[Villette by Charlotte Bronte]@TWC D-Link bookVillette CHAPTER XII 19/19
The unction, the suavity of her behaviour offered, for one who knew her, a sure token that suspicion of some kind was busy in her brain.
From some aperture or summit of observation, through parted bough or open window, she had doubtless caught a glimpse, remote or near, deceptive or instructive, of that night's transactions.
Finely accomplished as she was in the art of surveillance, it was next to impossible that a casket could be thrown into her garden, or an interloper could cross her walks to seek it, without that she, in shaken branch, passing shade, unwonted footfall, or stilly murmur (and though Dr.John had spoken very low in the few words he dropped me, yet the hum of his man's voice pervaded, I thought, the whole conventual ground)--without, I say, that she should have caught intimation of things extraordinary transpiring on her premises.
_What_ things, she might by no means see, or at that time be able to discover; but a delicious little ravelled plot lay tempting her to disentanglement; and in the midst, folded round and round in cobwebs, had she not secured "Meess Lucie" clumsily involved, like the foolish fly she was? .
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