A Terrible Temptation (Fiscle Part 3), Charles Reade [good story books to read .txt] 📗
- Author: Charles Reade
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Clerk Had Not Arrived, And Miss Somerset Was Not Visible.
She Appeared, However, At Last, In A Superb Silk Dress, The Broad
Luster Of Which Would Have Been Beautiful, Only The Effect Was Broken
And Frittered Away By Six Rows Of Gimp And Fringe. But Why Blame Her?
This Is A Blunder In Art As Universal As It Is Amazing, When One
Considers The Amount Of Apparent Thought Her Sex Devotes To Dress. They
Might Just As Well Score A Fair Plot Of Velvet Turf With Rows Of Box,
Or Tattoo A Blooming And Downy Cheek.
She Held Out Her Hand, Like A Man, And Talked To Sir Charles On
Indifferent Topics, Till Mr. Oldfield Arrived. She Then Retired Into
The Background, And Left The Gentlemen To Discuss The Deed. When
Appealed To, She Evaded Direct Replies, And Put On Languid And Imperial
Indifference. When She Signed, It Was With The Air Of Some Princess
Bestowing A Favor Upon Solicitation.
But The Business Concluded, She Thawed All In A Moment, And Invited The
Gentlemen To Luncheon With Charming Cordiality. Indeed, Her Genuine
_Bonhomie_ After Her Affected Indifference Was Rather Comic. Everybody
Was Content. Champagne Flowed. The Lady, With Her Good Mother-Wit, Kept
Conversation Going Till The Lawyer Was Nearly Missing His Next
Appointment. He Hurried Away; And Sir Charles Only Lingered, Out Of
Good-Breeding, To Bid Miss Somerset Good-By. In The Course Of
Leave-Taking He Said He Was Sorry He Left Her With People About Her Of
Whom He Had A Bad Opinion. "Those Women Have No More Feeling For You
Than Stones. When You Lay In Convulsions, Your Housekeeper Looked On As
Philosophically As If You Had Been Two Kittens At Play--You And Polly."
"I Saw Her."
"Indeed! You Appeared Hardly In A Condition To See Anything."
"I Did, Though, And Heard The Old Wretch Tell The Young Monkey To Water
My Lilac Dress. That Was To Get It For Her Polly. She Knew I'd Never
Wear It Afterward."
"Then Why Don't You Turn Her Off?"
"Who'd Take Such A Useless Old Hag, If I Turned Her Off?"
"You Carry A Charity A Long Way."
"I Carry Everything. What's The Use Doing Things By Halves, Good Or
Bad?"
"Well, But That Polly! She Is Young Enough To Get Her Living Elsewhere;
And She Is Extremely Disrespectful To You."
"That She Is. If I Wasn't A Lady, I'd Have Given Her A Good Hiding This
Very Day For Her Cheek!"
Part 3 Chapter 5 Pg 29
"Then Why Not Turn Her Off This Very Day For Her Cheek?"
"Well, I'll Tell You, Since You And I Are Parted Forever. No, I Don't
Like."
"Oh, Come! No Secrets Between Friends."
"Well, Then, The Old Hag Is--My Mother."
"What?"
"And The Young Jade--Is My Sister."
"Good Heavens!"
"And The Page--Is My Little Brother."
"Ha, Ha, Ha!"
"What, You Are Not Angry?"
"Angry? No. Ha, Ha, Ha!"
"See What A Hornets' Nest You Have Escaped From. My Dear Friend, Those
Two Women Rob Me Through Thick And Thin. They Steal My Handkerchiefs,
And My Gloves, And My Very Linen. They Drink My Wine Like Fishes.
They'd Take The Hair Off My Head, If It Wasn't Fast By The Roots--For A
Wonder."
"Why Not Give Them A Ten-Pound Note And Send Them Home?"
"They'd Pocket The Note, And Blacken Me In Our Village. That Was Why I
Had Them Up Here. First Time I Went Home, After Running About With That
Little Scamp, Vandeleur--Do You Know Him?"
"I Have Not The Honor."
"Then Your Luck Beats Mine. One Thing, He Is Going To The Dogs As Fast
As He Can. Some Day He'll Come Begging To Me For A Fiver. You Mark My
Words Now."
"Well, But You Were Saying--"
"Yes, I Went Off About Van. Polly _Says_ I've A Mind Like Running
Water. Well, Then, When I Went Home The First Time--After Van, Mother
And Polly Raised A Virtuous Howl. 'All Right,' Said I--For, Of Course,
I Know How Much Virtue There Is Under _Their_ Skins. Virtue Of The
Lower Orders! Tell That To Gentlefolks That Don't Know Them. I Do. I've
Been One Of 'Em--'I Know All About That,' Says I. 'You Want To Share
The Plunder, That Is The Sense Of Your Virtuous Cry.' So I Had 'Em Up
Here; And Then There Was No More Virtuous Howling, But A Deal Of
Virtuous Thieving, And Modest Drinking, And Pure-Minded Selling Of My
Street-Door To The Highest Male Bidder. And They Will Corrupt The Boy;
And If They Do, I'll Cuts Their Black Hearts Out With My Riding-Whip.
Part 3 Chapter 5 Pg 30But I Suppose I Must Keep Them On; They Are My Own Flesh And Blood; And
If I Was To Be Ill And Dying, They'd Do All They Knew To Keep Me
Alive--For Their Own Sakes. I'm Their Milch Cow, These Country
Innocents."
Sir Charles Groaned Aloud, And Said, "My Poor Girl, You Deserve A
Better Fate Than This. Marry Some Honest Fellow, And Cut The Whole
Thing."
"I'll See About It. You Try It First, And Let Us See How You Like It."
And So They Parted Gayly.
In The Hall, Polly Intercepted Him, All Smiles. He Looked At Her,
Smiled In His Sleeve, And Gave Her A Handsome Present. "If You Please,
Sir," Said She, "An Old Gentleman Called For You."
"When?"
"About An Hour Ago. Leastways, He Asked If Sir Charles Bassett Was
There. I Said Yes, But You Wouldn't See No One."
"Who Could It Be? Why, Surely You Never Told Anybody I Was To Be Here
To-Day?"
"La, No, Sir! How Could I?" Said Polly, With A Face Of Brass.
Sir Charles Thought This Very Odd, And Felt A Little Uneasy About It.
All To Portman Square He Puzzled Over It; And At Last He Was Driven To
The Conclusion That Miss Somerset Had Been Weak Enough To Tell Some
Person, Male Or Female, Of The Coming Interview, And So Somebody Had
Called There--Doubtless To Ask Him A Favor.
At Five O'clock He Reached Portman Square, And Was About To Enter, As A
Matter Of Course; But The Footman Stopped Him. "I Beg Pardon, Sir
Charles," Said The Man, Looking Pale And Agitated; "But I Have Strict
Orders. My Young Lady Is Very Ill."
"Ill! Let Me Go To Her This Instant."
"I Daren't, Sir Charles, I Daren't. I Know You Are A Gentleman; Pray
Don't Lose Me My Place. You Would Never Get To See Her. We None Of Us
Know The Rights, But There's Something Up. Sorry To Say It, Sir
Charles, But We Have Strict Orders Not To Admit You. Haven't You The
Admiral's Letter, Sir?"
"No; What Letter?"
"He Has Been After You, Sir; And When He Came Back He Sent Roger Off To
Your House With A Letter."
A Cold Chill Began To Run Down Sir Charles Bassett. He Hailed A Passing
Hansom, And Drove To His Own House To Get The Admiral's Letter; And As
He Went He Asked Himself, With Chill Misgivings, What On Earth Had
Part 3 Chapter 5 Pg 31Happened.
What Had Happened Shall Be Told The Reader Precisely But Briefly. .
In The First Place, Bella Had Opened The Anonymous Letter And Read Its
Contents, To Which The Reader Is Referred.
There Are People Who Pretend To Despise Anonymous Letters. Pure
Delusion! They Know They Ought To, And So Fancy They Do; But They
Don't. The Absence Of A Signature Gives Weight, If The Letter Is Ably
Written And Seems True.
As For Poor Bella Bruce, A Dove's Bosom Is No More Fit To Rebuff A
Poisoned Arrow Than She Was To Combat That Foulest And Direst Of All A
Miscreant's Weapons, An Anonymous Letter. She, In Her Goodness And
Innocence, Never Dreamed That Any Person She Did Not Know Could
Possibly Tell A Lie To Wound Her. The Letter Fell On Her Like A Cruel
Revelation From Heaven.
The Blow Was So Savage That, At First, It Stunned Her.
She Sat Pale And Stupefied; But Beneath The Stupor Were The Rising
Throbs Of Coming Agonies.
After That Horrible Stupor Her Anguish Grew And Grew, Till It Found
Vent In A Miserable Cry, Rising, And Rising, And Rising, In Agony.
"Mamma! Mamma! Mamma!"
Yes; Her Mother Had Been Dead These Three Years, And Her Father Sat In
The Next Room; Yet, In Her Anguish, She Cried To Her Mother--A Cry The
Which, If Your Mother Had Heard, She Would Have Expected Bella's To
Come To Her Even From The Grave.
Admiral Bruce Heard This Fearful Cry--The Living Calling On The
Dead--And Burst Through The Folding-Doors In A Moment, White As A
Ghost.
He Found His Daughter Writhing On The Sofa, Ghastly, And Grinding In
Her Hand The Cursed Paper That Had Poisoned Her Young Life.
"My Child! My Child!"
"Oh, Papa! See! See!" And She Tried To Open The Letter For Him, But Her
Hands Trembled So She Could Not.
He Kneeled Down By Her Side, The Stout Old Warrior, And Read The
Letter, While She Clung To Him, Moaning Now, And Quivering All Over
From Head To Foot.
"Why, There's No Signature! The Writer Is A Coward And, Perhaps, A
Liar. Stop! He Offers A Test. I'll Put Him To It This Minute."
He Laid The Moaning Girl On The Sofa, Ordered His Servants To Admit
Part 3 Chapter 5 Pg 32Nobody Into The House, And Drove At Once To Mayfair.
He Called At Miss Somerset's House, Saw Polly, And Questioned Her.
He Drove Home Again, And Came Into The Drawing-Room Looking As He Had
Been Seen To Look When Fighting His Ship; But His Daughter Had Never
Seen Him So. "My Girl," Said He, Solemnly, "There's Nothing For You To
Do But To Be Brave, And Hide Your Grief As Well As You Can, For The Man
Is Unworthy Of Your Love. That
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