The Moonstone eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 733 pages of information about The Moonstone.

The Moonstone eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 733 pages of information about The Moonstone.

Between six and seven the travellers arrived.  To my indescribable surprise, they were escorted, not by Mr. Godfrey (as I had anticipated), but by the lawyer, Mr. Bruff.

“How do you do, Miss Clack?” he said.  “I mean to stay this time.”

That reference to the occasion on which I had obliged him to postpone his business to mine, when we were both visiting in Montagu Square, satisfied me that the old worldling had come to Brighton with some object of his own in view.  I had prepared quite a little Paradise for my beloved Rachel—­and here was the Serpent already!

“Godfrey was very much vexed, Drusilla, not to be able to come with us,” said my Aunt Ablewhite.  “There was something in the way which kept him in town.  Mr. Bruff volunteered to take his place, and make a holiday of it till Monday morning.  By-the-by, Mr. Bruff, I’m ordered to take exercise, and I don’t like it.  That,” added Aunt Ablewhite, pointing out of window to an invalid going by in a chair on wheels, drawn by a man, “is my idea of exercise.  If it’s air you want, you get it in your chair.  And if it’s fatigue you want, I am sure it’s fatigue enough to look at the man.”

Rachel stood silent, at a window by herself, with her eyes fixed on the sea.

“Tired, love?” I inquired.

“No.  Only a little out of spirits,” she answered.  “I have often seen the sea, on our Yorkshire coast, with that light on it.  And I was thinking, Drusilla, of the days that can never come again.”

Mr. Bruff remained to dinner, and stayed through the evening.  The more I saw of him, the more certain I felt that he had some private end to serve in coming to Brighton.  I watched him carefully.  He maintained the same appearance of ease, and talked the same godless gossip, hour after hour, until it was time to take leave.  As he shook hands with Rachel, I caught his hard and cunning eyes resting on her for a moment with a peculiar interest and attention.  She was plainly concerned in the object that he had in view.  He said nothing out of the common to her or to anyone on leaving.  He invited himself to luncheon the next day, and then he went away to his hotel.

It was impossible the next morning to get my Aunt Ablewhite out of her dressing-gown in time for church.  Her invalid daughter (suffering from nothing, in my opinion, but incurable laziness, inherited from her mother) announced that she meant to remain in bed for the day.  Rachel and I went alone together to church.  A magnificent sermon was preached by my gifted friend on the heathen indifference of the world to the sinfulness of little sins.  For more than an hour his eloquence (assisted by his glorious voice) thundered through the sacred edifice.  I said to Rachel, when we came out, “Has it found its way to your heart, dear?” And she answered, “No; it has only made my head ache.”  This might have been discouraging to some people; but, once embarked on a career of manifest usefulness, nothing discourages Me.

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Project Gutenberg
The Moonstone from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.