[From Out the Vasty Deep by Mrs. Belloc Lowndes]@TWC D-Link book
From Out the Vasty Deep

CHAPTER IV
35/36

"And also the devil's own impudence, Lionel." And then she told him of the few words she had overheard at dinner of the winter Miss Burnaby had spent in Austria a matter of forty years ago.
"Yes, that's all very well! But it doesn't account for her absolutely correct description of my mother, or--or--" "Yes ?" said his companion sharply.
"Well--of her mention of the word 'arbour.' The last time I saw my mother alive was in the arbour of our horrible little garden at Bedford." "That," said Blanche thoughtfully, "was, I admit, pure thought-reading.
Good-night, Lionel." Varick remained standing at the foot of the staircase for quite a long while.
Yes, it had been thought-reading, of course.

But very remarkable, even so.

It was years since he had thought of that last painful talk with his mother.

She had warned him very seriously of certain--well, peculiarities of his character.

The long-forgotten words she had used suddenly leapt into his mind as if written in letters of fire: "Your father's unscrupulousness, matched with my courage, make a dangerous combination, my boy." As he lit a cigarette, his hand shook a little, but the more he thought of it, the more he told himself that for all that had occurred with relation to himself to-night there was an absolutely natural explanation.
Take the second figure Bubbles had described?
It was obviously that of the woman on whom he had allowed his mind to dwell uneasily, intensely, this afternoon.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books