Initials Only eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 320 pages of information about Initials Only.

Initials Only eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 320 pages of information about Initials Only.
of Oswald whose temperament was wholly different from his and who might have loved her, should it ever be shown that they had met and known each other.  And this was not an impossibility.  Oswald had been east, Oswald had even been in the Berkshires before himself.  Oswald —­Why it was Oswald who had suggested that he should go there—­go where she still was.  Why this second coincidence, if there were no tie—­if the Challoners and Oswald were as far apart as they seemed and as conventionalities would naturally place them.  Oswald was a sentimentalist, but very reserved about his sentimentalities.  If these suppositions were true, he had had a sentimentalist’s motive for what he did.  As Orlando realised this, he rose from his seat, aghast at the possibilities confronting him from this line of thought.  Should he contemplate them?  Risk his reason by dwelling on a supposition which might have no foundation in fact?  No.  His brain was too full—­his purposes too important for any unnecessary strain to be put upon his faculties.  No thinking! investigation first.  Mr. Challoner should be able to settle this question.  He would see him.  Even at this late hour he ought to be able to find him in one of the rooms below; and, by the force of an irresistible demand, learn in a moment whether he had to do with a mere chimera of his own overwrought fancy, or with a fact which would call into play all the resources of an hitherto unconquered and undaunted nature.

There was a wood-fire burning in the sitting-room that night, and around it was grouped a number of men with their papers and pipes.  Mr. Brotherson, entering, naturally looked that way for the man he was in search of, and was disappointed not to find him there; but on casting his glances elsewhere, he was relieved to see him standing in one of the windows overlooking the street.  His back was to the room and he seemed to be lost in a fit of abstraction.

As Orlando crossed to him, he had time to observe how much whiter was this man’s head than in the last interview he had held with him in the coroner’s office in New York.  But this evidence of grief in one with whom he had little, if anything, in common, neither touched his feelings nor deterred his step.  The awakening of his heart to new and profound emotions had not softened him towards the sufferings of others if those others stood without the pale he had previously raised as the legitimate boundary of a just man’s sympathies.

He was, as I have said, an extraordinary specimen of manly vigour in body and in mind, and his presence in any company always attracted attention and roused, if it never satisfied, curiosity.  Conversation accordingly ceased as he strode up to Mr. Challoner’s side, so that his words were quite audible as he addressed that gentleman with a somewhat curt: 

“You see me again, Mr. Challoner.  May I beg of you a few minutes’ further conversation?  I will not detain you long.”

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Initials Only from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.