Great Possessions eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 387 pages of information about Great Possessions.

Great Possessions eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 387 pages of information about Great Possessions.

“After all, the General had plenty of time before starting for the war to arrange his affairs; he was not a man who would neglect business.  I came here with a faint hope—­or I tried to think it was a hope—­that you might have another will in the house.  I’m afraid this—­document represents Sir David Bright’s last wishes.”  There was a ring of indignant scorn in his voice.

Rose looked through the window on to the thin black London turf outside, and her eyes were blank from the intensity of concentration.  She had no thought for the lawyer; if he had been sympathetic even to impertinence she would not have noticed it.

She was questioning her own instincts, her perceptions.  No, it was almost more as if she were emptying her mind of any conscious action that her whole power of instinctive perception might have play.  When the blow had fallen, her only surprise had been to find that she was not surprised, not astonished.  It seemed as if she had known this all the time, for the thing had been alongside of her for years, she had lived too close to it for any surprise when it raised its head and found a name.  Her reasoning powers indeed asked with astonishment why she was not surprised.  She could not explain, the symptoms of the thing that had haunted her had been too subtle, too elusive, too minute to be brought forward now as witnesses.  But while the lawyer looked at the open face and the large eyes, and the frank bearing of the figure in the photograph, and felt that outer man to have been the disguise of a villain, Rose, the victim, knew better.  It was a supreme proof of the clear vision of her soul that she was not surprised, and that, even while she seemed to be flayed morally and exposed to things evil and of shame, she did not judge with blind indignation.  He had not been wholly bad, he had not been callous in his cruelty; what he had been there would be time to understand—­time for the delicacies, almost for the luxuries of forgiveness.  What she was feeling after now was a point of view above passion and pain from which to judge this final opinion of the lawyer’s, from which to know whether Sir David had left another will.

“There has been another will,” she said very gently, “but, of course, it is more than likely that it will never be found.  I am convinced”—­she looked at the black and green turf all the time, and obviously spoke to herself, not to Mr. Murray—­“that he did not intend to leave me to open shame”—­the words were gently but very distinctly pronounced—­“or to leave a scandal round his own memory.  Perhaps he carried another will about with him, and if so it may be sent to me.  Somehow I don’t think this will happen.  I think the will you have in your hand is the only one I shall ever see, but I do not therefore judge him of having faced death with the intention of spoiling my life.  I shall live in this house and I shall honour his memory; he died for his country, and I am his widow.”

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Great Possessions from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.