[The Shadow of the Rope by E. W. Hornung]@TWC D-Link bookThe Shadow of the Rope CHAPTER XXI 6/10
He always plays to us when he drops in to dine, and you may think yourself lucky that he has dropped in to-night." "But where does the coincidence come in ?" asked Langholm, as the young fellow returned to the piano with a rather sad shake of the head. "What!" cried Venn, below his breath; "do you mean to say you are a friend of Mrs.Minchin's, or whatever her name is now, and that you never heard of Severino ?" "No," replied Langholm, his heart in an instantaneous flutter.
"Who is he ?" "The man she wanted to nurse the night her husband was murdered--the cause of the final row between them! His name was kept out of the papers, but that's the man." Langholm sat back in his chair.
To have spent a summer's day in stolid search for traces of this man, only to be introduced to the man himself by purest chance in the evening! It was, indeed, difficult to believe; nor was persuasion on the point followed by the proper degree of gratitude in Langholm for a transcendent stroke of fortune.
In fact, he almost resented his luck; he would so much rather have stood indebted to his skill.
And there were other causes for disappointment, as in an instant there were things more incredible to Langholm than the everyday coincidence of a chance meeting with the one person whom one desires to meet. "So that's the man!" he echoed, in a tone that might have told his companion something, only the fingers which Langholm had feared to crush had already fallen upon the keys, with the strong, tender, unerring touch of a master, and the impressionable player was swaying with enthusiasm on his stool. "And can't he play ?" whispered Valentine Venn, as though it were the man's playing alone that they were discussing. Yet even the preoccupied novelist had to listen and nod, and then listen again, before replying. "He can," said Langholm at length.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|