The Moonstone Wilkie Collins (ebook reader for manga .txt) đ
- Author: Wilkie Collins
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Mr. Bruff interfered for the third time.
âYou appear to forget,â he said, addressing Mr. Ablewhite, âthat you took this house as Miss Verinderâs guardian, for Miss Verinderâs use.â
âNot quite so fast,â interposed Mr. Ablewhite. âI have a last word to say, which I should have said some time since, if thisâ ââ He looked my way, pondering what abominable name he should call meâ ââif this rampant spinster had not interrupted us. I beg to inform you, sir, that, if my son is not good enough to be Miss Verinderâs husband, I cannot presume to consider his father good enough to be Miss Verinderâs guardian. Understand, if you please, that I refuse to accept the position which is offered to me by Lady Verinderâs will. In your legal phrase, I decline to act. This house has necessarily been hired in my name. I take the entire responsibility of it on my shoulders. It is my house. I can keep it, or let it, just as I please. I have no wish to hurry Miss Verinder. On the contrary, I beg her to remove her guest and her luggage, at her own entire convenience.â He made a low bow, and walked out of the room.
That was Mr. Ablewhiteâs revenge on Rachel, for refusing to marry his son!
The instant the door closed, Aunt Ablewhite exhibited a phenomenon which silenced us all. She became endowed with energy enough to cross the room!
âMy dear,â she said, taking Rachel by the hand, âI should be ashamed of my husband, if I didnât know that it is his temper which has spoken to you, and not himself. You,â continued Aunt Ablewhite, turning on me in my corner with another endowment of energy, in her looks this time instead of her limbsâ ââyou are the mischievous person who irritated him. I hope I shall never see you or your tracts again.â She went back to Rachel and kissed her. âI beg your pardon, my dear,â she said, âin my husbandâs name. What can I do for you?â
Consistently perverse in everythingâ âcapricious and unreasonable in all the actions of her lifeâ âRachel melted into tears at those commonplace words, and returned her auntâs kiss in silence.
âIf I may be permitted to answer for Miss Verinder,â said Mr. Bruff, âmight I ask you, Mrs. Ablewhite, to send Penelope down with her mistressâs bonnet and shawl. Leave us ten minutes together,â he added, in a lower tone, âand you may rely on my setting matters right, to your satisfaction as well as to Rachelâs.â
The trust of the family in this man was something wonderful to see. Without a word more, on her side, Aunt Ablewhite left the room.
âAh!â said Mr. Bruff, looking after her. âThe Herncastle blood has its drawbacks, I admit. But there is something in good breeding after all!â
Having made that purely worldly remark, he looked hard at my corner, as if he expected me to go. My interest in Rachelâ âan infinitely higher interest than hisâ âriveted me to my chair.
Mr. Bruff gave it up, exactly as he had given it up at Aunt Verinderâs, in Montagu Square. He led Rachel to a chair by the window, and spoke to her there.
âMy dear young lady,â he said, âMr. Ablewhiteâs conduct has naturally shocked you, and taken you by surprise. If it was worth while to contest the question with such a man, we might soon show him that he is not to have things all his own way. But it isnât worth while. You were quite right in what you said just now; he is beneath our notice.â
He stopped, and looked round at my corner. I sat there quite immovable, with my tracts at my elbow and with Miss Jane Ann Stamper on my lap.
âYou know,â he resumed, turning back again to Rachel, âthat it was part of your poor motherâs fine nature always to see the best of the people about her, and never the worst. She named her brother-in-law your guardian because she believed in him, and because she thought it would please her sister. I had never liked Mr. Ablewhite myself, and I induced your mother to let me insert a clause in the will, empowering her executors, in certain events, to consult with me about the appointment of a new guardian. One of those events has happened today; and I find myself in a position to end all these dry business details, I hope agreeably, with a message from my wife. Will you honour Mrs. Bruff by becoming her guest? And will you remain under my roof, and be one of my family, until we wise people have laid our heads together, and have settled what is to be done next?â
At those words, I rose to interfere. Mr. Bruff had done exactly what I had dreaded he would do, when he asked Mrs. Ablewhite for Rachelâs bonnet and shawl.
Before I could interpose a word, Rachel had accepted his invitation in the warmest terms. If I suffered the arrangement thus made between them to be carried outâ âif she once passed the threshold of Mr. Bruffâs doorâ âfarewell to the fondest hope of my life, the hope of bringing my lost sheep back to the fold! The bare idea of such a calamity as this quite overwhelmed me. I cast the miserable trammels of worldly discretion to the winds, and spoke with the fervour that filled me, in the words that came first.
âStop!â I saidâ ââstop! I must be heard. Mr. Bruff! you are not related to her, and I am. I invite herâ âI summon the executors to appoint me guardian. Rachel, dearest Rachel, I offer you my modest home; come to London by the next train, love, and share it with me!â
Mr. Bruff said nothing. Rachel looked at me with a cruel astonishment which she made no effort to conceal.
âYou are very kind, Drusilla,â she said. âI shall hope to visit you whenever I happen to be in London. But I have accepted Mr. Bruffâs invitation, and I think it will be best, for the present, if I remain under Mr. Bruffâs care.â
âOh,
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