Lady Audley's Secret by Mary Elizabeth Braddon (e book reader for pc .TXT) 📕
The governess lifted her head from its stooping attitude, and staredwonderingly at her employer, shaking back a shower of curls. They werethe most wonderful curls in the world--soft and feathery, alwaysfloating away from her face, and making a pale halo round her head whenthe sunlight shone through them.
"What do you mean, my dear Mrs. Dawson?" she asked, dipping hercamel's-hair brush into the wet aquamarine upon the palette, and poisingit carefully before putting in the delicate streak of purple which wasto brighten the horizon in her pupil's sketch.
"Why, I mean, my dear, that it only rests with yourself to become LadyAudley, and the mistress of Audley Court."
Lucy Graham dropped the brush upon the picture, and flushed scarlet tothe roots of her fair hair; and then grew pale again, far paler thanMrs. Dawson had ever seen her before.
"My dear, don't agitate yourself," said the surgeon's wife, soothingly;"you know that nobody asks you to marry Sir
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I have wondered sometimes, as it was only natural I should, whether I
was not the victim of some horrible hallucination, whether such an
alternative was not more probable than that a young and lovely woman
should be capable of so foul and treacherous a murder, all wonder is
past. After last night’s deed of horror, there is no crime you could
commit, however vast and unnatural, which could make me wonder.
Henceforth you must seem to me no longer a woman, a guilty woman with a
heart which in its worst wickedness has yet some latent power to suffer
and feel; I look upon you henceforth as the demoniac incarnation of some
evil principle. But you shall no longer pollute this place by your
presence. Unless you will confess what you are and who you are in the
presence of the man you have deceived so long, and accept from him and
from me such mercy as we may be inclined to extend to you, I will gather
together the witnesses who shall swear to your identity, and at peril of
any shame to myself and those I love, I will bring upon you the just and
awful punishment of your crime.”
The woman rose suddenly and stood before him erect and resolute, with
her hair dashed away from her face and her eyes glittering.
“Bring Sir Michael!” she cried; “bring him here, and I will confess
anything—everything. What do I care? God knows I have struggled hard
enough against you, and fought the battle patiently enough; but you have
conquered, Mr. Robert Audley. It is a great triumph, is it not—a
wonderful victory? You have used your cool, calculating, frigid,
luminous intellect to a noble purpose. You have conquered—a MAD WOMAN!”
“A mad woman!” cried Mr. Audley.
“Yes, a mad woman. When you say that I killed George Talboys, you say
the truth. When you say that I murdered him treacherously and foully,
you lie. I killed him because I AM MAD! because my intellect is a little
way upon the wrong side of that narrow boundary-line between sanity and
insanity; because, when George Talboys goaded me, as you have goaded me,
and reproached me, and threatened me, my mind, never properly balanced,
utterly lost its balance, and I was mad! Bring Sir Michael; and bring
him quickly. If he is to be told one thing let him be told everything;
let him hear the secret of my life!”
Robert Audley left the room to look for his uncle. He went in search of
that honored kinsman with God knows how heavy a weight of anguish at his
heart, for he knew he was about to shatter the day-dream of his uncle’s
life; and he knew that our dreams are none the less terrible to lose,
because they have never been the realities for which we have mistaken
them. But even in the midst of his sorrow for Sir Michael, he could not
help wondering at my lady’s last words—“the secret of my life.” He
remembered those lines in the letter written by Helen Talboys upon the
eve of her flight from Wildernsea, which had so puzzled him. He
remembered those appealing sentences—“You should forgive me, for you
know why I have been so. You know the secret of my life.”
He met Sir Michael in the hall. He made no attempt to prepare the way
for the terrible revelation which the baronet was to hear. He only drew
him into the firelit library, and there for the first time addressed
him quietly thus: “Lady Audley has a confession to make to you, sir—a
confession which I know will be a most cruel surprise, a most bitter
grief. But it is necessary for your present honor, and for your future
peace, that you should hear it. She has deceived you, I regret to say,
most basely; but it is only right that you should hear from her own lips
any excuses which she may have to offer for her wickedness. May God
soften this blow for you!” sobbed the young man, suddenly breaking down;
“I cannot!”
Sir Michael lifted his hand as if he would command his nephew to be
silent, but that imperious hand dropped feeble and impotent at his side.
He stood in the center of the firelit room rigid and immovable.
“Lucy!” he cried, in a voice whose anguish struck like a blow upon the
jarred nerves of those who heard it, as the cry of a wounded animal
pains the listener—“Lucy, tell me that this man is a madman! tell me
so, my love, or I shall kill him!”
There was a sudden fury in his voice as he turned upon Robert, as if he
could indeed have felled his wife’s accuser to the earth with the
strength of his uplifted arm.
But my lady fell upon her knees at his feet, interposing herself between
the baronet and his nephew, who stood leaning on the back of an
easy-chair, with his face hidden by his hand.
“He has told you the truth,” said my lady, “and he is not mad! I have
sent him for you that I may confess everything to you. I should be sorry
for you if I could, for you have been very, very good to me, much better
to me than I ever deserved; but I can’t, I can’t—I can feel nothing but
my own misery. I told you long ago that I was selfish; I am selfish
still—more selfish than ever in my misery. Happy, prosperous people may
feel for others. I laugh at other people’s sufferings; they seem so
small compared to my own.”
When first my lady had fallen on her knees, Sir Michael had attempted to
raise her, and had remonstrated with her; but as she spoke he dropped
into a chair close to the spot upon which she knelt, and with his hands
clasped together, and with his head bent to catch every syllable of
those horrible words, he listened as if his whole being had been
resolved into that one sense of hearing.
“I must tell you the story of my life, in order to tell you why I have
become the miserable wretch who has no better hope than to be allowed to
run away and hide in some desolate corner of the earth. I must tell you
the story of my life,” repeated my lady, “but you need not fear that I
shall dwell long upon it. It has not been so pleasant to me that I
should wish to remember it. When I was a very little child I remember
asking a question which it was natural enough that I should ask, God
help me! I asked where my mother was. I had a faint remembrance of a
face, like what my own is now, looking at me when I was very little
better than a baby; but I had missed the face suddenly, and had never
seen it since. They told me that mother was away. I was not happy, for
the woman who had charge of me was a disagreeable woman and the place in
which we lived was a lonely place, a village upon the Hampshire coast,
about seven miles from Portsmouth. My father, who was in the navy, only
came now and then to see me; and I was left almost entirely to the
charge of this woman, who was irregularly paid, and who vented her rage
upon me when my father was behindhand in remitting her money. So you see
that at a very early age I found out what it was to be poor.
“Perhaps it was more from being discontented with my dreary life than
from any wonderful impulse of affection, that I asked very often the
same question about my mother. I always received the same answer—she
was away. When I asked where, I was told that that was a secret. When I
grew old enough to understand the meaning of the word death, I asked if
my mother was dead, and I was told—‘No, she was not dead; she was ill,
and she was away.’ I asked how long she had been ill, and I was told
that she had been so some years, ever since I was a baby.
“At last the secret came out. I worried my foster-mother with the old
question one day when the remittances had fallen very much in arrear,
and her temper had been unusually tried. She flew into a passion, and
told me that my mother was a mad woman, and that she was in a madhouse
forty miles away. She had scarcely said this when she repented, and told
me that it was not the truth, and that I was not to believe it, or to
say that she had told me such a thing. I discovered afterward that my
father had made her promise most solemnly never to tell me the secret of
my mother’s fate.
“I brooded horribly upon the thought of my mother’s madness. It haunted
me by day and night. I was always picturing to myself this mad woman
pacing up and down some prison cell, in a hideous garment that bound her
tortured limbs. I had exaggerated ideas of the horror of her situation.
I had no knowledge of the different degrees of madness, and the image
that haunted me was that of a distraught and violent creature, who would
fall upon me and kill me if I came within her reach. This idea grew upon
me until I used to awake in the dead of night, screaming aloud in an
agony of terror, from a dream in which I had felt my mother’s icy grasp
upon my throat, and heard her ravings in my ear.
“When I was ten years old my father came to pay up the arrears due to my
protectress, and to take me to school. He had left me in Hampshire
longer than he had intended, from his inability to pay this money; so
there again I felt the bitterness of poverty, and ran the risk of
growing up an ignorant creature among coarse rustic children, because my
father was poor.”
My lady paused for a moment, but only to take breath, for she had spoken
rapidly, as if eager to tell this hated story, and to have done with it.
She was still on her knees, but Sir Michael made no effort to raise her.
He sat silent and immovable. What was this story that he was listening
to? Whose was it, and to what was it to lead? It could not be his
wife’s; he had heard her simple account of her youth, and had believed
it as he had believed in the Gospel. She had told him a very brief story
of an early orphanage, and a long, quiet, colorless youth spent in the
conventional seclusion of an English boarding-school.
“My father came at last, and I told him what I had discovered. He was
very much affected when I spoke of my mother. He was not what the world
generally calls a good man, but I learned afterward that he had loved
his wife very dearly, and that he would have willingly sacrificed his
life to her, and constituted himself her guardian, had he not been
compelled to earn the daily bread of the mad woman and her child by the
exercise of his profession. So here again I beheld what a bitter thing
it is to be poor. My mother, who might have been tended by a devoted
husband, was given over to the care of hired nurses.
“Before my father sent me to school at Torquay, he took me to see my
mother. This visit served
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