Eve's Ransom eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 216 pages of information about Eve's Ransom.

Eve's Ransom eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 216 pages of information about Eve's Ransom.

“I will certainly call and leave your message,” he said.

Up in his bed-room lie sat for a long time with the paper lying open before him.  And when he slept his rest was troubled with dreams of an anxious search about the highways and byways of London for that half-sad, half-smiling face which had so wrought upon his imagination.

Long before daylight he awoke at the sound of bells, and hootings, and whistlings, which summoned the Dudley workfolk to their labour.  For the first time in his life he heard these hideous noises with pleasure:  they told him that the day of his escape had come.  Unable to lie still, he rose at once, and went out into the chill dawn.  Thoughts of Eve Madeley no longer possessed him; a glorious sense of freedom excluded every recollection of his past life, and he wandered aimlessly with a song in his heart.

At breakfast, the sight of Mrs. Brewer’s album tempted him to look once more at the portrait, but he did not yield.

“Shall we ever see you again, I wonder?” asked his landlady, when the moment arrived for leave-taking.

“If I am ever again in Dudley, I shall come here,” he answered kindly.

But on his way to the station he felt a joyful assurance that fate would have no power to draw him back again into this circle of fiery torments.

CHAPTER V

Two months later, on a brilliant morning of May, Hilliard again awoke from troubled dreams, but the sounds about him had no association with bygone miseries.  From the courtyard upon which his window looked there came a ringing of gay laughter followed by shrill, merry gossip in a foreign tongue.  Somewhere in the neighbourhood a church bell was pealing.  Presently footsteps hurried along the corridor, and an impatient voice shouted repeatedly, “Alphonse!  Alphonse!”

He was in Paris; had been there for six weeks, and now awoke with a sense of loneliness, a desire to be back among his own people.

In London he had spent only a fortnight.  It was not a time that he cared to reflect upon.  No sooner had he found himself in the metropolis, alone and free, with a pocketful of money, than a delirium possessed him.  Every resolution notwithstanding, he yielded to London’s grossest lures.  All he could remember, was a succession of extravagances, beneath a sunless sky, with chance companions whose faces he had forgotten five minutes after parting with them.  Sovereign after sovereign melted out of his hand; the end of the second week found his capital diminished by some five-and-twenty pounds.  In an hour of physical and moral nausea, he packed his travelling-bag. journeyed to Newhaven, and as a sort of penance, crossed the Channel by third-class passage.  Arrived in Paris, he felt himself secure, and soon recovered sanity.

Thanks to his studious habits, he was equipped with book-French; now, both for economy’s sake and for his mental advantage, he struggled with the spoken language, and so far succeeded as to lodge very cheaply in a rather disreputable hotel, and to eat at restaurants where dinner of several courses cost two francs and a half.  His life was irreproachable; he studied the Paris of art and history.  But perforce he remained companionless, and solitude had begun to weigh upon him.

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Eve's Ransom from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.