登陆注册
19460600000113

第113章

"What more can I do!" murmured Mrs. Lecount behind her handkerchief. "Give me time to think--give me time to recover myself. May I retire, sir, for a moment? My nerves are shaken by this sad scene. I must have a glass of water, or I think I shall faint. Don't go yet, Miss Garth. I beg you will give us time to set this sad matter right, if we can--I beg you will remain until I come back."There were two doors of entrance to the room. One, the door into the front parlor, close at Magdalen's left hand. The other, the door into the back parlor, situated behind her. Mrs. Lecount politely retired--through the open folding-doors--by this latter means of exit, so as not to disturb the visitor by passing in front of her. Magdalen waited until she heard the door open and close again behind her, and then resolved to make the most of the opportunity which left her alone with Noel Vanstone. The utter hopelessness of rousing a generous impulse in that base nature had now been proved by her own experience. The last chance left was to treat him like the craven creature he was, and to influence him through his fears.

Before she could speak, Noel Vanstone himself broke the silence. Cunningly as he strove to hide it, he was half angry, half alarmed at his housekeeper's desertion of him. He looked doubtingly at his visitor; he showed a nervous anxiety to conciliate her until Mrs. Lecount's return.

"Pray remember, ma'am, I never denied that this case was a hard one," he began. "You said just now you had no wish to offend me--and I'm sure I don't want to offend you. May I offer you some strawberries? Would you like to look at my father's bargains? I assure you, ma'am, I am naturally a gallant man; and I feel for both these sisters--especially the younger one. Touch me on the subject of the tender passion, and you touch me on a weak place. Nothing would please me more than to hear that Miss Vanstone's lover (I'm sure I always call her Miss Vanstone, and so does Lecount)--I say, ma'am, nothing would please me more than to hear that Miss Vanstone's lover had come back and married her. If a loan of money would be likely to bring him back, and if the security offered was good, and if my lawyer thought me justified--""Stop, Mr. Vanstone," said Magdalen. "You are entirely mistaken in your estimate of the person you have to deal with. You are seriously wrong in supposing that the marriage of the younger sister--if she could be married in a week's time--would make any difference in the convictions which induced her to write to your father and to you. I don't deny that she may act from a mixture of motives. I don't deny that she clings to the hope of hastening her marriage, and to the hope of rescuing her sister from a life of dependence. But if both those objects were accomplished by other means, nothing would induce her to leave you in possession of the inheritance which her father meant his children to have. I know her, Mr. Vanstone! She is a nameless, homeless, friendless wretch. The law which takes care of you, the law which takes care of all legitimate children, casts her like carrion to the winds. It is your law--not hers. She only knows it as the instrument of a vile oppression, an insufferable wrong. The sense of that wrong haunts her like a possession of the devil. The resolution to right that wrong burns in her like fire. If that miserable girl was married and rich, with millions tomorrow, do you think she would move an inch from her purpose? I tell you she would resist, to the last breath in her body, the vile injustice which has struck at the helpless children, through the calamity of their father's death! I tell you she would shrink from no means which a desperate woman can employ to force that closed hand of yours open, or die in the attempt!"She stopped abruptly. Once more her own indomitable earnestness had betrayed her. Once more the inborn nobility of that perverted nature had risen superior to the deception which it had stooped to practice. The scheme of the moment vanished from her mind's view; and the resolution of her life burst its way outward in her own words, in her own tones, pouring hotly and more hotly from her heart. She saw the abject mani kin before her cowering, silent, in his chair. Had his fears left him sense enough to perceive the change in her voice? No: his face spoke the truth--his fears had bewildered him. This time the chance of the moment had befriended her. The door behind her chair had not opened again yet. "No ears but his have heard me," she thought, with a sense of unutterable relief. "I have escaped Mrs. Lecount."She had done nothing of the kind. Mrs. Lecount had never left the room.

After opening the door and closing it again, without going out, the housekeeper had noiselessly knelt down behind Magdalen's chair. Steadying herself against the post of the folding-door, she took a pair of scissors from her pocket, waited until Noel Vanstone (from whose view she was entirely hidden) had attracted Magdalen's attention by speaking to her, and then bent forward, with the scissors ready in her hand. The skirt of the false Miss Garth's gown--the brown alpaca dress, with the white spots on it--touched the floor, within the housekeeper's reach. Mrs. Lecount lifted the outer of the two flounces which ran round the bottom of the dress one over the other, softly cut away a little irregular fragment of stuff from the inner flounce, and neatly smoothed the outer one over it again, so as to hide the gap. By the time she had put the scissors back in her pocket, and had risen to her feet (sheltering herself behind the post of the folding-door), Magdalen had spoken her last words. Mrs. Lecount quietly repeated the ceremony of opening and shutting the back parlor door; and returned to her place.

同类推荐
  • 雅典的泰门

    雅典的泰门

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 千转大明陀罗尼经

    千转大明陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 郘亭知见传本书目

    郘亭知见传本书目

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 梵网经述记

    梵网经述记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • THE CONDUCT OF LIFE

    THE CONDUCT OF LIFE

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 怒剑狂枪

    怒剑狂枪

    天波府六子杨延昭因得罪朝廷权贵,被逐出京城,流浪民间。初入江湖的他缺乏历练,疾恶如仇,得罪了江湖各大帮派,树敌无数。误中妖术闯入阴间,挑战各路鬼怪,大败十殿阎王。更被魔神附体,修成绝世神功。一次次遇险,一步步成长,创造了属于他的传奇。白马银枪,纵横沙场,叱咤战疆。背剑斜睨,傲视群雄,敢问天下谁是英雄。
  • 兽鸣

    兽鸣

    拥有强大的灵魂力量的人,是上天的宠儿。魔法师,炼金术士,或者偏门一点的祭祀,萨满,又或者现代社会中流传的超能力。不过,有一点可以肯定:我们的主角灵魂力量很强,特别强…第一次写书,只想把自己心里的世界完整的构建起来,随时修改,还请各位读者大大们见谅
  • 提高独立生活能力(学生综合素质提高手册)

    提高独立生活能力(学生综合素质提高手册)

    独立是一种态度,也是一种内涵,更是在竞争如此激烈的今天成功的一种必备条件。本书以此为出发点,告诉家长从哪些方面培养孩子的独立性。相信看过本书一定会让读者豁然开朗。在社会竞争压力如此大的今天,正确地培养孩子独立生活的能力无疑是将来成才的必备条件,也是孩子成才的关键。本书将给家长提供专家们的权威指导,同时本书也可作为青少年自主阅读的读物。
  • 轩辕异界

    轩辕异界

    自从盘古开天造物主女娲补天后就将这个空间划分为三个界面后,分别是天界人界兽界魔界和冥界.每个界便由几个界王所看管着,造物主女娲则在六界中享受繁华快乐。一天,龙族生活天空一片血红下起了磅礴的血剑雨“啊“吼!“啊!传来了远方龙族的各个部落以及飞禽走兽的惨叫声。龙天这时眉头一邹,用水焰形成了保护层,阻挡着密密麻麻的血剑雨,难道你是……”“对,我就是魔帝!龙王龙天惊讶的说不会的,五百前你明明已经被我杀死了!不错当年。你用龙族的地狱烈的终极绝招‘万龙合一’把我杀了,哈哈真是天助我,我的魂魄飘到了大地的极端,汲取了天地之灵气使我不但死而复生,而且修行法力大增,哈哈龙天.今天我就让你们整个龙族尝尝死亡的味.
  • 唯爱倾心:喜欢你才欺负你

    唯爱倾心:喜欢你才欺负你

    从小玩到大就从小吵到大,欺负她是他的专长。对于死脑筋的她来说怎么会知道其中的道理呢?什么?婚约!!!和他?mygod开什么国际玩笑,等等,什么叫早就喜欢了?谁可以告诉她发生什么事了。要接受他?还是想想先…
  • 隋唐野史

    隋唐野史

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 黑暗与光明间的巅峰之战

    黑暗与光明间的巅峰之战

    伟诚为了消灭黑暗势力,到处寻找合适的同伴,一起并肩作战,他们击败了黑暗势力的三大组织,还击败了投靠黑暗势力的神秘界,他们不断地努力,终于将魔界的所有恶魔打败,但是他们再一次面临了一个恐怖的噩梦,他们不断地坚持,最后终于消灭了黑暗势力,保护了世界上的苍生……小布的QQ:24105125443暂封作品群:160817492
  • 犯罪客体研究:违法性的中国语境分析

    犯罪客体研究:违法性的中国语境分析

    本书共为六章,内容包括:犯罪客体理论的溯源、犯罪客体之含义、犯罪客体地位论、犯罪客体序位论、犯罪客体关系论、犯罪客体机能论。
  • 中国向何处去

    中国向何处去

    改革开放30年后的今天,我们向哪里去?所走的道路选对了,我们就可以避免发展中的陷阱;走错了,我们就可能跌人社会政治动荡、经济低速发展、人民长期不富裕、国家竞争力不强并下降等发展的“中国陷阱”之中。
  • 古神归来

    古神归来

    古神重生,重铸昔日辉煌,精彩尽在本书之中,敬请关注。