The Vanished Messenger eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 320 pages of information about The Vanished Messenger.

The Vanished Messenger eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 320 pages of information about The Vanished Messenger.

“He was proud, at least, of our family name.  Whatever credit he deserves for it, he must have.  It was owing to that accident that we became his slaves:  nothing but that—­his absolute slaves, to wait upon him, if he would, hand and foot.  You see, he has never been able to marry.  His life was, of course, ruined.  So the burden came to us.  We took it up, little thinking what was in store for us.  Five years ago we came here to live.  Gerald wanted to go into the army; I wanted to travel with my mother.  Gerald has done all the work secretly, but he has never been allowed to pass his examinations.  I have never left England except to spend two years at the strictest boarding-school in Paris, to which I was taken and fetched away by one of his creatures.  We live here, with the shadow of this thing always with us.  We are his puppets.  If we hesitate to do his bidding, he reminds us.  So far, we have been his creatures, body and soul.  Whether it will go on, I cannot say—­oh, I cannot say!  It is bad for us, but—­there is mother, too.  He makes her life a perfect hell!”

A roar of wind came booming once more across the marshes, bending the trees which grew so thickly beneath them and which ascended precipitately to the back of the house.  The French windows behind rattled.  She looked around nervously.

“I am afraid of him all the time,” she murmured.  “He seems to overhear everything—­he or his creatures.  Listen!”

They were silent for several moments.  He whispered in her ear so closely that through the darkness he could, see the fire in her eyes.

“You are telling me half,” he said.  “Tell me everything.  Who threw your uncle over the parapet?”

She stood by his side, motionless and trembling.

“It was the passion of a moment,” she said at last, speaking hoarsely.  “I cannot tell you.  Listen!  Listen!”

“There is no one near,” Hamel assured her.  “It is the wind which shakes the windows.  I wish that you would tell me everything.  I would like to be your friend.  Believe me, I have that desire, really.  There are so many things which I do not understand.  That it is dull here for you, of course, is natural, but there is something more than that.  You seem always to fear something.  Your uncle is a selfish man, naturally, although to look at him he seems to have the disposition of an angel.  But beyond that, is there anything of which you are afraid?  You seem all the time to live in fear.”

She suddenly clutched his hand.  There was nothing of affection in her touch, and yet he felt a thrill of delight.

“There are strange things which happen here,” she whispered, “things which neither Gerald nor I understand.  Yet they terrify us.  I think that very soon the end will come.  Neither of us can stand it very much longer.  We have no friends.  Somehow or other, he seems to manage to keep us always isolated.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Vanished Messenger from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.