Desperate Remedies eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 532 pages of information about Desperate Remedies.

Desperate Remedies eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 532 pages of information about Desperate Remedies.

The direction in which she had to go would take her close by the old manor-house.  The air was perfectly still, and between each low rumble of the thunder behind she could hear the roar of the waterfall before her, and the creak of the engine among the bushes hard by it.  Hurrying on, with a growing dread of the gloom and of the approaching storm, she drew near the Old House, now rising before her against the dark foliage and sky in tones of strange whiteness.

On the flight of steps, which descended from a terrace in front to the level of the park, stood a man.  He appeared, partly from the relief the position gave to his figure, and partly from fact, to be of towering height.  He was dark in outline, and was looking at the sky, with his hands behind him.

It was necessary for Cytherea to pass directly across the line of his front.  She felt so reluctant to do this, that she was about to turn under the trees out of the path and enter it again at a point beyond the Old House; but he had seen her, and she came on mechanically, unconsciously averting her face a little, and dropping her glance to the ground.

Her eyes unswervingly lingered along the path until they fell upon another path branching in a right line from the path she was pursuing.  It came from the steps of the Old House.  ’I am exactly opposite him now,’ she thought, ‘and his eyes are going through me.’

A clear masculine voice said, at the same instant—­

‘Are you afraid?’

She, interpreting his question by her feelings at the moment, assumed himself to be the object of fear, if any.  ’I don’t think I am,’ she stammered.

He seemed to know that she thought in that sense.

‘Of the thunder, I mean,’ he said; ‘not of myself.’

She must turn to him now.  ‘I think it is going to rain,’ she remarked for the sake of saying something.

He could not conceal his surprise and admiration of her face and bearing.  He said courteously, ’It may possibly not rain before you reach the House, if you are going there?’

‘Yes, I am,’

‘May I walk up with you?  It is lonely under the trees.’

‘No.’  Fearing his courtesy arose from a belief that he was addressing a woman of higher station than was hers, she added, ’I am Miss Aldclyffe’s companion.  I don’t mind the loneliness.’

’O, Miss Aldclyffe’s companion.  Then will you be kind enough to take a subscription to her?  She sent to me this afternoon to ask me to become a subscriber to her Society, and I was out.  Of course I’ll subscribe if she wishes it.  I take a great interest in the Society.’

‘Miss Aldclyffe will be glad to hear that, I know.’

’Yes; let me see—­what Society did she say it was?  I am afraid I haven’t enough money in my pocket, and yet it would be a satisfaction to her to have practical proof of my willingness.  I’ll get it, and be out in one minute.’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Desperate Remedies from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.