The Shuttle eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 799 pages of information about The Shuttle.

The Shuttle eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 799 pages of information about The Shuttle.

“The only time he got mad was when I wouldn’t believe him when he told me who he was.  I was a bit hot in the collar myself.  I’d felt sorry for him, because I thought he was a chap like myself, and he was up against it.  I know what that is, and I’d wanted to jolly him along a bit.  When he said his name was Mount Dunstan, and the place belonged to him, I guessed he thought he was making a joke.  So I got on my wheel and started off, and then he got mad for keeps.  He said he wasn’t such a damned fool as he looked, and what he’d said was true, and I could go and be hanged.”

Reuben S. Vanderpoel laughed.  He liked that.  It sounded like decent British hot temper, which he had often found accompanied honest British decencies.

He liked other things, as the story proceeded.  The picture of the huge house with the shut windows, made him slightly restless.  The concealed imagination, combined with the financier’s resentment of dormant interests, disturbed him.  That which had attracted Selden in the Reverend Lewis Penzance strongly attracted himself.  Also, a man was a good deal to be judged by his friends.  The man who lived alone in the midst of stately desolateness and held as his chief intimate a high-bred and gentle-minded scholar of ripe years, gave, in doing this, certain evidence which did not tell against him.  The whole situation meant something a splendid, vivid-minded young creature might be moved by—­might be allured by, even despite herself.

There was something fantastic in the odd linking of incidents—­Selden’s chance view of Betty as she rode by, his next day’s sudden resolve to turn back and go to Stornham, his accident, all that followed seemed, if one were fanciful—­part of a scheme prearranged

“When I came to myself,” G. Selden said, “I felt like that fellow in the Shakespeare play that they dress up and put to bed in the palace when he’s drunk.  I thought I’d gone off my head.  And then Miss Vanderpoel came.”  He paused a moment and looked down on the carpet, thinking.  “Gee whiz!  It was queer,” he said.

Betty Vanderpoel’s father could almost hear her voice as the rest was told.  He knew how her laugh had sounded, and what her presence must have been to the young fellow.  His delightful, human, always satisfying Betty!

Through this odd trick of fortune, Mount Dunstan had begun to see her.  Since, through the unfair endowment of Nature—­that it was not wholly fair he had often told himself—­she was all the things that desire could yearn for, there were many chances that when a man saw her he must long to see her again, and there were the same chances that such an one as Mount Dunstan might long also, and, if Fate was against him, long with a bitter strength.  Selden was not aware that he had spoken more fully of Mount Dunstan and his place than of other things.  That this had been the case, had been because Mr. Vanderpoel had intended it should be so.  He had subtly drawn

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The Shuttle from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.