God's Good Man by Marie Corelli (best young adult book series .txt) đ
- Author: Marie Corelli
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âIt will be quite easy to ascertain where she has gone,ââsaid Marius Longford presently, in soft conciliatory accentsââLady Wicketts will probably know, and Miss Fosby---â
âDamn Lady Wicketts and Miss Fosby!â snapped out Sir Morton, this time without any apologyââA couple of female donkeys! âKind of me to call upon them!â God bless my soul! I should think it WOULD be kind! Nobody but a fool would go near them---â
âThey are very pleasant, good women,ââsaid Miss Tabitha with severe serenityââPersonally, I much prefer them to Miss Vancourt.â
Sir Morton snorted contempt; Mr. Longford coughed discreetly.
âMiss Vancourt has not yet ripened sufficiently to bear comparison with Lady Wicketts,ââhe said, smoothlyââor with Miss Fosby. But I think, Miss Pippitt, there is a great deal in what you say!â Miss Tabitha bowed, and smiled a vinegary smile. âLady Wicketts has a fine mindâvery fine! Her husband, Sir Thomas---â
âOh never mind her husband!â blustered Sir Morton,â
âHeâs dead. And a good job tooâfor himself. Now whatâs to be done, my dear lord, eh?âwhatâs to be done?â
Roxmouth looked up and managed to force his usual conventional smile.
âNothing!â
âNothing? Oh come, come! That wonât do! Paint heart never won fair ladyâha-ha-ha! God bless my soul! The course of true love never did run smoothâthatâs the advice of whatâs-his-nameâShakespeare. Ha- ha! By the bye, whatâs become of that poet acquaintance of yours, Longford? Oughtnât HE to have known something about this? Didnât you tell him to keep a sharp look-out on Maryllia Van, eh?â
Longford reddened slightly under his pale yellow skin. What a vulgar way Sir Morton had of putting things, to be sure!
âI certainly asked Mr. Adderley to let us know if there was anything in which we could possibly participate to give pleasure and entertainment to Miss Vancourt,ââhe answered frigidlyââHe seems to have ingratiated himself with both Miss Vancourt and her young friend Miss BourneâI should have thought he would have been told of their intending departure.â
âYou may depend he knows all about it!â said Sir MortouââHeâs double-faced, thatâs what he is! Poets always are. I hate âem! Regular sneaks!âalways something queer about their moralsâlook at Byron!âGod bless my soul!âhe ought to have been locked upâ positively locked up, he-ha-ha! Weâll come down on this Adderleyâ weâll take him by surprise and cross-examine himâweâll ask him why the devil he has played a double game---â
âPray do not think of such a thing!ââinterrupted Roxmouth, quietly- âI really doubt whether he knows any more than we do. Maryllia- Miss Vancourtâis not of a character to confide her movements, even to a friend,âshe has always been reticent---â He paused.
âAnd sly!ââsaid Miss Tabitha, finishing his sentence for him, âVery sly! The first time I ever saw Miss Vancourt I knew she was deceitful! Her very look expresses it!â
âIâm afraid,ââmurmured Roxmouth,âand then hesitating a moment, he raised his eyes with an affectation of great franknessââIâm really afraid you may be right, Miss Tabitha! I had hoped that I should not have had to speak of a matter,âa very disagreeable matter which happened the other nightâbut, under the circumstances, it may be as well to mention it. You can perhaps imagine how distressing it has been to meâdistressing and painfulâand indeed incredible,âto discover the lady whom I have every right to consider almost my promised wife, entering into a kind of amorous entanglement down here with a clergyman!â
Sir Morton bounced in his chair.
âGod bless my soul! A clergyman?â
âA clergyman?â echoed Miss Tabitha, with sudden sharpness in her toneââWhat clergyman do you mean?â
âWho should I mean!â And Roxmouth affected a somewhat sad and forbearing demeanourââThere is only one who appears to be welcome at the Manor-the Reverend John Walden.â
Miss Tabitha turned a paler waxen yellow-Sir Morton shot forth a deep, dreadful and highly blasphemous oath.
âThat prig?â he roared, with a bull-like loudness and furyââThat high-and-mighty piece of damned superior clerical wisdom? God bless my soul! There must be some mistake---â
âYes surely!ââmurmured Miss Tabitha, feeling the clutch of a deadly spite and fear at her heart,âfor was not Walden HER clergyman?âHER choice of a husband?âthe man she had resolved to wed sooner or later, even if she had to wait till he was senile, and did not know what he was doing when led to the altar? âMr. Walden is not a man who would be easily allured---â
âPerhaps not,ââsaid Roxmouth, quietlyââBut I can hardly refuse to accept the witness of my own eyes and ears.â And, attended by an almost breathless silence on the part of his auditors, he related with an air of patient endurance and compassionate regret, his own account of the interview between Maryllia and Walden in the picture- gallery, exaggerating something here, introducing a suggestive insinuation there, suppressing the simplicity of the true facts, and inserting falsehood wherever convenient, till he had succeeded in placing Waldenâs good name at Miss Tabithaâs cat-like mercy for her to rend and pounce upon to the utmost extent of her own jaundiced rage and jealous venom.
Nothing could equal or surpass Sir Mortonâs amazement and wrath as he listened to the narration. His eyes seemed to literally start out of his head,âhis throat swelled visibly till a fat ridge of flesh lolled over the edge of his stiff shirt-collar, and he threw in various observations of his own with regard to Walden, such as âSniveling puppy!â âCanting rascal!â âElderly humbug!â âSneaking upstart,â which were quite in accordance with his native good taste and refinement of speech. And when at last his stock of expletives became, for the time being, exhausted, and when Miss Tabithaâs dumb viciousness had, like an invisible sculptorâs chisel, carved sudden deep lines in her face as fitting accompaniments to the deepening malice of her thoughts, they all rose from the luncheon table and went their several ways in their several moods of disconcerted confusion, impotence and vexation, in search of fresh means to gain new and unexpected ends. Roxmouth, reluctantly yielding to the earnest persuasions of Longford, walked with him into the village of St. Rest, and made enquiries at the post-office as to whether Miss Vancourtâs sudden departure was known there, or whether any instructions had been left as to the forwarding of her letters. But the postmistress, Mrs. Tapple, breathing hard and curtseying profoundly to the âfuture Dookâ declared she ââadnât heard nothink,â and ââadnât âad no orders.â Miss Vancourtâs letters and telegrams all went up to the Manor as usual. Whereupon, still guided by the astute Longford, Roxmouth so far obeyed Marylliaâs parting suggestion as to go and âkindly callâ upon Lady Wicketts and Miss Fosby at the Manor itself. The beautiful old house looked the same as usual; there were no shutters up, no blinds drawn, in any of the windows,ânothing indicated absence on the part of the reigning mistress of the fair domain; and even the dog Plato was comfortably snoozing according to daily custom, on the sun-baked flag-stones in the Tudor court. Primmins opened the door to them with his usual well-trained and imperturbable demeanour.
âMiss Vancourt is not at home?â began Roxmouth tentatively.
âMiss Vancourt has left for the Continent, my lord,â replied Primmins, sedately.
Longford exchanged a swift glance with his patron. The latter gave a slight, weary shrug of his shoulders.
âMiss Bourne.ââbegan Longford then.
âMiss Bourne and Mr. Gigg have also left,â said Primmins.
âI suppose Miss Vancourt went with them?â
âNo, sir.â
This was baffling.
âLady Wicketts is staying here, I believe,ââmurmured RoxmouthââCan Iâer?â
âHer ladyship has the neuralgy and is lying down, my lord,â and an acute observer might have noticed the tremor of a wink in Primminsâ eyeââMiss Fosby is in the drawing-room.â
With a profound sigh Roxmouth glanced at Longford. That gentleman smiled a superior smile.
âWe should like to see Miss Fosby.â
Primmins at once threw open the door more widely.
âThis way, if you please!â
In another moment they were ushered into the presence of Miss Fosby, who, laying aside her embroidery, rose with punctilious ceremony to receive them.
âLady Wicketts is not well,ââshe said, in tenderly lachrymose accentsââDear Lady Wicketts! She is always so good!âalways thinking of other people and doing such kind things!âshe fatigues herself, and she is so delicateâah!âso very delicate! She is suffering from neuralgia, I am sorry to say!â
âDonât mention it,ââsaid Roxmouth, hastilyââWe would not disturb her for the world! The fact is, we called to see Miss Vancourt---â
âYes?â queried Miss Fosby, gently, taking up her embroidery again, and carefully setting her needle into the petal of a rosebud she was designingââDear girl! She left here yesterday.â
âRather sudden, wasnât it?â said Longford.
Miss Fosby looked up placidly, and smiled. She had a touch of humour about her as well as much âearly Victorianâ sentiment, and she was just now enjoying herself.
âI think not! Young women like change and travel. Maryllia has always been accustomed to go abroad in August. The first time Lady Wicketts and I ever met her, she was travelling with her aunt. Oh no, I donât think it is at all sudden!â
âWhere has she gone?â asked Roxmouth, affecting as much ease and lightness of manner as he could in putting the question.
Miss Fosby smiled a little more.
âI really donât know,ââshe replied, with civil mildnessââI fancy she has no settled plans at all. She has kindly allowed Lady Wicketts and myself the use of the Manor for three weeks.â
âTill she returns?â suggested Longford.
This time Miss Fosby laughed.
âOh no! When WE leave it, the Manor is to be shut up again for quite a long timeâprobably till next summer.â
âMiss Bourne has gone with her friend, I suppose?â âNo,ââand Miss Fosby sought carefully among her embroidery silks for some special tint of colourââLittle Cicely and Monsieur Gigue, her master, went away together only this morning.â
âWell, I suppose Miss Vancourtâs letters will he forwarded on somewhere!ââsaid Eoxmouth, unguardedly. Miss Fosbyâs back stiffened instantly.
âReally, my lord, I know nothing about that,ââshe said, primlyâ âNor should I even make it my business to enquire.â There was an awkward pause after this, and though Longford skilfully changed the subject of conversation to generalities, the rest of the interview was fraught with considerable embarrassment. Miss Fosby was not to be âdrawn.â She was distinctly âold-fashioned,ââneedless therefore to add that she was absolutely loyal to her absent friend and hostess.
Leaving the Manor, Lord Roxmouth and his tame pussy sought for information in other quarters with equal futility. The agent, Mr. Stanways, âknew nothing.â His orders were to communicate all his business to Miss Vancourtâs solicitors in London. Finally the last hope failed them in Julian Adderley. They found that young gentleman as much taken aback as themselves by the news of Marylliaâa departure. He had been told nothing of it. A note from Cicely Bourne had been brought to him that morning by one of the gardeners at the Manorâand he showed this missive to both Roxmouth and Longford with perfect frankness. It merely ran: âGoodbye Moon-calf! Am going away. No time to see you for a fond farewell! Hope you will be famous before I come back. Enclosed herewith is my music to your âLittle Eose Tree,â GOBLIN.â
This, with the accompanying manuscript score of the song alluded to was all the information Julian could supply,âand his own surprise and consternation at the abrupt and unexpected termination of his pleasant visits to the Manor, were too genuine
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