Tales of the Five Towns eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 193 pages of information about Tales of the Five Towns.

Tales of the Five Towns eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 193 pages of information about Tales of the Five Towns.

‘Do you mind coming into the kitchen?’ she said, preceding him and turning up the gas; ‘there’s no light in the front-room.’

He leaned up against the high mantelpiece; his frock-coat hung to the level of the oven-knob.  She had one hand on the white deal table.  Between them a tortoiseshell cat purred on the red-tiled floor.

’Ye’re doing a verra serious thing, Miss Beechinor.  As Mr. Beechinor’s solicitor, I should just like to be acquaint with the real reasons for this conduct.’

‘I’ve told you.’  She had a slightly quizzical look.

‘Now, as to Mark,’ the lawyer continued blandly, ’Mr. Beechinor explained the whole circumstances to me.  Mark as good as defied his brother.’

‘That’s nothing to do with it.’

’By the way, it appears that Mark is practically engaged to be married.  May I ask if the lady is yeself?’

She hesitated.

‘If so,’ he proceeded, ’I may tell ye informally that I admire the pluck of ye.  But, nevertheless, that will has got to be executed.’

‘The young lady is a Miss Mellor of Hanbridge.’

‘I’m going to fetch my clerk,’ he said shortly.  ’I can see ye’re an obstinate and unfathomable woman.  I’ll be back in half an hour.’

When he had departed she bolted the front-door top and bottom, and went upstairs to the dying man.

Nearly an hour elapsed before she heard a knock.  Mr. Baines had had to arouse his clerk from sleep.  Instead of going down to the front-door, Mary threw up the bedroom window and looked out.  It was a mild but starless night.  Trafalgar Road was silent save for the steam-car, which, with its load of revellers returning from Hanbridge—­that centre of gaiety—­slipped rumbling down the hill towards Bursley.

’What do you want—­disturbing a respectable house at this time of night?’ she called in a loud whisper when the car had passed.  ’The door’s bolted, and I can’t come down.  You must come in the morning.’

‘Miss Beechinor, ye will let us in—­I charge ye.’

‘It’s useless, Mr. Baines.’

’I’ll break the door down.  I’m a strong man, and a determined.  Ye are carrying things too far.’

In another moment the two men heard the creak of the bolts.  Mary stood before them, vaguely discernible, but a forbidding figure.

‘If you must—­come upstairs,’ she said coldly.

‘Stay here in the passage, Arthur,’ said Mr. Baines; ’I’ll call ye when I want ye;’ and he followed Mary up the stairs.

Edward Beechinor lay on his back, and his sunken eyes stared glassily at the ceiling.  The skin of his emaciated face, stretched tightly over the protruding bones, had lost all its crimson, and was green, white, yellow.  The mouth was wide open.  His drawn features wore a terribly sardonic look—­a purely physical effect of the disease; but it seemed to the two spectators that this mean and disappointed slave of a miserly habit had by one superb imaginative effort realized the full vanity of all human wishes and pretensions.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Tales of the Five Towns from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.