登陆注册
26265200000160

第160章 CHAPTER XXXVII.(4)

There was a plain gold ring found on the hand in Hillsborough river, and my poor daughter had given Little a plain gold ring. But what was there to hinder an impostor from buying some pauper's body, and putting a plain gold ring on the hand? Why, paupers' bodies are constantly sold, and the funeral services gabbled over a coffin full of stones. If I had paper and ink here, and could put Little's case and Martin's in two columns, I should soon show you that Martin and his gang faced and overcame more and greater difficulties in the way of imposture than any that have been overcome in Little's case. The Martin gang dealt with the face; here, that is shirked. The Martin gang planted a body, not a fragment. Does it not strike you as very odd that the rest of Henry Little is not to be found? It may be all right; but, of the two, I incline to think it is a plan, and that some person, calling himself the heir or assign of Little, will soon apply to the 'Gosshawk' for five thousand pounds. Well, let him. I shall look on that person as the agent of a living man, not the heir of a dead one; and I shall tell him I don't believe in arms, and shoulders, and tweed suits, and plain gold rings--(why, wedding-rings are the very things conjurors take from the public at random to play hanky-panky with; they are so like one another). I shall demand to see the man's face; and the mother who bore him must identify that face before I will pay one shilling to his heirs or assigns. I am waiting to see who will come forward and claim.

Nobody moves; and that is curious. Well, when they do, I shall be ready for them. You look pale! But no wonder: it is really no subject for an after-dinner conversation."

Coventry was pale indeed, and his mind all in a whirl as to what he should say; for Mr. Carden's sagacity terrified him, and the worst of it was, he felt sure that Grace Carden heard every word.

At last, however, his natural cunning came to his aid, and he made a very artful speech, directed principally to his unseen hearer.

"Mr. Carden," said he, "this seems to me very shrewd; but surely it fails in one respect: you leave the man's character out of the account. Mr. Little came between me and one I love, and inflicted great misery on me; but I will try and be just to him. I don't believe he was an impostor of that kind. He was false in love; he had been reared amongst workmen, and every body says he loved a working-girl more than he did your daughter; but as for his cheating you or any other person out of five thousand pounds, I can't believe it. They all say he was as honest a man in money matters as ever breathed."

"You judge him by yourself. Besides, men begin by deceiving women, but they go on to-- Why, Grace, my poor child-- Good heavens! have you--?"

Grace was leaning against the open window, ghastly and terrible.

"Yes," said she haughtily, "I have been guilty of the meanness of listening, and I suffer for it. It is but one pang more to a broken heart. Mr. Coventry, you are just, you are generous; and I will try and reward you for those words. No, papa, no impostor, but a man sore tried, sore tempted. If he is alive, we shall soon know."

"How?"

"He will write--TO JAEL DENCE."

Having uttered this strange speech, she rushed away with a wild cry of agony, and nobody saw her face again that night.

She did not come down-stairs next day. Mr. Carden went up to her.

He stayed with her an hour, and came down looking much dejected; he asked Mr. Coventry to take a turn in the garden with him. When they were alone, he said, gravely, "Mr. Coventry, that unfortunate conversation of ours has quite upset my poor girl. She tells me now she will not believe he is dead until months and months have passed without his writing to Jael Dence."

"Well, but, sir," said Coventry, "could you not convince her?"

"How can I, when I am myself convinced he is alive, and will give us a great deal of trouble yet? for it is clear to me the poor girl loves him more than she knows. Look here, Coventry, there's no man I so desire for a son-in-law as yourself; you have shown a patience, a fidelity!--but as a just man, and a man of honor, I must now advise you to give up all thoughts of her. You are not doing yourself justice; she will never marry you while that man is alive and unmarried. I am provoked with her: she will not leave her room while you are in the house. Shall I tell you what she said? 'I respect him, I admire him, but I can't bear the sight of him now.'

That is all because I let out last night that I thought Little was alive. I told her, alive or not, he was dead to her."

"And what did she say to that?"

"Not a word. She wrung her hands, and burst out crying terribly.

Ah! my friend, may you never know what it is to be a father, and see your child wring her hands, and cry her heart out, as I have seen mine."

His own tears flowed, and his voice was choked. He faltered out, "We are two miserable creatures; forgive us, and leave us to our fate."

Coventry rose, sick at heart, and said, "Tell her I will not intrude upon her."

He telegraphed to Lally, and went back to Hillsborough as miserable as those he left behind; but with this difference, he deserved his misery, deserved it richly.

Ere he had been two days in Hillsborough a telegram came from him to Mr. Carden:

"Re Little. Important discovery. Pray come here at once.

Mr. Carden had the prudence to withhold from Grace the nature of this communication. He merely told her business called him suddenly to Hillsborough. He started by the next train and found Mr. Coventry awaiting him at "Woodbine Villa" with strange news: it was not conjecture, nor a matter of deduction, but a piece of undeniable evidence; and it knocked both Mr. Carden's theory and his daughter's to atoms at one blow.

同类推荐
  • 见闻纪训

    见闻纪训

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 鹿门子

    鹿门子

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 总释陀罗尼义赞

    总释陀罗尼义赞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 天论

    天论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 郡斋闲坐

    郡斋闲坐

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 农牧资源管理者

    农牧资源管理者

    一个祖传的吊坠,里面有一颗充满紫色空气的星球。随着一种种商店的出现,这颗星球上面的动植物也渐渐的多了起来。且看随身带着个农牧星球的龙萌,怎么样在地球上混的风生水起。
  • 倾世风华:我的腹黑王爷

    倾世风华:我的腹黑王爷

    玉帐空分垒,金笳已罢吹,东风回首尽成非。大漠孤烟,剑雨江南,她只愿化作他身边的一朵解语花,守护那谪仙般的男子。繁华落尽,她是他雪中的一把油纸伞;金戈铁马,她是他手中的三尺利剑。当他用残废的身躯扛起整个天下的腥风血雨时,她亦在那楠木轮椅后,不离不弃。马踏天阙时,他终许她一个肩膀,许她白首不相离的承诺。只是,沧海已然桑田,世事无常变迁,他们还能找回最初邂逅时的那一抹动人光华吗?
  • 听——原来是爱情

    听——原来是爱情

    “我从来不知道这些纠葛…原来是爱情。”夕阳的海边,海风将话音吹远,谁听见了呢。一年前“杨阳”,老师的声音破空而出,穿越前排学生的头颅,像一支疾行的羽箭,吸引了众生的目光,直射教室第四组第四排靠窗的位置。
  • exo玫瑰眼泪

    exo玫瑰眼泪

    对不起,都是我的错,是我害的你,原谅我好不好?——伯贤弦儿,回来做我的好妹妹吧,回学院继续读书吧!——钟大姐,是我没有照顾好你,你回来吧,我们还是好姐弟。——灿烈我还要继续在广播里听你甜美的声音,我只做你的副会长。——暻秀
  • 校草不在服务区

    校草不在服务区

    -“从现在开始,我就是你的新女友。”她眼里闪耀着信誓旦旦的光芒,可谁都以为,这只是场游戏。“荣幸之至。”花瓣般的唇勾起一抹浅淡的笑,他那妖孽般美到极致的脸满满的趣味。“为什么?你昨天亲了我的,为什么……为什么还要做别人的女朋友?”澄澈的眼里浓浓的愤怒和受伤,精致的脸上却透露出一分苍白。“是吗?”依旧是那冷冽的声音,俊美的脸上也依旧冰冷一片,唯一例外的就是墨黑色的瞳仁里跳跃着的一层微光。“你是我的!”可爱却又邪魅的脸上压抑着熊熊怒火,仿佛一触即发……
  • 红顶商人——胡雪岩

    红顶商人——胡雪岩

    “中国文化知识读本”丛书是由吉林文史出版社和吉林出版集团有限责任公司组织国内知名专家学者编写的一套旨在传播中华五千年优秀传统文化,提高全民文化修养的大型知识读本。
  • 舞墨弄清风

    舞墨弄清风

    在一个偏远的小镇子有个少年郎孜孜不倦的在读书...
  • 你是我的二分之一命

    你是我的二分之一命

    同是皇子,你是皇上皇后宠爱的太子殿下,而我呢,不过是皇上一醉之下,与宫女所生的弃子……父皇?手足?这些离我远去的词语,像你这样冷酷无情的人是无法体会到的吧?但是,我以前没有恨过你什么,只是想与母亲安静生活一生,你万万不该害我母亲性命!父皇?手足?这些词语统统葬送在母亲离我而去的那一晚!我与母亲所受的,有朝一日一定会奉还给你!轩辕芜!你是我轩辕远这辈子最大的敌人!轩辕远,你知道吗,我轩辕芜最大的悔恨就是曾经让你恨我入骨,最大的成就就是让你爱上我,最不后悔的就是爱上你
  • 漠骨苍澜

    漠骨苍澜

    神武界,东极大陆,白鹿洲。某茶馆。路人甲∶“喂,你知道郁家吧?”路人乙∶“废话!白鹿洲五大家族之一,白鹿洲谁不知?”甲∶“那郁紫你知道不?就是郁家前任族长的女儿,之前不是在传现任族长让人杀了她,自己独霸前任族长留下的遗产吗?说来也奇怪,那女孩本来是死了的,谁知三天后突然蹦了起来,解决了家族的内斗不说,还搞定了其他几家造成的经济危机。听说不久前还打败了洲主儿子,顺利进入了白鹿四卫中的朱雀卫,而且是头领!”乙∶“我也听说过!那郁紫真是厉害,以后可谓是前途无量啊。”甲∶“嗯,厉害!”……然而他们话里的主角正在他们的旁桌喝着茶,尾巴翘到了天上……
  • 天为神,吾为魔

    天为神,吾为魔

    天,是什么?神,是什么?天,眼睁睁看着这个世界渐渐腐朽;神,把这一切当作一场游戏。天为神,我,便为魔……ps:表示新手,别抱太大希望,外加,这篇文可能会腐==