The Woman in White Wilkie Collins (bts books to read txt) š
- Author: Wilkie Collins
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Just before I left I saw Miss Halcombe for a moment alone.
āHave you said all you wanted to Laura?ā she asked.
āYes,ā I replied. āShe is very weak and nervousā āI am glad she has you to take care of her.ā
Miss Halcombeās sharp eyes studied my face attentively.
āYou are altering your opinion about Laura,ā she said. āYou are readier to make allowances for her than you were yesterday.ā
No sensible man ever engages, unprepared, in a fencing match of words with a woman. I only answeredā ā
āLet me know what happens. I will do nothing till I hear from you.ā
She still looked hard in my face. āI wish it was all over, and well over, Mr. Gilmoreā āand so do you.ā With those words she left me.
Sir Percival most politely insisted on seeing me to the carriage door.
āIf you are ever in my neighbourhood,ā he said, āpray donāt forget that I am sincerely anxious to improve our acquaintance. The tried and trusted old friend of this family will be always a welcome visitor in any house of mine.ā
A really irresistible manā ācourteous, considerate, delightfully free from prideā āa gentleman, every inch of him. As I drove away to the station I felt as if I could cheerfully do anything to promote the interests of Sir Percival Glydeā āanything in the world, except drawing the marriage settlement of his wife.
IIIA week passed, after my return to London, without the receipt of any communication from Miss Halcombe.
On the eighth day a letter in her handwriting was placed among the other letters on my table.
It announced that Sir Percival Glyde had been definitely accepted, and that the marriage was to take place, as he had originally desired, before the end of the year. In all probability the ceremony would be performed during the last fortnight in December. Miss Fairlieās twenty-first birthday was late in March. She would, therefore, by this arrangement, become Sir Percivalās wife about three months before she was of age.
I ought not to have been surprised, I ought not to have been sorry, but I was surprised and sorry, nevertheless. Some little disappointment, caused by the unsatisfactory shortness of Miss Halcombeās letter, mingled itself with these feelings, and contributed its share towards upsetting my serenity for the day. In six lines my correspondent announced the proposed marriageā āin three more, she told me that Sir Percival had left Cumberland to return to his house in Hampshire, and in two concluding sentences she informed me, first, that Laura was sadly in want of change and cheerful society; secondly, that she had resolved to try the effect of some such change forthwith, by taking her sister away with her on a visit to certain old friends in Yorkshire. There the letter ended, without a word to explain what the circumstances were which had decided Miss Fairlie to accept Sir Percival Glyde in one short week from the time when I had last seen her.
At a later period the cause of this sudden determination was fully explained to me. It is not my business to relate it imperfectly, on hearsay evidence. The circumstances came within the personal experience of Miss Halcombe, and when her narrative succeeds mine, she will describe them in every particular exactly as they happened. In the meantime, the plain duty for me to performā ābefore I, in my turn, lay down my pen and withdraw from the storyā āis to relate the one remaining event connected with Miss Fairlieās proposed marriage in which I was concerned, namely, the drawing of the settlement.
It is impossible to refer intelligibly to this document without first entering into certain particulars in relation to the brideās pecuniary affairs. I will try to make my explanation briefly and plainly, and to keep it free from professional obscurities and technicalities. The matter is of the utmost importance. I warn all readers of these lines that Miss Fairlieās inheritance is a very serious part of Miss Fairlieās story, and that Mr. Gilmoreās experience, in this particular, must be their experience also, if they wish to understand the narratives which are yet to come.
Miss Fairlieās expectations, then, were of a twofold kind, comprising her possible inheritance of real property, or land, when her uncle died, and her absolute inheritance of personal property, or money, when she came of age.
Let us take the land first.
In the time of Miss Fairlieās paternal grandfather (whom we will call Mr. Fairlie, the elder) the entailed succession to the Limmeridge estate stood thusā ā
Mr. Fairlie, the elder, died and left three sons, Philip, Frederick, and Arthur. As eldest son, Philip succeeded to the estate. If he died without leaving a son, the property went to the second brother, Frederick; and if Frederick died also without leaving a son, the property went to the third brother, Arthur.
As events turned out, Mr. Philip Fairlie died leaving an only daughter, the Laura of this story, and the estate, in consequence, went, in course of law, to the second brother, Frederick, a single man. The third brother, Arthur, had died many years before the decease of Philip, leaving a son and a daughter. The son, at the age of eighteen, was drowned at Oxford. His death left Laura, the daughter of Mr. Philip Fairlie, presumptive heiress to the estate, with every chance of succeeding to it, in the ordinary course of nature, on her uncle Frederickās death, if the said Frederick died without leaving male issue.
Except in the event, then, of Mr. Frederick Fairlieās marrying and leaving an heir (the two very last things in the world that he was likely to do), his niece, Laura, would have the property on his death, possessing, it must be remembered, nothing more
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