A Simpleton eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 491 pages of information about A Simpleton.

A Simpleton eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 491 pages of information about A Simpleton.

When she was gone, Reginald, whose eye and ear had been at the keyhole, alternately gloating on the face and drinking the accents of the only woman he had ever really loved, came out, looking pale, and strangely disturbed; and sat down at table, without a word.

Phoebe came back to him, full of the diamond.  “Did you hear what she said, my dear?  It is a diamond; it is worth a hundred and fifty pounds at least.  Why, what ails you?  Ah! to be sure! you know that lady.”

“I have cause to know her.  Cursed jilt!”

“You seem a good deal put out at the sight of her.”

“It took me by surprise, that is all.”

“It takes me by surprise too.  I thought you were cured.  I thought my turn had come at last.”

Reginald met this in sullen silence.  Then Phoebe was sorry she had said it; for, after all, it wasn’t the man’s fault if an old sweetheart had run into the room, and given him a start.  So she made him some fresh tea, and pressed him kindly to try her home-made bread and butter.

My lord relaxed his frown and consented, and of course they talked diamond.

He told her, loftily, he must take a studio, and his sitters must come to him, and must no longer expect to be immortalized for one pound.  It must be two pounds for a bust, and three pounds for a kitcat.

“Nay, but, my dear,” said Phoebe, “they will pay no more because you have a diamond.”

“Then they will have to go unpainted,” said Mr. Falcon.

This was intended for a threat.  Phoebe instinctively felt that it might not be so received; she counselled moderation.  “It is a great thing to have earned a diamond,” said she:  “but ’tis only once in a life.  Now, be ruled by me:  go on just as you are.  Sell the diamond, and give me the money to keep for you.  Why, you might add a little to it, and so would I, till we made it up two hundred pounds.  And if you could only show two hundred pounds you had made and laid by, father would let us marry, and I might keep this shop—­it pays well, I can tell you—­and keep my gentleman in a sly corner; you need never be seen in it.”

“Ay, ay,” said he, “that is the small game.  But I am a man that have always preferred the big game.  I shall set up my studio, and make enough to keep us both.  So give me the stone, if you please.  I shall take it round to them all, and the rogues won’t get it out of me for a hundred and fifty; why, it is as big as a nut.”

“No, no, Reginald.  Money has always made mischief between you and me.  You never had fifty pounds yet, you didn’t fall into temptation.  Do pray let me keep it for you; or else sell it—­I know how to sell; nobody better—­and keep the money for a good occasion.”

“Is it yours, or mine?” said he, sulkily.

“Why yours, dear; you earned it.”

“Then give it me, please.”  And he almost forced it out of her hand.

So now she sat down and cried over this piece of good luck, for her heart filled with forebodings.

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A Simpleton from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.