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Read Ebook: Les misérables Tome II: Cosette by Hugo Victor

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Ebook has 2472 lines and 98360 words, and 50 pages

IN DANGER.

'Oh Death, that makest life so sweet! Oh fear, with mirth before thy feet!'

WHEN Nita and Jerome again arrived at the Abbey, they found that Mr. Bolton had returned from Burnham, and that the midday dinner, which was an institution in the family, was waiting for them.

'Have you settled anything?--has Nita helped you?' inquired Mr. Bolton.

'Miss Bolton has been very kind indeed, and has probably saved me from wasting a great deal of my small stock of money,' replied Jerome.

'Ah!' said Mr. Bolton, appreciatively, 'that's always something gained.'

He asked his daughter what she was going to do that afternoon, and Nita said she was going to drive to the town of Clyderhow to do a little shopping.

'Why Clyderhow? The shops in Burnham are a great deal better.'

'Because I like the drive to Clyderhow,' said Nita; 'and there is a wonderful milliner there. Aunt Margaret got a bonnet from her with five ostrich tips in it, and a bird, and three bows of black satin ribbon, and a great deal of velvet, for the sum of two guineas.'

'So you go by the quantity of stuff you get for your money when you choose bonnets?' asked Mr. Bolton.

'Aunt Margaret does. She likes plumes. I thought I might perhaps find something sweetly modest and simple, with one feather and one bow, and a little flower or sprig for instance, for next to nothing.'

'Is this shopping considered a secret service affair?' inquired Jerome; 'or may I go too, if I sit quite still while you are in the shop, and promise not to look that way?'

'I am afraid you would think it a great bore,' said Nita quickly, as her face flushed.

'I suppose it was because I love to bore and afflict myself that I asked permission to go,' he answered, with a smile.

'I shall be most happy to take you if you would really like to go. Will you come too, papa?'

'What an idea!--I hope not!' thought Jerome, within himself, and Mr. Bolton was obliging enough to say:

'I?--no. I never drive in the afternoon. I am going to my Italian, as usual.'

But as the carriage was not ordered to be round until half an hour after dinner, Mr. Bolton proposed to Jerome that they should take a walk round the garden and have a cigar. Nita watched the two figures as they paced together towards the cloisters. The elder man, with the massive lines, broad, sturdy figure, somewhat below middle height, but still imposing in its power and strength; the somewhat bowed back and high shoulders; the round, bull-dog head, with its expression of dogged determination. The younger--Nita leaned against the side of the window and folded her arms, as she contemplated him with a strange mixture of sensations. What a contrast to that dear familiar figure of the man who was noted for his hardness and coldness to others, but who was so gentle, so tender and indulgent to her, and to the few friends who composed their small circle of intimates--a contrast indeed! The new-comer was--unconsciously she recalled those lines in 'Esther'--

'He was a lovely youth; I guess The panther in the wilderness Was not more fair than he.'

'The panther in the wilderness!' That was an evil comparison; surely he was good as well as beautiful. Was it really only yesterday that he had arrived--not yet twenty-four hours ago? And how long would he still be here? And what would the Abbey, everything be, when he was gone? She turned hastily away from the window, and would not venture another look.

The two men paced about the river walk for a time, till Mr. Bolton asked:

'Do you know any of the people about here?'

'I met an old acquaintance this morning--Father Somerville, from Brentwood.'

'Somerville! You know him? Is he any favourite of yours?'

'As to that, I can hardly say. I like what I have seen of him, but know very little of him. I fancy we have many tastes in common. He is a cultivated man, who has seen the world, I think.'

'Ay, ay! he's clever, is Somerville, and attractive too, I could fancy. I never let any of those gentry inside my house.'

'No?' said Jerome, indifferently. 'I hope you have no objection to your visitors knowing them, for I have promised to go and see him to-morrow.'

'Oh, my visitors do as they please, I hope. So long as he does not darken my doors, it's all one to me what he does. Nita, I am thankful to say, is not of an hysterical temperament, for all she is so slight and delicate. She has never displayed any tendencies to being over-religious, or going in for Ritualism or that kind of mummery; else I should have had to send her to a good sharp school.'

'Miss Bolton has never been to school?'

'That is well,' said Jerome, gravely, wondering a little why Mr. Bolton, on so short an acquaintance, chose to discourse to him on this topic. And with Father Somerville's advice fresh in his mind, he felt interested in that topic--wrongfully interested.

'Your daughter will marry some one who will administer her fortune wisely, it is to be hoped,' he said.

Mr. Bolton sighed. 'I suppose she must marry,' he said, slowly. A girl with that money ought to marry. One has heard of wealthy maiden ladies of large property living alone, and exercising power over all around them; but,' he turned suddenly to Wellfield, 'did you ever hear or read of one, in real life or even in a romance, who was not unhappy? I never did.'

'I really don't feel to know much about the subject,' said Jerome, feeling that they were skirting delicate ground, wondering more and more that Mr. Bolton spoke thus to him, of all persons.

'Nita has told me about your sister, and your views about her,' he went on. 'I like you for your behaviour, Mr. Wellfield.'

'I?' stammered Jerome, surprised. 'Miss Bolton must have misunderstood.'

'No. She told me you had a half-sister, to whose use you intended to devote what money you had, while you sought for employment for yourself. I like to hear of a man treating his sister in that way.'

Jerome was silent--surprised. He felt his tongue tied. His natural impulse was to please, when his companion showed a predisposition to be pleased. He felt a desire to say something which should still further excite Mr. Bolton's goodwill, and make him--Jerome Wellfield--feel on still better terms with himself. But the thought of Sara Ford rose up, and forbade him to do so. He continued his walk in silence.

'I have a proposition to make to you,' said Mr. Bolton, suddenly. Jerome turned to him with his lips apart, and a quick inquiring look upon his face. Could it be that Father Somerville had the gift of second-sight?

'It's not a very brilliant proposition; and it is all founded on the assumption that you know nothing of business; no book-keeping for instance, no clerkship routine. Do you?'

'No, I do not; I know absolutely nothing of those things.'

'Well, if I found you capable--excuse my bluntness,' he said, with the same pedantic little air which characterised his speech--'we manufacturers are apt to be a little scornful of a want of practical talent; but if I found you capable, and you would care to try, I think I could find you some employment in my own office. But you would have to begin by learning the very elements of your work from my book-keeper and cashier. If you like to come over to Burnham two or three times a week, for a short time, and try, you are welcome.'

'You do not in the least know my reasons for making you the offer,' replied Mr. Bolton, with a calm superiority that made Jerome feel somewhat snubbed; 'therefore, do not be in any haste to express your gratitude. My book-keeper will soon turn you out a finished article, if you are to be turned out at all.'

'Sublime destiny! The gods might envy me!' thought Jerome, within himself; but he said: 'I shall accept your offer with gratitude. I do not know how I should have found anything, with my ignorance and my utter want of influence.'

'That's right! And in the meantime take holiday till next week, and enjoy yourself. There's Nita's phaeton going round, I see, and the groom; I suppose she will be ready.'

With which laconical dismissal of the whole subject, he led the way to the house again.

Nita drove a high phaeton, with a spirited pair of roans. In answer to Jerome's suggestion that he should drive she looked so rueful that he laughed, saying:

'I am glad to hear it,' replied Nita, taking the ribbons. Very soon they were driving at a pleasant speed through the lanes leading towards Clyderhow, whose ancient castle, on a mound, confronted them for a great part of the distance.

'What does Mr. Bolton mean, when he speaks of "his Italian"?' asked Jerome, reflectively.

Nita laughed as she flicked the roans lightly.

'Of course you would not understand,' she answered. 'Italian is papa's favourite weakness. Did you ever see anyone so unlike Italy as he is? Poor old dear! He always used to read in the afternoons, and one day he was perusing a little book aloud to me, and I was sewing. There came some allusion to "the fiery domes and cupolas of the city of Dis." He asked me what it meant, and I told him about the "Inferno." He said: "That's very fine--those fiery domes and cupolas. I must know some more about it." With which he took to studying Italian, and is now devoted to it. It is very seldom that he fails to give a few hours each day to it. He is translating the "Inferno," in his rough, plodding way. I am glad he finds something to amuse himself with, for he has had a sad life.'

'Sad? He has been unusually successful, has he not?'

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