Lady Audley's Secret by Mary Elizabeth Braddon (e book reader for pc .TXT) đź“•
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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this boulevard; stately houses, entre cour et jardin, and with plaster
vases of geraniums on the stone pillars of the ponderous gateways. The
rumbling hackney-carriage drove upward of three-quarters of a mile along
this smooth roadway before it drew up against a gateway, older and more
ponderous than any of those they had passed.
My lady gave a little scream as she looked out of the coach-window. The
gaunt gateway was lighted by an enormous lamp; a great structure of iron
and glass, in which one poor little shivering flame struggled with the
March wind.
The coachman rang the bell, and a little wooden door at the side of the
gate was opened by a gray-haired man, who looked out at the carriage,
and then retired. He reappeared three minutes afterward behind the
folding iron gates, which he unlocked and threw back to their full
extent, revealing a dreary desert of stone-paved courtyard.
The coachman led his wretched horses into the courtyard, and piloted the
vehicle to the principal doorway of the house, a great mansion of gray
stone, with several long ranges of windows, many of which were dimly
lighted, and looked out like the pale eyes of weary watchers upon the
darkness of the night.
My lady, watchful and quiet as the cold stars in the wintry sky, looked
up at these casements with an earnest and scrutinizing gaze. One of the
windows was shrouded by a scanty curtain of faded red; and upon this
curtain there went and came a dark shadow, the shadow of a woman with a
fantastic head dress, the shadow of a restless creature, who paced
perpetually backward and forward before the window.
Sir Michael Audley’s wicked wife laid her hand suddenly upon Robert’s
arm, and pointed with the other hand to this curtained window.
“I know where you have brought me,” she said. “This is a MADHOUSE.”
Mr. Audley did not answer her. He had been standing at the door of the
coach when she addressed him, and he quietly assisted her to alight, and
led her up a couple of shallow stone steps, and into the entrance-hall
of the mansion. He handed Dr. Mosgrave’s letter to a neatly-dressed,
cheerful-looking, middle-aged woman, who came tripping out of a little
chamber which opened out of the hall, and was very much like the bureau
of an hotel. This person smilingly welcome Robert and his charge: and
after dispatching a servant with the letter, invited them into her
pleasant little apartment, which was gayly furnished with bright amber
curtains and heated by a tiny stove.
“Madam finds herself very much fatigued?” the Frenchwoman said,
interrogatively, with a look of intense sympathy, as she placed an
arm-chair for my lady.
“Madam” shrugged her shoulders wearily, and looked round the little
chamber with a sharp glance of scrutiny that betokened no very great
favor.
“WHAT is this place, Robert Audley?” she cried fiercely. “Do you think I
am a baby, that you may juggle with and deceive me—what is it? It is
what I said just now, is it not?”
“It is a maison de sante, my lady,” the young man answered, gravely.
“I have no wish to juggle with or to deceive you.”
My lady paused for a few moments, looking reflectively at Robert.
“A maison de sante,” she repeated. “Yes, they manage these things
better in France. In England we should call it a madhouse. This a house
for mad people, this, is it not, madam?” she said in French, turning
upon the woman, and tapping the polished floor with her foot.
“Ah, but no, madam,” the woman answered with a shrill scream of protest.
“It is an establishment of the most agreeable, where one amuses one’s
self—”
She was interrupted by the entrance of the principal of this agreeable
establishment, who came beaming into the room with a radiant smile
illuminating his countenance, and with Dr. Mosgrave’s letter open in his
hand.
It was impossible to say how enchanted he was to make the acquaintance
of M’sieu. There was nothing upon earth which he was not ready to do for
M’sieu in his own person, and nothing under heaven which he would not
strive to accomplish for him, as the friend of his acquaintance, so very
much distinguished, the English doctor. Dr. Mosgrave’s letter had given
him a brief synopsis of the case, he informed Robert, in an undertone,
and he was quite prepared to undertake the care of the charming and very
interesting “Madam—Madam—”
He rubbed his hands politely, and looked at Robert. Mr. Audley
remembered, for the first time, that he had been recommended to
introduce his wretched charge under a feigned name.
He affected not to hear the proprietor’s question. It might seem a very
easy matter to have hit upon a heap of names, any one of which would
have answered his purpose; but Mr. Audley appeared suddenly to have
forgotten that he had ever heard any mortal appellation except that of
himself and of his lost friend.
Perhaps the proprietor perceived and understood his embarrassment. He at
any rate relieved it by turning to the woman who had received them, and
muttering something about No. 14, Bis. The woman took a key from a long
range of others, that hung over the mantelpiece, and a wax candle from
a bracket in a corner of the room, and having lighted the candle, led
the way across the stone-paved hall, and up a broad, slippery staircase
of polished wood.
The English physician had informed his Belgian colleague that money
would be of minor consequence in any arrangements made for the comfort
of the English lady who was to be committed to his care. Acting upon
this hint, Monsieur Val opened the outer doer of a stately suite of
apartments, which included a lobby, paved with alternate diamonds of
black and white marble, but of a dismal and cellar-like darkness; a
saloon furnished with gloomy velvet draperies, and with a certain
funereal splendor which is not peculiarly conducive to the elevation of
the spirits; and a bedchamber, containing a bed so wondrously made, as
to appear to have no opening whatever in its coverings, unless the
counterpane had been split asunder with a pen-knife.
My lady stared dismally round at the range of rooms, which looked dreary
enough in the wan light of a single wax-candle. This solitary flame,
pale and ghost-like in itself, was multiplied by paler phantoms of its
ghostliness, which glimmered everywhere about the rooms; in the shadowy
depths of the polished floors and wainscot, or the window-panes, in the
looking-glasses, or in those great expanses of glimmering something
which adorned the rooms, and which my lady mistook for costly mirrors,
but which were in reality wretched mockeries of burnished tin.
Amid all the faded splendor of shabby velvet, and tarnished gilding, and
polished wood, the woman dropped into an arm-chair, and covered her face
with her hands. The whiteness of them, and the starry light of diamonds
trembling about them, glittered in the dimly-lighted chamber. She sat
silent, motionless, despairing, sullen, and angry, while Robert and the
French doctor retired to an outer chamber, and talked together in
undertones. Mr. Audley had very little to say that had not been already
said for him, with a far better grace than he himself could have
expressed it, by the English physician. He had, after great trouble of
mind, hit upon the name of Taylor, as a safe and simple substitute for
that other name, to which alone my lady had a right. He told the
Frenchman that this Mrs. Taylor was distantly related to him—that she
had inherited the seeds of madness from her mother, as indeed Dr.
Mosgrave had informed Monsieur Val; and that she had shown some fearful
tokens of the lurking taint that was latent in her mind; but that she
was not to be called “mad.” He begged that she might be treated with all
tenderness and compassion; that she might receive all reasonable
indulgences; but he impressed upon Monsieur Val, that under no
circumstances was she to be permitted to leave the house and grounds
without the protection of some reliable person, who should be answerable
for her safe-keeping. He had only one other point to urge, and that was,
that Monsieur Val, who, as he had understood, was himself a
Protestant—the doctor bowed—would make arrangements with some kind and
benevolent Protestant clergyman, through whom spiritual advice and
consolation might be secured for the invalid lady; who had especial
need, Robert added, gravely, of such advantages.
This—with all necessary arrangements as to pecuniary matters, which
were to be settled from time to time between Mr. Audley and the doctor,
unassisted by any agents whatever—was the extent of the conversation
between the two men, and occupied about a quarter of an hour.
My lady sat in the same attitude when they re-entered the bedchamber in
which they had left her, with her ringed hands still clasped over her
face.
Robert bent over to whisper in her ear.
“Your name is Madam Taylor here,” he said. “I do not think you would
wish to be known by your real name.”
She only shook her head in answer to him, and did not even remove her
hands from over her face.
“Madam will have an attendant entirely devoted to her service.” said
Monsieur Val. “Madam will have all her wishes obeyed; her reasonable
wishes, but that goes without saying,” monsieur adds, with a quaint
shrug. “Every effort will be made to render madam’s sojourn at
Villebrumeuse agreeable. The inmates dine together when it is wished. I
dine with the inmates sometimes; my subordinate, a clever and a worthy
man always. I reside with my wife and children in a little pavilion in
the grounds; my subordinate resides in the establishment. Madam may rely
upon our utmost efforts being exerted to insure her comfort.”
Monsieur is saying a great deal more to the same effect, rubbing his
hands and beaming radiantly upon Robert and his charge, when madam rises
suddenly, erect and furious, and dropping her jeweled fingers from
before her face, tells him to hold his tongue.
“Leave me alone with the man who has brought me here.” she cried,
between her set teeth. “Leave me!”
She points to the door with a sharp, imperious gesture; so rapid that
the silken drapery about her arm makes a swooping sound as she lifts her
hand. The sibilant French syllables hiss through her teeth as she utters
them, and seem better fitted to her mood and to herself than the
familiar English she has spoken hitherto.
The French doctor shrugs his shoulders as he goes out into the lobby,
and mutters something about a “beautiful devil,” and a gesture worthy of
“the Mars.” My lady walked with a rapid footstep to the door between the
bedchamber and the saloon; closed it, and with the handle of the door
still in her hand, turned and looked at Robert Audley.
“You have brought me to my grave, Mr. Audley,” she cried; “you have used
your power basely and cruelly, and have brought me to a living grave.”
“I have done that which I thought just to others and merciful to you,”
Robert answered, quietly. “I should have been a traitor to society had I
suffered you to remain at liberty after—the disappearance of George
Talboys and the fire at Castle Inn. I have brought you to a place in
which you will be kindly treated by people who have no knowledge of your
story—no power to taunt or to reproach you. You will lead a quiet and
peaceful life, my lady; such a life as many a good
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