No Name Wilkie Collins (e book reader android TXT) š
- Author: Wilkie Collins
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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 housekeeperās desertion of him. He looked doubtingly at his visitor; he showed a nervous anxiety to conciliate her until Mrs. Lecountās return.
āPray remember, maāam, I never denied that this case was a hard one,ā he began. āYou said just now you had no wish to offend meā āand Iām sure I donāt want to offend you. May I offer you some strawberries? Would you like to look at my fatherās bargains? I assure you, maāam, I am naturally a gallant man; and I feel for both these sistersā āespecially 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 Vanstoneās lover (Iām sure I always call her Miss Vanstone, and so does Lecount)ā āI say, maāam, nothing would please me more than to hear that Miss Vanstoneās 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 justifiedā āā
āStop, Mr. Vanstone,ā said Magdalen. āYou 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 sisterā āif she could be married in a weekās timeā āwould make any difference in the convictions which induced her to write to your father and to you. I donāt deny that she may act from a mixture of motives. I donāt 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 lawā ānot 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 fatherās 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!ā
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 mindās 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 manikin 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 truthā āhis fears had bewildered him. This time the chance of the moment had befriended her. The door behind her chair had not opened again yet. āNo ears but his have heard me,ā she thought, with a sense of unutterable relief. āI have escaped Mrs. Lecount.ā
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 Magdalenās 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 Magdalenās attention by speaking to her, and then bent forward, with the scissors ready in her hand. The skirt of the false Miss Garthās gownā āthe brown alpaca dress, with the white spots on itā ātouched the floor, within the housekeeperās 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.
āWhat has happened, sir, in my absence?ā she inquired, addressing her master with a look of alarm. āYou are pale; you are agitated! Oh, Miss Garth, have you forgotten the caution I gave you in the other room?ā
āMiss Garth has forgotten everything,ā cried Noel Vanstone, recovering his lost composure on the reappearance of Mrs. Lecount. āMiss Garth has threatened me in the most outrageous manner. I forbid you to pity either of those two girls any more, Lecountā āespecially the younger one. She is the most desperate wretch I ever heard of! If she canāt get my money by fair means, she threatens to have it by foul. Miss Garth has told me that to my face. To my face!ā he repeated, folding his
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