I Say No by Wilkie Collins (reader novel txt) đ
- Author: Wilkie Collins
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âHow is my aunt?â Emily asked.
âBad.â
âWhy have I not heard of her illness before?â
âBecause sheâs too fond of you to let you be distressed about her. âDonât tell Emilyâ; those were her orders, as long as she kept her senses.â
âKept her senses? Good heavens! what do you mean?â
âFeverâthatâs what I mean.â
âI must see her directly; I am not afraid of infection.â
âThereâs no infection to be afraid of. But you mustnât see her, for all that.â
âI insist on seeing her.â
âMiss Emily, I am disappointing you for your own good. Donât you know me well enough to trust me by this time?â
âI do trust you.â
âThen leave my mistress to meâand go and make yourself comfortable in your own room.â
Emilyâs answer was a positive refusal. Mrs. Ellmother, driven to her last resources, raised a new obstacle.
âItâs not to be done, I tell you! How can you see Miss Letitia when she canât bear the light in her room? Do you know what color her eyes are? Red, poor soulâred as a boiled lobster.â
With every word the woman uttered, Emilyâs perplexity and distress increased.
âYou told me my auntâs illness was fever,â she saidââand now you speak of some complaint in her eyes. Stand out of the way, if you please, and let me go to her.â
Mrs. Ellmother, still keeping her place, looked through the open door.
âHereâs the doctor,â she announced. âIt seems I canât satisfy you; ask him whatâs the matter. Come in, doctor.â She threw open the door of the parlor, and introduced Emily. âThis is the mistressâs niece, sir. Please try if you can keep her quiet. I canât.â She placed chairs with the hospitable politeness of the old schoolâand returned to her post at Miss Letitiaâs bedside.
Doctor Allday was an elderly man, with a cool manner and a ruddy complexionâthoroughly acclimatized to the atmosphere of pain and grief in which it was his destiny to live. He spoke to Emily (without any undue familiarity) as if he had been accustomed to see her for the greater part of her life.
âThatâs a curious woman,â he said, when Mrs. Ellmother closed the door; âthe most headstrong person, I think, I ever met with. But devoted to her mistress, and, making allowance for her awkwardness, not a bad nurse. I am afraid I canât give you an encouraging report of your aunt. The rheumatic fever (aggravated by the situation of this houseâbuilt on clay, you know, and close to stagnant water) has been latterly complicated by delirium.â
âIs that a bad sign, sir?â
âThe worst possible sign; it shows that the disease has affected the heart. Yes: she is suffering from inflammation of the eyes, but that is an unimportant symptom. We can keep the pain under by means of cooling lotions and a dark room. Iâve often heard her speak of youâespecially since the illness assumed a serious character. What did you say? Will she know you, when you go into her room? This is about the time when the delirium usually sets in. Iâll see if thereâs a quiet interval.â
He opened the doorâand came back again.
âBy the way,â he resumed, âI ought perhaps to explain how it was that I took the liberty of sending you that telegram. Mrs. Ellmother refused to inform you of her mistressâs serious illness. That circumstance, according to my view of it, laid the responsibility on the doctorâs shoulders. The form taken by your auntâs deliriumâI mean the apparent tendency of the words that escape her in that stateâseems to excite some incomprehensible feeling in the mind of her crabbed servant. She wouldnât even let me go into the bedroom, if she could possibly help it. Did Mrs. Ellmother give you a warm welcome when you came here?â
âFar from it. My arrival seemed to annoy her.â
âAhâjust what I expected. These faithful old servants always end by presuming on their fidelity. Did you ever hear what a witty poetâI forget his name: he lived to be ninetyâsaid of the man who had been his valet for more than half a century? âFor thirty years he was the best of servants; and for thirty years he has been the hardest of masters.â Quite trueâI might say the same of my housekeeper. Rather a good story, isnât it?â
The story was completely thrown away on Emily; but one subject interested her now. âMy poor aunt has always been fond of me,â she said. âPerhaps she might know me, when she recognizes nobody else.â
âNot very likely,â the doctor answered. âBut thereâs no laying down any rule in cases of this kind. I have sometimes observed that circumstances which have produced a strong impression on patients, when they are in a state of health, give a certain direction to the wandering of their minds, when they are in a state of fever. You will say, âI am not a circumstance; I donât see how this encourages me to hopeââand you will be quite right. Instead of talking of my medical experience, I shall do better to look at Miss Letitia, and let you know the result. You have got other relations, I suppose? No? Very distressingâvery distressing.â
Who has not suffered as Emily suffered, when she was left alone? Are there not momentsâif we dare to confess the truthâwhen poor humanity loses its hold on the consolations of religion and the hope of immortality, and feels the cruelty of creation that bids us live, on the condition that we die, and leads the first warm beginnings of love, with merciless certainty, to the cold conclusion of the grave?
âSheâs quiet, for the time being,â Dr. Allday announced, on his return. âRemember, please, that she canât see you in the inflamed state of her eyes, and donât disturb the bed-curtains. The sooner you go to her the better, perhapsâif you have anything to say which depends on her recognizing your voice. Iâll call tomorrow morning. Very distressing,â he repeated, taking his hat and making his bowââVery distressing.â
Emily crossed the narrow little passage which separated the two rooms, and opened the bedchamber door. Mrs. Ellmother met her on the threshold. âNo,â said the obstinate old servant, âyou canât come in.â
The faint voice of Miss Letitia made itself heard, calling Mrs. Ellmother by her familiar nickname.
âBony, who is it?â
âNever mind.â
âWho is it?â
âMiss Emily, if you must know.â
âOh! poor dear, why does she come here? Who told her I was ill?â
âThe doctor told her.â
âDonât come in, Emily. It will only distress youâand it will do me no good. God bles s you, my love. Donât come in.â
âThere!â said Mrs. Ellmother. âDo you hear that? Go back to the sitting-room.â
Thus far, the hard necessity of controlling herself had kept Emily silent. She was now able to speak without tears. âRemember the old times, aunt,â she pleaded, gently. âDonât keep me out of your room, when I have come here to nurse you!â
âIâm her nurse. Go back to the sitting-room,â Mrs. Ellmother repeated.
True love lasts while life lasts. The dying woman relented.
âBony! Bony! I canât be unkind to Emily. Let her in.â
Mrs. Ellmother still insisted on having her way.
âYouâre contradicting your own orders,â she said to her mistress. âYou donât know how soon you may begin wandering in your mind again. Think, Miss Letitiaâthink.â
This remonstrance was received in silence. Mrs. Ellmotherâs great gaunt figure still blocked up the doorway.
âIf you force me to it,â Emily said, quietly, âI must go to the doctor, and ask him to interfere.â
âDo you mean that?â Mrs. Ellmother said, quietly, on her side.
âI do mean it,â was the answer.
The old servant suddenly submittedâwith a look which took Emily by surprise. She had expected to see anger; the face that now confronted her was a face subdued by sorrow and fear.
âI wash my hands of it,â Mrs. Ellmother said. âGo inâand take the consequences.â
CHAPTER XIII.
MISS LETITIA.
Emily entered the room. The door was immediately closed on her from the outer side. Mrs. Ellmotherâs heavy steps were heard retreating along the passage. Then the banging of the door that led into the kitchen shook the flimsily-built cottage. Then, there was silence.
The dim light of a lamp hidden away in a corner and screened by a dingy green shade, just revealed the closely-curtained bed, and the table near it bearing medicine-bottles and glasses. The only objects on the chimney-piece were a clock that had been stopped in mercy to the suffererâs irritable nerves, and an open case containing a machine for pouring drops into the eyes. The smell of fumigating pastilles hung heavily on the air. To Emilyâs excited imagination, the silence was like the silence of death. She approached the bed trembling. âWonât you speak to me, aunt?â
âIs that you, Emily? Who let you come in?â
âYou said I might come in, dear. Are you thirsty? I see some lemonade on the table. Shall I give it to you?â
âNo! If you open the bed-curtains, you let in the light. My poor eyes! Why are you here, my dear? Why are you not at the school?â
âItâs holiday-time, aunt. Besides, I have left school for good.â
âLeft school?â Miss Letitiaâs memory made an effort, as she repeated those words. âYou were going somewhere when you left school,â she said, âand Cecilia Wyvil had something to do with it. Oh, my love, how cruel of you to go away to a stranger, when you might live here with me!â She pausedâher sense of what she had herself just said began to grow confused. âWhat stranger?â she asked abruptly. âWas it a man? What name? Oh, my mind! Has death got hold of my mind before my body?â
âHush! hush! Iâll tell you the name. Sir Jervis Redwood.â
âI donât know him. I donât want to know him. Do you think he means to send for you. Perhaps he has sent for you. I wonât allow it! You shanât go!â
âDonât excite yourself, dear! I have refused to go; I mean to stay here with you.â
The fevered brain held to its last idea. âHas he sent for you?â she said again, louder than before.
Emily replied once more, in terms carefully chosen with the one purpose of pacifying her. The attempt proved to be useless, and worseâit seemed to make her suspicious. âI wonât be deceived!â she said; âI mean to know all about it. He did send for you. Whom did he send?â
âHis housekeeper.â
âWhat name?â The tone in which she put the question told of excitement that was rising to its climax. âDonât you know that Iâm curious about names?â she burst out. âWhy do you provoke me? Who is it?â
âNobody you know, or need care about, dear aunt. Mrs. Rook.â
Instantly on the utterance of that name, there followed an unexpected result. Silence ensued.
Emily waitedâhesitatedâadvanced, to part the curtains, and look in at her aunt. She was stopped by a dreadful sound of laughterâthe cheerless laughter that is heard among the mad. It suddenly ended in a dreary sigh.
Afraid to look in, she spoke, hardly knowing what she said. âIs there anything you wish for? Shall I callâ?â
Miss Letitiaâs voice interrupted her. Dull, low, rapidly muttering, it was unlike, shockingly unlike, the familiar voice of her aunt. It said strange words.
âMrs. Rook? What does Mrs. Rook matter? Or her husband either? Bony, Bony, youâre frightened about nothing. Whereâs the danger of those two people turning up? Do you know how many miles away the village is? Oh, you foolâa hundred miles and more. Never mind the coroner, the coroner must keep in his own districtâand the jury too. A risky deception? I
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