登陆注册
5168600000037

第37章

FATHER BENWELL'S CORRESPONDENCE.

I.

_To Mr.Bitrake.Private and Confidential._SIR--I understand that your connection with the law does not exclude your occasional superintendence of confidential inquiries, which are not of a nature to injure your professional position.The inclosed letter of introduction will satisfy you that I am incapable of employing your experience in a manner unbecoming to you, or to myself.

The inquiry that I propose to you relates to a gentleman named Winterfield.He is now staying in London, at Derwent's Hotel, and is expected to remain there for a week from the present date.His place of residence is on the North Devonshire coast, and is well known in that locality by the name of Beaupark House.

The range of my proposed inquiry dates back over the last four or five years--certainly not more.My object is to ascertain, as positively as may be, whether, within this limit of time, events in Mr.Winterfield's life have connected him with a young lady named Miss Stella Eyrecourt.If this proves to be the case it is essential that I should be made acquainted with the whole of the circumstances.

I have now informed you of all that I want to know.Whatever the information may be, it is most important that it shall be information which I can implicitly trust.Please address to me, when you write, under cover to the friend whose letter I inclose.

I beg your acceptance--as time is of importance--of a check for preliminary expenses, and remain, sir, your faithful servant,AMBROSE BENWELL.

II.

_To the Secretary, Society of Jesus, Rome._I inclose a receipt for the remittance which your last letter confides to my care.Some of the money has been already used in prosecuting inquiries, the result of which will, as I hope and believe, enable me to effectually protect Romayne from the advances of the woman who is bent on marrying him.

You tell me that our Reverend Fathers, lately sitting in council on the Vange Abbey affair, are anxious to hear if any positive steps have yet been taken toward the conversion of Romayne.I am happily able to gratify their wishes, as you shall now see.

Yesterday, I called at Romayne's hotel to pay one of those occasional visits which help to keep up our acquaintance.He was out, and Penrose (for whom I asked next) was with him.Most fortunately, as the event proved, I had not seen Penrose, or heard from him, for some little time; and I thought it desirable to judge for myself of the progress that he was making in the confidence of his employer.I said I would wait.The hotel servant knows me by sight.I was shown into Romayne's waiting-room.

This room is so small as to be a mere cupboard.It is lighted by a glass fanlight over the door which opens from the passage, and is supplied with air (in the absence of a fireplace) by a ventilator in a second door, which communicates with Romayne's study.Looking about me, so far, I crossed to the other end of the study, and discovered a dining-room and two bedrooms beyond--the set of apartments being secluded, by means of a door at the end of the passage, from the other parts of the hotel.Itrouble you with these details in order that you may understand the events that followed.

I returned to the waiting-room, not forgetting of course to close the door of communication.

Nearly an hour must have passed before I heard footsteps in the passage.The study door was opened, and the voices of persons entering the room reached me through the ventilator.I recognized Romayne, Penrose--and Lord Loring.

The first words exchanged among them informed me that Romayne and his secretary had overtaken Lord Loring in the street, as he was approaching the hotel door.The three had entered the house together--at a time, probably, when the servant who had admitted me was out of the way.However it may have happened, there I was, forgotten in the waiting-room!

Could I intrude myself (on a private conversation perhaps) as an unannounced and unwelcome visitor? And could I help it, if the talk found its way to me through the ventilator, along with the air that I breathed? If our Reverend Fathers think I was to blame, I bow to any reproof which their strict sense of propriety may inflict on me.In the meantime, I beg to repeat the interesting passages in the conversation, as nearly word for word as I can remember them.

His lordship, as the principal personage in social rank, shall be reported first.He said: "More than a week has passed, Romayne, and we have neither seen you nor heard from you.Why have you neglected us?"Here, judging by certain sounds that followed, Penrose got up discreetly, and left the room.Lord Loring went on.

He said to Romayne: "Now we are alone, I may speak to you more freely.You and Stella seemed to get on together admirably that evening when you dined with us.Have you forgotten what you told me of her influence over you? Or have you altered your opinion--and is that the reason why you keep away from us?"Romayne answered: "My opinion remains unchanged.All that I said to you of Miss Eyrecourt, I believe as firmly as ever."His lordship remonstrated, naturally enough."Then why remain away from the good influence? Why--if it really _can_ be controlled--risk another return of that dreadful nervous delusion?""I have had another return."

"Which, as you yourself believe, might have been prevented!

Romayne, you astonish me."

There was a time of silence, before Romayne answered this.He was a little mysterious when he did reply."You know the old saying, my good friend--of two evils, choose the least.I bear my sufferings as one of two evils, and the least of the two."Lord Loring appeared to feel the necessity of touching a delicate subject with a light hand.He said, in his pleasant way: "Stella isn't the other evil, I suppose?""Most assuredly not."

"Then what is it?"

同类推荐
  • 明宫史

    明宫史

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 荣进集

    荣进集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte

    The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 奇门法窍

    奇门法窍

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 上清三尊谱箓

    上清三尊谱箓

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 喝十八碗凉粉的皇帝

    喝十八碗凉粉的皇帝

    阳奉阴违野心狼,欺君压民乱朝纲。英明幼主施小计,智擒敖拜人赞扬。这四句小诗说的是发生在清王朝康熙年间的一桩宫廷奇案。奇就奇在小个十几岁的儿童皇帝竟斗倒了一个权倾朝野,杀人如麻、飞扬拔扈的特大权奸。而且谋划那么巧妙,行动那么利落,在神不知鬼不觉之中,不动声色,兵不血刃,就把大权夺回自己手中。康熙六年,也就是1667年的七月的一天,北京皇宫里的太和殿上,钟鼓齐鸣,香烟缭绕。
  • 响窑

    响窑

    响窑,一般是指关东一带旧时有钱的大户人家,响窑的产生是和当时那个年代息息相关的,那个时候匪患猖獗,骚扰民间,杀人掠夺,无恶不作,于是大户人家就不得不武装起来以自保。清律,满人不得从事农业生产和经商,但小说中的主人公为生活所迫,靠着智慧和毅力,成为胡匪眼中的响窑。
  • 太白阴经

    太白阴经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 但得爱书人似我:过有思考的教书生活

    但得爱书人似我:过有思考的教书生活

    本书收录了作者从教20余年来的60多篇教育随笔,清晰勾勒了作者成长的历程。这些随笔,既有作者对教育理性而又深刻的批判,又有作者寻找有意义的教育的执着与坚守。本书分五辑,分别从读书、课堂、家教、师友、人生等五个维度,叙写了作者自我成长的精神之旅。本书作为“书生教师轻随笔书丛”之一。
  • 貂蝉

    貂蝉

    故里处处说貂蝉,诗章篇篇开新韵。源于文化资源的无尽潜力,米脂县委、县政府提出了建设“陕北文化旅游名县”的战略目标,在打造李自成行宫、杨家沟革命旧址、姜氏庄园等旅游景区的基础上,重视拓新丰富的“名人文化,,资源,以貂蝉为主题并融合陕北民俗特色,在貂蝉成长地柳家孤,着力打造貂蝉风情特色旅游项目——貂蝉山庄。
  • 高血压食疗菜谱

    高血压食疗菜谱

    《常见病食疗菜谱丛书》是为常见病患者及其家庭精心策划的一套食疗养生菜谱丛书,其10本。《高血压食疗菜谱》精选了近60种对高血压具有一定的辅助疗效和预防作用的日常食材,详细、全面、科学地介绍其基础知识,并配备了近120道菜例,还包括一些高血压的常识,让读者在享受美食的同时,轻松抵抗疾病威胁,健康生活每一天。
  • 你说我陪你

    你说我陪你

    诺言都成了谎言……她还是愿意为他守候,她还是愿意偷偷地站在他身后……从不敢面对自己的情感,到直面自己的内心,她成长了太多太多。从初雪飘落的冬季,到樱花纷飞的四月,她的泪流了太多太多。可是,她依然不愿放弃,依然,在等待一个结局……"那个女孩问我,如果,你向她伸出手,她还会不会和你走。就当,她做了一场美好的梦。你觉得,她会和你走吗?""我知道,她会的。""对,她会的。"她用青春做赌注,不知结局是赢是输。 她不断向着最高点,只是为了他能看见。她只是笑着,笑着说:"他说过的话,我都记得。"
  • HP魔法传记

    HP魔法传记

    思来想去,还是决定开一本关于自己最喜欢的魔法世界的小说。借用了哈利波特的大的宏观以及主线,打算以自己的方式写一本从小到大痴迷的故事!
  • 都市妖怪名录

    都市妖怪名录

    我们眼中的世界,或许不止所见到的那样。许多事物,在悄悄地发生,也默默地消亡。手持都市妖怪名录,加入特别生物调查司,派出所小女警,生物系研究生,图书馆御姐和出租车司机,配上性格种类各异的妖兽,处理都市妖怪事务,探查案件背后的秘密。
  • 女扮男装:用尽幸运遇见你

    女扮男装:用尽幸运遇见你

    母亲病重在床,狠心父亲却只想利用乔默助事业一臂之力。继母冷言冷语,姐姐处处刁难,乔默喝酒买醉,却从陌生地方醒来!奈何女扮男装,她连为自己伸张正义的资格都没有。本想默默吞下苦果,谁料竟怀孕了?几年后带宝归来,从此被宠不停。