[The Primadonna by F. Marion Crawford]@TWC D-Link book
The Primadonna

CHAPTER III
2/45

Every one remembered the marvellous voice that used to sing so high above all the other nuns, behind the lattice on Sunday afternoons at the church of the Dominican Convent.

That had been the voice of Margarita da Cordova, and she could never go back to Spain, for if she did the Inquisition would seize upon her, and she would be tortured and probably burnt alive to encourage the other nuns.
This was very romantic, but unfortunately there was a man who said he knew the plain truth about her, and that she was just a good-looking Irish girl whose father used to play the flute at a theatre in Dublin, and whose mother kept a sweetshop in Queen Street.

The man who knew this had often seen the shop, which was conclusive.
Margaret showed herself daily and the myths lost value, for every one saw that she was neither an escaped Spanish nun nor the gifted offspring of a Dublin flute-player and a female retailer of bull's-eyes and butterscotch, but just a handsome, healthy, well-brought-up young Englishwoman, who called herself Miss Donne in private life.
But gossip, finding no hold upon her, turned and rent Mr.Van Torp, who dwelt within his tent like Achilles, but whether brooding or sea-sick no one was ever to know.

The difference of opinion about him was amazing.

Some said he had no heart, since he had not even waited for the funeral of the poor girl who was to have been his wife.
Others, on the contrary, said that he was broken-hearted, and that his doctor had insisted upon his going abroad at once, doubtless considering, as the best practitioners often do, that it is wisest to send a patient who is in a dangerous condition to distant shores, where some other doctor will get the credit of having killed him or driven him mad.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books