Modern Chronicle, a — Volume 05 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 79 pages of information about Modern Chronicle, a — Volume 05.

Modern Chronicle, a — Volume 05 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 79 pages of information about Modern Chronicle, a — Volume 05.

“Rum chap, Chiltern,” remarked Carrington.  “He might be almost anything, if he only knew it.”

In the morning, when she awoke, her eye fell on the cotillon favours scattered over the lounge.  One amongst them stood out—­a silver-mounted pin-cushion.  Honora arose, picked it up contemplatively, stared at it awhile, and smiled.  Then she turned to her window, breathing in the perfumes, gazing out through the horse-chestnut leaves at the green, shadow-dappled lawn below.

On her breakfast tray, amidst some invitations, was a letter from her. uncle.  This she opened first.

“Dear Honora,” he wrote, “amongst your father’s papers, which have been in my possession since his death, was a certificate for three hundred shares in a land company.  He bought them for very little, and I had always thought them worthless.  It turns out that these holdings are in a part of the state of Texas that is now being developed; on the advice of Mr. Isham and others I have accepted an offer of thirty dollars a share, and I enclose a draft on New York for nine thousand dollars.  I need not dwell upon the pleasure it is for me to send you this legacy from your father.  And I shall only add the counsel of an old uncle, to invest this money by your husband’s advice in some safe securities.” . . .

Honora put down the letter, and sat staring at the cheque in her hand.  Nine thousand dollars—­and her own!  Her first impulse was to send it back to her uncle.  But that would be, she knew, to hurt his feelings—­he had taken such a pride in handing her this inheritance.  She read the letter again, and resolved that she would not ask Howard to invest the money.  This, at least, should be her very own, and she made up her mind to take it to a bank in Thames Street that morning.

While she was still under the influence of the excitement aroused by the unexpected legacy, Mrs. Shorter came in, a lady with whom Honora’s intimacy had been of steady growth.  The tie between them might perhaps have been described as intellectual, for Elsie Shorter professed only to like people who were “worth while.”  She lent Honora French plays, discussed them with her, and likewise a wider range of literature, including certain brightly bound books on evolution and sociology.

In the eighteenth century, Mrs. Shorter would have had a title and a salon in the Faubourg:  in the twentieth, she was the wife of a most fashionable and successful real estate agent in New York, and was aware of no incongruity.  Bourgeoise was the last thing that could be said of her; she was as ready as a George Sand to discuss the whole range of human emotions; which she did many times a week with certain gentlemen of intellectual bent who had the habit of calling on her.  She had never, to the knowledge of her acquaintances, been shocked.  But while she believed that a great love carried, mysteriously concealed in its flame, its own pardon, she had through some fifteen years of married life remained faithful to Jerry Shorter:  who was not, to say the least, a Lochinvar or a Roland.  Although she had had nervous prostration and was thirty-four, she was undeniably pretty.  She was of the suggestive, and not the strong-minded type, and the secret of her strength with the other sex was that she was in the habit of submitting her opinions for their approval.

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Modern Chronicle, a — Volume 05 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.