A Terrible Temptation: A Story of To-Day - LightNovelsOnl.com
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Now Ba.s.sett had pondered well what he should say, but he was disconcerted by her superb presence and demeanor and her large gray eyes, that rested steadily upon his face.
However, he began to murmur mellifluously. Said he had often seen her in public, and admired her, and desired to make her acquaintance, etc., etc.
"Then why did you not ask Sir Charles to bring you here?" said Miss Somerset, abruptly, and searching him with her eyes, that were not to say bold, but singularly brave, and examiners pointblank.
"I am not on good terms with Sir Charles. He holds the estates that ought to be mine; and now he has robbed me of my love. He is the last man in the world I would ask a favor of."
"You came here to abuse him behind his back, eh?" asked the lady with undisguised contempt.
Ba.s.sett winced, but kept his temper. "No, Miss Somerset; but you seem to think I ought to have come to you through Sir Charles. I would not enter your house if I did not feel sure I shall not meet him here."
Miss Somerset looked rather puzzled. "Sir Charles does not come here every day, but he comes now and then, and he is always welcome."
"You surprise me."
"Thank you. Now some of my gentlemen friends think it is a wonder he does not come every minute."
"You mistake me. What surprises me is that you are such good friends under the circ.u.mstances."
"Circ.u.mstances! what circ.u.mstances?"
"Oh, you know. You are in his confidence, I presume?"--this rather satirically. So the lady answered, defiantly:
"Yes, I am; he knows I can hold my tongue, so he tells me things he tells n.o.body else."
"Then, if you are in his confidence, you know he is about to be married."
"Married! Sir Charles married!"
"In three weeks."
"It's a lie! You get out of my house this moment!"
Mr. Ba.s.sett colored at this insult. He rose from his seat with some little dignity, made her a low bow, and retired. But her blood was up: she made a wonderful rush, sweeping down a chair with her dress as she went, and caught him at the door, clutched him by the shoulder and half dragged him back, and made him sit down again, while she stood opposite him, with the knuckles of one hand resting on the table.
"Now," said she, panting, "you look me in the face and say that again."
"Excuse me; you punish me too severely for telling the truth."
"Well, I beg your pardon--there. Now tell me--this instant. Can't you speak, man?" And her knuckles drummed the table.
"He is to be married in three weeks."
"Oh! Who to?"
"A young lady I love."
"Her name?"
"Miss Arabella Bruce."
"Where does she live?"
"Portman Square."
"I'll stop that marriage."
"How?" asked Richard, eagerly.
"I don't know; that I'll think over. But he shall not marry her--never!"
Ba.s.sett sat and looked up with almost as much awe as complacency at the fury he had evoked; for this woman was really at times a poetic impersonation of that fiery pa.s.sion she was so apt to indulge. She stood before him, her cheek pale, her eyes glittering and roving savagely, and her nostrils literally expanding, while her tall body quivered with wrath, and her clinched knuckles pattered on the table.
"He shall not marry her. I'll kill him first!"
CHAPTER III.
RICHARD Ba.s.sETT eagerly offered his services to break off the obnoxious match. But Miss Somerset was beginning to be mortified at having shown so much pa.s.sion before a stranger.
"What have you to do with it?" said she, sharply.
"Everything. I love Miss Bruce."
"Oh, yes; I forgot that. Anything else? There is, now. I see it in your eye. What is it?"
"Sir Charles's estates are mine by right, and they will return to my line if he does not marry and have issue."
"Oh, I see. That is so like a man. It's always love, and something more important, with you. Well, give me your address. I'll write if I want you."
"Highly flattered," said Ba.s.sett, ironically-wrote his address and left her.
Miss Somerset then sat down and wrote:
"DEAR SIR CHARLES--please call here, I want to speak to you.
yours respecfuly,
"RHODA SOMERSET."
Sir Charles obeyed this missive, and the lady received him with a gracious and smiling manner, all put on and catlike. She talked with him of indifferent things for more than an hour, still watching to see if he would tell her of his own accord.
When she was quite sure he would not, she said,