FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   >>  
s anxiously from Florence to Dora, seeing plainly that there is something amiss. "What is it?" she asks kindly, going up to Florence. Miss Delmaine, after a little hesitation, encouraged by a glance at Dora's terrified countenance, determines on taking the new-comer into their confidence. In a few words she explains all that has taken place, and their suspicions. Ethel, though paling beneath the horror and surprise occasioned by the recital, does not lose her self-possession. "I will go with you," she volunteers. "But, let me say," she adds, "that I think you are wrong in making this search without a man. If--if indeed we are still in time to be of any use to poor Sir Adrian--always supposing he really is secreted in that terrible room--I do not think any of us would be strong enough to help him down the stairs, and, if he has been slowly starving all this time, think how weak he will be!" "Oh, what a wretched picture you conjure up!" exclaims Florence, nervously clasping her hands. "But you are right, and now tell me who you think can best be depended upon in this crisis." "I am sure," says Ethel, blushing slightly, but speaking with intense earnestness, "that, if you would not mind trusting Captain Ringwood, he would be both safe and useful." As this suggestion meets with approval, they manage to convey a message to the captain, and in a very few minutes he is with them, and is made acquainted with their hopes and fears. Silently, cautiously, without any light, but carrying two small lamps ready for ignition, they go down to the corridor where is the door that leads to the secret staircase. Turning the handle of this door, Captain Ringwood discovers that it is locked, but, nothing daunted, he pulls it so violently backward and forward that the lock, rusty with age, gives way, and leaves the passage beyond open to them. Going into the small landing at the foot of the staircase, they close the door carefully behind them, and then, Captain Ringwood producing some matches, they light the two lamps and go swiftly, with anxiously beating hearts, up the stairs. The second door is reached, and now nothing remains but to mount the last flight of steps and open the fatal door. Their hearts at this trying moment almost fail them. They look into one another's blanched faces, and look there in vain for hope. At last Ringwood, touching Ethel's arm, says, in a whisper-- "Come, have courage--all may yet
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   >>  



Top keywords:

Ringwood

 

Captain

 

Florence

 
hearts
 

stairs

 

staircase

 

anxiously

 
handle
 

discovers

 

suggestion


Turning

 

carrying

 
daunted
 

approval

 

locked

 
manage
 

acquainted

 

cautiously

 

Silently

 

minutes


captain
 

message

 
secret
 

ignition

 

corridor

 

convey

 

landing

 

moment

 
flight
 

blanched


courage
 

whisper

 

touching

 

remains

 
leaves
 

passage

 

backward

 

forward

 
beating
 

swiftly


reached

 

matches

 

carefully

 

producing

 
violently
 

conjure

 

beneath

 

paling

 
horror
 

surprise