The Beetle Richard Marsh (most romantic novels TXT) đ
- Author: Richard Marsh
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âMy dear Lindon, I cannot tell you how grateful I am to you for your suggestion, but I can only repeat thatâ âunfortunately, anything of the kind is out of the question.â
âI donât see why.â
âPerhaps not.â
âYouâ âyouâre a pretty lot, upon my word!â
âIâm afraid we are.â
âIâ âI want you to tell her that Lessingham is a damned scoundrel.â
âI see.â âBut I would suggest that if I am to use the influence with which you credit me to the best advantage, or to preserve a shred of it, I had hardly better state the fact quite so bluntly as that.â
âI donât care how you state itâ âstate it as you like. Onlyâ âonly I want you to soak her mind with a loathing of the fellow; Iâ âIâ âI want you to paint him in his true colours; inâ âinâ âin fact, Iâ âI want you to choke him off.â
While he still struggled with his words, and with the perspiration on his brow, Edwards entered. I turned to him.
âWhat is it?â
âMiss Lindon, sir, wishes to see you particularly, and at once.â
At that moment I found the announcement a trifle perplexingâ âit delighted Lindon. He began to stutter and to stammer.
âT-the very thing!â âc-couldnât have been better!â âshow her in here! H-hide me somewhereâ âI donât care whereâ âbehind that screen! Y-you use your influence with her;â âg-give her a good talking to;â ât-tell her what Iâve told you; and atâ âat the critical moment Iâll come in, and thenâ âthen if we canât manage her between us, itâll be a wonder.â
The proposition staggered me.
âBut, my dear Mr. Lindon, I fear that I cannotâ ââ
He cut me short.
âHere she comes!â
Ere I could stop him he was behind the screenâ âI had not seen him move with such agility before!â âand before I could expostulate Marjorie was in the room. Something which was in her bearing, in her face, in her eyes, quickened the beating of my pulsesâ âshe looked as if something had come into her life, and taken the joy clean out of it.
XXI The Terror in the NightâSydney!â she cried, âIâm so glad that I can see you!â
She might beâ âbut, at that moment, I could scarcely assert that I was a sharer of her joy.
âI told you that if trouble overtook me I should come to you, andâ âIâm in trouble now. Such strange trouble.â
So was Iâ âand in perplexity as well. An idea occurred to meâ âI would outwit her eavesdropping father.
âCome with me into the houseâ âtell me all about it there.â
She refused to budge.
âNoâ âI will tell you all about it here.â She looked about herâ âas it struck me queerly. âThis is just the sort of place in which to unfold a tale like mine. It looks uncanny.â
âButâ ââ
âââBut me no buts!â Sydney, donât torture meâ âlet me stop here where I amâ âdonât you see Iâm haunted?â
She had seated herself. Now she stood up, holding her hands out in front of her in a state of extraordinary agitation, her manner as wild as her words.
âWhy are you staring at me like that? Do you think Iâm mad?â âI wonder if Iâm going mad.â âSydney, do people suddenly go mad? Youâre a bit of everything, youâre a bit of a doctor too, feel my pulseâ âthere it is!â âtell me if Iâm ill!â
I felt her pulseâ âit did not need its swift beating to inform me that fever of some sort was in her veins. I gave her something in a glass. She held it up to the level of her eyes.
âWhatâs this?â
âItâs a decoction of my own. You might not think it, but my brain sometimes gets into a whirl. I use it as a sedative. It will do you good.â
She drained the glass.
âItâs done me good alreadyâ âI believe it has; thatâs being something like a doctor.â âWell, Sydney, the storm has almost burst. Last night papa forbade me to speak to Paul Lessinghamâ âby way of a prelude.â
âExactly. Mr. Lindonâ ââ
âYes, Mr. Lindonâ âthatâs papa. I fancy we almost quarrelled. I know papa said some surprising thingsâ âbut itâs a way he hasâ âheâs apt to say surprising things. Heâs the best father in the world, butâ âitâs not in his nature to like a really clever person; your good high dried old Tory never can;â âIâve always thought that thatâs why heâs so fond of you.â
âThank you, I presume that is the reason, though it had not occurred to me before.â
Since her entry, I had, to the best of my ability, been turning the position over in my mind. I came to the conclusion that, all things considered, her father had probably as much right to be a sharer of his daughterâs confidence as I had, even from the vantage of the screenâ âand that for him to hear a few home truths proceeding from her lips might serve to clear the air. From such a clearance the lady would not be likely to come off worst. I had not the faintest inkling of what was the actual purport of her visit.
She started off, as it seemed to me, at a tangent.
âDid I tell you last night about what took place yesterday morningâ âabout the adventure of my finding the man?â
âNot a word.â
âI believe I meant toâ âIâm half disposed to think heâs brought me trouble. Isnât there some superstition about evil befalling whoever shelters a homeless stranger?â
âWeâll hope not, for humanityâs sake.â
âI fancy there isâ âI feel sure there is.â âAnyhow, listen to my story. Yesterday morning, before breakfastâ âto be accurate, between eight and nine, I looked out of the window, and I saw a crowd in the street. I sent Peter out to see what was the matter. He came back and said there was a man in a fit. I went out to look at the man in the fit. I found, lying on the ground, in the centre of the crowd, a man who, but for the tattered remnants of what had apparently once been a cloak, would have been stark naked. He was covered with dust, and dirt, and bloodâ âa dreadful sight. As you know, I have had my smattering of instruction in First Aid to the Injured, and that kind of thing, so,
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