We have hundreds more books for your enjoyment. Read them all!
|
|
"Yes!" he said, "it is. And these things always appear so doubly
unfortunate when they hinder our serving others! But it does not
follow that because the assizes begin at Hellingford on the seventh,
Dixon's trial will come on so soon. We may still get to Marseilles
on Monday evening; on by diligence to Lyons; it will--it must, I
fear, be Thursday, at the earliest, before we reach Paris--Thursday,
the eighth--and I suppose you know of some exculpatory evidence that
has to be hunted up?"
He added this unwillingly; for he saw that Ellinor was jealous of the
secresy she had hitherto maintained as to her reasons for believing
Dixon innocent; but he could not help thinking that she, a gentle,
timid woman, unaccustomed to action or business, would require some
of the assistance which he would have been so thankful to give her;
especially as this untoward accident would increase the press of time
in which what was to be done would have to be done.
But no. Ellinor scarcely replied to his half-inquiry as to her
reasons for hastening to England. She yielded to all his directions,
agreed to his plans, but gave him none of her confidence, and he had
to submit to this exclusion from sympathy in the exact causes of her
anxiety.
Once more in the dreary sala, with the gaudy painted ceiling, the
bare dirty floor, the innumerable rattling doors and windows!
Ellinor was submissive and patient in demeanour, because so sick and
despairing at heart. Her maid was ten times as demonstrative of
annoyance and disgust; she who had no particular reason for wanting
to reach England, but who thought it became her dignity to make it
seem as though she had.
At length the weary time was over; and again they sailed past Elba,
and arrived at Marseilles. Now Ellinor began to feel how much
assistance it was to her to have Dr. Livingstone for a "courier," as
he had several times called himself.
|