Checkmate - The Original Classic Edition. Fanu Joseph

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Checkmate - The Original Classic Edition - Fanu Joseph

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"She's better than good," said Sir Reginald, with his thin, yellow smile, extending his hand, and leading her to a chair; "it is visiting the sick and the halt, and doing real good, for it is a pleasure to see her--a pleasure bestowed on a miserable soul who has very few pleasures left;" and with his other thin hand he patted gently the fingers of her fat hand. "Here is my brother David," continued the baronet. "He says you will hardly know him."

       "She'll hardly believe it. She was very young when she last saw me, and the last ten years have made some changes," said Uncle

       David, laughing gently.

       At the baronet's allusion to that most difficult subject, the lapse of time, Lady May winced and simpered uneasily; but she expanded

       gratefully as David Arden disposed of it so adroitly.

       "We'll not speak of years of change. I knew you instantly," said Lady May happily. "And you have been to Vichy, Reginald. What stay do you make here?"

       "None, almost; my crippled foot keeps me always on a journey. It seems a paradox, but so it is. I'm ordered to visit Buxton for a

       week or so, and then I go, for change of air, to Yorkshire."

       As Alice entered, she saw the pretty face, the original of the brilliant portrait which had haunted her on her night journey to Twyford, and she heard a very silvery voice chatting gaily. Mr. Longcluse was leaning on the end of the sofa on which Grace Maubray sat; and Vivian Darnley, it seemed in high spirits, was standing and laughing nearly before her. Alice Arden walked quickly over to welcome her handsome guest. With a misgiving and a strange pain at her heart, she saw how much more beautiful this young lady had grown. Smiling radiantly, with her hand extended, she greeted and kissed her fair kinswoman; and, after a few words, sat down for a little beside her; and asked Mr. Longcluse how he did; and finally spoke to Vivian Darnley, and then returned to her conventional dialogue of welcome and politeness with her cousin--how cousin, she could not easily have explained.

       The young ladies seemed so completely taken up with one another that, after a little waiting, the gentlemen fell into a desultory talk, and grew gradually nearer to the window. They were talking now of dogs and horses, and Mr. Longcluse was stealing rapidly into the good graces of the young man.

       "When we come up after dinner, you must tell me who these people are," said Grace Maubray, who did not care very much what she said. "That young man is a Mr. Vivian, ain't he?"

       "No--Darnley," whispered Alice; "Vivian is his Christian name."

       "Very romantic names; and, if he really means half he says, he is a very romantic person." She laughed.

       "What has he been saying?" Alice wondered. But, after all, it was possible to be romantic on almost any subject.

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       "And the other?"

       "He's a Mr. Longcluse," answered Alice.

       "He's rather clever," said the young lady, with a grave decision that amused Alice.

       "Do you think so? Well, so do I; that is, I know he can interest one. He has been almost everywhere, and he tells things rather pleasantly."

       Before they could go any further, Vivian Darnley, turning from the window toward the two young ladies, said--"I've just been saying

       that we must try to persuade Lady May to get up that party to the Derby." "I can place a drag at her disposal," said Mr. Longcluse.

       "And a splendid team--I saw them," threw in Darnley.

       "There's nothing I should like so much," said Alice. "I've never been to the Derby. What do you say, Grace? Can you manage Uncle

       David?"

       "I'll try," said the young lady gaily.

       "We must all set upon Lady May," said Alice. "She is so good-natured, she can't resist us." "Suppose we begin now?" suggested Darnley.

       "Hadn't we better wait till we have her quite to ourselves? Who knows what your papa and your uncle might say?" said Grace Maubray, turning to Alice. "I vote for saying nothing to them until Lady May has settled, and then they must only submit."

       "I agree with you quite," said Alice laughing.

       "Sage advice!" said Mr. Longcluse, with a smile; "and there's time enough to choose a favourable moment. It comes off exactly ten days from this."

       "Oh, anything might be done in ten days," said Grace. "I'm sorry it is so far away."

       "Yes, a great deal might be done in ten days; and a great deal might happen in ten days," said Longcluse, listlessly looking down at the

       floor--"a great deal might happen."

       He thought he saw Miss Arden's eye turned upon him, curiously and quickly, as he uttered this commonplace speech, which was yet

       a little odd.

       "In this busy world, Miss Arden, there is no such thing as quiet, and no one acts without imposing on other people the necessity for action," said Mr. Longcluse; "and I believe that often the greatest changes in life are the least anticipated by those who seem to bring them about spontaneously."

       At this moment, dinner being announced, the little party transferred itself to the dining-room, and Miss Arden found herself between Mr. Longcluse and Uncle David.

       CHAPTER XVIII.

       THE PARTY IN THE DINING-ROOM.

       ND now, all being seated, began the talk and business of dinner.

       "I believe," said Mr. Longcluse, with a laugh, "I am growing metaphysical."

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       "Well, shall I confess, Mr. Longcluse, you do sometimes say things that are, I fear, a little too wise for my poor comprehension?"

       "I don't express them; it is my fault," he answered, in a very low tone. "You have mind, Miss Arden, for anything. There is no one it

       is so delightful to converse with, owing in part to that very faculty--I mean quick apprehension. But I know my own defects. I know how imperfectly I often express myself. By-the-way, you seemed to wish to have that curious little wild Bohemian air I sang the other night, 'The Wanderer's Bride'--the song about the white lily, you know. I ventured to get a friend, who really is a very good musician, to make a setting of it, which I so very much hope you will like. I brought it with me. You will think me very presumptuous, but I hoped so much you might be tempted to try it."

       When Mr. Longcluse spoke to Alice, it was always in a tone so very deferential, that it was next to impossible that a very young girl should not be flattered by it--considering, especially, that the man was reputed clever, had seen the world, and had met with a certain success, and that by no means of a kind often obtained, or ever quite despised. There was also a directness in his eulogy which was unusual, and which spoken with a different manner would have been embarrassing, if not offensive. But in Mr. Longcluse's manner, when he spoke such phrases, there appeared a real humility, and even sadness, that the boldness of the sentiment was lost in the sincerity and dejection of the speaker, which seemed to place him on a sudden at the immeasurable distance of a melancholy worship.

       "I am so much obliged!" said Alice. "I did wish so much to have it when you sang it. It may not do for my voice at all, but I longed to try it.

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