[The Absentee by Maria Edgeworth]@TWC D-Link bookThe Absentee CHAPTER XIV 4/31
I am glad he's gone.
But he will come back and always lie in wait, and some time or other, when we're off our guard (unawares), he'll slide in.' Slide in! Oh, horrid!' cried Lady Clonbrony, sitting up, and wiping away the water which Miss Nugent had sprinkled on her face. 'Were you much alarmed ?' said Lord Colambre, with a voice of tenderness, looking at his mother first, but his eyes fixing on Miss Nugent. 'Shockingly!' said Lady Clonbrony; 'I never thought it would REELLY come to this.' 'It will really come to much more, my dear,' said Lord Clonbrony, 'that you may depend upon, unless you prevent it.' 'Lord! what can I do ?--I know nothing of business; how should I, Lord Clonbrony; but I know there's Colambre--I was always told that when he was of age everything should be settled; and why can't he settle it when he's upon the spot ?' 'And upon one condition, I will,' cried Lord Colambre; 'at what loss to myself, my dear mother, I need not mention.' 'Then I will mention it,' cried Lord Clonbrony; 'at the loss it will be of nearly half the estate he would have had, if we had not spent it.' 'Loss! Oh, I am excessively sorry my son's to be at such a loss--it must not be.' 'It cannot be otherwise,' said Lord Clonbrony; 'nor it can't be this way either, my Lady Clonbrony, unless you comply with his condition, and consent to return to Ireland.' 'I cannot--I will not,' replied Lady Clonbrony.
'Is this your condition, Colambre ?--I take it exceedingly ill of you.
I think it very unkind, and unhandsome, and ungenerous, and undutiful of you, Colambre; you, my son!' She poured forth a torrent of reproaches; then came to entreaties and tears.
But our hero, prepared for this, had steeled his mind; and he stood resolved not to indulge his own feelings, or to yield to caprice or persuasion, but to do that which he knew was best for the happiness of hundreds of tenants who depended upon them--best for both his father and his mother's ultimate happiness and respectability. 'It's all in vain,' cried Lord Clonbrony; 'I have no resource but one, and I must condescend now to go to him this minute, for Mordicai will be back and seize all--I must sign and leave all to Garraghty.' 'Well, sign, sign, my lord, and settle with Garraghty .-- Colambre, I've heard all the complaints you brought over against that man.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|