The Whirlpool eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 621 pages of information about The Whirlpool.

The Whirlpool eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 621 pages of information about The Whirlpool.

The little shop window, set out with objects carved in serpentine, held her for a moment; but remembering how often she had paused here lately, she felt ashamed, and walked on.  Presently there moved towards her a lady in a Bath-chair; a lady who had once been beautiful, but now, though scarcely middle-aged, looked gaunt and haggard from some long illness.  The invalid held open a newspaper, and Alma, in passing, saw that it was The World.  At once her step quickened, for she had remembered the desire which touched her an hour ago.

She walked to the railway station, surveyed the papers on the bookstall, and bought three —­ papers which would tell her what was going on in society.  With these in hand she found a quiet spot, sheltered from the August sun, where she could sit and read.  She read eagerly, enviously.  And before long her eye fell upon a paragraph in which was a name she knew.  Lady Isobel Barker, in her lovely retreat at Boscombe, was entertaining a large house-party; in the list appeared —­ Mrs. Hugh Carnaby.  Unmistakable:  Mrs. Hugh Carnaby.  Who Lady Isobel might be, Alma had no idea; nor were any of the other guests known to her, but the names of all seemed to roll upon the tongue of the announcing footman.  She had a vision of Sibyl in that august company; Sibyl, coldly beautiful, admirably sage, with —­ perhaps —­ ever so little of the air of a martyr, to heighten her impressiveness.

When she could command herself, she glanced hurriedly through column after column of all the papers, seeking for that name again.  In one, an illustrated publication, she came upon a couple of small portraits, side by side.  Surely she recognised that face —­ the bold, coarse-featured man, with his pretentious smile?  But the girl, no; a young and very pretty girl, smirking a little, with feathery hair which faded off into an aureole.  The text was illuminating.

‘I am able to announce,’ wrote Ego, ’and I think I shall be one of the first to do so, that the brilliant composer, Mr. Felix Dymes, will shortly vanish from the gay (if naughty) world of bachelorhood.  I learn on excellent authority that Mr. Dymes has quite recently become engaged to Miss Lettice Almond, a very charming young lady, whose many gifts (especially musical) have as yet been known only to a comparatively small circle, and for the delightful reason that she is still only eighteen.  Miss Almond is the daughter of Mr. Haliburton Almond, senior partner in the old and well-known firm of Almond Brothers, the manufacturers of fireworks.  She is an only daughter, and, though she has two brothers, I may add (I trust without indiscretion) that the title of heiress may be fittingly applied to her.  The marriage may take place in November, and will doubtless be a brilliant as well as a most interesting affair.  By-the-bye, Mr. Dymes’s new opera is not likely to be ready till next year, but some who have been privileged to hear the parts already composed declare that it will surpass even “Blue Roses” in the charm of sweet yet vivacious melody.’

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Project Gutenberg
The Whirlpool from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.