Halcyone eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 316 pages of information about Halcyone.

Halcyone eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 316 pages of information about Halcyone.

For a second the words conveyed no meaning to his brain, and for something to say, he said aloud to Arabella:  “This is your writing, I think, Miss Clinker.  I see you have a taste for our friend Gibbon, too,” and then, observing the troubled confusion of Arabella’s honest face, a sudden flash came over him of memory.  He recollected distinctly that upon the Sunday before his accident, they had talked at lunch of Julian the Apostate, and Mrs. Cricklander had turned the conversation, and then had referred to the subject again at dinner with an astonishing array of facts, surprising him by her erudition.

He looked down at the slip again—­yes, the date was right, and the red-ink heading was evidently a stereotyped one; probably Arabella kept a supply of these papers ready, being a methodical creature.  And the questions!—­were they for her own education?  But no—­Arabella was a cultivated person and would not require such things, and, on that particular Sunday, had never opened the door of her lips at either meal.

“She prompts Cecilia,” in a flash he thought, with a wild sense of bitter mirth.  “No wonder she can reel off statistics as she does.  ’Subjects to be talked of at dinner’—­forsooth!”

And Arabella stood there, her kind plain face crimson, and her brown eyes blinking pitifully behind her glasses.

She was too fine to say anything, it would make the situation impossibly difficult if she invented an explanation.  So she just blinked—­and finally, after placing the fresh flowers by Mr. Derringham’s bed, she left the room by the door beyond.

When she had gone it was as if a curtain were raised upon John Derringham’s understanding.  Countless circumstances came back to him when his fiancee’s apparent learning had aroused his admiration, and with a twinge he remembered Cheiron’s maliciously amused eyes which had met his during her visit to the orchard house, when she had become a little at sea in some of her conversation.  The whole thing then was a colossal bluff—­Arabella was the brain!  Arabella was the erudite, cultured person and his admirable Cecilia played the role of extremely clever parrot!  He laughed with bitter cynical merriment until he shook in his bed.

And he, poor fool, had been taken in by it all—­he and a number of others.  He was in company at all events!  Then he saw another aspect, and almost admired the woman for her audacity.  What nerve to play such a game, and so successfully!  The determination—­the application it required—­and the force of character!

But the gall of it when she should be his wife!  He saw pictures of himself trembling with apprehension at some important function in case mistakes should occur.  He would have to play the part of Arabella, and write out the notes for the subjects to be “talked of at dinner!”

He lay there, and groaned with rage and disgust.

He could not—­he would not go through with it!

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Halcyone from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.