[A Great Success by Mrs Humphry Ward]@TWC D-Link book
A Great Success

CHAPTER VI
44/50

As for Lord Dunstable, he grasped the girl by both hands.
"My dear child, what you have done for us! Ah, if your father were here!" And bending over her, with the courtly grace of an old man, he kissed her on the brow.

Alice Wigram flushed, turning involuntarily towards Lady Dunstable.
"Rachel!--don't we owe her everything," said Lord Dunstable with emotion--"her and Mrs.Meadows?
But for them, our boy might have wrecked his life." "He appears to have been a most extraordinary fool!" said Lady Dunstable with energy:--a recrudescence of the natural woman, which was positively welcome to everybody.

And it did not prevent the passage of some embarrassed but satisfactory words between Herbert Dunstable's mother and Alice Wigram, after Lady Dunstable had taken her latest guest to "Lady Mary's" room, bidding her go straight to bed, and be waited on.
Lord Dunstable and the lawyer departed after dinner to meet their special train at Perth.

Lady Dunstable, with variable spirits, kept the evening going, sometimes in a brown study, sometimes as brilliant and pugnacious as ever.

Doris slipped out of the drawing-room once or twice to go and gossip with Alice Wigram, who was lying under silken coverings, inclined to gentle moralising on the splendours of the great, and much petted by Miss Field and the house-keeper.
"How nice you look!" said the girl shyly, on one occasion, as Doris came stealing in to her.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books