
In this comic tale a weary retired officer, haunted by a disagreeable marriage and four unruly children, finds his life upended when an old friend, the handsome but irritable Lewis Romayne, asks him to accompany a frail aunt on a crossing to the French coast. The aunt, Lady Berrick, is terminally ill and terrified of the Channel, so Romayne must travel to Boulogne to persuade her, dragging the narrator into a adventure. Their banter, full of bitter sincerity and dry humor, sets the tone for a story that mixes social satire with a looming sense of dread.
Arriving in fog‑shrouded Boulogne, the two men confront cramped lodgings, a grim doctor, and the oppressive presence of the dying lady, whose whims dictate their every move. As they wait for the weather to clear, the narrator discovers an unexpected freedom away from his oppressive home, while Romayne’s disdain for genteel society and his odd comfort in the company of dogs add a quirky edge. Together they navigate the uneasy balance between duty, selfish desire, and the strange intimacy forged by shared misfortune.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (598K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by James Rusk and David Widger
Release date
2006-02-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1824–1889
Best known for The Woman in White and The Moonstone, this pioneering Victorian novelist helped shape the modern mystery and suspense story. His fiction mixed page-turning plots with sharp observations about money, law, identity, and social rules.
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