Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

“Write to say that your friend will meet him at a stated place.”

Robert saw his prey escaping.  “I’m not to see him?”

“No.  The decent is the right way in such cases.  You must leave it to me.  This will be the proper method between gentlemen.”

“It appears to my idea,” said Robert, “that gentlemen are always, somehow, stopped from taking the straight-ahead measure.”

“You,” Percy rejoined, “are like a civilian before a fortress.  Either he finds it so easy that he can walk into it, or he gives it up in despair as unassailable.  You have followed your own devices, and what have you accomplished?”

“He will lie to you smoothly.”

“Smoothly or not, if I discover that he has spoken falsely, he is answerable to me.”

“To me, Percy.”

“No; to me.  He can elude you; and will be acquitted by the general verdict.  But when he becomes answerable to me, his honour, in the conventional, which is here the practical, sense, is at stake, and I have him.”

“I see that.  Yes; he can refuse to fight me,” Robert sighed.  “Hey, Lord! it’s a heavy world when we come to methods.  But will you, Percy, will you put it to him at the end of your fist—­’Did you deceive the girl, and do you know where the girl now is?’ Why, great heaven! we only ask to know where she is.  She may have been murdered.  She’s hidden from her family.  Let him confess, and let him go.”

Major Waring shook his head.  “You see like a woman perhaps, Robert.  You certainly talk like a woman.  I will state your suspicions.  When I have done so, I am bound to accept his reply.  If we discover it to have been false, I have my remedy.”

“Won’t you perceive, that it isn’t my object to punish him by and by, but to tear the secret out of him on the spot—­now—­instantly,” Robert cried.

“I perceive your object, and you have experienced some of the results of your system.  It’s the primitive action of an appeal to the god of combats, that is exploded in these days.  You have no course but to take his word.”

“She said”—­Robert struck his knee—­“she said I should have the girl’s address.  She said she would see her.  She pledged that to me.  I’m speaking of the lady up at Fairly.  Come! things get clearer.  If she knows where Dahlia is, who told her?  This Mr. Algernon—­not Edward Blancove—­was seen with Dahlia in a box at the Playhouse.  He was there with Dahlia, yet I don’t think him the guilty man.  There’s a finger of light upon that other.”

“Who is this lady?” Major Waring asked, with lifted eyebrows.

“Mrs. Lovell.”

At the name, Major Waring sat stricken.

“Lovell!” he repeated, under his breath.  “Lovell!  Was she ever in India?”

“I don’t know, indeed.”

“Is she a widow?”

“Ay; that I’ve heard.”

“Describe her.”

Robert entered upon the task with a dozen headlong exclamations, and very justly concluded by saying that he could give no idea of her; but his friend apparently had gleaned sufficient.

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Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.