[Felix O’Day by F. Hopkinson Smith]@TWC D-Link bookFelix O’Day CHAPTER XIV 5/11
He had been sent down to Dorsetshire for a horse and, in an out-of-the-way inn in one corner of the county, had stumbled--early the next morning--into a cosey little sitting-room.
When he came to his senses--he never recovered the whole of them until he was safe once more inside his lordship's stables--he told, with bulging eyes and bated breath, what he had seen.
Whereupon the head coachman forthwith informed his wife, who at once poured it into the ears of the housekeeper, who, being jealous of my lady, fearing her dominance, lost no time in amplifying the details to Lord Carnavon.
That gentleman had walked his library the rest of the night and, on my lady's return from Scotland, two mornings later (she had "spent the night with her aunt"), had denounced her in tones so shrill that every word was heard at the end of the long gallery; the tirade, to his lordship's amazement, being cut short by his daughter's defiant answer: "And why not, if I love him ?" All of which accounts for the infamous order roared five minutes later by the distinguished nobleman to his coachman, who, having known her ladyship from a child and loved her accordingly, had not set her down on the main road, but had taken her to a cottage on an adjoining estate--her second change of roofs--from whence Dalton carried her off next day to Ostend, a refuge she had herself selected, the season there being then at its height. Had either of them kept a diary, it is safe to say that the delirious hours which filled that first week at Ostend would have been checked off in gold letters.
Neither of them had ever been so blissfully happy, nor so passionately enamoured of the other, nor so overjoyed that the dreary past, with all its misunderstandings, calumnies, and injustice, had been wiped out forever. There had, of course, been a few colorless moments.
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