The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins (little readers .TXT) đ
- Author: Wilkie Collins
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The question instantly reminded me of the letter in my pocket. I took it out, and opened it. It was a letter of many pages, closely written. I looked impatiently for the signature at the end. âRosanna Spearman.â
As I read the name, a sudden remembrance illuminated my mind, and a sudden suspicion rose out of the new light.
âStop!â I exclaimed. âRosanna Spearman came to my aunt out of a reformatory? Rosanna Spearman had once been a thief?â
âThereâs no denying that, Mr. Franklin. What of it now, if you please?â
âWhat of it now? How do we know she may not have stolen the Diamond after all? How do we know she may not have smeared my nightgown purposely with the paint?â
Betteredge laid his hand on my arm, and stopped me before I could say any more.
âYou will be cleared of this, Mr. Franklin, beyond all doubt. But I hope you wonât be cleared in that way. See what the letter says, sir. In justice to the girlâs memory, see what it says.â
I felt the earnestness with which he spokeâfelt it as a friendly rebuke to me. âYou shall form your own judgment on her letter,â I said. âI will read it out.â
I beganâand read these lines:
âSirâI have something to own to you. A confession which means much misery, may sometimes be made in very few words. This confession can be made in three words. I love you.â
The letter dropped from my hand. I looked at Betteredge. âIn the name of Heaven,â I said, âwhat does it mean?â
He seemed to shrink from answering the question.
âYou and Limping Lucy were alone together this morning, sir,â he said. âDid she say nothing about Rosanna Spearman?â
âShe never even mentioned Rosanna Spearmanâs name.â
âPlease to go back to the letter, Mr. Franklin. I tell you plainly, I canât find it in my heart to distress you, after what you have had to bear already. Let her speak for herself, sir. And get on with your grog. For your own sake, get on with your grog.â
I resumed the reading of the letter.
âIt would be very disgraceful to me to tell you this, if I was a living woman when you read it. I shall be dead and gone, sir, when you find my letter. It is that which makes me bold. Not even my grave will be left to tell of me. I may own the truthâwith the quicksand waiting to hide me when the words are written.
âBesides, you will find your nightgown in my hiding-place, with the smear of the paint on it; and you will want to know how it came to be hidden by me? and why I said nothing to you about it in my life-time? I have only one reason to give. I did these strange things, because I loved you.
âI wonât trouble you with much about myself, or my life, before you came to my ladyâs house. Lady Verinder took me out of a reformatory. I had gone to the reformatory from the prison. I was put in the prison, because I was a thief. I was a thief, because my mother went on the streets when I was quite a little girl. My mother went on the streets, because the gentleman who was my father deserted her. There is no need to tell such a common story as this, at any length. It is told quite often enough in the newspapers.
âLady Verinder was very kind to me, and Mr. Betteredge was very kind to me. Those two, and the matron at the reformatory, are the only good people I have ever met with in all my life. I might have got on in my placeânot happilyâbut I might have got on, if you had not come visiting. I donât blame you, sir. Itâs my faultâall my fault.
âDo you remember when you came out on us from among the sandhills, that morning, looking for Mr. Betteredge? You were like a prince in a fairy-story. You were like a lover in a dream. You were the most adorable human creature I had ever seen. Something that felt like the happy life I had never led yet, leapt up in me at the instant I set eyes on you. Donât laugh at this if you can help it. Oh, if I could only make you feel how serious it is to me!
âI went back to the house, and wrote your name and mine in my work-box, and drew a true loversâ knot under them. Then, some devilâno, I ought to say some good angelâwhispered to me, âGo and look in the glass.â The glass told meânever mind what. I was too foolish to take the warning. I went on getting fonder and fonder of you, just as if I was a lady in your own rank of life, and the most beautiful creature your eyes ever rested on. I triedâoh, dear, how I triedâto get you to look at me. If you had known how I used to cry at night with the misery and the mortification of your never taking any notice of me, you would have pitied me perhaps, and have given me a look now and then to live on.
âIt would have been no very kind look, perhaps, if you had known how I hated Miss Rachel. I believe I found out you were in love with her, before you knew it yourself. She used to give you roses to wear in your button-hole. Ah, Mr. Franklin, you wore my roses oftener than either you or she thought! The only comfort I had at that time, was putting my rose secretly in your glass of water, in place of hersâand then throwing her rose away.
âIf she had been really as pretty as you thought her, I might have borne it better. No; I believe I should have been more spiteful against her still. Suppose you put Miss Rachel into a servantâs dress, and took her ornaments off? I donât know what is the use of my writing in this way. It canât be denied that she had a bad figure; she was too thin. But who can tell what the men like? And young ladies may behave in a manner which would cost a servant her place. Itâs no business of mine. I canât expect you to read my letter, if I write it in this way. But it does stir one up to hear Miss Rachel called pretty, when one knows all the time that itâs her dress does it, and her confidence in herself.
âTry not to lose patience with me, sir. I will get on as fast as I can to the time which is sure to interest youâthe time when the Diamond was lost.
âBut there is one thing which I have got it on my mind to tell you first.
âMy life was not a very hard life to bear, while I was a thief. It was only when they had taught me at the reformatory to feel my own degradation, and to try for better things, that the days grew long and weary. Thoughts of the future forced themselves on me now. I felt the dreadful reproach that honest peopleâeven the kindest of honest peopleâwere to me in themselves. A heart-breaking sensation of loneliness kept with me, go where I might, and do what I might, and see what persons I might. It was my duty, I know, to try and get on with my fellow-servants in my new place. Somehow, I couldnât make friends with them. They looked (or I thought they looked) as if they suspected what I had been. I donât regret, far from it, having been roused to make the effort to be a reformed womanâbut, indeed, indeed it was a weary life. You had come across it like a beam of sunshine at firstâand then you too failed me. I was mad enough to love you; and I couldnât even attract your notice. There was great miseryâthere really was great misery in that.
âNow I am coming to what I wanted to tell you. In those days of bitterness, I went two or three times, when it was my turn to go out, to my favourite placeâthe beach above the Shivering Sand. And I said to myself, âI think it will end here. When I can bear it no longer, I think it will end here.â You will understand, sir, that the place had laid a kind of spell on me before you came. I had always had a notion that something would happen to me at the quicksand. But I had never looked at it, with the thought of its being the means of my making away with myself, till the time came of which I am now writing. Then I did think that here was a place which would end all my troubles for me in a moment or twoâand hide me for ever afterwards.
âThis is all I have to say about myself, reckoning from the morning when I first saw you, to the morning when the alarm was raised in the house that the Diamond was lost.
âI was so aggravated by the foolish talk among the women servants, all wondering who was to be suspected first; and I was so angry with you (knowing no better at that time) for the pains you took in hunting for the jewel, and sending for the police, that I kept as much as possible away by myself, until later in the day, when the officer from Frizinghall came to the house.
âMr. Seegrave began, as you may remember, by setting a guard on the womenâs bedrooms; and the women all followed him upstairs in a rage, to know what he meant by the insult he had put on them. I went with the rest, because if I had done anything different from the rest, Mr. Seegrave was the sort of man who would have suspected me directly. We found him in Miss Rachelâs room. He told us he wouldnât have a lot of women there; and he pointed to the smear on the painted door, and said some of our petticoats had done the mischief, and sent us all downstairs again.
âAfter leaving Miss Rachelâs room, I stopped a moment on one of the landings, by myself, to see if I had got the paint-stain by any chance on my gown. Penelope Betteredge (the only one of the women with whom I was on friendly terms) passed, and noticed what I was about.
ââYou neednât trouble yourself, Rosanna,â she said. âThe paint on Miss Rachelâs door has been dry for hours. If Mr. Seegrave hadnât set a watch on our bedrooms, I might have told him as much. I donât know what you thinkâI was never so insulted before in my life!â
âPenelope was a hot-tempered girl. I quieted her, and brought her back to what she had said about the paint on the door having been dry for hours.
ââHow do you know that?â I asked.
ââI was with Miss Rachel, and Mr. Franklin, all yesterday morning,â Penelope said, âmixing the colours, while they finished the door. I heard Miss Rachel ask whether the door would be dry that evening, in time for the birthday company to see it. And Mr. Franklin shook his head, and said it wouldnât be dry in less than twelve hours. It was long past luncheon-timeâit was three oâclock before they had done. What does your arithmetic say, Rosanna? Mine says the door was dry by three this morning.â
ââDid some of the ladies go upstairs yesterday evening to see it?â I asked. âI thought I heard Miss Rachel warning them to keep clear of the door.â
ââNone of the ladies made the smear,â Penelope answered. âI left
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