登陆注册
15693000000146

第146章

She was well aware that there was no one else in London on whom the major could depend to make the necessary inquiries; she was well aware that Miss Gwilt had applied for the situation, in the first instance, as a stranger answering an advertisement published in a newspaper. Yet knowing this, she had obstinately closed her eyes, with the blind frenzy of the blindest of all the passions, to the facts straight before her; and, looking back to the last of many quarrels between them which had ended in separating the elder lady and herself, had seized on the conclusion that Miss Gwilt's engagement was due to her mother-in-law's vindictive enjoyment of making mischief in her household. The inference which the very servants themselves, witnesses of the family scandal, had correctly drawn--that the major's mother, in securing the services of a well-recommended governess for her son, had thought it no part of her duty to consider that governess's looks in the purely fanciful interests of the major's wife--was an inference which it was simply impossible to convey into Mrs. Milroy's mind. Miss Gwilt had barely closed the sick-room door when the whispered words hissed out of Mrs. Milroy's lips, "Before another week is over your head, my lady, you go!"From that moment, through the wakeful night and the weary day, the one object of the bedridden woman's life was to procure the new governess's dismissal from the house.

The assistance of the nurse, in the capacity of spy, was secured--as Mrs. Milroy had been accustomed to secure other extra services which her attendant was not bound to render her--by a present of a dress from the mistress's wardrobe. One after another articles of wearing apparel which were now useless to Mrs. Milroy had ministered in this way to feed the nurse's greed--the insatiable greed of an ugly woman for fine clothes.

Bribed with the smartest dress she had secured yet, the household spy took her secret orders, and applied herself with a vile enjoyment of it to her secret work.

The days passed, the work went on; but nothing had come of it.

Mistress and servant had a woman to deal with who was a match for both of them.

Repeated intrusions on the major, when the governess happened to be in the same room with him, failed to discover the slightest impropriety of word, look, or action, on either side. Stealthy watching and listening at the governess's bedroom door detected that she kept a light in her room at late hours of the night, and that she groaned and ground her teeth in her sleep--and detected nothing more. Careful superintendence in the day-time proved that she regularly posted her own letters, instead of giving them to the servant; and that on certain occasions, when the occupation of her hours out of lesson time and walking time was left at her own disposal, she had been suddenly missed from the garden, and then caught coming back alone to it from the park. Once and once only, the nurse had found an opportunity of following her out of the garden, had been detected immediately in the park, and had been asked with the most exasperating politeness if she wished to join Miss Gwilt in a walk. Small circumstances of this kind, which were sufficiently suspicious to the mind of a jealous woman, were discovered in abundance. But circumstances, on which to found a valid ground of complaint that might be laid before the major, proved to be utterly wanting. Day followed day, and Miss Gwilt remained persistently correct in her conduct, and persistently irreproachable in her relations toward her employer and her pupil.

Foiled in this direction, Mrs. Milroy tried next to find an assailable place in the statement which the governess's reference had made on the subject of the governess's character.

Obtaining from the major the minutely careful report which his mother had addressed to him on this topic, Mrs. Milroy read and reread it, and failed to find the weak point of which she was in search in any part of the letter. All the customary questions on such occasions had been asked, and all had been scrupulously and plainly answered. The one sole opening for an attack which it was possible to discover was an opening which showed itself, after more practical matters had been all disposed of, in the closing sentences of the letter.

"I was so struck," the passage ran, "by the grace and distinction of Miss Gwilt's manners that I took an opportunity, when she was out of the room, of asking how she first came to be governess.

'In the usual way,' I was told. 'A sad family misfortune, in which she behaved nobly. She is a very sensitive person, and shrinks from speaking of it among strangers--a natural reluctance which I have always felt it a matter of delicacy to respect.'

Hearing this, of course, I felt the same delicacy on my side. It was no part of my duty to intrude on the poor thing's private sorrows; my only business was to do what I have now done, to make sure that I was engaging a capable and respectable governess to instruct my grandchild."After careful consideration of these lines, Mrs. Milroy, having a strong desire to find circumstances suspicious, found them suspicious accordingly. She determined to sift the mystery of Miss Gwilt's family misfortunes to the bottom, on the chance of extracting from it something useful to her purpose. There were two ways of doing this. She might begin by questioning the governess herself, or she might begin by questioning the governess's reference. Experience of Miss Gwilt's quickness of resource in dealing with awkward questions at their introductory interview decided her on taking the latter course. "I'll get the particulars from the reference first," thought Mrs. Milroy, "and then question the creature herself, and see if the two stories agree."The letter of inquiry was short, and scrupuously to the point.

同类推荐
  • 战守

    战守

    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。
  • Tanglewood Tales

    Tanglewood Tales

    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。
  • 破阵乐

    破阵乐

    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。
  • 黄金策

    黄金策

    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。
  • 中和集

    中和集

    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。
热门推荐
  • 妖孽物语

    妖孽物语

    千年前的一场浩劫,她变成孤儿,失去双亲的她又该何去何从?复仇的道路上,充满了险恶。在她迷惘之时,一个白色身影出现在她的面前,她自以为抓住了救命的稻草,却殊不知,一场巨大的阴谋正悄悄向她靠近……她紧握着那颗红扑扑的还在跳动的心脏,将它高高举起,对他冷笑着“结束了,一切都已经结束了……”
  • 鬼蛊凶尸

    鬼蛊凶尸

    古老神秘的邪恶诅咒,数百年轮回一次,启动毁灭性的灾害!带来死亡,让人们陷于极度恐慌之中。我的一生,都在与这些古老的邪恶力量对抗……吾以祖传秘术《察脉寻金八决》,察天地日月之命气,占土木沙石分位!以此追踪“金银气脉”,挖掘华夏大地深埋秘藏的千古秘密!遭遇:煞归穴、巫棺阵、黄泉命灯、老漆尸、蛊血池……并以八决要领破解:厌胜、痋术、蛊术、黑白二煞等等妖邪!精彩不容错过……
  • 幻想少女的逆袭

    幻想少女的逆袭

    我不在乎你是谁,从哪里来,做过什么,只要你爱我就好…………
  • 青春的突围

    青春的突围

    一群走上社会不久的大学生,正当扬起理想的风帆,却突然发现,自己的理想、信念、人生价值观等等遭到了现实生活的激烈碰撞和挤压。他们感到犹如陷入了无形的重围,不禁困惑、迷茫。有人退缩抱怨,有人随波逐流,有人则坚守信念努力抗争。怎样走出重围?在这纷乱而良莠杂芜的社会环境里,怎样确立人生价值走向?他们在经历了各自的人生遭遇后,终于找到了答案。
  • 末日重生之谁与争锋

    末日重生之谁与争锋

    请你告诉我,可以告诉我吗,我们活着的意义?这个世界的规则,这个世界的存在,是为谁而设立的规则,是为谁而创造的世界。有人笑着说:没有意义。有人沉默着:不想回答。有人望着天:一片茫然。有人看着我:为了更美好的明天。有人感慨着:为了今晚的晚餐而活着。有人哭着说:活着就是为了活着。对言辰来说,这些回答都是对的,活着本来没有意义,你非要加一个理由,也就成了你活着的理由。我是言辰,我要掌控规则,逆转未来,突破桎梏,谁与争锋。
  • 中国历代帝王陵墓之谜(二)

    中国历代帝王陵墓之谜(二)

    本书向读者解剖了笼罩在陵寝上的谜团。内容有:曾侯乙墓之谜、秦始皇陵墓之谜、中山靖王刘胜墓之谜、汉武帝茂陵之谜等。
  • 欲之翻天

    欲之翻天

    神挡杀神,佛挡杀佛先有杨戬桃山救母,后有陈香斧劈华山,谁要阻我救出父母,哪怕是杀尽诸天神佛,我独往矣.....
  • 一条手链的姻缘

    一条手链的姻缘

    因为夏笙的朋友林芳芳意外得的一条手链,却招来豪门之争,与蓝曦凝有着相同长相的人,意外遇到豪门男子妘宸,能否进入豪门,妘宸是否真的爱过夏笙还是因为手链,谁是手链真正的持有着?深爱着妘宸的蓝曦凝会怎样对待夏笙,而慕容谦是真的喜欢夏笙还是为了让妘宸丢脸,妘宸和夏笙能否生活在一起,他们又有怎样的爱情故事……
  • 末世孤途

    末世孤途

    困苦、艰辛、屈辱,我所做的一切,只是为了,活下去!
  • 某路过的人类

    某路过的人类

    他是家族中的废物,他失去了自己的姓氏,在遇到她之后,从此世上再无废物李路过,只有魔帝路过。新人新书,希望读者能喜欢