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.

‘But it is not the first,’ wrote Lady Maulevrier.  ’My pride has received crushing blows in days past, and I ought to be humbled to the dust.  But there is a stubborn resistance in some natures which stands firm against every shock.  You and Lesbia will both be surprised to hear that Mary, from whom I expected so little, has made a really great match.  She was married yesterday afternoon in my morning room, by special licence, to the Earl of Hartfield, the lover of her choice, whom we at Fellside have all known as plain John Hammond.  He is an admirable young man, and sure to make a great figure in the world, as no doubt you know better than I do, for you are in the way of hearing all about him.  His courtship of Mary is quite an idyll; and the happy issue of this romantic love-affair has cheered and comforted me more than anything that has happened since Lesbia left me.’

This letter, written in Fraeulein’s niggling little hand, Lady Kirkbank handed to Lesbia, who read it through in silence; but when she came to that part of the letter which told of her sister’s marriage, her cheek grew ashy pale, her brow contracted, and she started to her feet and stared at Lady Kirkbank with wild, dilated eyes, as if she had been stung by an adder.

‘A strange mystification, wasn’t it?’ said Lady Kirkbank, almost frightened at the awful look in Lesbia’s face, which was even worse than Belle Trinder’s expression when she read the announcement of Mr. Smithson’s flight.

‘Strange mystification!  It was base treachery—­a vile and wicked lie!’ cried Lesbia, furiously.  ’What right had he to come to us under false colours, to pretend to be poor, a nobody—­with only the vaguest hope of making a decent position in the future?—­and to offer himself under such impossible conditions to a girl brought up as I had been—­a girl educated by one of the proudest and most ambitious of women—­to force me to renounce everything except him?  How could he suppose that any girl, so placed, could decide in his favour?  If he had loved me he would have told me the truth—­he would not have made it impossible for me to accept him.’

‘I believe he is a very high flown young man,’ said Lady Kirkbank, soothingly; ’he was never in my set, you know, dear.  And I suppose he had some old Minerva-press idea that he would find a girl who would marry him for his own sake.  And your sister, no doubt, eager to marry anybody, poor child, for the sake of getting away from that very lovely dungeon of Lady Maulevrier’s, snapped at the chance; and by a mere fluke she becomes a countess.’

Lesbia ignored these consolatory remarks.  She was pacing the room like a tigress, her delicate cambric handkerchief grasped between her two hands, and torn and rent by the convulsive action of her fingers.  She could have thrown herself from the balcony on to the spikes of the area railings, she could have dashed herself against yonder big plate-glass window looking towards the Green Park, like a bird which shatters his little life against the glass barrier which he mistakes for the open sky.  She could have flung herself down on the floor and grovelled, and torn her hair—­she could have done anything mad, wicked, desperate, in the wild rage of this moment.

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