The Lion's Share eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 432 pages of information about The Lion's Share.

The Lion's Share eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 432 pages of information about The Lion's Share.

Accidentally pushing against the front door with an elbow in the deep obscurity, she discovered that it was not latched.  This was quite contrary to the plan.  She stepped into the house.  The unforeseeing simpleton had actually come on the excursion without a box of matches!  She felt her way, aided by the swift returning memories of childhood, to the foot of the stairs, and past the stairs into the kitchen, for in ancient days a candlestick with a box of matches in it had always been kept on the ledge of the small square window that gave light to the passage between the hall and the kitchen.  Her father had been most severely particular about that candlestick (with matches) being-always ready on that ledge in case of his need.  Ridiculous, of course, to expect a candlestick to be still there!  Times change so.  But she felt for it, and there it was, and the matches too!  She lit the candle.  The dim scene thus revealed seemed strange enough to her after the electricity of the Hotel du Danube and of the yacht.  It made her want to cry....

She was one of those people who have room in their minds for all sorts of things at once.  And thus she could simultaneously be worried to an extreme about Jane Foley, foolish and sad about her immensely distant childhood, and even regretful that she had admitted the fraudulence of the wedding-ring on her hand.  On the last point she had a very strong sense of failure and disillusion.  When she had first donned a widow’s bonnet she had meant to have wondrous adventures and to hear marvellous conversations as a widow.  And what had she done with her widowhood after all?  Nothing.  She could not but think that she ought to have kept it a little longer, on the chance....

Aguilar made a practice of sleeping in the kitchen; he considered that a house could only be well guarded at night from the ground floor.  There was his bed, in the corner against the brush and besom cupboard, all made up.  Its creaselessness, so characteristic of Aguilar, had not been disturbed.  The sight of the narrow bed made Audrey think what a strange existence was the existence of Aguilar. ...  Then, with a boldness that was half bluster, she went upstairs, and the creaking of the woodwork was affrighting.

“Jane!  Jane, dear!” she called out, as she arrived at the second-storey landing.  The sound of her voice was uncanny in the haunted stillness.  All Audrey’s infancy floated up the well of the stairs and wrapped itself round her and tightened her throat.  She went along the passage to the door of the tank-room.

“Jane, Jane!”

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The Lion's Share from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.