[Lady Merton, Colonist by Mrs. Humphry Ward]@TWC D-Link book
Lady Merton, Colonist

CHAPTER XII
48/53

"A new country like this can't be too particular." He was thankful, at any rate, that he would have an opportunity before long--for he was going straight home and to Cumberland--of putting Mrs.Gaddesden on her guard.

"I may be thought officious; Lady Merton let me see very plainly that she thinks me so--but I shall do my duty nevertheless." And as he stood over his packing, bewildering his valet with a number of precise and old-maidish directions, his sore mind ran alternately on the fiasco of his own journey and on the incredible folly of nice women.
Delaine departed; and for two days Elizabeth ministered to Anderson.

She herself went strangely through it, feeling between them, as it were, the bared sword of his ascetic will--no less than her own terrors and hesitations.

But she set herself to lift him from the depths; and as they walked about the mountains and the forests, in a glory of summer sunshine, the sanity and sweetness of her nature made for him a spiritual atmosphere akin in its healing power to the influence of pine and glacier upon his physical weariness.
On the second evening, Mariette walked into the hotel.

Anderson, who had just concluded all arrangements for the departure of the car with its party within forty-eight hours, received him with astonishment.
"What brings you here ?" Mariette's harsh face smiled at him gravely.
"The conviction that if I didn't come, you would be committing a folly." "What do you mean ?" "Giving up your Commissionership, or some nonsense of that sort." "I have given it up." "H'm! Anything from Ottawa yet ?" It was impossible, Anderson pointed out, that there should be any letter for another three days.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books