The Major’s Wife
CHAPTER I.
Major Mellish is sitting is his bachelor lodgings in Duke street in no enviable state of mind. After ten years’ hard and perilous service in India, during which he had almost miraculously passed safely through some of the most dangerous work of the great mutiny of 1856, he had obtained a twelve months’ leave of absence on urgent private affairs, and is now waiting the arrival of a detective, whom he has employed to discover the whereabouts of one who was, and who is even still very dear to him.
When his regiment lay at country quarters shortly before its hurried departure from England for India, the Major, then only a Lieutenant, had fallen deeply in love with a charming girl, who, though beneath him in the social scale, was in every other respect, worthy of becoming any honest man’s wife; for, although now reduced to the sad necessity of occupying a situation behind the counter of a Manchester mercer, Ellen Willmore had been well brought up and well educated.
The death of her only surviving parent had left her with a limited income, and the intemperate extravagance and gambling propensities of an elder brother soon afterward stripped her of every farthing of it. Their father had bequeathed to them an equal share in the little property of which he had died possessed; but unluckily the will was so loosely worded that no legal restriction prevented Ellen from parting with the half of her two thousand pounds of which it consisted; and after the reckless spendthrift had wasted his own moiety, his sister had not sufficient strength of mind to refuse his mingled menaces and… Read More