A Noble Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 263 pages of information about A Noble Life.

A Noble Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 263 pages of information about A Noble Life.

“Thank you, though I should have very little use it.  And that reminds me to explain something.  The day I made my will was, by an odd chance, the day you arrived here.  Had I know you then, I should have named you in it, leaving you—­I may as well tell you the sum—­a thousand pounds, in token of cousinly regard.”

“You are exceedingly kind, but I am no fortune-hunter.”

“I know that.  Still, the legacy may not be useless.  I shall make it legally secure as soon as I get to Edinburg.  In any case you are quite safe, for I have mentioned you to my heir.”

“Your heir!  Who do you mean?” interrupted Captain Bruce, thrown off his guard by excessive surprise.

The earl said, with a little dignity of manner, “It is scarcely needful to answer your question.  The title, you are aware, will be extinct; I meant the successor to my landed property.”

“Do I know the gentleman?”

“I named no gentleman.”

“Not surely a lady?  Not—­” a light suddenly breaking in upon him, so startling that it overthrew all his self-control, and even his good breeding.  “It can not possibly be Miss Helen Cardross?”

“Captain Bruce,” said the earl, the angry color flashing all over his pale face, “I was simply communicating a message to you; there was no need for any farther questioning.”

“I beg your pardon, Lord Cairnforth,” returned the other, perceiving how great a mistake he had made.  “I have no right whatever to question, or even to speculate concerning your heir, who is doubtless the fittest person you could have selected.”

“Most certainly,” replied the earl, in a manner which put a final stop to the conversation.

It was not resumed on any other topics; and shortly afterward, Malcolm having come in with the announcement that the carriage had returned from the Manse (at which Captain Bruce’s sharp eyes were bent scrutinizing on the earl’s face, but learned nothing thence), the cousins separated.

The captain had faithfully promised to be up at dawn to see the travelers off, but an apology came from him to the effect that the morning air was too damp for his lungs, and that he had spent a sleepless night owning to his cough.

“An’ nae wonder,” remarked Malcolm, cynically, as he delivered the message, “for I heard him a’ through the wee hours walkin’ and walkin’ up and doun, for a’ the world like a wolf in a cage.  And eh, but he’s dour the day!”

“A sickly man finds it difficult not to be dour at times,” said the Earl of Cairnforth.

Chapter 10

The earl reached Edinburg in the beginning of winter, and in those days an Edinburg winter was a very gay season.  That brilliant society, which has now become a matter of tradition, was then in its zenith.  Those renowned support-parties, where great wits, learned philosophers, and clever and beautiful women met together, a most enjoyable company, were going on almost every night, and drawing into their various small circles every thing that was most attractive in the larger circle outside.

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Project Gutenberg
A Noble Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.