The Governors
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Governors, by E. Phillips
Oppenheim
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Title: The Governors
Author: E. Phillips Oppenheim
Release Date: December 27, 2003 [eBook #10537]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE
GOVERNORS***
E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Rebekah Inman, and the Project
Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
THE GOVERNORS
By
E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM
Author of "A Maker of History," "The Long Arm of Mannister," "The
Missioner," etc.
1909
ILLUSTRATED BY WILL GREFÉ AND HOWARD SOMERVILLE
CONTENTS
BOOK I.
CHAPTER
I. MR. PHINEAS DUGE
II. COUSIN STELLA
III. STORM CLOUDS
IV. A MEETING OF GIANTS
V. TREACHERY
VI. MR. WEISS IN A HURRY
VII. A PROFESSIONAL BURGLAR
VIII. FIREARMS
IX. CONSPIRATORS
X. MR. NORRIS VINE
XI. MR. LITTLESON, FLATTERER
XII. STELLA SUCCEEDS
XIII. BEARDING THE LION
XIV. STELLA PROVES OBSTINATE
XV. THE WARNING
XVI. A TRUCE
BOOK II.
I. MY NAME IS MILDMAY
II. REFLECTIONS
III. "WILL YOU MARRY ME?"
IV. THE AMERICAN AMBASSADOR
V. A QUESTION OF COURAGE
VI. MR. MILDMAY AGAIN
VII. AN APPOINTMENT
VIII. DEFEATED
IX. INGRATITUDE
X. A NEW VENTURE
XI. CONSCIENCE
XII. DUKE OF MOWBRAY
XIII. AN INTRODUCTION
XIV. ANOTHER DISAPPEARANCE
XV. MR. DUGE THREATENS
XVI. TRAPPED
XVII. MR. DUGE FAILS
XVIII. ADVICE FOR MR. VINE
XIX. THE CRISIS
XX. BEWITCHED
XXI. A LESSON LEARNED
XXII. A SURPRISE
XXIII. A DINNER PARTY
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
VIRGINIA
"AS I DARESAY YOU KNOW, I AM NOT ON SPEAKING TERMS
WITH MY FATHER!"
ONE OF THE BLOCKS SPRANG UP A LITTLE WAY AND WAS
EASILY REMOVED
A BULLET WHISTLED ONLY A FEW INCHES FROM HIS HEAD
PHINEAS DUGE DROPPED HIS CIGARETTE, AND FELL ON HIS
KNEES BY HER SIDE
"FOR GOD'S SAKE, TELL ME WHO HAS IT, MISS DUGE!" HE
IMPLORED
"ISN'T IT THE BUSINESS OF ANY MAN TO LOOK AFTER A
CHILD LIKE YOU?"
VIRGINIA, WITH A LITTLE MURMUR OF DELIGHT,
RECOGNIZED MR. MILDMAY STANDING BEFORE HER
SIMULTANEOUSLY SHE HEARD A STEALTHY MOVEMENT
OUTSIDE
THEN HE CAME SLOWLY BACK, AND PUTTING HIS ARM
AROUND VIRGINIA'S WAIST, KISSED HER
SHE THOUGHT NOTHING OF THE MOTIVE OF HER COMING,
ONLY TO PLACE THE DOOR BETWEEN HER AND THIS!
HE HAD AN OPPORTUNITY OF WATCHING A SEARCH
CONDUCTED UPON SCIENTIFIC PRINCIPLES
THEN IN THE MIDST OF HER WONDERING CAME THE
ELUCIDATION OF THESE THINGS
HE WAS ONLY JUST IN TIME TO SAVE HER FROM FALLING
THE GOVERNORS
BOOK I
CHAPTER I
MR. PHINEAS DUGE
Virginia, when she had torn herself away from the bosom of her
sorrowing but excited family, and boarded the car which passed only
once a day through the tiny village in Massachusetts, where all her life
had been spent, had felt herself, notwithstanding her nineteen years, a
person of consequence and dignity. Virginia, when four hours later she
followed a tall footman in wonderful livery through a stately suite of
reception rooms in one of the finest of Fifth Avenue mansions, felt
herself suddenly a very insignificant person. The roar and bustle of
New York were still in her ears. Bewildered as she had been by this
first contact with all the distracting influences of a great city, she was
even more distraught by the wonder and magnificence of these, her
more immediate surroundings. She, who had lived all her life in a
simple farmhouse, where every one worked, and a single servant was
regarded as a luxury, found herself suddenly in the palace of a
millionaire, a palace made perfect by the despoilment of more than one
of the most ancient homes in Europe.
Very timidly, and with awed glances, she looked around her as she was
conducted in leisurely manner to the sanctum of the great man at whose
bidding she had come. The pictures on the walls, magnificent and
impressive even to her ignorant eyes; the hardwood floors, the
wonderful furniture, the statuary and flowers, the smooth-tongued
servants--all these things were an absolute revelation to her. She had
read of such things, even perhaps dreamed of them, but she had never
imagined it possible that she herself might be brought into actual
contact with them.
At every step she took she felt her self-confidence decreasing; her
clothes, made by the village dressmaker from an undoubted French
model, with which she had been more than satisfied only a few hours
ago, seemed suddenly dowdy and ill-fashioned. She was even doubtful
about her looks, although quite half a dozen of the nicest young men in
her neighbourhood had been doing their best to make her vain since the
day
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