falling.

Lucretia naturally supposed that they were travelling together and believed that Lord Winslow had really forgotten the "dead" young bride.

When they reached Genoa, Lucretia said to Elaine as they were alone in the latter's dressing room, "Elaine, dear, do you know that I have had a peculiar dream about my mother. I dreamed three times last night that my mother, who is supposed to be dead in Africa, met me at Rev. Jones' Mission, where she is awaiting my father's return.

"My life has been such a strange one of circumstance and almost miraculous escapes from dangers that I am almost persuaded to believe like Zina and the Africans, that my dream is true and that my mother is alive. I can never understand what became of a servant of my father's named 'Twe,' who disappeared on the eve of father's fatal sail. The boy was loyalty itself, but has never been heard of. And my old nurse Yanga, who was left to search for my mother has never been heard of either.

"Now, darling, don't think me ungrateful of your and Mr. Wilson's great kindness, but don't you see that under the circumstances you would do me a greater kindness if you will permit me to visit Freetown and inquire after Rev. Jones. I will promise faithfully not to go into the interior unless I am sure that my mother is alive and I have the proper protection, and I shall keep in touch with you always. Do, dear, persuade Mr. Wilson to consent.

"Some day I shall be in a position to repay the confidence you have placed in me without knowing my identity. But this much I can tell you now, I shall be seventeen this coming September and am a wife who is dead to her husband and relatives. Now, Elaine, you can see I am not the child you thought I was. It is too late to restore my happiness as a wife, but you may assist me to find the mother I have needed so much."

After this confidential outburst of Lucretia, Elaine persuaded Mr. Wilson to consent to Lucretia visiting Freetown, with the understanding that she would finally live with them in Chicago. Mr. Wilson and Elaine accompanied Lucretia as far as Teneriffe, where the party remained together in a mountain cottage for a fortnight.

Mr. Wilson gave Lucretia a very generous cash check upon the British West African Bank at Freetown and his Chicago Club address, where she could always reach them. They then parted from Lucretia upon the leeward-bound West African steamer and embarked in a northwest-bound steamer for their old home in the new world, which held out to Elaine a new and rosy future and a patriotic love she had never before experienced.

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Chapter XXXII: The Tidings of Lucretia's Death Reach Lord Winslow
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