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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earnest thought, and addressed the physician.
“I will trust you, Dr. Mosgrave,” he said. “I will confide entirely in
your honor and goodness. I do not ask you to do any wrong to society;
but I ask you to save our stainless name from degradation and shame, if
you can do so conscientiously.”
He told the story of George’s disappearance, and of his own doubts and
fears, Heaven knows how reluctantly.
Dr. Mosgrave listened as quietly as he had listened before. Robert
concluded with an earnest appeal to the physician’s best feelings. He
implored him to spare the generous old man whose fatal confidence in a
wicked woman had brought much misery upon his declining years.
It was impossible to draw any conclusion, either favorable or otherwise,
from Dr. Mosgrave’s attentive face. He rose, when Robert had finished
speaking, and looked at his watch once more.
“I can only spare you twenty minutes,” he said. “I will see the lady, if
you please. You say her mother died in a madhouse?”
“She did. Will you see Lady Audley alone?”
“Yes, alone, if you please.”
Robert rung for my lady’s maid, and under convoy of that smart young
damsel the physician found his way to the octagon antechamber, and the
fairy boudoir with which it communicated.
Ten minutes afterward, he returned to the library, in which Robert sat
waiting for him.
“I have talked to the lady,” he said, quietly, “and we understand each
other very well. There is latent insanity! Insanity which might never
appear; or which might appear only once or twice in a lifetime. It would
be a dementia in its worst phase, perhaps; acute mania; but its
duration would be very brief, and it would only arise under extreme
mental pressure. The lady is not mad; but she has the hereditary taint
in her blood. She has the cunning of madness, with the prudence of
intelligence. I will tell you what she is, Mr. Audley. She is
dangerous!”
Dr. Mosgrave walked up and down the room once or twice before he spoke
again.
“I will not discuss the probabilities of the suspicion which distresses
you, Mr. Audley,” he said, presently, “but I will tell you this much, I
do not advise any esclandre. This Mr. George Talboys has disappeared,
but you have no evidence of his death. If you could produce evidence of
his death, you could produce no evidence against this lady, beyond the
one fact that she had a powerful motive for getting rid of him. No jury
in the United Kingdom would condemn her upon such evidence as that.”
Robert Audley interrupted Dr. Mosgrave, hastily.
“I assure you, my dear sir,” he said, “that my greatest fear is the
necessity of any exposure—any disgrace.”
“Certainly, Mr. Audley,” answered the physician, coolly, “but you cannot
expect me to assist you to condone one of the worst offenses against
society. If I saw adequate reason for believing that a murder had been
committed by this woman, I should refuse to assist you in smuggling her
away out of the reach of justice, although the honor of a hundred noble
families might be saved by my doing so. But I do not see adequate reason
for your suspicions; and I will do my best to help you.”
Robert Audley grasped the physician’s hands in both his own.
“I will thank you when I am better able to do so,” he said, with
emotion; “I will thank you in my uncle’s name as well as in my own.”
“I have only five minutes more, and I have a letter to write,” said Dr.
Mosgrave, smiling at the young man’s energy.
He seated himself at a writing-table in the window, dipped his pen in
the ink, and wrote rapidly for about seven minutes. He had filled three
sides of a sheet of note-paper, when he threw down his pen and folded
his letter.
He put this letter into an envelope, and delivered it, unsealed, to
Robert Audley.
The address which it bore was:
“Monsieur Val,
“Villebrumeuse,
“Belgium.”
Mr. Audley looked rather doubtfully from this address to the doctor, who
was putting on his gloves as deliberately as if his life had never known
a more solemn purpose than the proper adjustment of them.
“That letter,” he said, in answer to Robert Audley’s inquiring look, “is
written to my friend Monsieur Val, the proprietor and medical
superintendent of a very excellent maison de sante in the town of
Villebrumeuse. We have known each other for many years, and he will no
doubt willingly receive Lady Audley into his establishment, and charge
himself with the full responsibility of her future life; it will not be
a very eventful one!”
Robert Audley would have spoken, he would have once more expressed his
gratitude for the help which had been given to him, but Dr. Mosgrave
checked him with an authoritative gesture.
“From the moment in which Lady Audley enters that house,” he said, “her
life, so far as life is made up of action and variety, will be finished.
Whatever secrets she may have will be secrets forever! Whatever crimes
she may have committed she will be able to commit no more. If you were
to dig a grave for her in the nearest churchyard and bury her alive in
it, you could not more safely shut her from the world and all worldly
associations. But as a physiologist and as an honest man, I believe you
could do no better service to society than by doing this; for physiology
is a lie if the woman I saw ten minutes ago is a woman to be trusted at
large. If she could have sprung at my throat and strangled me with her
little hands, as I sat talking to her just now, she would have done it.”
“She suspected your purpose, then!”
“She knew it. ‘You think I am mad like my mother, and you have come to
question me,’ she said. ‘You are watching for some sign of the dreadful
taint in my blood.’ Good-day to you, Mr. Audley,” the physician added
hurriedly, “my time was up ten minutes ago; it is as much as I shall do
to catch the train.”
CHAPTER XXXVII.
BURIED ALIVE.
Robert Audley sat alone in the library with the physician’s letter upon
the table before him, thinking of the work which was still to be done.
The young barrister had constituted himself the denouncer of this
wretched woman. He had been her judge; and he was now her jailer. Not
until he had delivered the letter which lay before him to its proper
address, not until he had given up his charge into the safe-keeping of
the foreign madhouse doctor, not until then would the dreadful burden
be removed from him and his duty done.
He wrote a few lines to my lady, telling her that he was going to carry
her away from Audley Court to a place from which she was not likely to
return, and requesting her to lose no time in preparing for the journey.
He wished to start that evening, if possible, he told her.
Miss Susan Martin, the lady’s maid, thought it a very hard thing to have
to pack her mistress’ trunks in such a hurry, but my lady assisted in
the task. She toiled resolutely in directing and assisting her servant,
who scented bankruptcy and ruin in all this packing up and hurrying
away, and was therefore rather languid and indifferent in the discharge
of her duties; and at six o’clock in the evening she sent her attendant
to tell Mr. Audley that she was ready to depart as soon as he pleased.
Robert had consulted a volume of Bradshaw, and had discovered that
Villebrumeuse lay out of the track of all railway traffic, and was only
approachable by diligence from Brussels. The mail for Dover left London
Bridge at nine o’clock, and could be easily caught by Robert and his
charge, as the seven o’clock up-train from Audley reached Shoreditch at
a quarter past eight. Traveling by the Dover and Calais route, they
would reach Villebrumeuse by the following afternoon or evening.
It was late in the afternoon of the next day when the diligence bumped
and rattled over the uneven paving of the principal street in
Villebrumeuse.
Robert Audley and my lady had had the coupe of the diligence to
themselves for the whole of the journey, for there were not many
travelers between Brussels and Villebrumeuse, and the public conveyance
was supported by the force of tradition rather than any great profit
attaching to it as a speculation.
My lady had not spoken during the journey, except to decline some
refreshments which Robert had offered her at a halting place upon the
road. Her heart sunk when they left Brussels behind, for she had hoped
that city might have been the end of her journey, and she had turned
with a feeling of sickness and despair from the dull Belgian landscape.
She looked up at last as the vehicle jolted into a great stony
quadrangle, which had been the approach to a monastery once, but which
was now the court yard of a dismal hotel, in whose cellars legions of
rats skirmished and squeaked even while the broad sunshine was bright in
the chambers above.
Lady Audley shuddered as she alighted from the diligence, and found
herself in that dreary court yard. Robert was surrounded by chattering
porters, who clamored for his “baggages,” and disputed among themselves
as to the hotel at which he was to rest. One of these men ran away to
fetch a hackney-coach at Mr. Audley’s behest, and reappeared presently,
urging on a pair of horses—which were so small as to suggest the idea
that they had been made out of one ordinary-sized animal—with wild
shrieks and whoops that had a demoniac sound in the darkness.
Mr. Audley left my lady in a dreary coffee-room in the care of a drowsy
attendant while he drove away to some distant part of the quiet city.
There was official business to be gone through before Sir Michael’s wife
could be quietly put away in the place suggested by Dr. Mosgrave. Robert
had to see all manner of important personages; and to take numerous
oaths; and to exhibit the English physician’s letter; and to go through
much ceremony of signing and countersigning before he could take his
lost friend’s cruel wife to the home which was to be her last upon
earth. Upward of two hours elapsed before all this was arranged, and the
young man was free to return to the hotel, where he found his charge
staring absently at a pair of wax-candles, with a cup of untasted coffee
standing cold and stagnant before her.
Robert handed my lady into the hired vehicle, and took his seat opposite
to her once more.
“Where are you going to take me?” she asked, at last. “I am tired of
being treated like some naughty child, who is put into a dark cellar as
a punishment for its offenses. Where are you taking me?”
“To a place in which you will have ample leisure to repent the past,
Mrs. Talboys,” Robert answered, gravely.
They had left the paved streets behind them, and had emerged out of a
great gaunt square, in which there appeared to be about half a dozen
cathedrals, into a small boulevard, a broad lamplit road, on which the
shadows of the leafless branches went and came tremblingly, like the
shadows of a paralytic skeleton. There were houses here
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