The Way We Live Now Anthony Trollope (classic books for 11 year olds .txt) đ
- Author: Anthony Trollope
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He would tell Brehgert in the morning that he had changed his mind. He would see Brehgert before any action could have been taken on the documents, and Brehgert would no doubt restore them to him. Then he would instruct his daughter to hold the money fast, to sign no paper that should be put before her, and to draw the income herself. Having done that, he would let his foes do their worst. They might drag him to gaol. They probably would do so. He had an idea that he could not be admitted to bail if accused of forgery. But he would bear all that. If convicted he would bear the punishment, still hoping that an end might come. But how great was the chance that they might fail to convict him! As to the dead manâs letter, and as to Dolly Longestaffeâs letter, he did not think that any sufficient evidence could be found. The evidence as to the deeds by which Marie was to have released the property was indeed conclusive; but he believed that he might still recover those documents. For the present it must be his duty to do nothingâ âwhen he should have recovered and destroyed those documentsâ âand to live before the eyes of men as though he feared nothing.
He dined at home alone, in the study, and after dinner carefully went through various bundles of papers, preparing them for the eyes of those ministers of the law who would probably before long have the privilege of searching them. At dinner, and while he was thus employed, he drank a bottle of champagneâ âfeeling himself greatly comforted by the process. If he could only hold up his head and look men in the face, he thought that he might still live through it all. How much had he done by his own unassisted powers! He had once been imprisoned for fraud at Hamburg, and had come out of gaol a pauper; friendless, with all his wretched antecedents against him. Now he was a member of the British House of Parliament, the undoubted owner of perhaps the most gorgeously furnished house in London, a man with an established character for high financeâ âa commercial giant whose name was a familiar word on all the exchanges of the two hemispheres. Even though he should be condemned to penal servitude for life, he would not all die. He rang the bell and desired that Madame Melmotte might be sent to him, and bade the servant bring him brandy.
In ten minutes his poor wife came crawling into the room. Everyone connected with Melmotte regarded the man with a certain amount of aweâ âeveryone except Marie, to whom alone he had at times been himself almost gentle. The servants all feared him, and his wife obeyed him implicitly when she could not keep away from him. She came in now and stood opposite to him, while he spoke to her. She never sat in his presence in that room. He asked her where she and Marie kept their jewelry;â âfor during the last twelvemonths rich trinkets had been supplied to both of them. Of course she answered by another question. âIs anything going to happen, Melmotte?â
âA good deal is going to happen. Are they here in this house, or in Grosvenor Square?â
âThey are here.â
âThen have them all packed upâ âas small as you can; never mind about wool and cases and all that. Have them close to your hand so that if you have to move you can take them with you. Do you understand?â
âYes; I understand.â
âWhy donât you speak, then?â
âWhat is going to happen, Melmotte?â
âHow can I tell? You ought to know by this time that when a manâs work is such as mine, things will happen. Youâll be safe enough. Nothing can hurt you.â
âCan they hurt you, Melmotte?â
âHurt me! I donât know what you call hurting. Whatever there is to be borne, I suppose it is I must bear it. I have not had it very soft all my life hitherto, and I donât think itâs going to be very soft now.â
âShall we have to move?â
âVery likely. Move! Whatâs the harm of moving? You talk of moving as though that were the worst thing that could happen. How would you like to be in some place where they wouldnât let you move?â
âAre they going to send you to prison?â
âHold your tongue.â
âTell me, Melmotte;â âare they going to?â Then the poor woman did sit down, overcome by her feelings.
âI didnât ask you to come here for a scene,â said Melmotte. âDo as I bid you about your own jewels, and Marieâs. The thing is to have them in small compass, and that you should not have it to do at the last moment, when you will be flurried and incapable. Now you neednât stay any longer, and itâs no good asking any questions because I shanât answer them.â So dismissed, the poor woman crept out again, and immediately, after her own slow fashion, went to work with her ornaments.
Melmotte sat up during the greater part of the night, sometimes sipping brandy and water, and sometimes smoking. But he did no work, and hardly touched a paper after his wife left him.
LXXXII Marieâs PerseveranceVery early the next morning, very early that is for London life, Melmotte was told by a servant that Mr. Croll had called and wanted to see him. Then it immediately became a question with him whether he wanted to see Croll. âIs it anything special?â he asked. The man thought that
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