Fenwick's Career eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 376 pages of information about Fenwick's Career.

Fenwick's Career eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 376 pages of information about Fenwick's Career.

Oh, how could he, how could he have treated her so!  ’I know I was ill-tempered and cross, John,—­I couldn’t write letters like that—­but I did, did love you—­you know, you know—­I did!’

It seemed as though she twined her arms round him, and he sat rigid as a stone, with a hard, contemptuous mouth.  A lonely agony, a blackness of despair, seized on Phoebe, as she crouched there, the letters on her lap, her hands hanging, her beautiful eyes, blurred with tears and sleeplessness, fixed on the picture.  What she felt was absurd; but how many tragedies—­aye, the deepest—­are at bottom ridiculous!  She had lost him; he cared no more for her; he had passed into another world out of her ken; and what was to become of her?

She started up, goaded by a blind instinct of revenge, seizing she scarcely knew what.  On the table lay a palette, laden with some dark pigment with which Fenwick had just been sketching in part of his new picture.  In a pot beside it were brushes.

She caught up a large brush, dipped it in the paint, and going to the picture—­panting and crimson—­she daubed it from top to bottom, blotting out the eyes, the mouth, the beautiful outline of the head—­above all, the hands, whose delicate whiteness specially enraged her.

When the work of wreck was done, she stood a moment gazing at it.  Then, violently, she looked for writing-paper.  She could see none:  but there was an unused half-sheet at the back of one of Madame de Pastourelles’ letters, and she roughly tore it off.  Making use of a book held on her knee, and finding the pen and ink with which, only half an hour before, Lord Findon had written his cheque, she began to write: 

Good-bye, John,—­I have found out all I want to know, and you will never see me again.  I will never be a burden on a man who is ashamed of me, and has behaved as though I were dead.  It is no good wasting words—­you know it’s true.  Perhaps you may think I have no right to take Carrie.  But I can’t be alone—­and, after all, she is more mine than yours.  Don’t trouble about me.  I have some money, and I mean to support myself and Carrie.  It was only last night this idea came to me, though it was the night before that—­Never mind—­I can’t write about it, it would take too long, and it doesn’t really matter to either of us.  I don’t want you to find me here; you might persuade me to come back to you, and I know it would be for the misery of both of us.  What was I saying?—­oh, the money—­Well, last night, a cousin of mine, from Keswick, perhaps you remember him—­Freddie Tolson—­came to see me.  Father sent him.  You didn’t believe what I told you about father—­you thought I was making up.  You’ll be sorry, I think, when you read this, for by now, most likely, father has passed away.  Freddie told me the doctor had given him up, and he was very near going.  But he sent Freddie to me, with some money he had really left me in his will—­only

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Fenwick's Career from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.