Leonora eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 280 pages of information about Leonora.

Leonora eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 280 pages of information about Leonora.

‘I shall be seeing you all soon,’ he said in a low voice, on the step.  She nodded and closed the door softly.

She thought how simple, agreeable, reliable, honest, good-natured, and sympathetic he was.

‘Her’s sleeping like a babby,’ Meshach stated, returning to the parlour.  He lighted his pipe, and through the smoke looked at Leonora in her dark magnificent dress.

Then John arrived, pompous and elaborately calm; but he had driven Prince to Hillport and back in twenty-five minutes.  John listened to the recital of events.

‘You’re sure there’s no danger now?’ He could disguise neither his present relief nor his fear for the future.

‘Thou’rt all right yet, nephew,’ said Meshach with an ironic inflection, as he gazed into the dying fire.  ’Her may live another ten year.  And I might flit to-morrow.  Thou’rt too anxious, my lad.  Keep it down.’

John, deeply offended, made no reply.

‘Why shouldn’t I be anxious?’ he exclaimed angrily as they drove home.  ‘Whose fault is it if I am?  Does he expect me not to be?’

CHAPTER VII

THE DEPARTURE

As I approach the crisis in Leonora’s life, I hesitate, fearing lest by an unfit phrase I should deprive her of your sympathies, and fearing also that this fear may incline me to set down less than the truth about her.

She was possessed by a mysterious sensation of content.  She wished to lie supine—­except in her domestic affairs—­and to dream that all was well or would be well.  It was as though she had determined that nothing could extinguish or even disturb the mild flame of happiness which burned placidly within her.  And yet the anxieties of her existence were certainly increasing again.  On the morning after the opera, John had departed on one of his sudden flying visits to London; these journeys, formerly frequent, had been in abeyance for a time, and their resumption seemed to point to some renewal of his difficulties.  He had called at Church Street on his way to Knype, and Carpenter had brought back word that Miss Myatt was wonderfully better; but when Leonora herself called at Church Street later in the morning and at last saw Aunt Hannah, she was impressed by the change in the old creature, whose nervous system had the appearance of being utterly disorganised.  Then there was the difficult case of Ethel and Fred Ryley, in which Leonora had done nothing whatever; and there was the case of Rose, whose alienation from the rest of the household became daily more marked.  Finally there was the new and portentous case of Millicent, probably the most disconcerting of the three.  Nevertheless, amid all these solicitudes, Leonora remained equable, optimistic, and quietly joyous.  Her state of mind, so miraculously altered in a few hours, gave her no surprise.  It seemed natural; everything seemed natural; she ceased for a period to waste emotion in the futile desire for her lost youth.

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Project Gutenberg
Leonora from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.