登陆注册
5577600000046

第46章

Elmslie's will, left the future of Ada's life entirely at her mother's disposal.The consequence was the immediate ratification of the marriage engagement to which my father had so steadily refused his consent.As soon as the fact was publicly announced, some of Mrs.Elmslie's more intimate friends, who were acquainted with the reports affecting the Monkton family, ventured to mingle with their formal congratulations one or two significant references to the late Mrs.Monkton and some searching inquiries as to the disposition of her son.

Mrs.Elmslie always met these polite hints with one bold form of answer.She first admitted the existence of these reports about the Monktons which her friends were unwilling to specify distinctly, and then declared that they were infamous calumnies.

The hereditary taint had died out of the family generations back.

Alfred was the best, the kindest, the sanest of human beings.He loved study and retirement; Ada sympathized with his tastes, and had made her choice unbiased; if any more hints were dropped about sacrificing her by her marriage, those hints would be viewed as so many insults to her mother, whose affection for her it was monstrous to call in question.This way of talking silenced people, but did not convince them.They began to suspect, what was indeed the actual truth, that Mrs.Elmslie was a selfish, worldly, grasping woman, who wanted to get her daughter well married, and cared nothing for consequences as long as she saw Ada mistress of the greatest establishment in the whole county.

It seemed, however, as if there was some fatality at work to prevent the attainment of Mrs.Elmslie's great object in life.

Hardly was one obstacle to the ill-omened marriage removed by my father's death before another succeeded it in the shape of anxieties and difficulties caused by the delicate state of Ada's health.Doctors were consulted in all directions, and the result of their advice was that the marriage must be deferred, and that Miss Elmslie must leave England for a certain time, to reside in a warmer climate--the south of France, if I remember rightly.

Thus it happened that just before Alfred came of age Ada and her mother departed for the Continent, and the union of the two young people was understood to be indefinitely postponed.Some curiosity was felt in the neighborhood as to what Alfred Monkton would do under these circumstances.Would he follow his lady-love? would he go yachting? would he throw open the doors of the old Abbey at last, and endeavor to forget the absence of Ada and the postponement of his marriage in a round of gayeties? He did none of these things.He simply remained at Wincot, living as suspiciously strange and solitary a life as his father had lived before him.Literally, there was now no companion for him at the Abbey but the old priest--the Monktons, I should have mentioned before, were Roman Catholics--who had held the office of tutor to Alfred from his earliest years.He came of age, and there was not even so much as a private dinner-party at Wincot to celebrate the event.Families in the neighborhood determined to forget the offense which his father's reserve had given them, and invited him to their houses.The invitations were politely declined.

Civil visitors called resolutely at the Abbey, and were as resolutely bowed away from the doors as soon as they had left their cards.Under this combination of sinister and aggravating circumstances people in all directions took to shaking their heads mysteriously when the name of Mr.Alfred Monkton was mentioned, hinting at the family calamity, and wondering peevishly or sadly, as their tempers inclined them, what he could possibly do to occupy himself month after month in the lonely old house.

The right answer to this question was not easy to find.It was quite useless, for ex ample, to apply to the priest for it.He was a very quiet, polite old gentleman; his replies were always excessively ready and civil, and appeared at the time to convey an immense quantity of information; but when they came to be reflected on, it was universally observed that nothing tangible could ever be got out of them.The housekeeper, a weird old woman, with a very abrupt and repelling manner, was too fierce and taciturn to be safely approached.The few indoor servants had all been long enough in the family to have learned to hold their tongues in public as a regular habit.It was only from the farm-servants who supplied the table at the Abbey that any information could be obtained, and vague enough it was when they came to communicate it.

Some of them had observed the "young master" walking about the library with heaps of dusty papers in his hands.Others had heard odd noises in the uninhabited parts of the Abbey, had looked up, and had seen him forcing open the old windows, as if to let light and air into the rooms supposed to have been shut close for years and years, or had discovered him standing on the perilous summit of one of the crumbling turrets, never ascended before within their memories, and popularly considered to be inhabited by the ghosts of the monks who had once possessed the building.The result of these observations and discoveries, when they were communicated to others, was of course to impress every one with a firm belief that "poor young Monkton was going the way that the rest of the family had gone before him," which opinion always appeared to be immensely strengthened in the popular mind by a conviction--founded on no particle of evidence--that the priest was at the bottom of all the mischief.

Thus far I have spoken from hearsay evidence mostly.What I have next to tell will be the result of my own personal experience.

同类推荐
  • 慎疾刍言

    慎疾刍言

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宝持总禅师语录

    宝持总禅师语录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Hospital Sketches

    Hospital Sketches

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 春秋战国门 再吟

    春秋战国门 再吟

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 经验丹方汇编

    经验丹方汇编

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 谁把天堂藏在地狱里

    谁把天堂藏在地狱里

    拔剑出鞘,那声清脆却惹得人生出阵阵寒意。女孩收敛了眼中的凌冽,一闪而过的温柔,恰似那长剑停住的身影。
  • 川菜杂谈

    川菜杂谈

    《川菜杂谈》是车辐先生九十岁高龄时推出的美食著作。书中自称为“好吃嘴”的车老,不仅把他多年来总结下来的川菜绝活毫无保留地展现给读者们,而且还收录了不少车老写的名人谈川菜的文章。书中将车老早年发表过和未曾发表的关于川菜的文章收入其中,用川菜表现老成都的文化。既有川菜的具体做法,也有川菜的故实旧闻,既有名流交往中的美酒佳肴,也有蕴藏在饮食中的文人雅识与情趣。
  • 宠妻是门技术活

    宠妻是门技术活

    十佳好男人?在她的面前怎么就成了瘟神?这是一个人前温柔儒雅人后腹黑成性的男主遇到一个霸道帅气女主,一见郁闷二见顺眼三见倾心四见想抱回家成亲的故事。男主颜值高,名气高,身材棒,耍得了帅,卖得了萌。女主实际上就是一个霸道总裁。
  • 郑芸汐传

    郑芸汐传

    在一次偶然的机遇中,活泼开朗的郑芸汐与端庄典雅的好闺蜜陈静颜从现代社会来到了灵允大陆,她们本想开开心心地在此处安家乐业,到处游山玩水。可上天却让她们一步步接近灵允朝廷。她与古代好友赵连诚,上官焐之间将会有怎样的友情呢?与冷面无情的上官峫之间将会发生怎样的爱情呢?
  • 艰难备孕

    艰难备孕

    【已出版】于静嫁给了凤凰男顾家辉。顾家辉终于当上了企业老板小有成就,于静也在集团公司当了HR主管。可是烦恼却悄然而至。结婚三年,未得一子。于静急了,努力备孕。正在这时,丈夫的外甥女俞春来了,从此,于静家里再无宁日。他的秘书肖珊通过俞春了解到,因此找到了鸠占鹊巢的捷径,对顾家辉进行了疯狂的追求。
  • 隆灵传

    隆灵传

    “隆灵儿,你仙魔不分,竟然为了一个天魔伤了你同门师兄!”“仙魔不分?哼……那你告诉我何为仙何为魔?”“他修炼的是魔功,走的是魔道,还弑杀这么多人就是魔!仙家之人修的是道法,走的普世仙道!惘你修仙千年竟然连这个都不知!”“普世仙道?这是我听到的最好笑的笑话。既然你说你们走的是普世之道,那请问你们的功德在哪里呢?”“……”“我告诉你们,在我眼中能为我一人而负天下者便是仙,为了所谓的大道而负我者就是魔!”“荒谬!隆灵儿,今天你若敢带走这天魔便是与整个仙界为敌!”“与整个仙界为敌么?那好,本公主今日起便是魔界之人!”
  • 盛宠娇妻:总裁的再婚老婆

    盛宠娇妻:总裁的再婚老婆

    三年,换来的竟然是他的冷眼嘲讽,她悉心维护的感情,换来的是一张离婚协议书和一个“滚”字。不是不爱,只是爱情不是这样。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 捡到一座监狱

    捡到一座监狱

    末世之中,韩盛捡到了一座关押着强者的监狱,为了早日出狱,强者们纷纷贿赂起韩盛这个狱长。想出狱吗?拿东西来换吧!玄幻新书《我能分享世间万物》
  • 隋乱(全集)

    隋乱(全集)

    公元612年,隋炀帝开始了对高丽的征伐。隋朝全国大征兵,一时豪杰蜂起,征伐不断。李旭,一个边塞小郡的懵懂少年,为逃兵役,与徐茂公同行,远赴塞外。后得罪突厥贵族,回归中原。而后投奔了李渊父子,并得隋帝赏识,参加首次征高丽,名扬天下。后又归附张须陀,并在四处征战中,结识了秦琼、程咬金、罗士信等豪杰。不久,他随众又入伙瓦岗,并与红拂女渐生情愫……中国历史上最传奇的一段人生就此开始……
  • 用故事培养孩子好习惯

    用故事培养孩子好习惯

    《用故事培养孩子好习惯》精心选择了一些有助于孩子养成良好习惯的故事,这些故事有些流传了很久,有些则是在海内外广泛流传,它们犹如一面的镜子,让你的孩子能很容易地看到自身的坏习惯,并逐渐养成良好的习惯。不要小看这些故事,它们可能是我们小时候。甚至是我们的父母那一辈小时候就听过的故事。衷心希望这《用故事培养孩子好习惯》,能帮助家长更好地培养孩子的良好习惯,让他们乘着良好习惯这艘帆船,乘风破浪,顺利地到达成功的彼岸!