A Life's Morning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 526 pages of information about A Life's Morning.

A Life's Morning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 526 pages of information about A Life's Morning.

Mrs. Baxendale sank her eyes, and hesitated.

‘He died by his own hand,’ Emily said, below her breath.

The lady kept silence.  Emily again closed her eyes, and, as she so lay, felt warm lips touch her forehead.

Mrs. Baxendale believed for a moment that the sufferer had lost consciousness, but the utterance of her name caused Emily to raise her lids.

‘Why did he do this?’ she asked, regarding her friend fixedly.

‘No one can say, dear.’

Emily drew a deep sigh; a gleam passed over her face.

‘There was an inquest?’ she asked.

‘Yes.’

‘Is it possible for me to see a newspaper in which it was reported?’

‘If you really desire it,’ said Mrs. Baxendale, with hesitation.

‘I do; I wish to read it.  Will you do me that great kindness?’

’I will bring it you in a day or two.  But would it not be better to delay—­’

‘Is there anything,’ Emily asked quickly, ‘that you have kept from me?’

‘Nothing; nothing.’

‘Then I need not put off reading it.  I have borne the worst.’

As Mrs. Baxendale left the house, she was passed at a short distance along the road by a man on horseback.  This rider gave a sign to the coachman to stop, and a moment after presented himself at the window of the brougham.  It was Dagworthy; he wished to have news of Mrs. and Miss Hood.  The lady gave him full information.

‘I fear I could not see Mrs. Hood?’ Dagworthy said.

‘Oh, she is far too ill!’ was the reply.

Having assured himself on this point, Dagworthy took his leave, and, when the carriage was remote, rode to the house.  He made fast the reins to the gate, entered, and knocked at the door.  A girl who did subordinate work for the nurses opened.

‘I want you,’ Dagworthy said, ’to give this note at once to Miss Hood.  You understand?—­to Miss Hood.  Will you do so?’

‘I will, sir.’

He went away, and, immediately after, Emily was reading these lines: 

’I wish to tell you that no one has heard, and no one ever will, of the circumstances you would desire to have unknown.  I send this as soon as you are able to receive it.  You will know from whom it comes.’

She knew, and the message aided her.  The shook of what she had just heard was not, in its immediate effect, as severe as others had feared it would be.  Perhaps Emily’s own sojourn at the gates of death lessened the distance between her and him who had passed them; perhaps the vast misery which lay behind her, the darkness threatening in the future, brought first to her mind death’s attribute of deliverance.  This, in the hours that followed, she strove to dwell upon nothing could touch her father now, he was safe from trouble.  But, as the current in her veins grew warmer, as life held her with a stronger hand and made her once more participant in his fears and

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A Life's Morning from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.