Precaution eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 539 pages of information about Precaution.

Precaution eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 539 pages of information about Precaution.

Her guests sat in silence, occupied with their own reflections, while they heard a summons at the door of the house.  It was opened, and footsteps approached the door of their own room.  It was pushed partly open, as a voice on the other side said, speaking to a servant without,—­

“Very well.  Do not disturb your lady.  I am in no haste.”

At the sound of its well known tones, both the ladies almost sprang from their seats.  Here could be no resemblance, and a moment removed their doubts.  The speaker entered.  It was Denbigh.

He stood for a moment fixed as a statue:  It was evident the surprise was mutual.  His face was pale as death, and then instantly was succeeded by a glow of fire.  Approaching them, he paid his compliments with great earnestness, and in a voice in which his softest tones preponderated.

“I am happy, very happy, to be so fortunate in again meeting with such friends, and so unexpectedly.”

Mrs. Wilson bowed in silence to his compliment, and Emily, pale as himself, sat with her eyes fastened on the carpet, without daring to trust her voice with an attempt to speak.

After struggling with his mortified feelings for a moment, Denbigh rose from the chair he had taken, and drawing near the sofa on which the ladies were placed, exclaimed with fervor,

“Tell me, dear madam, lovely, too lovely Miss Moseley, has one act of folly, of wickedness if you please, lost me your good opinion for ever?  Derwent had given me hopes that you yet retained some esteem for my character, lowered, as I acknowledge it to be, in my own estimation.”

“The Duke of Derwent?  Mr. Denbigh!”

“Do not; do not use a name, dear madam, almost hateful to me,” cried he, in a tone of despair.

“If,” said Mrs. Wilson, gravely, “you have made your own name disreputable, I can only regret it, but—­”

“Call me by my title—­oh! do not remind me of my folly; I cannot bear it, and from you.”

“Your title!” exclaimed Mrs. Wilson, with a cry of wonder, and Emily turned on him a face in which the flashes of color and succeeding paleness were as quick, and almost as vivid, as the glow of lightning.  He caught their astonishment in equal surprise.

“How is this? some dreadful mistake, of which I am yet in ignorance,” he cried, taking the unresisting hand of Mrs. Wilson, and pressing it with warmth between both his own, as he added, “do not leave me in suspense.”

“For the sake of truth, for my sake, for the sake of this suffering innocent, say, in sincerity, who and what you are,” said Mrs. Wilson in a solemn voice, gazing on him in dread of his reply.

Still retaining her hand, he dropped on his knees before her, as he answered,—­

“I am the pupil, the child of your late husband, the companion of his dangers, the sharer of his joys and griefs, and would I could add, the friend of his widow.  I am the Earl of Pendennyss.”

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Precaution from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.