"Suppose
my master refuses to see you. His temper might get the better of
him; he might make it so unpleasant for you that you would be
obliged to go."
"
My temper might get the better of
me," Mr. Rayburn replied; "and--if I thought it
was in Mrs. Zant's interests--I might refuse to leave the house
unless she accompanied me."
"That will never do, sir."
"Why not?"
"Because I should be the person to suffer."
"In what way?"
"In this way. If you picked a quarrel with my master, I
should be blamed for it because I showed you upstairs. Besides,
think of the lady. You might frighten her out of her senses, if it
came to a struggle between you two men."
The language was exaggerated; but there was a force in this last
objection which Mr. Rayburn was obliged to acknowledge.
"And, after all," the housekeeper continued, "he
has more right over her than you have. He is related to her, and
you are only her friend."
Mr. Rayburn declined to let himself be influenced by this
consideration, "Mr. John Zant is only related to her by
marriage," he said. "If she prefers trusting in me--come
what may of it, I will be worthy of her confidence."
The housekeeper shook her head.
"That only means another quarrel," she answered.
"The wise way, with a man like my master, is the peaceable
way. We must manage to deceive him."
"I don't like deceit."
"In that case, sir, I'll wish you good-by. We will
leave Mrs. Zant to do the best she can for herself."
Mr. Rayburn was unreasonable. He positively refused to adopt
this alternative.
"Will you hear what I have got to say?" the
housekeeper asked.
"There can be no harm in that," he admitted. "Go
on."
She took him at his word.
"When you called at our house," she began, "did
you notice the doors in the passage, on the first floor? Very well.
One of them is the door of the drawing-room, and the other is the
door of the library. Do you remember the drawing-room,
sir?"
"I thought it a large well-lighted room," Mr. Rayburn
answered. "And I noticed a doorway in the wall, with a
handsome curtain hanging over it."
"That's enough for our purpose," the housekeeper
resumed. "On the other side of the curtain, if you had looked
in, you would have found the library. Suppose my master is as
polite as usual, and begs to be excused for not receiving you,
because it is an inconvenient time. And suppose you are polite on
your side and take yourself off by the drawing-room door. You will
find me waiting downstairs, on the first landing. Do you see it
now?"
"I can't say I do."
"You surprise me, sir. What is to prevent us from getting
back softly into the library, by the door in the passage? And why
shouldn't we use that second way into the library as a means of
discovering what may be going on in the drawing-room? Safe behind
the curtain, you will see him if he behaves uncivilly to Mrs. Zant,
or you will hear her if she calls for help. In either case, you may
be as rough and ready with my master as you find needful; it will
be he who has frightened her, and not you. And who can blame the
poor housekeeper because Mr.
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