登陆注册
27054100000069

第69章 CHAPTER XVI AND LAST.(1)

"Is Judge Corbet at home?Can I see him?"she asked of the footman,who at length answered the door.

He looked at her curiously,and a little familiarly,before he replied,"Why,yes!He's pretty sure to be at home at this time of day;but whether he'll see you is quite another thing.""Would you be so good as to ask him?It is on very particular business.""Can you give me a card?your name,perhaps,will do,if you have not a card.I say,Simmons"(to a lady's-maid crossing the hall),"is the judge up yet?""Oh,yes!he's in his dressing-room this half-hour.My lady is coming down directly.It is just breakfast-time.""Can't you put it off and come again,a little later?"said he,turning once more to Ellinor--white Ellinor!trembling Ellinor!

"No!please let me come in.I will wait.I am sure Judge Corbet will see me,if you will tell him I am here.Miss Wilkins.He will know the name.""Well,then;will you wait here till I have got breakfast in?"said the man,letting her into the hall,and pointing to the bench there,he took her,from her dress,to be a lady's-maid or governess,or at most a tradesman's daughter;and,besides,he was behindhand with all his preparations.She came in and sat down.

"You will tell him I am here,"she said faintly.

"Oh,yes,never fear:I'll send up word,though I don't believe he'll come to you before breakfast."He told a page,who ran upstairs,and,knocking at the judge's door,said that a Miss Jenkins wanted to speak to him.

"Who?"asked the judge from the inside.

"Miss Jenkins.She said you would know the name,sir.""Not I.Tell her to wait."So Ellinor waited.Presently down the stairs,with slow deliberate dignity,came the handsome Lady Corbet,in her rustling silks and ample petticoats,carrying her fine boy,and followed by her majestic nurse.She was ill-pleased that any one should come and take up her husband's time when he was at home,and supposed to be enjoying domestic leisure;and her imperious,inconsiderate nature did not prompt her to any civility towards the gentle creature sitting down,weary and heart-sick,in her house.On the contrary,she looked her over as she slowly descended,till Ellinor shrank abashed from the steady gaze of the large black eyes.Then she,her baby and nurse,disappeared into the large dining-room,into which all the preparations for breakfast had been carried.

The next person to come down would be the judge.Ellinor instinctively put down her veil.She heard his quick decided step;she had known it well of old.

He gave one of his sharp,shrewd glances at the person sitting in the hall and waiting to speak to him,and his practised eye recognised the lady at once,in spite of her travel-worn dress.

"Will you just come into this room?"said he,opening the door of his study,to the front of the house:the dining-room was to the back;they communicated by folding-doors.

The astute lawyer placed himself with his back to the window;it was the natural position of the master of the apartment;but it also gave him the advantage of seeing his companion's face in full light.

Ellinor lifted her veil;it had only been a dislike to a recognition in the hall which had made her put it down.

Judge Corbet's countenance changed more than hers;she had been prepared for the interview;he was not.But he usually had the full command of the expression on his face.

"Ellinor!Miss Wilkins!is it you?"And he went forwards,holding out his hand with cordial greeting,under which the embarrassment,if he felt any,was carefully concealed.She could not speak all at once in the way she wished.

"That stupid Henry told me 'Jenkins!'I beg your pardon.How could they put you down to sit in the hall?You must come in and have some breakfast with us;Lady Corbet will be delighted,I'm sure."His sense of the awkwardness of the meeting with the woman who was once to have been his wife,and of the probable introduction which was to follow to the woman who was his actual wife grew upon him,and made him speak a little hurriedly.Ellinor's next words were a wonderful relief;and her soft gentle way of speaking was like the touch of a cooling balsam.

"Thank you,you must excuse me.I am come strictly on business,otherwise I should never have thought of calling on you at such an hour.It is about poor Dixon.""Ah!I thought as much!"said the judge,handing her a chair,and sitting down himself.He tried to compose his mind to business,but in spite of his strength of character,and his present efforts,the remembrance of old times would come back at the sound of her voice.

He wondered if he was as much changed in appearance as she struck him as being in that first look of recognition;after that first glance he rather avoided meeting her eyes.

"I knew how much you would feel it.Some one at Hellingford told me you were abroad,in Rome,I think.But you must not distress yourself unnecessarily;the sentence is sure to be commuted to transportation,or something equivalent.I was talking to the Home Secretary about it only last night.Lapse of time and subsequent good character quite preclude any idea of capital punishment."All the time that he said this he had other thoughts at the back of his mind--some curiosity,a little regret,a touch of remorse,a wonder how the meeting (which,of course,would have to be some time)between Lady Corbet and Ellinor would go off;but he spoke clearly enough on the subject in hand,and no outward mark of distraction from it appeared.

Elmer answered:

"I came to tell you,what I suppose may be told to any judge,in confidence and full reliance on his secrecy,that Abraham Dixon was not the murderer."She stopped short,and choked a little.

The judge looked sharply at her.

"Then you know who was?"said he.

"Yes,"she replied,with a low,steady voice,looking him full in the face,with sad,solemn eyes.

The truth flashed into his mind.He shaded his face,and did not speak for a minute or two.Then he said,not looking up,a little hoarsely,"This,then,was the shame you told me of long ago?""Yes,"said she.

同类推荐
  • 三峰半水元禅师语录

    三峰半水元禅师语录

    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。
  • 朱子家训

    朱子家训

    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。
  • 北征记

    北征记

    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。
  • 角虎集

    角虎集

    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。
  • 齐东野语

    齐东野语

    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。
热门推荐
  • 说别人的故事

    说别人的故事

    我爱聆听,聆听身边人的故事,聆听陌生人的故事。最理想的状态是找出故事的所有的主人公,听听他们真实内心的想法。故事里,面对着理解差异,他们最真实的内心也就只有我知道。我想我更喜欢以旁观者的身份来诉说别人的故事,不评头品足,故事里没有对错,正如爱情里没有胜负一样。可是,这并不是一件简单的事情,因为不是每个人都对我真诚以待,即便这样,故事仍需继续。只是故事少了半分真实和人情味罢了。并不是为了打发时间,也不是为了说别人的坏话,而是让自己的世界观更加丰富。我不求轰轰烈烈,只求简简单单。也许“我是一个没故事的人”是一个伪命题,但是我甘愿做一个没故事的人,平平淡淡。我的故事根本不足为外人道也。
  • 钻石少东不负责

    钻石少东不负责

    在日本旅游的明希歌回酒店时被人莫名其妙地拖到了床上,酒醉中的她敌不过对方的狂猛,被人折腾了整整一夜。“宝贝,我这样爱你,够不够?”他邪肆地在她耳边问。死盯着挂在他脖子上的黑珍珠,她以无法控制的尖叫回答他。
  • 灵光一现

    灵光一现

    咔嚓一声脆响,在黑幕之中,雨声中穿梭。一条隙缝蘧然在混沌仙府形成,闪电犹如游龙一般,直达府内。混沌之眼流转不息,难道命运真就注定?我偏要逆天改命。
  • 我默默在等

    我默默在等

    三年时光,她的生命中没有出现过”后悔“二字。从不后悔,来到这里,因为我庆幸,在平行的时间里,遇见你。他或许不是最好的,可对于她来说,是最重要的。当时光回头——我却还在原地。我默默在等,等一个所有人都遗弃的人,等一个不被重视的人,等一个学不会回头的人。我默默在等,等那一段青春。
  • 历代文人笔下的宁海

    历代文人笔下的宁海

    本书中可以看到宁海历代文人骚客的著作,古代宁海的美丽风光,遗址遗迹,乃至曾到过宁海的历史名人。
  • 快穿之男神等等

    快穿之男神等等

    女主是一个扮猪吃虎的人,在家里莫名其妙的就被什么“拯救系统”给契约了.于是她开启了一系列的追男神计划.“那个什么,你出来”某女拿着拖鞋.“宿主,叫我干什么啊?”某系统捂头.“你说说,这个界面,你的信息为什么会出错?”某系统看准时机跑,只留下一句话让某女风中凌乱“因为,boss吃醋了.......”ps:简介写不好啊,亲爱的书友们记得进来看看!!!
  • 神探双瞳猫:高校女侦探

    神探双瞳猫:高校女侦探

    【萌系青春推理轻小说,不一样的喵星人探案!】喵~我是一只充满正义感的猫咪!喵~我是所有罪犯的克星!喵~我是能开口说人话、还能变成人的超能小猫咪!喵~我不要吃猫粮!我要吃人的食物!喵~我是一直萌萌哒,人见人爱,聪明无敌的侦探猫咪!喵~喵~喵~【PK《金田一猫咪之事件簿》与《推理笔记》、《侦探齐木》!】【官方读者群,喜欢这本书的小伙伴们请加群:212134191】
  • 网游之至高信仰

    网游之至高信仰

    十人信仰我时,我得神卫,千人信仰我时,我有圣兵,万人信仰我时,我掌天启。深渊万魔怎敌我神卫亿万,光明神剑也断于我信仰圣兵,远古诸神最终也要败于受我天启之人。天在上,万民的信仰之力会把它捅破,而我,乃信仰之主。在踏入至高信仰的那一天,李若水就走上了成为至高信仰的路。
  • 时代恋人

    时代恋人

    一场突如其来的意外,使得夏以沫忘记了墨子谦,而墨子谦从小就喜欢夏以沫,夏以沫却从小就喜欢着她的安哥哥,又是一场突如其来的意外,让墨子谦和夏以沫重逢,从而同居。每次夏以沫遇到危险是墨子谦总是第一时间去保护她,但现实中,他又是那么霸道,渐渐的,她心动了。一个是高冷的霸道校草,一个是温暖的阳光哥哥,她会如何抉择……
  • 倾城叹:祸水皇后

    倾城叹:祸水皇后

    她穿了。一来就看到个帅哥冷着脸——“傅云若,你是我的女人,你想死,也得死在我手上!”她眉一挑——“听着,我是舒荷,来自21世纪中国青焰盟特情科,再对我不敬,我就让你上西天!”想欺负她,没门!要知道她不止是个高级特工。“狐狸精!扫把星!”她笑眯眯地反驳:“你错了,我只是祸水。”