The Woman Thou Gavest Me eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 874 pages of information about The Woman Thou Gavest Me.

The Woman Thou Gavest Me eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 874 pages of information about The Woman Thou Gavest Me.

“Who?”

“Don’t you remember little Margaret Mary at the Sacred Heart?”

“Is this she?”

“Yes,” said Angela, and then in a hoarse, angry voice the man said: 

“What has she come here for?”

Angela told him that I had seen her on Piccadilly, and being a great lady now, I (Oh heaven!) was one of the people who came out into the streets at midnight to rescue lost ones.

“She looked as if she wondered what had brought me down to that life, so I’ve fetched her home to see.”

I was shocked at Angela’s mistake, but before I could gather strength or courage to correct her Giovanni was raising himself in bed and saying, with a defiant air, his eyes blazing like watch-fires: 

“She does it for me, if you want to know.  I’ve been eleven months ill—­she does it all for me, I tell you.”

And then, in one of those outbursts of animation which come to the victims of that fell disease, he gave me a rapid account of what had happened to them since they ran away from Rome—­how at first he had earned their living as a teacher of languages; how it became known that he was an unfrocked and excommunicated priest who had broken his vows, and then his pupils had left him; how they had struggled on for some years longer, though pursued by this character as by a malignant curse; and how at length his health had quite broken down, and he would have starved but for Agnes (Angela being her nun’s name), who had stuck to him through everything.

While the sick man said this in his husky voice, Angela was sitting on the bed by his side with her arm about his waist, listening to him with a sort of pride and looking at me with a kind of triumph.

“I dare say you wonder why I didn’t try to get work,” she said.  “I could have got it if I had wanted to.  I could have got it at the Italian laundry.  But what was two shillings a day to a man who was ordered new milk and fresh eggs five times every twenty-four hours, not to speak of the house rent?”

“She ought to have let me die first,” said Giovanni, and then, looking at me again with his large, glittering, fierce eyes, he said: 

You think she ought to have let me die, don’t you?”

“No, no, no,” I said—­it was all I could say, for their mistake about myself was choking me.

Perhaps my emotion appeased both of them, for after a moment Angela beat out Giovanni’s pillow and straightened his counterpane, and then told him to lie down and be quiet, while she brought a chair for me and took off her things in her own bedroom.

But hardly had she gone into an adjoining chamber when the sick man raised himself again and, reaching over in my direction, told me in a hoarse whisper the story of the first night of her present way of life—­how the doctor had said he must be removed to the hospital; how Agnes would not part with him; how the landlord had threatened to turn them out; and how at last, after sitting with her head in her hands the whole evening, Aggie had got up and gone out and, coming back at midnight, had thrown two sovereigns on the table and said, “There you are, Giovanni—­that’s our rent and your eggs and milk for one week, anyway.”

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The Woman Thou Gavest Me from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.