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263 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
263 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Greystones, 23 April 1904
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My Dearest Lizzie,
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Of course you'll say I've been neglecting you, my sweet. Or Will
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you think me downright lazy? " Where is that letter he promised? " you
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wonder, and a frown wrinkles that beautiful brow of yours!
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But that is nothing compared to the astonishment with which you
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will read the address from which I write. Greystones! What can your
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very own Charles be doing as assistant in a reformatory for wayward
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young women? For, alas, I am only the assistant here. It is " Miss
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Martinet " , as the girls call her, who rules the establishment.
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Let me explain, my love. On that dreary day of our separation,
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when your family escorted you from our last rendezvous at the
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Grosvenor Hotel to the boat-train at Victoria, I was at my wit's end.
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Bereft of you, and well-nigh penniless, I went back to my rooms in
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Jermyn Street, paid off the cabbie, and mounted the stairs. I mixed a
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hock and seltzer, lit a cheroot and pondered on the beastliness of
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life. So lost in gloom was I that I did not for a time notice the
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envelope which the porter had laid upon the table. It bore the imprint
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of the family lawyers, Raven and Raven, of Gray's Inn Walk.
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My first reaction, you may imagine, was to think that it must be
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a communication from the father who, far from acknowledging me, never
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had the courtesy to marry my mother. What the deuce, I thought, can
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the old skinflint want of me now? Ain't he cut me off without a sov
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already? And ain't that the worst a cove can do to his own flesh and
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blood?
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Had the day been colder and the fire lit, I should have tossed
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the envelope in the flames! Yet, as it lay there, nothing was to be
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lost by looking over it's contents.
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What do you think, Lizzie? It was from old Silas Raven himself,
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in his crabbed lawyer's script! He presented his compliments to me -
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the first time the old devil had ever done so - and begged my
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attendance at his chambers at my earliest convenience. There, he
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promised, I would learn something to my advantage.
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Now, my sweet, all that tosh is a lawyer's way of telling a
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fellow that there's a pocketful of sovereigns waiting if he'll only
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have the goodness to fetch 'em. I was down the stairs quicker than
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Gladstone's hand up a whore's skirt, for I scarcely knew where my next
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meal was coming from. I hailed a Hansom cab, clambered aboard, and
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off we went to Grey's Inn Walk, with harness a-jingling and hooves
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clopping.
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If you never meet Silas Raven you won't miss much - he's a
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spiteful old devil of the prosecuting kind. A ghastly grimacing
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" phiz " , like an dose of rigor mortis. To my amazement, though, he had
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set out a tray of glasses and a bottle of fine old Madeira on his desk
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before my arrival. Hallo, I says to myself, here's a rum go and no
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mistake!
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As the old loon went driveling on, it appeared he was talking
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about my Uncle Brandon, an eccentric old bird who was my Gov'ner's
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brother. I knew little enough of Uncle Brandon, whose life was vaguely
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described as " rackety " and who had spent much of it in foreign parts.
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When Silas Raven, our cadaverous old brief, informed me that my
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revered uncle had gone to a better place and left me possessed of his
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entire estate, I could scarcely believe my ears. That Uncle Brandon's
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drinking and whoring had made him ripe for plucking I never doubted.
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Yet I had no idea he had even heard my name, let alone made me his
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sole heir.
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My first impulse was to milk old Silas Raven for a few hundred
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sovereigns on the spot. Yet it was not to be. The close-fisted senior
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partner of Raven & Raven read my thoughts. He favoured me with a grim
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that would have been unbecoming even on a stoat.
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" There is - ahem! - There is a condition attending the legacy of
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your late uncle. Should you fail to fulfill it, the entire inheritance
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is to be forfeited and the moneys applied to the Shoreditch Refuge for
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Penitent Magdalenes. "
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Did you ever read in the story books, Lizzie, how a fellow's
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blood is said to run cold? I never knew the meaning of that until that
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moment. What need had Penitent Magdalenes compared to my own? The
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senile old curmudgeon grinned at me like a skull.
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" You will become possessed of the funds held in trust when you
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have spent six months in gainful employment, precisely according to
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your late uncle's instructions. Should you fail . . . "
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Gainful employment? I was not even sure, just then, what the
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term meant. A chap who bets a sov or two on the nags, or lays a wager
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at Baccarat, may gain. Then again, he may lose. I need not have
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worried, however. My Uncle Brandon had left me no choice.
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" Gainful employment! " sneered Silas Raven. " On Monday next you
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will take up your post as Assistant Director of Greystones Reformatory
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on the Sussex Coast. You will remain thus occupied until further
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instructions, confided to me by your uncle, are given you. "
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" Look here! " I said crossly, " suppose they won't have me at this
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place, whatever it is? Dammit, it ain't justice to bilk a fellow of
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his inheritance when he can't do what's ordered. "
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" Have no fear, " answered the old swine softly, " Your uncle was a
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benefactor of the Greystones charity. Arrangements are already made
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for you. "
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" The devil they are! " said I, quite taken aback.
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" Very uncongenial to a shiftless young man of your habits, no
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doubt! " He murmured, " yet make no mistake, sir! Fail to fulfill the
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condition and I will see you cut from your uncle's will! "
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He would too, I never doubted that! So I left his chambers,
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descended the steep wooden stairs of the old building, and turned away
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under the broad trees of Gray's Inn Walk, which were just then coming
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into early leaf.
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All the way back to Jermyn Street in the cab I tried to puzzle
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out why a randy old uncle I had never seen should leave me all his
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spondoolicks, and on such conditions. What could it possibly matter to
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him if I spent a few months supervising the girls of Greystones, or
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working at some other profession or doing nothing at all? Why not
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leave a chap the load of oof, as they say, and have done with it?
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Why blight his life by taking him away from the London season and
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sending him off to the seaside, where he might die of tedium?
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Lizzie! Lizzie! How I wronged the frisky old fellow! Had I known
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what was to befall me at Greystones, I might almost have heard his
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laughter ringing out in the celestial spheres at my fury.
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Fifty sovereigns were forwarded by old Silas Raven to see me
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safe to Pinebourne-on-sea. Next morning, I received a letter from
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the Directress of Greystones, known to one and all as Miss
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Martinet. I was expected on the following Monday. the dogcart would
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be sent to the station to meet the three O'clock train.
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Pinned to the letter was a list of useful clothing, including
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riding apparel for supervising the equestrian discipline of the girls. A
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further note, which made my eyebrows rise slightly, referred to
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" instruments of correction. " Such implements were provided my Miss
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Martinet for her colleagues. However, if I possessed a particular type
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of cane, birch or whip, and if I preferred to use this, I might bring
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it with me. Naturally, the note added, it must be inspected and
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approved before I was authorized to use it on the bare bottom of any
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delinquent young woman.
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I nearly choked to death on my breakfast toast. With great care,
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I re-read the sentence. The words were still there - " bare bottom " - I
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had not fallen victim to hallucinations after all.
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That was Saturday morning. Already my regrets at being being
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parted from the London season were diminishing, and it seemed to me
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that Monday could not come soon enough. Believe me, Lizzie, it was not
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the thought of tanning the bare backside of a schoolgirl of fourteen
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or a runaway young wife of twenty-five which thrilled me. I was
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possessed by thoughts of what else might happen once I was privileged
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to see them slip down their knickers and pose for me.
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By noon on Monday my bags were packed and secured, all my
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possessions crammed into them, as I waited with impatience for the cab
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that was to take me to Victoria. the half-past twelve train was
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prompt to the minute. Seated in the dining car, I watched the houses
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of Pimlico and Balham speed past. Soon we were out in the countryside
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of Croydon and Purley, trees and hedges flashing by.
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By breaking into old Silas Raven's fifty sovs, I sported a bottle
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of Chateau Rothschild and a first-rate spread. I sniffed my post-
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prandial brandy and smoked a cigar as we pulled in towards Lewes under
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the graceful curve of the Sussex downs. By three O'clock I stood on
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the platform at Pinebourne, breathing in the sharp clean air of the
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sea, which lay just beyond the town.
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I knew Miss Martinet at first glance. She was quite tall, and
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smartly dressed with a look which one calls " handsome " . Nearer thirty-
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five than forty, she wore her brown hair in a somewhat old-fashioned
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coiffure. Her manner was quite well educated and pleasant. She might
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well have been a young widow, or, as proved to be the case, a lively
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minded spinster with a predilection for bending wayward young women to
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her will.
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We drove together in the dogcart, exchanging pleasantries.
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Pinebourne is an agreeable place, I supposed, with it's tree-lined
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shopping streets and it's elegant, broad-paved Marine Parade. The
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freshly painted pier, the bandstand, the ornamental gardens with their
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yellow flowers in bloom, lay beside a quiescent sea.
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Would you imagine Greystones as some grim fortress of vengeance,
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Lizzie? How wrong you would be! Though surrounded by a high wall,
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which the nimblest damsel would never scale, the house and grounds
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were delightful. The house itself accommodated thirty petulant
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Magdalenes, as old Silas Raven might call them, though their
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misdemeanors were more varied than the term implies. This extensive
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villa was light and airy, fronting onto ornamental grounds. Beyond the
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kitchen gardens rose the smooth turf of the downs, whose cliffs fell
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sheer to the tide. On the other side was a gentle slope, where the
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resinous smell of warm pine led down to the rippling waters of the
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bay.
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I took tea with Miss Martinet who, because of my Uncle's
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charitable interest in Greystones, treated me more as a guest than an
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employee. Presently, however, she began upon a subject which had
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already crossed my mind.
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" You will find, " Said she, " that in such a place as this there
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are certain romantic passions which develop between some of the girls.
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A few of these are genuine affections, others are basely criminal. I
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cannot advise you whether to permit or punish such infatuations. It
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must be at your discretion. Whatever your decision, you may depend on
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my support. "
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" I shall be grateful for that, Ma'am, " I said, swallowed my tea
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hard. The cup rattled nervously in the saucer, as I sat on the edge of
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the little chair in her drawing room.
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" Some of the girls, " she continued rather self-consciously, " are
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also liable to develop crushes or passions upon any man in the
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establishment. You, I am sure, will best know how to deal with that.
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They are also given to inventing stories about his activities. Have no
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fear, though, your word in such matters will always prevail with me. "
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" I shall strive to be worthy of such trust, " I gasped weakly.
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" As for the other matter, " she murmured, " whatever course of
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action you feel to be necessary in matters of chastisement must be a
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decision for you alone. "
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As she spoke, Miss Martinet looked at me across the tea table
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with a new depth of meaning in her clear grey eyes. " I shall not
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interfere with your wishes in this matter, " she went on, " except to
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assure you that use of the rod is, paradoxically, the kindest form of
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correction in the end. A single severe punishment may save a wayward
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young woman from evil ways and repeated penalties later on. "
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" I'm obliged, Ma'am, " says I, awkwardly, " deuced obliged for that. "
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Miss Martinet smiled kindly at me. " Then we understand one
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another, " she said quietly. " I knew that if your Uncle Brandon chose
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you as his heir he was certain that you would fit in with our way of
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doing things at Greystones. "
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Now, Lizzie, it may be that Miss Martinet understood, as she put
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it. I'll be damned if I did! Still I sensed, don't you see, some good
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sport ahead - just the kind that you and I love to hear of! Beyond the
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lace curtains of her up-stairs drawing room, the sun shone upon waves
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that were green as grass. Distantly, from the bandstand on the Marine
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Parade, came sounds of regimental brass.
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" Tomorrow morning, " said Miss Martinet, " you shall make your
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inspection. It was your uncle's wish that we should make you welcome
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here. I and the girls were, upon his instructions, to offer you every
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facility. Every facility. " She looked at me, as she repeated those
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words, with the same depth of meaning that had made my heart beat
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faster a few moments before.
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Ah, Lizzie! Tomorrow morning! What tales shall I have to tell you
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when I take up my pen tomorrow evening? For the present, as the lamp
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burns low, I bid you a loving goodnight and remain
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Your Own Adoring
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Charles
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To be Continued
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