The Irrational Knot eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 460 pages of information about The Irrational Knot.

The Irrational Knot eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 460 pages of information about The Irrational Knot.
but they are certainly not brilliant.  I hope it is not Aunt Dora’s walnut table that is broken.  Was it not mean of Parson’s man to tell on Armande?  I think, since you have plenty of loose cash, we might venture on a set of those curtains we saw at Protheroe’s, for the drawing-room.  I can easily use the ones that are there now for portieres.
“You must not think that I have written this all at once.  I shall be able to finish to-day, as it is Sunday, and I have made an excuse to stay away from church.  George is to preach; and somehow I never feel toward the service as I ought when he officiates.  I know you will laugh at this.
“The first part of your letter must have a paragraph all to itself.  I hardly know what to say.  I could not have believed that Mrs. Leith Fairfax would have behaved as she has done.  I was so angry at first that for fully an hour I felt ill; and I spoke quite wickedly to George the day after he arrived, because he said that Sholto had better not take me down to dinner, although his doing so was quite accidental.  I know you will believe me when I tell you that I was quite unconscious that he had been unusually attentive to me; and I was about to write you an indignant denial, only I shewed Nelly your letter, and she crushed me by telling me she had noticed it too.  We nearly had a quarrel about it; but she counted up the number of times I had danced with him and sat beside him at dinner; and I suppose an evil-minded woman looking on might think what Mrs. Leith Fairfax thought.  But there is no excuse for her.  She knows that Sholto and I have been intimate since we were children; and there is something odious in her, of all people, pretending to misunderstand us.  What is worse, she was particularly friendly and confidential with me while she was here; and although I tried to keep away from her at first, she persisted in conciliating me, and persuaded me that Douglas had entirely mistaken what she said that other time.  Who could have expected her to turn round and calumniate me the moment my back was turned!  How can people do such things!  I hope we shall not meet her again; for I will never speak to her.  I have not said anything to Douglas.  How could I?  It would only make mischief.  I feel that the right course is to come home as soon as I can, and in the meantime to avoid him as much as possible.  So you may expect me on Saturday next.  Mr. McQuinch is quite dismayed at my departure, which he says will be the signal for a general breaking up; but this I cannot help.  I shall be glad to go home, of course.  Still, I am sorry to leave this place, where we have all been so jolly.  I will write and let you know what train I shall come by; but you need not trouble to meet me, unless you like:  I can get home quite well by myself.  After all, it is just as well that I am getting away.  It was pleasant enough; but now I feel utterly disgusted with everything and everybody.  I find I must stop.  They have just come in from church; and I must go down.

                            “Your affectionate
                                        “MARIAN.”

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The Irrational Knot from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.