The Haunted Hotel eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 236 pages of information about The Haunted Hotel.

The Haunted Hotel eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 236 pages of information about The Haunted Hotel.
he introduced improvements in Mrs. Carbury’s couch, and in the means of conveying her from the bedchamber to the drawing-room, which alleviated the poor lady’s sufferings and brightened her gloomy life.  With these claims on the gratitude of the aunt, aided by the personal advantages which he unquestionably possessed, Arthur advanced rapidly in the favour of the charming niece.  She was, it is needless to say, perfectly well aware that he was in love with her, while he was himself modestly reticent on the subject—­ so far as words went.  But she was not equally quick in penetrating the nature of her own feelings towards Arthur.  Watching the two young people with keen powers of observation, necessarily concentrated on them by the complete seclusion of her life, the invalid lady discovered signs of roused sensibility in Miss Haldane, when Arthur was present, which had never yet shown themselves in her social relations with other admirers eager to pay their addresses to her.  Having drawn her own conclusions in private, Mrs. Carbury took the first favourable opportunity (in Arthur’s interests) of putting them to the test.

‘I don’t know what I shall do,’ she said one day, ’when Arthur goes away.’

Miss Haldane looked up quickly from her work.  ’Surely he is not going to leave us!’ she exclaimed.

’My dear! he has already stayed at his uncle’s house a month longer than he intended.  His father and mother naturally expect to see him at home again.’

Miss Haldane met this difficulty with a suggestion, which could only have proceeded from a judgment already disturbed by the ravages of the tender passion.  ’Why can’t his father and mother go and see him at Lord Montbarry’s?’ she asked.  ’Sir Theodore’s place is only thirty miles away, and Lady Barville is Lord Montbarry’s sister.  They needn’t stand on ceremony.’

‘They may have other engagements,’ Mrs. Carbury remarked.

‘My dear aunt, we don’t know that!  Suppose you ask Arthur?’

‘Suppose you ask him?’

Miss Haldane bent her head again over her work.  Suddenly as it was done, her aunt had seen her face—­and her face betrayed her.

When Arthur came the next day, Mrs. Carbury said a word to him in private, while her niece was in the garden.  The last new novel lay neglected on the table.  Arthur followed Miss Haldane into the garden.  The next day he wrote home, enclosing in his letter a photograph of Miss Haldane.  Before the end of the week, Sir Theodore and Lady Barville arrived at Lord Montbarry’s, and formed their own judgment of the fidelity of the portrait.  They had themselves married early in life—­and, strange to say, they did not object on principle to the early marriages of other people.  The question of age being thus disposed of, the course of true love had no other obstacles to encounter.  Miss Haldane was an only child, and was possessed of an ample fortune.  Arthur’s career at the university

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The Haunted Hotel from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.