I entered
your house for a few moments to-night, for the first time, on an errand
which seemed important, as Mr. Ruthven Smith will explain. I don't feel
called upon to apologize for my presence in the face of your attitude to
Miss Grayle. It was our intention that you should have plenty of notice
before she left you, time to find someone for her place; but after what
has happened, it's your own fault, madame, if we marry with a special
licence, and I take her out of this house to-morrow. I only wish it might
be now----"
"It _shall_ be now!" Mrs. Ellsworth screamed him down. "The girl doesn't
darken my doors another hour. I don't know who you are, and I don't want
to know. But with or without you, Annesley Grayle leaves my house
to-night."
"Mrs. Ellsworth, surely you haven't stopped to think what you're saying!"
protested Ruthven Smith. "You can't turn a girl into the street in the
middle of the night with a young man you don't know, even if she is
engaged to him."
"I won't have her here, after the way she's treated me--after the way
she's acted altogether," Mrs. Ellsworth insisted. "Let her go to your
cousins' if you think they'd approve of her conduct.
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