No Name Wilkie Collins (e book reader android TXT) đ
- Author: Wilkie Collins
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âMay I be permitted to retire, sir?â inquired Mrs. Lecount.
âCertainly not!â replied her master. âStay here, Lecount, and keep us company. Mrs. Lecount has my fullest confidence,â he continued, addressing Magdalen. âWhatever you say to me, maâam, you say to her. She is a domestic treasure. There is not another house in England has such a treasure as Mrs. Lecount.â
The housekeeper listened to the praise of her domestic virtues with eyes immovably fixed on her elegant chemisette. But Magdalenâs quick penetration had previously detected a look that passed between Mrs. Lecount and her master, which suggested that Noel Vanstone had been instructed beforehand what to say and do in his visitorâs presence. The suspicion of this, and the obstacles which the room presented to arranging her position in it so as to keep her face from the light, warned Magdalen to be on her guard.
She had taken her chair at first nearly midway in the room. An instantâs after-reflection induced her to move her seat toward the left hand, so as to place herself just inside, and close against, the left post of the folding-door. In this position she dexterously barred the only passage by which Mrs. Lecount could have skirted round the large table and contrived to front Magdalen by taking a chair at her masterâs side. On the right hand of the table the empty space was well occupied by the fireplace and fender, by some traveling-trunks, and a large packing-case. There was no alternative left for Mrs. Lecount but to place herself on a line with Magdalen against the opposite post of the folding-door, or to push rudely past the visitor with the obvious intention of getting in front of her. With an expressive little cough, and with one steady look at her master, the housekeeper conceded the point, and took her seat against the right-hand doorpost. âWait a little,â thought Mrs. Lecount; âmy turn next!â
âMind what you are about, maâam!â cried Noel Vanstone, as Magdalen accidentally approached the table in moving her chair. âMind the sleeve of your cloak! Excuse me, you nearly knocked down that silver candlestick. Pray donât suppose itâs a common candlestick. Itâs nothing of the sortâ âitâs a Peruvian candlestick. There are only three of that pattern in the world. One is in the possession of the President of Peru; one is locked up in the Vatican; and one is on my table. It cost ten pounds; itâs worth fifty. One of my fatherâs bargains, maâam. All these things are my fatherâs bargains. There is not another house in England which has such curiosities as these. Sit down, Lecount; I beg you will make yourself comfortable. Mrs. Lecount is like the curiosities, Miss Garthâ âshe is one of my fatherâs bargains. You are one of my fatherâs bargains, are you not, Lecount? My father was a remarkable man, maâam. You will be reminded of him here at every turn. I have got his dressing-gown on at this moment. No such linen as this is made nowâ âyou canât get it for love or money. Would you like to feel the texture? Perhaps youâre no judge of texture? Perhaps you would prefer talking to me about these two pupils of yours? They are two, are they not? Are they fine girls? Plump, fresh, full-blown English beauties?â
âExcuse me, sir,â interposed Mrs. Lecount, sorrowfully. âI must really beg permission to retire if you speak of the poor things in that way. I canât sit by, sir, and hear them turned into ridicule. Consider their position; consider Miss Garth.â
âYou good creature!â said Noel Vanstone, surveying the housekeeper through his half-closed eyelids. âYou excellent Lecount! I assure you, maâam, Mrs. Lecount is a worthy creature. You will observe that she pities the two girls. I donât go so far as that myself, but I can make allowances for them. I am a large-minded man. I can make allowances for them and for you.â He smiled with the most cordial politeness, and helped himself to a strawberry from the dish on his lap.
âYou shock Miss Garth; indeed, sir, without meaning it, you shock Miss Garth,â remonstrated Mrs. Lecount. âShe is not accustomed to you as I am. Consider Miss Garth, sir. As a favor to me, consider Miss Garth.â
Thus far Magdalen had resolutely kept silence. The burning anger, which would have betrayed her in an instant if she had let it flash its way to the surface, throbbed fast and fiercely at her heart, and warned her, while Noel Vanstone was speaking, to close her lips. She would have allowed him to talk on uninterruptedly for some minutes more if Mrs. Lecount had not interfered for the second time. The refined insolence of the housekeeperâs pity was a womanâs insolence; and it stung her into instantly controlling herself. She had never more admirably imitated Miss Garthâs voice and manner than when she spoke her next words.
âYou are very good,â she said to Mrs. Lecount. âI make no claim to be treated with any extraordinary consideration. I am a governess, and I donât expect it. I have only one favor to ask. I beg Mr. Noel Vanstone, for his own sake, to hear what I have to say to him.â
âYou understand, sir?â observed Mrs. Lecount. âIt appears that Miss Garth has some serious warning to give you. She says you are to hear her, for your own sake.â
Mr. Noel Vanstoneâs fair complexion suddenly turned white. He put away the plate of strawberries among his fatherâs bargains. His hand shook and his little figure twisted itself uneasily in the chair. Magdalen observed him attentively. âOne discovery already,â she thought; âhe is
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