The Three Black Pennys eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 349 pages of information about The Three Black Pennys.

The Three Black Pennys eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 349 pages of information about The Three Black Pennys.

For the first time he wondered about his future.  It was unguarded by the placid and safe engagements of the majority of lives.  He would, he knew, ultimately possess Myrtle Forge, a part of Shadrach, and a considerable fortune.  That was his obvious inheritance.  But, suddenly, the material thing, the actual, grew immaterial, and the visionary assumed a dark and enigmatic reality.

Howat abruptly quitted the night of the lawn, his sombre questioning, for the house.  The candles had been extinguished in the drawing room.  A square, glass lamp hung at the foot of the stairs; and there he encountered a man in a scratch wig, with a long nose flattened at the end.  He bowed obsequiously—­a posturing figure in shirtsleeves with a green cloth waistcoat and black legs.  The Italian servant, Howat concluded.  He passed noiselessly, leaving a reek of pomatum and the memory of a servile smile.  Howat Penny experienced a strong sense of distaste, almost depression, at the other’s silent proximity.  It followed him to his room, contaminated his sleep with unintelligible whispering, oily and disturbing gestures, and fled only at the widening glimmer of dawn.

IV

The sun had almost reached the zenith before Mrs. Winscombe appeared from her room.  And at the same moment David Forsythe arrived on a spent grey mare.  He had come over the forty rough miles which separated Myrtle Forge from the city in less than five hours.  He was a year older than Howat, but he appeared actually younger—­a candid youth with high colour and light, simply tied hair.  He had, he told Howat, important messages from his father to Mr. Winscombe.  The latter and Gilbert Penny were conversing amicably in the lower room at the right of the stairway—­a chamber with a bed that, nevertheless, was used for informal assemblage.  Mr. Winscombe wore an enveloping banian of russet brocade with deep furred cuffs, and a turban of vermilion silk comfortably replacing a wigged formality.  Under that brilliant colour his face was as yellow as an orange.

The written messages were delivered, and David returned to the lawn.  The day was superb—­a crystal cold through which the sun’s rays filtered with a faintly perceptible glow.  Caroline was standing at Howat’s side, and she gave his hand a rapid pressure as David Forsythe approached.  “Where’s Myrtle?” the latter asked apparently negligently.  Howat replied, “Still in the agony of fixing her hair—­for dinner; she’ll be at it again before supper.”  David whistled a vague tune.  Caroline added, “You’ve got fearfully dressy yourself, since London.”  He replied appropriately, and then became more serious.  “I wish,” he told them, “that we belonged to the church of England; you know the Penns have gone back.  It’s pretty heavy at home after—­after some other things.  The Quakers didn’t use to be so infernally solemn.  You should see the swells about the Court; the greatest fun.  And old George with a face like a plum—­”

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Project Gutenberg
The Three Black Pennys from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.