The Beetle Richard Marsh (most romantic novels TXT) đ
- Author: Richard Marsh
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âMiss Grayling!â âI shall be only too delighted.â She handed me her card. âWhich may I have?â
âFor your own sake you had better place it as far off as you possibly can.â
âThey all seem taken.â
âThat doesnât matter; strike off any name you please, anywhere and put your own instead.â
It was giving me an almost embarrassingly free hand. I booked myself for the next waltz but twoâ âwho it was who would have to give way to me I did not trouble to inquire.
âMr. Atherton!â âis that you?â
It wasâ âit was also she. It was Marjorie! And so soon as I saw her I knew that there was only one woman in the world for meâ âthe mere sight of her sent the blood tingling through my veins. Turning to her attendant cavalier, she dismissed him with a bow.
âIs there an empty chair?â
She seated herself in the one Miss Grayling had just vacated. I sat down beside her. She glanced at me, laughter in her eyes. I was all in a stupid tremblement.
âYou remember that last night I told you that I might require your friendly services in diplomatic intervention?â I noddedâ âI felt that the allusion was unfair. âWell, the occasionâs comeâ âor, at least, itâs very near.â She was stillâ âand I said nothing to help her. âYou know how unreasonable papa can be.â
I didâ ânever a more pigheaded man in England than Geoffrey Lindonâ âor, in a sense, a duller. But, just then, I was not prepared to admit it to his child.
âYou know what an absurd objection he has toâ âPaul.â
There was an appreciative hesitation before she uttered the fellowâs Christian nameâ âwhen it came it was with an accent of tenderness which stung me like a gadfly. To speak to meâ âof all menâ âof the fellow in such a tone wasâ âlike a woman.
âHas Mr. Lindon no notion of how things stand between you?â
âExcept what he suspects. That is just where you are to come in, papa thinks so much of youâ âI want you to sound Paulâs praises in his earâ âto prepare him for what must come.â Was ever rejected lover burdened with such a task? Its enormity kept me still. âSydney, you have always been my friendâ âmy truest, dearest friend. When I was a little girl you used to come between papa and me, to shield me from his wrath. Now that I am a big girl I want you to be on my side once more, and to shield me still.â
Her voice softened. She laid her hand upon my arm. How, under her touch, I burned.
âBut I donât understand what cause there has been for secrecyâ âwhy should there have been any secrecy from the first?â
âIt was Paulâs wish that papa should not be told.â
âIs Mr. Lessingham ashamed of you?â
âSydney!â
âOr does he fear your father?â
âYou are unkind. You know perfectly well that papa has been prejudiced against him all along, you know that his political position is just now one of the greatest difficulty, that every nerve and muscle is kept on the continual strain, that it is in the highest degree essential that further complications of every and any sort should be avoided. He is quite aware that his suit will not be approved of by papa, and he simply wishes that nothing shall be said about it till the end of the sessionâ âthat is all.â
âI see! Mr. Lessingham is cautious even in lovemakingâ âpolitician first, and lover afterwards.â
âWell!â âwhy not?â âwould you have him injure the cause he has at heart for want of a little patience?â
âIt depends what cause it is he has at heart.â
âWhat is the matter with you?â âwhy do you speak to me like that?â âit is not like you at all.â She looked at me shrewdly, with flashing eyes. âIs it possible that you areâ âjealous?â âthat you were in earnest in what you said last night?â âI thought that was the sort of thing you said to every girl.â
I would have given a great deal to take her in my arms, and press her to my bosom then and thereâ âto think that she should taunt me with having said to her the sort of thing I said to every girl.
âWhat do you know of Mr. Lessingham?â
âWhat all the world knowsâ âthat history will be made by him.â
âThere are kinds of history in the making of which one would not desire to be associated. What do you know of his private lifeâ âit was to that that I was referring.â
âReallyâ âyou go too far. I know that he is one of the best, just as he is one of the greatest, of men; for me, that is sufficient.â
âIf you do know that, it is sufficient.â
âI do know itâ âall the world knows it. Everyone with whom he comes in contact is awareâ âmust be aware, that he is incapable of a dishonourable thought or action.â
âTake my advice, donât appreciate any man too highly. In the book of every manâs life there is a page which he would wish to keep turned down.â
âThere is no such page in Paulâsâ âthere may be in yours; I think that probable.â
âThank you. I fear it is more than probable. I fear that, in my case, the page may extend to several. There is nothing Apostolic about meâ ânot even the name.â
âSydney!â âyou are unendurable!â âIt is the more strange to hear you talk like this since Paul regards you as his friend.â
âHe flatters me.â
âAre you not his friend?â
âIs it not sufficient to be yours?â
âNoâ âwho is against Paul is against me.â
âThat is hard.â
âHow is it hard? Who is against the husband can hardly be for the wifeâ âwhen the husband and the wife are one.â
âBut as yet you are not one.â âIs my cause so hopeless?â
âWhat do you call your cause?â âare you thinking of that nonsense you were talking about last night?â
She laughed!
âYou call it nonsense.â âYou ask for sympathy, and giveâ âso much!â
âI will give you all the sympathy you stand in need ofâ âI promise it! My poor, dear Sydney!â âdonât be so absurd! Do you think that I donât know you? Youâre the best of friends, and the worst of loversâ âas the one, so true;
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