Phantom Fortune, a Novel eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 663 pages of information about Phantom Fortune, a Novel.

Phantom Fortune, a Novel eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 663 pages of information about Phantom Fortune, a Novel.

Mary went with him to the door of her ladyship’s sitting-room, and there left him to go in alone.  She went to the library—­that room over which a gloomy shadow seemed to have hung ever since that awful winter afternoon when Mary found Lady Maulevrier lying on the floor in the twilight.  But it was a noble room, and in her studious hours Mary loved to sit here, walled round with books, and able to consult or dip into as many volumes as she liked.  To-day, however, her mind was not attuned to study.  She sat with a volume of Macaulay open before her:  but her thoughts were not with the author.  She was wondering what those two were saying in the room overhead, and finding all attempts at reading futile, she let her head sink back upon the cushion of her deep luxurious chair, and sat with her dreamy eyes fixed on the summer landscape and her thoughts with her lover.

Lady Maulevrier looked very wan and tired in the bright morning light, when Mr. Hammond seated himself beside her sofa.  The change in her appearance since the spring was more marked to-day than it had seemed to him last night in the dim lamplight.  Yes, there was need hero for a speedy settlement of air earthly matters.  The traveller was nearing the mysterious end of the journey.  The summons might come at any hour.

’Mr. Hammond, I feel a confidence in your integrity, your goodness of heart, and high principle which I never thought I could feel for a man of whom I know so little,’ began Lady Maulevrier, gravely.  ’All I know of you or your antecedents is what my grandson has told me—­and I must say that the information so given has been very meagre.  And yet I believe in you—­and yet I am going to trust you, wholly, blindly, implicitly—­and I am going to give you my granddaughter, ever so much sooner than I intended to give her to you.  Soon, very soon, if you will have her!’

‘I will have her to-morrow, if there is time to get a special licence,’ exclaimed Hammond, bending down to kiss the dowager’s hand, radiant with delight.

’You shall marry her very soon, if you like, marry her by special licence, in this room.  I should like to see your wedding.  I have a strange impatience to behold one of my granddaughters happily married, to know that her future is secure, that come weal, come woe, she is safe in the protection of a brave true man.  I am not scared by the idea of a little poverty.  That is often the best education for youth.  But while you and I are alone we may as well talk about ways and means.  Perhaps you may hardly feel prepared to take upon yourself the burden of a wife this year.’

‘As well this year as next.  I am not afraid.’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Phantom Fortune, a Novel from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.