The Beetle Richard Marsh (most romantic novels TXT) đ
- Author: Richard Marsh
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âWhy, in particular, not to Miss Lindon?â
âCan you not guess?â
I hunched my shoulder.
âIf what I guess is what you mean is not that a cause the more why silence would be unfair to her?â
âIt is for me to speak, if for anyone. I shall not fail to do what should be done.â âGive me your promise that you will not hint a word to her of what you have so unfortunately seen?â
I gave him the promise he required.
There was no more work for me that day. The Apostle, his divagations, his example of the coleoptera, his Arabian friendâ âthese things were as microbes which, acting on a system already predisposed for their reception, produced high fever; I was in a feverâ âof unrest. Brain in a whirl!â âMarjorie, Paul, Isis, beetle, mesmerism, in delirious jumble. Loveâs upsetting!â âin itself a sufficiently severe disease; but when complications intervene, suggestive of mystery and novelties, so that you do not know if you are moving in an atmosphere of dreams or of frozen factsâ âif, then, your temperature does not rise, like that rocket of M. Verneâsâ âwhich reached the moon, then you are a freak of an entirely genuine kind, and if the surgeons do not preserve you, and place you on view, in pickle, they ought to, for the sake of historical doubters, for no one will believe that there ever was a man like you, unless you yourself are somewhere around to prove them Thomases.
Myselfâ âI am not that kind of man. When I get warm I grow heated, and when I am heated there is likely to be a variety show of a gaudy kind. When Paul had gone I tried to think things out, and if I had kept on trying something would have happenedâ âso I went on the river instead.
XIV The Duchessâ BallThat night was the Duchess of Datchetâs ballâ âthe first person I saw as I entered the dancing-room was Dora Grayling.
I went straight up to her.
âMiss Grayling, I behaved very badly to you last night, I have come to make to you my apologiesâ âto sue for your forgiveness!â
âMy forgiveness?â Her head went backâ âshe has a pretty birdlike trick of cocking it a little on one side. âYou were not well. Are you better?â
âQuite.â âYou forgive me? Then grant me plenary absolution by giving me a dance for the one I lost last night.â
She rose. A man came upâ âa stranger to me; sheâs one of the best hunted women in Englandâ âthereâs a million with her.
âThis is my dance, Miss Grayling.â
She looked at him.
âYou must excuse me. I am afraid I have made a mistake. I had forgotten that I was already engaged.â
I had not thought her capable of it. She took my arm, and away we went, and left him staring.
âItâs he whoâs the sufferer now,â I whispered, as we went roundâ âshe can waltz!
âYou think so? It was I last nightâ âI did not mean, if I could help it, to suffer again. To me a dance with you means something.â She went all redâ âadding, as an afterthought, âNowadays so few men really dance. I expect itâs because you dance so well.â
âThank you.â
We danced the waltz right through, then we went to an impromptu shelter which had been rigged up on a balcony. And we talked. Thereâs something sympathetic about Miss Grayling which leads one to talk about oneâs selfâ âbefore I was half aware of it I was telling her of all my plans and projectsâ âactually telling her of my latest notion which, ultimately, was to result in the destruction of whole armies as by a flash of lightning. She took an amount of interest in it which was surprising.
âWhat really stands in the way of things of this sort is not theory but practiceâ âone can prove oneâs facts on paper, or on a small scale in a room; what is wanted is proof on a large scale, by actual experiment. If, for instance, I could take my plant to one of the forests of South America, where there is plenty of animal life but no human, I could demonstrate the soundness of my position then and there.â
âWhy donât you?â
âThink of the money it would cost.â
âI thought I was a friend of yours.â
âI had hoped you were.â
âThen why donât you let me help you?â
âHelp me?â âHow?â
âBy letting you have the money for your South American experiment;â âit would be an investment on which I should expect to receive good interest.â
I fidgeted.
âIt is very good of you, Miss Grayling, to talk like that.â
She became quite frigid.
âPlease donât be absurd!â âI perceive quite clearly that you are snubbing me, and that you are trying to do it as delicately as you know how.â
âMiss Grayling!â
âI understand that it was an impertinence on my part to volunteer assistance which was unasked; you have made that sufficiently plain.â
âI assure youâ ââ
âPray donât. Of course, if it had been Miss Lindon it would have been different; she would at least have received a civil answer. But we are not all Miss Lindon.â
I was aghast. The outburst was so uncalled forâ âI had not the faintest notion what I had said or done to cause it; she was in such a surprising passionâ âand it suited her!â âI thought I had never seen her look prettierâ âI could do nothing else but stare. So she went onâ âwith just as little reason.
âHere is someone coming to claim this danceâ âI canât throw all my partners over. Have I offended you so irremediably that it will be
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