[A Terrible Temptation by Charles Reade]@TWC D-Link book
A Terrible Temptation

CHAPTER XV
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"The man had his faults, but he had his good qualities too: a high-spirited gentleman, beloved by his friends and respected by all the county.

His successor will find it hard to reconcile the county to his loss." Wheeler stared, and then grinned satirically.
This eulogy was never repeated, for Sir Charles proved ungrateful--he omitted to die, after all.
Attended by first-rate physicians, tenderly nursed and watched by Lady Bassett and Mary Wells, he got better by degrees; and every stage of his slow but hopeful progress was communicated to the servants and the village, and to the ladies and gentlemen who rode up to the door every day and left their cards of inquiry.
The most attentive of all these was the new rector, a young clergyman, who had obtained the living by exchange.

He was a man highly gifted both in body and mind--a swarthy Adonis, whose large dark eyes from the very first turned with glowing admiration on the blonde beauties of Lady Bassett.
He came every day to inquire after her husband; and she sometimes left the sufferer a minute or two to make her report to him in person.

At other times Mary Wells was sent to him.

That artful girl soon discovered what had escaped her mistress's observation.
The bulletins were favorable, and welcomed on all sides.
Richard Bassett alone was incredulous.


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