The Cockaynes in Paris eBook

William Blanchard Jerrold
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 135 pages of information about The Cockaynes in Paris.

The Cockaynes in Paris eBook

William Blanchard Jerrold
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 135 pages of information about The Cockaynes in Paris.

“Quiet, gentlemen—­be quiet.  Step in—­but quiet—­quiet.”

We were in the chamber of Matthew Glendore in a moment.  A lady rose from the bedside.  Humble, and yet stately, a white face with red and swollen eyelids, eyes with command in them.  We were uncovered, and in an instant wholly subdued.

“My child—­my girl!” Reuben Sharp moaned.

The clergyman approached him, and laid his hand upon him.

“Whom do you want?”

“Mrs. Daker—­my—­”

The pale lady, full of grief, advanced a step, and looking full in the face of Reuben Sharp, said, “I, sir, am Mrs. Daker.”

I had never seen that lady before.

“You!” Sharp shouted, shaking with rage.

But the minister firmly laid his hand upon him now, saying, “Hush! in the chamber of death!  His mother is at his bedside; spare her.”

At this, a little figure with a ghastly face rose from the farther side of the bed.

“Mrs. Rowe!” I cried.

She had not the power left to scream; and her head fell heavily upon the pillow of the dying man.

“Enough, enough!” the clergyman said with authority—­closing the door of the chamber wherein Herbert Daker, the “Mr. Charles” of the Rue Millevoye, lay dead!

CHAPTER XIV.

THE CASTAWAY.

Cosmo Bertram was at a very low ebb.  No horse.  Had moved off to Batignolles.  Had not been asked to the Embassy for a twelvemonth.  When he ventured into the Tuileries gardens in the afternoon, it somehow happened that the backs of the ladies’ chairs were mostly turned towards him.  He was still dapper in appearance; but a close observer could see a difference.  Management was perceptible in his dress.  He had no watch; but the diamond remained on his finger—­for the present; and yet society had nothing seriously compromising to say against him.  It was rumoured that he had seen the interior of Clichy twice.  So had Sir Ronald, who was now the darling of the Faubourg; but then, note the difference.  Sir Ronald had re-issued with plenty of money—­or credit, which to society is the same thing; while poor Bertram had stolen down the hill by back streets to Batignolles, where he had found a cheap nest, and whence he trudged to his old haunts with a foolish notion that people would believe his story about a flying visit to England, and accept his translation to Batignolles as a sanitary precaution strongly recommended by his physician.  If society be not yet civilized enough to imitate the savages, who kill the old members of the community, it has studied the philosophy of the storks in Jutland, who get rid of their ailing, feeble brother storks, at the fall of the year.  Bertram was a bird to be pecked to pieces, and driven away from the prosperous community, being no longer prosperous.

First among the sharp peckers was Miss Tayleure, who always had her suspicions of Captain Bertram, although she was too good-natured to say anything.  The seasons had circled three or four times since she had had the honour of being introduced to the gentleman, and yet the lady was waiting to see what the improved facilities for travel might bring her in the matrimonial line.  She had, her dearest friends said, almost made up her mind to marry into commerce.

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Project Gutenberg
The Cockaynes in Paris from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.