The Moonstone - Page 181/404

Returning to my aunt's chair, I observed dear Mr. Godfrey searching for

something softly, here and there, in different parts of the room. Before

I could offer to assist him he had found what he wanted. He came back to

my aunt and me, with his declaration of innocence in one hand, and with

a box of matches in the other.

"Dear aunt, a little conspiracy!" he said. "Dear Miss Clack, a pious

fraud which even your high moral rectitude will excuse! Will you leave

Rachel to suppose that I accept the generous self-sacrifice which has

signed this paper? And will you kindly bear witness that I destroy it

in your presence, before I leave the house?" He kindled a match, and,

lighting the paper, laid it to burn in a plate on the table. "Any

trifling inconvenience that I may suffer is as nothing," he remarked,

"compared with the importance of preserving that pure name from the

contaminating contact of the world. There! We have reduced it to a

little harmless heap of ashes; and our dear impulsive Rachel will never

know what we have done! How do you feel? My precious friends, how do you

feel? For my poor part, I am as light-hearted as a boy!"

He beamed on us with his beautiful smile; he held out a hand to my aunt,

and a hand to me. I was too deeply affected by his noble conduct

to speak. I closed my eyes; I put his hand, in a kind of spiritual

self-forgetfulness, to my lips. He murmured a soft remonstrance. Oh the

ecstasy, the pure, unearthly ecstasy of that moment! I sat--I hardly

know on what--quite lost in my own exalted feelings. When I opened

my eyes again, it was like descending from heaven to earth. There was

nobody but my aunt in the room. He had gone.

I should like to stop here--I should like to close my narrative with

the record of Mr. Godfrey's noble conduct. Unhappily there is more, much

more, which the unrelenting pecuniary pressure of Mr. Blake's cheque

obliges me to tell. The painful disclosures which were to reveal

themselves in my presence, during that Tuesday's visit to Montagu

Square, were not at an end yet.

Finding myself alone with Lady Verinder, I turned naturally to the

subject of her health; touching delicately on the strange anxiety which

she had shown to conceal her indisposition, and the remedy applied to

it, from the observation of her daughter.

My aunt's reply greatly surprised me.

"Drusilla," she said (if I have not already mentioned that my Christian

name is Drusilla, permit me to mention it now), "you are touching quite

innocently, I know--on a very distressing subject."

I rose immediately. Delicacy left me but one alternative--the

alternative, after first making my apologies, of taking my leave. Lady

Verinder stopped me, and insisted on my sitting down again.