Beatrice eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 415 pages of information about Beatrice.

Beatrice eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 415 pages of information about Beatrice.

At Chester Beatrice got out of the train and posted her letter to Geoffrey.  She would not do so till then because it might have reached him too soon—­before all was finished!  Now it would be delivered to him in the House after everything had been accomplished in its order.  She looked at the letter; it was, she thought, the last token that could ever pass between them on this earth.  Once she pressed it to her heart, once she touched it with her lips, and then put it from her beyond recall.  It was done; there was no going back now.  And even as she stood the postman came up, whistling, and opening the box carelessly swept its contents into his canvas bag.  Could he have known what lay among them he would have whistled no more that day.

Beatrice continued her journey, and by three o’clock arrived safely at the little station next to Bryngelly.  There was a fair at Coed that day, and many people of the peasant class got in here.  Amidst the confusion she gave up her ticket to a small boy, who was looking the other way at the time, and escaped without being noticed by a soul.  Indeed, things happened so that nobody in the neighbourhood of Bryngelly ever knew that Beatrice had been to London and back upon those dreadful days.

Beatrice walked along the cliff, and in an hour was at the door of the Vicarage, from which she seemed to have been away for years.  She unlocked it and entered.  In the letter-box was a post-card from her father stating that he and Elizabeth had changed their plans and would not be back till the train which arrived at half-past eight on the following morning.  So much the better, she thought.  Then she disarranged the clothes upon her bed to make it seem as though it had been slept it, lit the kitchen fire, and put the kettle on to boil, and as soon as it was ready she took some food.  She wanted all her nerve, and that could not be kept up without food.

Shortly after this the girl Betty returned, and went about her duties in the house quite unconscious that Beatrice had been away from it for the whole night.  Her sister was much better, she said, in answer to Beatrice’s inquiries.

When she had eaten what she could—­it was not much—­Beatrice went to her room, undressed herself, bathed, and put on clean, fresh things.  Then she unbound her lovely hair, and did it up in a coronet upon her head.  It was a fashion that she did not often adopt, because it took too much time, but on this day, of all days, she had a strange fancy to look her best.  Also her hair had been done like this on the afternoon when Geoffrey first met her.  Next she put on the grey dress once more which she had worn on her journey to London, and taking the silver Roman ring that Geoffrey had given her from the string by which she wore it about her neck, placed it on the third finger of her left hand.

All this being done, Beatrice visited the kitchen and ordered the supper.  She went further in her innocent cunning.  Betty asked her what she would like for breakfast on the following morning, and she told her to cook some bacon, and to be careful how she cut it, as she did not like thick bacon.  Then, after one long last look at the Vicarage, she started for the lodging of the head teacher of the school, and, having found her, inquired as to the day’s work.

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Project Gutenberg
Beatrice from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.