A Perilous Secret eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 377 pages of information about A Perilous Secret.

A Perilous Secret eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 377 pages of information about A Perilous Secret.

“And what then?” inquired Mary, trembling.

Monckton appeared to be agitated at this question.

“Oh, don’t speak of it,” said he.  “You would be ruined for life, and he would get seven years’ penal servitude; and that is a sentence few gentlemen survive in the present day when prisons are slaughter-houses.  There, I have discharged the most disagreeable office I ever undertook in my life; but at all events you are warned in time.”

Then he bowed most respectfully to her, and retired, exhaling his pent-up venom in a diabolical grin.

She, poor victim, stood there stupefied, pierced with a poisoned arrow, and almost in a state of collapse; then she lifted her hands and eyes for help, and saw Hope’s study in front of her.  Everything swam confusedly before her; she did not know for certain whether he was there or not; she cried to that true friend for help.

“Mr. Hope—­I am lost—­I am in the deep waters of despair—­save me once more, save me!” Thus speaking she tottered into the office, and sank all limp and powerless into a chair, unable to move or speak, but still not insensible, and soon her brow sank upon the table, and her hands spread themselves feebly out before her.

It was all villainous spite on Monckton’s part.  He did not for a moment suppose that his lie could long outlive Walter Clifford’s return; but he was getting desperate, and longing to stab them all.  Unfortunately fate befriended the villain’s malice, and the husband and wife did not meet again till that diabolical poison had done its work.

Monckton retired, put off his old man’s disguise behind the fir-trees, and went toward another of his hiding-places, an enormous oak-tree which stood in the hedge of Hope’s cottage garden.  The subtle villain had made this hollow tree an observatory, and a sort of sally-port, whence he could play the fiend.

The people at the hotel were, as Mary told Julia Clifford, very honest people.

They showed Percy Fitzroy’s bracelet to one or two persons, and found it was of great value.  This made them uneasy, lest something should happen to it under their charge; so the woman sent her husband to the neighborhood of Clifford Hall to try and find out if there was a lady of that name who had left it.  The husband was a simple fellow, very unfit to discharge so delicate a commission.  He went at first, as a matter of course, to the public-house; they directed him to the Hall, but he missed it, and encountered a gentleman, whose quick eye fell upon the bracelet, for the foolish man had shown it to so many people that now he was carrying it in his hand, and it blazed in the meridian sun.  This gentleman said, “What have you got there?”

“Well, sir,” said the man, “it was left at our hotel by a young couple from these parts.  Handsome couple they were, sir, and spending their honey-moon.”

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Project Gutenberg
A Perilous Secret from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.