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Title: Wives and Daughters

Author: Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell

Release Date: July, 2003  [Etext #4274]
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This etext was produced by Charles Aldarondo.

ELIZABETH GASKELL

WIVES AND DAUGHTERS


CHAPTER I


THE DAWN OF A GALA DAY


To begin with the old rigmarole of childhood. In a country there was
a shire, and in that shire there was a town, and in that town there
was a house, and in that house there was a room, and in that room
there was a bed, and in that bed there lay a little girl; wide awake
and longing to get up, but not daring to do so for fear of the
unseen power in the next room--a certain Betty, whose slumbers must
not be disturbed until six o'clock struck, when she wakened of
herself 'as sure as clockwork', and left the household very little
peace afterwards. It was a June morning, and early as it was, the
room was full of sunny warmth and light.

On the drawers opposite to the little white dimity bed in which
Molly Gibson lay, was a primitive kind of bonnet-stand on which was
hung a bonnet, carefully covered over from any chance of dust, with
a large cotton handkerchief, of so heavy and serviceable a texture
that if the thing underneath it had been a flimsy fabric of gauze
and lace and flowers, it would have been altogether 'scromfished'
(again to quote from Betty's vocabulary). But the bonnet was made of
solid straw, and its only trimming was a plain white ribbon put over
the crown, and forming the strings. Still, there was a neat little
quilling inside, every plait of which Molly knew, for had she not
made it herself the evening before, with infinite pains? and was
there not a little blue bow in this quilling, the very first bit of
such finery Molly had ever had the prospect of wearing?

Six o'clock now! the pleasant, brisk ringing of the church bells
told that; calling every one to their daily work, as they had done
for hundreds of years. Up jumped Molly, and ran with her bare little
feet across the room, and lifted off the handkerchief and saw once
again the bonnet; the pledge of the gay bright day to come. Then to
the window, and after some tugging she opened the casement, and let
in the sweet morning air. The dew was already off the flowers in the
garden below, but still rising from the long hay-grass in the
meadows directly beyond. At one side lay the little town of
Hollingford, into a street of which Mr. Gibson's front door opened;
and delicate columns, and little puffs of smoke were already
beginning to rise from many a cottage chimney where some housewife
was already up, and preparing breakfast for the bread-winner of the
family.

Molly Gibson saw all this, but all she thought about it was, 'Oh! it
will be a fine day! I was afraid it never, never would come; or
that, if it ever came, it would be a rainy day!' Five-and-forty
years ago, children's pleasures in a country town were very simple,
and Molly had lived for twelve long years without the occurrence of
any event so great as that which was now impending. Poor child! it
is true that she had lost her mother, which was a jar to the whole
tenour of her life; but that was hardly an event in the sense
referred to; and besides, she had been too young to be conscious of
it at the time. The pleasure she was looking forward to to-day was
her first share in a kind of annual festival in Hollingford.

The little straggling town faded away into country on one side close
to the entrance-lodge of a great park, where lived my Lord and Lady
Cumnor 'the earl' and 'the countess', as they were always called by
the inhabitants of the town; where a very pretty amount of feudal
feeling still lingered, and showed itself in a number of simple
ways, droll enough to look back upon, but serious matters of
importance at the time. It was before the passing of the Reform
Bill, but a good deal of liberal talk took place occasionally
between two or three of the more enlightened freeholders living in
Hollingford; and there was a great Tory family in the county who,
from time to time, came forward and contested the election with the
rival Whig family of Cumnor. One would have thought that the
above-mentioned liberal-talking inhabitants would have, at least,
admitted the possibility of their voting for the Hely-Harrison, and
thus trying to vindicate their independence But no such thing. 'The
earl' was lord of the manor, and owner of much of the land on which
Hollingford was built; he and his household were fed, and doctored,
and, to a certain measure, clothed by the good people of the town;
their fathers' grandfathers had always voted for the eldest son of
Cumnor Towers, and following in the ancestral track every man-jack
in the place gave his vote to the liege lord, totally irrespective
of such chimeras as political opinion.

This was no unusual instance of the influence of the great
landowners over humbler neighbours in those days before railways,
and it was well for a place where the powerful family, who thus
overshadowed it, were of so respectable a character as the Cumnors.
They expected to be submitted to, and obeyed; the simple worship of
the townspeople was accepted by the earl and countess as a right;
and they would have stood still in amazement, and with a horrid
memory of the French sansculottes who were the bugbears of their
youth, had any inhabitant of Hollingford ventured to set his will or
opinions in opposition to those of the earl. But, yielded all that
obeisance, they did a good deal for the town, and were generally
condescending, and often thoughtful and kind in their treatment of
their vassals. Lord Cumnor was a forbearing landlord; putting his
steward a little on one side sometimes, and taking the reins into
his own hands now and then, much to the annoyance of the agent, who
was, in fact, too rich and independent to care greatly for
preserving a post where his decisions might any day be overturned by
my lord's taking a fancy to go 'pottering' (as the agent
irreverently expressed it in the sanctuary of his own home), which,
being interpreted, meant that occasionally the earl asked his own
questions of his own tenants, and used his own eyes and ears in the
management of the smaller details of his property. But his tenants
liked my lord all the better for this habit of his. Lord Cumnor had
certainly a little time for gossip, which he contrived to combine
with the failing of personal intervention between the old
land-steward and the tenantry. But, then, the countess made up by
her unapproachable dignity for this weakness of the earl's. Once a
year she was condescending. She and the ladies, her daughters, had
set up a school; not a school after the manner of schools
now-a-days, where far better intellectual teaching is given to the
boys and girls of labourers and workpeople than often falls to the
lot of their betters in worldly estate; but a school of the kind we
should call 'industrial', where girls are taught to sew beautifully,
to be capital housemaids, and pretty fair cooks, and, above all, to
dress neatly in a kind of charity uniform devised by the ladies of
Cumnor Towers;--white caps, white tippets, check aprons, blue gowns,
and ready curtseys, and 'please, ma'ams', being ~de rigueur~.

Now, as the countess was absent from the Towers for a considerable
part of the year, she was glad to enlist the sympathy of the
Hollingford ladies in this school, with a view to obtaining their
aid as visitors during the many months that she and her daughters
were away. And the various unoccupied gentlewomen of the town
responded to the call of their liege lady, and gave her their
service as required; and along with it, a great deal of whispered
and fussy admiration. 'How good of the countess! So like the dear
countess--always thinking of others!' and so on; while it was always
supposed that no strangers had seen Hollingford properly, unless
they had been taken to the countess's school, and been duly
impressed by the neat little pupils, and the still neater needlework
there to be inspected. In return, there was a day of honour set
apart every summer, when with much gracious and stately hospitality,
Lady Cumnor and her daughters received all the school visitors at
the Towers, the great family mansion standing in aristocratic
seclusion in the centre of the large park, of which one of the
lodges was close to the little town. The order of this annual
festivity was this. About ten o'clock one of the Towers' carriages
rolled through the lodge, and drove to different houses, wherein
dwelt a woman to be honoured; picking them up by ones or twos, till
the loaded carriage drove back again through the ready portals,
bowled along the smooth tree-shaded road, and deposited its covey of
smartly-dressed ladies on the great flight of steps leading to the
ponderous doors of Cumnor Towers. Back again to the town; another
picking up of womankind in their best clothes, and another return,
and so on till the whole party were assembled either in the house or
in the really beautiful gardens. After the proper amount of
exhibition on the one part, and admiration on the other, had been
done, there was a collation for the visitors, and some more display
and admiration of the treasures inside the house. Towards four
o'clock, coffee was brought round; and this was a signal of the
approaching carriage that was to take them back to their own homes;
whither they returned with the happy consciousness of a well-spent
day, but with some fatigue at the long-continued exertion of
behaving their best, and talking on stilts for so many hours. Nor
were Lady Cumnor and her daughters free from something of the same
self-approbation, and something, too, of the same fatigue; the
fatigue that always follows on conscious efforts to behave as will
best please the society you are in.

For the first time in her life, Molly Gibson was to be included
among the guests at the Towers. She was much too young to be a
visitor at the school, so it was not on that account that she was to
go; but it had so happened that one day when Lord Cumnor was on a
'pottering' expedition, he had met Mr. Gibson, ~the~ doctor of the
neighbourhood, coming out of the farm-house my lord was entering;
and having some small question to ask the surgeon (Lord Cumnor
seldom passed any one of his acquaintance without asking a question
of some sort--not always attending to the answer; it was his mode of
conversation), he accompanied Mr. Gibson to the out-building, to a
ring in the wall of which the surgeon's horse was fastened. Molly
was there too, sitting square and quiet on her rough little pony,
waiting for her father. Her grave eyes opened large and wide at the
close neighbourhood and evident advance of 'the earl'; for to her
little imagination the grey-haired, red-faced, somewhat clumsy man,
was a cross between an archangel and a king.

'Your daughter, eh, Gibson?--nice little girl, how old? Pony wants
grooming though,' patting it as he talked. 'What's your name, my
dear? He's sadly behindhand with his rent, as I was saying, but if
he's really ill, I must see after Sheepshanks, who is a hardish man
of business. What's his complaint? You'll come to our
school-scrimmage on Thursday, little girl--what's-your-name? Mind
you send her, or bring her, Gibson; and just give a word to your
groom, for I'm sure that pony wasn't singed last year, now, was he?
Don't forget Thursday, little girl--what's your name?--it's a
promise between us, is it not?' And off the earl trotted, attracted
by the sight of the farmer's eldest son on the other side of the
yard.

Mr. Gibson mounted, and he and Molly rode off. They did not speak
for some time. Then she said, 'May I go, papa?' in rather an anxious
little tone of voice.

'Where, my dear?' said he, wakening up out of his own professional
thoughts.

'To the Towers--on Thursday, you know. That gentleman' (she was shy
of calling him by his title) 'asked me.'

'Would you like it, my dear? It has always seemed to me rather a
tiresome piece of gaiety--rather a tiring day, I mean--beginning so
early--and the heat, and all that.'

'Oh, papa!' said Molly reproachfully.

'You'd like to go then, would you?'

'Yes if I may!--He asked me, you know. Don't you think I may?--he
asked me twice over.'

'Well! we'll see--yes! I think we can manage it, if you wish it so
much, Molly.'

Then they were silent again. By-and-by, Molly said:

'Please, papa--I do wish to go--but I don't care about it.'

'That's rather a puzzling speech. But I suppose you mean you don't
care to go, if it will be any trouble to get you there. I can easily
manage it, however, so you may consider it settled. You'll want a
white frock, remember; you'd better tell Betty you're going, and
she'll see after making you tidy.'

Now, there were two or three things to be done by Mr. Gibson, before
he could feel quite comfortable about Molly's going to the festival
at the Towers, and each of them involved a little trouble on his
part. But he was very willing to gratify his little girl; so the
next day he rode over to the Towers, ostensibly to visit some sick
housemaid, but, in reality, to throw himself in my lady's way, and
get her to ratify Lord Cumnor's invitation to Molly. He chose his
time, with a little natural diplomacy; which, indeed, he had often
to exercise in his intercourse with the great family. He rode into
the stable-yard about twelve o'clock, a little before luncheon-time,
and yet after the worry of opening the post-bag and discussing its
contents was over. After he had put up his horse, he went in by the
back-way to the house; the 'House' on this side, the 'Towers' at the
front. He saw his patient, gave his directions to the housekeeper,
and then went out, with a rare wild-flower in his hand, to find one
of the ladies Tranmere in the garden, where, according to his hope
and calculation, he came upon Lady Cumnor too--now talking to her
daughter about the contents of an open letter which she held in her
hand, now directing a gardener about certain bedding-out plants.

'I was calling to see Nanny, and I took the opportunity of bringing
Lady Agnes the plant I was telling her about as growing on Cumnor
Moss.'

'Thank you so much, Mr. Gibson. Mamma, look! this is the ~Drosera
rotundifolia~ I have been wanting so long.'

'Ah! yes; very pretty I daresay, only I am no botanist. Nanny is
better, I hope? We can't have any one laid up next week, for the
house will be quite full of people--and here are the Danbys waiting
to offer themselves as well. One comes down for a fortnight of
quiet, at Whitsuntide, and leaves half one's establishment in town,
and as soon as people know of our being here, we get letters without
end, longing for a breath of country air, or saying how lovely the
Towers must look in spring; and I must own, Lord Cumnor is a great
deal to blame for it all, for as soon as ever we are down here, he
rides about to all the neighbours, and invites them to come over and
spend a few days.'

'We shall go back to town on Friday the 18th,' said Lady Agnes, in a
consolatory tone.

'Ah, yes! as soon as we have got over the school visitors' affair.
But it is a week to that happy day.'

'By the way!' said Mr. Gibson, availing himself of the good opening
thus presented, 'I met my lord at the Cross-trees Farm yesterday,
and he was kind enough to ask my little daughter, who was with me,
to be one of the party here on Thursday; it would give the lassie
great pleasure, I believe.' He paused for Lady Cumnor to speak.

'Oh, well! if my lord asked her, I suppose she must come, but I wish
he was not so amazingly hospitable! Not but what the little girl
will be quite welcome; only, you see, he met a younger Miss Browning
the other day, of whose existence I had never heard.'

'She visits at the school, mamma,' said Lady Agnes.

'Well, perhaps she does; I never said she did not. I knew there was
one visitor of the name of Browning; I never knew there were two,
but, of course, as soon as Lord Cumnor heard there was another, he
must needs ask her; so the carriage will have to go backwards and
forwards four times now to fetch them all. So your daughter can come
quite easily, Mr. Gibson, and I shall be very glad to see her for
your sake. She can sit bodkin with the Brownings, I suppose? You'll
arrange it all with them; and mind you get Nanny well up to her work
next week.'

Just as Mr. Gibson was going away, Lady Cumnor called after him,
'Oh! by-the-bye, Clare is here; you remember Clare, don't you? She
was a patient of yours, long ago.'

'Clare!' he repeated, in a bewildered tone.

'Don't you recollect her? Miss Clare, our old governess,' said Lady
Agnes. 'About twelve or fourteen years ago, before Lady Cuxhaven was
married.'

'Oh, yes!' said he. 'Miss Clare, who had the scarlet fever here; a
very pretty delicate girl. But I thought she was married!'

'Yes!' said Lady Cumnor. 'She was a silly little thing, and did not
know when she was well off; we were all very fond of her, I'm sure.
She went and married a poor curate, and became a stupid Mrs.
Kirkpatrick; but we always kept on calling her 'Clare.' And now he's
dead, and left her a widow, and she is staying here; and we are
racking our brains to find out some way of helping her to a
livelihood without parting her from her child. She's somewhere about
the grounds, if you like to renew your acquaintance with her.'

'Thank you, my lady. I'm afraid I cannot stop to-day. I have a long
round to go; I've stayed here too long as it is, I'm afraid.'

Long as his ride had been that day, he called on the Miss Brownings
in the evening, to arrange about Molly's accompanying them to the
Towers. They were tall handsome women, past their first youth, and
inclined to be extremely complaisant to the widowed doctor.

'Eh dear! Mr. Gibson, but we shall he delighted to have her with us.
You should never have thought of asking us such a thing,' said Miss
Browning the elder.

'I'm sure I'm hardly sleeping at nights for thinking of it,' said
Miss Phoebe. 'You know I've never been there before. Sister has many
a time; but somehow, though my name has been down on the visitors'
list these three years, the countess has never named me in her note;
and you know I could not push myself into notice, and go to such a
grand place without being asked; how could I?'

'I told Phoebe last year,' said her sister, 'that I was sure it was
only inadvertence, as one may call it, on the part of the countess,
and that her ladyship would be as hurt as any one when she didn't
see Phoebe among the school visitors; but Phoebe has got a delicate
mind, you see Mr. Gibson, and for all I could say she wouldn't go,
but stopped here at home; and it spoilt all my pleasure all that
day, I do assure you, to think of Phoebe's face, as I saw it over
the window-blinds, as I rode away; her eyes were full of tears, if
you'll believe me.'

'I had a good cry alter you was gone, Sally,' said Miss Phoebe; 'but
for all that, I think I was right in stopping away from where I was
not asked. Don't you, Mr. Gibson?'

'Certainly,' said he. 'And you see you are going this year; and last
year it rained.'

'Yes! I remember! I set myself to tidy my drawers, to string myself
up, as it were; and I was so taken up with what I was about that I
was quite startled when I heard the rain beating against the
window-panes. 'Goodness me!' said I to myself, 'whatever will become
of sister's white satin shoes, if she has to walk about on soppy
grass after such rain as this?' for, you see, I thought a deal about
her having a pair of smart shoes; and this year she has gone and got
me a white satin pair just as smart as hers, for a surprise.'

'Molly will know she's to put on her best clothes,' said Miss
Browning. 'We could perhaps lend her a few beads, or artificials, if
she wants them.'

'Molly must go in a clean white frock,' said Mr. Gibson, rather
hastily; for he did not admire the Miss Brownings' taste in dress,
and was unwilling to have his child decked up according to their
fancy; he esteemed his old servant Betty's as the more correct,
because the more simple. Miss Browning had just a shade of annoyance
in her tone as she drew herself up, and said, 'Oh! very well. It's
quite right, I'm sure.' But Miss Phoebe said, 'Molly will look very
nice in whatever she puts on, that's certain.'


CHAPTER II


A NOVICE AMONGST THE GREAT FOLK


At ten o'clock on the eventful Thursday the Towers' carriage began
its work. Molly was ready long before it made its first appearance,
although it had been settled that she and the Miss Brownings were
not to go until the last, or fourth, time of its coming. Her face
had been soaped, scrubbed, and shone brilliantly clean; her frills,
her frock, her ribbons were all snow-white. She had on a black mode
cloak that had been her mother's; it was trimmed round with rich
lace, and looked quaint and old-fashioned on the child. For the
first time in her life she wore kid gloves; hitherto she had only
had cotton ones. Her gloves were far too large for the little
dimpled fingers, but as Betty had told her they were to last her for
years, it was all very well. She trembled many a time, and almost
turned faint once with the long expectation of the morning. Berry
might say what she liked about a watched pot never boiling; Molly
never ceased to watch the approach through the winding street, and
after two hours the carriage came for her at last. She had to sit
very forward to avoid crushing the Miss Brownings' new dresses; and
yet not too forward, for fear of incommoding fat Mrs. Goodenough and
her niece, who occupied the front seat of the carriage; so that
altogether the fact of sitting down at all was rather doubtful, and
to add to her discomfort, Molly felt herself to be very
conspicuously placed in the centre of the carriage, a mark for all
the observation of Hollingford. It was far too much of a gala day
for the work of the little town to go forward with its usual
regularity. Maid-servants gazed out of upper windows; shopkeepers'
wives stood on the doorsteps; cottagers ran out, with babies in
their arms; and little children, too young to know how to behave
respectfully at the sight of an earl's carriage, huzzaed merrily as
it bowled along. The woman at the lodge held the gate open, and
dropped a low curtsey to the liveries. And now they were in the
Park; and now they were in sight of the Towers, and silence fell
upon the carriage-full of ladies, only broken by one faint remark
from Mrs. Goodenough's niece, a stranger to the town, as they drew up
before the double semicircle flight of steps which led to the door
of the mansion.

'They call that a perron, I believe, don't they?' she asked. But the
only answer she obtained was a simultaneous 'hush.' It was very
awful, as Molly thought, and she half wished herself at home again.
But she lost all consciousness of herself by-and-by when the party
strolled out into the beautiful grounds, the like of which she had
never even imagined. Green velvet lawns, bathed in sunshine,
stretched away on every side into the finely wooded park; if there
were divisions and ha-has between the soft sunny sweeps of grass,
and the dark gloom of the forest-trees beyond, Molly did not see
them; and the melting away of exquisite cultivation into the
wilderness had an inexplicable charm to her. Near the house there
were walls and fences; but they were covered with climbing roses,
and rare honeysuckles and other creepers just bursting into bloom,
There were flower-beds, too, scarlet, crimson, blue, orange; masses
of blossom lying on the greensward. Molly held Miss Browning's hand
very tight as they loitered about in company with several other
ladies, and marshalled by a daughter of the Towers, who seemed half
amused at the voluble admiration showered down upon every possible
thing and place. Molly said nothing, as became her age and position,
but every now and then she relieved her full heart by drawing a deep
breath, almost like a sigh. Presently they came to the long
glittering range of greenhouses and hothouses, and an attendant
gardener was there to admit the party. Molly did not care for this
half so much as for the flowers in the open air; but Lady Agnes had
a more scientific taste, she expatiated on the rarity of this, and
the mode of cultivation required by that plant, till Molly began to
feel very tired, and then very faint. She was too shy to speak for
some time; but at length, afraid of making a greater sensation if
she began to cry, or if she fell against the stands of precious
flowers, she caught at Miss Browning's hand, and gasped out,--

'May I go back, out into the garden? I can't breathe here!'

'Oh, yes, to be sure, love. I dare say it's hard understanding for
you, love; but it's very fine and instructive, and a deal of Latin
in it too.'

She turned hastily round not to lose another word of Lady Agnes'
lecture on orchids, and Molly turned back and passed out of the
heated atmosphere. She felt better in the fresh air; and unobserved,
and at liberty, went from one lovely spot to another, now in the
open park, now in some shut-in flower-garden, where the song of the
birds, and the drip of the central fountain, were the only sounds,
and the tree-tops made an enclosing circle in the blue June sky; she
went along without more thought as to her whereabouts than a
butterfly has, as it skims from flower to flower, till at length she
grew very weary, and wished to return to the house, but did not know
how, and felt afraid of encountering all the strangers who would be
there, unprotected by either of the Miss Brownings. The hot sun told
upon her head, and it began to ache. She saw a great wide-spreading
cedar-tree upon a burst of lawn towards which she was advancing, and
the black repose beneath its branches lured her thither. There was a
rustic seat in the shadow, and weary Molly sate down there, and
presently fell asleep.

She was startled from her slumbers after a time, and jumped to her
feet. Two ladies were standing by her, talking about her. They were
perfect strangers to her, and with a vague conviction that she had
done something wrong, and also because she was worn-out with hunger,
fatigue, and the morning's excitement, she began to cry.

'Poor little woman! She has lost herself; she belongs to some of the
people from Hollingford, I have no doubt,' said the oldest-looking
of the two ladies; she who appeared to be about forty, although she
did not really number more than thirty years. She was
plain-featured, and had rather a severe expression on her face; her
dress was as rich as any morning dress could be; her voice deep and
unmodulated,--what in a lower rank of life would have been called
gruff; but that was not a word to apply to Lady Cuxhaven, the eldest
daughter of the earl and countess. The other lady looked much
younger, but she was in fact some years the elder; at first sight
Molly thought she was the most beautiful person she had ever seen,
and she was certainly a very lovely woman. Her voice, too, was soft
and plaintive, as she replied to Lady Cuxhaven,--

'Poor little darling! she is overcome by the heat, I have no
doubt--such a heavy straw bonnet, too. Let me untie it for you, my
dear.'

Molly now found voice to say,--'I am Molly Gibson, please. I came
here with the Miss Brownings;' for her great fear was that she
should be taken for an unauthorized intruder.

'The Miss Brownings?' said Lady Cuxhaven to her companion, as if
inquiringly.

'I think they were the two tall large young women that Lady Agnes
was taking about.'

'Oh, I dare say. I saw she had a number of people in tow;' then
looking again at Molly, she said, 'Have you had anything to cat,
child, since you came? You look a very white little thing; or is it
the heat?'

'I have had nothing to eat,' said Molly, rather piteously; for,
indeed, before she fell asleep she had been very hungry.

The two ladies spoke to each other in a low voice; then the elder
said in a voice of authority, which, indeed, she had always used in
speaking to the other, 'Sit still here, my dear; we are going to the
house, and Clare shall bring you something to eat before you try to
walk back; it must be a quarter of a mile at least.' So they went
away, and Molly sate upright, waiting for the promised messenger.
She did not know who Clare might be, and she did not care much for
food now; but she felt as if she could not walk without some help.
At length she saw the pretty lady coming back, followed by a footman
with a small tray.

'Look how kind Lady Cuxhaven is,' said she who was called Clare.
'She chose out this little lunch herself; and now you must try and
eat it, and you'll be quite right when you've had some food,
darling--You need not stop, Edwards; I will bring the tray back with
me.'

There was some bread, and some cold chicken, and some jelly, and a
glass of wine, and a bottle of sparkling water, and a bunch of
grapes; Molly put out her trembling little hand for the water; but
she was too faint to hold it. Clare put it to her mouth, and she
took a long draught and was refreshed. But she could not eat; she
tried, but she could not; her headache was too bad. Clare looked
bewildered. 'Take some grapes, they will be the best for you; you
must try and eat something, or I don't know how I shall get you to
the house.'

'My head aches so,' said Molly, lifting her heavy eyes wistfully.

'Oh, dear, how tiresome!' said Clare, still in her sweet gentle
voice, not at all as if she was angry, only expressing an obvious
truth. Molly felt very guilty and very unhappy. Clare went on, with
a shade of asperity in her tone: 'You see, I don't know what to do
with you here if you don't eat enough to enable you to walk home.
And I've been out for these three hours trapesing about the grounds
till I'm as tired as can be, and missed my lunch and all.' Then, as
if a new idea had struck her, she said,--'You lie back in that seat
for a few minutes, and try to eat the bunch of grapes, and I'll wait
for you, and just be eating a mouthful meanwhile. You are sure you
don't want this chicken?'

Molly did as she was bid, and leant back, picking languidly at the
grapes, and watching the good appetite with which the lady ate up
the chicken and jelly, and drank the glass of wine. She was so
pretty and so graceful in her deep mourning, that even her hurry in
eating, as if she was afraid of some one coming to surprise her in
the act, did not keep her little observer from admiring her in all
she did.

'And now, darling, are you ready to go?' said she, when she had
eaten up everything on the tray. 'Oh, come; you have nearly finished
your grapes; that's a good girl. Now, if you will come with me to
the side entrance, I will take you up to my own room, and you shall
lie down on the bed for an hour or two; and if you have a good nap
your headache will be quite gone.'

So they set off, Clare carrying the empty tray, rather to Molly's
shame; but the child had enough work to drag herself along, and was
afraid of offering to do anything more. The 'side entrance' was a
flight of steps leading up from a private flower-garden into a
private matted hall, or ante-room, out of which many doors opened,
and in which were deposited the light garden-tools and the bows and
arrows of the young ladies of the house. Lady Cuxhaven must have
seen their approach, for she met them in this hall as soon as they
came in.

'How is she now?' she asked; then glancing at the plates and
glasses, she added, 'Come, I think there can't be much amiss! You're
a good old Clare, but you should have let one of the men fetch that
tray in; life in such weather as this is trouble enough of itself.'

Molly could not help wishing that her pretty companion would have
told Lady Cuxhaven that she herself had helped to finish up the
ample luncheon; but no such idea seemed to come into her mind. She
only said,--'Poor dear! she is not quite the thing yet; has got a
headache, she says. I am going to put her down on my bed, to see if
she can get a little sleep.'

Molly saw Lady Cuxhaven say something in a half-laughing manner to
'Clare,' as she passed her; and the child could not keep from
tormenting herself by fancying that the words spoken sounded
wonderfully like 'Over-eaten herself, I suspect.' However, she felt
too poorly to worry herself long; the little white bed in the cool
and pretty room had too many attractions for her aching head. The
muslin curtains flapped softly from time to time in the scented air
that came through the open windows. Clare covered her up with a
light shawl, and darkened the room. As she was going away Molly
roused herself to say, 'Please, ma'am, don't let them go away
without me. Please ask somebody to waken me if I go to sleep. I am
to go back with the Miss Brownings.'

'Don't trouble yourself about it, dear; I'll take care,' said Clare,
turning round at the door, and kissing her hand to little anxious
Molly. And then she went away, and thought no more about it. The
carriages came round at half-past four, hurried a little by Lady
Cumnor, who had suddenly become tired of the business of
entertaining, and annoyed at the repetition of indiscriminating
admiration.

'Why not have both carriages out, mamma, and get rid of them all at
once?' said Lady Cuxhaven. 'This going by instalments is the most
tiresome thing that could be imagined.' So at last there had been a
great hurry and an unmethodical way of packing off every one at
once. Miss Browning had gone in the chariot (or 'chawyot,' as Lady
Cumnor called it;--it rhymed to her daughter, Lady Hawyot--or
Harriet, as the name was spelt in the ~Peerage~), and Miss Phoebe
had been speeded along with several other guests, away in a great
roomy family conveyance, of the kind which we should now call an
'omnibus.' Each thought that Molly Gibson was with the other, and
the truth was, that she lay fast asleep on Mrs. Kirkpatrick's
bed--Mrs. Kirkpatrick ~nee~ Clare.

The housemaids came in to arrange the room. Their talking aroused
Molly, who sate up on the bed, and tried to push back the hair from
her hot forehead, and to remember where she was. She dropped down on
her feet by the side of the bed, to the astonishment of the women,
and said,--'Please, how soon are we going away?'

'Bless us and save us! who'd ha' thought of any one being in the
bed? Are you one of the Hollingford ladies, my dear? They are all
gone this hour or more!'

'Oh, dear, what shall I do? That lady they call Clare promised to
waken me in time. Papa will so wonder where I am, and I don't know
what Betty will say.'

The child began to cry, and the housemaids looked at each other in
some dismay and much sympathy. Just then, they heard Mrs
Kirkpatrick's step along the passages, approaching. She was singing
some little Italian air in a low musical voice, coming to her
bedroom to dress for dinner. One housemaid said to the other, with a
knowing look, 'Best leave it to her;' and they passed on to their
work in the other rooms.

Mrs. Kirkpatrick opened the door, and stood aghast at the sight of
Molly.

'Why, I quite forgot you!' she said at length. 'Nay, don't cry;
you'll make yourself not fit to be seen. Of course I must take the
consequences of your over-sleeping yourself, and if I can't manage
to get you back to Hollingford to-night, you shall sleep with me,
and we'll do our best to send you home to-morrow morning.'

'But papa!' sobbed out Molly. 'He always wants me to make tea for
him; and I have no night-things.'

'Well, don't go and make a piece of work about what can't be helped
now. I'll lend you night-things, and your papa must do without your
making tea for him to-night. And another time don't over-sleep
yourself in a strange house; you may not always find yourself among
such hospitable people as they are here. Why now, if you don't cry
and make a figure of yourself, I'll ask if you may come in to
dessert with Master Smythe and the little ladies. You shall go into
the nursery, and have some tea with them; and then you must come
back here and brush your hair and make yourself tidy. I think it is
a very fine thing for you to be stopping in such a grand house as
this; many a little girl would like nothing better.'

During this speech she was arranging her ~toilette~ for dinner--
taking off her black morning gown; putting on her dressing-gown;
shaking her long soft auburn hair over her shoulders, and glancing
about the room in search of various articles of her dress,--a
running flow of easy talk came babbling out all the time.

'I have a little girl of my own, dear! I don't know what she would
not give to be staying here at Lord Cumnor's with me; but, instead
of that, she has to spend her holidays at school; and yet you are
looking as miserable as can be at the thought of stopping for just
one night. I really have been as busy as can be with those
tiresome--those good ladies, I mean, from Hollingford--and one can't
think of everything at a time.'

Molly--only child as she was--had stopped her tears at the mention
of that little girl of Mrs. Kirkpatrick's, and now she ventured to
say,--

'Are you married, ma'am; I thought she called you Clare?'

In high good humour Mrs. Kirkpatrick made reply:--'I don't look as if
I was married, do I? Every one is surprised. And yet I have been a
widow for seven months now: and not a grey hair on my head, though
Lady Cuxhaven, who is younger than I, has ever so many.'

'Why do they call you "Clare"?' continued Molly, finding her so
affable and communicative.

'Because I lived with them when I was Miss Clare. It is a pretty
name, isn't it? I married a Mr. Kirkpatrick; he was only a curate,
poor fellow; but he was of a very good family, and if three of his
relations had died without children I should have been a baronet's
wife. But Providence did not see fit to permit it; and we must
always resign ourselves to what is decreed. Two of his cousins
married, and had large families; and poor dear Kirkpatrick died,
leaving me a widow.'

'But you have a little girl?' asked Molly.

'Yes; darling Cynthia! I wish you could see her; she is my only
comfort now. If I have time I will show you her picture when we come
up to bed; but I must go now. It does not do to keep Lady Cumnor
waiting a moment, and she asked me to be down early, to help with
some of the people in the house. Now I shall ring this bell, and
when the housemaid comes, ask her to take you into the nursery, and
to tell Lady Cuxhaven's nurse who you are. And then you'll have tea
with the little ladies, and come in with them to dessert. There! I'm
sorry you've overslept yourself, and are left here; but give me a
kiss, and don't cry--you really are rather a pretty child, though
you've not got Cynthia's colouring! Oh, Nanny, would you be so very
kind as to take this young lady--(what's your name, my dear?
Gibson?),--Miss Gibson, to Mrs. Dyson, in the nursery, and ask her to
allow her to drink tea with the young ladies there; and to send her
in with them to dessert. I'll explain it all to my lady.'

Nanny's face brightened out of its gloom when she heard the name
Gibson; and, having ascertained from Molly that she was 'the
doctor's' child, she showed more willingness to comply with Mrs
Kirkpatrick's request than was usual with her.

Molly was an obliging girl, and fond of children; so, as long as she
was in the nursery, she got on pretty well, being obedient to the
wishes of the supreme power, and even very useful to Mrs. Dyson, by
playing at bricks, and thus keeping a little one quiet while its
brothers and sisters were being arrayed in gay attire,--lace and
muslin, and velvet, and brilliant broad ribbons.

'Now, miss,' said Mrs. Dyson, when her own especial charge were all
ready, 'what can I do for you? You have not got another frock here,
have you?' No, indeed, she had not; nor if she had had one, would it
have been of a smarter nature than her present thick white dimity.
So she could only wash her face and hands, and submit to the nurse's
brushing and perfuming her hair. She thought she would rather have
stayed in the park all night long, and slept under the beautiful
quiet cedar, than have to undergo the unknown ordeal of 'going down
to dessert,' which was evidently regarded both by children and
nurses as the event of the day. At length there was a summons from a
footman, and Mrs. Dyson, in a rustling silk gown, marshalled her
convoy, and set sail for the dining-room door.

There was a large party of gentlemen and ladies sitting round the
decked table, in the brilliantly lighted room. Each dainty little
child ran up to its mother, or aunt, or particular friend; but Molly
had no one to go to.

'Who is that tall girl in the thick white frock? Not one of the
children of the house, I think?'

The lady addressed put up her glass, gazed at Molly, and dropped it
in an instant. 'A French girl, I should imagine. I know Lady
Cuxhaven was inquiring for one to bring up with her little girls,
that they might get a good accent early. Poor little woman, she
looks wild and strange!' And the speaker, who sate next to Lord
Cumnor, made a little sign to Molly to come to her; Molly crept up
to her as to the first shelter; but when the lady began talking to
her in French, she blushed violently, and said, in a very low
voice,--

'I don't understand French. I'm only Molly Gibson, ma'am.'

'Molly Gibson!' said the lady, out loud; as if that was not much of
an explanation.

Lord Cumnor caught the words and the tone.

'Oh, ho!' said he. 'Are you the little girl who has been sleeping in
my bed?'

He imitated the deep voice of the fabulous bear, who asks this
question of the little child in the story; but Molly had never read
the 'Three Bears,' and fancied that his anger was real; she trembled
a little, and drew nearer to the kind lady who had beckoned her as
to a refuge. Lord Cumnor was very fond of getting hold of what he
fancied was a joke, and working his idea threadbare; so all the time
the ladies were in the room he kept on his running fire at Molly,
alluding to the Sleeping Beauty, the Seven Sleepers, and any other
famous sleeper that came into his head. He had no idea of the misery
his jokes were to the sensitive girl, who already thought herself a
miserable sinner, for having slept on, when she ought to have been
awake. If Molly had been in the habit of putting two and two
together, she might have found an excuse for herself, by remembering
that Mrs. Kirkpatrick had promised faithfully to awaken her in time;
but all the girl thought of was, how little they wanted her in this
grand house; how she must seem like a careless intruder who had no
business there. Once or twice she wondered where her father was, and
whether he was missing her; but the thought of the familiar
happiness of home brought such a choking in her throat, that she
felt she must not give way to it, for fear of bursting out crying;
and she had instinct enough to feel that, as she was left at the
Towers, the less trouble she gave, the more she kept herself out of
observation, the better.

She followed the ladies out of the dining-room, almost hoping that
no one would see her. But that was impossible, and she immediately
became the subject of conversation between the awful Lady Cumnor and
her kind neighbour at dinner.

'Do you know, I thought this young lady was French when I first saw
her? she has got the black hair and eyelashes, and grey eyes, and
colourless complexion which one meets with in some parts of France,
and I knew Lady Cuxhaven was trying to find a well-educated girl who
would be a pleasant companion to her children.'

'No!' said Lady Cumnor, looking very stern, as Molly thought. 'She
is the daughter of our medical man at Hollingford; she came with the
school visitors this morning, and she was overcome by the heat and
fell asleep in Clare's room, and somehow managed to oversleep
herself, and did not waken up till all the carriages were gone. We
will send her home to-morrow morning, but for to-night she must stay
here, and Clare is kind enough to say she may sleep with her.'

There was an implied blame running through this speech, that Molly
felt like needle-points all over her. Lady Cuxhaven came up at this
moment. Her tone was as deep, her manner of speaking as abrupt and
authoritative, as her mother's, but Molly felt the kinder nature
underneath.

'How are you now, my dear? You look better than you did under the
cedar-tree. So you're to stop here to-night? Clare, don't you think
we could find some of those books of engravings that would interest
Miss Gibson.'

Mrs. Kirkpatrick came gliding up to the place where Molly stood; and
began petting her with pretty words and actions, while Lady Cuxhaven
turned over heavy volumes in search of one that might interest the
girl.

'Poor darling! I saw you come into the dining-room, looking so shy;
and I wanted you to come near me, but I could not make a sign to
you, because Lord Cuxhaven was speaking to me at the time, telling
me about his travels. Ah, here is a nice book--~Lodge's Portraits~;
now I'll sit by you and tell you who they all are, and all about
them. Don't trouble yourself any more, dear Lady Cuxhaven; I'll take
charge of her; pray leave her to me!'

Molly grew hotter and hotter as these last words met her car. If
they would only leave her alone, and not labour at being kind to
her; would 'not trouble themselves' about her! These words of Mrs
Kirkpatrick's seemed to quench the gratitude she was feeling to Lady
Cuxhaven for looking for something to amuse her. But, of course, it
was a trouble, and she ought never to have been there.

By-and-by, Mrs. Kirkpatrick was called away to accompany Lady Agnes'
song; and then Molly really had a few minutes' enjoyment. She could
look round the room, unobserved, and, sure, never was any place out
of a king's house so grand and magnificent. Large mirrors, velvet
curtains, pictures in their gilded frames, a multitude of dazzling
lights decorated the vast saloon, and the floor was studded with
groups of ladies and gentlemen, all dressed in gorgeous attire.
Suddenly Molly bethought her of the children whom she had
accompanied into the dining-room, and to whose ranks she had
appeared to belong,--where were they? Gone to bed an hour before, at
some quiet signal from their mother. Molly wondered if she might go,
too--if she could ever find her way back to the haven of Mrs
Kirkpatrick's bedroom. But she was at some distance from the door; a
long way from Mrs. Kirkpatrick, to whom she felt herself to belong
more than to any one else. Far, too, from Lady Cuxhaven, and the
terrible Lady Cumnor, and her jocose and good-natured lord. So Molly
sate on, turning over pictures which she did not see; her heart
growing heavier and heavier in the desolation of all this grandeur.
Presently a footman entered the room, and after a moment's looking
about him, he went up to Mrs. Kirkpatrick, where she sate at the
piano, the centre of the musical portion of the company, ready to
accompany any singer, and smiling pleasantly as she willingly
acceded to all requests. She came now towards Molly, in her corner,
and said to her,--

'Do you know, darling, your papa has come for you, and brought your
pony for you to ride home; so I shall lose my little bedfellow, for
I suppose you must go.'

Go! was there a question of it in Molly's mind, as she stood up
quivering, sparkling, almost crying out loud. She was brought to her
senses, though, by Mrs. Kirkpatrick's next words,

'You must go and wish Lady Cumnor good-night, you know, my dear, and
thank her ladyship for her kindness to you, She is there, near that
statue, talking to Mr. Courtenay.'

Yes! she was there--forty feet away--a hundred miles away! All that
blank space had to be crossed; and then a speech to be made!

'Must I go?' asked Molly, in the most pitiful and pleading voice
possible.

'Yes; make haste about it; there is nothing so formidable in it, is
there?' replied Mrs. Kirkpatrick, in a sharper voice than before,
aware that they were wanting her at the piano, and anxious to get
the business in hand done as soon as possible.

Molly stood still for a minute, then, looking up, she said,
softly,--

'Would you mind coming with me, please?'

'No! not I!' said Mrs. Kirkpatrick, seeing that her compliance was
likely to be the most speedy way of getting through the affair; so
she took Molly's hand, and, on the way, in passing the group at the
piano, she said, smiling, in her pretty genteel manner,--

'Our little friend here is shy and modest, and wants me to accompany
her to Lady Cumnor to wish good-night; her father has come for her,
and she is going away.'

Molly did not know how it was afterwards, but she pulled her hand
out of Mrs. Kirkpatrick's on hearing these words, and going a step or
two in advance came up to Lady Cumnor, grand in purple velvet, and
dropping a curtsey, almost after the fashion of the school-children,
she said,--

'My lady, papa is come, and I am going away; and, my lady, I wish
you good-night, and thank you for your kindness. Your ladyship's
kindness, I mean,' she said, correcting herself as she remembered
Miss Browning's particular instructions as to the etiquette to be
observed to earls and countesses, and their honourable progeny, as
they were given this morning on the road to the Towers.

She got out of the saloon somehow; she believed afterwards, on
thinking about it, that she had never bidden good-by to Lady
Cuxhaven, or Mrs. Kirkpatrick, or 'all the rest of them,' as she
irreverently styled them in her thoughts.

Mr. Gibson was in the housekeeper's room, when Molly ran in, rather
to the stately Mrs. Brown's discomfiture. She threw her arms round
her father's neck. 'Oh, papa, papa, papa! I am so glad you have
come;' and then she burst out crying, stroking his face almost
hysterically as if to make sure he was there.

'Why, what a noodle you are, Molly! Did you think I was going to
give up my little girl to live at the Towers all the rest of her
life? You make as much work about my coming for you, as if you
thought I had. Make haste now, and get on your bonnet. Mrs. Brown,
may I ask you for a shawl, or a plaid, or a wrap of some kind to pin
about her for a petticoat?'

He did not mention that he had come home from a long round not half
an hour before, a round from which he had returned dinnerless and
hungry; but, on finding that Molly had not returned from the Towers,
he had ridden his tired horse round by Miss Brownings', and found
them in self-reproachful, helpless dismay. He would not wait to
listen to their tearful apologies; he galloped home, had a fresh
horse and Molly's pony saddled, and though Berry called after him
with a riding-skirt for the child, when he was not ten yards from
his own stable-door, he had refused to turn back for it, but gone
off, as Dick the stableman said, 'muttering to himself awful.'

Mrs. Brown had her bottle of wine out, and her plate of cake, before
Molly came back from her long expedition to Mrs. Kirkpatrick's room,
'pretty nigh on to a quarter of a mile off,' as the housekeeper
informed the impatient father, as he waited for his child to come
down arrayed in her morning's finery with the gloss of newness worn
off. Mr. Gibson was a favourite in all the Towers' household, as
family doctors generally are; bringing hopes of relief at times of
anxiety and distress; and Mrs. Brown, who was subject to gout,
especially delighted in petting him whenever he would allow her. She
even went out into the stable-yard to pin Molly up in the shawl, as
she sate upon the rough-coated pony, and hazarded the somewhat safe
conjecture,--

'I dare say she'll be happier at home, Mr. Gibson,' as they rode
away.

Once out into the park Molly struck her pony, and urged him on as
hard as he would go, Mr. Gibson called out at last,--

'Molly! we're coming to the rabbit-holes; it's not safe to go at
such a pace. Stop.' And as she drew rein he rode up alongside of
her.

'We're getting into the shadow of the trees, and it's not safe
riding fast here.'

'Oh! papa, I never was so glad in all my life. I felt like a lighted
candle when they're putting the extinguisher on it.'

'Did you? How d'ye know what the candle feels?'

'Oh, I don't know, but I did.' And again, after a pause, she
said,--'Oh, I am so glad to be here! It is so pleasant riding here
in the open free, fresh air, crushing out such a good smell from the
dewy grass. Papa! are you there? I can't see you.'

He rode close up alongside of her: he was not sure but what she
might be afraid of riding in the dark shadows, so he laid his hand
upon hers.

'Oh! I am so glad to feel you,' squeezing his hand hard. 'Papa, I
should like to get a chain like Ponto's,' just as long as your
longest round, and then I could fasten us two to each end of it, and
when I wanted you I could pull, and if you did not want to come, you
could pull back again; but I should know you knew I wanted you, and
we could never lose each other.'

'I'm rather lost in that plan of yours; the details, as you state
them, are a little puzzling; but if I make them out rightly, I am to
go about the country, like the donkeys on the common, with a clog
fastened to my hind leg.'

'I don't mind your calling me a clog, if only we were fastened
together.'

'But I do mind your calling me a donkey,' he replied.

'I never did. At least I did not mean to. But it is such a comfort
to know that I may be as rude as I like.'

'Is that what you've learnt from the grand company you've been
keeping to-day? I expected to find you so polite and ceremonious,
that I read a few chapters of ~Sir Charles Grandison~, in order to
bring myself up to concert pitch.'

'Oh, I do hope I shall never be a lord or a lady.'

'Well, to comfort you, I'll tell you this. I am sure you'll never be
a lord; and I think the chances are a thousand to one against your
ever being the other, in the sense in which you mean.'

'I should lose myself every time I had to fetch my bonnet, or else
get tired of long passages and great staircases long before I could
go out walking.'

'But you'd have your lady's-maid, you know.'

'Do you know, papa, I think lady's-maids are worse than ladies. I
should not mind being a housekeeper so much.'

'No! the jam-cupboards and dessert would lie very conveniently to
one's hand,' replied her father, meditatively. 'But Mrs. Brown tells
me that the thought of the dinners often keeps her from sleeping;
there's that anxiety to be taken into consideration. Still, in every
condition of life there are heavy cares and responsibilities.'

'Well! I suppose so,' said Molly, gravely. 'I know Betty says I wear
her life out with the green stains I get in my frocks from sitting
in the cherry-tree.'

'And Miss Browning said she had fretted herself into a headache with
thinking how they had left you behind. I am afraid you'll be as bad
as a bill of fare to them to-night. How did it all happen, goosey?'

'Oh, I went by myself to see the gardens; they are so beautiful! and
I lost myself, and sate down to rest under a great tree; and Lady
Cuxhaven and that Mrs. Kirkpatrick came; and Mrs. Kirkpatrick brought
me some lunch, and then put me to sleep on her bed,--and I thought
she would waken me in time, and she did not; and so they'd all gone
away; and when they planned for me to stop till to-morrow, I didn't
like saying how very, very much I wanted to go home,--but I kept
thinking how you would wonder where I was.'

'Then it was rather a dismal day of pleasure, goosey, eh?'

'Not in the morning. I shall never forget the morning in that
garden. But I was never so unhappy in all my life, as I have been
all this long afternoon.'

Mr. Gibson thought it his duty to ride round by the Towers, and pay a
visit of apology and thanks to the family, before they left for
London. He found them all on the wing, and no one was sufficiently
at liberty to listen to his grateful civilities but Mrs. Kirkpatrick,
who, although she was to accompany Lady Cuxhaven, and pay a visit to
her former pupil, made leisure enough to receive Mr. Gibson, on
behalf of the family; and assured him of her faithful remembrance of
his great professional attention to her in former days in the most
winning manner.


CHAPTER III


MOLLY GIBSON'S CHILDHOOD


Sixteen years before this time, all Hollingford had been disturbed
to its foundations by the intelligence that Mr. Hall, the skilful
doctor, who had attended them all their days, was going to take a
partner. It was no use reasoning to them on the subject; so Mr
Browning the vicar, Mr. Sheepshanks (Lord Cumnor's agent), and Mr
Hall himself, the masculine reasoners of the little society, left
off the attempt, feeling that the ~Che sara sara~ would prove more
silencing to the murmurs than many arguments. Mr. Hall had told his
faithful patients that, even with the strongest spectacles, his
sight was not to be depended upon; and they might have found out for
themselves that his hearing was very defective, although, on this
point, he obstinately adhered to his own opinion, and was frequently
heard to regret the carelessness of people's communication nowadays,
'like writing on blotting-paper, all the words running into each
other,' he would say. And more than once Mr. Hall had had attacks of
a suspicious nature,--'rheumatism' he used to call them; but he
prescribed for himself as if they had been gout,--which had
prevented his immediate attention to imperative summonses. But,
blind and deaf, and rheumatic as he might be, he was still Mr. Hall,
the doctor who could heal all their ailments--unless they died
meanwhile--and he had no right to speak of growing old, and taking a
partner.

He went very steadily to work all the same; advertising in medical
journals, reading testimonials, sifting character and
qualifications; and just when the elderly maiden ladies of
Hollingford thought that they had convinced their contemporary that
he was as young as ever, he startled them by bringing his new
partner, Mr. Gibson, to call upon them, and began 'slyly,' as these
ladies said, to introduce him into practice. And 'who was this Mr
Gibson?' they asked, and echo might answer the question, if she
liked, for no one else did. No one ever in all his life knew
anything more of his antecedents than the Hollingford people might
have found out the first day they saw him: that he was tall, grave,
rather handsome than otherwise; thin enough to be called 'a very
genteel figure,' in those days, before muscular Christianity had
come into vogue; speaking with a slight Scotch accent; and, as one
good lady observed, 'so very trite in his conversation,' by which
she meant sarcastic. As to his birth, parentage, and education,--the
favourite conjecture of Hollingford society was, that he was the
illegitimate son of a Scotch duke, by a Frenchwoman; and the grounds
for this conjecture were these:--He spoke with a Scotch accent;
therefore, he must be Scotch. He had a very genteel appearance, an
elegant figure, and was apt--so his ill-wishers said--to give
himself airs. Therefore, his father must have been some person of
quality; and, that granted, nothing was easier than to run this
supposition up all the notes of the scale of the peerage,--baronet,
baron, viscount, earl, marquis, duke. Higher they dared not go,
though one old lady, acquainted with English history, hazarded the
remark, that 'she believed that one or two of the Stuarts--hem--had
not always been,--ahem--quite correct in their--conduct; and she
fancied such--ahem--things ran in families.' But, in popular
opinion, Mr. Gibson's father always remained a duke; nothing more.

Then his mother must have been a Frenchwoman, because his hair was
so black; and he was so sallow; and because he had been in Paris.
All this might be true, or might not; nobody ever knew, or found out
anything more about him than what Mr. Hall told them, namely, that
his professional qualifications were as high as his moral character,
and that both were far above the average, as Mr. Hall had taken pains
to ascertain before introducing him to his patients. The popularity
of this world is as transient as its glory, as Mr. Hall found out
before the first year of his partnership was over. He had plenty of
leisure left to him now to nurse his gout and cherish his eyesight.
The younger doctor had carried the day; nearly every one sent for Mr
Gibson now; even at the great houses--even at the Towers, that
greatest of all, where Mr. Hall had introduced his new partner with
fear and trembling, with untold anxiety as to his behaviour, and the
impression he might make on my lord the Earl, and MY lady the
Countess. Mr. Gibson was received at the end of a twelvemonth with as
much welcome respect for his professional skill as Mr. Hall himself
had ever been. Nay--and this was a little too much for even the kind
old doctor's good temper--Mr. Gibson had even been invited once to
dinner at the Towers, to dine with the great Sir Astley, the head of
the profession! To be sure, Mr. Hall had been asked as well; but he
was laid up just then with his gout, since he had had a partner the
rheumatism had been allowed to develop itself, and he had not been
able to go. Poor Mr. Hall never quite got over this mortification;
after it he allowed himself to become dim of sight and hard of
hearing, and kept pretty closely to the house during the two winters
that remained of his life. He sent for an orphan grand-niece to keep
him company in his old age; he, the woman-contemning old bachelor,
became thankful for the cheerful presence of the pretty, bonny Mary
Preston, who was good and sensible, and nothing more. She formed a
close friendship with the daughters of the vicar, Mr. Browning, and
Mr. Gibson found time to become very intimate with all three.
Hollingford speculated much on which young lady would become Mrs
Gibson, and was rather sorry when the talk about possibilities, and
the gossip about probabilities with regard to the handsome young
surgeon's marriage, ended in the most natural manner in the world,
by his marrying his predecessor's niece. The two Miss Brownings
showed no signs of going into a consumption on the occasion,
although their looks and manners were carefully watched. On the
contrary, they were rather boisterously merry at the wedding, and
poor Mrs. Gibson it was that died of consumption, four or five years
after her marriage--three years after the death of her great-uncle,
and when her only child, Molly, was just three years old.

Mr. Gibson did not speak much about the grief at the loss of his
wife, which it is to be supposed that he felt. Indeed, he avoided
all demonstration of sympathy, and got up hastily and left the room
when Miss Phoebe Browning first saw him after his loss, and burst
into an uncontrollable flood of tears, which threatened to end in
hysterics. Miss Browning afterwards said she never could forgive him
for his hard-heartedness on that occasion; but a fortnight
afterwards she came to very high words with old Mrs. Goodenough, for
gasping out her doubts whether Mr. Gibson was a man of deep feeling;
judging by the narrowness of his crape hat-band, which ought to have
covered his hat, whereas there was at least three inches of beaver
to be seen. And, in spite of it all, Miss Browning and Miss Phoebe
considered themselves as Mr. Gibson's most intimate friends, in right
of their regard for his dead wife, and would fain have taken a
quasi-motherly interest in his little girl, had she not been guarded
by a watchful dragon in the shape of Betty, her nurse, who was
jealous of any interference between her and her charge; and
especially resentful and disagreeable towards all those ladies who,
by suitable age, rank, or propinquity, she thought capable of
'casting sheep's eyes at master.'

Several years before the opening of this story, Mr. Gibson's position
seemed settled for life, both socially and professionally. He was a
widower, and likely to remain so; his domestic affections were
centred on little Molly, but even to her, in their most private
moments, he did not give way to much expression of his feelings; his
most caressing appellation for her was 'Goosey,' and he took a
pleasure in bewildering her infant mind with his badinage. He had
rather a contempt for demonstrative people, arising from his medical
insight into the consequences to health of uncontrolled feeling. He
deceived himself into believing that still his reason was lord of
all, because he had never fallen into the habit of expression on any
other than purely intellectual subjects. Molly, however, had her own
intuitions to guide her. Though her papa laughed at her, quizzed
her, joked at her, in a way which the Miss Brownings called 'really
cruel' to each other when they were quite alone, Molly took her
little griefs and pleasures, and poured them into her papa's ears,
sooner even than into Betty's, that kind-hearted termagant. The
child grew to understand her father well, and the two had the most
delightful intercourse together--half banter, half seriousness, but
altogether confidential friendship. Mr. Gibson kept three servants;
Betty, a cook, and a girl who was supposed to be housemaid, but who
was under both the elder two, and had a pretty life of it in
consequence. Three servants would not have been required if it had
not been Mr. Gibson's habit, as it had been Mr. Hall's before him, to
take two 'pupils,' as they were called in the genteel language of
Hollingford, 'apprentices,' as they were in fact--being bound by
indentures, and paying a handsome premium' to learn their business.
They lived in the house, and occupied an uncomfortable, ambiguous,
or, as Miss Browning called it with some truth, 'amphibious'
position. They had their meals with Mr. Gibson and Molly, and were
felt to be terribly in the way; Mr. Gibson not being a man who could
make conversation, and hating the duty of talking under restraint.
Yet something within him made him wince, as if his duties were not
rightly performed, when, as the cloth was drawn, the two awkward
lads rose up with joyful alacrity, gave him a nod, which was to be
interpreted as a bow, knocked against each other in their endeavours
to get out of the dining-room quickly; and then might be heard
dashing along a passage which led to the surgery, choking with
half-suppressed laughter. Yet the annoyance he felt at this dull
sense of imperfectly fulfilled duties only made his sarcasms on
their inefficiency, or stupidity, or ill manners, more bitter than
before.

Beyond direct professional instruction, he did not know what to do
with the succession of pairs of young men, whose mission seemed to
be to plague their master consciously, and to plague him
unconsciously. Once or twice Mr. Gibson had declined taking a fresh
pupil, in the hopes of shaking himself free from the incubus, but
his reputation as a clever surgeon had spread so rapidly that fees
which he had thought prohibitory, were willingly paid, in order that
the young man might make a start in life, with the prestige of
having been a pupil of Gibson of Hollingford. But as Molly grew to
be a little girl instead of a child, when she was about eight years
old, her father perceived the awkwardness of her having her
breakfasts and dinners so often alone with the pupils, without his
uncertain presence. To do away with this evil, more than for the
actual instruction she could give, he engaged a respectable woman,
the daughter of a shopkeeper in the town, who had left a destitute
family, to come every morning before breakfast, and to stay with
Molly till he came home at night; or, if he was detained, until the
child's bedtime.

'Now, Miss Eyre,' said he, summing up his instructions the day
before she entered upon her office, 'remember this: you are to make
good tea for the young men, and see that they have their meals
comfortably, and--you are five-and-thirty, I think you said?--try
and make them talk,--rationally, I am afraid is beyond your or
anybody's power; but make them talk without stammering or giggling.
Don't teach Molly too much: she must sew, and read, and write, and
do her sums; but I want to keep her a child, and if I find more
learning desirable for her, I'll see about giving it to her myself.
After all, I am not sure that reading or writing is necessary. Many
a good woman gets married with only a cross instead of her name;
it's rather a diluting of mother-wit, to my fancy; but, however we
must yield to the prejudices of society, Miss Eyre, and so you may
teach the child to read.'

Miss Eyre listened in silence, perplexed but determined to be
obedient to the directions of the doctor, whose kindness she and her
family had good cause to know. She made strong tea; she helped the
young men liberally in Mr. Gibson's absence, as well as in his
presence, and she found the way to unloosen their tongues, whenever
their master was away, by talking to them on trivial subjects in her
pleasant homely way. She taught Molly to read and write, but tried
honestly to keep her back in every other branch of education. It was
only by fighting and struggling hard, that bit by bit Molly
persuaded her father to let her have French and drawing lessons. He
was always afraid of her becoming too much educated, though he need
not have been alarmed; the masters who visited such small country
towns as Hollingford forty years ago, were no such great proficients
in their arts. Once a week she joined a dancing class in the
assembly-room at the principal inn in the town: the 'George;' and,
being daunted by her father in every intellectual attempt, she read
every book that came in her way, almost with as much delight as if
it had been forbidden. For his station in life, Mr. Gibson had an
unusually good library; the medical portion of it was inaccessible
to Molly, being kept in the surgery, but every other book she had
either read, or tried to read. Her summer place of study was that
seat in the cherry-tree, where she got the green stains on her
frock, that have already been mentioned as likely to wear Betty's
life out. In spite of this 'hidden worm i' th' bud,' Betty was to
all appearance strong, alert, and flourishing. She was the one crook
in Miss Eyre's lot, who was otherwise so happy in having met with a
suitable well-paid employment just when she needed it most. But
Betty, though agreeing in theory with her master when he told her of
the necessity of having a governess for his little daughter, was
vehemently opposed to any division of her authority and influence
over the child who had been her charge, her plague, and her delight
ever since Mrs. Gibson's death. She took up her position as censor of
all Miss Eyre's sayings and doings from the very first, and did not
for a moment condescend to conceal her disapprobation. In her heart,
she could not help respecting the patience and painstaking of the
good lady,--for a 'lady' Miss Eyre was in the best sense of the
word, though in Hollingford she only took rank as a shopkeeper's
daughter. Yet Berry buzzed about her with the teasing pertinacity of
a gnat, always ready to find fault, if not to bite. Miss Eyre's only
defence came from the quarter whence it might least have been
expected--from her pupil; on whose fancied behalf, as an oppressed
little personage, Betty always based her attacks. But very early in
the day Molly perceived their injustice, and soon afterwards she
began to respect Miss Eyre for her silent endurance of what
evidently gave her far more pain than Betty imagined. Mr. Gibson had
been a friend in need to her family, so Miss Eyre restrained her
complaints, sooner than annoy him. And she had her reward. Betty
would offer Molly all sorts of small temptations to neglect Miss
Eyre's wishes; Molly steadily resisted, and plodded away at her task
of sewing or her difficult sum. Betty made cumbrous jokes at Miss
Eyre's expense. Molly looked up with the utmost gravity, as if
requesting the explanation of an unintelligible speech; and there is
nothing so quenching to a wag as to be asked to translate his jest
into plain matter-of-fact English, and to show wherein the point
lies. Occasionally Berry lost her temper entirely, and spoke
impertinently to Miss Eyre; but when this had been done in Molly's
presence, the girl flew out into such a violent passion of words in
defence of her silent trembling governess, that even Berry herself
was daunted, though she chose to take the child's anger as a good
joke, and tried to persuade Miss Eyre herself to join in her
amusement.

'Bless the child! one would think I was a hungry pussy-cat, and she
a hen-sparrow, with her wings all fluttering, and her little eyes
aflame, and her beak ready to peck me just because I happened to
look near her nest. Nay, child! if thou lik'st to be stifled in a
nasty close room, learning things as is of no earthly good when they
is learnt, instead o' riding on Job Donkin's hay-cart, it's thy
look-out, not mine. She's a little vixen, isn't she?' smiling at
Miss Eyre, as she finished her speech. But the poor governess saw no
humour in the affair; the comparison of Molly to a hen-sparrow was
lost upon her. She was sensitive and conscientious, and knew, from
home experience, the evils of an ungovernable temper. So she began
to reprove Molly for giving way to her passion, and the child
thought it hard to be blamed for what she considered her just anger
against Betty. But, after all, these were the small grievances of a
very happy childhood.


CHAPTER IV


MR GIBSON'S NEIGHBOURS


Molly grew up among these quiet people in calm monotony of life,
without any greater event than that which has been recorded,--the
being left behind at the Towers, until she was nearly seventeen. She
had become a visitor at the school, but she had never gone again to
the annual festival at the great house; it was easy to find some
excuse for keeping away, and the recollection of that day was not a
pleasant one on the whole, though she often thought how much she
should like to see the gardens again.

Lady Agnes was married; there was only Lady Harriet remaining at
home; Lord Hollingford, the eldest son, had lost his wife, and was a
good deal more at the Towers since he had become a widower. He was a
tall ungainly man, considered to be as proud as his mother, the
countess; but, in fact, he was only shy, and slow at making
commonplace speeches. He did not know what to say to people whose
daily habits and interests were not the same as his; he would have
been very thankful for a handbook of small-talk, and would have
learnt off his sentences with good-humoured diligence. He often
envied the fluency of his garrulous father, who delighted in talking
to everybody, and was perfectly unconscious of the incoherence of
his conversation. But, owing to his constitutional reserve and
shyness, Lord Hollingford was not a popular man, although his
kindness of heart was very great, his simplicity of character
extreme, and his scientific acquirements considerable enough to
entitle him to much reputation in the European republic of learned
men. In this respect Hollingford was proud of him. The inhabitants
knew that the great, grave, clumsy heir to its fealty was highly
esteemed for his wisdom; and that he had made one or two
discoveries, though in what direction they were not quite sure. But
it was safe to point him out to strangers visiting the little town,
as 'That's Lord Hollingford--the famous Lord Hollingford, you know;
you must have heard of him, he is so scientific.' If the strangers
knew his name, they also knew his claims to fame; if they did not,
ten to one but they would make as if they did, and so conceal not
only their own ignorance, but that of their companions, is to the
exact nature of the sources of his reputation.

He was left a widower, with two or three boys. They were at a public
school; so that their companionship could make the house in which he
had passed his married life but little of a home to him, and he
consequently spent much of his time at the Towers; where his mother
was proud of him, and his father very fond, but ever so little
afraid of him. His friends were always welcomed by Lord and Lady
Cumnor; the former, indeed, was in the habit of welcoming everybody
everywhere; but it was a proof of Lady Cumnor's real affection for
her distinguished son, that she allowed him to ask what she called
'all sorts of people' to the Towers. 'All sorts of people' meant
really those who were distinguished for science and learning,
without regard to rank; and, it must be confessed, without much
regard to polished manners likewise.

Mr. Hall, Mr. Gibson's predecessor, had always been received with
friendly condescension by my lady, who had found him established as
the family medical man, when first she came to the Towers on her
marriage; but she never thought of interfering with his custom of
taking his meals, if he needed refreshment, in the housekeeper's
room, not ~with~ the housekeeper, ~bien entendu~. The comfortable,
clever, stout, and red-faced doctor would very much have preferred
this, even if he had had the choice given him (which he never had)
of taking his 'snack,' as he called it, with my lord and my lady, in
the grand dining-room. Of course, if some great surgical gun (like
Sir Astley) was brought down from London to bear on the family's
health, it was due to him, as well as to the local medical
attendant, to ask Mr. Hall to dinner, in a formal and ceremonious
manner, on which occasions Mr. Hall buried his chin in voluminous
folds of white muslin, put on his black knee-breeches, with bunches
of ribbon at the sides, his silk stockings and buckled shoes, and
otherwise made himself excessively uncomfortable in his attire, and
went forth in state in a post-chaise from the 'George,' consoling
himself in the private corner of his heart for the discomfort he was
enduring with the idea of how well it would sound the next day in
the ears of the squires whom he was in the habit of attending.
'Yesterday at dinner the earl said,' or 'the countess remarked,' or
'I was surprised to hear when I was dining at the Towers yesterday.'
But somehow things had changed since Mr. Gibson had become 'the
doctor' ~par excellence~ at Hollingford. The Miss Brownings thought
that it was because he had such an elegant figure, and 'such a
distinguished manner;' Mrs. Goodenough, 'because of his aristocratic
connections'--'the son of a Scotch duke, my dear, never mind on
which side of the blanket'--but the fact was certain; although he
might frequently ask Mrs. Brown to give him something to eat in the
housekeeper's room--he had no time for all the fuss and ceremony of
luncheon with my lady--he was always welcome to the grandest circle
of visitors in the house. He might lunch with a duke any day that he
chose; given that a duke was forthcoming at the Towers. His accent
was Scotch, not provincial. He had not an ounce of superfluous flesh
on his bones; and leanness goes a great way to gentility. His
complexion was sallow, and his hair black; in those days, the decade
after the conclusion of the great continental war, to be sallow and
black-a-vised was of itself a distinction;' he was not jovial (as my
lord remarked with a sigh, but it was my lady who endorsed the
invitations), sparing of his words, intelligent, and slightly
sarcastic. Therefore he was perfectly presentable.

His Scotch blood (for that he was of Scotch descent there could be
no manner of doubt) gave him just the kind of thistly dignity which
made every one feel that they must treat him with respect; so on
that head he was assured. The grandeur of being an invited guest to
dinner at the Towers from time to time, gave him but little pleasure
for many years, but it was a form to be gone through in the way of
his profession, without any idea of social gratification.

But when Lord Hollingford returned to make the Towers his home,
affairs were altered. Mr. Gibson really heard and learnt things that
interested him seriously, and that gave a fresh flavour to his
reading. From time to time he met the leaders of the scientific
world; odd-looking, simple-hearted men, very much in earnest about
their own particular subjects, and not having much to say on any
other. Mr. Gibson found himself capable of appreciating such persons,
and also perceived that they valued his appreciation, as it was
honestly and intelligently given. Indeed, by-and-by, he began to
send contributions of his own to the more scientific of the medical
journals, and thus partly in receiving, partly in giving out
information and accurate thought, a new zest was added to his life.
There was not much intercourse between Lord Hollingford and himself;
the one was too silent and shy, the other too busy, to seek each
other's society with the perseverance required to do away with the
social distinction of rank that prevented their frequent meetings.
But each was thoroughly pleased to come into contact with the other.
Each could rely on the other's respect and sympathy with a security
unknown to many who call themselves friends; and this was a source
of happiness to both; to Mr. Gibson the most so, of course; for his
range of intelligent and cultivated society was the smaller. Indeed,
there was no one equal to himself among the men with whom he
associated, and this he had felt as a depressing influence, although
he had never recognized the cause of his depression. There was Mr
Ashton, the vicar, who had succeeded Mr. Browning, a thoroughly good
and kind-hearted man, but one without an original thought in him;
whose habitual courtesy and indolent mind led him to agree to every
opinion, not palpably heterodox, and to utter platitudes in the most
gentlemanly manner. Mr. Gibson had once or twice amused himself, by
leading the vicar on in his agreeable admissions of arguments 'as
perfectly convincing,' and of statements as 'curious but undoubted,'
till he had planted the poor clergyman in a bog of heretical
bewilderment. But then Mr. Ashton's pain and suffering at suddenly
finding out into what a theological predicament he had been brought,
his real self-reproach at his previous admissions, were so great
that Mr. Gibson lost all sense of fun, and hastened back to the
Thirty-nine Articles with all the good-will in life, as the only
means of soothing the vicar's conscience. On any other subject,
except that of orthodoxy, Mr. Gibson could lead him any lengths; but
then his ignorance on most of them prevented bland acquiescence from
arriving at any results which could startle him. He had some private
fortune, and was not married, and lived the life of an indolent and
refined bachelor; but though he himself was no very active visitor
among his poorer parishioners, he was always willing to relieve
their wants in the most liberal, and, considering his habits,
occasionally in the most self-denying manner, whenever Mr. Gibson, or
any one else, made them clearly known to him. 'Use my purse as
freely as if it was your own, Gibson,' he was wont to say. 'I'm such
a bad one at going about and making talk to poor folk--I dare say I
don't do enough in that way--but I am most willing to give you
anything for any one you may consider in want.'

'Thank you; I come upon you pretty often, I believe, and make very
little scruple about it; but if you'll allow me to suggest, it is,
that you should not try to make talk when you go into the cottages;
but just talk.'

'I don't see the difference,' said the vicar, a little querulously;
'but I dare say there is a difference, and I have no doubt what you
say is quite true. I should not make talk, but talk; and as both are
equally difficult to me, you must let me purchase the privilege of
silence by this ten-pound note.'

'Thank you. It is not so satisfactory to me; and, I should think,
not to yourself. But probably the Joneses and Greens will prefer
it.'

Mr. Ashton would look with plaintive inquiry into Mr. Gibson's face
after some such speech, as if asking if a sarcasm was intended. On
the whole they went on in the most amicable way; only beyond the
gregarious feeling common to most men, they had very little actual
pleasure in each other's society. Perhaps the man of all others to
whom Mr. Gibson took the most kindly--at least, until Lord
Hollingford came into the neighbourhood--was a certain Squire
Hamley. He and his ancestors had been called squire as long back as
local tradition extended. But there was many a greater landowner in
the county, for Squire Hamley's estate was not more than eight
hundred acres or so. But his family had been in possession of it
long before the Earls of Cumnor had been heard of; before the
Hely-Harrisons had bought Coldstone Park; no one in Hollingford knew
the time when the Hamleys had not lived at Hamley. 'Ever since the
Heptarchy,' said the vicar. 'Nay,' said Miss Browning, 'I have heard
that there were Hamleys of Hamley before the Romans.' The vicar was
preparing a polite assent, when Mrs. Goodenough came in with a still
more startling assertion. 'I have always heerd,' said she, with all
the slow authority of an oldest inhabitant, 'that there was Hamleys
of Hamley afore the time of the pagans.' Mr. Ashton could only bow,
and say, 'Possibly, very possibly, madam.' But he said it in so
courteous a manner that Mrs. Goodenough looked round in a gratified
manner, as much as to say, 'The Church confirms my words; who now
will dare dispute them?' At any rate, the Hamleys were a very old
family, if not aborigines. They had not increased their estate for
centuries; they had held their own, if even with an effort, and had
not sold a rood of it for the last hundred years or so. But they
were not an adventurous race. They never traded, or speculated, or
tried agricultural improvements of any kind. They had no capital in
any bank; nor what perhaps would have been more in character, hoards
of gold in any stocking. Their mode of life was simple, and more
like that of yeomen than squires. Indeed Squire Hamley, by
continuing the primitive manners and customs of his forefathers, the
squires of the eighteenth century, did live more as a yeoman, when
such a class existed, than as a squire of this generation. There was
a dignity in this quiet conservatism that gained him an immense
amount of respect both from high and low; and he might have visited
at every house in the county had he so chosen. But he was very
indifferent to the charms of society; and perhaps this was owing to
the fact that the squire, Roger Hamley, who at present lived and
reigned at Hamley, had not received so good an education as he ought
to have done. His father, Squire Stephen, had been plucked at
Oxford, and, with stubborn pride, he had refused to go up again.
Nay, more! he had sworn a great oath, as men did in those days, that
none of his children to come should ever know either university by
becoming a member of it. He had only one child, the present squire,
and he was brought up according to his father's word; he was sent to
a petty provincial school, where he saw much that he hated, and then
turned loose upon the estate as its heir. Such a bringing up did not
do him all the harm that might have been anticipated. He was
imperfectly educated, and ignorant on many points; but he was aware
of his deficiency, and regretted it in theory. He was awkward and
ungainly in society, and so kept out of it as much as possible; and
he was obstinate, violent-tempered, and dictatorial in his own
immediate circle. On the other side, he was generous, and true as
steel; the very soul of honour in fact. He had so much natural
shrewdness, that his conversation was always worth listening to,
although he was apt to start by assuming entirely false premisses,
which he considered as incontrovertible as if they had been
mathematically proved; but, given the correctness of his premisses,
nobody could bring more natural wit and sense to bear upon the
arguments based upon them.

He had married a delicate fine London lady; it was one of those
perplexing marriages of which one cannot understand the reasons. Yet
they were very happy, though possibly Mrs. Hamley would not have sunk
into the condition of a chronic invalid, if her husband had cared a
little more for her various tastes, or allowed her the companionship
of those who did. After his marriage he was wont to say he had got
all that was worth having out of that crowd of houses they called
London. It was a compliment to his wife which he repeated until the
year of her death; it charmed her at first, it pleased her up to the
last time of her hearing it; but, for all that, she used sometimes
to wish that he would recognize the fact that there might still be
something worth hearing and seeing in the great city. But he never
went there again, and though he did not prohibit her going, yet he
showed so little sympathy with her when she came back full of what
she had done on her visit that she ceased caring to go. Not but what
he was kind and willing in giving his consent, and in furnishing her
amply with money. 'There, there, my little woman, take that! Dress
yourself up as fine as any on 'em, and buy what you like, for the
credit of Hamley of Hamley; and go to the park and the play, and
show off with the best on 'em. I shall be glad to see thee back
again, I know; but have thy fling while thou art about it.' Then
when she came back it was, 'Well, well, it has pleased thee, I
suppose, so that's all right. But the very talking about it tires
me, I know, and I can't think how you have stood it all. Come out
and see how pretty the flowers are looking in the south garden. I've
made them sow all the seeds you like; and I went over to Hollingford
nursery to buy the cuttings of the plants you admired last year. A
breath of fresh air will clear my brain after listening to all this
talk about the whirl of London, which is like to have turned me
giddy.'

Mrs. Hamley was a great reader, and had considerable literary taste.
She was gentle and sentimental; tender and good. She gave up her
visits to London; she gave up her sociable pleasure in the company
of her fellows in education and position. Her husband, owing to the
deficiencies of his early years, disliked associating with those to
whom he ought to have been an equal; he was too proud to mingle with
his inferiors. He loved his wife all the more dearly for her
sacrifices for him; but, deprived of all her strong interests, she
sank into ill-health; nothing definite; only she never was well.
Perhaps if she had had a daughter it would have been better for her;
but her two children were boys, and their father, anxious to give
them the advantages of which he himself had suffered the
deprivation, sent the lads very early to a preparatory school. They
were to go on to Rugby and Cambridge; the idea of Oxford was
hereditarily distasteful in the Hamley family. Osborne, the
eldest--so called after his mother's maiden name--was full of
tastes, and had some talent. His appearance had all the grace and
refinement of his mother's. He was sweet-tempered and affectionate,
almost as demonstrative as a girl. He did well at school, carrying
away many prizes; and was, in a word, the pride and delight of both
father and mother; the confidential friend of the latter, in default
of any other. Roger was two years younger than Osborne; clumsy and
heavily built, like his father; his face was square, and the
expression grave, and rather immobile. He was good, but dull, his
schoolmasters said. He won no prizes, but brought home a favourable
report of his conduct. When he caressed his mother, she used
laughingly to allude to the fable of the lap-dog and the donkey; so
thereafter he left off all personal demonstration of affection. It
was a great question as to whether he was to follow his brother to
college after he left Rugby. Mrs. Hamley thought it would be rather a
throwing away of money, as he was so little likely to distinguish
himself in intellectual pursuits; anything practical--such as a
civil engineer--would be more the line of life for him. She thought
that it would be too mortifying for him to go to the same college
and university as his brother, who was sure to distinguish
himself--and, to be repeatedly plucked, to come away wooden-spoon at
last. But his father persevered doggedly, as was his wont, in his
intention of giving both his sons the same education; they should
both have the advantages of which he had been deprived. If Roger did
not do well at Cambridge it would be his own fault. If his father
did not send him thither, some day or other he might be regretting
the omission, as Squire Roger had done himself for many a year. So
Roger followed his brother Osborne to Trinity,' and Mrs. Hamley was
again left alone, after the year of indecision as to Roger's
destination, which had been brought on by her urgency. She had not
been able for many years to walk beyond her garden; the greater part
of her life was spent on a sofa, wheeled to the window in summer, to
the fireside in winter. The room which she inhabited was large and
pleasant; four tall windows looked out upon a lawn dotted over with
flower-beds, and melting away into a small wood, in the centre of
which there was a pond, filled with water-lilies. About this unseen
pond in the deep shade Mrs. Hamley had written many a pretty
four-versed poem since she lay on her sofa, alternately reading and
composing poetry. She had a small table by her side on which there
were the newest works of poetry and fiction; a pencil and
blotting-book, with loose sheets of blank paper; a vase of flowers
always of her husband's gathering; winter and summer, she had a
sweet fresh nosegay every day. Her maid brought her a draught of
medicine every three hours, with a glass of clear water and a
biscuit; her husband came to her as often as his love for the open
air and his labours out-of-doors permitted; but the event of her
day, when her boys were absent, was Mr. Gibson's frequent
professional visits.

He knew there was real secret harm going on all this time that
people spoke of her as a merely fanciful invalid; and that one or
two accused him of humouring her fancies. But he only smiled at such
accusations. He felt that his visits were a real pleasure and
lightening of her growing and indescribable discomfort; he knew that
Squire Hamley would have been only too glad if he had come every
day; and he was conscious that by careful watching of her symptoms
he might mitigate her bodily pain. Besides all these reasons, he
took great pleasure in the squire's society. Mr. Gibson enjoyed the
other's unreasonableness; his quaintness; his strong conservatism in
religion, politics, and morals. Mrs. Hamley tried sometimes to
apologize for, or to soften away, opinions which she fancied were
offensive to the doctor, or contradictions which she thought too
abrupt; but at such times her husband would lay his great hand
almost caressingly on Mr. Gibson's shoulder, and soothe his wife's
anxiety, by saying, 'Let us alone, little woman. We understand each
other, don't we, doctor? Why, bless your life, he gives me better
than he gets many a time; only, you see, he sugars it over, and says
a sharp thing, and pretends it's all civility and humility; but I
can tell when he's giving me a pill.'

One of Mrs. Hamley's often-expressed wishes had been, that Molly
might come and pay her a visit. Mr. Gibson always refused this
request of hers, though he could hardly have given his reasons for
these refusals. He did not want to lose the companionship of his
child, in fact; but he put it to himself in quite a different way.
He thought her lessons and her regular course of employment would be
interrupted. The life in Mrs. Hamley's heated and scented room would
not be good for the girl; Osborne and Roger Hamley would be at home,
and he did not wish Molly to be thrown too exclusively upon them for
young society; or they would not be at home, and it would be rather
dull and depressing for his girl to be all the day long with a
nervous invalid.

But at length the day came when Mr. Gibson rode over, and volunteered
a visit from Molly; an offer which Mrs. Hamley received with the
'open arms of her heart,' as she expressed it; and of which the
duration was unspecified. And the cause for this change in Mr
Gibson's wishes was as follows:--It has been mentioned that he took
pupils, rather against his inclination, it is true; but there they
were, a Mr. Wynne and Mr. Coxe, 'the young gentlemen,' as they were
called in the household; 'Mr. Gibson's young gentlemen,' as they were
termed in the town. Mr. Wynne was the elder, the more experienced
one, who could occasionally take his master's place, and who gained
experience by visiting the poor, and the 'chronic cases.' Mr. Gibson
used to talk over his practice with Mr. Wynne, and try and elicit his
opinions in the vain hope that, some day or another, Mr. Wynne might
start an original thought. The young man was cautious and slow; he
would never do any harm by his rashness, but at the same time he
would always be a little behind his day. Still Mr. Gibson remembered
that he had had far worse 'young gentlemen' to deal with; and was
content with, if not thankful for, such an elder pupil as Mr. Wynne.
Mr. Coxe was a boy of nineteen or so, with brilliant red hair, and a
tolerably red face, of both of which he was very conscious and much
ashamed. He was the son of an Indian officer, an old acquaintance of
Mr. Gibson's. Major Coxe was at some unpronounceable station in the
Punjaub, at the present time; but the year before he had been in
England, and had repeatedly expressed his great satisfaction at
having placed his only child as a pupil to his old friend, and had
in fact almost charged Mr. Gibson with the guardianship as well as
the instruction of his boy, giving him many injunctions which he
thought were special in this case; but which Mr. Gibson with a touch
of annoyance assured the major were always attended to in every
case, with every pupil. But when the poor major ventured to beg that
his boy might be considered as one of the family, and that he might
spend his evenings in the drawing-room instead of the surgery, Mr
Gibson turned upon him with a direct refusal.

'He must live like the others. I can't have the pestle and mortar
carried into the drawing-room, and the place smelling of aloes.'

'Must my boy make pills himself, then?' asked the major, ruefully.

'To be sure. The youngest apprentice always does. It's not hard
work. He'll have the comfort of thinking he won't have to swallow
them himself. And he'll have the run of the pomfret cakes, and the
conserve of hips, and on Sundays he shall have a taste of tamarinds
to reward him for his weekly labour at pill-making.'

Major Coxe was not quite sure whether Mr. Gibson was not laughing at
him in his sleeve; but things were so far arranged, and the real
advantages were so great that he thought it was best to take no
notice, but even to submit to the indignity of pill-making. He was
consoled for all these rubs by Mr. Gibson's manner at last when the
supreme moment of final parting arrived. The doctor did not say
much; but there was something of real sympathy in his manner that
spoke straight to the father's heart, and an implied 'you have
trusted me with your boy, and I have accepted the trust in full,' in
each of the last few words.

Mr. Gibson knew his business and human nature too well to distinguish
young Coxe by any overt marks of favouritism; but he could not help
showing the lad occasionally that he regarded him with especial
interest as the son of a friend. Besides this claim upon his regard,
there was something about the young man himself that pleased Mr
Gibson. He was rash and impulsive, apt to speak, hitting the nail on
the head sometimes with unconscious cleverness, at other times
making gross and startling blunders. Mr. Gibson used to tell him that
his motto would always be 'kill or cure,' and to this Mr. Coxe once
made answer that he thought it was the best motto a doctor could
have; for if he could not cure the patient, it was surely best to
get him out of his misery quietly, and at once. Mr. Wynne looked up
in surprise, and observed that he should be afraid that such putting
out of misery might be looked upon as homicide by some people. Mr
Gibson said in a dry tone, that for his part he should not mind the
imputation of homicide, but that it would not do to make away with
profitable patients in so speedy a manner; and that he thought that
as long as they were willing and able to pay two-and-sixpence for
the doctor's visit, it was his duty to keep them alive; of course,
when they became paupers the case was different. Mr. Wynne pondered
over this speech; Mr. Coxe only laughed. At last Mr. Wynne said,--

'But you go every morning, sir, before breakfast to see old Nancy
Grant, and you've ordered her this medicine, sir, which is about the
most costly in Corbyn's bill?'

'Have you not found out how difficult it is for men to live up to
their precepts? You've a great deal to learn yet, Mr. Wynne!' said Mr
Gibson, leaving the surgery as he spoke.

'I never can make the governor out,' said Mr. Wynne, in a tone of
utter despair. 'What are you laughing at, Coxey?'

'Oh! I'm thinking how blest you are in having parents who have
instilled moral principles into your youthful bosom. You'd go and be
poisoning all the paupers off, if you hadn't been told that murder
was a crime by your mother; you'd be thinking you were doing as you
were bid, and quote old Gibson's words when you came to be tried.
"Please, my lord judge, they were not able to pay for my visits, and
so I followed the rules of the profession as taught me by Mr. Gibson,
the great surgeon at Hollingford, and poisoned the paupers." '

'I can't bear that scoffing way of his.'

'And I like it. If it wasn't for the governor's fun, and the
tamarinds, and something else that I know of, I would run off to
India. I hate stifling rooms, and sick people, and the smell of
drugs, and the stink of pills on my hands;--faugh!'


CHAPTER V


CALF-LOVE


One day, for some reason or other, Mr. Gibson came home unexpectedly.
He was crossing the hall, having come in by the garden-door--the
garden communicated with the stable-yard, where he had left his
horse--when the kitchen door opened, and the girl who was underling
in the establishment, came quickly into the hall with a note in her
hand, and made as if she was taking it upstairs; but on seeing her
master she gave a little start, and turned back as if to hide
herself in the kitchen. If she had not made this movement, so
conscious of guilt, Mr. Gibson, who was anything but suspicious,
would never have taken any notice of her. As it was, he stepped
quickly forwards, opened the kitchen door, and called out, 'Bethia'
so sharply that she could not delay coming forwards.

'Give me that note,' he said. She hesitated a little.

'It's for Miss Molly,' she stammered out.

'Give it to me!' he repeated more quietly than before. She looked as
if she would cry; but still she kept the note tight held behind her
back.

'He said as I was to give it into her own hands; and I promised as I
would, faithful.'

'Cook, go and find Miss Molly. Tell her to come here at once.'

He fixed Bethia with his eyes. It was of no use trying to escape:
she might have thrown it into the fire, but she had not presence of
mind enough. She stood immovable, only her eyes looked any way
rather than encounter her master's steady gaze. 'Molly, my dear!'

'Papa! I did not know you were at home,' said innocent, wondering
Molly.

'Bethia, keep your word. Here is Miss Molly; give her the note.'

'Indeed, Miss, I couldn't help it!'

Molly took the note, but before she could open it, her father
said,--'That's all, my dear; you need not read it. Give it to me.
Tell those who sent you, Bethia, that all letters for Miss Molly
must pass through my hands. Now be off with you, goosey, and go back
to where you came from.'

'Papa, I shall make you tell me who my correspondent is.'

'We'll see about that, by-and-by.'

She went a little reluctantly, with ungratified curiosity, upstairs
to Miss Eyre, who was still her daily companion, if not her
governess. He turned into the empty dining-room, shut the door,
broke the seal of the note, and began to read it. It was a flaming
love-letter from Mr. Coxe; who professed himself unable to go on
seeing her day after day without speaking to her of the passion she
had inspired--an 'eternal passion,' he called it; on reading which
Mr. Gibson laughed a little. Would she not look kindly at him? would
she not think of him whose only thought was of her? and so on, with
a very proper admixture of violent compliments to her beauty. She
was fair, not pale; her eyes were loadstars, her dimples marks of
Cupid's finger, &c.

Mr. Gibson finished reading it; and began to think about it in his
own mind. 'Who would have thought the lad had been so poetical; but,
to be sure, there's a "Shakespeare" in the surgery library: I'll
take it away and put "Johnson's Dictionary" instead. One comfort is
the conviction of her perfect innocence--ignorance, I should rather
say--for it is easy to see it's the first "confession of his love,"
as he calls it. But it's an awful worry--to begin with lovers so
early. Why, she's only just seventeen,--not seventeen, indeed, till
July; not for six weeks yet. Sixteen and three-quarters! Why, she's
quite a baby. To be sure--poor Jeanie was not so old, and how I did
love her! (Mrs. Gibson's name was Mary, so he must have been
referring to someone else.) Then his thoughts wandered back to other
days, though he still held the open note in his hand. By-and-by his
eyes fell upon it again, and his mind came back to bear upon the
present time. 'I'll not be hard upon him. I'll give him a hint; he
is quite sharp enough to take it. Poor laddie! if I send him away,
which would be the wisest course, I do believe, he's got no home to
go to.'

After a little more consideration in the same strain, Mr. Gibson went
and sat down at the writing-table and wrote the following formula:--

~Master Coxe~

('That "master" will touch him to the quick,' said Mr. Gibson to
himself as he wrote the word.)

* Verecundiae *
Fidelitatis Domesticae *
Reticentiae gr.
iij.
M. Capiat hanc dosim ter die in aqua pura.

R. GIBSON, ~Ch.~

Mr. Gibson smiled a little sadly as he re-read his words. 'Poor
Jeanie,' he said aloud. And then he chose out an envelope, enclosed
the fervid love-letter, and the above prescription; sealed it with
his own sharply-cut seal-ring, R. G., in Old-English letters, and
then paused over the address.

'He'll not like ~Master~ Coxe outside; no need to put him to
unnecessary shame.' So the direction on the envelope was--

~Edward Coxe, Esq.~

Then Mr. Gibson applied himself to the professional business which
had brought him home so opportunely and unexpectedly, and afterwards
he went back through the garden to the stables; and just as he had
mounted his horse, he said to the stable-man,--'Oh! by the way,
here's a letter for Mr. Coxe. Don't send it through the women; take
it round yourself to the surgery-door, and do it at once.'

The slight smile upon his face, as he rode out of the gates, died
away as soon as he found himself in the solitude of the lanes. He
slackened his speed, and began to think. It was very awkward, he
considered, to have a motherless girl growing up into womanhood in
the same house with two young men, even if she only met them at
meal-times; and all the intercourse they had with each other was
merely the utterance of such words as, 'May I help you to potatoes?'
or, as Mr. Wynne would persevere in saying, 'May I assist you to
potatoes?'--a form of speech which grated daily more and more upon
Mr. Gibson's cars. Yet Mr. Coxe, the offender in this affair which had
just occurred, had to remain for three years more as a pupil in Mr
Gibson's family. He should be the very last of the race. Still there
were three years to be got over; and if this stupid passionate
calf-love of his lasted, what was to be done? Sooner or later Molly
would become aware of it. The contingencies of the affair were so
excessively disagreeable to contemplate, that Mr. Gibson determined
to dismiss the subject from his mind by a good strong effort. He put
his horse to a gallop, and found that the violent shaking over the
lanes--paved as they were with round stones, which had been
dislocated by the wear and tear of a hundred years--was the very
best thing for the spirits, if not for the bones. He made a long
round that afternoon, and came back to his home imagining that the
worst was over, and that Mr. Coxe would have taken the hint conveyed
in the prescription. All that would be needed was to find a safe
place for the unfortunate Bethia, who had displayed such a daring
aptitude for intrigue. But Mr. Gibson reckoned without his host. It
was the habit of the young men to come in to tea with the family in
the dining-room, to swallow two cups, munch their bread or toast,
and then disappear. This night Mr. Gibson watched their countenances
furtively from under his long eye-lashes, while he tried against his
wont to keep up a ~degage~ manner, and a brisk conversation on
general subjects. He saw that Mr. Wynne was on the point of breaking
out into laughter, and that red-haired, red-faced Mr. Coxe was redder
and fiercer than ever, while his whole aspect and ways betrayed
indignation and anger.

'He will have it, will he?' thought Mr. Gibson to himself; and he
girded up his loins for the battle. He did not follow Molly and Miss
Eyre into the drawing-room as he usually did. He remained where he
was, pretending to read the newspaper, while Bethia, her face
swelled up with crying, and with an aggrieved and offended aspect,
removed the tea-things. Not five minutes after the room was cleared,
came the expected tap at the door. 'May I speak to you, sir?' said
the invisible Mr. Coxe, from outside.

'To be sure. Come in, Mr. Coxe. I was rather wanting to talk to you
about that bill of Corbyn's. Pray sit down.'

'It is about nothing of that kind, sir, that I wanted--that I
wished--No, thank you--I would rather not sit down.' He,
accordingly, stood in offended dignity. 'It is about that letter,
sir--that letter with the insulting prescription, sir.'

'Insulting prescription! I am surprised at such a word being applied
to any prescription of mine--though, to be sure, patients are
sometimes offended at being told the nature of their illnesses; and,
I dare say, they may take offence at the medicines which their cases
require.'

'I did not ask you to prescribe for me.'

'Oh, ho! Then you were the Master Coxe who sent the note through
Bethia! Let me tell you it has cost her her place, and was a very
silly letter into the bargain.'

'It was not the conduct of a gentleman, sir, to intercept it, and to
open it, and to read words never addressed to you, sir.'

'No!' said Mr. Gibson, with a slight twinkle in his eye and a curl on
his lips, not unnoticed by the indignant Mr. Coxe. 'I believe I was
once considered tolerably good-looking, and I dare say I was as
great a coxcomb as any one at twenty; but I don't think that even
then I should quite have believed that all those pretty compliments
were addressed to myself.'

'It was not the conductor a gentleman, sir,' repeated Mr. Coxe,
stammering over his words--he was going on to say something more,
when Mr. Gibson broke in.

'And let me tell you, young man,' replied Mr. Gibson, with a sudden
sternness in his voice, 'that what you have done is only excusable
in consideration of your youth and extreme ignorance of what are
considered the laws of domestic honour. I receive you into my house
as a member of my family--you induce one of my servants--corrupting
her with a bribe, I have no doubt--'

'Indeed, sir! I never gave her a penny.'

'Then you ought to have done. You should always pay those who do
your dirty work.'

'Just now, sir, you called it corrupting with a bribe,' muttered Mr
Coxe.

Mr. Gibson took no notice of this speech, but went on,--'Inducing one
of my servants to risk her place, without offering her the slightest
equivalent, by begging her to convey a letter clandestinely to my
daughter--a mere child.'

'Miss Gibson, sir, is nearly seventeen! I heard you say so only the
other day,' said Mr. Coxe, aged twenty. Again Mr. Gibson ignored the
remark.

'A letter which you were unwilling to have seen by her father, who
had tacitly trusted to your honour, by receiving you as an inmate of
his house. Your father's son--I know Major Coxe well--ought to have
come to me, and have said out openly, "Mr. Gibson, I love--or I fancy
that I love--your daughter; I do not think it right to conceal this
from you, although unable to earn a penny; and with no prospect of
an unassisted livelihood, even for myself, for several years, I
shall not say a word about my feelings--or fancied feelings--to the
very young lady herself." That is what your father's son ought to
have said; if, indeed, a couple of grains of reticent silence would
not have been better still.'

'And if I had said it, sir--perhaps I ought to have said it,' said
poor Mr. Coxe, in a hurry of anxiety, 'what would have been your
answer? Would you have sanctioned my passion, sir?'

'I would have said, most probably--I will not be certain of my exact
words in a suppositious case--that you were a young fool, but not a
dishonourable young fool, and I should have told you not to let your
thoughts run upon a calf-love until you had magnified it into a
passion. And I dare say, to make up for the mortification I should
have given you, I should have prescribed your joining the
Hollingford Cricket Club, and set you at liberty as often as I could
on the Saturday afternoons. As it is, I must write to your father's
agent in London, and ask him to remove you out of my household,
repaying the premium, of course, which will enable you to start
afresh in some other doctor's surgery.'

'It will so grieve my father,' said Mr. Coxe, startled into dismay,
if not repentance.

'I see no other course open. It will give Major Coxe some trouble (I
shall take care that he is at no extra expense), but what I think
will grieve him the most is the betrayal of confidence; for I
trusted you, Edward, like a son of my own!' There was something in
Mr. Gibson's voice when he spoke seriously, especially when he
referred to any feeling of his own--he who so rarely betrayed what
was passing in his heart--that was irresistible to most people: the
change from joking and sarcasm to tender gravity.

Mr. Coxe hung his head a little, and meditated.

'I do love Miss Gibson,' said he at length. 'Who could help it?'

'Mr. Wynne, I hope!' said Mr. Gibson.

'His heart is pre-engaged,' replied Mr. Coxe. 'Mine was free as air
till I saw her.'

'Would it tend to cure your--well! passion, we'll say--if she wore
blue spectacles at meal-times? I observe you dwell much on the
beauty of her eyes.'

'You are ridiculing my feelings, Mr. Gibson. Do you forget that you
yourself were young once?'

'Poor Jeanie' rose before Mr. Gibson's eyes; and he felt a little
rebuked.

'Come, Mr. Coxe, let us see if we can't make a bargain,' said he,
after a minute or so of silence. 'You have done a really wrong
thing, and I hope you are convinced of it in your heart, or that you
will be when the heat of this discussion is over, and you come to
think a little about it. But I won't lose all respect for your
father's son. If you will give me your word that, as long as you
remain a member of my family--pupil, apprentice, what you will--you
won't again try to disclose your passion--you see, I am careful to
take your view of what I should call a mere fancy--by word or
writing, looks or acts, in any manner whatever, to my daughter, or
to talk about your feelings to any one else, you shall remain here.
If you cannot give me your word, I must follow out the course I
named, and write to your father's agent.'

Mr. Coxe stood irresolute.

'Mr. Wynne knows all I feel for Miss Gibson, sir. He and I have no
secrets from each other.'

'Well, I suppose he must represent the reeds. You know the story of
King Midas's barber, who found out that his royal master had the
ears of an ass beneath his hyacinthine curls. So the barber, in
default of a Mr. Wynne, went to the reeds that grew on the shores of
a neighbouring lake, and whispered to them, "King Midas has the ears
of an ass." But he repeated it so often that the reeds learnt the
words, and kept on saying them all the day long, till at the last
the secret was no secret at all. If you keep on telling your tale to
Mr. Wynne, are you sure he won't repeat it in his turn?'

'If I pledge my word as a gentleman, sir, I pledge it for Mr. Wynne
as well.'

'I suppose I must run the risk. But remember how soon a young girl's
name may be breathed upon, and sullied. Molly has no mother, and for
that very reason she ought to move among you all, as unharmed as Una
herself.'

'Mr. Gibson, if you wish it, I'll swear it on the Bible,' cried the
excitable young man.

'Nonsense. As if your word, if it's worth anything, was not enough!
We'll shake hands upon it, if you like.'

Mr. Coxe came forward eagerly, and almost squeezed Mr. Gibson's ring
into his finger.

As he was leaving the room, he said, a little uneasily, 'May I give
Bethia a crown-piece?'

'No, indeed! Leave Bethia to me. I hope you won't say another word
to her while she is here. I shall see that she gets a respectable
place when she goes away.'

Then Mr. Gibson rang for his horse, and went out on the last visits
of the day. He used to reckon that he rode the world around in the
course of the year. There were not many surgeons in the county who
had so wide a range of practice as he; he went to lonely cottages on
the borders of great commons; to farm-houses at the end of narrow
country lanes that led to nowhere else, and were overshadowed by the
elms and beeches overhead. He attended all the gentry within a
circle of fifteen miles round Hollingford; and was the appointed
doctor to the still greater families who went up to London very
February--as the fashion then was--and returned to their acres in
the early weeks of July. He was, of necessity, a great deal from
home, and on this soft and pleasant summer evening he felt the
absence as a great evil. He was startled into discovering that his
little one was growing fast into a woman, and already the passive
object of some of the strong interests that affect a woman's life;
and he--her mother as well as her father--so much away that he could
not guard her as he would have wished. The end of his cogitations
was that ride to Hamley the next morning, when he proposed to allow
his daughter to accept Mrs. Hamley's last invitation--an invitation
that had been declined at the time.

'You may quote against me the proverb, "He that will not when he
may, when he will he shall have nay." And I shall have no reason to
complain,' he had said.

But Mrs. Hamley was only too much charmed with the prospect of having
a young girl for a visitor; one whom it would not be a trouble to
entertain; who might be sent out to ramble in the gardens, or told
to read when the invalid was too much fatigued for conversation; and
yet one whose youth and freshness would bring a charm, like a waft
of sweet summer air, into her lonely shut-up life. Nothing could be
pleasanter, and so Molly's visit to Hamley was easily settled.

'I only wish Osborne and Roger had been at home,' said Mrs. Hamley,
in her slow soft voice. 'She may find it dull being with old people,
like the squire and me, from morning till night. When can she come?
the darling--I am beginning to love her already!'

Mr. Gibson was very glad in his heart that the young men of the house
were out of the way; he did not want his little Molly to be passing
from Scylla to Charybdis; and, as he afterwards scoffed at himself
for thinking, he had got an idea that all young men were wolves in
chase of his one ewe-lamb.

'She knows nothing of the pleasure in store for her,' he replied;
'and I am sure I don't know what feminine preparations she may think
necessary, or how long they may take. You'll remember she is a
little ignoramus, and has had no . . . no training in etiquette; our
ways at home are rather rough for a girl, I'm afraid. But I know I
could not send her into a kinder atmosphere than this.'

When the squire heard from his wife of Mr. Gibson's proposal, he was
as much pleased as she at the prospect of their youthful visitor;
for he was a man of a hearty hospitality, when his pride did not
interfere with its gratification; and he was delighted to think of
his sick wife's having such an agreeable companion in her hours of
loneliness. After a while he said,--'It's as well the lads are at
Cambridge; we might have been having a love-affair if they had been
at home.'

'Well--and if we had?' asked his more romantic wife.

'It would not have done,' said the squire, decidedly. 'Osborne will
have had a first-rate education--as good as any man in the
county--he'll have this property, and he's a Hamley of Hamley; not a
family in the shire is as old as we are, or settled on their ground
so well. Osborne may marry where he likes. If Lord Hollingford had a
daughter, Osborne would have been as good a match as she could have
required. It would never do for him to fall in love with Gibson's
daughter--I should not allow it. So it's as well he's out of the
way.'

'Well! perhaps Osborne had better look higher.'

'"Perhaps!" I say he must.' The squire brought his hand down with a
thump on the table, near him, which made his wife's heart beat hard
for some minutes. 'And as for Roger,' he continued, unconscious of
the flutter he had put her into, 'he'll have to make his own way,
and earn his own bread; and, I'm afraid, he's not getting on very
brilliantly at Cambridge. He must not think of falling in love for
these ten years.'

'Unless he marries a fortune,' said Mrs. Hamley, more by way of
concealing her palpitation than anything else; for she was unworldly
and romantic to a fault.

'No son of mine shall ever marry a wife who is richer than himself,
with my good will,' said the squire again, with emphasis, but
without a thump. 'I don't say but what if Roger is gaining five
hundred a year by the time he's thirty, he shall not choose a wife
with ten thousand pounds down; but I do say, if a boy of mine, with
only two hundred a year--which is all Roger will have from us, and
that not for a long time--goes and marries a woman with fifty
thousand to her portion, I will disown him--it would be just
disgusting.'

'Not if they loved each other, and their whole happiness depended
upon their marrying each other?' put in Mrs. Hamley, mildly.

'Pooh! away with love! Nay, my dear, we loved each other so dearly
we should never have been happy with any one else; but that's a
different thing. People are not like what they were when we were
young. All the love now-a-days is just silly fancy, and sentimental
romance, as far as I can see.'

Mr. Gibson thought that he had settled everything about Molly's going
to Hamley before he spoke to her about it, which he did not do,
until the morning of the day on which Mrs. Hamley expected her. Then
he said,--'By the way, Molly! you are to go to Hamley this
afternoon; Mrs. Hamley wants you to go to her for a week or two, and
it suits me capitally that you should accept her invitation just
now.'

'Go to Hamley! This afternoon! Papa, you've got some odd reasons at
the back of your head--some mystery, or something. Please, tell me
what it is. Go to Hamley for a week or two! Why, I never was from
home before this without you in all my life.'

'Perhaps not. I don't think you ever walked before you put your feet
to the ground. Everything must have a beginning.'

'It has something to do with that letter that was directed to me,
but that you took out of my hands before I could even see the
writing of the direction.' She fixed her grey eyes on her father's
face, as if she meant to pluck out his secret.

He only smiled and said,--'You're a witch, goosey!'

'Then it had! But if it was a note from Mrs. Hamley, why might I not
see it? I have been wondering if you had some plan in your head ever
since that day--Thursday, was it not? You've gone about in a kind of
thoughtful perplexed way, just like a conspirator. Tell me,
papa'--coming up to him, and putting on a beseeching manner--'why
might not I see that note? and why am I to go to Hamley all on a
sudden?'

'Don't you like to go? Would you rather not?' If she had said that
she did not want to go he would have been rather pleased than
otherwise, although it would have put him into a great perplexity;
but he was beginning to dread the parting from her even for so short
a time. However, she replied directly,--

'I don't know--I dare say I shall like it when I have thought a
little more about it. Just now I am so startled by the suddenness of
the affair, I have not considered whether I shall like it or not. I
shan't like going away from you, I know. Why am I to go, papa?'

'There are three old ladies sitting somewhere, I and thinking about
you just at this very minute; one has a distaff in her hands, and is
spinning a thread; she has come to a knot in it, and is puzzled what
to do with it. Her sister has a great pair of scissors in her hands,
and wants--as she always does, when any difficulty arises in the
smoothness of the thread--to cut it off short; but the third, who
has the most head of the three, plans how to undo the knot; and she
it is who has decided that you are to go to Hamley. The others are
quite convinced by her arguments; so, as the Fates have decreed that
this visit is to be paid, there is nothing left for you and me but
to submit.'

'That is all nonsense, papa, and you are only making me more curious
to find out this hidden reason.'

Mr. Gibson changed his tone, and spoke gravely now. 'There is a
reason, Molly, and one which I do not wish to give. When I tell you
this much, I expect you to be an honourable girl, and to try and not
even conjecture what the reason may be,--much less endeavour to put
little discoveries together till very likely you may find out what I
want to conceal.'

'Papa, I won't even think about your reason again. But then I shall
have to plague you with another question. I have had no new gowns
this year, and I have outgrown all my last summer frocks. I have
only three that I can wear at all. Betty was saying only yesterday
that I ought to have some more.'

'That will do that you have got on, won't it? It is a very pretty
colour.'

'Yes; but, papa,' (holding it out as if she was, going to dance)
'it's made of woollen, and so hot and heavy; and every day it will
be getting warmer.'

'I wish girls could dress like boys,' said Mr. Gibson, with a little
impatience. 'How is a man to know when his daughter wants clothes?
and how is he to rig her out when he finds it out, just when she
needs them most and has not got them?'

'Ah, that's the question!' said Molly, in some despair.

'Can't you go to Miss Rose's? Does not she keep ready-made frocks
for girls of your age?'

'Miss Rose! I never had anything from her in my life,' replied
Molly, in some surprise; for Miss Rose was the great dressmaker and
milliner of the little town, and hitherto Betty had made the girl's
frocks.

'Well, but it seems people consider you as a young woman now, and so
I suppose you must run up milliners' bills like the rest of your
kind. Not that you are to get anything anywhere that you can't pay
for down in ready money. Here's a ten-pound note; go to Miss Rose's,
or Miss anybody's, and get what you want at once. The Hamley
carriage is to come for you at two, and anything that is not quite
ready, can easily be sent by their cart on Saturday, when some of
their people always come to market. Nay, don't thank me! I don't
want to have the money spent, and I don't want you to go and leave
me: I shall miss you, I know; it's only hard necessity that drives
me to send you a-visiting, and to throw away ten pounds on your
clothes. There, go away; you're a plague, and I mean to leave off
loving you as fast as I can.'

'Papa!' holding up her finger as in warning, 'you are getting
mysterious again; and though my honourableness is very strong, I
won't promise that it shall not yield to my curiosity if you go on
hinting at untold secrets.'

'Go away and spend your ten pounds. What did I give it you for but
to keep you quiet?'

Miss Rose's ready-made resources and Molly's taste combined, did not
arrive at a very great success. She bought a lilac print, because it
would wash, and would be cool and pleasant for the mornings; and
this Betty could make at home before Saturday. And for high-days and
holidays--by which was understood afternoons and Sundays--Miss Rose
persuaded her to order a gay-coloured, flimsy plaid silk, which she
assured her was quite the latest fashion in London, and which Molly
thought would please her father's Scotch blood. But when he saw the
scrap which she had brought home as a pattern, he cried out that the
plaid belonged to no clan in existence, and that Molly ought to have
known this by instinct. It was too late to change it, however, for
Miss Rose had promised to cut the dress out as soon as Molly had
left her shop.

Mr. Gibson had hung about the town all the morning instead of going
away on his usual distant rides. He passed his daughter once or
twice in the street, but he did not cross over the way when he was
on the opposite side--only gave her a look or a nod, and went on his
way, scolding himself for his weakness in feeling so much pain at
the thought of her absence for a fortnight or so.

'And, after all,' thought he, 'I am only where I was when she comes
back; at least, if that foolish fellow goes on with his imaginary
fancy. She'll have to come back some time, and if he chooses to
imagine himself constant, there's still the devil to pay.' Presently
he began to hum the air out of the 'Beggar's Opera'--

I wonder any man alive
Should ever rear a daughter.


CHAPTER VI


A VISIT TO THE HAMLEYS


Of course the news of Miss Gibson's approaching departure had spread
through the household before the one o'clock dinner-time came; and
Mr. Coxe's dismal countenance was a source of much inward irritation
to Mr. Gibson, who kept giving the youth sharp glances of savage
reproof for his melancholy face, and the want of appetite; which he
trotted out, with a good deal of sad ostentation; all of which was
lost upon Molly, who was too full of her own personal concerns to
have any thought or observation to spare from them, excepting once
or twice when she thought of the many days that must pass over
before she should again sit down to dinner with her father.

When she named this to him after the meal was over, and they were
sitting together in the drawing-room, waiting for the sound of the
wheels of the Hamley carriage, he laughed, and said,--

'I'm coming over to-morrow to see Mrs. Hamley; and I dare say I shall
dine at their lunch; so you won't have to wait long before you've
the treat of seeing the wild beast feed.'

Then they heard the approaching carriage.

'Oh, papa,' said Molly, catching at his hand, 'I do so wish I was
not going, now that the time is come.'

'Nonsense; don't let us have any sentiment. Have you got your keys?
that's more to the purpose.'

Yes; she had got her keys, and her purse; and her little box was put
up on the seat by the coachman; and her father handed her in; the
door was shut, and she drove away in solitary grandeur, looking back
and kissing her hand to her father, who stood at the gate, in spite
of his dislike of sentiment, as long as the carriage could be seen.
Then he turned into the surgery, and found Mr. Coxe had had his
watching too, and had, indeed, remained at the window gazing,
moonstruck, at the empty road, up which the young lady had
disappeared. Mr. Gibson startled him from his reverie by a sharp,
almost venomous, speech about some small neglect of duty a day or
two before. That night Mr. Gibson insisted on passing by the bedside
of a poor girl whose parents were worn-out by many wakeful anxious
nights succeeding to hard working days.

Molly cried a little, but checked her tears as soon as she
remembered how annoyed her father would have been at the sight of
them. It was very pleasant driving quickly along in the luxurious
carriage, through the pretty green lanes, with dog-roses and
honeysuckles so plentiful and rathe in the hedges, that she once or
twice was tempted to ask the coachman to stop till she had gathered
a nosegay. She began to dread the end of her little journey of seven
miles; the only drawback to which was, that her silk was not a true
clan-tartan, and a little uncertainty as to Miss Rose's punctuality,
At length they came to a village; straggling cottages lined the
road, an old church stood on a kind of green, with the public-house
close by it; there was a great tree, with a bench all round the
trunk, midway between the church gates and the little inn. The
wooden stocks were close to the gates. Molly had long passed the
limit of her rides, but she knew this must be the village of Hamley,
and they must be very near to the hall.

They swung in at the gates of the park in a few minutes, and drove
up through meadow-grass, ripening for hay,--it was no grand
aristocratic deer-park this--to the old red-brick hall; not three
hundred yards from the high-road. There had been no footman sent
with the carriage, but a respectable servant stood at the door, even
before they drew up, ready to receive the expected visitor, and take
her into the drawing-room where his mistress lay awaiting her.

Mrs. Hamley rose from her sofa to give Molly a gentle welcome; she
kept the girl's hand in hers after she had finished speaking,
looking into her face, as if studying it, and unconscious of the
faint blush she called up on the otherwise colourless cheeks.

'I think we shall be great friends,' said she, at length. 'I like
your face, and I am always guided by first impressions. Give me a
kiss, my dear.'

It was far easier to be active than passive during this process of
'swearing eternal friendship,' and Molly willingly kissed the sweet
pale face held up to her.

'I meant to have gone and fetched you myself; but the heat oppresses
me, and I did not feel up to the exertion. I hope you had a pleasant
drive?'

'Very,' said Molly, with shy conciseness.

'And now I will take you to your room; I have had you put close to
me; I thought you would like it better, even though it was a smaller
room than the other.'

She rose languidly, and wrapping her light shawl round her yet
elegant figure, led the way upstairs. Molly's bedroom opened out of
Mrs. Hamley's private sitting-room; on the other side of which was
her own bedroom. She showed Molly this easy means of communication,
and then, telling her visitor she would await her in the
sitting-room, she closed the door, and Molly was left at leisure to
make acquaintance with her surroundings.

First of all, she went to the window to see what was to be seen. A
flower-garden right below; a meadow of ripe grass just beyond,
changing colour in long sweeps, as the soft wind blew over it; great
old forest-trees a little on one side; and, beyond them again, to be
seen only by standing very close to the side of the window-sill, or
by putting her head out, if the window was open, the silver shimmer
of a mere, about a quarter of a mile off. On the opposite side to
the trees and the mere, the look-out was bounded by the old walls
and high-peaked roofs of the extensive farm-buildings. The
deliciousness of the early summer silence was only broken by the
song of the birds, and the nearer hum of bees. Listening to these
sounds, which enhanced the exquisite sense of stillness, and
puzzling out objects obscured by distance or shadow, Molly forgot
herself, and was suddenly startled into a sense of the present by a
sound of voices in the next room--some servant or other speaking to
Mrs. Hamley. Molly hurried to unpack her box, and arrange her few
clothes in the pretty old-fashioned chest of drawers, which was to
serve her as dressing-table as well. All the furniture in the room
was as old-fashioned and as well-preserved as it could be. The
chintz curtains were Indian calico of the last century--the colours
almost washed out, but the stuff itself exquisitely clean. There was
a little strip of bedside carpeting, but the wooden flooring, thus
liberally displayed, was of finely-grained oak, so firmly joined,
plank to plank, that no grain of dust could make its way into the
interstices. There were none of the luxuries of modern days; no
writing-table, or sofa, or pier-glass. In one corner of the walls
was a bracket, holding an Indian jar filled with pot-pourri; and
that and the climbing honeysuckle outside the open window scented
the room more exquisitely than any ~toilette~ perfumes. Molly laid
out her white gown (of last year's date and size) upon the bed,
ready for the (to her new) operation of dressing for dinner, and
having arranged her hair and dress, and taken out her company
worsted-work,' she opened the door softly, and saw Mrs. Hamley lying
on the sofa.

'Shall we stay up here, m dear? I think it is pleasanter than down
below; and then I shall not have to come upstairs again at
dressing-time.'

'I shall like it very much,' replied Molly.

'Ah! you've got your sewing, like a good girl,' said Mrs. Hamley.
'Now, I don't sew much. I live alone a great deal. You see, both my
boys are at Cambridge, and the squire is out of doors all day
long--so I have almost forgotten how to sew. I read a great deal. Do
you like reading?'

'It depends upon the kind of book,' said Molly. 'I'm afraid I don't
like "steady reading," as papa calls it.'

'But you like poetry!' said Mrs. Hamley, almost interrupting Molly.
'I was sure you did, from your face. Have you read this last poem of
Mrs. Hemans? Shall I read it aloud to you?'

So she began. Molly was not so much absorbed in listening but that
she could glance round the room. The character of the furniture was
much the same as in her own. Old-fashioned, of handsome material,
and faultlessly clean; the age and the foreign appearance of it gave
an aspect of comfort and picturesqueness to the whole apartment. On
the walls there hung some crayon sketches--portraits. She thought
she could make out that one of them was a likeness of Mrs. Hamley, in
her beautiful youth. And then she became interested in the poem, and
dropped her work, and listened in a manner that was after Mrs
Hamley's own heart. When the reading of the poem was ended, Mrs
Hamley replied to some of Molly's words of admiration, by saying,--

'Ah! I think I must read you some of Osborne's poetry some day;
under seal of secrecy, remember; but I really fancy they are almost
as good as Mrs. Hemans'.'

To be 'nearly as good as Mrs. Hemans' was saying as much to the young
ladies of that day, as saying that poetry is nearly as good as
Tennyson's would be in this. Molly looked up with eager interest.

'Mr. Osborne Hamley? Does your son write poetry?'

'Yes. I really think I may say he is a poet. He is a very brilliant,
clever young man, and he quite hopes to get a fellowship at Trinity.
He says he is sure to be high up among the wranglers, and that he
expects to get one of the Chancellor's medals. That is his
likeness--the one hanging against the wall behind you.'

Molly turned round, and saw one of the crayon sketches--representing
two boys, in the most youthful kind of jackets and trousers, and
falling collars. The elder was sitting down, reading intently. The
younger was standing by him, and evidently trying to call the
attention of the reader off to some object out of doors--out of the
window of the very room in which they were sitting, as Molly
discovered when she began to recognize the articles of furniture
faintly indicated in the picture.

'I like their faces!' said Molly. 'I suppose it is so long ago now,
that I may speak of their likenesses to you as if they were somebody
else; may not I?'

'Certainly,' said Mrs. Hamley, as soon as she understood what Molly
meant. 'Tell me just what you think of them, my dear; it will amuse
me to compare your impressions with what they really are.'

'Oh! but I did not mean to guess at their characters. I could not do
it; and it would be impertinent, if I could. I can only speak about
their faces as I see them in the picture.'

'Well! tell me what you think of them!'

'The eldest--the reading boy--is very beautiful; but I can't quite
make out his face yet, because his head is down, and I can't see the
eyes. That is the Mr. Osborne Hamley who writes poetry?'

'Yes. He is not quite so handsome now; but he was a beautiful boy.
Roger was never to be compared with him.'

'No; he is not handsome. And yet I like his face. I can see his
eyes. They are grave and solemn-looking; but all the rest of his
face is rather merry than otherwise. It looks too steady and sober,
too good a face, to go tempting his brother to leave his lesson.'

'Ah! but it was not a lesson. I remember the painter, Mr. Green, once
saw Osborne reading some poetry, while Roger was trying to persuade
him to come out and have a ride in the hay-cart--that was the
"motive" of the picture, to speak artistically. Roger is not much of
a reader; at least, he doesn't care for poetry, and books of
romance, or sentiment. He is so fond of natural history; and that
takes him, like the squire, a great deal out of doors; and when he
is in, he is always reading scientific books that bear upon his
pursuits. He is a good, steady fellow, though, and gives us great
satisfaction, but he is not likely to have such a brilliant career
as Osborne.'

Molly tried to find out in the picture the characteristics of the
two boys, as they were now explained to her by their mother; and in
questions and answers about the various drawings hung round the room
the time passed away until the dressing-bell rang for the six
o'clock dinner.

Molly was rather dismayed by the offers of the maid whom Mrs. Hamley
had sent to assist her. 'I am afraid they expect me to be very
smart,' she kept thinking to herself. 'If they do, they'll be
disappointed; that's all. But I wish my plaid silk gown had been
ready.'

She looked at herself in the glass with some anxiety, for the first
time in her life. She saw a slight, lean figure, promising to be
tall; a complexion browner than cream-coloured, although in a year
or two it might have that tint; plentiful curly black hair, tied up
in a bunch behind with a rose--coloured ribbon; long, almond-shaped,
soft grey eyes, shaded both above and below by curling black
eye-lashes.

'I don't think I am pretty,' thought Molly, as she turned away from
the glass; 'and yet I am not sure.' She would have been sure, if,
instead of inspecting herself with such solemnity, she had smiled
her own sweet merry smile, and called out the gleam of her teeth,
and the charm of her dimples.

She found her way downstairs into the drawing-room in good time; she
could look about her, and learn how to feel at home in her new
quarters. The room was forty-feet long or so, fitted up with yellow
satin at some distant period; high spindle-legged chairs and
pembroke-tables abounded. The carpet was of the same date as the
curtains, and was threadbare in many places; and in others was
covered with drugget. Stands of plants, great jars of flowers, old
Indian china and cabinets gave the room the pleasant aspect it
certainly had. And to add to it, there were five high, long windows
on one side of the room, all opening to the prettiest bit of
flower-garden in the grounds--or what was considered as
such--brilliant-coloured, geometrically-shaped beds, converging to a
sun-dial in the midst. The squire came in abruptly, and in his
morning dress; he stood at the door, as if surprised at the
white-robed stranger in possession of his hearth. Then, suddenly
remembering himself, but not before Molly had begun to feel very
hot, he said,--

'Why, God bless my soul, I'd quite forgotten you; you're Miss
Gibson, Gibson's daughter, aren't you? Come to pay us a visit? I'm
sure I'm very glad to see you, my dear.'

By this time, they had met in the middle of the room, and he was
shaking Molly's hand with vehement friendliness, intended to make up
for his not knowing her at first.

'I must go and dress, though,' he said, looking at his soiled
gaiters. 'Madam likes it. It's one of her fine London ways, and
she's broken me into it at last. Very good plan, though, and quite
right to make oneself fit for ladies' society. Does your father
dress for dinner, Miss Gibson?' He did not stay to wait for her
answer, but hastened away to perform his ~toilette~.

They dined at a small table in a great large room. There were so few
articles of furniture in it, and the apartment itself was so vast,
that Molly longed for the snugness of the home dining-room; nay, it
is to be feared that, before the stately dinner at Hamley Hall came
to an end, she even regretted the crowded chairs and tables, the
hurry of eating, the quick unformal manner in which everybody seemed
to finish their meal as fast as possible, and to return to the work
they had left. She tried to think that at six o'clock all the
business of the day was ended, and that people might linger if they
chose. She measured the distance from the sideboard to the table
with her eye, and made allowances for the men who had to carry
things backwards and forwards; but, all the same, this dinner
appeared to her a wearisome business, prolonged because the squire
liked it, for Mrs. Hamley seemed tired out. She ate even less than
Molly, and sent for fan and smelling--bottle to amuse herself with,
until at length the table-cloth was cleared away, and the dessert
was put upon a mahogany table, polished like a looking-glass.

The squire had hitherto been too busy to talk, except about the
immediate concerns of the table, and one or two of the greatest
breaks to the usual monotony of his days; a monotony in which he
delighted, but which sometimes became oppressive to his wife. Now,
however, peeling his orange, he turned to Molly,--

'To-morrow you'll have to do this for me Miss Gibson.'

'Shall I? I'll do it to-day, if you like, sir.'

'No; to-day I shall treat you as a visitor, with all proper
ceremony. To-morrow I shall send you errands, and call you by your
Christian name.'

'I shall like that,' said Molly.

'I was wanting to call you something less formal than Miss Gibson,'
said Mrs. Hamley.

'My name is Molly. It is an old-fashioned name, and I was christened
Mary. But papa likes Molly.'

'That's right. Keep to the good old fashions, my dear.'

'Well, I must say I think Mary is prettier than Molly, and quite as
old a name, too,' said Mrs. Hamley.

'I think it was,' said Molly, lowering her voice, and dropping her
eyes, 'because mamma was Mary, and I was called Molly while she
lived.'

'Ah, poor thing,' said the squire, not perceiving his wife's signs
to change the subject, 'I remember how sorry every one was when she
died; no one thought she was delicate, she had such a fresh colour,
till all at once she popped off, as one may say.'

'It must have been a terrible blow to your father,' said Mrs. Hamley,
seeing that Molly did not know what to answer.

'Ay, ay. It came so sudden, so soon after they were married.'

'I thought it was nearly four years,' said Molly.

'And four years is soon--is a short time to a couple who look to
spending their lifetime together. Every one thought Gibson would
have married again.'

'Hush,' said Mrs. Hamley, seeing in Molly's eyes and change of colour
how completely this was a new idea to her. But the squire was not so
easily stopped.

'Well--I'd perhaps better not have said it, but it's the truth; they
did. He's not likely to marry now, so one may say it out. Why, your
father is past forty, isn't he?'

'Forty-three. I don't believe he ever thought of marrying again,'
said Molly, recurring to the idea, as one does to that of danger
which has passed by, without one's being aware of it.

'No! I don't believe he did my dear. He looks to me just like a man
who would be constant to the memory of his wife. You must not mind
what the squire says.'

'Ah! you'd better go away, if you're going to teach Miss Gibson such
treason as that against the master of the house.' Molly went into
the drawing-room with Mrs. Hamley, but her thoughts did not change
with the room. She could not help dwelling on the danger which she
fancied she had escaped, and was astonished at her own stupidity at
never having imagined such a possibility as her father's second
marriage. She felt that she was answering Mrs. Hamley's remarks in a
very unsatisfactory manner.

'There is papa, with the squire!' she suddenly exclaimed. There they
were coming across the flower-garden from the stable-yard, her
father switching his boots with his riding whip, in order to make
them presentable in Mrs. Hamley's drawing-room. He looked so exactly
like his usual self, his home-self, that the seeing him in the flesh
was the most efficacious way of dispelling the phantom fears of a
second wedding, which were beginning to harass his daughter's mind;
and the pleasant conviction that he could not rest till he had come
over to see how she was going on in her new home, stole into her
heart, although he spoke but little to her, and that little was all
in a joking tone. After he had gone away, the squire undertook to
teach her cribbage; and she was happy enough now to give him all her
attention. He kept on prattling while they played; sometimes in
relation to the cards; at others telling her of small occurrences
which he thought might interest her.

'So you don't know my boys, even by sight. I should have thought you
would have done, for they are fond enough of riding into
Hollingford; and I know Roger has often enough been to borrow books
from your father. Roger is a scientific sort of a fellow. Osborne is
clever, like this mother. I should not wonder if he published a book
some day. You're not counting right, Miss Gibson. Why, I could cheat
you as easily as possible.' And so on, till the butler came in with
a solemn look, placed a large prayer-book before his master, who
huddled the cards away in a hurry, as if caught in an incongruous
employment; and then the maids and men trooped in to prayers--the
windows were still open, and the sounds of the solitary corncrake,
and the owl hooting in the trees, mingled with the words spoken.
Then to bed; and so ended the day.

Molly looked out of her chamber window--leaning on the sill, and
snuffing up the night odours of the honeysuckle. The soft velvet
darkness hid everything that was at any distance from her; although
she was as conscious of their presence as if she had seen them.

'I think I shall be very happy here,' was in Molly's thoughts, as
she turned away at length, and began to prepare for bed. Before long
the squire's words, relating to her father's second marriage, came
across her, and spoilt the sweet peace of her final thoughts. 'Who
could he have married?' she asked herself. 'Miss Eyre? Miss
Browning? Miss Phoebe? Miss Goodenough?' One by one, each of these
was rejected for sufficient reasons. Yet the unsatisfied question
rankled in her mind, and darted out of ambush to disturb her dreams.

Mrs. Hamley did not come down to breakfast; and Molly found out,
with a little dismay, that the squire and she were to have it by
themselves. On this first morning he put aside his newspapers--one
an old established Tory journal, with all the local and county news,
which was the most interesting to him; the other the ~Morning
Chronicle~, which he called his dose of bitters, and which called
out many a strong expression and tolerably pungent oath. To-day,
however, he was 'on his manners,' as he afterwards explained to
Molly; and he plunged about, trying to find ground for a
conversation. He could talk of his wife and his sons, his estate,
and his mode of farming; his tenants, and the mismanagement of the
last county election. Molly's interests were her father, Miss Eyre,
her garden and pony; in a fainter degree the Miss Brownings, the
Cumnor Charity School, and the new gown that was to come from Miss
Rose's; into the midst of which the one great question, 'Who was it
that people thought it was possible papa might marry?' kept popping
up into her mouth, like a troublesome Jack-in-the-box. For the
present, however, the lid was snapped down upon the intruder as
often as he showed his head between her teeth. They were very polite
to each other during the meal; and it was not a little tiresome to
both. When it was ended the squire withdrew into his study to read
the untasted newspapers. It was the custom to call the room in which
Squire Hamley kept his coats, boots, and gaiters, his different
sticks and favourite spud, his gun and fishing-rods, the study.
There was a bureau in it, and a three-cornered arm-chair, but no
books were visible. The greater part of them were kept in a large,
musty-smelling room, in an unfrequented part of the house; so
unfrequented that the housemaid often neglected to open the
window-shutters, which looked into a part of the grounds over-grown
with the luxuriant growth of shrubs. Indeed, it was a tradition in
the servants' hall that, in the late squire's time--he who had been
plucked at college--the library windows had been boarded up to avoid
paying the window-tax. And when the 'young gentlemen' were at home
the housemaid, without a single direction to that effect, was
regular in her charge of this room; opened the windows and lighted
fires daily, and dusted the handsomely-bound volumes, which were
really a very fair collection of the standard literature in the
middle of the last century. All the books that had been purchased
since that time were held in small book-cases between each two of
the drawing-room windows, and in Mrs. Hamley's own sitting-room
upstairs. Those in the drawing-room were quite enough to employ
Molly; indeed she was so deep in one of Sir Walter Scott's novels
that she jumped as if she had been shot, when an hour or so after
breakfast the squire came to the gravel-path outside one of the
windows, and called to ask her if she would like to come out of
doors and go about the garden and home-fields with him.

'It must be a little dull for you, my girl, all by yourself, with
nothing but books to look at, in the mornings here; but you see,
madam has a fancy for being quiet in the mornings: she told your
father about it, and so did I, but I felt sorry for you all the
same, when I saw you sitting on the ground all alone in the
drawing-room.'

Molly had been in the very middle of the ~Bride of Lammermoor~, and
would gladly have stayed in-doors to finish it, but she felt the
squire's kindness all the same. They went in and out of
old-fashioned greenhouses, over trim lawns, the squire unlocked the
great walled kitchen-garden, and went about giving directions to
gardeners; and all the time Molly followed him like a little dog,
her mind quite full of 'Ravenswood' and 'Lucy Ashton.' Presently,
every place near the house had been inspected and regulated, and the
squire was more at liberty to give his attention to his companion,
as they passed through the little wood that separated the gardens
from the adjoining fields. Molly, too, plucked away her thoughts
from the seventeenth century; and, somehow or other, that one
question, which had so haunted her before, came out of her lips
before she was aware--a literal impromptu,--

'Who did people think papa would marry? That time--long ago--soon
after mamma died?'

She dropped her voice very soft and low, as she spoke the last
words. The squire turned round upon her, and looked at her face, he
knew not why. It was very grave, a little pale, but her steady eyes
almost commanded some kind of answer.

'Whew,' said he, whistling to gain time; not that he had anything
definite to say, for no one had ever had any reason to join Mr
Gibson's name with any known lady: it was only a loose conjecture
that had been hazarded on the probabilities--a young widower, with a
little girl.

'I never heard of any one--his name was never coupled with any
lady's--'twas only in the nature of things that he should marry
again; he may do it yet, for aught I know, and I don't think it
would be a bad move either. I told him so, the last time but one he
was here.'

'And what did he say?' asked breathless Molly.

'Oh: he only smiled, and said nothing. You shouldn't take up words
so seriously, my dear. Very likely he may never think of marrying
again, and if he did, it would be a very good thing both for him and
for you!'

Molly muttered something, as if to herself, but the squire might
have heard it if he had chosen. As it was, he wisely turned the
current of the conversation.

'Look at that!' he said, as they suddenly came upon the mere, or
large pond. There was a small island in the middle of the glassy
water, on which grew tall trees, dark Scotch firs in the centre,
silvery shimmering willows close to the water's edge. 'We must get
you punted over there, some of these days. I'm not fond of using the
boat at this time of the year, because the young birds are still in
the nests among the reeds and water-plants; but we'll go. There are
coots and grebes.'

'Oh, look, there's a swan!'

'Yes; there are two pair of them here. And in those trees there is
both a rookery and a heronry; the herons ought to be here by now,
for they're off to the sea in August, but I have not seen one yet.
Stay! is not that one--that fellow on a stone, with his long neck
bent down, looking into the water?'

'Yes! I think so. I have never seen a heron, only pictures of them.'

'They and the rooks are always at war, which does not do for such
near neighbours. If both herons leave the nest they are building,
the rooks come and tear it to pieces; and once Roger showed me a
long straggling fellow of a heron, with a flight of rooks after him,
with no friendly purpose in their minds, I'll be bound. Roger knows
a deal of natural history, and finds out queer things sometimes. He
would have been off a dozen times during this walk of ours, if he'd
been here; his eyes are always wandering about, and see twenty
things where I only see one. Why! I have known him bolt into a copse
because he saw something fifteen yards off--some plant, maybe, which
he would tell me was very rare, though I should say I'd seen its
marrow at every turn in the woods; and, if we came upon such a thing
as this,' touching a delicate film of a cobweb upon a leaf with his
stick, as he spoke, 'why, he could tell you what insect or spider
made it, and if it lived in rotten fir-wood, or in a cranny of good
sound timber, or deep down in the ground, or up in the sky, or
anywhere. It is a pity they don't take honours in Natural History at
Cambridge. Roger would be safe enough if they did.'

'Mr. Osborne Hamley is very clever, is he not?' Molly asked, timidly.

'Oh, yes. Osborne's a bit of a genius. His mother looks for great
things from Osborne. I'm rather proud of him myself. He'll get a
Trinity fellowship, if they play him fair. As I was saying at the
magistrates' meeting yesterday, "I've got a son who will make a
noise at Cambridge, or I'm very much mistaken." Now, is it not a
queer quip of Nature,' continued the squire, turning his honest face
towards Molly, as if he was going to impart a new idea to her, 'that
I, a Hamley of Hamley, straight in descent from nobody knows
when--the Heptarchy, they say--What's the date of the Heptarchy?'

'I don't know,' said Molly, startled at being thus appealed to.

'Well! it was some time before King Alfred, because he was the King
of all England, you know; but, as I was saying, here am I, of as
good and as old a descent as any man in England, and I doubt if a
stranger to look at me, would take me for a gentleman, with my red
face, great hands and feet, and thick figure, fourteen stone, and
never less than twelve even when I was a young man;' and there's
Osborne, who takes after his mother, who could not tell her
great-grandfather from Adam, bless her; and Osborne has a girl's
delicate face, and a slight make, and hands and feet as small as a
lady's. He takes after madam's side, who, as I said, can't tell who
was their grandfather. Now, Roger is like me, a Hamley of Hamley,
and no one who sees him in the street will ever think that
red-brown, big-boned, clumsy chap is of gentle blood. Yet all those
Cumnor people, you make such ado of in Hollingford, are mere muck of
yesterday. I was talking to madam the other day about Osborne's
marrying a daughter of Lord Hollingford's--that's to say, if he had
a daughter--he's only got boys, as it happens; but I'm not sure if I
should consent to it. I really am not sure; for you see Osborne will
have had a first-rate education, and his family dates from the
Heptarchy, while I should be glad to know where the Cumnor folk were
in the time of Queen Anne?' He walked on, pondering the question of
whether he could have given his consent to this impossible marriage;
and after some time, and when Molly had quite forgotten the subject
to which he alluded, he broke out with--'No! I am sure I should have
looked higher. So, perhaps, it's as well my Lord Hollingford has
only boys.'

After a while, he thanked Molly for her companionship, with
old-fashioned courtesy; and told her that he thought, by this time,
madam would be up and dressed, and glad to have her young visitor
with her. He pointed out the deep purple house, with its stone
facings, as it was seen at some distance between the trees, and
watched her protectingly on her way along the field-paths.

'That's a nice girl of Gibson's,' quoth he to himself. 'But what a
tight hold the wench got of the notion of his marrying again! One
had need be on one's guard as to what one says before her. To think
of her never having thought of the chance of a step-mother. To be
sure, a step-mother to a girl is a different thing to a second wife
to a man!'


CHAPTER VII


FORESHADOWS OF LOVE PERILS


If Squire Hamley had been unable to tell Molly who had ever been
thought of as her father's second wife, fate was all this time
preparing an answer of a pretty positive kind to her wondering
curiosity. But fate is a cunning hussy, and builds up her plans as
imperceptibly as a bird builds her nest; and with much the same kind
of unconsidered trifles.' The first 'trifle' of an event was the
disturbance which Jenny (Mr. Gibson's cook) chose to make at Bethia's
being dismissed. Bethia was a distant relation and ~protegee~ of
Jenny's, and she chose to say it was Mr. Coxe the tempter who ought
to have 'been sent packing,' not Bethia the tempted, the victim. In
this view there was quite enough plausibility to make Mr. Gibson feel
that he had been rather unjust. He had, however, taken care to
provide Bethia with another situation, to the full as good as that
which she held in his family. Jenny, nevertheless, chose to give
warning; and though Mr. Gibson knew full well from former experience
that her warnings were words, not deeds, he hated the discomfort,
the uncertainty,--the entire disagreeableness of meeting a woman at
any time in his house, who wore a grievance and an injury upon her
face as legibly as Jenny took care to do.

Down into the middle of this small domestic trouble came another,
and one of greater consequence. Miss Eyre had gone with her old
mother, and her orphan nephews and nieces, to the sea-side, during
Molly's absence, which was only intended at first to last for a
fortnight. After about ten days of this time had elapsed, Mr. Gibson
received a beautifully written, beautifully worded, admirably
folded, and most neatly sealed letter from Miss Eyre. Her eldest
nephew had fallen ill of scarlet fever, and there was every
probability that the younger children would be attacked by the same
complaint. It was distressing enough for poor Miss Eyre--this
additional expense, this anxiety--the long detention from home which
the illness involved. But she said not a word of any inconvenience
to herself; she only apologized with humble sincerity for her
inability to return at the appointed time to her charge in Mr
Gibson's family; meekly adding, that perhaps it was as well, for
Molly had never had the scarlet fever, and even if Miss Eyre had
been able to leave the orphan children to return to her employments,
it might not have been a safe or a prudent step.

'To be sure not,' said Mr. Gibson, tearing the letter in two, and
throwing it into the hearth, where he soon saw it burnt to ashes. 'I
wish I'd a five-pound house and not a woman within ten miles of me.
I might have some peace then.' Apparently, he forgot Mr. Coxe's
powers of making mischief; but indeed he might have traced that evil
back to unconscious Molly. The martyr-cook's entrance to take away
the breakfast things, which she announced by a heavy sigh, roused Mr
Gibson from thought to action.

'Molly must stay a little longer at Hamley,' he resolved. 'They've
often asked for her, and now they'll have enough of her, I think.
But I can't have her back here just yet; and so the best I can do
for her is to leave her where she is. Mrs. Hamley seems very fond of
her, and the child is looking happy, and stronger in health. I'll
ride round by Hamley to-day at any rate, and see how the land lies.'

He found Mrs. Hamley lying on a sofa placed under the shadow of the
great cedar-tree on the lawn. Molly was flitting about her,
gardening away under her directions; tying up the long sea-green
stalks of bright budded carnations, snipping off dead roses.

'Oh! here's papa!' she cried out joyfully, as he rode up to the
white paling which separated the trim lawn and trimmer flower-garden
from the rough park-like ground in front of the house.

'Come in--come here--through the drawing-room window,' said Mrs
Hamley, raising herself on her elbow. 'We've got a rose-tree to show
you that Molly has budded all by herself. We are both so proud of
it.'

So Mr. Gibson rode round to the stables, left his horse there, and
made his way through the house to the open-air summer-parlour under
the cedar-tree, where there were chairs, a table, books, and tangled
work. Somehow, he rather disliked asking for Molly to prolong her
visit; so he determined to swallow his bitter first, and then take
the pleasure of the delicious day, the sweet repose, the murmurous,
scented air. Molly stood by him, her hand on his shoulder. He sate
opposite to Mrs. Hamley.

'I have come here to-day to ask for a favour,' he began.

'Granted before you name it. Am not I a bold woman?'

He smiled and bowed, but went straight on with his speech.

'Miss Eyre, who has been Molly's--governess, I suppose I must call
her--for many years, writes to-day to say that one of the little
nephews she took with her to Newport while Molly was staying here,
has caught the scarlet fever.'

'I guess your request. I make it before you do. I beg for dear
little Molly to stay on here. Of course Miss Eyre can't come back to
you; and of course Molly must stay here!'

'Thank you; thank you very much. That was my request.'

Molly's hand stole down to his, and nestled in that firm compact
grasp.

'Papa!--Mrs. Hamley!--I know you'll both understand me--but mayn't I
go home? I am very very happy here; but--oh papa! I think I should
like to be at home with you best.'

An uncomfortable suspicion flashed across his mind. He pulled her
round, and looked straight and piercingly into her innocent face.
Her colour came at his unwonted scrutiny, but her sweet eyes were
filled with wonder, rather than with any feeling which he dreaded to
find. For an instant he had doubted whether young red-headed Mr
Coxe's love might not have called out a response in his daughter s
breast; but he was quite clear now.

'Molly, you're rude to begin with. I don't know how you're to make
your peace with Mrs. Hamley, I'm sure. And in the next place, do you
think you're wiser than I am; or that I don't want you at home, if
all other things were conformable? Stay where you are, and be
thankful.'

Molly knew him well enough to be certain that the prolongation of
her visit at Hamley was quite a decided affair in his mind; and then
she was smitten with a sense of ingratitude. She left her father,
and went to Mrs. Hamley, and bent over and kissed her; but she did
not speak. Mrs. Hamley took hold of her hand, and made room on the
sofa for her.

'I was going to have asked for a longer visit the next time you
came, Mr. Gibson. We are such happy friends, are not we, Molly? and
now that this good little nephew of Miss Eyre's----'

'I wished he was whipped,' said Mr. Gibson.

'--has given us such a capital reason, I shall keep Molly for a real
long visitation. You must come over and see us very often. There's a
room here for you always, you know; and I don't see why you should
not start on your rounds from Hamley every morning, just as well as
from Hollingford.'

'Thank you. If you had not been so kind to my little girl, I might
be tempted to say something rude in answer to your last speech.'

'Pray say it. You won't be easy till you have given it out, I know.'

'Mrs. Hamley has found out from whom I get my rudeness,' said Molly,
triumphantly. 'It's an hereditary quality.'

'I was going to say that proposal of yours that I should sleep at
Hamley was just like a woman's idea--all kindness, and no common
sense. How in the world would my patients find me out, seven miles
from my accustomed place? They'd be sure to send for some other
doctor, and I should be ruined in a month.'

'Could not they send on here? A messenger costs very little.'

'Fancy old Goody Henbury struggling up to my surgery, groaning at
every step, and then being told to just step on seven miles farther!
Or take the other end of society:--I don't think my Lady Cumnor's
smart groom would thank me for having to ride on to Hamley every
time his mistress wants me.'

'Well, well, I submit. I am a woman. Molly, thou art a woman! Go and
order some strawberries and cream for this father of yours. Such
humble offices fall within the province of women. Strawberries and
cream are all kindness and no common sense, for they'll give him a
horrid fit of indigestion.'

'Please speak for yourself, Mrs. Hamley,' said Molly, merrily. 'I
ate--oh, such a great basketful yesterday, and the squire went
himself to the dairy and brought me out a great bowl of cream when
he found me at my busy work. And I'm as well as ever I was, to-day,
and never had a touch of indigestion near me.'

'She's a good girl,' said her father, when she had danced out of
hearing. The words were not quite an inquiry, he was so certain of
his answer. There was a mixture of tenderness and trust in his eyes,
as he awaited the reply, which came in a moment.

'She's a darling! I cannot tell you how fond the squire and I are of
her; both of us. I am so delighted to think she is not to go away
for a long time. The first thing I thought of this morning when I
wakened up, was that she would soon have to return to you, unless I
could persuade you into leaving her with me a little longer. And now
she must stay--oh, two months at least.'

It was quite true that the squire had become very fond of Molly. The
charm of having a young girl dancing and singing inarticulate
ditties about the house and garden, was indescribable in its novelty
to him. And then Molly was. so willing and so wise; ready both to
talk and to listen at the right times. Mrs. Hamley was quite right in
speaking of her husband's fondness for Molly. But either she herself
chose a wrong time for telling him of the prolongation of the girl's
visit, or one of the fits of temper to which he was liable, but
which he generally strove to check in the presence of his wife, was
upon him; at any rate, he received the news in anything but a
gracious frame of mind.

'Stay longer! Did Gibson ask for it?' 'Yes! I don't see what else is
to become of her; Miss Eyre away and all. It's a very awkward
position for a motherless girl like her to be at the head of a
household with two young men in it.'

'That's Gibson's look-out; he should have thought of it before
taking pupils, or apprentices, or whatever he calls them.'

'My dear squire! why, I thought you'd be as glad as I was--as I am
to keep Molly. I asked her to stay for an indefinite time; two
months at least.'

'And to be in the house with Osborne! Roger, too, will be at home.'

By the cloud in the squire's eyes, Mrs. Hamley read his mind.

'Oh, she's not at all the sort of girl young men of their age would
take to, We like her because we see what she really is; but lads of
one or two and twenty want all the accessories of a young woman.'

'Want what?' growled the squire.

'Such things as becoming dress, style of manner. They would not at
their age even see that she is pretty; their ideas of beauty would
include colour.'

'I suppose all that's very clever; but I don't understand it. All I
know is, that it's a very dangerous thing to shut two young men of
one and three and twenty up in a country-house like this, with a
girl of seventeen--choose what her gowns may be like, or her hair,
or her eyes. And I told you particularly I didn't want Osborne, or
either of them, indeed, to be falling in love with her. I'm very
much annoyed.'

Mrs. Hamley's face fell; she became a little pale.

'Shall we make arrangements for their stopping away while she is
here; staying up at Cambridge, or reading with some one? going
abroad for a month or two?'

'No; you've been reckoning this ever so long on their coming home.
I've seen the marks of the weeks on your almanack. I'd sooner speak
to Gibson, and tell him he must take his daughter away, for it's not
convenient to us----'

'My dear Roger! I beg you will do no such thing. It will be so
unkind; it will give the lie to all I said yesterday. Don't, please,
do that. For my sake, don't speak to Mr. Gibson!'

'Well, well, don't put yourself in a flutter,' for he was afraid of
her becoming hysterical; 'I'll speak to Osborne when he comes home,
and tell him how much I should dislike anything of the kind.'

'And Roger is always far too full of his natural history and
comparative anatomy, and messes of that sort, to be thinking of
falling in love with Venus herself, He has not the sentiment and
imagination of Osborne.'

'Ah, you don't know; you never can be sure about a young man! But
with Roger it wouldn't so much signify. He would know he couldn't
marry for years to come.'

All that afternoon the squire tried to steer clear of Molly, to whom
he felt himself to have been an inhospitable traitor. But she was so
perfectly unconscious of his shyness of her, and so merry and sweet
in her behaviour as a welcome guest, never distrusting him for a
moment, however gruff he might be, that by the next morning she had
completely won him round, and they were quite on the old terms
again. At breakfast this very morning, a letter was passed from the
squire to his wife, and back again, without a word as to its
contents; but--

'Fortunate!'

'Yes! very!'

Little did Molly apply these expressions to the piece of news Mrs
Hamley told her in the course of the day; namely, that her son
Osborne had received an invitation to stay with a friend in the
neighbourhood of Cambridge, and perhaps to make a tour on the
Continent with him subsequently; and that, consequently, he would
not accompany his brother when Roger came home.

Molly was very sympathetic.

'Oh, dear! I am so sorry!'

Mrs. Hamley was thankful her husband was not present, Molly spoke the
words so heartily.

'You have been thinking so long of his coming home. I am afraid it
is a great disappointment.'

Mrs. Hamley smiled--relieved.

'Yes! it is a disappointment certainly, but we must think of
Osborne's pleasure. And with his poetical mind, he will write us
such delightful travelling letters. Poor fellow! he must be going
into the examination to-day! Both his father and I feel sure,
though, that he will be a high wrangler.' Only--I should like to
have seen him, my own dear boy. But it is best as it is.'

Molly was a little puzzled by this speech, but soon put it out of
her head. It was a disappointment to her, too, that she should not
see this beautiful, brilliant young man, his mother's hero. From
time to time her maiden fancy had dwelt upon what he would be like;
how the lovely boy of the picture in Mrs. Hamley's dressing-room
would have changed in the ten years that had elapsed since the
likeness was taken; if he would read poetry aloud; if he would even
read his own poetry. However, in the never-ending feminine business
of the day, she soon forgot her own disappointment; it only came
back to her on first wakening the next morning, as a vague something
that was not quite so pleasant as she had anticipated, and then was
banished as a subject of regret. Her days at Hamley were well filled
up with the small duties that would have belonged to a daughter of
the house had there been one. She made breakfast for the lonely
squire, and would willingly have carried up madam's, but that daily
piece of work belonged to the squire, and was jealously guarded by
him. She read the smaller print of the newspapers aloud to him, city
articles, money and corn-markets included. She strolled about the
gardens with him, gathering fresh flowers, meanwhile, to deck the
drawing-room against Mrs. Hamley should come down. She was her
companion when she took her drives in the close carriage; they read
poetry and mild literature together in Mrs. Hamley's sitting-room
upstairs. She was quite clever at cribbage now, and could beat the
squire if she took pains. Besides these things, there were her own
independent ways of employing herself. She used to try to practise a
daily hour on the old grand piano in the solitary drawing-room,
because she had promised Miss Eyre she would do so. And she had
found her way into the library, and used to undo the heavy bars of
the shutters if the housemaid had forgotten this duty, and mount the
ladder, sitting on the steps, for an hour at a time, deep in some
book of the old English classics. The summer days were very short to
this happy girl of seventeen.


CHAPTER VIII


DRIFTING INTO DANGER


On Thursday, the quiet country household was stirred through all its
fibres with the thought of Roger's coming home. Mrs. Hamley had not
seemed quite so well, or quite in such good spirits for two or three
days before; and the squire himself had appeared to be put out
without any visible cause. They had not chosen to tell Molly that
Osborne's name had only appeared very low down in the mathematical
tripos. So all that their visitor knew was that something was out of
tune, and she hoped that Roger's coming home would set it to rights,
for it was beyond the power of her small cares and wiles.

On Thursday, the housemaid apologized to her for some slight
negligence in her bedroom, by saying she had been busy scouring Mr
Roger's rooms. 'Not but what they were as clean as could be
beforehand; but mistress would always have the young gentlemen's
rooms cleaned afresh before they came home. If it had been Mr
Osborne, the whole house would have had to be done; but to be sure
he was the eldest son, so it was but likely.' Molly was amused at
this testimony to the rights of heirship; but somehow she herself
had fallen into the family manner of thinking that nothing was too
great or too good for 'the eldest son.' In his father's eyes,
Osborne was the representative of the ancient house of Hamley of
Hamley, the future owner of the land which had been theirs for a
thousand years. His mother clung to him because they two were cast
in the same mould, both physically and mentally--because he bore her
maiden name. She had indoctrinated Molly with her faith, and, in
spite of her amusement at the housemaid's speech, the girl visitor
would have been as anxious as any one to show her feudal loyalty to
the heir, if indeed it had been he that was coming. After luncheon,
Mrs. Hamley went to rest, in preparation for Roger's return; and
Molly also retired to her own room, feeling that it would be better
for her to remain there until dinner-time, and so to leave the
father and mother to receive their boy in privacy. She took a book
of MS. poems with her; they were all of Osborne Hamley's
composition; and his mother had read some of them aloud to her young
visitor more than once. Molly had asked permission to copy one or
two of those which were her greatest favourites; and this quiet
summer afternoon she took this copying for her employment, sitting
at the pleasant open window, and losing herself in dreamy out-looks
into the gardens and woods, quivering in the noontide heat. The
house was so still, in its silence it might have been the 'moated
grange;' the booming buzz of the blue flies, in the great staircase
window, seemed the loudest noise in-doors. And there was scarcely a
sound out-of-doors but the humming of bees, in the flower-beds below
the window. Distant voices from the far-away fields in which they
were making hay--the scent of which came in sudden wafts distinct
from that of the nearer roses and honey-suckles--these merry piping
voices just made Molly feel the depth of the present silence. She
had left off copying, her hand weary with the unusual exertion of so
much writing, and she was lazily trying to learn one or two of the
poems off by heart.

I asked of the wind, but answer made it none,
Save its accustomed sad and solitary moan--

she kept saying to herself, losing her sense of whatever meaning the
words had ever had, in the repetition which had become mechanical.
Suddenly there was the snap of a shutting gate; wheels cranching on
the dry gravel, horses' feet on the drive; a loud cheerful voice in
the house, coming up through the open windows, the hall, the
passages, the staircase, with unwonted fulness and roundness of
tone. The entrance-hall downstairs was paved with diamonds of black
and white marble; the low wide staircase that went in short flights
around the hall, till you could look down upon the marble floor from
the top story of the house, was uncarpeted--uncovered. The squire
was too proud of his beautifully-joined oaken flooring to cover this
staircase up unnecessarily; not to say a word of the usual state of
want of ready money to expend upon the decorations of his house. So,
through the undraperied hollow square of the hall and staircase
every sound ascended clear and distinct; and Molly heard the
squire's glad 'Hollo! here he is,' and madam's softer, more
plaintive voice; and then the loud, full, strange tone, which she
knew must be Roger's. Then there was an opening and shutting of
doors, and only a distant buzz of talking. Molly began again--

I asked of the wind, but answer made it, none.

And this time she had nearly finished learning the poem, when she
heard Mrs. Hamley come hastily into her sitting-room that adjoined
Molly's bedroom, and burst out into an irrepressible half-hysterical
fit of sobbing. Molly was too young to have any complication of
motives which should prevent her going at once to try and give what
comfort she could. In an instant she was kneeling at Mrs. Hamley's
feet, holding the poor lady's hands, kissing them, murmuring soft
words; which, all unmeaning as they were of aught but sympathy with
the untold grief, did Mrs. Hamley good. She checked herself, smiling
sadly at Molly through the midst of her thick-coming sobs.

'It's only Osborne,' said she, at last. 'Roger has been telling us
about him.'

'What about him?' asked Molly, eagerly.

'I knew on Monday; we had a letter--he said he had not done so well
as we had hoped--as he had hoped himself, poor fellow! He said he
had just passed,--was only low down among the ~junior optimes~, and
not where he had expected, and had led us to expect, But the squire
has never been at college, and does not understand college terms,
and he has been asking Roger all about it, and Roger has been
telling him, and it has made him so angry. But the squire hates
college slang;--he has never been there, you know; and he thought
poor Osborne was taking it too lightly, and he has been asking Roger
about it, and Roger----'

There was a fresh fit of the sobbing crying. Molly burst out,--

'I don't think Mr. Roger should have told; he had no need to begin so
soon about his brother's failure. Why, he hasn't been in the house
an hour!'

'Hush, hush, love!' said Mrs. Hamley. 'Roger is so good. You don't
understand. The squire Would begin and ask questions before Roger
had tasted food--as soon as ever we had got into the dining-room.
And all he said--to me, at any rate--was that Osborne was nervous,
and that if he could only have gone in for the Chancellor's medals,
he would have carried all before him. But Roger said that after
failing like this, he is not very likely to get a fellowship, which
the squire had placed his hopes on. Osborne himself seemed so sure
of it, that the squire can't understand it, and is seriously angry,
and growing more so the more he talks about it. He has kept it in
two or three days, and that never suits him. He is always better
when he is angry about a thing at once, and does not let it smoulder
in his mind. Poor, poor Osborne! I did wish he had been coming
straight home, instead of going to these friends of his; I thought I
could have comforted him. But now I'm glad, for it will be better to
let his father's anger cool first.'

So talking out what was in her heart, Mrs. Hamley became more
composed; and at length she dismissed Molly to dress for dinner,
with a kiss, saying,--

'You're a real blessing to mothers, child! You give one such
pleasant sympathy, both in one's gladness and in one's sorrow; in
one's pride (for I was so proud last week, so confident), and in
one's disappointment. And now your being a fourth at dinner will
keep us off that sore subject; there are times when a stranger in
the household is a wonderful help.'

Molly thought over all that she had heard, as she was dressing and
putting on the terrible, over-smart plaid gown in honour of the new
arrival. Her unconscious fealty to Osborne was not in the least
shaken by his having come to grief at Cambridge. Only she was
indignant--with or without reason--against Roger, who seemed to have
brought the reality of bad news as an offering of first-fruits on
his return home.

She went down into the drawing-room with anything but a welcome to
him in her heart. He was standing by his mother; the squire had not
yet made his appearance. Molly thought that the two were hand in
hand when she first opened the door, but she could not be quite
sure. Mrs. Hamley came a little forwards to meet her, and introduced
her in so fondly intimate a way to her son, that Molly, innocent and
simple, knowing nothing but Hollingford manners, which were anything
but formal, half put out her hand to shake hands with one of whom
she had heard so much--the son of such kind friends. She could only
hope he had not seen the movement, for he made no attempt to respond
to it; only bowed.

He was a tall powerfully-made young man, giving the impression of
strength more than elegance. His face was rather square,
ruddy-coloured (as his father had said), hair and eyes brown--the
latter rather deep-set beneath his thick eyebrows; and he had a
trick of wrinkling up his eyelids when he wanted particularly to
observe anything, which made his eyes look even smaller still at
such times. He had a large mouth, with excessively mobile lips; and
another trick of his was, that when he was amused at anything, he
resisted the impulse to laugh, by a droll manner of twitching and
puckering up his mouth, till at length the sense of humour had its
way, and his features relaxed, and he broke into a broad sunny
smile; his beautiful teeth--his only beautiful feature--breaking out
with a white gleam upon the red-brown countenance. These two tricks
of his--of crumpling up the eyelids, so as to concentrate the power
of sight, which made him look stern and thoughtful; and the odd
twitching of the lips, which was preliminary to a smile, which made
him. look intensely merry--gave the varying expressions of his face
a greater range 'from grave to gay, from lively to severe,' than is
common to most men. To Molly, who was not finely discriminative in
her glances at the stranger this first night, he simply appeared
'heavy-looking, clumsy,' and 'a person she was sure she should never
get on with.' He certainly did not seem to care much what impression
he made upon his mother's visitor. He was at that age when young men
admire a formed beauty more than a face with any amount of future
capability of loveliness, and when they are morbidly conscious of
the difficulty of finding subjects of conversation in talking to
girls in a state of feminine hobbledehoyhood. Besides, his thoughts
were full of other subjects, which he did not intend to allow to
ooze out in words, yet he wanted to prevent any of that heavy
silence which he feared might be impending--with an angry and
displeased father, and a timorous and distressed mother. He only
looked upon Molly as a badly-dressed, and rather awkward girl, with
black hair and an intelligent face, who might help him in the task
he had set himself of keeping up a bright general conversation
during the rest of the evening; might help him--if she would, but
she would not. She thought him unfeeling in his talkativeness; his
constant flow of words upon indifferent subjects was a wonder and a
repulsion to her. How could he go on so cheerfully while his mother
sate there, scarcely eating anything, and doing her best, with ill
success, to swallow down the tears that would keep rising to her
eyes; when his father's heavy brow was deeply clouded, and he
evidently cared nothing--at first at least--for all the chatter his
son poured forth? Had Mr. Roger Hamley no sympathy in him? She would
show that she had, at any rate. So she quite declined the part,
which he had hoped she would have taken, of respondent, and possible
questioner; and his work became more and more like that of a man
walking in a quagmire. Once the squire roused himself to speak to
the butler; he felt the need of outward stimulus--of a better
vintage than usual.

'Bring up a bottle of the Burgundy with the yellow seal.'

He spoke low; he had no spirit to speak in his usual voice. The
butler answered in the same tone. Molly sitting near them, and
silent herself, heard what they said.

'If you please, sir, there are not above six bottles of that seal
left; and it is Mr. Osborne's favourite wine.'

The squire turned round with a growl in his voice.

'Bring up a bottle of the Burgundy with the yellow seal, as I said.'

The butler went away, wondering. 'Mr. Osborne's' likes and dislikes
had been the law of the house in general until now. If he had liked
any particular food or drink, any seat or place, any special degree
of warmth or coolness, his wishes were to be attended to; for he was
the heir, and he was delicate, and he was the clever one of the
family. All the out-of-doors men would have said the same; Mr
Osborne wished a tree cut down, or kept standing, or had
such-and-such a fancy about the game; or had desired something
unusual about the horses; and they had all to attend to it as if it
were law. But to-day the Burgundy with the yellow seal was to be
brought; and it was brought. Molly testified with quiet vehemence of
action; she never took wine, so she need not have been afraid of the
man's pouring it into her glass; but as an open mark of fealty to
the absent Osborne, however little it might be understood, she
placed the palm of her small brown hand over the top of the glass,
and held it there, till the wine had gone round, and Roger and his
father were in full enjoyment of the same.

After dinner, too, the gentlemen lingered long over their dessert,
and Molly heard them laughing; and then she saw them loitering about
in the twilight out-of-doors; Roger hatless, his hands in his
pockets, lounging by his father's side, who was now able to talk in
his usual loud and cheerful way, forgetting Osborne. ~Voe, victis!~

And so in mute opposition on Molly's side, in polite indifference,
scarcely verging on kindliness on his, Roger and she steered clear
of each other. He had many occupations in which he needed no
companionship, even if she had been qualified to give it. The worst
was, that she found he was in the habit of occupying the library,
her favourite retreat, in the mornings before Mrs. Hamley came down.
She opened the half-closed door a day or two after his return home,
and found him busy among books and papers, with which the large
leather-covered table was strewn; and she softly withdrew before he
could turn his head and see her, so as to distinguish her from one
of the housemaids. He rode out every day, sometimes with his father
about the outlying fields, sometimes far away for a good gallop.
Molly would have enjoyed accompanying him on these occasions, for
she was very fond of riding; and there had been some talk of sending
for her habit and grey pony when first she came to Hamley; only the
squire, after some consideration, had said he so rarely did more
than go slowly from one field to another, where his labourers were
at work, that he feared she would find such slow work--ten minutes
riding through heavy land, twenty minutes sitting still on
horseback, listening to the directions he should have to give to his
men--rather dull. Now, when if she had had her pony here she might
have ridden out with Roger, without giving him any trouble--she
would have taken care of that--nobody seemed to think of renewing
the proposal. Altogether it was pleasanter before he came home.

Her father came over pretty frequently; sometimes there were long
unaccountable absences, it was true; when his daughter began to
fidget after him, and to wonder what had become of him. But when he
made his appearance he had always good reasons to give; and the
right she felt that she had to his familiar household tenderness;
the power she possessed of fully understanding the exact value of
both his words and his silence, made these glimpses of intercourse
with him inexpressibly charming. Latterly her burden had always
been, 'When may I come home, papa?' It was not that she was unhappy,
or uncomfortable; she was passionately fond of Mrs. Hamley, she was a
favourite of the squire's, and could not as Yet fully understand why
some people were so much afraid of him; and as for Roger, if he did
not add to her pleasure, he scarcely took away from it. But she
wanted to be at home once more. The reason why she could not tell;
but this she knew full well. Mr. Gibson reasoned with her till she
was weary of being completely convinced that it was right and
necessary for her to stay where she was. And then with an effort she
stopped the cry upon her tongue, for she saw that its repetition
harassed her father.

During this absence of hers Mr. Gibson was drifting into matrimony.
He was partly aware of whither he was going; and partly it was like
the soft floating movement of a dream. He was more passive than
active in the affair; though, if his reason had not fully approved
of the step he was tending to--if he had not believed that a second
marriage was the very best way of cutting the Gordian knot of
domestic difficulties, he could have made an effort without any
great trouble to himself, and extricated himself without pain from
the mesh of circumstances. It happened in this manner:--

Lady Cumnor having married her two eldest daughters, found her
labours as a chaperone to Lady Harriet, the youngest, considerably
lightened by co-operation; and, at length, she had leisure to be an
invalid. She was, however, too energetic to allow herself this
indulgence constantly; only she permitted herself to break down
occasionally after a long course of dinners, late hours, and London
atmosphere: and then, leaving Lady Harriet with either Lady Cuxhaven
or Lady Agnes Manners, she betook herself to the comparative quiet
of the Towers, where she found occupation in doing her benevolence,
which was sadly neglected in the hurly-burly of London. This
particular summer she had broken down earlier than usual, and longed
for the repose of the country. She believed that her state of
health, too, was more serious than previously; but she did not say a
word of this to her husband or daughters; reserving her confidence
for Mr. Gibson's cars. She did not wish to take Lady Harriet away
from the gaieties of town which she was thoroughly enjoying, by any
complaint of hers, which might, after all, be ill-founded; and yet
she did not quite like being without a companion in the three weeks
or a month that might intervene before her family would join her at
the Towers, especially as the annual festivity to the school
visitors was impending; and both the school and the visit of the
ladies connected with it, had rather lost the zest of novelty.

'Thursday, the 19th, Harriet,' said Lady Cumnor meditatively; 'what
do you say to coming down to the Towers on the 18th, and helping me
over that long day; you could stay in the country till Monday, and
have a few days' rest and good air; you would return a great deal
fresher to the remainder of your gaieties. Your father would bring
you down, I know: indeed, he is coming naturally.'

'Oh, mammal' said Lady Harriet, the youngest daughter of the
house--the prettiest, the most indulged; 'I cannot go; there is the
water-party up to Maidenhead on the 20th, I should be so sorry to
miss it: and Mrs. Duncan's ball, and Grisi's concert; please, don't
want me. Besides, I should do no good. I can't make provincial
small-talk; I'm not up in the local politics of Hollingford. I
should be making mischief, I know I should.'

'Very well, my dear,' said Lady Cumnor, sighing, 'I had forgotten
the Maidenhead water-party, or I would not have asked you.'

'What a pity it isn't the Eton holidays, so that you could have had
Hollingford's boys to help you to do the honours, mamma. They are
such affable little prigs. It was the greatest fun to watch them
last year at Sir Edward's, doing the honours of their grandfather's
house to much such a collection of humble admirers as you get
together at the Towers. I shall never forget seeing Edgar gravely
squiring about an old lady in a portentous black bonnet, and giving
her information in the correctest grammar possible.'

'Well, I like those lads,' said Lady Cuxhaven; 'they are on the way
to become true gentlemen. But, mamma, why shouldn't you have Clare
to stay with you? You like her, and she is just the person to save
you the troubles of hospitality to the Hollingford people, and we
should all be so much more comfortable if we knew you had her with
you.'

'Yes, Clare would do very well,' said Lady Cumnor; 'but is not it
her school-time or something? We must not interfere with her school
so as to injure her, for I am afraid she is not doing too well as it
is; and she has been so very unlucky ever since she left us--first
her husband died, and then she lost Lady Davies' situation, and then
Mrs. Maude's, and now Mr. Preston told your father it was all she
could do to pay her way in Ashcombe, though Lord Cumnor lets her
have the house rent-free.'

'I can't think how it is,' said Lady Harriet. 'She's not very wise,
certainly; but she is so useful and agreeable, and has such pleasant
manners. I should have thought any one who wasn't particular about
education would have been charmed to keep her as a governess.'

'What do you mean by not being particular about education? Most
people who keep governesses for their children are supposed to be
particular,' said Lady Cuxhaven.

'Well, they think themselves so, I've no doubt; but I call you
particular, Mary, and I don't think mamma was; but she thought
herself so, I am sure.'

'I can't think what you mean, Harriet,' said Lady Cumnor, a good
deal annoyed at this speech of her clever, heedless, youngest
daughter.

'Oh dear, mamma, you did everything you could think of for us; but
you see you'd ever so many other engrossing interests, and Mary
hardly ever allows her love for her husband to interfere with her
all-absorbing care for the children. You gave us the best of masters
in every department, and Clare to dragonize and keep us up to our
preparation for these masters, as well as ever she could; but then
you know, or rather you didn't know, some of the masters admired our
very pretty governess, and there was a kind of respectable veiled
flirtation going on, which never came to anything, to be sure; and
then you were often so overwhelmed with your business as a great
lady--fashionable and benevolent, and all that sort of thing--that
you used to call Clare away from us at the most critical times of
our lessons, to write your notes, or add up your accounts, and the
consequence is, that I'm about the most ill-informed girl in London.
Only Mary was so capitally trained by good awkward Miss Benson, that
she is always full to overflowing with accurate knowledge, and her
glory is reflected upon me.'

'Do you think what Harriet says is true, Mary?' asked Lady Cumnor,
rather anxiously.

'I was so little with Clare in the schoolroom. I used to read French
with her; she had a beautiful accent, I remember. Both Agnes and
Harriet were very fond of her. I used to be jealous for Miss
Benson's sake, and perhaps--' Lady Cuxhaven paused a minute--'that
made me fancy that she had a way of flattering and indulging
them--not quite conscientious, I used to think. But girls are severe
judges, and certainly she has had an anxious enough life since. I am
always so glad when we can have her, and give her a little pleasure.
The only thing that makes me uneasy now is the way in which she
seems to send her daughter away from her so much; we never can
persuade her to bring Cynthia with her when she comes to see us.'

'Now that I call ill-natured,' said Lady Harriet; 'here is a poor
dear woman trying to earn her livelihood, first as a governess, and
what could she do with her daughter then, but send her to school?
and after that, when Clare is asked to go visiting, and is too
modest to bring her girl with her--besides all the expense of the
journey, and the rigging out--Mary finds fault with her for her
modesty and economy.'

'Well, after all, we are not discussing Clare and her affairs, but
trying to plan for mamma's comfort. I don't see that she can do
better than ask Mrs. Kirkpatrick to come to the Towers--as soon as
her holidays begin, I mean.'

'Here is her last letter,' said Lady Cumnor, who had been searching
for it in her escritoire, while her daughters were talking. Holding
her glasses before her eyes, she began to read, '"My wonted
misfortunes appear to have followed me to Ashcombe"--um, um, um;
that's not it--"Mr. Preston is most kind in sending me fruit and
flowers from the Manor-house, according to dear Lord Cumnor's kind
injunctions." Oh, here it is! "The vacation begins on the 11th,
according to the usual custom of schools in Ashcombe; and I must
then try and obtain some change of air and scene, in order to fit
myself for the resumption of my duties on the 10th of August." You
see, girls, she would be at liberty, if she has not made any other
arrangement for spending her holidays. To-day is the 15th.'

'I'll write to her at once, mamma,' Lady Harriet said. 'Clare and I
are always great friends; I was her confidant in her loves with poor
Mr. Kirkpatrick, and we've kept up our intimacy ever since. I know of
three offers she had besides.'

'I sincerely hope Miss Bowes is not telling her love-affairs to
Grace or Lily. Why, Harriet, you could not have been older than
Grace when Clare was married!' said Lady Cuxhaven in maternal alarm.

'No; but I was well versed in the tender passion, thanks to novels.
Now I dare say you don't admit novels into your school-room, Mary;
so your daughters wouldn't be able to administer discreet sympathy
to their governess in case she was the heroine of a love-affair.'

'My dear Harriet, don't let me hear you talking of love in that way;
it is not pretty. Love is a serious thing.'

'My dear mamma, your exhortations are just eighteen years too late.
I've talked all the freshness off love, and that's the reason I'm
tired of the subject.'

This last speech referred to a recent refusal of lady Harriet's,
which had displeased Lady Cumnor, and rather annoyed my lord; as
they, the parents, could see no objection to the gentleman in
question. Lady Cuxhaven did not want to have the subject brought up,
so she hastened to say,--

'Do ask the poor little daughter to come with her mother to the
Towers; why, she must be seventeen or more; she would really be a
companion to you, mamma, if her mother was unable to come,' said
Lady Cuxhaven.

'I was not ten when Clare married, and I'm nearly nine-and-twenty,'
added Lady Harriet.

'Don't speak of it, Harriet; at any rate you are but
eight-and-twenty now, and you look a great deal younger. There is no
need to be always bringing up your age on every possible occasion.'

'There was need of it now, though. I wanted to make out how old
Cynthia Kirkpatrick was. I think she can't be far from eighteen.'

'She is at school at Boulogne, I know; and so I don't think she can
be as old as that. Clare says something about her in this letter:
"Under these circumstances" (the ill-success of her school), "I
cannot think myself justified in allowing myself the pleasure of
having darling Cynthia at home for the holidays; especially as the
period when the vacation in French schools commences differs from
that common in England; and it might occasion some confusion in my
arrangements if darling Cynthia were to come to Ashcombe, and occupy
my time and thoughts so immediately before the commencement of my
scholastic duties as the 8th of August, on which day her vacation
begins, which is but two days before my holidays end." So, you see,
Clare would be quite at liberty to come to me, and I dare say it
would be a very nice change for her.'

'And Hollingford is busy seeing after his new laboratory at the
Towers, and is constantly backwards and forwards. And Agnes wants to
go there for change of air, as soon as she is strong enough after
her confinement. And even my own dear insatiable "me" will have had
enough of gaiety in two or three weeks, if this hot weather lasts.'

'I think I may be able to come down for a few days too, if you will
let me, mamma; and I'll bring Grace, who is looking rather pale and
weedy; growing too fast, I am afraid. So I hope you won't be dull.'

'My dear,' said Lady Cumnor, drawing herself up, 'I should be
ashamed of feeling dull with my resources; my duties to others and
to myself!'

So the plan in its present shape was told to Lord Cumnor, who highly
approved of it; as he always did of every project of his wife's.
Lady Cumnor's character was perhaps a little too ponderous for him
in reality, but he was always full of admiration for all her words
and deeds, and used to boast of her wisdom, her benevolence, her
power and dignity, in her absence, as if by this means he could
buttress up his own more feeble nature.

'Very good--very good, indeed! Clare to join you at the Towers!
Capital! I could not have planned it better myself! I shall go down
with you on Wednesday in time for the jollification on Thursday. I
always enjoy that day; they are such nice, friendly people, those
good Hollingford ladies. Then I'll have a day with Sheepshanks, and
perhaps I may ride over to Ashcombe and see Preston--Brown Jess can
do it in a day, eighteen miles--to be sure! But there's back again
to the Towers! how much is twice eighteen--thirty?'

'Thirty-six,' said Lady Cumnor, sharply.

'So it is; you're always right, my dear. Preston's a clever, sharp
fellow.'

'I don't like him,' said my lady.

'He takes looking after; but he's a sharp fellow. He's such a
good-looking man, too, I wonder you don't like him.'

'I never think whether a land-agent is handsome or not. They don't
belong to the class of people whose appearance I notice.'

'To be sure not. But he is a handsome fellow; and what should make
you like him is the interest he takes in Clare and her prospects. He
is constantly suggesting something that can be done to her house,
and I know he sends her fruit, and flowers, and game just as
regularly as we should ourselves if we lived at Ashcombe.'

'How old is he?' said Lady Cumnor, with a faint suspicion of motives
in her mind.

'About twenty-seven, I think. Ah! I see what is in your ladyship's
head. No! no! he's too young for that. You must look out for some
middle-aged man, if you want to get poor Clare married; Preston
won't do.'

'I'm not a match-maker, as you might know. I never did it for my own
daughters. I'm not likely to do it for Clare,' said she, leaning
back languidly.

'Well! you might do a worse thing. I'm beginning to think she'll
never get on as a schoolmistress, though why she should not, I'm
sure I don't know; for she's an uncommonly pretty woman for her age,
and her having lived in our family, and your having had her so often
with you, ought to go a good way. I say, my lady, what do you think
of Gibson? He would be just the right age--widower--lives near the
Towers.'

'I told you just now I was no match-maker, my lord. I suppose we had
better go by the old road--the people at those inns know us?'

And so they passed on to speaking about other things than Mrs
Kirkpatrick and her prospects, scholastic or matrimonial.


CHAPTER IX


THE WIDOWER AND THE WIDOW


Mrs. Kirkpatrick was only too happy to accept Lady Cumnor's
invitation. It was what she had been hoping for, but hardly daring
to expect, as she believed that the family were settled in London
for some time to come. The Towers was a pleasant and luxurious house
in which to pass her holidays; and though she was not one to make
deep plans, or to look far ahead, she was quite aware of the
prestige which her being able to say she had been staying with 'dear
Lady Cumnor' at the Towers, was likely to give her and her school in
the eyes of a good many people; so she gladly prepared to join her
ladyship on the 17th. Her wardrobe did not require much arrangement;
if it had done, the poor lady would not have had much money to
appropriate to the purpose. She was very pretty and graceful; and
that goes a great way towards carrying off shabby clothes; and it
was her taste, more than any depth of feeling, that had made her
persevere in wearing all the delicate tints--the violets and
greys--which, with a certain admixture of black, constitute
half-mourning. This style of becoming dress she was supposed to wear
in memory of Mr. Kirkpatrick; in reality because it was both
lady-like and economical. Her beautiful hair was of that rich auburn
that hardly ever turns grey; and partly out of consciousness of its
beauty, and partly because the washing of caps is expensive, she did
not wear anything on her head; her complexion had the vivid tints
that often accompany the kind of hair which has once been red; and
the only injury her skin had received from advancing years was that
the colouring was rather more brilliant than delicate, and varied
less with every passing emotion. She could no longer blush; and at
eighteen she had been very proud of her blushes. Her eyes were soft,
large, and china-blue in colour. they had not much expression or
shadow about them, which was perhaps owing to the flaxen colour of
her eyelashes. Her figure was a little fuller than it used to be,
but her movements were as soft and sinuous as ever. Altogether, she
looked much younger than her age, which was not far short of forty.
She had a very pleasant voice, and read aloud well and distinctly,
which Lady Cumnor liked. Indeed, for some inexplicable reason, she
was a greater; more positive favourite with Lady Cumnor than with
any of the rest of the family, though they all liked her up to a
certain point, and found it agreeably useful to have any one in the
house who was so well acquainted with their ways and habits; so
ready to talk, when a little trickle of conversation was required;
so willing to listen, and to listen with tolerable intelligence, if
the subjects spoken about did not refer to serious solid literature,
or science, or politics, or social economy. About novels and poetry,
travels and gossip, personal details, or anecdotes of any kind, she
always made exactly the remarks which are expected from an agreeable
listener; and she had sense enough to confine herself to those short
expressions of wonder, admiration, and astonishment, which may mean
anything, when more recondite things were talked about.

It was a very pleasant change to a poor unsuccessful schoolmistress
to leave her own house, full of battered and shabby furniture (she
had taken the goodwill and furniture of her predecessor at a
valuation, two or three years before), where the look-out was as
gloomy, and the surrounding as squalid, as is often the case in the
smaller streets of a country town, and to come bowling through the
Towers Park in the luxurious carriage sent to meet her; to alight,
and feel secure that the well-trained servants would see after her
bags and umbrella, and parasol, and cloak, without her loading
herself with all these portable articles, as she had had to do while
following the wheel-barrow containing her luggage in going to the
Ashcombe coach-office that morning; to pass up the deep-piled
carpets of the broad shallow stairs into my lady's own room, cool
and deliciously fresh, even on this sultry day, and fragrant with
great bowls of freshly gathered roses of every shade of colour.
There were two or three new novels lying uncut on the table; the
daily papers, the magazines. Every chair was an easy-chair of some
kind or other; and all covered with French chintz that mimicked the
real flowers in the garden below. She was familiar with the bedroom
called hers, to which she was soon ushered by Lady Cumnor's maid. It
seemed to her far more like home than the dingy place she had left
that morning; it was so natural to her to like dainty draperies and
harmonious colouring, and fine linen and soft raiment. She sate down
on the arm-chair by the bed-side, and wondered over her fate
something in this fashion,--

'One would think it was an easy enough thing to deck a looking-glass
like that with muslin and pink ribbons; and yet how hard it is to
keep it up! People don't know how hard it is till they've tried as I
have. I made my own glass just as pretty when I first went to
Ashcombe; but the muslin got dirty, and the pink ribbons faded, and
it is so difficult to earn money to renew them; and when one has got
the money one hasn't the heart to spend it all at once. One thinks
and one thinks how one can get the most good out of it; and a new
gown, or a day's pleasure, or some hot-house fruit, or some piece of
elegance that can be seen and noticed in one's drawing-room, carries
the day, and good-by to prettily decked looking-glasses. Now here,
money is like the air they breathe. No one ever asks or knows how
much the washing costs, or what pink ribbon is a yard. Ah! it would
be different if they had to earn every penny as I have! They would
have to calculate, like me, how to get the most pleasure out of it.
I wonder if I am to go on all my life toiling and moiling for money?
It's not natural. Marriage is the natural thing; then the husband
has all that kind of dirty work to do, and his wife sits in the
drawing-room like a lady. I did, when poor Kirkpatrick was alive.
Heigho! it's a sad thing to be a widow.'

Then there was the contrast between the dinners which she had to
share with her scholars at Ashcombe--rounds of beef, legs of mutton,
great dishes of potatoes, and large barter-puddings, with the tiny
meal of exquisitely cooked delicacies, sent up on old Chelsea china,
that was served every day to the earl and countess and herself at
the Towers. She dreaded the end of her holidays as much as the most
home-loving of her pupils. But at this time that end was some weeks
off, so Clare shut her eyes to the future, and tried to relish the
present to its fullest extent. A disturbance to the pleasant, even
course of the summer days came in the indisposition of Lady Cumnor.
Her husband had gone back to London, and she and Mrs. Kirkpatrick had
been left to the very even tenor of life, which was according to my
lady's wish just now. In spite of her languor and fatigue, she had
gone through the day when the school visitors came to the Towers, in
full dignity, dictating clearly all that was to be done, what walks
were to be taken, what hothouses to be seen, and when the party were
to return to the 'collation.' She herself remained indoors, with one
or two ladies who had ventured to think that the fatigue or the heat
might be too much for them, and who had therefore declined
accompanying the ladies in charge of Mrs. Kirkpatrick, or those other
favoured few to whom Lord Cumnor was explaining the new buildings in
his farm-yard. 'With the utmost condescension,' as her hearers
afterwards expressed it, Lady Cumnor told them all about her married
daughters' establishments, nurseries, plans for the education of
their children, and manner of passing the day. But the exertion
tired her; and when every one had left, the probability is that she
would have gone to lie down and rest, had not her husband made an
unlucky remark in the kindness of his heart. He came up to her and
put his hand on her shoulder.

'I'm afraid you're sadly tired, my lady?' he said.

She braced her muscles, and drew herself up, saying coldly,--

'When I am tired, Lord Cumnor, I will tell you so.' And her own
fatigue showed itself during the rest of the evening in her sitting
particularly upright, and declining all offers of easy-chairs or
footstools, and refusing the insult of a suggestion that they should
all go to bed earlier. She went on in something of this kind of
manner as long as Lord Cumnor remained at the Towers. Mrs
Kirkpatrick was quite deceived by it, and kept assuring Lord Cumnor
that she had never seen dear Lady Cumnor looking better, or so
strong and well. But he had an affectionate heart, if a blundering
head; and though he could give no reason for his belief, he was
almost certain his wife was not well. Yet he was too much afraid of
her to send for Mr. Gibson without her permission. His last words to
Clare were,--

'It's such a comfort to leave my lady to you; only don't you be
deluded by her ways. She'll not show she's ill till she can't help
it. Consult with Bradley,' (Lady Cumnor's 'own woman,'--she disliked
the new-fangledness of 'lady's-maid,') 'and if I were you, I'd send
and ask Gibson to call--you might make any kind of a pretence,'--and
then the idea he had had in London of the fitness of a match between
the two coming into his head just now, he could not help
adding,--'Get him to come and see you, he's a very agreeable man;
Lord Hollingford says there's no one like him in these parts: and he
might be looking at my lady while he was talking to you, and see if
he thinks her really ill. And let me know what he says about her.'

But Clare was just as great a coward about doing anything for Lady
Cumnor which she had not expressly ordered, as Lord Cumnor himself.
She knew she might fall into such disgrace if she sent for Mr. Gibson
without direct permission, that she might never be asked to stay at
the Towers again; and the life there, monotonous in its smoothness
of luxury as it might be to some, was exactly to her taste. She in
her turn tried to put upon Bradley the duty which Lord Cumnor had
put upon her.

'Mrs. Bradley,' she said one day, 'are you quite comfortable about my
lady's health? Lord Cumnor fancied that she was looking worn and
ill?'

'Indeed, Mrs. Kirkpatrick, I don't think my lady is herself. I can't
persuade myself as she is, though if you was to question me till
night I couldn't tell you why.'

'Don't you think you could make some errand to Hollingford, and see
Mr. Gibson, and ask him to come round this way some day, and make a
call on Lady Cumnor?'

'It would be as much as my place is worth, Mrs. Kirkpatrick. Till my
lady's dying day, if Providence keeps her in her senses, she'll have
everything done her own way, or not at all. There's only Lady
Harriet that can manage her at all, and she not always.'

'Well, then--we must hope that there is nothing the matter with her;
and I dare say there is not. She says there is not, and she ought to
know best herself.'

But a day or two after this conversation took place, Lady Cumnor
startled Mrs. Kirkpatrick, by saying suddenly,--

'Clare, I wish you'd write a note to Mr. Gibson, saying, I should
like to see him this afternoon. I thought he would have called of
himself before now. He ought to have done so, to pay his respects.'

Mr. Gibson had been far too busy in his profession to have time for
mere visits of ceremony, though he knew quite well he was neglecting
what was expected of him. But the district of which he may be said
to have had medical charge was full of a bad kind of low fever,
which took up all his time and thought, and often made him very
thankful that Molly was out of the way in the quiet shades of
Hamley.

His domestic 'raws' had not healed over in the least, though he was
obliged to put the perplexities on one side for the time. The last
drop--the final straw, had been an impromptu visit of Lord
Hollingford's, whom he had met in the town one forenoon. They had
had a good deal to say to each other about some new scientific
discovery, with the details of which Lord Hollingford was well
acquainted, while Mr. Gibson was ignorant and deeply interested. At
length Lord Hollingford said suddenly,--

'Gibson, I wonder if you'd give me some lunch; I've been a good deal
about since my seven-o'clock breakfast, and am getting quite
ravenous.'

Now Mr. Gibson was only too much pleased to show hospitality to one
whom he liked and respected so much as Lord Hollingford, and he
gladly took him home with him to the early family dinner. But it was
just at the time when the cook was sulking at Bethia's
dismissal--and she chose to be unpunctual and careless. There was no
successor to Bethia as yet appointed to wait at the meals. So,
though Mr. Gibson knew well that bread-and-cheese, cold beef, or the
simplest food available, would have been welcome to the hungry lord,
he could not get either these things for luncheon, or even the
family dinner, at anything like the proper time, in spite of all his
ringing, and as much anger as he liked to show, for fear of making
Lord Hollingford uncomfortable. At last dinner was ready, but the
poor host saw the want of nicety--almost the want of cleanliness, in
all its accompaniments--dingy plate, dull-looking glass, a
tablecloth that, if not absolutely dirty, was anything but fresh in
its splashed and rumpled condition, and compared it in his own mind
with the dainty delicacy with which even a loaf of brown bread was
served up at his guest's home. He did not apologize directly, but,
after dinner, just as they were parting, he said,--

'You see a man like me--a widower--with a daughter who cannot always
be at home--has not the regulated household which would enable me to
command the small portions of time I can spend there.'

He made no allusion to the comfortless meal of which they had both
partaken, though it was full in his mind. Nor was it absent from
Lord Hollingford's, as he made reply,--

'True, true. Yet a man like you ought to be free from any thought of
household cares. You ought to have somebody. How old is Miss
Gibson?'

'Seventeen. It's a very awkward age for a motherless girl.'

'Yes; very. I have only boys, but it must be very awkward with a
girl. Excuse me, Gibson, but we're talking like friends. Have you
never thought of marrying again? It would not be like a first
marriage, of course; but if you found a sensible agreeable woman of
thirty or so, I really think you couldn't do better than take her to
manage your home, and so save you either discomfort or worry; and,
besides, she would be able to give your daughter that kind of tender
supervision which, I fancy, all girls of that age require. It's a
delicate subject, but you'll excuse my having spoken frankly.'

Mr. Gibson had thought of this advice several times since it was
given; but it was a case of 'first catch your hare.' Where was the
'sensible and agreeable woman of thirty or so?' Not Miss Browning,
nor Miss Phoebe, nor Miss Goodenough. Among his country patients
there were two classes pretty distinctly marked: farmers, whose
children were unrefined and uneducated; squires, whose daughters
would, indeed think the world was coming to a pretty pass, if they
were to marry a country surgeon.

But the first day on which Mr. Gibson paid his visit to Lady Cumnor,
he began to think it possible that Mrs. Kirkpatrick was his 'hare.'
He rode away with slack rein, thinking over what he knew of her,
more than about the prescriptions he should write, or the way he was
going. He remembered her as a very pretty Miss Clare: the governess
who had the scarlet fever; that was in his wife's days, a long time
ago; he could hardly understand Mrs. Kirkpatrick's youthfulness of
appearance when he thought how long. Then he heard of her marriage
to a curate; and the next day (or so it seemed, he could not
recollect the exact duration of the interval), of his death. He
knew, in some way, that ever since she had been living as a
governess in different families; but that she had always been a
great favourite with the family at the Towers, for whom, quite
independent of their rank, he had a true respect. A year or two ago
he had heard that she had taken the good-will of a school at
Ashcombe; a small town close to another property of Lord Cumnor's,
in the same county. Ashcombe was a larger estate than that near
Hollingford, but the old Manor-house there was not nearly so good a
residence as the Towers; so it was given up to Mr. Preston, the
land-agent, for the Ashcombe property, just as Mr. Sheepshanks was
for that at Hollingford. There were a few rooms at the Manor-house
reserved for the occasional visits of the family, otherwise Mr
Preston, a handsome young bachelor, had it all to himself. Mr. Gibson
knew that Mrs. Kirkpatrick had one child, a daughter, who must be
much about the same age as Molly. Of course she had very little, if
any, property. But he himself had lived carefully, and had a few
thousands well invested; besides which, his professional income was
good, and increasing rather than diminishing every year. By the time
he had arrived at this point in his consideration of the case, he
was at the house of the next patient on his round, and he put away
all thought of matrimony and Mrs. Kirkpatrick for the time. Once
again, in the course of the day, he remembered with a certain
pleasure that Molly had told him some little details connected with
her unlucky detention at the Towers five or six years ago, which had
made him feel at the time as if Mrs. Kirkpatrick had behaved very
kindly to his little girl. So there the matter rested for the
present, as far as he was concerned.

Lady Cumnor was out of health; but not so ill as she had been
fancying herself during all those days when the people about her
dared not send for the doctor. It was a great relief to her to have
Mr. Gibson to decide for her what she was to do; what to eat, drink,
avoid. Such decisions ~ab extra~, are sometimes a wonderful relief
to those whose habit it has been to decide, not only for themselves,
but for every one else; and occasionally the relaxation of the
strain which a character for infallible wisdom brings with it, does
much to restore health. Mrs. Kirkpatrick thought in her secret soul
that she had never found it so easy to get on with Lady Cumnor; and
Bradley and she had never done singing the praises of Mr. Gibson,
'who always managed my lady so beautifully.'

Reports were duly sent up to my lord, but he and her daughters were
strictly forbidden to come down. Lady Cumnor wished to be weak and
languid, and uncertain both in body and mind, without family
observation. It was a condition so different to anything she had
ever been in before, that she was unconsciously afraid of losing her
prestige, if she was seen in it. Sometimes she herself wrote the
daily bulletins; at other times she bade Clare to do it, but she
would always see the letters. Any answers she received from her
daughters she used to read herself, occasionally imparting some of
their contents to 'that good Clare.' But anybody might read my
lord's letters. There was no great fear of family secrets oozing out
in his sprawling lines of affection. But once Mrs. Kirkpatrick came
upon a sentence in a letter from Lord Cumnor, which she was reading
out loud to his wife, that caught her eye before she came to it, and
if she could have skipped it and kept it for private perusal, she
would gladly have done so. My lady was too sharp for her, though. In
her opinion 'Clare was a good creature, but not clever,' the truth
being that she was not always quick at resources, though tolerably
unscrupulous in the use of them.

'Read on. What are you stopping for? There is no bad news, is there,
about Agnes?--Give me the letter.'

Lady Cumnor read, half aloud,--

'"How are Clare and Gibson getting on? You despised my advice to
help on that affair, but I really think a little match-making would
be a very pleasant amusement now that you are shut up in the house;
and I cannot conceive any marriage more suitable."'

'Oh!' said Lady Cumnor, laughing, 'it was awkward for you to come
upon that, Clare: I don't wonder you stopped short. You gave me a
terrible fright, though.'

'Lord Cumnor is so fond of joking,' said Mrs. Kirkpatrick, a little
flurried, yet quite recognizing the truth of his last words,--'I
cannot conceive any marriage more suitable.' She wondered what Lady
Cumnor thought of it. Lord Cumnor wrote as if there was really a
chance. It was not an unpleasant idea; it brought a faint smile out
upon her face, as she sate by Lady Cumnor, while the latter took her
afternoon nap.


CHAPTER X


A CRISIS


Mrs. Kirkpatrick had been reading aloud till Lady Cumnor fell asleep,
the book rested on her knee, just kept from falling by her hold. She
was looking out of the window, not seeing the trees in the park, nor
the glimpses of the hills beyond, but thinking how pleasant it would
be to have a husband once more;--some one who would work while she
sate at her elegant ease in a prettily-furnished drawing-room; and
she was rapidly investing this imaginary bread-winner with the form
and features of the country surgeon, when there was a slight tap at
the door, and almost before she could rise, the object of her
thoughts came in. She felt herself blush, and she was not displeased
at the consciousness. She advanced to meet him, making a sign
towards her sleeping ladyship.

'Very good,' said he, in a low voice, casting a professional eye on
the slumbering figure; 'can I speak to you for a minute or two in
the library?'

'Is he going to offer?' thought she, with a sudden palpitation, and
a conviction of her willingness to accept a man whom an hour before
she had simply looked upon as one of the category of unmarried men
to whom matrimony was possible.

He was only going to make one or two medical inquiries; she found
that out very speedily, and considered the conversation as rather
flat to her, though it might be instructive to him. She was not
aware that he finally made up his mind to propose, during the time
that she was speaking--answering his questions in many words, but he
was accustomed to winnow the chaff from the corn; and her voice was
so soft, her accent so pleasant, that it struck him as particularly
agreeable after the broad country accent he was perpetually hearing.
Then the harmonious colours of her dress, and her slow and graceful
movements, had something of the same soothing effect upon his nerves
that a cat's purring has upon some people's. He began to think that
he should be fortunate if he could win her, for his own sake.
Yesterday he had looked upon her more as a possible stepmother for
Molly; to-day he thought more of her as a wife for himself. The
remembrance of Lord Cumnor's letter gave her a very becoming
consciousness; she wished to attract, and hoped that she was
succeeding. Still they only talked of the countess's state for some
time; then a lucky shower came on. Mr. Gibson did not care a jot for
rain, but just now it gave him an excuse for lingering.

'It is very stormy weather,' said he.

'Yes, very. My daughter writes me word, that for two days last week
the packet could not sail from Boulogne.'

'Miss Kirkpatrick is at Boulogne, is she?'

'Yes, poor girl; she is at school there, trying to perfect herself
in the French language. But, Mr. Gibson, you must not call her Miss
Kirkpatrick. Cynthia remembers you with so much--affection, I may
say. She was your little patient when she had the measles here four
years ago, you know. Pray call her Cynthia; she would be quite hurt
at such a formal name as Miss Kirkpatrick from you.'

'Cynthia seems to me such an out-of-the-way name, only fit for
poetry, not for daily use.'

'It is mine,' said Mrs. Kirkpatrick, in a plaintive tone of reproach.
'I was christened Hyacinth, and her poor father would have called
her after me. I'm sorry you don't like it.'

Mr. Gibson did not know what to say. He was not quite prepared to
plunge into the directly personal style. While he was hesitating,
she went on,--

'Hyacinth Clare! Once upon a time I was quite proud of my pretty
name; and other people thought it pretty, too.'

'I've no doubt--' Mr. Gibson began; and then stopped.

'Perhaps I did wrong in yielding to his wish, to have her called by
such a romantic name. It may excite prejudice against her in some
people; and, poor child! she will have enough to struggle with. A
young daughter is a great charge, Mr. Gibson, especially when there
is only one parent to look after her.'

'You are quite right,' said he, recalled to the remembrance of
Molly; 'though I should have thought that a girl who is so fortunate
as to have a mother could not feel the loss of her father so acutely
as one who is motherless must suffer from her deprivation.'

'You are thinking of your own daughter. It was careless of me to say
what I did. Dear child! how well I remember her sweet little face as
she lay sleeping on my bed. I suppose she is nearly grown-up now.
She must be near my Cynthia's age. How I should like to see her!'

'I hope you will. I should like you to see her. I should like you to
love my poor little Molly,--to love her as your own--' He swallowed
down something that rose in his throat, and was nearly choking him.

'Is he going to offer? ~Is~ he?' she wondered; and she began to
tremble in the suspense before he next spoke.

'Could you love her as your daughter? Will you try? Will you give me
the right of introducing you to her as her future mother; as my
wife?'

There! he had done it--whether it was wise or foolish--he had done
it; but he was aware that the question as to its wisdom came into
his mind the instant that the words were said past recall.

She hid her face in her hands.

'Oh! Mr. Gibson,' she said; and then, a little to his surprise, and a
great deal to her own, she burst into hysterical tears: it was such
a wonderful relief to feel that she need not struggle any more for a
livelihood.

'My dear--my dearest,' said he, trying to soothe her with word and
caress; but, just at the moment, uncertain what name he ought to
use. After her sobbing had abated a little, she said herself, as if
understanding his difficulty,--

'Call me Hyacinth--your own Hyacinth. I can't bear "Clare," it does
so remind me of being a governess, and those days are all past now.'

'Yes; but surely no one can have been more valued, more beloved than
you have been in this family at least.'

'Oh, yes! they have been very good. But still one has always had to
remember one's position.'

'We ought to tell Lady Cumnor,' said he, thinking, perhaps, more of
the various duties which lay before him, in consequence of the step
he had just taken, than of what his future bride was saying.

'You'll tell her, won't you?' said she, looking up in his face with
beseeching eyes. 'I always like other people to tell her things, and
then I can see how she takes them.'

'Certainly! I will do whatever you wish. Shall we go and see if she
is awake now?'

'No! I think not. I had better prepare her. You will come to-morrow,
won't you? and you will tell her then.'

'Yes; that will be best. I ought to tell Molly first. She has the
right to know. I do hope you and she will love each other dearly.'

'Oh, yes! I'm sure we shall. Then you'll come to-morrow and tell
Lady Cumnor? And I'll prepare her.'

'I don't see what preparation is necessary; but you know best, my
dear. When can we arrange for you and Molly to meet?'

Just then a servant came in, and the pair started apart.

'Her ladyship is awake, and wishes to see Mr. Gibson.'

They both followed the man upstairs; Mrs. Kirkpatrick trying hard to
look as if nothing had happened, for she particularly wished 'to
prepare' Lady Cumnor; that is to say, to give her version of Mr
Gibson's extreme urgency, and her own coy unwillingness.

But Lady Cumnor had observant eyes in sickness as well as in health.
She had gone to sleep with the recollection of the passage in her
husband's letter full in her mind, and, perhaps, it gave a direction
to her wakening ideas.

'I'm glad you're not gone, Mr. Gibson. I wanted to tell you----What's
the matter with you both? What have you been saying to Clare? I'm
sure something has happened.'

There was nothing for it, in Mr. Gibson's opinion, but to make a
clean breast of it, and tell her ladyship all. He turned round, and
took hold of Mrs. Kirkpatrick's hand, and said out straight, 'I have
been asking Mrs. Kirkpatrick to be my wife, and to be a mother to my
child; and she has consented. I hardly know how to thank her enough
in words.'

'Umph! I don't see any objection. I dare say you'll be very happy.
I'm very glad of it! Here! shake hands with me, both of you.' Then
laughing a little, she added, 'It does not seem to me that any
exertion has been required on my part.'

Mr. Gibson looked perplexed at these words. Mrs. Kirkpatrick reddened.

'Did she not tell you? Oh, then, I must. It's too good a joke to be
lost, especially as everything has ended so well. When Lord Cumnor's
letter came this morning--this very morning--I gave it to Clare to
read aloud to me, and I saw she suddenly came to a full stop, where
no full stop could be, and I thought it was something about Agnes,
so I took the letter and read--stay! I'll read the sentence to you.
Where's the letter, Clare? Oh! don't trouble yourself, here it is.
"How are Clare and Gibson getting on? You despised my advice to help
on that affair, but I really think a little match-making would be a
very pleasant amusement now that you are shut up in the house; and I
cannot conceive any marriage more suitable." You see, you have my
lord's full approbation. But I must write, and tell him you have
managed your own affairs without any interference of mine. Now we'll
just have a little medical talk, Mr. Gibson, and then you and Clare
shall finish your ~tete-a-tete~.'

They were neither of them quits as desirous of further conversation
together as they had been before the passage out of Lord Cumnor's
letter had been read aloud. Mr. Gibson tried not to think about it,
for he was aware that if he dwelt upon it, he might get to fancy all
sorts of things, as to the conversation which had ended in his
offer. But Lady Cumnor was imperious now, as always.

'Come, no nonsense. I always made my girls go and have
~tete-a-tetes~ with the men who were to be their husbands, whether
they would or no: there's a great deal to be talked over before
every marriage, and you two are certainly old enough to be above
affectation. Go away with you.' So there was nothing for it but for
them to return to the library; Mrs. Kirkpatrick pouting a little, and
Mr. Gibson feeling more like his own cool, sarcastic self, by many
degrees, than he had done when last in that room.

She began, half crying,--

'I cannot tell what poor Kirkpatrick would say if he knew what I
have done. He did so dislike the notion of second marriages, poor
fellow.'

'Let us hope that he does not know, then; or that, if he does know,
he is wiser--I mean, that he sees how second marriages may be most
desirable and expedient in some cases.'

Altogether, this second ~tete-a-tete~, done to command, was not so
satisfactory as the first; and Mr. Gibson was quite alive to the
necessity of proceeding on his round to see his patients before very
much time had elapsed.

'We shall shake down into uniformity before long, I've no doubt,'
said he to himself, as he rode away. 'It's hardly to be expected
that our thoughts should run in the same groove all at once. Nor
should I like it,' he added. 'It would be very flat and stagnant to
have only an echo of one's own opinions from one's wife. Heigho! I
must tell Molly about it: dear little woman, I wonder how she'll
take it! It's done, in a great measure, for her good.' And then he
lost himself in recapitulating Mrs. Kirkpatrick's good qualities, and
the advantages to be gained to his daughter from the step he had
just taken.

It was too late to go round by Hamley that afternoon. The Towers and
the Towers' round lay just in the opposite direction to Hamley. So
it was the next morning before Mr. Gibson arrived at the hall, timing
his visit as well as he could so as to have half-an-hour's private
talk with Molly before Mrs. Hamley came down into the drawing-room.
He thought that his daughter would require sympathy after receiving
the intelligence he had to communicate; and he knew there was no one
more fit to give it than Mrs. Hamley.

It was a brilliantly hot summer's morning; men in their
shirt-sleeves were in the fields getting in the early harvest of
oats; as Mr. Gibson rode slowly along, he could see them over the
tall hedge-rows, and even hear the soothing measured sound of the
fall of the long swathes, as they were mown. The labourers seemed
too hot to talk; the dog, guarding their coats and cans, lay panting
loudly on the other side of the elm, under which Mr. Gibson stopped
for an instant to survey the scene, and gain a little delay before
the interview that he wished was well over. In another minute he had
snapped at himself for his weakness, and put spurs to his horse. He
came up to the hall at a good sharp trot; it was earlier than the
usual time of his visits, and no one was expecting him; all the
stablemen were in the fields, but that signified little to Mr
Gibson; he walked his horse about for five minutes or so before
taking him into the stable, and loosened his girths, examining him
with perhaps unnecessary exactitude. He went into the house by a
private door, and made his way into the drawing-room, half
expecting, however, that Molly would be in the garden. She had been
there, but it was too hot and dazzling now for her to remain out of
doors, and she had come in by the open window of the drawing-room.
Oppressed with the heat, she had fallen asleep in an easy-chair, her
bonnet and open book upon her knee, one arm hanging listlessly down.
She looked very soft, and young, and childlike; and a gush of love
sprang into her father's heart as he gazed at her.

'Molly!' said he, gently, taking the little brown hand that was
hanging down, and holding it in his own. 'Molly!'

She opened her eyes, that for one moment had no recognition in them.
Then the light came brilliantly into them and she sprang up, and
threw her arms round his neck, exclaiming,--

'Oh, papa, my dear, dear papa! What made you come while I was
asleep? I love the pleasure of watching for you.'

Mr. Gibson turned a little paler than he had been before. He still
held her hand, and drew her to a seat by him on a sofa, without
speaking. There was no need; she was chattering away.

'I was up so early! It is so charming to be out here in the fresh
morning air. I think that made me sleepy. But isn't it a gloriously
hot day? I wonder if the Italian skies they talk about can be bluer
than that--that little bit you see just between the oaks--there!'

She pulled her hand away, and used both it and the other to turn her
father's head, so that he should exactly see the very bit she meant.
She was rather struck by his unusual silence.

'Have you heard from Miss Eyre, papa? How are they all? And this
fever that is about? Do you know, papa, I don't think you are
looking well? You want me at home to take care of you. How soon may
I come home?'

'Don't I look well? That must be all your fancy, goosey. I feel
uncommonly well; and I ought to look well, for----I have a piece of
news for you, little woman.' (He felt that he was doing his business
very awkwardly, but he was determined to plunge on.) 'Can you guess
it?'

'How should I?' said she; but her tone was changed, and she was
evidently uneasy, as with the presage of an instinct.

'Why, you see, my love,' said he, again taking her hand, 'that you
are in a very awkward position--a girl growing up in such a family
as mine--young men--which was a piece of confounded stupidity on my
part. And I am obliged to be away so much.'

'But there is Miss Eyre,' said she, sick with the strengthening
indefinite presage of what was to come. 'Dear Miss Eyre, I want
nothing but her and you.'

'Still there are times like the present when Miss Eyre cannot be
with you; her home is not with us; she has other duties. I've been
in great perplexity for some time; but at last I've taken a step
which will, I hope, make us both happier.'

'You're going to be married again,' said she, helping him out, with
a quiet dry voice, and gently drawing her hand out of his.

'Yes. To Mrs. Kirkpatrick--you remember her? They call her Clare at
the Towers. You recollect how kind she was to you that day you were
left there?'

She did not answer. She could not tell what words to use. She was
afraid of saying anything, lest the passion of anger, dislike,
indignation--whatever it was that was boiling up in her
breast--should find vent in cries and screams, or worse, in raging
words that could never be forgotten. It was as if the piece of solid
ground on which she stood had broken from the shore, and she was
drifting out to the infinite sea alone.

Mr. Gibson saw that her silence was unnatural, and half-guessed at
the cause of it. But he knew that she must have time to reconcile
herself to the idea, and still believed that it would be for her
eventual happiness. He had, besides, the relief of feeling that the
secret was told, the confidence made, which he had been dreading for
the last twenty-four hours. He went on recapitulating all the
advantages of the marriage; he knew them off by heart now.

'She's a very suitable age for me. I don't know how old she is
exactly, but she must be nearly forty. I shouldn't have wished to
marry any one younger. She's highly respected by Lord and Lady
Cumnor and their family, which is of itself a character. She has
very agreeable and polished manners--of course, from the circles she
has been thrown into--and you and I, goosey, are apt to be a little
brusque, or so; we must brush up our manners now.'

No remark from her on this little bit of playfulness. He went on,--

'She has been accustomed to housekeeping--economical housekeeping,
too--for of late years she has had a school at Ashcombe, and has
had, of course, to arrange all things for a large family. And last,
but not least, she has a daughter--about your age, Molly--who, of
course, will come and live with us, and be a nice companion--a
sister--for you.'

Still she was silent. At length she said,--

'So I was sent out of the house that all this might be quietly
arranged in my absence?'

Out of the bitterness of her heart she spoke, but she was roused out
of her assumed impassiveness by the effect produced. Her father
started up, and quickly left the room, saying something to
himself--what, she could not hear, though she ran after him,
followed him through dark stone passages, into the glare of the
stable-yard, into the stables--

'Oh, papa, papa--I'm not myself--I don't know what to say about this
hateful--detestable----'

He led his horse out. She did not know if he beard her words. Just
as he mounted, he turned round upon her with a grey grim face,--

'I think it's better for both of us, for me to go away now. We may
say things difficult to forget. We are both much agitated. By
to-morrow we shall be more composed; you will have thought it over,
and have seen that the principal--one great motive, I mean--was your
good. You may tell Mrs. Hamley--I meant to have told her myself. I
will come again to-morrow. Good-by, Molly.'

For many minutes after he had ridden away--long after the sound of
his horse's hoofs on the round stones of the paved lane, beyond the
home-meadows, had died away--Molly stood there, shading her eyes,
and looking at the empty space of air in which his form had last
appeared. Her very breath seemed suspended; only, two or three
times, after long intervals she drew a miserable sigh, which was
caught up into a sob. She turned way at last, but could not go into
the house, could not tell Mrs. Hamley, could not forget how her
father had looked and spoken--and left her.

She went out by a side-door--it was the way by which the gardeners
passed when they took the manure into the garden--and the walk to
which it led was concealed from sight as much as possible by shrubs
and evergreens and over-arching trees. No one would know what became
of her, and, with the ingratitude of misery, she added to herself,
no one would care. Mrs. Hamley had her own husband, her own children,
her close home interests--she was very good and kind, but there was
a bitter grief in Molly's heart, with which the stranger could not
intermeddle. She went quickly on to the bourne which she had fixed
for herself--a seat almost surrounded by the drooping leaves of a
weeping-ash--a seat on the long broad terrace walk on the other side
of the wood, that overlooked the pleasant slope of the meadows
beyond; the walk had probably been made to command this sunny,
peaceful landscape, with trees, and a church spire, two or three
red-tiled roofs of old cottages, and a purple bit of rising ground
in the distance; and at some previous date, when there might have
been a large family of Hamleys residing at the hall, ladies in
hoops, and gentlemen in bag-wigs with swords by their sides, might
have filled up the breadth of the terrace, as they sauntered,
smiling, along. But no one ever cared to saunter there now. It was a
deserted walk. The squire or his sons might cross it in passing to a
little gate that led to the meadow beyond; but no one loitered
there. Molly almost thought that no one knew of the hidden seat
under the ash-tree but herself; for there were not more gardeners
employed upon the grounds than were necessary to keep the
kitchen-gardens and such of the ornamental part as was frequented by
the family, or in sight of the house, in good order.

When she had once got to the seat she broke out with a suppressed
passion of grief; she did not card to analyze the sources of her
tears and sobs--her father was going to be married again--her father
was angry with her; she had done very wrong--he had gone away
displeased; she had lost his love, he was going to be married--away
from her--away from his child--his little daughter--forgetting her
own dear, dear mother. So she thought in a tumultuous kind of way,
sobbing till she was wearied out, and had to gain strength by being
quiet for a time, to break forth into her passion of tears afresh.
She had cast herself on the ground--that natural throne for violent
sorrow--and leant up against the old moss-grown seat; sometimes
burying her face in her hands; sometimes clasping them together, as
if by the tight painful grasp of her fingers she could deaden mental
suffering.

She did not see Roger Hamley returning from the meadows, nor hear
the click of the little white gate. He had been out dredging in
ponds and ditches, and had his wet sling-net, with its imprisoned
treasures of nastiness, over his shoulder. He was coming home to
lunch, having always a fine midday appetite, though he pretended to
despise the meal in theory. But he knew that his mother liked his
companionship then; she depended much upon her luncheon, and was
seldom downstairs and visible to her family much before the time. So
he overcame his theory, for the sake of his mother, and had his
reward in the hearty relish with which he kept her company in
eating.

He did not see Molly as he crossed the terrace-walk on his way
homewards. He had gone about twenty yards on the small wood-path at
right angles to the terrace, when, looking among the grass and wild
plants under the trees, he spied out one which was rare, one which
he had been long wishing to find in flower, and saw it at last, with
those bright keen eyes of his. Down went his net, skilfully twisted
so as to retain its contents, while it lay amid the herbage, and he
himself went with light and well-planted footsteps in search of the
treasure. He was so great a lover of nature that, without any
thought, but habitually, he always avoided treading unnecessarily on
any plant; who knew what long-sought growth or insect might develop
itself in what now appeared but insignificant?

His steps led him in the direction of the ash-tree seat, much less
screened from observation on this side than on the terrace. He
stopped; he saw a light-coloured dress on the ground--somebody
half-lying on the seat, so still just then, he wondered if the
person, whoever it was, had fallen ill or fainted. He paused to
watch. In a minute or two the sobs broke out again--the words. It
was Miss Gibson crying out in a broken voice,--

'Oh, papa, papa! if you would but come back!'

For a minute or two he thought it would be kinder to leave her
believing herself unobserved; he had even made a retrograde step or
two, on tip-toe; but then he heard the miserable sobbing again. It
was farther than his mother could walk, or else, be the sorrow what
it would, she was the natural comforter of this girl, her visitor.
However, whether it was right or wrong, delicate or obtrusive, when
he heard the sad voice talking again, in such tones of uncomforted,
lonely misery, he turned back, and went to the green tent under the
ash-tree. She started up when he came thus close to her; she tried
to check her sobs, and instinctively smoothed her wet tangled hair
back with her hands.

He looked down upon her with grave, kind sympathy, but he did not
know exactly what to say.

'Is it lunch-time?' said she, trying to believe that he did not see
the traces of her tears and the disturbance of her features--that he
had not seen her lying, sobbing her heart out there.

'I don't know. I was going home to lunch. But--you must let me say
it--I couldn't go on when I saw your distress. Has anything
happened?--anything in which I can help you, I mean; for, of course,
I've no right to make the inquiry, if it is any private sorrow, in
which I can be of no use.'

She had exhausted herself so much with crying, that she felt as if
she could neither stand nor walk just yet. She sate down on the
seat, and sighed, and turned so pale, he thought she was going to
faint.

'Wait a moment,' said he, quite unnecessarily, for she could not
have stirred; and he was off like a shot to some spring of water
that he knew of in the wood, and in a minute or two he returned with
careful steps, bringing a little in a broad green leaf, turned into
an impromptu cup. Little as it was, it did her good.

'Thank you!' she said: 'I can walk back now, in a short time. Don't
stop.'

'You must let me,' said he: 'my mother wouldn't like me to leave you
to come home alone, while you are so faint.'

So they remained in silence for a little while; he, breaking off and
examining one or two abnormal leaves of the ash-tree, partly from
the custom of his nature, partly to give her time to recover.

'Papa is going to be married again,' said she, at length.

She could not have said why she told him this; an instant before she
spoke, she had no intention of doing so. He dropped the leaf he held
in his hand, turned round, and looked at her. Her poor wistful eyes
were filling with tears as they met his, with a dumb appeal for
sympathy. Her look was much more eloquent than her words. There was
a momentary pause before he replied, and then it was more because he
felt that he must say something than that he was in any doubt as to
the answer to the question he asked.

'You are sorry for it?'

She did not take her eyes away from his, as her quivering lips
formed the word 'Yes,' though her voice made no sound. He was silent
again now; looking on the ground, kicking softly at a loose pebble
with his foot. His thoughts did not come readily to the surface in
the shape of words; nor was he apt at giving comfort till he saw his
way clear to the real source from which consolation must come. At
last he spoke,--almost as if he was reasoning out the matter with
himself.

'It seems as if there might be cases where--setting the question of
love entirely on one side--it must be almost a duty to find some one
to be a substitute for the mother.... I can believe,' said he, in a
different tone of voice, and looking at Molly afresh, 'that this
step may be greatly for your father's happiness--it may relieve him
from many cares, and may give him a pleasant companion.'

'He had me. You don't know what we were to each other--at least,
what he was to me,' she added, humbly.

'Still he must have thought it for the best, or he wouldn't have
done it. He may have thought it the best for your sake even more
than for his own.'

'That is what he tried to convince me of.'

Roger began kicking the pebble again. He had not got hold of the
right end of the clue. Suddenly he looked up.

'I want to tell you of a girl I know. Her mother died when she was
about sixteen--the eldest of a large family. From that time--all
though the bloom of her youth--she gave herself up to her father
first as his comforter, afterwards as his companion, friend,
secretary--anything you like. He was a man with a great deal of
business on hand, and often came home only to set to afresh to
preparations for the next day's work. Harriet was always there,
ready to help, to talk, or to be silent. It went on for eight or ten
years in this way; and then her father married again,--a woman not
many years older than Harriet herself. Well--they are just the
happiest set of people I know--you wouldn't have thought it likely,
would you?'

She was listening, but she had no heart to say anything. Yet she was
interested in this little story of Harriet--a girl who had been so
much to her father, more than Molly in this early youth of hers
could have been to Mr. Gibson. 'How was it?' she sighed out at last.

'Harriet thought of her father's happiness before she thought of her
own,' Roger answered, with something of severe brevity. Molly needed
the bracing. She began to cry again a little.

'If it were for papa's happiness----'

'He must believe that it is. Whatever you fancy, give him a chance.
He cannot have much comfort, I should think, if he sees you fretting
or pining,--you who have been so much to him, as you say. The lady
herself, too--if Harriet's stepmother had been a selfish woman, and
been always clutching after the gratification of her own wishes; but
she was not: she was as anxious for Harriet to be happy as Harriet
was for her father--and your father's future wife may be another of
the same kind, though such people are rare.'

'I don't think she is, though,' murmured Molly, a waft of
recollection bringing to her mind the details of her day at the
Towers long ago.

Roger did not want to hear Molly's reasons for this doubting speech.
He felt as if he had no right to hear more of Mr. Gibson's family
life, past, present, or to come, than was absolutely necessary for
him, in order that he might comfort and help the crying girl, whom
he had come upon so unexpectedly. And besides, he wanted to go home,
and be with his mother at lunch-time. Yet he could not leave her
alone.

'It is right to hope for the best about everybody, and not to expect
the worst. This sounds like a truism, but it has comforted me before
now, and some day you'll find it useful. One has always to try to
think more of others than of oneself, and it is best not to prejudge
people on the bad side. My sermons aren't long, are they? Have they
given you an appetite for lunch? Sermons always make me hungry, I
know.'

He appeared to be waiting for her to get up and come along with him,
as indeed he was. But he meant her to perceive that he should not
leave her; so she rose up languidly, too languid to say how much she
should prefer being left alone, if he would only go away without
her. She was very weak, and stumbled over the straggling root of a
tree that projected across the path. He, watchful though silent, saw
this stumble, and putting out his hand held her up from falling. He
still held her hand when the occasion was past; this little physical
failure impressed on his heart how young and helpless she was, and
he yearned to her, remembering the passion of sorrow in which he had
found her, and longing to be of some little tender bit of comfort to
her, before they parted--before their ~tete-a-tete~ walk was merged
in the general familiarity of the household life. Yet he did not
know what to say.

'You will have thought me hard,' he burst out at length, as they
were nearing the drawing-room windows and the garden-door. 'I never
can manage to express what I feel, somehow I always fall to
philosophizing, but I am sorry for you. Yes, I am; it's beyond my
power to help you, as far as altering facts goes, but I can feel for
you, in a way which it's best not to talk about, for it can do no
good. Remember how sorry I am for you! I shall often be thinking of
you, though I daresay it's best not to talk about it again.'

She said, 'I know you are sorry,' under her breath, and then she
broke away, and ran indoors, and upstairs to the solitude of her own
room. He went straight to his mother, who was sitting before the
untasted luncheon, as much annoyed by the mysterious unpunctuality
of her visitor as she was capable of being with anything; for she
had heard that Mr. Gibson had been, and was gone, and she could not
discover if he had left any message for her; and her anxiety about
her own health, which some people esteemed hypochondriacal, always
made her particularly craving for the wisdom which might fall from
her doctor's lips.

'Where have you been, Roger? Where is Molly?--Miss Gibson, I mean,'
for she was careful to keep up a barrier of forms between the young
man and young woman who were thrown together in the same household.

'I've been out dredging. (By the way, I left my net on the terrace
walk.) I found Miss Gibson sitting there, crying as if her heart
would break. Her father is going to be married again.'

'Married again! You don't say so.'

'Yes, he is; and she takes it very hardly, poor girl. Mother, I
think if you could send some one to her with a glass of wine, a cup
of tea, or something of that sort--she was very nearly fainting----'

'I'll go to her myself, poor child,' said Mrs. Hamley, rising.

'Indeed you must not,' said he, laying his hand upon her arm. 'We
have kept you waiting already too long; you are looking quite pale.
Hammond can take it,' he continued, ringing the bell. She sate down
again, almost stunned with surprise.

'Whom is he going to marry?'

'I don't know. I didn't ask, and she didn't tell me.'

'That's so like a man. Why, half the character of the affair lies in
the question of whom it is that he is going to marry.'

'I daresay I ought to have asked. But somehow I'm not a good one on
such occasions. I was as sorry as could be for her, and yet I
couldn't tell what to say.'

'What did you say?'

'I gave her the best advice in my power.'

'Advice! you ought to have comforted her. Poor little Molly!'

'I think that if advice is good it's the best comfort.'

'That depends on what you mean by advice. Hush! here she is.'

To their surprise, Molly came in, trying hard to look as usual. She
had bathed her eyes, and arranged her hair; and was making a great
struggle to keep from crying, and to bring her voice into order. She
was unwilling to distress Mrs. Hamley by the sight of pain and
suffering. She did not know that she was following Roger's
injunctions to think more of others than of herself--but so she was.
Mrs. Hamley was not sure if it was wise in her to begin on the piece
of news she had just heard from her son; but she was too full of it
herself to talk of anything else. 'So I hear your father is going to
be married, my dear? May I ask whom it is to?'

'Mrs. Kirkpatrick. I think she was governess a long time ago at the
Countess of Cumnor's. She stays with them a great deal, and they
call her Clare, and I believe they are very fond of her.' Molly
tried to speak of her future stepmother in the most favourable
manner she knew how.

'I think I've heard of her. Then she is not very young? That's as it
should be. A widow too. Has she any family?'

'One girl, I believe. But I know so little about her!'

Molly was very near crying again.

'Never mind, my dear. That will all come in good time. Roger, you've
hardly eaten anything; where are you going?'

'To fetch my dredging-net. It's full of things I don't want to lose.
Besides, I never eat much, as a general thing.' The truth was partly
told, not all. He thought he had better leave the other two alone.
His mother had such sweet power of sympathy, that she would draw the
sting out of the girl's heart, when she had her alone. As soon as he
was gone, Molly lifted up her poor swelled eyes, and, looking at Mrs
Hamley, she said,--'He was so good to me. I mean to try and remember
all he said.'

'I'm glad to hear it, love; very glad. From what he told me, I was
afraid he had been giving you a little lecture. He has a good heart,
but he isn't so tender in his manner as Osborne. Roger is a little
rough sometimes.'

'Then I like roughness. It did me good. It made me feel how
badly--oh, Mrs. Hamley, I did behave so badly to papa this morning.'

She rose up and threw herself into Mrs. Hamley's arms, and sobbed
upon her breast. Her sorrow was not now for the fact that her father
was going to be married again, but for her own ill-behaviour.

If Roger was not tender in words, he was in deeds. Unreasonable and
possibly exaggerated as Molly's grief had appeared to him, it was
real suffering to her; and he took some pains to lighten it, in his
own way, which was characteristic enough. That evening he adjusted
his microscope, and put the treasures he had collected in his
morning's ramble on a little table; and then he asked his mother to
come and admire. Of course Molly came too, and this was what he had
intended. He tried to interest her in his pursuit, cherished her
first little morsel of curiosity, and nursed it into a very proper
desire for further information. Then he brought out books on the
subject, and translated the slightly pompous and technical language
into homely every-day speech. Molly had come down to dinner,
wondering how the long hours till bedtime would ever pass away:
hours during which she must not speak on the one thing that would be
occupying her mind to the exclusion of all others; for she was
afraid that already she had wearied Mrs. Hamley with it during their
afternoon ~tete-a-tete~. But prayers and bedtime came long before
she had expected; she had been refreshed by a new current of
thought, and she was very thankful to Roger. And now there was
to-morrow to come, and a confession of penitence to be made to her
father.

But Mr. Gibson did not want speech or words. He was not fond of
expressions of feeling at any time, and perhaps, too, he felt that
the less said the better on a subject about which it was evident
that his daughter and he were not thoroughly and impulsively in
harmony. He read her repentance in her eyes; he saw how much she had
suffered; and he had a sharp pang at his heart in consequence. But
he stopped her from speaking out her regret at her behaviour the day
before, by a 'There, there, that will do. I know all you want to
say. I know my little, Molly--my silly little goosey--better than
she knows herself. I've brought you an invitation. Lady Cumnor wants
you to go and spend next Thursday at the Towers!'

'Do you wish me to go?' said she, her heart sinking.

'I wish you and Hyacinth to become better acquainted--to learn to
love each other.'

'Hyacinth!' said Molly, entirely bewildered.

'Yes; Hyacinth! It's the silliest name I ever heard of; but it's
hers, and I must call her by it. I can't bear Clare, which is what
my lady and all the family at the Towers call her; and "Mrs
Kirkpatrick" is formal and nonsensical too, as she'll change her
name so soon.'

'When, papa?' asked Molly, feeling as if she were living in a
strange, unknown world.

'Not till after Michaelmas.' And then, continuing on his own
thoughts, he added, 'And the worst is, she's gone and perpetuated
her own affected name by having her daughter called after her.
Cynthia! One thinks of the moon, and the man in the moon with his
bundle of faggots. I'm thankful you're plain Molly, child.'

'How old is she--Cynthia, I mean?'

'Ay, get accustomed to the name. I should think Cynthia Kirkpatrick
was about as old as you are. She's at school in France, picking up
airs and graces. She's to come home for the wedding, so you'll be
able to get acquainted with her then; though, I think, she's to go
back again for another half-year or so.'



CHAPTER XI


MAKING FRIENDSHIP


Mr. Gibson believed that Cynthia Kirkpatrick was to return to England
to be present at her mother's wedding; but Mrs. Kirkpatrick had no
such intention. She was not what is commonly called a woman of
determination; but somehow what she disliked she avoided, and what
she liked she tried to do, or to have. So although in the
conversation, which she had already led to, as to the when and the
how she was to be married, she had listened quietly to Mr. Gibson's
proposal that Molly and Cynthia should be the two bridesmaids, she
had felt how disagreeable it would be to her to have her young
daughter flashing out her beauty by the side of the faded bride, her
mother; and as the further arrangements for the wedding became more
definite, she saw further reasons in her own mind for Cynthia's
remaining quietly at her school at Boulogne.

Mrs. Kirkpatrick had gone to bed that first night of her engagement
to Mr. Gibson, fully anticipating a speedy marriage. She looked to it
as a release from the thraldom of keeping school--keeping an
unprofitable school, with barely enough of pupils to pay for
house-rent and taxes, food, washing, and the requisite masters. She
saw no reason for ever going back to Ashcombe, except to wind up her
affairs, and to pack up her clothes. She hoped that Mr. Gibson's
ardour would be such that he would press on the marriage, and urge
her never to resume her school drudgery, but to relinquish it now
and for ever. She even made up a very pretty, very passionate speech
for him in her own mind; quite sufficiently strong to prevail upon
her, and to overthrow the scruples which she felt that she ought to
have, at telling the parents of her pupils that she did not intend
to resume school, and that they must find another place of education
for their daughters, in the last week but one of the midsummer
holidays.

It was rather like a douche of cold water on Mrs. Kirkpatrick's
plans, when the next morning at breakfast Lady Cumnor began to
decide upon the arrangements and duties of the two middle-aged
lovers.

'Of course you can't give up your school all at once, Clare. The
wedding can't be before Christmas, but that will do very well. We
shall all be down at the Towers; and it will be a nice amusement for
the children to go over to Ashcombe, and see you married.'

'I think--I am afraid--I don't believe Mr. Gibson will like waiting
so long; men are so impatient under these circumstances.'

'Oh, nonsense! Lord Cumnor has recommended you to his tenants, and
I'm sure he wouldn't like them to be put to any inconvenience. Mr
Gibson will see that in a moment. He's a man of sense, or else he
wouldn't be our family doctor. Now, what are you going to do about
your little girl? Have you fixed yet?'

'No. Yesterday there seemed so little time, and when one is agitated
it is so difficult to think of everything. Cynthia is nearly
eighteen, old enough to go out as a governess, if he wishes it, but
I don't think he will. He is so generous and kind.'

'Well! I must give you time to settle some of your affairs to-day.
Don't waste it in sentiment, you're too old for that. Come to a
clear understanding with each other; it will be for your happiness
in the long run.'

So they did come to a clear understanding about one or two things.
To Mrs. Kirkpatrick's dismay, she found that Mr. Gibson had no more
idea than Lady Cumnor of her breaking faith with the parents of her
pupils. Though he really was at a serious loss as to what was to
become of Molly until she could be under the protection of his new
wife at her own home, and though his domestic worries teased him
more and more every day, he was too honourable to think of
persuading Mrs. Kirkpatrick to give up school a week sooner than was
right for his sake. He did not even perceive how easy the task of
persuasion would be; with all her winning wiles she could scarcely
lead him to feel impatience for the wedding to take place at
Michaelmas.

'I can hardly tell you what a comfort and relief it will be to me,
Hyacinth, when you are once my wife--the mistress of my home--poor
little Molly's mother and protector; but I wouldn't interfere with
your previous engagements for the world. It wouldn't be right.'

'Thank you, my own love. How good you are! So many men would think
only of their own wishes and interests! I'm sure the parents of my
dear pupils will admire you--will be quite surprised at your
consideration for their interests.'

'Don't tell them, then. I hate being admired. Why shouldn't you say
it is your wish to keep on your school till they've had time to look
out for another?'

'Because it isn't,' said she, daring all. 'I long to be making you
happy; I want to make your home a place of rest and comfort to you;
and I do so wish to cherish your sweet Molly, as I hope to do, when
I come to be her mother. I can't take virtue to myself which doesn't
belong to me. If I have to speak for myself, I shall say, "Good
people, find a school for your daughters by Michaelmas,--for after
that time I must go and make the happiness of others." I can't bear
to think of your long rides in November--coming home wet at night
with no one to take care of you. Oh! if you leave it to me, I shall
advise the parents to take their daughters away from the care of one
whose heart will be absent. Though I couldn't consent to any time
before Michaelmas--that wouldn't be fair or right, and I'm sure you
wouldn't urge me--you are too good.'

'Well, if you think that they will consider we have acted uprightly
by them, let it be Michaelmas with all my heart. What does Lady
Cumnor say?'

'Oh! I told her I was afraid you wouldn't like waiting, because of
your difficulties with your servants, and because of Molly--it would
be so desirable to enter on the new relationship with her as soon as
possible.'

'To be sure; so it would. Poor child! I'm afraid the intelligence of
my engagement has rather startled her.'

'Cynthia will feel it deeply, too,' said Mrs. Kirkpatrick, unwilling
to let her daughter be behind Mr. Gibson's in sensibility and
affection.

'We will have her over to the wedding! She and Molly shall be
bridesmaids,' said Mr. Gibson, in the unguarded warmth of his heart.

This plan did not quite suit Mrs. Kirkpatrick; but she thought it
best not to oppose it, until she had a presentable excuse to give,
and perhaps also some reason would naturally arise out of future
circumstances; so at this time she only smiled, and softly pressed
the hand she held in hers.

It is a question whether Mrs. Kirkpatrick or Molly wished the most
for the day to be over which they were to spend together at the
Towers. Mrs. Kirkpatrick was rather weary of girls as a class. All
the trials of her life were connected with girls in some way. She
was very young when she first became a governess, and had been
worsted in her struggles with her pupils, in the first place she
ever went to. Her elegance of appearance and manner, and her
accomplishments, more than her character and acquirements, had
rendered it more easy for her than for most to obtain good
'situations;' and she had been absolutely petted in some; but still
she was constantly encountering naughty or stubborn, or
over-conscientious, or severe-judging, or curious and observant
girls. And again, before Cynthia was born, she had longed for a boy,
thinking it possible that if some three or four intervening
relations died, he might come to be a baronet; and instead of a son,
lo and behold it was a daughter! Nevertheless, with all her dislike
to girls in the abstract as 'the plagues of her life' (and her
aversion was not diminished by the fact of her having kept a school
for 'young ladies' at Ashcombe), she really meant to be as kind as
she could be to her new step-daughter, whom she remembered
principally as a black-haired, sleepy child, in whose eyes she had
read admiration of herself. Mrs. Kirkpatrick accepted Mr. Gibson
principally because she was tired of the struggle of earning her own
livelihood; but she liked him personally--nay, she even loved him in
her torpid way, and she intended to be good to his daughter, though
she felt as if it would have been easier for her to have been good
to his son.

Molly was bracing herself up in her way too. 'I will be like
Harriet. I will think of others. I won't think of myself,' she kept
repeating all the way to the Towers. But there was no selfishness in
wishing that the day was come to an end, and that she did very
heartily. Mrs. Hamley sent her thither in the carriage, which was to
wait and bring her back at night. Mrs. Hamley wanted Molly to make a
favourable impression, and she sent for her to come and show herself
before she set out.

'Don't put on your silk gown--your white muslin will look the
nicest, my dear.'

'Not my silk? it is quite new! I had it to come here.'

'Still, I think your white muslin suits you the best.' 'Anything but
that horrid plaid silk' was the thought in Mrs. Hamley's mind; and,
thanks to her, Molly set off for the Towers, looking a little
quaint, it is true, but thoroughly ladylike, if she was
old-fashioned. Her father was to meet her there; but he had been
detained, and she had to face Mrs. Kirkpatrick by herself, the
recollection of her last day of misery at the Towers fresh in her
mind as if it had been yesterday. Mrs. Kirkpatrick was as caressing
as could be. She held Molly's hand in hers, as they sate together in
the library, after the first salutations were over. She kept
stroking it from time to time, and purring out inarticulate sounds
of loving satisfaction, as she gazed in the blushing face.

'What eyes! so like your dear father's! How we shall love each
other--shan't we, darling? For his sake!'

'I'll try,' said Molly, bravely; and then she could not finish her
sentence.

'And you've just got the same beautiful black curling hair!' said
Mrs. Kirkpatrick, softly lifting one of Molly's curls from off her
white temple.

'Papa's hair is growing grey,' said Molly.

'Is it? I never see it. I never shall see it. He will always be to
me the handsomest of men.'

Mr. Gibson was really a very handsome man, and Molly was pleased with
the compliment; but she could not help saying,--

'Still he will grow old, and his hair will grow grey. I think he
will be just as handsome, but it won't be as a young man.'

'Ah! that's just it, love. He'll always be handsome; some people
always are. And he is so fond of you, dear.' Molly's colour flashed
into her face. She did not want an assurance of her own father's
love from this strange woman. She could not help being angry; all
she could do was to keep silent. 'You don't know how he speaks of
you; "his little treasure," as he calls you. I'm almost jealous
sometimes.'

Molly took her hand away, and her heart began to harden; these
speeches were so discordant to her. But she set her teeth together,
and 'tried to be good.'

'We must make him so happy. I'm afraid he has had a great deal to
annoy him at home; but we will do away with all that now. You must
tell me,' seeing the cloud in Molly's eyes, 'what he likes and
dislikes, for of course you will know.'

Molly's face cleared a little; of course she did know. She had not
watched and loved him so long without believing that she understood
him better than any one else; though how he had come to like Mrs
Kirkpatrick enough to wish to marry her, was an unsolved problem
that she unconsciously put aside as inexplicable. Mrs. Kirkpatrick
went on,--'All men have their fancies and antipathies, even the
wisest. I have known some gentlemen annoyed beyond measure by the
merest trifles; leaving a door open, or spilling tea in their
saucers, or a shawl crookedly put on. Why,' continued she, lowering
her voice, 'I know of a house to which Lord Hollingford will never
be asked again because he didn't wipe his shoes on both the mats in
the hall! Now you must tell me what your dear father dislikes most
in these fanciful ways, and I shall take care to avoid it. You must
be my little friend and helper in pleasing him. It will be such a
pleasure to me to attend to his slightest fancies. About my dress,
too--what colours does he like best? I want to do everything in my
power with a view to his approval.'

Molly was gratified by all this, and began to think that really,
after all, perhaps her father had done well for himself; and that if
she could help towards his new happiness, she ought to do it. So she
tried very conscientiously to think over Mr. Gibson's wishes and
ways; to ponder over what annoyed him the most in his household.

'I think,' said she, 'papa isn't particular about many things; but I
think our not having the dinner quite punctual--quite ready for him
when he comes in, fidgets him more than anything. You see, he has
often had a long ride, and there is another long ride to come, and
he has only half-an-hour--sometimes only a quarter--to eat his
dinner in.'

'Thank you, my own love. Punctuality! Yes; it's a great thing in a
household. It's what I've had to enforce with my young ladies at
Ashcombe. No wonder poor dear Mr. Gibson has been displeased at his
dinner not being ready, and he so hard-worked!'

'Papa doesn't care what he has, if it's only ready. He would take
bread-and-cheese, if cook would only send it in instead of dinner.'

'Bread-and-cheese! Does Mr. Gibson eat cheese?'

'Yes; he's very fond of it,' said Molly, innocently. 'I've known him
eat toasted cheese when he has been too tired to fancy anything
else.'

'Oh! but, my dear, we must change all that. I shouldn't like to
think of your father eating cheese; it's such a strong-smelling,
coarse kind of thing. We must get him a cook who can toss him up an
omelette, or something elegant. Cheese is only fit for the kitchen.'

'Papa is very fond of it,' persevered Molly.

'Oh! but we will cure him of that. I couldn't bear the smell of
cheese; and I'm sure he would be sorry to annoy me.'

Molly was silent; it did not do, she found, to be too minute in
telling about her father's likes or dislikes. She had better leave
them for Mrs. Kirkpatrick to find out for herself. It was an awkward
pause; each was trying to find something agreeable to say. Molly
spoke at length. 'Please! I should so like to know something about
Cynthia--your daughter.'

'Yes, call her Cynthia. It's a pretty name, isn't it? Cynthia
Kirkpatrick. Not so pretty, though, as my old name, Hyacinth Clare.
People used to say it suited me so well. I must show you an acrostic
a gentleman--he was a lieutenant in the 53rd--made upon it. Oh! we
shall have a great deal to say to each other, I foresee!'

'But about Cynthia?'

'Oh, yes! about dear Cynthia. What do you want to know, my dear?'

'Papa said she was to live with us! When will she come?'

'Oh, was it not sweet of your kind father? I thought of nothing else
but Cynthia's going out as a governess when she had completed her
education; she has been brought up for it, and has had great
advantages. But good dear Mr. Gibson wouldn't hear of it. He said
yesterday that she must come and live with us when she left school.'

'When will she leave school?'

'She went for two years. I don't think I must let her leave before
next summer. She teaches English as well as learning French. Next
summer she shall come home, and then shan't we be a happy little
quartette?'

'I hope so,' said Molly. 'But she is to come to the wedding, isn't
she?' she went on timidly, now knowing how far Mrs. Kirkpatrick would
like the allusion to her marriage.

'Your father has begged for her to come; but we must think about it
a little more before quite fixing it. The journey is a great
expense!'

'Is she like you? I do so want to see her.'

'She is very handsome, people say. In the bright-coloured
style,--perhaps something like what I was. But I like the
dark-haired foreign kind of beauty best--just now,' touching Molly's
hair, and looking at her with an expression of sentimental
remembrance.

'Does Cynthia--is she very clever and accomplished?' asked Molly, a
little afraid lest the answer should remove Miss Kirkpatrick at too
great a distance from her.

'She ought to be; I've paid ever so much money to have her taught by
the best masters. But you will see her before long, and I'm afraid
we must go now to Lady Cumnor. It has been very charming having you
all to myself, but I know Lady Cumnor will be expecting us now, and
she was very curious to see you,--my future daughter, as she calls
you.'

Molly followed Mrs. Kirkpatrick into the morning-room, where Lady
Cumnor was sitting--a little annoyed, because, having completed her
~toilette~ earlier than usual, Clare had not been aware by instinct
of the fact, and so had not brought Molly Gibson for inspection a
quarter of an hour before. Every small occurrence is an event in the
day of a convalescent invalid, and a little while ago Molly would
have met with patronizing appreciation, where now she had to
encounter criticism. Of Lady Cumnor's character as an individual she
knew nothing; she only knew she was going to see and be seen by a
live countess; nay, more, by '~the~ countess' of Hollingford.

Mrs. Kirkpatrick led her into Lady Cumnor's presence by the hand, and
in presenting her, said,--'My dear little daughter, Lady Cumnor!'

'Now, Clare, don't let me have nonsense. She is not your daughter
yet, and may never be,--I believe that one-third of the engagements
I have heard of, have never come to marriages. Miss Gibson, I am
very glad to see you, for your father's sake; when I know you
better, I hope it will be for your own.'

Molly very heartily hoped that she might never be known any better
by the stern-looking lady who sate so uprightly in the easy chair,
prepared for lounging, and which therefore gave all the more effect
to the stiff attitude. Lady Cumnor luckily took Molly's silence for
acquiescent humility, and went on speaking after a further little
pause of inspection.

'Yes, yes, I like her looks, Clare. You may make something of her.
It will be a great advantage to you, my dear, to have a lady who has
trained up several young people of quality always about you just at
the time when you are growing up. I'll tell you what, Clare!'--a
sudden thought striking her,--'you and she must become better
acquainted--you know nothing of each other at present; you are not
to be married till Christmas, and what could be better than that she
should go back with you to Ashcombe! She would be with you
constantly, and have the advantage of the companionship of your
young people, which would be a good thing for an only child! It's a
capital plan; I'm very glad I thought of it!'

Now it would be difficult to say which of Lady Cumnor's two hearers
was the most dismayed at the idea which had taken possession of her.
Mrs. Kirkpatrick had no fancy for being encumbered with a
step-daughter before her time. If Molly came to be an inmate of her
house, farewell to many little background economies, and a still
more serious farewell to many little indulgences, that were innocent
enough in themselves, but which Mrs. Kirkpatrick's former life had
caused her to look upon as sins to be concealed: the dirty
dog's-eared delightful novel from the Ashcombe circulating library,
the leaves of which she turned over with a pair of scissors. the
lounging-chair which she had for use at her own home, straight and
upright as she sate now in Lady Cumnor's presence; the dainty
morsel, savoury and small, to which she treated herself for her own
solitary supper,--all these and many other similarly pleasant things
would have to be foregone if Molly came to be her pupil,
parlour-boarder, or visitor, as Lady Cumnor was planning. One--two
things Clare was instinctively resolved upon: to be married at
Michaelmas, and not to have Molly at Ashcombe. But she smiled as
sweetly as if the plan proposed was the most charming project in the
world, while all the time her poor brains were beating about in
every bush for the reasons or excuses of which she should make use
at some future time. Molly, however, saved her all this trouble. It
was a question which of the three was the most surprised by the
words which burst out of her lips. She did not mean to speak, but
her heart was very full, and almost before she was aware of her
thought she heard herself saying,--

'I don't think it would be nice at all. I mean, my lady, that I
should dislike it very much; it would be taking me away from papa
just these very few last months. I will like you,' she went on, her
eyes full of tears; and, turning to Mrs. Kirkpatrick, she put her
hand into her future stepmother's with the prettiest and most
trustful action. 'I will try hard to love you, and to do all I can
to make you happy. but you must not take me away from papa just this
very last bit of time that I shall have him.'

Mrs. Kirkpatrick fondled the hand thus placed in hers, and was
grateful to the girl for her outspoken opposition to Lady Cumnor's
plan. Clare was, however, exceedingly unwilling to back up Molly by
any words of her own until Lady Cumnor had spoken and given the cue.
But there was something in Molly's little speech, or in her
straightforward manner, that amused instead of irritating Lady
Cumnor in her present mood. Perhaps she was tired of the silkiness
with which she had been shut up for so many days.

She put up her glasses, and looked at them both before speaking.
Then she said,--'Upon my word, young lady! Why, Clare, you've got
your work before you! Not but what there is a good deal of truth in
what she says. It must be very disagreeable to a girl of her age to
have a stepmother coming in between her father and herself, whatever
may be the advantages to her in the long run.'

Molly almost felt as if she could make a friend of the stiff old
countess, for her clearness of sight as to the plan proposed being a
trial; but she was afraid, in her new-born desire of thinking for
others, of Mrs. Kirkpatrick being hurt. She need not have feared as
far as outward signs went, for the smile was still on that lady's
pretty rosy lips, and the soft fondling of her hand never stopped.
Lady Cumnor was more interested in Molly the more she looked at her;
and her gaze was pretty steady through her gold-rimmed eye-glasses.
She began a sort of catechism; a string of very straightforward
questions, such as any lady under the rank of countess might have
scrupled to ask, but which were not unkindly meant.

'You are sixteen, are you not?'

'No; I am seventeen. My birthday was three weeks ago.'

'Very much the same thing, I should think. Have you ever been to
school?'

'No, never! Miss Eyre has taught me everything I know.'

'Umph! Miss Eyre was your governess, I suppose? I should not have
thought your father could have afforded to keep a governess. But of
course he must know his own affairs best.'

'Certainly, my lady,' replied Molly, a little touchy as to any
reflections on her father's wisdom.

'You say "certainly!" as if it was a matter of course that every one
should know their own affairs best. You are very young, Miss
Gibson--very. You'll know better before you come to my age. And I
suppose you've been taught music, and the use of the globes, and
French, and all the usual accomplishments, since you have had a
governess? I never heard of such nonsense!' she went on, lashing
herself up. 'An only daughter! If there had been half-a-dozen girls,
there might have been some sense in it.'

Molly did not speak but it was by a strong effort that she kept
silence. Mrs. Kirkpatrick fondled her hand more perseveringly than
ever, hoping thus to express a sufficient amount of sympathy to
prevent her from saying anything injudicious. But the caress had
become wearisome to Molly, and only irritated her nerves. She took
her hand out of Mrs. Kirkpatrick's, with a slight manifestation of
impatience.

It was, perhaps, fortunate for the general peace that just at this
moment Mr. Gibson was announced. It is odd enough to see how the
entrance of a person of the opposite sex into an assemblage of
either men or women calms down the little discordances and the
disturbance of mood. It was the case now; at Mr. Gibson's entrance my
lady took off her glasses, and smoothed her brow; Mrs. Kirkpatrick
managed to get up a very becoming blush, and as for Molly, her face
glowed with delight, and the white teeth and pretty dimples came out
like sunlight on a landscape.

Of course, after the first greeting, my lady had to have a private
interview with her doctor; and Molly and her future stepmother
wandered about in the gardens with their arms round each other's
waists, or hand in hand, like the babes in the wood; Mrs. Kirkpatrick
active in such endearments, Molly passive, and feeling within
herself very shy and strange; for she had that particular kind of
shy modesty which makes any one uncomfortable at receiving caresses
from a person towards whom the heart does not go forth with an
impulsive welcome.

Then came the early dinner; Lady Cumnor having hers in the quiet of
her own room, to which she was still a prisoner. Once or twice
during the meal, the idea crossed Molly's mind that her father
disliked his position as a middle-aged lover being made so evident
to the men in waiting as it was by Mrs. Kirkpatrick's affectionate
speeches and innuendos. He tried to banish every tint of pink
sentimentalism from the conversation, and to confine it to matter of
fact; and when Mrs. Kirkpatrick would persevere in dwelling upon such
facts as had a bearing upon the future relationship of the parties,
he insisted upon viewing them in the most matter-of-fact way; and
this continued even after the men had left the room. An old rhyme
Molly had heard Betty use, would keep running in her head and making
her uneasy,--

Two is company,
Three is trumpery.

But where could she go to in that strange house? What ought she to
do? She was roused from this fit of wonder and abstraction by her
father's saying,--'What do you think of this plan of Lady Cumnor's?
She says she was advising you to have Molly as a visitor at Ashcombe
until we are married.'

Mrs. Kirkpatrick's countenance fell. If only Molly would be so good
as to testify again, as she had done before Lady Cumnor! But if the
proposal was made by her father, it would come to his daughter from
a different quarter than it had done from a strange lady, be she
ever so great. Molly did not say anything; she only looked pale, and
wistful, and anxious. Mrs. Kirkpatrick had to speak for herself.

'It would be a charming plan, only--Well! we know why we would
rather not have it, don't we, love? And we won't tell papa, for fear
of making him vain. No! I think I must leave her with you, dear Mr
Gibson, to have you all to herself for these last few weeks.
It would be cruel to take her away.'

'But you know, my dear, I told you of the reason why it does not do
to have Molly at home just at present,' said Mr. Gibson, eagerly. For
the more he knew of his future wife, the more he felt it necessary
to remember that, with all her foibles, she would be able to stand
between Molly and any such adventures as that which had occurred
lately with Mr. Coxe; so that one of the good reasons for the step he
had taken was always present to him, while it had slipped off the
smooth surface of Mrs. Kirkpatrick's mirror-like mind without leaving
any impression. She now recalled it, on seeing Mr. Gibson's anxious
face.

But what were Molly's feelings at these last words of her father's?
She had been sent from home for some reason, kept a secret from her,
but told to this strange woman. Was there to be perfect confidence
between these two, and she to be for ever shut out? Was she, and
what concerned her--though how, she did not know--to be discussed
between them for the future, and she to be kept in the dark? A
bitter pang of jealousy made her heart-sick. She might as well go to
Ashcombe, or anywhere else, now. Thinking more of others' happiness
than of her own was very fine; but did it not mean giving up her
very individuality, quenching all the warm love, the keen desires,
that made her herself? Yet in this deadness lay her only comfort; or
so it seemed. Wandering in such mazes, she hardly knew how the
conversation went on; a third was indeed 'trumpery,' where there was
entire confidence between the two who were company, from which the
other was shut out. She was positively unhappy, and her father did
not appear to see it; he was absorbed with his new plans and his new
wife that was to be. But he did notice it; and was keenly sorry for
his little girl; only he thought that there was a greater chance for
the future harmony of the household, if he did not lead Molly to
define her present feelings by putting them into words. It was his
general plan to repress emotion by not showing the sympathy he felt.
Yet, when he had to leave, he took Molly's hand in his, and held it
there, in such a different manner to that in which Mrs. Kirkpatrick
had done; and his voice softened to his child as he bade her
good-by, and added the words (most unusual to him), 'God bless you,
child!'

Molly had held up all the day bravely; she had not shown anger, or
repugnance, or annoyance, or regret; but when once more by herself
in the Hamley carriage, she burst into a passion of tears, and cried
her fill till she reached the village of Hamley. Then she tried in
vain to smooth her face into smiles, and do away with the other
signs of her grief. She only hoped she could run upstairs to her own
room without notice, and bathe her eyes in cold water before she was
seen. But at the hall-door she was caught by the squire and Roger
coming in from an after-dinner stroll in the garden, and hospitably
anxious to help her to alight. Roger saw the state of things in an
instant, and saying,--

'My mother has been looking for you to come back for this last
hour,' he led the way to the drawing-room. But Mrs. Hamley was not
there; the squire had stopped to speak to the coachman about one of
the horses; they two were alone. Roger said,--

'I am afraid you have had a very trying day. I have thought of you
several times, for I know how awkward these new relations are.'

'Thank you,' said she, her lips trembling, and on the point of
crying again. 'I did try to remember what you said, and to think
more of others, but it is so difficult sometimes; you know it is,
don't you?'

'Yes,' said he, gravely. He was gratified by her simple confession
of having borne his words of advice in mind, and tried to act up to
them. He was but a very young man, and he was honestly flattered;
perhaps this led him on to offer more advice, and this time it was
evidently mingled with sympathy. He did not want to draw out her
confidence, which he felt might very easily be done with such a
simple girl; but he wished to help her by giving her a few of the
principles on which he had learnt to rely. 'It is difficult,' he
went on, 'but by-and-by you will be so much happier for it.'

'No, I shan't!' said Molly, shaking her head. 'It will be very dull
when I shall have killed myself, as it were, and live only in trying
to do, and to be, as other people like. I don't see any end to it. I
might as well never have lived. And as for the happiness you speak
of, I shall never be happy again.'

There was an unconscious depth in what she said, that Roger did not
know how to answer at the moment; it was easier to address himself
to the assertion of the girl of seventeen, that she should never be
happy again.

'Nonsense: perhaps in ten years' time you will be looking back on
this trial as a very light one--who knows?'

'I daresay it seems foolish; perhaps all our earthly trials will
appear foolish to us after a while. perhaps they seem so now to
angels. But we are ourselves, you know, and this is now, not some
time to come, a long, long way off. And we are not angels, to be
comforted by seeing the ends for which everything is sent.'

She had never spoken so long a sentence to him before; and when she
had said it, though she did not take her eyes away from his, as they
stood steadily looking at each other, she blushed a little; she
could not have told why. Nor did he tell himself why a sudden
pleasure came over him as he gazed at her simple expressive
face--and for a moment lost the sense of what she was saying, in the
sensation of pity for her sad earnestness. In an instant more he was
himself again. Only it is pleasant to the wisest, most reasonable
youth of one or two and twenty to find himself looked up to as a
Mentor by a girl of seventeen.

'I know, I understand. Yes: it is ~now~ we have to do with. Don't
let us go into metaphysics.' Molly opened her eyes wide at this. Had
she been talking metaphysics without knowing it? 'One looks forward
to a mass of trials, which will only have to be encountered one by
one, little by little. Oh, here is my mother! she will tell you
better than I can.'

And the ~tete-a-tete~ was merged in a trio. Mrs. Hamley lay down;
she had not been well all day--she had missed Molly, she said,--and
now she wanted to hear of all the adventures that had occurred to
the girl at the Towers. Molly sate on a stool close to the head of
the sofa, and Roger, though at first he took up a book and tried to
read that he might be no restraint, soon found his reading all a
pretence: it was so interesting to listen to Molly's little
narrative, and, besides, if he could give her any help in her time
of need, was it not his duty to make himself acquainted with all the
circumstances of her case?

And so they went on during all the remaining time of Molly's stay at
Hamley. Mrs. Hamley sympathized, and liked to hear details, as the
French say, her sympathy was given ~en detail~, the squire's
~en gros~. He was very sorry for her evident grief, and almost felt
guilty, as if he had had a share in bringing it about, by the
mention he had made of the possibility of Mr. Gibson's marrying
again, when first Molly had come on her visit to them. He said to
his wife more than once,--

''Pon my word, now, I wish I'd never spoken those unlucky words that
first day at dinner. Do you remember how she took them up? It was
like a prophecy of what was to come, now, wasn't it? And she looked
pale from that day, and I don't think she has ever fairly enjoyed
her food since. I must take more care what I say for the future. Not
but what Gibson is doing the very best thing, both for himself and
her, that he can do. I told him so only yesterday. But I'm very
sorry for the little girl, though. I wish I'd never spoken about it,
that I do! but it was like a prophecy, wasn't it?'

Roger tried hard to find out a reasonable and right method of
comfort, for he, too, in his way, was sorry for the girl, who
bravely struggled to be cheerful, in spite of her own private grief,
for his mother's sake. He felt as if high principle and noble
precept ought to perform an immediate work. But they do not, for
there is always the unknown quantity of individual experience and
feeling, which offer a tacit resistance, the amount incalculable by
another, to all good counsel and high decree. But the bond between
the Mentor and his Telemachus strengthened every day. He endeavoured
to lead her out of morbid thought into interest in other than
personal things; and, naturally enough, his own objects of interest
came readiest to hand. She felt that he did her good, she did not
know why or how; but after a talk with him, she always fancied that
she had got the clue to goodness and peace, whatever befell.


CHAPTER XII


PREPARING FOR THE WEDDING


Meanwhile the love-affairs between the middle-aged couple were
prospering well, after a fashion; after the fashion that they liked
best, although it might probably have appeared dull and prosaic to
younger people. Lord Cumnor had come down in great glee at the news
he had heard from his wife at the Towers. He, too, seemed to think
he had taken an active part in bringing about the match by only
speaking about it. His first words on the subject to Lady Cumnor
were,--

'I told you so. Now didn't I say what a good, suitable thing this
affair between Gibson and Clare would be! I don't know when I have
been so much pleased. You may despise the trade of match-maker, my
lady, but I am very proud of it. After this, I shall go on looking
out for suitable cases among the middle-aged people of my
acquaintance. I shan't meddle with young folks, they are so apt to
be fanciful; but I have been so successful in this, that I do think
it is a good encouragement to go on.'

'Go on--with what?' asked Lady Cumnor, drily.

'Oh, planning--You can't deny that I planned this match.'

'I don't think you are likely to do either much good or harm by
planning,' she replied, with cool, good sense.

'It puts it into people's heads, my dear.'

'Yes, if you speak about your plans to them, of course it does. But
in this case you never spoke to either Mr. Gibson, or Clare, did
you?'

All at once the recollection of how Clare had come upon the passage
in Lord Cumnor's letter flashed on his lady, but she did not say
anything about it, but left her husband to flounder about as best he
might.

'No! I never spoke to them; of course not.'

'Then you must be strongly mesmeric, and your will acted upon
theirs, if you are to take credit for any part in the affair,'
continued his pitiless wife.

'I really can't say. It's no use looking back to what I said or did.
I'm very well satisfied with it, and that's enough, and I mean to
show them how much I'm pleased. I shall give Clare something towards
her rigging out, and they shall have a breakfast at Ashcombe
Manor-house. I'll write to Preston about it. When did you say they
were to be married?'

'I think they'd better wait till Christmas, and I have told them so.
It would amuse the children, going over to Ashcombe for the wedding;
and if it's bad weather during the holidays I'm always afraid of
their finding it dull at the Towers. It's very different if it's a
good frost, and they can go out skating and sledging in the park.
But these last two years it has been so wet for them, poor dears!'

'And will the other poor dears be content to wait to make a holiday
for your grandchildren? "To make a Roman holiday." Pope, or somebody
else, had a line of poetry like that. "To make a Roman
holiday,"'--he repeated, pleased with his unusual aptitude at
quotation.

'It's Byron, and it's nothing to do with the subject in hand. I'm
surprised at your lordship's quoting Byron,--he was a very immoral
poet.'

'I saw him take his oaths in the House of Lords,' said Lord Cumnor,
apologetically.

'Well! the less said about him the better,' said Lady Cumnor. 'I
have told Clare that she had better not think of being married
before Christmas; and it won't do for her to give up her school in a
hurry either.'

But Clare did not intend to wait till Christmas; and for this once
she carried her point against the will of the countess, and without
many words, or any open opposition. She had a harder task in setting
aside Mr. Gibson's desire to have Cynthia over for the wedding, even
if she went back to her school at Boulogne directly after the
ceremony. At first she had said that it would be delightful, a
charming plan; only she feared that she must give up her own wishes
to have her child near her at such a time, on account of the expense
of the double journey.

But Mr. Gibson, economical as he was in his habitual expenditure, had
a really generous heart. He had already shown it, in entirely
relinquishing his future wife's life-interest in the very small
property the late Mr. Kirkpatrick had left, in favour of Cynthia;
while he arranged that she should come to his home as a daughter as
soon as she left the school she was at. The life-interest was about
thirty pounds a year. Now he gave Mrs. Kirkpatrick three five-pound
notes, saying that he hoped they would do away with the objections
to Cynthia's coming over to the wedding; and at the time Mrs
Kirkpatrick felt as if they would, and caught the reflection of his
strong wish, and fancied it was her own. If the letter could have
been written and the money sent off that day while the reflected
glow of affection lasted, Cynthia would have been bridesmaid to her
mother. But a hundred little interruptions came in the way of
letter-writing; and by the next day maternal love had diminished;
and the value affixed to the money had increased: money had been so
much needed, so hardly earned in Mrs. Kirkpatrick's life; while the
perhaps necessary separation of mother and child had lessened the
amount of affection the former had to bestow. So she persuaded
herself, afresh, that it would be unwise to disturb Cynthia at her
studies; to interrupt the fulfilment of her duties just after the
~semestre~ had begun afresh; and she wrote a letter to Madame
Lefevre so well imbued with this persuasion, that an answer which
was almost an echo of her words was returned, the sense of which
being conveyed to Mr. Gibson, who was no great French scholar,
settled the vexed question, to his moderate but unfeigned regret.
But the fifteen pounds were not returned. Indeed, not merely that
sum, but a great part of the hundred which Lord Cumnor had given her
for her trousseau, was required to pay off debts at Ashcombe; for
the school had been anything but flourishing since Mrs. Kirkpatrick
had had it. It was really very much to her credit that she preferred
clearing herself from debt to purchasing wedding finery. But it was
one of the few points to be respected in Mrs. Kirkpatrick that she
had always been careful in payment to the shops where she dealt; it
was a little sense of duty cropping out. Whatever other faults might
arise from her superficial and flimsy character, she was always
uneasy till she was out of debt. Yet she had no scruple in
appropriating her future husband's money to her own use, when it was
decided that it was not to be employed as he intended. What new
articles she bought for herself, were all such as would make a show,
and an impression upon the ladies of Hollingford. She argued with
herself that linen, and all underclothing, would never be seen,
while she knew that every gown she had, would give rise to much
discussion and would be counted up in the little town.

So her stock of 'underclothing was very small, and scarcely any of
it new; but it was made of dainty material, and was finely mended up
by her deft fingers, many a night long after her pupils were in bed;
inwardly resolving all the time she sewed, that hereafter some one
else should do her plain-work. Indeed, many a little circumstance of
former subjection to the will of others rose up before her during
these quiet hours, as an endurance or a suffering never to occur
again. So apt are people to look forward to a different kind of life
from that to which they have been accustomed, as being free from
care and trial! She recollected how, one time during this very
summer at the Towers, after she was engaged to Mr. Gibson, when she
had taken above an hour to arrange her hair in some new mode
carefully studied from Mrs. Bradley's fashion-book--after all, when
she came down, looking her very best, as she thought, and ready for
her lover, Lady Cumnor had sent her back again to her room, just as
if she had been a little child, to do her hair over again, and not
to make such a figure of fun of herself! Another time she had been
sent to change her gown for one in her opinion far less becoming,
but which suited Lady Cumnor's taste better. These were little
things; but they were late samples of what in different shapes she
had had to endure for many years; and her liking for Mr. Gibson grew
in proportion to her sense of the evils from which he was going to
serve as a means of escape. After all, that interval of hope and
plain-sewing, intermixed though it was by tuition, was not
disagreeable. Her wedding-dress was secure. Her former pupils at the
Towers were going to present her with that; they were to dress her
from head to foot on the auspicious day. Lord Cumnor, as has been
said, had given her a hundred pounds for her trousseau, and had sent
Mr. Preston a ~carte-blanche~ order for the wedding-breakfast in the
old hall in Ashcombe Manor-house. Lady Cumnor--a little put out by
the marriage not being deferred till her grandchildren's Christmas
holidays--had nevertheless given Mrs. Kirkpatrick an excellent
English-made watch and chain; more clumsy but more serviceable than
the little foreign elegance that had hung at her side so long, and
misled her so often.

Her preparations were thus in a very considerable state of
forwardness, while Mr. Gibson had done nothing as yet towards any new
arrangement or decoration of his house for his intended bride. He
knew he ought to do something. But what? Where to begin, when so
much was out of order, and he had so little time for
superintendence? At length he came to the wise decision of asking
one of the Miss Brownings to take the trouble of preparing all that
was immediately requisite in his house, for old friendship's sake;
and resolved to leave all the more ornamental decorations that he
proposed, to the taste of his future wife. But before making his
request to the Miss Brownings he had to tell them of his engagement,
which had hitherto been kept a secret from the townspeople, who had
set down his frequent visits at the Towers to the score of the
countess's health. He felt how he should have laughed in his sleeve
at any middle-aged widower who came to him with a confession of the
kind he had now to make to the Miss Brownings, and disliked the idea
of the necessary call: but it was to be done, so one evening he went
in 'promiscuous,' as they called it, and told them his story. At the
end of the first chapter--that is to say, at the end of the story of
Mr. Coxe's calf-love, Miss Browning held up her hands in surprise.

'To think of Molly, as I have held in long-clothes, coming to have a
lover! Well, to be sure! Sister Phoebe--' (she was just coming into
the room), 'here's a piece of news! Molly Gibson has got a lover!
One may almost say she's had an offer! Mr. Gibson, may not one?--and
she's but sixteen!'

'Seventeen, sister,' said Miss Phoebe, who piqued herself on knowing
all about dear Mr. Gibson's domestic affairs. 'Seventeen, the 22nd of
last June.'

'Well, have it your own way. Seventeen, if you like to call her so!'
said Miss Browning, impatiently. 'The fact is still the same--she's
got a lover; and it seems to me she was in long-clothes only
yesterday.'

'I'm sure I hope her course of true love will run smooth,' said Miss
Phoebe.

Now Mr. Gibson came in; for his story was not half told, and he did
not want them to run away too far with the idea of Molly's
love-affair.

'Molly knows nothing about it. I haven't even named it to any one
but you two, and to one other friend. I trounced Coxe well, and did
my best to keep his attachment--as he calls it--in bounds. But I was
sadly puzzled what to do about Molly. Miss Eyre was away, and I
couldn't leave them in the house together without any older woman.'

'Oh, Mr. Gibson! why did you not send her to us?' broke in Miss
Browning. 'We would have done anything in our power for you; for
your sake, as well as her poor dear mother's.'

'Thank you. I know you would, but it wouldn't have done to have had
her in Hollingford, just at the time of Coxe's effervescence. He's
better now. His appetite has come back with double force, after the
fasting he thought it right to exhibit. He had three helpings of
blackcurrant dumpling yesterday.'

'I am sure you are most liberal, Mr. Gibson. Three helpings! And, I
daresay, butcher's meat in proportion?'

'Oh! I only named it because, with such very young men, it's
generally see-saw between appetite and love, and I thought the third
helping a very good sign. But still, you know, what has happened
once, may happen again.'

'I don't know. Phoebe had an offer of marriage once--' said Miss
Browning.

'Hush! sister. It might hurt his feelings to have it spoken about.'

'Nonsense, child! It's five-and-twenty years ago; and his eldest
daughter is married herself.'

'I own he has not been constant,' pleaded Miss Phoebe, in her
tender, piping voice. 'All men are not--like you, Mr
Gibson--faithful to the memory of their first love.'

Mr. Gibson winced. Jeanie was his first love; but her name had never
been breathed in Hollingford. His wife--good, pretty, sensible, and
beloved as she had been--was not his second; no, nor his third love.
And now he was come to make a confidence about his second marriage.

'Well, well,' said he; 'at any rate, I thought I must do something
to protect Molly from such affairs while she was so young, and
before I had given my sanction. Miss Eyre's little nephew fell ill
of scarlet fever--'

'Ah! by-the-by, how careless of me not to inquire. How is the poor
little fellow?'

'Worse--better. It doesn't signify to what I've got to say now; the
fact was, Miss Eyre couldn't come back to my house for some time,
and I cannot leave Molly altogether at Hamley.'

'Ah! I see now, why there was that sudden visit to Hamley. Upon my
word, it's quite a romance.'

'I do like hearing of a love-affair,' murmured Miss Phoebe.

'Then if you'll let me get on with my story, you shall hear of
mine,' said Mr. Gibson, quite beyond his patience with their constant
interruptions.

'Yours!' said Miss Phoebe, faintly.

'Bless us and save us!' said Miss Browning, with less sentiment in
her tone; 'what next?'

'My marriage, I hope,' said Mr. Gibson, choosing to take her
expression of intense surprise literally. 'And that's what I came to
speak to you about.'

A little hope darted up in Miss Phoebe's breast. She had often said
to her sister, in the confidence of curling-time (ladies wore curls
in those days), 'that the only man who could ever bring her to think
of matrimony was Mr. Gibson; but that if he ever proposed, she should
feel bound to accept him, for poor dear Mary's sake;' never
explaining what exact style of satisfaction she imagined she should
give to her dead friend by marrying her late husband. Phoebe played
nervously with the strings of her black silk apron. Like the Caliph
in the Eastern story, a whole lifetime of possibilities passed
through her mind in an instant, of which possibilities the question
of questions was, Could she leave her sister? Attend, Phoebe, to the
present moment, and listen to what is being said before you distress
yourself with a perplexity which will never arise.

'Of course it has been an anxious thing for me to decide who I
should ask to be the mistress of my family, the mother of my girl;
but I think I've decided rightly at last. The lady I have chosen--'

'Tell us at once who she is, there's a good man,' said
straightforward Miss Browning.

'Mrs. Kirkpatrick,' said the bridegroom elect.

'What! the governess at the Towers, that the countess makes so much
of?'

'Yes; she is much valued by them--and deservedly so. She keeps a
school now at Ashcombe, and is accustomed to housekeeping. She has
brought up the young ladies at the Towers, and has a daughter of her
own, therefore it is probable she will have a kind, motherly feeling
towards Molly.'

'She's a very elegant-looking woman,' said Miss Phoebe, feeling it
incumbent upon her to say something laudatory, by way of concealing
the thoughts that had just been passing through her mind. 'I've seen
her in the carriage, riding backwards with the countess; a very
pretty woman, I should say.'

'Nonsense, sister,' said Miss Browning. 'What has her elegance or
prettiness to do with the affair? Did you ever know a widower marry
again for such trifles as those? It's always from a sense of duty of
one kind or another--isn't it, Mr. Gibson? They want a housekeeper;
or they want a mother for their children; or they think their last
wife would have liked it.'

Perhaps the thought had passed through the elder sister's mind that
Phoebe might have been chosen for there was a sharp acrimony in her
tone; not unfamiliar to Mr. Gibson, but with which he did not choose
to cope at this present moment.

'You must have it your own way, Miss Browning. Settle my motives for
me. I don't pretend to be quite clear about them myself. But I am
clear in wishing heartily to keep my old friends, and for them to
love my future wife for my sake. I don't know any two women in the
world, except Molly and Mrs. Kirkpatrick, I regard as much as I do
you. Besides, I want to ask you if you will let Molly come and stay
with you till after my marriage?'

'You might have asked us before you asked Madam Hamley,' said Miss
Browning, only half mollified. 'We are your old friends; and we were
her mother's friends, too; though we are not county folk.'

'That's unjust,' said Mr. Gibson. 'And you know it is.'

'I don't know. You are always with Lord Hollingford, when you can
get at him, much more than you ever are with Mr. Goodenough, or Mr
Smith. And you are always going over to Hamley.'

Miss Browning was not one to give in all at once.

'I seek Lord Hollingford as I should seek such a man, whatever his
rank or position might be: usher to a school, carpenter, shoemaker,
if it were possible for them to have had a similar character of mind
developed by similar advantages. Mr. Goodenough is a very clever
attorney, with strong local interests and not a thought beyond.'

'Well, well, don't go on arguing, it always gives me a headache, as
Phoebe knows. I didn't mean what I said, that's enough, isn't it?
I'll retract anything sooner than be reasoned with. Where were we
before you began your arguments?'

'About dear little Molly coming to pay us a visit,' said Miss
Phoebe.

'I should have asked you at first, only Coxe was so rampant with his
love. I didn't know what he might do, or how troublesome he might be
both to Molly and you. But he has cooled down now. Absence has had a
very tranquillizing effect, and I think Molly may be in the same
town with him, without any consequences beyond a few sighs every
time she's brought to his mind by meeting her. And I've got another
favour to ask of you, so you see it would never do for me to argue
with you, Miss Browning, when I ought to be a humble suppliant.
Something must be done to the house to make it all ready for the
future Mrs. Gibson. It wants painting and papering shamefully, and I
should think some new furniture, but I'm sure I don't know what.
Would you be so very kind as to look over the place, and see how far
a hundred pounds will go? The dining-room walls must be painted;
we'll keep the drawing-room paper for her choice, and I've a little
spare money for that room for her to lay out; but all the rest of
the house I'll leave to you, if you'll only be kind enough to help
an old friend.'

This was a commission which exactly gratified Miss Browning's love
of power. The disposal of money involved patronage of tradespeople,
such as she had exercised in her father's lifetime, but had had very
little chance of showing since his death. Her usual good-humour was
quite restored by this proof of confidence in her taste and economy,
while Miss Phoebe's imagination dwelt rather on the pleasure of a
visit from Molly.


CHAPTER XIII


MOLLY GIBSON'S NEW FRIENDS


Time was speeding on; it was now the middle of August,--if anything
was to be done to the house, it must be done at once. Indeed, in
several ways Mr. Gibson's arrangements with Miss Browning had not
been made too soon. The squire had heard that Osborne might probably
return home for a few days before going abroad; and, though the
growing intimacy between Roger and Molly did not alarm him in the
least, yet he was possessed by a very hearty panic lest the heir
might take a fancy to the surgeon's daughter; and he was in such a
fidget for her to leave the house before Osborne came home, that his
wife lived in constant terror lest he should make it too obvious to
their visitor.

Every young girl of seventeen or so, who is at all thoughtful, is
very apt to make a Pope out of the first person who presents to her
a new or larger system of duty than that by which she has been
unconsciously guided hitherto. Such a Pope was Roger to Molly; she
looked to his opinion, to his authority on almost every subject, yet
he had only said one or two things in a terse manner which gave them
the force of precepts--stable guides to her conduct, and had shown
the natural superiority in wisdom and knowledge which is sure to
exist between a highly educated young man of no common intelligence,
and an ignorant girl of seventeen, who yet was well capable of
appreciation. Still, although they were drawn together in this very
pleasant relationship, each was imagining some one very different
for the future owner of their whole heart--their highest and
completest love. Roger looked to find a grand woman, his equal, and
his empress; beautiful in person, serene in wisdom, ready for
counsel, as was Egeria.' Molly's little wavering maiden fancy dwelt
on the unseen Osborne, who was now a troubadour, and now a knight,
such as he wrote about in one of his own poems; some one like
Osborne, perhaps, rather than Osborne himself, for she shrank from
giving a personal form and name to the hero that was to be. The
squire was not unwise in wishing her well out of the house before
Osborne came home, if he was considering her peace of mind. Yet,
when she went away from the hall he missed her constantly; it had
been so pleasant to have her there daily fulfilling all the pretty
offices of a daughter; cheering the meals, so often ~tete-a-tete~
betwixt him and Roger, with her innocent wise questions, her
lively interest in their talk, her merry replies to his banter.

And Roger missed her too. Sometimes her remarks had probed into his
mind, and excited him to the deep thought in which he delighted; at
other times he had felt himself of real help to her in her hours of
need, and in making her take an interest in books, which treated of
higher things than the continual fiction and poetry which she had
hitherto read. He felt something like an affectionate tutor who was
suddenly deprived of his most promising pupil; he wondered how she
would go on without him; whether she would be puzzled and
disheartened by the books he had lent her to read; how she and her
stepmother would get along together? She occupied his thoughts a
good deal those first few days after she left the hall. Mrs. Hamley
regretted her more, and longer than did the other two. She had given
her the place of a daughter in her heart; and now she missed the
sweet feminine companionship, the playful caresses, the
never-ceasing attentions; the very need of sympathy in her sorrows,
that Molly had shown so openly from time to time; all these things
had extremely endeared her to the tenderhearted Mrs. Hamley.

Molly, too, felt the change of atmosphere keenly; and she blamed
herself for so feeling even more keenly still. But she could not
help having a sense of refinement, which had made her appreciate the
whole manner of being at the Hall. By her dear old friends the Miss
Brownings she was petted and caressed so much that she became
ashamed of noticing the coarser and louder tones in which they
spoke, the provincialism of their pronunciation, the absence of
interest in things, and their greediness of details about persons.
They asked her questions which she was puzzled enough to answer
about her future stepmother; her loyalty to her father forbidding
her to reply fully and truthfully. She was always glad when they
began to make inquiries as to every possible affair at the Hall. She
had been so happy there; she liked them all, down to the very dogs,
so thoroughly, that it was easy work replying: she did not mind
telling them everything, even to the style of Mrs. Hamley's invalid
dress; nor what wine the squire drank at dinner. Indeed, talking
about these things helped her to recall the happiest time in her
life. But one evening, as they were all sitting together after tea
in the little upstairs drawing-room, looking into the High
Street--Molly discoursing away on the various pleasures of Hamley
Hall, and just then telling of all Roger's wisdom in natural
science, and some of the curiosities he had shown her, she was
suddenly pulled up by this little speech,--

'You seem to have seen a great deal of Mr. Roger, Molly!' said Miss
Browning, in a way intended to convey a great deal of meaning to her
sister and none at all to Molly. But,--

The man recovered of the bite;
The dog it was that died.'

Molly was perfectly aware of Miss Browning's emphatic tone, though
at first she was perplexed as to its cause; while Miss Phoebe was
just then too much absorbed in knitting the heel of her stocking to
be fully alive to her sister's nods and winks.

'Yes; he was very kind to me,' said Molly, slowly, pondering over
Miss Browning's manner, and unwilling to say more until she had
satisfied herself to what the question tended.

'I dare say you will soon be going to Hamley Hall again? He's not
the eldest son, you know, Phoebe! Don't make my head ache with
your eternal "eighteen, nineteen," but attend to the conversation.
Molly is telling us how much she saw of Mr. Roger, and how kind he
was to her. I've always heard he was a very nice young man, my dear.
Tell us some more about him! Now, Phoebe, attend! How was he kind to
you, Molly?'

'Oh, he told me what books to read; and one day he made me notice
how many bees I saw--'

'Bees, child! What do you mean? Either you or he must have been
crazy!'

'No, not at all. There are more than two hundred kinds of bees in
England, and he wanted me to notice the difference between them and
flies. Miss Browning, I can't help seeing what you fancy,' said
Molly, as red as fire, 'but it is very wrong; it is all a mistake. I
won't speak another word about Mr. Roger or Hamley at all, if it puts
such silly notions into your head.'

'Highty-tighty! Here's a young lady to be lecturing her elders!
Silly notions, indeed! They are in your head, it seems. And let me
tell you, Molly, you are too young to let your mind be running on
lovers.'

Molly had been once or twice called saucy and impertinent, and
certainly a little sauciness came out now.

'I never said what the "silly notion" was, Miss Browning; did I now,
Miss Phoebe? Don't you see, dear Miss Phoebe, it is all her own
interpretation, and according to her own fancy, this foolish talk
about lovers?'

Molly was flaming with indignation; but she had appealed to the
wrong person for justice. Miss Phoebe tried to make peace after the
fashion of weak-minded persons, who would cover over the unpleasant
sight of a sore, instead of trying to heal it.

'I'm sure I don't know anything about it, my dear. It seems to me
that what Sally was saying was very true--very true indeed; and I
think, love, you misunderstood her; or, perhaps, she misunderstood
you; or I may be misunderstanding it altogether; so we'd better not
talk any more about it. What price did you say you were going to
give for the drugget in Mr. Gibson's dining-room, sister?'

So Miss Browning and Molly went on till evening, each chafed and
angry with the other. They wished each other good-night, going
through the usual forms in the coolest manner possible. Molly went
up to her little bedroom, clean and neat as a bedroom could be, with
draperies of small delicate patchwork--bed-curtains,
window-curtains, and counter-pane; a japanned ~toilette~-table, full
of little boxes, with a small looking-glass affixed to it, that
distorted every face that was so unwise as to look in it. This room
had been to the child one of the most dainty and luxurious places
ever seen, in comparison with her own bare, white-dimity bedroom;
and now she was sleeping in it, as a guest, and all the quaint
adornments she had once peeped at as a great favour, as they were
carefully wrapped up in cap-paper, were set out for her use. And yet
how little she had deserved this hospitable care; how impertinent
she had been; how cross she had felt ever since! She was crying
tears of penitence and youthful misery when there came a low tap to
the door. Molly opened it, and there stood Miss Browning, in a
wonderful erection of a nightcap, and scantily attired in a coloured
calico jacket over her scrimpy and short white petticoat.

'I was afraid you were asleep, child,' said she, coming in and
shutting the door. 'But I wanted to say to you we've got wrong
to-day, somehow; and I think it was perhaps my doing. It's as well
Phoebe shouldn't know, for she thinks me perfect; and when there's
only two of us, we get along better if one of us thinks the other
can do no wrong. But I rather think I was a little cross. We'll not
say any more about it, Molly; only we'll go to sleep friends,--and
friends we'll always be, child, won't we? Now give me a kiss, and
don't cry and swell your eyes up;--and put out your candle
carefully.'

'I was wrong--it was my fault,' said Molly, kissing her.

'Fiddlestick-ends! Don't contradict me! I say it was my fault, and I
won't hear another word about it.'

The next day Molly went with Miss Browning to see the changes going
on in her father's house. To her they were but dismal improvements.
The faint grey of the dining-room walls, which had harmonized well
enough with the deep crimson of the moreen curtains, and which when
well cleaned looked thinly coated rather than dirty, was now
exchanged for a pink salmon-colour of a very glowing hue; and the
new curtains were of that pale sea-green just coming into fashion.
'Very bright and pretty,' Miss Browning called it; and in the first
renewing of their love Molly could not bear to contradict her. She
could only hope that the green and brown drugget would tone down the
brightness and prettiness. There was scaffolding here, scaffolding
there, and Betty scolding everywhere.

'Come up now, and see your papa's bedroom. He's sleeping upstairs in
yours, that everything may be done up afresh in his.'

Molly could just remember, in faint clear lines of distinctness, the
being taken into this very room to bid farewell to her dying mother.
She could see the white linen, the white muslin, surrounding the
pale, wan wistful face, with the large, longing eyes, yearning for
one more touch of the little soft warm child, whom she was too
feeble to clasp in her arms, already growing numb in death. Many a
time when Molly had been in this room since that sad day, had she
seen in vivid fancy that same wan wistful face lying on the pillow,
the outline of the form beneath the clothes; and the girl had not
shrunk from such visions, but rather cherished them, as preserving
to her the remembrance of her mother's outward semblance. Her eyes
were full of tears, as she followed Miss Browning into this room to
see it under its new aspect. Nearly everything was changed--the
position of the bed and the colour of the furniture; there was a
grand ~toilette~-table now, with a glass upon it, instead of the
primitive substitute of the top of a chest of drawers, with a mirror
above upon the wall, sloping downwards; these latter things had
served her mother during her short married life.

'You see we must have all in order for a lady who has passed so much
of her time in the countess's mansion,' said Miss Browning, who was
now quite reconciled to the marriage, thanks to the pleasant
employment of furnishing that had devolved upon her in consequence.
'Cromer, the upholsterer, wanted to persuade me to have a sofa and a
writing-table. These men will say anything is the fashion, if they
want to sell an article. I said, "No, no, Cromer: bedrooms are for
sleeping in, and sitting-rooms are for sitting in. Keep everything
to its right purpose, and don't try and delude me into nonsense."
Why, my mother would have given us a fine scolding if she had ever
caught us in our bedrooms in the daytime. We kept our outdoor things
in a closet downstairs; and there was a very tidy place for washing
our hands, which is as much as one wants in the day-time. Stuffing
up a bedroom with sofas and tables! I never heard of such a thing.
Besides, a hundred pounds won't last for ever. I shan't be able to
do anything for your room, Molly!'

'I'm right down glad of it,' said Molly. 'Nearly everything in it
was what mamma had when she lived with my great-uncle. I wouldn't
have had it changed for the world; I am so fond of it.'

'Well, there's no danger of it, now the money is run out. By the
way, Molly, who's to buy you a bridesmaid's dress?'

'I don't know,' said Molly;'I suppose I am to be a bridesmaid; but
no one has spoken to me about my dress.'

'Then I shall ask your papa.'

'Please, don't. He must have to spend a great deal of money just
now. Besides, I would rather not be at the wedding, if they'll let
me stay away.'

'Nonsense, child. Why, all the town would be talking of it. You must
go, and you must be well dressed, for your father's sake.'

But Mr. Gibson had thought of Molly's dress, although he had said
nothing about it to her. He had commissioned his future wife to get
her what was requisite; and presently a very smart dressmaker came
over from the county-town to try on a dress, which was both so
simple and so elegant as at once to charm Molly. When it came home
all ready to put on, Molly had a private dressing-up for the Miss
Brownings' benefit; and she was almost startled when she looked into
the glass, and saw the improvement in her appearance. 'I wonder if
I'm pretty,' thought she. 'I almost think I am--in this kind of
dress I mean, of course. Betty would say, "Fine feathers make fine
birds."'

When she went downstairs in her bridal attire, and with shy blushes
presented herself for inspection, she was greeted with a burst of
admiration.

'Well, upon my word! I shouldn't have known you.' ('Fine feathers,'
thought Molly, and checked her rising vanity.)

'You are really beautiful--isn't she, sister?' said Miss Phoebe.
'Why, my dear, if you were always dressed, you would be prettier
than your dear mamma, whom we always reckoned so very personable.'

'You're not a bit like her. You favour your father, and white always
sets off a brown complexion.'

'But isn't she beautiful?' persevered Miss Phoebe.

'Well! and if she is, Providence made her, and not she herself.
Besides, the dressmaker must go shares. What a fine India muslin it
is! it'll have cost a pretty penny!'

Mr. Gibson and Molly drove over to Ashcombe, the night before the
wedding, in the one yellow post-chaise that Hollingford possessed.
They were to be Mr. Preston's, or, rather, my lord's, guests at the
Manor-house. The Manor-house came up to its name, and delighted
Molly at first sight. It was built of stone, had many gables and
mullioned windows, and was covered over with Virginian creeper and
late-blowing roses. Molly did not know Mr. Preston, who stood in the
doorway to greet her father. She took standing with him as a young
lady at once, and it was the first time she had met with the kind of
behaviour--half complimentary, half flirting--which some men think
it necessary to assume with every woman under five-and-twenty. Mr
Preston was very handsome, and knew it. He was a fair man, with
light-brown hair and whiskers; grey, roving, well-shaped eyes, with
lashes darker than his hair; and a figure rendered easy and supple
by the athletic exercises in which his excellence was famous, and
which had procured him admission into much higher society than he
was otherwise entitled to enter. He was a capital cricketer; was so
good a shot, that any house desirous of reputation for its bags on
the 12th or the 1st, was glad to have him for a guest. He taught
young ladies to play billiards on a wet day, or went in for the game
in serious earnest when required, He knew half the private
theatrical plays off by heart, and was invaluable in arranging
impromptu charades and tableaux. He had his own private reasons for
wishing to get up a flirtation with Molly just at this time; he had
amused himself so much with the widow when she first came to
Ashcombe, that he fancied that the sight of him, standing by her
less polished, less handsome, middle-aged husband, might be too much
of a contrast to be agreeable. Besides, he had really a strong
passion for some one else; some one who would be absent; and that
passion it was necessary for him to conceal. So that, altogether, he
had resolved, even had 'the little Gibson-girl' (as he called her)
been less attractive than she was, to devote himself to her for the
next sixteen hours.

They were taken by their host into a wainscoted parlour, where a
wood fire crackled and burnt, and the crimson curtains shut out the
waning day and the outer chill. Here the table was laid for dinner;
snowy table-linen, bright silver, clear sparkling glass, wine and an
autumnal dessert on the sideboard. Yet Mr. Preston kept apologizing
to Molly for the rudeness of his bachelor home, for the smallness of
the room, the great dining-room being already appropriated by his
housekeeper, in preparation for the morrow's breakfast. And then he
rang for a servant to show Molly to her room. She was taken into a
most comfortable chamber. a wood fire on the hearth, candles lighted
on the ~toilette~-table, dark woollen curtains surrounding a
snow-white bed, great vases of china standing here and there.

'This is my Lady Harriet's room when her ladyship comes to the
Manor-house with my lord the earl,' said the housemaid, striking out
thousands of brilliant sparks by a well-directed blow at a
smouldering log. 'Shall I help you to dress, miss? I always helps
her ladyship.'

Molly, quite aware of the fact that she had but her white muslin
gown for the wedding besides that she had on, dismissed the good
woman, and was thankful to be left to herself.

'Dinner' was it called? Why it was nearly eight o'clock; and
preparations for bed seemed a more natural employment than dressing
at this hour of night. All the dressing she could manage was the
placing of a red damask rose or two in the band of her grey stuff
gown, there being a great nosegay of choice autumnal flowers on the
~toilette~-table. She did try the effect of another crimson rose in
her black hair, just above her ear; it was very pretty, but too
coquettish, and so she put it back again. The dark-oak panels and
wainscoting of the whole house seemed to glow in warm light; there
were so many fires in different rooms, in the hall, and even one on
the landing of the staircase. Mr. Preston must have heard her step,
for he met her in the hall, and led her into a small drawing-room,
with closed folding-doors on one side, opening into the larger
drawing-room, as he told her. This room into which she entered
reminded her a little of Hamley--yellow-satin upholstery of seventy
or a hundred years ago, all delicately kept and scrupulously clean;
great Indian cabinets, and china jars, emitting spicy odours; a
large blazing fire, before which her father stood in his morning
dress, grave and thoughtful, as he had been all day.

'This room is that which Lady Harriet uses when she comes here with
her father for a day or two,' said Mr. Preston. And Molly tried to
save her father by being ready to talk herself.

'Does she often come here?'

'Not often. But I fancy she likes being here when she does. Perhaps
she finds it an agreeable change after the more formal life she
leads at the Towers. '

'I should think it was a very pleasant house to stay at,' said
Molly, remembering the look of warm comfort that pervaded it. But a
little to her dismay Mr. Preston seemed to take it as a compliment to
himself.

'I was afraid a young lady like you might perceive all the
incongruities of a bachelor's home. I am very much obliged to you,
Miss Gibson. In general I live pretty much in the room in which we
shall dine; and I have a sort of agent's office in which I keep
books and papers, and receive callers on business.'

Then they went in to dinner. Molly thought everything that was
served was delicious, and cooked to the point of perfection; but
they did not seem to satisfy Mr. Preston, who apologized to his
guests several times for the bad cooking of this dish, or the
omission of a particular sauce to that; always referring to
bachelor's housekeeping, bachelor's this and bachelor's that, till
Molly grew quite impatient at the word. Her father's depression,
which was still continuing and rendering him very silent, made her
uneasy; yet she wished to conceal it from Mr. Preston; and so she
talked away, trying to obviate the sort of personal bearing which
their host would give to everything. She did not know when to leave
the gentlemen, but her father made a sign to her; and she was
conducted back to the yellow drawing-room by Mr. Preston, who made
many apologies for leaving her there alone. She enjoyed herself
extremely, however, feeling at liberty to prowl about, and examine
all the curiosities the room contained. Among other things was a
Louis Quinze cabinet with lovely miniatures in enamel let into the
fine woodwork. She carried a candle to it, and was looking intently
at these faces when her father and Mr. Preston came in. Her father
looked still careworn and anxious; he came up and patted her on the
back, looked at what she was looking at, and then went off to
silence and the fire. Mr. Preston took the candle out of her hand,
and threw himself into her interests with an air of ready gallantry.

'That is said to be Mademoiselle de St Quentin, a great beauty at
the French Court. This is Madame du Barri. Do you see any likeness
in Mademoiselle de St Quentin to any one you know?' He had lowered
his voice a little as he asked this question.

'No!' said Molly, looking at it again. 'I never saw any one half so
beautiful.'

'But don't you see a likeness--in the eyes particularly?' he asked
again, with some impatience.

Molly tried hard to find out a resemblance, and was again
unsuccessful.

'It constantly reminds me of--of Miss Kirkpatrick.'

'Does it?' said Molly, eagerly. 'Oh! I am so glad--I've never seen
her, so of course I couldn't find out the likeness. You know her,
then, do you? Please tell me all about her.'

He hesitated a moment before speaking. He smiled a little before
replying.

'She's very beautiful; that of course is understood when I say that
this miniature does not come up to her for beauty.'

'And besides?--Go on, please.'

'What do you mean by "besides"?'

'Oh! I suppose she's very clever and accomplished?'

That was not in the least what Molly wanted to ask; but it was
difficult to word the vague vastness of her unspoken inquiry.

'She is clever naturally; she has picked up accomplishments. But she
has such a charm about her, one forgets what she herself is in the
halo that surrounds her. You ask me all this, Miss Gibson, and I
answer truthfully; or else I should not entertain one young lady
with my enthusiastic praises of another.'

'I don't see why not,' said Molly. 'Besides, if you wouldn't do it
in general, I think you ought to do it in my case; for you, perhaps,
don't know, but she is coming to live with us when she leaves
school, and we are very nearly the same age; so it will be almost
like having a sister.'

'She is to live with you, is she?' said Mr. Preston, to whom this
intelligence was news. 'And when is she to leave school? I thought
she would surely have been at this wedding; but I was told she was
not to come. When is she to leave school?'

'I think it is to be at Easter. You know she's at Boulogne, and it's
a long journey for her to come alone; or else papa wished for her to
be at the marriage very much indeed.'

'And her mother prevented it?--I understand.'

'No, it wasn't her mother; it was the French schoolmistress, who
didn't think it desirable.'

'It comes to pretty much the same thing. And she's to return and
live with you after Easter?'

'I believe so. Is she a grave or a merry person?'

'Never very grave, as far as I have seen of her. Sparkling would be
the word for her, I think. Do you ever write to her? If you do, pray
remember me to her, and tell her how we have been talking about
her--you and I.'

'I never write to her,' said Molly, rather shortly.

Tea came in; and after that they all went to bed, Molly heard her
father exclaim at the fire in his bedroom, and Mr. Preston's reply,--

'I pique myself on my keen relish for all creature comforts, and
also on my power of doing without them, if need be. My lord's woods
are ample, and I indulge myself with a fire in my bedroom for nine
months in the year; yet I could travel in Iceland without wincing
from the cold.'


CHAPTER XIV


MOLLY FINDS HERSELF PATRONIZED


The wedding went off much as such affairs do. Lord Cumnor and Lady
Harriet drove over from the Towers, so the hour for the ceremony was
as late as possible. Lord Cumnor came over to officiate as the
bride's father, and was in more open glee than either bride or
bridegroom, or any one else. Lady Harriet came as a sort of amateur
bridesmaid, to 'share Molly's duties,' as she called it. They went
from the Manor-house in two carriages to the church in the park, Mr
Preston and Mr. Gibson in one, and Molly, to her dismay, shut up with
Lord Cumnor and Lady Harriet in the other. Lady Harriet's gown of
white muslin had seen one or two garden-parties, and was not in the
freshest order; it had been rather a freak of the young lady's at
the last moment. She was very merry, and very much inclined to talk
to Molly, by way of finding out what sort of a little personage
Clare was to have for her future daughter. She began,--

'We mustn't crush this pretty muslin dress of yours. Put it over
papa's knee; he doesn't mind it in the least.'

'What, my dear, a white dress!--no, to be sure not. I rather like
it. Besides, going to a wedding, who minds anything? It would be
different if we were going to a funeral.'

Molly conscientiously strove to find out the meaning of this speech;
but before she had done so, Lady Harriet spoke again, going to the
point, as she always piqued herself on doing.

'I daresay it's something of a trial to you, this second marriage of
your father's; but you'll find Clare the most amiable of women. She
always let me have my own way, and I've no doubt she'll let you have
yours.'

'I mean to try and like her,' said Molly, in a low voice, trying
hard to keep down the tears that would keep rising to her eyes this
morning. 'I've seen very little of her yet.'

'Why, it's the very best thing for you that could have happened, my
dear,' said Lord Cumnor. 'You're growing up into a young lady--and
a very pretty young lady, too, if you'll allow an old man to say
so--and who so proper as your father's wife to bring you out, and
show you off, and take you to balls, and that kind of thing? I
always said this match that is going to come off to-day was the most
suitable thing I ever knew; and it's even a better thing for you
than for the people themselves.'

'Poor child!' said Lady Harriet, who had caught a sight of Molly's
troubled face, 'the thought of balls is too much for her just now;
but you'll like having Cynthia Kirkpatrick for a companion, shan't
you, dear?'

'Very much,' said Molly, cheering up a little. 'Do you know her?'

'Oh, I've seen her over and over again when she was a little girl,
and once or twice since. She's the prettiest creature that you ever
saw; and with eyes that mean mischief, if I'm not mistaken. But
Clare kept her spirit under pretty well when she was staying with
us,--afraid of her being troublesome, I fancy.'

Before Molly could shape her next question, they were at the church;
and she and Lady Harriet went into a pew near the door to wait for
the bride, in whose train they were to proceed to the altar. The
earl drove on alone to fetch her from her own house, not a quarter
of a mile distant. It was pleasant to her to be led to the hymeneal
altar by a belted earl, and pleasant to have his daughter as a
volunteered bridesmaid. Mrs. Kirkpatrick in this flush of small
gratifications, and on the brink of matrimony with a man whom she
liked, and who would be bound to support her without any exertion of
her own, looked beamingly happy and handsome. A little cloud came
over her face at the sight of Mr. Preston,--the sweet perpetuity of
her smile was rather disturbed as he followed in Mr. Gibson's wake.
But his face never changed; he bowed to her gravely, and then seemed
absorbed in the service. Ten minutes, and all was over. The bride
and bridegroom were driving together to the Manor-house, Mr. Preston
was walking thither by a short cut, and Molly was again in the
carriage with my lord, rubbing his hands and chuckling, and Lady
Harriet, trying to be kind and consolatory, when her silence would
have been the best comfort.

Molly found out, to her dismay, that the plan was for her to return
with Lord Cumnor and Lady Harriet when they went back to the Towers
in the evening. In the meantime Lord Cumnor had business to do with
Mr. Preston, and after the happy couple had driven off on their
week's holiday tour, she was to be left alone with the formidable
Lady Harriet. When they were by themselves after all the others had
been thus disposed of, Lady Harriet sate still over the drawing-room
fire, holding a screen' between it and her face, but gazing intently
at Molly for a minute or two. Molly was fully conscious of this
prolonged look, and was trying to get up her courage to return the
stare, when Lady Harriet suddenly said,--

'I like you;--you are a little wild creature, and I want to tame
you. Come here, and sit on this stool by me. What is your name? or
what do they call you?--as North-country people would express it.'

'Molly Gibson. My real name is Mary.'

'Molly is a nice, soft-sounding name. People in the last century
weren't afraid of homely names; now we are all so smart and fine: no
more "Lady Bettys" now. I almost wonder they haven't re-christened
all the worsted and knitting-cotton that bears her name. Fancy Lady
Constantia's cotton, or Lady Anna-Maria's worsted.'

'I didn't know there was a Lady Betty's cotton,' said Molly.

'That proves you don't do fancy-work! You'll find Clare will set you
to it, though. She used to set me at piece after piece: knights
kneeling to ladies; impossible flowers. But I must do her the
justice to add that when I got tired of them she finished them
herself. I wonder how you'll get on together?'

'So do I!' sighed out Molly, under her breath.

'I used to think I managed her, till one day an uncomfortable
suspicion arose that all the time she had been managing me. Still
it's easy work to let oneself be managed; at any rate till one
wakens up to the consciousness of the process, and then it may
become amusing, if one takes it in that light.'

'I should hate to be managed,' said Molly, indignantly. 'I'll try
and do what she wishes for papa's sake, if she'll only tell me
outright; but I should dislike to be trapped into anything.'

'Now I,' said Lady Harriet, 'am too lazy to avoid traps; and I
rather like to remark the cleverness with which they're set. But
then of course I know that, if I choose to exert myself, I can break
through the withes of green flax with which they try to bind me.
Now, perhaps, you won't be able.'

'I don't quite understand what you mean,' said Molly.

'Oh, well--never mind; I daresay it's as well for you that you
shouldn't. The moral of all I have been saying is, "Be a good girl,
and suffer yourself to be led, and you'll find your new stepmother
the sweetest creature imaginable." You'll get on capitally with her,
I make no doubt. How you'll get on with her daughter is another
affair; but I daresay very well. Now we'll ring for tea; for I
suppose that heavy breakfast is to stand for our lunch.'

Mr. Preston came into the room just at this time, and Molly was a
little surprised at Lady Harriet's cool manner of dismissing him,
remembering as she did how Mr. Preston had implied his intimacy with
her ladyship the evening before at dinner-time.

'I cannot bear that sort of person,' said Lady Harriet, almost
before he was out of hearing; 'giving himself airs of gallantry
towards one to whom his simple respect is all his duty. I can talk
to one of my father's labourers with pleasure, while with a man like
that underbred fop I am all over thorns and nettles. What is it the
Irish call that style of creature? They've got some capital word for
it, I know. What is it?'

'I don't know--I never heard it,' said Molly, a little ashamed of
her ignorance.

'Oh! that shows you've never read Miss Edgeworth's tales;--now, have
you? If you had, you'd have recollected that there was such a word,
even if you didn't remember what it was. If you've never read those
stories, they would be just the thing to beguile your
solitude--vastly improving and moral, and yet quite sufficiently
interesting. I'll lend them to you while you're all alone.'

'I'm not alone. I'm not at home, but on a visit to the Miss
Brownings.'

'Then I'll bring them to you. I know the Miss Brownings; they used
to come regularly on the school-day to the Towers. Pecksy and Flapsy
I used to call them. I like the Miss Brownings; one gets enough of
respect from them at any rate; and I've always wanted to see the
kind of ~menage~ of such people. I'll bring you a whole pile of
Miss Edgeworth's stories, my dear.'

Molly sate quite silent for a minute or two; then she mustered up
courage to speak out what was in her mind.

'Your ladyship' (the title was the firstfruits of the lesson, as
Molly took it, on paying due respect)--'your ladyship keeps speaking
of the sort of--the class of people to which I belong as if it was a
kind of strange animal you were talking about; yet you talk so
openly to me that--'

'Well, go on--I like to hear you.'

Still silence.

'You think me in your heart a little impertinent--now, don't you?'
said Lady Harriet, almost kindly.

Molly held her peace for two or three moments; then she lifted her
beautiful, honest eyes to Lady Harriet's face, and said,--

'Yes!--a little. But I think you a great many other things.'

'We'll leave the "other things" for the present. Don't you see,
little one, I talked after my kind, just as you talk after your
kind. It's only on the surface with both of us. Why, I daresay some
of your good Hollingford ladies talk of the poor people in a manner
which they would consider as impertinent in their turn, if they
could hear it. But I ought to be more considerate when I remember
how often my blood has boiled at the modes of speech and behaviour
of one of my aunts, mamma's sister, Lady--No! I won't name names.
Any one who earns his livelihood by an exercise of head or hands,
from professional people and rich merchants down to labourers, she
calls "persons." She would never in her most slip-slop talk accord
them even the conventional title of "gentlemen;" and the way in
which she takes possession of human beings, "my woman," "my
people,"--but, after all, it is only a way of speaking. I ought not
to have used it to you; but somehow I separate you from all these
Hollingford people.'

'But why?' persevered Molly. 'I'm one of them.'

'Yes, you I are. But--now don't reprove me again for
impertinence--most of them are so unnatural in their exaggerated
respect and admiration when they come up to the Towers, and put on
so much pretence by way of fine manners, that they only make
themselves objects of ridicule. You at least are simple and
truthful, and that's why I separate you in my own mind from them,
and have talked unconsciously to you as I would--Well! now here's
another piece of impertinence--as I would to my equal--in rank, I
mean; for I don't set myself up in solid things as any better than
my neighbours. Here's tea, however, come in time to stop me from
growing too humble.'

It was a very pleasant little tea in the fading September twilight.
just as it was ended, in came Mr. Preston again.

'Lady Harriet, will you allow me the pleasure of showing you some
alterations I have made in the flower-garden--in which I have tried
to consult your taste--before it grows dark?'

'Thank you, Mr. Preston. I will ride over with papa some day, and we
will see if we approve of them.'

Mr. Preston's brow flushed. But he affected not to perceive Lady
Harriet's haughtiness, and, turning to Molly, he said,--

'Will not you come out, Miss Gibson, and see something of the
gardens? You haven't been out at all, I think, excepting to church.'

Molly did not like the idea of going out for a ~tete-a-tete~
walk with Mr. Preston; yet she pined for a little fresh air, would
have liked to have seen the gardens, and have looked at the
Manor-house from different aspects; and, besides this, much as
she recoiled from Mr. Preston, she felt sorry for him under the
repulse he had just received. While she was hesitating, and
slowly tending towards consent, Lady Harriet spoke,--

'I cannot spare Miss Gibson. If she would like to see the place, I
will bring her over some day myself.'

When he had left the room, Lady Harriet said,--

'I daresay it's my own lazy selfishness has kept you indoors all day
against your will. But, at any rate, you are not to go out walking
with that man. I've an instinctive aversion to him; not entirely
instinctive either; it has some foundation in fact; and I desire you
don't allow him ever to get intimate with you. He's a very clever
land-agent, and does his duty by papa, and I don't choose to be
taken up for libel; but remember what I say!'

Then the carriage came round, and after numberless last words from
the earl--who appeared to have put off every possible direction to
the moment when he stood, like an awkward Mercury, balancing himself
on the step of the carriage--they drove back to the Towers.

'Would you rather come in and dine with us--we should send you home,
of course--or go home straight?' asked Lady Harriet of Molly. She
and her father had both been sleeping till they drew up at the
bottom of the flight of steps.

'Tell the truth, now and evermore. Truth is generally amusing, if
it's nothing else!'

'I would rather go back to Miss Brownings' at once, please,' said
Molly, with a nightmare-like recollection of the last, the only
evening she had spent at the Towers.

Lord Cumnor was standing on the steps, waiting to hand his daughter
out of the carriage. Lady Harriet stopped to kiss Molly on the
forehead, and to say,--

'I shall come some day soon, and bring you a load of Miss
Edgeworth's tales, and make further acquaintance with Pecksy and
Flapsy.'

'No, don't, please,' said Molly, taking hold of her, to detain her.
'You must not come--indeed you must not.'

'Why not?'

'Because I would rather not--because I think that I ought not to
have any one coming to see me who laughs at the friends I am staying
with, and calls them names.' Molly's heart beat very fast, but she
meant every word that she said.

'My dear little woman!' said Lady Harriet, bending over her and
speaking quite gravely. 'I'm very sorry to have called them
names--very, very sorry to have hurt you. If I promise you to be
respectful to them in word and deed--and in very thought, if I
can--you'll let me then, won't you?'

Molly hesitated. 'I'd better go home at once; I shall only say wrong
things--and there's Lord Cumnor waiting all this time.'

'Let him alone; he's very well amused hearing all the news of the
day from Brown. Then I shall come--under promise?'

So Molly drove off in solitary grandeur; and Miss Brownings' knocker
was loosened on its venerable hinges by the never-ending peal of
Lord Cumnor's footman.

They were full of welcome, full of curiosity. All through the long
day they had been missing their bright young visitor, and three or
four times in every hour they had been wondering and settling what
everybody was doing at that exact minute. What had become of Molly
during all the afternoon, had been a great perplexity to them; and
they were very much oppressed with a sense of the great honour she
had received in being allowed to spend so many hours ~tete-a-tete~
with Lady Harriet. They were, indeed, more excited by this one fact
than by all the details of the wedding, most of which they had
known of beforehand, and talked over with much perseverance
during the day. Molly began to feel as if there was some foundation
for Lady Harriet's inclination to ridicule the worship paid by the
good people of Hollingford to their liege lords, and to wonder with
what tokens of reverence they would receive Lady Harriet if she
came to pay her promised visit. She had never thought of concealing
the probability of this call until this evening; but now she felt
as if it would be better not to speak of the chance, as she was
not at all sure if the promise would be fulfilled.

Before Lady Harriet's call was paid, Molly received another visit.
Roger Hamley came riding over one day with a note from his mother,
and a wasps'-nest as a present from himself. Molly heard his
powerful voice come sounding up the little staircase, as he asked if
Miss Gibson was at home from the servant-maid at the door; and she
was half amused and half annoyed as she thought how this call of his
would give colour to Miss Browning's fancies. 'I would rather never
be married at all,' thought she, 'than marry an ugly man,--and dear
good Mr. Roger is really ugly; I don't think one could even call him
plain.' Yet the Miss Brownings, who did not look upon young men as
if their natural costume was a helmet and a suit of armour, thought
Mr. Roger Hamley a very personable young fellow, as he came into the
room, his face flushed with exercise, his white teeth showing
pleasantly in the courteous bow and smile he gave to all around. He
knew the Miss Brownings slightly, and talked pleasantly to them
while Molly read Mrs. Hamley's little missive of sympathy and good
wishes relating to the wedding; then he turned to her, and though
the Miss Brownings listened with all their ears, they could not find
out anything remarkable either in the words he said or the tone in
which they were spoken.

'I've brought you the wasps'-nest I promised you, Miss Gibson. There
has been no lack of such things this year; we've taken seventy-four
on my father's land alone; and one of the labourers, a poor fellow
who ekes out his wages by bee-keeping, has had a sad misfortune--the
wasps have turned the bees out of his seven hives, taken possession,
and eaten up the honey.'

'What greedy little vermin!' said Miss Browning.

Molly saw Roger's eyes twinkle at the misapplication of the word;'
but though he had a strong sense of humour, it never appeared to
diminish his respect for the people who amused him.

'I'm sure they deserve fire and brimstone more than the poor dear
innocent bees,' said Miss Phoebe. 'And then it seems so ungrateful
of mankind, who are going to feast on the honey!' She sighed over
the thought, as if it was too much for her.

While Molly finished reading her note, he explained its contents to
Miss Browning.

'My brother and I are going with my father to an agricultural
meeting at Canonbury on Thursday, and my mother desired me to say to
you how very much obliged to you she should be if you would spare
her Miss Gibson for the day. She was very anxious to ask for the
pleasure of your company, too, but she really is so poorly that we
persuaded her to be content with Miss Gibson, as she wouldn't
scruple leaving a young lady to amuse herself, which she would be
unwilling to do if you and your sister were there.'

'I'm sure she's very kind; very. Nothing would have given us more
pleasure,' said Miss Browning, drawing herself up in gratified
dignity. 'Oh, yes, we quite understand, Mr. Roger; and we fully
recognize Mrs. Hamley's kind intention. We will take the will for the
deed, as the common people express it. I believe that there was an
intermarriage between the Brownings and the Hamleys, a generation or
two ago.'

'I daresay there was,' said Roger. 'My mother is very delicate, and
obliged to humour her health, which has made her keep aloof from
society.'

'Then I may go?' said Molly, sparkling with the idea of seeing her
dear Mrs. Hamley again, yet afraid of appearing too desirous of
leaving her kind old friends.

'To be sure, my dear. Write a pretty note, and tell Mrs. Hamley how
much obliged to her we are for thinking of us.'

'I'm afraid I can't wait for a note,' said Roger. 'I must take a
message instead, for I have to meet my father at one o'clock, and
it's close upon it now.'

When he was gone, Molly felt so light-hearted at the thoughts of
Thursday that she could hardly attend to what the Miss Brownings
were saying. One was talking about the pretty muslin gown which
Molly had sent to the wash only that morning, and contriving how it
could be had back again in time for Molly to wear; and the other,
Miss Phoebe, totally inattentive to her sister's speaking for a
wonder, was piping out a separate strain of her own, and singing
Roger Hamley's praises.

'Such a fine-looking young man, and so courteous and affable. Like
the young men of our youth now, is he not, sister? And yet they all
say Mr. Osborne is the handsomest. What do you think, child?'

'I've never seen Mr. Osborne,' said Molly, blushing, and hating
herself for doing so. Why was it? She had never seen him as she
said. It was only that her fancy had dwelt on him so much.

He was gone; all the gentlemen were gone before the carriage, which
came to fetch Molly on Thursday, reached Hamley Hall. But Molly was
almost glad, she was so much afraid of being disappointed. Besides,
she had her dear Mrs. Hamley the more to herself; the quiet sit in
the morning-room, talking poetry and romance; the mid-day saunter
into the garden, brilliant with autumnal flowers and glittering
dew-drops on the gossamer webs that stretched from scarlet to blue,
and thence to purple and yellow petals. As they were sitting at
lunch, a strange man's voice and step were heard in the hall; the
door was opened, and a young man came in, who could be no other than
Osborne. He was beautiful and languid-looking, almost as frail in
appearance as his mother, whom he strongly resembled. This seeming
delicacy made him appear older than he was. He was dressed to
perfection, and yet with easy carelessness. He came up to his
mother, and stood by her, holding her hand, while his eyes sought
Molly, not boldly or impertinently, but as if appraising her
critically.

'Yes! I'm back again. Bullocks, I find, are not in my line. I only
disappointed my father in not being able to appreciate their merits,
and, I'm afraid, I didn't care to learn. And the smell was
insufferable on such a hot day.'

'My dear boy, don't make apologies to me; keep them for your father.
I'm only too glad to have you back. Miss Gibson, this tall fellow is
my son Osborne, as I daresay you have guessed. Osborne--Miss Gibson.
Now, what will you have?'

He looked round the table as he sate down. 'Nothing here,' said he.
'Is there not some cold game-pie? I'll ring for that.'

Molly was trying to reconcile the ideal with the real. The ideal was
agile, yet powerful, with Greek features and an eagle-eye, capable
of enduring long fasting, and indifferent as to what he ate. The
real was almost effeminate in movement, though not in figure; he had
the Greek features, but his blue eyes had a cold, weary expression
in them. He was dainty in eating, and had anything but a Homeric
appetite. However, Molly's hero was not to eat more than Ivanhoe,
when he was Friar Tuck's guest;' and, after all, with a little
alteration, she began to think Mr. Osborne Hamley might turn out a
poetical, if not a chivalrous hero. He was extremely attentive to
his mother, which pleased Molly, and, in return, Mrs. Hamley seemed
charmed with him to such a degree that Molly once or twice fancied
that mother and son would have been happier in her absence. Yet,
again, it struck on the shrewd, if simple girl, that Osborne was
mentally squinting at her in the conversation which was directed to
his mother. There were little turns and '~fioriture~' of speech
which Molly could not help feeling were graceful antics of language
not common in the simple daily intercourse between mother and son.
But it was flattering rather than otherwise to perceive that a very
fine young man, who was a poet to boot, should think it worth while
to talk on the tight rope for her benefit. And before the afternoon
was ended, without there having been any direct conversation between
Osborne and Molly, she had reinstated him on his throne in her
imagination; indeed, she had almost felt herself disloyal to her
dear Mrs. Hamley when, in the first hour after her introduction, she
had questioned his claims on his mother's idolatry. His beauty came
out more and more, as he became animated in some discussion with
her; and all his attitudes, if a little studied, were graceful in
the extreme. Before Molly left, the squire and Roger returned from
Canonbury.

'Osborne here!' said the squire, red and panting. 'Why the deuce
couldn't you tell us you were coming home? I looked about for you
everywhere, just as we were going into the ordinary. I wanted to
introduce you to Grantley, and Fox, and Lord Forrest-men from the
other side of the county, whom you ought to know; and Roger there
missed above half his dinner hunting about for you; and all the time
you'd stole away, and were quietly sitting here with the women. I
wish you'd let me know the next time you make off. I've lost half my
pleasure in looking at as fine a lot of cattle as I ever saw, with
thinking you might be having one of your old attacks of faintness.'

'I should have had one, I think, if I'd stayed longer in that
atmosphere. But I'm sorry if I've caused you anxiety.'

'Well! well!' said the squire, somewhat mollified. 'And Roger,
too,--there I've been sending him here and sending him there all the
afternoon.'

'I didn't mind it, sir. I was only sorry you were so uneasy. I
thought Osborne had gone home, for I knew it wasn't much in his
way,' said Roger.

Molly intercepted a glance between the two brothers--a look of true
confidence and love, which suddenly made her like them both under
the aspect of relationship--new to her observation.

Roger came up to her, and sate down by her.

'Well, and how are you getting on with Huber; don't you find him
very interesting?'

'I'm afraid,' said Molly, penitently, 'I haven't read much. The Miss
Brownings like me to talk; and, besides, there is so much to do at
home before papa comes back; and Miss Browning doesn't like me to go
without her. I know it sounds nothing, but it does take up a great
deal of time.'

'When is your father coming back?'

'Next Tuesday, I believe. He cannot stay long away.'

'I shall ride over and pay my respects to Mrs. Gibson,' said he. 'I
shall come as soon as I may. Your father has been a very kind friend
to me ever since I was a boy. And when I come, I shall expect my
pupil to have been very diligent,' he concluded, smiling his kind,
pleasant smile at idle Molly.

Then the carriage came round, and she had the long solitary drive
back to Miss Brownings'. It was dark out of doors when she got
there; but Miss Phoebe was standing on the stairs, with a lighted
candle in her hand, peering into the darkness to see Molly come in.

'Oh, Molly! I thought you'd never come back. Such a piece of news!
Sister has gone to bed; she's had a headache--with the excitement, I
think; but she says it's new bread. Come upstairs softly, my dear,
and I'll tell you what it is! Who do you think has been
here,--drinking tea with us, too, in the most condescending manner?'

'Lady Harriet?' said Molly, suddenly enlightened by the word
'condescending.'

'Yes. Why, how did you guess it? But, after all, her call, at any
rate in the first instance, was upon you. Oh dear, Molly! if you're
not in a hurry to go to bed, let me sit down quietly and tell you
all about it; for my heart jumps into my mouth still when I think of
how I was caught. She--that is, her ladyship--left the carriage at
the "George," and took to her feet to go shopping--just as you or I
may have done many a time in our lives. And sister was taking her
forty winks; and I was sitting with my gown up above my knees and my
feet on the fender, pulling out my grandmother's lace which I'd been
washing. The worst has yet to be told. I'd taken off my cap, for I
thought it was getting dusk and no one would come, and there was I
in my black silk skull-cap, when Nancy put her head in, and
whispered, "There's a lady downstairs--a real grand one, by her
talk;" and in there came my Lady Harriet, so sweet and pretty in her
ways, it was some time before I remembered I had never a cap on.
Sister never wakened; or never roused up, so to say. She says she
thought it was Nancy bringing in the tea when she heard some one
moving; for her ladyship, as soon as she saw the state of the case,
came and knelt down on the rug by me, and begged my pardon so
prettily for having followed Nancy upstairs without waiting for
permission; and was so taken by my old lace, and wanted to know how
I washed it, and where you were, and when you'd be back, and when
the happy couple would be back: till sister wakened--she's always a
little bit put out, you know, when she first wakens from her
afternoon nap,--and, without turning her head to see who it was, she
said, quite sharp,--

"Buzz, buzz, buzz! When will you learn that whispering is more
fidgeting than talking out loud? I've not been able to sleep at all
for the chatter you and Nancy have been keeping up all this time.
You know that was a little fancy of sister's, for she'd been snoring
away as naturally as could be."

So I went to her, and leant over her, and said, in a low voice,--

'Sister, it's her ladyship and me that has been conversing.'

'"Ladyship here, ladyship there! have you lost your wits, Phoebe,
that you talk such nonsense--and in your skull-cap, too!"'

By this time she was sitting up, and, looking round her, she saw
Lady Harriet, in her velvets and silks, sitting on our rug, smiling,
her bonnet off, and her pretty hair all bright with the blaze of the
fire. My word! Sister was up on her feet directly; and she dropped
her curtsey, and made her excuses for sleeping, as fast as might be,
while I went off to put on my best cap, for sister might well say I
was out of my wits to go on chatting to an earl's daughter in an old
black silk skull-cap. Black silk, too! when, if I'd only known she
was coming, I might have put on my new brown silk one, lying idle in
my top drawer. And when I came back, sister was ordering tea for her
ladyship,--our tea, I mean. So I took my turn at talk, and sister
slipped out to put on her Sunday silk. But I don't think we were
quite so much at our case with her ladyship as when I sate pulling
out my lace in my skull-cap. And she was quite struck with our tea,
and asked where we got it, for she had never tasted any like it
before; and I told her we gave only 3~s~. 4~d~. a pound for it, at
Johnson's--(sister says I ought to have told her the price of our
company-tea, which is 5~s~. a pound, only that was not what we were
drinking; for, as ill-luck would have it, we'd none of it in the
house)--and she said she would send us some of hers, all the way
from Russia or Prussia, or some out-of-the-way place, and we were to
compare and see which we liked best; and if we liked hers best, she
could get it for us at 3~s~. a pound. And she left her love for you;
and, though she was going away, you were not to forget her. Sister
thought such a message would set you up too much, and told me she
would not be chargeable for the giving it you. "But," I said, "a
message is a message, and it's on Molly's own shoulders if she's set
up by it. Let us show her an example of humility, sister, though we
have been sitting cheek-by-jowl in such company." So sister humphed,
and said she'd a headache, and went to bed. And now you may tell me
your news, my dear.'

So Molly told her small events; which, interesting as they might
have been at other times to the gossip-loving and sympathetic Miss
Phoebe, were rather pale in the stronger light reflected from the
visit of an earl's daughter.


CHAPTER XV


THE NEW MAMMA


On Tuesday afternoon Molly returned home, to the home which was
already strange, and what Warwickshire people would call 'unked,' to
her. New paint, new paper, new colours; grim servants dressed in
their best, and objecting to every change--from their master's
marriage to the new oilcloth in the hall, 'which tripped 'em up, and
threw 'em down, and was cold to the feet, and smelt just
abominable.' All these complaints Molly had to listen to, and it was
not a cheerful preparation for the reception which she already felt
to be so formidable.

The sound of their carriage-wheels was heard at last, and Molly went
to the front door to meet them. Her father got out first, and took
her hand and held it while he helped his bride to alight. Then he
kissed her fondly, and passed her on to his wife; but her veil was
so securely (and becomingly) fastened down, that it was some time
before Mrs. Gibson could get her lips clear to greet her new
daughter. Then there was luggage to be seen about; and both the
travellers were occupied in this, while Molly stood by, trembling
with excitement, unable to help, and only conscious of Betty's
rather cross looks, as heavy box after heavy box jammed up the
passage.

'Molly, my dear, show--your mamma to her room!'

Mr. Gibson had hesitated, because the question of the name by which
Molly was to call her new relation had never occurred to him before.
The colour flashed into Molly's face. Was she to call her
'mamma'?--the name long appropriated in her mind to some one else--
to her own dead mother. The rebellious heart rose against it, but
she said nothing. She led the way upstairs, Mrs. Gibson turning
round, from time to time, with some fresh direction as to which bag
or trunk she needed most. She hardly spoke to Molly till they were
both in the newly-furnished bedroom, where a small fire had been
lighted by Molly's orders.

'Now, my love, we can embrace each other in peace. Oh dear, how
tired I am!'--(after the embrace had been accomplished.) 'My spirits
are so easily affected with fatigue; but your dear papa has been
kindness itself. Dear! what an old-fashioned bed! And what a--But it
doesn't signify. By-and-by we'll renovate the house--won't we, my
dear? And you'll be my little maid to-night, and help me to arrange
a few things, for I'm just worn out with the day's journey.'

'I've ordered a sort of tea-dinner to be ready for you,' said Molly.
'Shall I go and tell them to send it in?'

'I'm not sure if I can go down again to-night. It would be very
comfortable to have a little table brought in here, and sit in my
dressing-gown by this cheerful fire. But, to be sure, there's your
dear papa? I really don't think he would eat anything if I were not
there. One must not think about oneself, you know. Yes, I'll come
down in a quarter of an hour.'

But Mr. Gibson had found a note awaiting him, with an immediate
summons to an old patient, dangerously ill; and, snatching a
mouthful of food while his horse was being saddled, he had to resume
at once his old habits of attention to his profession above
everything.

As soon as Mrs. Gibson found that he was not likely to miss her
presence--he had eaten a very tolerable lunch of bread and cold meat
in solitude, so her fears about his appetite in her absence were not
well founded--she desired to have her meal upstairs in her own room;
and poor Molly, not daring to tell the servants of this whim, had to
carry up first a table, which, however small, was too heavy for her;
and afterwards all the choice portions of the meal, which she had
taken great pains to arrange on the table, as she had seen such
things done at Hamley, intermixed with fruit and flowers that had
that morning been sent in from various great houses where Mr. Gibson
was respected and valued. How pretty Molly had thought her handiwork
an hour or two before! How dreary it seemed as, at last released
from Mrs. Gibson's conversation, she sate down in solitude to cold
tea and the drumsticks of the chicken! No one to look at her
preparations, and admire her left-handedness and taste! She had
thought that her father would be gratified by it, and then he had
never seen it. She had meant her cares as an offering of good-will
to her stepmother, who even now was ringing her bell to have the
tray taken away, and Miss Gibson summoned to her bedroom,

Molly hastily finished her meal, and went upstairs again.

'I feel so lonely, darling, in this strange house; do come and be
with me, and help me to unpack. I think your dear papa might have
put off his visit to Mr. Craven Smith for just this one evening.'

'Mr. Craven Smith couldn't put off his dying,' said Molly, bluntly.

'You droll girl!' said Mrs. Gibson, with a faint laugh. 'But if this
Mr. Smith is dying, as you say, what's the use of your father's going
off to him in such a hurry? Does he expect any legacy, or anything
of that kind?'

Molly bit her lips to prevent herself from saying something
disagreeable. She only answered,--

'I don't quite know that he is dying. The man said so; and papa can
sometimes do something to make the last struggle easier. At any
rate, it's always a comfort to the family to have him.'

'What dreary knowledge of death you have learned for a girl of your
age! Really, if I had heard all these details of your father's
profession, I doubt if I could have brought myself to have him!'

'He doesn't make the illness or the death; he does his best against
them. I call it a very fine thing to think of what he does or tries
to do. And you will think so, too, when you see how he is watched
for, and how people welcome him!'

'Well, don't let us talk any more of such gloomy things to-night! I
think I shall go to bed at once, I am so tired, if you will only sit
by me till I get sleepy, darling. If you will talk to me, the sound
of your voice will soon send me off.'

Molly got a book, and read her stepmother to sleep, preferring that
to the harder task of keeping up a continual murmur of speech.

Then she stole down and went into the dining-room, where the fire
was gone out; purposely neglected by the servants, to mark their
displeasure at their new mistress's having had her tea in her own
room. Molly managed to light it, however, before her father came
home, and collected and rearranged some comfortable food for him.
Then she knelt down again on the hearth-rug, gazing into the fire in
a dreamy reverie, which had enough of sadness about it to cause the
tears to drop unnoticed from her eyes. But she jumped up, and shook
herself into brightness at the sound of her father's step.

'How is Mr. Craven Smith?' said she.

'Dead. He just recognized me. He was one of my first patients on
coming to Hollingford.'

Mr. Gibson sate down in the arm-chair made ready for him, and warmed
his hands at the fire, seeming neither to need food nor talk, as he
went over a train of recollections. Then he roused himself from his
sadness, and looking round the room, he said briskly enough,--

'And where's the new mamma?'

'She was tired, and went to bed early. Oh, papa! must I call her
"mamma"?'

'I should like it,' replied he, with a slight contraction of the
brows.

Molly was silent. She put a cup or tea near him; he stirred it, and
sipped it, and then he recurred to the subject.

'Why shouldn't you call her "mamma"? I'm sure she means to do the
duty of a mother to you. We all may make mistakes, and her ways may
not be quite all at once our ways; but at any rate let us start with
a family bond between us.'

What would Roger say was right?--that was the question that rose to
Molly's mind. She had always spoken of her father's new wife as Mrs
Gibson, and had once burst out at Miss Brownings' with a
protestation that she never would call her 'mamma.' She did not feel
drawn to her new relation by their intercourse that evening. She
kept silence, though she knew her father was expecting an answer. At
last he gave up his expectation, and turned to another subject; told
about their journey, questioned her as to the Hamleys, the
Brownings, Lady Harriet, and the afternoon they had passed together
at the Manor House. But there was a certain hardness and constraint
in his manner, and in hers a heaviness and absence of mind. All at
once she said,--

'Papa, I will call her "mamma"!'

He took her hand, and grasped it tight; but for an instant or two he
did not speak. Then he said,--

'You won't be sorry for it, Molly, when you come to lie as poor
Craven Smith did to-night.'

For some time the murmurs and grumblings of the two elder servants
were confined to Molly's ears, then they spread to her father's,
who, to Molly's dismay, made summary work with them.

'You don't like Mrs. Gibson's ringing her bell so often, don't you?
You've been spoilt, I'm afraid; but if you don't conform to my
wife's desires, you have the remedy in your own hands, you know.'

What servant ever resisted the temptation to give warning after such
a speech as that? Betty told Molly she was going to leave, in as
indifferent a manner as she could possibly assume towards the girl,
whom she had tended and been about for the last sixteen years. Molly
had hitherto considered her former nurse as a fixture in the house;
she would almost as soon have thought of her father's proposing to
sever the relationship between them; and here was Betty coolly
talking over whether her next place should be in town or country.
But a great deal of this was assumed hardness. In a week or two
Betty was in floods of tears at the prospect of leaving her
nursling, and would fain have stayed and answered all the bells in
the house once every quarter of an hour. Even Mr. Gibson's masculine
heart was touched by the sorrow of the old servant, which made
itself obvious to him every time he came across her by her broken
voice and her swollen eyes.

One day he said to Molly, 'I wish you'd ask your mamma if Betty
might not stay, if she made a proper apology, and all that sort of
thing.'

'I don't much think it will be of any use,' said Molly, in a
mournful voice. 'I know she is writing, or has written, about some
under-housemaid at the Towers.'

'Well!--all I want is peace and a decent quantity of cheerfulness
when I come home. I see enough of tears in other people's houses.
After all, Betty has been with us sixteen years--a sort of service
of the antique world. But the woman may be happier elsewhere. Do as
you like about asking mamma; only if she agrees, I shall be quite
willing.'

So Molly tried her hand at making a request to that effect to Mrs
Gibson. Her instinct told her she should be unsuccessful; but surely
favour was never refused in so soft a tone.

'My dear girl, I should never have thought of sending an old servant
away,--one who has had the charge of you from your birth, or nearly
so. I could not have had the heart to do it. She might have stayed
for ever for me, if she had only attended to all my wishes; and I am
not unreasonable, am I? But, you see, she complained; and when your
dear papa spoke to her, she gave warning; and it is quite against my
principles ever to take an apology from a servant who has given
warning.'

'She is so sorry,' pleaded Molly; 'she says she will do anything you
wish, and attend to all your orders, if she may only stay.'

'But, sweet one, you seem to forget that I cannot go against my
principles, however much I may be sorry for Betty. She should not
have given way to ill-temper. As I said before, although I never
liked her, and considered her a most inefficient servant, thoroughly
spoilt by having had no mistress for so long, I should have borne
with her--at least, I think I should--as long as I could. Now I
have all but engaged Maria, who was under-housemaid at the Towers,
so don't let me hear any more of Betty's sorrow, or anybody else's
sorrow, for I'm sure, what with your dear papa's sad stories and
other things, I'm getting quite low.'

Molly was silent for a moment or two.

'Have you quite engaged Maria?' asked she.

'No--I said "all but engaged." Sometimes one would think you did not
hear things, dear Molly!' replied Mrs. Gibson, petulantly. 'Maria is
living in a place where they don't give her as much wages as she
deserves. Perhaps they can't afford it, poor things! I'm always
sorry for poverty, and would never speak hardly of those who are not
rich; but I have offered her two pounds more than she gets at
present, so I think she'll leave. At any rate, if they increase her
wages, I shall increase my offer in proportion; so I think I'm sure
to get her. Such a genteel girl!--always brings in a letter on a
salver!'

'Poor Betty!' said Molly, softly.

'Poor old soul! I hope she'll profit by the lesson, I'm sure,'
sighed out Mrs. Gibson; 'but it's a pity we hadn't Maria before the
county families began to call.'

Mrs. Gibson had been highly gratified by the circumstances of so many
calls 'from county families.' Her husband was much respected; and
many ladies from various halls, courts, and houses, who had profited
by his services towards themselves and their families, thought it
right to pay his new wife the attention of a call when they drove
into Hollingford to shop. The state of expectation into which these
calls threw Mrs. Gibson rather diminished Mr. Gibson's domestic
comfort. It was awkward to be carrying hot, savoury-smelling dishes
from the kitchen to the dining-room at the very time when high-born
ladies, with noses of aristocratic refinement, might be calling.
Still more awkward was the accident which happened in consequence of
clumsy Betty's haste to open the front door to a lofty footman's
ran-tan, which caused her to set down the basket containing the
dirty plates right in his mistress's way, as she stepped gingerly
through the comparative darkness of the hall; and then the young
men, leaving the dining-room quietly enough, but bursting with
long-repressed giggle, or no longer restraining their tendency to
practical joking, no matter who might be in the passage when they
made their exit. The remedy proposed by Mrs. Gibson for all these
distressing grievances was a late dinner. The luncheon for the young
men, as she observed to her husband, might be sent into the surgery.
A few elegant cold trifles for herself and Molly would not scent the
house, and she would always take care to have some little dainty
ready for him. He acceded, but unwillingly, for it was an innovation
on the habits of a lifetime, and he felt as if he should never be
able to arrange his rounds aright with this newfangled notion of a
six o'clock dinner.

'Don't get any dainties for me, my dear; bread and cheese is the
chief of my diet, like it was that of the old woman's.'

'I know nothing of your old woman,' replied his wife; 'but really I
cannot allow cheese to come beyond the kitchen.'

'Then I'll eat it there,' said he. 'It's close to the stable-yard,
and if I come in in a hurry I can get it in a moment.'

'Really, Mr. Gibson, it is astonishing to compare your appearance and
manners with your tastes. You look such a gentleman, as dear Lady
Cumnor used to say.'

Then the cook left; also an old servant, though not so old a one as
Betty. The cook did not like the trouble of late dinners; and, being
a Methodist, she objected on religious grounds to trying any of Mrs
Gibson's new receipts for French dishes. It was not scriptural, she
said. There was a deal of mention of food in the Bible; but it was
of sheep ready dressed, which meant mutton, and of wine, and of
bread, and milk, and figs and raisins, of fatted calves, a good
well-browned fillet of veal, and such like; but it had always gone
against her conscience to cook swine-flesh and make raised
pork-pies, and now if she was to be set to cook heathen dishes after
the fashion of the Papists, she'd sooner give it all up together. So
the cook followed in Betty's track, and Mr. Gibson had to satisfy his
healthy English appetite on badly made omelettes, rissoles,
~vol-au-vents, croquets~, and timbales; never being exactly sure
what he was eating.

He had made up his mind before his marriage to yield in trifles, and
be firm in greater things. But the differences of opinion about
trifles arose every day, and were perhaps more annoying than if they
had related to things of more consequence. Molly knew her father's
looks as well as she knew her alphabet; his wife did not; and being
an unperceptive person, except when her own interests were dependent
upon another person's humour, never found out how he was worried by
all the small daily concessions which he made to her will or her
whims. He never allowed himself to put any regret into shape, even
in his own mind; he repeatedly reminded himself of his wife's good
qualities, and comforted himself by thinking they should work
together better as time rolled on; but he was very angry at a
bachelor great-uncle of Mr. Coxe's, who, after taking no notice of
his red-headed nephew for years, suddenly sent for him, after the
old man had partially recovered from a serious attack of illness,
and appointed him his heir, on condition that his great-nephew
remained with him during the remainder of his life. This had
happened almost directly after Mr. and Mrs. Gibson's return from their
wedding journey, and once or twice since that time Mr. Gibson had
found himself wondering why the deuce old Benson could not have made
up his mind sooner, and so have rid his house of the unwelcome
presence of the young lover. To do Mr. Coxe justice, in the very last
conversation he had as a pupil with Mr. Gibson he had said, with
hesitating awkwardness, that perhaps the new circumstances in which
he should be placed might make some difference with regard to Mr
Gibson's opinion on--

'Not at all,' said Mr. Gibson, quickly. 'You are both of you too
young to know your own minds; and if my daughter was silly enough to
be in love, she should never have to calculate her happiness on the
chances of an old man's death. I dare say he'll disinherit you after
all. He may do, and then you'd be worse off than ever. No! go away,
and forget all this nonsense; and when you've done, come back and
see us!'

So Mr. Coxe went away, with an oath of unalterable faithfulness in
his heart; and Mr. Gibson had unwillingly to fulfil an old promise
made to a gentleman farmer in the neighbourhood a year or two
before, and to take the second son of Mr. Browne in young Coxe's
place. He was to be the last of the race of pupils, and as he was
rather more than a year younger than Molly, Mr. Gibson trusted that
there would be no repetition of the Coxe romance.


CHAPTER XVI


THE BRIDE AT HOME


Among the 'county people' (as Mrs. Gibson termed them) who called
upon her as a bride, were the two young Mr. Hamleys. The Squire,
their father, had done his congratulations, as far as he ever
intended to do them, to Mr. Gibson himself when he came to the hall;
but Mrs. Hamley, unable to go and pay visits herself, anxious to show
attention to her kind doctor's new wife, and with perhaps a little
sympathetic curiosity as to how Molly and her stepmother got on
together, made her sons ride over to Hollingford with her cards and
apologies. They came into the newly-furnished drawing-room, looking
bright and fresh from their ride: Osborne first, as usual,
perfectly dressed for the occasion, and with the sort of fine manner
which sate so well upon him; Roger, looking like a strong-built,
cheerful, intelligent country farmer, followed in his brother's
train. Mrs. Gibson was dressed for receiving callers, and made the
effect she always intended to produce, of a very pretty woman, no
longer in first youth, but with such soft manners and such a
caressing voice, that people forgot to wonder what her real age
might be. Molly was better dressed than formerly; her stepmother saw
after that. She disliked anything old or shabby, or out of taste
about her; it hurt her eye; and she had already fidgeted Molly into
a new amount of care about the manner in which she put on her
clothes, arranged her hair, and was gloved and shod. Mrs. Gibson had
tried to put her through a course of rosemary washes and creams in
order to improve her tanned complexion; but about that Molly was
either forgetful or rebellious, and Mrs. Gibson could not well come
up to the girl's bedroom every night and see that she daubed her
face and neck over with the cosmetics so carefully provided for her.
Still, her appearance was extremely improved, even to Osborne's
critical eye. Roger sought rather to discover in her looks and
expression whether she was happy or not; his mother had especially
charged him to note all these signs.

Osborne and Mrs. Gibson made themselves agreeable to each other
according to the approved fashion when a young man calls on a
middle-aged bride. They talked of the 'Shakespeare and musical
glasses' of the day, each viewing with the other in their knowledge
of London topics. Molly heard fragments of their conversation in the
pauses of silence between Roger and herself. Her hero was coming out
in quite a new character; no longer literary or poetical, or
romantic, or critical, he was now full of the last new play, the
singers at the opera. He had the advantage over Mrs. Gibson, who, in
fact, only spoke of these things from hearsay, from listening to the
talk at the Towers, while Osborne had run up from Cambridge two or
three times to hear this, or to see that, wonder of the season. But
she had the advantage over him in greater boldness of invention to
eke out her facts; and besides she had more skill in the choice and
arrangement of her words, so as to make it appear as if the opinions
that were in reality quotations, were formed by herself from actual
experience or personal observation; such as, in speaking of the
mannerisms of a famous Italian singer, she would ask,--

'Did you observe her constant trick of heaving her shoulders and
clasping her hands together before she took a high note?'--which was
so said as to imply that Mrs. Gibson herself had noticed this trick.
Molly, who had a pretty good idea by this time of how her stepmother
had passed the last year of her life, listened with no small
bewilderment to this conversation; but at length decided that she
must misunderstand what they were saying, as she could not gather up
the missing links for the necessity of replying to Roger's questions
and remarks. Osborne was not the same Osborne he was when with his
mother at the hall. Roger saw her glancing at his brother.

'You think my brother looking ill?' said he, lowering his voice.

'No--not exactly.'

'He is not well. Both my father and I are anxious about him. That
run on the Continent did him harm, instead of good; and his
disappointment at his examination has told upon him, I'm afraid.'

'I was not thinking he looked ill; only changed somehow.'

'He says he must go back to Cambridge soon. Possibly it may do him
good; and I shall be off next week. This is a farewell visit to you,
as well as one of congratulation to Mrs. Gibson.'

'Your mother will feel your both going away, won't she? But of
course young men will always have to live away from home.'

'Yes,' he replied. 'Still she feels it a good deal; and I am not
satisfied about her health either. You will go over and see her
sometimes, will you? she is very fond of you.'

'If I may,' said Molly, unconsciously glancing at her stepmother.
She had an uncomfortable instinct that, in spite of Mrs. Gibson's own
perpetual flow of words, she could, and did, hear everything that
fell from Molly's lips.

'Do you want any more books?' said he. 'If you do, make a list out,
and send it to my mother before I leave, next Tuesday. After I am
gone, there will be no one to go into the library and pick them
out.'

After they were gone, Mrs. Gibson began her usual comments on the
departed visitors.

'I do like that Osborne Hamley! What a nice fellow he is! Somehow, I
always do like eldest sons. He will have the estate, won't he? I
shall ask your dear papa to encourage him to come about the house.
He will be a very good, very pleasant acquaintance for you and
Cynthia. The other is but a loutish young fellow, to my mind; there
is no aristocratic bearing about him. I suppose he takes after his
mother, who is but a parvenue, I've heard them say at the Towers.'

Molly was spiteful enough to have great pleasure in saying,--

'I think I've heard her father was a Russia merchant, and imported
tallow and hemp. Mr. Osborne Hamley is extremely like her.'

'Indeed! But there's no calculating these things. Anyhow, he is the
perfect gentleman in appearance and manner. The estate is entailed,
is it not?'

'I know nothing about it,' said Molly.

A short silence ensued. Then Mrs. Gibson said,--

'Do you know, I almost think I must get dear papa to give a little
dinner-party, and ask Mr. Osborne Hamley? I should like to have him
feel at home in this house. It would be something cheerful for him
after the dulness and solitude of Hamley Hall. For the old people
don't visit much, I believe?'

'He's going back to Cambridge next week,' said Molly.

'Is he? Well, then, we'll put off our little dinner till Cynthia
comes home. I should like to have some young society for her, poor
darling, when she returns.'

'When is she coming?' said Molly, who had always a longing curiosity
for this same Cynthia's return.

'Oh! I'm not sure; perhaps at the new year--perhaps not till Easter.
I must get this drawing-room all new furnished first; and then I
mean to fit up her room and yours just alike. They are just the same
size, only on opposite sides of the passage.'

'Are you going to new-furnish that room?' said Molly, in
astonishment at the never-ending changes.

'Yes; and yours, too, darling; so don't be jealous.'

'Oh, please, mamma, not mine,' said Molly, taking in the idea for
the first time.

'Yes, dear! You shall have yours done as well. A little French bed,'
and a new paper, and a pretty carpet, and a dressed-up
~toilette~-table and glass, will make it look quite a different
place.'

'But I don't want it to look different. I like it as it is. Pray
don't do anything to it.'

'What nonsense, child! I never heard anything more ridiculous! Most
girls would be glad to get rid of furniture only fit for the
lumber-room.'

'It was my own mamma's before she was married,' said Molly, in a
very low voice; bringing out this last plea unwillingly, but with a
certainty that it would not be resisted.

Mrs. Gibson paused for a moment before she replied,--

'It's very much to your credit that you should have such feelings,
I'm sure. But don't you think sentiment may be carried too far? Why,
we should have no new furniture at all, and should have to put up
with worm-eaten horrors. Besides, my dear, Hollingford will seem
very dull to Cynthia, after pretty, gay France, and I want to make
the first impressions attractive. I've a notion I can settle her
down near here; and I want her to come in a good temper; for,
between ourselves, my dear, she is a little, leetle wilful. You need
not mention this to your papa.'

'But can't you do Cynthia's room, and not mine? Please let mine
alone.'

'No, indeed! I couldn't agree to that. Only think what would be said
of me by everybody; petting my own child, and neglecting my
husband's! I couldn't bear it.'

'No one need know.'

'In such a tittle-tattle place as Hollingford! Really, Molly, you
are either very stupid or very obstinate, or else you don't care
what hard things may be said about me: and all for a selfish fancy
of your own! No! I owe myself the justice of acting in this matter
as I please. Every one shall know I'm not a common stepmother. Every
penny I spend on Cynthia I shall spend on you too; so it's no use
talking any more about it.'

So Molly's little white dimity bed, her old-fashioned chest of
drawers, and her other cherished relics of her mother's maiden-days,
were consigned to the lumber-room; and after a while, when Cynthia
and her great French boxes had come home, the old furniture that had
filled up the space required for the fresh importation of trunks,
disappeared into the lumber-room.

All this time the family at the Towers had been absent; Lady Cumnor
had been ordered to Bath for the early part of the winter, and her
family were with her there. On dull rainy days, Mrs. Gibson used to
bethink her of missing 'the Cumnors,' for so she had taken to
calling them since her position had become more independent of
theirs. It marked a distinction between her intimacy in the family,
and the reverential manner in which the townspeople were accustomed
to speak of 'the earl and the countess.' both Lady Cumnor and Lady
Harriet wrote to their dear Clare from time to time. The former had
generally some commissions that she wished to have executed at the
Towers, or in the town; and no one could do them so well as Clare,
who was acquainted with all the tastes and ways of the countess.
These commissions were the cause of various bills for flys and cars
from the 'George' Inn. Mr. Gibson pointed out this consequence to his
wife; but she, in return, bade him remark that a present of game was
pretty sure to follow upon the satisfactory execution of Lady
Cumnor's wishes. Somehow, Mr. Gibson did not quite like this
consequence either; but he was silent about it, at any rate. Lady
Harriet's letters were short and amusing. She had that sort of
regard for her old governess which prompted her to write from time
to time, and to feel glad when the half-voluntary task was
accomplished. So there was no real outpouring of confidence, but
enough news of the family and gossip of the place she was in, as she
thought would make Clare feel that she was not forgotten by her
former pupils, intermixed with moderate but sincere expressions of
regard. How those letters were quoted and referred to by Mrs. Gibson
in her conversations with the Hollingford ladies! She had found out
their effect at Ashcombe; and it was not less at Hollingford. But
she was rather perplexed at kindly messages to Molly, and at
inquiries as to how the Miss Brownings liked the tea she had sent;
and Molly had first to explain, and then to narrate at full length,
all the occurrences of the afternoon at Ashcombe Manor House, and
Lady Harriet's call upon her at Miss Brownings'.

'What nonsense!' said Mrs. Gibson, with some annoyance. 'Lady Harriet
only went to see you out of a desire of amusement. She would only
make fun of the Miss Brownings, and then they will be quoting her
and talking about her, just as if she was their intimate friend.'

'I don't think she did make fun of them. She really sounded as if
she had been very kind.'

'And you suppose you know her ways better than I do, who have known
her these fifteen years? I tell you she turns every one into
ridicule who does not belong to her set. Why, she used always to
speak of the Miss Brownings as "Pecksy and Flapsy."'

'She promised me she would not,' said Molly driven to bay.

'Promised you!--Lady Harriet? What do you mean?'

'Only--she spoke of them as Pecksy and Flapsy--and when she talked
of coming to call on me at their house, I asked her not to come if
she was going to--to make fun of them.'

'Upon my word! with all my long acquaintance with Lady Harriet I
should never have ventured on such impertinence.'

'I didn't mean it as impertinence,' said Molly, sturdily. 'And I
don't think Lady Harriet took it as such.'

'You can't know anything about it. She can put on any kind of
manner.'

Just then Squire Hamley came in. It was his first call; and Mrs
Gibson gave him a graceful welcome, and was quite ready to accept
his apology for its tardiness, and to assure him that she quite
understood the pressure of business on every landowner who farmed
his own estate. But no such apology was made. He shook her hand
heartily, as a mark of congratulation on her good fortune in having
secured such a prize as his friend Gibson, but said nothing about
his long neglect of duty. Molly, who by this time knew the few
strong expressions of his countenance well, was sure that something
was the matter, and that he was very much disturbed. He hardly
attended to Mrs. Gibson's fluent opening of conversation, for she had
already determined to make a favourable impression on the father of
the handsome young man who was heir to an estate, besides his own
personal agreeableness; but he turned to Molly, and, addressing her,
said--almost in a low voice, as if he was making a confidence to her
that he did not intend Mrs. Gibson to hear,--

'Molly, we are all wrong at home! Osborne has lost the fellowship at
Trinity he went back to try for. Then he has gone and failed
miserably in his degree, after all that he said, and that his mother
said; and I, like a fool, went and boasted about my clever son. I
can't understand it. I never expected anything extraordinary from
Roger; but Osborne--! And then it has thrown madam into one of her
bad fits of illness; and she seems to have a fancy for you, child!
Your father came to see her this morning. Poor thing, she's very
poorly, I'm afraid; and she told him how she should like to have you
about her, and he said I might fetch you. You'll come, won't you, my
dear? She's not a poor woman, such as many people think it's the
only charity to be kind to, but she's just as forlorn of woman's
care as if she was poor--worse, I dare say.'

'I'll be ready in ten minutes,' said Molly, much touched by the
squire's words and manner, never thinking of asking her stepmother's
consent, now that she had heard that her father had given his. As
she rose to leave the room, Mrs. Gibson, who had only half heard what
the squire had said, and was a little affronted at the exclusiveness
of his confidence, said,--'My dear, where are you going?'

'Mrs. Hamley wants me, and papa says I may go,' said Molly; and
almost at the same time the squire replied,--

'My wife is ill, and as she's very fond of your daughter, she begged
Mr. Gibson to allow her to come to the Hall for a little while, and
he kindly said she might, and I'm come to fetch her.'

'Stop a minute, darling,' said Mrs. Gibson to Molly--a slight cloud
over her countenance, in spite of her caressing word. 'I am sure
dear papa quite forgot that you were to go out with me to-night, to
visit people,' continued she, addressing herself to the squire,
'with whom I am quite unacquainted--and it is very uncertain if Mr
Gibson can return in time to go with me--so, you see, I cannot allow
Molly to go with you.'

'I shouldn't have thought it would have signified. Brides are always
brides, I suppose; and it's their part to be timid; but I shouldn't
have thought it--in this case. And my wife sets her heart on things,
as sick people do. Well, Molly' (in a louder tone, for these
foregoing sentences were spoken ~sotto voce~), 'we must put it off
till to-morrow: and it's our loss, not yours,' he continued, as he
saw the reluctance with which she slowly returned to her place.
'You'll be as gay as can be to-night, I dare say--'

'No, I shall not,' broke in Molly. 'I never wanted to go, and now I
shall want it less than ever.'

'Hush, my dear,' said Mrs. Gibson; and, addressing the squire, she
added, 'The visiting here is not all one could wish for so young a
girl--no young people, no dances, nothing of gaiety; but it is wrong
in you, Molly, to speak against such kind friends of your father's
as I understand these Cockerells are. Don't give so bad an
impression of yourself to the kind squire.'

'Let her alone! let her alone!' quoth he. 'I see what she means.
She'd rather come and be in my wife's sick-room than go out for this
visit to-night. Is there no way of getting her off?'

'None whatever,' said Mrs. Gibson. 'An engagement is an engagement
with me; and I consider that she is not only engaged to Mrs
Cockerell, but to me--bound to accompany me, in my husband's
absence.'

The squire was put out; and when he was put out he had a trick of
placing his hands on his knees and whistling softly to himself.
Molly knew this phase of his displeasure, and only hoped he would
confine himself to this wordless expression of annoyance. It was
pretty hard work for her to keep the tears out of her eyes; and she
endeavoured to think of something else, rather than dwell on regrets
and annoyances. She heard Mrs. Gibson talking on in a sweet monotone,
and wished to attend to what she was saying, but the squire's
visible annoyance struck sharper on her mind. At length, after a
pause of silence, he started up, and said,--

'Well! it's no use. Poor madam; she won't like it. She'll be
disappointed! But it's but for one evening!--but for one evening!
She may come to-morrow, mayn't she? Or will the dissipation of such
an evening as she describes, be too much for her?'

There was a touch of savage irony in his manner which frightened Mrs
Gibson into good behaviour.

'She shall be ready at any time you name. I am so sorry: my foolish
shyness is in fault, I believe; but still you must acknowledge that
an engagement is an engagement.'

'Did I ever say an engagement was an elephant, madam? However,
there's no use saying any more about it, or I shall forget my
manners. I'm an old tyrant, and she--lying there in bed, poor
girl--has always given me my own way. So you'll excuse me, Mrs
Gibson, won't you; and let Molly come along with me at ten to-morrow
morning?'

'Certainly,' said Mrs. Gibson, smiling. But when his back was turned,
she said to Molly,--

'Now, my dear, I must never have you exposing me to the ill-manners
of such a man again! I don't call him a squire; I call him a boor,
or a yeoman at best. You must not go on accepting or rejecting
invitations as if you were an independent young lady, Molly. Pay me
the respect of a reference to my wishes another time, if you please,
my dear!'

'Papa had said I might go,' said Molly, choking a little.

'As I am now your mamma your references must be to me, for the
future. But as you are to go you may as well look well dressed. I
will lend you my new shawl for this visit, if you like it, and my
set of green ribbons. I am always indulgent when proper respect is
paid to me. And in such a house as Hamley Hall, no one can tell who
may be coming and going, even if there is sickness in the family.'

'Thank you. But I don't want the shawl and the ribbons, please:
there will be nobody there except the family. There never is, I
think; and now that she is so ill'--Molly was on the point of crying
at the thought of her friend lying ill and lonely, and looking for
her arrival. Moreover, she was sadly afraid lest the squire had gone
off with the idea that she did not want to come--that she preferred
that stupid, stupid party at the Cockerells'. Mrs. Gibson, too, was
sorry; she had an uncomfortable consciousness of having given way to
temper before a stranger, and a stranger, too, whose good opinion
she had meant to cultivate: and she was also annoyed at Molly's
tearful face.

'What can I do for you, to bring you back into good temper?' she
said. 'First, you insist upon your knowing Lady Harriet better than
I do--I, who have known her for eighteen or nineteen years at least.
Then you jump at invitations without ever consulting me, or thinking
of how awkward it would be for me to go stumping into a drawing-room
all by myself; following my new name, too, which always makes me
feel uncomfortable, it is such a sad come-down after Kirkpatrick!
And then, when I offer you some of the prettiest things I have got,
you say it does not signify how you are dressed. What can I do to
please you, Molly? I, who delight in nothing more than peace in a
family, to see you sitting there with despair upon your face?'

Molly could stand it no longer; she went upstairs to her own
room--her own smart new room, which hardly yet seemed a familiar
place; and began to cry so heartily and for so long a time, that she
stopped at length for very weariness. She thought of Mrs. Hamley
wearying for her; of the old Hall whose very quietness might become
oppressive to an ailing person; of the trust the squire had had in
her that she would come off directly with him. And all this
oppressed her much more than the querulousness of her stepmother's
words.


CHAPTER XVII


TROUBLE AT HAMLEY HALL


If Molly thought that peace dwelt perpetually at Hamley Hall she was
sorely mistaken. Something was out of tune in the whole
establishment; and, for a very unusual thing, the common irritation
seemed to have produced a common bond. All the servants were old in
their places, and were told by some one of the family, or gathered,
from the unheeded conversation carried on before them, everything
that affected master or mistress or either of the young gentlemen.
Any one of them could have told Molly that the grievance which lay
at the root of everything, was the amount of the bills run up by
Osborne at Cambridge, and which, now that all chance of his
obtaining a fellowship was over, came pouring down upon the squire.
But Molly, confident of being told by Mrs. Hamley herself anything
which she wished her to hear, encouraged no confidences from any one
else.

She was struck with the change in 'madam's' looks as soon as she
caught sight of her in the darkened room, lying on the sofa in her
dressing-room, all dressed in white, which almost rivalled the white
wanness of her face. The squire ushered Molly in with,--

'Here she is at last!' and Molly had scarcely imagined that he had
so much variety in the tones of his voice--the beginning of the
sentence was spoken in a loud congratulatory manner, while the last
words were scarcely audible. He had seen the death-like pallor on
his wife's face; not a new sight, and one which had been presented
to him gradually enough, but which was now always giving him a fresh
shock. It was a lovely tranquil winter's day; every branch and every
twig of the trees and shrubs were glittering with drops of the
sun-melted hoarfrost; a robin was perched on a holly-bush, piping
cheerily; but the blinds were down, and out of Mrs. Hamley's windows
nothing of all this was to be seen. There was even a large screen
placed between her and the wood-fire, to keep off that cheerful
blaze. Mrs. Hamley stretched out one hand to Molly, and held hers
firm; with the other she shaded her eyes.

'She is not so well this morning,' said the squire, shaking his
head. 'But never fear, my dear one; here's the doctor's daughter,
nearly as good as the doctor himself. Have you had your medicine?
Your beef-tea?' he continued, going about on heavy tiptoe and
peeping into every empty cup and glass. Then he returned to the
sofa; looked at her for a minute or two, and then softly kissed her,
and told Molly he would leave her in charge.

As if Mrs. Hamley was afraid of Molly's remarks or questions, she
began in her turn a hasty system of interrogatories.

'Now, dear child, tell me all; it's no breach of confidence, for I
shan't mention it again, and I shan't be here long. How does it all
go on--the new mother, the good resolutions? let me help you if I
can. I think with a girl I could have been of use--a mother does not
know boys. But tell me anything you like and will; don't be afraid
of details.'

Even with Molly's small experience of illness she saw how much of
restless fever there was in this speech; and instinct, or some such
gift, prompted her to tell a long story of many things--the
wedding-day, her visit to Miss Brownings', the new furniture, Lady
Harriet, &c., all in an easy flow of talk which was very soothing to
Mrs. Hamley, inasmuch as it gave her something to think about beyond
her own immediate sorrows. But Molly did not speak of her own
grievances, nor of the new domestic relationship. Mrs. Hamley noticed
this.

'And you and Mrs. Gibson get on happily together?'

'Not always,' said Molly. 'You know we didn't know much of each
other before we were put to live together.'

'I didn't like what the squire told me last night. He was very
angry.'

That sore had not yet healed over; but Molly resolutely kept
silence, beating her brains to think of some other subject of
conversation.

'Ah! I see, Molly,' said Mrs. Hamley; 'you won't tell me your
sorrows, and yet, perhaps, I could have done you some good.'

'I don't like,' said Molly, in a low voice. 'I think papa wouldn't
like it. And, besides, you have helped me so much--you and Mr. Roger
Hamley. I often, often think of the things he said. they come in so
usefully, and are such a strength to me.'

'Ah, Roger! yes. He is to be trusted. Oh, Molly! I've a great deal
to say to you myself, only not now. I must have my medicine and try
to go to sleep. Good girl! You are stronger than I am, and can do
without sympathy.'

Molly was taken to another room; the maid who conducted her to it
told her that Mrs. Hamley had not wished her to have her nights
disturbed, as they might very probably have been if she had been in
her former sleeping-room. In the afternoon Mrs. Hamley sent for her,
and with the want of reticence common to invalids, especially to
those suffering from long and depressing maladies, she told Molly of
the family distress and disappointment.

She made Molly sit down near her on a little stool, and, holding her
hand, and looking into her eyes to catch her spoken sympathy from
their expression quicker than she could from her words, she said,--

'Osborne has so disappointed us! I cannot understand it yet. And the
squire was so terribly angry! I cannot think how all the money was
spent--advances through money-lenders, besides bills. The squire
does not show me how angry he is now, because he's afraid of another
attack; but I know how angry he is. You see he has been spending
ever so much money in reclaiming that land at Upton Common, and is
very hard pressed himself. But it would have doubled the value of
the estate, and so we never thought anything of economics which
would benefit Osborne in the long run. And now the squire says he
must mortgage some of the land; and you can't think how it cuts him
to the heart. He sold a great deal of timber to send the two boys to
college. Osborne--oh! what a dear, innocent boy he was: he was the
heir, you know; and he was so clever, every one said he was sure of
honours and a fellowship, and I don't know what all; and he did get
a scholarship, and then all went wrong. I don't know how. That is
the worst. Perhaps the squire wrote too angrily, and that stopped up
confidence. But he might have told me. He would have done, I think,
Molly, if he had been here, face to face with me. But the squire, in
his anger, told him not to show his face at home till he had paid
off the debts he had incurred out of his allowance. Out of two
hundred and fifty a year to pay off more than nine hundred, one way
or another! And not to come home till then! Perhaps Roger will have
debts too! He had but two hundred; but, then, he was not the eldest
son. The squire has given orders that the men are to be turned off
the draining-works; and I lie awake thinking of their poor families
this wintry weather. But what shall we do? I've never been strong,
and, perhaps, I've been extravagant in my habits; and there were
family traditions as to expenditure, and the reclaiming of this
land. Oh! Molly, Osborne was such a sweet little baby, and such a
loving boy: so clever, too! You know I read you some of his poetry:
now, could a person who wrote like that do anything very wrong? And
yet I'm afraid he has.'

'Don't you know, at all, how the money has gone?' asked Molly.

'No! not at all. That's the sting. There are tailors' bills, and
bills for book-binding and wine and pictures--that come to four or
five hundred; and though this expenditure is extraordinary--
inexplicable to such simple folk as we are--yet it may be only the
luxury of the present day. But the money for which he will give no
account,--of which, indeed, we only heard through the squire's
London agents, who found out that certain disreputable attorneys
were making inquiries as to the entail of the estate,--oh! Molly,
worse than all--I don't know how to bring myself to tell you--as to
the age and health of the squire, his dear father'--(she began to
sob almost hysterically; yet she would go on talking, in spite of
Molly's efforts to stop her)--'who held him in his arms, and blessed
him, even before I had kissed him; and thought always so much of him
as his heir and first-born darling. How he has loved him! How I have
loved him! I sometimes have thought of late that we've almost done
that good Roger injustice.'

'No! I'm sure you've not: only look at the way he loves you. Why,
you are his first thought: he may not speak about it, but any one
may see it. And dear, dear Mrs. Hamley,' said Molly, determined to
say out all that was in her mind now that she had once got the word,
'don't you think that it would be better not to misjudge Mr. Osborne
Hamley? We don't know what he has done with the money: he is so good
(is he not?) that he may have wanted it to relieve some poor
person--some tradesman, for instance, pressed by creditors--some--'

'You forget, dear,' said Mrs. Hamley, smiling a little at the girl's
impetuous romance, but sighing the next instant, 'that all the other
bills come from tradesmen, who complain piteously of being kept out
of their money.'

Molly was nonplussed for the moment; but then she said,--

'I daresay they imposed upon him. I'm sure I've heard stories of
young men being made regular victims of by the shopkeepers in great
towns.'

'You're a great darling, child,' said Mrs. Hamley, comforted by
Molly's strong partisanship, unreasonable and ignorant though it
was.

'And, besides,' continued Molly, 'some one must be acting wrongly in
Osborne's--Mr. Osborne Hamley's, I mean--I can't help saying Osborne
sometimes, but, indeed, I always think of him as Mr. Osborne--'

'Never mind, Molly, what you call him; only go on talking. It seems
to do me good to have the hopeful side taken. The squire has been so
hurt and displeased: strange-looking men coming into the
neighbourhood, too, questioning the tenants, and grumbling about the
last fall of timber, as if they were calculating on the squire's
death.'

'That's just what I was going to speak about. Doesn't it show that
they are bad men? and would bad men scruple to impose upon him, and
to tell lies in his name, and to ruin him?'

'Don't you see, you only make him out weak, instead of wicked?'

'Yes; perhaps I do. But I don't think he is weak. You know yourself,
dear Mrs. Hamley, how very clever he really is. Besides, I would
rather he was weak than wicked. Weak people may find themselves all
at once strong in heaven, when they see things quite clearly; but I
don't think the wicked will turn themselves into virtuous people all
at once.'

'I think I've been very weak, Molly,' said Mrs. Hamley, stroking
Molly's curls affectionately. 'I've made such an idol of my
beautiful Osborne; and he turns out to have feet of clay, not strong
enough to stand firm on the ground. And that's the best view of his
conduct, too!'

What with his anger against his son, and his anxiety about his wife:
the difficulty of raising the money immediately required, and his
irritation at the scarce-concealed inquiries made by strangers as to
the value of his property, the poor squire was in a sad state. He
was angry and impatient with every one who came near him; and then
was depressed at his own violent temper and unjust words. The old
servants, who, perhaps, cheated him in many small things, were
beautifully patient under his upbraidings. They could understand
bursts of passion, and knew the cause of his variable moods as well
as he did himself. The butler, who was accustomed to argue with his
master about every fresh direction as to his work, now nudged Molly
at dinner-time to make her eat of some dish which she had just been
declining, and explained his conduct afterwards as follows,--

'You see, miss, me and cook had planned a dinner as would tempt
master to cat; but when you say, "No, thank you," when I hand you
anything, master never so much as looks at it. But if you takes a
thing, and cats with a relish, why first he waits, and then he
looks, and by-and-by he smells; and then he finds out as he's
hungry, and falls to eating as natural as a kitten takes to mewing.
That's the reason, miss, as I gave you a nudge and a wink, which no
one knows better nor me was not manners.'

Osborne's name was never mentioned during these tete-a-tete meals.
The squire asked Molly questions about Hollingford people, but did
not seem much to attend to her answers. He used also to ask her
every day how she thought that his wife was; but if Molly told the
truth--that every day seemed to make her weaker and weaker--he was
almost savage with the girl. He could not bear it; and he would not.
Nay, once he was on the point of dismissing Mr. Gibson because he
insisted on a consultation with Dr Nicholls, the great physician of
the county.

'It's nonsense thinking her so ill as that--you know it's only the
delicacy she's had for years; and if you can't do her any good in
such a simple case--no pain--only weakness and nervousness--it is a
simple case, eh?--don't look in that puzzled way, man!--you'd better
give her up altogether, and I'll take her to Bath or Brighton,' or
somewhere for change, for in my opinion it's only moping and
nervousness.'

But the squire's bluff florid face was pinched with anxiety, and
worn with the effort of being deaf to the footsteps of fate as he
said these words which belied his fears.

Mr. Gibson replied very quietly,--

'I shall go on coming to see her, and I know you will not forbid my
visits. But I shall bring Dr Nicholls with me the next time I come.
I may be mistaken in my treatment; and I wish to God he may say I am
mistaken in my apprehensions.'

'Don't tell me them! I cannot hear them!' cried the squire. 'Of
course we must all die; and she must too. But not the cleverest
doctor in England shall go about coolly meting out the life of such
as her. I dare say I shall die first. I hope I shall. But I'll knock
any one down who speaks to me of the death sitting within me. And,
besides, I think all doctors are ignorant quacks, pretending to
knowledge they haven't got. Ay, you may smile at me. I don't care.
Unless you can tell me I shall die first, neither you nor your Dr
Nicholls shall come prophesying and croaking about this house.'

Mr. Gibson went away, heavy at heart at the thought of Mrs. Hamley's
approaching death, but thinking little enough of the squire's
speeches. He had almost forgotten them, in fact, when about nine
o'clock that evening, a groom rode in from Hamley Hall in hot haste,
with a note from the squire.

DEAR GIBSON,--For God's sake forgive me if I was rude to-day. She is
much worse. Come and spend the night here. Write for Nicholls, and
all the physicians you want. Write before you start off here. They
may give her ease. There were Whitworth doctors much talked of in my
youth for curing people given up by the regular doctors; can't you
get one of them? I put myself in your hands. Sometimes I think it is
the turning point, and she'll rally after this bout. I trust all to
you.

Yours ever,

R. HAMLEY.

P.S.--Molly is a treasure.--God help me!

Of course Mr. Gibson went; for the first time since his marriage
cutting short Mrs. Gibson's querulous lamentations over her life, as
involved in that of a doctor called out at all hours of day and
night.

He brought Mrs. Hamley through this attack; and for a day or two the
squire's alarm and gratitude made him docile in Mr. Gibson's hands.
Then he returned to the idea of its being a crisis through which his
wife had passed; and that she was now on the way to recovery. But
the day after the consultation with Dr Nicholls, Mr. Gibson said to
Molly,--

'Molly! I've written to Osborne and Roger. Do you know Osborne's
address?'

'No, papa. He's in disgrace. I don't know if the squire knows; and
she has been too ill to write.'

'Never mind. I'll enclose it to Roger; whatever those lads may be to
others, there's as strong brotherly love as ever I saw, between the
two. Roger will know. And, Molly, they are sure to come home as soon
as they hear my report of their mother's state. I wish you'd tell
the squire what I've done. It's not a pleasant piece of work; and
I'll tell madam myself in my own way. I'd have told him if he'd been
at home; but you say he was obliged to go to Ashcombe on business.'

'Quite obliged. He was so sorry to miss you. But, papa, he will be
so angry! You don't know how mad he is against Osborne.'

Molly dreaded the squire's anger when she gave him her father's
message. She had seen quite enough of the domestic relations of the
Hamley family to understand that, underneath his old-fashioned
courtesy, and the pleasant hospitality he showed to her as a guest,
there was a strong will, and a vehement passionate temper, along
with that degree of obstinacy in prejudices (or 'opinions,' as he
would have called them) so common to those who have, neither in
youth nor in manhood, mixed largely with their kind. She had
listened, day after day, to Mrs. Hamley's plaintive murmurs as to the
deep disgrace in which Osborne was being held by his father--the
prohibition of his coming home; and she hardly knew how to begin to
tell him that the letter summoning Osborne had already been sent
off.

Their dinners were ~tete-a-tete~. The squire tried to
make them pleasant to Molly, feeling deeply grateful to her for the
soothing comfort she was to his wife. He made merry speeches, which
sank away into silence, and at which they each forgot to smile. He
ordered up rare wines, which she did not care for, but tasted out of
complaisance. He noticed that one day she had eaten some brown
~buerre~ pears as if she liked them; and as his trees had not
produced many this year, he gave directions that this particular
kind should be sought for through the neighbourhood. Molly felt
that, in many ways, he was full of good-will towards her; but it did
not diminish her dread of touching on the one sore point in the
family. However, it had to be done, and that without delay.

The great log was placed on the after-dinner fire, the hearth swept
up, the ponderous candles snuffed, and then the door was shut, and
Molly and the squire were left to their dessert. She sate at the
side of the table in her old place. That at the head was vacant; yet
as no orders had been given to the contrary, the plate and glasses
and napkin were always arranged as regularly and methodically as if
Mrs. Hamley would come in as usual. Indeed, sometimes, when the door
by which she used to enter was opened by any chance, Molly caught
herself looking round as if she expected to see the tall, languid
figure in the elegant draperies of rich silk and soft lace, which
Mrs. Hamley was wont to wear of an evening.

This evening, it struck her, as a new thought of pain, that into
that room she would come no more. She had fixed to give her father's
message at this very point of time; but something in her throat
choked her, and she hardly knew how to govern her voice. The squire
got up and went to the broad fire-place, to strike into the middle
of the great log, and split it up into blazing, sparkling pieces.
His back was towards her. Molly began, 'When papa was here to-day,
he bade me tell you he had written to Mr. Roger Hamley to say
that--that he thought he had better come home; and he enclosed a
letter to Mr. Osborne Hamley to say the same thing.'

The squire put down the poker, but he still kept his back to Molly.

'He sent for Osborne and Roger?' he asked, at length.

Molly answered, 'Yes.'

Then there was a dead silence, which Molly thought would never end.
The squire had placed his two hands on the high chimney-piece, and
stood leaning over the fire.

'Roger would have been down from Cambridge on the 18th,' said he.
'And he has sent for Osborne, too! Did he know,'--he continued,
turning round to Molly, with something of the fierceness she had
anticipated in voice and look. In another moment he had dropped his
voice. 'It is right, quite right. I understand. It has come at
length. Come! come! Osborne has brought it on, though,' with a fresh
access of anger in his tones. 'She might have' (some word Molly
could not hear--she thought it sounded like 'lingered') 'but for
that. I cannot forgive him; I cannot.'

And then he suddenly left the room. While Molly sate there still,
very sad in her sympathy with all, he put his head in again,--

'Go to her, my dear; I cannot--not just yet. But I will soon. Just
this bit; and after that I won't lose a moment. You are a good girl.
God bless you!'

It is not to be supposed that Molly had remained all this time at
the Hall without interruption. Once or twice her father had brought
her a summons home. Molly thought she could perceive that he had
brought it unwillingly; in fact, it was Mrs. Gibson that had sent for
her, almost, as it were, to preserve a 'right of way' through her
actions.

'You shall come back to-morrow, or the next day,' her father had
said. 'But mamma seems to think people will put a bad construction
on your being so much way from home so soon after our marriage.'

'Oh, papa, I'm afraid Mrs. Hamley will miss me! I do so like being
with her.'

'I don't think it is likely she will miss you as much as she would
have done a month or two ago. She sleeps so much now, that she is
scarcely conscious of the lapse of time. I'll see that you come back
here again in a day or two.'

So out of the silence and the soft melancholy of the Hall Molly
returned into the all-pervading element of chatter and gossip at
Hollingford. Mrs. Gibson received her kindly enough. Once' she had a
smart new winter bonnet ready to give her as a present; but she did
not care to hear any particulars about the friends whom Molly had
just left; and her few remarks on the state of affairs at the Hall
jarred terribly on the sensitive Molly.

'What a time she lingers! Your papa never expected she would last
half so long after that attack. It must be very wearing work to them
all; I declare you look quite another creature since you went there.
One can only wish it mayn't last, for their sakes.'

'You don't know how the squire values every minute,' said Molly.

'Why, you say she sleeps a great deal, and doesn't talk much when
she's awake, and there's not the slightest hope for her. And yet, at
such times, people are kept on the tenterhooks with watching and
waiting. I know it by my dear Kirkpatrick. There really were days
when I thought it never would end. But we won't talk any more of
such dismal things; you've had quite enough of them, I'm sure, and
it always makes me melancholy to hear of illness and death; and yet
your papa seems sometimes as if he could talk of nothing else. I'm
going to take you out to-night, though, and that will give you
something of a change; and I've been getting Miss Rose to trim up
one of my old gowns for you; it's too tight for me. There's some
talk of dancing,--it's at Mrs. Edward's.'

'Oh, mamma, I cannot go!' cried Molly. 'I've been so much with her;
and she may be suffering so, or even dying--and I to be dancing!'

'Nonsense! You're no relation, so you need not feel it so much. I
wouldn't urge you, if she was likely to know about it and be hurt;
but as it is, it's all fixed that you are to go; and don't let us
have any nonsense about it. We might sit twirling our thumbs, and
repeating hymns all our lives long, if we were to do nothing else
when people were dying.'

'I cannot go,' repeated Molly. And, acting upon impulse, and almost
to her own surprise, she appealed to her father, who came into the
room at this very time. He contracted his dark eyebrows, and looked
annoyed as both wife and daughter poured their different sides of
the argument into his ears. He sate down in desperation of patience.
When his turn came to pronounce a decision, he said,--

'I suppose I can have some lunch? I went away at six this morning,
and there's nothing in the dining-room. I have to go off again
directly.'

Molly started to the door; Mrs. Gibson made haste to ring the bell.

'Where are you going, Molly?' said she, sharply.

'Only to see about papa's lunch.'

'There are servants to do it; and I don't like your going into the
kitchen.'

'Come, Molly! sit down and be quiet,' said her father. 'One comes
home wanting peace and quietness--and food too. If I am to be
appealed to, which I beg I may not be another time, I settle that
Molly stops home this evening. I shall come back late and tired. See
that I have something ready to cat, goosey, and then I'll dress
myself up in my best, and go and fetch you home, my dear. I wish all
these wedding festivities were well over. Ready, is it? Then I'll go
into the dining-room and gorge myself. A doctor ought to be able to
eat like a camel, or like Major Dugald Dalgetty.'

It was well for Molly that callers came in just at this time, for
Mrs. Gibson was extremely annoyed. They told her some little local
piece of news, however, which filled up her mind; and Molly found
that, if she only expressed wonder enough at the engagement they had
both heard of from the departed callers, the previous discussion as
to her accompanying her stepmother or not might be entirely passed
over. Not entirely though; for the next morning she had to listen to
a very brilliantly touched-up account of the dance and the gaiety
which she had missed; and also to be told that Mrs. Gibson had
changed her mind about giving her the gown, and thought now that she
should reserve it for Cynthia, if only it was long enough; but
Cynthia was so tall--quite overgrown, in fact. The chances seemed
equally balanced as to whether Molly might not have the gown after
all.


CHAPTER XVIII


MR OSBORNE'S SECRET


Osborne and Roger came to the Hall; Molly found Roger established
there when she returned after this absence at home. She gathered
that Osborne was coming; but very little was said about him in any
way. The Squire scarcely ever left his wife's room now; he sat by
her, watching her, and now and then moaning to himself. She was so
much under the influence of opiates that she did not often rouse up;
but when she did, she almost invariably asked for Molly. On these rare
occasions, she would ask after Osborne--where he was, if he had been
told, and if he was coming? In her weakened and confused state of
intellect she seemed to have retained two strong impressions--one,
of the sympathy with which Molly had received her confidence about
Osborne; the other, of the anger which her husband entertained
against him. Before the squire she never mentioned Osborne's name;
nor did she seem at her case in speaking about him to Roger; while,
when she was alone with Molly, she hardly spoke of any one else.
She must have had some sort of wandering idea that Roger blamed his
brother, while she remembered Molly's eager defence, which she had
thought hopelessly improbable at the time. At any rate she made
Molly her confidante about her first-born. She sent her to ask
Roger how soon he would come, for she seemed to know perfectly
well that he was coming.

'Tell me all Roger says. He will tell you.'

But it was several days before Molly could ask Roger any questions;
and meanwhile Mrs. Hamley's state had materially altered. At length
Molly came upon Roger sitting in the library, his head buried in his
hands. He did not hear her footstep till she was close beside him.
Then he lifted up his face, red, and stained with tears, his hair
all ruffled up and in disorder.

'I've been wanting to see you alone,' she began. 'Your mother does
so want some news of your brother Osborne. She told me last week to
ask you about him, but I did not like to speak of him before your
father.'

'She has hardly ever named him to me.'

'I don't know why; for to me she used to talk of him perpetually. I
have seen so little of her this week, and I think she forgets a
great deal now. Still, if you don't mind, I should like to be able
to tell her something if she asks me again.'

He put his head again between his hands, and did not answer her for
some time.

'What does she want to know?' said he, at last. 'Does she know that
Osborne is coming soon--any day?'

'Yes. But she wants to know where he is.'

'I can't tell you. I don't exactly know. I believe he's abroad, but
I'm not sure.'

'But you've sent papa's letter to him?'

'I've sent it to a friend of his who will know better than I do
where he's to be found. You must know that he isn't free from
creditors, Molly. You can't have been one of the family, like a
child of the house almost, without knowing that much. For that and
for some other reasons I don't exactly know where he is.'

'I will tell her so. You are sure he will come?'

'Quite sure. But, Molly, I think my mother may live some time yet;
don't you? Dr Nicholls said so yesterday when he was here with your
father. He said she had rallied more than he had ever expected.
You're not afraid of any change that makes you so anxious for
Osborne's coming?'

'No. It's only for her that I asked. She did seem so to crave for
news of him. I think she dreamed of him; and then when she wakened
it was a relief to her to talk about him to me. She always seemed to
associate me with him. We used to speak so much of him when we were
together.'

'I don't know what we should any of us have done without you. You've
been like a daughter to my mother.'

'I do so love her,' said Molly, softly.

'Yes; I see. Have you ever noticed that she sometimes calls you
"Fanny"? It was the name of a little sister of ours who died. I
think she often takes you for her. It was partly that, and partly
that at such a time as this one can't stand on formalities, that
made me call you Molly. I hope you don't mind it?'

'No; I like it. But will you tell me something more about your
brother? She really hungers for news of him.'

'She'd better ask me herself. Yet, no! I am so involved by promises
of secrecy, Molly, that I couldn't satisfy her if she once began to
question me. I believe he's in Belgium, and that he went there about
a fortnight ago, partly to avoid his creditors. You know my father
has refused to pay his debts?'

'Yes; at least, I knew something like it.'

'I don't believe my father could raise the money all at once without
having recourse to steps which he would exceedingly recoil from. Yet
for the time it places Osborne in a very awkward position.'

'I think what vexes your father a good deal is some mystery as to
how the money was spent.'

'If my mother ever says anything about that part of the affair,'
said Roger, hastily, 'assure her from me that there's nothing of
vice or wrong-doing about it. I can't say more: I'm tied. But set
her mind at ease on this point.'

'I'm not sure if she remembers all her painful anxiety about this,'
said Molly. 'She used to speak a great deal to me about him before
you came, when your father seemed so angry. And now, whenever she
sees me she wants to talk on the old subject; but she doesn't
remember so clearly. If she were to see him I don't believe she
would recollect why she was uneasy about him while he was absent.'

'He must be here soon. I expect him every day,' said Roger,
uneasily.

'Do you think your father will be very angry with him?' asked Molly,
with as much timidity as if the squire's displeasure might be
directed against her.

'I don't know,' said Roger. 'My mother's illness may alter him; but
he didn't easily forgive us formerly. I remember once--but that is
nothing to the purpose. I can't help fancying that he has put
himself under some strong restraint for my mother's sake, and that
he won't express much. But it doesn't follow that he will forget it.
My father is a man of few affections, but what he has are very
strong; he feels anything that touches him on these points deeply
and permanently. That unlucky valuing of the property! It has given
my father the idea of post-obits--'

'What are they?' asked Molly.

'Raising money to be paid on my father's death, which, of course,
involves calculations as to the duration of his life.'

'How shocking!' said she.

'I'm as sure as I am of my own life that Osborne never did anything
of the kind. But my father expressed his suspicions in language that
irritated Osborne; and he doesn't speak out, and won't justify
himself even as much as he might; and, much as he loves me, I've but
little influence over him, or else he would tell my father all.
Well, we must leave it to time,' he added, sighing. 'My mother would
have brought us all right, if she'd been what she once was.'

He turned away leaving Molly very sad. She knew that every member of
the family she cared for so much was in trouble, out of which she
saw no exit; and her small power of helping them was diminishing day
by day as Mrs. Hamley sank more and more under the influence of
opiates and stupefying illness. Her father had spoken to her only
this very day of the desirableness of her returning home for good.
Mrs. Gibson wanted her--for no particular reason, but for many small
fragments of reasons. Mrs. Hamley had ceased to want her much, only
occasionally appearing to remember her existence. Her position (her
father thought--the idea had not entered her head) in a family of
which the only woman was an invalid confined to bed, was becoming
awkward. But Molly had begged hard to remain two or three days
longer--only that--only till Friday. If Mrs. Hamley should want her
(she argued, with tears in her eyes), and should hear that she had
left the house, she would think her so unkind, so ungrateful!

'My dear child, she's getting past wanting any one! The keenness of
earthly feelings is deadened.'

'Papa, that is worst of all. I cannot bear it. I won't believe it.
She may not ask for me again, and may quite forget me; but I'm sure,
to the very last, if the medicines don't stupefy her, she will look
round for the squire and her children. For poor Osborne most of all;
because he's in sorrow.'

Mr. Gibson shook his head, but said nothing in reply. In a minute or
two he asked,--

'I don't like to take you away while you even fancy you can be of
use or comfort to one who has been so kind to you. But, if she
hasn't wanted you before Friday, will you be convinced, will you
come home willingly?'

'If I go then, I may see her once again, even if she hasn't asked
for me?' inquired Molly.

'Yes, of course. You must make no noise, no step; but you may go in
and see her. I must tell you, I'm almost certain she won't ask for
you.'

'But she may, papa. I will go home on Friday, if she has not. I
think she will.'

So Molly hung about the house, trying to do all she could out of the
sick-room, for the comfort of those in it. They only came out for
meals, or for necessary business, and found little time for talking
to her, so her life was solitary enough, waiting for the call that
never came. The evening of the day on which she had had the above
conversation with Roger, Osborne arrived. He came straight into the
drawing-room, where Molly was seated on the rug, reading by
firelight, as she did not like to ring for candies merely for her
own use. Osborne came in, with a kind of hurry, which almost made
him appear as if he would trip himself up, and fall down. Molly
rose. He had not noticed her before; now he came forwards, and took
hold of both her hands, leading her into the full flickering light,
and straining his eyes to look into her face.

'How is she? You will tell me--you must know the truth! I've
travelled day and night since I got your father's letter.'

Before she could frame her answer, he had sate down in the nearest
chair, covering his eyes with his hand.

'She's very ill,' said Molly. 'That you know; but I don't think she
suffers much pain. She has wanted you sadly.'

He groaned aloud. 'My father forbade me to come.'

'I know!' said Molly, anxious to prevent his self-reproach. 'Your
brother was away, too. I think no one knew how ill she was--she had
been an invalid for so long.'

'You know--Yes! she told you a great deal--she was very fond of you.
And God knows how I loved her. If I had not been forbidden to come
home, I should have told her all. Does my father know of my coming
now?'

'Yes,' said Molly; 'I told him papa had sent for you.'

Just at that moment the squire came in. He had not heard of
Osborne's arrival, and was seeking Molly to ask her to write a
letter for him.

Osborne did not stand up when his father entered. He was too much
exhausted, too much oppressed by his feelings, and also too much
estranged by his father's angry, suspicious letters. If he had come
forwards with any manifestation of feeling at this moment,
everything might have been different. But he waited for his father
to see him before he uttered a word. All that the squire said when
his eye fell upon him at last was,--

'You here, sir!'

And, breaking off in the directions he was giving to Molly, he
abruptly left the room. All the time his heart was yearning after
his first-born; but mutual pride kept them asunder. Yet he went
straight to the butler, and asked of him when Mr. Osborne had
arrived, and how he had come and if he had had any refreshment--
dinner or what--since his arrival?

'For I think I forget everything now!' said the poor squire, putting
his hand up to his head. 'For the life of me, I can't remember
whether we've had dinner or not; these long nights, and all this
sorrow and watching, quite bewilder me.'

'Perhaps, sir, you will take some dinner with Mr. Osborne. Mrs. Morgan
is sending up his directly. You hardly sate down at dinner-time,
sir, you thought my mistress wanted something.'

'Ay! I remember now. No! I won't have any more. Give Mr. Osborne what
wine he chooses. Perhaps he can eat and drink.' So the squire went
away upstairs with bitterness as well as sorrow in his heart.

When lights were brought, Molly was struck with the change in
Osborne. He looked haggard and worn; perhaps with travelling and
anxiety. Not quite such a dainty gentleman either, as Molly had
thought him, when she had last seen him calling on her stepmother,
two months before. But she liked him better now. The tone of his
remarks pleased her more. He was simpler, and less ashamed of
showing his feelings. He asked after Roger in a warm, longing kind
of way. Roger was out: he had ridden to Ashcombe to transact some
business for the squire. Osborne evidently wished for his return;
and hung about restlessly in the drawing-room after he had dined.

'You are sure I may not see her to-night?' he asked Molly, for the
third or fourth time. 'No, indeed. I will go up again if you like
it. But Mrs. Jones, the nurse Dr Nicholls sent, is a very decided
person. I went up while you were at dinner, and Mrs. Hamley had just
taken her drops, and was on no account to be disturbed by seeing any
one, much less by any excitement.'

Osborne kept walking up and down the long drawing-room, half talking
to himself, half to Molly.

'I wish Roger would come. He seems to be the only one to give me a
welcome. Does my father always live upstairs in my mother's rooms,
Miss Gibson?'

'He has done since her last attack. I believe he reproaches himself
for not having been enough alarmed before.'

'You heard all the words he said to me: they were not much of a
welcome, were they? And my dear mother, who always--whether I was to
blame or not--I suppose Roger is sure to come home to-night?'

'Quite sure.'

'You are staying here, are you not? Do you often see my mother, or
does this omnipotent nurse keep you out too?'

'Mrs. Hamley hasn't asked for me for three days now, and I don't go
into her room unless she asks. I'm leaving on Friday, I believe.'

'My mother was very fond of you, I know.'

After a while he said, in a voice that had a great deal of sensitive
pain in its tone,--

'I suppose--do you know whether she is quite conscious--quite
herself?'

'Not always conscious,' said Molly, tenderly. 'She has to take so
many opiates. But she never wanders, only forgets, and sleeps.'

'Oh, mother, mother!' said he, stopping suddenly, and hanging over
the fire, his hands on the chimney-piece.

When Roger came home, Molly thought it time to retire. Poor girl! it
was getting to be time for her to leave this scene of distress in
which she could be of no use. She sobbed herself to sleep this
Tuesday night. Two days more, and it would be Friday; and she would
have to wrench up the roots she had shot down into this ground. The
weather was bright the next morning; and morning and sunny weather
cheer up young hearts. Molly sate in the dining-room making tea for
the gentlemen as they came down. She could not help hoping that the
squire and Osborne might come to a better understanding before she
left; for after all, in the discussion between father and son, lay a
bitterer sting than in the illness sent by God. But though they met
at the breakfast-table, they purposely avoided addressing each
other. Perhaps the natural subject of conversation between the two,
at such a time, would have been Osborne's long journey the night
before; but he had never spoken of the place he had come from,
whether north, south, east, or west, and the squire did not choose
to allude to anything that might bring out what his son wished to
conceal. Again, there was an unexpressed idea in both their minds
that Mrs. Hamley's present illness was much aggravated, if not
entirely brought on, by the discovery of Osborne's debts; so, many
inquiries and answers on that head were tabooed. In fact, their
attempts at easy conversation were limited to local subjects, and
principally addressed to Molly or Roger. Such intercourse was not
productive of pleasure, or even of friendly feeling, though there
was a thin outward surface of politeness and peace. Long before the
day was over, Molly wished that she had acceded to her father's
proposal, and gone home with him. No one seemed to want her. Mrs
Jones, the nurse, assured her time after time that Mrs. Hamley had
never named her name; and her small services in the sickroom were
not required since there was a regular nurse. Osborne and Roger
seemed all in all to each other; and Molly now felt how much the
short conversations she had had with Roger had served to give her
something to think about, all during the remainder of her solitary
days. Osborne was extremely polite, and even expressed his gratitude
to her for her attentions to his mother in a very pleasant manner;
but he appeared to be unwilling to show her any of the deeper
feelings of his heart, and almost ashamed of his exhibition of
emotion the night before. He spoke to her as any agreeable young man
speaks to any pleasant young lady; but Molly almost resented this.
It was only the squire who seemed to make her of any account. He
gave her letters to write, small bills to reckon up; and she could
have kissed his hands for thankfulness.

The last afternoon of her stay at the Hall came. Roger had gone out
on the squire's business. Molly went into the garden, thinking over
the last summer, when Mrs. Hamley's sofa used to be placed under the
old cedar-tree on the lawn, and when the warm air seemed to be
scented with roses and sweetbrier. Now, the trees were
leafless,--there was no sweet odour in the keen frosty air; and
looking up at the house, there were the white sheets of blinds,
shutting out the pale winter sky from the invalid's room. Then she
thought of the day her father had brought her the news of his second
marriage: the thicket was tangled with dead weeds and rime and
hoarfrost; and the beautiful fine articulation of branches and
boughs and delicate twigs were all intertwined in leafless
distinctness against the sky. Could she ever be so passionately
unhappy again? Was it goodness, or was it numbness, that made her
feel as though life was too short to be troubled much about
anything? death seemed the only reality. She had neither energy nor
heart to walk far or briskly; and turned back towards the house. The
afternoon sun was shining brightly on the windows; and, stirred up
to unusual activity by some unknown cause, the housemaids had opened
the shutters and windows of the generally unused library. The middle
window was also a door; the white-painted wood went half-way up.
Molly turned along the little flag-paved path that led past the
library windows to the gate in the white railings at the front of
the house, and went in at the opened doors. She had had leave given
to choose out any books she wished to read, and to take them home
with her; and it was just the sort of half-dawdling employment
suited to her taste this afternoon. She mounted on the ladder to get
to a particular shelf high up in dark corner of the room; and
finding there some volume that looked interesting, she sate down on
the step to read part of it. There she sate, in her bonnet and
cloak, when Osborne suddenly came in. He did not see her at first;
indeed, he seemed in such a hurry that he probably might not have
noticed her at all, if she had not spoken.

'Am I in your way? I only came here for a minute to look for some
books.' She came down the steps as she spoke, still holding the book
in her hand.

'Not at all. It is I who am disturbing you. I must just write a
letter for the post, and then I shall be gone. Is not this open door
too cold for you?'

'Oh, no. It is so fresh and pleasant.'

She began to read again, sitting on the lowest step of the ladder;
he to write at the large old-fashioned writing-table close to the
window. There was a minute or two of profound silence, in which the
rapid scratching of Osborne's pen upon the paper was the only sound.
Then came a click of the gate, and Roger stood at the open door. His
face was towards Osborne, sitting in the light; his back to Molly,
crouched up in her corner. He held out a letter, and said in hoarse
breathlessness,--

'Here's a letter from your wife, Osborne. I went past the
post-office and thought--'

Osborne stood up, angry dismay upon his face.

'Roger! what have you done! Don't you see her?'

Roger looked round, and Molly stood up in her corner, red,
trembling, miserable, as though she were a guilty person. Roger
entered the room. All three seemed to be equally dismayed. Molly was
the first to speak; she came forwards and said,--

'I am so sorry! You didn't wish me to hear it, but I couldn't help
it. You will trust me, won't you?' and turning to Roger she said to
him with tears in her eyes,--'Please say you know I shall not tell.'

'We can't help it,' said Osborne, gloomily. 'Only Roger, who knew of
what importance it was, ought to have looked round him before
speaking.'

'So I should,' said Roger. 'I'm more vexed with myself than you can
conceive. Not but what I'm sure of you as of myself,' continued he,
turning to Molly.

'Yes; but,' said Osborne, 'you see how many chances there are that
even the best-meaning persons may let out what it is of such
consequence to me to keep secret.'

'I know you think it so,' said Roger.

'Well, don't let us begin that old discussion again--at any rate,
not before a third person.'

Molly had had hard work all this time to keep from crying. Now that
she was alluded to as the third person before whom conversation was
to be restrained, she said,--

'I'm going away. Perhaps I ought not to have been here. I'm very
sorry--very. But I will try and forget what I've heard.'

'You can't do that,' said Osborne, still ungraciously. 'But will you
promise me never to speak about it to any one--not even to me, or to
Roger? Will you try to act and speak as if you had never heard it?
I'm sure, from what Roger has told me about you, that if you give me
this promise I may rely upon it.'

'Yes; I will promise,' said Molly, putting out her hand as a kind of
pledge. Osborne took it, but rather as if the action was
superfluous. She added, 'I think I should have done so, even without
a promise. But it is, perhaps, better to bind oneself. I will go
away now. I wish I'd never come into this room.'

She put down her book on the table very softly, and turned to leave
the room, choking down her tears until she was in the solitude of
her own chamber. But Roger was at the door before her, holding it
open for her, and reading--she felt that he was reading--her face.
He held out his band for hers, and his firm grasp expressed both
sympathy and regret for what had occurred.

She could hardly keep back her sobs till she reached her bedroom.
Her feelings had been overwrought for some time past, without
finding the natural vent in action. The leaving Hamley Hall had
seemed so sad before; and now she was troubled with having to bear
away a secret which she ought never to have known, and the knowledge
of which had brought out a very uncomfortable responsibility. Then
there would arise a very natural wonder as to who was Osborne's
wife. Molly had not stayed so long and so intimately in the Hamley
family without being well aware of the manner in which the future
lady of Hamley was planned for. The squire, for instance, partly in
order to show that Osborne, his heir, was above the reach of Molly
Gibson, the doctor's daughter, in the early days before he knew
Molly well, had often alluded to the grand, the high, and the
wealthy marriage which Hamley of Hamley, as represented by his
clever, brilliant, handsome son Osborne, might be expected to make.
Mrs. Hamley, too, unconsciously on her part, showed the projects that
she was constantly devising for the reception of the unknown
daughter-in-law that was to be.

'The drawing-room must be refurnished when Osborne marries'--or
'Osborne's wife will like to have the west suite of rooms to
herself; it will perhaps be a trial to her to live with the old
couple; but we must arrange it so that she will feel it as little as
possible'--'Of course, when Mrs. Osborne comes we must try and give
her a new carriage; the old one does well enough for us'--these, and
similar speeches had given Molly the impression of the future Mrs
Osborne as of some beautiful grand young lady, whose very presence
would make the old Hall into a stately, formal mansion, instead of
the pleasant, unceremonious home that it was at present. Osborne,
too, who had spoken with such languid criticism to Mrs. Gibson about
various country belles, and even in his own home was apt to give
himself airs--only at home his airs were poetically fastidious,
while with Mrs. Gibson they had been socially fastidious--what
unspeakably elegant beauty had he chosen for his wife? Who had
satisfied him; and yet satisfying him, had to have her, marriage
kept in concealment from his parents? At length Molly tore herself
up from her wanderings. It was of no use: she could not find out;
she might not even try. The blank wall of her promise blocked up the
way. Perhaps it was not even right to wonder, and endeavour to
remember slight speeches, casual mentions of a name, so as to piece
them together into something coherent. Molly dreaded seeing either
of the brothers again; but they all met at dinner-time as if nothing
had happened. The squire was taciturn, either from melancholy or
displeasure. He had never spoken to Osborne since his return,
excepting about the commonest trifles, when intercourse could not be
avoided; and his wife's state oppressed him like a heavy cloud
coming over the light of his day. Osborne put on an indifferent
manner to his father, which Molly felt sure was assumed; but it was
not conciliatory, for all that. Roger, quiet, steady, and natural,
talked more than all the others; but he too was uneasy, and in
distress on many accounts. To-day he principally addressed himself
to Molly; entering into rather long narrations of late discoveries
in natural history, which kept up the current of talk without
requiring much reply from any one, Molly had expected Osborne to
look something different from usual--conscious, or ashamed, or
resentful, or even 'married'--but he was exactly the Osborne of the
morning--handsome, elegant, languid in manner and in look; cordial
with his brother, polite towards her, secretly uneasy at the state
of things between his father and himself. She would never have
guessed the concealed romance which lay ~perdu~ under that every-day
behaviour. She had always wished to come into direct contact with a
love-story: here she was, and she only found it very uncomfortable;
there was a sense of concealment and uncertainty about it all; and
her honest straightforward father, her quiet life at Hollingford,
which, even with all its drawbacks, was above-board, and where
everybody knew what everybody was doing, seemed secure and pleasant
in comparison. Of course she felt great pain at quitting the Hall,
and at the mute farewell she had taken of her sleeping and
unconscious friend. But leaving Mrs. Hamley now was a different thing
to what it had been a fortnight ago. Then she was wanted at any
moment, and felt herself to be of comfort. Now her very existence
seemed forgotten by the poor lady whose body appeared to be living
so long after her soul.

She was sent home in the carriage, loaded with true thanks from
every one of the family. Osborne ransacked the houses for flowers
for her; Roger had chosen her out books of every kind. The squire
himself kept shaking her hand, without being able to speak his
gratitude, till at last he had taken her in his arms, and kissed her
as he would have done a daughter.


CHAPTER XIX


CYNTHIA'S ARRIVAL


Molly's father was not at home when she returned; and there was no
one to give her a welcome. Mrs. Gibson was out paying calls, the
servants told Molly. She went upstairs to her own room, meaning to
unpack and arrange her borrowed books, Rather to her surprise she
saw the chamber, corresponding to her own, being dusted; water and
towels too were being carried in.

'Is any one coming?' she asked of the housemaid.

'Missus's daughter from France. Miss Kirkpatrick is coming
to-morrow.'

Was Cynthia coming at last? Oh, what a pleasure it would be to have
a companion, a girl, a sister of her own age! Molly's depressed
spirits sprang up again with bright elasticity. She longed for Mrs
Gibson's return, to ask her all about it: it must be very sudden,
for Mr. Gibson had said nothing of it at the Hall the day before. No
quiet reading now; the books were hardly put away with Molly's usual
neatness. She went down into the drawing-room, and could not settle
to anything. At last Mrs. Gibson came home, tired out with her walk
and her heavy velvet cloak. Until that was taken off, and she had
rested herself for a few minutes, she seemed quite unable to attend
to Molly's questions.

'Oh, yes! Cynthia is coming home to-morrow, by the "Umpire," which
passes through at ten o'clock. What an oppressive day it is for the
time of the year! I really am almost ready to faint. Cynthia heard
of some opportunity, I believe, and was only too glad to leave
school a fortnight earlier than we planned. She never gave me the
chance of writing to say I did, or did not, like her coming so much
before the time; and I shall have to pay for her just the same as if
she had stopped. And I meant to have asked her to bring me a French
bonnet; and then you could have had one made after mine. But I'm
very glad she's coming, poor dear.'

'Is anything the matter with her?' asked Molly.

'Oh, no! Why should there be?'

'You called her "poor dear," and it made me afraid lest she might be
ill.'

'Oh, no! It's only a way I got into, when Mr. Kirkpatrick died. A
fatherless girl--you know one always does call them "poor dears."
Oh, no! Cynthia never is ill. She's as strong as a horse. She never
would have felt to-day as I have done. Could you get me a glass of
wine and a biscuit, my dear? I'm. really quite faint.'

Mr. Gibson was much more excited about Cynthia's arrival than her own
mother was. He anticipated her coming as a great pleasure to Molly,
on whom, in spite of his recent marriage and his new wife, his
interests principally centred. He even found time to run upstairs
and see the bedrooms of the two girls; for the furniture of which he
had paid a pretty round sum.

'Well, I suppose young ladies like their bedrooms decked out in this
way! It's very pretty certainly, but--'

'I liked my own old room better, papa; but perhaps Cynthia is
accustomed to such decking up.'

'Perhaps; at any rate, she'll see we've tried to make it pretty.
Yours is like hers. That's right. It might have hurt her, if hers
had been smarter than yours. Now, good-night in your fine flimsy
bed.'

Molly was up betimes--almost before it was light--arranging her
pretty Hamley flowers in Cynthia's room. She could hardly eat her
breakfast that morning. She ran upstairs and put on her things,
thinking that Mrs. Gibson was quite sure to go down to the 'George'
Inn, where the 'Umpire' stopped, to meet her daughter after a two
years' absence. But to her surprise Mrs. Gibson had arranged herself
at her great worsted-work frame, just as usual; and she, in her
turn, was astonished at Molly's bonnet and cloak.

'Where are you going so early, child? The fog hasn't cleared away
yet.'

'I thought you would go and meet Cynthia; and I wanted to go with
you.'

'She will be here in half an hour; and dear papa has told the
gardener to take the wheelbarrow down for her luggage. I'm not sure
if he is not gone himself.'

'Then are not you going?' asked Molly, with a good deal of
disappointment.

'No, certainly not. She will be here almost directly. And, besides,
I don't like to expose my feelings to every passer-by in High
Street. You forget I have not seen her for two years, and I hate
scenes in the market-place.'

She settled herself to her work again; and Molly, after some
consideration, gave up her own going, and employed herself in
looking out of the downstairs window which commanded the approach
from the town.

'Here she is--here she is!' she cried out at last. Her father was
walking by the side of a tall young lady; William the gardener was
wheeling along a great cargo of luggage. Molly flew to the
front-door, and had it wide open to admit the new corner some time
before she arrived.

'Well! here she is. Molly, this is Cynthia. Cynthia, Molly. You're
to be sisters, you know.'

Molly saw the beautiful, tall, swaying figure, against the light of
the open door, but could not see any of the features that were, for
the moment, in shadow. A sudden gush of shyness had come over her
just at the instant, and quenched the embrace she would have given a
moment before. But Cynthia took her in her arms, and kissed her on
both cheeks.

'Here's mamma,' she said, looking beyond Molly on to the stairs
where Mrs. Gibson stood, wrapped up in a shawl, and shivering in the
cold. She ran past Molly and Mr. Gibson, who rather averted their
eyes from this first greeting between mother and child.

Mrs. Gibson said,--

'Why, how you are grown, darling! You look quite a woman.'

'And so I am,' said Cynthia. 'I was before I went away; I've hardly
grown since,--except, it is always to be hoped, in wisdom.'

'Yes! That we will hope,' said Mrs. Gibson, in rather a meaning way.
Indeed there were evidently hidden allusions in their seeming
commonplace speeches. When they all came into the full light and
repose of the drawing-room, Molly was absorbed in the contemplation
of Cynthia's beauty. Perhaps her features were not regular; but the
changes in her expressive countenance gave one no time to think of
that. Her smile was perfect; her pouting charming; the play of the
face was in the mouth. Her eyes were beautifully shaped, but their
expression hardly seemed to vary. In colouring she was not unlike
her mother; only she had not so much of the red-haired tints in her
complexion; and her long-shaped, serious grey eyes were fringed with
dark lashes, instead of her mother's insipid flaxen ones. Molly fell
in love with her, so to speak, on the instant. She sate there
warming her feet and hands, as much at her ease as if she had been
there all her life; not particularly attending to her mother--who,
all the time, was studying either her or her dress--measuring Molly
and Mr. Gibson with grave observant looks, as if guessing how she
should like them.

'There's hot breakfast ready for you in the dining-room, when you
are ready for it,' said Mr. Gibson. 'I'm sure you must want it after
your night journey.' He looked round at his wife, at Cynthia's
mother, but she did not seem inclined to leave the warm room again.

'Molly will take you to your room, darling,' said she; 'it is near
hers, and she has got her things to take off. I'll come down and sit
in the dining-room while you are having your breakfast, but I really
am afraid of the cold now.'

Cynthia rose and followed Molly upstairs.

'I'm so sorry there isn't a fire for you,' said Molly, 'but--I
suppose it wasn't ordered; and, of course, I don't give any orders.
Here is some hot water, though.'

'Stop a minute,' said Cynthia, getting hold of both Molly's hands,
and looking steadily into her face, but in such a manner that she
did not dislike the inspection.

'I think I shall like you. I am go glad! I was afraid I should not.
We're all in a very awkward position together, aren't we? I like
your father's looks, though.'

Molly could not help smiling at the way this was said. Cynthia
replied to her smile.

'Ah, you may laugh. But I don't know that I am easy to get on with;
mamma and I didn't suit when we were last together. But perhaps we
are each of us wiser now. Now, please leave me for a quarter of an
hour. I don't want anything more.'

Molly went into her own room, waiting to show Cynthia down to the
dining-room. Not that, in the moderate-sized house, there was any
difficulty in finding the way. A very little trouble in conjecturing
would enable a stranger to discover any room. But Cynthia had so
captivated Molly, that she wanted to devote herself to the new
comer's service. Ever since she had heard of the probability of her
having a sister--(she called her a sister, but whether it was a
Scotch sister, or a sister ~a la mode de Bretagne~, would
have puzzled most people)--Molly had allowed her fancy to dwell much
on the idea of Cynthia's coming; and in the short time since they
had met, Cynthia's unconscious power of fascination had been
exercised upon her. Some people have this power. Of course, its
effects are only manifested in the susceptible. A school-girl may be
found in every school who attracts and influences all the others,
not by her virtues, nor her beauty, nor her sweetness, nor her
cleverness, but by something that can neither be described nor
reasoned upon. It is the something alluded to in the old lines:--

Love me not for comely grace,
For my pleasing eye and face;
No, nor for my constant heart,--
For these may change, and turn to ill,
And thus true love may sever.
But love me on, and know not why,
So hast thou the same reason still
To dote upon me ever.'

A woman will have this charm, not only over men but over her own
sex; it cannot be defined, or rather it is so delicate a mixture of
many gifts and qualities that it is impossible to decide on the
proportions of each. Perhaps it is incompatible with very high
principle; as its essence seems to consist in the most exquisite
power of adaptation to varying people and still more various moods;
'being all things to all men.' At any rate, Molly might soon have
been aware that Cynthia was not remarkable for unflinching morality;
but the glamour thrown over her would have prevented Molly from any
attempt at penetrating into and judging her companion's character,
even had such processes been the least in accordance with her own
disposition.

Cynthia was very beautiful, and was so well aware of this fact that
she had forgotten to care about it; no one with such loveliness ever
appeared so little conscious of it. Molly would watch her
perpetually as she moved about the room, with the free stately step
of some wild animal of the forest--moving almost, as it were, to the
continual sound of music. Her dress, too, though now to our ideas it
would be considered ugly and disfiguring, was suited to her
complexion and figure, and the fashion of it subdued within due
bounds by her exquisite taste. It was inexpensive enough, and the
changes in it were but few. Mrs. Gibson professed herself shocked to
find that Cynthia had but four gowns, when she might have stocked
herself so well, and brought over so many useful French patterns, if
she had but patiently awaited her mother's answer to the letter
which she had sent announcing her return by the opportunity madame
had found for her. Molly was hurt for Cynthia at all these speeches;
she thought they implied that the pleasure which her mother felt in
seeing her a fortnight sooner after her two years' absence was
inferior to that which she would have received from a bundle of
silver-paper patterns. But Cynthia took no apparent notice of the
frequent recurrence of these small complaints. Indeed, she received
much of what her mother said with a kind of complete indifference,
that made Mrs. Gibson hold her rather in awe; and she was much more
communicative to Molly than to her own child. With regard to dress,
however, Cynthia soon showed that she was her mother's own daughter
in the manner in which she could use her deft and nimble fingers.
She was a capital workwoman; and, unlike Molly, who excelled in
plain sewing, but had no notion of dressmaking or millinery, she
could repeat the fashions she had only seen in passing along the
streets of Boulogne, with one or two pretty rapid movements of her
hands, as she turned and twisted the ribbons and gauze her mother
furnished her with. So she refurbished Mrs. Gibson's wardrobe; doing
it all in a sort of contemptuous manner, the source of which Molly
could not quite make out.

Day after day the course of these small frivolities was broken in
upon by the news Mr. Gibson. brought of Mrs. Hamley's nearer approach
to death. Molly--very often sitting by Cynthia, and surrounded by
ribbon, and wire, and net--heard the bulletins like the toll of a
funeral bell at a marriage feast. Her father sympathized with her.
It was the loss of a dear friend to him too; but he was so
accustomed to death, that it seemed to him but as it was, the
natural end of all things human. To Molly, the death of some one she
had known so well and loved so much, was a sad and gloomy
phenomenon. She loathed the small vanities with which she was
surrounded, and would wander out into the frosty garden, and pace
the walk, which was both sheltered and concealed by evergreens.

At length--and yet it was not so long, not a fortnight since Molly
had left the Hall--the end came. Mrs. Hamley had sunk out of life as
gradually as she had sunk out of consciousness and her place in this
world. The quiet waves closed over her, and her place knew her no
more.

'They all sent their love to you, Molly,' said her father. 'Roger
Hamley said he knew how you would feel it.'

Mr. Gibson had come in very late, and was having a solitary dinner in
the dining-room. Molly was sitting near him to keep him company.
Cynthia and her mother were upstairs. The latter was trying on a
head-dress which Cynthia had made for her.

Molly remained downstairs after her father had gone out afresh on
his final round among his town patients. The fire was growing very
low, and the lights were waning. Cynthia came softly in, and taking
Molly's listless hand, that hung down by her side, sate at her feet
on the rug, chafing her chilly fingers without speaking. The tender
action thawed the tears that had been gathering heavily at Molly's
heart, and they came dropping down her cheeks.

'You loved her dearly, did you not, Molly?'

'Yes,' sobbed Molly; and then there was a silence.

'Had you known her long?'

'No, not a year. But I had seen a great deal of her. I was almost
like a daughter to her; she said so. Yet I never bid her good-by, or
anything. Her mind became weak and confused.'

'She had only sons, I think?'

'No; only Mr. Osborne and Mr. Roger Hamley. She had a daughter once--
"Fanny." Sometimes, in her illness, she used to call me "Fanny."'

The two girls were silent for some time, both gazing into the fire.
Cynthia spoke first,--

'I wish I could love people as you do, Molly!'

'Don't you?' said the other, in surprise.

'No. A good number of people love me, I believe, or at least they
think they do; but I never seem to care much for any one. I do
believe I love you, little Molly, whom I have only known for ten
days, better than any one.'

'Not than your mother?' said Molly, in grave astonishment.

'Yes, than my mother!' replied Cynthia, half-smiling. 'It's very
shocking, I daresay; but it is so. Now, don't go and condemn me. I
don't think love for one's mother quite comes by nature; and
remember how much I have been separated from mine! I loved my
father, if you will,' she continued, with the force of truth in her
tone, and then she stopped; 'but he died when I was quite a little
thing, and no one believes that I remember him. I heard mamma say to
a caller, not a fortnight after his funeral, "Oh, no, Cynthia is too
young; she has quite forgotten him"--and I bit my lips, to keep from
crying out, "Papa! papa! have I?" But it's of no use. Well, then
mamma had to go out as a governess; she couldn't help it, poor
thing! but she didn't much care for parting with me. I was a
trouble, I daresay. So I was sent to school at four years old; first
one school, and then another; and in the holidays, mamma went to
stay at grand houses, and I was generally left with the
schoolmistresses. Once I went to the Towers; and mamma lectured me
continually, and yet I was very naughty, I believe. And so I never
went again; and I was very glad of it, for it was a horrid place.'

'That it was,' said Molly, who remembered her own day of tribulation
there.

'And once I went to London, to stay with my uncle Kirkpatrick. He is
a lawyer, and getting on now; but then he was poor enough, and had
six or seven children. It was wintertime, and we were all shut up in
a small house in Doughty Street.' But, after all, that wasn't so
bad.'

'But then you lived with your mother when she began school at
Ashcombe. Mr. Preston told me that, when I stayed that day at the
Manor-house.'

'What did he tell you?' asked Cynthia, almost fiercely.

'Nothing but that. Oh, yes! He praised your beauty, and wanted me to
tell you what he had said.'

'I should have hated you if you had,' said Cynthia.

'Of course I never thought of doing such a thing,' replied Molly. 'I
didn't like him; and Lady Harriet spoke of him the next day, as if
he wasn't a person to be liked.'

Cynthia was quite silent. At length she said,--

'I wish I was good!'

'So do I,' said Molly, simply. She was thinking again of Mrs
Hamley,--

Only the actions of the just
Smell sweet and blossom in the dust

--and 'goodness' just then seemed to her to be the only enduring
thing in the world.

'Nonsense, Molly! You are good. At least, if you're not good, what
am I? There's a rule-of-three sum for you to do! But it's no use
talking; I am not good, and I never shall be now. Perhaps I might be
a heroine still, but I shall never be a good woman, I know.'

'Do you think it easier to be a heroine?'

'Yes, as far as one knows of heroines from history. I'm capable of a
great jerk, an effort, and then a relaxation--but steady every-day
goodness is beyond me. I must be a moral kangaroo!'

Molly could not follow Cynthia's ideas; she could not distract
herself from the thoughts of the sorrowing group at the Hall.

'How I should like to see them all! and yet one can do nothing at
such a time! Papa says the funeral is to be on Tuesday, and that,
after that, Roger Hamley is to go back to Cambridge. It will seem as
if nothing had happened! I wonder how the squire and Mr. Osborne
Hamley will get on together.'

'He's the eldest son, is he not? Why shouldn't he and his father get
on well together?'

'Oh! I don't know. That is to say, I do know, but I think I ought
not to tell.'

'Don't be so pedantically truthful, Molly. Besides, your manner
shows when you speak truth and when you speak falsehood, without
troubling yourself to use words. I knew exactly what your "I don't
know" meant. I never consider myself bound to be truthful, so I beg
we may be on equal terms.'

Cynthia might well say she did not consider herself bound to be
truthful; she literally said what came uppermost, without caring
very much whether it was accurate or not. But there was no
ill-nature, and, in a general way, no attempt at procuring any
advantage for herself in all her deviations; and there was often
such a latent sense of fun in them that Molly could not help being
amused with them in fact, though she condemned them in theory.
Cynthia's playfulness of manner glossed such failings over with a
kind of charm; and yet, at times, she was so soft and sympathetic
that Molly could not resist her, even when she affirmed the most
startling things. The little account she made of her own beauty
pleased Mr. Gibson extremely; and her pretty deference to him won his
heart. She was restless too, till she had attacked Molly's dress,
after she had remodelled her mother's.

'Now for you, sweet one,' said she as she began upon one of Molly's
gowns. 'I've been working as connoisseur until now. Now I begin as
amateur.'

She brought down her pretty artificial flowers, plucked out of her
own best bonnet to put into Molly's, saying they would suit her
complexion, and that a knot of ribbons would do well enough for her.
All the time she worked, she sang; she had a sweet voice in singing,
as well as in speaking, and used to run up and down her gay French
chansons without any difficulty; so flexible in the art was she. Yet
she did not seem to care for music. She rarely touched the piano, on
which Molly practised with daily conscientiousness. Cynthia was
always willing to answer questions about her previous life, though,
after the first, she rarely alluded to it of herself; but she was a
most sympathetic listener to all Molly's innocent confidences of
joys and sorrows; sympathizing even to the extent of wondering how
she could endure Mr. Gibson's second marriage, and why she did not
take some active steps of rebellion.

In spite of all this agreeable and pungent variety of companionship
at home, Molly yearned after the Hamleys. If there had been a woman
in that family she would probably have received many little notes,
and heard of numerous details which were now lost to her, or summed
up in condensed accounts of her father's visits at the Hall, which,
since his dear patient was dead, were only occasional.

'Yes! The squire is a good deal changed; but he's better than he
was. There's an unspoken estrangement between him and Osborne; one
can see it in the silence and constraint of their manners; but
outwardly they are friendly--civil at any rate. The squire will
always respect Osborne as his heir, and the future representative of
the family. Osborne doesn't look well; he says he wants change. I
think he's weary of the domestic ~tete-a-tete~, or
domestic dissension. But he feels his mother's death acutely. It's a
wonder that he and his father are not drawn together by their common
loss. Roger's away at Cambridge too--examination for the
mathematical tripos. Altogether the aspect of both people and place
is changed; it is but natural!'

Such is perhaps the summing-up of the news of the Hamleys, as
contained in many bulletins. They always ended in some kind message
to Molly.

Mrs. Gibson generally said, as a comment upon her husband's account
of Osborne's melancholy,--

'My dear! why don't you ask him to dinner here? A little quiet
dinner, you know. Cook is quite up to it; and we would all of us
wear blacks and lilacs;' he couldn't consider that as gaiety.'

Mr. Gibson took no more notice of these suggestions than by shaking
his head. He had grown accustomed to his wife by this time, and
regarded silence on his own part as a great preservative against
long inconsequential arguments. But every time that Mrs. Gibson was
struck by Cynthia's beauty, she thought it more and more advisable
that Mr. Osborne Hamley should be cheered up by a quiet little
dinner-party. As yet no one but the ladies of Hollingford and Mr
Ashton, the vicar--that hopeless and impracticable old bachelor--
had seen Cynthia; and what was the good of having a lovely daughter,
if there were none but old women to admire her?

Cynthia herself appeared extremely indifferent upon the subject, and
took very little notice of her mother's constant talk about the
gaieties that were possible, and the gaieties that were impossible,
in Hollingford. She exerted herself just as much to charm the two
Miss Brownings as she would have done to delight Osborne Hamley, or
any other young heir. That is to say, she used no exertion, but
simply followed her own nature, which was to attract every one of
those she was thrown amongst. The exertion seemed rather to be to
refrain from doing so, and to protest, as she so often did, by
slight words and expressive looks against her mother's words and
humours--alike against her folly and her caresses. Molly was almost
sorry for Mrs. Gibson, who seemed so unable to gain influence over
her child. One day Cynthia read Molly's thought.

'I am not good, and I told you so. Somehow I cannot forgive her for
her neglect of me as a child, when I would have clung to her.
Besides, I hardly ever heard from her when I was at school. And I
know she put a stop to my coming over to her wedding. I saw the
letter she wrote to Madame Lefevre. A child should be brought up
with its parents, if it is to think them infallible when it grows
up.'

'But though it may know that there must be faults,' replied Molly,
'it ought to cover them over and try to forget their existence.'

'It ought. But don't you see I have grown up outside the pale of
duty and "oughts." Love me as r am, sweet one, for I shall never be
better.'


CHAPTER XX


MRS GIBSON'S VISITORS


One day, to Molly's infinite surprise, Mr. Preston was announced as a
caller. Mrs. Gibson and she were sitting together in the
drawing-room; Cynthia was out--gone into the town a-shopping--when
the door was opened, the name given, and in walked the young man.
His entrance seemed to cause more confusion than Molly could well
account for. He came in with the same air of easy assurance with
which he had received them at Ashcombe Manor-house. He looked
remarkably handsome in his riding-dress, and with the open-air
exercise he had just had. But Mrs. Gibson's smooth brows contracted a
little at the sight of him, and her reception of him was much cooler
than that which she usually gave to visitors. Yet there was a degree
of agitation in it, which surprised Molly a little. Mrs. Gibson was
at her everlasting worsted-work frame when Mr. Preston entered the
room; but somehow in rising to receive him, she threw down her
basket of crewels, and, declining Molly's offer to help her, she
would pick up all the reels herself, before she asked her visitor to
sit down. He stood there, hat in hand, affecting an interest in the
recovery of the worsted which Molly was sure he did not feel; for
all the time his eyes were glancing round the room, and taking note
of the details in the arrangement.

At length they were seated, and conversation began.

'It is the first time I have been in Hollingford since your
marriage, Mrs. Gibson, or I should certainly have called to pay my
respects sooner.'

'I know you are very busy at Ashcombe. I did not expect you to call.
Is Lord Cumnor at the Towers? I have not heard from her ladyship for
more than a week!'

'No! he seemed still detained at Bath. But I had a letter from him
giving me certain messages for Mr. Sheepshanks. Mr. Gibson is not at
home, I'm afraid?'

'No. He is a great deal out--almost constantly, I may say. I had no
idea that I should see so little of him. A doctor's wife leads a
very solitary life, Mr. Preston!'

'You can hardly call it solitary, I should think, when you have such
a companion as Miss Gibson always at hand,' said he, bowing to
Molly.

'Oh, but I call it solitude for a wife when her husband is away.
Poor Mr. Kirkpatrick was never happy unless I always went with
him,--all his walks, all his visits, he liked me to be with him. But
somehow Mr. Gibson feels as if I should be rather in his way.'

'I don't think you could ride pillion behind him on Black Bess,
mamma,' said Molly. 'And unless you could go in that way you could
hardly go with him in his rounds up and down all the rough lanes.'

'Oh! but he might keep a brougham! I've often said so. And then I
could use it for visiting in the evenings. Really it was one reason
why I didn't go to the Hollingford Charity Ball. I couldn't bring
myself to use the dirty fly from the "George." We really must stir
papa up against next winter, Molly; it will never do for you and--'

She pulled herself up suddenly, and looked furtively at Mr. Preston
to see if he had taken any notice of her abruptness. Of course he
had, but he was not going to show it. He turned to Molly, and
said,--

'Have you ever been to a public ball yet, Miss Gibson?'

'No!' said Molly.

'It will be a great pleasure to you when the time comes.'

'I'm not sure. I shall like it if I have plenty of partners; but I'm
afraid I shan't know many people.'

'And you suppose that young men haven't their own ways and means of
being introduced to pretty girls?'

It was exactly one of the speeches Molly had disliked him for
before; and delivered, too, in that kind of underbred manner which
showed that it was meant to convey a personal compliment. Molly took
great credit to herself for the unconcerned manner with which she
went on with her tatting exactly as if she had never heard it.

'I only hope I may be one of your partners at the first ball you go
to. Pray, remember my early application for that honour, when you
are overwhelmed with requests for dances.'

'I don't choose to engage myself beforehand,' said Molly,
perceiving, from under her dropped eyelids, that he was leaning
forwards and looking at her as though he was determined to have an
answer.

'Young ladies are always very cautious in fact, however modest they
may be in profession,' he replied, addressing himself in a
nonchalant manner to Mrs. Gibson. 'In spite of Miss Gibson's
apprehension of not having many partners she declines the certainty
of having one. I suppose Miss Kirkpatrick will have returned from
France before then?'

He said these last words exactly in the same tone as he had used
before; but Molly's instinct told her that he was making an effort
to do so. She looked up. He was playing with his hat, almost as if
he did not care to have any answer to his question. Yet he was
listening acutely, and with a half smile on his face.

Mrs. Gibson reddened a little, and hesitated,--

'Yes; certainly. My daughter will be with us next winter, I believe;
and I daresay she will go out with us.'

'Why can't she say at once that Cynthia is here now?' asked Molly to
herself, yet glad that Mr. Preston's curiosity was baffled.

He still smiled; but this time he looked up at Mrs. Gibson, as he
asked,--'You have good news from her, I hope?'

'Yes; very. By the way, how are our old friends the Robinsons? How
often I think of their kindness to me at Ashcombe! Dear good people,
I wish I could see them again.'

'I will certainly tell them of your kind inquiries. They are very
well, I believe.'

Just at this moment, Molly heard the familiar sound of the click and
opening of the front door. She knew it must be Cynthia; and,
conscious of some mysterious reason which made Mrs. Gibson wish to
conceal her daughter's whereabouts from Mr. Preston, and maliciously
desirous to baffle him, she rose to leave the room, and meet Cynthia
on the stairs; but one of the lost crewels of worsted had entangled
itself in her gown and feet, and before she had freed herself of the
encumbrance, Cynthia had opened the drawing-room door, and stood in
it, looking at her mother, at Molly, at Mr. Preston, but not
advancing one step. Her colour, which had been brilliant the first
moment of her entrance, faded away as she gazed; but her eyes--her
beautiful eyes--usually so soft and grave, seemed to fill with fire,
and her brows to contract, as she took the resolution to come
forwards and take her place among the three, who were all looking at
her with different emotions. She moved calmly and slowly forwards;
Mr. Preston went a step or two to meet her, his hand held out, and
the whole expression of his face that of eager delight.

But she took no notice of the outstretched hand, nor of the chair
that he offered her. She sate down on a little sofa in one of the
windows, and called Molly to her.

'Look at my purchases,' said she. 'This green ribbon was
fourteen-pence a yard, this silk three shillings,' and so she went
on, forcing herself to speak about these trifles as if they were all
the world to her, and she had no attention to throw away on her
mother and her mother's visitor.

Mr. Preston took his cue from her. He, too, talked of the news of the
day, the local gossip--but Molly, who glanced up at him from time to
time, was almost alarmed by the bad expression of suppressed anger,
almost amounting to vindictiveness, which entirely marred his
handsome looks. She did not wish to look again; and tried rather to
back up Cynthia's efforts at maintaining a separate conversation.
Yet she could not help overhearing Mrs. Gibson's strain after
increased civility, as if to make up for Cynthia's rudeness, and, if
possible, to deprecate his anger. She talked perpetually, as though
her object were to detain him; whereas previous to Cynthia's return
she had allowed frequent pauses in the conversation, as though to
give him the opportunity to take his leave.

In the course of the conversation between them the Hamleys came up.
Mrs. Gibson was never unwilling to dwell upon Molly's intimacy with
this county family; and when the latter caught the sound of her own
name, her stepmother was saying,--

'Poor Mrs. Hamley could hardly do without Molly; she quite looked
upon her as a daughter, especially towards the last, when, I am
afraid, she had a good deal of anxiety. Mr. Osborne Hamley--I daresay
you have heard--he did not do so well at college, and they had
expected so much--parents will, you know; but what did it signify?
for he had not to earn his living! I call it a very foolish kind of
ambition when a young man has not to go into a profession.'

'Well, at any rate, the squire must be satisfied now. I saw this
morning's ~Times~, with the Cambridge examination lists in it. Isn't
the second son called after his father, Roger?'

'Yes,' said Molly, starting up, and coming nearer.

'He's senior wrangler, that's all,' said Mr. Preston, almost as
though he were vexed with himself for having anything to say that
could give her pleasure. Molly went back to her seat by Cynthia.

'Poor Mrs. Hamley,' said she very softly, as if to herself. Cynthia
took her hand, in sympathy with Molly's sad and tender look, rather
than because she understood all that was passing in her mind, nor
did she quite understand it herself. A death that had come out of
time; a wonder if the dead knew what passed upon the earth they had
left--the brilliant Osborne's failure, Roger's success; the vanity
of human wishes; all these thoughts, and what they suggested, were
inextricably mingled up in her mind. She came to herself in a few
minutes. Mr. Preston was saying all the unpleasant things he could
think of about the Hamleys in a tone of false sympathy.

'The poor old squire--not the wisest of men--has woefully
mismanaged his estate. And Osborne Hamley is too fine a gentleman to
understand the means by which to improve the value of the land--even
if he had the capital. A man who had practical knowledge of
agriculture, and some thousands of ready money, might bring the
rental up to eight thousand or so. Of course, Osborne will try and
marry some one with money; the family is old and well-established,
and he mustn't object to commercial descent, though I daresay the
squire will for him; but then the young fellow himself is not the
man for the work. No! the family's going down fast; and it's pity
when these old Saxon houses vanish off the land; but it is "kismet"
with the Hamleys. Even the senior wrangler--if it is that Roger
Hamley--he will have spent all his brains in one effort. You never
hear of a senior wrangler being worth anything afterwards. He'll be
a Fellow of his college, of course--that will be a livelihood for
him at any rate.'

'I believe in senior wranglers,' said Cynthia, her clear high voice
ringing through the room. 'And from all I've heard of Mr. Roger
Hamley, I believe he will keep up the distinction he has earned. And
I don't believe that the house of Hamley is so near extinction in
wealth and fame, and good name.'

'They are fortunate in having Miss Kirkpatrick's good word,' said Mr
Preston, rising to take his leave.

'Dear Molly,' said Cynthia, in a whisper, 'I know nothing about your
friends the Hamleys, except that they are your friends, and what you
have told me about them. But I won't have that man speaking of them
so--and your eyes filling with tears all the time. I'd sooner swear
to their having all the talents and good fortune under the sun.'

The only person of whom Cynthia appeared to be wholesomely afraid
was Mr. Gibson. When he was present she was more careful in speaking,
and showed more deference to her mother. Her evident respect for Mr
Gibson, and desire for his good opinion, made her curb herself
before him; and in this manner she earned his good favour as a
lively, sensible girl, with just so much knowledge of the world as
made her a very desirable companion to Molly. Indeed, she made
something of the same kind of impression on all men. They were first
struck with her personal appearance; and then with her pretty
deprecating manner, which appealed to them much as if she had said,
'You are wise, and I am foolish--have mercy on my folly.' It was a
way she had; it meant nothing really; and she was hardly conscious
of it herself; but it was very captivating all the same. Even old
Williams, the gardener, felt it; he said to his confidante, Molly,--

'Eh, miss, but that be a rare young lady! She do have such pretty
coaxing ways. I be to teach her to bud roses come the season--and
I'll warrant ye she'll learn to be sharp enough, for all she says
she bees so stupid.'

If Molly had not had the sweetest disposition in the world she might
have become jealous of all the allegiance laid at Cynthia's feet;
but she never thought of comparing the amount of admiration and love
which they each received. Yet once she did feel a little as if
Cynthia were poaching on her manor. The invitation to the quiet
dinner had been sent to Osborne Hamley, and declined by him. But he
thought it right to call soon afterwards. It was the first time
Molly had seen any of the family since she left the Hall, since Mrs
Hamley's death; and there was so much that she wanted to ask. She
tried to wait patiently till Mrs. Gibson had exhausted the first gush
of her infinite nothings; and then Molly came in with her modest
questions. How was the squire? Had he returned to his old habits?
Had his health suffered?--putting each inquiry with as light and
delicate a touch as if she had been dressing a wound. She hesitated
a little, a very little, before speaking of Roger; for just one
moment the thought flitted across her mind that Osborne might feel
the contrast between his own and his brother's college career too
painfully to like to have it referred to; but then she remembered
the generous brotherly love that had always existed between the two,
and had just entered upon the subject, when Cynthia, in obedience to
her mother's summons, came into the room, and took up her work. No
one could have been quieter--she hardly uttered a word; but Osborne
seemed to fall under her power at once. He no longer gave his
undivided attention to Molly. He cut short his answers to her
questions; and by-and-by, without Molly's rightly understanding how
it was, he had turned towards Cynthia, and was addressing himself to
her. Molly saw the look of content on Mrs. Gibson's face; perhaps it
was her own mortification at not having heard all she wished to know
about Roger, that gave her a keener insight than usual, but certain
it is that all at once she perceived that Mrs. Gibson would not
dislike a marriage between Osborne and Cynthia, and considered the
present occasion as an auspicious beginning. Remembering the secret
which she had been let into so unwillingly, Molly watched his
behaviour, almost as if she had been retained in the interests of
the absent wife; but, after all, thinking as much of the possibility
of his attracting Cynthia as of the unknown and mysterious Mrs
Osborne Hamley. His manner was expressive of great interest and of
strong prepossession in favour of the beautiful girl to whom he was
talking. He was in deep mourning, which showed off his slight figure
and delicate refined face. But there was nothing of flirting, as far
as Molly understood the meaning of the word, in either looks or
words. Cynthia, too, was extremely quiet; she was always much
quieter with men than with women; it was part of the charm of her
soft allurement that she was so passive. They were talking of
France. Mrs. Gibson herself had passed two or three years of her
girlhood there; and Cynthia's late return from Boulogne made it a
very natural subject of conversation. But Molly was thrown out of
it; and with her heart still unsatisfied as to the details of
Roger's success, she had to stand up at last, and receive Osborne's
good-by, scarcely longer or more intimate than his farewell to
Cynthia. As soon as he was gone Mrs. Gibson began in his praise.

'Well, really, I begin to have some faith in long descent. What a
gentleman he is! How agreeable and polite! So different from that
forward Mr. Preston,' she continued, looking a little anxiously at
Cynthia. Cynthia, quite aware that her reply was being watched for,
said, coolly,--

'Mr. Preston doesn't improve on acquaintance. There was a time,
mamma, when I think both you and I thought him very agreeable.'

'I don't remember. You've a clearer memory than I have. But we were
talking of this delightful Mr. Osborne Hamley. Why, Molly, you were
always talking of his brother--it was Roger this, and Roger that--I
can't think how it was you so seldom mentioned this young man.'

'I did not know I had mentioned Mr. Roger Hamley so often,' said
Molly, blushing a little. 'But I saw much more of him--he was more
at home.'

'Well, well! It's all right, my dear. I daresay he suits you best.
But really, when I saw Osborne Hamley close to my Cynthia, I
couldn't help thinking--but perhaps I'd better not tell you what I
was thinking of. Only they are each of them so much above the
average in appearance; and, of course, that suggests things.'

'I perfectly understand what you were thinking of, mamma,' said
Cynthia, with the greatest composure; 'and so does Molly, I have no
doubt.'

'Well! there's no harm in it, I'm sure. Did you hear him say that,
though he did not like to leave his father alone just at present,
yet that when his brother Roger came back from Cambridge, he should
feel more at liberty? It was quite as much to say, "If you will ask
me to dinner then, I shall be delighted to come." And chickens will
be so much cheaper, and cook has such a nice way of boning them, and
doing them up with forcemeat. Everything seems to be falling out so
fortunately. And Molly, my dear, you know I won't forget you.
By-and-by, when Roger Hamley has taken his turn at stopping at home
with his father, we will ask him to one of our little quiet
dinners.'

Molly was very slow at taking this in; but in about a minute the
sense of it had reached her brain, and she went all over very red
and hot; especially as she saw that Cynthia was watching the light
come into her mind with great amusement.

'I'm afraid Molly isn't properly grateful, mamma. If I were you, I
wouldn't exert myself to give a dinner-party on her account. Bestow
all your kindness upon me.'

Molly was often puzzled by Cynthia's speeches to her mother; and
this was one of these occasions. But she was more anxious to say
something for herself; she was so much annoyed at the implication in
Mrs. Gibson's last words.

'Mr. Roger Hamley has been very good to me; he was a great deal at
home when I was there, and Mr. Osborne Hamley was very little there:
that was the reason I spoke so much more of one than the other. If I
had--if he had,'--losing her coherence in the difficulty of finding
words,--'I don't think I should. Oh, Cynthia, instead of laughing at
me, I think you might help me to explain myself!'

Instead, Cynthia gave a diversion to the conversation.

'Mamma's paragon gives me an idea of weakness. I can't quite make
out whether it is in body or mind. Which is it, Molly?'

'He is not strong, I know; but he is very accomplished and clever.
Every one says that,--even papa, who doesn't generally praise young
men. That made the puzzle the greater when he did so badly at
college.'

'Then it's his character that is weak. I'm sure there's weakness
somewhere; but he's very agreeable. It must have been very pleasant,
staying at the Hall.'

'Yes; but it's all over now.'

'Oh, nonsense!' said Mrs. Gibson, wakening up from counting the
stitches in her pattern. 'We shall have the young men coming to
dinner pretty often, you'll see. Your father likes them, and I shall
always make a point of welcoming his friends. They can't go on
mourning for a mother for ever. I expect we shall see a great deal
of them; and that the two families will become very intimate. After
all, these good Hollingford people are terribly behindhand, and I
should say, rather commonplace.'


CHAPTER XXI


THE HALF-SISTERS


It appeared as if Mrs. Gibson's predictions were likely to be
verified; for Osborne Hamley found his way to her drawing-room
pretty frequently. To be sure, sometimes prophets can help on the
fulfilment of their own prophecies; and Mrs. Gibson was not passive.

Molly was altogether puzzled by his manners and ways. He spoke of
occasional absences from the Hall, without exactly saying where he
had been. But that was not her idea of the conduct of a married man,
who, she imagined, ought to have a house and servants, and pay rent
and taxes, and live with his wife. Who this mysterious wife might
be, faded into insignificance before the wonder of where she was.
London, Cambridge, Dover, nay even France, were mentioned by him as
places to which he had been on these different little journeys.
These facts came out quite casually, almost as if he was unaware of
what he was betraying; sometimes he dropped out such sentences as
these:--'Ah, that would be the day I was crossing! It was stormy,
indeed! Instead of our being only two hours, we were nearly five.'
Or, 'I met Lord Hollingford at Dover last week, and he said,' &c.
'The cold now is nothing to what it was in London on Thursday--the
thermometer was down at 15 degrees.' Perhaps, in the rapid flow of
conversation, these small revelations were noticed by no one but
Molly; whose interest and curiosity were always hovering over the
secret she had become possessed of, in spite of all her self-reproach
for allowing her thoughts to dwell on what was still to be kept
as a mystery.

It was also evident to her that Osborne was not too happy at home.
He had lost the slight touch of cynicism which he had affected when
he was expected to do wonders at college; and that was one good
result of his failure. If he did not give himself the trouble of
appreciating other people, and their performances, at any rate his
conversation was not so amply sprinkled with critical pepper. He was
more absent, not so agreeable, Mrs. Gibson thought, but did not say.
He looked ill in health; but that might be the consequence of the
real depression of spirits which Molly occasionally saw peeping out
through all his pleasant surface-talk. Now and then, he referred to
'the happy days that are gone,' or, 'to the time when my mother was
alive,' when talking directly to her; and then his voice sank, and a
gloom came over his countenance, and Molly longed to express her own
deep sympathy. He did not often mention his father; and Molly
thought she could read in his manner, when he did, that something of
the painful restraint she had noticed when she was last at the Hall
still existed between them. Nearly all that she knew of the family
interior she had heard from Mrs. Hamley, and she was uncertain as to
how far her father was acquainted with them; so she did not like to
question him too closely; nor was he a man to be so questioned as to
the domestic affairs of his patients. Sometimes she wondered if it
was a dream--that short half hour in the library at Hamley Hall--
when she had learnt a fact which seemed so all-important to Osborne,
yet which made so little difference in his way of life--either in
speech or action. During the twelve or fourteen hours or so that she
had remained at the Hall afterwards, no further allusion had been
made to his marriage, either by himself or by Roger. It was, indeed,
very like a dream. Probably Molly would have been rendered much more
uncomfortable in the possession of her secret if Osborne had struck
her as particularly attentive in his devotion to Cynthia. She
evidently amused and attracted him, but not in any lively or
passionate kind of manner. He admired her beauty, and seemed to feel
her charm; but he would leave her side, and come to sit near Molly,
if anything reminded him of his mother, about which he could talk to
her, and to her alone. Yet he came so often to the Gibsons', that
Mrs. Gibson might be excused for the fancy she had taken into her
head, that it was for Cynthia's sake. He liked the lounge, the
friendliness, the company of two intelligent girls of beauty and
manners above the average; one of whom stood in a peculiar relation
to him, as having been especially beloved by the mother whose memory
he cherished so fondly. Knowing himself to be out of the category of
bachelors, he was, perhaps, too indifferent as to other people's
ignorance, and its possible consequences.

Somehow, Molly did not like to be the first to introduce Roger's
name into the conversation, so she lost many an opportunity of
hearing intelligence about him. Osborne was often so languid or so
absent that he only followed the lead of talk; and as an awkward
fellow, who had paid her no particular attention, and as a second
son, Roger was not pre-eminent in Mrs. Gibson's thoughts; Cynthia had
never seen him, and the freak did not take her often to speak about
him. He had not come home since he had obtained his high place in
the mathematical lists: that Molly knew; and she knew, too, that he
was working hard for something--she supposed a fellowship--and that
was all. Osborne's tone in speaking of him was always the same:
every word, every inflexion of the voice breathed out affection and
respect--nay, even admiration! And this from the ~nil admirari~
brother, who seldom carried his exertions so far.

'Ah, Roger!' he said one day. Molly caught the name in an instant,
though she had not heard what had gone before. 'He is a fellow in a
thousand--in a thousand, indeed! I don't believe there is his match
anywhere for goodness and real solid power combined.'

'Molly,' said Cynthia, after Mr. Osborne Hamley had gone, 'what sort
of a man is this Roger Hamley? One can't tell how much to believe of
his brother's praises; for it is the one subject on which Osborne
Hamley becomes enthusiastic. I've noticed it once or twice before.'

While Molly hesitated on which point of the large round to begin her
description, Mrs. Gibson struck in,--

'It just shows what a sweet disposition Osborne Hamley is of--that
he should praise his brother as he does. I daresay he is senior
wrangler, and much good may it do him! I don't deny that; but as for
conversation, he's as heavy as heavy can be. A great awkward fellow
to boot, who looks as if he did not know two and two made four, for
all he is such a mathematical genius. You would hardly believe he
was Osborne Hamley's brother to see him! I should not think he had a
profile at all.'

'What do you think of him, Molly?' said the persevering Cynthia.

'I like him,' said Molly. 'He has been very kind to me. I know he
isn't handsome like Osborne.'

It was rather difficult to say all this quietly, but Molly managed
to do it, quite aware that Cynthia would not rest till she had
extracted some kind of an opinion out of her.

'I suppose he will come home at Easter,' said Cynthia, 'and then I
shall see him for myself.'

'It's a great pity that their being in mourning will prevent their
going to the Easter charity ball,' said Mrs. Gibson, plaintively. 'I
shan't like to take you two girls, if you are not to have any
partners. It will put me in such an awkward position. I wish we
could join on to the Towers party. That would secure you partners,
for they always bring a number of dancing men, who might dance with
you after they had done their duty by the ladies of the house. But
really everything is so changed since dear Lady Cumnor has been an
invalid that perhaps they won't go at all.'

This Easter ball was a great subject of conversation with Mrs
Gibson. She sometimes spoke of it as her first appearance in society
as a bride, though she had been visiting once or twice a week all
winter long. Then she shifted her ground, and said she felt so much
interest in it, because she would then have the responsibility of
introducing both her own and Mr. Gibson's daughter to public notice,
though the fact was that pretty nearly every one who was going to
this ball had seen the two young ladies--though not their ball
dresses--before. But, aping the manners of the aristocracy as far as
she knew them, she intended to 'bring out' Molly and Cynthia on this
occasion, which she regarded in something of the light of a
presentation at Court. 'They are not out yet,' was her favourite
excuse when either of them was invited to any house to which she did
not wish them to go, or invited without her. She even made a
difficulty about their 'not being out' when Miss Browning--that old
friend of the Gibson family--came in one morning to ask the two
girls to come to a very friendly tea and a round game afterwards;
this mild piece of gaiety being designed as an attention to three of
Mrs. Goodenough's grandchildren--two young ladies and their
school-boy brother--who were staying on a visit to their grandmamma.

'You are very kind, Miss Browning, but you see I hardly like to let
them go--they are not out, you know, till after the Easter ball.'

'Till when we are invisible,' said Cynthia, always ready with her
mockery to exaggerate any pretension of her mother's. 'We are so
high in rank that our sovereign must give us her sanction before we
can play a round game at your house.'

Cynthia enjoyed the idea of her own full-grown size and stately
gait, as contrasted with that of a meek, half-fledged girl in the
nursery; but Miss Browning was half puzzled and half affronted.

'I don't understand it at all. In my days girls went wherever it
pleased people to ask them, without this farce of bursting out in
all their new fine clothes at some public place. I don't mean but
what the gentry took their daughters to York, or Matlock,
or Bath to give them a taste of gay society when they were growing
up; and the quality went up to London, and their young ladies were
presented to Queen Charlotte, and went to a birthday ball, perhaps.
But for us little Hollingford people, why we knew every child
amongst us from the day of its birth; and many a girl of twelve or
fourteen have I seen go out to a card-party, and sit quiet at her
work, and know how to behave as well as any lady there. There was no
talk of "coming out" in those days for any one under the daughter of
a squire.'

'After Easter, Molly and I shall know how to behave at a card-party,
but not before,' said Cynthia, demurely.

'You're always fond of your quips and your cranks,' my dear,' said
Miss Browning, 'and I wouldn't quite answer for your behaviour: you
sometimes let your spirits carry you away. But I'm quite sure Molly
will be a little lady as she always is, and always was, and I have
known her from a babe.'

Mrs. Gibson took up arms on behalf of her own daughter, or rather,
she took up arms against Molly's praises.

'I don't think you would have called Molly a lady the other day,
Miss Browning, if you had found her where I did: sitting up in a
cherry-tree, six feet from the ground at least, I do assure you.'

'Oh! but that wasn't pretty,' said Miss Browning, shaking her head
at Molly. 'I thought you'd left off those tomboy ways.'

'She wants the refinement which good society gives in several ways',
said Mrs. Gibson, returning to the attack on poor Molly. 'She's very
apt to come upstairs two steps at a time.'

'Only two, Molly!' said Cynthia. 'Why, to-day I found I could manage
four of these broad shallow steps.'

'My dear child, what are you saying?'

'Only confessing that I, like Molly, want the refinements which good
society gives; therefore, please do let us go to Miss Brownings'
this evening. I will pledge myself for Molly that she shan't sit in
a cherry-tree; and Molly shall see that I don't go upstairs in an
unladylike way. I will go upstairs as meekly as if I were a come-out
young lady, and had been to the Easter ball.'

So it was agreed that they should go. If Mr. Osborne Hamley had been
named as one of the probable visitors, there would have been none of
this difficulty about the affair.

But though he was not there his brother Roger was. Molly saw him in
a minute when she entered the little drawing-room; but Cynthia did
not.

'And see, my dears,' said Miss Phoebe Browning, turning them round
to the side where Roger stood waiting for his turn of speaking to
Molly. 'We've got a gentleman for you after all! Wasn't it
fortunate?--just as sister said that you might find it dull--you,
Cynthia, she meant, because you know you come from France; and then,
just as if he had been sent from heaven, Mr. Roger came in to call;
and I won't say we laid violent hands on him, because he was too
good for that; but really we should have been near it, if he had not
stayed of his own accord.'

The moment Roger had done his cordial greeting to Molly, he asked
her to introduce him to Cynthia.

'I want to know her--your new sister,' he added, with the kind smile
Molly remembered so well since the very first day she had seen it
directed towards her, as she sate crying under the weeping ash.
Cynthia was standing a little behind Molly when Roger asked for this
introduction. She was generally dressed with careless grace. Molly,
who was delicate neatness itself, used sometimes to wonder how
Cynthia's tumbled gowns, tossed away so untidily, had the art of
looking so well and falling in such graceful folds. For instance,
the pale lilac muslin gown she wore this evening had been worn many
times before, and had looked unfit to wear again until Cynthia put
it on. Then the limpness became softness, and the very creases took
the lines of beauty. Molly, in a daintily clean pink muslin, did not
look half so elegantly dressed as Cynthia. The grave eyes that the
latter raised when she had to be presented to Roger had a sort of
child-like innocence and wonder about them, which did not quite
belong to Cynthia's character. She put on her armour of magic that
evening--involuntarily as she always did; but, on the other side,
she could not help trying her power on strangers. Molly had always
felt that she should have a right to a good long talk with Roger
when she next saw him; and that he would tell her, or she should
gather from him, all the details she so longed to hear about the
squire--about the Hall--about Osborne--about himself. He was just as
cordial and friendly as ever with her. If Cynthia had not been there
all would have gone on as she had anticipated; but of all the
victims to Cynthia's charms he fell most prone and abject. Molly saw
it all, as she was sitting next to Miss Phoebe at the tea-table,
acting right-hand, and passing cake, cream, sugar, with such busy
assiduity that every one besides herself thought that her mind, as
well as her hands, was fully occupied. She tried to talk to the two
shy girls, as in virtue of her two years' seniority she thought
herself bound to do; and the consequence was, she went upstairs with
the twain clinging to her arms, and willing to swear an eternal
friendship. Nothing would satisfy them but that she must sit between
them at ~vingt-un~; and they were so desirous of her advice in the
important point of fixing the price of the counters that she could
not even have joined in in the animated tete-a-tete
going on between Roger and Cynthia. Or rather, it would be more
correct to say that Roger was talking in a most animated manner to
Cynthia, whose sweet eyes were fixed upon his face with a look of
great interest in all he was saying, while it was only now and then
she made her low replies. Molly caught a few words occasionally in
intervals of business.

'At my uncle's, we always gave a silver threepence for three dozen.
You know what a silver threepence is, don't you, dear Miss Gibson?'

'The three classes are published in the Senate House at nine o'clock
on the Friday morning, and you can't imagine--'

'I think it will be thought rather shabby to play at anything less
than sixpence. That gentleman' (this in a whisper) 'is at Cambridge,
and you know they always play very high there, and sometimes ruin
themselves, don't they, dear Miss Gibson?'

'Oh, on this occasion the Master of Arts who precedes the candidates
for honours when they go into the Senate House is called the Father
of the College to which he belongs. I think I mentioned that before,
didn't I?'

So Cynthia was hearing all about Cambridge, and the very examination
about which Molly had felt such keen interest, without having ever
been able to have her questions answered by a competent person; and
Roger, to whom she had always looked as the final and most
satisfactory answerer, was telling all she wanted to know, and she
could not listen. It took all her patience to make up little packets
of counters, and settle, as the arbiter of the game, whether it
would be better for the round or the oblong counters to be reckoned
as six. And when all was done, and every one sate in their places
round the table, Roger and Cynthia had to be called twice before
they came. They stood up, it is true, at the first sound of their
names; but they did not move: Roger went on talking, Cynthia
listening, till the second call--when they hurried to the table and
tried to appear all on a sudden quite interested in the great
questions of the game, namely, the price of three dozen counters,
and whether, all things considered, it would be better to call the
round counters or the oblong half-a-dozen each. Miss Browning,
drumming the pack of cards on the table, and quite ready to begin
dealing, decided the matter by saying, 'Rounds are sixes, and three
dozen counters cost sixpence. Pay up, if you please, and let us
begin at once.' Cynthia sate between Roger and William Osborne, the
young schoolboy, who bitterly resented on this occasion his sisters'
habit of calling him 'Willie,' as he thought that it was this boyish
sobriquet which prevented Cynthia from attending as much to him as
to Mr. Roger Hamley; he also was charmed by the charmer, who found
leisure to give him one or two of her sweet smiles. On his return
home to his grandmamma's he gave out one or two very decided and
rather original opinions, quite opposed--as was natural--to his
sisters'. One was,--

'That, after all, a senior wrangler was no great shakes. Any man
might be one if he liked, but there were a lot of fellows that he
knew who would be very sorry to go in for anything so slow.'

Molly thought the game would never end. She had no particular turn
for gambling in her; and whatever her card might be, she regularly
put on two counters, indifferent as to whether she won or lost.
Cynthia, on the contrary, staked high, and was at one time very
rich, but ended by being in debt to Molly something like six
shillings. She had forgotten her purse, she said, and was obliged to
borrow from the more provident Molly, who was aware that the round
game of which Miss Browning had spoken to her was likely to require
money. If it was not a very merry affair for all the individuals
concerned, it was a very noisy one on the whole. Molly thought it
was going to last till midnight; but punctually as the clock struck
nine, the little maid-servant staggered in under the weight of a
tray loaded with sandwiches, cakes, and jelly. This brought on a
general move; and Roger, who appeared to have been on the watch for
something of the kind, came and took a chair by Molly.

'I am so glad to see you again--it seems such a long time since
Christmas,' said he, dropping his voice, and not alluding more
exactly to the day when she had left the Hall.

'It is a long time,' she replied; 'we are close to Easter now. I
have so wanted to tell you how glad I was to hear about your honours
at Cambridge. I once thought of sending you a message through your
brother, but then I thought it might be making too much fuss,
because I know nothing of mathematics, or of the value of a
senior-wranglership; and you were sure to have so many
congratulations from people who did know.'

'I missed yours though, Molly,' said he, kindly. 'But I felt sure
you were glad for me.'

'Glad and proud too,' said she. 'I should so like to hear something
more about it. I heard you telling Cynthia--'

'Yes. What a charming person she is! I should think you must be
happier than we expected long ago.'

'But tell me something about the senior-wranglership, please,' said
Molly.

'It's a long story, and I ought to be helping the Miss Brownings to
hand sandwiches--besides, you wouldn't find it very interesting,
it's so full of technical details.'

'Cynthia looked very much interested,' said Molly.

'Well! then I refer you to her, for I must go now. I can't for shame
go on sitting here, and letting those good ladies have all the
trouble. But I shall come and call on Mrs. Gibson soon. Are you
walking home to-night?'

'Yes, I think so,' replied Molly, eagerly foreseeing what was to
come.

'Then I shall walk home with you. I left my horse at the "George,"
and that's half-way. I suppose old Betty will allow me to accompany
you and your sister? You used to describe her as something of a
dragon.'

'Betty has left us,' said Molly, sadly. 'She's gone to live at a
place at Ashcombe.'

He made a face of dismay, and then went off to his duties. The short
conversation had been very pleasant, and his manner had had just the
brotherly kindness of old times; but it was not quite the manner he
had to Cynthia; and Molly half thought she would have preferred the
latter. He was now hovering about Cynthia, who had declined the
offer of refreshments from Willie Osborne. Roger was tempting her,
and with playful entreaties urging her to take something from him.
Every word they said could be heard by the whole room; yet every
word was said, on Roger's part at least, as if he could not have
spoken it in that peculiar manner to any one else. At length, and
rather more because she was weary of being entreated, than because
it was his wish, Cynthia took a macaroon, and Roger seemed as happy
as though she had crowned him with flowers. The whole affair was as
trifling and commonplace as could be in itself. hardly worth
noticing: and yet Molly did notice it, and felt uneasy; she could
not tell why. As it turned out, it was a rainy night, and Mrs. Gibson
sent a fly for the two girls instead of old Betty's substitute. Both
Cynthia and Molly thought of the possibility of their taking the two
Osborne girls back to their grandmother's, and so saving them a wet
walk; but Cynthia got the start in speaking about it; and the thanks
and the implied praise for thoughtfulness were hers.

When they got home Mr. and Mrs. Gibson were sitting in the
drawing-room, quite ready to be amused by any details of the
evening.

Cynthia began,--

'Oh! it wasn't very entertaining. One didn't expect that,' and she
yawned wearily.

'Who were there?' asked Mr. Gibson. 'Quite a young party--wasn't it?'

'They'd only asked Lizzie and Fanny Osborne, and their brother; but
Mr. Roger Hamley had ridden over and called on the Miss Brownings,
and they had kept him to tea. No one else.'

'Roger Hamley there!' said Mr. Gibson. 'He's come home then. I must
make time to ride over and see him.'

'You'd much better ask him here,' said Mrs. Gibson. 'Suppose you
invite him and his brother to dine here on Friday, my dear? It would
be a very pretty attention, I think.'

'My dear! these young Cambridge men have a very good taste in wine,
and don't spare it. My cellar won't stand many of their attacks.'

'I didn't think you were so inhospitable, Mr. Gibson.'

'I'm not inhospitable, I'm sure. If you'll put "bitter beer" in the
corner of your notes of invitation, just as the smart people put
"quadrilles" as a sign of entertainment offered, we'll have Osborne
and Roger to dinner any day you like. And what did you think of my
favourite, Cynthia? You hadn't seen him before, I think?'

'Oh! he's nothing like so handsome as his brother; nor so polished;
nor so easy to talk to. He entertained me for more than an hour with
a long account of some examination or other; but there's something
one likes about him.'

'Well--and Molly--' said Mrs. Gibson, who piqued herself on being an
impartial stepmother; and who always tried hard to make Molly talk
as much as Cynthia--'what sort of an evening have you had?'

'Very pleasant, thank you.' Her heart a little belied her as she
said this. She had not cared for the round game; and she would have
cared for Roger's conversation. She had had what she was indifferent
to, and not had what she would have liked.

'We've had our unexpected visitor, too,' said Mr. Gibson. 'Just after
dinner who should come in but Mr. Preston. I fancy he's having more
of the management of the Hollingford property than formerly.
Sheepshanks is getting an old man. And if so, I suspect we shall see
a good deal of Preston. He's "no blate," as they used to say in
Scotland, and made himself quite at home to-night. If I'd asked him
to stay, or, indeed, if I'd done anything but yawn, he'd have been
here now. But I defy any man to stay when I have a fit of yawning.'

'Do you like Mr. Preston, papa?' asked Molly.

'About as much as I do half the men I meet. He talks well, and has
seen a good deal. I know very little of him, though, except that
he's my lord's steward, which is a guarantee for a good deal.'

'Lady Harriet spoke pretty strongly against him that day I was with
her at the Manor-house.'

'Lady Harriet's always full of fancies: she likes persons to-day,
and dislikes them to-morrow,' said Mrs. Gibson, who was touched on
her sore point whenever Molly quoted Lady Harriet, or said anything
to imply ever so transitory an intimacy with her.

'You must know a good deal about Mr. Preston, my dear? I suppose you
saw a good deal of him at Ashcombe?'

Mrs. Gibson coloured, and looked at Cynthia before she replied.
Cynthia's face was set into a determination not to speak, however
much she might be referred to.

'Yes; we saw a good deal of him--at one time, I mean. He's
changeable, I think. But he always sent us game, and sometimes
fruit. There were some stories against him, but I never believed
them.'

'What kind of stories?' said Mr. Gibson, quickly.

'Oh, vague stories, you know: scandal, I daresay. No one ever
believed them. He could be so agreeable if he chose; and my lord,
who is so very particular, would never have kept him as agent if
they were true; not that I ever knew what they were, for I consider
all scandal as abominable gossip.'

'I'm very glad I yawned in his face,' said Mr. Gibson. 'I hope he'll
take the hint.'

'If it was one of your giant-gapes, papa, I should call it more than
a hint,' said Molly. 'And if you want a yawning chorus the next time
he comes, I'll join in; won't you, Cynthia?'

'I don't know,' replied the latter, shortly, as she lighted her
bed-candle. The two girls had usually some nightly conversation in
one or other of their bed-rooms; but to-night Cynthia said something
or other about being terribly tired, and hastily shut her door.

The very next day, Roger came to pay his promised call. Molly was
out in the garden with Williams, planning the arrangement of some
new flower-beds, and deep in her employment of placing pegs upon the
lawn to mark out the different situations, when, standing up to mark
the effect, her eye was caught by the figure of a gentleman, sitting
with his back to the light, leaning forwards, and talking, or
listening, eagerly. Molly knew the shape of the head perfectly, and
hastily began to put off her brown-holland gardening apron, emptying
the pockets as she spoke to Williams.

'You can finish it now, I think,' said she. 'You know about the
bright-coloured flowers being against the privet-hedge, and where
the new rose-bed it to be?'

'I can't justly say as I do,' said he. 'Mebbe, you'll just go o'er
it all once again, Miss Molly. I'm not so young as I oncst was, and
my head is not so clear now-a-days, and I'd be loth to make mistakes
when you're so set upon your plans.'

Molly gave up her impulse in a moment. She saw that the old gardener
was really perplexed, yet that he was as anxious as he could be to
do his best. So she went over the ground again, pegging and
explaining till the wrinkled brow was smooth again, and he kept
saying, 'I see, miss. All right, Miss Molly, I'se gotten it in my
head as clear as patch-work now.'

So she could leave him, and go in. But just as she was close to the
garden door, Roger came out. It really was for once a case of virtue
its own reward, for it was far pleasanter to her to have him in a
tete-a-tete, however short, than in the restraint of
Mrs. Gibson's and Cynthia's presence.

'I only just found out where you were, Molly. Mrs. Gibson said you
had gone out, but she didn't know where; and it was the greatest
chance that I turned round and saw you.'

'I saw you some time ago, but I couldn't leave Williams. I think he
was unusually slow to-day; and he seemed as if he couldn't
understand my plan for the new flower-beds.'

'Is that the paper you've got in your hand? Let me look at it, will
you? Ah, I see! you've borrowed some of your ideas from our garden
at home, haven't you? This bed of scarlet geraniums, with the border
of young oaks, pegged down! That was a fancy of my dear mother's.'

They were both silent for a minute or two. Then Molly said,--

'How is the squire? I've never seen him since.'

'No, he told me how much he wanted to see you, but he couldn't make
up his mind to come and call. I suppose it would never do now for
you to come and stay at the Hall, would it? It would give my father
so much pleasure: he looks upon you as a daughter, and I'm sure both
Osborne and I shall always consider you are like a sister to us,
after all my mother's love for you, and your tender care of her at
last. But I suppose it wouldn't do.'

'No! certainly not,' said Molly, hastily.

'I fancy if you could come it would put us a little to rights. You
know, as I think I once told you, Osborne has behaved differently to
what I should have done, though not wrongly,--only what I call an
error of judgment. But my father, I'm sure, has taken up some notion
of--never mind; only the end of it is that he holds Osborne still in
tacit disgrace, and is miserable himself all the time. Osborne, too,
is sore and unhappy, and estranged from my father. It is just what
my mother would have put right very soon, and perhaps you could have
done it--unconsciously, I mean--for this wretched mystery that
Osborne preserves about his affairs is at the root of it all. But
there's no use talking about it; I don't know why I began.' Then,
with a wrench, changing the subject, while Molly still thought of
what he had been telling her, he broke out,--'I can't tell you how
much I like Miss Kirkpatrick, Molly. It must be a great pleasure to
you having such a companion!'

'Yes,' said Molly, half smiling. 'I'm very fond of her; and I think
I like her better every day I know her. But how quickly you have
found out her virtues!'

'I didn't say "virtues," did I?' asked he, reddening, but putting
the question in all good faith. 'Yet I don't think one could be
deceived in that face. And Mrs. Gibson appears to be a very friendly
person,--she has asked Osborne and me to dine here on Friday.'

'Bitter beer' came into Molly's mind; but what she said was, 'And
are you coming?'

'Certainly, I am, unless my father wants me; and I've given Mrs
Gibson a conditional promise for Osborne too. So I shall see you all
very soon again. But I must go now. I have to keep an appointment
seven miles from here in half an hour's time. Good luck to your
flower-garden, Molly.'


CHAPTER XXII


THE OLD SQUIRE'S TROUBLES


Affairs were going on worse at the Hall than Roger had liked to
tell. Moreover, very much of the discomfort there arose from 'mere
manner,' as people express it, which is always indescribable and
indefinable. Quiet and passive as Mrs. Hamley had always been in
appearance, she was the ruling spirit of the house as long as she
lived. The directions to the servants, down to the most minute
particulars, came from her sitting-room, or from the sofa on which
she lay. Her children always knew where to find her; and to find
her, was to find love and sympathy. Her husband, who was often
restless and angry from one cause or another, always came to her to
be smoothed down and put right. He was conscious of her pleasant
influence over him, and became at peace with himself when in her
presence; just as a child is at case when with some one who is both
firm and gentle. But the keystone of the family arch was gone, and
the stones of which it was composed began to fall apart. It is
always sad when a sorrow of this kind seems to injure the character
of the mourning survivors. Yet, perhaps, this injury may be only
temporary or superficial; the judgments so constantly passed upon
the way people bear the loss of those whom they have deeply loved,
appear to be even more cruel, and wrongly meted out, than human
judgments generally are. To careless observers, for instance, it
would seem as though the squire was rendered more capricious and
exacting, more passionate and authoritative, by his wife's death.
The truth was, that it occurred at a time when many things came to
harass him, and some to bitterly disappoint him; and ~she~ was no
longer there to whom he used to carry his sore heart for the gentle
balm of her sweet words. So the sore heart ached and smarted
internally; and often, when he saw how his violent conduct affected
others, he could have cried out for their pity, instead of their
anger and resentment: 'Have mercy upon me, for I am very miserable.'
How often have such dumb thoughts gone up from the hearts of those
who have taken hold of their sorrow by the wrong end, as prayers
against sin! And when the squire saw that his servants were learning
to dread him, and his first-born to avoid him, he did not blame
them. He knew he was becoming a domestic tyrant; it seemed as if all
circumstances conspired against him, and as if he was too weak to
struggle with them; else, why did everything indoors and
out-of-doors go so wrong just now, when all he could have done, had
things been prosperous, was to have submitted, in very imperfect
patience, to the loss of his wife? But just when he needed ready
money to pacify Osborne's creditors, the harvest had turned out
remarkably plentiful, and the price of corn had sunk down to a level
it had not touched for years. The squire had insured his life at the
time of his marriage for a pretty large sum. It was to be a
provision for his wife, if she had survived him, and for their
younger children. Roger was the only representative of these
interests now; but the squire was unwilling to lose the insurance by
ceasing to pay the annual sum. He would not, if he could, have sold
any part of the estate which he inherited from his father; and,
besides, it was strictly entailed. He had sometimes thought how wise
a step it would have been could he have sold a portion of it, and
with the purchase-money have drained and reclaimed the remainder;
and at length, learning from some neighbour that Government would
make certain advances for drainage, &c. at a very low rate of
interest, on condition that the work was done, and the money repaid,
within a given time; his wife had urged him to take advantage of the
proffered loan. But now that she was no longer here to encourage
him, and take an interest in the progress of the work, he grew
indifferent to it himself, and cared no more to go out on his stout
roan cob, and sit square on his seat, watching the labourers on the
marshy land all overgrown with rushes; speaking to them from time to
time in their own strong nervous country dialect: but the interest
to Government had to be paid all the same, whether the men worked
well or ill. Then the roof of the Hall let in the melted snow-water
this winter; and, on examination, it turned out that a new roof was
absolutely required. The men who had come about the advances made to
Osborne by the London money-lender, had spoken disparagingly of the
timber on the estate--'Very fine trees--sound, perhaps, too, fifty
years ago, but gone to rot now; had wanted lopping and clearing. Was
there no wood-ranger or forester? They were nothing like the value
young Mr. Hamley had represented them to be of.' The remarks had come
round to the squire's ears. He loved the trees he had played under
as a boy as if they were living creatures; that was on the romantic
side of his nature. Merely looking at them as representing so many
pounds sterling, he had esteemed them highly, and had had, until
now, no opinion of another by which to correct his own judgment. So
these words of the valuers cut him sharp, although he affected to
disbelieve them, and tried to persuade himself that he did so. But,
after all, these cares and disappointments did not touch the root of
his deep resentment against Osborne. There is nothing like wounded
affection for giving poignancy to anger. And the squire believed
that Osborne and his advisers had been making calculations, based
upon his own death. He hated the idea so much--it made him so
miserable--that he would not face it, and define it, and meet it
with full inquiry and investigation. He chose rather to cherish the
morbid fancy that he was useless in this world--born under an
unlucky star--that all things went badly under his management. But
he did not become humble in consequence. He put his misfortunes down
to the score of Fate--not to his own; and he imagined that Osborne
saw his failures, and that his first-born grudged him his natural
term of life. All these fancies would have been set to rights could
he have talked them over with his wife; or even had he been
accustomed to mingle much in the society of those whom he esteemed
his equals; but, as has been stated, he was inferior in education to
those who should have been his mates; and perhaps the jealousy and
~mauvaise honte~ that this inferiority had called out long ago,
extended itself in some measure to the feelings he entertained
towards his sons--less to Roger than to Osborne, though the former
was turning out by far the most distinguished man. But Roger was
practical; interested in all out-of-doors things, and he enjoyed the
details, homely enough, which his father sometimes gave him of the
every-day occurrences which the latter had noticed in the woods and
the fields. Osborne, on the contrary, was what is commonly called
'fine;' delicate almost to effeminacy in dress and in manner;
careful in small observances. All this his father had been rather
proud of in the days when he had looked forward to a brilliant
career at Cambridge for his son; he had at that time regarded
Osborne's fastidiousness and elegance as another stepping-stone to
the high and prosperous marriage which was to restore the ancient
fortunes of the Hamley family. But now that Osborne had barely
obtained his degree; that all the boastings of his father had proved
vain; that the fastidiousness had led to unexpected expenses (to
attribute the most innocent cause to Osborne's debts), the poor
young man's ways and manners became a subject of irritation to his
father. Osborne was still occupied with his books and his writings
when he was at home; and this mode of passing the greater part of
the day gave him but few subjects in common with his father when
they did meet at meal-times, or in the evenings. Perhaps if Osborne
had been able to have more out-of-door amusements it would have been
better; but he was short-sighted, and cared little for the
carefully-observant pursuits of his brother: he knew but few young
men of his own standing in the county; his hunting even, of which he
was passionately fond, had been curtailed this season, as his father
had disposed of one of the two hunters he had been hitherto allowed.
The whole stable establishment had been reduced; perhaps because it
was the economy which told most on the enjoyment of both the squire
and Osborne, and which, therefore, the former took a savage pleasure
in enforcing. The old carriage--a heavy family coach bought in the
days of comparative prosperity--was no longer needed after madam's
death, and fell to pieces in the cobwebbed seclusion of the
coach-house.' The best of the two carriage-horses was taken for a
gig, which the squire now set up; saying many a time to all who
might care to listen to him that it was the first time for
generations that the Hamleys of Hamley had not been able to keep
their own coach. The other carriage-horse was turned out to grass;
being too old for regular work. Conqueror used to come whinnying up
to the park palings whenever he saw the squire, who had always a
piece of bread, or some sugar, or an apple for the old
favourite--and made many a complaining speech to the dumb animal,
telling him of the change of times since both were in their prime.
It had never been the squire's custom to encourage his boys to
invite their friends to the Hall. Perhaps this, too, was owing to
his ~mauvaise honte~, and also to an exaggerated consciousness of
the deficiencies of his establishment as compared with what he
imagined these lads were accustomed to at home. He explained this
once or twice to Osborne and Roger when they were at Rugby.

'You see, all you public schoolboys have a kind of freemasonry of
your own, and outsiders are looked on by you much as I look on
rabbits and all that isn't game. Ay, you may laugh, but it is so;
and your friends will throw their eyes askance at me, and never
think on my pedigree, which would beat theirs all to shivers, I'll
be bound. No: I'll have no one here at the Hall who will look down
on a Hamley of Hamley, even if he only knows how to make a cross
instead of write his name.'

Then, of course, they must not visit at houses to whose sons the
squire could not or would not return a like hospitality. On all
these points Mrs. Hamley had used her utmost influence without avail;
his prejudices were immovable. As regarded his position as head of
the oldest family in three counties, his pride was invincible; as
regarded himself personally--ill at ease in the society of his
equals, deficient in manners, and in education--his morbid
sensitiveness was too sore and too self-conscious to be called
humility.

Take one instance from among many similar scenes of the state of
feeling between the squire and his eldest son, which, if it could
not be called active discord, showed at least passive estrangement.

It took place on an evening in the March succeeding Mrs. Hamley's
death. Roger was at Cambridge. Osborne had also been from home, and
he had not volunteered any information as to his absence. The squire
believed that Osborne had been either in Cambridge with his brother,
or in London; he would have liked to hear where his son had been,
what he had been doing, and whom he had seen, purely as pieces of
news, and as some diversion from the domestic worries and cares
which were pressing him hard; but he was too proud to ask any
questions, and Osborne had not given him any details of his journey.
This silence had aggravated the squire's internal dissatisfaction,
and he came home to dinner weary and sore-hearted a day or two after
Osborne's return. It was just six o'clock, and he went hastily into
his own little business-room on the ground-floor, and, after washing
his hands, came into the drawing-room feeling as if he were very
late, but the room was empty. He glanced at the clock over the
mantelpiece, as he tried to warm his hands at the fire. The fire had
been neglected, and had gone out during the day; it was now piled
with half-dried wood, which sputtered and smoked instead of doing
its duty in blazing and warming the room, through which the keen
wind was cutting its way in all directions. The clock had stopped,
no one had remembered to wind it up, but by the squire's watch it
was already past dinner-time. The old butler put his head into the
room, but, seeing the squire alone, he was about to draw it back,
and wait for Mr. Osborne, before announcing dinner. He had hoped to
do this unperceived, but the squire caught him in the act.

'Why isn't dinner ready?' he called out sharply. 'It's ten minutes
past six. And, pray, why are you using this wood? It's impossible to
get oneself warm by such a fire as this.'

'I believe, sir, that Thomas--'

'Don't talk to me of Thomas. Send dinner in directly.'

About five minutes elapsed, spent by the hungry squire in all sorts
of impatient ways--attacking Thomas, who came in to look after the
fire; knocking the logs about, scattering out sparks, but
considerably lessening the chances of warmth; touching up the
candles, which appeared to him to give a light unusually
insufficient for the large cold room. While he was doing this,
Osborne came in dressed in full evening dress. He always moved
slowly; and this, to begin with, irritated the squire. Then an
uncomfortable consciousness of a rough black coat, drab trowsers,
checked cotton cravat, and splashed boots, forced itself upon him as
he saw Osborne's point-device costume. He chose to consider it
affectation and finery in Osborne, and was on the point of bursting
out with some remark, when the butler, who had watched Osborne
downstairs before making the announcement, came in to say that
dinner was ready.

'It surely isn't six o'clock?' said Osborne, pulling out his dainty
little watch. He was scarcely more aware than it of the storm that
was brewing.

'Six o'clock! It's more than a quarter past,' growled out his
father,

'I fancy your watch must be wrong, sir. I set mine by the Horse
Guards only two days ago.'

Now, impugning that old steady, turnip-shaped watch of the squire's
was one of the insults which, as it could not reasonably be
resented, was not to be forgiven. That watch had been given him by
his father when watches were watches long ago. It had given the law
to house-clocks, stable-clocks, kitchen-clocks--nay, even to Hamley
Church clock in its day; and was it now, in its respectable old age,
to be looked down upon by a little whipper-snapper of a French watch
which could go into a man's waistcoat pocket, instead of having to
be extricated, with due effort, like a respectable watch of size and
position, from a fob in the waistband? No! Not if the
whipper-snapper were backed by all the Horse Guards that ever were,
with the Life Guards to boot. Poor Osborne might have known better
than to cast this slur on his father's flesh and blood; for so dear
did he hold his watch!

'My watch is like myself,' said the squire, 'girning,' as the Scotch
say--'plain, but steady-going. At any rate, it gives the law in my
house. The King may go by the Horse Guards if he likes.'

'I beg your pardon, sir,' said Osborne, really anxious to keep the
peace; 'I went by my watch, which is certainly right by London time;
and I'd no idea you were waiting for me, otherwise I could have
dressed much quicker.'

'I should think so,' said the squire, looking sarcastically at his
son's attire. 'When I was a young man I should have been ashamed to
have spent as much time at my looking-glass as if I'd been a girl. I
could make myself as smart as any one when I was going to a dance,
or to a party where I was likely to meet pretty girls; but I should
have laughed myself to scorn if I'd stood fiddle-faddling at a
glass, smirking at my own likeness, all for my own pleasure.'

Osborne reddened, and was on the point of letting fly some caustic
remark on his father's dress at the present moment; but he contented
himself with saying, in a low voice,--

'My mother always expected us all to dress for dinner. I got into
the habit of doing it to please her, and I keep it up now.' Indeed,
he had a certain kind of feeling of loyalty to her memory in keeping
up all the little domestic habits and customs she had instituted or
preferred. But the contrast which the squire thought was implied by
Osborne's remark, put him beside himself.

'And I, too, try to attend to her wishes. I do: and in more
important things. I did when she was alive; and I do so now.'

'I never said you did not,' said Osborne, astonished at his father's
passionate words and manner.

'Yes, you did, sir. You meant it. I could see by your looks. I saw
you look at my morning-coat. At any rate, I never neglected any wish
of hers in her life-time. If she'd wished me to go to school again
and learn my A, B, C, I would. By--I would; and I wouldn't have gone
playing me, and lounging away my time, for fear of vexing and
disappointing her. Yet some folks older than schoolboys--' The
squire choked here; but though the words would not come his passion
did not diminish. 'I'll not have you casting up your mother's wishes
to me, sir. You, who went near to break her heart at last!'

Osborne was strongly tempted to get up and leave the room. Perhaps
it would have been better if he had; it might then have brought
about an explanation, and a reconciliation between father and son.
But he thought he did well in sitting still and appearing to take no
notice. This indifference to what he was saying appeared to annoy
the squire still more, and he kept on grumbling and talking to
himself till Osborne, unable to bear it any longer, said, very
quietly, but very bitterly,--'I am only a cause of irritation to
you, and home is no longer home to me, but a place in which I am to
be controlled in trifles, and scolded about trifles as if I were a
child. Put me in a way of making a living for myself--that much
your oldest son has a right to ask of you--I will then leave this
house, and you shall be no longer vexed by my dress, or my want of
punctuality.'

'You make your request pretty much as another son did long ago:
"Give me the portion that falleth to me." But I don't think what he
did with his money is much encouragement for me to--' Then the
thought of how little he could give his son his 'portion,' or any
part of it, stopped the squire.

Osborne took up the speech.

'I'm as ready as any man to earn my living; only the preparation for
any profession will cost money, and money I haven't got.'

'No more have I,' said the squire, shortly.

'What is to be done then?' said Osborne, only half believing his
father's words.

'Why, you must learn to stop at home, and not take expensive
journeys; and you must redeem your tailor's bills. I don't ask you
to help me in the management of the land--you're far too fine a
gentleman for that; but if you can't earn money, at least you
needn't spend it.'

'I've told you I'm willing enough to earn money,' cried Osborne,
passionately at last. 'But how am I to do it? You really are very
unreasonable, sir.'

'Am I?' said the squire--cooling in manner, though not in temper,
as Osborne grew warm. 'But I don't set up for being reasonable: men
who have to pay away money that they haven't got for their
extravagant sons, aren't likely to be reasonable. There's two things
you've gone and done which put me beside myself, when I think of
them: you've turned out next door to a dunce at college, when your
poor mother thought so much of you--and when you might have pleased
and gratified her so if you chose--and, well! I won't say what the
other thing is.'

'Tell me, sir,' said Osborne, almost breathless with the idea that
his father had discovered his secret marriage; but the father was
thinking of the money-lenders, who were calculating how soon Osborne
would come into the estate.

'No!' said the squire. 'I know what I know; and I'm not going to
tell you how I know it. Only, I'll just say this--your friends no
more know a piece of good timber when they see it than you or I know
how you could earn five pounds if it was to keep you from starving.
Now, there's Roger--we none of us made an ado about him; but he'll
have his fellowship now I'll warrant him, and be a bishop, or a
chancellor, or something, before we've found out he's clever--we've
been so much taken up thinking about you. I don't know what's come
over me to speak of "we"--"we" in this way,' said he, suddenly
dropping his voice,--a change of tone as sad as sad could be. 'I
ought to say "I;" it will be "I" for evermore in this world.'

He got up and left the room in quick haste, knocking over his chair,
and not stopping to pick it up. Osborne, who was sitting and shading
his eyes with his hand, as he had been doing for some time, looked
up at the noise, and then rose as quickly and hurried after his
father, only in time to hear the study-door locked on the inside the
moment he reached it.

Osborne returned into the dining-room chagrined and sorrowful. But
he was always sensitive to any omission of the usual observances,
which might excite remark; and even with his heavy heart he was
careful to pick up the fallen chair, and restore it to its place
near the bottom of the table; and afterwards so to disturb the
dishes as to make it appear that they had been touched, before
ringing for Robinson. When the latter came in, followed by Thomas,
Osborne thought it necessary to say to him that his father was not
well, and had gone into the study; and that he himself wanted no
dessert, but would have a cup of coffee in the drawing-room. The old
butler sent Thomas out of the room, and came up confidentially to
Osborne.

'I thought master wasn't justly himself, Mr. Osborne, before dinner.
And therefore I made excuses for him--I did. He spoke to Thomas
about the fire, sir, which is a thing I could in nowise put up with,
unless by reason of sickness, which I am always ready to make
allowances for.'

'Why shouldn't my father speak to Thomas?' said Osborne. 'But,
perhaps, he spoke angrily, I daresay; for I'm sure he's not well.'

'No, Mr. Osborne, it wasn't that. I myself am given to anger; and I'm
blessed with as good health as any man in my years. Besides, anger's
a good thing for Thomas. He needs a deal of it. But it should come
from the right quarter--and that is me myself, Mr. Osborne. I know my
place, and I know my rights and duties as well as any butler that
lives. And it's my duty to scold Thomas, and not master's. Master
ought to have said, "Robinson! you must speak to Thomas about
letting out the fire," and I'd ha' given it him well,--as I shall do
now, for that matter. But as I said before, I make excuses for
master, as being in mental distress and bodily ill-health; so I've
brought myself round not to give warning, as I should ha' done, for
certain, under happier circumstances.'

'Really, Robinson, I think it's all great nonsense,' said Osborne,
weary of the long story the butler had told him, and to which he had
not half attended. 'What in the world does it signify whether my
father speaks to you or to Thomas? Bring me coffee in the
drawing-room, and don't trouble your head any more about scolding
Thomas.'

Robinson went away offended at his grievance being called nonsense.
He kept muttering to himself in the intervals of scolding Thomas,
and saying,--'Things is a deal changed since poor missis went. I
don't wonder master feels it, for I'm sure I do. She was a lady who
had always a becoming respect for a butler's position, and could
have understood how he might be hurt in his mind. She'd never ha'
called his delicacies of feelings nonsense--not she; no more would
Mr. Roger. He's a merry young gentleman, and over-fond of bringing
dirty, slimy creatures into the house; but he's always a kind word
for a man who is hurt in his mind. He'd cheer up the squire, and
keep him from getting so cross and wilful. I wish Mr. Roger was here,
I do.'

The poor squire, shut up with his grief and his ill-temper as well,
in the dingy, dreary study in which he daily spent more and more of
his indoors life, turned over his cares and troubles till he was as
bewildered with the process as a squirrel must be in going round in
a cage. He had out day-books and ledgers, and was calculating up
back-rents; and every time the sum-totals came to different amounts.
He could have cried like a child over his sums; he was worn out and
weary, angry and disappointed. He closed his books at last with a
bang.

'I'm getting old,' he said, 'and my head's less clear than it used
to be. I think sorrow for her has dazed me. I never was much to
boast on; but she thought a deal of me--bless her! She'd never let
me call myself stupid; but, for all that, I am stupid. Osborne ought
to help me. He's had money enough spent on his learning; but
instead, he comes down dressed like a popinjay, and never troubles
his head to think how I'm to pay his debts. I wish I'd told him to
earn his living as a dancing-master,' said the squire, with a sad
smile at his own wit. 'He's dressed for all the world like one. And
how he's spent the money no one knows! Perhaps Roger will turn up
some day with a heap of creditors at his heels. No, he won't--not
Roger; he may be slow, but he's steady, is old Roger. I wish he was
here. He's not the eldest son, but he'd take an interest in the
estate; and he'd do up these weary accounts for me. I wish Roger was
here!'


CHAPTER XXIII


OSBORNE HAMLEY REVIEWS HIS POSITION


Osborne had his solitary cup of coffee in the drawing-room. He was
very unhappy too, after his fashion. He stood on the hearth-rug
pondering over his situation. He was not exactly aware how hardly
his father was pressed for ready-money; the squire had never spoken
to him on the subject without being angry; and many of his loose
contradictory statements--all of which, however contradictory they
might appear, had their basis in truth--were set down by his son to
the exaggeration of passion. But it was uncomfortable enough to a
young man of Osborne's age to feel himself continually hampered for
want of a five-pound note. The principal supplies for the liberal--
almost luxurious table at the Hall, came off the estate; so that
there was no appearance of poverty as far as the household went; and
as long as Osborne was content at home, he had everything he could
wish for; but he had a wife elsewhere--he wanted to see her
continually--and that necessitated journeys. She, poor thing! had to
be supported: where was the money for the journeys and for
Aimee's modest wants to come from? That was the puzzle in
Osborne's mind just now. While he had been at college his allowance
--heir of the Hamleys--had been three hundred, while Roger had to be
content with a hundred less. The payment of these annual sums had
given the squire a good deal of trouble; but he thought of it as a
merely temporary inconvenience, perhaps unreasonably thought so.
Osborne was to do great things; take high honours, get a fellowship,
marry a long-descended heiress, live in some of the many uninhabited
rooms at the Hall, and help the squire in the management of the
estate that would some time be his. Roger was to be a clergyman;
steady, slow Roger was just fitted for that, and when he declined
entering the Church, preferring a life of more activity and
adventure, Roger was to be--anything; he was useful and practical,
and fit for all the employments from which Osborne was shut out by
his fastidiousness, and his (pseudo) genius; so it was well he was
an eldest son, for he would never have done to struggle through the
world; and as for his settling down to a profession, it would be
like cutting blocks with a razor! And now here was Osborne, living
at home, but longing to be elsewhere; his allowance stopped in
reality; indeed the punctual payment of it during the last year or
two had been owing to his mother's exertions; but nothing had been
said about its present cessation by either father or son: money
matters were too sore a subject between them. Every now and then the
squire threw him a ten-pound note or so; but the sort of suppressed
growl with which they were given, and the entire uncertainty as to
when he might receive them, rendered any calculation based upon
their receipt exceedingly vague and uncertain.

'What in the world can I do to secure an income?' thought Osborne,
as he stood on the hearth-rug, his back to a blazing fire, his cup
of coffee sent up in the rare old china that had belonged to the
Hall for generations; his dress finished, as dress of Osborne's
could hardly fail to be. One could hardly have thought that this
elegant young man, standing there in the midst of comfort that
verged on luxury, should have been turning over that one great
problem in his mind; but so it was. 'What can I do to be sure of a
present income? Things cannot go on as they are. I should need
support for two or three years, even if I entered myself at the
Temple, or Lincoln's Inn.' It would be impossible for live on my pay
in the army; besides, I should hate that profession. In fact, there
are evils attending all professions--I couldn't bring myself to
become a member of any I've ever heard of. Perhaps I'm more fitted
to take orders than anything else, but to be compelled to write
weekly sermons whether one had anything to say or not, and,
probably, doomed only to associate with people below one in
refinement and education! Yet poor Aimee must have money. I
can't bear to compare our dinners here, overloaded with joints and
game and sweets, as Morgan will persist in sending them up, with
Aimee's two little mutton-chops. Yet what would my father say
if he knew I'd married a Frenchwoman? In his present mood he'd
disinherit me, if that is possible; and he'd speak about her in a
way I couldn't stand. A Roman Catholic, too! Well, I don't repent
it. I'd do it again. Only if my mother had been in good health, if
she could have heard my story, and known Aimee! As it is, I
must keep it secret; but where to get money? Where to get money?'

Then he bethought him of his poems--would they sell, and bring him
in money? In spite of Milton, he thought they might; and he went to
fetch his MSS. out of his room. He sate down near the fire, trying
to study them with a critical eye, to represent public opinion as
far as he could. He had changed his style since the Mrs. Hemans'
days. He was essentially imitative in his poetic faculty; and of
late he had followed the lead of a popular writer of sonnets.' He
turned his poems over: they were almost equivalent to an
autobiographical passage in his life. Arranging them in their order,
they came as follows:--


'To Aimee, Walking with a Little Child.'
'To
Aimee, Singing at her Work.'
'To Aimee, turning away
from me while I told my Love.'
'Aimee's Confession.'

'Aimee in Despair.'
'The Foreign Land in which my Aimee dwells.'
'The Wedding Ring.'
'The Wife.'

When he came to this last sonnet he put down his bundle of papers
and began to think. 'The wife.' Yes, and a French wife. and a Roman
Catholic wife--and a wife who might be said to have been in service!
And his father's hatred of the French, both collectively and
individually--collectively, as tumultuous brutal ruffians, who
murdered their king, and committed all kinds of bloody atrocities:
individually, as represented by 'Boney,' and the various caricatures
of 'Johnny Crapaud' that had been in full circulation about
five-and-twenty years before this time--when the squire had been
young and capable of receiving impressions. As for the form of
religion in which Mrs. Osborne Hamley had been brought up, it is
enough to say that Catholic emancipation had begun to be talked
about by some politicians, and that the sullen roar of the majority
of Englishmen, at the bare idea of it, was surging in the distance
with ominous threatenings; the very mention of such a measure before
the squire was, as Osborne well knew, like shaking a red flag before
a bull.

And then he considered that if Aimee had had the unspeakable,
the incomparable blessing of being born of English parents, in the
very heart of England--Warwickshire, for instance--and had never
heard of priests, or mass, or confession, or the Pope, or Guy
Fawkes, but had been born, baptized, and bred in the Church of
England, without having ever seen the outside of a dissenting
meeting-house, or a papist chapel--even with all these advantages,
her having been a (what was the equivalent for 'bonne' in English?
'nursery governess' was a term hardly invented) nursery-maid, with
wages paid down once a quarter, liable to be dismissed at a month's
warning, and having her tea and sugar doled out to her, would be a
shock to his father's old ancestral pride that he would hardly ever
get over.

'If he saw her!' thought Osborne. 'If he could but see her!' But if
the squire were to see Aimee, he would also hear her speak her
pretty broken English--precious to her husband, as it was in it that
she had confessed brokenly with her English tongue, that she loved
him soundly with her French heart--and Squire Hamley piqued himself
on being a good hater of the French. 'She would make such a loving,
sweet, docile little daughter to my father--she would go as near as
any one could towards filling up the blank void in this house, if he
would but have her; but he won't; he never would; and he shan't have
the opportunity of scouting her. Yet if I called her "Lucy" in these
sonnets; and if they made a great effect--were praised in
~Blackwood~ and the ~Quarterly~--and all the world was agog to find
out the author; and I told him my secret--I could if I were
successful--I think then he would ask who Lucy was, and I could tell
him all then. If--how I hate "ifs." "If me no ifs." My life has been
based on "whens;" and first they have turned to "ifs," and then they
have vanished away. It was "when Osborne gets honours," and then "if
Osborne," and then a failure altogether. I said to Aimee, "When
my mother sees you," and now it is "If my father saw her," with a
very faint prospect of its ever coming to pass.' So he let the
evening hours flow on and disappear in reveries like these; winding
up with a sudden determination to try the fate of his poems with a
publisher, with the direct expectation of getting money for them,
and an ulterior fancy that, if successful, they might work wonders
with this father.

When Roger came home Osborne did not let a day pass before telling
his brother of his plans. He never did conceal anything long from
Roger; the feminine part of his character made him always desirous
of a confidant, and as sweet sympathy as he could extract. But
Roger's opinion had no effect on Osborne's actions; and Roger knew
this full well. So when Osborne began with--'I want your advice on a
plan I have got in my head,' Roger replied: 'Some one told me that
the Duke of Wellington's maxim was never to give advice unless he
could enforce its being carried into effect. now I can't do that;
and you know, old boy, you don't follow out my advice when you've
got it.'

'Not always, I know. Not when it does not agree with my own opinion.
You are thinking about this concealment of my marriage. but you're
not up in all the circumstances. You know how fully I meant to have
done it, if there had not been that row about my debts; and then my
mother's illness and death. And now you've no conception how my
father is changed--how irritable he has become! Wait till you've
been at home a week! Robinson, Morgan--it's the same with them all;
but worst of all with me!'

'Poor fellow!' said Roger; 'I thought he looked terribly changed;
shrunken, and his ruddiness of complexion altered.'

'Why, he hardly takes half the exercise he used to do, so it's no
wonder. He has turned away all the men off the new works, which used
to be such an interest to him; and because the roan cob stumbled
with him one day, and nearly threw him, he won't ride it; and yet he
won't sell it and buy another, which would be the sensible plan; so
there are two old horses eating their heads off, while he is
constantly talking about money and expense. And that brings me to
what I was going to say. I'm desperately hard up for money, and so
I've been collecting my poems--weeding them well, you know--going
over them quite critically, in fact; and I want to know if you think
Deighton would publish them. You've a name in Cambridge, you know;
and I daresay he would look at them if you offered them to him.'

'I can but try,' said Roger; 'but I'm afraid you won't get much by
them.'

'I don't expect much. I'm a new man, and must make my name. I should
be content with a hundred. If I'd a hundred pounds I'd set myself to
do something. I might keep myself and Aimee by my writings
while I studied for the bar; or, if the worst came to the worst, a
hundred pounds would take us to Australia.'

'Australia! Why, Osborne, what could you do there? And leave my
father! I hope you'll never get your hundred pounds, if that's the
use you're to make of it! Why, you'd break the squire's heart.'

'It might have done once,' said Osborne, gloomily, 'but it would not
now. He looks at me askance, and shies away from conversation with
me. Let me alone for noticing and feeling this kind of thing. It's
this very susceptibility to outward things that gives me what
faculty I have; and it seems to me as if my bread, and my wife's
too, were to depend upon it. You'll soon see for yourself the terms
which I am on with my father!'

Roger did soon see. His father had slipped into a habit of silence
at meal times--a habit which Osborne, who was troubled and anxious
enough for his own part, had not striven to break. Father and son
sate together, and exchanged all the necessary speeches connected
with the occasion civilly enough; but it was a relief to them when
their intercourse was over, and they separated--the father to brood
over his sorrow and his disappointment, which were real and deep
enough, and the injury he had received from his boy, which was
exaggerated in his mind by his ignorance of the actual steps Osborne
had taken to raise money. If the money-lenders had calculated the
chances of his father's life or death in making their bargain,
Osborne himself had thought only of how soon and how easily lie
could get the money requisite for clearing him from all imperious
claims at Cambridge, and for enabling him to follow Aimee to
her home in Alsace, and for the subsequent marriage. As yet, Roger
had never seen his brother's wife; indeed, he had only been taken
into Osborne's full confidence after all was decided in which his
advice could have been useful. And now, in the enforced separation,
Osborne's whole thought, both the poetical and practical sides of
his mind, ran upon the little wife who was passing her lonely days
in farmhouse lodgings, wondering when her bridegroom husband would
come to her next. With such an engrossing subject it was, perhaps,
no wonder that he unconsciously neglected his father; but it was
none the less sad at the time, and to be regretted in its
consequences.

'I may come in and have a pipe with you, sir, mayn't I?' said Roger,
that first evening, pushing gently against the study-door, which his
father held only half open.

'You'll not like it,' said the squire, still holding the door
against him, but speaking in a relenting tone. 'The tobacco I use
isn't what young men like. Better go and have a cigar with Osborne.'

'No. I want to sit with you, and I can stand pretty strong tobacco.'

Roger pushed in, the resistance slowly giving way before him.

'It will make your clothes smell. You'll have to borrow Osborne's
scents to sweeten yourself,' said the squire, grimly, at the same
time pushing a short smart amber-mouthed pipe to his son.

'No; I'll have a churchwarden. Why, father, do you think I'm a baby
to put up with a doll's head like this?' looking at the carving upon
it.

The squire was pleased in his heart, though he did not choose to
show it. He only said, 'Osborne brought it me when he came back from
Germany. That's three years ago.' And then for some time they smoked
in silence. But the voluntary companionship of his son was very
soothing to the squire, though not a word might be said. The next
speech he made showed the direction of his thoughts; indeed his
words were always a transparent medium through which the current
might be seen.

'A deal of a man's life comes and goes in three years--I've found
that out.' And he puffed away at his pipe again. While Roger was
turning over in his mind what answer to make to this truism, the
squire again stopped his smoking and spoke.

'I remember when there was all that fuss about the Prince of Wales
being made Regent, I read somewhere--I daresay it was in a
newspaper--that kings and their heirs-apparent were always on bad
terms. Osborne was quite a little chap then: he used to go out
riding with me on White Surrey; you won't remember the pony we
called White Surrey?'

'I remember it; but I thought it a tall horse in those days.'

'Ah! that was because you were such a small lad, you know. I had
seven horses in the stable then--not counting the farm-horses. I
don't recollect having a care then, except--~she~ was always
delicate, you know. But what a beautiful boy Osborne was! He was
always dressed in black velvet--it was a foppery, but it wasn't my
doing, and it was all right, I'm sure. He's a handsome fellow now,
but the sunshine has gone out of his face.'

'He's a good deal troubled about this money, and the anxiety he has
given you,' said Roger, rather taking his brother's feelings for
granted.

'Not he,' said the squire, taking the pipe out of his mouth, and
hitting the bowl so sharply against the hob that it broke in pieces.
'There! But never mind! I say, not he, Roger! He's none troubled
about the money. It's easy getting money from Jews if you're the
eldest son, and the heir. They just ask, "How old is your father,
and has he had a stroke, or a fit?" and it's settled out of hand,
and then they come prowling about a place, and running down the
timber and land--Don't let us speak of him; it's no good, Roger. He
and I are out of tune, and it seems to me as if only God Almighty
could put us to rights. It's thinking of how he grieved her at last
that makes me so bitter with him. And yet there's a deal of good in
him! and he's so quick and clever, if only he'd give his mind to
things. Now, you were always slow, Roger--all your masters used to
say so.'

Roger laughed a little,--

'Yes; I'd many a nickname at school for my slowness,' said he.

'Never mind!' said the squire, consolingly. 'I'm sure I don't. If
you were a clever fellow like Osborne yonder, you'd be all for
caring for books and writing, and you'd perhaps find it as dull as
he does to keep company with a bumpkin-Squire Jones like me. Yet I
daresay they think a deal of you at Cambridge,' said he, after a
pause, 'since you've got this fine wranglership; I'd nearly
forgotten that--the news came at such a miserable time.'

'Well, yes! They're always proud of the senior wrangler of the year
up at Cambridge. Next year I must abdicate.'

The squire sate and gazed into the embers, still holding his useless
pipe-stem. At last he said, in a low voice, as if scarcely aware he
had got a listener,--'I used to write to her when she was away in
London, and tell her the home news. But no letter will reach her
now! Nothing reaches her!'

Roger started up.

'Where's the tobacco-box, father? Let me fill you another pipe!' and
when he had done so, he stooped over his father and stroked his
cheek. The squire shook his head.

'You've only just come home, lad. You don't know me, as I am
now-a-days! Ask Robinson--I won't have you asking Osborne, he ought
to keep it to himself--but any of the servants will tell you I'm not
like the same man for getting into passions with them. I used to be
reckoned a good master, but that is past now! Osborne was once a
little boy, and she was once alive--and I was once a good master--a
good master--yes! It is all past now.'

He took up his pipe, and began to smoke afresh, and Roger, after a
silence of some minutes, began a long story about some Cambridge
man's misadventure on the hunting-field, telling it with such humour
that the squire was beguiled into hearty laughing. When they rose to
go to bed, his father said to Roger,--

'Well, we've had a pleasant evening--at least, I have. But perhaps
you have not; for I'm but poor company now, know.'

'I don't know when I've passed a happier evening, father,' said
Roger. And he spoke truly, though he did not trouble himself to find
out the cause of his happiness.


CHAPTER XXIV


MRS GIBSON'S LITTLE DINNER


All this had taken place before Roger's first meeting with Molly and
Cynthia at Miss Brownings'; and the little dinner on the Friday at
Mr. Gibson's, which followed in due sequence.

Mrs. Gibson intended the Hamleys to find this dinner pleasant; and
they did. Mr. Gibson was fond of these two young men, both for their
parents' sake and their own, for he had known them since boyhood;
and to those whom he liked Mr. Gibson could be remarkably agreeable.
Mrs. Gibson really gave them a welcome--and cordiality in a hostess
is a very becoming mantle for any other deficiencies there may be.
Cynthia and Molly looked their best, which was all the duty Mrs
Gibson absolutely required of them, as she was willing enough to
take her full share in the conversation. Osborne fell to her lot, of
course, and for some time he and she prattled on with all the case
of manner and commonplaceness of meaning which go far to make the
'art of polite conversation.' Roger, who ought to have made himself
agreeable to one or the other of the young ladies, was exceedingly
interested in what Mr. Gibson was telling him of a paper on
comparative osteology in some foreign journal of science, which Lord
Hollingford was in the habit of forwarding to his friend the country
surgeon. Yet every now and then while he listened he caught his
attention wandering to the face of Cynthia, who was placed between
his brother and Mr. Gibson. She was not particularly occupied with
attending to anything that was going on; her eyelids were carelessly
dropped, as she crumbled her bread on the tablecloth, and her
beautiful long eyelashes were seen on the clear tint of her oval
cheek. She was thinking of something else; Molly was trying to
understand with all her might. Suddenly Cynthia looked up, and
caught Roger's gaze of intent admiration too fully for her to be
unaware that he was staring at her. She coloured a little, but after
the first moment of rosy confusion at his evident admiration of her,
she flew to the attack, diverting his confusion at thus being
caught, to the defence of himself from her accusation.

'It is quite true!' she said to him. 'I was not attending: you see I
don't know even the A B C of science. But, please, don't look so
severely at me, even if I am a dunce!'

'I did not know--I did not mean to look severely, I am sure,'
replied he, not knowing well what to say.

'Cynthia is not a dunce either,' said Mrs. Gibson, afraid lest her
daughter's opinion of herself might be taken seriously. 'But I have
always observed that some people have a talent for one thing and
some for another. Now Cynthia's talents are not for science and the
severer studies. Do you remember, love, what trouble I had to teach
you the use of the globes?'

'Yes; and I don't know longitude from latitude now; and I'm always
puzzled as to which is perpendicular and which is horizontal.'

'Yet, I do assure you,' her mother continued, rather addressing
herself to Osborne 'that her memory for poetry is prodigious. I have
heard her repeat the "Prisoner of Chillon" from beginning to end.'

'It would be rather a bore to have to hear her, I think,' said Mr
Gibson, smiling at Cynthia, who gave him back one of her bright
looks of mutual understanding.

'Ah, Mr. Gibson, I have found out before now that you have no soul
for poetry; and Molly there is your own child. She reads such deep
books--all about facts and figures: she'll be quite a blue-stocking
by and by.'

'Mamma,' said Molly, reddening, 'you think it was a deep book
because there were the shapes of the different cells of bees in it;
but it was not at all deep. It was very interesting.'

'Never mind, Molly,' said Osborne. 'I stand up for blue-stockings!'

'And I object to the distinction implied in what you say,' said
Roger. 'It was not deep, ~ergo~, it was very interesting. Now, a
book may be both deep and interesting.'

'Oh, if you are going to chop logic and use Latin words, I think it
is time for us to leave the room,' said Mrs. Gibson.

'Don't let us run away as if we were beaten, mamma,' said Cynthia.
'Though it may be logic, I, for one, can understand what Mr. Roger
Hamley said just now; and I read some of Molly's book; and whether
it was deep or not I found it very interesting--more so than I
should think the "Prisoner of Chillon" now-a-days. I've displaced
the Prisoner to make room for Johnnie Gilpin as my favourite poem.'

'How could you talk such nonsense, Cynthia?' said Mrs. Gibson, as the
girls followed her upstairs. 'You know you are not a dunce. It is
all very well not to be a blue-stocking, because gentle-people don't
like that kind of woman; but running yourself down, and
contradicting all I said about your liking for Byron, and poets and
poetry--to Osborne Hamley of all men, too!'

Mrs. Gibson spoke quite crossly for her.

'But, mamma,' Cynthia replica, 'I am either a dunce, or I am not. If
I am, I did right to own it; if I am not, he's a dunce if he doesn't
find out I was joking.'

'Well,' said Mrs. Gibson, a little puzzled by this speech, and
wanting some elucidatory addition.

'Only that if he's a dunce his opinion of me is worth nothing. So,
any way, it doesn't signify.'

'You really bewilder me with your nonsense, child. Molly is worth
twenty of you.'

'I quite agree with you, mamma,' said Cynthia, turning round to take
Molly's hand.

'Yes; but she ought not to be,' said Mrs. Gibson, still irritated.
'Think of the advantages you've had.'

'I'm afraid I had rather be a dunce than a blue-stocking,' said
Molly; for the term had a little annoyed her, and the annoyance was
rankling still.

'Hush; here they are coming: I hear the dining-room door! I never
meant you were a blue-stocking, dear, so don't look vexed.--Cynthia,
my love, where did you get those lovely flowers--anemones, are they?
They suit your complexion so exactly.'

'Come, Molly, don't look so grave and thoughtful,' exclaimed
Cynthia. 'Don't you perceive mamma wants us to be smiling and
amiable?'

Mr. Gibson had had to go out to his evening round; and the young men
were all too glad to come up into the pretty drawing-room; the
bright little wood fire; the comfortable easy chairs which, with so
small a party, might be drawn round the hearth; the good-natured
hostess; the pretty, agreeable girls. Roger sauntered up to the
corner where Cynthia was standing, playing with a hand-screen.

'There is a charity ball in Hollingford soon, isn't there?' asked
he.

'Yes; on Easter Tuesday,' she replied.

'Are you going? I suppose you are?'

'Yes; mamma is going to take Molly and me.'

'You will enjoy it very much--going together?'

For the first time during this little conversation she glanced up at
him--real honest pleasure shining out of her eyes.

'Yes; going together will make the enjoyment of the thing. It would
be dull without her.'

'You are great friends, then?' he asked.

'I never thought I should like any one so much,--any girl I mean.'

She put in the final reservation in all simplicity of heart; and in
all simplicity did he understand it. He came ever so little nearer,
and dropped his voice a little.

'I was so anxious to know. I am so glad. I have often wondered how
you two were getting on.'

'Have you?' said she, looking up again. 'At Cambridge? You must be
very fond of Molly!'

'Yes, I am. She was with us so long; and at such a time! I look upon
her almost as a sister.'

'And she is very fond of all of you. I seem to know you all from
hearing her talk about you so much.--All of you!' said she, laying
an emphasis on 'all' to show that it included the dead as well as
the living. Roger was silent for a minute or two.

'I didn't know you, even by hearsay. So you mustn't wonder that I
was a little afraid. But as soon as I saw you, I knew how it must
be; and it was such a relief!'

'Cynthia,' said Mrs. Gibson, who thought that the younger son had had
quite his share of low, confidential conversation, 'come here, and
sing that little French ballad to Mr. Osborne Hamley.'

'Which do you mean, mamma? "Tu t'en repentiras, Colin"?'

'Yes; such a pretty, playful little warning to young men,' said Mrs
Gibson, smiling up at Osborne. 'The refrain is--

Tu t'en repentiras, Colin,
Tu t'en repentiras,
Car si tu prends une femme, Colin,
Tu t'en repentiras.

The advice may apply very well when there is a French wife in the
case; but not, I am sure, to an Englishman who is thinking of an
English wife.'

This choice of a song was exceedingly ~mal-apropos~, had Mrs
Gibson but known it. Osborne and Roger knowing that the wife of the
former was a Frenchwoman, and, conscious of each other's knowledge,
felt doubly awkward. while Molly was as much confused as though she
herself were secretly married. However, Cynthia carolled the saucy
ditty out, and her mother smiled at it, in total ignorance of any
application it might have. Osborne had instinctively gone to stand
behind Cynthia, as she sate at the piano, so as to be ready to turn
over the leaves of her music if she required it. He kept his hands
in his pockets and his eyes fixed on her fingers; his countenance
clouded with gravity at all the merry quips which she so playfully
sang. Roger looked grave as well, but was much more at his case than
his brother; indeed, he was half-amused by the awkwardness of the
situation. He caught Molly's troubled eyes and heightened colour,
and he saw that she was feeling this ~contretemps~ more seriously
than she needed to do. He moved to a seat by her, and half
whispered, 'Too late a warning, is it not?'

Molly looked up at him as he leant towards her, and replied in the
same tone,--'Oh, I am so sorry!'

'You need not be. He won't mind it long; and a man must take the
consequences when he puts himself in a false position.'

Molly could not tell what to reply to this, so she hung her head and
kept silence. Yet she could see that Roger did not change his
attitude or remove his hand from the back of his chair, and,
impelled by curiosity to find out the cause of his stillness, she
looked up at him at length, and saw his gaze fixed on the two who
were near the piano. Osborne was saying something eagerly to
Cynthia, whose grave eyes were upturned to him with soft intentness
of expression, and her pretty mouth half-open, with a sort of
impatience for him to cease speaking, that she might reply.

'They are talking about France,' said Roger, in answer to Molly's
unspoken question. 'Osborne knows it well, and Miss Kirkpatrick has
been at school there, you know. It sounds very interesting; shall we
go nearer and hear what they are saying?'

It was all very well to ask this civilly, but Molly thought it would
have been better to wait for her answer. Instead of waiting,
however, Roger went to the piano, and, leaning on it, appeared to
join in the light merry talk, while he feasted his eyes as much as
he dared by looking at Cynthia. Molly suddenly felt as if she could
scarcely keep from crying--a minute ago he had been so near to her,
and talking so pleasantly and confidentially; and now he almost
seemed as if he had forgotten her existence. She thought that all
this was wrong; and she exaggerated its wrongness to herself;
'mean,' and 'envious of Cynthia,' and 'ill-natured,' and 'selfish,'
were the terms she kept applying to herself; but it did no good, she
was just as naughty at the last as at the first.

Mrs. Gibson broke into the state of things which Molly thought was to
endure for ever. Her work had been intricate up to this time, and
had required a great deal of counting; so she had had no time to
attend to her duties, one of which she always took to be to show
herself to the world as an impartial stepmother. Cynthia had played
and sung, and now she must give Molly her turn of exhibition.
Cynthia's singing and playing was light and graceful, but anything
but correct; but she herself was so charming, that it was only
fanatics for music who cared for false chords and omitted notes.
Molly, on the contrary, had an excellent ear, if she had ever been
well taught; and both from inclination and conscientious
perseverance of disposition, she would go over an incorrect passage
for twenty times. But she was very shy of playing in company; and
when forced to do it, she went through her performance heavily, and
hated her handiwork more than any one.

'Now, you must play a little, Molly,' said Mrs. Gibson; 'play us that
beautiful piece of Kalkbrenner's,' my dear.'

Molly looked up at her stepmother with beseeching eyes, but it only
brought out another form of request, still more like a command.

'Go at once, my dear. You may not play it quite rightly; and I know
you are very nervous; but you're quite amongst friends.'

So there was a disturbance made in the little group at the piano,
and Molly sate down to her martyrdom.

'Please, go away!' said she to Osborne, who was standing behind her
ready to turn over. 'I can quite well do it for myself. And oh! if
you would but talk!'

Osborne remained where he was in spite of her appeal, and gave her
what little approval she got; for Mrs. Gibson, exhausted by her
previous labour of counting her stitches, fell asleep in her
comfortable sofa-corner near the fire; and Roger, who began at first
to talk a little in compliance with Molly's request, found his
tete-a-tete with Cynthia so agreeable, that Molly
lost her place several times in trying to catch a sudden glimpse of
Cynthia sitting at her work, and Roger by her, intent on catching
her low replies to what he was saying.

'There, now I've done!' said Molly, standing up quickly as soon as
she had finished the eighteen dreary pages; 'and I think I will
never sit down to play again!'

Osborne laughed at her vehemence. Cynthia began to take some part in
what was being said, and thus made the conversation general. Mrs
Gibson wakened up gracefully, as was her way of doing all things,
and slid into the subjects they were talking about so easily, that
she almost succeeded in making them believe she had never been
asleep at all.


CHAPTER XXV


HOLLINGFORD IN A BUSTLE


All Hollingford felt as if there was a great deal to be done before
Easter this year. There was Easter proper, which always required new
clothing of some kind, for fear of certain consequences from little
birds, who were supposed to resent the impiety of those who do not
wear some new article of dress on Easter-day.' And most ladies
considered it wiser that the little birds should see the new article
for themselves, and not have to take it upon trust, as they would
have to do if it were merely a pocket-handkerchief, or a petticoat,
or any article of under-clothing. So piety demanded a new bonnet, or
a new gown; and was barely satisfied with an Easter pair of gloves.
Miss Rose was generally very busy just before Easter in Hollingford.
Then this year there was the charity ball. Ashcombe, Hollingford,
and Coreham were three neighbouring towns, of about the same number
of population, lying at the three equidistant corners of a triangle.
In imitation of greater cities with their festivals, these three
towns had agreed to have an annual ball for the benefit of the
county hospital to be held in turn at each place; and Hollingford
was to be the place this year.

It was a fine time for hospitality, and every house of any
pretension was as full as it could hold, and flys were engaged long
months before.

If Mrs. Gibson could have asked Osborne, or in default, Roger Hamley
to go to the ball with them and to sleep at their house,--or if,
indeed, she could have picked up any stray scion of a 'county
family' to whom such an offer would have been a convenience, she
would have restored her own dressing-room to its former use as the
spare-room, with pleasure. But she did not think it was worth her
while to put herself out for any of the humdrum and ill-dressed
women who had been her former acquaintance at Ashcombe. For Mr
Preston it might have been worth while to give up her room,
considering him in the light of a handsome and prosperous young man,
and a good dancer besides. But there were more lights in which he
was to be viewed. Mr. Gibson, who really wanted to return the
hospitality shown to him by Mr. Preston at the time of his marriage,
had yet an instinctive distaste to the man, which no wish of freeing
himself from obligation, nor even the more worthy feeling of
hospitality, could overcome. Mrs. Gibson had some old grudges of her
own against him, but she was not one to retain angry feelings, or be
very active in her retaliation; she was afraid of Mr. Preston, and
admired him at the same time. It was awkward too--so she said--to go
into a ball-room without any gentleman at all, and Mr. Gibson was so
uncertain! On the whole--partly for this last-given reason, and
partly because conciliation was the best policy, Mrs. Gibson herself
was slightly in favour of inviting Mr. Preston to be their guest. But
as soon as Cynthia heard the question discussed--or rather, as soon
as she heard it discussed in Mr. Gibson's absence, she said that if
Mr. Preston came to be their visitor on the occasion, she for one
would not go to the ball at all. She did not speak with vehemence or
in anger; but with such quiet resolution that Molly looked up in
surprise. She saw that Cynthia was keeping her eyes fixed on her
work, and that she had no intention of meeting any one's gaze, or
giving any further explanation. Mrs. Gibson, too, looked perplexed,
and once or twice seemed on the point of asking some question; but
she was not angry as Molly had fully expected. She watched Cynthia
furtively and in silence for a minute or two, and then said that
after all she could not conveniently give up her dressing-room; and
altogether, they had better say no more about it. So no stranger was
invited to stay at Mr. Gibson's at the time of the ball; but Mrs
Gibson openly spoke of her regret at the unavoidable inhospitality,
and hoped that they might be able to build an addition to their
house before the triennial Hollingford ball.

Another cause of unusual bustle at Hollingford this Easter was the
expected return of the family to the Towers, after their unusually
long absence. Mr. Sheepshanks might be seen trotting up and down on
his stout old cob, speaking to attentive masons, plasterers, and
glaziers about putting everything--on the outside at least--about
the cottages belonging to 'my lord,' in perfect repair. Lord Cumnor
owned the greater part of the town; and those who lived under other
landlords, or in houses of their own, were stirred up by the dread
of contrast to do up their dwellings. So the ladders of whitewashers
and painters were sadly in the way of the ladies tripping daintily
along to make their purchases, and holding their gowns up in a bunch
behind, after a fashion quite gone out in these days.' The
housekeeper and steward from the Towers might also be seen coming in
to give orders at the various shops; and stopping here and there at
those kept by favourites, to avail themselves of the
eagerly-tendered refreshments.

Lady Harriet came to call on her old governess the day after the
arrival of the family at the Towers. Molly and Cynthia were out
walking when she came--doing some errands for Mrs. Gibson, who had a
secret idea that Lady Harriet would call at the particular time she
did, and had a not uncommon wish to talk to her ladyship without the
corrective presence of any member of her own family.

Mrs. Gibson did not give Molly the message of remembrance that Lady
Harriet had left for her; but she imparted various pieces of news
relating to the Towers with great animation and interest. The
Duchess of Menteith and her daughter, Lady Alice, were coming to the
Towers; would be there the day of the ball; would come to the ball;
and the Menteith diamonds were famous. That was piece of news the
first. The second was that ever so many gentlemen were coming to the
Towers--some English, some French. This piece of news would have
come first in order of importance had there been much probability of
their being dancing men, and, as such, possible partners at the
coming ball. But Lady Harriet had spoken of them as Lord
Hollingford's friends, useless scientific men in all probability.
Then, finally, Mrs. Gibson was to go to the Towers next day to lunch;
Lady Cumnor had written a little note by Lady Harriet to beg her to
come; if Mrs. Gibson could manage to find her way to the Towers, one
of the carriages in use should bring her back to her own home in the
course of the afternoon.

'The dear countess!' said Mrs. Gibson, with soft affection. It was a
soliloquy, uttered after a minute's pause, at the end of all this
information.

And all the rest of that day her conversation had an aristocratic
perfume hanging about it. One of the few books she had brought with
her into Mr. Gibson's house was bound in pink, and in it she studied
'Menteith, Duke of, Adolphus George,' &c. &c., till she was fully up
in all the duchess's connections, and probable interests. Mr. Gibson
made his mouth up into a droll whistle when he came home at night,
and found himself in a Towers' atmosphere. Molly saw the shade of
annoyance through the drollery; she was beginning to see it oftener
than she liked, not that she reasoned upon it, or that she
consciously traced the annoyance to its source; but she could not
help feeling uneasy in herself when she knew her father was in the
least put out.

Of course a fly was ordered for Mrs. Gibson. In the early afternoon
she came home. If she had been disappointed in her interview with
the countess she never told her woe, nor revealed the fact that when
she first arrived at the Towers she had to wait for an hour in Lady
Cumnor's morning-room, uncheered by any companionship save that of
her old friend Mrs. Bradley, till suddenly, Lady Harriet coming in,
she exclaimed, 'Why, Clare! you dear woman! are you here all alone?
Does mamma know?' And, after a little more affectionate
conversation, she rushed to find her ladyship, perfectly aware of
the fact, but too deep in giving the duchess the benefit of her
wisdom and experience in trousseaux to be at all aware of the length
of time Mrs. Gibson had been passing in patient solitude. At lunch
Mrs. Gibson was secretly hurt by my lord's supposing it to be her
dinner, and calling out his urgent hospitality from the very bottom
of the table, giving as a reason for it, that she must remember it
was her dinner. In vain she piped out in her soft, high voice, 'Oh,
my lord! I never eat meat in the middle of the day; I can hardly eat
anything at lunch.' Her voice was lost, and the duchess might go
away with the idea that the Hollingford doctor's wife dined early;
that is to say, if her grace ever condescended to have any idea on
the subject at all; which presupposes that she was cognizant of the
facts of there being a doctor at Hollingford, and that he had a
wife, and that his wife was the pretty, faded, elegant-looking woman
sending away her plate of untasted food--food that she longed to
eat, for she was really desperately hungry after her drive and her
solitude.

And then, after lunch, there did come a tete-a-tete
with Lady Cumnor, which was conducted after this wise:--

'Well, Clare! I am really glad to see you. I once thought I should
never get back to the Towers, but here I am! There was such a clever
man at Bath--a Doctor Snape--he cured me at last--quite set me up. I
really think if ever I am ill again I shall send for him: it is such
a thing to find a really clever medical man. Oh, by the way, I
always forget you've married Mr. Gibson--of course he is very clever,
and all that. (The carriage to the door in ten minutes, Brown, and
desire Bradley to bring my things down.) What was I asking you? Oh!
how do you get on with the step-daughter. She seemed to me to be a
young lady with a pretty stubborn will of her own. I put a letter
for the post down somewhere, and I cannot think where; do help me to
look for it, there's a good woman. Just run to my room, and see if
Brown can find it, for it is of great consequence.'

Off went Mrs. Gibson rather unwillingly; for there were several
things she had wanted to speak about, and she had not heard half of
what she had expected to learn of the family gossip. But all chance
was gone; for when she came back from her fruitless errand, Lady
Cumnor and the duchess were in full talk, Lady Cumnor with the
missing letter in her hand, which she was using something like a
baton to enforce her words.

'Every iota from Paris! Every i-o-ta!'

Lady Cumnor was too much of a lady not to apologize for useless
trouble, but they were nearly the last words she spoke to Mrs
Gibson, for she had to go out and drive with the duchess; and the
brougham to take 'Clare' (as she persisted in calling Mrs. Gibson)
back to Hollingford, followed the carriage to the door. Lady Harriet
came away from her entourage of young men and young ladies, all
prepared for some walking expedition, to wish Mrs. Gibson good-by.

'We shall see you at the ball,' she said. 'You'll be there with your
two girls, of course, and I must have a little talk with you there;
with all these visitors in the house, it has been impossible to see
anything of you to-day, you know.'

Such were the facts, but rose-colour was the medium through which
they were seen by Mrs. Gibson's household listeners on her return.

'There are many visitors staying at the Towers--oh, yes! a great
many: the duchess and Lady Alice, and Mr. and Mrs. Grey, and Lord
Albert Monson and his sister, and my old friend Captain James of the
Blues--many more, in fact. But of course I preferred going to Lady
Cumnor's own room, where I could see her and Lady Harriet quietly,
and where we were not disturbed by the bustle downstairs. Of course
we were obliged to go down to lunch, and then I saw my old friends,
and renewed pleasant acquaintances. But I really could hardly get
any connected conversation with any one. Lord Cumnor seemed so
delighted to see me there again: though there were six or seven
between us, he was always interrupting with some civil or kind
speech especially addressed to me. And after lunch Lady Cumnor asked
me all sorts of questions about my new life with as much interest as
if I had been her daughter. To be sure, when the duchess came in we
had to leave off, and talk about the trousseau she is preparing for
Lady Alice. Lady Harriet made such a point of our meeting at the
ball; she is a good, affectionate creature, is Lady Harriet!'

This last was said in a tone of meditative appreciation.

The afternoon of the day on which the ball was to take place, a
servant rode over from Hamley with two lovely nosegays, 'with the Mr
Hamleys' compliments to Miss Gibson and Miss Kirkpatrick.' Cynthia
was the first to receive them. She came dancing into the
drawing-room, flourishing the flowers about in either hand, and
danced up to Molly, who was trying to settle to her reading, by way
of passing the time away till the evening came.

'Look, Molly, look! Here are bouquets for us! Long life to the
givers!'

'Who are they from?' asked Molly, taking hold of one, and examining
it with tender delight at its beauty.

'Who from? Why, the two paragons of Hamleys, to be sure! Is it not a
pretty attention?'

'How kind of them!' said Molly.

'I'm sure it is Osborne who thought of it. He has been so much
abroad, where it is such a common compliment to send bouquets to
young ladies.'

'I don't see why you should think it is Osborne's thought!' said
Molly, reddening a little. 'Mr. Roger Hamley used to gather nosegays
constantly for his mother, and sometimes for me.'

'Well, never mind whose thought it was, or who gathered them; we've
got the flowers, and that's enough. Molly, I'm sure these red
flowers will just match your coral necklace and bracelets,' said
Cynthia, pulling out some camellias, then a rare kind of flower.

'Oh, please, don't!' exclaimed Molly. 'Don't you see how carefully
the colours are arranged--they have taken such pains; please,
don't.'

'Nonsense!' said Cynthia, continuing to pull them out; 'see, here
are quite enough. I'll make you a little coronet of them--sewn on
black velvet, which will never be seen--just as they do in France!'

'Oh, I am so sorry! It is quite spoilt,' said Molly.

'Never mind! I'll take this spoilt bouquet; I can make it up again
just as prettily as ever; and you shall have this, which has never
been touched.' Cynthia went on arranging the crimson buds and
flowers to her taste. Molly said nothing, but kept on watching
Cynthia's nimble fingers tying up the wreath.

'There,' said Cynthia, at last, 'when that is sewn on black velvet,
to keep the flowers from dying, you'll see how pretty it will look.
And there are enough red flowers in this untouched nosegay to carry
out the idea!'

'Thank you' (very slowly). 'But shan't you mind having only the
wrecks of the other?'

'Not I; red flowers would not go with my pink dress.'

'But--I daresay they arranged each nosegay so carefully!'

'Perhaps they did. But I never would allow sentiment to interfere
with my choice of colours; and pink does tie one down. Now you, in
white muslin, just tipped with crimson, like a daisy, may wear
anything.'

Cynthia took the utmost pains in dressing Molly, leaving the clever
housemaid to her mother's exclusive service. Mrs. Gibson was more
anxious about her attire than was either of the girls; it had given
her occasion for deep thought and not a few sighs. Her deliberation
had ended in her wearing her pearl-grey satin wedding-gown, with a
profusion of lace, and white and coloured lilacs. Cynthia was the
one who took the affair the most lightly. Molly looked upon the
ceremony of dressing for a first ball as rather a serious ceremony;
certainly as an anxious proceeding. Cynthia was almost as anxious as
herself; only Molly wanted her appearance to be correct and
unnoticed; and Cynthia was desirous of setting off Molly's rather
peculiar charms--her cream-coloured skin, her profusion of curly
black hair, her beautiful long-shaped eyes, with their shy, loving
expression. Cynthia took up so much time in dressing Molly to her
mind, that she herself had to perform her ~toilette~ in a hurry.
Molly, ready dressed, sate on a low chair in Cynthia's room,
watching the pretty creature's rapid movements, as she stood in her
petticoat before the glass, doing up her hair, with quick certainty
of effect. At length, Molly heaved a long sigh, and said,--

'I should like to be pretty!'

'Why, Molly,' said Cynthia, turning round with an exclamation on the
tip of her tongue; but when she caught the innocent, wistful look on
Molly's face, she instinctively checked what she was going to say,
and, half-smiling to her own reflection in the glass, she
said,--'The French girls would tell you, to believe that you were
pretty would make you so.'

Molly paused before replying,--

'I suppose they would mean that if you knew you were pretty, you
would never think about your looks; you would be so certain of being
liked, and that it is caring--'

'Listen! that's eight o'clock striking. Don't trouble yourself with
trying to interpret a French girl's meaning, but help me on with my
frock, there's a dear one.'

The two girls were dressed, and were standing over the fire waiting
for the carriage in Cynthia's room, when Maria (Betty's successor)
came hurrying into the room. Maria had been officiating as maid to
Mrs. Gibson, but she had had intervals of leisure, in which she had
rushed upstairs, and, under the pretence of offering her services,
she had seen the young ladies' dresses, and the sight of so many
fine clothes had sent her into a state of excitement which made her
think nothing of rushing upstairs for the twentieth time, with a
nosegay still more beautiful than the two previous ones.

'Here, Miss Kirkpatrick! No, it's not for you, miss!' as Molly,
being nearer to the door, offered to take it and pass it to Cynthia.
'It's for Miss Kirkpatrick; and there's a note for her besides!'

Cynthia said nothing, but took the note and the flowers. She held
the note so that Molly could read it at the same time she did.

I send you some flowers; and you must allow me
to claim the first dance after nine o'clock, before
which time I fear I cannot arrive.--R. P.

'Who is it?' asked Molly.

Cynthia looked extremely irritated, indignant, perplexed--what was
it turned her cheek so pale, and made her eyes so full of fire?

'It is Mr. Preston,' said she, in answer to Molly. 'I shall not dance
with him; and here go his flowers--'

Into the very middle of the embers, which she immediately stirred
down upon the beautiful shrivelling petals as if she wished to
annihilate them as soon as possible. Her voice had never been
raised; it was as sweet as usual; nor, though her movements were
prompt enough, were they hasty or violent.

'Oh!' said Molly, 'those beautiful flowers! We might have put them
in water.'

'No,' said Cynthia; 'it's best to destroy them. We don't want them;
and I can't bear to be reminded of that man.'

'It was an impertinent familiar note,' said Molly. 'What right had
he to express himself in that way--no beginning, no end, and only
initials. Did you know him well when you were at Ashcombe, Cynthia?'

'Oh, don't let us think any more about him,' replied Cynthia. 'It is
quite enough to spoil any pleasure at the ball to think that he will
be there. But I hope I shall get engaged before he comes, so that I
can't dance with him--and don't you, either!'

'There! they are calling for us,' exclaimed Molly, and with quick
step, yet careful of their draperies, they made their way downstairs
to the place where Mr. and Mrs. Gibson awaited them. Yes: Mr. Gibson
was going; even if he had to leave them afterwards to attend to any
professional call. And Molly suddenly began to admire her father as
a handsome man, when she saw him now, in full evening attire. Mrs
Gibson, too--how pretty she was! In short, it was true that no
better-looking a party than these four people entered the
Hollingford ball-room that evening.


CHAPTER XXVI


A CHARITY BALL


At the present time there are few people at a public ball besides
the dancers and their chaperones, or relations in some degree
interested in them. But in the days when Molly and Cynthia were
young--before railroads were, and before their consequences, the
excursion-trains, which take every one up to London now-a-days,
there to see their fill of gay crowds and fine dresses--to go to an
annual charity-ball, even though all thought of dancing had passed
by years ago, and without any of the responsibilities of a
chaperone, was a very allowable and favourite piece of dissipation
to all the kindly old maids who thronged the country towns of
England. They aired their old lace and their best dresses; they saw
the aristocratic magnates of the country side; they gossipped with
their coevals, and speculated on the romances of the young around
them in a curious yet friendly spirit. The Miss Brownings would have
thought themselves sadly defrauded of the gayest event of the year,
if anything had prevented their attending the charity-ball, and Miss
Browning would have been indignant, Miss Phoebe aggrieved, had they
not been asked to Ashcombe and Coreham, by friends at each place,
who had, like them, gone through the dancing stage of life some
five-and-twenty years before, but who liked still to haunt the
scenes of their former enjoyment, and see a younger generation dance
on 'regardless of their doom.' They had come in one of the two
sedan-chairs that yet lingered in use at Hollingford; such a night
as this brought a regular harvest of gains to the two old men who,
in what was called the 'town's livery,' trotted backwards and
forwards with their many loads of ladies and finery. There were some
postchaises, and some 'flys,' but after mature deliberation Miss
Browning had decided to keep to the more comfortable custom of the
sedan-chair; 'which,' as she said to Miss Piper, one of her
visitors, 'came into the parlour, and got full of the warm air, and
nipped you up, and carried you tight and cosy into another warm
room, where you could walk out without having to show your legs by
going up steps, or down steps.' Of course only one could go at a
time; but here again a little of Miss Browning's good management
arranged everything so very nicely, as Miss Hornblower (their other
visitor) remarked. She went first, and remained in the warm
cloak-room until her hostess followed; and then the two ladies went
arm-in-arm into the ball-room, finding out convenient seats whence
they could watch the arrivals and speak to their passing friends,
until Miss Phoebe and Miss Piper entered, and came to take
possession of the seats reserved for them by Miss Browning's care.
These two younger ladies came in, also arm-in-arm, but with a
certain timid flurry in look and movement very different from the
composed dignity of their seniors (by two or three years). When all
four were once more assembled together, they took breath, and began
to converse.

'Upon my word, I really do think this is a better room than our
Ashcombe Court-house!'

'And how prettily it is decorated!' piped out Miss Piper. 'How well
the roses are made! But you all have such taste at Hollingford.'

'There's Mrs. Dempster,' cried Miss Hornblower; 'she said she and her
two daughters were asked to stay at Mr. Sheepshanks'. Mr
Preston was to be there, too; but I suppose they could not all come
at once. Look! and there is young Roscoe, our new doctor. I declare
it seems as if all Ashcombe were here. Mr. Roscoe! Mr. Roscoe! come
here and let me introduce you to the Miss Brownings, the friends we
are staying with. We think very highly of our young doctor, I can
assure you, Miss Browning.'

Mr. Roscoe bowed, and simpered at hearing his own praises. But Miss
Browning had no notion of having any doctor praised, who had come to
settle even on the very verge of Mr. Gibson's practice, so she said
to Miss Hornblower,--

'You must be glad, I am sure, to have somebody you can call in, if
you are in any sudden hurry, or for things that are too trifling to
trouble Mr. Gibson about; and I should think Mr. Roscoe would feel it
a great advantage to profit, as he will naturally have the
opportunity of doing, by witnessing Mr. Gibson's skill!'

Probably Mr. Roscoe would have felt more aggrieved by this speech
than he really was, if his attention had not been called off just
then by the entrance of the very Mr. Gibson who was being spoken of.
Almost before Miss Browning had ended her severe and depreciatory
remarks, he had asked his friend Miss Hornblower,--

'Who is that lovely girl in pink, just come in?'

'Why, that's Cynthia Kirkpatrick!' said Miss Hornblower, taking up a
ponderous gold eyeglass to make sure of her fact. 'How she has
grown! To be sure it is two or three years since she left
Ashcombe--she was very pretty then--people did say Mr. Preston
admired her very much; but she was so young!'

'Can you introduce me?' asked the impatient young surgeon. 'I should
like to ask her to dance.' When Miss Hornblower returned from her
greeting to her former acquaintance, Mrs. Gibson, and had
accomplished the introduction which Mr. Roscoe had requested, she
began her little confidences to Miss Browning.

'Well, to be sure! How condescending we are! I remember the time
when Mrs. Kirkpatrick wore old black silks, and was thankful and
civil as became her place as a schoolmistress, and as having to earn
her bread. And now she is in a satin; and she speaks to me as if she
just could recollect who I was, if she tried very hard! It isn't so
long ago since Mrs. Dempster came to consult me as to whether Mrs
Kirkpatrick would be offended, if she sent her a new breadth for her
lilac silk-gown, in place of one that had been spoilt by Mrs
Dempster's servant spilling the coffee over it the night before; and
she took it and was thankful, for all she's dressed in pearl-grey
satin now! And she would have been glad enough to marry Mr. Preston
in those days.'

'I thought you said he admired her daughter,' put in Miss Browning
to her irritated friend.

'Well! perhaps I did, and perhaps it was so; I am sure I can't tell;
he was a great deal at the house. Miss Dixon keeps a school in the
same house now, and I am sure she does it a great deal better.'

'The earl and the countess are very fond of Mrs. Gibson,' said Miss
Browning. 'I know, for Lady Harriet told us when she came to drink
tea with us last autumn; and they desired Mr. Preston to be very
attentive to her when she lived at Ashcombe.'

'For goodness' sake don't go and repeat what I've been saying about
Mr. Preston and Mrs. Kirkpatrick to her ladyship. One may be mistaken,
and you know I only said "people talked about it."'

Miss Hornblower was evidently alarmed lest her gossip should be
repeated to the Lady Harriet, who appeared to be on such an intimate
footing with her Hollingford friends. Nor did Miss Browning
dissipate the illusion. Lady Harriet had drunk tea with them, and
might do it again; and, at any rate, the little fright she had put
her friend into was not a bad return for that praise of Mr. Roscoe,
which had offended Miss Browning's loyalty to Mr. Gibson.

Meanwhile Miss Piper and Miss Phoebe, who had not the character of
~esprit-forts~ to maintain, talked of the dresses of the people
present, beginning by complimenting each other.

'What a lovely turban you have got on, Miss Piper, if I may be
allowed to say so: so becoming to your complexion!'

'Do you think so?' said Miss Piper, with ill-concealed
gratification; it was something to have a 'complexion' at
forty-five. 'I got it at Brown's, at Somerton, for this very ball. I
thought I must have something to set off my gown, which isn't quite
so new as it once was; and I have no handsome jewellery like
you'--looking with admiring eyes at a large miniature set round with
pearls, which served as a shield to Miss Phoebe's breast.

'It is handsome,' that lady replied. 'It is a likeness of my dear
mother; Sally has got my father on. The miniatures were both taken
at the same time; and just about then my uncle died and left us each
a legacy of fifty pounds, which we agreed to spend on the setting of
our miniatures. But because they are so valuable Sally always keeps
them locked up with the best silver, and hides the box somewhere;
she never will tell me where, because she says I've such weak
nerves, and that if a burglar, with a loaded pistol at my head, were
to ask me where we kept our plate and jewels, I should be sure to
tell him; and she says, for her part, she would never think of
revealing under any circumstances. (I'm sure I hope she won't be
tried.) But that's the reason I don't wear it often; it's only the
second time I've had it on; and I can't even get at it, and look at
it, which I should like to do. I shouldn't have had it on to-night,
but that Sally gave it out to me, saying it was but a proper
compliment to pay to the Duchess of Menteith, who is to be here in
all her diamonds.'

'Dear-ah-me! Is she really! Do you know I never saw a duchess
before.' And Miss Piper drew herself up and craned her neck, as if
resolved to 'behave herself properly,' as she had been taught to do
at boarding-school thirty years before, in the presence of 'her
grace.' By-and-by she said to Miss Phoebe, with a sudden jerk out of
position,--'Look, look! that's our Mr. Cholmley, the magistrate' (he
was the great man of Coreham), 'and that's Mrs. Cholmley in red
satin, and Mr. George and Mr. Harry from Oxford, I do declare; and
Miss Cholmley, and pretty Miss Sophy. I should like to go and speak
to them, but then it's so formidable crossing. a room without a
gentleman. And there is Coxe the butcher and his wife! Why, all
Coreham seems to be here! And how Mrs. Coxe can afford such a gown I
can't make out for one, for I know Coxe had some difficulty in
paying for the last sheep he bought of my brother.'

Just at this moment the band, consisting of two violins, a harp, and
an occasional clarionet, having finished their tuning, and brought
themselves as nearly into accord as was possible, struck up a brisk
country-dance, and partners quickly took their places. Mrs. Gibson
was secretly a little annoyed at Cynthia's being one of those to
stand up in this early dance, the performers in which were
principally the punctual plebeians of Hollingford, who, when a ball
was fixed to begin at eight, had no notion of being later, and so
losing part of the amusement for which they had paid their money.
She imparted some of her feelings to Molly, sitting by her, longing
to dance, and beating time to the spirited music with one of her
pretty little feet.

'Your dear papa is always so very punctual! To-night it seems almost
a pity, for we really are here before there is any one come that we
know.'

'Oh! I see so many people here that I know. There are Mr. and Mrs
Smeaton, and that nice good-tempered daughter.'

'Oh! booksellers and butchers if you will.'

'Papa has found a great many friends to talk to.'

'Patients, my dear--hardly friends. There are some nice-looking
people here,' catching her eye on the Cholmleys; 'but I daresay they
have driven over from the neighbourhood of Ashcombe or Coreham, and
have hardly calculated how soon they would get here. I wonder when
the Towers' party will come. Ah! there's Mr. Ashton, and Mr. Preston.
Come, the room is beginning to fill.'

So it was, for this was to be a very good ball, people said; and a
large party from the Towers was coming, and a duchess in diamonds
among the number. Every great house in the district was expected to
be full of guests on these occasions; but, at this early hour, the
townspeople had the floor almost entirely to themselves; the county
magnates came dropping in later; and chiefest among them all was the
lord-lieutenant from the Towers. But to-night they were unusually
late, and the aristocratic ozone being absent from the atmosphere,
there was a flatness about the dancing of all those who considered
themselves above the plebeian ranks of the tradespeople. They,
however, enjoyed themselves thoroughly, and sprang and pounded till
their eyes sparkled and their cheeks glowed with exercise and
excitement. Some of the more prudent parents, mindful of the next
day's duties, began to consider at what hour they ought to go home;
but with all there was an expressed or unexpressed curiosity to see
the duchess and her diamonds; for the Menteith diamonds were famous
in higher circles than that now assembled; and their fame had
trickled down to it through the medium of ladies'-maids and
housekeepers. Mr. Gibson had had to leave the ball-room for a time,
as he had anticipated, but he was to return to his wife as soon as
his duties were accomplished; and, in his absence, Mrs. Gibson kept
herself a little aloof from the Miss Brownings and those of her
acquaintance who would willingly have entered into conversation with
her, with the view of attaching herself to the skirts of the Towers'
party, when they should make their appearance. If Cynthia would not
be so very ready in engaging herself to every possible partner who
asked her to dance, there were sure to be young men staying at the
Towers who would be on the look-out for pretty girls: and who could
tell to what a dance would lead? Molly, too, though a less good
dancer than Cynthia, and, from her timidity, less graceful and easy,
was becoming engaged pretty deeply; and, it must be confessed, she
was longing to dance every dance, no matter with whom. Even she
might not be available for the more aristocratic partners Mrs. Gibson
anticipated. She was feeling very much annoyed with the whole
proceedings of the evening when she was aware of some one standing
by her; and, turning a little to one side, she saw Mr. Preston
keeping guard, as it were, over the seats which Molly and Cynthia
had just quitted. He was looking so black that, if their eyes had
not met, Mrs. Gibson would have preferred not speaking to him; as it
was, she thought it unavoidable.

'The rooms are not well-lighted to-night, are they, Mr. Preston?'

'No,' said he; 'but who could light such dingy old paint as this,
loaded with evergreens, too, which always darken a room.'

'And the company, too! I always think that freshness and brilliancy
of dress go as far as anything to brighten up a room. Look what a
set of people are here: the greater part of the women are dressed in
dark silks, really only fit for a morning. The place will be quite
different, by-and-by, when the county families are in a little more
force.'

Mr. Preston made no reply. He had put his glass in his eye,
apparently for the purpose of watching the dancers. If its exact
direction could have been ascertained, it would have been found that
he was looking intently and angrily at a flying figure in pink
muslin: many a one was gazing at Cynthia with intentness besides
himself, but no one in anger. Mrs. Gibson was not so fine an observer
as to read all this; but here was a gentlemanly and handsome young
man, to whom she could prattle, instead of either joining herself on
to objectionable people, or sitting all forlorn until the Towers'
party came. So she went on with her small remarks.

'You are not dancing, Mr. Preston!'

'No! The partner I had engaged has made some mistake. I am waiting
to have an explanation with her.'

Mrs. Gibson was silent. An uncomfortable tide of recollections
appeared to come over her; she, like Mr. Preston, watched Cynthia;
the dance was ended, and she was walking round the room in easy
unconcern as to what might await her. Presently her partner, Mr
Harry Cholmley, brought her back to her seat. She took that vacant
next to Mr. Preston, leaving that by her mother for Molly's
occupation. The latter returned a moment afterwards to her place.
Cynthia seemed entirely unconscious of Mr. Preston's neighbourhood.
Mrs. Gibson leaned forwards, and said to her daughter,--

'Your last partner was a gentleman, my dear. You are improving in
your selection. I really was ashamed of you before, figuring away
with that attorney's clerk. Molly, do you know whom you have been
dancing with? I have found out he is the Coreham bookseller.'

'That accounts for his being so well up in all the books I have been
wanting to hear about,' said Molly, eagerly, but with a spice of
malice in her mind. 'He really was very pleasant, mamma,' she added;
'and he looks quite a gentleman, and dances beautifully!'

'Very well. But remember if you go on this way you will have to
shake hands over the counter to-morrow morning with some of your
partners of to-night,' said Mrs. Gibson, coldly.

'But I really don't know how to refuse when people are introduced to
me and ask me, and I am longing to dance. You know to-night it is a
charity-ball, and papa said everybody danced with everybody,' said
Molly, in a pleading tone of voice; for she could not quite and
entirely enjoy herself if she was out of harmony with any one. What
reply Mrs. Gibson would have made to this speech cannot now be
ascertained, for, before she could make reply, Mr. Preston stepped a
little forwards, and said, in a tone which he meant to be icily
indifferent, but which trembled with anger,--

'If Miss Gibson finds any difficulty in refusing a partner, she has
only to apply to Miss Kirkpatrick for instructions.'

Cynthia lifted up her beautiful eyes, and, fixing them on Mr
Preston's face, said, very quietly, as if only stating a matter of
fact,--

'You forget, I think, Mr. Preston: Miss Gibson implied that she
wished to dance with the person who asked her--that makes all the
difference. I can't instruct her how to act in that difficulty.'

And to the rest of this little conversation, Cynthia appeared to
lend no car; and she was almost directly claimed by her next
partner. Mr. Preston took the seat now left empty much to Molly's
annoyance. At first she feared lest he should be going to ask her to
dance; but, instead, he put out his hand for Cynthia's nosegay,
which she had left on rising, entrusted to Molly. It had suffered
considerably from the heat of the room, and was no longer full and
fresh; not so much so as Molly's, which had not, in the first
instance, been pulled to pieces in picking out the scarlet flowers
which now adorned Molly's hair, and which had since been cherished
with more care. Enough, however, remained of Cynthia's to show very
distinctly that it was not the one Mr. Preston had sent; and it was
perhaps to convince himself of this, that he mutely asked to examine
it. But Molly, faithful to what she imagined would be Cynthia's
wish, refused to allow him to touch it; she only held it a little
nearer.

'Miss Kirkpatrick has not done me the honour of wearing the bouquet
I sent her, I see. She received it, I suppose, and my note?'

'Yes,' said Molly, rather intimidated by the tone in which this was
said. 'But we had already accepted these two nosegays.'

Mrs. Gibson was just the person to come to the rescue with her
honeyed words on such an occasion as 'the present. She evidently was
rather afraid of Mr. Preston, and wished to keep at peace with him.

'Oh, yes, we were so sorry! Of course, I don't mean to say we could
be sorry for any one's kindness; but two such lovely nosegays had
been sent from Hamley Hall--you may see how beautiful from what
Molly holds in her hand--and they had come before yours, Mr
Preston.'

'I should have felt honoured if you had accepted of mine, since the
young ladies were so well provided for. I was at some pains in
selecting the flowers at Green's; I think I may say it was rather
more ~recherche~ than that of Miss Kirkpatrick's, which Miss
Gibson holds so tenderly and securely in her hand.'

'Oh, because Cynthia would take out the most effective flowers to
put in my hair!' exclaimed Molly, eagerly.

'Did she?' said Mr. Preston' with a certain accent of pleasure in his
voice, as though he were glad she set so little store by the
nosegay; and he walked off to stand behind Cynthia in the quadrille
that was being danced; and Molly saw him making her reply to him--
against her will, Molly was sure. But, somehow, his face and manner
implied power over her. She looked grave, deaf, indifferent,
indignant, defiant; but, after a half-whispered speech to Cynthia,
at the conclusion of the dance, she evidently threw him an impatient
consent to what he was asking, for he walked off with a disagreeable
smile of satisfaction on his handsome face.

All this time the murmurs were spreading at the lateness of the
party from the Towers, and person after person came up to Mrs. Gibson
as if she were the accredited authority as to the earl and
countess's plans. In one sense this was flattering; but then the
acknowledgment of common ignorance and wonder reduced her to the
level of the inquirers. Mrs. Goodenough felt herself particularly
aggrieved; she had had her spectacles on for the last hour and a
half, in order to be ready for the sight the very first minute any
one from the Towers appeared at the door.

'I had a headache,' she complained, 'and I should have sent my
money, and never stirred out o' doors to-night; for I've seen a many
of these here balls, and my lord and my lady too, when they were
better worth looking at nor they are now; but every one was talking
of the duchess, and the duchess and her diamonds, and I thought I
shouldn't like to be behindhand, and never ha' seen neither the
duchess nor her diamonds; so I'm here, and coal and candlelight
wasting away at home, for I told Sally to sit up for me; and, above
everything, I cannot abide waste. I took it from my mother, who was
such a one against waste as you never see now-a-days. She was a
manager, if ever there was a one, and brought up nine children on
less than any one else could do, I'll be bound. Why! She wouldn't
let us be extravagant--not even in the matter of colds. Whenever any
on us had got a pretty bad cold, she took the opportunity and cut
our hair; for she said, said she, it was of no use having two colds
when one would do--and cutting of our hair was sure to give us a
cold. But, for all that, I wish the duchess would come.'

'Ah! but fancy what it is to me,' sighed out Mrs. Gibson; 'so long as
I have been without seeing the dear family--and seeing so little of
them the other day when I was at the Towers (for the duchess would
have my opinion on Lady Alice's trousseau, and kept asking me so
many questions it took up all the time)--and Lady Harriet's last
words were a happy anticipation of our meeting to-night. It's nearly
twelve o'clock.'

Every one of any pretensions to gentility was painfully affected by
the absence of the family from the Towers; the very fiddlers seemed
unwilling to begin playing a dance that might be interrupted by the
entrance of the great folks. Miss Phoebe Browning had apologized for
them--Miss Browning had blamed them with calm dignity; it was only
the butchers and bakers and candlestick-makers who rather enjoyed
the absence of restraint, and were happy and hilarious.

At last, there was a rumbling, and a rushing, and a whispering, and
the music stopped, so the dancers were obliged to do so too, and in
came Lord Cumnor in his state dress, with a fat, middle-aged woman
on his arm; she was dressed almost like a girl--in a sprigged
muslin, with natural flowers in her hair, but not a vestige of a
jewel or a diamond. Yet it must be the duchess; but what was a
duchess without diamonds?--and in a dress which farmer Hodson's
daughter might have worn! Was it the duchess? Could it be the
duchess? The little crowd of inquirers around Mrs. Gibson thickened,
to hear her confirm their disappointing surmise. After the duchess
came Lady Cumnor, looking like Lady Macbeth in black velvet--a cloud
upon her brow, made more conspicuous by the lines of age rapidly
gathering on her handsome face; and Lady Harriet, and other ladies,
amongst whom there was one dressed so like the duchess as to suggest
the idea of a sister rather than a daughter, as far as dress went.
There was Lord Hollingford, plain in face, awkward in person,
gentlemanly in manner; and half-a-dozen younger men, Lord Albert
Monson, Captain James, and others of their age and standing, who
came in looking anything if not critical. This long-expected party
swept up to the seats reserved for them at the head of the room,
apparently regardless of the interruption they caused; for the
dancers stood aside, and almost dispersed back to their seats, and
when "Money-musk" struck up again, not half the former set of people
stood up to finish the dance.

Lady Harriet, who was rather different to Miss Piper, and no more
minded crossing the room alone than if the lookers-on were so many
cabbages, spied the Gibson party pretty quickly out, and came across
to them.

'Here we are at last. How d'ye do, dear? Why, little one' (to
Molly), 'how nice you're looking! Aren't we shamefully late?'

'Oh! it's only just past twelve,' said Mrs. Gibson; 'and I daresay
you dined very late.'

'It was not that; it was that ill-mannered woman, who went to her
own room after we came out from dinner, and she and Lady Alice
stayed there invisible, till we thought they were putting on some
splendid attire--as they ought to have done--and at half-past ten
when mamma sent up to them to say the carriages were at the door,
the duchess sent down for some beef-tea, and at last appeared
~a l'enfant~ as you see her. Mamma is so angry with her, and
some of the others are annoyed at not coming earlier, and one or two
are giving themselves airs about coming at all. Papa is the only one
who is not affected by it.' Then turning to Molly Lady Harriet
asked,--

'Have you been dancing much, Miss Gibson?'

'Yes; not every dance, but nearly all.'

It was a simple question enough; but Lady Harriet's speaking at all
to Molly had become to Mrs. Gibson almost like shaking a red rag at a
bull; it was the one thing sure to put her out of temper. But she
would not have shown this to Lady Harriet for the world; only she
contrived to baffle any endeavours at further conversation between
the two, by placing herself between Lady Harriet and Molly, whom the
former asked to sit down in the absent Cynthia's room.

'I won't go back to those people, I am so mad with them; and,
besides, I hardly saw you the other day, and I must have some gossip
with you.' So she sat down by Mrs. Gibson, and as Mrs. Goodenough
afterwards expressed it, 'looked like anybody else.' Mrs. Goodenough
said this to excuse herself for a little misadventure she fell into.
She had taken a deliberate survey of the grandees at the upper end
of the room, spectacles on nose, and had inquired, in no very
measured voice, who everybody was, from Mr. Sheepshanks, my lord's
agent, and her very good neighbour, who in vain tried to check her
loud ardour for information by replying to her in whispers. But she
was rather deaf as well as blind, so his low tones only brought upon
him fresh inquiries. Now, satisfied as far as she could be, and on
her way to departure, and the extinguishing of fire and candlelight,
she stopped opposite to Mrs. Gibson, and thus addressed her by way of
renewal of their former subject of conversation,--

'Such a shabby thing for a duchess I never saw; not a bit of a
diamond near her. They're none of them worth looking at except the
countess, and she's always a personable woman, and not so lusty as
she was. But they're not worth waiting up for till this time o'
night.'

There was a moment's pause. Then Lady Harriet put her hand out, and
said,--

'You don't remember me, but I know you from having seen you at the
Towers. Lady Cumnor is a good deal thinner than she was, but we hope
her health is better for it.'

'It's Lady Harriet,' said Mrs. Gibson to Mrs. Goodenough, in
reproachful dismay.

'Deary me, your ladyship! I hope I've given no offence! But, you
see--that is to say, your ladyship sees, that it's late hours for
such folks as me, and I only stayed out of my bed to see the
duchess, and I thought she'd come in diamonds and a coronet; and it
puts one out at my age, to be disappointed in the only chance I'm
like to have of so fine a sight.'

'I'm put out too,' said Lady Harriet. 'I wanted to have come early,
and here we are as late as this. I'm so cross and ill-tempered, I
should be glad to hide myself in bed as soon as you will do.'

She said this so sweetly that Mrs. Goodenough relaxed into a smile,
and her crabbedness into a compliment.

'I don't believe as ever your ladyship can be cross and ill-tempered
with that pretty face. I'm an old woman, so you must let me say so.'
Lady Harriet stood up, and made a low curtsey. Then holding out her
hand, she said,--

'I won't keep you up any longer; but I'll promise one thing in
return for your pretty speech: if ever I am a duchess, I'll come and
show myself to you in all my robes and gewgaws. Good-night, madam!'

'There! I knew how it would be!' said she, not resuming her seat.
'And on the eve of a county election too.'

'Oh! you must not take old Mrs. Goodenough as a specimen, dear Lady
Harriet. She is always a grumbler! I am sure no one else would
complain of your all being as late as you liked,' said Mrs. Gibson.

'What do you say, Molly?' said Lady Harriet, suddenly turning her
eyes on Molly's face. 'Don't you think we've lost some of our
popularity,--which at this time means votes--by coming so late.
Come, answer me! you used to be a famous little truth-teller.'

'I don't know about popularity or votes,' said Molly, rather
unwillingly. 'But I think many people were sorry you did not come
sooner; and isn't that rather a proof of popularity?' she added.

'That's a very neat and diplomatic answer,' said Lady Harriet,
smiling, and tapping Molly's cheek with her fan.'

'Molly knows nothing about it,' said Mrs. Gibson, a little off her
guard. 'It would be very impertinent if she or any one else
questioned Lady Cumnor's perfect right to come when she chose.'

'Well, all I know is, I must go back to mamma now, but I shall make
another raid into these regions by-and-by, and you must keep a place
for me. Ah! there are--the Miss Brownings; you see I don't forget my
lesson, Miss Gibson.'

'Molly, I cannot have you speaking so to Lady Harriet,' said Mrs
Gibson, as soon as she was left alone with her step-daughter. 'You
would never have known her at all if it had not been for me, and
don't be always putting yourself into our conversation.'

'But I must speak if she asks me questions,' pleaded Molly.

'Well! if you must, you must, I acknowledge. I'm candid about that
at any rate. But there's no need for you to set up to have an
opinion at your age.'

'I don't know how to help it,' said Molly.

'She's such a whimsical person; look there, if she's not talking to
Miss Phoebe; and Miss Phoebe is so weak she'll be easily led away
into fancying she is hand and glove with Lady Harriet. If there is
one thing I hate more than another, it is the trying to make out an
intimacy with great people.'

Molly felt innocent enough, so she offered no justification of
herself, and made no reply. Indeed she was more occupied in watching
Cynthia. She could not understand the change that seemed to have
come over the latter. She was dancing, it was true, with the same
lightness and grace as before, but the smooth bounding motion as of
a feather blown onwards by the wind was gone. She was conversing
with her partner, but without the soft animation that usually shone
out upon her countenance. And when she was brought back to her seat
Molly noticed her changed colour, and her dreamily abstracted eyes.

'What is the matter, Cynthia?' asked she, in a very low voice.

'Nothing,' said Cynthia, suddenly looking up, and in an accent of
what was in her, sharpness. 'Why should there be?'

'I don't know; but you look different to what you did--tired or
something.'

'There is nothing the matter, or, if there is, don't talk about it.
It is all your fancy.'

This was a rather contradictory speech, to be interpreted by
intuition rather than by logic. Molly understood that Cynthia wished
for quietness and silence. But what was her surprise, after the
speeches that had passed before, and the implication of Cynthia's
whole manner to Mr. Preston, to see him come up, and, without a word,
offer his arm to Cynthia and lead her off to dance. It appeared to
strike Mrs. Gibson as something remarkable, for, forgetting her late
passage at arms with Molly, she asked, wanderingly, as if almost
distrusting the evidence of her senses,--

'Is Cynthia going to dance with Mr. Preston?'

Molly had scarcely time to answer before she herself was led off by
her partner. She could hardly attend to him or to the figures of the
quadrille for watching for Cynthia among the moving forms.

Once she caught a glimpse of her standing still--downcast--listening
to Mr. Preston's eager speech. Again she was walking languidly among
the dancers, almost as if she took no notice of those around her.
When she and Molly joined each other again, the shade on Cynthia's
face had deepened to gloom. But, at the same time, if a
physiognomist had studied her expression, he would have read in it
defiance and anger, and perhaps also a little perplexity. While this
quadrille had been going on, Lady Harriet had been speaking to her
brother.

'Hollingford!' she said, laying her hand on his arm, and drawing him
a little apart from the well-born crowd amid which he stood, silent
and abstracted, 'you don't know how these good people here have been
hurt and disappointed with our being so late, and with the duchess's
ridiculous simplicity of dress.'

'Why should they mind it?' asked he, taking advantage of her being
out of breath with eagerness.

'Oh, don't be so wise and stupid; don't you see, we're a show and a
spectacle--it's like having a pantomime with harlequin and columbine
in plain clothes.'

'I don't understand how--' he began.

'Then take it upon trust. They really are a little disappointed,
whether they are logical or not in being so, and we must try and
make it up to them; for one thing, because I can't bear our vassals
to look dissatisfied and disloyal, and then there's the election in
June.'

'I really would as soon be out of the House as in it.'

'Nonsense; it would grieve papa beyond measure--but there is no time
to talk about that now. You must go and dance with some of the
townspeople, and I'll ask Sheepshanks to introduce me to a
respectable young farmer. Can't you get Captain James to make
himself useful? There he goes with Lady Alice! If I don't get him
introduced to the ugliest tailor's daughter I can find for the next
dance!' She put her arm in her brother's as she spoke, as if to lead
him to some partner. He resisted, however--resisted piteously.

'Pray don't, Harriet. You know I can't dance. I hate it; I always
did. I don't know how to get through a quadrille.'

'It's a country dance!' said she, resolutely.

'It's all the same. And what shall I say to my partner? I haven't a
notion: I shall have no subject in common. Speak of being
disappointed, they'll be ten times more disappointed when they find
I can neither dance nor talk!'

'I'll be merciful; don't be so cowardly. In their eyes a lord may
dance like a bear--as some lords not very far from me are--if he
likes, and they'll take it for grace. And you shall begin with Molly
Gibson, your friend the doctor's daughter. She's a good, simple,
intelligent little girl, which you'll think a great deal more of, I
suppose, than of the frivolous fact of her being very pretty, Clare!
will you allow me to introduce my brother to Miss Gibson? he hopes
to engage her for this dance. Lord Hollingford, Miss Gibson!'

Poor Lord Hollingford! there was nothing for it but for him to
follow his sister's very explicit lead, and Molly and he walked off
to their places, each heartily wishing their dance together well
over. Lady Harriet flew off to Mr. Sheepshanks to secure her
respectable young farmer, and Mrs. Gibson remained alone, wishing
that Lady Cumnor would send one of her attendant gentlemen for her.
It would be so much more agreeable to be sitting even at the fag-end
of nobility than here on a bench with everybody; hoping that
everybody would see Molly dancing away with a lord, yet vexed that
the chance had so befallen that Molly instead of Cynthia was the
young lady singled out; wondering if simplicity of dress was now
become the highest fashion, and pondering on the possibility of
cleverly inducing Lady Harriet to introduce Lord Albert Monson to
her own beautiful daughter, Cynthia.

Molly found Lord Hollingford, the wise and learned Lord Hollingford,
strangely stupid in understanding the mystery of 'Cross hands and
back again, down the middle and up again.' He was constantly getting
hold of the wrong hands, and as constantly stopping when he had
returned to his place, quite unaware that the duties of society and
the laws of the dance required that he should go on capering till he
had arrived at the bottom of the room. He perceived that he had
performed his part very badly, and apologized to Molly when once
they had arrived at that haven of comparative peace, and he
expressed his regret so simply and heartily that she felt at her
ease with him at once, especially when he had confided to her his
reluctance at having to dance at all, and his only doing it under
his sister's compulsion. To Molly he was an elderly widower, almost
as old as her father, and by-and-by they got into very pleasant
conversation. She learnt from him that Roger Hamley had just been
publishing a paper in some scientific periodical, which had excited
considerable attention, as it was intended to confute some theory of
a great French physiologist, and Roger's article proved the writer
to be possessed of a most unusual amount of knowledge on the
subject. This piece of news was of great interest to Molly, and, in
her questions, she herself evinced so much intelligence, and a mind
so well prepared for the reception of information, that Lord
Hollingford at any rate would have felt his quest of popularity a
very easy affair indeed, if he might have gone on talking quietly to
Molly during the rest of the evening. When he took her back to her
place, he found Mr. Gibson there, and fell into talk with him, until
Lady Harriet once more came to stir him up to his duties. Before
very long, however, he returned to Mr. Gibson's side, and began
telling him of this paper of Roger Hamley's, of which Mr. Gibson had
not yet heard. In the midst of their conversation, as they stood
close by Mrs. Gibson, Lord Hollingford saw Molly in the distance, and
interrupted himself to say, 'What a charming little lady that
daughter of yours is! Most girls of her age are so difficult to talk
to; but she is intelligent and full of interest in all sorts of
sensible things; well read, too--she was up in ~Le Regne
Animal~--and very pretty!'

Mr. Gibson bowed, much pleased at such a compliment from such a man,
was he lord or not. It is very likely that if Molly had been a
stupid listener, Lord Hollingford would not have discovered her
beauty, or the converse might be asserted--if she had not been young
and pretty he would not have exerted himself to talk on scientific
subjects in a manner which she could understand. But in whatever
manner Molly had won his approbation and admiration, there was no
doubt that she had earned it somehow. And, when she next returned to
her place, Mrs. Gibson greeted her with soft words and a gracious
smile; for it does not require much reasoning power to discover that
if it is a very fine thing to be mother-in-law to a very magnificent
three-tailed bashaw, it presupposes that the wife who makes the
connection between the two parties is in harmony with her mother.
And so far had Mrs. Gibson's thoughts wandered into futurity. She
only wished that the happy chance had fallen to Cynthia's instead of
to Molly's lot. But Molly was a docile, sweet creature, very pretty,
and remarkably intelligent, as my lord had said. It was a pity that
Cynthia preferred making millinery to reading; but perhaps that
could be rectified. And there was Lord Cumnor coming to speak to
her, and Lady Cumnor nodding to her, and indicating a place by her
side.

It was not an unsatisfactory ball upon the whole to Mrs. Gibson,
although she paid the usual penalty for sitting up beyond her usual
hour in perpetual glare and movement. The next morning she awoke
irritable and fatigued; and a little of the same feeling oppressed
both Cynthia and Molly. The former was lounging in the window-seat,
holding a three-days-old newspaper in her hand, which she was making
a pretence of reading, when she was startled by her mother's saying,
-

'Cynthia! can't you take up a book and improve yourself. I am sure
your conversation will never be worth listening to, unless you read
something better than newspapers. Why don't you keep up your French?
There was some French book that Molly was reading--~Le Regne
Animal~, I think.'

'No! I never read it!' said Molly, blushing. 'Mr. Roger Hamley
sometimes read pieces out of it when I was first at the Hall, and
told me what it was about.'

'Oh! well. Then I suppose I was mistaken. But it comes to all the
same thing. Cynthia, you really must learn to settle yourself to
some improving reading every morning.'

Rather to Molly's surprise, Cynthia did not reply a word; but
dutifully went and brought down from among her Boulogne
school-books, ~Le Siecle de Louis XIV~. But after a while Molly
saw that this 'improving reading' was just as much a mere excuse for
Cynthia's thinking her own thoughts as the newspaper had been.


CHAPTER XXVII


FATHER AND SONS


Things were not going on any better at Hamley Hall. Nothing had
occurred to change the state of dissatisfied feeling into which the
squire and his eldest son had respectively fallen; and the long
continuance merely of dissatisfaction is sure of itself to deepen
the feeling, Roger did all in his power to bring the father and son
together; but sometimes wondered if it would not have been better to
leave them alone; for they were falling into the habit of
respectively making him their confidant, and so defining emotions
and opinions which would have had less distinctness if they had been
unexpressed. There was little enough relief in the daily life at the
Hall to help them all to shake off the gloom; and it even told on
the health of both the squire and Osborne. The squire became
thinner, his skin as well as his clothes began to hang loose about
him, and the freshness of his colour turned to red streaks, till his
cheeks looked like Eardiston pippins, instead of resembling 'a
Katherine pear on the side that's next the sun.' Roger thought that
his father sate indoors and smoked in his study more than was good
for him, but it had become difficult to get him far afield; he was
too much afraid of coming across some sign of the discontinued
drainage works, or being irritated afresh by the sight of his
depreciated timber. Osborne was wrapt up in the idea of arranging
his poems for the press, and so working out his wish for
independence. What with daily writing to his wife--taking his
letters himself to a distant post-office, and receiving hers
there--touching up his sonnets, &c., with fastidious care; and
occasionally giving himself the pleasure of a visit to the Gibsons,
and enjoying the society of the two pleasant girls there, he found
little time for being with his father. Indeed Osborne was too
self-indulgent or 'sensitive,' as he termed it, to bear well with
the squire's gloomy fits, or too frequent querulousness. The
consciousness of his secret, too, made Osborne uncomfortable in his
father's presence. It was very well for all parties that Roger was
not 'sensitive.' for, if he had been, there were times when it would
have been hard to bear little spurts of domestic tyranny, by which
his father strove to assert his power over both his sons. One of
these occurred very soon after the night of the Hollingford
charity-ball.

Roger had induced his father to come out with him; and the squire
had, on his son's suggestion, taken with him his long unused spud.
The two had wandered far afield; perhaps the elder man had found the
unwonted length of exercise too much for him, for, as he approached
the house, on his return, he became what nurses call in children
'fractious,' and ready to turn on his companion for every remark he
made. Roger understood the case by instinct, as it were, and bore it
all with his usual sweetness of temper. They entered the house by
the front door; it lay straight on their line of march. On the old
cracked yellow-marble slab, there lay a card with Lord Hollingford's
name on it, which Robinson, evidently on the watch for their return,
hastened out of his pantry to deliver to Roger.

'His lordship was very sorry not to see you, Mr. Roger, and his
lordship left a note for you. Mr. Osborne took it, I think, when he
passed through, I asked his lordship if he would like to see Mr
Osborne, who was indoors, as I thought. But his lordship said he was
pressed for time, and told me to make his excuses.'

'Didn't he ask for me?' growled the squire.

'No, sir; I can't say as his lordship did. He would never have
thought of Mr. Osborne, sir, if I hadn't named him. It was Mr. Roger
he seemed so keen after.'

'Very odd,' said the squire. Roger said nothing, although he
naturally felt some curiosity. He went into the drawing-room, not
quite aware that his father was following him. Osborne sate at a
table near the fire, pen in hand, looking over one of his poems, and
dotting the ~i's~, crossing the ~t's~, and now and then pausing over
the alteration of a word.

'Oh, Roger!' he said, as his brother came in, 'here's been Lord
Hollingford wanting to see you.'

'I know,' replied Roger.

'And he's left a note for you. Robinson tried to persuade him it was
for my father, so he's added a "junior" (Roger Hamley, Esq., junior)
in pencil.' The squire was in the room by this time, and what he had
overheard rubbed him up still more the wrong way. Roger took his
unopened note and read it.

'What does he say?' asked the squire.

Roger handed him the note. It contained an invitation to dinner to
meet M. Geoffroi St H--,' whose views on certain subjects Roger had
been advocating in the article Lord Hollingford had spoken about to
Molly, when he danced with her at the Hollingford ball. M. Geoffroi
St H--was in England now, and was expected to pay a visit at the
Towers in the course of the following week. He had expressed a wish
to meet the author of the paper which had already attracted the
attention of the French comparative anatomists; and Lord Hollingford
added a few words as to his own desire to make the acquaintance of a
neighbour whose tastes were so similar to his own; and then followed
a civil message from Lord and Lady Cumnor.

Lord Hollingford's hand was cramped and rather illegible. The squire
could not read it all at once, and was enough put out to decline any
assistance in deciphering it. At last he made it out.

'So my lord lieutenant is taking some notice of the Hamleys at last.
The election is coming on, is it? But I can tell him we're not to be
got so easily. I suppose this trap is set for you, Osborne? What's
this you've been writing that the French ~mounseer~ is so taken
with?'

'It is not me, sir!' said Osborne. 'Both note and call are for
Roger.'

'I don't understand it,' said the squire. 'These Whig fellows have
never done their duty by me; not that I want it of them. The Duke of
Debenham used to pay the Hamleys a respect due to 'em--the oldest
landowners in the county--but since he died, and this shabby Whig
lord has succeeded him, I've never dined at the lord lieutenant's
once--no, not once.'

'But I think, sir, I've heard you say Lord Cumnor used to invite
you,--only you did not choose to go,' said Roger.

'Yes. What d'ye mean by that? Do you suppose I was going to desert
the principles of my family, and curry favour of the Whigs? No!
leave that to them. They can ask the heir of the Hamleys fast enough
when a county election is coming on.'

'I tell you, sir,' said Osborne, in the irritable tone he sometimes
used when his father was particularly unreasonable, 'it is not me
Lord Hollingford is inviting; it is Roger. Roger is making himself
known for what he is, a first-rate fellow,' continued Osborne--a
sting of self-reproach mingling with his generous pride in his
brother--'and he is getting himself a name; he's been writing about
these new French theories and discoveries, and this foreign savant
very naturally wants to make his acquaintance, and so Lord
Hollingford asks him to dine. It's as clear as can be,' lowering his
tone, and addressing himself to Roger, 'it has nothing to do with
politics, if my father would but see it.'

Of course the squire heard this little aside with the unlucky
uncertainty of hearing which is a characteristic of the beginning of
deafness; and its effect on him was perceptible in the increased
acrimony of his next speech.

'You young men think you know everything. I tell you it's a palpable
Whig trick. And what business has Roger--if it is Roger the man
wants--to go currying favour with the French? In my day we were
content to hate 'em and to lick 'em. But it's just like your
conceit, Osborne, setting yourself up to say it's your younger
brother they're asking, and not you; I tell you it's you. They think
the eldest son was sure to be called after his father, Roger--Roger
Hamley, junior. It's as plain as a pike-staff. They know they can't
catch me with chaff, but they've got up this French dodge. What
business had you to go writing about the French, Roger? I should
have thought you were too sensible to take any notice of their
fancies and theories; but if it is you they've asked, I'll not have
you going and meeting these foreigners at a Whig house. They ought
to have asked Osborne. He's the representative of the Hamleys, if
I'm not; and they can't get me, let them try ever so. Besides,
Osborne has got a bit of the ~mounseer~ about him, which he caught
with being so fond of going off to the Continent, instead of coming
back to his good old English home.'

He went on, repeating much of what he had said before, till he left
the room. Osborne had kept on replying to his unreasonable
grumblings, which had only added to his anger; and as soon as the
squire had fairly gone, Osborne turned to Roger, and said,--

'Of course you'll go, Roger? ten to one he'll be in another mind
to-morrow.'

'No,' said Roger, bluntly enough--for he was extremely disappointed;
'I won't run the chance of vexing him. I shall refuse.'

'Don't be such a fool!' exclaimed Osborne. 'Really, my father is too
unreasonable. You heard how he kept contradicting himself; and such
a man as you to be kept under like a child by--'

'Don't let us talk any more about it, Osborne,' said Roger, writing
away fast. When the note was written, and sent off, he came and put
his hand caressingly on Osborne's shoulder, as he sate pretending to
read, but in reality vexed with both his father and his brother,
though on very different grounds.

'How go the poems, old fellow? I hope they're nearly ready to bring
out.'

'No, they're not; and if it were not for the money, I shouldn't care
if they were never published. What's the use of fame, if one mayn't
reap the fruits of it?'

'Come, now, we'll have no more of that; let's talk about the money.
I shall be going up for my fellowship examination next week, and
then we'll have a purse in common, for they'll never think of not
giving me a fellowship now I'm senior wrangler. I'm short enough
myself at present, and I don't like to bother my father; but when
I'm Fellow, you shall take me down to Winchester, and introduce me
to the little wife.'

'It will be a month next Monday since I left her,' said Osborne,
laying down his papers and gazing into the fire, as if by so doing
he could call up her image. 'In her letter this morning she bids me
give you such a pretty message. It won't bear translating into
English; you must read it for yourself,' continued he, pointing out
a line or two in a letter he drew out of his pocket.

Roger suspected that one or two of the words were wrongly spelt; but
their purport was so gentle and loving, and had such a touch of
simple, respectful gratitude in them, that he could not help being
drawn afresh to the little unseen sister-in-law, whose acquaintance
Osborne had made by helping her to look for some missing article of
the children's, whom she was taking for their daily walk in Hyde
Park. For Mrs. Osborne Hamley had been nothing more than a French
~bonne~, very pretty, very graceful, and very much tyrannized over
by the rough little boys and girls she had in charge. She was a
little orphan-girl, who had charmed the heads of a travelling
English family, as she had brought ~madame~ some articles of
~lingerie~ at an hotel; and she had been hastily engaged by them as
bonne to their children, partly as a pet and plaything herself,
partly because it would be so good for the children to learn French
from a native (of Alsace!). By and by her mistress ceased to take
any particular notice of Aimee in the bustle of London and
London gaiety; but though feeling more and more forlorn in a strange
land every day, the French girl strove hard to do her duty. One
touch of kindness, however, was enough to set the fountain gushing;
and she and Osborne naturally fell into an ideal state of love, to
be rudely disturbed by the indignation of the mother, when accident
discovered to her the attachment existing between her children's
~bonne~ and a young man of an entirely different class. Aimee
answered truly to all her mistress's questions; but no worldly
wisdom, nor any lesson to be learnt from another's experience, could
in the least disturb her entire faith in her lover. Perhaps Mrs
Townshend did no more than her duty in immediately sending
Aimee back to Metz, where she had first met with her, and where
such relations as remained to the girl might be supposed to be
residing. But, altogether, she knew so little of the kind of people
or life to which she was consigning her deposed protegee that
Osborne, after listening with impatient indignation to the lecture
which Mrs. Townshend gave him when he insisted on seeing her in order
to learn what had become of his love, that the young man set off
straight for Metz in hot haste, and did not let the grass grow under
his feet until he had made Aimee his wife. All this had
occurred the previous autumn, and Roger did not know of the step his
brother had taken until it was irrevocable. Then came the mother's
death, which, besides the simplicity of its own overwhelming sorrow,
brought with it the loss of the kind, tender mediatrix, who could
always soften and turn his father's heart. It is doubtful, however,
if even she could have succeeded in this, for the squire looked
high, and over high, for the wife of his heir; he detested all
foreigners, and moreover held all Roman Catholics in dread and
abomination something akin to our ancestors' hatred of witchcraft.
All these prejudices were strengthened by his grief. Argument would
always have glanced harmless away off his shield of utter unreason;
but a loving impulse, in a happy moment, might have softened his
heart to what he most detested in the former days. But the happy
moments came not now, and the loving impulses were trodden down by
the bitterness of his frequent remorse, not less than by his growing
irritability; so Aimee lived solitary in the little cottage
near Winchester in which Osborne had installed her when she first
came to England as his wife, and in the dainty furnishing of which
he had run himself so deeply into debt. For Osborne consulted his
own fastidious taste in his purchases rather than her simple
childlike wishes and wants, and looked upon the little Frenchwoman
rather as the future mistress of Hamley Hall than as the wife of a
man who was wholly dependent on others at present. He had chosen a
southern county as being far removed from those midland shires where
the name of Hamley of Hamley was well and widely known; for he did
not wish his wife to assume, if only for a time, a name which was
not justly and legally her own. In all these arrangements he had
willingly striven to do his full duty by her; and she repaid him
with passionate devotion and admiring reverence. If his vanity had
met with a check, or his worthy desires for college honours had been
disappointed, he knew where to go for a comforter; one who poured
out praise till her words were choked in her throat by the rapidity
of her thoughts, and who poured out the small vials of her
indignation on every one who did not acknowledge and bow down to her
husband's merits. If she ever wished to go to the
~chateau~--that was his home--and to be introduced to his
family, Aimee never hinted a word of it to him. Only she did
yearn, and she did plead, for a little more of her husband's
company; and the good reasons which had convinced her of the
necessity of his being so much away when he was present to urge
them, failed in their efficacy when she tried to reproduce them to
herself in his absence.

The afternoon of the day on which Lord Hollingford had called, Roger
was going upstairs, three steps at a time, when, at a turn on the
landing, he encountered his father. It was the first time he had
seen him since their conversation about the Towers' invitation to
dinner. The squire stopped his son by standing right in the middle
of the passage.

'Thou'rt going to meet the ~mounseer~, my lad?' said he, half as
affirmation, half as question.

'No, sir; I sent off James almost immediately with a note declining
it. I don't care about it--that's to say, not to signify.'

'Why did you take me up so sharp, Roger?' said his father pettishly.
'You all take me up so hastily now-a-days. I think it's hard when a
man mustn't be allowed a bit of crossness when he's tired and heavy
at heart--that I do.'

'But, father, I should never like to go to a house where they had
slighted you.'

'Nay, nay, lad,' said the squire, brightening up a little; 'I think
I slighted them. They asked me to dinner after my lord was made
lieutenant time after time, but I never would go near 'em. I call
that my slighting them.'

And no more was said at the time; but the next day the squire again
stopped Roger.

'I've been making Jem try on his livery-coat that he hasn't worn
this three or four years,--he's got too stout for it now.'

'Well, he needn't wear it, need he? and Morgan's lad will be glad
enough of it,--he's sadly in want of clothes.'

'Ay, ay; but who's to go with you when you call at the Towers? It's
but polite to call after Lord What's-his-name has taken the trouble
to come here; and I shouldn't like you to go without a groom.'

'My dear father! I shouldn't know what to do with a man riding at my
back. I can find my way to the stable-yard for myself, or there'll
be some man about to take my horse. Don't trouble yourself about
that.'

'Well, you're not Osborne, to be sure. Perhaps it won't strike 'em
as strange for you. But you must look up, and hold your own, and
remember you're one of the Hamleys, who've been on the same land for
hundreds of years, while they're but trumpery Whig folk who only
came into the county in Queen Anne's time.'


CHAPTER XXVIII


RIVALRY


For some days after the ball Cynthia seemed languid, and was very
silent. Molly, who had promised herself fully as much enjoyment in
talking over the past gaiety with Cynthia as in the evening itself,
was disappointed when she found that all conversation on the subject
was rather evaded than encouraged. Mrs. Gibson, it is true, was ready
to go over the ground as many times as any one liked; but her words
were always like ready-made clothes, and never fitted individual
thoughts. Anybody might have used them, and, with a change of proper
names, they might have served to describe any ball. She repeatedly
used the same language in speaking about it, till Molly knew the
sentences and their sequence even to irritation.

'Ah! Mr. Osborne, you should have been there! I said to myself many a
time how you really should have been there--you and, your brother of
course.'

'I thought of you very often during the evening!'

'Did you? Now that I call very kind of you. Cynthia, darling! Do you
hear what Mr. Osborne Hamley was saying?' as Cynthia came into the
room just then. 'He thought of us all on the evening of the ball.'

'He did better than merely remember us then,' said Cynthia, with her
soft slow smile. 'We owe him thanks for those beautiful flowers,
mamma.'

'Oh!' said Osborne, 'you must not thank me exclusively. I believe it
was my thought, but Roger took all the trouble of it.'

'I consider the thought as everything,' said Mrs. Gibson. 'Thought is
spiritual, while action is merely material.'

This fine sentence took the speaker herself by surprise; and in such
conversation as was then going on, it is not necessary to accurately
define the meaning of everything that is said.

'I'm afraid the flowers were too late to be of much use though,'
continued Osborne. 'I met Preston the next morning, and of course we
talked about the ball. I was sorry to find he had been beforehand
with us,'

'He only sent one nosegay, and that was for Cynthia,' said Molly,
looking up from her work. 'And it did not come till after we had
received the flowers from Hamley.' Molly caught a sight of Cynthia's
face before she bent down again to her sewing. It was scarlet in
colour, and there was a flash of anger in her eyes. Both she and her
mother hastened to speak as soon as Molly had finished, but
Cynthia's voice was choked with passion, and Mrs. Gibson had the
word.

'Mr. Preston's bouquet was just one of those formal affairs any one
can buy at a nursery-garden, which always strike me as having no
sentiment in them. I would far rather have two or three lilies of
the valley gathered for me by a person I like, than the most
expensive bouquet that could be bought!'

'Mr. Preston had no business to speak as if he had forestalled you,'
said Cynthia. 'It came just as we were ready to go, and I put it
into the fire directly.'

'Cynthia, my dear love!' said Mrs. Gibson (who had never heard of the
fate of the flowers until now), 'what an idea of yourself you will
give to Mr. Osborne Hamley; but to be sure, I can quite understand
it. You inherit my feeling--my prejudice--sentimental I grant,
against bought flowers.'

Cynthia was silent for a moment; then she said, 'I used some of your
flowers, Mr. Hamley, to dress Molly's hair. It was a great
temptation, for the colour so exactly matched her coral ornaments;
but I believe she thought it treacherous to disturb the arrangement,
so I ought to take all the blame on myself.'

'The arrangement was my brother's, as I told you; but I am sure he
would have preferred seeing them in Miss Gibson's hair rather than
in the blazing fire. Mr. Preston comes far the worst off.' Osborne
was rather amused at the whole affair, and would have liked to probe
Cynthia's motives a little farther. He did not hear Molly saying in
as soft a voice as if she were talking to herself, 'I wore mine just
as they were sent,' for Mrs. Gibson came in with a total change of
subject.

'Speaking of lilies of the valley, is it true that they grow wild in
Hurst Wood? It is not the season for them to be in flower yet; but
when it is, I think we must take a walk there--with our luncheon in
a basket--a little picnic in fact. You'll join us, won't you?'
turning to Osborne. 'I think it's a charming plan! You could ride to
Hollingford and put up your horse here, and we would have a long day
in the woods and all come home to dinner--dinner with a basket of
lilies in the middle of the table!'

'I should like it very much,' said Osborne; 'but I may not be at
home. Roger is more likely to be here, I believe, at that time--a
month hence.' He was thinking of the visit to London to sell his
poems, and the run down to Winchester which he anticipated
afterwards--the end of May had been the period fixed for this
pleasure for some time, not merely in his own mind, but in writing
to his wife.

'Oh, but you must be with us! We must wait for Mr. Osborne Hamley,
must not we, Cynthia?'

'I'm afraid the lilies won't wait,' replied Cynthia.

'Well, then, we must put it off till dog-rose and honeysuckle time.
You will be at home then, won't you? or does the London season
present too many attractions?'

'I don't exactly know when dog-roses are in flower!'

'Not know, and you a poet? Don't you remember the lines--

"It was the time of roses,
We plucked them as we passed?"

'Yes; but that doesn't specify the time of year that is the time of
roses; and I believe my movements are guided more by the lunar
calendar than the floral. You had better take my brother for your
companion; he is practical in his love of flowers, I am only
theoretical.'

'Does that fine word "theoretical" imply that you are ignorant?'
asked Cynthia.

'Of course we shall be happy to see your brother; but why can't we
have you too? I confess to a little timidity in the presence of one
so deep and learned as your brother is from all accounts. Give me a
little charming ignorance, if we must call it by that hard word.'

Osborne bowed. It was very pleasant to him to be petted and
flattered, even though he knew all the time that it was only
flattery. It was an agreeable contrast to the home that was so
dismal to him, to come to this house where the society of two
agreeable girls, and the soothing syrup of their mother's speeches,
awaited him whenever he liked to come. To say nothing of the
difference that struck upon his senses, poetical though he might
esteem himself, of a sitting-room full of flowers and tokens of
women's presence, where all the chairs were easy, and all the tables
well covered with pretty things, to the great drawing-room at home,
where the draperies were threadbare, and the seats uncomfortable,
and no sign of feminine presence ever now lent a grace to the stiff
arrangement of the furniture. Then the meals, light and well cooked,
suited his taste and delicate appetite so much better than the rich
and heavy viands prepared by the servants at the Hall. Osborne was
becoming a little afraid of falling into the habit of paying too
frequent visits to the Gibsons (and that, not because he feared the
consequences of his intercourse with the two young ladies; for he
never thought of them excepting as friends;--the fact of his
marriage was constantly present to his mind, and Aimee too
securely enthroned in his heart, for him to remember that he might
be looked upon by others in the light of a possible husband); but
the reflection forced itself upon him occasionally, whether he was
not trespassing too often on hospitality which he had at present no
means of returning.

But Mrs. Gibson, in her ignorance of the true state of affairs, was
secretly exultant in the attraction which made him come so often and
lounge away the hours in their house and garden. She had no doubt
that it was Cynthia who drew him to the house; and if the latter had
been a little more amenable to reason, her mother would have made
more frequent allusions than she did to the crisis which she thought
was approaching. But she was restrained by the intuitive conviction
that if her daughter became conscious of what was impending, and was
made aware of Mrs. Gibson's cautious and quiet efforts to forward the
catastrophe, the wilful girl would oppose herself to it with all her
skill and power. As it was, Mrs. Gibson trusted that Cynthia's
affections would become engaged before she knew where she was, and
that in that case she would not attempt to frustrate her mother's
delicate scheming, even though she did perceive it. But Cynthia had
come across too many varieties of flirtation, admiration, and even
passionate love, to be for a moment at fault as to the quiet
friendly nature of Osborne's attentions. She received him always as
a sister might a brother. It was different when Roger returned from
his election as Fellow of Trinity. The trembling diffidence, the
hardly suppressed ardour of his manner, made Cynthia understand
before long with what kind of love she had now to deal. She did not
put it into so many words--no, not even in her secret heart--but she
recognized the difference between Roger's relation to her and
Osborne's, long before Mrs. Gibson found it out. Molly was, however,
the first to discover the nature of Roger's attraction. The first
time they saw him after the ball, it came out to her observant eyes.
Cynthia had not been looking well since that evening; she went
slowly about the house, pale and heavy-eyed; and, fond as she
usually was of exercise and the free fresh air, there was hardly any
persuading her now to go out for a walk. Molly watched this fading
with tender anxiety, but to all her questions as to whether she had
felt over-fatigued with her dancing, whether anything had occurred
to annoy her, and all such inquiries, she replied in languid
negatives. Once Molly touched on Mr. Preston's name, and found that
this was a subject on which Cynthia was raw; now, Cynthia's face
lighted up with spirit, and her whole body showed her ill-repressed
agitation, but she only said a few sharp words, expressive of
anything but kindly feeling towards the gentleman, and then bade
Molly never name his name to her again. Still, the latter could not
imagine that he was more than intensely distasteful to her friend,
as well as to herself, he could not be the cause of Cynthia's
present indisposition. But this indisposition lasted so many days
without change or modification, that even Mrs. Gibson noticed it, and
Molly became positively uneasy. Mrs. Gibson considered Cynthia's
quietness and languor as the natural consequence of 'dancing with
everybody who asked her' at the ball. Partners whose names were in
the 'Red Book' would not have produced half the amount of fatigue,
according to Mrs. Gibson's judgment apparently, and if Cynthia had
been quite well, very probably she would have hit the blot in her
mother's speech with one of her touches of sarcasm. Then, again,
when Cynthia did not rally, Mrs. Gibson grew impatient, and accused
her of being fanciful and lazy; at length, and partly at Molly's
instance, there came an appeal to Mr. Gibson, and a professional
examination of the supposed invalid, which Cynthia hated more than
anything, especially when the verdict was, that there was nothing
very much the matter, only a general lowness of tone, and depression
of health and spirits, which would soon be remedied by tonics, and,
meanwhile, she was not to be urged to exertion.

'If there is one thing I dislike,' said Cynthia to Mr. Gibson, after
he had pronounced tonics to be the cure for her present state, 'it
is the way doctors have of giving tablespoonfuls of nauseous
mixtures as a certain remedy for sorrows and cares.' She laughed up
in his face as she spoke; she had always a pretty word and smile for
him, even in the midst of her loss of spirits.

'Come! you acknowledge you have "sorrows" by that speech; we'll make
a bargain: if you'll tell me your sorrows and cares, I'll try and
find some other remedy for them than giving you what you are pleased
to term my nauseous mixtures.'

'No,' said Cynthia, colouring; 'I never said I had sorrows and
cares; I spoke generally. What should I have a sorrow about--you and
Molly are only too kind to me,' her eyes filling with tears.

'Well, well, we'll not talk of such gloomy things, and you shall
have some sweet emulsion to disguise the taste of the bitters I
shall be obliged to fall back upon.'

'Please, don't. If you but knew how I dislike emulsions and
disguises! I do want bitters--and if I sometimes--if I'm obliged
to--if I'm not truthful myself, I do like truth in others--at least,
sometimes.' She ended her sentence with another smile, bus it was
rather faint and watery.

Now the first person out of the house to notice Cynthia's change of
look and manner was Roger Hamley--and yet he did not see her until,
under the influence of the nauseous mixture, she was beginning to
recover. But his eyes were scarcely off her during the first five
minutes he was in the room. All the time he was trying to talk to
Mrs. Gibson in reply to her civil platitudes, he was studying
Cynthia; and at the first convenient pause he came and stood before
Molly, so as to interpose his person between her and the rest of the
room; for some visitors had come in subsequent to his entrance.

'Molly, how ill your sister is looking! What is it? Has she had
advice? You must forgive me, but so often those who live together in
the same house don't observe the first approaches of illness.'

Now Molly's love for Cynthia was fast and unwavering, but if
anything tried it, it was the habit Roger had fallen into of always
calling Cynthia Molly's sister in speaking to the latter. From any
one else it would have been a matter of indifference to her, and
hardly to be noticed; it vexed both ear and heart when Roger used
the expression; and there was a curtness of manner as well as of
words in her reply.

'Oh! she was over-tired by the ball. Papa has seen her, and says she
will be all right very soon.'

'I wonder if she wants change of air?' said Roger, meditatively. 'I
wish--I do wish we could have her at the Hall; you and your mother
too, of course. But I don't see how it would be possible--or else
how charming it would be!'

Molly felt as if a visit to the Hall under such circumstances would
be altogether so different an affair to all her former ones, that
she could hardly tell if she should like it or not.

Roger went on,--

'You got our flowers in time, did you not? Ah! you don't know how
often I thought of you that evening! And you enjoyed it too, didn't
you?--you had plenty of agreeable partners, and all that makes a
first ball delightful? I heard that your sister danced every dance.'

'It was very pleasant,' said Molly, quietly. 'But, after all, I'm
not sure if I want to go to another just yet; there seems to be so
much trouble connected with a ball.'

'Ah! you are thinking of your sister, and her not being well?'

'No, I was not,' said Molly, rather bluntly. 'I was thinking of the
dress, and the dressing, and the weariness the next day.'

He might think her unfeeling if he liked; she felt as if she had
only too much feeling just then, for it was bringing on her a
strange contraction of heart. But he was too inherently good himself
to put any harsh construction on her speech. Just before he went
away, while he was ostensibly holding her hand and wishing her
good-by, he said to her in a voice too low to be generally heard,--

'Is there anything I could do for your sister? We have plenty of
books, as you know, if she cares for reading.' Then, receiving no
affirmative look or word from Molly in reply to this suggestion, he
went on,--'Or flowers? she likes flowers. Oh! and our forced
strawberries are just ready--I will bring some over to-morrow.'

'I am sure she will like them,' said Molly.

For some reason or other, unknown to the Gibsons, a longer interval
than usual occurred between Osborne's visits, while Roger came
almost every day, always with some fresh offering by which he openly
sought to relieve Cynthia's indisposition as far as it lay in his
power. Her manner to him was so gentle and gracious that Mrs. Gibson
became alarmed, lest, in spite of his 'uncouthness' (as she was
pleased to term it), he might come to be preferred to Osborne, who
was so strangely neglecting his own interests, in Mrs. Gibson's
opinion. In her quiet way, she contrived to pass many slights upon
Roger; but the darts rebounded from his generous nature that could
not have imagined her motives, and fastened themselves on Molly. She
had often been called naughty and passionate when she was a child;
and she thought now that she began to understand that she really had
a violent temper. What seemed neither to hurt Roger nor annoy
Cynthia made Molly's blood boil; and now she had once discovered Mrs
Gibson's wish to make Roger's visits shorter and less frequent, she
was always on the watch for indications of this desire. She read her
stepmother's heart when the latter made allusions to the squire's
loneliness, now that Osborne was absent from the Hall, and that
Roger was so often away amongst his friends during the day,--

'Mr. Gibson and I should be so delighted if you could have stopped to
dinner; but, of course, we cannot be so selfish as to ask you to
stay when we remember how your father would be left alone. We were
saying yesterday we wondered how he bore his solitude, poor old
gentleman!'

Or, as soon as Roger came with his bunch of early roses, it was
desirable for Cynthia to go and rest in her own room, while Molly
had to accompany Mrs. Gibson on some improvised errand or call. Still
Roger, whose object was to give pleasure to Cynthia, and who had,
from his boyhood, been always certain of Mr. Gibson's friendly
regard, was slow to perceive that he was not wanted. If he did not
see Cynthia, that was his loss; at any rate, he heard how she was,
and left her some little thing which he believed she would like, and
was willing to risk the chance of his own gratification by calling
four or five times in the hope of seeing her once. At last there
came a day when Mrs. Gibson went beyond her usual negative
snubbiness, and when, in some unwonted fit of crossness, for she was
a very placid-tempered person in general, she was guilty of positive
rudeness,

Cynthia was very much better. Tonics had ministered to a mind
diseased, though she hated to acknowledge it; her pretty bloom and
much of her light-heartedness had come back, and there was no cause
remaining for anxiety. Mrs. Gibson was sitting at her embroidery in
the drawing-room, and the two girls were at the window, Cynthia
laughing at Molly's earnest endeavours to imitate the French accent
in which the former had been reading a page of Voltaire. For the
duty, or the farce, of settling to 'improving reading' in the
mornings was still kept up, although Lord Hollingford, the
unconscious suggestor of the idea, had gone back to town without
making any of the efforts to see Molly again that Mrs. Gibson had
anticipated on the night of the ball. That Alnaschar vision had
fallen to the ground. It was as yet early morning; a delicious,
fresh, lovely June day, the air redolent with the scents of
flower-growth and bloom; and half the time the girls had been
ostensibly employed in the French reading they had been leaning out
of the open window trying to reach a cluster of climbing roses. They
had secured them at last, and the bunch lay on Cynthia's lap, but
many of the petals had fallen off, so, though the perfume lingered
about the window-seat, the full beauty of the flowers had passed
away. Mrs. Gibson had once or twice reproved them for the merry noise
they had been making, which hindered her in the business of counting
the stitches in her pattern; and she had set herself a certain
quantity to do that morning before going out, and was of that nature
which attaches infinite importance to fulfilling small resolutions,
made about indifferent trifles without any reason whatever.

'Mr. Roger Hamley,' was announced. 'So tiresome!' said Mrs. Gibson,
almost in his hearing, as she pushed away her embroidery frame. She
put out her cold, motionless hand to him, with a half-murmured word
of welcome, still eyeing her lost embroidery. He took no apparent
notice, and passed on to the window.

'How delicious!' said he. 'No need for any more Hamley roses now
yours are out,'

'I agree with you,' said Mrs. Gibson, replying to him before either
Cynthia or Molly could speak, though he addressed his words to them.
'You have been very kind in bringing us flowers so long; but now our
own are out we need not trouble you any more.'

He looked at her with a little surprise clouding his honest face; it
was perhaps more at the tone than the words. Mrs. Gibson, however,
had been bold enough to strike the first blow, and she determined to
go on as opportunity offered. Molly would perhaps have been more
pained if she had not seen Cynthia's colour rise. She waited for her
to speak, if need were; for she knew that Roger's defence, if
defence were needed, might be safely entrusted to Cynthia's ready
wit.

He put out his hand for the shattered cluster of roses that lay in
Cynthia's lap.

'At any rate,' said he, 'my trouble--if Mrs. Gibson considers it has
been a trouble to me--will be over-paid, if I may have this.'

'Old lamps for new,' said Cynthia, smiling as she gave it to him. 'I
wish one could always buy nosegays such as you have brought us, as
cheaply.'

'You forget the waste of time that, I think, we must reckon as part
of the payment,' said her mother. 'Really, Mr. Hamley, we must learn
to shut our doors on you if you come so often, and at such early
hours! I settle myself to my own employment regularly after
breakfast till lunch-time; and it is my wish to keep Cynthia and
Molly to a course of improving reading and study--so desirable for
young people of their age, if they are ever to become intelligent,
companionable women; but with early visitors it is quite impossible
to observe any regularity of habits.'

All this was said in that sweet, false tone which of late had gone
through Molly like the scraping of a slate-pencil on a slate.
Roger's face changed. His ruddy colour grew paler for a moment, and
he looked grave and not pleased. In another moment the wonted
frankness of expression returned. Why should not he, he asked
himself, believe her? it was early to call; it did interrupt regular
occupation. So he spoke, and said,--

'I believe I have been very thoughtless--I'll not come so early
again; but I had some excuse to-day: my brother told me you had made
a plan for going to see Hurst Wood when the roses were out, and they
are earlier than usual this year--I've been round to see. He spoke
of a long day there, going before lunch--'

'The plan was made with Mr. Osborne Hamley. I could not think of
going without him!' said Mrs. Gibson, coldly.

'I had a letter from him this morning, in which he named your wish,
and he says he fears he cannot be at home till they are out of
flower. I daresay they are not much to see in reality, but the day
is so lovely I thought that the plan of going to Hurst Wood would be
a charming excuse for being out of doors.'

'Thank you. How kind you are! and so good, too, in sacrificing your
natural desire to be with your father as much as possible.'

'I am glad to say my father is so much better than he was in the
winter that he spends much of his time out of doors in his fields.
He has been accustomed to go about alone, and I--we think that as
great a return to his former habits as he can be induced to make, is
the best for him.'

'And when do you return to Cambridge?'

There was some hesitation in Roger's manner as he replied,--

'It is uncertain. You probably know that I am a Fellow of Trinity
now. I hardly yet know what my future plans may be; I am thinking of
going up to London soon.'

'Ah! London is the true place for a young man,' said Mrs. Gibson,
with decision, as if she had reflected a good deal on the question.
'If it were not that we really are so busy this morning, I should
have been tempted to make an exception to our general rule; one more
exception, for your early visits have made us make too many already.
Perhaps, however, we may see you again before you go?'

'Certainly I shall come,' replied he, rising to take his leave, and
still holding the demolished roses in his hand. Then, addressing
himself more especially to Cynthia, he added, 'My stay in London
will not exceed a fortnight or so--is there anything I can do for
you--or you?' turning a little to Molly.

'No, thank you very much,' said Cynthia, very sweetly, and then,
acting on a sudden impulse, she leant out of the window, and
gathered him some half-opened roses. 'You deserve these; do throw
that poor shabby bunch away.'

His eyes brightened, his cheeks glowed. He took the offered buds,
but did not throw away the other bunch.

'At any rate, I may come after lunch is over, and the afternoons and
the evenings will be the most delicious time of day a month hence.'
He said this to both Molly and Cynthia, but in his heart he
addressed it to the latter.

Mrs. Gibson affected not to hear what he was saying, but held out her
limp hand once more to him.

'I suppose we shall see you when you return; and pray tell your
brother how we are longing to have a visit from him again.'

When he had left the room, Molly's heart was quite full. She had
watched his face, and read something of his feelings: his
disappointment at their non-acquiescence in his plan of a day's
pleasure in Hurst Wood, the delayed conviction that his presence was
not welcome to the wife of his old friend, which had come so slowly
upon him--perhaps, after all, these things touched Molly more keenly
than they did him. His bright look when Cynthia gave him the
rosebuds indicated a gush of sudden delight more vivid than the pain
he had shown by his previous increase of gravity.

'I can't think why he will come at such untimely hours,' said Mrs
Gibson, as soon as she heard him fairly out of the house. 'It's
different from Osborne; we are so much more intimate with him: he
came and made friends with us all the time this stupid brother of
his was muddling his brains with mathematics at Cambridge. Fellow of
Trinity, indeed! I wish he would learn to stay there, and not come
intruding here, and assuming that because I asked Osborne to join in
a picnic it was all the same to me which brother came.'

'In short, mamma, one man may steal a horse, but another must not
look over the hedge,' said Cynthia, pouting a little.

'And the two brothers have always been treated so exactly alike by
their friends, and there has been such a strong friendship between
them, that it is no wonder Roger thinks he may be welcome where
Osborne is allowed to come at all hours,' continued Molly, in high
dudgeon. 'Roger's "muddled brains," indeed! Roger, "stupid!"'

'Oh, very well, my dears! When I was young it wouldn't have been
thought becoming for girls of your age to fly out because a little
restraint was exercised as to the hours at which they should receive
the young men's calls. And they would have supposed that there might
be good reasons why their parents disapproved of the visits of
certain gentlemen, even while they were proud and pleased to see
some members of the same family.'

'But that was what I said, mamma,' said Cynthia, looking at her
mother with an expression of innocent bewilderment on her face. 'One
man may--'

'Be quiet, child! All proverbs are vulgar, and I do believe that is
the vulgarest of all. You are really catching Roger Hamley's
coarseness, Cynthia!'

'Mamma,' said Cynthia, roused to anger, 'I don't mind your abusing
me, but Mr. Roger Hamley has been very kind to me while I've not been
well: I can't bear to hear him disparaged. If he's coarse, I've no
objection to be coarse as well, for it seems to me it must mean
kindliness and pleasantness, and the bringing of pretty flowers and
presents.'

Molly's tears were brimming over at these words; she could have
kissed Cynthia for her warm partisanship, but, afraid of betraying
emotion, and 'making a scene,' as Mrs. Gibson called any signs of
warm feeling, she laid down her book hastily, and ran upstairs to
her room, and locked the door in order to breathe freely. There were
traces of tears upon her face when she returned into the
drawing-room half-an-hour afterwards, walking straight and demurely
up to her former place, where Cynthia still sate and gazed idly out
of the window, pouting and displeased; Mrs. Gibson, meanwhile,
counting her stitches aloud with great distinctness and vigour.


CHAPTER XXIX


BUSH-FIGHTING


During all the months that had elapsed since Mrs. Hamley's death,
Molly had wondered many a time about the secret she had so
unwittingly become possessed of that last day in the Hall library.
It seemed so utterly strange and unheard-of a thing to her
inexperienced mind, that a man should be married, and yet not live
with his wife--that a son should have entered into the holy state of
matrimony without his father's knowledge, and without being
recognized as the husband of some one known or unknown by all those
with whom he came in daily contact, that she felt occasionally as if
that little ten minutes of revelation must have been a vision in a
dream. Both Roger and Osborne had kept the most entire silence on
the subject ever since. Not even a look, or a pause, betrayed any
allusion to it; it even seemed to have passed out of their thoughts.
There had been the great sad event of their mother's death to fill
their minds on the next occasion of their meeting Molly; and since
then long pauses of intercourse had taken place; so that she
sometimes felt as if each of the brothers must have forgotten how
she had come to know their important secret. She often found herself
entirely forgetting it, but perhaps the consciousness of it was
present to her unawares, and enabled her to comprehend the real
nature of Osborne's feelings towards Cynthia. At any rate she never
for a moment had supposed that his gentle kind manner towards
Cynthia was anything but the courtesy of a friend; strange to say,
in these latter days Molly had looked upon Osborne's relation to
herself as pretty much the same as that in which at one time she had
considered Roger's; and she thought of the former as of some one as
nearly a brother both to Cynthia and herself, as any young man could
well be, whom they had not known in childhood, and who was in nowise
related to them. She thought that he was very much improved in
manner, and probably in character, by his mother's death. He was no
longer sarcastic, or fastidious, or vain, or self-confident. She did
not know how often all these styles of talk or of behaviour were put
on to conceal shyness or consciousness, and to veil the real self
from strangers.

Osborne's conversation and ways might very possibly have been just
the same as before, had he been thrown amongst new people; but Molly
only saw him in their own circle in which he was on terms of decided
intimacy. Still there was no doubt that he was really improved,
though perhaps not to the extent for which Molly gave him credit;
and this exaggeration on her part arose very naturally from the
fact, that he, perceiving Roger's warm admiration for Cynthia,
withdrew a little out of his brother's way; and used to go and talk
to Molly in order not to intrude himself between Roger and Cynthia.
Of the two, perhaps, Osborne preferred Molly; to her he needed not
to talk if the mood was not on him--they were on those happy terms
where silence is permissible, and where efforts to act against the
prevailing mood of the mind are not required. Sometimes, indeed,
when Osborne was in the humour to be critical and fastidious as of
yore, he used to vex Roger by insisting upon it that Molly was
prettier than Cynthia.

'You mark my words, Roger. Five years hence the beautiful Cynthia's
red and white will have become just a little coarse, and her figure
will have thickened, while Molly's will only have developed into
more perfect grace. I don't believe the girl has done growing yet; I
am sure she is taller than when I first saw her last summer.'

'Miss Kirkpatrick's eyes must always be perfection. I cannot fancy
any could come up to them: soft, grave, appealing, tender; and such
a heavenly colour--I often try to find something in nature to
compare them to; they are not like violets--that blue in the eyes is
too like physical weakness of sight; they are not like the sky--that
colour has something of cruelty in it.'

'Come, don't go on trying to match her eyes as if you were a draper,
and they a bit of ribbon; say at once "her eyes are loadstars," and
have done with it! I set up Molly's grey eyes and curling black
lashes, long odds above the other young woman's; but, of course,
it's all a matter of taste.'

And now both Osborne and Roger had left the neighbourhood. In spite
of all that Mrs. Gibson had said about Roger's visits being ill-timed
and intrusive, she began to feel as if they had been a very pleasant
variety, now they had ceased altogether. He brought in a whiff of a
new atmosphere from that of Hollingford. He and his brother had been
always ready to do numberless little things which only a man can do
for women; small services which Mr. Gibson was always too busy to
render. For the good doctor's business grew upon him. He thought
that this increase was owing to his greater skill and experience,
and he would probably have been mortified if he could have known how
many of his patients were solely biassed in sending for him, by the
fact that he was employed at the Towers. Something of this sort must
have been contemplated in the low scale of payment adopted long ago
by the Cumnor family. Of itself the money he received for going to
the Towers would hardly have paid him for horse-flesh, but then as
Lady Cumnor in her younger days had worded it,--

'It is such a thing for a man just setting up in practice for
himself to be able to say he attends at this house!'

So the prestige was tacitly sold and paid for; but neither buyer nor
seller defined the nature of the bargain. On the whole, it was as
well that Mr. Gibson spent so much of his time from home. He
sometimes thought so himself when he heard his wife's plaintive fret
or pretty babble over totally indifferent things, and perceived of
how flimsy a nature were all her fine sentiments. Still, he did not
allow himself to repine over the step he had taken; he wilfully shut
his eyes and waxed up his ears to many small things that he knew
would have irritated him if he had attended to them; and, in his
solitary rides, he forced himself to dwell on the positive
advantages that had accrued to him and his through his marriage. He
had obtained an unexceptionable chaperone, if not a tender mother,
for his little girl; a skilful manager of his formerly disorderly
household; a woman who was graceful and pleasant to look at for the
head of his table. Moreover, Cynthia reckoned for something in the
favourable side of the balance. She was a capital companion for
Molly; and the two were evidently very fond of each other. The
feminine companionship of the mother and daughter was agreeable to
him as well as to his child,--when Mrs. Gibson was moderately
sensible and not over-sentimental, he mentally added; and then he
checked himself, for he would not allow himself to become more aware
of her faults and foibles by defining them. At any rate, she was
harmless, and wonderfully just to Molly for a stepmother. She piqued
herself upon this indeed, and would often call attention to the fact
of her being unlike other women in this respect. Just then sudden
tears came into Mr. Gibson's eyes, as he remembered how quiet and
undemonstrative his little Molly had become in her general behaviour
to him; but how once or twice, when they had met upon the stairs, or
were otherwise unwitnessed, she had caught him and kissed him--hand
or cheek--in a sad passionateness of affection. But in a moment he
began to whistle an old Scotch air he had heard in his childhood,
and which had never recurred to his memory since; and five minutes
afterwards he was too busily treating a case of white swelling in
the knee of a little boy, and thinking how to relieve the poor
mother, who went out charring all day, and had to listen to the
moans of her child all night, to have any thought for his own cares,
which, if they really existed, were of so trifling a nature compared
to the hard reality of this hopeless woe.

Osborne came home first. He returned, in fact, not long after Roger
had gone away; but he was languid and unwell, and, though he did not
complain, he felt unequal to any exertion. Thus a week or more
elapsed before any of the Gibsons knew that he was at the Hall; and
then it was only by chance that they became aware of it. Mr. Gibson
met him in one of the lanes near Hamley; the acute surgeon noticed
the gait of the man as he came near, before he recognized who it
was. When he overtook him he said,--

'Why, Osborne, is it you? I thought it was an old man of fifty
loitering before me! I didn't know you had come back.'

'Yes,' said Osborne, 'I've been at home nearly ten days. I daresay I
ought to have called on your people, for I made a half promise to
Mrs. Gibson to let her know as soon as I returned; but the fact is,
I'm feeling very good-for-nothing,--this air oppresses me; I could
hardly breathe in the house, and yet I'm already tired with this
short walk.'

'You'd better get home at once; and I'll call and see you as I come
back from Rowe's.'

'No, you mustn't, on any account!' said Osborne, hastily; my father
is annoyed enough about my going from home, so often, he says,
though it was six weeks. He puts down all my languor to my having
been away,--he keeps the purse-strings, you know,' he added, with a
faint smile, 'and I'm in the unlucky position of a penniless heir,
and I've been brought up so--In fact, I must leave home from time to
time, and, if my father gets confirmed in this notion of his that my
health is worse for my absences, he will stop the supplies
altogether.'

'May I ask where you do spend your time when you are not at Hamley
Hall?' asked Mr. Gibson, with some hesitation in his manner.

'No!' replied Osborne, reluctantly. 'I will tell you this:--I stay
with friends in the country. I lead a life which ought to be
conducive to health, because it is thoroughly simple, rational, and
happy. And now I've told you more about it than my father himself
knows. He never asks me where I have been; and I shouldn't tell him
if he did--at least, I think not.'

Mr. Gibson rode on by Osborne's side, not speaking for a moment or
two.

'Osborne, whatever scrapes you may have got into, I should advise
your telling your father boldly out. I know him; and I know he'll be
angry enough at first, but he'll come round, take my word for it;
and, somehow or another, he'll find money to pay your debts and set
you free, if it's that kind of difficulty; and if it's any other
kind of entanglement, why still he's your best friend. It's this
estrangement from your father that's telling on your health, I'll be
bound.'

'No,' said Osborne, 'I beg your pardon; but it's not that; I am
really out of order. I daresay my unwillingness to encounter any
displeasure from my father is the consequence of my indisposition;
but I'll answer for it, it is not the cause of it. My instinct tells
me there is something real the matter with me.'

'Come, don't be setting up your instinct against the profession,'
said Mr. Gibson, cheerily. He dismounted, and throwing the reins of
his horse round his arm, he looked at Osborne's tongue and felt his
pulse, asking him various questions. At the end he said,--

'We'll soon bring you about, though I should like a little more
quiet talk with you, without this tugging brute for a third. If
you'll manage to ride over and lunch with us to-morrow, Dr Nicholls
will be with us; he's coming over to see old Rowe; and you shall
have the benefit of the advice of two doctors instead of one. Go
home now, you've had enough exercise for the middle of a day as hot
as this is. And don't mope in the house, listening to the
maunderings of your stupid instinct.'

'What else have I to do?' said Osborne. 'My father and I are not
companions; one can't read and write for ever, especially when there
is no end to be gained by it. I don't mind telling you--but in
confidence, recollect--that I've been trying to get some of my poems
published; but there's no one like a publisher for taking the
conceit out of one. Not a man among them would take them as a gift.'

'0 ho! so that's it, is it, Master Osborne? I thought there was some
mental cause for this depression of health. I wouldn't trouble my
head about it, if I were you, though that's always very easily said,
I know. Try your hand at prose, if you can't manage to please the
publishers with poetry; but, at any rate, don't go on fretting over
spilt milk. But I mustn't lose my time here. Come over to us
to-morrow, as I said; and what with the wisdom of two doctors, and
the wit and folly of three women, I think we shall cheer you up a
bit.'

So saying, Mr. Gibson remounted, and rode away at the long, slinging
trot so well known to the country people as the doctor's pace.

'I don't like his looks,' thought Mr. Gibson to himself at night, as
over his daybooks he reviewed the events of the day. 'And then his
pulse. But how often we're all mistaken; and, ten to one, my own
hidden enemy lies closer to me than his does to him--even taking the
worse view of the case.'

Osborne made his appearance a considerable time before luncheon the
next morning; and no one objected to the earliness of his call. He
was feeling better. There were few signs of the invalid about him;
and what few there were disappeared under the bright pleasant
influence of such a welcome as he received from all. Molly and
Cynthia had much to tell him of the small proceedings since he went
away, or to relate the conclusions of half-accomplished projects.
Cynthia was often on the point of some gay, careless inquiry as to
where he had been, and what he had been doing; but Molly, who
conjectured the truth, as often interfered to spare him the pain of
equivocation--a pain that her tender conscience would have felt for
him, much more than he would have felt it for himself.

Mr. Gibson's talk was desultory, complimentary, and sentimental,
after her usual fashion; but still, on the whole, though Osborne
smiled to himself at much that she said, it was soothing and
agreeable. Presently, Dr Nicholls and Mr. Gibson came in; the former
had had some conference with the latter on the subject of Osborne's
health; and, from time to time, the skilful old physician's sharp
and observant eyes gave a comprehensive look at Osborne.

Then there was lunch, when every one was merry and hungry, excepting
the hostess, who was trying to train her midday appetite into the
genteelest of all ways, and thought (falsely enough) that Dr
Nicholls was a good person to practise the semblance of ill-health
upon, and that he would give her the proper civil amount of
commiseration for her ailments, which every guest ought to bestow
upon a hostess who complains of her delicacy of health. The old
doctor was too cunning a man to fall into this trap. He would keep
recommending her to try the coarsest viands on the table; and, at
last, he told her if she could not fancy the cold beef to try a
little with pickled onions. There was a twinkle in his eye as he
said this, that would have betrayed his humour to any observer; but
Mr. Gibson, Cynthia, and Molly were all attacking Osborne on the
subject of some literary preference he had expressed, and Dr
Nicholls had Mrs. Gibson quite at his mercy. She was not sorry when
luncheon was over to leave the room to the three gentlemen; and ever
afterwards she spoke of Dr Nicholls as 'that bear.'

Presently, Osborne came upstairs, and, after his old fashion, began
to take up new books, and to question the girls as to their music.
Mrs. Gibson had to go out and pay some calls, so she left the three
together; and after a while they adjourned into the garden, Osborne
lounging on a chair, while Molly employed herself busily in tying up
carnations, and Cynthia gathered flowers in her careless, graceful
way.

'I hope you notice the difference in our occupations, Mr. Hamley.
Molly, you see, devotes herself to the useful, and I to the
ornamental. Please, under what head do you class what you are doing?
I think you might help one of us, instead of looking on like the
Grand Seigneur.'

'I don't know what I can do,' said he, rather plaintively. 'I should
like to be useful, but I don't know how; and my day is past for
purely ornamental work. You must let me be, I am afraid. Besides, I
am really rather exhausted by being questioned and pulled about by
those good doctors.'

'Why, you don't mean to say they have been attacking you since
lunch!' exclaimed Molly.

'Yes; indeed, they have; and they might have gone on till now if Mrs
Gibson had not come in opportunely.'

'I thought mamma had gone out some time ago!' said Cynthia, catching
wafts of the conversation as she flitted hither and thither among
the flowers.

'She came into the dining-room not five minutes ago. Do you want
her, for I see her crossing the hall at this very moment?' and
Osborne half rose.

'Oh, not at all!' said Cynthia. 'Only she seemed to be in such a
hurry to go out, I fancied she had set off long ago. She had some
errand to do for Lady Cumnor, and she thought she could manage to
catch the housekeeper, who is always in the town on Thursday.'

'Are the family coming to the Towers this autumn?'

'I believe so. But I don't know, and I don't much care. They don't
take kindly to me,' continued Cynthia, 'and so I suppose I am not
generous enough to take kindly to them.'

'I should have thought that such a very unusual blot in their
discrimination would have interested you in them as extraordinary
people,' said Osborne, with a little air of conscious gallantry.

'Isn't that a compliment?' said Cynthia, after a pause of mock
meditation. 'If any one pays me a compliment, please let it be short
and clear. I'm very stupid at finding out hidden meanings.'

'Then such speeches as "you are very pretty," or "you have charming
manners," are what you prefer. Now, I pique myself on wrapping up my
sugar-plums delicately.'

'Then would you please to write them down, and at my leisure I'll
parse them.'

'No! It would be too much trouble. I'll meet you half way, and study
clearness next time.'

'What are you two talking about?' said Molly, resting on her light
spade.

'It's only a discussion on the best way of administering
compliments,' said Cynthia, taking up her flower-basket again, but
not going out of the reach of the conversation.

'I don't like them at all in any way,' said Molly. 'But, perhaps,
it's rather sour grapes with me,' she added.

'Nonsense!' said Osborne. 'Shall I tell you what I heard of you at
the ball?'

'Or shall I provoke Mr. Preston,' said Cynthia, 'to begin upon you?
It is like turning a tap, such a stream of pretty speeches flow out
at the moment.' Her lip curled with scorn.

'For you, perhaps,' said Molly; 'but not for me.'

'For any woman. It is his notion of making himself agreeable. If you
dare me, Molly, I will try the experiment, and you'll see with what
success.'

'No, don't, pray!' said Molly, in a hurry. 'I do so dislike him!'

'Why?' said Osborne, roused to a little curiosity by her vehemence.

'Oh! I don't know. He never seems to know what one is feeling.'

'He wouldn't care if he did know,' said Cynthia. 'And he might know
he is not wanted,'

'If he chooses to stay, he cares little whether he is wanted or
not.'

'Come, this is very interesting,' said Osborne. 'It is like the
strophe and anti-strophe in a Greek chorus. Pray, go on.'

'Don't you know him?' asked Molly.

'Yes, by sight, and I think we were once introduced. But, you know,
we are much farther from Ashcombe, at Hamley, than you are here, at
Hollingford.'

'Oh! but he is coming to take Mr. Sheepshanks' place, and then he
will live here altogether,' said Molly.

'Molly! who told you that?' said Cynthia, in quite a different tone
of voice to that in which she had been speaking hitherto.

'Papa, didn't you hear him? Oh, no! it was before you were down this
morning. Papa met Mr. Sheepshanks yesterday, and he told him it was
all settled: you know we heard a rumour about it in the spring!'

Cynthia was very silent after this. Presently, she said that she had
gathered all the flowers she wanted, and that the heat was so great
she would go indoors. And then Osborne went away. But Molly had set
herself a task to dig up such roots as had already flowered, and to
put down some bedding-out plants in their stead. Tired and heated as
she was she finished it, and then went upstairs to rest, and change
her dress. According to her wont, she sought for Cynthia; there was
no reply to her soft knock at the bedroom-door opposite to her own,
and, thinking that Cynthia might have fallen asleep, and be lying
uncovered in the draught of the open window, she went in softly.
Cynthia was lying upon the bed as if she had thrown herself down on
it without caring for the ease or comfort of her position. She was
very still; and Molly took a shawl, and was going to place it over
her, when she opened her eyes, and spoke,--

'Is that you, dear? Don't go. I like to know that you are there.'

She shut her eyes again, and remained quite quiet for a few minutes
longer. Then she started up into a sitting posture, pushed her hair
away from her forehead and burning eyes, and gazed intently at
Molly.

'Do you know what I've been thinking, dear?' said she. 'I think I've
been long enough here, and that I had better go out as a governess.'

'Cynthia, what do you mean?' asked Molly, aghast. 'You've been
asleep--you've been dreaming. You're overtired,' continued she,
sitting down on the bed, and taking Cynthia's passive hand, and
stroking it softly--a mode of caressing that had come down to her
from her mother--whether as an hereditary instinct, or as a
lingering remembrance of the tender ways of the dead woman, Mr
Gibson often wondered within himself when he observed it.

'Oh, how good you are, Molly. I wonder, if I had been brought up
like you, if I should have been as good. But I've been tossed about
so.'

'Then, don't go and be tossed about any more,' said Molly, softly.

'Oh, dear! I had better go. But, you see, no one ever loved me like
you, and, I think, your father--doesn't he, Molly? And it's hard to
be driven out.'

'Cynthia, I am sure you're not well, or else you're not half awake.'

Cynthia sate with her arms encircling her knees, and looking at
vacancy.

'Well!' said she, at last, heaving a great sigh; but, then, smiling
as she caught Molly's anxious face, 'I suppose there's no escaping
one's doom; and anywhere else I should be much more forlorn and
unprotected.'

'What do you mean by your doom?'

'Ah, that's telling, little one,' said Cynthia, who seemed now to
have recovered her usual manner. 'I don't mean to have one, though.
I think that, though I am an arrant coward at heart, I can show
fight.'

'With whom?' asked Molly, really anxious to probe the mystery--if,
indeed, there was one--to the bottom, in the hope of some remedy
being found for the distress Cynthia was in when first Molly had
entered,

Again Cynthia was lost in thought; then, catching the echo of
Molly's last words in her mind, she said,--

'"With whom?"--oh! show fight with whom--with my doom, to be sure.
Am not I a grand young lady to have a doom? Why, Molly, child, how
pale and grave you look!' said she, kissing her all of a sudden.
'You ought not to care so much for me; I'm not good enough for you
to worry yourself about me. I've given myself up a long time ago as
a heartless baggage!'

'Nonsense! I wish you wouldn't talk so, Cynthia!'

'And I wish you wouldn't always take me "at the foot of the letter,"
as an English girl at school used to translate it. Oh, how hot it
is! Is it never going to get cool again? My child! what dirty hands
you've got, and face too; and I've been kissing you--I daresay I'm
dirty with it, too. Now, isn't that like one of mamma's speeches?
But, for all that, you look more like a delving Adam than a spinning
Eve.'

This had the effect that Cynthia intended; the daintily clean Molly
became conscious of her soiled condition, which she had forgotten
while she had been attending to Cynthia, and she hastily withdrew to
her own room. When she had gone, Cynthia noiselessly locked the
door; and, taking her purse out of her desk, she began to count over
her money. She counted it once--she counted it twice, as if
desirous of finding out some mistake which should prove it to be
more than it was; but the end of it all was a sigh.

'What a fool!--what a fool I was!' she said, at length. 'But even if
I don't go out as a governess, I shall make it up in time.'

Some weeks after the time he had anticipated when he had spoken of
his departure to the Gibsons, Roger returned back to the Hall. One
morning when he called, Osborne told them that his brother had been
at home for two or three days.

'And why has he not come here, then?' said Mrs. Gibson. 'It is not
kind of him not to come and see us as soon as he can. Tell him I say
so--pray do.'

Osborne had gained one or two ideas as to her treatment of Roger the
last time he had called. Roger had not complained of it, or even
mentioned it, till that very morning; when Osborne was on the point
of starting, and had urged Roger to accompany him, the latter had
told him something of what Mrs. Gibson had said. He spoke rather as
if he was more amused than annoyed; but Osborne could read that he
was chagrined at those restrictions placed upon calls which were the
greatest pleasure of his life. Neither of them let out the suspicion
which had entered both their minds--the well-grounded suspicion
arising from the fact that Osborne's visits, be they paid early or
late, had never yet been met with a repulse.

Osborne now reproached himself with having done Mrs. Gibson
injustice. She was evidently a weak, but probably a disinterested,
woman; and it was only a little bit of ill-temper on her part which
had caused her to speak to Roger as she had done.

'I daresay it was rather impertinent of me to call at such an
untimely hour,' said Roger.

'Not at all; I call at all hours, and nothing is ever said about it.
It was just because she was put out that morning. I'll answer for it
she's sorry now, and I'm sure you may go there at any time you like
in the future.'

Still, Roger did not choose to go again for two or three weeks, and
the consequence was that the next time he called the ladies were
out. Once again he had the same ill-luck, and then he received a
little pretty three-cornered note from Mrs. Gibson:--

MY DEAR SIR,--How is it that you are become so formal all on a
sudden, leaving cards, instead of awaiting our return? Fie for
shame! If you had seen the races of disappointment that I did when
the horrid little bits of pasteboard were displayed to our view, you
would not have borne malice against me so long; for it is really
punishing others as well as my naughty self. If you will come
to-morrow--as early as you like--and lunch with us, I'll own I was
cross, and acknowledge myself a penitent.--Yours ever,
HYACINTH C. K. GIBSON.

There was no resisting this, even if there had not been strong
inclination to back up the pretty words. Roger went, and Mrs. Gibson
caressed and petted him in her sweetest, silkiest manner. Cynthia
looked lovelier than ever to him for the slight restriction that had
been laid for a time on their intercourse. She might be gay and
sparkling with Osborne; with Roger she was soft and grave.
Instinctively she knew her men. She saw that Osborne was only
interested in her because of her position in a family with whom he
was intimate; that his friendship was without the least touch of
sentiment; and that his admiration was only the warm criticism of an
artist for unusual beauty. But she felt how different Roger's
relation to her was. To him she was ~the~ one, alone, peerless. If
his love was prohibited, it would be long years before he could sink
down into tepid friendship; and to him her personal loveliness was
only one of the many charms that made him tremble into passion.
Cynthia was not capable of returning such feelings; she had had too
little true love in her life, and perhaps too much admiration to do
so; but she appreciated this honest ardour, this loyal worship that
was new to her experience. Such appreciation, and such respect for
his true and affectionate nature, gave a serious tenderness to her
manner to Roger, which allured him with a fresh and separate grace.
Molly sate by, and wondered how it would all end, or, rather, how
soon it would all end, for she thought that no girl could resist
such reverent passion; and on Roger's side there could be no
doubt--alas! there could be no doubt. An older spectator might have
looked far ahead, and thought of the question of pounds, shillings,
and pence. Where was the necessary income for a marriage to come
from? Roger had his fellowship now, it is true; but the income of
that would be lost if he married; he had no profession, and the life
interest of the two or three thousand pounds that he inherited from
his mother, belonged to his father. This older spectator might have
been a little surprised at the ~empressement~ of Mrs. Gibson's manner
to a younger son, always supposing this said spectator to have read
to the depths of her worldly heart. Never had she tried to be more
agreeable to Osborne; and though her attempt was a great failure
when practised upon Roger, and he did not know what to say in reply
to the delicate Batteries which he felt to be insincere, he saw that
she intended him to consider himself henceforward free of the house;
and he was too glad to avail himself of this privilege to examine
over-closely into what might be her motives for her change of
manner. He shut his eyes, and chose to believe that she was now
desirous of making up for her little burst of temper on his previous
visit.

The result of Osborne's conference with the two doctors had been
certain prescriptions which appeared to have done him much good, and
which would in all probability have done him yet more, could he have
been free of the recollection of the little patient wife in her
solitude near Winchester. He went to her whenever he could; and,
thanks to Roger, money was far more plentiful with him now than it
had been. But he still shrank, and perhaps even more and more, from
telling his father of his marriage. Some bodily instinct made him
dread all agitation inexpressibly. If he had not had this money from
Roger, he might have been compelled to tell his father all, and to
ask for the necessary funds to provide for the wife and the coming
child. But with enough in hand, and a secret, though remorseful,
conviction that as long as Roger had a penny his brother was sure to
have half of it, made him more reluctant than ever to irritate his
father by a revelation of his secret. 'Not just yet, not just at
present,' he kept saying both to Roger and to himself. 'By and by,
if we have a boy, I will call it Roger'--and then visions of
poetical and romantic reconciliations brought about between father
and son, through the medium of a child, the offspring of a forbidden
marriage, became still more vividly possible to him, and at any rate
it was a staving-off of an unpleasant thing. He atoned to himself
for taking so much of Roger's fellowship money by reflecting that,
if Roger married, he would lose this source of revenue; yet Osborne
was throwing no impediment in the way of this event, rather
forwarding it by promoting every possible means of his brother's
seeing the lady of his love. Osborne ended his reflections by
convincing himself of his own generosity.


CHAPTER XXX


OLD WAYS AND NEW WAYS


Mr. Preston was now installed in his new house at Hollingford; Mr
Sheepshanks having entered into dignified idleness at the house of
his married daughter, who lived in the county town. His successor
had plunged with energy into all manner of improvements; and among
others he fell to draining a piece of outlying waste and unreclaimed
land of Lord Cumnor's, which was close to Squire Hamley's property;
that very piece for which he had had the Government grant, but which
now lay neglected, and only half-drained, with stacks of mossy
tiles, and lines of up-turned furrows telling of abortive plans. It
was not often that the squire rode in this direction now-a-days; but
the cottage of a man who had been the squire's gamekeeper in those
more prosperous days when the Hamleys could afford to preserve, was
close to the rush-grown ground. This old servant and tenant was ill,
and had sent a message up to the Hall, asking to see the squire; not
to reveal any secret, or to say anything particular, but only from
the feudal loyalty, which made it seem to the dying man as if it
would be a comfort to shake the hand, and look once more into the
eyes of the lord and master whom he had served, and whose ancestors
his own forbears had served for so many generations. And the squire
was as fully alive as old Silas to the claims of the tie that
existed between them. Though he hated the thought, and, still more,
should hate the sight of the piece of land, on the side of which
Silas's cottage stood, the squire ordered his horse, and rode off
within half-an-hour of receiving the message. As he drew near the
spot he thought he heard the sound of tools, and the hum of many
voices, just as he used to hear them a year or two before. He
listened with surprise. Yes. Instead of the still solitude he had
expected, there was the clink of iron, the heavy gradual thud of the
fall of barrows-full of soil--the cry and shout of labourers. But
not on his land--better worth expense and trouble by far than the
reedy clay common on which the men were, in fact, employed. He knew
it was Lord Cumnor's property; and he knew Lord Cumnor and his
family had gone up in the world ('the Whig rascals!'), both in
wealth and in station, as the Hamleys had gone down. But all the
same--in spite of long known facts, and in spite of reason--the
squire's ready anger rose high at the sight of his neighbour doing
what he had been unable to do, and he a Whig; and his family only in
the county since Queen Anne's time. He went so far as to wonder
whether they might not--the labourers he meant--avail themselves of
his tiles, lying so conveniently close to hand. All these thoughts,
regrets, and wonders were in his mind as he rode up to the cottage
he was bound to, and gave his horse in charge to a little lad, who
had hitherto found his morning's business and amusement in playing
at 'houses' with a still younger sister, with some of the squire's
neglected tiles. But he was old Silas's grandson, and he might have
battered the rude red earthenware to pieces--a whole stack--one by
one, and the squire would have said little or nothing. It was only
that he would not spare one to a labourer of Lord Cumnor's. No! not
one.

Old Silas lay in a sort of closet, opening out of the family
living-room. The small window that gave it light looked right on to
the 'moor,' as it was called; and by clay the check curtain was
drawn aside so that he might watch the progress of the labour.
Everything about the old man was clean, if coarse; and, with Death,
the leveller, so close at hand, it was the labourer who made the
first advances, and put out his horny hand to the squire.

'I thought you'd come, squire. Your father came for to see my father
as he lay a-dying.'

'Come, come, my man!' said the squire, easily affected, as he always
was. 'Don't talk of dying, we shall soon have you out, never fear.
They've sent you up some soup from the Hall, as I bade 'em, haven't
they?'

'Ay, ay, I've had all as I could want for to eat and to drink. The
young squire and Master Roger was here yesterday.'

'Yes, I know.'

'But I'm a deal nearer Heaven to-day, I am. I should like you to
look after the covers in the West Spinney, squire; them gorse, you
know, where th' old fox had her hole--her as give 'em so many a run.
You'll mind it, squire, though you was but a lad. I could laugh to
think on her tricks yet.' And, with a weak attempt at a laugh, he
got himself into a violent fit of coughing, which alarmed the
squire, who thought he would never get his breath again. His
daughter-in-law came in at the sound, and told the squire that he
had these coughing-bouts very frequently, and that she thought he
would go off in one of them before long. This opinion of hers was
spoken simply out before the old man, who now lay gasping and
exhausted upon his pillow. Poor people acknowledge the
inevitableness and the approach of death in a much more
straightforward manner than is customary among more educated folk.
The squire was shocked at the hard-heartedness, as he considered it;
but the old man himself had received much tender kindness in action
from his daughter-in-law; and what she had just said was no more
news to him than the fact that the sun would rise to-morrow. He was
more anxious to go on with his story.

'Them navvies--I call 'em navvies because some on 'em is strangers,
though some on 'em is th' men as was turned off your own works,
squire, when there came orders to stop 'em last fall--they're
a-pulling up gorse and brush to light their fire for warming up
their messes. It's a long way off to their homes, and they mostly
dine here; and there'll be nothing of a cover left, if you don't see
after 'em. I thought I should like to tell ye afore I died. Parson's
been here; but I did na tell him. He's all for the earl's folk, and
he'd not ha' heeded. It's the earl as put him into his church, I
reckon, for he said what a fine thing it were for to see so much
employment a-given to the poor, and he never said nought o' th' sort
when your works were agait, squire.'

This long speech had been interrupted by many a cough and gasp for
breath; and having delivered himself of what was on his mind, he
turned his face to the wall, and appeared to be going to sleep.
Presently he roused himself with a start.

'I know I flogged him well, I did. But he were after pheasants'
eggs, and I didn't know he were an orphan. Lord, forgive me!'

'He's thinking on David Morton, the cripple, as used to go about
trapping vermin,' whispered the woman.

'Why, he died long ago--twenty year, I should think,' replied the
squire.

'Ay, but when grandfather goes off i' this way to sleep after a bout
of talking he seems to be dreaming on old times. He'll not waken up
yet, sir; you'd best sit down if you'd like to stay,' she continued,
as she went into the house-place and dusted a chair with her apron.
'He was very particular in bidding me wake him if he were asleep,
and you or Mr. Roger was to call. Mr. Roger said he'd be coming again
this morning--but he'll likely sleep an hour or more, if he's let
alone.'

'I wish I'd said good-by, I should like to have done that.'

'He drops off so sudden,' said the woman. 'But if you'd be better
pleased to have said it, squire, I'll waken him up a bit.'

'No, no!' the squire called out as the woman was going to be as good
as her word. 'I'll come again, perhaps to-morrow. And tell him I was
sorry; for I am indeed. And be sure and send to the Hall for
anything you want! Mr. Roger is coming, is he? He'll bring me word
how he is, later on. I should like to have bidden him good-by.'

So, giving sixpence to the child who had held his horse, the squire
mounted. He sate still a moment, looking at the busy work going on
before him, and then at his own half-completed drainage. It was a
bitter pill. He had objected to borrowing from Government, in the
first instance; and then his wife had persuaded him to the step; and
after it was once taken, he was as proud as could be of the only
concession to the spirit of progress he ever made in his life. He
had read and studied the subject pretty thoroughly, if also very
slowly, during the time his wife had been influencing him. He was
tolerably well up in agriculture, if in nothing else; and at one
time he had taken the lead among the neighbouring landowners, when
he first began tile-drainage. In those days people used to speak of
Squire Hamley's hobby; and at market ordinaries, or county dinners,
they rather dreaded setting him off on long repetitions of arguments
from the different pamphlets on the subject which he had read. And
now the proprietors all around him were draining--draining; his
interest to Government was running on all the same, though his works
were stopped, and his tiles deteriorating in value. It was not a
soothing consideration, and the squire was almost ready to quarrel
with his shadow. He wanted a vent for his ill-humour; and suddenly
remembering the devastation on his covers, which he had heard about
not a quarter of an hour before, he rode up to the men busy at work
on Lord Cumnor's land. Just before he got up to them he encountered
Mr. Preston, also on horseback, come to overlook his labourers. The
squire did not know him personally, but from the agent's manner of
speaking, and the deference that was evidently paid to him, Mr
Hamley saw that he was a responsible person. So he addressed the
agent,--'I beg your pardon, I suppose you are the manager of these
works?'

Mr. Preston replied,--'Certainly. I am that and many other things
besides, at your service. I have succeeded Mr. Sheepshanks in the
management of my lord's property. Mr. Hamley of Hamley, I believe?'

The squire bowed stiffly. He did not like his name to be asked or
presumed upon in that manner. An equal might conjecture who he was,
or recognize him, but, till he announced himself, an inferior had no
right to do more than address him respectfully as 'sir.' That was
the squire's code of etiquette.

'I am Mr. Hamley of Hamley. I suppose you are as yet ignorant of the
boundary of Lord Cumnor's land, and so I will inform you that my
property begins at the pond yonder--just where you see the rise in
the ground.'

'I am perfectly acquainted with that fact, Mr. Hamley,' said Mr
Preston, a little annoyed at the ignorance attributed to him. 'But
may I inquire why my attention is called to it just now?'

The squire was beginning to boil over; but he tried to keep his
temper in. The effort was very much to be respected, for it was a
great one. There was something in the handsome and well-dressed
agent's tone and manner inexpressibly irritating to the squire, and
it was not lessened by an involuntary comparison of the capital
roadster on which Mr. Preston was mounted with his own ill-groomed
and aged cob.

'I have been told that your men out yonder do not respect these
boundaries, but are in the habit of plucking up gorse from my covers
to light their fires.'

'It is possible they may!' said Mr. Preston, lifting his eyebrows,
his manner being more nonchalant than his words. 'I daresay they
think no great harm of it. However, I'll inquire.'

'Do you doubt my word, sir?' said the squire, fretting his mare till
she began to dance about. 'I tell you I've heard it only within this
last half-hour.'

'I don't mean to doubt your word, Mr. Hamley; it's the last thing I
should think of doing. But you must excuse my saying that the
argument which you have twice brought up for the authenticity of
your statement, "that you have heard it within the last half-hour,"
is not quite so forcible as to preclude the possibility of a
mistake.'

'I wish you'd only say in plain language that you doubt my word,'
said the squire, clenching and slightly raising his horsewhip. 'I
can't make out what you mean--you use so many words.'

'Pray don't lose your temper, sir. I said I should inquire. You have
not seen the men pulling up gorse yourself, or you would have named
it. I surely may doubt the correctness of your informant until I
have made some inquiry; at any rate, that is the course I shall
pursue, and if it gives you offence, I shall be sorry, but I shall
do it just the same. When I am convinced that harm has been done to
your property, I shall take steps to prevent it for the future, and
of course, in my lord's name, I shall pay you compensation--it may
probably amount to half-a-crown.' He added these last words in a
lower tone, as if to himself, with a slight, contemptuous smile on
his face.

'Quiet, mare, quiet,' said the squire, quite unaware that he was the
cause of her impatient movements by the way he was perpetually
tightening her reins; and also, perhaps, he unconsciously addressed
the injunction to himself.

Neither of them saw Roger Hamley, who was just then approaching them
with long, steady steps. He had seen his father from the door of old
Silas's cottage, and, as the poor fellow was still asleep, he was
coming to speak to his father, and was near enough now to hear the
next words.

'I don't know who you are, but I've known land-agents who were
gentlemen, and I've known some who were not. You belong to this last
set, young man,' said the squire, 'that you do. I should like to try
my horsewhip on you for your insolence.'

'Pray, Mr. Hamley,' replied Mr. Preston, coolly, 'curb your temper a
little, and reflect. I really feel sorry to see a man of your age in
such a passion'--moving a little farther off, however, but really
more with a desire to save the irritated man from carrying his
threat into execution, out of a dislike to the slander and
excitement it would cause, than from any personal dread. Just at
this moment Roger Hamley came close up. He was panting a little, and
his eyes were very stern and dark; but he spoke quietly enough.

'Mr. Preston, I can hardly understand what you mean by your last
words. But, remember, my father is a gentleman of age and position,
and not accustomed to receive advice as to the management of his
temper from young men like you.'

'I desired to keep his men off my land,' said the squire to his
son--his wish to stand well in Roger's opinion restraining his
temper a little; but though his words might be a little calmer,
there were all other signs of passion present--the discoloured
complexion, the trembling hands, the fiery cloud in his eyes. 'He
refused, and doubted my word.'

Mr. Preston turned to Roger, as if appealing from Philip drunk to
Philip sober, and spoke in a tone of cool explanation, which, though
not insolent in words, was excessively irritating in manner.

'Your father has misunderstood me--perhaps it is no wonder,' trying
to convey, by a look of intelligence at the son, his opinion that
the father was in no state to hear reason. 'I never refused to do
what was just and right. I only required further evidence as to the
past wrong-doing; your father took offence at this'--and then he
shrugged his shoulders, and lifted his eyebrows in a manner he had
formerly learnt in France.

'At any rate, sir! I can scarcely reconcile the manner and words to
my father, which I heard you use when I first came up, with the
deference you ought to have shown to a man of his age and position.
As to the fact of the trespass--'

'They are pulling up all the gorse, Roger--there'll be no cover
whatever for game soon,' put in the squire. Roger bowed to his
father, but took up his speech at the point it was at before the
interruption.

'I will inquire into it myself at a cooler moment; and if I find
that such trespass or damage has been committed, of course I shall
expect that you will see it put a stop to. Come, father! I am going
to see old Silas--perhaps you don't know that he is very ill.' So he
endeavoured to wile the squire away to prevent further words. He was
not entirely successful.

Mr. Preston was enraged by Roger's calm and dignified manner, and
threw after them this parting shaft, in the shape of a loud
soliloquy,--

'Position, indeed! What are we to think of the position of a man who
begins works like these without counting the cost, and comes to a
stand-still, and has to turn off his labourers just at the beginning
of winter, leaving--'

They were too far off to hear the rest. The squire was on the point
of turning back before this, but Roger took hold of the reins of the
old mare, and led her over some of the boggy ground, as if to guide
her into sure footing, but, in reality, because he was determined to
prevent the renewal of the quarrel. It was well that the cob knew
him, and was, indeed, old enough to prefer quietness to dancing; for
Mr. Hamley plucked hard at the reins, and at last broke out with an
oath,--'Damn it, Roger! I'm not a child; I won't be treated as such.
Leave go, I say!'

Roger let go; they were not on firm ground, and he did not wish any
watchers to think that he was exercising any constraint over his
father; and this quiet obedience to his impatient commands did more
to soothe the squire than anything else could have effected just
then.

'I know I turned them off--what could I do? I'd no more money for
their weekly wages; it's a loss to me, as you know. He doesn't know,
no one knows, but I think your mother would, how it cut me to turn
'em off just before winter set in. I lay awake many a night thinking
of it, and I gave them what I had--I did, indeed. I hadn't got money
to pay 'em, but I had three barren cows fattened, and gave every
scrap of meat to the men, and I let 'em go into the woods and gather
what was fallen, and I winked at their breaking off old branches,
and now to have it cast up against me by that cur--that servant.
But I'll go on with the works, by--, I will, if only to spite him.
I'll show him who I am. My position, indeed! A Hamley of Hamley
takes a higher position than his master. I'll go on with the works,
see if I don't! I'm paying between one and two hundred a year
interest on Government money. I'll raise some more if I go to the
Jews; Osborne has shown me the way, and Osborne shall pay for it--
he shall. I'll not put up with insults. You shouldn't have stopped
me, Roger! I wish to heaven I'd horsewhipped the fellow!

He was lashing himself again into an impotent rage, painful to a son
to witness; but just then the little grandchild of old Silas, who
had held the squire's horse during his visit to the sick man, came
running up, breathless,--

'Please, sir, please, squire, mammy has 'sent me; grandfather has
wakened up sudden, and mammy says he's dying, and would you please
come; she says he'd take it as a kind compliment, she's sure.'

So they went to the cottage, the squire speaking never a word, but
suddenly feeling as if lifted out of a whirlwind and set down in a
still and awful place.


CHAPTER XXXI


A PASSIVE COQUETTE


It is not to be supposed that such an encounter as Mr. Preston had
just had with Roger Hamley sweetened the regards in which the two
young men henceforward held each other. They had barely spoken to
each other before, and but seldom met; for the land-agent's
employment had hitherto lain at Ashcombe, some sixteen or seventeen
miles from Hamley. He was older than Roger by several years; but
during the time he had been in the county Osborne and Roger had been
at school and at college. Mr. Preston was prepared to dislike the
Hamleys for many unreasonable reasons. Cynthia and Molly had both
spoken of the brothers with familiar regard, implying considerable
intimacy; their flowers had been preferred to his on the occasion of
the ball; most people spoke well of them; and Mr. Preston had an
animal's instinctive jealousy and combativeness against all popular
young men. Their 'position'--poor as the Hamleys might be--was far
higher than his own in the county; and, moreover, he was agent to
the great Whig lord, whose political interests were diametrically
opposed to those of the old Tory squire. Not that Lord Cumnor
troubled himself much about his political interests. His family had
obtained property and title from the Whigs at the time of the
Hanoverian succession; and so, traditionally, he was a Whig, and had
belonged in his youth to Whig clubs, where he had lost considerable
sums of money to Whig gamblers. All this was satisfactory and
consistent enough. And if Lord Hollingford had not been returned for
the county on the Whig interest--as his father had been before him,
until he had succeeded to the title--it is quite probable Lord
Cumnor would have considered the British constitution in danger, and
the patriotism of his ancestors ungratefully ignored. But, excepting
at elections, he had no notion of making Whig and Tory a party cry.
He had lived too much in London, and was of too sociable a nature,
to exclude any man who jumped with his humour, from the hospitality
he was always ready to offer, be the agreeable acquaintance Whig,
Tory, or Radical. But in the county of which he was lord-lieutenant,
the old party distinction was still a shibboleth by which men were
tested for their fitness for social intercourse, as well as on the
hustings. If by any chance a Whig found himself at a Tory
dinner-table--or ~vice-versa~--the food was hard of digestion,
and wine and viands were criticized rather than enjoyed. A marriage
between the young people of the separate parties was almost as
unheard-of and prohibited an alliance as that of Romeo and Juliet's.
And of course Mr. Preston was not a man in whose breast such
prejudices would die away. They were an excitement to him for one
thing, and called out all his talent for intrigue on behalf of the
party to which he was allied. Moreover, he considered it as loyalty
to his employer to 'scatter his enemies' by any means in his power.
He had always hated and despised the Tories in general; and after
that interview on the marshy common in front of Silas's cottage, he
hated the Hamleys and Roger especially, with a very choice and
particular hatred. 'That prig,' as hereafter he always designated
Roger--'he shall pay for it yet,' he said to himself by way of
consolation, after the father and son had left him. 'What a lout it
is!'--watching the receding figure. 'The old chap has twice as much
spunk,' as the squire tugged at his bridle-reins. 'The old mare
could make her way better without being led, my fine fellow. But I
see through your dodge. You're afraid of your old father turning
back and getting into another rage. Position indeed! a beggarly
squire--a man who did turn off his men just before winter, to rot or
starve, for all he cared--it's just like a brutal old Tory.' And,
under the cover of sympathy with the dismissed labourers, Mr. Preston
indulged his own private pique very pleasantly.

Mr. Preston had many causes for rejoicing: he might have forgotten
this discomfiture, as he chose to feel it, in the remembrance of an
increase of income, and in the popularity he enjoyed in his new
abode. All Hollingford came forward to do the earl's new agent
honour. Mr. Sheepshanks had been a crabbed, crusty old bachelor,
frequenting inn-parlours on market-days, not unwilling to give
dinners to three or four chosen friends and familiars, with whom, in
return, he dined from time to time, and with whom, also, he kept up
an amicable rivalry in the matter of wines. But he 'did not
appreciate female society,' as Miss Browning elegantly worded his
unwillingness to accept the invitations of the Hollingford ladies.
He was unrefined enough to speak of these invitations to his
intimate friends aforesaid in the following manner, 'Those old
women's worrying,' but, of course, they never heard of this. Little
quarter-of-sheet notes, without any envelopes--that invention was
unknown in those days--but sealed in the corners when folded up
instead of gummed as they are fastened at present, occasionally
passed between Mr. Sheepshanks and the Miss Brownings, Mrs. Goodenough
or others. In the first instance, the form ran as follows:--'Miss'
Browning and her sister, Miss Phoebe Browning, present their
respectful compliments to Mr. Sheepshanks, and beg to inform him that
a few friends have kindly consented to favour them with their
company at tea on Thursday next. Miss Browning and Miss Phoebe will
take it very kindly if Mr. Sheepshanks will join their little
circle.'

Now for Mrs. Goodenough:--

'Mrs. Goodenough's respects to Mr. Sheepshanks, and hopes he is in
good health. She would be very glad if he would favour her with his
company to tea on Monday. My daughter, in Combermere, has sent me a
couple of guinea fowls, and Mrs. Goodenough hopes Mr. Sheepshanks will
stay and take a bit of supper.'

No need for the dates of the days of the month. The good ladies
would have thought that the world was coming to an end if the
invitation had been sent out a week before the party therein named.
But not even guinea-fowls for supper could tempt Mr. Sheepshanks. He
remembered the made-wines he had tasted in former days at
Hollingford parties, and shuddered. Bread-and-cheese, with a glass
of bitter-beer, or a little brandy-and-water, partaken of in his old
clothes (which had worn into shapes of loose comfort, and smelt
strongly of tobacco), he liked better than roast guinea-fowl and
birch-wine, even without throwing into the balance the stiff uneasy
coat, and the tight neckcloth and tighter shoes. So the ex-agent had
been seldom, if ever, seen at the Hollingford tea-parties. He might
have had his form of refusal stereotyped, it was so invariably the
same.

'Mr. Sheepshanks' duty to Miss Browning and her sister' (to Mrs
Goodenough, or to others, as the case might be). 'Business of
importance prevents him from availing himself of their polite
invitation; for which he begs to return his best thanks.'

But now that Mr. Preston had succeeded, and come to live in
Hollingford, things were changed.

He accepted every civility right and left, and won golden opinions
accordingly. Parties were made in his honour, 'just as if he had
been a bride,' Miss Phoebe Browning said; and to all of them he
went.

'What's the man after?' said Mr. Sheepshanks to himself, when he
heard of his successor's affability, and sociability, and
amiability, and a variety of other agreeable 'ilities,' from the
friends whom the old steward still retained at Hollingford.

'Preston's not a man to put himself out for nothing. He's deep.
He'll be after something solider than popularity.'

The sagacious old bachelor was right. Mr. Preston was 'after'
something more than mere popularity. He went wherever he had a
chance of meeting Cynthia Kirkpatrick.

It might be that Molly's spirits were more depressed at this time
than they were in general; or that Cynthia was exultant, unawares to
herself, in the amount of attention and admiration she was receiving
from Roger by day, from Mr. Preston in the evenings, but the two
girls seemed to have parted company in cheerfulness. Molly was
always gentle, but very grave and silent. Cynthia, on the contrary,
was merry, full of pretty mockeries, and hardly ever silent. When
first she came to Hollingford, one of her great charms had been that
she was such a gracious listener; now her excitement, by whatever
caused, made her too restless to hold her tongue; yet what she said
was too pretty, too witty, not to be a winning and sparkling
interruption, eagerly welcomed by those who were under her sway. Mr
Gibson was the only one who observed this change, and reasoned upon
it.

'She is in a mental fever of some kind,' thought he to himself. 'She
is very fascinating, but I don't quite understand her.' If Molly had
not been so entirely loyal to her friend, she might have thought
this constant brilliancy a little tiresome when brought into
every-day life; it was not the sunshiny rest of a placid lake, it
was rather the glitter of the pieces of a broken mirror, which
confuses and bewilders. Cynthia would not talk quietly about
anything now; subjects of thought or conversation seemed to have
lost their relative value. There were exceptions to this mood of
hers, when she sank into deep fits of silence, that would have been
gloomy had it not been for the never varying sweetness of her
temper. If there was a little kindness to be done to either Mr
Gibson or Molly, Cynthia was just as ready as ever to do it; nor did
she refuse to do anything her mother wished, however fidgety might
be, the humour that prompted the wish. But in this latter case
Cynthia's eyes were not quickened by her heart.

Molly was dejected, she knew not why. Cynthia had drifted a little
apart; that was not it. Her stepmother had whimsical moods; and if
Cynthia displeased her, she would oppress Molly with small
kindnesses and pseudo-affection. Or else everything was wrong, the
world was out of joint, and Molly had failed in her mission to set
it right, and was to be blamed accordingly. But Molly was of too
steady a disposition to be much moved by the changeableness of an
unreasonable person. She might be annoyed, or irritated, but she was
not depressed. That was not it. The real cause was certainly this.
As long as Roger was drawn to Cynthia, and sought her of his own
accord, it had been a sore pain and bewilderment to Molly's heart;
but it was a straightforward attraction, and one which Molly
acknowledged, in her humility and great power of loving, to be the
most natural thing in the world. She would look at Cynthia's beauty
and grace, and feel as if no one could resist it. And when she
witnessed all the small signs of honest devotion which Roger was at
no pains to conceal, she thought, with a sigh, that surely no girl
could help relinquishing her heart to such tender, strong keeping as
Roger's character ensured. She would have been willing to cut off
her right hand, if need were, to forward his attachment to Cynthia;
and the self-sacrifice would have added a strange zest to a happy
crisis. She was indignant at what she considered to be Mrs. Gibson's
obtuseness to so much goodness and worth; and when she called Roger
'a country lout', or any other depreciative epithet, Molly would
pinch herself in order to keep silent. But after all those were
peaceful days compared to the present, when she, seeing the wrong
side of the tapestry, after the wont of those who dwell in the same
house with a plotter, became aware that Mrs. Gibson had totally
changed her behaviour to Roger, from some cause unknown to Molly.

But he was always exactly the same; 'steady as old Time,' as Mrs
Gibson called him, with her usual originality; 'a rock of strength,
under whose very shadow there is rest,' as Mrs. Hamley had once
spoken of him. So the cause of Mrs. Gibson's altered manner lay not
in him. Yet now he was sure of a welcome, let him come at any hour
he would. He was playfully reproved for having taken Mrs. Gibson's
words too literally, and for never coming before lunch. But he said
he considered her reasons for such words to be valid, and should
respect them. And this was done out of his simplicity, and from no
tinge of malice. Then in their family conversations at home, Mrs
Gibson was constantly making projects for throwing Roger 'and
Cynthia together, with so evident a betrayal of her wish to bring
about an engagement, that Molly chafed at the net spread so
evidently, and at Roger's blindness in coming so willingly to be
entrapped. She forgot his previous willingness, his former evidences
of manly fondness for the beautiful Cynthia; she only saw plots of
which he was the victim, and Cynthia the conscious if passive bait.
She felt as if she could not have acted as Cynthia did; no, not even
to gain Roger's love. Cynthia heard and saw as much of the domestic
background as she did, and yet she submitted to the ~role~
assigned to her! To be sure, this ~role~ would have been played
by her unconsciously; the things prescribed were what she would
naturally have done; but because they were prescribed--by
implication only, it is true--Molly would have resisted; have gone
out, for instance, when she was expected to stay at home; or have
lingered in the garden when a long country walk was planned. At last
--for she could not help loving Cynthia, come what would--she
determined to believe that Cynthia was entirely unaware of all; but
it was with an effort that she brought herself to believe it.

It may be all very pleasant 'to sport with Amaryllis in the shade,
or with the tangles of Neaera's hair,' but young men at the
outset of their independent life have many other cares in this
prosaic England to occupy their time and their thoughts. Roger was
Fellow of Trinity, to be sure; and from the outside it certainly
appeared as if his position, as long as he chose to keep unmarried,
was a very easy one. His was not a nature, however, to sink down
into inglorious ease, even had his fellowship income been at his
disposal. He looked forward to an active life; in what direction he
had not yet determined. He knew what were his talents and his
tastes; and did not wish the former to lie buried, nor the latter,
which he regarded as gifts, fitting him for some peculiar work, to
be disregarded or thwarted. He rather liked awaiting an object,
secure in his own energy to force his way to it, when he once saw it
clearly. He reserved enough of money for his own personal needs,
which were small, and for the ready furtherance of any project he
might see fit to undertake; the rest of his income was Osborne's;
given and accepted in the spirit which made the bond between these
two brothers so rarely perfect. It was only the thought of Cynthia
that threw Roger off his balance. A strong man in everything else,
about her he was as a child. He knew that he could not marry and
retain his fellowship; his intention was to hold himself loose from
any employment or profession until he had found one to his mind, so
there was no immediate prospect--no prospect for many years, indeed,
that he would be able to marry. Yet he went on seeking Cynthia's
sweet company, listening to the music of her voice, basking in her
sunshine, and feeding his passion in every possible way, just like
an unreasoning child. He knew that it was folly--and yet he did it;
and it was perhaps this that made him so sympathetic with Osborne.
Roger racked his brains about Osborne's affairs much more frequently
than Osborne troubled himself. Indeed, he had become so ailing and
languid of late, that even the squire made only very faint
objections to his desire for frequent change of scene, though
formerly he used to grumble so much at the necessary expenditure it
involved.

'After all, it does not cost much,' the squire said to Roger one
day. 'Choose how he does it, he does it cheaply; he used to come and
ask me for twenty, where now he does it for five. But he and I. have
lost each other's language, that's what we have! and my dictionary'
(only he called it 'dixonary') 'has all got wrong because of those
confounded debts--which he will never explain to me, or talk
about--he always holds me off at arm's length when I begin upon
it--he does, Roger--me, his old dad, as was his primest favourite of
all, when he was a little bit of a chap!'

The squire dwelt so much upon Osborne's reserved behaviour to
himself' that brooding over this one subject perpetually he became
more morose and gloomy than ever in his manner to Osborne, resenting
the want of the confidence and affection that he thus repelled. So
much so that Roger, who desired to avoid being made the receptacle
of his father's complaints against Osborne--and Roger's passive
listening was the sedative his father always sought--had often to
have recourse to the discussion of the drainage works as a
counter-irritant. The squire had felt Mr. Preston's speech about the
dismissal of his workpeople very keenly; it fell in with the
reproaches of his own conscience, though, as he would repeat to
Roger over and over again,--'I could not help it--how could I?--I
was drained dry of ready money--I wish the land was drained as dry
as I am,' said he, with a touch of humour that came out before he
was aware, and at which he smiled sadly enough. 'What was I to do, I
ask you, Roger? I know I was in a rage--I've had a deal to make me
so--and maybe I did not think as much about consequences as I should
ha' done, when I gave orders for 'em to be sent off; but I could not
have done otherwise if I'd ha' thought for a twelvemonth in cool
blood. Consequences! I hate consequences; they've always been
against me; they have. I'm so tied up I can't cut down a stick more,
and that's a "consequence" of having the property so deucedly well
settled; I wish I'd never had any ancestors. Ay, laugh, lad! it does
me good to see thee laugh a bit, after Osborne's long face, which
always grows longer at sight o' me!'

'Look here, father!' said Roger suddenly, 'I'll manage somehow about
the money for the works. You trust to me; give me two months to turn
myself in, and you shall have some money, at any rate, to begin
with.'

The squire looked at him, and his face brightened as a child's does
at the promise of a pleasure made to him by some one on whom he can
rely. He became a little graver, however, as he said,--'But how will
you get it? It's hard enough work.'

'Never mind; I'll get it--a hundred or so at first--I don't yet know
how--but remember, father, I'm a Senior Wrangler, and a "very
promising young writer," as that review called me. Oh, you don't
know what a fine fellow you've got for a son. You should have read
that review to know all my wonderful merits.'

'I did, Roger. I heard Gibson speaking of it, and I made him get it
for me. I should have understood it better if they could have called
the animals by their English names, and not put so much of their
French jingo into it.'

'But it was an answer to an article by a French writer,' pleaded
Roger.

'I'd ha' let him alone!' said the squire earnestly. 'We had to beat
'em, and we did it at Waterloo; but I'd not demean myself by
answering any of their lies, if I was you. But I got through the
review, for all their Latin and French; I did, and if you doubt me,
you just look at the end of the great ledger, turn it upside down,
and you'll find I've copied out all the fine words they said of you:
"careful observer," "strong nervous English," "rising philosopher."
Oh! I can nearly say it all off by heart, for many a time when I am
frabbed by bad debts, or Osborne's bills, or moidered with accounts,
I turn the ledger wrong way up, and smoke a pipe over it, while I
read those pieces out of the review which speak about you, lad!'


CHAPTER XXXII


COMING EVENTS


Roger had turned over many plans in his mind, by which he thought
that he could obtain sufficient money for the purpose he desired to
accomplish. His careful grandfather, who had been a merchant in the
city, had so tied up the few thousands he had left to his daughter,
that although, in case of her death before her husband's, the latter
might enjoy the life interest thereof, yet in case of both their
deaths, their second son did not succeed to the property until he
was five-and-twenty. and if he died before that age the money that
would then have been his went to one of his cousins on the maternal
side. In short, the old merchant had taken as many precautions about
his legacy as if it had been for tens, instead of units of
thousands. Of course Roger might have slipped through all these
meshes by insuring his life until the specified age; and probably if
he had consulted any lawyer this course would have been suggested to
him. But he disliked taking any one into his confidence on the
subject of his father's want of ready money. He had obtained a copy
of his grandfather's will at Doctors' Commons, and he imagined that
all the contingencies involved in it would be patent to the light of
nature and common sense. He was a little mistaken in this, but not
the less resolved that money in some way he would have in order to
fulfil his promise to his father, and for the ulterior purpose of
giving the squire some daily interest to distract his thoughts from
the regrets and cares that were almost weakening his mind. It was
'Roger Hamley, Senior Wrangler and Fellow of Trinity, to the highest
bidder, no matter what honest employment,' and presently it came
down to 'any bidder at all.'

Another perplexity and distress at this time weighed upon Roger.
Osborne, heir to the estate, was going to have a child. The Hamley
property was entailed on 'heirs male born in lawful wedlock.' Was
the 'wedlock' lawful? Osborne never seemed to doubt that it
was--never seemed, in fact, to think twice about it. And if he, the
husband, did not, how much less did Aimee, the trustful wife?
Yet who could tell how much misery any shadows of illegality might
cast into the future? One evening Roger, sitting by the languid,
careless, dilettante Osborne, began to question him as to the
details of the marriage. Osborne knew instinctively at what Roger
was aiming. It was not that he did not desire perfect legality in
justice to his wife; it was that he was so indisposed at the time
that he hated to be bothered. It was something like the refrain of
Gray's Scandinavian Prophetess: 'Leave me, leave me to repose.'

'But do try and tell me how you managed it.'

'How tiresome you are, Roger,' put in Osborne.

'Well, I dare say I am. Go on!'

'I've told you Morrison married us. You remember old Morrison at
Trinity?'

'Yes; as good and blunder-headed a fellow as ever lived.'

'Well, he's taken orders; and the examination for priest's orders
fatigued him so much that he got his father to give him a hundred or
two for a tour on the Continent. He meant to get to Rome, because he
heard that there were such pleasant winters there. So he turned up
at Metz in August.'

'I don't see why.'

'No more did he. He never was great in geography, you know; and
somehow he thought that Metz, pronounced French fashion, must be on
the road to Rome. Some one had told him so in fun. However, it was
very well for me that I met with him there for I was determined to
be married, and that without loss of time.'

'But Aimee is a Catholic?'

'That's true! but you see I am not. You don't suppose I would do her
any wrong, Roger?' asked Osborne, sitting up in his lounging-chair,
and speaking rather indignantly to Roger, his face suddenly flushing
red.

'No! I'm sure you would not mean it; but you see there's a child
coming, and this estate is entailed on "heirs male." Now, I want to
know if the marriage is legal or not? and it seems to me it's a
ticklish question.'

'Oh!' said Osborne, falling back into repose, 'if that's all, I
suppose you're next heir male, and I can trust you as I can myself.
You know my marriage is ~bona fide~ in intention, and I believe
it to be legal in fact. We went over to Strasbourg; Aimee
picked up a friend--a good middle-aged Frenchwoman--who served half
as bridesmaid, half as chaperone, and then we went before the
mayor--~prefet~--what do you call them? I think Morrison
rather enjoyed the spree. I signed all manner of papers in the
prefecture; I did not read them over, for fear lest I could not sign
them conscientiously. It was the safest plan. Aimee kept
trembling so I thought she would faint, and then we went off to the
nearest English chaplaincy, Carlsruhe, and the chaplain was away, so
Morrison easily got the loan of the chapel, and we were married the
next day.'

'But surely some registration or certificate was necessary?'

'Morrison said he would undertake all those forms; and he ought to
know his own business.' I know I tipped him pretty well for the
job.'

'You must be married again,' said Roger, after a pause, 'and that
before the child is born. Have you got a certificate of the
marriage?'

'I dare say Morrison has got it somewhere. But I believe I'm legally
married according to the laws both of England and France; I really
do, old fellow. I've got the ~prefet~'s papers somewhere.'

'Never mind! you shall be married again in England. Aimee goes
to the Roman Catholic chapel at Prestham, does not she?'

'Yes. She is so good I would not disturb her in her religion for the
world.'

'Then you shall be married both there and at the church of the
parish in which she lives as well,' said Roger, decidedly.

'It's a great deal of trouble, unnecessary trouble, and unnecessary
expense, I should say,' said Osborne. 'Why can't you leave well
alone? Neither Aimee nor I are of the sort of stuff to turn
scoundrels and deny the legality of our marriage, and if the child
is a boy and my father dies, and I die, why I'm. sure you'll do him
justice, as sure as I am of myself, old fellow!'

'But if I die into the bargain? Make a hecatomb of the present
Hamleys all at once, while you are about it. Who succeeds as heir
male?'

Osborne thought for a moment. 'One of the Irish Hamleys, I suppose.
I fancy they are needy chaps. Perhaps you're right. But what need to
have such gloomy forebodings?'

'The law makes one have foresight in such affairs,' said Roger. 'So
I'll go down to Aimee next week when I'm in town, and I'll make
all necessary arrangements before you come. I think you'll be
happier if it is all done.'

'I shall be happier if I've a chance of seeing the little woman,
that I grant you. But what is taking you up to town? I wish I'd
money to run about like you, instead of being shut up for ever in
this dull old house.'

Osborne was apt occasionally to contrast his position with Roger's
in a tone of complaint, forgetting that both were the results of
character, and also that out of his income Roger gave up so large a
portion for the maintenance of his brother's wife. But if this
ungenerous thought of Osborne's had been set clearly before his
conscience, he would have smote his breast and cried '~Mea culpa~'
with the best of them; it was only that he was too indolent to keep
an unassisted conscience.

'I should not have thought of going up,' said Roger, reddening as if
he had been accused of spending another's money instead of his own,
'if I had not had to go up on business. Lord Hollingford has written
for me; he knows my great wish for employment, and has heard of
something which he considers suitable; there's his letter if you
care to read it. But it does not tell anything definitely.'

Osborne read the letter and returned it to Roger. After a moment or
two of silence he said,--'Why do you want money? Are we taking too
much from you? It's a great shame of me; but what can I do? Only
suggest a career for me, and I'll follow it to-morrow.' He spoke as
if Roger had been reproaching him.

'My dear fellow, don't get those notions into your head! I must do
something for myself sometimes, and I have been on the look-out.
Besides, I want my father to go on with his drainage, it would do
good both to his health and his spirits. If I can advance any part
of the money requisite, he and you shall pay me interest until you
can return the capital.'

'Roger, you're the providence of the family,' exclaimed Osborne,
suddenly struck by admiration at his brother's conduct, and
forgetting to contrast it with his own.

So Roger went up to London and Osborne followed him, and for two or
three weeks the Gibsons saw nothing of the brothers. But as wave
succeeds to wave, so interest succeeds to interest. 'The family,' as
they were called, came down for their autumn sojourn at the Towers;
and again the house was full of visitors, and the Towers' servants,
and carriages, and liveries were seen in the two streets of
Hollingford, just as they might have been seen for scores of autumns
past.

So runs the round of life from day to day. Mrs. Gibson found the
chances of intercourse with the Towers rather more personally
exciting than Roger's visits, or the rarer calls of Osborne Hamley.
Cynthia had an old antipathy to the great family who had made so
much of her mother and so little of her; and whom she considered as
in some measure the cause why she had seen so little of her mother
in the days when the little girl had craved for love and found none.
Moreover, Cynthia missed her slave, although she did not care for
Roger one thousandth part of what he did for her; yet she had found
it not unpleasant to have a man whom she thoroughly respected, and
whom men in general respected, the subject of her eye, the glad
ministrant to each scarce spoken wish, a person in whose sight all
her words were pearls or diamonds, all her actions heavenly
graciousness, and in whose thoughts she reigned supreme. She had no
modest unconsciousness about her; and yet she was not vain. She knew
of all this worship; and when from circumstances she no longer
received it she missed it. The Earl and the Countess, Lord
Hollingford and Lady Harriet, lords and ladies in general, liveries,
dresses, bags of game, and rumours of riding parties were as nothing
to her as compared to Roger's absence. And yet she did not love him.
No, she did not love him. Molly knew that Cynthia did not love him.
Molly grew angry with her many and many a time as the conviction of
this fact was forced upon her. Molly did not know her own feelings;
Roger had no overwhelming interest in what they might be; while his
very life-breath seemed to depend on what Cynthia felt and thought.
Therefore Molly had keen insight into her 'sister's' heart; and she
knew that Cynthia did not love Roger, Molly could have cried with
passionate regret at the thought of the unvalued treasure lying at
Cynthia's feet; and it would have been a merely unselfish regret. It
was the old fervid tenderness. 'Do not wish for the moon, O my
darling, for I cannot give it thee.' Cynthia's love was the moon
Roger yearned for; and Molly saw that it was far away and out of
reach, else would she have strained her heart-chords to give it to
Roger.

'I am his sister,' she would say to herself. 'That old bond is not
done away with, though he is too much absorbed by Cynthia to speak
about it just now. His mother called me "Fanny;" it was almost like
an adoption. I must wait and watch, and see if I can do anything for
my brother.'

One day Lady Harriet came to call on the Gibsons, or rather on Mrs
Gibson, for the latter retained her old jealousy if any one else in
Hollingford was supposed to be on intimate terms at the great house,
or in the least acquainted with their plans. Mr. Gibson might
possibly know as much, but then he was professionally bound to
secrecy. Out of the house she considered Mr. Preston as her rival,
and he was aware that she did so, and delighted in teasing her by
affecting a knowledge of family plans and details of affairs of
which she was not aware. Indoors she was jealous of the fancy Lady
Harriet had evidently taken for her stepdaughter, and she contrived
to place quiet obstacles in the way of a too frequent intercourse
between the two. These obstacles were not unlike the shield of the
knight in the old story; only instead of the two sides presented to
the two travellers approaching it from opposite quarters, one of
which was silver, and one of which was gold, Lady Harriet saw the
smooth and shining yellow radiance, while poor Molly only perceived
a dull and heavy lead. To Lady Harriet it was 'Molly is gone out;
she will be so sorry to miss you, but she was obliged to go to see
some old friends of her mother's whom she ought not to neglect: as I
said to her, constancy is everything. It is Sterne, I think, who
says, "Thine own and thy mother's friends forsake not." But, dear
Lady Harriet, you'll stop till she comes home, won't you? I know how
fond you are of her. in fact' (with a little surface playfulness) 'I
sometimes say you come more to see her than your poor old Clare.'

To Molly it had previously been,--

'Lady Harriet is coming here this morning. I can't have any one else
coming in. Tell Maria to say I'm not at home. Lady Harriet has
always so much to tell me. Dear Lady Harriet! I've known all her
secrets since she was twelve years old. You two girls must keep out
of the way. Of course she'll ask for you, out of common civility;
but you would only interrupt us if you came in, as you did the other
day;'--now addressing Molly--'l hardly like to say so, but I thought
it was very forward.'

'Maria told me she had asked for me,' put in Molly, simply.

'Very forward indeed!' continued Mrs. Gibson, taking no further
notice of the interruption, except to strengthen the words to which
Molly's little speech had been intended as a correction.

'I think this time I must secure her ladyship from the chances of
such an intrusion, by taking care that you are out of the house,
Molly. You had better go to the Holly Farm, and speak about those
damsons I ordered, and which have never been sent.'

'I'll go,' said Cynthia. 'It's far too long a walk for Molly; she's
had a bad cold, and is not as strong as she was a fortnight ago. I
delight in long walks. If you want Molly out of the way, mamma, send
her to the Miss Brownings'--they are always glad to see her.'

'I never said I wanted Molly out of the way, Cynthia,' replied Mrs
Gibson. 'You always put things in such an exaggerated--I should
almost say, so coarse a manner. I am sure, Molly, my love, you could
never have so misunderstood me; it is only on Lady Harriet's
account.'

'I don't think I can walk as far as the Holly Farm; papa would take
the message; Cynthia need not go.'

'Well! I'm the last person in the world to tax any one's strength;
I'd sooner never see damson preserve again. Suppose you do go and
see Miss Browning; you can pay her a nice long call--you know she
likes that--and ask after Miss Phoebe's cold from me, you know. They
were friends of your mother's, my dear, and I would not have you
break off old friendships for the world. "Constancy above
everything" is my motto, as you know, and the memory of the dead
ought always to be cherished.'

'Now, mamma, where am I to go?' asked Cynthia. 'Though Lady Harriet
does not care for me as much as she does for Molly--indeed, quite
the contrary I should say--yet she might ask after me, and I had
better be safely out of the way.'

'True!' said Mrs. Gibson, meditatively, yet unconscious of any satire
in Cynthia's speech.--'She is much less likely to ask for you, my
dear: I almost think you might remain in the house, or you might go
to the Holly Farm; I really do want the damsons; or you might stay
here in the dining-room, you know, so as to be ready to arrange
lunch prettily, if she does take a fancy to stay for it. She is very
fanciful, is dear Lady Harriet! I would not like her to think we
made any difference in our meals because she stayed. "Simple
elegance," as I tell her, "always is what we aim at." But still you
could put out the best service, and arrange some flowers, and ask
cook what there is for dinner that she could send us for lunch, and
make it all look pretty, and impromptu, and natural. I think you had
better stay at home, Cynthia, and then you could fetch Molly from
Miss Brownings' in the afternoon, you know, and you two could take a
walk together.'

'After Lady Harriet was fairly gone! I understand, mamma. Off with
you, Molly. Make haste, or Lady Harriet may come and ask for you as
well as mamma. I'll take care and forget where you are going to, so
that no one shall learn from me where you are, and I'll answer for
mamma's loss of memory.'

'Child! what nonsense you talk; you quite confuse me with being so
silly,' said Mrs. Gibson, fluttered and annoyed as she usually was
with the Lilliputian darts' Cynthia flung at her. She had recourse
to her accustomed feckless piece of retaliation--bestowing some
favour on Molly; and this did not hurt Cynthia one whit.

'Molly, darling, there's a very cold wind, though it looks so fine.
You had better put on my Indian shawl; and it will look so pretty,
too, on your grey gown--scarlet and grey--it's not everybody I would
lend it to, but you're so careful.'

'Thank you,' said Molly: and she left Mrs. Gibson in careless
uncertainty as to whether her otter would be accepted or not.

Lady Harriet was sorry to miss Molly, as she was fond of the girl;
but as she perfectly agreed with Mrs. Gibson's truisms about
'constancy' and 'old friends,' she saw no occasion for saying any
more about the affair, but sate down in a little low chair with her
feet on the fender. This said fender was made of bright, bright
steel, and was strictly tabooed to all household and plebeian feet;
indeed the position, if they assumed it, was considered low-bred and
vulgar.

'That's right, dear Lady Harriet! you can't think what a pleasure it
is to me to welcome you at my own fireside, into my humble home.'

'Humble! now, Clare, that's a little bit of nonsense, begging your
pardon. I don't call this pretty little drawing-room a bit of a
"humble home." It is as full of comforts, and of pretty things too,
as any room of its size can be.'

'Ah! how small you must feel it! even I had to reconcile myself to
it at first.'

'Well! perhaps your school-room was larger, but remember how bare it
was, how empty of anything but deal tables, and forms, and mats. Oh,
indeed, Clare, I quite agree with mamma, who always says you have
done very well for yourself; and Mr. Gibson too! What an agreeable,
well-informed man!'

'Yes, he is,' said his wife, slowly, as if she did not like to
relinquish her ~role~ of a victim to circumstances quite
immediately. 'He is very agreeable, very; only we see so little of
him; and of course he comes home tired and hungry, and not inclined
to talk to his own family, and apt to go to sleep.'

'Come, come!' said Lady Harriet, 'I'm going to have my turn now.
We've had the complaint of a doctor's wife, now hear the moans of a
peer's daughter. Our house is so overrun with visitors; and
literally to-day I have come to you for a little solitude.'

'Solitude!' exclaimed Mrs. Gibson. 'Would you rather be alone?'
slightly aggrieved.

'No, you dear silly woman; my solitude requires a listener, to whom
I may say, "How sweet is solitude." But I am tired of the
responsibility of entertaining. Papa is so open-hearted, he asks
every friend he meets with to come and pay us a visit. Mamma is
really a great invalid, but she does not choose to give up her
reputation for good health, having always considered illness a want
of self-control. So she gets wearied and worried by a crowd of
people who are all of them open-mouthed for amusement of some kind;
just like a brood of fledglings in a nest; so I have to be
parent-bird, and pop morsels into their yellow leathery bills, to
find them swallowed down before I can think of where to find the
next. Oh, it's "entertaining" in the largest, literalest, dreariest
sense of the word. So I have told a few lies this morning, and come
off here for quietness and the comfort of complaining!'

Lady Harriet threw herself back in her chair, and yawned; Mrs. Gibson
took one of her ladyship's hands in a soft sympathizing manner, and
murmured, 'Poor Lady Harriet!' and then she purred affectionately.

After a pause Lady Harriet started up and said,--'I used to take you
as my arbiter of morals when I was a little girl. Tell me, do you
think it wrong to tell lies?'

'Oh, my dear! how can you ask such questions?--of course it is very
wrong,--very wicked indeed, I think I may say. But I know you were
only joking when you said you had told lies.'

'No, indeed, I was not. I told as plump fat lies as you would wish
to hear. I said I "was obliged to go into Hollingford on business,"
when the truth was there was no obligation in the matter, only an
insupportable desire of being free from my visitors for an hour or
two, and my only business was to come here, and yawn, and complain,
and lounge at my leisure. I really think I'm unhappy at having told
a story, as children express it.'

'But, my dear Lady Harriet,' said Mrs. Gibson, a little puzzled as to
the exact meaning of the words that were trembling on her tongue, 'I
am sure you thought that you meant what you said, when you said it.'

'No, I didn't,' put in Lady Harriet.

'And besides, if you didn't, it was the fault of the tiresome people
who drove you into such straits--yes, it was certainly their fault,
not yours--and then you know the conventions of society--ah, what
trammels they are!'

Lady Harriet was silent for a minute or two; then she said,--'Tell
me, Clare; you've told lies sometimes, haven't you?'

'Lady Harriet! r think you might have known me better; but I know
you don't mean it, dear.'

'Yes, I do. You must have told white lies, at any rate. How did you
feel after them?'

'I should have been miserable if I ever had. I should have died of
self-reproach. "The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the
truth," has always seemed to me such a fine passage. But then I have
so much that is unbending in my nature, and in our sphere of life
there are so few temptations. If we are humble, we are also simple,
and unshackled by etiquette.'

'Then you blame me very much? If somebody else will blame me, I
shan't be so unhappy at what I said this morning.'

'I am sure I never blamed you, not in my innermost heart, dear Lady
Harriet. Blame you, indeed! That would be presumption in me.'

'I think I shall set up a confessor! and it shan't be you, Clare,
for you have always been only too indulgent to me.'

After a pause she said,--'Can you give me some lunch, Clare? I don't
mean to go home till three. My "business" will take me till then, as
the people at the Towers are duly informed.'

'Certainly. I shall be delighted! but you know we are very simple in
our habits.'

'Oh, I only want a little bread and butter, and perhaps a slice of
cold meat--you must not give yourself any trouble, Clare--perhaps
you dine now? let me sit down just like one of your family.'

'Yes, you shall; I won't make any alteration;--it will be so
pleasant to have you sharing our family meal, dear Lady Harriet. But
we dine late, we only lunch now. How low the fire is getting; I
really am forgetting everything in the pleasure of this
tete-a-tete!'

So she rang twice; with great distinctness, and with a long pause
between the rings. Maria brought in coals.

But the signal was as well understood by Cynthia as the 'Hall of
Apollo' was by the servants of Lucullus. The brace of partridges
that were to have been for the late dinner were instantly put down
to the fire; and the prettiest china put out, and the table decked
with flowers and fruit, arranged with all Cynthia's usual dexterity
and taste. So that when the meal was announced, and Lady Harriet
entered the room, she could not but think her hostess's apologies
had been quite unnecessary; and be more and more convinced that
Clare had done very well for herself. Cynthia now joined the party,
pretty and elegant as she always was; but somehow she did not take
Lady Harriet's fancy; she only noticed her on account of her being
her mother's daughter. Her presence made the conversation more
general, and Lady Harriet gave out several pieces of news, none of
them of any great importance to her, but as what had been talked
about by the circle of visitors assembled at the Towers.

'Lord Hollingford ought to have been with us,' she said, amongst
other things; 'but he is obliged, or fancies himself obliged, which
is all the same thing, to stay in town about this Crichton legacy!'

'A legacy? To Lord Hollingford? I am so glad!'

'Don't be in a hurry to be glad! It's nothing for him but trouble.
Did not you hear of that rich eccentric Mr. Crichton, who died some
time ago, and--fired by the example of Lord Bridgewater, I
suppose--left a sum of money in the hands of trustees, of whom my
brother is one, to send out a man with a thousand fine
qualifications, to make a scientific voyage, with a view to bringing
back specimens of the fauna of distant lands, and so forming the
nucleus of a museum which is to be called the Crichton Museum, and
so perpetuate the founder's name. Such various forms does man's
vanity take! Sometimes it stimulates philanthropy; sometimes a love
of science!'

'It seems to me a very laudable and useful object, I am sure,' said
Mrs. Gibson, safely.

'I daresay it is, taking it from the public-good view. But it is
rather tiresome to us privately, for it keeps Hollingford in
town--or between it and Cambridge--and each place as dull and empty
as can be, just when we want him down at the Towers. The thing ought
to have been decided long ago, and there's some danger of the legacy
lapsing. The two other trustees have run away to the Continent,
feeling, as they say, the utmost confidence in him, but in reality
shirking their responsibilities. However, I believe he likes it, so
I ought not to grumble. He thinks he is going to be very successful
in the choice of his man--and he belongs to this county, too,--young
Hamley of Hamley, if he can only get his college to let him go, for
he's a Fellow of Trinity, Senior Wrangler or something; and they're
not so foolish as to send their crack man to be eaten up by lions
and tigers!'

'It must be Roger Hamley!' exclaimed Cynthia, her eyes brightening,
and her cheeks flushing.

'He's not the eldest son; he can scarcely be called Hamley of
Hamley!' said Mrs. Gibson.

'Hollingford's man is a Fellow of Trinity, as I said before.'

'Then it is Mr. Roger Hamley,' said Cynthia; 'and he's up in London
about some business! What news for Molly when she comes home!'

'Why, what has Molly to do with it?' asked Lady Harriet. 'Is--?' and
she looked into Mrs. Gibson's face for an answer. Mrs. Gibson in reply
gave an intelligent and very expressive glance at Cynthia, who
however did not perceive it.

'Oh, no! not at all'--and Mrs. Gibson nodded a little at her
daughter, as much as to say, 'If any one, that.'

Lady Harriet began to look at the pretty Miss Kirkpatrick with fresh
interest; her brother had spoken in such a manner of this young Mr
Hamley that every one connected with the Phoenix was worthy of
observation. Then, as if the mention of Molly's name had brought her
afresh into her mind, Lady Harriet said,--'And where is Molly all
this time? I should like to see my little mentor. I hear she is very
much grown since those days.'

'Oh! when she once gets gossipping with the Miss Brownings, she
never knows when to come home,' said Mrs. Gibson.

'The Miss Brownings? Oh! I am so glad you named them! I am very fond
of them. Pecksy and Flapsy; I may call them so in Molly's absence.
I'll go and see them before I go home, and then perhaps I shall see
my dear little Molly too. Do you know, Clare, I have quite taken a
fancy to that girl!'

So Mrs. Gibson, after all her precautions, had to submit to Lady
Harriet's leaving her half-an-hour earlier than she otherwise would
have done in order to 'make herself common' (as Mrs. Gibson expressed
it) by calling on the Miss Brownings.

But Molly had left before Lady Harriet arrived.

Molly went the long walk to the Holly Farm to order the damsons out
of a kind of penitence. She had felt conscious of anger at being
sent out of the house by such a palpable manoeuvre as that which her
stepmother had employed. Of course she did not meet Cynthia, so she
went alone along the pretty lanes, with grassy sides and high
hedge-banks not at all in the style of modern agriculture. At first
she made herself uncomfortable with questioning herself as to how
far it was right to leave unnoticed the small domestic failings--
the webs, the distortions of truth which had prevailed in their
household ever since her father's second marriage. She knew that
very often she longed to protest, but did not do it, from the desire
of sparing her father any discord; and she saw by his face that he,
too, was occasionally aware of certain things that gave him pain, as
showing that his wife's standard of conduct was not as high as he
would have liked. It was a wonder to Molly if this silence was right
or wrong. With a girl's want of toleration, and want of experience
to teach her the force of circumstances, and of temptation, she had
often been on the point of telling her stepmother some forcible home
truths. But possibly her father's example of silence, and often some
piece of kindness on Mrs. Gibson's part (for after her way, and when
in a good temper, she was very kind to Molly), made her hold her
tongue.

That night at dinner Mrs. Gibson recounted the conversation between
herself and Lady Harriet, giving it a very strong individual
colouring, as was her wont, and telling nearly the whole of what had
passed, although implying that there was a great deal said that was
so purely confidential, that she was bound in honour not to repeat
it. Her three auditors listened to her without interrupting her
much--indeed, without bestowing extreme attention on what she was
saying, until she came to the fact of Lord Hollingford's absence in
London, and the reason for it.

'Roger Hamley going off on a scientific expedition!' exclaimed Mr
Gibson, suddenly awakened into vivacity.

'Yes. At least it is not settled finally; but as Lord Hollingford is
the only trustee who takes any interest--and being Lord Cumnor's
son--it is next to certain.'

'I think I must have a voice in the matter,' said Mr. Gibson; and he
relapsed into silence, keeping his ears open, however, henceforward.

'How long will he be away?' asked Cynthia. 'We shall miss him
sadly.'

Molly's lips formed an acquiescing 'yes' to this remark, but no
sound was heard. There was a buzzing in her ears as if the others
were going on with the conversation, but the words they uttered
seemed indistinct and blurred; they were merely conjectures, and did
not interfere with the one great piece of news. To the rest of the
party she appeared to be eating her dinner as usual, and, if she
were silent, there was one listener the more to Mrs. Gibson's stream
of prattle, and Mr. Gibson's and Cynthia's remarks.


CHAPTER XXXIII


BRIGHTENING PROSPECTS


It was a day or two afterwards, that Mr. Gibson made time to ride
round by Hamley, desirous to learn more exact particulars of this
scheme for Roger than he could obtain from any extraneous source,
and rather puzzled to know whether he should interfere in the
project or not. The state of the case was this:--Osborne's symptoms
were, in Mr. Gibson's opinion, signs of his having a fatal disease.
Dr Nicholls had differed from him on this head, and Mr. Gibson knew
that the old physician had had long experience, and was considered
very skilful in the profession. Still he believed that he himself
was right, and, if so, the complaint was one which might continue
for years in the same state as at present, or might end the young
man's life in a hour--a minute. Supposing that Mr. Gibson was right,
would it be well for Roger to be away where no sudden calls for his
presence could reach him--away for two years? Yet if the affair was
concluded, the interference of a medical man might accelerate the
very evil to be feared; and after all Dr Nicholls might be right,
and the symptoms might proceed from some other cause. Might? Yes.
Probably did? No. Mr. Gibson could not bring himself to say yes to
this latter form of sentence. So he rode on, meditating; his reins
slack, his head a little bent. It was one of those still and lovely
autumn days when the red and yellow leaves are hanging-pegs to dewy,
brilliant gossamer-webs; when the hedges are full of trailing
brambles, loaded with ripe blackberries; when the air is full of the
farewell whistles and pipes of birds, clear and short--not the long
full-throated warbles of spring; when the whirr of the partridge's
wings is heard in the stubble-fields, as the sharp hoof-blows fall
on the paved lanes; when here and there a leaf floats and flutters
down to the ground, although there is not a single breath of wind.
The country surgeon felt the beauty of the seasons perhaps more than
most men. He saw more of it by day, by night, in storm and sunshine,
or in the still, soft, cloudy weather He never spoke about what he
felt on the subject; indeed, he did not put his feelings into words,
even to himself, But if his mood ever approached to the sentimental,
it was on such days as this. He rode into the stable-yard, gave his
horse to a man, and went into the house by a side entrance. In the
passage he met the squire.

'That's capital, Gibson! what good wind blew you here? You'll have
some lunch? it's on the table, I only just this minute left the
room.' And he kept shaking Mr. Gibson's hand all the time till he had
placed him, nothing loth, at the well-covered dining-table.

'What's this I hear about Roger?' said Mr. Gibson, plunging at once
into the subject.

'Aha! so you've heard, have you? It's famous, is it not? He's a boy
to be proud of, is old Roger. Steady Roger; we used to think him
slow, but it seems to me that slow and sure wins the race. But tell
me; what have you heard? how much is known? Nay, you must have a
glass full. It's old ale, such as we don't brew now-a-days; it's as
old as Osborne. We brewed it that autumn and we called it the young
squire's ale. I thought to have tapped it on his marriage, but I
don't know when that will come to pass, so we've tapped it now in
Roger's honour.'

The old squire had evidently been enjoying the young squire's ale to
the verge of prudence. It was indeed as he said, 'as strong as
brandy,' and Mr. Gibson had to sip it very carefully as he ate his
cold roast beef.

'Well! and what have you heard? There's a deal to hear, and all good
news, though I shall miss the lad, I know that.'

'I did not know it was settled; I only heard that it was in
progress.'

'Well, it was only in progress, as you call it, till last Tuesday.
He never let me know anything about it, though; he says he thought I
might be fidgety with thinking of the pros and cons. So I never knew
a word on't till I had a letter from my Lord Hollingford--where is
it?' pulling out a great black leathern receptacle for all manner of
papers. And putting on his spectacles, he read aloud their headings.

'"Measurement of timber, new railings," "drench for cows, from
Farmer Hayes," "Dobson's accounts,"--'um 'um--here it is. Now read
that letter,' handing it to Mr. Gibson.

It was a manly, feeling, sensible letter, explaining to the old
father in very simple language the services which were demanded by
the terms of the will to which he and two or three others were
trustees; the liberal allowance for expenses, the still more liberal
reward for performance, which had tempted several men of
considerable renown to offer themselves as candidates for the
appointment. Lord Hollingford then went on to say that, having seen
a good deal of Roger lately, since the publication of his article in
reply to the French osteologist, he had had reason to think that in
him the trustees would find united the various qualities required in
a greater measure than in any of the applicants who had at that time
presented themselves. Roger had deep interest in the subject; much
acquired knowledge, and at the same time, great natural powers of
comparison, and classification of facts; he had shown' himself to be
an observer of a fine and accurate kind, he was of the right age, in
the very prime of health and strength, and unshackled by any family
ties. Here Mr. Gibson paused for consideration. He hardly cared to
ascertain by what steps the result had been arrived at--he already
knew what that result was; but his mind was again arrested as his
eye caught on the remuneration offered, which was indeed most
liberal; and then he read with attention the high praise bestowed on
the son in this letter to the father. The squire had been watching
Mr. Gibson--waiting till he came to this part--and he rubbed his
hands together as he said,--

'Ay! you've come to it at last. It's the best part of the whole, is
it not? God bless the boy! and from a Whig, mind you, which makes it
the more handsome. And there's more to come still. I say, Gibson, I
think my luck is turning at last,' passing him on yet another letter
to read. 'That only came this morning; but I've acted on it already,
I sent for the foreman of the drainage works at once, I did; and
to-morrow, please God, they'll be at work again.'

Mr. Gibson read the second letter, from Roger. To a certain degree it
was a modest repetition of what Lord Hollingford had said, with an
explanation of how he had come to take so decided a step in life
without consulting his father. He did not wish him to be in suspense
for one reason. Another was that he felt, as no one else could feel
for him, that by accepting this offer, he entered upon the kind of
life for which he knew himself to be the most fitted. And then he
merged the whole into business. He said that he knew well the
suffering his father had gone through when he had had to give up his
drainage works for want of money; that he, Roger, had been enabled
at once to raise money upon the remuneration he was to receive on
the accomplishment of his two years' work; and that he had insured
his life at once, in order to provide for the repayment of the money
he had raised, in case he did not live to return to England. He said
that the sum he had borrowed on this security would at once be
forwarded to his father.

Mr. Gibson laid down the letter without speaking a word for some
time; then he said,--

'He'll have to pay a pretty sum for insuring his life beyond seas.'

'He has got his Fellowship money,' said the squire, a little
depressed at Mr. Gibson's remark.

'Yes; that's true. And he's a strong young fellow, as I know.'

'I wish I could tell his mother,' said the squire in an under-tone.

'It seems all settled now,' said Mr. Gibson, more in reply to his own
thoughts than to the squire's remark.

'Yes!' said the squire; 'and they're not going to let the grass grow
under his feet. He's to be off as soon as he can get his scientific
traps ready. I almost wish he wasn't to go. You don't seem quite to
like it, doctor?'

'Yes I do,' said Mr. Gibson in a more cheerful tone than before. 'It
can't be helped now without doing a mischief,' thought he to
himself. 'Why, squire, I think it's a great honour to have such a
son. I envy you, that's what I do. Here's a lad of three or four and
twenty distinguishing himself in more ways than one, and as simple
and affectionate at home as any fellow need to be--not a bit set
up.'

'Ay, ay; he's twice as much a son to me as Osborne, who has been all
his life set up on nothing at all, as one may say.

'Come, squire, I must not hear anything against Osborne; we may
praise one, without hitting at the other. Osborne has not had the
strong health which has enabled Roger to work as he has done. I met
a man who knew his tutor at Trinity the other day, and of course we
began cracking about Roger--it's not every day that one can reckon a
senior wrangler amongst one's friends, and I'm nearly as proud of
the lad as you are. This Mr. Mason told me the tutor said that only
half of Roger's success was owing to his mental powers; the other
half was owing to his perfect health, which enabled him to work
harder and more continuously than most men without suffering. He
said that in all his experience he had never known any one with an
equal capacity for mental labour; and that he could come again with
a fresh appetite to his studies after shorter intervals of rest than
most. Now I, being a doctor, trace a good deal of his superiority to
the material cause of a thoroughly good constitution, which Osborne
has not got.'

'Osborne might have if he got out o' doors more,' said the squire,
moodily; 'but except when he can loaf into Hollingford he does not
care to go out at all. I hope,' he continued, with a glance of
sudden suspicion at Mr. Gibson, 'he's not after one of your girls? I
don't mean any offence, you know; but he'll have the estate, and it
won't be free, and he must marry money. I don't think I could allow
it in Roger; but Osborne is the eldest son, you know.'

Mr. Gibson reddened; he was offended for a moment. Then the partial
truth of what the squire said was presented to his mind, and he
remembered their old friendship, so he spoke quietly, if shortly.

'I don't believe there's anything of the kind going on. I'm not much
at home, you know; but I've never heard or seen anything that should
make me suppose that there is. When I do, I'll let you know.'

'Now, Gibson, don't go and be offended. I am glad for the boys to
have a pleasant house to go to, and I thank you and Mrs. Gibson for
making it pleasant. Only keep off love; it can come to no good.
That's all. I don't believe Osborne will ever earn a farthing to
keep a wife during my life, and if I were to die to-morrow, she
would have to bring some money to clear the estate. And if I do
speak as I should not have done formerly--a little sharp or so--why,
it's because I've been worried by many a care no one knows anything
of.'

'I'm not going to take offence,' said Mr. Gibson, 'but let us
understand each other clearly. If you don't want your sons to come
as much to my house as they do, tell them so yourself. I like the
lads, and am glad to see them; but if they do come, you must take
the consequences, whatever they are, and not blame me, or them
either, for what may happen from the frequent intercourse between
two young men and two young women; and what is more, though, as I
said, I see nothing whatever of the kind you fear at present, and
have promised to tell you of the first symptoms I do see, yet
farther than that I won't go. If there is an attachment at any
future time, I won't interfere.'

'I should not so much mind if Roger fell in love with your Molly. He
can fight for himself, you see, and she's an uncommon nice girl. My
poor wife was so fond of her,' answered the squire. 'It's Osborne
and the estate I'm thinking of!'

'Well, then, tell him not to come near us. I shall be sorry, but you
will be safe.'

'I'll think about it; but he's difficult to manage. I've always to
get my blood well up before I can speak my mind to him.'

Mr. Gibson was leaving the room, but at these words he turned and
laid his hand on the squire's arm.

'Take my advice, squire. As I said, there is no harm done as yet, as
far as I know. Prevention is better than cure. Speak out, but speak
gently to Osborne, and do it at once. I shall understand how it is
if he does not show his face for some months in my house. If you
speak gently to him, he'll take the advice as from a friend. If he
can assure you there's no danger, of course he'll come just as
usual, when he likes.'

It was all very fine giving the squire this good advice; but as
Osborne had already formed the very kind of marriage his father most
deprecated, it did not act quite as well as Mr. Gibson had hoped. The
squire began the conversation with unusual self-control; but he grew
irritated when Osborne denied his father's right to interfere in any
marriage he might contemplate; denied it with a certain degree of
doggedness and weariness of the subject that drove the squire into
one of his passions; and although on after reflection he remembered
that he had his son's promise and solemn word not to think of either
Cynthia or Molly for his wife, yet the father and son had passed
through one of those altercations which help to estrange men for
life. Each had said bitter things to the other; and, if the
brotherly affection had not been so true between Osborne and Roger,
they too might have become alienated, in consequence of the squire's
exaggerated and injudicious comparison of their characters and
deeds. But as Roger in his boyhood had loved Osborne too well to be
jealous of the praise and love the eldest son, the beautiful
brilliant lad, had received, to the disparagement of his own plain
awkwardness and slowness, so now Osborne strove against any feeling
of envy or jealousy with all his might; but his efforts were
conscious, Roger's had been the simple consequence of affection, and
the end to poor Osborne was that he became moody and depressed in
mind and body; but both father and son concealed their feelings in
Roger's presence. When he came home just before sailing, busy and
happy, the squire caught his infectious energy, and Osborne looked
up and was cheerful.

There was no time to be lost. He was bound to a hot climate, and
must take all advantage possible of the winter months. He was to go
first to Paris, to have interviews with some of the scientific men
there. Some of his outfit, instruments, &c., were to follow him to
Havre, from which port he was to embark, after transacting his
business in Paris. The squire, learnt all his arrangements and
plans, and even tried in after-dinner conversations to penetrate
into the questions involved in the researches his son was about to
make. But Roger's visit home could not be prolonged beyond two days.

The last day he rode into Hollingford earlier than he needed to have
done to catch the London coach, in order to bid the Gibsons good-by.
He had been too actively busy for some time to have leisure to
bestow much thought on Cynthia; but there was no need for fresh
meditation on that subject. Her image as a prize to be worked for,
to be served for seven years, and seven years more,' was safe and
sacred in his heart. It was very bad, this going away, and wishing
her good-by for two long years; and he wondered much during his ride
how far he should be justified in telling her mother, perhaps in
telling her own sweet self, what his feelings were without
expecting, nay, indeed reprobating, any answer on her part. Then she
would know at any rate how dearly she was beloved by one who was
absent; how in all difficulties or dangers the thought of her would
be a polar star, high up in the heavens, and so on, and so on; for
with all a lover's quickness of imagination and triteness of fancy,
he called her a star, a flower, a nymph, a witch, an angel, or a
mermaid, a nightingale, a siren, as one or another of her attributes
rose up before him.


CHAPTER XXXIV


A LOVER'S MISTAKE


It was afternoon. Molly had gone out for a walk. Mrs. Gibson had been
paying some calls. Lazy Cynthia had declined accompanying either. A
daily walk was not a necessity to her as it was to Molly. On a
lovely day, or with an agreeable object, or when the fancy took her,
she could go as far as any one; but these were exceptional cases; in
general, she was not disposed to disturb herself from her in-door
occupations. Indeed, not one of the ladies would have left the
house, had they been aware that Roger was in the neighbourhood; for
they were aware that he was to come down but once before his
departure, and that his stay at home then would be but for a short
time, and they were all anxious to wish him good-by before his long
absence, But they had understood that he was not coming to the Hall
until the following week, and therefore they had felt themselves at
full liberty this afternoon to follow their own devices.

Molly chose a walk that had been a favourite with her ever since she
was a child. Something or other had happened just before she left
home that made her begin wondering how far it was right for the sake
of domestic peace to pass over without comment the little deviations
from right that people perceive in those whom they live with. Or,
whether, as they are placed in families for distinct purposes, not
by chance merely, there are not duties involved in this aspect of
their lot in life,--whether by continually passing over failings,
their own standard is not lowered,--the practical application of
these thoughts being a dismal sort of perplexity on Molly's part as
to whether her father was quite aware of her stepmother's perpetual
lapses from truth; and whether his blindness was wilful or not. Then
she felt bitterly enough that although she was sure as could be that
there was no real estrangement between her and her father, yet that
there were perpetual obstacles thrown in the way of their
intercourse; and she thought with a sigh that if he would but come
in with authority, he might cut his way clear to the old intimacy
with his daughter, and that they might have all the former walks and
talks, and quips and cranks, and glimpses of real confidence once
again; things that her stepmother did not value, yet which she, like
the dog in the manger, prevented Molly enjoying. But after all Molly
was a girl, not so far removed from childhood; and in the middle of
her grave regrets and perplexities her eye was caught by the sight
of some fine ripe blackberries flourishing away high up on the
hedge-bank among scarlet hips and green and russet leaves. She did
not care much for blackberries herself; but she had heard Cynthia
say that she liked them; and besides there was the charm of
scrambling and gathering them, so she forgot all about her troubles,
and went climbing up the banks, and clutching at her almost
inaccessible prizes, and slipping down again triumphant, to carry
them back to the large leaf which was to serve her as a basket. One
or two of them she tasted, but they were as vapid to her palate as
ever. The skirt of her pretty print gown was torn out of the
gathers, and even with the fruit she had eaten 'her pretty lips with
blackberries were all besmeared and dyed,' when, having gathered as
many and more than she could possibly carry, she set off home,
hoping to escape into her room and mend her gown before it had
offended Mrs. Gibson's neat eye. The front door was easily opened
from the outside, and Molly was out of the clear light of the open
air and in the shadow of the hall; she saw a face peep out of the
dining-room before she quite recognized who it was; and then Mrs
Gibson came softly out, sufficiently at least to beckon her into the
room. When Molly had entered Mrs. Gibson closed the door. Poor Molly
expected a reprimand for her torn gown and untidy appearance, but
was soon relieved by the expression of Mrs. Gibson's face--mysterious
and radiant.

'I have been watching for you, dear. Don't go upstairs into the
drawing-room, love. It might be a little interruption just now.
Roger Hamley is there with Cynthia; and I've reason to think,--in
fact I did open the door unawares, but I shut it again softly, and I
don't think they heard me. Is not it charming? Young love, you know,
ah, how sweet it is!'

'Do you mean that Roger has proposed to Cynthia?' asked Molly.

'Not exactly that. But I don't know; of course I know nothing. Only
I did hear him say that he had meant to leave England without
speaking of his love, but that the temptation of seeing her alone
had been too great for him. It was symptomatic, was it not, my dear?
And all I wanted was to let it come to a crisis without
interruption. So I've been watching for you to prevent your going in
and disturbing them.'

'But I may go to my room, mayn't I,' pleaded Molly.

'Of course,' said Mrs. Gibson, a little testily. 'Only I had expected
sympathy from you at such an interesting moment.'

But Molly did not hear these last words. She had escaped upstairs,
and had shut her door. Instinctively she had carried her leaf full
of blackberries--what would blackberries be to Cynthia now? She felt
as if she could not understand it all; but as for that matter, what
could she understand? Nothing. For a few minutes her brain seemed in
too great a whirl to comprehend anything but that she was being
carried on in earth's diurnal course, with rocks, and stones, and
trees, with as little volition on her part as if she were dead. Then
the room grew stifling, and instinctively she went to the open
casement window, and leant out, gasping for breath. Gradually the
consciousness of the soft peaceful landscape stole into her mind,
and stilled the buzzing confusion. There, bathed in the almost level
rays of the autumn sunlight, lay the landscape she had known and
loved from childhood; as quiet, as full of low humming life as it
had been at this hour for many generations. The autumn flowers
blazed out in the garden below, the lazy cows were in the meadow
beyond, chewing their cud in the green aftermath; the evening fires
had just been made up in the cottages beyond, in preparation for the
husband's homecoming, and were sending up soft curls of blue smoke
into the still air; the children, let loose from school, were
shouting merrily in the distance, and she--Just then she heard
nearer sounds; an opened door, steps on the lower flight of stairs,
He could not have gone without even seeing her. He never, never
would have done so cruel a thing--never would have forgotten poor
little Molly, however happy he might be. No! there were steps and
voices, and the drawing-room door was opened and shut once more. She
laid down her head on her arms that rested on the window-sill, and
cried,--she had been so distrustful as to have let the idea enter
her mind that he could go without wishing her good-by; her, whom his
mother had so loved, and called by the name of his little dead
sister. And as she thought of the tender love Mrs. Hamley had borne
her she cried the more, for the vanishing of such love for her off
the face of the earth. Suddenly the drawing-room door opened, and
some one was heard coming upstairs; it was Cynthia's step. Molly
hastily wiped her eyes, and stood up and tried to look unconcerned;
it was all she had time to do before Cynthia, after a little pause
at the closed door, had knocked; and on an answer being given, had
said, without opening the door,--'Molly! Mr. Roger Hamley is here,
and wants to wish you good-by before he goes.' Then she went
downstairs again, as if anxious just at that moment to avoid even so
short a tete-a-tete with Molly. With a gulp and a fit
of resolution, as a child makes up its mind to swallow a nauseous
dose of medicine, Molly went instantly downstairs.

Roger was talking earnestly to Mrs. Gibson in the bay of the window
when Molly entered; Cynthia was standing near, listening, but taking
no part in the conversation. Her eyes were downcast, and she did not
look up as Molly drew shyly near.

Roger was saying,--'I could never forgive myself if I had accepted a
pledge from her. She shall be free until my return; but the hope,
the words, her sweet goodness, have made me happy beyond
description. Oh, Molly!' suddenly becoming aware of her presence,
and turning to her, and taking her hand in both of his,--'I think
you have long guessed my secret, have you not? I once thought of
speaking to you before I left, and confiding it all to you. But the
temptation has been too great, I have told Cynthia how fondly I love
her, as far as words can tell; and she says--' then he looked at
Cynthia with passionate delight and seemed to forget in that gaze
that he had left his sentence to Molly half finished.

Cynthia did not seem inclined to repeat her saying, whatever it was,
but her mother spoke for her.

'My dear sweet girl values your love as it ought to be valued, I am
sure. And I believe,' looking at Cynthia and Roger with intelligent
archness, 'I could tell tales as to the cause of her indisposition
in the spring.'

'Mother,' said Cynthia suddenly, 'you know it was no such thing.
Pray don't invent stories about me. I have engaged myself to Mr
Roger Hamley, and that is enough.'

'Enough! more than enough!' said Roger. 'I will not accept your
pledge. I am bound, but you are free. I like to feel bound, it makes
me happy and at peace, but with all the chances involved in the next
two years, you must not shackle yourself by promises.'

Cynthia did not speak at once; she was evidently revolving something
in her own mind. Mrs. Gibson took up the word.

'You are very generous, I am sure. Perhaps it will be better not to
mention it.'

'I would much rather have it kept a secret,' said Cynthia,
interrupting.

'Certainly, my dear love. That was just what I was going to say. I
once knew a young lady who heard of the death of a young man in
America, whom she had known pretty well; and she immediately said
she had been engaged to him, and even went so far as to put on
weeds; and it was a false report, for he came back well and merry,
and declared to everybody he had never so much as thought about her.
So it was very awkward for her. These things had much better be kept
secret until the proper time has come for divulging them.'

Even then and there Cynthia could not resist the temptation of
saying,--'Mamma, I will promise you I won't put on weeds, whatever
reports come of Mr. Roger Hamley.'

'Roger, please!' he put in, in a tender whisper.

'And you will all be witnesses that he has professed to think of me,
if he is tempted afterwards to deny the fact. But at the same time I
wish it to be kept a secret until his return--and I am sure you will
all be so kind as to attend to my wish. Please, ~Roger!~ Please,
Molly! Mamma! I must especially beg it of you!'

Roger would have granted anything when she asked him by that name,
and in that tone. He took her hand in silent pledge of his reply.
Molly felt as if she could never bring herself to name the affair as
a common piece of news. So it was only Mrs. Gibson answered aloud,--

'My dear child! why "especially" to poor me! You know I'm the most
trustworthy person alive!'

The little pendule on the chimney-piece struck the half-hour.

'I must go!' said Roger, in dismay. 'I had no idea it was so late. I
shall write from Paris. The coach will be at the "George" by this
time, and will only stay five minutes. Dearest Cynthia--' he took
her hand, and then, as if the temptation was irresistible, he drew
her to him and kissed her. 'Only remember you are free!' said he, as
he released her and passed on to Mrs. Gibson.

'If I had considered myself free,' said Cynthia, blushing a little,
but ready with her repartee to the last,--'if I had thought myself
free, do you think I would have allowed that?'

Then Molly's turn came; and the old brotherly tenderness came back
into his look, his voice, his bearing.

'Molly! you won't forget me, I know; I shall never forget you, nor
your goodness to--her.' His voice began to quiver, and it was best
to be gone. Mrs. Gibson was pouring out, unheard and unheeded, words
of farewell; Cynthia was rearranging some flowers in a vase on the
table, the defects in which had caught her artistic eye, without the
consciousness penetrating to her mind. Molly stood, numb to the
heart; neither glad nor sorry, nor anything but stunned. She felt
the slackened touch of the warm grasping hand; she looked up--for
till now her eyes had been downcast, as if there were heavy weights
to their lids--and the place was empty where he had been; his quick
step was heard on the stair, the front door was opened and shut; and
then as quick as lightning Molly ran up to the front attic--the
lumber-room, whose window commanded the street down which he must
pass. The window-clasp was unused and stiff, Molly tugged at it--
unless it was open, and her head put out, that last chance would be
gone.

'I must see him again; I must! I must!' she wailed out, as she was
pulling. There he was, running hard to catch the London coach; his
luggage had been left at the 'George' before he came up to wish the
Gibsons good-by. In all his hurry, Molly saw him turn round and
shade his eyes from the level rays of the westering sun, and rake
the house with his glances--in hopes, she knew, of catching one more
glimpse of Cynthia. But apparently he saw no one, not even Molly at
the attic casement. for she had drawn back when he had turned, and
kept herself in shadow; for she had no right to put herself forward
as the one to watch and yearn for farewell signs. None came--another
moment--he was out of sight for years.

She shut the window softly, and shivered all over. She left the
attic and went to her own room; but she did not begin to take off
her out-of-door things till she heard Cynthia's foot on the stairs.
Then she hastily went to the toilet-table, and began to untie her
bonnet-strings; but they were in a knot, and took time to undo.
Cynthia's step stopped at Molly's door; she opened it a little and
said,--'May I come in, Molly?'

'Certainly,' said Molly, longing to be able to say 'No' all the
time. Molly did not turn to meet her, so Cynthia came up behind her,
and putting her two hands round Molly's waist, peeped over her
shoulder, putting out her lips to be kissed. Molly could not resist
the action--the mute entreaty for a caress. But in the moment before
she had caught the reflection of the two faces in the glass; her
own, red-eyed, pale, with lips dyed with blackberry juice, her curls
tangled, her bonnet pulled awry, her gown torn--and contrasted it
with Cynthia's brightness and bloom, and the trim elegance of her
dress. 'Oh! it is no wonder!' thought poor Molly, as she turned
round, and put her arms round Cynthia, and laid her head for an
instant on her shoulder--the weary, aching head that sought a loving
pillow in that supreme moment! The next she had raised herself, and
taken Cynthia's two hands, and was holding her off a little, the
better to read her face.

'Cynthia! you do love him dearly, don't you?'

Cynthia winced a little aside from the penetrating steadiness of
those eyes.

'You speak with all the solemnity of an adjuration, Molly!' said
she, laughing a little at first to cover her nervousness, and then
looking up at Molly. 'Don't you think I have given a proof of it?
But you know I've often told you I've not the gift of loving; I said
pretty much the same thing to him. I can respect, and I fancy I can
admire, and I can like, but I never feel carried off my feet by love
for any one, not even for you, little Molly, and I am sure I love
you more than--'

'No, don't!' said Molly, putting her hand before Cynthia's mouth, in
almost a passion of impatience. 'Don't, don't--I won't hear you--I
ought not to have asked you--it makes you tell lies!'

'Why, Molly!' said Cynthia, in her turn seeking to read Molly's
face, 'what's the matter with you? One might think you cared for him
yourself.'

'I?' said Molly, all the blood rushing to her heart suddenly; then
it returned, and she had courage to speak, and she spoke the truth
as she believed it, though not the real actual truth.

'I do care for him; I think you have won the love of a prince
amongst men. Why, I am proud to remember that he has been to me as a
brother, and I love him as a sister, and I love you doubly because
he has honoured you with his love.'

'Come, that's not complimentary!' said Cynthia, laughing, but not
ill-pleased to hear her lover's praises, and even willing to
depreciate him a little in order to hear more. 'He's well enough, I
daresay, and a great deal too learned and clever for a stupid girl
like me; but even you must acknowledge he is very plain and awkward;
and I like pretty things and pretty people.'

'Cynthia, I won't talk to you about him. You know you don't mean
what you are saying, and you only say it out of contradiction,
because I praise him. He shan't be run down by you, even in joke.'

'Well, then, we won't talk of him at all. I was so surprised when he
began to speak--so--' and Cynthia looked very lovely, blushing and
dimpling up as she remembered his words and looks. Suddenly she
recalled herself to the present time, and her eye caught on the leaf
full of blackberries--the broad green leaf, so fresh and crisp when
Molly had gathered it an hour or so ago, but now soft and flabby,
and dying. Molly saw it, too, and felt a strange kind of sympathetic
pity for the poor inanimate leaf.

'Oh! what blackberries! you've gathered them for me, I know!' said
Cynthia, sitting down and beginning to feed herself daintily,
touching them lightly with the ends of her taper fingers, and
dropping each ripe berry into her open mouth. When she had eaten
about half she stopped suddenly short.

'How I should like to have gone as far as Paris with him,' she
exclaimed. 'I suppose it would not have been proper; but how
pleasant it would have been. I remember at Boulogne' (another
blackberry) 'how I used to envy the English who were going to Paris;
it seemed to me then as if nobody stopped at Boulogne, but dull,
stupid school-girls.'

'When will he be there?' asked Molly.

'On Wednesday, he said. I'm to write to him there; at any rate he is
going to write to me.'

Molly went about the adjustment of her dress in a quiet,
business-like manner, not speaking much; Cynthia, although sitting
still, seemed very restless. Oh! how much Molly wished that she
would go.

'Perhaps, after all,' said Cynthia, after a pause of apparent
meditation, 'we shall never be married.'

'Why do you say that?' said Molly, almost bitterly. 'You have
nothing to make you think so. I wonder how you can bear to think you
won't, even for a moment.'

'Oh!' said Cynthia; 'you must not go and take me ~au grand
serieux~. I daresay I don't mean what I say, but you see
everything seems a dream at present. Still, I think the chances are
equal--the chances for and against our marriage, I mean. Two years!
it's a long time; he may change his mind, or I may; or some one else
may turn up, and say I'm engaged to him: what should you think of
that, Molly? I'm putting such a gloomy thing as death quite on one
side, you see; yet in two years how much may happen.'

'Don't talk so, Cynthia, please don't,' said Molly, piteously. 'One
would think you did not care for him, and he cares so much for you!'

'Why, did I say I did not care for him! I was only calculating
chances. I am sure I hope nothing will happen to prevent the
marriage. Only, you know it may, and I thought I was taking a step
in wisdom, in looking forward to all the evils that might befall. I
am sure all the wise people I have ever known thought it a virtue to
have gloomy prognostics of the future. But you're not in a mood for
wisdom or virtue, I see; so I'll go and get ready for dinner, and
leave you to your vanities of dress.'

She took Molly's face in both her hands, before Molly was aware of
her intention, and kissed it playfully. Then she left Molly to
herself.


CHAPTER XXXV


THE MOTHER'S MANOEUVRE


Mr. Gibson was not at home at dinner--detained by some patient, most
probably. This was not an unusual occurrence; but it was rather an
unusual occurrence for Mrs. Gibson to go down into the dining-room,
and sit with him as he ate his deferred meal when he came in an hour
or two later. In general, she preferred her easy-chair, or her
corner of the sofa, upstairs in the drawing-room, though it was very
rarely that she would allow Molly to avail herself of her
stepmother's neglected privilege. Molly would fain have gone down
and kept her father company every night that he had these solitary
meals; but for peace and quietness she gave up her own wishes on the
subject.

Mrs. Gibson took a seat by the fire in the dining-room, and patiently
waited for the auspicious moment when Mr. Gibson, having satisfied
his healthy appetite, turned from the table, and took his place by
her side. She got up, and with unaccustomed attention she moved the
wine and glasses so that he could help himself without moving from
his chair.

'There, now! are you comfortable? for I have a great piece of news
to tell you!' said she, when all was arranged.

'I thought there was something on hand,' said he, smiling. 'Now for
it!'

'Roger Hamley has been here this afternoon to bid us good-by.'

'Good-by! Is he gone? I did not know he was going so soon!'
exclaimed Mr. Gibson.

'Yes: never mind, that's not it,'

'But tell me; has he left this neighbourhood? I wanted to have seen
him.'

'Yes, yes. He left love and regret, and all that sort of thing for
you. Now let me get on with my story: he found Cynthia alone,
proposed to her, and was accepted.'

'Cynthia? Roger proposed to her, and she accepted him?' repeated Mr
Gibson, slowly.

'Yes, to be sure. Why not? you speak as if it was something so very
surprising.'

'Did I? But I am surprised. He is a very fine young fellow, and I
wish Cynthia joy; but do you like it? It will have to be a very long
engagement.'

'Perhaps,' said she, in a knowing manner.

'At any rate he will be away for two years,' said Mr. Gibson.

'A great deal may happen in two years,' she replied.

'Yes! he will have to run many risks, and go into many dangers, and
will come back no nearer to the power of maintaining a wife than
when he went out.'

'I don't know that,' she replied, still in the arch manner of one
possessing superior knowledge. 'A little bird did tell me that
Osborne's life is not so very secure; and then--what will Roger be?
Heir to the estate.'

'Who told you that about Osborne?' said he, facing round upon her,
and frightening her with his sudden sternness of voice and manner.
It seemed as if absolute fire came out of his long dark sunken eyes.
'~Who~ told you, I say?'

She made a faint rally back into her former playfulness.

'Why? can you deny it? Is it not the truth?'

'I ask you again, Hyacinth, who told you that Osborne Hamley's life
is in more danger than mine--or yours?'

'Oh, don't speak in that frightening way. My life is not in danger,
I'm sure; nor yours either, love, I hope.'

He gave an impatient movement, and threw a wine-glass off the table.
For the moment she felt grateful for the diversion, and busied
herself in picking up the fragments: 'bits of glass were so
dangerous,' she said. But she was startled by a voice of command,
such as she had never yet heard from her husband.

'Never mind the glass. I ask you again, Hyacinth, who told you
anything about Osborne Hamley's state of health?'

'I am sure I wish no harm to him, and I daresay he is in very good
health, as you say,' whispered she, at last.

'Who told--?' began he again, sterner than ever.

'Well, if you will know, and will make such a fuss about it,' said
she, driven to extremity, 'it was you yourself--you or Dr Nicholls,
I am sure I forget which.'

'I never spoke to you on the subject, and I don't believe Nicholls
did. You had better tell me at once what you are alluding to, for
I'm resolved I'll have it out before we leave this room.'

'I wish I'd never married again,' she said, now fairly crying, and
looking round the room, as if in vain search for a mouse-hole in
which to hide herself. Then, as if the sight of the door into the
store-room gave her courage, she turned and faced him.

'You should not talk your medical secrets so loud then, if you don't
want people to hear them. I had to go into the store-room that day
Dr Nicholls was here; cook wanted a jar of preserve, and stopped me
just as I was going out--I am sure it was for no pleasure of mine,
for I was sadly afraid of stickying my gloves--it was all that you
might have a comfortable dinner.'

She looked as if she was going to cry again, but he gravely motioned
her to go on, merely saying,--

'Well! you overheard our conversation, I suppose?'

'Not much,' she answered, eagerly, almost relieved by being this
helped out in her forced confession. 'Only a sentence or two.'

'What were they?' he asked.

'Why, you had just been saying something, and Dr Nicholls said: "If
he had got aneurism of the aortal his days are numbered."'

'Well. Anything more?'

'Yes; you said, "I hope to God I may be mistaken; but there is a
pretty clear indication of symptoms, in my opinion."'

'How do you know we were speaking of Osborne Hamley?' he asked;
perhaps in hopes of throwing her off the scent. But as soon as she
perceived that he was descending to her level of subterfuge, she
took courage, and said in quite a different tone to the cowed one
which she had been using,--

'Oh! I know. I heard his name mentioned by you both before I began
to listen.'

'Then you own you did listen?'

'Yes,' said she, hesitating a little now.

'And pray how do you come to remember so exactly the name of the
disease spoken of?'

'Because I went--now don't be angry, I really can't see any harm in
what I did--'

'Then, don't deprecate anger. You went--'

'Into the surgery, and looked it out. Why might not I?'

Mr. Gibson did not answer--did not look at her. His face was very
pale, and both forehead and lips were contracted. At length he
roused himself, sighed, and said,--

'Well! I suppose as one brews one must bake?'

'I don't understand what you mean,' pouted she.

'Perhaps not,' he replied. 'I suppose that it was what you heard on
that occasion that made you change your behaviour to Roger Hamley? I
have noticed how much more civil you were to him of late.'

'If you mean that I have ever got to like him as much as Osborne,
you are very much mistaken; no, not even though he has offered to
Cynthia, and is to be my son-in-law.'

'Let me know the whole affair. You overheard,--I will own that it
was Osborne about whom we were speaking, though I shall have
something to say about that presently--and then, if I understand you
rightly, you changed your behaviour to Roger, and made him more
welcome to this house than you had ever done before, regarding him
as proximate heir to the Hamley estates?'

'I don't know what you mean by "proximate."'

'Go into the surgery, and look into the dictionary then,' said he,
losing his temper for the first time during the conversation.

'I knew,' said she through sobs and tears, 'that Roger had taken a
fancy to Cynthia; any one might see that; and as long as Roger was
only a younger son, with no profession, and nothing but his
Fellowship, I thought it right to discourage him, as any one would
who had a grain of common sense in them; for a clumsier, more
common, awkward, stupid fellow I never saw--to be called county, I
mean.'

'Take care; you'll have to eat your words presently when you come to
fancy he'll have Hamley some day.'

'No, I shan't,' said she, not perceiving his exact drift. 'You are
vexed now because it is not Molly he's in love with; and I call it
very unjust and unfair to my poor fatherless girl. I am sure I have
always tried to further Molly's interests as if she was my own
daughter.'

Mr. Gibson was too indifferent to this accusation to take any notice
of it. He returned to what was of far more importance to him.

'The point I want to be clear about is this. Did you or did you not
alter your behaviour to Roger in consequence of what you overheard
of my professional conversation with Dr Nicholls? Have you not
favoured his suit to Cynthia since then, on the understanding
gathered from that conversation that he stood a good chance of
inheriting Hamley?'

'I suppose I did,' said she, sulkily. 'And if I did, I can't see any
harm in it, that I should be questioned as if I were in a
witness-box. He was in love with Cynthia long before that
conversation, and she liked him so much. It was not for me to cross
the path of true love. I don't see how you would have a mother love
her child if she may not turn accidental circumstances to her
advantage. Perhaps Cynthia might have died if she had been crossed
in love; her poor father was consumptive.'

'Don't you know that all professional conversations are
confidential? That it would be the most dishonourable thing possible
for me to betray secrets which I learn in the exercise of my
profession?'

'Yes, of course, you.'

'Well! and are not you and I one in all these respects? You cannot
do a dishonourable act without my being inculpated in the disgrace.
If it would be a deep disgrace for me to betray a professional
secret, what would it be for me to trade on that knowledge?'

He was trying hard to be patient; but the offence was of that class
which galled him insupportably.

'I don't know what you mean by trading. Trading in a daughter's
affections is the last thing I should do; and I should have thought
you would be rather glad than otherwise to get Cynthia well married,
and off your hands.'

Mr. Gibson got up, and walked about the room, his hands in his
pockets. Once or twice he began to speak, but he stopped impatiently
short without going on.

'I don't know what to say to you,' he said at length. 'You either
can't or won't see what I mean. I am glad enough to have Cynthia
here. I have given her a true welcome, and I sincerely hope she will
find this house as much a home as my own daughter does. But for the
future I must look out of my doors, and double-lock the approaches
if I am so foolish as to---However, that's past and gone; and it
remains with me to prevent its recurrence as far as I can for the
future. Now let us hear the present state of affairs.'

'I don't think I ought to tell you anything about it. It is a
secret, just as much as your mysteries are.'

'Very well; you have told me enough for me to act upon, which I most
certainly shall do. It was only the other day I promised the squire
to let him know if I suspected anything--any love affair, or
entanglement, much less an engagement, between either of his sons
and our girls.'

'But this is not an engagement; he would not let it be so; if you
would only listen to me, I could tell you all. Only I do hope you
won't go and tell the squire and everybody. Cynthia did so beg that
it might not be known. It is only my unfortunate frankness has led
me into this scrape. I never could keep a secret from those whom I
love.'

'I must tell the squire. I shall not mention it to any one else. And
do you quite think it was consistent with your general frankness to
have overheard what you did, and never to have mentioned it to me? I
could have told you then that Dr Nicholls' opinion was decidedly
opposed to mine, and that he believed and believes that the
disturbance about which I consulted him on Osborne's behalf was
merely temporary. Dr Nicholls would tell you that Osborne is as
likely as any man to live and marry and beget children.'

If there was any skill used by Mr. Gibson so to word this speech as
to conceal his own opinion, Mrs. Gibson was not sharp enough to find
it out. She was dismayed, and Mr. Gibson enjoyed her dismay; it
restored him to something like his usual frame of mind.

'Let us review this misfortune, for I see you consider it as such,'
said he.

'No, not quite a misfortune,' said she. 'But certainly if I had
known Dr Nicholls' opinion--' she hesitated.

'You see the advantage of always consulting me,' he continued
gravely. 'Here is Cynthia engaged--'

'Not engaged, I told you before. He would not allow it to be
considered an engagement on her part.'

'Well, entangled in a love affair with a lad of three-and-twenty,
with nothing beyond his fellowship and a chance of inheriting an
encumbered estate; no profession even, abroad for two years, and I
must go and tell his father all about it to-morrow.'

'Oh dear! Pray say that, if he dislikes it, he has only to express
his opinion.'

'I don't think you can act without Cynthia in the affair. And if I
am not mistaken, Cynthia will have a pretty stout will of her own on
the subject.'

'Oh, I don't think she cares for him very much; she is not one to be
always falling in love, and she does not take things very deeply to
heart. But of course one would not do anything abruptly; two years'
absence gives one plenty of time to turn oneself in.'

'But a little while ago we were threatened with consumption and an
early death if Cynthia's affections were thwarted.'

'Oh, you dear creature, how you remember all my silly words! It
might be, you know. Poor dear Mr. Kirkpatrick was consumptive, and
Cynthia may have inherited it, and a great sorrow might bring out
the latent seeds. At times I am so fearful. But I dare say it is not
probable, for I don't think she takes things very deeply to heart.'

'Then I am quite at liberty to give up the affair, acting as
Cynthia's proxy, if the squire disapproves of it?'

Poor Mrs. Gibson was in a strait at this question.

'No!' she said at last. 'We cannot give it up. I am sure Cynthia
would not; especially if she thought others were acting for her. And
he really is very much in love. I wish he were in Osborne's place.'

'Shall I tell you what I should do?' said Mr. Gibson, in real
earnest. 'However it may have been brought about, here are two young
people in love with each other. One is as fine a young fellow as
ever breathed; the other a very pretty, lively, agreeable girl. The
father of the young man must be told, and it is most likely he will
bluster and oppose; for there is no doubt it is an imprudent affair
as far as money goes. But let them be steady and patient, and a
better lot need await no young woman. I only wish it were Molly's
good fortune to meet with such another.'

'I will try for her; I will indeed,' said Mrs. Gibson, relieved by
his change of tone.

'No, don't. That's one thing I forbid. I'll have no "trying" for
Molly.'

'Well, don't be angry, dear! Do you know I was quite afraid you were
going to lose your temper at one time!'

'It would have been of no use!' said he, gloomily, getting up as if
to close the sitting. His wife was only too glad to make her escape.
The conjugal interview had not been satisfactory to either. Mr
Gibson had been compelled to face and acknowledge the fact that the
wife he had chosen had a very different standard of conduct to that
which he had upheld all his life, and had hoped to have seen
inculcated in his daughter. He was more irritated than he chose to
show; for there was so much of self-reproach in his irritation that
he kept the feeling to himself, brooded over it, and allowed a
feeling of suspicious dissatisfaction with his wife to grow up in
his mind, which extended itself by-and-by to the innocent Cynthia,
and caused his manner to both mother and daughter to assume a
certain curt severity, which took the latter at any rate with
extreme surprise. But on the present occasion he followed his wife
up to the drawing-room, and gravely congratulated the astonished
Cynthia.

'Has mamma told you?' said she, shooting an indignant glance at her
mother. 'It is hardly an engagement; and we all pledged ourselves to
keep it a secret, mamma among the rest!'

'But, my dearest Cynthia, you could not expect--you could not have
wished me to keep a secret from my husband?' pleaded Mrs. Gibson.

'No, perhaps not. At any rate, sir,' said Cynthia, turning towards
him with graceful frankness, 'I am glad you should know it. You have
always been a most kind friend to me, and I daresay I should have
told you myself, but I did not want it named; if you please, it must
still be a secret. In fact, it is hardly an engagement--he' (she
blushed and sparkled a little at the euphuism, which implied that
there was but one 'he' present in her thoughts at the moment) 'would
not allow me to bind myself by any promise until his return!'

Mr. Gibson looked gravely at her, irresponsive to her winning looks,
which at the moment reminded him too forcibly of her mother's ways.
Then he took her hand, and said, seriously enough,--

'I hope you are worthy of him, Cynthia, for you have indeed drawn a
prize. I have never known a truer or warmer heart than Roger's; and
I have known him boy and man.'

Molly felt as if she could have thanked her father aloud for this
testimony to the value of him who was gone away. But Cynthia pouted
a little before she smiled up in his face.

'You are not complimentary, are you, Mr. Gibson?' said she. 'He
thinks me worthy, I suppose; and if you have so high an opinion of
him, you ought to respect his judgment of me.' If she hoped to
provoke a compliment, she was disappointed, for Mr. Gibson let go of
her hand in an absent manner, and sate down in an easy chair by the
fire, gazing at the wood embers as if hoping to read the future in
them. Molly saw Cynthia's eyes fill with tears, and followed her to
the other end of the room, where she had gone to seek some working
materials.

'Dear Cynthia,' was all she said; but she pressed her hand while
trying to assist in the search.

'Oh, Molly, I am so fond of your father; what makes him speak so to
me to-night?'

'I don't know,' said Molly; 'perhaps he's tired.'

They were recalled from further conversation by Mr. Gibson. He had
roused himself from his reverie, and was now addressing Cynthia.

'I hope you will not consider it a breach of confidence, Cynthia,
but I must tell the squire of--of what has taken place to-day
between you and his son. I have bound myself by a promise to him. He
was afraid--it's as well to tell you the truth--he was afraid' (an
emphasis on this last word) 'of something of this kind between his
sons and one of you two girls. It was only the other day I assured
him there was nothing of the kind on foot; and I told him then I
would inform him at once if I saw any symptoms.'

Cynthia looked extremely annoyed.

'It was the one thing I stipulated for--secrecy.'

'But why?' said Mr. Gibson. 'I can understand your not wishing to
have it made public under the present circumstances. But the nearest
friends on both sides! Surely you can have no objection to that?'

'Yes, I have,' said Cynthia; 'I would not have had any one know if I
could have helped it.'

'I am almost certain Roger will tell his father.'

'No, he won't,' said Cynthia; 'I made him promise, and I think he is
one to respect a promise'--with a glance at her mother, who, feeling
herself in disgrace with both husband and child, was keeping a
judicious silence.

'Well, at any rate, the story would come with so much better a grace
from him that I shall give him the chance; I won't go over to the
Hall till the end of the week; he may have written and told his
father before then.'

Cynthia held her tongue for a little while. Then she said, with
tearful pettishness,--

'A man's promise is to override a woman's wish then, is it?'

'I don't see any reason why it should not.'

'Will you trust in my reasons when I tell you it will cause me a
great deal of distress if it gets known?' She said this in so
pleading a voice, that if Mr. Gibson had not been thoroughly
displeased and annoyed by his previous conversation with her mother,
he must have yielded to her. As it was, he said coldly,--'Telling
Roger's father is not making it public. I don't like this
exaggerated desire for such secrecy, Cynthia. It seems to me as if
something more than was apparent was concealed behind it.'

'Come, Molly,' said Cynthia, suddenly; 'let us sing that duet I've
been teaching you; it's better than talking as we are doing.'

It was a little lively French duet. Molly sang it carelessly, with
heaviness at her heart; but Cynthia sang it with spirit and apparent
merriment; only she broke down in hysterics at last, and flew
upstairs to her own room. Molly, heeding nothing else--neither her
father nor Mrs. Gibson's words--followed her, and found the door of
her bedroom locked, and for all reply to her entreaties to be
allowed to come in, she heard Cynthia sobbing and crying.

It was more than a week after the incidents last recorded before Mr
Gibson found himself at liberty to call on the squire; and he
heartily hoped that long before then, Roger's letter might have
arrived from Paris, telling his father the whole story. But he saw
at the first glance that the squire had heard nothing unusual to
disturb his equanimity. He was looking better than he had done for
months past; the light of hope was in his eyes, his face seemed of a
healthy ruddy colour, gained partly by his resumption of out-of-door
employment in the superintendence of the works, and partly because
the happiness he had lately had through Roger's means, caused his
blood to flow with regular vigour. He had felt Roger's going away,
it is true; but whenever the sorrow of parting with him pressed too
heavily upon him, he filled his pipe, and smoked it out over a long,
slow, deliberate reperusal of Lord Hollingford's letter, every word
of which he knew by heart; but expressions in which he made a
pretence to himself of doubting, that he might have an excuse for
looking at his son's praises once again. The first greetings over,
Mr. Gibson plunged into his subject.

'Any news from Roger yet?'

'Oh, yes; here's his letter,' said the squire, producing lets black
leather case, in which Roger's missive had been placed along with
the other very heterogeneous contents.

Mr. Gibson read it, hardly seeing the words after he had by one rapid
glance assured himself that there was no mention of Cynthia in it.

'Hum! I see he does not name one very important event that has
befallen him since he left you,' said Mr. Gibson, seizing on the
first words that came. 'I believe I'm committing a breach of
confidence on one side. but I'm going to keep the promise I made the
last time I was here. I find there is something--something of the
kind you apprehended--you understand--between him and my
step-daughter, Cynthia Kirkpatrick. He called at our house to wish
us good-by, while waiting for the London coach, found her alone, and
spoke to her. They don't call it an engagement, but of course it is
one.'

'Give me back the letter,' said the squire, in a constrained kind of
voice. Then he read it again, as if he had not previously mastered
its contents, and as if there might be some sentence or sentences he
had overlooked.

'No!' he said at last, with a sigh. 'He tells me nothing about it.
Lads may play at confidences with their fathers, but they keep a
deal back.' The squire appeared more disappointed at not having
heard of this straight from Roger than displeased at the fact
itself, Mr. Gibson thought. But he let him take his time.

'He's not the eldest son,' continued the squire, talking as it were
to himself. 'But it's not the match I should have planned for him.
How came you, sir,' said he, firing round on Mr. Gibson, suddenly--
'to say when you were last here, that there was nothing between my
sons and either of your girls? Why, this must have been going on all
the time!'

'I am afraid it was. But I was as ignorant about it as the babe
unborn. I only heard of it on the evening of the day of Roger's
departure.'

'And that's a week ago, sir. What's kept you quiet ever since?'

'I thought that Roger would tell you himself.'

'That shows you've no sons. More than half their life is unknown to
their fathers. Why, Osborne there, we live together--that's to say,
we have our meals together, and we sleep under the same roof--and
yet--Well! well! life is as God has made it. You say it's not an
engagement yet? But I wonder what I'm doing? Hoping for my lad's
disappointment in the folly he's set his heart on--and just when
he's been helping me. Is it a folly, or is it not? I ask you,
Gibson, for you must know this girl. She has not much money, I
suppose?'

'About thirty pounds a year, at my pleasure during her mother's
life.'

'Whew! It's well he's not Osborne. They'll have to wait. What family
is she of? None of 'em in trade, I reckon, from her being so poor?'

'I believe her father was grandson of a certain Sir Gerald
Kirkpatrick. Her mother tells me it is an old baronetcy. I know
nothing of such things.'

'That's something. I do know something of such things, as you are
pleased to call them. I like honourable blood.'

Mr. Gibson could not help saying, 'But I'm afraid that only
one-eighth of Cynthia's blood is honourable; I know nothing further
of her relations excepting the fact that her father was a curate.'

'Professional, That's a step above trade at any rate. How old is
she?'

'Eighteen or nineteen.'

'Pretty?'

'Yes, I think so; most people do; but it is all a matter of taste.
Come, squire, judge for yourself. Ride over and take lunch with us
any day you like. I may not be in; but her mother will be there, and
you can make acquaintance with your son's future wife.'

This was going too fast, however; presuming too much on the
quietness with which the squire had been questioning him. Mr. Hamley
drew back within his shell, and spoke in a surly manner as he
replied,--

'Roger's "future wife!"--He'll be wiser by the time he comes home.
Two years among the black folk will have put more sense in him.'

'Possible, but not probable, I should say,' replied Mr. Gibson.
'Black folk are not remarkable for their powers of reasoning, I
believe, so that they have not much chance of altering his opinion
by argument, even if they understood each other's language; and
certainly if he shares my taste, their peculiarity of complexion
will only make him appreciate white skins the more.'

'But you said it was no engagement,' growled the squire. 'If he
thinks better of it, you won't keep him to it, will you?'

'If he wishes to break it off, I shall certainly advise Cynthia to
be equally willing, that's all I can say. And I see no reason for
discussing the affair further at present. I have told you how
matters stand because I promised you I would, if I saw anything of
this kind going on. But in the present condition of things, we can
neither make nor mar; we can only wait.' And he took up his hat to
go. But the squire was discontent.

'Don't go, Gibson. Don't take offence at what I've said, though I'm
sure I don't know why you should. What is the girl like in herself?'

'I don't know what you mean,' said Mr. Gibson. But he did; only he
was vexed, and did not choose to understand.

'Is she--well, is she like your Molly?--sweet-tempered and
sensible--with her gloves always mended, and neat about the feet,
and ready to do anything one asks her just as if doing it Was the
very thing she liked best in the world?'

Mr. Gibson's face relaxed now, and he could understand all the
squire's broken sentences and unexplained meanings.

'She is much prettier than Molly to begin with, and has very winning
ways. She is always well-dressed and smart-looking, and I know she
has not much to spend on her clothes, and always does what she is
asked to do, and is ready enough with her pretty, lively answers. I
don't think I ever saw her out of temper; but then I'm not sure if
she takes things keenly to heart, and a certain obtuseness of
feeling goes a great way towards a character for good temper, I've
observed. Altogether I think Cynthia is one in a hundred.'

The squire meditated a little. 'Your Molly is one in a thousand, to
my mind. But then you see she comes of no family at all,--and I
don't suppose she'll have a chance of much money.' This he said as
if he were thinking aloud, and without reference to Mr. Gibson, but
it nettled the latter gentleman, and he replied somewhat
impatiently,--

'Well, but as there is no question of Molly in this business, I
don't see the use of bringing her name in, and considering either
her family or her fortune.'

'No, to be sure not,' said the squire, rousing up. 'My wits had gone
far afield, and I'll own I was only thinking what a pity it was she
would not do for Osborne. But of course it's out of the
question--out of the question.'

'Yes,' said Mr. Gibson, 'and if you will excuse me, squire, I really
must go now, and then you'll be at liberty to send your wits afield
uninterrupted.' This time he was at the door before the squire
called him back. He stood impatiently hitting his top-boots with his
riding-whip, waiting for the interminable last words.

'I say, Gibson, we're old friends, and you're a fool if you take
anything I say as an offence. Madam your wife and I did not hit it
off the only time I ever saw her. I won't say she was silly, but I
think one of us was silly, and it was not me. However, we'll pass
that over. Suppose you bring her, and this girl Cynthia (which is as
outlandish a Christian name as I'd wish to hear), and little Molly
out here to lunch some day,--I'm more at my ease in my own
house,--and I'm more sure to be civil, too. We need say nothing
about Roger,--neither the lass nor me,--and you keep your wife's
tongue quiet, if you can. It will only be like a compliment to you
on your marriage, you know--and no one must take it for anything
more. Mind, no allusion or mention of Roger, and this piece of
folly. I shall see the girl then, and I can judge her for myself;
for, as you say, that will be the best plan. Osborne will be here,
too; and he's always in his element talking to women. I sometimes
think he's half a woman himself, he spends so much money and is so
unreasonable.'

The squire was pleased with his own speech and his own thought, and
smiled a little as he finished speaking. Mr. Gibson was both pleased
and amused; and he smiled too, anxious as he was to be gone. The
next Thursday was soon fixed upon as the day on which Mr. Gibson was
to bring his womankind out to the Hall. He thought that on the whole
the interview had gone off a good deal better than he had expected,
and felt rather proud of the invitation of which he was the bearer.
Therefore Mrs. Gibson's manner of receiving it was an annoyance to
him. She meanwhile had been considering herself as an injured woman
ever since the evening of the day of Roger's departure. what
business had any one had to speak as if the chances of Osborne's
life being prolonged were infinitely small, if in fact the matter
was uncertain? She liked Osborne extremely, much better than Roger;
and would gladly have schemed to secure him for Cynthia, if she had
not shrunk from the notion of her daughter's becoming a widow. For
if Mrs. Gibson had ever felt anything acutely it was the death of Mr
Kirkpatrick, and, amiably callous as she was in most things, she
recoiled from exposing her daughter wilfully to the same kind of
suffering which she herself had experienced. But if she had only
known Dr Nicholls' opinion she would never have favoured Roger's
suit; never. And then Mr. Gibson himself; why was he so cold and
reserved in his treatment of her since that night of explanation?
she had done nothing wrong; yet she was treated as though she were
in disgrace. And everything about the house was flat just now. She
even missed the little excitement of Roger's visits, and the
watching of his attentions to Cynthia. Cynthia too was silent
enough; and as for Molly, she was absolutely dull and out of
spirits, a state of mind so annoying to Mrs. Gibson just now, that
she vented some of her discontent upon the poor girl, from whom she
feared neither complaint nor repartee.


CHAPTER XXXVI


DOMESTIC DIPLOMACY


The evening of the day on which Mr. Gibson had been to see the
squire, the three women were alone in the drawing-room, for Mr
Gibson had had a long round and was not as yet come in. They had had
to wait dinner for him; and for some time after his return there was
nothing done or said but what related to the necessary business of
eating. Mr. Gibson was, perhaps, as well satisfied with his day's
work as any of the four; for this visit to the squire had been
weighing on his mind ever since he had heard of the state of things
between Roger and Cynthia. He did not like the having to go and tell
of a love affair so soon after he had declared his belief that no
such thing existed; it was a confession of fallibility which is
distasteful to most men. If the squire had not been of so
unsuspicious and simple a nature, he might have drawn his own
conclusions from the apparent concealment of facts, and felt
doubtful of Mr. Gibson's perfect honesty in the business; but being
what he was, there was no danger of such unjust misapprehension.
Still Mr. Gibson knew the hot hasty temper he had to deal with, and
had expected more violence of language than he really encountered;
and the last arrangement by which Cynthia, her mother, and Molly--
who, as Mr. Gibson thought to himself, and smiled at the thought, was
sure to be a, peacemaker, and a sweetener of intercourse--were to go
to the Hall and make acquaintance with the squire, appeared like a
great success to Mr. Gibson, for achieving which he took not a little
credit to himself. Altogether, he was more cheerful and bland than
he had been for many days; and when he came up into the drawing-room
for a few minutes after dinner, before going out again to see his
town-patients, he whistled a little under his breath, as he stood
with his back to the fire, looking at Cynthia, and thinking that he
had not done her justice when describing her to the squire. Now this
soft, almost tuneless whistling, was to Mr. Gibson what purring is to
a cat. He could no more have done it with an anxious case on his
mind, or when he was annoyed by human folly, or when he was hungry,
than he could have flown through the air. Molly knew all this by
instinct, and was happy without being aware of it, as soon as she
heard the low whistle which was no music after all. But Mrs. Gibson
did not like this trick of her husband's; it was not refined she
thought, not even 'artistic;' if she could have called it by this
fine word it would have compensated her for the want of refinement.
To-night it was particularly irritating to her nerves; but since her
conversation with Mr. Gibson about Cynthia's engagement, she had not
felt herself in a sufficiently good position to complain.

Mr. Gibson began,--'Well, Cynthia; I have seen the squire to-day, and
made a clean breast of it.'

Cynthia looked up quickly, questioning with her eyes; Molly stopped
her netting to listen; no one spoke.

'You're all to go there on Thursday to lunch; he asked you all, and
I promised for you.'

Still no reply; natural, perhaps, but very flat.

'You'll be glad of that Cynthia, shan't you?' asked Mr. Gibson. 'It
may be a little formidable, but I hope it will be the beginning of a
good understanding between you.'

'Thank you!' said she, with an effort. 'But--but won't it make it
public? I do so wish not to have it known, or talked about, not till
he comes back or close upon the marriage.'

'I don't see how it should make it public,' said Mr. Gibson. 'My wife
goes to lunch with my friend, and takes her daughters
with her--there's nothing in that, is there?'

'I am not sure that I shall go,' put in Mrs. Gibson. She did not know
why she said it, for she fully intended to go all the time; but
having said it she was bound to stick to it for a little while; and,
with such a husband as hers, the hard necessity was sure to fall
upon her of having to find a reason for her saying. There it came,
quick and sharp.

'Why not?' said he, turning round upon her.

'Oh, because--because I think he ought to have called on Cynthia
first; I've that sort of sensitiveness I can't bear to think of her
being slighted because she is poor.'

'Nonsense!' said Mr. Gibson. 'I do assure you, no slight whatever was
intended. He does not wish to speak about the engagement to
anyone--not even to Osborne--that's your wish, too, is it not,
Cynthia? Nor does he intend to mention it to any of you when you go
there; but, naturally enough, he wants to make acquaintance with his
future daughter-in-law. If he deviated so much from his usual course
as to come calling here--'

'I am sure I don't want him to come calling here,' said Mrs. Gibson,
interrupting. 'He was not so very agreeable the only time he did
come. But I am that sort of a character that I cannot put up with
any neglect of persons I love, just because they are not smiled upon
by fortune.' She sighed a little ostentatiously as she ended her
sentence.

'Well, then, you won't go!' said Mr. Gibson provoked, but not wishing
to have a long discussion, especially as he felt his temper going.

'Do you wish it, Cynthia?' said Mrs. Gibson, anxious for an excuse to
yield.

But her daughter was quite aware of this motive for the question,
and replied quietly,--'Not particularly, mamma. I am quite willing
to refuse the invitation.'

'It is already accepted,' said Mr. Gibson, almost ready to vow that
he would never again meddle in any affair in which women were
concerned, which would effectually shut him out from all love
affairs for the future. He had been touched by the squire's
relenting, pleased with what he had thought would give others
pleasure, and this was the end of it!

'Oh, do go, Cynthia!' said Molly, pleading with her eyes as' well as
her words. 'Do; I am sure you will like the squire; and it is such a
pretty place, and he'll be so much disappointed.'

'I should not like to give up my dignity,' said Cynthia, demurely.
'And you heard what mamma said!' It was very malicious of her. She
fully intended to go, and was equally sure that her mother was
already planning her dress for the occasion in her own mind. Mr
Gibson, however, who, surgeon though he was, had never learnt to
anatomize a woman's heart, took it all literally, and was
excessively angry both with Cynthia and her mother; so angry that he
did not dare to trust himself to speak. He went quickly to the door,
intending to leave the room; but his wife's voice arrested him; she
said,--

'My dear, do you wish me to go? if you do, I will put my own
feelings on one side.'

'Of course I do!' he said, short and stern, and left the room.

'Then I'll go!' said she, in the voice of a victim--those words were
meant for him, but he hardly heard them. 'And we'll have a fly from
the "George," and get a livery-coat for Thomas, which I've long been
wanting, only dear Mr. Gibson did not like it, but on an occasion
like this I'm sure he won't mind; and Thomas shall go on the box,
and--'

'But, mamma, I've my feelings too,' said Cynthia.

'Nonsense, child! when all is so nicely arranged too.'

So they went on the day appointed. Mr. Gibson was aware of the change
of plans, and that they were going after all; but he was so much
annoyed by the manner in which his wife had received an invitation
which had appeared to him so much kinder than he had expected from
his previous knowledge of the squire, and his wishes on the subject
of his sons' marriages, that Mrs. Gibson heard neither interest nor
curiosity expressed by her husband as to the visit itself, or the
reception they met with. Cynthia's indifference as to whether the
invitation was accepted or not had displeased Mr. Gibson. He was not
up to her ways with her mother, and did not understand how much of
this said indifference had been assumed in order to countervent Mrs
Gibson's affectation and false sentiment, But for all his annoyance
on the subject, he was, in fact, very curious to know how the visit
had gone off, and took the first opportunity of being alone with
Molly to question her about the lunch of the day before at Hamley
Hall.

'And so you went to Hamley yesterday after all?'

'Yes; I thought you would have come. The squire seemed quite to
expect you.'

'I thought of going there at first; but I changed my mind like other
people. I don't see why women are to have a monopoly of
changeableness. Well! how did it go off? Pleasantly, I suppose, for
both your mother and Cynthia were in high spirits last night.'

'Yes. The dear old squire was in his best dress and on his best
behaviour, and was so prettily attentive to Cynthia, and she looked
so lovely, walking about with him, and listening to all his talk
about the garden and farm. Mamma was tired, and stopped in-doors, so
they got on very well, and saw a great deal of each other.'

'And my little girl trotted behind?'

'Oh, yes. You know I was almost at home, and besides--of course--'
Molly went very red, and left the sentence unfinished.

'Do you think she's worthy of him?' asked her father, just as if she
had completed her speech.

'Of Roger, papa? oh, who is? But she is very sweet, and very, very
charming.'

'Very charming if you will, but somehow I don't quite understand
her. Why does she want all this secrecy? Why was she not more eager
to go and pay her duty to Roger's father? She took it as coolly as
if I'd asked her to go to church!'

'I don't think she did take it coolly; I believe I don't quite
understand her either, but I love her dearly all the same.'

'Umph; I like to understand people thoroughly, but I know it's not
necessary to women. D'ye really think she's worthy of him?'

'Oh, papa--' said Molly, and then she stopped; she wanted to speak
in favour of Cynthia, but somehow she could form no reply that
pleased her to this repeated inquiry. He did not seem much to care
if he got an answer or not, for he went on with his own thoughts,
and the result was that he asked Molly if Cynthia had heard from
Roger.

'Yes; on Wednesday morning.'

'Did she show it to you? But of course not. Besides, I read the
squire's letter, which told all about him.'

Now Cynthia, rather to Molly's surprise, had told her that she might
read the letter if she liked, and Molly had shrunk from availing
herself of the permission, for Roger's sake. She thought that he
would probably have poured out his heart to the one sole person, and
that it was not fair to listen, as it were, to his confidences.

'Was Osborne at home?' asked Mr. Gibson. 'The squire said he did not
think he would have come back; but the young fellow is so uncertain
--'

'No, he was still from home.' Then Molly blushed all over crimson,
for it suddenly struck her that Osborne was probably with his
wife--that mysterious wife, of whose existence she was cognizant,
but of whom she knew so little, and of whom her father knew nothing,
Mr. Gibson noticed the blush with anxiety. What did it mean? It was
troublesome enough to find that one of the squire's precious sons
had fallen in love within the prohibited ranks; and what would not
have to be said and done if anything fresh were to come out between
Osborne and Molly? He spoke out at once to relieve himself of this
new apprehension.

'Molly, I was taken by surprise by this affair between Cynthia and
Roger Hamley--if there's anything more on the ~tapis~ let me know at
once, honestly and openly. I know it's an awkward question for you
to reply to; but I would not ask it unless I had good reasons.' He
took her hand as he spoke. She looked up at him with clear, truthful
eyes which filled with tears as she spoke. She did not know why the
tears came; perhaps it was because she was not so strong as
formerly.

'If you mean that you're afraid that Osborne thinks of me as Roger
thinks of Cynthia, papa, you are quite mistaken. Osborne and I are
friends and nothing more, and never can be anything more. That's all
I can tell you.'

'It's quite enough, little one. It's a great relief. I don't want to
have my Molly carried off by any young man just yet; I should miss
her sadly.' He could not help saying this in the fulness of his
heart just then, but he was surprised at the effect these few tender
words produced. Molly threw her arms round his neck, and began to
sob bitterly, her head lying on his shoulder. 'There, there!' said
he, patting her on the back, and leading her to the sofa, 'that will
do. I get quite enough of tears in the day, shed for real causes,
not to want them at home, where, I hope, they are shed for no cause
at all. There's nothing really the matter, is there, my dear?' he
continued, holding her a little away from him that he might look in
her face. She smiled at him through her tears; and he did not see
the look of sadness which returned to her face after he had left
her.

'Nothing, dear, dear papa--nothing now. It is such a comfort to have
you all to myself--it makes me happy.'

Mr. Gibson knew all implied in these words, and felt that there was
no effectual help for the state of things which had arisen from his
own act. It was better for them both that they should not speak out
more fully. So he kissed her, and said,--

'That's right, dear! I can leave you in comfort now, and indeed I've
stayed too long already gossiping. Go out and have a walk--take
Cynthia with you, if you like. I must be off. Good-by, little one.'

His commonplace words acted like an astringent on Molly's relaxed
feelings. He intended that they should do so; it was the truest
kindness to her; but he walked away from her with a sharp pang at
his heart, which he stunned into numbness as soon as he could by
throwing himself violently into the affairs and cares of others.


CHAPTER XXXVII


A FLUKE, AND WHAT CAME OF IT


The honour and glory of having a lover of her own was soon to fall
to Molly's share; though to be sure it was a little deduction to the
honour that the man who came with the full intention of proposing to
her, ended by making Cynthia an offer. It was Mr. Coxe, who came back
to Hollingford to follow out the purpose he had announced to Mr.
Gibson nearly two years before, of inducing Molly to become his wife
as soon as he should have succeeded to his uncle's estate. He was
now a rich, though still a red-haired, young man. He came to the
'George' Inn, bringing his horses and his groom; not. that he was
going to ride much, but that he thought such outward signs of his
riches might help on his suit; and he was so justly modest in his
estimation of himself that he believed that he needed all extraneous
aid. He piqued himself on his constancy; and indeed, considering
that he had been so much restrained by his duty, his affection, and
his expectations to his crabbed old uncle, that he had not been able
to go much into society, and very rarely indeed into the company of
young ladies, such fidelity to Molly was very meritorious, at least
in his own eyes. Mr. Gibson too was touched by it, and made it a
point of honour to give him a fair field, all the time sincerely
hoping that Molly would not be such a goose as to lend a willing ear
to a youth who could never remember the difference between apophysis
and epiphysis. He thought it as well not to tell his wife more of Mr
Coxe's antecedents than that he had been a former pupil; who had
relinquished (all that he knew of, understood) the medical
profession because an old uncle had left him enough of money to be
idle. Mrs. Gibson, who felt that she had somehow lost her place in
her husband's favour, took it into her head that she could reinstate
herself if she was successful in finding a good match for his
daughter Molly. She knew that her husband had forbidden her to try
for this end, as distinctly as words could express a meaning; but
her own words so seldom did express her meaning, or if they did, she
held to her opinions so loosely, that she had no idea but that it
was the same with other people. Accordingly she gave Mr. Coxe a very
sweet and gracious welcome.

'It is such a pleasure to me to make acquaintance with the former
pupils of my husband. He had spoken to me so often of you that I
quite feel as if you were one of the family, as indeed I am sure
that Mr. Gibson considers you.'

Mr. Coxe felt much flattered, and took the words as a happy omen for
his love-affair. 'Is Miss Gibson in?' asked he, blushing violently.
'I knew her formerly, that is to say, I lived in the same house with
her, for more than two years, and it would be a great pleasure to--
to--'

'Certainly, I am sure she will be so glad to see you. I sent her and
Cynthia--you don't know my daughter Cynthia, I think, Mr. Coxe? she
and Molly are such great friends--out for a brisk walk this frosty
day, but I think they will soon come back.' She went on saying
agreeable nothings to the young man, who received her attentions
with a certain complacency, but was all the time much more engaged
in listening to the well-remembered click at the front door,--the
shutting it to again with household care, and the sound of the
familiar bounding footstep on the stair. At last they came. Cynthia
entered first, bright and blooming, fresh colour in her cheeks and
lips, fresh brilliance in her eyes. She looked startled at the sight
of a stranger, and for an instant she stopped short at the door, as
if taken by surprise. Then in came Molly softly behind her, smiling,
happy, dimpled; but not such a glowing beauty as Cynthia.

'Oh, Mr. Coxe, is it you?' said she, going up to him with an
outstretched hand, and greeting him with simple friendliness.

'Yes; it seems such a long time since I saw you. You are so much
grown--so much--well, I suppose I must not say what,' he replied,
speaking hurriedly, and holding her hand all the time rather to her
discomfiture. Then Mrs. Gibson introduced her daughter, and the two
girls spoke of the enjoyment of their walk. Mr. Coxe marred his cause
in that very first interview, if indeed he ever could have had any
chance, by his precipitancy in showing his feelings, and Mrs. Gibson
helped him to mar it by trying to assist him. Molly lost her open
friendliness of manner, and began to shrink away from him in a way
which he thought was a very ungrateful return for all his
faithfulness to her these two years past, and after all she was not
the wonderful beauty his fancy or his love had painted her. That
Miss Kirkpatrick was far more beautiful and much easier of access.
For Cynthia put on all her pretty airs--her look of intent interest
in what any one was saying to her, let the subject be what it would,
as if it was the thing she cared the most about in the whole world;
her unspoken deference; in short, all the unconscious ways she
possessed by instinct of tickling the vanity of men. So while Molly
quietly repelled him, Cynthia drew him to her by her soft attractive
ways; and his constancy fell before her charms. He was thankful that
he, had not gone too far with Molly, and grateful to Mr. Gibson for
having prohibited all declarations two years ago. For Cynthia, and
Cynthia alone, could make him happy. After a fortnight's time,
during which he had entirely veered round in his allegiance, he
thought it desirable to speak to Mr. Gibson. He did so with a certain
sense of exultation in his own correct behaviour in the affair, but
at the same time feeling rather ashamed of the confession of his own
changeableness which was naturally involved. Now it had so happened
that Mr. Gibson had been unusually little at home during the
fortnight that Mr. Coxe had ostensibly lodged at the 'George'--but in
reality had spent the greater part of his time at Mr. Gibson's
house--so that he had seen very little of his former pupil, and on
the whole he had thought him improved, especially after Molly's
manner had made her father pretty sure that Mr. Coxe stood no chance
in that quarter. But Mr. Gibson was quite ignorant of the attraction
which Cynthia had had for the young man. If he had perceived it he
would have nipped it in the bud pretty quickly, for he had no notion
of any girl, even though only partially engaged to one man,
receiving offers from others if a little plain speaking could
prevent it. Mr. Coxe had asked for a private interview; they were
sitting in the old surgery, now called the consulting-room, but
still retaining so much of its former self as to be the last place
in which Mr. Coxe could feel himself at case. He was red up to me
very roots of his red Hair, and kept turning his glossy new hat
round and round in his fingers, unable to find out the proper way of
beginning his sentence, so at length he plunged in, grammar or no
grammar.

'Mr. Gibson, I daresay you'll be surprised, I'm sure I am at--at what
I want to say; but I think it's the part of an honourable man, as
you said yourself, sir, a year or two ago, to--to speak to the
father first, and as you, sir, stand in the place of a father to
Miss Kirkpatrick, I should like to express my feelings, my hopes, or
perhaps I should say wishes, in short--'

'Miss Kirkpatrick?' said Mr. Gibson, a good deal surprised.

'Yes, sir!' continued Mr. Coxe, rushing on now he had got so far. 'I
know it may appear inconstant and changeable, but I do assure you, I
came here with a heart as faithful to your daughter, as ever beat in
a man's bosom. I most fully intended to offer myself and all that I
had to her acceptance before I left; but really, sir, if you had
seen her manner to me every time I endeavoured to press my suit a
little--it was more than coy, it was absolutely repellent, there
could be no mistaking it,--while Miss Kirkpatrick--' he looked
modestly down, and smoothed the nap of his hat, smiling a little
while he did SO.

'While Miss Kirkpatrick--?' repeated Mr. Gibson, in such a stern
voice, that Mr. Coxe, landed esquire as he was now, felt as much
discomfited as he used to do when he was an apprentice, and Mr
Gibson had spoken to him in a similar manner.

'I was only going to say, sir, that so far as one can judge from
manner, and willingness to listen, and apparent pleasure in my
visits--altogether I think I may venture to hope that Miss
Kirkpatrick is not quite indifferent to me,--and I would wait,--you
have no objection, have you, sir, to my speaking to her, I mean?'
said Mr. Coxe, a little anxious at the expression on Mr. Gibson's
face. 'I do assure you I have not a chance with Miss Gibson,' he
continued, not knowing what to say, and fancying that his
inconstancy was rankling in Mr. Gibson's mind.

'No! I don't suppose you have. Don't go and fancy it is that which
is annoying me. You're mistaken about Miss Kirkpatrick, however. I
don't believe she could ever have meant to give you encouragement!'

Mr. Coxe's face grew perceptibly paler. His feelings, if evanescent,
were evidently strong.

'I think, sir, if you could have seen her--I don't consider myself
vain, and manner is so difficult to describe. At any rate, you can
have no objection to my taking my chance, and speaking to her.'

'Of course, if you won't be convinced otherwise, I can have no
objection. But if you'll take my advice, you will spare yourself the
pain of a refusal. I may, perhaps, be trenching on confidence, but I
think I ought to tell you that her affections are otherwise
engaged.'

'It cannot be!' said Mr. Coxe. 'Mr. Gibson, there must be some
mistake. I have gone as far as I dared iii expressing my feelings,
and her manner has been most gracious. I don't think she could have
misunderstood my meaning. Perhaps she has changed her mind? It is
possible that, after consideration, she has learnt to prefer
another, is it not?'

'By "another," you mean yourself, I suppose. I can believe in such
inconstancy' (he could not help, in his own mind, giving a slight
sneer at the instance before him), 'but I should be very sorry to
think that Miss Kirkpatrick could be guilty of it.'

'But she may--it is a chance. Will you allow me to see her?'

'Certainly, my poor fellow'--for, intermingled with a little
contempt, was a good deal of respect for the simplicity, the
unworldliness, the strength of feeling, even though the feeling was
evanescent--'I will send her to you directly.'

'Thank you, sir. God bless you for a kind friend!'

Mr. Gibson went upstairs to the drawing-room, where he was pretty
sure he should find Cynthia. There she was' as bright and careless
as usual, making up a bonnet for her mother, and chattering to Molly
as she worked.

'Cynthia, you will oblige me by going down into my consulting-room
at once. Mr. Coxe wants to speak to you!'

'Mr. Coxe?' said Cynthia. 'What can he want with me?'

Evidently, she answered her own question as soon as it was asked,
for she coloured, and avoided meeting Mr. Gibson's severe,
uncompromising look. As soon as she had left the room, Mr. Gibson
sate down, and took up a new ~Edinburgh~ lying on the table, as an
excuse for conversation. Was there anything in the article that made
him say, after a minute or two, to Molly, who sate silent and
wondering,--

"Molly, you must never trifle with the love of an honest man. You
don't know what pain you may give."

Presently Cynthia came back into the drawing-room, looking very much
confused. Most likely she would not have returned if she had known
that Mr. Gibson was still there; but it was such an unheard-of thing
for him to be sitting in that room in the middle of the day, reading
or making pretence to read, that she had never thought of his
remaining. He looked up at her the moment she came in, so there was
nothing for it but putting a bold face on it, and going back to her
work.

'Is Mr. Coxe still downstairs?' asked Mr. Gibson.

'No. He is gone. He asked me to give you both his kind regards. I
believe he is leaving this afternoon.' Cynthia tried to make her
manner as commonplace as possible; but she did not look up, and her
voice trembled a little.

Mr. Gibson went on looking at his book for a few minutes; but Cynthia
felt that more was coming, and only wished it would come quickly,
for the severe silence was very hard to bear. It came at last.

'I trust this will never occur again, Cynthia!' said he, in grave
displeasure. 'I should not feel satisfied with the conduct of any
girl, however free, who could receive marked attentions from a young
man with complacency, and so lead him on to make an offer which she
never meant to accept. But what must I think of a young woman in
your position, engaged--yet "accepting most graciously," for that
was the way Coxe expressed it--the overtures of another man? Do you
consider what unnecessary pain you have given him by your
thoughtless behaviour? I call it "thoughtless," but it is the
mildest epithet I can apply to it. I beg that such a thing may not
occur again, or I shall be obliged to characterize it more
severely.'

Molly could not imagine what "more severely" could be, for her
father's manner appeared to her almost cruel in its sternness.
Cynthia coloured up extremely, then went pale, and at length raised
her beautiful appealing eyes full of tears to Mr. Gibson. He was
touched by that look, but he resolved immediately not to be
mollified by any of her physical charms of expression, but to keep
to his sober judgment of her conduct.

'Please, Mr. Gibson, hear my side of the story before you speak so
hardly to me. I did not mean to--to flirt. I merely meant to make
myself agreeable,--I can't help doing that,--and that goose of a Mr
Coxe seems to have fancied I meant to give him encouragement.'

'Do you mean that you were not aware that he was falling in love
with you?' Mr. Gibson was melting into a readiness to be convinced by
that sweet voice, and pleading face.

'Well, I suppose I must speak truly.' Cynthia blushed and
smiled--ever so little--but it was a smile, and it hardened Mr
Gibson's heart again. 'I did think once or twice that he was
becoming a little more complimentary than the occasion required; but
I hate throwing cold water on people, and I never thought he could
take it into his silly head to fancy himself seriously in love, and
to make such a fuss at the last, after only a fortnight's
acquaintance.'

'You seem to have been pretty well aware of his silliness (I should
rather call it simplicity). Don't you think you should have
remembered that it might lead him to exaggerate what you were doing
and saying into encouragement?'

'Perhaps. I daresay I'm all wrong, and that he is all right,' said
Cynthia, piqued and pouting. 'We used to say in France, that "les
absens ont toujours tort," but really it seems as if here--' she
stopped. She was unwilling to be impertinent to a man whom she
respected and liked. She took up another point of her defence, and
rather made matters worse. 'Besides, Roger would not allow me to
consider myself as finally engaged to him; I would willingly have
done it, but he would not let me.'

'Nonsense. Don't let us go on talking about it, Cynthia! I have said
all that I mean to say. I believe that you were only thoughtless, as
I told you before. But don't let it happen again.' He left the room
at once, to put a stop to the conversation, the continuance of which
would serve no useful purpose, and perhaps end by irritating him.

'"Not guilty, but we recommend the prisoner not to do it again."
It's pretty much that, isn't it, Molly?' said Cynthia, letting her
tears downfall,' even. while she smiled. 'I do believe your father
might make a good woman of me yet, if he would only take the pains,
and was not quite so severe. And to think of that stupid little
fellow making all this mischief He pretended to take it to heart, as
if he had loved me for years instead of only for days. I daresay
only for hours if the truth were told.'

'I was afraid he was becoming very fond of you,' said Molly; 'at
least it struck me once or twice; but I knew he could not stay long,
and I thought it would only make you uncomfortable if I said
anything about it. But now I wish I had!'

'It would not have made a bit of difference,' replied Cynthia. 'I
knew he liked me, and I like to be liked; it's born in me to try to
make every one I come near fond of me; but then they should not
carry it too far, for it becomes very troublesome if they do. I
shall hate red-haired people for the rest of my life. To think of
such a man as that being the cause of your father's displeasure with
me!'

Molly had a question at her tongue's end that she longed to put; she
knew it was indiscreet, but at last out it came almost against her
will.

'Shall you tell Roger about it?'

Cynthia replied, 'I have not thought about it--no! I don't think I
shall--there's no need. Perhaps, if we are ever married--'

'Ever married!' said Molly, under her breath. But Cynthia took no
notice of the exclamation until she had finished the sentence which
it interrupted.

'---and I can see his face, and know his mood, I may tell it him
then; but not in writing, and when he is absent; it might annoy
him.'

'I am afraid it would make him uncomfortable,' said Molly, simply.
'And yet it must be so pleasant to be able to tell him everything--
all your difficulties and troubles.'

'Yes; only I don't worry him with these things; it is better to
write him merry letters, and cheer him up among the black folk. You
repeated "Ever married," a little while ago; do you know, Molly, I
don't think I ever shall be married to him? I don't know why, but I
have a strong presentiment, so it's just as well not to tell him all
my secrets, for it would be awkward for him to know them if it never
came off!'

Molly dropped her work, and sate silent, looking into the future; at
length she said, 'I think it would break his heart, Cynthia!'

'Nonsense. Why, I am sure that Mr. Coxe came here with the intention
of falling in love with you--you need not blush so violently. I am
sure you saw it as plainly as I did, only you made yourself
disagreeable, and I took pity on him, and consoled his wounded
vanity.'

'Can you--do you dare to compare Roger Hamley to Mr. Coxe?' asked
Molly, indignantly.

'No, no, I don't!' said Cynthia in a moment. 'They are as different
as men can be. Don't be so dreadfully serious over everything,
Molly. You look as oppressed with sad reproach, as if I had been
passing on to you the scolding your father gave me.'

'Because I don't think you value Roger as you ought, Cynthia!' said
Molly stoutly, for it required a good deal of courage to force
herself to say this, although she could not tell why she shrank so
from speaking.

'Yes, I do! It's not in my nature to go into ecstasies, and I don't
suppose I shall ever be what people call "in love." But I am glad he
loves me, and I like to make him happy, and I think him the best and
most agreeable man I know, always excepting your father when he is
not angry with me. What can I say more, Molly? would you like me to
say I think him handsome?'

'I know most people think him plain, but--'

'Well, I'm of the opinion of most people then, and small blame to
them. But I like his face--oh, ten thousand times better than Mr
Preston's handsomeness!' For the first time during the conversation
Cynthia seemed thoroughly in earnest. Why Mr. Preston was introduced
neither she nor Molly knew; it came up and out by a sudden impulse;
but a fierce look came into the eyes, and the soft lips contracted
themselves as Cynthia named his name. Molly had noticed this look
before, always at the mention of this one person.

'Cynthia, what makes you dislike Mr. Preston so much?'

'Don't you? Why do you ask me? and yet, Molly,' said she, suddenly
relaxing into depression, not merely in tone and look, but in the
droop of her limbs--'Molly, what should you think of me if I married
him after all?'

'Married him! Has he ever asked you?'

But Cynthia, instead of replying to this question, went on, uttering
her own thoughts,--'More unlikely things have happened. Have you
never heard of strong wills mesmerizing weaker ones into submission?
One of the girls at Madame Lefevre's went out as a governess to a
Russian family, who lived near Moscow. I sometimes think I'll write
to her to get me a situation in Russia, just to get out of the daily
chance of seeing that man!'

'But sometimes you seem quite intimate with him, and talk to him--'

'How can I help it?' said Cynthia impatiently. Then recovering
herself she added: 'We knew him so well at Ashcombe, and he's not a
man to be easily thrown off, I can tell you. I must be civil to him;
it's not from liking, and he knows it is not, for I've told him so.
However, we won't talk about him. I don't know how we came to do it,
I'm sure: the mere fact of his existence, and of his being within
half a mile of us, is bad enough. Oh! I wish Roger was at home, and
rich, and could marry me at once, and carry me away from that man!
If I'd thought of it, I really believe I would have taken poor
red-haired Mr. Coxe.'

'I don't understand it at all,' said Molly. 'I dislike Mr. Preston,
but I should never think of taking such violent steps as you speak
of, to get away from the neighbourhood in which he lives.'

'No, because you are a reasonable little darling,' said Cynthia,
resuming her usual manner, and coming up to Molly, and kissing her.
'At least you'll acknowledge I'm a good hater!'

'Yes. But still I don't understand it.'

'Oh, never mind! There are old complications with our affairs at
Ashcombe. Money matters are at the root of it all. Horrid
poverty--do let us talk of something else! Or, better still, let me
go and finish my letter to Roger, or I shall be too late for the
African mail!'

'Is it not gone? Oh, I ought to have reminded you! It will be too
late. Did you not see the notice at the post-office that letters
for--ought to be in London on the morning of the 10th instead of the
evening. Oh, I am so sorry!'

'So am I, but it can't be helped. It is to be hoped it will be the
greater treat when he does get it. I've a far greater weight on my
heart, because your father seems so displeased with me. I was fond
of him, and now he is making me quite a coward. You see, Molly,'
continued she, a little piteously, 'I've never lived with people
with such a high standard of conduct before; and I don't quite know
how to behave.'

'You must learn,' said Molly, tenderly. 'You'll find Roger quite as
strict in his notions of right and wrong.'

'Ah, but he's in love with me!' said Cynthia, with a pretty
consciousness of her power. Molly turned away her head, and was
silent; it was of no use combating the truth, and she tried rather
not to feel it--not to feel, poor girl, that she too had a great
weight on her heart, into the cause of which she shrank from
examining. That whole winter long she had felt as if her sun was all
shrouded over with grey mist, and could no longer shine brightly for
her. She wakened up in the morning with a dull sense of something
being wrong--the world was out of joint, and, if she were born to
set it right, she did not know how to do it. Blind herself as she
would, she could not help perceiving that her father was not
satisfied with the wife he had chosen. For a long time Molly had
been surprised at his apparent contentment; sometimes she had been
unselfish enough to be glad that he was satisfied; but still more
frequently nature would have its way, and she was almost irritated
at what she considered his blindness. Something, however, had
changed him now: something that had arisen at the time of Cynthia's
engagement; he had become nervously sensitive to his wife's
failings, and his whole manner had grown dry and sarcastic, not
merely to her, but sometimes to Cynthia,--and even--but this very
rarely, to Molly herself. He was not a man to go into passions, or
ebullitions of feeling: they would have relieved him, even while
degrading him in his own eyes; but he became hard, and occasionally
bitter in his speeches and ways. Molly now learnt to long after the
vanished blindness in which her father had passed the first year of
his marriage; yet there were no outrageous infractions of domestic
peace. Some people might say that Mr. Gibson 'accepted the
inevitable;' he told himself in more homely phrase 'that it was no
use crying over spilt milk;' and he, from principle, avoided all
actual dissensions with his wife, preferring to cut short a
discussion by a sarcasm, or by leaving the room. Moreover, Mrs
Gibson had a very tolerable temper of her own, and her cat-like
nature purred and delighted in smooth ways, and pleasant quietness.
She had no great facility for understanding sarcasm; it is true it
disturbed her, but as she was not quick at deciphering any depth of
meaning, and felt it to be unpleasant to think about it, she forgot
it as soon as possible. Yet she saw she was often in some kind of
disfavour with her husband, and it made her uneasy. She resembled
Cynthia in this; she liked to be liked; and she wanted to regain the
esteem which she did not perceive she had lost for ever. Molly
sometimes took her stepmother's part in secret; she felt as if she
herself could never have borne her father's hard speeches so
patiently: they would have cut her to the heart, and she must either
have demanded an explanation, and probed the sore to the bottom, or
sate down despairing and miserable. Instead of which Mrs. Gibson,
after her husband had left the room on these occasions, would say in
a manner more bewildered than hurt,--

'I think dear papa seems a little put out to-day; we must see that
he has a dinner that he likes when he comes home. I have often
perceived that everything depends on making a man comfortable in his
own house.'

And thus she went on, groping about to find the means of reinstating
herself in his good graces--really trying, according to her lights,
till Molly was often compelled to pity her in spite of herself, and
although she saw that her stepmother was the cause of her father's
increased astringency of disposition. For indeed he had got into
that kind of exaggerated susceptibility with regard to his wife's
faults, which may be best typified by the state of bodily irritation
that is produced by the constant recurrence of any particular noise:
those who are brought within hearing of it, are apt to be always on
the watch for the repetition, if they are once made to notice it,
and are in an irritable state of nerves.

So that poor Molly had not passed a cheerful winter, independently
of any private sorrows that she might have in her own heart. She did
not look well, either; she was gradually falling into low health,
rather than bad health. Her heart beat more feebly and slower; the
vivifying stimulant of hope--even unacknowledged hope--was gone out
of her life. It seemed as if there was not, and never could be in
this world, any help for the dumb discordancy between her father and
his wife. Day after day, month after month, year after year, would
Molly have to sympathize with her father, and pity her stepmother,
feeling acutely for both, and certainly more than Mrs. Gibson felt
for herself. Molly could not imagine how she had at one time wished
for her father's eyes to be opened, and how she could ever have
fancied that if they were, he would be able to change things in Mrs
Gibson's character. It was all hopeless, and the only attempt at a
remedy was to think about it as little as possible. Then Cynthia's
ways and manners about Roger gave Molly a great deal of uneasiness.
She did not believe that Cynthia cared enough for him; at any rate,
not with the sort of love that she herself would have bestowed, if
she had been so happy--no, that was not ii--if she had been in
Cynthia's place. She felt as if she should have gone to him both
hands held out, full and brimming over with tenderness, and been
grateful for every word of precious confidence bestowed on her. Yet
Cynthia received his letters with a kind of carelessness, and read
them with a strange indifference, while Molly sate at her feet, so
to speak, looking up with eyes as wistful as a dog's waiting for
crumbs, and such chance beneficences.

She tried to be patient on these occasions, but at last she must
ask,--'Where is he, Cynthia? What does he say?' By this time Cynthia
had put down the letter on the table by her, smiling a little from
time to time, as she remembered the loving compliments it contained.

'Where? Oh, I did not look exactly--somewhere in Abyssinia--Huon.'
I can't read the word, and it does not much signify, for it would
give me no idea.'

'Is he well?' asked greedy Molly.

'Yes, now. He has had a slight touch of fever, he says; but it's all
over now, and he hopes he is getting acclimatized.'

'Of fever!--and who took care of him? he would want nursing--and so
far from home. Oh, Cynthia!'

'Oh, I don't fancy he had any nursing, poor fellow! One does not
expect nursing, and hospitals, and doctors in Abyssinia; but he had
plenty of quinine with him, and I suppose that is the best specific.
At any rate, he says he is quite well now!'

Molly sate silent for a minute or two.

'What is the date of the letter, Cynthia?'

'I did not look. December the--December the 10th.'

'That's nearly two months ago,' said Molly.

'Yes; but I determined I would not worry myself with useless
anxiety, when he went away. If anything did--go wrong, you know,'
said Cynthia, using an euphuism' for death, as most people do (it is
an ugly word to speak plain out in the midst of life), 'it would be
all over before I even heard of his illness, and I could be of no
use to him--could I, Molly?'

'No. I daresay it is all very true; only I should think the squire
could not take it so easily.'

'I always write him a little note when I hear from Roger, but I
don't think I'll name this touch of fever--shall I, Molly?'

'I don't know,' said Molly. 'People say one ought, but I almost wish
I had not heard it. Please, does he say anything else that I may
hear?'

'Oh, lovers' letters are so silly, and I think this is sillier than
usual,' said Cynthia, looking over her letter again. 'Here's a piece
you may read, from that line to that,' indicating two places. 'I
have not read it myself for it looked dullish--all about Aristotle
and Pliny--and I want to get this bonnet-cap made up before we go
out to pay our calls.'

Molly took the letter, the thought crossing her mind that he had
touched it, had had his hands upon it, in those far-distant desert
lands, where he might be lost to sight and to any human knowledge of
his fate; even now her pretty brown fingers almost caressed the
flimsy paper with their delicacy of touch as she read. She saw
references made to books, which, with a little trouble, would be
accessible to her here in Hollingford. Perhaps the details and the
references would make the letter dull and dry to some people, but
not to her, thanks to his former teaching and the interest he had
excited in her for his pursuits. But, as he said in apology, what
had he to write about in that savage land, but his love, and his
researches, and travels? There was no society, no gaiety, no new
books to write about, no gossip in Abyssinian wilds.

Molly was not in strong health, and perhaps this made her a little
fanciful; but certain it is that her thoughts by day and her dreams
by night were haunted by the idea of Roger lying ill and untended in
those savage lands. Her constant prayer, 'O my Lord! give her the
living child, and in no wise slay it,' came from a heart as true as
that of the real mother in King Solomon's judgment. 'Let him live,
let him live, even though I may never set eyes upon him again. Have
pity upon his father! Grant that he may come home safe, and live
happily with her whom he loves so tenderly--so tenderly, O God.' And
then she would burst into tears, and drop asleep at last, sobbing.


CHAPTER XXXVIII


MR KIRKPATRICK, Q.C.


Cynthia was always the same with Molly: kind, sweet-tempered, ready
to help, professing a great deal of love for her, and probably
feeling as much as she did for any one in the world. But Molly had
reached to this superficial depth of affection and intimacy in the
first few weeks of Cynthia's residence in her father's house; and if
she had been of a nature prone to analyse the character of one whom
she loved dearly, she might have perceived that, with all Cynthia's
apparent frankness, there were certain limits beyond which her
confidence did not go; where her reserve began, and her real self
was shrouded in mystery. For instance, her relations with Mr. Preston
were often very puzzling to Molly. She was sure that there had been
a much greater intimacy between them formerly at Ashcombe, and that
the remembrance of this was often very galling and irritating to
Cynthia, who was as evidently desirous of forgetting it as he was
anxious to make her remember it. But why this intimacy had ceased,
why Cynthia disliked him so extremely now, and many other
unexplained circumstances connected with these two facts, were
Cynthia's secrets; and she effectually baffled all Molly's innocent
attempts during the first glow of her friendship for Cynthia, to
learn the girlish antecedents of her companion's life. Every now and
then Molly came to a dead wall, beyond which she could not pass--at
least with the delicate instruments which were all she chose to use.
Perhaps Cynthia might have told all there was to tell to a more
forcible curiosity, which knew how to improve every slip of the
tongue and every fit of temper to its own gratification. But Molly's
was the interest of affection, not the coarser desire of knowing
everything for a little excitement; and as soon as she saw that
Cynthia did not wish to tell her anything about that period of her
life, Molly left off referring to it. But if Cynthia had preserved a
sweet tranquillity of manner and an unvarying kindness for Molly
during the winter of which there is question, at present she was the
only person to whom the beauty's ways were unchanged. Mr. Gibson's
influence had been good for her as long as she saw that he liked
her; she had tried to keep as high a place in his good opinion as
she could, and had curbed many a little sarcasm against her mother,
and many a twisting of the absolute truth when he was by. Now there
was a constant uneasiness about her which made her more cowardly
than before; and even her partisan, Molly, could not help being
aware of the distinct equivocations she occasionally used when
anything in Mr. Gibson's words or behaviour pressed her too hard. Her
repartees to her mother were less frequent than they had been, but
there was often the unusual phenomenon of pettishness in her
behaviour to Mrs. Gibson. These changes in humour and disposition,
here described all at once, were in themselves a series of delicate
alterations of relative conduct spread over many months--many winter
months of long evenings and bad weather, which bring out discords of
character, as a dash of cold water brings out the fading colours of
an old fresco.

During much of this time Mr. Preston had been at Ashcombe; for Lord
Cumnor had not been able to find an agent whom he liked to replace
Mr. Preston; and while the inferior situation remained vacant Mr
Preston had undertaken to do the duties of both. Mrs. Goodenough had
had a serious illness; and the little society at Hollingford did not
care to meet while one of their habitual set was scarcely out of
danger. So there had been very little visiting; and though Miss
Browning said that the absence of the temptations of society was
very agreeable to cultivated minds, after the dissipations of the
previous autumn, when there were parties every week to welcome Mr
Preston, yet Miss Phoebe let out in confidence that she and her
sister had fallen into the habit of going to bed at nine o'clock,
for they found cribbage night after night, from five o'clock till
ten, rather too much of a good thing. To tell the truth, that
winter, if peaceful, was monotonous in Hollingford; and the whole
circle of gentility there was delighted to be stirred up in March by
the intelligence that Mr. Kirkpatrick, the newly-made Q.C., was
coming on a visit of a couple of days to his sister-in-law Mrs
Gibson. Mrs. Goodenough's room was the very centre of gossip; gossip
had been her daily bread through her life, gossip was meat and wine
to her now.

'Dear-ah-me!' said the old lady, rousing herself so as to sit
upright in her easy chair, and propping herself with her hands on
the arms; 'who would ha' thought she'd such grand relations! Why, Mr
Ashton told me once that a Queen's counsel was as like to be a judge
as a kitten is like to be a cat. And to think of her being as good
as a sister to a judge! I saw one oncst; and I know I thought as I
should not wish for a better winter-cloak than his old robes would
make me, if I could only find out where I could get them
second-hand. And I know she'd her silk gowns turned and dyed and
cleaned, and, for aught I know, turned again, while she lived at
Ashcombe. Keeping a school, too, and so near akin to this Queen's
counsel all the time! Well, to be sure, it was not much of a
school--only ten young ladies at the best o' times; so perhaps he
never heard of it.'

'I've been wondering what they'll give him to dinner,' said Miss
Browning. 'It is an unlucky time for visitors; no game to be had,
and lamb so late this year, and chicken hardly to be had for love or
money.'

'He'll have to put up with calves-head, that he will,' said Mrs
Goodenough, solemnly. 'If I'd ha' got my usual health I'd copy out a
receipt of my grandmother's for a rolled calves-head,' and send it
to Mrs. Gibson,--the doctor has been very kind to me all through this
illness,--I wish my daughter in Combermere would send me some autumn
chickens--I'd pass 'em on to the doctor, that I would; but she's
been a-killing of 'em all, and a-sending of them to me, and the last
she sent she wrote me word was the last.'

'I wonder if they'll give a party for him!' suggested Miss Phoebe.
'I should like to see a Queen's counsel for once in my life. I have
seen javelin-men, but that's the greatest thing in the legal line I
ever came across.'

'They'll ask Mr. Ashton, of course,' said Miss Browning. 'The three
black graces, Law, Physic, and Divinity, as the song calls them.'
Whenever there's a second course, there's always the clergyman of
the parish invited in any family of gentility.'

'I wonder if he's married!' said Mrs. Goodenough. Miss Phoebe had
been feeling the same wonder, but had not thought it maidenly to
express it, even to her sister, who was the source of knowledge,
having met Mrs. Gibson in the street on her way to Mrs. Goodenough's.

'Yes, he's married, and must have several children, for Mrs. Gibson
said that Cynthia Kirkpatrick had paid them a visit in London, to
have lessons with her cousins. And she said that his wife was a most
accomplished woman, and of good family, though she brought him no
fortune.'

'It's a very creditable connection, I'm sure; it's only a wonder to
me as how we've heard so little talk of it before,' said Mrs
Goodenough. 'At the first look of the thing, I should not ha'
thought Mrs. Gibson was one to hide away her fine relations under a
bushel; indeed for that matter we're all of us fond o' turning the
best breadth o' the gown to the front. I remember, speaking o'
breadths, how I've undone my skirts many a time and oft to put a
stain or a grease-spot next to poor Mr. Goodenough. He'd a soft kind
of heart when first we was married, and he said, says he, "Patty,
link thy right arm into my left one, then thou'lt be nearer to my
heart;" and so we kept up the habit, when, poor man, he'd a deal
more to think on than romancing on which side his heart lay; so as I
said I always put my damaged breadths on the right hand, and when we
walked arm in arm, as we always did, no one was never the wiser.'

'I should not be surprised if he invited Cynthia to pay him another
visit in London,' said Miss Browning. 'If he did it when he was
poor, he's twenty times more likely to do it now he's a Queen's
counsel.'

'Ay, work it by the rule o' three, and she stands a good chance. I
only hope it won't turn her head; going up visiting in London at her
age. Why, I was fifty before ever I went!'

'But she has been in France, she's quite a travelled young lady,'
said Miss Phoebe.

Mrs. Goodenough shook her head, for a whole minute before she gave
vent to her opinion.

'It's a risk,' said she, 'a great risk. I don't like saying so to
the doctor, but I should not like having my daughter, if I was him,
so cheek-by-jowl with a girl as was brought up in the country where
Robespierre and Bonyparte was born.'

'But Buonaparte was a Corsican,' said Miss Browning, who was much
farther advanced both in knowledge and in liberality of opinions
than Mrs. Goodenough. 'And there's a great opportunity for
cultivation of the mind afforded by intercourse with foreign
countries. I always admire Cynthia's grace of manner, never too shy
to speak, yet never putting herself forwards; she's quite a help to
a party; and if she has a few airs and graces, why they're natural
at her age! Now as for dear Molly, there's a kind of awkwardness
about her--she broke one of our best china cups last time she was at
a party at our house, and spilt the coffee on the new carpet; and
then she got so confused that she hardly did anything but sit in a
corner and hold her tongue all the rest of the evening.'

'She was so sorry for what she'd done, sister,' said Miss Phoebe, in
a gentle tone of reproach; she was always faithful to Molly.

'Well, and did I say she wasn't? but was there any need for her to
be stupid all the evening after?'

'But you were rather sharp,--rather displeased--'

'And I think it my duty to be sharp, ay, and cross too, when I see
young folks careless. And when I see my duty clear I do it; I'm not
one to shrink from it, and they ought to be grateful to me. It's not
every one that will take the trouble of reproving them, as Mrs
Goodenough knows. I'm very fond of Molly Gibson, very, for her own
sake and for her mother's too; I'm not sure if I don't think she's
worth half-a-dozen Cynthias, but for all that she should not break
my best china tea-cup, and then sit doing nothing for her livelihood
all the rest of the evening.'

By this time Mrs. Goodenough gave evident signs of being tired;
Molly's misdemeanors and Miss Browning's broken teacup were not as
exciting subjects of conversation as Mrs. Gibson's newly-discovered
good luck in having a successful London lawyer for a relation.

Mr. Kirkpatrick had been, like many other men, struggling on in his
profession, and encumbered with a large family of his own; he was
ready to do a good turn for his connections, if it occasioned him no
loss of time, and if (which was, perhaps, a primary condition) he
remembered their existence. Cynthia's visit to Doughty Street nine
or ten years ago had not made much impression upon him after he had
once suggested its feasibility to his good-natured wife. He was even
rather startled every now and then by the appearance of a pretty
little girl amongst his own children, as they trooped in to dessert,
and had to remind himself who she was. But as it was his custom to
leave the table almost immediately and to retreat into a small
back-room called his study, to immerse himself in papers for the
rest of the evening, the child had not made much impression upon
him; and probably the next time he remembered her existence was when
Mrs. Kirkpatrick wrote to him to beg him to receive Cynthia for a
night on her way to school at Boulogne. The same request was
repeated on her return; but it so happened that he had not seen her
either time; and only dimly remembered some remarks which his wife
had made on one of these occasions, that it seemed to her rather
hazardous to send so young a girl so long a journey without making
more provision for her safety than Mrs. Kirkpatrick had done. He knew
that his wife would fill up all deficiencies in this respect as if
Cynthia had been her own daughter; and thought no more about her
until he received an invitation to attend Mrs. Kirkpatrick's wedding
with Mr. Gibson, the highly-esteemed surgeon of Hollingford, &c.
&c.--an attention which irritated instead of pleasing him. 'Does the
woman think I have nothing to do but run about the country in search
of brides and bridegrooms, when this great case of Houghton v.
Houghton is coming on, and I have not a moment to spare?' he asked
of his wife.

'Perhaps she never heard of it,' suggested Mrs. Kirkpatrick.

'Nonsense! the case has been in the papers for days.'

'But she mayn't know you are engaged in it.'

'She mayn't,' said he, meditatively--such ignorance was possible.

But now the great case of Houghton v. Houghton was a thing of the
past; the hard struggle was over, the comparative table-land of Q.
C.-dom gained, and Mr. Kirkpatrick had leisure for family feeling and
recollection. One day in the Easter vacation he found himself near
Hollingford; he had a Sunday to spare, and he wrote to offer himself
as a visitor to the Gibsons from Friday to Monday, expressing
strongly (what he really felt, in a less degree,) his wish to make
Mr. Gibson's acquaintance. Mr. Gibson, though often overwhelmed with
professional business, was always hospitable; and moreover, it was
always a pleasure to him to get out of the somewhat confined mental
atmosphere which he had breathed over and over again, and have a
whiff of fresh air: a glimpse of what was passing in the great world
beyond his daily limits of thought and action. So he was ready to
give a cordial welcome to his unknown relation. Mrs. Gibson was in a
flutter of sentimental delight, which she fancied was family
affection, but which might not have been quite so effervescent if Mr
Kirkpatrick had remained in his former position of struggling
lawyer, with seven children, living in Doughty Street.

When the two gentlemen met they were attracted towards each other by
a similarity of character, with just enough difference in their
opinions to make the experience of each, on which such opinions were
based, valuable to the other. Mrs. Gibson, although the bond between
them, counted for very little in their intercourse. Mr. Kirkpatrick
paid her very polite attention; and was, in fact, very glad that she
had done so well for herself as to marry a sensible and agreeable
man, who was able to keep her in comfort, and to behave to her
daughter in so liberal a manner. Molly struck him as a
delicate-looking girl, who might be very pretty if she had had a
greater look of health and animation: indeed, looking at her
critically, there were beautiful points about her face--long soft
grey eyes, black curling eyelashes, rarely-showing dimples, perfect
teeth; but there was a languor over all, a slow depression of
manner, which contrasted unfavourably with the brightly-coloured
Cynthia, sparkling, quick, graceful, and witty. As Mr. Kirkpatrick
expressed it afterwards to his wife, he was quite in love with that
girl; and Cynthia, as ready to captivate strangers as any little
girl of three or four, rose to the occasion, forgot all her cares
and despondencies, remembered no longer her regret at having lost
something of Mr. Gibson's good opinion, and listened eagerly and made
soft replies, intermixed with naive sallies of droll humour,
till Mr. Kirkpatrick was quite captivated. He left Hollingford,
almost surprised to have performed a duty, and found it a pleasure.
For Mrs. Gibson and Molly he had a general friendly feeling; but he
did not care if he never saw them again. But for Mr. Gibson he had a
warm respect, a strong personal liking, which he should be glad to
have ripen into a friendship, if there was time for it in this
bustling world. And he fully resolved to see more of Cynthia; his
wife must know her; they must have her up to stay with them in
London, and show her something of the world. But, on returning home,
Mr. Kirkpatrick found so much work awaiting him that he had to lock
up embryo friendships and kindly plans in some safe closet of his
mind, and give himself up, body and soul, to the immediate work of
his profession. But, in May, he found time to take his wife to the
Academy Exhibition,' and some portrait there, striking him as being
like Cynthia, he told his wife more about her and his visit to
Hollingford than he had ever had leisure to do before; and the
result was that on the next day a letter was sent off to Mrs. Gibson,
inviting Cynthia to pay a visit to her cousins in London, and
reminding her of many little circumstances that had occurred when
she was with them as a child, so as to carry on the clue of
friendship from that time to the present.

On its receipt this letter was greeted in various ways by the four
people who sate round the breakfast-table. Mrs. Gibson read it to
herself first. Then, without telling what its contents were, so that
her auditors were quite in the dark as to what her remarks applied,
she said,--

'I think they might have remembered that I am a generation nearer to
them than she is, but nobody thinks of family affection now-a-days;
and I liked him so much, and bought a new cookery-book, all to make
it pleasant and agreeable and what he was used to.' She said all
this in a plaintive, aggrieved tone of voice; but as no one knew to
what she was referring, it was difficult to offer her consolation.
Her husband was the first to speak.

'If you want us to sympathize with you, tell us what is the nature
of your woe.'

'Why, I daresay it's what he means as a very kind attention, only I
think I ought to have been asked before Cynthia,' said she, reading
the letter over again.

'Who's ~he~? and what's meant for a "kind attention"?'

'Mr. Kirkpatrick, to be sure. This letter is from him; and he wants
Cynthia to go and pay them a visit, and never says anything about
you or me, my dear. And I'm sure we did our best to make it
pleasant; and he should have asked us first, I think.'

'As I could not possibly have gone, it makes very little difference
to me.'

'But I could have gone; and, at any rate, he should have paid us the
compliment: it's only a proper mark of respect, you know. So
ungrateful, too, when I gave up my dressing-room on purpose for
him!'

'And I dressed for dinner every day he was here, if we are each to
recapitulate all our sacrifices on his behalf. But for all that I
did not expect to be invited to his house. I shall be only too glad
if he will come again to mine.'

'I've a great mind not to let Cynthia go,' said Mrs. Gibson,
reflectively.

'I can't go, mamma,' said Cynthia, colouring. 'My gowns are all so
shabby, and my old bonnet must do for this summer.'

'Well, but you can buy a new one; and I'm sure it is high time you
should get yourself another silk-gown. You must have been saving up
a great deal, for I don't know when you've had any new clothes.'

Cynthia began to say something, but stopped short. She went on
buttering her toast, but she held it in her hand without eating it;
without looking up either, as, after a minute or two of silence, she
spoke again,--

'I cannot go. I should like it very much; but I really cannot go.
Please, mamma, write at once, and refuse it.'

'Nonsense, child! When a man in Mr. Kirkpatrick's position comes
forward to offer a favour, it does not do to decline it without
giving a sufficient reason. So kind of him as it is, too!'

'Suppose you offer to go instead of me?' proposed Cynthia.

'No, no! that won't do,' said Mr. Gibson, decidedly. 'You can't
transfer invitations in that way. But really this excuse about your
clothes does appear to be very trivial, Cynthia, if you have no
other reason to give.'

'It is a real, true reason to me,' said Cynthia, looking up at him
as she spoke. 'You must let me judge for myself. It would not do to
go there in a state of shabbiness, for even in Doughty Street, I
remember, my aunt was very particular about dress; and now that
Margaret and Helen are grown up, and they visit so much,--pray don't
say anything more about it, for I know it would not do.'

'What have you done with all your money, I wonder?' said Mrs. Gibson.
'You've twenty pounds a year, thanks to Mr. Gibson and me; and I'm
sure you haven't spent more than ten.'

'I had not many things when I came back from France,' said Cynthia,
in a low voice, and evidently troubled by all this questioning.
'Pray let it be decided at once; I can't go, and there's an end of
it.' She got up, and left the room rather suddenly.

'I don't understand it at all,' said Mrs. Gibson. 'Do you, Molly?'

'No. I know she does not like spending money on her dress, and is
very careful.' Molly said this much, and then was afraid she had
made mischief.

'But then she must have got the money somewhere. It always has
struck me that if you have not extravagant habits, and do not live
up to your income, you must have a certain sum to lay by at the end
of the year. Have I not often said so, Mr. Gibson?'

'Probably.'

'Well, then, apply the same reasoning to Cynthia's case; and then, I
ask, what has become of the money?'

'I cannot tell,' said Molly, seeing that she was appealed to. 'She
may have given it away to some one who wants it.'

Mr. Gibson put down his newspaper.

'It is very clear that she has neither got the dress nor the money
necessary for this London visit, and that she does not want any more
inquiries to be made on the subject. She likes mysteries, in fact,
and I detest them. Still, I think it is a desirable thing for her to
keep up the acquaintance, or friendship, or whatever it is to be
called, with her father's family; and I shall gladly give her ten
pounds; and if that's not enough, why, either you must help her out,
or she must do without some superfluous article of dress or
another.'

'I'm sure there never was such a kind, dear, generous man as you
are, Mr. Gibson,' said his wife. 'To think of your being a
stepfather! and so good to my poor fatherless girl! But, Molly my
dear, I think you'll acknowledge that you too are very fortunate in
your stepmother. Are not you, love? And what happy tete-a-tetes we
shall have together when Cynthia goes to London. I'm not sure if I
don't get on better with you even than with her, though she is my
own child; for, as dear papa says so truly, there is a love of
mystery about her; and if I hate anything, it is the slightest
concealment or reserve. Ten pounds! Why, it will quite set her up,
buy her a couple of gowns and a new bonnet, and I don't know what
all! Dear Mr. Gibson, how generous you are!'

Something very like 'Pshaw!' was growled out from behind the
newspaper.

'May I go and tell her?' said Molly, rising up.

'Yes, do, love. Tell her it would be so ungrateful to refuse; and
tell her that your father wishes her to go; and tell her, too, that
it would be quite wrong not to avail herself of an opening which may
by-and-by be extended to the rest of the family. I am sure if they
ask me--which certainly they ought to do--I won't say before they
asked Cynthia, because I never think of myself, and am really the
most forgiving person in the world, in forgiving slights;--but when
they do ask me, which they are sure to do, I shall never be content
till, by putting in a little hint here and a little hint there, I've
induced them to send you an invitation. A month or two in London
would do you so much good, Molly.'

Molly had left the room before this speech was ended, and Mr. Gibson
was occupied with his newspaper; but Mrs. Gibson finished it to
herself very much to her own satisfaction; for, after all, it was
better to have some one of the family going on the visit, though she
might not be the right person, than to refuse it altogether, and
never to have the opportunity of saying anything about it. As Mr
Gibson was so kind to Cynthia, she too would be kind to Molly, and
dress her becomingly, and invite young men to the house; do all the
things, in fact, which Molly and her father did not want to have
done, and throw the old stumbling-blocks in the way of their
unrestrained intercourse, which was the one thing they desired to
have, free and open, and without the constant dread of her jealousy.


CHAPTER XXXIX


SECRET THOUGHTS OOZE OUT


Molly found Cynthia in the drawing-room, standing in the bow-window,
looking out on the garden. She started as Molly came up to her.

'Oh, Molly,' said she, putting her arms out towards her, 'I am
always so glad to have you with me!'

It was outbursts of affection such as these that always called Molly
back, if she had been ever so unconsciously wavering in her
allegiance to Cynthia. She had been wishing downstairs that Cynthia
would be less reserved, and not have so many secrets; but now it
seemed almost like treason to have wanted her to be anything but
what she was. Never had any one more than Cynthia the power spoken
of by Goldsmith when he wrote,--

He threw off his friends like a huntsman his pack,
For he knew when he liked he could whistle them back.'

'Do you know, I think you'll be glad to hear what I've got to tell
you?' said Molly. 'I think you would really like to go to London;
should not you?'

'Yes, but it is of no use liking,' said Cynthia. 'Don't you begin
about it, Molly, for the thing is settled; and I can't tell you why,
but I can't go.'

'It is only the money, dear. And papa has been so kind about it. He
wants you to go; he thinks you ought to keep up relationships; and
he is going to give you ten pounds.'

'How kind he is!' said Cynthia. 'But I ought not to take it. I wish
I had known you years ago; I should have been different to what I
am.'

'Never mind that! We like you as you are; we don't want you
different. You'll really hurt papa if you don't take it. Why do you
hesitate? Do you think Roger won't like it?'

'Roger! no, I was not thinking about him! Why should he care? I
shall be there and back again before he even hears about it.'

'Then you will go?' said Molly.

Cynthia thought for a minute or two. 'Yes, I will,' said she, at
length. 'I daresay it's not wise, but it will be pleasant, and I'll
go. Where is Mr. Gibson? I want to thank him. Oh, how kind he is!
Molly, you're a lucky girl!'

'I?' said Molly, quite startled at being told this; for she had been
feeling as if so many things were going wrong, almost as if they
would never go right again.

'There he is!' said Cynthia. 'I hear him in the hall!' And down she
flew, and laying her hands on Mr. Gibson's arm, she thanked him with
such warm impulsiveness, and in so pretty and caressing a manner,
that something of his old feeling of personal liking for her
returned, and he forgot for a time the causes of disapproval he had
against her.

'There, there!' said he, 'that's enough, my dear! It is quite right
you should keep up with your relations; there's nothing more to be
said about it.'

'I do think your father is the most charming man I know,' said
Cynthia, on her return to Molly; 'and it's that which always makes
me so afraid of losing his good opinion, and fret go when I think he
is displeased with me. And now let us think all about this London
visit. It will be delightful, won't it? I can make ten pounds go
ever so far; and in some ways it will be such a comfort to get out
of Hollingford.'

'Will it?' said Molly, rather wistfully.

'Oh, yes! You know I don't mean that it will be a comfort to leave
you; that will be anything but a comfort. But, after all, a country
town is a country town, and London is London. You need not smile at
my truisms; I've always had a sympathy with M. de la Palisse,--

M. de la Palisse est mort
En perdant sa vie;
Un quart d'heure avant sa mort
Il etait en vie,'

sang she, in so gay a manner that she puzzled Molly, as she often
did, by her change of mood from the gloomy decision with which she
had refused to accept the invitation only half an hour ago. She
suddenly took Molly round the waist, and began waltzing round the
room with her, to the imminent danger of the various little tables,
loaded with '~objets d'art~' (as Mrs. Gibson delighted to call them)
with which the drawing-room was crowded. She avoided them, however,
with her usual skill; but they both stood still at last, surprised
at Mrs. Gibson's surprise, as she stood at the door, looking at the
whirl going on before her.

'Upon my word, I only hope you are not going crazy, both of you?
What's all this about, pray?'

'Only because I'm so glad I'm going to London, mamma,' said Cynthia,
demurely.

'I'm not sure if it's quite the thing for an engaged young lady to
be so much beside herself at the prospect of gaiety. In my time, our
great pleasure in our lovers' absence was in thinking about them.'

'I should have thought that would have given you pain, because you
would have had to remember that they were away, which ought to have
made you unhappy. Now, to tell you the truth, just at the moment I
had forgotten all about Roger. I hope it was not very wrong. Osborne
looks as if he did all my share as well as his own of the fretting
after Roger. How ill he looked yesterday!'

'Yes,' said Molly; 'I did not know if any one besides me had noticed
it. I was quite shocked.'

'Ah,' said Mrs. Gibson, 'I'm afraid that young man won't live
long--very much afraid,' and she shook her head ominously.

'Oh, what will happen if he dies!' exclaimed Molly, suddenly sitting
down, and thinking of that strange, mysterious wife who never made
her appearance, whose very existence was never spoken about--and
Roger away too!

'Well, it would be very sad, of course, and we should all feel it
very much, I've no doubt; for I've always been very fond of Osborne;
in fact, before Roger became, as it were, my own flesh and blood, I
liked Osborne better: but we must not forget the living, dear Molly'
(for Molly's eyes were filling with tears at the dismal thoughts
presented to her). 'Our dear good Roger would, I am sure, do all in
his power to fill Osborne's place in every way; and his marriage
need not be so long delayed.'

'Don't speak of that in the same breath as Osborne's life, mamma,'
said Cynthia, hastily.

'Why, my dear, it is a very natural thought. For poor Roger's sake,
you know, one wishes it not to be so very very long an engagement;
and I was only answering Molly's question, after all. One can't help
following out one's thoughts. People must die, you know--young, as
well as old.'

'If I ever suspected Roger of following out his thoughts in a
similar way,' said Cynthia, 'I'd never speak to him again.'

'As if he would!' said Molly, warm in her turn. 'You know he never
would; and you should not suppose it of him, Cynthia--no, not even
for a moment!'

'I can't see the great harm of it all, for my part,' said Mrs
Gibson, plaintively. 'A young man strikes us all as looking very
ill--and I'm sure I'm sorry for it; but illness very often leads to
death. Surely you agree with me there, and what's the harm of saying
so? Then Molly asks what will happen if he dies; and I try to answer
her question. I don't like talking or thinking of death any more
than any one else; but I should think myself wanting in strength of
mind if I could not look forward to the consequences of death. I
really think we're commanded to do so, somewhere in the Bible or the
Prayer-book.'

'Do you look forward to the consequences of my death, mamma?' asked
Cynthia.

'You really are the most unfeeling girl I ever met with,' said Mrs
Gibson, really hurt. 'I wish I could give you a little of my own
sensitiveness, for I have too much for my happiness. Don't let us
speak of Osborne's looks again; ten to one it was only some
temporary over-fatigue, or some anxiety about Roger, or perhaps a
little fit of indigestion. I was very foolish to attribute it to
anything more serious, and dear papa might be displeased if he knew
I had done so. Medical men don't like other people to be making
conjectures about health; they consider it as trenching on their own
particular province, and very proper I'm sure. Now let us consider
about your dress, Cynthia; I could not understand how you had spent
your money, and made so little show with it.'

'Mammal it may sound very cross, but I must tell Molly and you, and
everybody, once for all, that as I don't want and did not ask for
more than my allowance, I'm not going to answer any questions about
what I do with it.' She did not say this with any want of respect;
but she said it with quiet determination, which subdued her mother
for the time, though often afterwards when Mrs. Gibson and Molly were
alone, the former would start the wonder as to what Cynthia could
possibly have done with her money, and hunt each poor conjecture
through woods and valleys of doubt, till she was wearied out;' and
the exciting sport was given up for the day. At present, however,
she confined herself to the practical matter in hand; and the genius
for millinery and dress, inherent in both mother and daughter, soon
settled a great many knotty points of contrivance and taste, and
then they all three set to work to 'gar auld claes look amaist as
weel's the new.'

Cynthia's relations with the squire had been very stationary ever
since the visit she had paid to the Hall the previous autumn. He had
received them all at that time with hospitable politeness, and he
had also been more charmed with Cynthia than he liked to acknowledge
to himself when he thought the visit all over afterwards.

'She's a pretty lass sure enough,' thought he, 'and has pretty ways
about her too, and likes to learn from older people, which is a good
sign; but somehow I don't like madam her mother, but still she is
her mother, and the girl is her daughter; yet she spoke to her once
or twice as I should not ha' liked our little Fanny to have spoken,
if it had pleased God for her to ha' lived. No, it's not the right
way, and it may be a bit old-fashioned, but I like the right way.
And then again she took possession o' me as I may say, and little
Molly had to run after us in the garden walks that are too narrow
for three, just like a little four-legged doggie; and the other was
so full of listening to me, she never turned round for to speak a
word to Molly. I don't mean to say they're not fond of each other,
and that's in Roger's sweetheart's favour, and it's very ungrateful
in me to go and find fault with a lass who was so civil to me, and
had such a pretty way with her of hanging on every word that fell
from my lips. Well! a deal may come and go in two years! and the lad
says nothing to me about it. I'll be as deep as him, and take no
more notice of the affair till he comes home and tells me himself.'

So although the squire was always delighted to receive the little
notes which Cynthia sent to him every time she heard from Roger, and
although this attention on her part was melting the heart he tried
to harden, he controlled himself into writing her the briefest
acknowledgements. His words were strong in meaning, but formal in
expression; she herself did not think much about them, being
satisfied to do the kind actions that called them forth. But her
mother criticized them and pondered them. She thought she had hit on
the truth when she had decided in her own mind that it was a very
old-fashioned style, and that he and his house and his furniture all
wanted some of the brightening up and polishing which they were sure
to receive, when--she never quite liked to finish the sentence
definitely, although she kept repeating to herself that 'there was
no harm in it.'

To return to the squire. Occupied as he now was, he recovered his
former health, and something of his former cheerfulness. If Osborne
had met him half-way, it is probable that the old bond between
father and son might have been renewed; but Osborne either was
really an invalid, or had sunk into invalid habits, and made no
effort to rally. If his father urged him to go out--nay, once or
twice he gulped down his pride, and asked Osborne to accompany
him--Osborne would go to the window and find out some flaw or speck
in the wind or weather, and make that an excuse for stopping in the
house over his books. He would saunter out on the sunny side of the
house in a manner that the squire considered as both indolent and
unmanly. Yet if there was a prospect of his leaving home, which he
did pretty often about this time, he was seized with a hectic
energy: the clouds in the sky, the easterly wind, the dampness of
the air, were nothing to him then; and as the squire did not know
the real secret cause of this anxiety to be gone, he took it into
his head that it arose from Osborne's dislike to Hamley and to the
monotony of his father's society.

'It was a mistake,' thought the squire. 'I see it now. I was never
great at making friends myself. I always thought those Oxford and
Cambridge men turned up their noses at me for a country booby, and
I'd get the start and have none o' them. But when the boys went to
Rugby and Cambridge, I should ha' let them have had their own
friends about 'em, even though they might ha' looked down on me; it
was the worst they could ha' done to me, and now what few friends I
had have fallen off from me, by death or somehow, and it is but
dreary work for a young man, I grant it. But he might try not to
show it so plain to me as he does. I'm getting case-hardened, but it
does cut me to the quick sometimes--it does. And he so fond of his
dad as he was once! If I can but get the land drained I'll make him
an allowance, and let him go to London, or where he likes. Maybe
he'll do better this time, or maybe he'll go to the dogs altogether;
but perhaps it will make him think a bit kindly of the old father at
home--I should like him to do that, I should!'

It is possible that Osborne might have been induced to tell his
father of his marriage during their long ~tete-a-tete~ intercourse,
if the squire, in an unlucky moment, had not given him his
confidence about Roger's engagement with Cynthia. It was on one wet
Sunday afternoon, when the father and son were sitting together in
the large empty drawing-room. Osborne had not been to church in the
morning; the squire had, and he was now trying hard to read one of
Blair's sermons. They had dined early; they always did on Sundays;
and either that, or the sermon, or the hopeless wetness of the day,
made the afternoon seem interminably long to the squire. He had
certain unwritten rules for the regulation of his conduct on
Sundays. Cold meat, sermon-reading, no smoking till after evening
prayers, as little thought as possible as to the state of the land
and the condition of the crops, and as much respectable
sitting-indoors in his best clothes as was consistent with going to
church twice a day, and saying the responses louder than the clerk.
To-day it had rained so unceasingly that he had remitted the
afternoon church; but oh, even with the luxury of a nap, how long it
seemed before he saw the Hall servants trudging homewards, along the
field-path, a covey of umbrellas! He had been standing at the window
for the last half-hour, his hands in his pockets, and his mouth
often contracting itself into the traditional sin of a whistle, but
as often checked into sudden gravity--ending, nine times out of ten,
in a yawn. He looked askance at Osborne, who was sitting near the
fire absorbed in a book. The poor squire was something like the
little boy in the child's story, who asks all sorts of birds and
beasts to come and play with him; and, in every case, receives the
sober answer, that they are too busy to have leisure for trivial
amusements. The father wanted the son to put down his book, and talk
to him: it was so wet, so dull, and a little conversation would so
wile away the time! But Osborne, with his back to the window where
his father was standing, saw nothing of all this, and went on
reading. He had assented to his father's remark that it was a very
wet afternoon, but had not carried on the subject into all the
varieties of truisms of which it was susceptible. Something more
rousing must be started, and this the squire felt. The recollection
of the affair between Roger and Cynthia came into his head, and,
without giving it a moment's consideration, he began,--

'Osborne! Do you know anything about this--this attachment of
Roger's?'

Quite successful. Osborne laid down his book in a moment, and turned
round to his father.

'Roger! an attachment! No! I never heard of it--I can hardly believe
it--that is to say, I suppose it is to---'

And then he stopped; for he thought he had no right to betray his
own conjecture that the object was Cynthia Kirkpatrick.

'Yes. He is though. Can you guess who to? Nobody that I particularly
like--not a connection to my mind--yet she's a very pretty girl; and
I suppose I was to blame in the first instance.'

'Is it--'

'It's no use beating about the bush. I've gone so far, I may as well
tell you all. It's Miss Kirkpatrick, Gibson's stepdaughter. But it's
not an engagement, mind you--'

'I'm very glad--I hope she likes Roger back again--'

'Like--it's only too good a connection for her not to like it: if
Roger is of the same mind when he comes home, I'll be bound she'll
be only too happy!'

'I wonder Roger never told me,' said Osborne, a little hurt, now he
began to consider himself.

'He never told me either,' said the squire. 'It was Gibson, who came
here, and made a clean breast of it like a man of honour. I'd been
saying to him, I could not have either of you two lads taking up
with his lasses. I'll own it was you I was afraid of--it's bad
enough with Roger, and maybe will come to nothing after all; but if
it had been you, I'd ha' broken with Gibson and every mother's son
of 'em, sooner than have let it go on; and so I told Gibson.'

'I beg your pardon for interrupting you, but, once for all, I claim
the right of choosing my wife for myself, subject to no man's
interference,' said Osborne, hotly.

'Then you'll keep your wife with no man's interference, that's all;
for ne'er a penny will you get from me, my lad, unless you marry to
please me a little, as well as yourself a great deal. That's all I
ask of you. I'm not particular as to beauty, or as to cleverness,
and piano-playing, and that sort of thing; if Roger marries this
girl, we shall have enough of that in the family. I should not much
mind her being a bit older than you, but she must be well-born, and
the more money she brings the better for the old place.'

'I say again, father, I choose my wife for myself, and I don't admit
any man's right of dictation.'

'Well, well!' said the squire, getting a little angry in his turn.
'If I'm not to be father in this matter, thou shan't be son. Go
against me in what I've set my heart on, and you'll find there's the
devil to pay, that's all. But don't let us get angry, it's Sunday
afternoon for one thing, and it's a sin; and besides that, I've not
finished my story.'

For Osborne had taken up his book again, and under pretence of
reading, was fuming to himself, He hardly put it away even at his
father's request.

'As I was saying, Gibson said, when first we spoke about it, that
there was nothing on foot between any of you four, and that if there
was, he would let me know; so by-and-by he comes and tells me of
this.'

'Of what--I don't understand how far it has gone?'

There was a tone in Osborne's voice the squire did not quite like;
and he began answering rather angrily.

'Of this to be sure--of what I'm telling you--of Roger going and
making love to this girl, that day he left, after he had gone away
from here, and was waiting for the "Umpire" in Hollingford. One
would think you quite stupid at times, Osborne.'

'I can only say that these details are quite new to me; you never
mentioned them before, I assure you.'

'Well; never mind whether I did or not. I'm sure I said Roger was
attached to Miss Kirkpatrick, and be hanged to her; and you might
have understood all the rest, as a matter of course.'

'Possibly,' said Osborne, politely. 'May I ask if Miss Kirkpatrick,
who appeared to me to be a very nice girl, responds to Roger's
affection?'

'Fast enough, I'll be bound,' said the squire, sulkily. 'A Hamley of
Hamley is not to be had every day. Now, I'll tell you what, Osborne,
you're the only marriageable one left in the market, and I want to
hoist the old family up again. Don't go against me in this; it
really will break my heart if you do.'

'Father, don't talk so,' said Osborne. 'I will do anything I can to
oblige you, except--'

'Except the only thing I've set my heart on your doing.'

'Well, well, let it alone for the present. There's no question of my
marrying just at this moment. I'm out of health, and I'm not up to
going into society, and meeting young ladies and all that sort of
thing, even if I had an opening into fitting society.'

'You should have an opening fast enough. There'll be more money
coming in, in a year or two, please God. And as for your health,
why, what's to make you well, if you cower over the fire all day,
and shudder away from a good honest tankard as if it were poison?'

'So it is to me,' said Osborne, languidly, playing with his book as
if he wanted to end the conversation and take it up again. The
squire saw the movements, and understood them.

'Well,' said he, 'I'll go and have a talk with Will about poor old
Black Bess. It's Sunday work enough, asking after a dumb animal's
aches and pains.'

But after his father had left the room Osborne did not take up his
book again. He laid it down on the table by him, leant back in his
chair, and covered his eyes with his hand. He was in a state of
health which made him despondent about many things, though, least of
all, about what was most in danger. The long concealment of his
marriage from his father made the disclosure of it far far more
difficult than it would have been at first. Unsupported by Roger,
how could he explain it all to one so passionate as the squire? how
tell of the temptation, the stolen marriage, the consequent
happiness, and alas! the consequent suffering?--for Osborne had
suffered, and did suffer, greatly in the untoward circumstances in
which he had placed himself. He saw no way out of it all, excepting
by the one strong stroke of which he felt himself incapable. So with
a heavy heart he addressed himself to his book again. Everything
seemed to come in his way, and he was not strong enough in character
to overcome obstacles. The only overt step he took in consequence of
what he had heard from his father, was to ride over to Hollingford
the first fine day after he had received the news, and go to see
Cynthia and the Gibsons. He had not been there for a long time; bad
weather and languor combined had prevented him. He found them full
of preparations and discussions about Cynthia's visit to London; and
she herself not at all in the sentimental mood proper to respond to
his delicate intimations of how glad he was in his brother's joy.
Indeed, it was so long after the time, that Cynthia scarcely
perceived that to him the intelligence was recent, and that the
first bloom of his emotions had not yet passed away. With her head a
little on one side, she was contemplating the effect of a knot of
ribbons, when he began, in a low whisper, and leaning forward
towards her as he spoke,--'Cynthia--I may call you Cynthia now,
mayn't I?--I am so glad of this news; I've only just heard of it,
but I'm so glad!'

'What news do you mean?' She had her suspicions; but she was annoyed
to think that from one person her secret was passing to another, and
another, till, in fact, it was becoming no secret at all. Still,
Cynthia could always conceal her annoyance when she chose. 'Why are
you to begin calling me Cynthia now?' she went on, smiling. 'The
terrible word has slipped out from between your lips before, do you
know?'

This light way of taking his tender congratulations did not quite
please Osborne, who was in a sentimental mood, and for a minute or
so he remained silent. Then, having finished making her bow of
ribbon, she turned to him, and continued, in a quick low voice,
anxious to take advantage of a ~tete-a-tete~ between
her mother and Molly,--

'I think I can guess why you made me that pretty little speech just
now. But do you know you ought not to have been told? And, moreover,
things are not quite arrived at the solemnity of--of--well--an
engagement. He would not have it so. Now, I shan't say any more; and
you must not. Pray remember you ought not to have known; it is my
own secret, and I particularly wished it not to be spoken about; and
I don't like it's being so talked about. Oh, the leaking of water
through one small hole!'

And then she plunged into the ~tete-a-tete~ of the
other two, making the conversation general. Osborne was rather
discomfited at the non-success of his congratulations; he had
pictured to himself the unbosoming of a love-sick girl, full of
rapture, and glad of a sympathizing confidant. He little knew
Cynthia's nature. The more she suspected that she was called upon
for a display of emotion, the less would she show; and her emotions
were generally under the control of her will. He had made an effort
to come and see her; and now he leant back in his chair, weary and a
little dispirited.

'You poor dear young man,' said Mrs. Gibson, coming up to him with
her soft, soothing manner; 'how tired you look! Do take some of that
eau-de-Cologne and bathe your forehead. This spring weather
overcomes me too. '~Primavera~' I think the Italians call it. But it
is very trying for delicate constitutions, as much from its
associations as from its variableness of temperature. It makes me
sigh perpetually; but then I am so sensitive. Dear Lady Cumnor
always used to say I was like a thermometer. You've heard how ill
she has been?'

'No,' said Osborne, not very much caring either.

'Oh, yes, she is better now; but the anxiety about her has tried me
so: detained here by what are, of course, my duties, but far away
from all intelligence, and not knowing what the next post might
bring.'

'Where was she then?' asked Osborne, becoming a little more
sympathetic.

'At Spa. Such a distance off! Three days' post! Can't you conceive
the trial? Living with her as I did for years; bound up in the
family as I was.'

'But Lady Harriet said, in her last letter, that they hoped that she
would be stronger than she had been for years,' said Molly,
innocently.

'Yes--Lady Harriet--of course--every one who knows Lady Harriet
knows that she is of too sanguine a temperament for her statements
to be perfectly relied on. Altogether--strangers are often deluded
by Lady Harriet--she has an off--hand manner which takes them in;
but she does not mean half she says.'

'We will hope she does in this instance,' said Cynthia, shortly.
'They are in London now, and Lady Cumnor has not suffered from the
journey.'

'They say so,' said Mrs. Gibson, shaking her head, and laying an
emphasis on the word 'say.' 'I am perhaps over-anxious, but I
wish--I wish I could see and judge for myself. It would be the only
way of calming my anxiety. I almost think I shall go up with you,
Cynthia, for a day or two, just to see her with my own eyes. I don't
quite like your travelling alone either. We will think about it, and
you shall write to Mr. Kirkpatrick, and propose it, if we determine
upon it. You can tell him of my anxiety; and it will be only sharing
your bed for a couple of nights.'


CHAPTER XL


MOLLY GIBSON BREATHES FREELY


That was the way in which Mrs. Gibson first broached her intention of
accompanying Cynthia up to London for a few days' visit. She had a
trick of producing the first sketch of any new plan before an
outsider to the family circle; so that the first emotions of others,
if they disapproved of her projects, had to be repressed, until the
idea had become familiar to them. To Molly it seemed too charming a
proposal ever to come to pass. She had never allowed herself to
recognize the restraint she was under in her stepmother's presence;
but all at once she found it out when her heart danced at the idea
of three whole days--for that it would be at the least--of perfect
freedom of intercourse with her father; of old times come back
again; of meals without perpetual fidgetiness after details of
ceremony and correctness of attendance.

'We'll have bread and cheese for dinner, and eat it on our knees;
we'll make up for having had to eat sloppy puddings with a fork
instead of a spoon all this time, by putting our knives in our
mouths till we cut ourselves. Papa shall pour his tea into his
saucer if he is in a hurry; and if I'm thirsty, I'll take the
slop-basin. And oh, if I could but get, buy, borrow, or steal any
kind of an old horse; my grey skirt is not new, but it will
do;--that would be too delightful. After all, I think I can be happy
again; for months and months it has seemed as if I had got too old
ever to feel pleasure, much less happiness again.'

So thought Molly. Yet she blushed, as if with guilt, when Cynthia,
reading her thought, said to her one day,--

'Molly, you are very glad to get rid of us, are not you?'

'Not of you, Cynthia; at least, I don't think I am. Only, if you
only knew how I love papa, and how I used to see a great deal more
of him than I ever do now---'

'Ah! I often think what interlopers we must seem, and are in fact--'

'I don't feel you as such. You, at any rate, have been a new delight
to me, a sister; and I never knew how charming such a relationship
could be.'

'But mamma?' said Cynthia, half-suspiciously, half-sorrowfully.

'She is papa's wife,' said Molly, quietly. 'I don't mean to say I am
not often very sorry to feel I am no longer first with him; but it
was'--the violent colour flushed into her face till even her eyes
burnt, and she suddenly found herself on the point of crying; the
weeping ash-tree, the misery, the slow dropping comfort;' and the
comforters came all so vividly before her;--'it was Roger!'--she
went on looking up at Cynthia, as she overcame her slight hesitation
at mentioning his name--'Roger, who told me how I ought to take
papa's marriage, when I was first startled and grieved at the news.
Oh, Cynthia, what a great thing it is to be loved by him!'

Cynthia blushed, and looked fluttered and pleased.

'Yes, I suppose it is. At the same time, Molly, I'm afraid he'll
expect me to be always as good as he fancies me now, and I shall
have to walk on tip-toe all the rest of my life.'

'But you are good, Cynthia,' put in Molly.

'No, I'm not. You're just as much mistaken as he is; and some day I
shall go down in your opinions with a run, just like the hall clock
the other day when the spring broke.'

'I think he'll love you just as much,' said Molly.

'Could you? Would you be my friend if--if it turned out ever that I
had done very wrong things? Would you remember how very difficult it
has sometimes been to me to act rightly' (she took hold of Molly's
hand as she spoke). 'We won't speak of mamma, for your sake as much
as mine or hers; but you must see she is not one to help a girl with
much good advice, or good---Oh, Molly, you don't know how I was
neglected just at a time when I wanted friends most. Mamma does not
know it; it is not in her to know what I might have been if I had
only fallen into wise, good hands. But I know it; and what's more,'
continued she, suddenly ashamed of her unusual exhibition of
feeling, 'I try not to care, which I daresay is really the worst of
all; but I could worry myself to death if I once took to serious
thinking.'

'I wish I could help you, or even understand you,' said Molly, after
a moment or two of sad perplexity.

'You can help me,' said Cynthia, changing her manner abruptly. 'I
can trim bonnets, and make head-dresses; but somehow my hands can't
fold up gowns and collars, like your deft little fingers. Please
will you help me to pack? That's a real, tangible piece of kindness,
and not sentimental consolation for sentimental distresses, which
are, perhaps, imaginary after all.'

In general, it is the people who are left behind stationary, who
give way to low spirits at any parting; the travellers, however
bitterly they may feel the separation, find something in the change
of scene to soften regret in the very first hour of separation. But
as Molly walked home with her father from seeing Mrs. Gibson and
Cynthia off to London by the 'Umpire' coach, she almost danced along
the street.

'Now, papa!' said she, 'I'm going to have you all to myself for a
whole week. You must be very obedient.'

'Don't be tyrannical, then. You are walking me out of breath, and we
are cutting Mrs. Goodenough, in our hurry.'

So they crossed over the street to speak to Mrs. Goodenough.

'We've just been seeing my wife and her daughter off to London. Mrs
Gibson has gone up for a week!'

'Deary, deary, to London, and only for a week! Why, I can remember
its being a three days' journey! It will be very lonesome for you,
Miss Molly, without your young companion!'

'Yes!' said Molly, suddenly feeling as if she ought to have taken
this view of the case. 'I shall miss Cynthia very much.'

'And you, Mr. Gibson; why, it will be like being a widower over
again! You must come and drink tea with me some evening. We must try
and cheer you up a bit amongst us. Shall it be Tuesday?'

In spite of the sharp pinch which Molly gave to his arm, Mr. Gibson
accepted the invitation, much to the gratification of the old lady.

'Papa, how could you go and waste one of our evenings. We have but
six in all, and now but five; and I had so reckoned on our doing all
sorts of things together.'

'What sort of things?'

'Oh, I don't know: everything that is unrefined and ungenteel,'
added she, slyly looking up into her father's face.

His eyes twinkled, but the rest of his face was perfectly grave.
'I'm not going to be corrupted. With toil and labour I have reached
a very fair height of refinement. I won't be pulled down again.'

'Yes, you will, papa. We'll have bread and cheese for lunch this
very day. And you shall wear your slippers in the drawing-room every
evening you'll stay quietly at home; and oh, papa, don't you think I
could ride Nora Creina. I've been looking out the old grey skirt,
and I think I could make myself tidy.'

'Where is the side-saddle to come from?'

'To be sure the old one won't fit that great Irish mare. But I'm not
particular, papa. I think I could manage somehow.'

'Thank you. But I'm not quite going to return into barbarism. It may
he a depraved taste, but I should like to see my daughter properly
mounted.'

'Think of riding together down the lanes--why, the dog-roses must be
all out in flower, and the honeysuckles, and the hay--how I should
like to see Merriman's farm again! Papa, do let me have one ride
with you! Please do. I am sure we can manage it somehow.'

And 'somehow' it was managed. 'Somehow' all Molly's wishes came to
pass; there was only one little drawback to this week of holiday and
happy intercourse with her father. Everybody would ask them out to
tea. They were quite like bride and bridegroom; for the fact was,
that the late dinners which Mrs. Gibson had introduced into her own
house, were a great inconvenience in the calculations of the small
tea-drinkings at Hollingford. How ask people to tea at six, who
dined at that hour? How, when they refused cake and sandwiches at
half-past eight, how induce other people who were really hungry to
commit a vulgarity before those calm and scornful eyes? So there had
been a great lull of invitations for the Gibsons to Hollingford
tea-parties. Mrs. Gibson, whose object was to squeeze herself into
'county society,' had taken this being left out of the smaller
festivities with great equanimity; but Molly missed the kind
homeliness of the parties to which she had gone from time to time as
long as she could remember; and though, as each three-cornered note
was brought in, she grumbled a little over the loss of another
charming tete-a-tete with her father, she really was
glad to go again in the old way among old friends. Miss Browning and
Miss Phoebe were especially compassionate towards her in her
loneliness. If they had had their will she would have dined there
every day; and she had to call upon them very frequently in order to
prevent their being hurt at her declining the dinners. Mrs. Gibson
wrote twice during her week's absence to her husband. That piece of
news was quite satisfactory to the Miss Brownings, who had of late
months held themselves a great deal aloof from a house where they
chose to suppose that their presence was not wanted. In their winter
evenings they had often talked over Mr. Gibson's household, and
having little besides conjectures to go upon, they found the subject
interminable, as they could vary the possibilities every day. One of
their wonders was how Mr. and Mrs. Gibson really got on together;
another was whether Mrs. Gibson was extravagant or not. Now two
letters during the week of her absence showed what was in those days
considered a very proper amount of conjugal affection. Yet not too
much--at elevenpence halfpenny postage. A third letter would have
been extravagant. Sister looked to sister with an approving nod as
Molly named the second letter, which arrived in Hollingford the very
day before Mrs. Gibson was to return. They had settled between
themselves that two letters would show the right amount of good
feeling and proper understanding in the Gibson family: more would
have been extravagant; only one would have been a mere matter of
duty. There had been rather a question between Miss Browning and
Miss Phoebe as to which person the second letter (supposing it came)
was to be addressed. It would be very conjugal to write twice to Mr
Gibson; and yet it would be very pretty if Molly came in for her
share.

'You've had another letter, you say, my dear,' asked Miss Browning,
'I daresay Mrs. Gibson has written to you this time?'

'It is a large sheet, and Cynthia has written on one half to me, and
all the rest is to papa.'

'A very nice arrangement, I'm sure. And what does Cynthia say? Is
she enjoying herself?'

'Oh, yes, I think so. They have had a dinner-party, and one night
when mamma was at Lady Cumnor's, Cynthia went to the play with her
cousins.'

'Upon my word! and all in one week? I do call that dissipation. Why,
Thursday would be taken up with the journey, and Friday with
resting, and Sunday is Sunday all the world over; and they must have
written on Tuesday. Well! I hope Cynthia won't find Hollingford
dull, that's all, when she comes back.'

'I don't think it's likely,' said Miss Phoebe, with a little simper
and a knowing look, which sate oddly on her kindly innocent face.
'You see a great deal of Mr. Preston, don't you, Molly!'

'Mr. Preston!' said Molly, flushing up with surprise. 'No! not much.
He's been at Ashcombe all winter, you know! He has but just come
back to settle here, What should make you think so!'

'Oh! a little bird told us,' said Miss Browning. Molly knew that
little bird from her childhood, and had always hated it, and longed
to wring its neck. Why could not people speak out and say that they
did not mean to give up the name of their informant? But it was a
very favourite form of fiction with the Miss Brownings, and to Miss
Phoebe it was the very acme of wit.

'The little bird was flying about one day in Heath Lane, and it saw
Mr. Preston and a young lady--we won't say who--walking together in a
very friendly manner, that is to say, he was on horseback; but the
path is raised above the road, just where there is the little wooden
bridge over the brook--'

'Perhaps Molly is in the secret, and we ought not to ask her about
it,' said Miss Phoebe, seeing Molly's extreme discomfiture and
annoyance.

'It can be no great secret,' said Miss Browning, dropping the
little-bird formula, and assuming an air of dignified reproval at
Miss Phoebe's interruption, 'for Miss Hornblower says Mr. Preston
owns to being engaged--'

'At any rate it is not to Cynthia, that I know positively,' said
Molly with some vehemence. 'And pray put a stop to any such reports;
you don't know what mischief they may do. I do so hate that kind of
chatter!' It was not very respectful of Molly to speak in this way
to be sure, but she thought only of Roger; and the distress any such
reports might cause, should he ever hear of them (in the centre of
Africa!) made her colour up scarlet with vexation.

'Heighty-teighty! Miss Molly! don't you remember that I am old
enough to be your mother, and that it is not pretty behaviour to
speak so to us--to me! "Chatter" to be sure. Really, Molly--'

'I beg your pardon,' said Molly, only half-penitent.

'I daresay you did not mean to speak so to sister,' said Miss
Phoebe, trying to make peace.

Molly did not answer all at once. She wanted to explain how much
mischief might be done by such reports.

'But don't you see,' she went on, still flushed by vexation, 'how
bad it is to talk of such things in such a way? Supposing one of
them cared for some one else, and that might happen, you know; Mr
Preston, for instance, may be engaged to some one else?'

'Molly! I pity the woman! Indeed I do. I have a very poor opinion of
Mr. Preston,' said Miss Browning, in a warning tone of voice; for a
new idea had come into her head.

'Well, but the woman, or young lady, would not like to hear such
reports about Mr. Preston.'

'Perhaps not. But for all that, take my word for it, he's a great
flirt, and young ladies had better not have much to do with him.'

'I daresay it was all accident their meeting in Heath Lane.' said
Miss Phoebe.

'I know nothing about it,' said Molly, 'and I daresay I have been
impertinent, only please don't talk about it any more. I have my
reasons for asking you.' She got up, for by the striking of the
church clock she had just found out that it was later than she had
thought, and she knew that her father would be at home by this time.
She bent down and kissed Miss Browning's grave and passive face.

'How you are growing, Molly!' said Miss Phoebe, anxious to cover
over her sister's displeasure. '"As tall and as straight as a
poplar-tree!" as the old song says.'

'Grow in grace, Molly, as well as in good looks!' said Miss
Browning, watching her out of the room. As soon as she was fairly
gone, Miss Browning got up and shut the door quite securely, and
then sitting down near her sister, she said, in a low voice,
'Phoebe, it was Molly herself that was with Mr. Preston in Heath Lane
that day when Mrs. Goodenough saw them together!'

'Gracious goodness me!' exclaimed Miss Phoebe, receiving it at once
as gospel. 'How do you know?'

'By putting two and two together. Did not you notice how red Molly
went, and then pale, and how she said she knew for a fact that Mr
Preston and Cynthia Kirkpatrick were not engaged?'

'Perhaps not engaged; but Mrs. Goodenough saw them loitering
together, all by their own two selves--'

'Mrs. Goodenough only crossed Heath Lane at the Shire Oak, as she was
riding in her phaeton,' said Miss Browning, sententiously. 'We all
know what a coward she is in a carriage, so that most likely she had
only half her wits about her, and her eyes are none of the best when
she is standing steady on the ground. Molly and Cynthia have got
those new plaid shawls just alike, and they trim their bonnets
alike, and Molly is grown as tall as Cynthia since Christmas. I was
always afraid she'd be short and stumpy, but she's now as tall and
slender as any one need be. I'll answer for it, Mrs. Goodenough saw
Molly, and took her for Cynthia.'

When Miss Browning 'answered for it' Miss Phoebe gave up doubting.
She sate some time in silence revolving her thoughts. Then she
said,--

'It would not be such a very bad match after all, sister.' She spoke
very meekly, awaiting her sister's sanction to her opinion.

'Phoebe, it would be a bad match for Mary Preston's daughter. If I
had known what I know now we'd never have had him to tea last
September.'

'Why, what do you know?' asked Miss Phoebe.

'Miss Hornblower told me many things; some that I don't think you
ought to hear, Phoebe. He was engaged to a very pretty Miss Gregson,
at Henwick, where he comes from; and her father made inquiries, and
heard so much that was bad about him, that he made his daughter
break off the match, and she's dead since!'

'How shocking!' said Miss Phoebe, duly impressed.

'Besides, he plays at billiards and he bets at races, and some
people do say he keeps race-horses.'

'But is not it strange that the earl keeps him on as his agent?'

'No! perhaps not. He's very clever about land, and very sharp in all
law affairs; and my lord is not bound to take notice--if indeed he
knows--of the manner in which Mr. Preston talks when he has taken too
much wine.'

'Taken too much wine. Oh, sisters is he a drunkard? and we have had
him to tea!'

'I did not say he was a drunkard, Phoebe,' said Miss Browning,
pettishly. 'A man may take too much wine occasionally, without being
a drunkard. Don't let me hear you using such coarse words, Phoebe!'

Miss Phoebe was silent for a time after this rebuke.

'Presently she said, 'I do hope it was not Molly Gibson.'

'You may hope as much as you like, but I'm pretty sure it was.
However, we'd better say nothing about it to Mrs. Goodenough; she has
got Cynthia into her head, and there let her rest. Time enough to
set reports afloat about Molly when we know there's some truth in
them. Mr. Preston might do for Cynthia, who's been brought up France,
though she has such pretty manners; but it may have made her not
particular. He must not, and he shall not, have Molly, if I go into
church and forbid the banns myself; but I'm afraid--I'm afraid
there's something between her and him. We must keep on the lookout,
Phoebe. I'll be her guardian angel, in spite of herself.'


CHAPTER XLI


GATHERING CLOUDS


Mrs. Gibson came back full of rose-coloured accounts of London. Lady
Cumnor had been gracious and affectionate, 'so touched by my going
up to see her, so soon after her return to England;' Lady Harriet
charming and devoted to her old governess; Lord Cumnor 'just like
his dear usual hearty self;' and as for the Kirkpatricks, no Lord
Chancellor's house was ever grander than theirs, and the silk gown
of the Q.C. had floated over housemaids and footmen. Cynthia, too,
was so much admired; and as for her dress, Mrs. Kirkpatrick had
showered down ball-dresses and wreaths, and pretty bonnets and
mantles, like a fairy godmother. Mr. Gibson's poor present of ten
pounds shrank into very small dimensions compared with all this
munificence.

'And they're so fond of her, I don't know when we shall have her
back,' was Mrs. Gibson's winding-up sentence. 'And now, Molly, what
have you and papa been doing? Very gay, you sounded in your letter.
I had not time to read it in London; so I put it in my pocket, and
read it in the coach coming home. But, my dear child, you do look so
old-fashioned with your gown made all tight, and your hair all
tumbling about in curls. Curls are quite gone out.' We must do your
hair differently,' she continued, trying to smooth Molly's black
waves into straightness.

'I sent Cynthia an African letter,' said Molly, timidly. 'Did you
hear anything of what was in it?'

'Oh, yes, poor child! It made her very uneasy, I think; she said she
did not feel inclined to go to Mr. Rawson's ball, which was on that
night, and for which Mrs. Kirkpatrick had given her the ball-dress.
But there really was nothing for her to fidget herself about. Roger
only said he had had another touch of fever, but was better when he
wrote. He says every European has to be acclimatized by fever in
that part of Abyssinia where he is.'

'And did she go?' asked Molly.

'Yes, to be sure. It is not an engagement; and if it were, it is not
acknowledged. Fancy her going and saying, "A young man that I know
has been ill for a few days in Africa, two months ago, therefore I
don't want to go to the ball to-night." It would have seemed like
affectation of sentiment; and if there's one thing I hate it is
that.'

'She would hardly enjoy herself,' said Molly.

'Oh, yes, but she did. Her dress was white gauze, trimmed with
lilacs, and she really did look--a mother may be allowed a little
natural partiality--most lovely. And she danced every dance,
although she was quite a stranger. I am sure she enjoyed herself,
from her manner of talking about it next morning.'

'I wonder if the squire knows.'

'Knows what? Oh, yes, to be sure! You mean about Roger. I dare say
he doesn't, and there's no need to tell him, for I've no doubt it is
all right now.' And she went out of the room to Finish her
unpacking.

Molly let her work fall, and sighed. 'It will be a year the day
after to-morrow since he came here to propose our going to Hurst
Wood, and mamma was so vexed at his calling before lunch. I wonder
if Cynthia remembers it as well as I do. And now, perhaps--Oh!
Roger, Roger! I wish--I pray that you were safe home again! How
could we all bear it, if--'

She covered her face with her hands, and tried to stop thinking.
Suddenly she got up, as if stung by a venomous fancy,

'I don't believe she loves him as she ought, or she could not--could
not have gone and danced. What shall I do if she does not? What
shall I do? I can bear anything but that.'

But she found the long suspense as to his health hard enough to
endure. They were not likely to hear from him for a month at least,
and before that time had elapsed Cynthia would be at home again.
Molly learnt to long for her return before a fortnight of her
absence was over. She had had no idea that perpetual tete-a-tetes
with Mrs. Gibson could, by any possibility, be so tiresome as she
found them. Perhaps Molly's state of delicate health, consequent
upon her rapid growth during the last few months, made her irritable;
but really often she had to get up and leave the room to calm
herself down after listening to a long series of words, more
frequently plaintive or discontented in tone than cheerful, and
which at the end conveyed no distinct impression of either the
speaker's thought or feeling. Whenever anything had gone wrong,
whenever Mr. Gibson had coolly persevered in anything to which
she had objected; whenever the cook had made a mistake about
the dinner, or the housemaid broken any little frangible article;
whenever Molly's hair was not done to her liking, or her dress did
not become her, or the smell of dinner pervaded the house, or the
wrong callers came, or the right callers did not come--in fact,
whenever anything went wrong, poor Mr. Kirkpatrick was regretted and
mourned over, nay, almost blamed, as if, had he only given himself
the trouble of living, he could have helped it.

'When I look back to those happy days, it seems to me as if I had
never valued them as I ought. To be sure--youth, love,--what did we
care for poverty! I remember dear Mr. Kirkpatrick walking five miles
into Stratford to buy me a muffin because I had such a fancy for one
after Cynthia was born. I don't mean to complain of dear papa--but I
don't think--but, perhaps I ought not to say it to you. If Mr
Kirkpatrick had but taken care of that cough of his; but he was so
obstinate! Men always are, I think. And it really was selfish of
him. Only I dare say he did not consider the forlorn state in which
I should be left. It came harder upon me than upon most people,
because I always was of such an affectionate sensitive nature. I
remember a little poem of Mr. Kirkpatrick's in which he compared my
heart to a harp-string, vibrating to the slightest breeze.'

'I thought harp-strings required a pretty strong finger to make them
sound,' said Molly.

'My dear child, you've no more poetry in you than your father. And
as for your hair! it's worse than ever. Can't you drench it in water
to take those untidy twists and twirls out of it?'

'It only makes it curl more and more when it gets dry,' said Molly,
sudden tears coming into her eyes as a recollection came before her
like a picture seen long ago and forgotten for years--a young mother
washing and dressing her little girl; placing the half-naked darling
on her knee, and twining the wet rings of dark hair fondly round her
fingers, and then, in an ecstasy of fondness, kissing the little
curly head.

The receipt of Cynthia's letters made very agreeable events. She did
not write often, but her letters were tolerably long when they did
come, and very sprightly in tone. There was constant mention made of
many new names, which conveyed no idea to Molly, though Mrs. Gibson
would try and enlighten her by running commentaries like the
following,--

'Mrs. Green! ah, that's Mr. Jones's pretty cousin, who lives in
Russell Square with the fat husband. They keep their carriage; but
I'm not sure if it is not Mr. Green who is Mrs. Jones's cousin. We can
ask Cynthia when she comes home. Mr. Henderson! to be sure--a young
man with black whiskers, a pupil of Mr. Kirkpatrick's formerly,--or
was he a pupil of Mr. Murray's? I know they said he had read law with
somebody. Ah, yes! they are the people who called the day after Mr
Rawson's ball, and who admired Cynthia so much, without knowing I
was her mother. She was very handsomely dressed indeed, in black
satin; and the son had a glass eye, but he was a young man of good
property. Coleman! yes, that was the name.'

No more news of Roger until some time after Cynthia had returned
from her London visit. She came back looking fresher and prettier
than ever, beautifully dressed, thanks to her own good taste, and
her cousins' generosity, full of amusing details of the gay life she
had been enjoying, yet not at all out of spirits at having left it
behind her. She brought home all sorts of pretty and dainty devices
for Molly; a neck ribbon made up in the newest fashion, a pattern
for a tippet, a delicate pair of light gloves embroidered as Molly
had never seen gloves embroidered before, and many another little
sign of remembrance during her absence. Yet somehow or other, Molly
felt that Cynthia was changed in her relation to her. Molly was
aware that she had never had Cynthia's full confidence, for with all
her apparent frankness and ~naivete~ of manner, Cynthia
was extremely reserved and reticent. She knew this much of herself,
and had often laughed about it to Molly, and the latter had found
out the truth of her friend's assertion for herself. But Molly did
not trouble herself much about this, She too knew that there were
many thoughts and feelings that flitted through her mind that she
should never think of telling to any one, except perhaps--if they
were ever very much thrown together--to her father. She knew that
Cynthia withheld from her more than thoughts and feelings--that she
withheld facts. But then, as Molly reflected, these facts might
involve details of struggle and suffering, might relate to her
mother's neglect, and altogether be of so painful a character, that
it would be well if Cynthia could forget her childhood altogether,
instead of fixing it in her mind by the relation of her grievances
and troubles. So it was not now by any want of confidence that Molly
felt distanced as it were. It was because Cynthia rather avoided
than sought her companionship; because her eyes shunned the
straight, serious, loving look of Molly's; because there were
certain subjects on which she evidently disliked speaking, not
particularly interesting things as far as Molly could perceive, but
it almost seemed as if they lay on the road to points to be avoided.
Molly felt a sort of sighing pleasure in noticing Cynthia's changed
manner of talking about Roger. She spoke of him tenderly now; 'poor
Roger,' as she called him; and Molly thought that she must be
referring to the illness which he had mentioned in his last letter.
One morning in the first week after Cynthia's return home, just as
he was going out, Mr. Gibson ran up into the drawing-room, hat on,
booted and spurred, and hastily laid an open pamphlet down before
her; pointing out a particular passage with his finger, but not
speaking a word before he rapidly quitted the room. His eyes were
sparkling, and had an amused as well as pleased expression. All this
Molly noticed, as well as Cynthia's flush of colour as she read what
was thus pointed out to her. Then she pushed it a little on one
side, not closing the book however, and went on with her work.

'What is it? may I see it?' asked Molly, stretching out her hand for
the pamphlet, which lay within her reach. But she did not take it
until Cynthia had said,--

'Certainly, I don't suppose there are any great secrets in a
scientific journal, full of reports of meetings.' And she gave the
book a little push towards Molly. .

'Oh, Cynthia!' said Molly, catching her breath as she read, Care you
not proud?' For it was an account of an annual gathering of the
Geographical Society, and Lord Hollingford had read a letter he had
received from Roger Hamley, dated from Arracuoba, a district in
Africa, hitherto unvisited by any intelligent European traveller;
and about which, Mr. Hamley sent many curious particulars. The
reading of this letter had been received with the greatest interest,
and several subsequent speakers had paid the writer very high
compliments.

But Molly might have known Cynthia better than to expect an answer
responsive to the feelings that prompted her question. Let Cynthia
be ever so proud, ever so glad, or so grateful, or even indignant,
remorseful, grieved or sorry, the very fact that she was expected by
another to entertain any of these emotions, would have been enough
to prevent her expressing them.

'I'm afraid I'm not as much struck by the wonder of the thing as you
are, Molly. Besides, it is not news to me; at least, not entirely. I
heard about the meeting before I left London; it was a good deal
talked about in my uncle's set; to be sure I did not hear all the
fine things they say of him there--but then, you know, that's a mere
fashion of speaking, which means nothing; somebody is bound to pay
compliments when a lord takes the trouble to read one of his letters
aloud.'

'Nonsense,' said Molly. 'You know you don't believe what you are
saying, Cynthia.'

Cynthia gave that pretty little jerk of her shoulders, which was her
equivalent for a French shrug, but did not lift up her head from her
sewing. Molly began to read the report over again.

'Why, Cynthia!' she said, 'you might have been there; ladies were
there. It says "many ladies were present." Oh, could not you have
managed to go? If your uncle's set cared about these things, would
not some of them have taken you?'

'Perhaps, if I had asked them. But I think they would have

'You might have told your uncle how matters really stood, he would
not have talked about it if you had wished him not, I am sure, and
he could have helped you.'

'Once for all, Molly,' said Cynthia, now laying down her work, and
speaking with quick authority, 'do learn to understand that it is,
and always has been my wish, not to have the relation which Roger
and I bear to each other, mentioned or talked about. When the right
time comes, I will make it known to my uncle, and to everybody whom
it may concern; but I am not going to make mischief, and get myself
into trouble--even for the sake of hearing compliments paid to
him--by letting it out before the time. If I'm pushed to it, I'd
sooner break it off altogether at once, and have done with it. I
can't be worse off than I am now.' Her angry tone had changed into a
kind of desponding complaint before she had ended her sentence.
Molly looked at her with dismay.

'I can't understand you, Cynthia,' she said at length.

'No; I dare say you can't,' said Cynthia, looking at her with tears
in her eyes, and very tenderly, as if in atonement for her late
vehemence. 'I am afraid--I hope you never will.'

In a moment, Molly's arms were round her. 'Oh, Cynthia,' she
murmured, 'have I been plaguing you? Have I vexed you? Don't say
you're afraid of my knowing you. Of course you've your faults,
everybody has, but I think I love you the better for them.'

'I don't know that I'm so very bad,' said Cynthia, smiling a little
through the tears that Molly's words and caresses had forced to
overflow from her eyes. 'But I have got into scrapes. I am in a
scrape now, I do sometimes believe I shall always be in scrapes, and
if they ever come to light, I shall seem to be worse than I really
am; and I know your father will throw me off, and I--no, I won't be
afraid that you will, Molly.'

'I'm sure I won't. Are they--do you think--how would Roger take it?'
asked Molly, very timidly.

'I don't know. I hope he will never hear of it. I don't see why he
should, for in a little while I shall be quite clear again. It all
came about without my ever thinking I was doing wrong. I've a great
mind to tell you all about it, Molly.'

Molly did not like to urge it, though she longed to know, and to see
if she could not offer help; but while Cynthia was hesitating, and
perhaps, to say the truth, rather regretting that she had even made
this slight advance towards bestowing her confidence, Mrs. Gibson
came in, full of some manner of altering a gown of hers, so as to
make it into the fashion of the day, as she had seen it during her
visit to London. Cynthia seemed to forget her tears and her
troubles, and to throw her whole soul into millinery.

Cynthia's correspondence went on pretty briskly with her London
cousins, according to the usual rate of correspondence in those
days. Indeed Mrs. Gibson was occasionally inclined to complain of the
frequency of Helen Kirkpatrick's letters; for before the penny post
came in, the recipient had to pay the postage of letters; and
elevenpence-halfpenny three times a week came, according to Mrs
Gibson's mode of reckoning when annoyed, to a sum 'between three and
four shillings.' But these complaints were only for the family; they
saw the wrong side of the tapestry. Hollingford in general, the Miss
Brownings in particular, heard of 'dear Helen's enthusiastic
friendship for Cynthia' and of 'the real pleasure it was to receive
such constant news--relays of news indeed--from London. It was
almost as good as living there!'

'A great deal better I should think,' said Miss Browning with some
severity. For she had got many of her notions of the metropolis from
the British Essayists, where town is so often represented as the
centre of dissipation, corrupting country wives and squires'
daughters, and unfitting them for all their duties by the
constant whirl of its not always innocent pleasures. London was a
sort of moral pitch, which few could touch and not be defiled. Miss
Browning had been on the watch for the signs of deterioration in
Cynthia's character ever since her return home. But, excepting in a
greater number of pretty and becoming articles of dress, there was
no great change for the worse to be perceived. Cynthia had been 'in
the world,' had 'beheld the glare and glitter and dazzling display
of London,' yet had come back to Hollingford as ready as ever to
place a chair for Miss Browning, or to gather flowers for a nosegay
for Miss Phoebe, or to mend her own clothes. But all this was set
down to the merits of Cynthia, not to the credit of London-town.

'As far as I can judge of London,' said Miss Browning, sententiously
continuing her tirade against the place, 'it's no better than a
pickpocket and a robber dressed up in the spoils of honest folk. I
should like to know where my Lord Hollingford was bred, and Mr. Roger
Hamley. Your good husband lent me that report of the meeting, Mrs
Gibson, where so much was said about them both, and he was as proud
of their praises as if he had been akin to them, and Phoebe read it
aloud to me, for the print was too small for my eyes; she was a good
deal perplexed with all the new names of places, but I said she had
better skip them all, for we had never heard of them before and
probably should never hear of them again, but she read out the fine
things they said of my lord, and Mr. Roger, and I put it to you,
where were they born and bred? Why, within eight miles of
Hollingford; it might have been Molly there or me; it's all a
chance; and then they go and talk about the pleasures of
intellectual society in London, and the distinguished people up
there that it is such an advantage to know, and all the time I know
it's only shops and the play that's the real attraction. But that's
neither here nor there. We all put our best foot foremost, and if we
have a reason to give that looks sensible we speak it out like men,
and never say anything about the silliness we are hugging to our
hearts. But I ask you again, where does this fine society come from,
and these wise men, and these distinguished travellers? Why, out of
country parishes like this! London picks 'em all up, and decks
herself with them, and then calls out loud to the folks she's
robbed, and says, "Come and see how fine I am." Fine, indeed! I've
no patience with London: Cynthia is much better out of it; and I'm
not sure, if I were you, Mrs. Gibson, if I would not stop up those
London letters: they'll only be unsettling her.'

'But perhaps she may live in London some of these days, Miss
Browning,' simpered Mrs. Gibson.

'Time enough then to be thinking of London. I wish her an honest
country husband with enough to live upon, and a little to lay by,
and a good character to boot. Mind that, Molly,' said she, firing
round upon the startled Molly, 'I wish Cynthia a husband with a good
character; but she's got a mother to look after her; you've none and
when your mother was alive she was a dear friend of mine: so I'm not
going to let you throw yourself away upon any one whose life is not
clear and above-board, you may depend upon it.'

This last speech fell like a bomb into the quiet little
drawing-room, it was delivered with such vehemence. Miss Browning,
in her secret heart, meant it as a warning against the intimacy she
believed that Molly had formed with Mr. Preston; but as it happened
that Molly had never dreamed of any such intimacy, the girl could
not imagine why such severity of speech should be addressed to her.
Mrs. Gibson, who always took up the points of every word or action
where they touched her own self (and called it sensitiveness), broke
the silence that followed Miss Browning's speech by saying,
plaintively,--

'I'm sure, Miss Browning, you are very much mistaken if you think
that any mother could take more care of Molly than I do. I don't--I
can't think there is any need for any one to interfere to protect
her, and I have not an idea why you have been talking in this way,
just as if we were all wrong, and you were all right. It hurts my
feelings, indeed it does; for Molly can tell you there is not a
thing or a favour that Cynthia has, that she has not. And as for not
taking care of her, why, if she were to go up to London to-morrow, I
should make a point of going with her to see after her; and I never
did it for Cynthia when she was at school in France; and her bedroom
is furnished just like Cynthia's; and I let her wear my red shawl
whenever she likes, she might have it oftener if she would. I can't
think what you mean, Miss Browning.'

'I did not mean to offend you, but I meant just to give Molly a
hint. She understands what I mean.'

'I'm sure I do not,' said Molly, boldly. 'I have not a notion what
you meant, if you were alluding to anything more than you said
straight out; that you do not wish me to marry any one who has not a
good character, and that, as you were a friend of mamma's, you would
prevent my marrying a man with a bad character, by every means in
your power. I'm not thinking of marrying; I don't want to marry
anybody at all; but if I did, and he were not a good man, I should
thank you for coming and warning me of it.'

'I shall not stand on warning you, Molly. I shall forbid the banns
in church, if need be,' said Miss Browning, half convinced of the
clear transparent truth of what Molly had said; blushing all over,
it is true, but with her steady eyes fixed on Miss Browning's face
while she spoke.

'Do!' said Molly.

'Well, well, I won't say any more. Perhaps I was mistaken, We won't
say any more about it. But remember what I have said, Molly, there's
no harm in that, at any rate. I'm sorry I hurt your feelings, Mrs
Gibson. As stepmothers go, I think you try and do your duty. Good
morning. Good-by to you both, and God bless you.'

If Miss Browning thought that her final blessing would secure peace
in the room she was leaving, she was very much mistaken; Mrs. Gibson
burst out with,--

'Try and do my duty, indeed! I should be much obliged to you, Molly,
if you would take care not to behave in such a manner as to bring
down upon me such impertinence as I have just been receiving from
Miss Browning.'

'But I don't know what made her talk as she did, mamma,' said Molly.

'I'm sure I don't know, and I don't care either. But I know that I
never was spoken to as if I was trying to do my duty
before,--"trying" indeed! everybody always knew that I did it,
without talking about it before my face in that rude manner. I've
that deep feeling about duty that I think it ought only to be talked
about in church, and in such sacred places as that; not to have a
common caller startling one with it, even though she was an early
friend of your mother's. And as if I did not look after you quite as
much as I look after Cynthia! Why, it was only yesterday I went up
into Cynthia's room and found her reading a letter that she put away
in a hurry as soon as I came in, and I did not even ask her who it
was from, and I am sure I should have made you tell me.'

Very likely. Mrs. Gibson shrank from any conflicts with Cynthia,
pretty sure that she would be worsted in the end; while Molly
generally submitted, sooner than have any struggle for her own will.

Just then Cynthia came in.

'What's the matter?' said she quickly, seeing that something was
wrong.

'Why, Molly has been doing something which has set that impertinent
Miss Browning off into lecturing me on trying to do my duty! If your
poor father had but lived, Cynthia, I should never have been spoken
to as I have been. "A stepmother trying to do her duty", indeed.
That was Miss Browning's expression.'

Any allusion to her father took from Cynthia all desire of irony.
She came forwards, and again asked Molly what was the matter.

Molly, herself ruffled, made answer,--

'Miss Browning seemed to think I was likely to marry some one whose
character was objectionable--'

'You, Molly?' said Cynthia.

'Yes--she once before spoke to me,--I suspect she has got some
notion about Mr. Preston in her head--'

Cynthia sate down quite suddenly. Molly went on,--'and she spoke as
if mamma did not look enough after me,--I think she was rather
provoking--'

'Not rather, but very--very impertinent,' said Mrs. Gibson, a little
soothed by Molly's recognition of her grievance.

'What could have put it into her head?' said Cynthia, very quietly,
taking up her sewing as she spoke.

'I don't know,' said her mother, replying to the question after her
own fashion. 'I'm sure I don't always approve of Mr. Preston; but
even if it was him she was thinking about, he's far more agreeable
than she is; and I had much rather have him coming to call than an
old maid like her any day.'

'I don't know that it was Mr. Preston she was thinking about,' said
Molly. 'It was only a guess. When you were both in London she spoke
about him,--I thought she had heard something about you and him,
Cynthia.' Unseen by her mother Cynthia looked up at Molly, her eyes
full of prohibition, her cheeks full of angry colour. Molly stopped
short suddenly. After that look she was surprised at the quietness
with which Cynthia said, almost immediately,--

'Well, after all it is only your fancy that she was alluding to Mr
Preston, so perhaps we had better not say any more about him; and as
for her advice to mamma to look after you better, Miss Molly, I'll
stand bail for your good behaviour; for both mamma and I know you're
the last person to do any foolish things in that way. And now don't
let us talk any more about it. I was coming to tell you that Hannah
Brand's little boy has been badly burnt, and his sister is
downstairs asking for old linen.'

Mrs. Gibson was always kind to poor people, and she immediately got
up and went to her stores to search for the article wanted.

Cynthia turned quietly round to Molly.

'Molly, pray don't ever allude to anything between me and Mr
Preston,--not to mamma, nor to any one. Never do! I've a reason for
it,--don't say anything more about it, ever.'

Mrs. Gibson came back at this moment, and Molly had to stop short
again on the brink of Cynthia's confidence; uncertain indeed this
time, if she would have been told anything more, and only sure that
she had annoyed Cynthia a good deal.

But the time was approaching when she would know all.


CHAPTER XLII


THE STORM BURSTS


The autumn drifted away through all its seasons; the golden
corn-harvest, the walks through the stubble fields, and rambles into
hazel-copses in search of nuts; the stripping of the apple-orchards
of their ruddy fruit, amid the joyous cries and shouts of watching
children; and the gorgeous tulip-like colouring of the later time
had now come on with the shortening days. There was comparative
silence in the land, excepting for the distant shots and the whirr
of the partridges as they rose up from the field.

Ever since Miss Browning's unlucky conversation things had been ajar
in the Gibsons' house. Cynthia seemed to keep every one out at
(mental) arm's-length; and particularly avoided any private talks
with Molly. Mrs. Gibson, still cherishing a grudge against Miss
Browning for her implied accusation of not looking enough after
Molly, chose to exercise a most wearying supervision over the poor
girl. It was, 'Where have you been, child?' 'Who did you see?' 'Who
was that letter from?' 'Why were you so long out when you had only
to go to so-and-so?' just as if Molly had really been detected in
carrying on some underhand intercourse. She answered every question
asked of her with the simple truthfulness of perfect innocence; but
the inquiries (although she read their motive, and knew that they
arose from no especial suspicion of her conduct, but only that Mrs
Gibson might be able to say that she looked well after her
stepdaughter), chafed her inexpressibly. Very often she did not go
out at all, sooner than have to give a plan of her intended
proceedings, when perhaps she had no plan at all, only thought of
wandering out at her own sweet will, and of taking pleasure in the
bright solemn fading of the year. It was a very heavy time for
Molly,--zest and life had fled; and left so many of the old delights
mere shells of seeming. She thought it was that her youth had fled;
at nineteen! Cynthia was no longer the same, somehow; and perhaps
Cynthia's change would injure her in the distant Roger's opinion.
Her stepmother seemed almost kind in comparison with Cynthia's
withdrawal of her heart; Mrs. Gibson worried her to be sure, with all
these forms of watching over her; but in all her other ways, she, at
any rate, was the same. Yet Cynthia herself, seemed anxious and
care-worn, though she would not speak of her anxieties to Molly. And
then the poor girl in her goodness would blame herself for feeling
Cynthia's change of manner; for as Molly said to herself, 'If it is
hard work for me to help always fretting after Roger, and wondering
where he is, and how he is; what must it be for her?'

One day Mr. Gibson came in, bright and swift.

'Molly,' said he, 'where's Cynthia?'

'Gone out to do some errands--'

'Well, it's a pity--but never mind. Put on your bonnet and cloak as
fast as you can. I've had to borrow old Simpson's dogcart,--there
would have been room both for you and Cynthia; but as it is, you
must walk back alone. I'll drive you as far on the Barford Road as I
can, and then you must jump down. I can't take you on to
Broadhurst's, I may be kept there for hours.'

Mrs. Gibson was out of the room; out of the house it might be, for
all Molly cared, now she had her father's leave and command. Her
bonnet and cloak were on in two minutes, and she was sitting by her
father's side, the back scat shut up, and the light weight going
swiftly and merrily bumping over the stone-paved lanes.

'Oh, this is charming,' said Molly, after a toss-up on her seat from
a tremendous bump.

'For youth, but not for crabbed age,' said Mr. Gibson. 'My bones are
getting rheumatic, and would rather go smoothly over macadamized
streets.'

'That's treason to this lovely view and this fine pure air, papa.
Only I don't believe you.'

'Thank you. As you are so complimentary, I think I shall put you
down at the foot of this hill; we have passed the second milestone
from Hollingford.'

'Oh, let me just go up to the top! I know we can see the blue range
of the Malverns from it, and Dorrimer Hall among the woods; the
horse will want a minute's rest, and then I will get down without a
word.'

So she went up to the top of the hill; and there they sate still a
minute or two, enjoying the view, without much speaking. The woods
were golden, the old house of purple-red brick, with its twisted
chimneys, rose up from among them facing on to green lawns, and a
placid lake; beyond again were the Malvern Hills!

'Now jump down, lassie, and make the best of your way home before it
gets dark. You'll find the cut over Croston Heath shorter than the
road we've come by.'

To get to Croston Heath, Molly had to go down a narrow lane
overshadowed by trees, with picturesque old cottages dotted here and
there on the steep sandy banks; and then there came a small wood,
and then there was a brook to be crossed on a plank-bridge, and up
the steeper fields on the opposite side were cut steps in the turfy
path, which ended, she was on Croston Heath, a wide-stretching
common skirted by labourers' dwellings, past which a near road to
Hollingford lay.

The loneliest part of the road was the first--the lane, the wood,
the little bridge, and the clambering through the upland fields. But
Molly cared little for loneliness. She went along the lane under the
over-arching elm-branches, from which, here and there, a yellow leaf
came floating down upon her very dress; past the last cottage where
a little child had tumbled down the sloping bank, and was publishing
the accident with frightened cries. Molly stooped to pick it up, and
taking it in her arms in a manner which caused intense surprise to
take the place of alarm in its little breast, she carried it up the
rough flag steps towards the cottage which she supposed to be its
home. The mother came running in from the garden behind the house,
still holding the late damsons she had been gathering in her apron;
but, on seeing her, the little creature held out its arms to go to
her, and she dropped her damsons all about as she took it, and began
to soothe it as it cried afresh, interspersing her lulling with
thanks to Molly. She called her by her name; and on Molly asking the
woman how she came to know it, she replied that she had been a
servant of Mrs. Goodenough before her marriage, and so was 'bound to
know Dr Gibson's daughter by sight.' After the exchange of two or
three more words, Molly ran down into the lane, and pursued her way,
stopping here and there to gather a nosegay of such leaves as struck
her for their brilliant colouring. She entered the wood. As she
turned a corner in the lonely path, she heard a passionate voice of
distress; and in an instant she recognized Cynthia's tones. She
stood still and looked around. There were some holly bushes shining
out dark green in the midst of the amber and scarlet foliage. If any
one was there, it must be behind these thick bushes. So Molly left
the path, and went straight, plunging through the brown tangled
growth of ferns and underwood, and turned the holly bushes. There
stood Mr. Preston and Cynthia; he holding her hands tight, each
looking as if just silenced in some vehement talk by the rustle of
Molly's footsteps.

For an instant no one spoke. Then Cynthia said--,

'Oh, Molly, Molly, come and judge between us!'

Mr. Preston let go Cynthia's hands slowly, with a look that was more
of a sneer than a, smile; and yet he, too, had been strongly
agitated, whatever was the subject in dispute. Molly came forwards
and took Cynthia's arm, her eyes steadily fixed on Mr. Preston's
face. It was fine to see the fearlessness of her perfect innocence.
He could not bear her look, and said to Cynthia,--

'The subject of our conversation does not well admit of a third
person's presence. As Miss Gibson seems to wish for your company
now, I must beg you to fix some other time and place where we can
finish our discussion.'

'I will go if Cynthia wishes me,' said Molly.

'No, no; stay--I want you to stay--I want you to hear it all--I wish
I had told you sooner.'

'You mean that you regret that she has not been made aware of our
engagement--that you promised long ago to be my wife. Pray remember
that it was you who made me promise secrecy, not I you?'

'I don't believe him, Cynthia. Don't, don't cry if you can help it;
I don't believe him.'

'Cynthia,' said he, suddenly changing his tone to fervid tenderness,
'pray, pray do not go on so; you can't think how it distresses me.'
He stepped forwards to try and take her hand and soothe her; but she
shrank away from him, and sobbed the more irrepressibly. She felt
Molly's presence so much to be a protection that now she dared to
let herself go, and to weaken herself by giving way to her emotion.

'Go away!' said Molly. 'Don't you see you make her worse?' But he
did not stir; he was looking at Cynthia so intently that he did not
seem even to hear her. 'Go,' said Molly, vehemently, 'if it really
distresses you to see her cry. Don't you see, it's you who are the
cause of it?'

'I will go if Cynthia tells me,' said he at length.

'Oh, Molly, I do not know what to do,' said Cynthia, taking down her
hands from her tear-stained face, and appealing to Molly, and
sobbing worse than ever; in fact, she became hysterical, and though
she tried to speak coherently, no intelligible words would come.

'Run to that cottage in the trees, and fetch her a cup of water,'
said Molly. He hesitated a little.

'Why don't you go?' said Molly, impatiently.

'I have not done speaking to her; you will not leave before I come
back?'

'No. Don't you see she can't move in this state?'

He went quickly, if reluctantly.

Cynthia was some time before she could check her sobs enough to
speak. At length, she said,--

'Molly, I do hate him!'

'But what did he mean by saying you were engaged to him? Don't cry,
dear, but tell me; if I can help you I will, but I can't imagine
what it all really is.'

'It is too long a story to tell now, and I'm not strong enough.
Look! he is coming back. As soon as I can, let us get home.'

'With all my heart,' said Molly.

He brought the water, and Cynthia drank, and was restored to
calmness.

'Now,' said Molly, 'we had better go home as fast as you can manage
it; it is getting dark quickly.'

If she hoped to carry Cynthia off so easily, she was mistaken. Mr
Preston was resolute on this point. He said,--

'I think since Miss Gibson has made herself acquainted with this
much, we had better let her know the whole truth--that you are
engaged to marry me as soon as you are twenty; otherwise your being
here with me, and by appointment too, may appear strange, even
equivocal to her.'

'As I know that Cynthia is engaged to--another man, you can hardly
expect me to believe what you say, Mr. Preston.'

'Oh, Molly,' said Cynthia, trembling all over, but trying to be
calm, 'I am not engaged, neither to the person you mean, nor to Mr
Preston.'

Mr. Preston forced a. smile. 'I think I have some letters that would
convince Miss Gibson of the truth of what I have said; and which
will convince Mr. Osborne Hamley, if necessary--I conclude it is to
him she is alluding.'

'I am quite puzzled by you both,' said Molly. .'The only thing I do
know is, that we ought not to be standing here at this time of
evening, and that Cynthia and I shall go home directly. If you want
to talk to Miss Kirkpatrick, Mr. Preston, why don't you come to my
father's house, and ask to see her openly, and like a gentleman.'

'I am perfectly willing,' said he; 'I shall only be too glad to
explain to Mr. Gibson on what terms I stand in relation to her. If I
have not done it sooner, it is because I have yielded to her
wishes.'

'Pray, pray don't. Molly--you don't know all--you don't know
anything about it; you mean well and kindly, I know, but you are
only making mischief. I am quite well enough to walk, do let us go;
I will tell you all about it when we are at home.' She took Molly's
arm and tried to hasten her away; but Mr. Preston followed, talking
as he walked by their side.

'I do not know what you will say at home; but can you deny that you
are my promised wife? Can you deny that it has only been at your
earnest request that I have kept the engagement secret so long?' He
was unwise--Cynthia stopped, and turned at bay.

'Since you will have it out, since I must speak here, I own that
what you say is literally true; that when I was a neglected girl of
sixteen, you--whom I believed to be a friend, lent me money at my
need, and made me give you a promise of marriage.'

'Made you!' said he, laying an emphasis on the first word.

Cynthia turned scarlet. '"Made" is not the right word, I confess. I
liked you then--you were almost my only friend--and, if it had been
a question of immediate marriage, I dare say I should never have
objected. But I know you better now; and you have persecuted me so
of late, that I tell you once for all (as I have told you before,
till I am sick of the very words), that nothing shall ever make me
marry you. Nothing. I see there's no chance of escaping exposure
and, I dare say, losing my character, and I know losing all the few
friends I have.'

'Never me,' said Molly, touched by the wailing tone of despair that
Cynthia was falling into.

'It is hard,' said Mr. Preston. 'You may believe all the bad things
you like about me, Cynthia, but I don't think you can doubt my real,
passionate disinterested love for you.'

'I do doubt it,' said Cynthia, breaking out with fresh energy. 'Ah!
when I think of the self-denying affection I have seen--I have
known--affection that thought of others before itself--'

Mr. Preston broke in at the pause she made. She was afraid of
revealing too much to him.

'You do not call it love which has been willing to wait for
years--to be silent while silence was desired--to suffer jealousy
and to bear neglect, relying on the solemn promise of a girl of
sixteen--for "solemn" say "flimsy," when that girl grows older.
Cynthia, I have loved you, and I do love you, and I won't give you
up. If you will but keep your word, and marry me, I'll swear I'll
make you love me in return.'

'Oh, I wish--I wish I'd never borrowed that unlucky money, it was
the beginning of it all. Oh, Molly, I have saved and scrimped to
repay it, and he won't take it now; I thought if I could but repay
it, it would set me free.'

'You seem to imply you sold yourself for twenty pounds,' he said.
They were nearly on the common now, close to the protection of the
cottages, in very hearing of their inmates; if neither of the other
two thought of this Molly did, and resolved in her mind to call in
at one of them, and ask for the labourer's protection home; at any
rate his presence must put a stop to this miserable altercation.

'I did not sell myself; I liked you then. But oh, how I do hate you
now!' cried Cynthia, unable to contain her words.

He bowed and turned back, vanishing rapidly down the field
staircase.' At any rate that was a relief. Yet the two girls
hastened on, as if he was still pursuing them. Once, when Molly said
something to Cynthia, the latter replied,--

'Molly, if you pity me--if you love me--don't say anything more just
now. We shall have to look as if nothing had happened when we get
home. Come to my room when we go upstairs to bed, and I will tell
you all. I know you will blame me terribly, but I will tell you
all.'

So Molly did not say another word till they reached home; and then,
comparatively at ease, inasmuch as no one perceived how late was
their return to the house, each of the girls went up into their
separate rooms, to rest and calm themselves before dressing for the
necessary family gathering at dinner. Molly felt as if she were 'so
miserably shaken that she could not have gone down at all, if her
own interests only were at stake. She sate by her dressing-table,
holding her head in her hands, her candles unlighted, and the room
in soft darkness, trying to still her beating heart, and to recall
all she had heard, and what would be its bearing on the lives of
those whom she loved. Roger. Oh, Roger!--far away in mysterious
darkness of distance--loving as he did (ah, that was love! That was
the love to which Cynthia had referred, as worthy of the name!) and
the object of his love claimed by another--false to one she must be!
How could it be? What would he think and feel if ever he came to
know it? It was of no use trying to imagine his pain--that could do
no good. What lay before Molly was, to try and extricate Cynthia, if
she could help her by thought, or advice, or action; not to weaken
herself by letting her fancy run into pictures of possible, probable
suffering.

When she went into the drawing-room before dinner, she found Cynthia
and her mother tete-a-tete. There were candles in the
room, but they were not lighted, for the wood-fire blazed merrily if
fitfully, and they were awaiting Mr. Gibson's return, which might be
expected at any minute. Cynthia sate in the shade, so it was only by
her sensitive ear that Molly could judge of her state of composure.
Mrs. Gibson was telling some of her day's adventures--whom she had
found at home in the calls she had been making; who had been out;
and the small pieces of news she had heard. To Molly's quick
sympathy Cynthia's voice sounded languid and weary, but she made all
the proper replies, and expressed the proper interest at the right
places, and Molly came to the rescue, chiming in, with an effort, it
is true; but Mrs. Gibson was not one to notice slight shades or
differences in manner. When Mr. Gibson returned, the relative
positions of the parties were altered. It was Cynthia now who raised
herself into liveliness, partly from a consciousness that he would
have noticed any depression, and partly because, from her cradle to
her grave, Cynthia was one of those natural coquettes, who
instinctively bring out all their prettiest airs and graces in order
to stand well with any man, young or old, who may happen to be
present. She listened to his remarks and stories with all the sweet
intentness of happier days, till Molly, silent and wondering, could
hardly believe that the Cynthia before her was the same girl as she
who was sobbing and crying as if her heart would break not two hours
before. It is true she looked pale and heavy-eyed, but that was the
only sign she gave of her past trouble, which yet must be a present
care, thought Molly. After dinner, Mr. Gibson went out to his town
patients; Mrs. Gibson subsided into her arm-chair, holding a sheet of
~The Times~ before her, behind which she took a quiet and lady-like
doze. Cynthia had a book in one hand, with the other she shaded her
eyes from the light. Molly alone could neither read, nor sleep, nor
work. She sate in the seat in the bow-window; the blind was not
drawn down, for there was no danger of their being overlooked. She
gazed into the soft outer darkness, and found herself striving to
discern the outlines of objects--the cottage at the end of the
garden--the great beech-tree with the seat round it--the wire
arches, up which the summer roses had clambered; each came out faint
and dim against the dusky velvet of the atmosphere. Presently tea
came, and there was the usual nightly bustle. The table was cleared,
Mrs. Gibson roused herself, and made the same remark about dear papa
that she had done at the same hour for weeks past. Cynthia too did
not look different to usual. And yet what a hidden mystery did her
calmness hide, thought Molly. At length came bed-time, and the
accustomary little speeches. Both Molly and Cynthia went to their
own rooms without exchanging a word. When Molly was in hers she had
forgotten if she was to go to Cynthia, or Cynthia to come to her.
She took off her gown and put on her dressing-gown, and stood and
waited, and even sate down for a minute or two; but Cynthia did not
come, so Molly went and knocked at the opposite door, which, to her
surprise, she found shut. When she entered the room Cynthia sate by
her dressing-table, just as she came up from the drawing-room. She
had been leaning her head on her arms, and seemed almost to have
forgotten the tryst she had made with Molly, for she looked up as if
startled, and her face did seem full of worry and distress; in her
solitude she made no more exertion, but gave way to thoughts of
care.


CHAPTER XLIII


CYNTHIA'S CONFESSION


'You said I might come,' said Molly, 'and that you would tell me
all.'

'You know all, I think,' said Cynthia heavily. 'Perhaps you don't
know what excuses I have, but at any rate you know what a scrape I
am in.'

'I've been thinking a great deal,' said Molly timidly and
doubtfully. 'And I can't help fancying if you told papa--'

Before she could go on, Cynthia had stood up.

'No!' said she. 'That I won't. Unless I'm to leave here at once. And
you know I have not another place to go to--without warning I mean.
I dare say my uncle would take me in, he's a relation, and would be
bound to stand by me in whatever disgrace I might be; or perhaps I
might get a governess's situation; a pretty governess I should be!'

'Fray, please, Cynthia, don't go off into such wild talking. I don't
believe you've done so very wrong. You say you have not, and I
believe you. That horrid man has managed to get you involved in some
way; but I'm sure papa could set it to rights, if you would only
make a friend of him and tell him all--'

'No, Molly,' said Cynthia, 'I can't, and there's an end of it. You
may if you like, only let me leave the house first; give me that
much time.'

'You know I would never tell anything you wished me not to tell,
Cynthia,' said Molly, deeply hurt.

'Would you not, darling?' said Cynthia, taking her hand. 'Will you
promise me that? quite a sacred promise?--for it would be such a
comfort to me to tell you all, now you know so much.'

'Yes! I'll promise not to tell. You should not have doubted me,'
said Molly, still a little sorrowfully.

'Very well. I trust to you. I know I may.'

'But do think of telling papa, and getting him to help you,'
persevered Molly.

'Never,' said Cynthia resolutely, but more quietly than before. 'Do
you think I forget what he said at the time of that wretched Mr
Coxe; how severe he was, and how long I was in disgrace, if indeed
I'm out of it now? I am one of those people, as mamma says sometimes
--I cannot live with persons who don't think well of me. It may be a
weakness, or a sin, I am sure I don't know and I don't care; but I
really cannot be happy in the same house with any one who knows my
faults, and thinks that they are greater than my merits. Now you
know your father would do that. I have often told you that he (and
you too, Molly,) had a higher standard than I had ever known. Oh, I
could not bear it--if he were to know he would be so angry with me--
he would never get over it, and I have so liked him! I do so like
him.'

'Well, never mind, dear; he shall not know,' said Molly, for Cynthia
was again becoming hysterical,--'at least we'll say no more about it
now.'

'And you'll never say any more--never--promise me,' said Cynthia,
taking her hand eagerly.

'Never till you give me leave. Now do let me see if I cannot help
you. Lie down on the bed, and I will sit by you, and let us talk it
over.'

But Cypthia sate down again in the chair by the dressing-table.

'When did it all begin?' said Molly, after a long pause of silence.

'Long ago--four or five years. I was such a child to be left all to
myself. It was the holidays, and mamma was away visiting, and the
Donaldsons asked me to go with them to the Worcester Festival. You
can't fancy how pleasant it all sounded, especially to me. I had
been shut up in that great dreary house at Ashcombe, where mamma had
her school; it belonged to Lord Cumnor, and Mr. Preston as his agent
had to see it all painted and papered; but besides that he was very
intimate with us: I believe mamma thought--no, I'm not sure about
that, and I have enough blame to lay at her door, to prevent my
telling you anything that may be only fancy--'

Then she paused, and sate still for a minute or two, recalling the
past. Molly was struck by the aged and careworn expression which had
taken temporary hold of the brilliant and beautiful face; she could
see from that how much Cynthia must have suffered from this hidden
trouble of hers.

'Well! at any, rate we were intimate with him, and he came a great
deal about the house, and knew as much as any one of mamma's
affairs, and all the ins and outs of her life. I'm telling you that
in order that you may understand how natural it was for me to answer
his questions when he came one day and found me, not crying, for you
know I'm not much given to that, in spite of to-day's exposure of
myself; but fretting and fuming because, though mamma had written
word I might go with the Donaldsons, she had never said how I was to
get any money for the journey, much less for anything of dress, and
I had outgrown all my last year's frocks, and as for gloves and
boots--in short, I really had hardly clothes decent enough for
church--'

'Why did not you write to her and tell her all this?' said Molly,
half afraid of appearing to cast blame by her very natural question.

'I wish I had her letter to show you; you must have seen some of
mamma's letters, though; don't you know how she always seems to
leave out just the important point of every fact? In this case she
descanted largely on the enjoyment she was having, and the kindness
she was receiving, and her wish that I could have been with her, and
her gladness that I too was going to have some pleasure, but the
only thing that would have been of real use to me she left out, and
that was where she was going to next. She mentioned that she was
leaving the house she was stopping at the day after she wrote, and
that she should be at home by a certain date; but I got the letter
on a Saturday, and the festival began on the next Tuesday--'

'Poor Cynthia!' said Molly. 'Still, if you had written, your letter
might have been forwarded. I don't mean to be hard, only I do so
dislike the thought of your ever having made a friend of that man.'

'Ah!' said Cynthia, sighing. 'How easy it is to judge rightly after
one sees what evil comes from judging wrongly: I was only a young
girl, hardly more than a child, and he was a friend to us then;
excepting mamma, the only friend I knew; the Donaldsons were only
kind and good-natured acquaintances.'

'I am sorry,' said Molly humbly, 'I have been so happy with papa. I
hardly can understand how different it must have been with you.'

'Different! I should think so. The worry about money made me sick of
my life. We might not say we were poor, it would have injured the
school, but I would have stinted and starved if mamma and I had got
on as happily together as we might have done--as you and Mr. Gibson
do. It was not the poverty; it was that she never seemed to care to
have me with her. As soon as the holidays came round, she was off to
some great house or another, and I dare say I was at a very awkward
age to have me lounging about in her drawing-room when callers came.
Girls at the age I was then are so terribly keen at scenting out
motives, and putting in their awkward questions as to the little
twistings and twirlings and vanishings of conversation; they've no
distinct notion of what are the truths and falsehoods of polite
life. At any rate I was very much in mamma's way, and I felt it. Mr
Preston seemed to feel it too for me; and I was very grateful to him
for kind words and sympathetic looks--crumbs of kindness which would
have dropped under your table unnoticed. So this day, when he came
to see how the workmen were getting on, he found me in the deserted
schoolroom, looking at my faded summer bonnet and some old ribbons I
had been sponging out, and half-worn-out gloves--a sort of rag-fair
spread out on the deal table. I was in a regular passion with only
looking at that shabbiness. He said he was so glad to hear I was
going to this festival with the Donaldsons; old Betty, our servant,
had told him the news, I believe. But I was so perplexed about
money, and my vanity was so put out about my shabby dress, that I
was in a pet, and said I should not go. He sate down on the table,
and little by little he made me tell him all my troubles. I do
sometimes think he was very nice in those days. Somehow I never felt
as if it was wrong or foolish or anything to accept his offer of
money at the time. He had twenty pounds in his pocket, he said, and
really did not know what. to do with it, should not want it for
months; I could repay it, or rather mamma could, when it suited her.
She must have known I should want money, and most likely thought I
should apply to him. Twenty pounds would not be too much, I must
take it all, and so on. I knew, at least I thought I knew, that I
should never spend twenty pounds; but I thought I could give him
back what I did not want, and so--well, that was the beginning! It
does not sound so very wrong, does it, Molly?'

'No,' said Molly, hesitatingly. She did not wish to make herself
into a hard judge, and yet she did so dislike Mr. Preston. Cynthia
went on,--

'Well, what with boots and gloves, and a bonnet and a mantle, and a
white muslin gown, which was made for me before I left on the
Tuesday, and a silk gown that followed to the Donaldsons', and my
journeys, and all, there was very little left of the twenty pounds,
especially when I found I must get a ball-dress in Worcester, for we
were all to go to the Ball. Mrs. Donaldson gave me my ticket, but she
rather looked grave at my idea of going to the Ball in my white
muslin, which I had already worn two evenings at their house. Oh
dear! how pleasant it must be to be rich! You know,' continued
Cynthia, smiling a very little, 'I can't help being aware that I am
pretty, and that people admire me very much. I found it out first at
the Donaldsons'. I began to think I did look pretty in my fine new
clothes, and I saw that other people thought so too. I was certainly
the belle of the house, and it was very pleasant to feel my power.
The last day or two of that gay week Mr. Preston joined our party.
The last time he had seen me was when I was dressed in shabby
clothes too small for me, half-crying in my solitude, neglected and
penniless. At the Donaldsons' I was a little queen; and as I said,
fine feathers make fine birds, all the people were making much of
me; and at that ball, which was the first night he came, I had more
partners than I knew what to do with. I suppose he really did fall
in love with me then. I don't think he had done so before. And then
I began to feel how awkward it was to be in his debt. I could not
give myself airs to him as I did to others. Oh! it was so awkward
and uncomfortable! But I liked him, and felt him as a friend all the
time. The last day I was walking in the garden along with the
others, and I thought I would tell him how much I had enjoyed
myself, and how happy I had been, all thanks to his twenty pounds (I
was beginning to feel like Cinderella when the clock was striking
twelve), and to tell him it should be repaid to him as soon as
possible, though I turned sick at the thought of telling mamma, and
knew enough of our affairs to understand how very difficult it would
be to muster up the money. The end of our talk came very soon, for
almost to my terror he began to talk violent love to me, and to beg
me to promise to marry him. I was so frightened, that I ran away to
the others. But that night I got a letter from him, apologizing for
startling me, renewing his offer, his entreaties for a promise of
marriage, to be fulfilled at any date I would please to name--in
fact a most urgent love-letter, and in it a reference to my unlucky
debt, which was to be a debt no longer, only an advance of the money
to be hereafter mine if only--You can fancy it all, Molly, better
than I can remember it to tell it you.'

'And what did you say?' asked Molly, breathless.

'I did not answer it at all until another letter came, entreating
for a reply. By that time mamma had come home, and the old daily
pressure and plaint of poverty had come on. Mary Donaldson wrote to
me often, singing the praises of Mr. Preston as enthusiastically as
if she had been bribed to do it. I had seen him a very popular man
in their set, and I liked him well enough, and felt grateful to him.
So I wrote and gave him my promise to marry him when I was twenty,
but it was to be a secret till then. And I tried to forget I had
ever borrowed money of him, but somehow as soon as I felt pledged to
him I began to hate him. I could not endure his eagerness of
greeting if ever he found me alone; and mamma began to suspect, I
think. I cannot tell you all the ins and outs, in fact I did not
understand them at the time, and I don't remember clearly how it all
happened now. But I know that Lady Cuxhaven sent mamma some money to
be applied to my education as she called it, and mamma seemed very
much put out and in very low spirits, and she and I did not get on
at all together. So of course I never ventured to name the hateful
twenty pounds to her, but went on trying to think that if I was to
marry Mr. Preston, it need never be paid--very mean and wicked I dare
say, but oh, Molly, I've been punished for it, for how I abhor that
man.'

'But why? When did you begin to dislike him? You seem to have taken
it very passively all this time.'

'I don't know. It was growing upon me before I went to that school
at Boulogne. He made me feel as if I was in his power; and by too
often reminding me of my engagement to him, he made me critical of
his words and ways. There was an insolence in his manner to mamma,
too. Ah! you're thinking that I'm not too respectful a daughter--and
perhaps not; but I could not bear his covert sneers at her faults,
and I hated his way of showing what he called his "love" for me.
Then, after I had been a ~semestre~ at Madame Lefevre's, a new
English girl came--a cousin of his, who knew but little of me. Now,
Molly, you must forget as soon as I have told you what I am going to
say--and she used to talk much and perpetually about her cousin
Robert--he was the great man of the family, evidently--and how he
was so handsome, and every lady of the land in love with him,--a
lady of title into the bargain.'

'Lady Harriet! I dare say,' said Molly, indignantly.

'I don't know,' said Cynthia, wearily. 'I didn't care at the time,
and I don't care now; for she went on to say there was a very pretty
widow too, who made desperate love to him. He had often laughed with
them at all her little advances, which she thought he did not see
through,--and--oh,--and this was the man I had promised to marry,
and gone into debt to, and written love-letters to. So now you
understand it all, Molly.'

'No, I don't yet. What did you do on hearing how he had spoken about
your mother?'

'There was but one thing to do. I wrote and told him I hated him,
and would never, never marry him, and would pay him back his money
and the interest of it as soon as ever I could.'

'Well?'

'And Madame Lefevre brought me back my letter,--unopened, I will
say; and told me that she did not allow letters to gentlemen to be
sent by the pupils of her establishment unless she had previously
seen their contents. I told her he was a family friend, the agent
who managed mamma's affairs--I really could not stick at the truth;
but she would not let it go; and I bad to see her burn it, and to
give her my promise I would not write again before she would consent
not to tell mamma. So I had to calm down, and wait till I came
home.'

'But you did not see him then; at least, not for some time.'

'No, but I could write; and I began to try and save up my money to
pay him.'

'What did he say to your letter?'

'Oh, at first he pretended not to believe I could be in earnest; he
thought it was only pique, or a temporary offence to be apologized
for and covered over with passionate protestations.'

'And afterwards?'

'He condescended to threats; and, what is worse, then I turned
coward. I could not bear to have it all known and talked about, and
my silly letters shown--oh, such letters--I cannot bear to think of
them, beginning, "My dearest Robert," to that man--'

'But, oh, Cynthia, how could you go and engage yourself to Roger?'
asked Molly.

'Why not?' said Cynthia, sharply turning round upon her. 'I was
free--I am free; it seemed a way of assuring myself that I was quite
free; and I did like Roger--it was such a comfort to be brought into
contact with people who could be relied upon; and I was not a stock
or a stone that I could fail to be touched with his tender,
unselfish love, so different to Mr. Preston's. I know you don't think
me good enough for him; and, of course, if all this comes out, he
won't think me good enough either' (falling into a plaintive tone
very touching to hear); 'and sometimes I think I will give him up,
and go off to some fresh life amongst strangers; and once or twice I
have thought I would marry Mr. Preston out of pure revenge, and have
him for ever in my power--only I think I should have the worst of
it. for he is cruel in his very soul--tigerish, with his beautiful
striped skin and relentless heart. I have so begged and begged him
to let me go without exposure.'

'Never mind the exposure,' said Molly. 'It will recoil far more on
him than harm you.'

Cynthia went a little paler. 'But I said things in those letters
about mamma. I was quick-eyed enough to all her faults, and hardly
understood the force of her temptations; and he says he will show
those letters to your father, unless I consent to acknowledge our
engagement.'

'He shall not!' said Molly, rising up in her indignation, and
standing before Cynthia almost as resolutely fierce as if she were
in the very presence of Mr. Preston himself. 'I am not afraid of him.
He dare not insult me, or if he does, I do not care. I will ask him
for those letters, and see if he will dare to refuse me.'

'You don't know him,' said Cynthia, shaking her head. 'He has made
many an appointment with me, just as if he would take back the
money--which has been sealed up ready for him this four months; or
as if he would give me back my letters. Poor, poor Roger! How little
he thinks of all this. When I want to write words of love to him I
pull myself up, for I have written words as affectionate to that
other man. And if Mr. Preston ever guessed that Roger and I were
engaged he would manage to be revenged on both him and me by giving
us as much pain as he could with those unlucky letters--written when
I was not sixteen, Molly,--only seven of them! They are like a mine
under my feet, which may blow up any day; and down will come father
and mother and all.' She ended bitterly enough, though her words
were so light.

'How can I get them?' said Molly, thinking,--'for get them I will.
With papa to back me, he dare not refuse.'

'Ah! But that's just the thing. He knows I'm afraid of your father's
hearing of it all, more than of any one else.'

'And yet he thinks he loves you!'

'It is his way of loving. He says often enough he does not care what
he does so that he gets me to be his wife; and that after that he is
sure he can make me love him.' Cynthia began to cry, out of
weariness of body and despair of mind. Molly's arms were round her
in a minute, and she pressed the beautiful head to her bosom, and
laid her own cheek upon it, and hushed her up with lulling words,
just as if Cynthia were a little child.

'Oh, it is such a comfort to have told you all!' murmured she. And
Molly made reply,--'I am sure we have right on our side; and that
makes me certain he must and shall give up the letters.'

'And take the money?' added Cynthia, lifting her head, and looking
eagerly into Molly's face. 'He must take the money. Oh, Molly, you
can never manage it all without its coming out to your father! And I
would far rather go out to Russia as a governess. I almost think I
would rather--no, not that,' said she, shuddering away from what she
was going to say. 'But he must not know--please, Molly, he must not
know. I could not bear it. I don't know what I might not do. You'll
promise me never to tell him, or mamma?'

'I never will. You do not think I would for anything short of
saving--' She was going to have said, 'saving you and Roger from
pain.' But Cynthia broke in,--

'For nothing. No reason whatever must make you tell your father. If
you fail, you fail, and I will love you for ever for trying; but I
shall be no worse than before. Better, indeed; for I shall have the
comfort of your sympathy. But promise me not to tell Mr. Gibson.'

'I have promised once,' said Molly, 'but I promise again; so now do
go to bed, and try and rest. You are looking as white as a sheet;
you'll be ill if you don't get some rest; and it's past two o'clock,
and you're shivering with cold.'

So they wished each other good-night. But when Molly got into her
room all her spirit left her; and she threw herself down on her bed,
dressed as she was, for she had no heart left for anything. If Roger
ever heard of it all by any chance, she felt how it would disturb
his love for Cynthia. And yet was it right to conceal it from him?
She must try and persuade Cynthia to tell it all straight out to him
as soon as he returned to England. A full confession on her part
would wonderfully lessen any pain he might have on first hearing of
it. She lost herself in thoughts of Roger--how he would feel, what
he would say, how that meeting would come to pass, where he was at
that very time, and so on, till she suddenly plucked herself up, and
recollected what she herself had offered and promised to do. Now
that the first fervour was over, she saw the difficulties clearly;
and the foremost of all was how she was to manage to have a
tete-a-tete with Mr. Preston? How had Cynthia managed?
and the letters that had passed between them too? Unwillingly, Molly
was compelled to perceive that there must have been a great deal of
underhand work going on beneath Cynthia's apparent I openness of
behaviour; and still more unwillingly she began to be afraid that
she herself would be led into the practice. But she would try and
walk in a straight path; and if she did wander out of it, it should
only be to save pain to those whom she loved.


CHAPTER XLIV


MOLLY GIBSON TO THE RESCUE


It seemed curious enough, after the storms of the night, to meet in
smooth tranquillity at breakfast. Cynthia was pale; but she talked
as quietly as usual about all manner of indifferent things, while
Molly sate silent, watching and wondering, and becoming convinced
that Cynthia must have gone through a long experience of concealing
her real thoughts and secret troubles before she could have been
able to put on such a semblance of composure. Among the letters that
came in that morning was one from the London Kirkpatricks; but not
from Helen, Cynthia's own particular correspondent. Her sister wrote
to apologize for Helen, who was not well, she said: had had the
influenza, which had left her very weak and poorly.

'Let her come down here for change of air,' said Mr. Gibson. 'The
country at this time of the year is better than London, excepting
when the place is surrounded by trees. Now our house is well
drained, high up, gravel soil, and I'll undertake to doctor her for
nothing.'

'It would be charming,' said Mrs. Gibson, rapidly revolving in her
mind the changes necessary in her household economy before receiving
a young lady accustomed to such a household as Mr. Kirkpatrick's, and
calculating the consequent inconveniences in her own mind, weighing
them against the probable advantages even while she spoke.

'Should not you like it, Cynthia? and Molly too. You too, dear,
would become acquainted with one of the girls, and I have no doubt
you would be asked back again, which would be so very nice!'

'And I should not let her go,' said Mr. Gibson, who had acquired an
unfortunate facility of reading his wife's thoughts.

'Dear Helen!' went on Mrs. Gibson, 'I should so like to nurse her, we
would make your consulting-room into her own private sitting-room,
my dear.'--(It is hardly necessary to say that the scales had been
weighed down by the inconveniences of having a person behind the
scenes for several weeks). 'For with an invalid so much depends on
tranquillity. In the drawing-room, for instance, she might
constantly be disturbed by callers; and the dining-room is so--so
what shall I call it? so dinnery,--the smell of meals never seems to
leave it; it would have been different if dear papa had allowed me
to throw out that window--'

'Why can't she have the dressing-room for her bed-room, and the
little room opening out of the drawing-room for her sitting-room?'
asked Mr. Gibson.

'The library,' for by this name Mrs. Gibson chose to dignify what had
formerly been called the book-closet,--'why, it would hardly hold a
sofa, besides the books and the writing-table, and there are
draughts everywhere. No, my dear, we had better not ask her at all,
her own home is comfortable at any rate!'

'Well, well!' said Mr. Gibson, seeing that he was to be worsted, and
not caring enough about the matter to show fight. 'Perhaps you are
right. It's a case of luxury ~versus~ fresh air. Some people suffer
more from the want of one than from want of the other. You know I
shall be glad to see her if she likes to come, and take us as we
are, but I can't give up the consulting-room. It's a necessity; our
daily bread!'

'I'll write and tell them how kind Mr. Gibson is,' said his wife in
high contentment, as her husband left the room. 'They'll be just as
much obliged to him as if she had come!'

Whether it was Helen's illness, or from some other cause, after
breakfast Cynthia became very flat and absent, and this lasted all
day long; Molly understood now why her moods had been so changeable
for many months, and was tender and forbearing with her accordingly.
Towards evening when the two girls were left alone, Cynthia came and
stood over Molly, so that her face could not be seen.

'Molly,' said she, 'will you do it? Will you do what you said last
night? I have been thinking of it all day, and sometimes I believe
he would give you back the letters if you asked him; he might
fancy--at any rate it's worth trying, if you don't very much dislike
it.'

Now it so happened that with every thought she had given to it,
Molly disliked the idea of the proposed interview with Mr. Preston
more and more; but it was after all her own offer, and she neither
could nor would draw back from it; it might do good; she did not see
how it could possibly do harm. So she gave her consent, and tried to
conceal her distaste, which grew upon her more and more as Cynthia
hastily arranged the details.

'You shall meet him in the avenue leading from the park lodge up to
the Towers. He can come in one way, from the Towers, where he has
often business--he has pass-keys everywhere--you can go in as we
have often done by the lodge--you need not go far.'

It did strike Molly that Cynthia must have had some experience in
making all these arrangements; and she did venture to ask how he was
to be informed of all this? Cynthia only reddened, and replied, 'Oh!
never mind! He will only be too glad to come; you heard him say he
wished to discuss the affair more; it is the first time the
appointment has come from my side. If I can but once be free--oh,
Molly, I will love you, and be grateful to you all my life!'

Molly thought of Roger, and that thought prompted her next speech.

'It must be horrible--I think I'm very brave--but I don't think I
could have--could have accepted even Roger, with a half-cancelled
engagement hanging over me.' She blushed as she spoke.

'You forget how I detest Mr. Preston!' said Cynthia. 'It was that,
more than any excess of love for Roger, that made me thankful to be
at least as securely pledged to some one else. He did not want to
call it an engagement, but I did; because it gave me the feeling of
assurance that I was free from Mr. Preston. And so I am! all but
these letters. Oh! if you can but make him take back his abominable
money, and get me my letters. Then we would bury it all in oblivion,
and he could marry somebody else, and I would marry Roger, and no
one would be the wiser. After all it was only what people call
"youthful folly." And you may tell Mr. Preston that as soon as he
makes my letters public, shows them to your father or anything, I'll
go away from Hollingford, and never come back--'

Loaded with many such messages, which she felt that she should never
deliver, not really knowing what she should say, hating the errand,
not satisfied with Cynthia's manner of speaking about her relations
to Roger, oppressed with shame and complicity in conduct which
appeared to her deceitful, yet willing to bear all and brave all, if
she could once set Cynthia in a straight path--in a clear space, and
almost more pitiful to her friend's great distress and possible
disgrace, than able to give her that love which involves perfect
sympathy, Molly set out on her walk towards the appointed place. It
was a cloudy blustering day, and the noise of the blowing wind among
the nearly leafless branches of the great trees filled her ears, as
she passed through the park-gates and entered the avenue. She walked
quickly, instinctively wishing to get her blood up, and have no time
for thought. But there was a bend in the avenue about a quarter of a
mile from the lodge; after that bend it was a straight line up to
the great house, now emptied of its inhabitants. Molly did not like
going quite out of sight of the lodge, and she stood facing it,
close by the trunk of one of the trees. Presently she heard a step
coming over the grass. It was Mr. Preston. He saw a woman's figure,
half-behind the trunk of a tree, and made no doubt that it was
Cynthia. But when he came nearer, almost close, the figure turned
round, and, instead of the brilliantly coloured face of Cynthia, he
met the pale resolved look of Molly. She did not speak to greet him,
but though he felt sure from the general aspect of pallor and
timidity that she was afraid of him, her steady grey eyes met his
with courageous innocence.

'Is Cynthia unable to come?' asked he, perceiving that she expected
him.

'I did not know you thought that you should meet her,' said Molly, a
little surprised. In her simplicity she had believed that Cynthia
had named that it was she, Molly Gibson, who would meet Mr. Preston
at a given time and place; but Cynthia had been too worldly-wise for
that, and had decoyed him thither by a vaguely worded note, which,
while avoiding actual falsehood, had led him to believe that she
herself would give him the meeting.

'She said she should be here,' said Mr. Preston, extremely annoyed at
being entrapped as he now felt that he had been, into an interview
with Miss Gibson. Molly hesitated a little before she spoke. He was
determined not to break the silence; as she had intruded herself
into the affair, she should find her situation as awkward as
possible.

'At any rate she sent me here to meet you,' said Molly. 'She has
told me exactly how matters stand between you and her.'

'Has she?' sneered he. 'She is not always the most open or reliable
person in the world!'

Molly reddened. She perceived the impertinence of the tone; and her
temper was none of the coolest. But she mastered herself and gained
courage by so doing.

'You should not speak so of the person you profess to wish to have
for your wife. But putting all that aside, you have some letters of
hers that she wishes to have back again.'

'I dare say.'

'And that you have no right to keep.'

'No legal, or no moral right? which do you mean?'

'I do not know; simply you have no right at all, as a gentleman, to
keep a girl's letters when she asks for them back again, much less
to hold them over her as a threat.'

'I see you do know all, Miss Gibson,' said he, changing his manner
to one of more respect. 'At least she has told you her story from
her point of view, her side; now you must hear mine. She promised me
as solemnly as ever woman--'

'She was not a woman, she was only a girl, barely sixteen.'

'Old enough to know what she was doing; but I'll call her a girl if
you like. She promised me solemnly to be my wife, making the one
stipulation of secrecy, and a certain period of waiting; she wrote
me letters repeating this promise, and confidential enough to prove
that she considered herself bound to me by such an implied relation.
I don't give in to humbug--I don't set myself up as a saint--and in
most ways I can look after my own interests pretty keenly; you know
enough of her position as a penniless girl, and at that time, with
no influential connections to take the place of wealth, and help me
on in the world, it was as sincere and unworldly a passion as ever
man felt; she must say so herself. I might have married two or three
girls with plenty of money; one of them was handsome enough, and not
at all reluctant.'

Molly interrupted him; she was chafed at the conceit of his manner.
'I beg your pardon, but I do not want to hear accounts of young
ladies whom you might have married; I come here simply on behalf of
Cynthia, who does not like you, and who does not wish to marry you.'

'Well, then I must make her "like" me, as you call it. She did
"like" me once, and made promises which she will find it requires
the consent of two people to break. I don't despair of making her
love me as much as ever she did, according to her letters, at least,
when we are married.'

'She will never marry you,' said Molly, firmly.

'Then if she ever honours any one else with her preference, he shall
be allowed the perusal of her letters to me.'

Molly almost could have laughed; she was so secure and certain that
Roger would never read letters offered to him under these
circumstances; but then she thought that he would feel such pain at
the whole affair, and at the contact with Mr. Preston, especially if
he had not heard of it from Cynthia first, and if she, Molly, could
save him pain she would. Before she could settle what to say, Mr
Preston spoke again.

'You said the other day that Cynthia was engaged. May I ask whom
to?'

'No,' said Molly, 'you may not. You heard her say it was not an
engagement. It is not exactly; and if it were a full engagement, do
you think, after what you last said, I should tell you to whom? But
you may be sure of this, he would never read a line of your letters.
He is too--No! I won't speak of him before you. You could never
understand him.'

'It seems to me that this mysterious "he" is a very fortunate person
to have such a warm defender in Miss Gibson, to whom he is not at
all engaged,' said Mr. Preston, with so disagreeable a look on his
face that Molly suddenly found herself on the point of bursting into
tears. But she rallied herself, and worked on--for Cynthia first,
and for Roger as well.

'No honourable man or woman will read your letters, and if any
people do read them, they will be so much ashamed of it that they
won't dare to speak of them. What use can they be of to you?'

'They contain Cynthia's reiterated promises of marriage,' replied
he.

'She says she would rather leave Hollingford for ever, and go out to
earn her bread, than marry you.'

His face fell a little. He looked so bitterly mortified that Molly
was almost sorry for him.

'Does she say that to you in cold blood? Do you know you are telling
me very hard truths, Miss Gibson?--if they are truths, that is to
say,' he continued, recovering himself a little. 'Young ladies are
very fond of the words "hate" and "detest." I have known many who
have applied them to men whom they were all the time hoping to
marry.'

'I cannot tell about other people,' said Molly, 'I only know that
Cynthia does--' Here she hesitated for a moment; she fell for his
pain, and so she hesitated; but then she brought it out,--'does as
nearly hate you as anybody like her ever does hate.'

'Like her?' said he, repeating the words almost unconsciously,
seizing on anything to try and hide his mortification.

'I mean, I should hate worse,' said Molly in a low voice.

But he did not attend much to her answer. He was working the point
of his stick into the turf, and his eyes were bent on it.

'So now would you mind sending her back the letters by me? I do
assure you that you cannot make her marry you.'

'You are very simple, Miss Gibson,' said he, suddenly lifting up his
head. 'I suppose that you don't know that there is any other feeling
that can be gratified, excepting love. Have you never heard of
revenge? Cynthia had cajoled me with promises, and little as you or
she may believe me--well, it's of no use speaking of that. I don't
mean to let her go unpunished. You may tell her that. I shall keep
the letters, and make use of them as I see fit when the occasion
arises.'

Molly was miserably angry with herself for her mismanagement of the
affair. She had hoped to succeed: she had only made matters worse.
What new argument could she use? Meanwhile he went on, lashing
himself up as he thought how the two girls must have talked him
over, bringing in wounded vanity to add to the rage of disappointed
love.

'Mr. Osborne Hamley may hear of their contents, though he may be too
honourable to read them. Nay, even your father may hear whispers;
and if I remember them rightly, Miss Cynthia Kirkpatrick does not
always speak in the most respectful terms of the lady who is now Mrs
Gibson. There are--'

'Stop,' said Molly. 'I won't hear anything out of these letters,
written, when she was almost without friends, to you whom she looked
upon as a friend! But I have thought of what I will do next. I give
you fair warning. If I had not been foolish I should have told my
father, but Cynthia made me promise that I would not. So I will tell
it all, from beginning to end, to Lady Harriet, and ask her to speak
to her father. I feel sure that she will do it; and I don't think
you will dare to refuse Lord Cumnor.'

He felt at once that he should not dare; that, clever land-agent as
he was, and high up in the earl's favour on that account, yet that
the conduct of which he had been guilty about these letters, and the
threats which he had held out about them, were just what no
gentleman, no honourable man, no manly man, could put up with in any
one about him. He knew that much, and he wondered how she, the girl
standing before him, had been clever enough to find it out. He
forgot himself for an instant in admiration of her. There she stood,
frightened, yet brave, not letting go her hold on what she meant to
do, even when things seemed most against her; and besides, there was
something that struck him most of all perhaps, and which shows the
kind of man he was--he perceived that Molly was as unconscious that
he was a young man, and she a young woman, as if she had been a pure
angel of heaven. Though he felt that he would have to yield, and
give up the letters, he was not going to do it at once; and while he
was thinking what to say so as still to evade making any concession
till he had had time to think over it, he, with his quick senses all
about him, heard the trotting of a horse cranching quickly along
over the gravel of the drive. A moment afterwards, Molly's
perception overtook his. He could see the startled look overspread
her face; and in an instant she would have run away, but before the
first rush was made, Mr. Preston laid his hand firmly on her arm.

'Keep quiet. You must be seen. You, at any rate, have done nothing
to be ashamed of.'

As he spoke Mr. Sheepshanks came round the bend of the road and was
close upon them. Mr. Preston saw, if Molly did not, the sudden look
of intelligence that dawned upon the shrewd ruddy face of the old
gentleman--saw, but did not much heed. He went forwards and spoke to
Mr. Sheepshanks, who made a halt right before them.

'Miss Gibson! your servant! Rather a blustering day for a young lady
to be out, and cold, I should say, for standing still too long; eh,
Preston?' poking his whip at the latter in a knowing manner.

'Yes,' said Mr. Preston; 'and I'm afraid I have kept Miss Gibson too
long standing.'

Molly did not know what to say or do; so she only bowed a silent
farewell, and turned away to go home, feeling very heavy at heart at
the non-success of her undertaking. For she did not know how she had
conquered, in fact, although Mr. Preston might not as yet acknowledge
it even to himself. Before she was out of hearing, she heard Mr
Sheepshanks say,--

'Sorry to have disturbed your tete-a-tete, Preston,'
but though she heard the words, their implied sense did not sink
into her mind; she was only feeling how she had gone out glorious
and confident, and was coming back to Cynthia defeated.

Cynthia was on the watch for her return, and, rushing downstairs,
dragged Molly into the dining-room.

'Well, Molly? Oh! I see you have not got them. After all, I never
expected it.' She sate down, as if she could get over her
disappointment better in that position, and Molly stood like a
guilty person before her.

'I am so sorry; I did all I could; we were interrupted at last--Mr
Sheepshanks rode up.'

'Provoking old man! Do you think you should have persuaded him to
give up the letters if you had had more time?'

'I don't know. I wish Mr. Sheepshanks had not come just then. I did
not like his finding me standing talking to Mr. Preston.'

'Oh! I daresay he would never think anything about it. What did
he--Mr. Preston--say?'

'He seemed to think you were fully engaged to him, and that these
letters were the only proof he had. I think he loves you in his
way.'

'His way, indeed!' said Cynthia, scornfully.

'The more I think of it, the more I see it would be better for papa
to speak to him. I did say I would tell it all to Lady Harriet, and
get Lord Cumnor to make him give up the letters. But it would be
very awkward.'

'Very!' said Cynthia, gloomily. 'But he would see it was only a
threat.'

'But I will do it in a moment, if you like. I meant what I said;
only I feel that papa would manage it best of all, and more
privately.'

'I'll tell you what, Molly; you're bound by a promise, you know, and
cannot tell Mr. Gibson without breaking your solemn word; but it's
just this. I'll leave Hollingford and never come back again, if ever
your father hears of this affair; there!' Cynthia stood up now, and
began to fold up Molly's shawl, in her nervous excitement.

'Oh, Cynthia--Roger!' was all that Molly said.

'Yes, I know! you need not remind me of him. But I'm not going to
live in the house with any one who may be always casting up in his
mind the things he had heard against me--things--faults,
perhaps--which sound so much worse than they really are. I was so
happy when I first came here: you all liked me, and admired me, and
thought well of me, and now--Why, Molly, I can see the difference in
you already. You carry your thoughts in your face--I have read them
there these two days--you've been thinking, "How Cynthia must have
deceived me; keeping up a correspondence all this time--having
half-engagements to two men." You've been more full of that than of
pity for me as a girl who has always been obliged to manage for
herself, without any friend to help her and protect her.'

Molly was silent. There was a great deal of truth in what Cynthia
was saying; and yet a great deal of falsehood. For, through all this
long forty-eight hours, Molly had loved Cynthia dearly; and had been
more weighed down by the position the latter was in than Cynthia
herself. She also knew--but this was a second thought following on
the other--that she had suffered much pain in trying to do her best
in this interview with Mr. Preston. She had been tried beyond her
strength; and the great tears welled up into her eyes, and fell
slowly down her cheeks.

'Oh! what a brute I am,' said Cynthia, kissing them away. 'I see--I
know it is the truth, and I deserve it--but I need not reproach
you.'

'You did not reproach me!' said Molly, trying to smile. 'I have
thought some of what you said--but I do love you dearly--dearly,
Cynthia--I should have done just the same as you did.'

'No, you would not. Your grain is different, somehow.'


 CHAPTER XLV


CONFIDENCES


All the rest of that day Molly was depressed and not well. Having
anything to conceal was so unusual--almost so unprecedented a
circumstance with her that it preyed upon her in every way.

It was a nightmare that she could not shake off; she did so wish to
forget it all, and yet every little occurrence seemed to remind her
of it. The next morning's post brought several letters; one from
Roger for Cynthia, and Molly, letterless herself, looked at Cynthia
as she read it, with wistful sadness; it appeared to Molly as though
Cynthia should have no satisfaction in these letters, until she had
told him what was her exact position with Mr. Preston; yet Cynthia
was colouring and dimpling up as she always did at any pretty words
of praise, or admiration, or love. But Molly's thoughts and
Cynthia's reading were both interrupted by a little triumphant sound
from Mrs. Gibson, as she pushed a letter she had just received to her
husband, with a,--

'There! I must say I expected that!' Then, turning to Cynthia, she
explained,--'It is a letter from uncle Kirkpatrick, love. So kind,
wishing you to go and stay with them, and help them to cheer up
Helen; poor Helen! I am afraid she is very far from well. But we
could not have had her here, without disturbing dear papa in his
consulting-room; and, though I could have relinquished my
dressing-room--he--well! so I said in my letter how you were
grieved--you above all of us, because you are such a friend of
Helen's, you know--and how you longed to be of use,--as I am sure
you do--and so now they want you to go up directly, for Helen has
quite set her heart upon it.'

Cynthia's eyes sparkled. 'I shall like going,' said she,--'all but
leaving you, Molly,' she added, in a lower tone, as if suddenly
smitten with some compunction.

'Can you be ready to go up by the "Bang-up" to-night?' said Mr
Gibson, 'for, curiously enough, after more than twenty years of
quiet practice at Hollingford, I am summoned up to-day for the first
time to a consultation in London, to-morrow. I am afraid Lady Cumnor
is worse, my dear.'

'You don't say so? Poor dear lady! What a shock it is to me. I'm so
glad I've had some breakfast. I could not have eaten anything.'

'Nay, I only say she is worse. With her complaint, being worse may
be only a preliminary to being better. Don't take my words for more
than their literal meaning.'

'Thank you. How kind and reassuring dear papa always is. About your
gowns, Cynthia?'

'Oh, they are all right, mamma, thank you. I shall be quite ready by
four o'clock. Molly, will you come with me and help me to pack? I
wanted to speak to you, dear,' said she, as soon as they had gone
upstairs. 'It is such a relief to get away from a place haunted by
that man; but I'm afraid you thought I was glad to leave you; and
indeed I am not.' There was a little flavour of 'protesting too
much' about this; but Molly did not perceive it. She only said,
'Indeed I did not. I know from my own feelings how you must dislike
meeting a man in public in a different manner from what you have
done in private. I shall try not to see Mr. Preston again for a long,
long time, I'm sure. And Helen Kirkpatrick--But Cynthia, you have
not told me one word out of Roger's letter. Please how is he? Has he
quite got over his attack of fever?'

'Yes, quite. He writes in very good spirits. A great deal about
birds and beasts, as usual, and habits of natives, and things of
that kind. You may read from there'--indicating a place in the
letter--'to there, if you can; and I'll tell you what, I'll trust
you with it, Molly, while I pack (and that shows my sense of your
honour, not but what you might read it all, only you'd find the
love-making dull); but make a little account of where he is, and
what he is doing, date, and that sort of thing, and send it to his
father.'

Molly took the letter down without a word, and began to copy it at
the writing-table; often reading over what she was allowed to read;
often pausing, her cheek on her hand, her eyes on the letter, and
letting her imagination rove to the writer, and all the scenes in
which she had either seen him herself, or in which her fancy had
painted him. She was startled from her meditations by Cynthia's
sudden entrance into the drawing-room, looking the picture of
glowing delight. 'No one here! What a blessing! Ah, Miss Molly, you
are more eloquent than you believe yourself. Look here!' holding up
a large full envelope, and then quickly replacing it in her pocket,
as if she was afraid of being seen. 'What's the matter, sweet one?'
coming up and caressing Molly. 'Is it worrying itself over that
letter? Why, don't you see these are my very own horrible letters,
that I am going to burn directly, that Mr. Preston has had the grace
to send me, thanks to you, little Molly--~cuishla ma chree~, pulse
of my heart,--the letters that have been hanging over my head like
somebody's sword for these two years?'

'Oh, I am so glad!' said Molly, rousing up a little. 'I never
thought he would have sent them. He is better than I believed him.
And now it is all over. I am so glad. You quite think he means to
give up all claim over you by this, don't you, Cynthia?'

'He may claim, but I won't be claimed; and he has no proofs now. It
is the most charming relief; and I owe it all to you, you precious
little lady! Now there is only one thing more to be done; and if you
would but do it for me--?' (coaxing and caressing while she asked
the question).

'Oh, Cynthia, don't ask me; I cannot do any more. You don't know how
sick I go when I think of yesterday, and Mr. Sheepshanks' look.'

'It is only a very little thing. I won't burden your conscience with
telling you how I get my letters, but it is not through a person I
can trust with money; and I must force him to take back his
twenty-three pounds odd shillings. I have put it together at the
rate of five per cent., and it's sealed up. Oh, Molly, I should go
off with such a light heart if you would only try to get it safely
to him. It's the last thing; there would be no immediate hurry, you
know. You might meet him by chance in a shop, in the street, even at
a party--and if you only had it with you in your pocket, there would
be nothing so easy.'

Molly was silent. 'Papa would give it to him. There would be no harm
in that. I would tell him he must ask no questions as to what it
was.'

'Very well,' said Cynthia, 'have it your own way. I think my way is
the best; for if any of this affair comes out--But you've done a
great deal for me already, and I won't blame you now for declining
to do any more!'

'I do so dislike having these underhand dealings with him,' pleaded
Molly.

'Underhand! just simply giving him a letter from me! If I left a
note for Miss Browning, should you dislike giving it to her?'

'You know that's very different. I could do it openly.'

'And yet there might be writing in that; and there would not be a
line with the money. It would only be the winding-up--the
honourable, honest winding-up of an affair which has worried me for
years! But do as you like!'

'Give it me!' said Molly. 'I will try.'

'There's a darling! You can but try; and if you can't give it to him
in private, without getting yourself into a scrape, why, keep it
till I come back again. He shall have it then, whether he will or
no!'

Molly looked forward to her tete-a-tete two days with
Mrs. Gibson with very different anticipations to those with which she
had welcomed the similar intercourse with her father. In the first
place, there was no accompanying the travellers to the inn from
which the coach started; leave-taking in the market-place was quite
out of the bounds of Mrs. Gibson's sense of propriety. Besides this,
it was a gloomy, rainy evening, and candles had to be brought in at
an unusually early hour. There would be no break for six hours--no
music, no reading; but the two ladies would sit at their worsted
work, pattering away at small-talk, with not even the usual break of
dinner; for, to suit the requirements of those who were leaving,
they had already dined early. But Mrs. Gibson really meant to make
Molly happy, and tried to be an agreeable companion, only Molly was
not well, and uneasy about many apprehended cares and troubles--and
at such hours of indisposition as she was then passing through,
apprehensions take the shape of certainties, lying await in our
paths. Molly would have given a good deal to have shaken off all
these feelings, unusual enough to her; but the very house and
furniture, and rain-blurred outer landscape, seemed steeped with
unpleasant associations, most of them dating from the last few days.

'You and I must go on the next journey, I think, my dear,' said Mrs
Gibson, almost chiming in with Molly's wish that she could get away
from Hollingford into some new air and life, for a week or two. 'We
have been stay-at-homes for a long time, and variety of scene is so
desirable for the young! But I think the travellers will be wishing
themselves at home by this nice bright fireside. "There's no place
like home," as the poet says.' "Mid pleasures and palaces although I
may roam," it begins, and it's both very pretty and very true. It's
a great blessing to have such a dear little home as this, is not it,
Molly?'

'Yes,' said Molly, rather drearily, having something of the
'~Toujours perdrix~' feeling at the moment. If she could but have
gone away with her father, just for two days, how pleasant it would
have been.

'To be sure, love, it would be very nice for you and me to go a
little journey all by ourselves. You and I. No one else. If it were
not such miserable weather we would have gone off on a little
impromptu tour. I've been longing for something of the kind for some
weeks; but we live such a restricted kind of life here! I declare
sometimes I get quite sick of the very sight of the chairs and
tables that I know so well. And one misses the others too! It seems
so flat and deserted without them!'

'Yes! We are very forlorn to-night; but I think it's partly owing to
the weather!'

'Nonsense, dear. I can't have you giving in to the silly fancy of
being affected by weather. Poor dear Mr. Kirkpatrick used to say, "a
cheerful heart makes its own sunshine." He would say it to me, in
his pretty way, whenever I was a little low--for I am a complete
barometer--you may really judge of the state of the weather by my
spirits, I have always been such a sensitive creature! It is well
for Cynthia that she does not inherit it; I don't think her easily
affected in any way, do you?'

Molly thought for a minute or two, and then replied,--'No, she is
certainly not easily affected--not deeply affected perhaps I should
say.'

'Many girls, for instance, would have been touched by the admiration
she excited--I may say the attentions she received when she was at
her uncle's last summer.'

'At Mr. Kirkpatrick's?'

'Yes. There was Mr. Henderson, that young lawyer; that's to say he is
studying law, but he has a good private fortune and is likely to
have more, so he can' only be what I call playing at law. Mr
Henderson was over head and ears in love with her. It is not my
fancy, although I grant mothers are partial; both Mr. and Mrs
Kirkpatrick noticed it; and in one of Mrs. Kirkpatrick's letters, she
said that poor Mr. Henderson was going into Switzerland for the long
vacation,' doubtless to try and forget Cynthia; but she really
believed he would find it only dragging at each remove a lengthening
chain. I thought it such a refined quotation, and altogether worded
so prettily. You must know aunt Kirkpatrick some day, Molly, my
love: she is what I call a woman of a truly elegant mind.'

'I can't help thinking it was a pity that Cynthia did not tell them
of her engagement.'

'It is not an engagement, my dear! How often must I tell you that?'

'But what am I to call it?'

'I don't see why you need to call it anything. Indeed I don't
understand what you mean by "it." You should always try to express
yourself intelligibly. It really is one of the first principles of
the English language. In fact, philosophers might ask what is
language given us for at all, if it is not that we may make our
meaning understood?'

'But there is something between Cynthia and Roger; they are more to
each other than I am to Osborne, for instance. What am I to call
it?'

'You should not couple your name with that of any unmarried young
man; it is so difficult to teach you delicacy, child. Perhaps one
may say there is a peculiar relation between dear Cynthia and Roger,
but it is very difficult to characterize it; I have no doubt that is
the reason she shrinks from speaking about it. For, between
ourselves, Molly, I really sometimes think it will come to nothing.
He is so long away, and, privately speaking, Cynthia is not very
very constant. I once knew her very much taken before--that little
affair is quite gone by; and she was very civil to Mr. Henderson, in
her way; I fancy she inherits it, for when I was a girl I was beset
by lovers, and could never find in my heart to shake them off. You
have not heard dear papa say anything of the old squire, or dear
Osborne, have you? It seems so long since we have heard or seen
anything of Osborne. But he must be quite well, I think, or we
should have heard of it.'

'I believe he is quite well. Some one said the other day that they
had met him riding--it was Mrs. Goodenough, now I remember--and that
he was looking stronger than he had done for years.'

'Indeed! I am truly glad to hear it. I always was fond of Osborne;
and, do you know, I never really took to Roger; I respected him and
all that, of course. But to compare him with Mr. Henderson! Mr
Henderson is so handsome and well-bred, and gets all his gloves from
Houbigant!'

It was true that they had not seen anything of Osborne Hamley for a
long time; but, as it often happens, just after they had been
speaking about him he appeared. It was on the day following on Mr
Gibson's departure that Mrs. Gibson had received one of the notes,
not so common now as formerly, from the family in town asking her to
go over to the Towers, and find a book, or a manuscript, or
something or other that Lady Cumnor wanted with all an invalid's
impatience. It was just the kind of employment she required for an
amusement on a gloomy day, and it put her into a good. humour
immediately. There was a certain confidential importance about it,
and it was a variety, and it gave her the pleasant drive in a fly up
the noble avenue, and the sense of being the temporary mistress of
all the grand rooms once so familiar to her. She asked Molly to
accompany her, out of an access of kindness, but was not at all
sorry when Molly excused herself and preferred stopping at home. At
eleven o'clock Mrs. Gibson was off, all in her Sunday best (to use
the servant's expression, which she herself would so have
contemned), well-dressed in order to impose on the servants at the
Towers, for there was no one else to be seen or to be seen by.

'I shall not be at home until the afternoon, my dear! But I hope you
will not find it dull. I don't think you will, for you are something
like me, my love--never less alone than when alone, as one of the
great authors has justly expressed it.'

Molly enjoyed her house to herself to the full as much as Mrs. Gibson
would enjoy having the Towers to herself. She ventured on having her
lunch brought upon a tray into the drawing-room, so that she might
eat her sandwiches while she went on with her book. In the middle,
Mr. Osborne Hamley was announced. He came in, looking wretchedly ill
in spite of purblind Mrs. Goodenough's report of his healthy
appearance.

'This call is not on you, Molly,' said he, after the first greetings
were over. 'I was in hopes I might have found your father at home; I
thought lunch-time was the best hour.' He had sate down, as if
thoroughly glad of the rest, and fallen into a languid stooping
position, as if it had become so natural to him that no sense of
what were considered good manners sufficed to restrain him now.

'I hope you did not want to see him professionally?' said Molly,
wondering if she was wise in alluding to his health, yet urged to it
by her real anxiety.

'Yes, I did. I suppose I may help myself to a biscuit and a glass of
wine? No, don't ring for more. I could not eat it if it was here.
But I just want a mouthful; this is quite enough, thank you. When
will your father be back?'

'He was summoned up to London. Lady Cumnor is worse. I fancy there
is some operation going on; but I don't know. He will be back
to-morrow night.'

'Very well. Then I must wait. Perhaps I shall be better by that
time. I think it's half fancy; but I should like your father to tell
me so. He will laugh at me, I daresay; but I don't think I shall
mind that. He always is severe on fanciful patients, is not he,
Molly?'

Molly thought that if he saw Osborne's looks just now he would
hardly think him fanciful, or be inclined to be severe. But she only
said,--'Papa enjoys a joke at everything, you know. It is a relief
after all the sorrow he sees.'

'Very true. There is a great deal of sorrow in the world. I don't
think it's a very happy place after all. So Cynthia is gone to
London,' he added, after a pause, 'I think I should like to have
seen her again. Poor old Roger! He loves her very dearly, Molly,' he
said. Molly hardly knew how to answer him in all this; she was so
struck by the change in both voice and manner.

'Mamma has gone to the Towers,' she began, at length. 'Lady Cumnor
wanted several things that mamma only can find. She will be sorry to
miss you. We were speaking of you only yesterday, and she said how
long it was since we had seen you.'

'I think I've grown careless; I have often felt so weary and ill
that it was all I could do to keep up a brave face before my
father.'

'Why did you not come and see papa?' said Molly; 'or write to him?'

'I cannot tell. I drifted on sometimes better, and sometimes worse,
till to-day I mustered up pluck, and came to hear what your father
has got to tell me: and all for no use it seems.'

'I am very sorry. But it is only for two days. He shall go and see
you as soon as ever he returns.'

'He must not alarm my father, remember, Molly,' said Osborne,
lifting himself by the arms of his chair into an upright position
and speaking eagerly for the moment. 'I wish to God Roger was at
home,' said he, falling back into the old posture.

'I can't help understanding you,' said Molly. 'You think yourself
very ill; but is not it that you are tired just now?' She was not
sure if she ought to have understood what was passing in his mind;
but as she did, she could not help speaking a true reply.

'Well, sometimes I do think I'm very ill; and then, again, I think
it's only the moping life sets me fancying and exaggerating.' He was
silent for some time. Then, as if he had taken a sudden resolution,
he spoke again. 'You see there are others depending upon me--upon my
health. You have not forgotten what you heard that day in the
library at home? No, I know you have not. I have seen the thought of
it in your eyes often since then. I did not know you at that time. I
think I do now.'

'Don't go on talking so fast,' said Molly. 'Rest. No one will
interrupt us; I will go on with my sewing; when you want to say
anything more I shall be listening.' For she had been alarmed at the
strange pallor that had come over his face.

'Thank you.' After a time he roused himself, and began to speak very
quietly, as if on an indifferent matter of fact.

'The name of my wife is Aimee. Aimee Hamley of course. She
lives at Bishopsfield, a village near Winchester. Write it down, but
keep it to yourself. She is a Frenchwoman, a Roman Catholic, and was
a servant. She is a thoroughly good woman. I must not say how dear
she is to me. I dare not. I meant once to have told Cynthia, but she
did not seem quite to consider me as a brother. Perhaps she was shy
of a new relation, but you'll give my love to her, all the same. It
is a relief to think that some one else has my secret; and you are
like one of us, Molly. I can trust you almost as I can trust Roger.
I feel better already now I feel that some one else knows the
whereabouts of my wife and child.'

'Child!' said Molly, surprised. But before he could reply, Maria had
announced,--

'Miss Phoebe Browning.'

'Fold up that paper,' said he, quickly, putting something into her
hands. 'It is only for yourself.'


CHAPTER XLVI


HOLLINGFORD GOSSIPS


'MY dear Molly, why didn't you come and dine with us? I said to
sister I would come and scold you well. Oh, Mr. Osborne Hamley, is
that you?' and a look of mistaken intelligence at the
tete-a-tete she had disturbed came so perceptibly
over Miss Phoebe's face that Molly caught Osborne's sympathetic eye,
and both smiled at the notion.

'I'm sure I--well! one must sometimes--I see our dinner would have
been--' Then she recovered herself into a connected sentence. 'We
only just heard of Mrs. Gibson's having a fly from the "George,"
because sister sent our Nancy to pay for a couple of rabbits Tom
Ostler had snared (I hope we shan't be taken up for poachers, Mr
Osborne--snaring doesn't require a licence, I believe?), and she
heard he was gone off with the fly to the Towers with your dear
mamma; for Coxe who drives the fly in general has sprained his
ankle. We had just finished dinner, but when Nancy said Tom Ostler
would not be back till night I said, "Why, there's that poor dear
girl left all alone by herself, and her mother such a friend of
ours,"--when she was alive, I mean, But I'm sure I'm glad I'm
mistaken.'

Osborne said,--'I came to speak to Mr. Gibson, not knowing he had
gone to London, and Miss Gibson kindly gave me some of her lunch. I
must go now.'

'Oh dear! I am so sorry,' fluttered out Miss Phoebe, 'I disturbed
you; but it was with the best intentions. I always was
~mal-apropos~ from a child.' But Osborne was gone before she
had finished her apologies. Before he left, his eyes met Molly's
with a strange look of yearning farewell that struck her at the
time, and that she remembered strongly afterwards. 'Such a nice
suitable thing, and I came in the midst, and spoilt it all. I am
sure you're very kind, my dear, considering--'

'Considering what, my dear Miss Phoebe? If you are conjecturing a
love affair between Mr. Osborne Hamley and me, you never were more
mistaken in your life. I think I told you so once before. Please do
believe me.'

'Oh, yes! I remember. And somehow sister got it into her head it was
Mr. Preston, I recollect.'

'One guess is just as wrong as the other,' said Molly, smiling, and
trying to look perfectly indifferent, but going extremely red from
annoyance at the mention of Mr. Preston's name. It was very difficult
for her to keep up any conversation, for her heart was full of
Osborne--his changed appearance, his melancholy words of foreboding,
and his confidences about his wife--French, Catholic, servant. Molly
could not help trying to piece these strange facts together by
imaginations of her own, and found it very hard work to attend to
kind Miss Phoebe's unceasing patter. She came up to the point,
however, when the voice ceased; and could recall, in a mechanical
manner, the echo of the last words, which from both Miss Phoebe's
look, and the dying accent that lingered in Molly's ear, she
perceived to be a question. Miss Phoebe was asking her if she would
go out with her? She was going to Grinstead's, the bookseller of
Hollingford; who, in addition to his regular business, was the agent
for the Hollingford Book Society, received their subscriptions, kept
their accounts, ordered their books from London, and, on payment of
a small salary, allowed the Society to keep their volumes on shelves
in his shop. It was the centre of news and gossip, the club, as it
were, of the little town. Everybody who pretended to gentility in
the place belonged to it, It was a test of gentility, indeed, rather
than of education or a love of literature. No shopkeeper would have
thought of offering himself as a member, however great his general
intelligence and love of reading; while it boasted upon the list of
subscribers most of the county families in the neighbourhood, some
of whom subscribed to the Hollingford Book Society as a sort of duty
belonging to their station, without often using their privilege of
reading the books: while there were residents in the little town,
such as Mrs. Goodenough, who privately thought reading a great waste
of time, that might be much better employed in sewing, and knitting,
and pastry-making, but who nevertheless belonged to it as a mark of
station, just as these good, motherly women would have thought it a
terrible come-down in the world if they had not had a pretty young
servant-maid to fetch them home from the tea-parties at night. At
any rate, Grinstead's was a very convenient place for a lounge. In
that view of the Book Society every one agreed. Molly went upstairs
to get ready to accompany Miss Phoebe; and on opening one of her
drawers she saw Cynthia's envelope, containing the notes she owed to
Mr. Preston, carefully sealed up like a letter. This was what Molly
had so unwillingly promised to deliver--the last final stroke to the
affair. Molly took it up, hating it. For a time she had forgotten
it; and now it was here, facing her, and she must try and get rid of
it. She put it into her pocket for the chances of the walk and the
day, and fortune for once seemed to befriend her; for, on their
entering Grinstead's shop, in which two or three people were now, as
always, congregated, making play of examining the books, or business
of writing down the titles of new works in the order-book, there was
Mr. Preston. He bowed as they came in. He could not help that; but,
at the sight of Molly, he looked as ill-tempered and out of humour
as a man well could do. She was connected in his mind with defeat
and mortification; and besides, the sight of her called up what he
desired now above all things to forget; namely, the deep conviction
received through Molly's simple earnestness, of Cynthia's dislike to
him, If Miss Phoebe had seen the scowl upon his handsome face, she
might have undeceived her sister in her suppositions about him and
Molly. But Miss Phoebe, who did not consider it quite maidenly to go
and stand close to Mr. Preston, and survey the shelves of books in
such close proximity to a gentleman, found herself an errand at the
other end of the shop, and occupied herself in buying writing-paper.
Molly fingered her valuable letter, as it lay in her pocket; did she
dare to cross over to Mr. Preston, and give it to him, or not? While
she was still undecided, shrinking always just at the moment when
she thought she had got her courage up for action, Miss Phoebe,
having finished her purchase, turned round, and after looking a
little pathetically at Mr. Preston's back, said to Molly in a
whisper,--'I think we'll go to Johnson's now, and come back for the
books in a little while.' So across the street to Johnson's they
went; but no sooner had they entered the draper's shop, than Molly's
conscience smote her for her cowardice, and loss of a good
opportunity. 'I'll be back directly,' said she, as soon as Miss
Phoebe was engaged with her purchases; and Molly ran across to
Grinstead's, without looking either to the right or the left; she
had been watching the door, and she knew that no Mr. Preston had
issued forth. She ran in; he was at the counter now, talking to
Grinstead himself, Molly put the letter into his hand, to his
surprise, and almost against his will, and turned round to go back
to Miss Phoebe. At the door of the shop stood Mrs. Goodenough,
arrested in the act of entering, staring, with her round eyes, made
still rounder and more owl-like by spectacles, to see Molly Gibson
giving Mr. Preston a letter, which he, conscious of being watched,
and favouring underhand practices habitually, put quickly into his
pocket, unopened. Perhaps, if he had had time for reflection he
would not have scrupled to put Molly to open shame, by rejecting
what she so eagerly forced upon him.

There was another long evening to be got through with Mrs. Gibson;
but on this occasion there was the pleasant occupation of dinner,
which took up at least an hour; for it was one of Mrs. Gibson's
fancies--one which Molly chafed against--to have every ceremonial
gone through in the same stately manner for two as for twenty. So,
although Molly knew full well, and her stepmother knew full well,
and Maria knew full well, that neither Mrs. Gibson nor Molly touched
dessert, it was set on the table with as much form as if Cynthia had
been at home, who delighted in almonds and raisins; or Mr. Gibson
been there, who never could resist dates, although he always
protested against 'persons in their station of life having a formal
dessert set out before them every day.'

And Mrs. Gibson herself apologized as it were to Molly to-day, in the
same words she had often used to Mr. Gibson,--'It's no extravagance,
for we need not eat it--I never do. But it looks well, and makes
Maria understand what is required in the daily life of every family
of position.'

All through the evening Molly's thoughts wandered far and wide,
though she managed to keep up a show of attention to what Mrs. Gibson
was saying. She was thinking of Osborne, and his abrupt,
half-finished confidence, his ill-looks; she was wondering when
Roger would come home, and longing for his return, as much (she said
to herself) for Osborne's sake as for her own. And then she checked
herself. What had she to do with Roger? Why should she long for his
return? It was Cynthia who was doing this; only somehow he was such
a true friend to Molly, that she could not help thinking of him as a
staff and a stay in the troublous times which appeared to lie not
far ahead this evening. Then Mr. Preston and her little adventure
with him came uppermost. How angry he looked! How could Cynthia have
liked him even enough to get into this abominable scrape, which was,
however, all over now! And so she ran on in her fancies and
imaginations, little dreaming that that very night much talk was
going on not half-a-mile from where she sate sewing, that would
prove that the 'scrape' (as she called it, in her girlish
phraseology) was not all over.

Scandal sleeps in the summer, comparatively speaking. Its nature is
the reverse of that of the dormouse. Warm ambient air, loiterings
abroad, gardenings, flowers to talk about, and preserves to make,
soothed the wicked imp to slumber in the parish of Hollingford in
summer-time. But when evenings grew short, and people gathered round
the fires, and put their feet in a circle--not on the fenders, that
was not allowed--then was the time for confidential conversation! Or
in the pauses allowed for the tea-trays to circulate among the
card-tables--when those who were peaceably inclined tried to stop
the warm discussions about 'the odd trick,' and the rather wearisome
feminine way of 'shouldering the crutch, and showing how fields were
won'--small crumbs and scraps of daily news came up to the surface,
such as 'Martindale has raised the price of his best joints a
halfpenny in the pound;' or 'it's a shame of Sir Harry to order in
another book on farriery into the Book Society; Phoebe and I tried
to read it, but really there is no general interest in it;' or, 'I
wonder what Mr. Ashton will do, now Nancy is going to be married!
Why, she has been with him these seventeen years! It's a very
foolish thing for a woman of her age to be thinking of matrimony;
and so I told her, when I met her in the market-place this morning!'

So said Miss Browning on the night in question; her hand of cards
lying by her on the green baize-covered table, while she munched the
rich pound-cake of a certain Mrs. Dawes, lately come to inhabit
Hollingford.

'Matrimony's not so bad as you think for, Miss Browning,' said Mrs
Goodenough, standing up for the holy estate into which she had twice
entered. 'If I had ha' seen Nancy, I should ha' given her my mind
very different. It's a great thing to be able to settle what you'll
have for dinner, without never a one interfering with you.'

'If that's all!' said Miss Browning, drawing herself up, 'I can do
that; and, perhaps, better than a woman who has a husband to
please.'

'No one can say as I didn't please my husbands--both on 'em, though
Jeremy was tickler' in his tastes than poor Harry Beaver. But as I
used to say to 'em, "Leave the victual to me; it's better for you
than knowing what's to come beforehand. The stomach likes to be
taken by surprise." And neither of 'em ever repented 'em of their
confidence. You may take my word for it, beans and bacon will taste
better (and Mr. Ashton's Nancy in her own house) than all the
sweetbreads and spring chickens she's been a-doing for him this
seventeen years. But if I chose I could tell you of something as
would interest you all a deal more than old Nancy's marriage to a
widower with nine children--only as the young folks themselves is
meeting in private, clandestine-like, it's perhaps not for me to
tell their secrets.'

'I'm sure I don't want to hear of clandestine meetings between young
men and young women,' said Miss Browning, throwing up her head.
'It's disgrace enough to the people themselves, I consider, if they
enter on a love affair without the proper sanction of parents. I
know 'public opinion has changed on the subject; but when poor
Gratia was married to Mr. Byerley, he wrote to my father without ever
having so much as paid her a compliment, or said more than the most
trivial and commonplace things to her; and my father and mother sent
for her into my father's study, and she said she never was so much
frightened in her life,--and they said it was a very good offer, and
Mr. Byerley was a very worthy man, and they hoped she would behave
properly to him when he came to supper that night. And after that he
was allowed to come twice a week till they were married. My mother
and I sate at our work in the bow-window of the Rectory
drawing-room, and Gratia and Mr. Byerley at the other end; and my
mother always called my attention to some flower or plant in the
garden when it struck nine, for that was his time for going. Without
offence to the present company, I am rather inclined to look upon
matrimony as a weakness to which some very worthy people are prone;
but if they must be married, let them make the best of it, and go
through the affair with dignity and propriety; or if there are
misdoings and clandestine meetings, and such things, at any rate,
never let me hear about them! I think it's you to play, Mrs. Dawes.
You'll excuse my frankness on the subject of matrimony! Mrs
Goodenough there can tell you I'm a very out-spoken person.'

'It's not the out-speaking, it's what you say that goes against me,
Miss Browning,' said Mrs. Goodenough, affronted, yet ready to play
her card as soon as needed, And as for Mrs. Dawes, she was too
anxious to get into the genteelest of all (Hollingford) society to
object to whatever Miss Browning (who, in right of being a deceased
rector's daughter, rather represented the selectest circle of the
little town) advocated, celibacy, marriage, bigamy, or polygamy.

So the remainder of the evening passed over without any farther
reference to the secret Mrs. Goodenough was burning to disclose,
unless a remark made ~apropos de rien~ by Miss Browning, during
the silence of a deal, could be supposed to have connexion with the
previous conversation. She said suddenly and abruptly,--

'I don't know what I have done that any man should make me his
slave.' If she was referring to any prospect of matrimonial danger
she saw opening before her fancy, she might have been comforted. But
it was a remark of which no one took any notice, all being far too
much engaged in the rubber. Only when Miss Browning took her early
leave (for Miss Phoebe had a cold, and was an invalid at home), Mrs
Goodenough burst out with,--

'Well! now I may speak out my mind, and say as how if there was a
slave between us two, when Goodenough was alive, it wasn't me; and I
don't think as it was pretty in Miss Browning to give herself such
airs on her virginity when there was four widows in the
room,--who've had six honest men among 'em for husbands. No offence,
Miss Airy!' addressing an unfortunate little spinster, who found
herself the sole representative of celibacy now that Miss Browning
was gone. 'I could tell her of a girl as she's very fond on, who's
on the high road to matrimony; and in as cunning a way as ever I
heerd on. going out at dusk to meet her sweetheart, just as if she
was my Sally, or your Jenny. And her name is Molly too,--which, as I
have often thought, shows a low taste in them as first called her
so;' she might as well be a scullery-maid at oncest. Not that she's
picked up anybody common; she's looked about her for a handsome
fellow, and a smart young man enough!'

Every one around the table looked curious and intent on the
disclosures being made, except the hostess, Mrs. Dawes, who smiled
intelligence with her eyes, and knowingly pursed up her mouth until
Mrs. Goodenough had finished her tale. Then she said demurely,--

'I suppose you mean Mr. Preston and Miss Gibson?'

'Why, who told you?' said Mrs. Goodenough, turning round upon her in
surprise. 'You can't say as I did. There's many a Molly in
Hollingford, besides her,--though none, perhaps, in such a genteel
station in life. I never named her, I'm sure.'

'No! But I know. I could tell my tale too,' continued Mrs. Dawes.

'No! could you, really?' said Mrs. Goodenough, very curious and a
little jealous.

'Yes. My uncle Sheepshanks came upon them in the Park Avenue,--he
startled 'em a good deal, he said; and when he taxed Mr. Preston with
being with his sweetheart, he didn't deny it.'

'Well! Now so much has come out, I'll tell you what I know. Only,
ladies, I wouldn't wish to do the girl an unkind turn,--so you must
keep what I've got to tell you a secret.' Of course they promised;
that was easy.

'My Hannah, as married Tom Oakes, and lives in Pearson's Lane, was
a-gathering of damsons only about a week ago, and Molly Gibson was
a-walking fast down the lane,--quite in a hurry like to meet some
one,--and Hannah's little Anna-Maria fell down, and Molly (who's a
kind-hearted lass enough) picked her up; so if Hannah had had her
doubts before, she had none then.'

'But there was no one with her, was there?' asked one of the ladies
anxiously, as Mrs. Goodenough stopped to finish her piece of cake,
just at this crisis.

'No: I said she looked as if she was going to meet some one,--and
by-and-by comes Mr. Preston running out of the wood just beyond
Hannah's, and says he, "A cup of water, please, good woman, for a
lady has fainted, or is 'sterical or something." Now though he
didn't know Hannah, Hannah knew him. "More folks know Tom Fool, than
Tom Fool knows," asking Mr. Preston's pardon; for he's no fool
whatever he be. And I could tell you more,--and what I've seed with
my own eyes. I seed her give him a letter in Grinstead's shop, only
yesterday, and he looked as black as thunder at her, for he seed me
if she didn't.'

'It's a very suitable kind of thing,' said Miss Airy; 'why do they
make such a mystery of it?'

'Some folks like it,' said Mrs. Dawes; 'it adds zest to it all, to do
their courting underhand.'

'Ay, it's like salt to their victual,' put in Mrs. Goodenough. But I
didn't think Molly Gibson was one of that sort, I didn't.'

'The Gibsons hold themselves very high?' cried Mrs. Dawes, more as an
inquiry than an assertion. 'Mrs. Gibson has called upon me.'

'Ay, you're like to be a patient of the doctor's,' put in Mrs
Goodenough.

'She seemed to me very affable, though she is so intimate with the
Countess and the family at the Towers; and is quite the lady
herself; dines late, I've heard, and everything in style.'

'Style! very different style to what Bob Gibson, her husband, was
used to when first he came here,--glad of a mutton-chop in his
surgery, for I doubt if he'd a fire anywhere else; we called him Bob
Gibson then, but none on us dare Bob him now; I'd as soon think o'
calling him sweep!'

'I think it looks very bad for Miss Gibson!' said one lady, rather
anxious to bring back the conversation to the more interesting
present time. But as soon as Mrs. Goodenough heard this natural
comment on the disclosures she had made, she fired round on the
speaker.

'Not at all bad, and I'll trouble you not to use such a word as that
about Molly Gibson, as I've known all her life. It's odd, if you
will. I was odd myself as a girl; I never could abide a plate of
gathered gooseberries, but I must needs go and skulk behind a bush
and gather 'em for myself. It's some folk's taste, though it mayn't
be Miss Browning's, who'd have all the courting done under the nose
of the family. All as ever I said was that I was surprised at it in
Molly Gibson; and that I'd ha' thought it was liker that pretty minx
of a Cynthia as they call her; indeed at one time I was ready to
swear as it was her Mr. Preston was after. And now, ladies, I'll wish
you a very good night. I cannot abide waste; and I'll venture for it
Sally's letting the candle in the lantern run all to grease, instead
of putting it out, as I've told her to do, if ever she's got to wait
for me.'

So with formal dipping curtseys the ladies separated, but not
without thanking Mrs. Dawes for the pleasant evening they had had; a
piece of old-fashioned courtesy always gone through in those days.


CHAPTER XLVII


SCANDAL AND ITS VICTIMS


When Mr. Gibson returned to Hollingford, he found an accumulation of
business waiting for him, and he was much inclined to complain of
the consequences of the two days' comparative holiday, which had
resulted in over-work for the week to come. He had hardly time to
speak to his family, he had so immediately to rush off to pressing
cases of illness. But Molly managed to arrest him in the hall,
standing there with his great coat held out ready for him to put on,
but whispering as she did so,--

'Papa! Mr. Osborne Hamley was here to see you yesterday. He looks
very ill, and he's evidently frightened about himself.'

Mr. Gibson faced about, and looked at her for a moment; but all he
said was,--

'I'll go and see him; don't tell your mother where I'm gone: you've
not mentioned this to her, I hope?'

'No,' said Molly, for she had only told Mrs. Gibson of Osborne's
call, not of the occasion for it.

'Don't say anything about it: there's no need. Now I think of it, I
can't possibly go to-day,--but I will go.'

Something in her father's manner disheartened Molly, who had
persuaded herself that Osborne's evident illness was partly
'nervous,' by which she meant imaginary. She had dwelt upon his
looks of enjoyment at Miss Phoebe's perplexity, and thought that no
one really believing himself to be in danger could have given the
merry glances which he had done; but after seeing the seriousness of
her father's face, she recurred to the shock she had experienced on
first seeing Osborne's changed appearance. All this time Mrs. Gibson
was busy reading a letter from Cynthia which Mr. Gibson had brought
from London; for every opportunity of private conveyance was seized
upon when postage was so high; and Cynthia had forgotten so many
things in her hurried packing, that she now sent a list of the
clothes which she required. Molly almost wondered that it had not
come to her; but she did not understand the sort of reserve that was
springing up in Cynthia's mind towards her. Cynthia herself
struggled with the feeling, and tried to fight against it by calling
herself 'ungrateful,' but the truth was she believed that she no
longer held her former high place in Molly's estimation and she
could not help turning away from one who knew things to her
discredit. She was fully aware of Molly's prompt decision and
willing action, where action was especially disagreeable, on her
behalf; she knew that Molly would never bring up the past errors and
difficulties; but still the consciousness that the good,
straightforward girl had learnt that Cynthia had been guilty of so
much underhand work cooled her regard, and restrained her
willingness of intercourse. Reproach herself with ingratitude as she
would, she could not help feeling glad to be away from Molly; it was
awkward to speak to her as if nothing had happened; it was awkward
to write to her about forgotten ribbons and laces, when their last
conversation had been on such different subjects, and had called out
such vehement expressions of feeling. So Mrs. Gibson held the list in
her hand, and read out the small fragments of news that were
intermixed with notices of Cynthia's requirements.

'Helen cannot be so very ill,' said Molly at length, 'or Cynthia
would not want her pink muslin and daisy wreath.'

'I don't see that that follows, I'm sure,' replied Mrs. Gibson rather
sharply. 'Helen would never be so selfish as to tie Cynthia to her
side, however ill she was. Indeed, I should not have felt that it
was my duty to let Cynthia go to London at all, if I had thought she
was to be perpetually exposed to the depressing atmosphere of a
sick-room. Besides, it must be so good for Helen to have Cynthia
coming in with bright pleasant accounts of the parties she has been
to--even if Cynthia disliked gaiety I should desire her to sacrifice
herself and go out as much as she could, for Helen's sake. My idea
of nursing is that one should not be always thinking of one's own
feelings and wishes, but doing those things which will most serve to
beguile the weary hours of an invalid. But then so few people have
had to consider the subject so deeply as I have done!' Mrs. Gibson
here thought fit to sigh before going on with Cynthia's letter. As
far as Molly could make any sense out of this rather incoherent
epistle, very incoherently read aloud to her, Cynthia was really
pleased and glad to be of use and comfort to Helen, but at the same
time very ready to be easily persuaded into the perpetual small
gaieties which abounded in her uncle's house in London, even at this
dead season of the year. Mrs. Gibson came upon Mr. Henderson's name
once, and then went on with a running um-um-um to herself, which
sounded very mysterious, but which might as well have been omitted,
as all that Cynthia really said about him was, 'Mr. Henderson's
mother has advised my aunt to consult a certain Dr Donaldson, who is
said to be very clever in such cases as Helen's, but my uncle is not
sufficiently sure of the professional etiquette, &c.' Then there
came a very affectionate, carefully worded message to Molly,--
implying a good deal more than was said of loving gratitude for the
trouble she had taken on Cynthia's behalf. And that was all; and
Molly went away a little depressed; she knew not why.

The operation on Lady Cumnor had been successfully performed, and in
a few days they hoped to bring her down to the Towers to recruit her
strength in the fresh country air; the case was one which interested
Mr. Gibson extremely, and in which his opinion had been proved to be
right, in opposition to that of one or two great names in London.
The consequence was that he was frequently consulted and referred to
during the progress of her recovery; and, as he had much to do in
the immediate circle of his Hollingford practice, as well as to
write thoughtful letters to his medical brethren in London, he found
it difficult to spare the three or four hours necessary to go over
to Hamley to see Osborne. He wrote to him, however, begging him to
reply immediately and detail his symptoms; and from the answer he
received he did not imagine that the case was immediately pressing.
Osborne, too, deprecated his coming over to Hamley for the express
purpose of seeing him. So the visit was deferred to that more
convenient season which is so often too late.

All these days the buzzing gossip about Molly's meetings with Mr
Preston, her clandestine correspondence, the tete-a-tete interviews
in lonely places, had been gathering strength, and assuming the
positive form of scandal. The simple innocent girl, who walked
through the quiet streets without a thought of being the object of
mysterious implications, became for a time the unconscious black
sheep of the town. Servants heard part of what was said in their
mistresses' drawing-rooms, and exaggerated the sayings amongst
themselves with the coarse strengthening of expression common
amongst uneducated people. Mr. Preston himself became aware that
her name was being coupled with his, though hardly to the extent
to which the love of excitement and gossip had carried people's
speeches; he chuckled over the mistake, but took no pains
to correct it. 'It serves her right,' said he to himself, 'for
meddling with other folk's business,' and he felt himself avenged
for the discomfiture which her menace of appealing to Lady Harriet
had caused him, and the mortification he had experienced in learning
from her plain-speaking lips, how he had been talked over by Cynthia
and herself, with personal dislike on the one side, and evident
contempt on the other. Besides, if any denial of Mr. Preston's
stirred up an examination as to the real truth, more might come out
of his baffled endeavours to compel Cynthia to keep to her
engagement to him than he cared to have known. He was angry with
himself for still loving Cynthia; loving her in his own fashion, be
it understood. He told himself that many a woman of more position
and wealth would be glad enough to have him; some of them pretty
women too. And he asked himself why he was such a confounded fool as
to go on hankering after a penniless girl, who was as fickle as the
wind? The answer was silly enough, logically; but forcible in fact.
Cynthia was Cynthia, and not Venus herself could have been her
substitute. In this one thing Mr. Preston was more really true than
many worthy men; who, seeking to be married, turn with careless
facility from the unattainable to the attainable, and keep their
feelings and fancy tolerably loose till they find a woman who
consents to be their wife. But no one would ever be to Mr. Preston
what Cynthia had been, and was; and yet he could have stabbed her in
certain of his moods. So, Molly, who had come between him and the
object of his desire, was not likely to find favour in his sight, or
to obtain friendly actions from him.

There came a time--not very distant from the evening at Mrs
Dawes'--when Molly felt that people looked askance at her. Mrs
Goodenough openly pulled her grand-daughter away, when the young
girl stopped to speak to Molly in the street, and an engagement
which the two had made for a long walk together was cut very short
by a very trumpery excuse. Mrs. Goodenough explained her conduct in
the following manner to some of her friends,--

'You see, I don't think the worse of a girl for meeting her
sweetheart here and there and everywhere, till she gets talked
about; but then when she does--and Molly Gibson's name is in
everybody's mouth--I think it's only fair to Bessy, who has trusted
me with Annabella, not to let her daughter be seen with a lass who
has managed her matters so badly, as to set folk talking about her.
My maxim is this,--and it's a very good working one, you may depend
on't--women should mind what they're about, and never be talked of;
and if a woman's talked of, the less her friends have to do with her
till the talk has died away, the better. So Annabella is not to have
anything to do with Molly Gibson, this visit at any rate.'

For a good while the Miss Brownings were kept in ignorance of the
evil tongues that whispered hard words about Molly. Miss Browning
was known to 'have a temper,' and by instinct every one who came in
contact with her shrank from irritating that temper by uttering the
slightest syllable against the smallest of those creatures over whom
she spread the aegis of her love. She would and did reproach
them herself; she used to boast that she never spared them: but no
one else might touch them with the slightest slur of a passing word.
But Miss Phoebe inspired no such terror; the great reason why she
did not hear of the gossip against Molly as early as any one, was
that, although she was not the rose, she lived near the rose.
Besides, she was of so tender a nature that even thick-skinned Mrs
Goodenough was unwilling to say what would give Miss Phoebe pain;
and it was the new-comer Mrs. Dawes, who in all ignorance alluded to
the town's talk, as to something of which Miss Phoebe must be aware.
Then Miss Phoebe poured down her questions, although she protested,
even with tears, her total disbelief in all the answers she
received. It was a small act of heroism on her part to keep all that
she there learnt a secret from her sister Sally, as she did for four
or five days; till Miss Browning attacked her one evening with the
following speech,--

'Phoebe! either you've some reason for puffing yourself out with
sighs, or you've not. If you have a reason, it's your duty to tell
it me directly; and if you've no reason, you must break yourself of
a bad habit that is growing upon you.'

'Oh, sister! do you think it is really my duty to tell you? it would
be such a comfort; but then I thought I ought not; it will distress
you so.'

'Nonsense. I am so well prepared for misfortune by the frequent
contemplation of its possibility that I believe I can receive any
ill news with apparent equanimity and real resignation. Besides,
when you said yesterday at breakfast-time that you meant to give up
the day to making your drawers tidy, I was aware that some
misfortune was impending, though of course I could not judge of its
magnitude. Is the Highchester Bank broken?'

'Oh no, sister!' said Miss Phoebe, moving to a seat close to her
sister's on the sofa. 'Have you really been thinking that! I wish I
had told you what I heard at the very first, if you've been fancying
that!'

'Take warning, Phoebe, and learn to have no concealments from me. I
did think we must be ruined, from your ways of going on; eating no
meat at dinner, and sighing continually. And now what is it?'

'I hardly know how to tell you, Sally. I really don't.'

Miss Phoebe began to cry; Miss Browning took hold of her arm, and
gave her a little sharp shake.

'Cry as much as you like when you've told me; but don't cry now,
child, when you're keeping me on the tenterhooks.'

'Molly Gibson has lost her character, sister. That's it.'

'Molly Gibson has done no such thing!' said Miss Browning
indignantly. 'How dare you repeat such stories about poor Mary's
child! Never let me hear you say such things again!'

'I can't help it. Mrs. Dawes told me; and she says it's all over the
town. I told her I did not believe a word of it. And I kept it from
you; and I think I should have been really ill if I'd kept it to
myself any longer. Oh, sister! what are you going to do?'

For Miss Browning had risen without speaking a word, and was leaving
the room in a stately and determined fashion.

'I am going to put on my bonnet and things, and then I shall call
upon Mrs. Dawes, and confront her with her lies.'

'Oh, don't call them "lies," sister; it's such a strong, ugly word.
Please call them "tallydiddles," for I don't believe she meant any
harm. Besides--besides--if they should turn out to be truth!
Really, sister, that's the weight on my mind; so many things sounded
as if they might be true.'

'What things?' said Miss Browning, still standing with judicial
erectness of position in the middle of the floor.

'Why--one story was that Molly had given him a letter.'

'Who's him? How am I to understand a story told in that silly way?'
Miss Browning sate down on the nearest chair, and made up her mind
to be patient if she could.

'Him is Mr. Preston. And that must be true; because I missed her from
my side when I wanted to ask her if she thought blue would look
green by candlelight, as the young man said it would, and she had
run across the street, and Mrs. Goodenough was just going into the
shop, just as she said she was.'

Miss Browning's distress was overcoming her anger; so she only said,
'Phoebe, I think you'll drive me mad. Do tell me what you heard from
Mrs. Dawes in a sensible and coherent manner, for once in your life.'

'I'm sure I'm trying with all my might to tell you everything just
as it happened.'

'What did you hear from Mrs. Dawes?'

'Why, that Molly and Mr. Preston were keeping company just as if she
was a maid-servant and he was a gardener; meeting at all sorts of
improper times and places, and fainting away in his arms, and out at
night together, and writing to each other, and slipping their
letters into each other's hands; and that was what I was talking
about, sister, for I next door to saw that done once. I saw her with
my own eyes run across the street to Grinstead's, where he was, for
we had just left him there; with a letter in her hand, too, which
was not there when she came back all fluttered and blushing. But I
never thought anything of it at the time; but now all the town is
talking about it, and crying shame, and saying they ought to be
married.' Miss Phoebe sank, into sobbing again; but was suddenly
roused by a good box on her car. Miss Browning was standing over her
almost trembling with passion.

'Phoebe, if ever I hear you say such things again, I'll turn you out
of the house that minute.'

'I only said what Mrs. Dawes said, and you asked me what it was,'
replied Miss Phoebe, humbly and meekly. 'Sally, you should not have
done that.'

'Never mind whether I should or I shouldn't. That's not the matter
in hand. What I've got to decide is how to put a stop to all these
lies.'

'But, Sally, they are not all lies--if you will call them so; I'm
afraid some things are true; though I stuck to their being false
when Mrs. Dawes told me of them.'

'If I go to Mrs. Dawes, and she repeats them to me, I shall slap her
face or box her ears I'm afraid, for I couldn't stand tales being
told of poor Mary's daughter, as if they were just a, stirring piece
of news like James Horrocks' pig with two heads,' said Miss
Browning, meditating aloud. 'That would do harm instead of good.
Phoebe, I'm really sorry I boxed your ears, only I should do it
again if you said the same things.' Phoebe sate down by her sister,
and took hold of one of her withered hands, and began caressing it,
which was her way of accepting her sister's expression of regret.
'If I speak to Molly, the child will deny it, if she's half as
good-for-nothing as they say; and if she's not, she'll only worry
herself to death. No, that won't do. Mrs. Goodenough--but she's a
donkey; and if I convinced her, she could never convince any one
else. No; Mrs. Dawes, who told you, shall tell me, and I'll tie my
hands together inside my muff, and bind myself over to keep the
peace. And when I've heard what is to be heard, I'll put the matter
into Mr. Gibson's hands. That's what I'll do. So it's no use your
saying anything against it, Phoebe, for I shan't attend to you.'

Miss Browning went to Mrs. Dawes', and began civilly enough to make
inquiries about the reports current in Hollingford about Molly and
Mr. Preston; and Mrs. Dawes fell into the snare, and told all the real
and fictitious circumstances of the story in circulation, quite
unaware of the storm that was gathering and ready to fall upon her
as soon as she stopped speaking. But she had not the long habit of
reverence for Miss Browning which would have kept so many
Hollingford ladies from justifying themselves if she found fault.
Mrs. Dawes stood up for herself and her own veracity, bringing out
fresh scandal, which she said she did not believe, but that many
did; and adducing so much evidence as to the truth of what she had
said and did believe, that Miss Browning was almost quelled, and
sate silent and miserable at the end of Mrs. Dawes' justification of
herself.

'Well!' she said at length, rising up from her chair as she spoke,
'I'm very sorry I've lived till this day; it's a blow to me just as
if I had heard of such goings-on in my own flesh and blood. I
suppose I ought to apologize to you, Mrs. Dawes, for what I said; but
I've no heart to do it to-day. I ought not to have spoken as I did;
but that's nothing to this affair, you see.'

'I hope you do me the justice to perceive that I only repeated what
I had heard on good authority, Miss Browning,' said Mrs. Dawes in
reply.

'My dear, don't repeat evil on any authority unless you can do some
good by speaking about it,' said Miss Browning, laying her hand on
Mrs. Dawes' shoulder. 'I'm not a good woman, but I know what is good,
and that advice is. And now I think I can tell you that I beg your
pardon for flying out upon you so; but God knows what pain you were
putting me to. You'll forgive me, won't you, my dear?' Mrs. Dawes
felt the hand trembling on her shoulder, and saw the real distress
of Miss Browning's mind, so it was not difficult to her to grant the
requested forgiveness. Then Miss Browning went home, and said but
few words to Phoebe, who indeed saw well enough that her sister had
heard the reports confirmed, and needed no further explanation of
the cause of scarcely-tasted dinner, and short replies, and saddened
looks. Presently Miss Browning sate down and wrote a short note.
Then she rang the bell, and told the little maiden who answered it
to take it to Mr. Gibson, and if he was out to see that it was given
to him as soon as ever he came home. And then she went and put on
her Sunday cap; and Miss Phoebe knew that her sister had written to
ask Mr. Gibson to come and be told of the rumours affecting his
daughter. Miss Browning was sadly disturbed at the information she
had received, and the task that lay before her; she was miserably
uncomfortable to herself and irritable to Miss Phoebe, and the
netting-cotton she was using kept continually snapping and breaking
from the jerks of her nervous hands. When the knock at the door was
heard,--the well-known doctor's knock,--Miss Browning took off her
spectacles, and dropped them on the carpet, breaking them as she did
so; and then she bade Miss Phoebe leave the room, as if her presence
had cast the evil-eye, and caused the misfortune. She wanted to look
natural, and was distressed at forgetting whether she usually
received him sitting or standing.

'Well!' said he, coming in cheerfully, and rubbing his cold hands as
he went straight to the fire, 'and what is the matter with us? It's
Phoebe, I suppose. I hope none of those old spasms? But, after all,
a dose or two will set that to rights.'

'Oh! Mr. Gibson, I wish it was Phoebe, or me either!' said Miss
Browning, trembling more and more.

He sate down by her patiently, when he saw her agitation, and took
her hand in a kind, friendly manner.

'Don't hurry yourself,--take your time. I daresay it's not so bad as
you fancy; but we'll see about it. There's a great deal of help in
the world, much as we abuse it.'

'Mr. Gibson,' said she, 'it's your Molly I'm so grieved about. It's
out now, and God help us both, and the poor child too, for I'm sure
she's been led astray, and not gone wrong by her own free will!'

'Molly!' said he, fighting against her words. 'What's my little
Molly been doing or saying?'

'Oh! Mr. Gibson, I don't know how to tell you. I never would have
named it, if I had not been convinced, sorely, sorely against my
will.'

'At any rate, you can let me hear what you have heard,' said he,
putting his elbow on the table, and screening his eyes with his
hand. 'Not that I am a bit afraid of anything you can hear about my
girl,' continued he. 'Only in this little nest of gossip it's as
well to know what people are talking about.'

'They say--oh! how shall I tell you?'

'Go on, can't you?' said he, removing his hand from his blazing
eyes. 'I'm not going to believe it, so don't be afraid!'

'But I fear you must believe it. I would not if I could help it.
She's been carrying on a clandestine correspondence with Mr
Preston!--'

'Mr. Preston!' exclaimed he.

'And meeting him at all sorts of unseemly places and hours out of
doors,--in the dark,--fainting away in his--his arms, if I must
speak out. All the town is talking of it.' Mr. Gibson's hand was over
his eyes again, and he made no sign; so Miss Browning went on,
adding touch to touch. 'Mr. Sheepshanks saw them together. They have
exchanged notes in Grinstead's shop; she ran after him there.'

'Be quiet, can't you?' said Mr. Gibson, taking his hand away, and
showing his grim set face. 'I have heard enough. Don't go on. I said
I shouldn't believe it, and I don't. I suppose I must thank you for
telling me; but I can't yet.'

'I don't want your thanks,' said Miss Browning, almost crying. 'I
thought you ought to know; for though you're married again, I can't
forget you were dear Mary's husband once upon a time; and Molly's
her child.'

'I'd rather not speak any more about it just at present,' said he,
not at all replying to Miss Browning's last speech. 'I may not
control myself as I ought. I only wish I could meet Preston, and
horsewhip him within an inch of his life. I wish I'd the doctoring
of these slanderous gossips. I'd make their tongues lie still for a
while. My little girl! What harm has she done them all, that they
should go and foul her fair name.'

'Indeed, Mr. Gibson, I'm afraid it's all true. I would not have sent
for you if I hadn't examined into it. Do ascertain the truth before
you do anything violent, such as horsewhipping or poisoning.'

With all the ~inconsequence~ of a man in a passion, Mr. Gibson
laughed out, 'What have I said about horsewhipping or poisoning? Do
you think I'd have Molly's name dragged about the streets in
connection with any act of violence on my part. Let the report die
away as it arose. Time will prove its falsehood.'

'But I don't think it will, and that's the pity of it,' said Miss
Browning. 'You must do something, but I don't know what.'

'I shall go home and ask Molly herself what's the meaning of it all;
that's all I shall do. It's too ridiculous--knowing Molly as I do,
it's perfectly ridiculous.' He got up and walked about the room with
hasty steps, laughing short unnatural laughs from time to time.
'Really what will they say next? "Satan finds some mischief still
for idle tongues to do."'

'Don't talk of Satan, please, in this house. No one knows what may
happen, if he's lightly spoken about,' pleaded Miss Browning.

He went on, without noticing her, talking to himself,--'I've a
great mind to leave the place;--and what food for scandal that piece
of folly would give rise to!' Then he was silent for a time; his
hands in his pockets, his eyes on the ground, as he continued his
quarter-deck march. Suddenly he stopped close to Miss Browning's
chair. 'I'm thoroughly ungrateful to you, for as true a mark of
friendship as you've ever shown to me. True or false, it was right I
should know the wretched scandal that was being circulated; and it
could not have been pleasant for you to tell it me. Thank you from
the bottom of my heart.'

'Indeed, Mr. Gibson, if it was false I would never have named it, but
let it die away.'

'It's not true though!' said he, doggedly, letting drop the hand he
had taken in his effusion of gratitude.

She shook her head. 'I shall always love Molly for her mother's
sake,' she said. And it was a great concession from the correct Miss
Browning. But her father did not understand it as such.

'You ought to love her for her own. She has done nothing to disgrace
herself. I shall go straight home, and probe into the truth.'

'As if the poor girl who has been led away into deceit already would
scruple much at going on in falsehood,' was Miss Browning's remark
on this last speech of Mr. Gibson's; but she had discretion enough
not to make it until he was well out of hearing.


CHAPTER XLVIII


AN INNOCENT CULPRIT


With his head bent down--as if he were facing some keen-blowing
wind--and yet there was not a breath of air stirring--Mr. Gibson went
swiftly to his own home. He rang at the door-bell; an unusual
proceeding on his part. Maria opened the door. 'Go and tell Miss
Molly she is wanted in the dining-room. Don't say who it is that
wants her.' There was something in Mr. Gibson's manner that made
Maria obey him to the letter, in spite of Molly's surprised
question,--

'Wants me? Who is it, Maria?'

Mr. Gibson went into the dining-room, and shut the door, for an
instant's solitude. He went up to the chimney-piece, took hold of
it, and laid his head on his hands, and tried to still the beating
of his heart.

The door opened. He knew that Molly stood there before he heard her
tone of astonishment.

'Papa!'

'Hush!' said he, turning round sharply. 'Shut the door. Come here.'

She came to him, wondering what was amiss. Her thoughts went to the
Hamleys immediately. 'Is it Osborne?' she asked, breathless. If Mr
Gibson had not been too much agitated to judge calmly, he might have
deduced comfort from these three words.

But instead of allowing himself to seek for comfort from collateral
evidence, he said,--'Molly, what is this I hear? That you have been
keeping up a clandestine intercourse with Mr. Preston--meeting him in
out-of-the-way places; exchanging letters with him in a stealthy
way.'

Though he had professed to disbelieve all this, and did disbelieve
it at the bottom of his soul, his voice was hard and stern, his face
was white and grim, and his eyes fixed Molly's with the terrible
keenness of their research. Molly trembled all over; but she did not
attempt to evade his penetration. If she was silent for a moment, it
was because she was rapidly reviewing her relation with regard to
Cynthia in this matter. It was but a moment's pause of silence; but
it seemed long minutes to one who was craving for a burst of
indignant denial. He had taken hold of her two arms just above her
wrists, as she had first advanced towards him; he was unconscious of
this action; but, as his impatience for her words grew upon him, he
grasped her more and more tightly in his vice-like hands, till she
made a little involuntary sound of pain. And then he let go; and she
looked at her soft bruised flesh, with tears gathering fast to her
eyes to think that he, her father, should have hurt her so. At the
instant it appeared to her stranger that he should inflict bodily
pain upon his child, than that he should have heard the truth--even
in an exaggerated form. With a childish gesture she held out her arm
to him; but if she expected pity, she received none.

'Pooh!' said he, as he just glanced at the mark, 'that is
nothing--nothing. Answer my question. Have you--have you met that
man in private?'

'Yes, papa, I have; but I don't think it was wrong.'

He sate down now. 'Wrong!' he echoed, bitterly. 'Not 'wrong? Well! I
must bear it somehow. Your mother is dead. That's one comfort. It is
true, then, is it? Why, I did not believe it--not I. I laughed in my
sleeve at their credulity; and I was the dupe all the time!'

'Papa, I cannot tell you all. It is not my secret, or you should
know it directly. Indeed, you will be sorry some time--I have never
deceived you yet, have I?' trying to take one of his hands; but he
kept them tightly in his pockets, his eyes fixed on the pattern of
the carpet before him. 'Papa!' said she, pleading again, 'have I
ever deceived you?'

'How can I tell? I hear of this from the town's talk. I don't know
what next may come out!'

'The town's talk,' said Molly in dismay. 'What business is it of
theirs?'

'Every one makes it their business to cast dirt on a girl's name who
has disregarded the commonest rules of modesty and propriety.'

'Papa, you are very hard. "Disregarded modesty." I will tell you
exactly what I have done. I met Mr. Preston once,--that evening when
you put me down to walk over Croston Heath,--and there was another
person with him. I met him a second time--and that time by
appointment--nobody but our two selves,--in the Towers' Park. That
is all. Papa, you must trust me. I cannot explain more. You must
trust me indeed.'

He could not help relenting at her words; there was such truth in
the tone in which they were spoken. But he neither spoke nor stirred
for a minute or two. Then he raised his eyes to hers for the first
time since she had acknowledged the external truth of what he
charged her with. Her face was very white, but it bore the impress
of the final sincerity of death, when the true expression prevails
without the poor disguises of time.

'The letters?' he said,--but almost as if he ere ashamed to question
that countenance any further.

'I gave him one letter,--of which I did not write a word,--which, in
fact, I believe to have been merely an envelope, without any writing
whatever inside. The giving that letter,--the two interviews I have
named,--make all the private intercourse I have had with Mr. Preston.
Oh! papa, what have they been saying that has grieved--shocked you
so much?'

'Never mind. As the world goes, what you say you have done, Molly,
is ground enough. You must tell me all. I must be able to refute
these rumours point by point.'

'How are they to be refuted; when you say that the truth which I
have acknowledged is ground enough for what people are saying?'

'You say you were not acting for yourself, but for another. If you
tell me who the other was,--if you tell me everything out fully, I
will do my utmost to screen her--for of course I guess it was
Cynthia--while I am exonerating you.'

'No, papa!' said Molly, after some little consideration; 'I have
told you all I can tell; all that concerns myself; and I have
promised not to say one word more.'

'Then your character will be impugned. It must be, unless the
fullest explanation of these secret meetings is given. I have a
great mind to force the whole truth out of Preston himself!'

'Papa! once again I beg you to trust me. If you ask Mr. Preston you
will very likely hear the whole truth; but that is just what I have
been trying so hard to conceal, for it will only make several people
very unhappy if it is known, and the whole affair is over and done
with now.'

'Not your share in it. Miss Browning sent for me this evening to
tell me how people were talking about you. She implied that it was a
complete loss of your good name. You do not know, Molly, how slight
a thing may blacken a girl's reputation for life. I had hard work to
stand all she said, even though I did not believe a word of it at
the time. And now you have told me that much of it is true.'

'But I think you are a brave man, papa. And you believe me, don't
you? We shall outlive these rumours, never fear.'

'You don't know the power of ill-natured tongues, child,' said he.

'Oh, now you've called me "child" again I don't care for anything.
Dear, dear papa, I'm sure it is best and wisest to take no notice of
these speeches. After all they may not mean them ill-naturedly. I am
sure Miss Browning would not. By-and-by they'll quite forget how
much they made out of so little,--and even if they don't, you would
not have me break my solemn word, would you?'

'Perhaps not. But I cannot easily forgive the person who, by
practising on your generosity, led you into this scrape. You are
very young, and look upon these things as merely temporary evils. I
have more experience.'

'Still, I don't see what I can do now, papa. Perhaps I've been
foolish; but what I did, I did of my ownself. It was not suggested
to me. And I'm sure it was not wrong in morals, whatever it might be
in judgment. As I said, it is all over now; what I did ended the
affair, I am thankful to say; and it was with that object I did it.
If people choose to talk about me, I must submit; and so must you,
dear papa.'

'Does your mother--does Mrs. Gibson--know anything about it?' asked
he with sudden anxiety.

'No; not a bit; not a word. Pray don't name it to her. That might
lead to more mischief than anything else. I have really told you
everything I am at liberty to tell.'

It was a great relief to Mr. Gibson to find that his sudden fear that
his wife might have been privy to it all was ill-founded; he had
been seized by a sudden dread that she, whom he had chosen to marry
in order to have a protectress and guide for his daughter, had been
cognizant of this ill-advised adventure with Mr. Preston; nay, more,
that she might even have instigated it to save her own child; for
that Cynthia was somehow or other at the bottom of it all he had no
doubt whatever. But now, at any rate, Mrs. Gibson had not been
playing a treacherous part; that was all the comfort he could
extract out of Molly's mysterious admission, that much mischief
might result from Mrs. Gibson's knowing anything about these meetings
with Mr. Preston.

'Then, what is to be done?' said he. 'These reports are abroad,--am
I to do nothing to contradict them? Am I to go about smiling and
content with all this talk about you, passing from one idle gossip
to another?'

'I'm afraid so. I'm very sorry, for I never meant you to have known
anything about it, and I can see now how it must distress you. But
surely when nothing more happens, and nothing comes of what has
happened, the wonder and the gossip must die away? I know you
believe every word I have said, and that you trust me, papa. Please,
for my sake, be patient with all this gossip and cackle.'

'It will try me hard, Molly,' said he.

'For my sake, papa!'

'I don't see what else I can do,' replied he moodily, 'unless I get
hold of Preston.'

'That would be the worst of all. That would make a talk. And, after
all, perhaps he was not so very much to blame. Yes! he was. But he
behaved well to me as far as that goes,' said she, suddenly
recollecting his speech when Mr. Sheepshanks came up in the Towers'
Park,--'Don't stir, you have done nothing to be ashamed of.'

'That is true. A quarrel between men which drags a woman's name into
notice is to be avoided at any cost. But sooner or later I must have
it out with Preston. He shall find it not so pleasant to have placed
my daughter in equivocal circumstances.'

'He did not place me. He did not know I was coming, did not expect
to meet me either time; and would far rather not have taken the
letter I gave him if he could have helped himself.'

'It is all a mystery. I hate to have you mixed up in mysteries.'

'I hate to be mixed up. But what can I do? I know of another mystery
which I am pledged not to speak about. I cannot help myself.'

'Well, all I can say is, never be the heroine of a mystery. That you
can avoid, if you can't help being an accessory. Then, I suppose, I
must yield to your wishes and let this scandal wear itself out
without any notice from me?'

'What else can you do under the circumstances?'

'Ay; what else indeed? How shall you bear it?'

For an instant the quick hot tears sprang into her eyes; to have
everybody--all her world thinking evil of her, did seem hard to the
girl who had never thought or said an unkind thing of them. But she
smiled as she made answer,--

'It's like tooth-drawing, it will be over some time. It would be
much worse if I had really been doing wrong.'

'Cynthia shall beware--' he began; but Molly put her hand before his
mouth.

'Papa, Cynthia must not be accused, or suspected; you will drive her
out of your house if you do, she is so proud, and so unprotected,
except by you. And Roger,--for Roger's sake, you will never do or
say anything to send Cynthia away, when he has trusted us all to
take care of her, and love her in his absence. Oh! I think if she
were really wicked, and I did not love her at all, I should feel
bound to watch over her, he loves her so dearly. And she is really
good at heart, and I do love her dearly. You must not vex or hurt
Cynthia, papa,--remember she is dependent upon you!'

'I think the world would get on tolerably well, if there were no
women in it. They plague the life out of one. You've made me forget,
amongst you--poor old Job Haughton that I ought to have gone to see
an hour ago.'

Molly put up her mouth to be kissed. 'You're not angry with me now,
papa, are you?'

'Get out of my way' (kissing her all the same). 'If I'm not angry
with you, I ought to be; for you've caused a great deal of worry,
which won't be over yet awhile, I can tell you.'

For all Molly's bravery at the time of this conversation, it was she
that suffered more than her father. He kept out of the way of
hearing gossip; but she was perpetually thrown into the small
society of the place. Mrs. Gibson herself had caught cold, and
moreover was not tempted by the quiet old-fashioned visiting which
was going on just about this time, provoked by the visit of two of
Mrs. Dawes' pretty unrefined nieces, who laughed, and chattered, and
ate, and would fain have flirted with Mr. Ashton, the vicar, could he
have been brought by any possibility to understand his share in the
business. Mr. Preston did not accept the invitations to Hollingford
tea-drinkings with the same eager gratitude as he had done a year
before: or else the shadow which hung over Molly would have extended
to him, her co-partner in the clandestine meetings which gave such
umbrage to the feminine virtue of the town. Molly herself was
invited, because it would not do to pass any apparent slight on
either Mr. or Mrs. Gibson; but there was a tacit, and under-hand
protest against her being received on the old terms. Every one was
civil to her, but no one was cordial; there was a very perceptible
film of difference in their behaviour to her from what it was
formerly; nothing that had outlines and could be defined. But Molly,
for all her clear conscience and her brave heart, felt acutely that
she was only tolerated, not welcomed. She caught the buzzing
whispers of the two Miss Oakeses', who, when they first met the
heroine of the prevailing scandal, looked at her askance, and
criticized her pretensions to good looks, with hardly an attempt at
under-tones. Molly tried to be thankful that her father was not in
the mood for visiting. She was even glad that her stepmother was too
much of an invalid to come out, when she felt thus slighted, and as
it were, degraded from her place. Miss Browning herself, that true
old friend, spoke to her with chilling dignity, and much reserve,
for she had never heard a word from Mr. Gibson since the evening when
she had put herself to so much pain to tell him of the disagreeable
rumours affecting his daughter.

Only Miss Phoebe would seek out Molly with even more than her former
tenderness; and this tried Molly's calmness more than all the
slights put together. The soft hand, pressing hers under the
table,--the continual appeals to her, so as to bring her back into
the conversation, touched Molly almost to shedding tears. Sometimes
the poor girl wondered to herself whether this change in the
behaviour of her acquaintances was not a mere fancy of hers;
whether, if she had never had that conversation with her father, in
which she had borne herself so bravely at the time, she should have
discovered the difference in their treatment of her. She never told
her father how she felt these perpetual small slights; she had
chosen to bear the burden of her own free will; nay, more, she had
insisted on being allowed to do so; and it was not for her to grieve
him now by showing that she shrank from the consequences of her own
act. So she never even made an excuse for not going into the small
gaieties, or mingling with the society of Hollingford. Only she
suddenly let go the stretch of restraint she was living in, when one
evening her father told her that he was really anxious about Mrs
Gibson's cough, and should like Molly to give up a party at Mrs
Goodenough's, to which they were all three invited, but to Which
Molly alone was going. Molly's heart leaped up at the thoughts of
stopping at home, even though the next moment she had to blame
herself for rejoicing at a reprieve that was purchased by another's
suffering. However, the remedies prescribed by her husband did Mrs
Gibson good; and she was particularly grateful and caressing to
Molly.

'Really, dear!' said she, stroking Molly's head, 'I think your hair
is getting softer, and losing that disagreeable crisp curly
feeling.'

Then Molly knew that her stepmother was in high good-humour; the
smoothness or curliness of her hair was a sure test of the favour in
which Mrs. Gibson held her at the moment.

'I am so sorry to be the cause of detaining you from this little
party, but dear papa is so over-anxious about me. I have always been
a kind of pet with gentlemen, and poor Mr. Kirkpatrick never knew how
to make enough of me. But I think Mr. Gibson is even more foolishly
fond; his last words were, "Take care of yourself, Hyacinth;" and
then he came back again to say, "If you don't attend to my
directions I won't answer for the consequences." I shook my
forefinger at him, and said, "Don't be so anxious, you silly man."'

'I hope we have done everything he told us to do,' said Molly.

'Oh yes! I feel so much better. Do you know, late as it is, I think
you might go to Mrs. Goodenough's yet? Maria could take you, and I
should like to see you dressed; when one has been wearing dull warm
gowns for a week or two one gets quite a craving for bright colours,
and evening dress. So go and get ready, dear, and then perhaps
you'll bring me back some news, for really shut up as I have been
with only papa and you for the last fortnight, I've got quite moped
and dismal, and I can't bear to keep young people from the gaieties
suitable to their age.'

'Oh, pray, mamma! I had so much rather not go.'

'Very well! very well! Only I think it is rather selfish of you,
when you see I am so willing to make the sacrifice for your sake.'

'But you say it is a sacrifice to you, and I don't want to go.'

'Very well; did I not say you might stop at home; only pray don't
chop logic; nothing is so fatiguing to a sick person.'

Then they were silent for some time. Mrs. Gibson broke the silence by
saying, in a languid voice,--

'Can't you think of anything amusing to say, Molly?'

Molly pumped up from the depths of her mind a few little
trivialities which she had nearly forgotten, but she felt that they
were anything but amusing, and so Mrs. Gibson seemed to feel them;
for presently she said,--

'I wish Cynthia was at home.' And Molly felt it as a reproach to her
own dulness.

'Shall I write to her and ask her to come back?'

'Well, I'm not sure; I wish I knew a great many things. You've not
heard anything of poor dear Osborne Hamley lately, have you?'

Remembering her father's charge not speak of Osborne's health, Molly
made no reply, nor was any needed, for Mrs. Gibson went on thinking
aloud,--

'You see, if Mr. Henderson has been as attentive as he was in the
spring--and the chances about Roger--I shall be really grieved if
anything happens to that young man, uncouth as he is, but it must be
owned that Africa is not merely an unhealthy--it is a savage--and
even in some parts a cannibal country. I often think of all I've
read of it in geography books, as I lie awake at night, and if Mr
Henderson is really becoming attached! The future is hidden from us
by infinite wisdom, Molly, or else I should like to know it; one
would calculate one's behaviour at the present time so much better
if one only knew what events were to come. But I think, on the
whole, we had better not alarm Cynthia. If we had only known in time
we might have planned for her to have come down with Lord Cumnor and
my lady.'

'Are they coming? Is Lady Cumnor well enough to travel?'

'Yes, to be sure. Or else I should not have considered whether or no
Cynthia could have come down with them; it would have sounded very
well--more than respectable, and would have given her a position
among that lawyer set in London.'

'Then Lady Cumnor is better?'

'To be sure. I should have thought papa would have mentioned it to
you; but, to be sure, he is always so scrupulously careful not to
speak about his patients. Quite right too--quite right and delicate.
Why, he hardly ever tells me how they are going on. Yes! The Earl
and the Countess, and Lady Harriet, and Lord and Lady Cuxhaven, and
Lady Agnes; and I've ordered a new winter bonnet and a black satin
cloak.'


CHAPTER XLIX


MOLLY GIBSON FINDS A CHAMPION


Lady Cumnor had so far recovered from the violence of her attack,
and from the consequent operation, as to be able to be removed to
the Towers for change of air; and accordingly she was brought
thither by her whole family with all the pomp and state becoming an
invalid peeress. There was every probability that 'the family' would
make a longer residence at the Towers than they had done for several
years, during which time they had been wanderers hither and thither
in search of health. Somehow, after all, it was very pleasant and
restful to come to the old ancestral home, and every member of the
family enjoyed it in his or her own way; Lord Cumnor most
especially. His talent for gossip and his love of small details had
scarcely fair play in the hurry of a London life, and were much
nipped in the bud during his Continental sojournings, as he neither
spoke French fluently, nor understood it easily when spoken.
Besides, he was a great proprietor, and liked to know how his land
was going on; how his tenants were faring in the world. He liked to
hear of their births, marriages, and deaths, and had something of a
royal memory for faces. In short, if ever a peer was an old woman,
Lord Cumnor was that peer; but he was a very good-natured old woman,
and rode about on his stout old cob with his pockets full of
halfpence for the children, and little packets of snuff for the old
people. Like an old woman, too, he enjoyed an afternoon cup of tea
in his wife's sitting-room, and over his gossip's beverage he would
repeat all that he had learnt in the day. Lady Cumnor was exactly in
that state of convalescence when such talk as her lord's was
extremely agreeable to her, but she had contemned the habit of
listening to gossip so severely all her life, that she thought it
due to consistency to listen first, and enter a supercilious protest
afterwards. It had, however, come to be a family habit for all of
them to gather together in Lady Cumnor's room on their return from
their daily walks or drives or rides, and over the fire, sipping
their tea at her early meal, to recount the morsels of local
intelligence they had heard during the morning. When they had said
all that they had to say (and not before), they had always to listen
to a short homily from her ladyship on the well-worn texts,--the
poorness of conversation about persons,--the probable falsehood of
all they had heard, and the degradation of character implied by its
repetition. On one of these November evenings they were all
assembled in Lady Cumnor's room. She was lying,--all draped in
white, and covered up with an Indian shawl,--on a sofa near the
fire. Lady Harriet sate on the rug, close before the wood-fire,
picking up fallen embers with a pair of dwarf tongs, and piling them
on the red and odorous heap in the centre of the hearth. Lady
Cuxhaven, notable' from girlhood, was using the blind man's holiday
to net fruit-nets for the walls at Cuxhaven Park. Lady Cumnor's
woman was trying to see to pour out tea by the light of one small
wax-candle in the background (for Lady Cumnor could not bear much
light to her weakened eyes); I and the great leafless branches of
the trees outside the house kept sweeping against the windows, moved
by the wind that was gathering.

It was always Lady Cumnor's habit to snub those she loved best. Her
husband was perpetually snubbed by her, yet she missed him now that
he was later than usual, and professed not to want her tea; but they
all knew that it was only because he was not there to hand it to
her, and be found fault with for his invariable stupidity in
forgetting that she liked to put sugar in before she took any cream.
At length he burst in.

'I beg your pardon, my lady,--I'm later than I should have been, I
know. Why, haven't you had your tea yet?' he exclaimed, bustling
about to get the cup for his wife.

'You know I never take cream before I've sweetened it,' said she,
with even more emphasis on the 'never' than usual.

'To be sure! What a simpleton I am! I think I might have remembered
it by this time. You see I met old Sheepshanks, and that's the
reason of it.'

'Of your handing me the cream before the sugar?' asked his wife. It
was one of her grim jokes.

'No, no! ha, ha! You're better this evening, I think, my dear. But,
as I was saying, Sheepshanks is such an eternal talker, there's no
getting away from him, and I had no idea it was so late!'

'Well, I think the least you can do is to tell us something of Mr
Sheepshanks' conversation now you have torn yourself away from him.'

'Conversation! did I call it conversation? I don't think I said
much. I listened. He really has always a great deal to say. More
than Preston, for instance. And, by the way, he was telling me
something about Preston;--old Sheepshanks thinks he'll be married
before long,--he says there's a great deal of gossip going on about
him and Gibson's daughter. They've been caught meeting in the park,
and corresponding, and all that kind of thing that is likely to end
in a marriage.'

'I shall be very sorry,' said Lady Harriet. 'I always liked that
girl; and I can't bear papa's model land-agent.'

'I daresay it's not true,' said Lady Cumnor, in a very audible aside
to Lady Harriet. 'Papa picks up stories one day to contradict them
the next.'

'Ah, but this did sound like truth. Sheepshanks said all the old
ladies in the town had got hold of it, and were making a great
scandal out of it.'

'I don't think it does sound quite a nice story. I wonder what Clare
could be doing to allow such goings on,' said Lady Cuxhaven.

'I think it is much more likely that Clare's own daughter--that
pretty pawky Miss Kirkpatrick--is the real heroine of this story,'
said Lady Harriet. 'She always looks like a heroine of genteel
comedy, and those young ladies were capable of a good deal of
innocent intriguing, if I remember rightly. Now little Molly Gibson
has a certain ~gaucherie~ about her which would disqualify her at
once from any clandestine proceedings. Besides, "clandestine!" why,
the child is truth itself. Papa, are you sure Mr. Sheepshanks said it
was Miss Gibson that was exciting Hollingford scandal? Wasn't it
Miss Kirkpatrick? The notion of her and Mr. Preston making a match of
it does not sound so incongruous; but, if it's my little friend
Molly, I'll go to church and forbid the banns.'

'Really, Harriet, I can't think what always makes you take such an
interest in all these petty Hollingford affairs.'

'Mamma, it's only tit for tat. They take the most lively interest in
all our sayings and doings. If I were going to be married, they
would want to know every possible particular,--where we first met,
what we first said to each other, what I wore, and whether he
offered by letter or in person. I'm sure those good Miss Brownings
were wonderfully well-informed as to Mary's methods of managing her
nursery, and educating her girls; so it's only a proper return of
the compliment to want to know on our side how they are going on. I
am quite of papa's faction. I like to hear all the local gossip.'

'Especially when it is flavoured with a spice of scandal and
impropriety, as in this case,' said Lady Cumnor, with the momentary
bitterness of a convalescent invalid. Lady Harriet coloured with
annoyance. But then she rallied her courage, and said with more
gravity than before,--

'I am really interested in this story about Molly Gibson, I own. I
both like and respect her; and I do not like to hear her name
coupled with that of Mr. Preston. I can't help fancying papa has made
some mistake.'

'No, my dear. I'm sure I'm repeating what I heard. I'm sorry I said
anything about it, if it annoys you or my lady there. Sheepshanks
did say Miss Gibson, though, and he went on to say it was a pity the
girl had got herself so talked about; for it was the way they had
carried on that gave rise to all the chatter. Preston himself was a
very fair match for her, and nobody could have objected to it. But
I'll try and find a more agreeable piece of news. Old Margery at the
lodge is dead; and they don't know where to find some one to teach
clear-starching at your school; and Robert Hall made forty pounds
last year by his apples.' So they drifted away from Molly and her
affairs; only Lady Harriet kept turning what she had heard over in
her own mind with interest and wonder.

'I warned her against him the day of her father's wedding. And what
a straightforward, out-spoken lassie it was then! I don't believe
it; it's only one of old Sheepshanks' stories, half invention and
half deafness.'

The next day Lady Harriet rode over to Hollingford, and for the
settling of her curiosity she called on the Miss Brownings, and
introduced the subject. She would not have spoken about the rumour
she had heard to any who were not warm friends of Molly's. If Mr
Sheepshanks had chosen to allude to it when she had been riding with
her father, she would very soon have silenced him by one of the
haughty looks she knew full well how to assume. But she felt as if
she must know the truth, and accordingly she began thus abruptly to
Miss Browning,--

'What is all this I hear about my little friend Molly Gibson and Mr
Preston?'

'Oh, Lady Harriet! have you heard of it? We are so sorry!'

'Sorry for what?'

'I think, begging your ladyship's pardon, we had better not say any
more till we know how much you know,' said Miss Browning.

'Nay,' replied Lady Harriet, laughing a little, 'I shan't tell what
I know till I am sure you know more. Then we'll make an exchange if
you like.'

'I'm afraid it's no laughing Matter for poor Molly,' said Miss
Browning, shaking her head. 'People do say such things!'

'But I don't believe them; indeed I don't,' burst in Miss Phoebe,
half crying.

'No more will I, then,' said Lady Harriet, taking the good lady's
hand.

'It's all very fine, Phoebe, saying you don't believe them, but I
should like to know who it was that convinced me, sadly against my
will, I am sure.'

'I only told you the facts as Mrs. Goodenough told them me, sister;
but I'm sure if you had seen poor patient Molly as I have done,
sitting up in a corner of a room, looking at the ~Beauties of
England and Wales~ till she must have been sick of them, and no one
speaking to her; and she as gentle and sweet as ever at the end of
the evening, though maybe a bit pale--facts or no facts, I won't
believe anything against her.'

So there sate Miss Phoebe, in tearful defiance of facts.

'And, as I said before, I'm quite of your opinion,' said Lady
Harriet.

'But how does your ladyship explain away her meetings with Mr
Preston in all sorts of unlikely and open-air places?' asked Miss
Browning, who, to do her justice, would have been only too glad to
join Molly's partisans, if she could have preserved her character
for logical deduction at the same time. 'I went so far as to send
for her father and tell him all about it. I thought at least he
would have horsewhipped Mr. Preston; but he seems to have taken no
notice of it.'

'Then we may be quite sure he knows some way of explaining matters
that we don't,' said Lady Harriet, decisively. 'After all, there may
be a hundred and fifty perfectly natural and justifiable
explanations.'

'Mr. Gibson knew of none when I thought it my duty to speak to him,'
said Miss Browning.

'Why, suppose that Mr. Preston is engaged to Miss Kirkpatrick, and
Molly is confidante and messenger.'

'I don't see that your ladyship's supposition much alters the blame.
Why, if he is honourably engaged to Cynthia Kirkpatrick, does he not
visit her openly at her home in Mr. Gibson's house? Why does Molly
lend herself to clandestine proceedings?'

'One can't account for everything,' said Lady Harriet, a little
impatiently, for reason was going hard against her. 'But I choose to
have faith in Molly Gibson. I'm sure she's not done anything very
wrong. I've a great mind to go and call on her--Mrs. Gibson is
confined to her room with this horrid influenza--and take her with
me on a round of calls through this little gossipping town,--on Mrs
Goodenough, or Badenough, who seems to have been propagating all
these stories. But I've not time to-day. I've to meet papa at three,
and it's three now. Only remember, Miss Phoebe, it's you and I
against the world, in defence of a distressed damsel.'

'Don Quixote and Sancho Panza!' said she to herself as she ran
lightly down Miss Browning's old-fashioned staircase.

'Now, I don't think that's pretty of you, Phoebe,' said Miss
Browning in some displeasure, as soon as she was alone with her
sister. 'First, you convince me against my will, and make me very
unhappy; and I have to do unpleasant things, all because you've made
me believe that certain statements are true; and then you turn round
and cry, and say you don't believe a word of it all, making me out a
regular ogre and backbiter. No! it's of no use. I shan't listen to
you.' So she left Miss Phoebe in tears, and locked herself up in her
own room.

Lady Harriet, meanwhile, was riding homewards by her father's side,
apparently listening to all he chose to say, but in reality turning
over the probabilities and possibilities that might account for
these strange interviews between Molly and Mr. Preston. It was a case
of ~parler de l'ane et l'on en voit les oreilles~. At a turn in
the road they saw Mr. Preston a little way before them, coming
towards them on his good horse, point device, in his riding attire.

The earl, in his thread-bare coat, and on his old brown cob, called
out cheerfully,--

'Aha! here's Preston. Good-day to you. I was just wanting to ask you
about that slip of pasture-land on the Home Farm. John Brickkill
wants to plough it up and crop it. It's not two acres at the best.'

While they were talking over this bit of land, Lady Harriet came to
her resolution. As soon as her father had finished, she said,--

'Mr. Preston, perhaps you will allow me to ask you one or two
questions to relieve my mind, for I am in some little perplexity at
present.'

'Certainly; I shall only be too happy to give you any information in
my power.' But the moment after he had made this polite speech, he
recollected Molly's speech--that she would refer her case to Lady
Harriet. But the letters had been returned, and the affair was now
wound up. She had come off conqueror, he the vanquished. Surely she
would never have been so ungenerous as to appeal after that?

'There are reports about Miss Gibson and you current among the
gossips of Hollingford. Are we to congratulate you on your
engagement to that young lady?'

'Ah! by the way, Preston, we ought to have done it before,'
interrupted Lord Cumnor, in hasty goodwill. But his daughter said
quietly, 'Mr. Preston has not yet told us if the reports are well
founded, papa.'

She looked at him with the air of a person expecting an answer, and
expecting a truthful answer.

'I am not so fortunate,' replied he, trying to make his horse appear
fidgety, without incurring observation.

'Then I may contradict that report?' asked Lady Harriet quietly. 'Or
is there any reason for believing that in time it may come true? I
ask because such reports, if unfounded, do harm to young ladies.'

'Keep other sweethearts off,' put in Lord Cumnor, looking a good
deal pleased at his own discernment. Lady Harriet went on,--

'And I take a great interest in Miss Gibson.'

Mr. Preston saw from her manner that he was 'in for it,' as he
expressed it to himself. The question was, how much or how little
did she know?

'I have no expectation or hope of ever having a nearer interest in
Miss Gibson than I have at present. I shall be glad if this
straightforward answer relieves your ladyship from your perplexity.'

He could not help the touch of insolence that accompanied these last
words. It was not in the words themselves, nor in the tone in which
they were spoken, nor in the look which accompanied them, it was in
all; it implied a doubt of Lady Harriet's right to question him as
she did; and there was something of defiance in it as well. But this
touch of insolence put Lady Harriet's mettle up; and she was not one
to check herself, in any course, for the opinion of an inferior.

'Then, sir! are you aware of the injury you may do to a young lady's
reputation if you meet her, and detain her in long conversations,
when she is walking by herself, unaccompanied by any one? You give
rise--you have given rise to reports.'

'My dear Harriet, are not you going too far? You don't know--Mr
Preston may have intentions--unacknowledged intentions.'

'No, my lord. I have no intentions with regard to Miss Gibson. She
may be a very worthy young lady--I have no doubt she is. Lady
Harriet seems determined to push me into such a position that I
cannot but acknowledge myself to be--it is not enviable--not
pleasant to own--but I am, in fact, a jilted man; jilted by Miss
Kirkpatrick, after a tolerably long engagement. My interviews with
Miss Gibson were not of the most agreeable kind--as you may conclude
when I tell you she was, I believe, the instigator--certainly, she
was the agent in this last step of Miss Kirkpatrick's. Is your
ladyship's curiosity' (with an emphasis on this last word)
'satisfied with this rather mortifying confession of mine?'

'Harriet, my dear, you've gone too far--we had no right to pry into
Mr. Preston's private affairs.'

'No more I had,' said Lady Harriet, with a smile of winning
frankness: the first smile she had accorded to Mr. Preston for many a
long day; ever since the time, years ago, when, presuming on his
handsomeness, he had assumed a tone of gallant familiarity with Lady
Harriet, and paid her personal compliments as he would have done to
an equal.

'But he will excuse me, I hope,' continued she, still in that
gracious manner which made him feel that he now held a much higher
place in her esteem than he had had at the beginning of their
interview, 'when he learns that the busy tongues of the Hollingford
ladies have been speaking of my friend, Miss Gibson, in the most
unwarrantable manner; drawing unjustifiable inferences from the
facts of that intercourse with Mr. Preston, the nature of which he
has just conferred such a real obligation on me by explaining.'

'I think I need hardly request Lady Harriet to consider this
explanation of mine as confidential,' said Mr. Preston.

'Of course, of course!' said the earl; 'every one will understand
that.' And he rode home, and told his wife and Lady Cuxhaven the
whole conversation between Lady Harriet and Mr. Preston; in the
strictest confidence, of course. Lady Harriet had to stand a good
many strictures on manners, and proper dignity for a few days after
this. However, she consoled herself by calling on the Gibsons; and,
finding that Mrs. Gibson (who was still an invalid) was asleep at the
time, she experienced no difficulty in carrying off the unconscious
Molly for a walk, which Lady Harriet so contrived that they twice
passed through all the length of the principal street of the town,
loitered at Grinstead's for half an hour, and wound up by Lady
Harriet's calling on the Miss Brownings, who, to her regret, were
not at home.

'Perhaps, it is as well,' said she, after a minute's consideration.
'I'll leave my card, and put your name down underneath it, Molly.'

Molly was a little puzzled by the manner in which she had been taken
possession of, like an inanimate chattel, for all the afternoon, and
exclaimed,--

'Please, Lady Harriet--I never leave cards; I have not got any, and
on the Miss Brownings, of all people; why, I run in and out whenever
I like.'

'Never mind, little one. To-day you shall do everything properly,
and according to full etiquette.

'And now tell Mrs. Gibson to come out to the Towers for a long day;
we will send the carriage for her whenever she will let us know that
she is strong enough to come. Indeed, she had better come for a few
days; at this time of the year it does not do for an invalid to be
out in the evenings, even in a carriage.' So spoke Lady Harriet,
standing on the white door-steps at Miss Brownings', and holding
Molly's hand while she wished her good-by. 'You'll tell her, dear,
that I came partly to see her--but that finding her asleep, I ran
off with you, and don't forget about her coming to stay with us for
change of air--mamma will like it, I'm sure--and the carriage, and
all that. And now good-by, we've done a good day's work! And better
than you're aware of,' continued she, still addressing Molly, though
the latter was quite out of hearing. 'Hollingford is not the place I
take it to be, if it doesn't veer round in Miss Gibson's favour
after my to-day's trotting of that child about.'


CHAPTER L


CYNTHIA AT BAY


Mrs. Gibson was slow in recovering her strength after the influenza,
and before she was well enough to accept Lady Harriet's invitation
to the Towers, Cynthia came home from London. If Molly had thought
her manner of departure was scarcely as affectionate and considerate
as it might have been,--if such a thought had crossed Molly's fancy
for an instant, she was repentant for it as soon as ever Cynthia
returned, and the girls met together face to face, with all the old
familiar affection, going upstairs to the drawing-room, with their
arms round each other's waists, and sitting there together hand in
hand. Cynthia's whole manner was more quiet than it had been, when
the weight of her unpleasant secret rested on her mind, and made her
alternately despondent or flighty.

'After all,' said Cynthia, 'there's a look of home about these rooms
which is very pleasant. But I wish I could see you looking stronger,
mammal that's the only unpleasant thing. Molly, why didn't you send
for me?'

'I wanted to do,' began Molly.

'But I wouldn't let her,' said Mrs. Gibson. 'You were much better in
London than here, for you could have done me no good; and your
letters were very agreeable to read; and now Helen is better, and
I'm nearly well, and you've come home just at the right time, for
everybody is full of the Charity Ball.'

'But we are not going this year, mamma,' said Cynthia decidedly. 'It
is on the 25th, isn't it? and I'm sure you'll never be well enough
to take us.'

'You really seem determined to make me out worse than I am, child,'
said Mrs. Gibson, rather querulously, she being one of those who,
when their malady is only trifling, exaggerate it, but when it is
really of some consequence, are unwilling to sacrifice any pleasures
by acknowledging it. It was well for her in this instance that her
husband had wisdom and authority enough to forbid her going to this
ball, on which she had set her heart; but the consequence of his
prohibition was an increase of domestic plaintiveness and low
spirits, which seemed to tell on Cynthia--the bright gay Cynthia
herself--and it was often hard work for Molly to keep up the spirits
of two other people as well as her own. Ill-health might account for
Mrs. Gibson's despondency, but why was Cynthia so silent, not to say
so sighing? Molly was puzzled to account for it; and all the more
perplexed because from time to time Cynthia kept calling upon her
for praise for some unknown and mysterious virtue that she had
practised; and Molly was young enough to believe that, after any
exercise of virtue, the spirits rose, cheered up by an approving
conscience. Such was not the case with Cynthia, however. She
sometimes said such things as these, when she had been particularly
inert and desponding,--

'Ah, Molly, you must let my goodness lie fallow for a while! It has
borne such a wonderful crop this year. I have been so
pretty-behaved--if you knew all!' Or, 'Really, Molly, my virtue must
come down from the clouds! It was strained to the utmost in
London--and I find it is like a kite--after soaring aloft for some
time, it suddenly comes down, and gets tangled in all sorts of
briars and brambles; which things are an allegory, unless you can
bring yourself to believe in my extraordinary goodness while I was
away--giving me a sort of right to fall foul of all mamma's briars
and brambles now.'

But Molly had had some experience of Cynthia's whim of perpetually
hinting at a mystery which she did not mean to reveal in the Mr
Preston days, and, although she was occasionally piqued into
curiosity, Cynthia's allusions at something more in the background
fell in general on rather deaf ears. One day the mystery burst its
shell, and came out in the shape of an offer made to Cynthia by Mr
Henderson--and refused. Under all the circumstances, Molly could not
appreciate the heroic goodness so often alluded to. The revelation
of the secret at last took place in this way. Mrs. Gibson breakfasted
in bed: she had done so ever since she had had the influenza; and,
consequently, her own private letters always went up on her
breakfast-tray. One morning she came into the drawing-room earlier
than usual, with an open letter in her hand.

'I've had a letter from aunt Kirkpatrick, Cynthia. She sends me my
dividends,--your uncle is so busy. But what does she mean by this,
Cynthia' (holding out the letter to her, with a certain paragraph
indicated by her finger). Cynthia put her netting on one side, and
looked at the writing. Suddenly her face turned scarlet, and then
became of a deadly white. She looked at Molly, as if to gain courage
from the strong serene countenance.

'It means--mamma, I may as well tell you at once--Mr. Henderson
offered to me while I was in London, and I refused him.'

'Refused him--and you never told me, but let me hear it by chance!
Really, Cynthia, I think you're very unkind. And pray what made you
refuse Mr. Henderson? Such a fine young man,--and such a gentleman!
Your uncle told me he had a very good private fortune besides.'

'Mamma, do you forget that I have promised to marry Roger Hamley?'
said Cynthia quietly.

'No! of course I don't--how can I, with Molly always dinning the
word "engagement" into my ears? But really, when one considers all
the uncertainties,--and after all it was not a distinct promise,--he
seemed almost as if he might have looked forward to something of
this sort.'

'Of what sort, mamma?' said Cynthia sharply.

'Why, of a more eligible offer. He must have known you might change
your mind, and meet with some one you liked better: so little as you
had seen of the world.' Cynthia made an impatient movement, as if to
stop her mother.

'I never said I liked him better,--how can you talk so, mamma? I'm
going to marry Roger, and there's an end of it. I will not be spoken
to about it again.' She got up and left the room.

'Going to marry Roger! That's all very fine. But who is to guarantee
his coming back alive! And if he does, what have they to marry upon,
I should like to know? I don't wish her to have accepted Mr
Henderson, though I am sure she liked him; and true love ought to
have its course, and not be thwarted; but she need not have quite
finally refused him until--well, until we had seen how matters turn
out. Such an invalid as I am too! It has given me quite a
palpitation at the heart. I do call it quite unfeeling of Cynthia.'

'Certainly,' began Molly; but then she remembered that her
stepmother was far from strong, and unable to bear a protest in
favour of the right course without irritation. So she changed her
speech into a suggestion of remedies for palpitation; and curbed her
impatience to speak out her indignation at the contemplated
falsehood to Roger. But when they were alone, and Cynthia began upon
the subject, Molly was less merciful. Cynthia said,--

'Well, Molly, and now you know all! I've been longing to tell
you--and yet somehow I could not.'

'I suppose it was a repetition of Mr. Coxe,' said Molly gravely. 'You
were agreeable,--and he took it for something more.'

'I don't know,' sighed Cynthia. 'I mean I don't know if I was
agreeable or not. He was very kind--very pleasant--but I did not
expect it all to end as it did. However, it is of no use thinking of
it.'

'No!' said Molly, simply; for to her mind the pleasantest and
kindest person in the world put in comparison with Roger was as
nothing; he stood by himself. Cynthia's next words,--and they did
not come very soon,--were on quite a different subject, and spoken
in rather a pettish tone. Nor did she allude again in jesting
sadness to her late efforts at virtue.

In a little while Mrs. Gibson was able to accept the often-repeated
invitation from the Towers to go and stay there for a day or two.
Lady Harriet told her that it would be a kindness to Lady Cumnor to
come and bear her company in the life of seclusion the latter was
still compelled to lead; and Mrs. Gibson was flattered and gratified
with a dim unconscious sense of being really wanted, not merely
deluding herself into a pleasing fiction. Lady Cumnor was in that
state of convalescence common to many invalids. The spring of life
had begun again to flow, and with the flow returned the old desires
and projects and plans, which had all become mere matters of
indifference during the worst part of her illness. But as yet her
bodily strength was not sufficient to be an agent to her energetic
mind, and the difficulty of driving the ill-matched pair of body and
will--one weak and languid, the other strong and stern,--made her
ladyship often very irritable. Mrs. Gibson herself was not quite
strong enough for a '~souffre-douleur~; and the visit to the Towers
was not, on the whole, quite so happy a one as she had anticipated.
Lady Cuxhaven and Lady Harriet, each aware of their mother's state
of health and temper, but only alluding to it as slightly as was
absolutely necessary in their conversations with each other, took
care not to leave 'Clare' too long with Lady Cumnor; but several
times when one or the other went to relieve guard they found Clare
in tears, and Lady Cumnor holding forth on some point on which she
had been meditating during the silent hours of her illness, and on
which she seemed to consider herself born to set the world to
rights. Mrs. Gibson was always apt to consider these remarks as
addressed with a personal direction at some error of her own, and
defended the fault in question with a sense of property in it,
whatever it might happen to be. The second and the last day of her
stay at the Towers, Lady Harriet came in, and found her mother
haranguing in an excited tone of voice, and Clare looking submissive
and miserable and oppressed.

'What's the matter, dear mamma? Are not you tiring yourself with
talking?'

'No, not at all! I was only speaking of the folly of people dressing
above their station. I began by telling Clare of the fashions of my
grandmother's days, when every class had a sort of costume of its
own,--and servants did not ape tradespeople, nor tradespeople
professional men, and so on,--and what must the foolish woman do but
begin to justify her own dress, as if I had been accusing her, or
even thinking about her at all. Such nonsense! Really, Clare, your
husband has spoilt you sadly, if you can't listen to any one without
thinking they are alluding to you! People may flatter themselves
just as much by thinking that their faults are always present to
other people's minds, as if they believe that the world is always
contemplating their individual charms and virtues.'

'I was told, Lady Cumnor, that this silk was reduced in price. I
bought it at Waterloo House' after the season was over,' said Mrs
Gibson, touching the very handsome gown she wore in deprecation of
Lady Cumnor's angry voice, and blundering on to the very source of
irritation.

'Again, Clare! How often must I tell you I had no thought of you or
your gowns, or whether they cost much or little; your husband has to
pay for them, and it is his concern if you spend more on your dress
than you ought to do.'

'It was only five guineas for the whole dress,' pleaded Mrs. Gibson.

'And very pretty it is,' said Lady Harriet, stooping to examine it,
and so hoping to soothe the poor aggrieved woman. But Lady Cumnor
went on,--

'No! you ought to have known me better by this time. When I think a
thing I say it out. I don't beat about the bush. I use
straightforward language. I will tell you where I think you have
been in fault, Clare, if you like to know.' Like it or not, the
plain-speaking was coming now. 'You have spoilt that girl of yours
till she does not know her own mind. She has behaved abominably to
Mr. Preston; and it is all in consequence of the faults in her
education. You have much to answer for.'

'Mamma, mamma!' said Lady Harriet, 'Mr. Preston did not wish it
spoken about.' And at the same moment Mrs. Gibson exclaimed,
'Cynthia--Mr. Preston!' in such a tone of surprise, that if Lady
Cumnor had been in the habit of observing the revelations made by
other people's tones and voices, she would have found out that Mrs
Gibson was ignorant of the affair to which she was alluding.

'As for Mr. Preston's wishes, I do not suppose I am bound to regard
them when I feel it my duty to reprove error,' said Lady Cumnor
loftily to Lady Harriet. 'And, Clare, do you mean to say that you
are not aware that your daughter has been engaged to Mr. Preston
for some time--years, I believe,--and has at last chosen to break it
off,--and has used the Gibson girl--I forget her name,--as a
cat's-paw, and made both her and herself the town's talk--the butt
for all the gossip of Hollingford? I remember when I was young there
was a girl called Jilting Jessy. You'll have to watch over your
young lady, or she will get some such name. I speak to you like a
friend, Clare, when I tell you it's my opinion that girl of yours
will get herself into some more mischief yet before she's safely
married. Not that I care one straw for Mr. Preston's feelings. I
don't even know if he's got feelings or not; but I know what is
becoming in a young woman, and jilting is not. And now you may both
go away, and send Bradley to me, for I'm tired, and want to have a
little sleep.'

'Indeed, Lady Cumnor--will you believe me?--I do not think Cynthia
was ever engaged to Mr. Preston. There was an old flirtation. I was
afraid---'

'Ring the bell for Bradley,' said Lady Cumnor, wearily: her eyes
closed. Lady Harriet had too much experience of her mother's moods
not to lead Mrs. Gibson away almost by main force, she protesting all
the while that she did not think there was any truth in the
statement, though it was dear Lady Cumnor that said it.

Once in her own room, Lady Harriet said, 'Now, Clare, I'll tell you
all about it; and I think you'll have to believe it, for it was Mr
Preston himself who told me. I heard of a great commotion in
Hollingford about Mr. Preston; and I met him riding out, and asked
him what it was all about; he did not want to speak about it,
evidently. No man does, I suppose, when he's been jilted; and he
made both papa and me promise not to tell; but papa did--and that's
what mamma has for a foundation; you see, a really good one.'

'But Cynthia is engaged to another man--she really is. And another--
a very good match indeed--has just been offering to her in London.
Mr. Preston is always at the root of mischief.'

'Nay! I do think in this case it must be that pretty Miss Cynthia of
yours who has drawn on one man to be engaged to her,--not to say
two,--and another to make her an offer. I can't endure Mr. Preston,
but I think it's rather hard to accuse him of having called up the
rivals, who are, I suppose, the occasion of his being jilted.'

'I don't know; I always feel as if he owed me a grudge, and men have
so many ways of being spiteful. You must acknowledge that if he had
not met you I should not have had dear Lady Cumnor so angry with
me.'

'She only wanted to warn you about Cynthia. Mamma has always been
very particular about her own daughters. She has been
very severe on the least approach to flirting, and Mary will be like
her!'

'But Cynthia will flirt, and I can't help it. She is not noisy, or
giggling; she is always a lady--that everybody must own. But she has
a way of attracting men, she must have inherited from me, I think.'
And here she smiled faintly, and would not have rejected a
confirmatory compliment, but none came. 'However, I will speak to
her; I will get to the bottom of the whole affair. Pray tell Lady
Cumnor that it has so fluttered me the way she spoke, about my dress
and all. And it only cost five guineas after all, reduced from
eight!'

'Well, never mind now. You are looking very much flushed; quite
feverish! I left you too long in mamma's hot room. But do you know
she is so much pleased to have you here?' And so Lady Cumnor really
was, in spite of the continual lectures which she gave 'Clare,' and
which poor Mrs. Gibson turned under as helplessly as the typical
worm. Still it was something to have a countess to scold her; and
that pleasure would endure when the worry was past. And then Lady
Harriet petted her more than usual to make up for what she had to go
through in the convalescent's room; and Lady Cuxhaven talked sense
to her, with dashes of science and deep thought intermixed, which
was very flattering, although generally unintelligible; and Lord
Cumnor, good-natured, good-tempered, kind, and liberal, was full of
gratitude to her for her kindness in coming to see Lady Cumnor, and
his gratitude took the tangible shape of a haunch of venison, to say
nothing of lesser game. When she looked back upon her visit as she
drove home in the solitary grandeur of the Towers' carriage, there
had been but one great enduring rub--Lady Cumnor's crossness--and
she chose to consider Cynthia as the cause of that, instead of
seeing the truth, which had been so often set before her by the
members of her ladyship's family, that it took its origin in her
state of health. Mrs. Gibson did not exactly mean to visit this one
discomfort upon Cynthia, nor did she quite mean to upbraid her
daughter for conduct as yet unexplained, and which might have some
justification; but, finding her quietly sitting in the drawing-room,
she sate down despondingly in her own little easy chair, and in
reply to Cynthia's quick, pleasant greeting of,--

'Well, mamma, how are you? We did not expect you so early! Let me
take off your bonnet and shawl!' she replied dolefully,--

'It has not been such a happy visit that I should wish to prolong
it.' Her eyes were fixed on the carpet, and her face was as
irresponsive to the welcome offered as she could make it.

'What has been the matter?' asked Cynthia, in all good faith.

'You! Cynthia--you! I little thought when you were born how I should
have to bear to hear you spoken about.'

Cynthia threw back her head, and angry light came into her eyes.

'What business have they with me? How came they to talk about me in
any way?'

'Everybody is talking about you; it is no wonder they are. Lord
Cumnor is sure to hear about everything always. You should take more
care about what you do, Cynthia, if you don't like being talked
about.'

'It rather depends upon what people say,' said Cynthia, affecting a
lightness which she did not feel; for she had a provision of what
was coming.

'Well! I don't like it, at any rate. It is not pleasant to me to
hear first of my daughter's misdoings from Lady Cumnor, and then to
be lectured about her, and her flirting, and her jilting, as if I
had had anything to do with it. I can assure you it has quite spoilt
my visit. No! don't touch my shawl. When I go to my room I can take
it myself.'

Cynthia was brought to bay, and sate down; remaining with her
mother, who kept sighing ostentatiously from time to time.

'Would you mind telling me what they said? If there are accusations
abroad against me, it is as well I should know what they are. Here's
Molly' (as the girl entered the room, fresh from a morning's walk).
'Molly, mamma has come back from the Towers, and my lord and my lady
have been doing me the honour to talk over my crimes and
misdemeanors, and I am asking mamma what they have said. I don't set
up for more virtue than other people, but I can't make out what an
earl and a countess have to do with poor little me.'

'It was not for your sake!' said Mrs. Gibson. 'It was for mine. They
felt for me, for it is not pleasant to have one's child's name in
everybody's mouth.'

'As I said before, that depends upon how it is in everybody's mouth.
If I were going to marry Lord Hollingford, I make no doubt every one
would be talking about me, and neither you nor I should mind it in
the least.'

'But this is no marriage with Lord Hollingford, so it is nonsense to
talk as if it was. They say you've gone and engaged yourself to Mr
Preston, and now refuse to marry him; and they call that jilting.'

'Do you wish me to marry him, mamma?' asked Cynthia, her face in a
flame, her eyes cast down. Molly stood by, very hot, not fully
understanding it; and only kept where she was by the hope of coming
in as sweetener or peacemaker, or helper of some kind.

'No,' said Mrs. Gibson, evidently discomfited by the question. 'Of
course I don't; you have gone and entangled yourself with Roger
Hamley, a very worthy young man; but nobody knows where he is, and
if he's dead or alive; and he has not a penny if he is alive.'

'I beg your pardon. I know that he has some fortune from his mother;
it may not be much, but he is not penniless; and he is sure to earn
fame and great reputation, and with it money will come,' said
Cynthia.

'You've entangled yourself with him, and you've done something of
the sort with Mr. Preston, and got yourself into such an imbroglio'
(Mrs. Gibson could not have said 'mess' for the world, although the
word was present to her mind), 'that when a really eligible person
comes forward--handsome, agreeable, and quite the gentleman--and a
good private fortune into the bargain, you have to refuse him.
You'll end as an old maid, Cynthia, and it will break my heart.'

'I daresay I shall,' said Cynthia, quietly. 'I sometimes think I am
the kind of person of which old maids are made!' She spoke
seriously, and a little sadly.

Mrs. Gibson began again. 'I don't want to know your secrets as long
as they are secrets; but when all the town is talking about you, I
think I ought to be told.'

'But, mamma, I did not know I was such a subject of conversation;
and even now I can't make out how it has come about.'

'No more can I. I only know that they say you've been engaged to Mr
Preston, and ought to have married him, and that I can't help it, if
you did not choose, any more than I could have helped your refusing
Mr. Henderson; and yet I am constantly blamed for your misconduct. I
think it's very hard.' Mrs. Gibson began to cry. Just then her
husband came in.

'You here, my dear! Welcome back,' said he, coming up to her
courteously, and kissing her cheek. 'Why, what's the matter? Tears?'
and he heartily wished himself away again.

'Yes!' said she, raising herself up, and clutching after sympathy of
any kind, at any price. 'I'm come home again, and I'm telling
Cynthia how Lady Cumnor has been so cross to me, and all through
her. Did you know she had gone and engaged herself to Mr. Preston,
and then broken it off? Everybody is talking about it, and they know
it up at the Towers.'

For one moment his eyes met Molly's, and he comprehended it all. He
made his lips up into a whistle, but no sound came. Cynthia had
quite lost her defiant manner since her mother had spoken to Mr
Gibson. Molly sate down by her.

'Cynthia,' said he, very seriously.

'Yes!' she answered, softly.

'Is this true? I had heard something of it before--not much; but
there is scandal enough about to make it desirable that you should
have some protector--some friend who knows the whole truth.'

No answer. At last she said, 'Molly knows it all.'

Mrs. Gibson, too, had been awed into silence by her husband's grave
manner, and she did not like to give vent to the jealous thought in
her mind that Molly had known the secret of which she was ignorant.
Mr. Gibson replied to Cynthia with some sternness,--

'Yes! I know that Molly knows it all, and that she has had to bear
slander and ill words for your sake, Cynthia. But she refused to
tell me more.'

'She told you that much, did she?' said Cynthia, aggrieved.

'I could not help it,' said Molly.

'She did not name your name,' said Mr. Gibson. 'At the time I believe
she thought she had concealed it--but there was no mistaking who it
was.'

'Why did she speak about it at all?' said Cynthia, with some
bitterness. Her tone--her question stirred up Mr. Gibson's passion.

'It was necessary for her to justify herself to me--I heard my
daughter's reputation attacked for the private meetings she had
given to Mr. Preston--I came to her for an explanation. There is no
need to be ungenerous, Cynthia, because you have been a flirt and a
jilt even to the degree of dragging Molly's name down into the same
mire.'

Cynthia lifted her bowed-down head, and looked at him.

'You say that of me, Mr. Gibson. Not knowing what the circumstances
are, you say that!'

He had spoken too strongly: he knew it. But he could not bring
himself to own it just at that moment. The thought of his sweet
innocent Molly, who had borne so much patiently, prevented any
retractation of his words at the time.

'Yes!' he said, 'I do say it. You cannot tell what evil
constructions are put upon actions ever so slightly beyond the
bounds of maidenly propriety. I do say that Molly has had a great
deal to bear, in consequence of this clandestine engagement of
yours, Cynthia--there may be extenuating circumstances, I
acknowledge--but you will need to remember them all to excuse your
conduct to Roger Hamley, when he comes home. I asked you to tell me
the full truth, in order that until he comes, and has a legal right
to protect you, I may do so.' No answer. 'It certainly requires
explanation,' continued he. 'Here are you,--engaged to two men at
once to all appearances!' Still no answer. 'To be sure, the gossips
of the town have not yet picked out the fact of Roger Hamley's being
your accepted lover; but scandal has been resting on Molly, and
ought to have rested on you, Cynthia--for a concealed engagement to
Mr. Preston--necessitating meetings in all sorts of places unknown to
your friends.'

'Papa,' said Molly, 'if you knew all you would not speak so to
Cynthia. I wish she would tell you herself all that she has told
me.'

'I am ready to hear whatever she has to say,' said he. But Cynthia
said,--

'No! you have prejudged me; you have spoken to me as you had no
right to speak. I refuse to give you my confidence, or accept your
help. People are very cruel to me'--her voice trembled for a
moment,--'I did not think you would have been. But I can bear it.'

And then, in spite of Molly, who would have detained her by force,
she tore herself away, and hastily left the room.

'Oh, papa!' said Molly, crying, and clinging to him, 'do let me tell
you all.' And then she suddenly recollected the awkwardness of
telling some of the details of the story before Mrs. Gibson, and
stopped short.

'I think, Mr. Gibson, you have been very very unkind to my poor
fatherless child,' said Mrs. Gibson, emerging from behind her
pocket-handkerchief. 'I only wish her poor father had been alive,
and all this would never have happened.'

'Very probably. Still I cannot see of what either she or you have to
complain. Inasmuch as we could, I and mine have sheltered her; I
have loved her; I do love her almost as if she were my own child--
as well as Molly, I do not pretend to do.'

'That's it, Mr. Gibson! you do not treat her like your own child.'
But in the midst of this wrangle Molly stole out, and went in search
of Cynthia. She thought she bore an olive-branch of healing in the
sound of her father's just spoken words: 'I do love her almost as if
she were my own child.' But Cynthia was locked into her room, and
refused to open the' door.

'Open to me, please,' pleaded Molly. 'I have something to say to
you--I want to see you--do open!'

'No!' said Cynthia. 'Not now. I am busy. Leave me alone. I don't
want to hear what you have got to say. I do not want to see you.
By-and-by we shall meet, and then--' Molly stood quite quietly,
wondering what new words of more persuasion she could use. In a
minute or two Cynthia called out, 'Are you there still, Molly?' and
when Molly answered 'Yes,' and hoped for a relenting, the same hard
metallic voice, telling of resolution and repression, spoke out, 'Go
away. I cannot bear the feeling of your being there--waiting and
listening. Go downstairs--out of the house--anywhere away. It is the
most you can do for me, now.'


CHAPTER LI


'TROUBLES NEVER COME ALONE'


Molly had her out-of-door things on, and she crept away as she was
bidden; she lifted her heavy weight of heart and body along till she
came to a field, not so very far off,--where she had sought the
comfort of loneliness ever since she was a child; and there, under
the hedge-bank, she sate down, burying her face in her hands, and
quivering all over as she thought of Cynthia's misery, that she
might not try to touch or assuage. She never knew how long she sate
there, but it was long past lunch-time when once again she stole up
to her room. The door opposite was open wide,--Cynthia had quitted
the chamber. Molly arranged her dress and went down into the
drawing-room. Cynthia and her mother sate there in the stern repose
of an armed neutrality. Cynthia's face looked made of stone, for
colour and rigidity; but she was netting away as if nothing unusual
had occurred. Not so Mrs. Gibson: her face bore evident marks of
tears, and she looked up and greeted Molly's entrance with a faint
smiling notice. Cynthia went on as though she had never heard the
opening of the door, or felt the approaching sweep of Molly's dress.
Molly took up a book,--not to read, but to have the semblance of
some employment which should not necessitate conversation.

There was no measuring the duration of the silence that ensued.
Molly grew to fancy it was some old enchantment that weighed upon
their tongues and kept them still. At length Cynthia spoke, but she
had to begin again before her words came clear,--

'I wish you both to know that henceforward all is at an end between
me and Roger Hamley.'

Molly's book went down upon her knees; with open eyes and lips she
strove to draw in Cynthia's meaning. Mrs. Gibson spoke querulously,
as if injured,--

'I could have understood this if it had happened three months
ago,--when you were in London; but now it's just nonsense, Cynthia,
and you know you don't mean it!'

Cynthia did not reply; nor did the resolute look on her face change
when Molly spoke at last,--

'Cynthia--think of him! It will break his heart!'

'No!' said Cynthia, 'it will not. But even if it did, I cannot help
it.'

'All this talk will soon pass away!' said Molly; 'and when he knows
the truth from your own self--'

'From my own self he shall never hear it. I do not love him well
enough to go through the shame of having to excuse myself,--to plead
that he will reinstate me in his good opinion. Confession may
be--well! I can never believe it pleasant--but it may be an ease of
mind if one makes it to some people,--to some person,--and it may
not be a mortification to sue for forgiveness. I cannot tell. All I
know is,--and I know it clearly, and will act upon it
inflexibly--that--' And there she stopped short.

'I think you might finish your sentence,' said her mother, after a
silence of five seconds.

'I cannot bear to exculpate myself to Roger Hamley. I will not
submit to his thinking less well of me than he has done,--however
foolish his judgment may have been. I would rather never see him
again, for these two reasons. And the truth is, I do not love him. I
like him, I respect him; but I will not marry him. I have written to
tell him so. That was merely as a relief to myself, for when or
where the letter will reach him--And I have written to old Mr
Hamley. The relief is the one good thing come out of it all. It is
such a comfort to feel free again. It wearied me so to think of
straining up to his goodness. "Extenuate my conduct!"' she
concluded, quoting Mr. Gibson's words. Yet when Mr. Gibson came home,
after a silent dinner, she asked to speak with him, alone, in his
consulting-room; and there laid bare the exculpation of herself
which she had given to Molly many weeks before. When she had ended,
she said,--

'And now, Mr. Gibson,--I still treat you like a friend,--help me to
find some home far away, where all the evil talking and gossip mamma
tells me of cannot find me and follow me. It may be wrong to care
for people's good opinion,--but it is me, and I cannot alter myself.
You, Molly,--all the people in the town,--I have not the patience
to live through the nine days' wonder. I want to go away and be a
governess.'

'But, my dear Cynthia,--how soon Roger will be back,--a tower of
strength.'

'Has not mamma told you I have broken it all off with Roger? I wrote
this morning. I wrote to his father. That letter will reach
to-morrow. I wrote to Roger. If he ever receives that letter I hope
to be far away by that time; in Russia may be.'

'Nonsense. An engagement like yours cannot be broken off, except by
mutual consent. You have only given others a great deal of pain,
without freeing yourself. Nor will you wish it in a month's time.
When you come to think calmly you will be glad to think of the stay
and support of such a husband as Roger. You have been in fault, and
have acted foolishly at first,--perhaps wrongly afterwards; but you
don't want your husband to think you faultless?'

'Yes, I do,' said Cynthia. 'At any rate, my lover must think me so.
And it is just because I do not love him even as so light a thing as
I could love, that I feel that I could not bear to have to tell him
I'm sorry, and stand before him like a chidden child to be
admonished and forgiven.'

'But here you are, just in such a position before me, Cynthia!'

'Yes! but I love you better than Roger; I have often told Molly so.
And I would have told you, if I had not expected and hoped to leave
you all before long. I could see if the recollection of it all came
up before your mind; I could see it in your eyes; I should know it
by instinct. I have a fine instinct for reading the thoughts of
others when they refer to me. I almost hate the idea of Roger
judging me by his own standard, which was not made for me, and
graciously forgiving me at last.'

'Then I do believe it is right for you to break it off,' said Mr
Gibson, almost as if he was thinking to himself. 'That poor lad! But
it will be best for him too. And he'll get over it. He has a good
strong heart. Poor old Roger!'

For a moment Cynthia's wilful fancy stretched after the object
passing out of her grasp,--Roger's love became for the instant a
treasure; but, again, she knew that in its entirety of high
undoubting esteem, as well as of passionate regard, it would no
longer be hers; and for the flaw which she herself had made, she
cast it away, and would none of it. Yet often in after years, when
it was too late, she wondered, and strove to penetrate the
inscrutable mystery of 'what would have been.'

'Still take till to-morrow before you act upon your decision,' said
Mr. Gibson, slowly. 'What faults you have fallen into have been mere
girlish faults at first,--leading you into much deceit, I grant.'

'Don't give yourself the trouble to define the shades of blackness,'
said Cynthia, bitterly. 'I am not so obtuse but what I know them all
better than any one can tell me. And as for my decision I acted upon
it at once. It may be long before Roger gets my letter,--but I hope
he is sure to get it at last,--and, as I said, I have let his father
know; it won't hurt him! Oh, sir, I think if I had been differently
brought up I should not have had the sore angry heart I have. Now!
No, don't! I don't want reasoning comfort. I can't stand it. I
should always have wanted admiration and worship, and men's good
opinion. Those unkind gossips! To visit Molly with their hard words!
Oh, dear! I think life is very dreary.'

She put her head down on her hands; tired out mentally as well as
bodily. So Mr. Gibson thought. He felt as if much speech from him
would only add to her excitement, and make her worse. He left the
room, and called Molly, from where she was sitting, dolefully. 'Go
to Cynthia!' he whispered, and Molly went. She took Cynthia into her
arms with gentle power, and laid her head against her own breast, as
if the one had been a mother, and the other a child.

'Oh, my darling!' she murmured. 'I do so love you, dear, dear
Cynthia!' and she stroked her hair, and kissed her eyelids; Cynthia
passive all the while, till suddenly she started up stung with a new
idea, and looking Molly straight in the face, she said,--

'Molly, Roger will marry you! See if it is not so! You two good--'

But Molly pushed her away with a sudden violence of repulsion.
'Don't!' she said. She was crimson with shame and indignation. 'Your
husband this morning! Mine to-night! What do you take him for?'

'A man!' smiled Cynthia. 'And therefore, if you won't let me call
him changeable, I'll coin a word and call him consolable!' But Molly
gave her back no answering smile. At this moment, the servant Maria
entered the consulting-room, where the two girls were. She had a
scared look.

'Is not master here?' asked she, as if she distrusted her eyes.

'No!' said Cynthia. 'I heard him go out. I heard him shut the front
door not five minutes ago.'

'Oh, dear!' said Maria. 'And there's a man come on horseback from
Hamley Hall, and he says Mr. Osborne is dead, and that master must go
off to the squire straight away!'

'Osborne Hamley dead?' said Cynthia, in awed surprise. Molly was out
at the front door, seeking the messenger through the dusk, round
into the stable-yard, where the groom sate motionless on his dark
horse, flecked with foam, made visible by the lantern placed on the
steps near, where it had been left by the servants, who were
dismayed at this news of the handsome young man who had frequented
their master's house, so full of sportive elegance and winsomeness.
Molly went up to the man, whose thoughts were lost in recollection
of the scene he had left at the place he had come from.

She laid her hand on the hot damp skin of the horse's shoulder; the
man started.

'Is the doctor coming, Miss?' For he saw who it was by the dim
light.

'He is dead, is he not?' asked Molly, in a low voice.

'I'm afeard he is,--leastways there is no doubt according to what
they said. But I have ridden hard! there may be a chance. Is the
doctor coming, Miss?'

'He is gone out. They are seeking him, I believe. I will go myself.
Oh! the poor old squire.' She went into the kitchen--went over the
house with swift rapidity to gain news of her father's whereabouts.
The servants knew no more than she did. Neither she nor they had
heard what Cynthia, ever quick of perception, had done. The shutting
of the front door had fallen on deaf cars, as far as others were
concerned. Upstairs sped Molly to the drawing-room, where Mrs. Gibson
stood at the door, listening to the unusual stir in the house.

'What is it, Molly? Why, how white you look, child!'

'Where's papa?'

'Gone out. What's the matter?'

'Where?'

'How should I know? I was asleep; Jenny came upstairs on her way to
the bedrooms; she's a girl who never keeps to her work, and Maria
takes advantage of her.'

'Jenny, Jenny!' cried Molly, frantic at the delay.

'Don't shout, dear,--ring the bell. What can be the matter?'

'Oh, Jenny!' said Molly, half way up the stairs to meet her, 'who
wanted papa?'

Cynthia came to join the group; she too had been looking for traces
or tidings of Mr. Gibson.

'What is the matter?' said Mrs. Gibson. 'Can nobody speak and answer
a question?'

'Osborne Hamley is dead!' said Cynthia, gravely.

'Dead! Osborne! Poor fellow! I knew it would be so, though,--I was
sure of it. But Mr. Gibson can do nothing if he's dead. Poor young
man! I wonder where Roger is now? He ought to come home.'

Jenny bad been blamed for coming into the drawing-room instead of
Maria, whose place it was, and so had lost the few wits she had. To
Molly's hurried questions her replies had been entirely
unsatisfactory. A man had come to the back door--she could not see
who it was--she had not asked his name: he wanted to speak to
master,--master had seemed in a hurry, and only stopped to get his
hat.

'He will not be long away,' thought Molly, 'or he would have left
word where he was going. But oh! the poor father all alone.' And
then a thought came into her head, which she acted upon straight.
'Go to James, tell him to put the side-saddle I had in November on
Nora Creina. Don't cry, Jenny. There's no time for that. No one is
angry with you. Run!'

So down into the cluster of collected women Molly came, equipped in
her jacket and skirt; quick determination in her eyes; controlled
quivering about the corners of her mouth.

'Why, what in the world,' said Mrs. Gibson,--'Molly, what are you
thinking about?' But Cynthia had understood it at a glance, and was
arranging Molly's hastily assumed dress, as she passed along.

'I am going. I must go. I cannot bear to think of him alone. When
papa comes back he is sure to go to Hamley, and if I am not wanted,
I can come back with him.' She heard Mrs. Gibson's voice following
her in remonstrance, but she did not stay for words. She had to wait
in the stable-yard, and she wondered how the messenger could bear to
eat and drink the food and beer brought out to him by the servants.
Her coming out had evidently interrupted the eager talk,--the
questions and answers passing sharp to and fro; but she caught the
words, 'all amongst the tangled grass,' and 'the squire would let
none on us touch him: he took him up as if he was a baby; he had to
rest many a time, and once he sate him down on the ground; but still
he kept him in his arms; but we thought we should ne'er have gotten
him up again--him and the body.'

'The body!'

Molly had never felt that Osborne was really dead till she heard
those words. They rode quick under the shadows of the budding
hedgerow trees, but when they slackened speed, to go up a brow, or
to give their horses breath, Molly heard those two little words
again in her cars; and said them over again to herself, in hopes of
forcing the sharp truth into her unwilling sense. But when they came
in sight of the square stillness of the house, shining in the
moonlight--the moon had risen by this time--Molly caught at her
breath, and for an instant she thought she never could go in, and
face the presence in that dwelling. One yellow light burnt steadily,
spotting the silver shining with its earthly coarseness. The man
pointed it out: it was almost the first word he had spoken since
they had left Hollingford.

'It's the old nursery. They carried him there. The squire broke down
at the stair-foot, and they took him to the readiest place. I'll be
bound for it the squire is there hisself, and old Robin too. They
fetched him, as a knowledgable man among dumb beasts, till th'
regular doctor came.'

Molly dropped down from her seat before the man could dismount to
help her. She gathered up her skirts and did not stay again to think
of what was before her. She ran along the once familiar turns, and
swiftly up the stairs, and through the doors, till she came to the
last; then she stopped and listened. It was a deathly silence. She
opened the door: the squire was sitting alone at the side of the
bed, holding the dead man's hand, and looking straight before him at
vacancy. He did not stir or move, even so much as an eyelid, at
Molly's entrance. The truth had entered his soul before this, and he
knew that no doctor, be he ever so cunning, could, with all his
striving, put the breath into that body again. Molly came up to him
with the softest steps, the most hushed breath that ever she could.
She did not speak, for she did not know what to say. She felt that
he had no more hope from earthly skill, so what was the use of
speaking of her father and the delay in his coming? After a moment's
pause, standing by the old man's side, she slipped down to the
floor, and sate at his feet. Possibly her presence might have some
balm in it; but uttering of words was as a vain thing. He must have
been aware of her being there, but he took no apparent notice. There
they sate, silent and still, he in his chair, she on the floor; the
dead man, beneath the sheet, for a third. She fancied that she must
have disturbed the father in his contemplation of the quiet face,
now more than half, but not fully, covered up out of sight. Time had
never seemed so without measure, silence had never seemed so
noiseless as it did to Molly, sitting there. In the acuteness of her
senses she heard a step mounting a distant staircase, coming slowly,
coming nearer. She knew it not to be her father's, and that was all
she cared about. Nearer and nearer--close to the outside of the
door--a pause, and a soft hesitating tap. The great gaunt figure
sitting by her side quivered at the sound. Molly rose and went to
the door: it was Robinson, the old butler, holding in his hand a
covered basin of soup.

'God bless you, Miss,' said he; 'make him touch a drop o' this: he's
gone since breakfast without food, and it's past one in the morning
now.'

He softly removed the cover, and Molly took the basin back with her
to her place at the squire's side. She did not speak, for she did
not well know what to say, or how to present this homely want of
nature before one so rapt in grief. But she put a spoonful to his
lips, and touched them with the savoury food, as if he had been a
sick child, and she the nurse; and instinctively he took down the
first spoonful of the soup. But in a minute he said, with a sort of
cry, and almost overturning the basin Molly held, by his passionate
gesture as he pointed to the bed,--

'He will never eat again--never.'

Then he threw himself across the corpse, and wept in such a terrible
manner that Molly trembled lest he also should die--should break
his heart there and then. He took no more notice of her words, of
her tears, of her presence, than he did of that of the moon, looking
through the unclosed window, with passionless stare, Her father
stood by them both. before either of them was aware.

'Go downstairs, Molly,' said he gravely; but he stroked her head
tenderly as she rose. 'Go into the dining-room.' Now she felt the
reaction from all her self-control. She trembled with fear as she
went along the moonlit passages. It seemed to her as if she should
meet Osborne, and hear it all explained; how he came to die,--what
he now felt and thought and wished her to do. She did get down to
the dining-room,--the last few steps with a rush of terror,--
senseless terror of what might be behind her; and there she found
supper laid out, and candles lit, and Robinson bustling about
decanting some wine. She wanted to cry; to get into some quiet
place, and weep away her over-excitement; but she could hardly do so
there. She only felt very much tired, and to care for nothing in
this world any more. But vividness of life came back when she found
Robinson holding a glass to her lips as she sate in the great
leather easy-chair, to which she had gone instinctively as to a
place of rest.

'Drink, Miss. It's good old Madeira. Your papa said as how you was
to eat a bit. Says he, "My daughter may have to stay here, Mr
Robinson, and she's young for the work. Persuade her to eat
something, or she'll break down utterly." Those was his very words.'

Molly did not say anything. She had not energy enough for
resistance. She drank and she ate at the old servant's bidding; and
then she asked him to leave her alone, and went back to her
easy-chair and let herself cry, and so ease her heart.


CHAPTER LII


SQUIRE HAMLEY'S SORROW


It seemed very long before Mr. Gibson came down. He went and stood
with his back to the empty fireplace, and did not speak for a minute
or two.

'He's gone to bed,' said he at length. 'Robinson and I have got him
there. But just as I was leaving him he called me back, and asked me
to let you stop. I'm sure I don't know--but one doesn't like to
refuse at such a time.'

'I wish to stay,' said Molly.

'Do you? There's a good girl. But how will you manage?'

'Oh, never mind that. I can manage. Papa,'--she paused--what did
Osborne die of?' She asked the question in a low, awe-stricken
voice.

'Something wrong about the heart. You wouldn't understand if I told
you. I apprehended it for some time; but it is, better not to talk
of such things at home. When I saw him on Thursday week, he seemed
better than I have seen him for a long time. I told Dr Nicholls so.
But one never can calculate in these complaints.'

'You saw him on Thursday week? Why, you never mentioned it!' said
Molly.

'No. I don't talk of my patients at home, Besides, I didn't want him
to consider me as his doctor, but. as a friend. Any alarm about his
own health would only have hastened the catastrophe.'

'Then didn't he know that he was ill--ill of a dangerous complaint,
I mean: one that might end as it has done?'

'No; certainly not. He would only have been watching his
symptoms--accelerating matters, in fact.'

'Oh, papa!' said Molly, shocked.

'I've no time to go into the question,' Mr. Gibson continued. 'And
until you know what has to be said on both sides, and in every
instance, you are not qualified to judge. We must keep our attention
on the duties in hand now. You sleep here for the remainder of the
night, which is more than half-gone already?'

'Yes.'

'Promise me to go to bed just as usual. You may not think it, but
most likely you'll go to sleep at once. People do at your age.'

'Papa, I think I ought to tell you something. I know a great secret
of Osborne's, which I promised solemnly not to tell; but the last
time I saw him I think he must have been afraid of something like
this.' A fit of sobbing came upon her, which her father was afraid
would end in hysterics. But suddenly she mastered herself, and
looked up into his anxious face, and smiled to reassure him.

'I could not help it, papa!'

'No. I know. Go on with what you were saying. You ought to be in
bed; but if you have a secret on your mind you won't sleep.'

'Osborne was married,' said she, fixing her eyes on her father.
'That is the secret.'

'Married! Nonsense. What makes you think so?'

'He told me. That's to say, I was in the library--was reading there,
some time ago; and Roger came and spoke to Osborne about his wife.
Roger did not see me, but Osborne did. They made me promise secrecy.
I don't think I did wrong.'

'Don't worry yourself about right or wrong just now; tell me more
about it, at once.'

'I knew no more till six months ago--last November, when you went up
to Lady Cumnor. Then he called, and gave me his wife's address, but
still under promise of secrecy; and, excepting those two times, I
have never heard any one mention the subject. I think he would have
told me more that last time, only Miss Phoebe came in.'

'Where is this wife of his?'

'Down in the south; near Winchester, I think. He said she was a
Frenchwoman and a Roman Catholic; and I think he said she was a
servant,' added Molly.

'Phew!' Her father made a long whistle of dismay.

'And,' continued Molly, 'he spoke of a child. Now you know as much
as I do, papa, except the address. I have it written down safe at
home.'

Forgetting, apparently, what time of night it was, Mr. Gibson sate
down, stretched out his legs before him, put his hands in his
pockets, and began to think. Molly sate still without speaking, too
tired to do more than wait.

'Well!' said he at last, jumping up, 'nothing can be done to-night;
by to-morrow morning, perhaps, I may find out. Poor little pale
face!'--taking it between both his hands and kissing it; 'poor,
sweet, little pale face!' Then he rang the bell, and told Robinson
to send some maid-servant to take Miss Gibson to her room.

'He won't be up early,' said he, in parting. 'The shock has lowered
him too much to be energetic. Send breakfast up to him in his own
room. I'll be here again before ten.'

Late as it was before he left, he kept his word.

'Now, Molly,' he said, 'you and I must tell him the truth between
us. I don't know how he will take it; it may comfort him, but I have
very little hope: either way, he ought to know it at once.'

'Robinson says he has gone into the room again, and he is afraid he
has locked the door on the inside.'

'Never mind. I shall ring the bell, and send up Robinson to say that
I am here, and wish to speak to him.'

The message returned was, 'The squire's kind love, and could not see
Mr. Gibson just then.' Robinson added, 'It was a long time before
he'd answer at all, sir.'

'Go up again, and tell him I can wait his convenience. Now that's a
lie,' Mr. Gibson said, turning round to Molly as soon as Robinson had
left the room. 'I ought to be far enough away at twelve; but, if I'm
not much mistaken, the innate habits of a gentleman will make him
uneasy at the idea of keeping me waiting his pleasure, and will do
more to bring him out of that room into this than any entreaties or
reasoning.' Mr. Gibson was growing impatient though, before they
heard the squire's footstep on the stairs; he was evidently coming
slowly and unwillingly. He came in almost like one blind, groping
along, and taking hold of chair or table for support or guidance
till he reached Mr. Gibson. He did not speak when he held the doctor
by the hand; he only hung down his head, and kept on a feeble
shaking of welcome.

'I'm brought very low, sir. I suppose it's God's doing; but it comes
hard upon me. He was my firstborn child.' He said this almost as if
speaking to a stranger, and informing him of facts of which he was
ignorant.

'Here's Molly,' said Mr. Gibson, choking a little himself, and
pushing her forwards.

'I beg your pardon; I did not see you at first. My mind is a good
deal occupied just now.' He sate heavily down, and then seemed
almost to forget they were there. Molly wondered what was to come
next. Suddenly her father spoke,--

'Where's Roger?' said he. 'Is he not likely to be soon at the Cape?'
He got up and looked at the directions of one or two unopened
letters brought by that morning's post; among them was one in
Cynthia's handwriting. Both Molly and he saw it at the same time.
How long it was since yesterday! But the squire took no notice of
their proceedings or their looks.

'You will be glad to have Roger at home as soon as may be, I think,
sir. Some months must elapse first; but I'm sure he will return as
speedily as possible.'

The squire said something in a very low voice. Both father and
daughter strained their ears to hear what it was. They both believed
it to be, 'Roger is not Osborne!' And Mr. Gibson spoke on that
belief. He spoke more quietly than Molly had ever heard him do
before.

'No! we know that. I wish that anything that Roger could do, or that
I could do, or that any one could do, would comfort you; but it is
past human comfort.'

'I do try to say, God's will be done, sir,' said the squire, looking
up at Mr. Gibson for the first time, and speaking with more life in
his voice; 'but it is harder to be resigned than happy people
think.' They were all silent for a while. The squire himself was the
first to speak again,--'He was my first child, sir; my eldest son.
And of late years we weren't'--his voice broke down, but he
controlled himself--'we weren't quite as good friends as could be
wished; and I'm not sure--not sure that he knew how I loved him.'
And now he cried aloud with an exceeding bitter cry.

'Better so!' whispered Mr. Gibson to Molly. 'When he is a little
calmer, don't be afraid; tell him all you know, exactly as it
happened.'

Molly began. Her voice sounded high and unnatural to herself, as if
some one else was speaking, but she made her words clear. The squire
did not attempt to listen, at first, at any rate.

'One day when I was here, at the time of Mrs. Hamley's last illness'
(the squire here checked his convulsive breathing), 'I was in the
library, and Osborne came in. He said he had only come in for a
book, and that I was not to mind him, so I went on reading.
Presently, Roger came along the flagged garden-path just outside the
window (which was open). He did not see me in the corner where I was
sitting, and said to Osborne, "Here's a letter from your wife!"'

Now the squire was all attention; for the first time his
tear-swollen eyes met the eyes of another, and he looked at Molly
with searching anxiety, as he repeated, 'His wife! Osborne married!'
Molly went on,--

'Osborne was angry with Roger for speaking out before me, and they
made me promise never to mention it to any one; or to allude to it
to either of them again. I never named it to papa till last night.'

'Go on,' said Mr. Gibson. 'Tell the squire about Osborne's
call,--what you told me!' Still the squire hung on her lips,
listening with open mouth and eyes.

'Some months ago Osborne called. He was not well, and wanted to see
papa. Papa was away, and I was alone. I don't exactly remember how
it came about, but he spoke to me of his wife for the first and only
time since the affair in the library.' She looked at her father, as
if questioning him as to the desirableness of telling the few
further particulars that she knew. The squire's mouth was dry and
stiff, but he tried to say, 'Tell me all,--everything.' And Molly
understood the half-formed words.

'He said his wife was a good woman, and that he loved her dearly;
but she was a French Roman Catholic, and a'--another glance at her
father--'she had been a servant once. That was all; except that I
have her address at home. He wrote it down and gave it me.'

'Well, well!' moaned the squire. 'It's all over now. All over. All
past and gone. We'll not blame him,--no; but I wish he'd a told me;
he and I to live together with such a secret in one of us. It's no
wonder to me now--nothing can be a wonder again, for one never can
tell what's in a man's heart. Married so long! and we sitting
together at meals--and living together. Why, I told him everything!
Too much, may be, for I showed him all my passions and ill-tempers!
Married so long! Oh, Osborne, Osborne, you should have told me!'

'Yes, he should!' said Mr. Gibson. 'But I daresay he knew how much
you would dislike such a choice as he had made. But he should have
told you!'

'You know nothing about it, sir,' said the squire sharply. 'You
don't know the terms we were on. Not hearty or confidential. I was
cross to him many a time. angry with him for being dull, poor
lad--and he with all this weight on his mind. I won't have people
interfering and judging between me and my sons. And Roger too! He
could know it all, and keep it from me!'

'Osborne evidently had bound him down to secrecy, just as he bound
me,' said Molly; 'Roger could not help himself.'

'Osborne was such a fellow for persuading people, and winning them
over,' said the squire, dreamily. 'I remember--but what's the use of
remembering? It's all over, and Osborne is dead without opening his
heart to me. I could have been tender to him, I could. But he'll
never know it now!'

'But we can guess what wish he had strongest in his mind at the
last, from what we do know of his life.' said Mr. Gibson.

'What, sir?' said the squire, with sharp suspicion of what was
coming.

'His wife must have been his last thought, must she not?'

'How do I know she was his wife? Do you think he'd go and marry a
French baggage of a servant? It may be all a tale trumped up.'

'Stop, squire. I don't care to defend my daughter's truth or
accuracy. But with the dead man's body lying upstairs--his soul with
God--think twice before you say more hasty words, impugning his
character; if she was not his wife, what was she?'

'I beg your pardon. I hardly know what I am saying. Did I accuse
Osborne? Oh, my lad, my lad--thou might have trusted thy old dad! He
used to call me his "old dad" when he was a little chap not bigger
than this,' indicating a certain height with his hand. 'I never
meant to say he was not--not what one would wish to think him
now--his soul with God, as you say very justly--for I am sure it is
there--'

'Well! but, squire,' said Mr. Gibson, trying to check the other's
rambling, 'to return to his wife--'

'And the child,' whispered Molly to her father. Low as the whisper
was, it struck on the squire's ear.

'What?' said he, turning round to her suddenly, '--child! You never
named that? Is there a child? Husband and father, and I never knew!
God bless Osborne's child! I say, God bless it!' He stood up
reverently, and the other two instinctively rose. He closed his
hands as if in momentary prayer. Then exhausted he sate down again,
and put out his hand to Molly.

'You're a good girl. Thank you. Tell me what I ought to do, and I'll
do it.' This to Mr. Gibson.

'I am almost as much puzzled as you are, squire,' replied he. 'I
fully believe the whole story; but I think there must be some
written confirmation of it, which perhaps ought to be found at once,
before we act. Most probably this is to be discovered among
Osborne's papers. Will you look over them at once? Molly shall
return with me, and find the address that Osborne gave her, while
you are busy--'

'She'll come back again?' said the squire eagerly. 'You--she won't
leave me to myself?'

'No! She shall come back this evening. I'll manage to send her
somehow. But she has no clothes but the habit she came in, and I
want my horse that she rode away upon.'

'Take the carriage,' said the squire. 'Take anything. I'll give
orders. You'll come back again, too?'

'No! I'm afraid not, to-day. I'll come to-morrow, early. Molly shall
return this evening, whenever it suits you to send for her.'

'This afternoon; the carriage shall be at your house at three. I
dare not look at Osborne's--at the papers without one of you with
me; and yet I shall never rest till I know more.'

'I will send the desk in by Robinson before I leave. And--can you
give me some lunch before I go?'

Little by little he led the squire to eat a morsel or so of food;
and so, strengthening him physically, and encouraging him mentally,
Mr. Gibson hoped that he would begin his researches during Molly's
absence.

There was something touching in the squire's wistful looks after
Molly as she moved about. A stranger might have imagined her to be
his daughter instead of Mr. Gibson's. The meek, broken-down,
considerate ways of the bereaved father never showed themselves more
strongly than when he called them back to his chair, out of which he
seemed too languid to rise, and said, as if by an
after-thought,--'Give my love to Miss Kirkpatrick; tell her I look
upon her as quite one of the family. I shall be glad to see her
after--after the funeral. I don't think I can before.'

'He knows nothing of Cynthia's resolution to give up Roger,' said Mr
Gibson as they rode away. 'I had a long talk with her last night,
but she was as resolute as ever. From what your mamma tells me,
there is a third lover in London, whom she's already refused. I'm
thankful that you've no lover at all, Molly, unless that abortive
attempt of Mr. Coxe's at an offer, long ago, can be called a lover.'

'I never heard of it, papa,' said Molly.

'Oh, no. I forgot. What a fool I was! Why, don't you remember the
hurry I was in to get you off to Hamley Hall, the very first time
you ever went? It was all because I got hold of a desperate
love-letter from Coxe, addressed to you.'

But Molly was too tired to be amused, or even interested. She could
not get over the sight of the straight body covered with a sheet,
which yet let the outlines be seen,--all that remained of Osborne.
Her father had trusted too much to the motion of the ride, and the
change of scene from the darkened house. He saw his mistake.

'Some one must write to Mrs. Osborne Hamley,' said he. 'I believe her
to have a legal right to the name; but whether or no, she must be
told that the father of her child is dead. Shall you do it, or I?'

'Oh, you, please, papa!'

'I will, if you wish, But she may have heard of you as a friend of
her dead husband's; while of me--a mere country doctor--it's very
probable she has never heard the name.'

'If I ought, I will do it.' Mr. Gibson did not like this ready
acquiescence, given in so few words, too.

'There's Hollingford church-spire,' said she presently, as they drew
near the town, and caught a glimpse of the church through the trees.
'I think I never wish to go out of sight of it again.'

'Nonsense!' said he. 'Why, you've all your travelling to do yet; and
if these newfangled railways spread, as they say they will, we shall
all be spinning about the world; "sitting on tea-kettles," as Phoebe
Browning calls it. Miss Browning wrote such a capital letter of
advice to Miss Hornblower. I heard of it at the Millers'. Miss
Hornblower was going to travel by railroad for the first time; and
Sally was very anxious, and sent her directions for her conduct; one
piece of advice was not to sit on the boiler.'

Molly laughed a little, as she was expected to do.

'Here we are at home, at last.'

Mrs. Gibson gave Molly a warm welcome. For one thing, Cynthia was in
disgrace; for another, Molly came from the centre of news; for a
third, Mrs. Gibson was really fond of the girl, in her way, and sorry
to see her pale heavy looks.

'To think of it all being so sudden at last! Not but what I always
expected it! And so provoking! Just when Cynthia had given up Roger!
If she had only waited a day! What does the squire say to it all?'

'He is beaten down with grief,' replied Molly.

'Indeed! I should not have fancied he had liked the engagement so
much.'

'What engagement?'

'Why, Roger to Cynthia, to be sure. I asked you how the squire took
her letter, announcing the breaking of it off?'

'Oh--I made a mistake. He has not opened his letters to-day. I saw
Cynthia's among them.'

'Now that I call positive disrespect.'

'I don't know. He did not mean it for such. Where is Cynthia?'

'Gone out into the meadow-garden. She'll be in directly. I wanted
her to do some errands for me, but she flatly refused to go into the
town. I am afraid she mismanages her affairs sadly. But she won't
allow me to interfere. I hate to look at such things in a mercenary
spirit, but it is provoking to see her throw over two such good
matches. First Mr. Henderson, and now Roger Hamley. When does the
squire expect Roger? Does he think he will come back sooner for poor
dear Osborne's death?'

'I don't know. He hardly seems to think of anything but Osborne. He
seems to me to have almost forgotten every one else. But perhaps the
news of Osborne's being married, and of the child, may rouse him
up.'

Molly had no doubt that Osborne was really and truly married, nor
had she any idea that her father had never breathed the facts of
which she had told him on the previous night, to his wife or
Cynthia. But Mr. Gibson had been slightly dubious of the full
legality of the marriage, and had not felt inclined to speak of it
to his wife until that had been ascertained one way or another. So
Mrs. Gibson exclaimed, 'What ~do~ you mean, child? Married! Osborne
married. Who says so?'

'Oh, dear! I suppose I ought not to have named it. I am very stupid
to-day. Yes! Osborne has been married a long time; but the squire
did not know of it until this morning. I think it has done him good.
But I don't know.'

'Who is the lady? Why, I call it a shame to go about as a single
man, and be married all the time! If there is one thing that revolts
me, it is duplicity. Who is the lady? Do tell me all you know about
it, there's a dear.'

'She is French, and a Roman Catholic,' said Molly.

'French! They are such beguiling women; and he was so much abroad!
You said there was a child,--is it a boy or girl?'

'I did not hear. I did not ask.'

Molly did not think it necessary to do more than answer questions;
indeed, she was vexed enough to have told anything of what her
father evidently considered it desirable to keep secret. Just then
Cynthia came wandering into the room with a careless, hopeless look
in her face, which Molly noticed at once. She had not heard of
Molly's arrival, and had no idea that she was returned until she saw
her sitting there.

'Molly, darling! Is that you? You're as welcome as the flowers in
May, though you've not been gone twenty-four hours. But the house is
not the same when you are away!'

'And she brings us such news too!' said Mrs. Gibson. 'I'm really
almost glad you wrote to the squire yesterday, for if you had waited
till to-day--I thought you were in too great a hurry at the time--
he might have thought you had some interested reason for giving up
your engagement. Osborne Hamley was married all this time unknown to
everybody, and has got a child too.'

'Osborne married!' exclaimed Cynthia. 'If ever a man looked a
bachelor, he did. Poor Osborne! with his fair delicate elegance,--he
looked so young and boyish!'

'Yes! it was a great piece of deceit, and I can't easily forgive him
for it. Only think! If he had paid either of you any particular
attention, and you had fallen in love with him! Why, he might have
broken your heart, or Molly's either. I can't forgive him, even
though he is dead, poor fellow!'

Well, as he never did pay either of us any particular attention, and
as we neither of us did fall in love with him, I think I only feel
sorry that he had all the trouble and worry of concealment.' Cynthia
spoke with a pretty keen recollection of how much trouble and worry
her concealment had cost her.

'And now of course it is a son, and will be the heir, and Roger will
just be as poorly off as ever. I hope you'll take care and let the
squire know Cynthia was quite ignorant of these new facts that have
come out when she wrote those letters, Molly? I should not like a
suspicion of worldliness to rest upon any one with whom I had any
concern.'

'He has not read Cynthia's letter yet. Oh, do let me bring it home
unopened,' said Molly. 'Send another letter to Roger--now--at once;
it will reach him at the same time; he will get both when he arrives
at the Cape, and make him understand which is the last--the real
one. Think! he will hear of Osborne's death at the same time--two
such sad things! Do, Cynthia!'

'No, my dear,' said Mrs. Gibson. 'I could not allow that, even if
Cynthia felt inclined for it. Asking to be re-engaged to him! At any
rate, she must wait now until he proposes again, and we see how
things turn out.'

But Molly kept her pleading eyes fixed on Cynthia.

'No!' said Cynthia firmly, but not without consideration. 'It cannot
be. I have felt more content this last night than I have done for
weeks past. I am glad to be free. I dreaded Roger's goodness, and
learning, and all that. It was not in my way, and I don't believe I
should have ever married him, even without knowing of all these
ill-natured stories that are circulating about me, and which he
would hear of, and expect me to explain, and be sorry for, and
penitent and humble. I know he could not have made me happy, and I
don't believe he would have been happy with me. It must stay as it
is. I would rather be a governess than married to him. I should get
weary of him every day of my life.'

'Weary of Roger!' said Molly to herself. 'It is best as it is, I
see,' she answered aloud. 'Only I am very sorry for him, very. He
did love you so. You will never get any one to love you like him!'

'Very well. I must take my chance. And too much love is rather
oppressive to me, I believe. I like a great deal, widely spread
about; not all confined to one individual lover.'

'I don't believe you,' said Molly. 'But don't let us talk any more
about it. It is best as it is. I thought--I almost felt sure you
would be sorry this morning. But we will leave it alone now.' She
sate silently looking out of the window, her heart sorely stirred,
she scarcely knew how or why. But she could not have spoken. Most
likely she would have begun to cry if she had spoken. Cynthia stole
softly up to her after a while.

'You are vexed with me, Molly,' she began in a low voice. But Molly
turned sharply round.

'I! I have no business at all in the affair. It is for you to judge.
Do what you think right. I believe you have done right. Only I don't
want to discuss it, and paw it over with talk. I am very much tired,
dear'--gently now she spoke,--'and I hardly know what I say. If I
speak crossly, don't mind it.' Cynthia did not reply at once. Then
she said,--

'Do you think I might go with you, and help you? I might have done
yesterday; and you say he has not opened my letter, so he has not
heard as yet. And I was always fond of poor Osborne, in my way, you
know.'

'I cannot tell; I have no right to say,' replied Molly, scarcely
understanding Cynthia's motives, which, after all, were only
impulses in this case. 'Papa would be able to judge; I think,
perhaps, you had better not. But don't go by my opinion, I can only
tell what I should wish to do in your place.'

'It was as much for your sake as any one's, Molly,' said Cynthia.

'Oh, then, don't! I am tired to-day with sitting up; but to-morrow I
shall be all right; and I should not like it, if, for my sake, you
came into the house at so solemn a time.'

'Very well!' said Cynthia, half-glad that her impulsive offer was
declined; for, as she said, thinking to herself, 'It would have been
awkward after all,' So Molly went back in the carriage alone,
wondering how she should find the squire, wondering what discoveries
he had made among Osborne's papers; and at what conviction he would
have arrived.


CHAPTER LIII


UNLOOKED-FOR ARRIVALS


Robinson opened the door for Molly almost before the carriage had
fairly drawn up at the Hall, and told her that the squire had been
very anxious for her return, and had more than once sent him to an
upstairs window, from which a glimpse of the hill-road between
Hollingford and Hamley could be perceived, to know if the carriage
was not yet in sight. Molly went into the drawing-room. The squire
was standing in the middle of the floor, awaiting her; in fact,
longing to go out and meet her, but restrained by a feeling of
solemn etiquette, which prevented his moving about as usual in that
house of mourning. He held a paper in his hands, which were
trembling with excitement and emotion; and four or five open letters
were strewed on a table near him.

'It's all true,' he began; 'she's his wife, and he's her
husband--was her husband--that's the word for it--was! Poor lad!
poor lad! it's cost him a deal. Pray God, it was not my fault. Read
this, my dear. It's a certificate. It's all regular--Osborne Hamley
to Marie-Aimee Scherer,--parish-church and all, and witnessed.
Oh, dear!' He sate down in the nearest chair and groaned. Molly took
a seat by him, and read the legal paper, the perusal of which was
not needed to convince her of the fact of the marriage. She held it
in her hand after she had finished reading it, waiting for the
squire's next coherent words; for he kept talking to himself in
broken sentences. 'Ay, ay! that comes o' temper, and crabbedness.
She was the only one as could--and I've been worse since she was
gone. Worse! worse! and see what it has come to. He was afraid of me
--ay--afraid. That's the truth of it--afraid. And it made him keep
all to himself, and care killed him. They may call it heart-disease
--O my lad, my lad, I know better now; but it's too late--that's the
sting of it--too late, too late!' He covered his face, and moved
himself backwards and forwards till Molly could bear it no longer.

'There are some letters,' said she: 'may I read any of them?' At
another time she would not have asked; but she was driven to it now
by her impatience of the speechless grief of the old man.

'Ay, read 'em, read 'em,' said he. 'Maybe you can. I can only pick
out a word here and there. I put 'em there for you to look at; and
tell me what is in 'em.'

Molly's knowledge of written French of the present day was not so
great as her knowledge of the French of the ~Memoires de
Sully~, and neither the spelling nor the writing of the letters was
of the best; but she managed to translate into good enough
colloquial English some innocent sentences of love, and submission
to Osborne's will--as if his judgment was infallible,--and faith in
his purposes;--little sentences in 'little language' that went home
to the squire's heart. Perhaps if Molly had read French more easily
she might not have translated them into such touching, homely,
broken words. Here and there, there were expressions in English;
these the hungry-hearted squire had read while waiting for Molly's
return. Every time she stopped, he said, 'Go on.' He kept his face
shaded, and only repeated those two words at every pause. She got up
to find some more of Aimee's letters. In examining the papers,
she came upon one in particular. 'Have you seen this, sir? This
certificate of baptism' (reading aloud) 'of Roger Stephen Osborne
Hamley, born June 21, 183-, child of Osborne Hamley and
Marie-Aimee his wife--'

'Give it me,' said the squire, his voice breaking now, and
stretching forth his eager hand. '"Roger," that's me, "Stephen,"
that's my poor old father: he died when he was not so old as I am;
but I've always thought on him as very old. He was main and fond of
Osborne, when he was quite a little one. It's good of the lad to
have thought on my father Stephen. Ay! that was his name. And
Osborne--Osborne Hamley! One Osborne Hamley lies dead on his bed--
and t'other--t'other I have never seen, and never heard on till
to-day. He must be called Osborne: Molly. There is a Roger--there's
two for that matter; but one is a good-for-nothing old man; and
there's never an Osborne any more, unless this little thing is
called Osborne: we'll take him here, and get a nurse for him; and
make his mother comfortable for life in her own country. I'll keep
this, Molly. You're a good lass for finding it. Osborne Hamley! And
if God will give me grace, he shall never hear a cross word from me
--never. He shan't be afeard of me. Oh, ~my~ Osborne, ~my~ Osborne'
(he burst out), 'do you know now how bitter and sore is my heart for
every hard word as I ever spoke to you? Do you know now how I loved
you--my boy--my boy?'

From the general tone of the letters Molly doubted if the mother
would consent, so easily as the squire seemed to expect, to be
parted from her child; the letters were not very wise, perhaps
(though of this Molly never thought), but a heart full of love spoke
tender words in every line. Still, it was not for Molly to talk of
this doubt of hers just then; rather to dwell on the probable graces
and charms of the little Roger Stephen Osborne Hamley. She let the
squire exhaust himself in wondering as to the particulars of every
event, helping him out in conjectures; and both of them, from their
imperfect knowledge of possibilities, made the most curious,
fantastic, and improbable guesses at the truth. And so that day
passed over, and the night came.

There were not many people who had any right to be invited to the
funeral, and of these Mr. Gibson and the squire's hereditary man of
business had taken charge. But when Mr. Gibson came, early on the
following morning, Molly referred the question to him, which had
suggested itself to her mind, though apparently not to the squire's.
What intimation of her loss should be sent to the widow, living
solitary near Winchester, watching and waiting, if not for his
coming who lay dead in his distant home, at least for his letters? A
letter had already come in her foreign handwriting to the
post-office to which all her communications were usually sent, but
of course they at the Hall knew nothing of this.

'She must be told!' said Mr. Gibson, musing.

'Yes, she must,' replied her daughter. 'But how?'

'A day or two of waiting will do no harm,' said he, almost as if he
was anxious to delay the solution of the problem. 'It will make her
anxious, poor thing, and all sorts of gloomy possibilities will
suggest themselves to her mind--amongst them the truth; it will be a
kind of preparation.'

'For what? Something must be done at last,' said Molly.

'Yes; true. Suppose you write, and say he is very ill; write
to-morrow. I daresay they have indulged themselves in daily postage,
and then she'll have had three days' silence. You say how you come
to know all how and about it; I think she ought to know he is very
ill--in great danger, if you like: and you can follow it up next day
with the full truth. I would not worry the squire about it. After
the funeral we will have a talk about the child.'

'She will never part with it,' said Molly.

'Whew! Till I see the woman I can't tell,' said her father; 'some
women would. It will be well provided for, according to what you
say. And she is a foreigner, and may very likely wish to go back to
her own people and kindred. There's much to be said on both sides.'

'So you always say, papa. But in this case I think you'll find I'm
right. I judge from her letters; but I think I'm right.'

'So you always say, daughter. Time will show. So the child is a boy?
Mrs. Gibson told me particularly to ask. It will go far to
reconciling her to Cynthia's dismissal of Roger. But indeed it is
quite as well for both of them, though of course he will be a long
time before he thinks so. They were not suited to each other. Poor
Roger! It was hard work writing to him yesterday; and who knows what
may have become of him! Well, well! one has to get through the world
somehow. I'm glad, however, this little lad has turned up to be the
heir. I should not have liked the property to go to the Irish
Hamleys, who are the next heirs, as Osborne once told me. Now write
that letter, Molly, to the poor little Frenchwoman out yonder. It
will prepare her for it; and we must think a bit how to spare her
the shock, for Osborne's sake.'

The writing this letter was rather difficult work for Molly, and she
tore up two or three copies before she could manage it to her
satisfaction; and at last, in despair of ever doing it better, she
sent it off without re-reading it. The next day was easier; the fact
of Osborne's death was told briefly and tenderly. But when this
second letter was sent off, Molly's heart began to bleed for the
poor creature, bereft of her husband, in a foreign land, and he at a
distance from her, dead and buried without her ever having had the
chance of printing his dear features on her memory by one last long
lingering look. With her thoughts full of the unknown Aimee,
Molly talked much about her that day to the squire. He would listen
for ever to any conjecture, however wild, about the grandchild, but
perpetually winced away from all discourse about 'the Frenchwoman,'
as he called her; not unkindly, but to his mind she was simply the
Frenchwoman--chattering, dark-eyed, demonstrative, and possibly even
rouged. He would treat her with respect as his son's widow, and
would try even not to think upon the female inveiglement in which he
believed. He would make her an allowance to the extent of his duty;
but he hoped and trusted he might never be called upon to see her.
His solicitor, Gibson, anybody and everybody, should be called upon
to form a phalanx of defence against that danger.

And all this time a little, young, grey-eyed woman was making her
way; not towards him, but towards the dead son, whom as yet she
believed to be her living husband. She knew she was acting in
defiance of his expressed wish; but he had never dismayed her with
any expression of his own fears about his health; and she, bright
with life, had never contemplated death coming to fetch away one so
beloved. He was ill--very ill, the letter from the strange girl said
that; but Aimee had nursed her parents, and knew what illness
was. The French doctor had praised her skill and neat-handedness as
a nurse, and even if she had been the clumsiest of women, was he not
her husband--her all? And was she not his wife, whose place was by
his pillow? So without even as much reasoning as has been here
given, Aimee made her preparations, swallowing down the tears
that would overflow her eyes, and drop into the little trunk she was
packing so neatly. And by her side, on the ground, sate the child,
now nearly two years old; and for him Aimee had always a smile
and a cheerful word. Her servant loved her and trusted her; and the
woman was of an age to have had experience of humankind. Aimee
had told her that her husband was ill, and the servant had known
enough of the household history to know that as yet Aimee was
not his acknowledged wife. But she sympathized with the prompt
decision of her mistress to go to him directly, wherever he was,
Caution comes from education of one kind or another, and Aimee
was not dismayed by warnings; only the woman pleaded hard for the
child to be left. 'He was such company,' she said; 'and he would so
tire his mother in her journeying; and maybe his father would be too
ill to see him.' To which Aimee replied, 'Good company for you,
but better for me. A woman is never tired with carrying her own
child' (which was not true; but there was sufficient truth in it to
make it be believed by both mistress and servant), 'and if
~Monsieur~ could care for anything, he would rejoice to hear the
babble of his little son.' So Aimee caught the evening coach to
London at the nearest cross-road, Martha standing by as chaperon and
friend to see her off, and handing her in the large lusty child,
already crowing with delight at the sight of the horses. There was a
'~lingerie~' shop, kept by a Frenchwoman, whose acquaintance
Aimee had made in the days when she was a London nursemaid, and
thither she betook herself, rather than to an hotel, to spend the
few night-hours that intervened before the Birmingham coach started
at early morning. She slept or watched on a sofa in the parlour, for
spare-bed there was none; but Madame Pauline came in betimes with a
good cup of coffee for the mother, and of '~soupe blanche~' for the
boy; and they went off again into the wide world, only thinking of,
only seeking the 'him,' who was everything human to both. Aimee
remembered the sound of the name of the village where Osborne had
often told her that he alighted from the coach to walk home; and
though she could never have spelt the strange uncouth word, yet she
spoke it with pretty slow distinctness to the guard, asking him in
her broken English when they should arrive there? Not till four
o'clock. Alas! and what might happen before then! Once with him she
should have no fear; she was sure that she could bring him round;
but what might not happen before he was in her tender care? She was
a very capable person in many ways, though so childish and innocent
in others. She made up her mind to the course she should pursue when
the coach set her down at Feversham. She asked for a man to carry
her trunk, and show her the way to Hamley Hall.

'Hamley Hall!' said the innkeeper. 'Eh! there's a deal of trouble
there just now.'

'I know, I know,' said she, hastening off after the wheelbarrow in
which her trunk was going, and breathlessly struggling to keep up
with it, her heavy child asleep in her arms. Her pulses beat all
over her body; she could hardly see out of her eyes. To her, a
foreigner, the drawn blinds of the house, when she came in sight of
it, had no significance; she hurried, stumbled on.

'Back door or front, missus?' asked the boots from the inn.

'The most nearest,' said she. And the front door was 'the most
nearest.' Molly was sitting with the squire in the darkened
drawing-room, reading out her translations of Aimee's letters
to her husband. The squire was never weary of hearing them; the very
sound of Molly's voice soothed and comforted him, it was so sweet
and low. And he pulled her up, much as a child does, if on a second
reading of the same letter she substituted one word for another. The
house was very still this afternoon, still as it had been now for
several days; every servant in it, however needless, moving about on
tiptoe, speaking below the breath, and shutting doors as softly as
might be The nearest noise or stir of active life was that of the
rooks in the trees, who were beginning their spring chatter of
business. Suddenly, through this quiet, there came a ring at the
front-door bell that sounded, and went on sounding, through the
house, pulled by an ignorant vigorous hand. Molly stopped reading;
she and the squire looked at each other in surprised dismay. Perhaps
a thought of Roger's sudden (and impossible) return was in the mind
of each; but neither spoke. They heard Robinson hurrying to answer
the unwonted summons. They listened; but they heard no more. There
was little more to hear. When the old servant opened the door, a
lady with a child in her arms stood there. She gasped out her
ready-prepared English sentence,--

'Can I see Mr. Osborne Hamley? He is ill, I know; but I am his wife.'

Robinson had been aware that there was some mystery, long suspected
by the servants, and come to light at last to the master,--he had
guessed that there was a young woman in the case; but when she stood
there before him, asking for her dead husband as if he were living,
any presence of mind Robinson might have had forsook him; he could
not tell her the truth,--he could only leave the door open, and say
to her, 'Wait awhile, I'll come back,' and betake himself to the
drawing-room where Molly was, he knew. He went up to her in a
flutter and a hurry, and whispered something to her which turned her
white with dismay.

'What is it? What is it?' said the squire, trembling with
excitement. 'Don't keep it from me. I can bear it. Roger--' They
both thought he was going to faint; he had risen up and come close
to Molly; suspense would be worse than anything.

'Mrs. Osborne Hamley is here,' said Molly. 'I wrote to tell her her
husband was very ill, and she has come.'

'She does not know what has happened, seemingly,' said Robinson.

'I can't see her--I can't see her,' said the squire, shrinking away
into a corner. 'You will go, Molly, won't you? You'll go.'

Molly stood for a moment or two, irresolute. She, too, shrank from
the interview. Robinson put in his word,--'She looks but a weakly
thing, and has carried a big baby, choose how far, I did not stop to
ask.'

At this instant the door softly opened, and right into the midst of
them came the little figure in grey, looking ready to fall with the
weight of her child.

'You are Molly,' said she, not seeing the squire at once. 'The lady
who wrote the letter; he spoke of you sometimes. You will let me go
to him.'

Molly did not answer, except that at such moments the eyes speak
solemnly and comprehensively. Aimee read their meaning. All she
said was,--'He is not--oh, my husband--my husband!' Her arms
relaxed, her figure swayed, the child screamed and held out his arms
for help. That help was given him by his grandfather, just before
Aimee fell senseless on the floor.

'Maman, maman!' cried the little fellow, now striving and fighting
to get back to her, where she lay; he fought so lustily that the
squire had to put him down, and he crawled to the poor inanimate
body, behind which sate Molly, holding the head; whilst Robinson
rushed away for water, wine, and more womankind.

'Poor thing, poor thing!' said the squire, bending over her, and
crying afresh over her suffering. 'She is but young, Molly, and she
must ha' loved him dearly.'

'To be sure!' said Molly, quickly. She was untying the bonnet, and
taking off the worn, but neatly mended gloves; there was the soft
luxuriant black hair, shading the pale, innocent face,--the little
notable-looking brown hands, with the wedding-ring for sole
ornament. The child clustered his fingers round one of hers, and
nestled up against her with his plaintive cry, getting more and more
into a burst of wailing: 'Maman, maman!' At the growing acuteness of
his imploring, her hand moved, her lips quivered, consciousness came
partially back. She did not open her eyes, but great heavy tears
stole out from beneath her eyelashes. Molly held her head against
her own breast; and they tried to give her wine,--which she shrank
from--water, which she did not reject; that was all. At last she
tried to speak. 'Take me away,' she said, 'into the dark. Leave me
alone.'

So Molly and the woman lifted her up and carried her away, and laid
her on the bed, in the best bed-chamber in the house, and darkened
the already shaded light. She was like an unconscious corpse
herself, in that she offered neither assistance nor resistance to
all that they were doing. But just before Molly was leaving the room
to take up her watch outside the door, she felt rather than heard
that Aimee spoke to her.

'Food--bread and milk for baby.' But when they brought her food
herself, she only shrank away and turned her face to the wall
without a word. In the hurry the child had been left with Robinson
and the squire. For some unknown, but most fortunate reason, he took
a dislike to Robinson's red face and hoarse voice, and showed a most
decided preference for his grandfather. When Molly came down she
found the squire feeding the child, with more of peace upon his face
than there had been for all these days. The boy was every now and
then leaving off taking his bread and milk to show his dislike to
Robinson by word and gesture: a proceeding which only amused the old
servant, while it highly delighted the more favoured squire.

'She is lying very still, but she will neither speak nor eat. I
don't even think she is crying,' said Molly, volunteering this
account, for the squire was for the moment too much absorbed in his
grandson to ask many questions.

Robinson put in his word,--'Dick Hayward, he's Boots at the Hamley
Arms, says the coach she come by started at five this morning from
London, and the passengers said she'd been crying a deal on the
road, when she thought folks were not noticing; and she never came
in to meals with the rest, but stopped feeding her child.'

'She'll be tired out; we must let her rest,' said the squire. 'And I
do believe this little chap is going to sleep in my arms. God bless
him.'

But Molly stole out, and sent off a lad to Hollingford with a note
to her father. Her heart had warmed towards the poor stranger, and
she felt uncertain as to what ought to be the course pursued in her
case.

She went up from time to time to look at the girl, scarce older than
herself, who lay there with her eyes open, but as motionless as
death. She softly covered her over, and let her feel the sympathetic
presence from time to time; and that was all she was allowed to do.
The squire was curiously absorbed in the child; but Molly's supreme
tenderness was for the mother. Not but what she admired the sturdy,
gallant, healthy little fellow, whose every limb, and square inch of
clothing, showed the tender and thrifty care that had been taken of
him. By-and-by the squire said in a whisper,--

'She is not like a Frenchwoman, is she, Molly?'

'I don't know. I don't know what Frenchwomen are like. People say
Cynthia is French.'

'And she did not look like a servant? We won't speak of Cynthia
since she's served my Roger so. Why, I began to think, as soon as I
could think after ~that~, how I would make Roger and her happy, and
have them married at once; and then came that letter! I never wanted
her for a daughter-in-law, not I. But he did, it seems; and he was
not one for wanting many things for himself. But it's all over now;
only we won't talk of her; and maybe, as you say, she was more
French than English. The poor thing looks like a gentlewoman, I
think. I hope she's got friends who'll take care of her,--she can't
be above twenty. I thought she must be older than my poor lad!'

'She's a gentle, pretty creature,' said Molly. 'But--but I sometimes
think it has killed her; she lies like one dead.' And Molly could
not keep from crying softly at the thought.

'Nay, nay!' said the squire. 'It's not so easy to break one's heart.
Sometimes I've wished it were. But one has to go on living--all the
appointed days, as it says in the Bible.' But we'll do our best for
her. We'll not think of letting her go away till she's fit to
travel.'

Molly wondered in her heart about this going away, on which the
squire seemed fully resolved. She was sure that he intended to keep
the child; perhaps he had a legal right to do so;--but would the
mother ever part from it? Her father, however, would solve the
difficulty,--her father, whom she always looked to as so
clear-seeing and experienced. She watched and waited for his coming.
The February evening drew on; the child lay asleep in the squire's
arms till his grandfather grew tired, and laid him down on the sofa:
the large square-cornered yellow sofa upon which Mrs. Hamley used to
sit, supported by pillows in a half-reclining position. Since her
time it had been placed against the wall, and had served merely as a
piece of furniture to fill up the room. But once again a human
figure was lying upon it; a little human creature, like a cherub in
some old Italian picture. The squire, remembered his wife as he put
the child down. He thought of her as he said to Molly,--

'How pleased she would have been!' But Molly thought of the young
widow upstairs. Aimee was her 'she' at the first moment.
Presently,--but it seemed a long long time first,--she heard the
quick prompt sounds, which told of her father's arrival. In he
came--to the room as yet only lighted by the fitful blaze of the
fire.


CHAPTER LIV


MOLLY GIBSON'S WORTH IS DISCOVERED


Mr. Gibson came in rubbing his hands after his frosty ride. Molly
judged from the look in his eye that he had been fully informed of
the present state of things at the Hall by some one. But he simply
went up to and greeted the squire, and waited to hear what was said
to him. The squire was fumbling at the taper on the writing-table,
and before he answered much he lighted it, and signing to his friend
to follow him, he went softly to the sofa and showed him the
sleeping child, taking the utmost care not to arouse it by flare or
sound.

'Well! this is a fine young gentleman,' said Mr. Gibson, returning to
the fire rather sooner than the squire expected. 'And you've got the
mother here, I understand. Mrs. Osborne Hamley, as we must call her,
poor thing! It's a sad coming home to her. for I hear she knew
nothing of his death.' He spoke without exactly addressing any one,
so that either Molly or the squire might answer as they liked. The
squire said,--

'Yes! She has felt it a terrible shock. She's upstairs in the best
bedroom. I should like you to see her, Gibson, if she'll let you. We
must do our duty by her, for my poor lad's sake. I wish he could
have seen his boy lying there; I do. I daresay it preyed on him to
have to keep it all to himself. He might ha' known me, though. He
might ha' known my bark was waur than my bite. It's all over now,
though; and God forgive me if I was too sharp. I'm punished now.'

Molly grew impatient on the mother's behalf.

'Papa, I feel as if she was very ill; perhaps worse than we think.
Will you go and see her at once?'

Mr. Gibson followed her upstairs, and the squire came too, thinking
that he would do his duty now, and even feeling some
self-satisfaction at conquering his desire to stay with the child.
They went into the room where she had been taken. She lay quite
still in the same position as at first. Her eyes were open and
tearless, fixed on the wall. Mr. Gibson spoke to her, but she did not
answer; he lifted her hand to feel her pulse; she never noticed.

'Bring me some wine at once, and order some beef-tea,' he said to
Molly.

But when he tried to put the wine into her mouth as she lay there on
her side, she made no effort to receive or swallow it, and it ran
out upon the pillow. Mr. Gibson left the room abruptly; Molly chafed
the little inanimate hand; the squire stood by in dumb dismay,
touched in spite of himself by the death-in-life of one so young,
and who must have been so much beloved.

Mr. Gibson came back two steps at a time; he was carrying the
half-awakened child in his arms. He did not scruple to rouse him
into yet further wakefulness--did not grieve to hear him begin to
wail and cry. His eyes were on the figure upon the bed, which at
that sound quivered all through; and when her child was laid at her
back, and began caressingly to scramble yet closer, Aimee
turned round, and took him to her arms, and lulled him and soothed
him with the soft wont of mother's love.

Before she lost this faint consciousness, which was habit or
instinct rather than thought, Mr. Gibson spoke to her in French. The
child's one word of 'maman' had given him this clue. It was the
language sure to be most intelligible to her dulled brain; and as it
happened,--only Mr. Gibson did not think of that--it was the language
in which she had been commanded, and had learnt to obey.

Mr. Gibson's tongue was a little stiff at first, but by-and-by he
spoke it with all his old readiness. He extorted from her short
answers at first, then longer ones, and from time to time he plied
her with little drops of wine, until some further nourishment should
be at hand. Molly was struck by her father's low tones of comfort
and sympathy, although she could not follow what was said quickly
enough to catch the meaning of what passed.

By-and-by, however, when her father had done all that he could, and
they were once more downstairs, he told them more about her journey
than they yet knew. The hurry, the sense of acting in defiance of a
prohibition, the over-mastering anxiety, the broken night, and
fatigue of the journey, had ill prepared her for the shock at last,
and Mr. Gibson was seriously alarmed for the consequences. She had
wandered strangely in her replies to him; had perceived that she was
wandering, and had made great efforts to recall her senses; but Mr
Gibson foresaw that some bodily illness was coming on, and stopped
late that night, arranging many things with Molly and the squire.
One--the only--comfort arising from her state was, the probability
that she would be entirely unconscious by the morrow--the day of the
funeral. Worn out by the contending emotions of the day, the squire
seemed now unable to look beyond the wrench and trial of the next
twelve hours. He sate with his head in his hands, declining to go to
bed, refusing to dwell on the thought of his grandchild--not three
hours ago such a darling in his eyes. Mr. Gibson gave some
instructions to one of the maid-servants as to the watch she was to
keep by Mrs. Osborne Hamley, and insisted on Molly's going to bed.
When she pleaded the apparent necessity of her staying up, he
said,--

'Now, Molly, look how much less trouble the dear old squire would
give if he would obey orders. He is only adding to anxiety by
indulging himself. One pardons everything to extreme grief, however.
But you will have enough to do to occupy all your strength for days
to come; and go to bed you must now. I only wish I saw my way as
clearly through other things as I do to your nearest duty. I wish
I'd never let Roger go wandering off; he'll wish it too, poor
fellow! Did I tell you Cynthia is going off in hot haste to her
uncle Kirkpatrick's? I suspect a visit to him will stand in lieu of
going out to Russia as a governess.'

'I am sure she was quite serious in wishing for that.'

'Yes, yes! at the time. I've no doubt she thought she was sincere in
intending to go. But the great thing was to get out of the
unpleasantness of the present time and place; and uncle
Kirkpatrick's will do this as effectually, and more pleasantly, than
a situation at Nishni-Novgorod in an ice-palace.'

He had given Molly's thoughts a turn, which was what he wanted to
do. Molly could not help remembering Mr. Henderson; and his offer,
and all the consequent hints; and wondering, and wishing--what did
she wish? or had she been falling asleep? Before she had quite
ascertained this point she was asleep in reality.

After this, long days passed over in a monotonous round of care; for
no one seemed to think of Molly's leaving the Hall during the woeful
illness that befell Mrs. Osborne Hamley. It was not that her father
allowed her to take much active part in the nursing; the squire gave
him ~carte-blanche~, and he engaged two efficient hospital nurses to
watch over the unconscious Aimee; but Molly was needed to
receive the finer directions as to her treatment and diet. It was
not that she was wanted for the care of the little boy; the squire
was too jealous of the child's exclusive love for that, and one of
the housemaids was employed in the actual physical charge of him;
but he needed some one to listen to his incontinence of language,
both when his passionate regret for his dead son came uppermost, and
also when he had discovered some extraordinary charm in that son's
child; and again when he was oppressed with the uncertainty of
Aimee's long-continued illness. Molly was not so good or so
bewitching a listener to ordinary conversation as Cynthia; but where
her heart was interested her sympathy was deep and unfailing. In
this case she only wished that the squire could really feel that
Aimee was not the encumbrance which he evidently considered her
to be. Not that he would have acknowledged the fact, if it had been
put before him in plain words. He fought against the dim
consciousness of what was in his mind; he spoke repeatedly of
patience when no one but himself was impatient; he would often say
that when she grew better she must not be allowed to leave the Hall
until she was perfectly strong, when no one was even contemplating
the remotest chance of her leaving her child, excepting only
himself. Molly once or twice asked her father if she might not speak
to the squire, and represent the hardship of sending her away--the
improbability that she would consent to quit her boy, and so on; but
Mr. Gibson only replied,--

'Wait quietly. Time enough when nature and circumstance have had
their chance, and have failed.'

It was well that Molly was such a favourite with the old servants;
for she had frequently to restrain and to control. To be sure, she
had her father's authority to back her. and they were aware that
where her own comfort, case, or pleasure was concerned she never
interfered, but submitted to their will. If the squire had known of
the want of attendance to which she submitted with the most perfect
meekness, as far as she herself was the only sufferer, he would have
gone into a towering rage. But Molly hardly thought of it, so
anxious was she to do all she could for others and to remember the
various charges which her father gave her in his daily visits.
Perhaps he did not spare her enough. she was willing and
uncomplaining; but one day after Mrs. Osborne Hamley had 'taken the
turn,' as the nurses called it, when she was lying weak as a
new-born baby, but with her faculties all restored, and her fever
gone, when spring buds were blooming out, and spring birds sang
merrily, Molly answered to her father's sudden questioning that she
felt unaccountably weary; that her head ached heavily, and that she
was aware of a sluggishness of thought which it required a painful
effort to overcome.

'Don't go on,' said Mr. Gibson, with a quick pang of anxiety, almost
of remorse. 'Lie down here--with your back to the light. I'll come
back and see you before I go.' And off he went in search of the
squire. He had a good long walk before he came upon Mr. Hamley in a
field of spring wheat, where the women were weeding, his little
grandson holding to his finger in the intervals of short walks of
inquiry into the dirtiest places, which was all his sturdy little
limbs could manage.

'Well, Gibson, and how goes the patient? Better! I wish we could get
her out of doors, such a fine day as it is. It would make her strong
as soon as anything. I used to beg my poor lad to come out more.
Maybe, I worried him; but the air is the finest thing for
strengthening that I know of, Though, perhaps, she'll not thrive in
English air as if she'd been born here; and she'll not be quite
right till she gets back to her native place, wherever that is.'

'I don't know. I begin to think we shall get her quite round here;
and I don't know that she could be in a better place. But it is not
about her. May I order the carriage for my Molly?' Mr. Gibson's voice
sounded as if he was choking a little as he said these last words.

'To be sure,' said the squire, setting the child down. He had been
holding him in his arms the last few minutes; but now he wanted all
his eyes to look into Mr. Gibson's face. 'I say,' said he, catching
hold of Mr. Gibson's arm, 'what's the matter, man? Don't twitch up
your face like that, but speak!'

'Nothing's the matter,' said Mr. Gibson, hastily. 'Only I want her at
home, under my own eye;' and he turned away to go to the house, But
the squire left his field and his weeders, and kept at Mr. Gibson's
side. He wanted to speak, but his heart was so full he did not know
what to say. 'I say, Gibson,' he got out at last, 'your Molly is
liker a child of mine than a stranger; and I reckon we've all on us
been coming too hard upon her. You don't think there's much amiss,
do you?'

'How can I tell?' said Mr. Gibson, almost savagely. But any hastiness
of temper was instinctively understood by the squire; and he was not
offended, though he did not speak again till they reached the house.
Then he went to order the carriage, and stood by sorrowful enough
while the horses were being put in. He felt as if he should not know
what to do without Molly; he had never known her value, he thought,
till now. But he kept silence on this view of the case; which was a
praiseworthy effort on the part of one who usually let by-standers
see and hear as much of his passing feelings as if he had had a
window in his breast. He stood by while Mr. Gibson helped the
faintly-smiling, tearful Molly into the carriage. Then the squire
mounted on the step and kissed her hand; but when he tried to thank
her and bless her, he broke down; and as soon as he was once more
safely on the ground Mr. Gibson cried out to the coachman to drive
on. And so Molly left Hamley Hall. From time to time her father rode
up to the window, and made some little cheerful and apparently
careless remark. When they came within two miles of Hollingford he
put spurs to his horse, and rode briskly past the carriage windows,
kissing his hand to the occupant as he did so. He went on to prepare
her home for Molly: when she arrived Mrs. Gibson was ready to greet
her. Mr. Gibson had given one or two of his bright, imperative
orders, and Mrs. Gibson was feeling rather lonely without either of
her two dear girls at home, as she phrased it, to herself as well as
to others.

'Why, my sweet Molly, this is an unexpected pleasure. Only this
morning I said to papa, "When do you think we shall see our Molly
back?" He did not say much--he never does, you know; but I am sure
he thought directly of giving me this surprise, this pleasure.
You're looking a little--what shall I call it? I remember such a
pretty line of poetry, "Oh, call her fair, not pale!"--so we'll call
you fair.'

'You'd better not call her anything, but let her get to her own room
and have a good rest as soon as possible. Haven't you got a trashy
novel or two in the house? That's the literature to send her to
sleep.'

He did not leave her till he had seen her laid on a sofa in a
darkened room, with some slight pretence of reading in her hand.
Then he came away, leading his wife, who turned round at the door to
kiss her hand to Molly, and make a little face of unwillingness to
be dragged away.

'Now, Hyacinth,' said he, as he took his wife into the drawing-room,
'she will need much care. She has been overworked, and I've been a
fool. That's all. We must keep her from all worry and care,--but I
won't answer for it that she'll not have an illness, for all that!'

'Poor thing! she does look worn out. She is something like me, her
feelings are too much for her. But now she is come home she shall
find us as cheerful as possible. I can answer for myself; and you
really must brighten up your doleful face, my dear--nothing so bad
for invalids as the appearance of depression in those around them. I
have had such a pleasant letter from Cynthia to-day. Uncle
Kirkpatrick really seems to make so much of her, he treats her just
like a daughter; he has given her a ticket to the Concerts of
Ancient Music; and Mr. Henderson has been to call on her, in spite of
all that has gone before.'

For an instant, Mr. Gibson thought that it was easy enough for his
wife to be cheerful, with the pleasant thoughts and evident
anticipations she had in her mind, but a little more difficult for
him to put off his doleful looks while his own child lay in a state
of suffering and illness which might be the precursor of a still
worse malady. But he was always a man for immediate action as soon
as he had resolved on the course to be taken; and he knew that 'some
must watch, while some must sleep; so runs the world away.'

The illness which he apprehended came upon Molly; not violently or
acutely, so that there was any immediate danger to be dreaded; but
making a long pull upon her strength, which seemed to lessen day by
day, until at last her father feared that she might become a
permanent invalid. There was nothing very decided or alarming to
tell Cynthia, and Mrs. Gibson kept the dark side from her in her
letters. 'Molly was feeling the spring weather;' or 'Molly had been
a good deal overdone with her stay at the Hall, and was resting;'
such little sentences told nothing of Molly's real state. But then,
as Mrs. Gibson said to herself, it would be a pity to disturb
Cynthia's pleasure by telling her much about Molly; indeed there was
not much to tell, one day was so like another. But it so happened
that Lady Harriet,--who came whenever she could to sit awhile with
Molly, at first against Mrs. Gibson's will, and afterwards with her
full consent, for reasons of her own--Lady Harriet wrote a letter
to Cynthia, to which she was urged by Mrs. Gibson. It fell out in
this manner:--One day, when Lady Harriet was sitting in the
drawing-room for a few minutes after she had been with Molly, she
said,--

'Really, Clare, I spend so much time in your house that I am going
to establish a work-basket here. Mary has infected me with her
notability, and I am going to work mamma a footstool. It is to be a
surprise; and so if I do it here she will know nothing about it.
Only I cannot match the gold beads I want for the pansies in this
dear little town; and Hollingford, who could send me down stars and
planets if I asked him, I make no doubt, could no more match beads
than--'

'My dear Lady Harriet! you forget Cynthia! Think what a pleasure it
would be to her to do anything for you.'

'Would it? Then she shall have plenty of it; but, mind, it is you
who have answered for her. She shall get me some wool too; how good
I am to confer so much pleasure on a fellow-creature. But seriously,
do you think I might write and give her a few commissions? Neither
Agnes nor Mary are in town--'

'I am sure she would be delighted,' said Mrs. Gibson, who also took
into consideration the reflection of aristocratic honour that would
fall upon Cynthia if she had a letter from a Lady Harriet while at
Mr. Kirkpatrick's. So she gave the address, and Lady Harriet wrote.
All the first part of the letter was taken up with apology and
commissions; but then, never doubting but that Cynthia was aware of
Molly's state, she went on to say,--

'I saw Molly this morning. Twice I have been forbidden admittance,
as she was too ill to see any one out of her own family. I wish we
could begin to perceive a change for the better; but she looks more
fading every time, and I fear Mr. Gibson considers it a very anxious
case.'

The day but one after this letter was despatched, Cynthia walked
into the drawing-room at home with as much apparent composure as if
she had left it not an hour before. Mrs. Gibson was dozing, but
believing herself to be reading; she had been with Molly the greater
part of the morning, and now after her lunch, and the invalid's
pretence of early dinner, she considered herself entitled to some
repose. She started up as Cynthia came in.

'Cynthia! Dear child, where have you come from? Why in the world
have you come? My poor nerves! My heart is quite fluttering; but, to
be sure, it's no wonder with all this anxiety I have to undergo. Why
have you come back?'

'Because of the anxiety you speak of, mamma. I never knew,--you
never told me how ill Molly was.'

'Nonsense. I beg your pardon, my dear, but it's really nonsense.
Molly's illness is only nervous, Mr. Gibson says. A nervous fever;
but you must remember nerves are mere fancy, and she's getting
better. Such a pity for you to have left your uncle's. Who told you
about Molly?'

'Lady Harriet. She wrote about some wool--'

'I know,--I know. But you might have known she always exaggerates
things, Not but what I have been almost worn out with nursing.
Perhaps after all it is a very good thing you have come, my dear;
and now you shall come down into the dining-room and have some
lunch, and tell me all the Hyde Park Street news--into my
room,--don't go into yours yet--Molly is so sensitive to noise!'

While Cynthia ate her lunch, Mrs. Gibson went on questioning. 'And
your aunt, how is her cold? And Helen, quite strong again?
Margaretta as pretty as ever? The boys are at Harrow, I suppose? And
my old favourite, Mr. Henderson?' She could not manage to slip in
this last inquiry naturally; in spite of herself there was a change
of tone, an accent of eagerness. Cynthia did not reply on the
instant; she poured herself out some water with great deliberation,
and then said,--

'My aunt is quite well; Helen is as strong as she ever is, and
Margaretta very pretty. The boys are at Harrow, and I conclude that
Mr. Henderson is enjoying his usual health, for he was to dine at my
uncle's to-day.'

'Take care, Cynthia. Look how you are cutting that gooseberry tart,'
said Mrs. Gibson, with sharp annoyance; not provoked by Cynthia's
present action, although it gave excuse for a little vent of temper.
'I can't think how you could come off in this sudden kind of way; I
am sure it must have annoyed your uncle and aunt. I daresay they'll
never ask you again.'

'On the contrary, I am to go back there as soon as ever I can be
easy to leave Molly.'

'"Easy to leave Molly." Now that really is nonsense, and rather
uncomplimentary to me, I must say: nursing her as I have been doing,
daily, and almost nightly; for I have been wakened times out of
number by Mr. Gibson getting up, and going to see if she had had her
medicine properly.'

'I am afraid she has been very ill?' asked Cynthia.

'Yes, she has, in one way; but not in another. It was what I call
more a tedious, than an interesting illness. There was no immediate
danger, but she lay much in the same state from day to day.'

'I wish I had known!' sighed Cynthia. 'Do you think I might go and
see her now?'

'I'll go and prepare her. You'll find her a good deal better than
she has been. Ah! here's Mr. Gibson!' He came into the dining-room,
hearing voices. Cynthia thought that he looked much older.

'You here!' said he, coming forward to shake hands. 'Why, how did
you come?'

'By the "Umpire." I never knew Molly had been so ill, or I would
have come directly.' Her eyes were full of tears. Mr. Gibson was
touched; he shook her hand again, and murmured, 'You're a good girl,
Cynthia.'

'She's heard one of dear Lady Harriet's exaggerated accounts,' said
Mrs. Gibson, 'and come straight off. I tell her it's very foolish,
for really Molly is a great deal better now.'

'Very foolish,' said Mr. Gibson, echoing his wife's words, but
smiling at Cynthia. 'But sometimes one likes foolish people for
their folly, better than wise people for their wisdom.'

'I am afraid folly always annoys me,' said his wife. 'However,
Cynthia is here, and what is done, is done.'

'Very true, my dear. And now I'll run up and see my little girl, and
tell her the good news. You'd better follow me in a couple of
minutes.' This to Cynthia.

Molly's delight at seeing her showed itself first in a few happy
tears; and then in soft caresses and inarticulate sounds of love.
Once or twice she began, 'It is such a pleasure,' and there she
stopped short. But the eloquence of these five words sank deep into
Cynthia's heart. She had returned just at the right time, when Molly
wanted the gentle fillip of the society of a fresh and yet a
familiar person. Cynthia's tact made her talkative or silent, gay or
grave, as the varying humour of Molly required. She listened, too,
with the semblance, if not the reality, of unwearied interest, to
Molly's continual recurrence to all the time of distress and sorrow
at Hamley Hall, and to the scenes which had then so deeply impressed
themselves upon her susceptible nature. Cynthia instinctively knew
that the repetition of all these painful recollections would case
the oppressed memory, which refused to dwell on anything but what
had occurred at a time of feverish disturbance of health. So she
never interrupted Molly, as Mrs. Gibson had so frequently done, with,
--'You told me all that before, my dear. Let us talk of something
else;' or, 'Really I cannot allow you to be always dwelling on
painful thoughts. Try and be a little more cheerful. Youth is gay.
You are young, and therefore you ought to be gay. That is put in a
famous form of speech; I forget exactly what it is called.'

So Molly's health and spirits improved rapidly after Cynthia's
return; and although she was likely to retain many of her invalid
habits during the summer, she was able to take drives, and enjoy the
fine weather; it was only her as yet tender spirits that required a
little management. All the Hollingford people forgot that they had
ever thought of her except as the darling of the town; and each in
his or her way showed kind interest in her father's child. Miss
Browning and Miss Phoebe considered it quite a privilege that they
were allowed to see her a fortnight or three weeks before any one
else; Mrs. Goodenough, spectacles on nose, stirred dainty messes in a
silver saucepan for Molly's benefit; the Towers sent books and
forced fruit, and new caricatures, and strange and delicate poultry;
humble patients of 'the doctor,' as Mr. Gibson was usually termed,
left the earliest cauliflowers they could grow in their cottage
gardens, with 'their duty for Miss.'

And last of all, though strongest in regard, most piteously eager in
interest, came Squire Hamley himself. When she was at the worst, he
rode over every day to hear the smallest detail, facing even Mrs
Gibson (his abomination) if her husband was not at home, to ask and
hear, and ask and hear, till the tears were unconsciously stealing
down his cheeks. Every resource of his heart, or his house, or his
lands was searched and tried, if it could bring a moment's pleasure
to her; and whatever it might be that came from him, at her very
worst time, it brought out a dim smile upon her face.


CHAPTER LV


AN ABSENT LOVER RETURNS


And now it was late June; and to Molly's and her father's extreme
urgency in pushing, and Mr. and Mrs. Kirkpatrick's affectionate
persistency in pulling, Cynthia had yielded, and had gone back to
finish her interrupted visit in London, but not before the bruit of
her previous sudden return to nurse Molly, had told strongly in her
favour in the fluctuating opinion of the little town. Her affair
with Mr. Preston was thrust into the shade; while every one was
speaking of her warm heart. Under the gleam of Molly's recovery
everything assumed a rosy hue, as indeed became the time when actual
roses were actually in bloom.

One morning Mrs. Gibson brought Molly a great basket of flowers, that
bad been sent from the Hall. Molly still breakfasted in bed, but had
just come down, and was now well enough to arrange the flowers for
the drawing-room, and as she did so with these blossoms, she made
some comments on each.

'Ah! these white pinks! They were Mrs. Hamley's favourite flower; and
so like her! This little bit of sweetbrier, it quite scents the
room. It has pricked my fingers, but never mind. Oh, mamma, look at
this rose! I forget its name, but it is very rare, and grows up in
the sheltered corner of the wall, near the mulberry-tree. Roger
bought the tree for his mother with his own money when he was quite
a boy; he showed it me, and made me notice it.'

'I daresay it was Roger who got it now. You heard papa say he had
seen him yesterday.'

'No! Roger! Roger come home!' said Molly, turning first red, then
very white.

'Yes. Oh, I remember you had gone to bed before papa came in, and he
was called off early to tiresome Mrs. Beale. Yes, Roger turned up at
the Hall the day before yesterday.'

But Molly leaned back against her chair, too faint to do more at the
flowers for some time. She had been startled by the suddenness of
the news. 'Roger come home!'

It happened that Mr. Gibson was unusually busy on this particular
day, and he did not return until late in the afternoon. But Molly
kept her place in the drawing-room all the time, not even going to
take her customary siesta, so anxious was she to hear everything
about Roger's return, which as yet appeared to her almost
incredible. But it was quite natural in reality; the long monotony
of her illness had made her lose all count of time. When Roger left
England, his idea was to coast round Africa on the eastern side
until he reached the Cape; and thence to make what further journey
or voyage might seem to him best in pursuit of his scientific
objects. To Cape Town all his letters had been addressed of late;
and there, two months before, he had received the intelligence of
Osborne's death, as well as Cynthia's hasty letter of
relinquishment. He did not consider that he was doing wrong in
returning to England immediately, and reporting himself to the
gentlemen who had sent him out, with a full explanation of the
circumstances relating to Osborne's private marriage and sudden
death. He offered, and they accepted his offer, to go out again for
any time that they might think equivalent to the five months he was
yet engaged to them for. They were most of them gentlemen of
property, and saw the full importance of proving the marriage of an
eldest son, and installing his child as the natural heir to a
long-descended estate. This much information, but in a more
condensed form, Mr. Gibson gave to Molly, in a very few minutes. She
sate up on her sofa, looking very pretty with the flush on her
cheeks, and the brightness in her eyes.

'Well!' said she, when her father stopped speaking.

'Well! what?' asked he, playfully.

'Oh! why, such a number of things. I've been waiting all day to ask
you all about everything. How is he looking?'

'If a young man of twenty-four ever does take to growing taller, I
should say that he was taller. As it is, I suppose it is only that
he looks broader, stronger--more muscular.'

'Oh! is he changed?' asked Molly, a little disturbed by this
account.

'No, not changed; and yet not the same. He is as brown as a berry
for one thing; caught a little of the negro tinge, and a beard as
fine and sweeping as my bay-mare's tail.'

'A beard! But go on, papa. Does he talk as he used to do? I should
know his voice amongst ten thousand.'

'I did not catch any Hottentot twang, if that's what you mean. Nor
did he say, "Caesar and Pompey berry much alike, 'specially
Pompey," which is the only specimen of negro language I can remember
just at this moment.'

'And which I never could see the wit of,' said Mrs. Gibson, who had
come into the room after the conversation had begun; and did not
understand what it was aiming at. Molly fidgeted; she wanted to go
on with her questions and keep her father to definite and
matter-of-fact answers, and she knew that when his wife chimed into
a conversation, Mr. Gibson was very apt to find out that he must go
about some necessary piece of business.

'Tell me, how are they all getting on together?' It was an inquiry
which she did not make in general before Mrs. Gibson, for Molly and
her father had tacitly agreed to keep silence on what they knew or
had observed, respecting the three who formed the present family at
the Hall.

'Oh!' said Mr. Gibson, 'Roger is evidently putting everything to
rights in his firm, quiet way.'

'"Things to rights." Why, what's wrong?' asked Mrs. Gibson quickly.
'The squire and the French daughter-in-law don't get on well
together, I suppose? I am always so glad Cynthia acted with the
promptitude she did; it would have been very awkward for her to have
been mixed up with all these complications. Poor Roger! to find
himself supplanted by a child when he comes home!'

'You were not in the room, my dear, when I was telling Molly of the
reasons for Roger's return; it was to put his brother's child at
once into his rightful and legal place. So now, when he finds the
work partly done to his hands, he is happy and gratified in
proportion.'

'Then he is not much affected by Cynthia's breaking off her
engagement?' (Mrs. Gibson could afford to call it an 'engagement'
now.) 'I never did give him credit for very deep feelings.'

'On the contrary, he feels it very acutely. He and I had a long talk
about it, yesterday.'

Both Molly and Mrs. Gibson would have liked to have heard something
more about this conversation; but Mr. Gibson did not choose to go on
with the subject. The only point which he disclosed was that Roger
had insisted on his right to have a personal interview with Cynthia;
and, on hearing that she was in London at present, had deferred any
further explanation or expostulation by letter, preferring to await
her return.

Molly went on with her questions on other subjects. 'And Mrs. Osborne
Hamley? How is she?'

'Wonderfully brightened up by Roger's presence. I don't think I have
ever seen her smile before; but she gives him the sweetest smiles
from time to time. They are evidently good friends; and she loses
her strange startled look when she speaks to him. I suspect she has
been quite aware of the squire's wish that she should return to
France; and has been hard put to it to decide whether to leave her
child or not. The idea that she would have to make some such
decision came upon her when she was completely shattered by grief
and illness, and she has not had any one to consult as to her duty
until Roger came, upon whom she has evidently firm reliance. He told
me something of this himself.'

'You seem to have had quite a long conversation with him, papa!'

'Yes. I was going to see old Abraham, when the squire called to me
over the hedge, as I was jogging along. He told me the news; and
there was no resisting his invitation to come back and lunch with
them. Besides, one gets a great deal of meaning out of Roger's
words; it did not take so very long a time to hear this much.'

'I should think he would come and call upon us soon,' said Mrs
Gibson to Molly; 'and then we shall see how much we can manage to
hear.'

'Do you think he will, papa?' said Molly, more doubtfully. She
remembered the last time he was in that very room, and the hopes
with which he left it; and she fancied that she could see traces of
this thought in her father's countenance at his wife's speech.

'I cannot tell, my dear. Until he is quite convinced of Cynthia's
intentions, it cannot be very pleasant for him to come on mere
visits of ceremony to the house in which he has known her; but he is
one who will always do what he thinks right, whether pleasant or
not.'

Mrs. Gibson could hardly wait till her husband had finished his
sentence before she testified against a part of it.

'"Convinced of Cynthia's intentions!" I should think she had made
them pretty clear! What more does the man want?'

'He is not as yet convinced that the letter was not written in a fit
of temporary feeling. I have told him that this was true; although I
did not feel it my place to explain to him the causes of that
feeling. He believes that he can induce her to resume the former
footing. I do not; and I have told him so; but of course he needs
the full conviction that she alone can give him.'

'Poor Cynthia! My poor child!' said Mrs. Gibson, plaintively. 'What
she has exposed herself to by letting herself be over-persuaded by
that man!'

Mr. Gibson's eyes flashed fire. But he kept his lips tight closed;
and only said, '"That man," indeed!' quite below his breath.

Molly, too, had been damped by an expression or two in her father's
speech. 'Mere visits of ceremony!' Was it so, indeed? A 'mere visit
of ceremony!' Whatever it was, the call was paid before many days
were over. That he felt all the awkwardness of his position towards
Mrs. Gibson--that he was in reality suffering pain all the time--was
but too evident to Molly; but of course Mrs. Gibson saw nothing of
this in her gratification at the proper respect paid to her by one
whose name was already in the newspapers that chronicled his return,
and about whom already Lord Cumnor and the Towers family had been
making inquiry.

Molly was sitting in her pretty white invalid's dress, half reading,
half dreaming, for the June air was so clear and ambient, the garden
so full of bloom, the trees so full of leaf, that reading by the
open window was only a pretence at such a time; besides which Mrs
Gibson continually interrupted her with remarks about the pattern of
her worsted-work. It was after lunch--orthodox calling time, when
Maria ushered in Mr. Roger Hamley. Molly started up; and then stood
shyly and quietly in her place while a bronzed, bearded, grave man
came into the room, in whom she at first had to seek for the merry
boyish face she knew by heart only two years ago. But months in the
climates in which Roger had been travelling age as much as years in
more temperate districts. And constant thought and anxiety while in
daily peril of life deepen the lines of character upon a face.
Moreover, the circumstances that had of late affected him personally
were not of a nature to make him either buoyant or cheerful. But his
voice was the same; that was the first point of the old friend Molly
caught, when he addressed her in a tone far softer than he used in
speaking conventional politenesses to her stepmother.

'I was so sorry to hear how ill you had been! You are looking but
delicate!' letting his eyes rest upon her face with affectionate
examination. Molly felt herself colour all over with the
consciousness of his regard. To do something to put an end to it,
she looked up, and showed him her beautiful soft grey eyes, which he
never remembered to have noticed before. She smiled at him as she
blushed still deeper, and said,--

'Oh! I am quite strong now to what I was. It would be a shame to be
ill when everything is in its full summer beauty.'

'I have heard how deeply we--I am indebted to you--my father can
hardly praise you--'

'Please don't,' said Molly, the tears coming into her eyes in spite
of herself. He seemed to understand her at once; he went on as if
speaking to Mrs. Gibson,--'Indeed my little sister-in-law is never
weary of talking about ~Monsieur le Docteur~, as she calls your
husband!'

'I have not had the pleasure of making Mrs. Osborne Hamley's
acquaintance yet,' said Mrs. Gibson, suddenly aware of a duty which
might have been expected from her, 'and I must beg you to apologize
to her for my remissness. But Molly has been such a care and anxiety
to me--for, you know, I look upon her quite as my own child--that I
really have not gone anywhere, excepting to the Towers perhaps I
should say, which is just like another home to me. And then I
understood that Mrs. Osborne Hamley was thinking of returning to
France before long? Still it was very remiss.'

The little trap thus set for news of what might be going on in the
Hamley family was quite successful. Roger answered her thus,--

'I am sure Mrs. Osborne Hamley will be very glad to see any friends
of the family, as soon as she is a little stronger. I hope she will
not go back to France at all. She is an orphan, and I trust we shall
induce her to remain with my father. But at present nothing is
arranged.' Then, as if glad to have got over his 'visit of
ceremony,' he got up and took leave. When he was at the door he
looked back, having, as he thought, a word more to say; but he quite
forgot what it was, for he surprised Molly's intent gaze, and sudden
confusion at discovery, and went away as soon as he could.

'Poor Osborne was right!' said he. 'She had grown into delicate
fragrant beauty just as he said she would: or is it the character
which has formed the face? Now the next time I enter these doors it
will be to learn my fate!'

Mr. Gibson had told his wife of Roger's desire to have a personal
interview with Cynthia, rather with a view to her repeating what he
said to her daughter. He did not see any exact necessity for this,
it is true; but he thought that it might be advisable that she
should know all the truth in which she was concerned, and he told
his wife this. But she took the affair into her own management, and,
although she apparently agreed with Mr. Gibson, she never named the
affair to Cynthia; all that she said to her was,--

'Your old admirer, Roger Hamley, has come home in a great hurry in
consequence of poor dear Osborne's unexpected decease. He must have
been rather surprised to find the widow and her little boy
established at the Hall. He came to call here the other day, and
made himself really rather agreeable, although his manners are not
improved by the society he has kept on his travels. Still I prophesy
he will be considered as a fashionable "lion," and perhaps the very
uncouthness which jars against my sense of refinement, may even
become admired in a scientific traveller, who has been into more
desert places, and eaten more extraordinary food, than any other
Englishman of the day. I suppose he has given up all chance of
inheriting the estate, for I hear he talks of returning to Africa,
and becoming a regular wanderer. Your name was not mentioned, but I
believe he inquired about you from Mr. Gibson.'

'There!' said she to herself, as she folded up and directed this
letter; 'that can't disturb her, or make her uncomfortable. And it's
all the truth too, or very near it. Of course he'll want to see her
when she comes back; but by that time I do hope Mr. Henderson will
have proposed again, and that that affair will be all settled.'

But Cynthia returned to Hollingford one Tuesday morning, and in
answer to her mother's anxious inquiries on the subject, would only
say that Mr. Henderson had not offered again. 'Why should he? She had
refused him once,' and he did not know the reason of her refusal, at
least one of the reasons. She did not know if she should have taken
him if there had been no such person as Roger Hamley in the world.
No! Uncle and aunt Kirkpatrick had never heard anything about
Roger's offer,--nor had her cousins. She had always declared her
wish to keep it a secret, and she had not mentioned it to any one,
whatever other people might have done.' Underneath this light and
careless vein there were other feelings; but Mrs. Gibson was not one
to probe beneath the surface. She had set her heart on Mr
Henderson's marrying Cynthia very early in their acquaintance: and
to know, firstly, that the same wish had entered into his head, and
that Roger's attachment to Cynthia, with its consequences, had been
the obstacle; and secondly, that Cynthia herself with all the
opportunities of propinquity that she had lately had, had failed to
provoke a repetition of the offer,--it was, as Mrs. Gibson said,
'enough to provoke a saint.' All the rest of the day she alluded to
Cynthia as a disappointing and ungrateful daughter; Molly could not
make out why, and resented it for Cynthia, until the latter said,
bitterly, 'Never mind, Molly. Mamma is only vexed because Mr---
because I have not come back an engaged young lady.'

'Yes; and I am sure you might have done,--there's the ingratitude! I
am not so unjust as to want you to do what you can't do!' said Mrs
Gibson, querulously.

'But where's the ingratitude, mamma? I am very much tired, and
perhaps that makes me stupid; but I cannot see the ingratitude.'
Cynthia spoke very wearily, leaning her head back on the
sofa-cushions, as if she did not much care to have an answer.

'Why, don't you see we are doing all we can for you; dressing you
well, and sending you to London; and when you might relieve us of
the expense of all this, you don't.'

'No! Cynthia, I will speak,' said Molly, all crimson with
indignation, and pushing away Cynthia's restraining hand. 'I am sure
papa does not feel, and does not mind, any expense he incurs about
his daughters. And I know quite well that he does not
wish us to marry, unless--' She faltered and stopped.

'Unless what?' said Mrs. Gibson, half-mocking.

'Unless we love some one very dearly indeed,' said Molly, in a low,
firm tone.

'Well, after this tirade--really rather indelicate, I must say--I
have done. I will neither help nor hinder any love-affairs of you
two young ladies. In my days we were glad of the advice of our
elders.' And she left the room to put into fulfilment an idea which
had just struck her: to write a confidential letter to Mrs
Kirkpatrick, giving her her version of Cynthia's 'unfortunate
entanglement' and 'delicate sense of honour,' and hints of her
entire indifference to all the masculine portion of the world, Mr
Henderson being dexterously excluded from the category.

'Oh, dear!' said Molly, throwing herself back in a chair, with a
sigh of relief, as Mrs. Gibson left the room; 'how cross I do get
since I have been ill. But I could not bear her to speak as if papa
grudged you anything.'

'I am sure he does not, Molly. You need not defend him on my
account. But I am sorry mamma still looks upon me as "an
encumbrance," as the advertisements in ~The Times~ always call us
unfortunate children. But I have been an encumbrance to her all my
life. I am getting very much into despair about everything, Molly. I
shall try my luck in Russia. I have heard of a situation as English
governess at Moscow, in a family owning whole provinces of land, and
serfs by the hundred. I put off writing my letter till I came home;
I shall be as much out of the way there as if I was married. Oh,
dear! travelling all night is not good for the spirits. How is Mr
Preston?'

'Oh, he has taken Cumnor Grange, three miles away, and he never
comes in to the Hollingford tea-parties now. I saw him once in the
street, but it's a question which of us tried the hardest to get out
of the other's way.'

'You've not said anything about Roger, yet.'

'No; I did not know if you would care to hear. He is very much
older-looking; quite a strong grown-up man. And papa says he is much
graver. Ask me any questions, if you want to know, but I have only
seen him once.'

'I was in hopes he would have left the neighbourhood by this time.
Mamma said he was going to travel again.'

'I can't tell,' said Molly. 'I suppose you know,' she continued, but
hesitating a little before she spoke, 'that he wishes to see you.'

'No! I never heard. I wish he would have been satisfied with my
letter. It was as decided as I could make it. If I say I won't see
him, I wonder if his will or mine will be the strongest?'

'His,' said Molly. 'But you must see him, you owe it to him. He will
never be satisfied without it.'

'Suppose he talks me round into resuming the engagement? I should
only break it off again.'

'Surely you can't be "talked round" if your mind is made up. But
perhaps it is not really, Cynthia?' asked she, with a little wistful
anxiety betraying itself in her face.

'It is quite made up. I am going to teach little Russian girls; and
am never going to marry nobody.'

'You are not serious, Cynthia. And yet it is a very serious thing.'

But Cynthia went into one of her wild moods, and no more reason or
sensible meaning was to be got out of her at the time.


CHAPTER LVI


'OFF WITH THE OLD LOVE, AND ON WITH THE NEW.'


The next morning saw Mrs. Gibson in a much more contented frame of
mind. She had written and posted her letter, and the next thing was
to keep Cynthia in what she called a reasonable state, or, in other
words, to try and cajole her into docility. But it was so much
labour lost. Cynthia had already received a letter from Mr. Henderson
before she came down to breakfast,--a declaration of love, a
proposal of marriage as clear as words could make it; together with
an intimation that, unable to wait for the slow delays of the post,
he was going to follow her down to Hollingford, and would arrive at
the same time that she had done herself on the previous day. Cynthia
said nothing about this letter to any one. She came late into the
breakfast-room, after Mr. and Mrs. Gibson had finished the actual
business of the meal; but her unpunctuality was quite accounted for
by the fact that she had been travelling all the night before. Molly
was not as yet strong enough to get up so early. Cynthia hardly
spoke, and did not touch her food. Mr. Gibson went about his daily
business, and Cynthia and her mother were left alone.

'My dear,' said Mrs. Gibson, 'you are not eating your breakfast as
you should do. I am afraid our meals seem very plain and homely to
you after those in Hyde Park Street?'

'No,' said Cynthia; 'I am not hungry, that's all.'

'If we were as rich as your uncle, I should feel it to be both a
duty and a pleasure to keep an elegant table; but limited means are
a sad clog to one's wishes. I don't suppose that, work as he will,
Mr. Gibson can earn more than he does at present; while the
capabilities of the law are boundless. Lord Chancellor! Titles as
well as fortune!'

Cynthia was almost too much absorbed in her own reflections to
reply, but she did say,--

'Hundreds of briefless barristers. Take the other side, mamma.'

'Well; but I have noticed that many of these have private fortunes.'

'Perhaps. Mamma, I expect Mr. Henderson will come and call this
morning.'

'Oh, my precious child! But how do you know? My darling Cynthia, am
I to congratulate you?'

'No! I suppose I must tell you. I have had a letter this morning
from him, and he is coming down by the "Umpire" to-day.'

'But he has offered? He surely must mean to offer, at any rate?'

Cynthia played with her teaspoon before she replied; then she looked
up, like one startled from a dream, and caught the echo of her
mother's question.

'Offered! yes, I suppose he has.'

'And you accept him? Say yes, Cynthia, and make me happy!'

'I shan't say "yes" to make any one happy except myself, and the
Russian scheme has great charms for me.' She said this to plague her
mother, and lessen Mrs. Gibson's exuberance of joy, it must be
confessed; for her mind was pretty well made up. But it did not
affect Mrs. Gibson, who affixed even less truth to it than there
really was. The idea of a residence in a new, strange country, among
new, strange people, was not without allurement to Cynthia.

'You always look nice, dear; but don't you think you had better put
on that pretty lilac silk?'

'I shall not vary a thread or a shred from what I have got on now.'

'You dear wilful creature! you know you always look lovely in
whatever you put on.' So, kissing her daughter, Mrs. Gibson left the
room, intent on the lunch which should impress Mr. Henderson at once
with an idea of family refinement.

Cynthia went upstairs to Molly; She was inclined to tell her about
Mr. Henderson, but she found it impossible to introduce the subject
naturally, so she left it to time to reveal the future as gradually
as it might. Molly was tired with a bad night; and her father, in
his flying visit to his darling before going out, had advised her to
stay upstairs for the greater part of the morning, and to keep quiet
in her own room till after her early dinner, so Time had not a fair
chance of telling her what he had in store in his budget. Mrs. Gibson
sent an apology to Molly for not paying her her usual morning visit,
and told Cynthia to give Mr. Henderson's probable coming as a reason
for her occupation downstairs. But Cynthia did no such thing. She
kissed Molly, and sate silently by her, holding her hand; till at
length she jumped up, and said, 'You shall be left alone now, little
one. I want you to be very well and very bright this afternoon: so
rest now.' And Cynthia left her, and went to her own room, locked
the door, and began to think.

Some one was thinking about her at the same time, and it was not Mr
Henderson. Roger had heard from Mr. Gibson that Cynthia had come
home, and he was resolving to go to her at once, and have one
strong, manly attempt to overcome the obstacles, whatever they might
be--and of their nature he was not fully aware--that she had
conjured up against the continuance of their relation to each other.
He left his father--he left them all--and went off into the woods,
to be alone until the time came when he might mount his horse and
ride over to put his fate to the touch. He was as careful as ever
not to interfere with the morning hours that were tabooed to him of
old; but waiting was very hard work when he knew that she was so
near, and the time so near at hand.

Yet he rode slowly, compelling himself to quietness and patience
when he was once really on the way to her.

'Mrs. Gibson at home? Miss Kirkpatrick?' he asked of the servant,
Maria, who opened the door. She was confused, but he did not notice
it.

'I think so; I am not sure! Will you walk up into the drawing-room,
sir? Miss Gibson is there, I know.'

So he went upstairs, all his nerves on one strain for the coming
interview with Cynthia. It was either a relief or a disappointment,
he was not sure which, to find only Molly in the room. Molly, half
lying on the couch in the bow-window which commanded the garden;
draped in soft white drapery, very white herself, and a laced
half-handkerchief tied over her head to save her from any ill
effects of the air that blew in through the open window. He was so
ready to speak to Cynthia that he hardly knew what to say to any one
else.

'I am afraid you are not so well,' he said to Molly, who sate up to
receive him, and who suddenly began to tremble with emotion.

'I am a little tired, that's all,' said she; and then she was quite
silent, hoping that he might go, and yet somehow wishing him to
stay. But he took a chair and placed it near her, opposite to the
window. He thought that surely Maria would tell Miss Kirkpatrick
that she was wanted, and that at any moment he might hear her light
quick footstep on the stairs. He thought he ought to talk, but he
could not think of anything to say. The pink flush came out on
Molly's cheeks; once or twice she was on the point of speaking, but
again she thought better of it; and the pauses between the faint
disjointed remarks became longer and longer. Suddenly, in one of
these pauses, the merry murmur of distant happy voices in the garden
came nearer and nearer; Molly looked more and more uneasy and
flushed, and in spite of herself kept watching Roger's face. He
could see over her into the garden. A sudden deep colour overspread
him, as if his heart had sent its blood out coursing at full gallop.
Cynthia and Mr. Henderson had come in sight; he eagerly talking to
her as he bent forward to look into her face; she, her looks half
averted in pretty shyness, was evidently coquetting about some
flowers, which she either would not give, or would not take. Just
then, for the lovers had emerged from the shrubbery into
comparatively public life, Maria was seen approaching; apparently
she had feminine tact enough to induce Cynthia to leave her present
admirer, and go a few steps to meet her to receive the whispered
message that Mr. Roger Hamley was there, and wished to speak to her.
Roger could see her startled gesture, she turned back to say
something to Mr. Henderson before coming towards the house. Now Roger
spoke to Molly--spoke hurriedly, spoke hoarsely.

'Molly, tell me! It is too late for me to speak to Cynthia? I came
on purpose. Who is that man?'

'Mr. Henderson. He only came to-day--but now he is her accepted
lover. Oh, Roger, forgive me the pain!'

'Tell her I have been, and am gone. Send out word to her. Don't let
her be interrupted.'

And Roger ran downstairs at full speed, and Molly heard the
passionate clang of the outer door. He had hardly left the house
before Cynthia entered the room, pale and resolute.

'Where is he?' she said, looking around, as if he might yet be
hidden.

'Gone!' said Molly, very faint.

'Gone. Oh, what a relief! It seems to be my fate never to be off
with the old lover before I am on with the new, and yet I did write
as decidedly as I could. Why, Molly, what's the matter?' for now
Molly had fainted away utterly. Cynthia flew to the bell, summoned
Maria, water, salts, wine, everything; and as soon as Molly, gasping
and miserable, became conscious again, she wrote a little
pencil-note to Mr. Henderson, bidding him return to the "George,"
whence he had come in the morning, and saying that if he obeyed her
at once, he might be allowed to call again in the evening, otherwise
she would not see him till the next day. This she sent down by
Maria, and the unlucky man never believed but that it was Miss
Gibson's sudden indisposition in the first instance that had
deprived him of his charmer's company. He comforted himself for the
long solitary afternoon by writing to tell all his friends of his
happiness, and amongst them uncle and aunt Kirkpatrick, who received
his letter by the same post as that discreet epistle of Mrs
Gibson's, which she had carefully arranged to reveal as much as she
wished, and no more.

'Was he very terrible?' asked Cynthia, as she sate with Molly in the
stillness of Mrs. Gibson's dressing-room.

'Oh, Cynthia, it was such pain to see him, he suffered so!'

'I don't like people of deep feelings,' said Cynthia, pouting. 'They
don't suit me. Why could not he let me go without this fuss. I'm not
worth his caring for!'

'You have the happy gift of making people love you. Remember Mr
Preston,--he too would not give up hope.'

'Now I won't have you classing Roger Hamley and Mr. Preston together
in the same sentence. One was as much too bad for me, as the other
is too good. Now I hope that maxi in the garden is the ~juste
milieu~,--I'm that myself, for I don't think I'm vicious, and I know
I'm not virtuous.'

'Do you really like him enough to marry him?' asked Molly earnestly.
'Do think, Cynthia. It won't do to go on throwing your lovers off;
you give pain that I am sure you do not mean to do,--that you cannot
understand.'

'Perhaps I can't. I'm not offended. I never set up for what I am
not, and I know I'm not constant. I have told Mr. Henderson so--' She
stopped, blushing and smiling at the recollection.

'You have! and what did he say?'

'That he liked me just as I was; so you see he's fairly warned. Only
he is a little afraid, I suppose,--for he wants me to be married
very soon, almost directly in fact. But I don't know if I shall give
way,--you hardly saw him, Molly,--but he's coming again to-night,
and mind, I'll never forgive you if you don't think him very
charming. I believe I cared for him when he offered all those months
ago, but I tried to think I didn't; only sometimes I really was so
unhappy, I thought I must put an iron-band round my heart to keep it
from breaking, like the Faithful John of the German story,'--do you
remember, Molly?--how when his master came to his crown and his
fortune, and his lady-love, after innumerable trials and disgraces,
and was driving away from the church where he'd been married in a
coach and six, with Faithful John behind, the happy couple heard
three great cracks in succession, and on inquiring, they were the
iron-bands round his heart, that Faithful John had worn all during
the time of his master's tribulation, to keep it from breaking.'

In the evening Mr. Henderson came. Molly had been very curious to see
him; and when she saw him she was not sure whether she liked him or
not. He was handsome, without being conceited; gentlemanly, without
being foolishly fine. He talked easily, and never said a silly
thing. He was perfectly well-appointed, yet never seemed to have
given a thought to his dress. He was good-tempered and kind; not
without some of the cheerful flippancy of repartee which belonged to
his age and profession, and which his age and profession are apt to
take for wit. But he wanted something in Molly's eyes, at any rate
in this first interview, and in her heart of hearts she thought him
rather commonplace. But of course she said nothing of this to
Cynthia, who was evidently as happy as she could be. Mrs. Gibson,
too, was in the seventh heaven of ecstasy and spoke but little; but
what she did say, expressed the highest sentiments in the finest
language. Mr. Gibson was not with them for long, but while he was
there he was evidently studying the unconscious Mr. Henderson with
his dark penetrating eyes. Mr. Henderson behaved exactly as he ought
to have done to everybody; respectful to Mr. Gibson, deferential to
Mrs. Gibson, friendly to Molly, devoted to Cynthia. The next time Mr
Gibson found Molly alone, he began,--

'Well! and how do you like the new relation that is to be?'

'It is difficult to say. I think he is very nice in all his bits,
but--rather dull on the whole.'

'I think him perfection,' said Mr. Gibson, to Molly's surprise; but
in an instant afterwards she saw that he had been speaking
ironically. He went on. 'I don't wonder she preferred him to Roger
Hamley. Such scents! such gloves! And then his hair and his cravat!'

'Now, papa, you are not fair. He is a great deal more than that. One
could see that he had very good feeling; and he is very handsome,
and very much attached to her.'

'So was Roger. However, I must confess I shall only be too glad to
have her married. She is a girl who will always have some
love-affair on hand, and will always be apt to slip through a man's
fingers if he does not look sharp; as I was saying to Roger--'

'You have seen him, then, since he was here?'

'Met him in the street.'

'How was he?'

'I don't suppose he had been going through the pleasantest thing in
the world; but he'll get over it before long. He spoke with sense
and resignation, and did not say much about it; but one could see
that he was feeling it pretty sharply. He's had three months to
think it over, remember. The squire, I should guess, is showing more
indignation. He is boiling over, that any one should reject his son!
The enormity of the sin never seems to have been apparent to him
till now, when he sees how Roger is affected by it. Indeed, with the
exception of myself, I don't know one reasonable father; eh, Molly?'

Whatever else Mr. Henderson might be, he was an impatient lover; he
wanted to marry Cynthia directly--next week--the week after. At any
rate before the long vacation, so that they could go abroad at once.
Trousseaux, and preliminary ceremonies, he gave to the winds. Mr
Gibson, generous as usual, called Cynthia aside a morning or two
after her engagement, and put a hundred-pound note into her hands.

'There! that's to pay your expenses to Russia and back. I hope
you'll find your pupils obedient.'

To his surprise, and rather to his discomfiture, Cynthia threw her
arms round his neck and kissed him.

'You are the kindest person I know,' said she; 'and I don't know how
to thank you in words.'

'If you tumble my shirt-collars again in that way, I'll charge you
for the washing. Just now, too, when I'm trying so hard to be trim
and elegant, like your Mr. Henderson.'

'But you do like him, don't you?' said Cynthia, pleadingly. 'He does
so like you.'

'Of course. We are all angels just now, and you are an arch-angel. I
hope he'll wear as well as Roger.'

Cynthia looked grave. 'That was a very silly affair,' she said. 'We
were two as unsuitable people--'

'It has ended, and that's enough. Besides, I've no more time to
waste; and there is your smart young man coming here in all haste.'

Mr. and Mrs. Kirkpatrick sent all manner of congratulations; and, in a
private letter, assured Mrs. Gibson that her ill-timed confidence
about Roger should be considered as quite private. For as soon as Mr
Henderson had made his appearance in Hollingford, she had written a
second letter, entreating them not to allude to anything she might
have said in her first; which she said was written in such
excitement on discovering the real state of her daughter's
affections, that she had hardly known what she had said, and had
exaggerated some things, and misunderstood others; all that she did
know now was, that Mr. Henderson had just proposed to Cynthia, and
was accepted, and that they were as happy as the day was long, and
('excuse the vanity of a mother,') made a most lovely couple. So Mr
and Mrs. Kirkpatrick wrote back an equally agreeable letter, praising
Mr. Henderson, admiring Cynthia, and generally congratulatory;
insisting into the bargain that the marriage should take place from
their house in Hyde Park Street, and that Mr. and Mrs. Gibson and
Molly should all come up and pay them a visit. There was a little
postscript at the end. 'Surely you do not mean the famous traveller,
Hamley, about whose discoveries all our scientific men are so much
excited. You speak of him as a young Hamley, who went to Africa.
Answer this question, pray, for Helen is most anxious to know.' This
P.S. being in Helen's handwriting. In her exultation at the general
success of everything, and desire for sympathy, Mrs. Gibson read
parts of this letter to Molly; the postscript among the rest. It
made a deeper impression on Molly than even the proposed kindness of
the visit to London.

There were some family consultations; but the end of them all was
that the Kirkpatrick invitation was accepted. There were many small
reasons for this, which were openly acknowledged; but there was one
general and unspoken wish to have the ceremony performed out of the
immediate neighbourhood of the two men whom Cynthia had
previously--rejected; that was the word now to be applied to her
treatment of them. So Molly was ordered and enjoined and entreated
to become strong as soon as possible, in order that her health might
not prevent her attending the marriage. Mr. Gibson himself, though he
thought it his duty to damp the exultant anticipations of his wife
and her daughter, was not at all averse to the prospect of going to
London, and seeing half-a-dozen old friends, and many scientific
exhibitions, independently of the very fair amount of liking which
he had for his host, Mr. Kirkpatrick, himself.


CHAPTER LVII


BRIDAL VISITS AND ADIEUX


The whole town of Hollingford came to congratulate and inquire into
particulars. Some indeed--Mrs. Goodenough at the head of this class
of malcontents--thought that they were defrauded of their right to
a fine show by Cynthia's being married in London. Even Lady Cumnor
was moved into action. She, who had hardly ever paid calls 'out of
her own sphere,' who had only once been to see 'Clare' in her own
house,--she came to congratulate after her fashion. Maria had only
just time to run up into the drawing-room, one morning, and say,--

'Please, ma'am, the great carriage from the Towers is coming up to
the gate, and my lady the Countess is sitting inside.' It was but
eleven o'clock, and Mrs. Gibson would have been indignant at any
commoner who had ventured to call at such an untimely hour, but in
the case of the Peerage the rules of domestic morality were relaxed.

The family 'stood at arms,' as it were, till Lady Cumnor appeared in
the drawing-room; and then she had to be settled in the best chair,
and the light adjusted before anything like conversation began. She
was the first to speak; and Lady Harriet, who had begun a few words
to Molly, dropped into silence.

'I have been taking Mary--Lady Cuxhaven--to the railway station on
this new line between Birmingham and London,' and I thought I would
come on here, and offer you my congratulations. Clare, which is the
young lady?'--putting up her glasses, and looking at Cynthia and
Molly, who were dressed pretty much alike. 'I did not think it would
be amiss to give you a little. advice, my dear,' said she, when
Cynthia had been properly pointed out to her as bride elect. 'I have
heard a good deal about you; and I am only too glad, for your
mother's sake,--your mother is a very worthy woman, and did her
duty very well while she was in our family--I am truly rejoiced, I
say, to hear that you are going to make so creditable a marriage. I
hope it will efface your former errors of conduct--which, we will
hope, were but trivial in reality--and that you will live to be a
comfort to your mother,--for whom both Lord Cumnor and I entertain a
very sincere regard. But you must conduct yourself with discretion
in whatever state of life it pleases God to place you, whether
married or single. You must reverence your husband, and conform to
his opinion in all things. Look up to him as your head, and do
nothing without consulting him.'--It was as well that Lord Cumnor
was not amongst the audience; or he might have compared precept with
practice.--'Keep strict accounts; and remember your station in
life. I understand that Mr--' looking about for some help as to the
name she had forgotten--'Anderson--Henderson is in the law. Although
there is a general prejudice against attorneys, I have known of two
or three who were very respectable men; and I am sure Mr. Henderson
is one, or your good mother and our old friend Gibson would not have
sanctioned the engagement.'

'He is a barrister,' put in Cynthia, unable to restrain herself any
longer. 'Barrister-at-law.'

'Ah, yes. Attorney-at-law. Barrister-at-law. I understand without
your speaking so loud, my dear. What was I going to say before you
interrupted me? When you have been a little in society you will find
that it is reckoned bad manners to interrupt. I had a great deal
more to say to you, and you have put it all out of my head. There
was something else your father wanted me to ask--what was it,
Harriet?'

'I suppose you mean about Mr. Hamley!'

'Oh, yes! we are intending to have the house full of Lord
Hollingford's friends next month, and Lord Cumnor is particularly
anxious to secure Mr. Hamley.'

'The squire?' asked Mrs. Gibson in some surprise. Lady Cumnor bowed
slightly, as much as to say, 'If you did not interrupt me I should
explain.'

'The famous traveller--the scientific Mr. Hamley, I mean. I imagine
he is son to the squire. Lord Hollingford knows him well; but when
we asked him before, he declined coming, and assigned no reason.'

Had Roger indeed been asked to the Towers and declined? Mrs. Gibson
could not understand it. Lady Cumnor went on,--

'Now this time we are particularly anxious to secure him, and my son
Lord Hollingford will not return to England until the very week
before the Duke of Atherstone is coming to us. I believe Mr. Gibson
is very intimate with Mr. Hamley; do you think he could induce him to
favour us with his company?'

And this from the proud Lady Cumnor; and the object of it Roger
Hamley, whom she had all but turned out of her drawing-room two
years ago for calling at an untimely hour; and whom Cynthia had
turned out of her heart. Mrs. Gibson was surprised, and could only
murmur out that she was sure Mr. Gibson would do all that her
ladyship wished.

'Thank you. You know me well enough to be aware that I am not the
person, nor is the Towers the house, to go about soliciting guests.
But in this instance I bend my head; high rank should always be the
first to honour those who have distinguished themselves by art or
science.'

'Besides, mamma,' said Lady Harriet, 'papa was saying that the
Hamleys have been on their land since before the Conquest; while we
only came into the county a century ago; and there is a tale that
the first Cumnor began his fortune through selling tobacco in King
James's reign.'

If Lady Cumnor did not exactly shift her trumpet and take snuff
there on the spot, she behaved in an equivalent manner. She began a
low-toned but nevertheless authoritative conversation with Clare
about the details of the wedding, which lasted until she thought it
fit to go, when she abruptly plucked Lady Harriet up, and carried
her off in the very midst of a description she was giving to Cynthia
about the delights of Spa, which was to be one of the resting-places
of the newly-married couple on their wedding-tour.

Nevertheless she prepared a handsome present for the bride: a Bible
and a Prayer-book bound in velvet with silver-clasps; and also a
collection of household account-books, at the beginning of which
Lady Cumnor wrote down with her own hand the proper weekly allowance
of bread, butter, eggs, meat, and groceries per head, with the
London prices of the articles, so that the most inexperienced
housekeeper might ascertain if her expenditure exceeded her means,
as she expressed herself in the note which she sent with the
handsome, dull present.

'If you are driving into Hollingford, Harriet, perhaps you will take
these books to Miss Kirkpatrick,' said Lady Cumnor, after she had
sealed her note with all the straightness and correctness befitting
a countess of her immaculate character. 'I understand they are all
going up to London to-morrow for this wedding, in spite of what I
said to Clare of the duty of being married in one's own
parish-church. She told me at the time that she entirely agreed with
me, but that her husband had such a strong wish for a visit to
London, that she did not know how she could oppose him consistently
with her wifely duty. I advised her to repeat to him my reasons for
thinking that they would be ill-advised to have the marriage in
town; but I am afraid she has been overruled. That was her one great
fault when she lived with us; she was always so yielding, and never
knew how to say "No."

'Mamma!' said Lady Harriet, with a little sly coaxing in her tone.
'Do you think you would have been so fond of her, if she had opposed
you, and said "No," when you wished her

'To be sure I should, my dear. I like everybody to have an opinion
of their own; only when my opinions are based on thought and
experience, which few people have had equal opportunities of
acquiring, I think it is but proper deference in others to allow
themselves to be convinced. In fact, I think it is only obstinacy
which keeps them from acknowledging that they are. I am not a
despot, I hope?' she asked, with some anxiety.

'If you are, dear mamma,' said Lady Harriet, kissing the stern
uplifted face very fondly, 'I like a despotism better than a
republic, and I must be very despotic over my ponies, for it is
already getting very late for my drive round by Ash-holt.' But when
she arrived at the Gibsons', she was detained so long there by the
state of the family, that she had to give up her going to Ash-holt.

Molly was sitting in the drawing-room pale and trembling, and
keeping herself quiet only by a strong effort. She was the only
person there when Lady Harriet entered; the room was all in
disorder, strewed with presents and paper, and pasteboard boxes, and
half-displayed articles of finery.

'You look like Marius sitting amidst the ruins of Carthage, my dear!
What's the matter? Why have you got on that woe-begone face? This
marriage is not broken off, is it? Though nothing would surprise me
where the beautiful Cynthia is concerned.'

'Oh, no! that's all right. But I have caught a fresh cold, and papa
says he thinks I had better not go to the wedding.'

'Poor little one! And it's the first visit to London too!'

'Yes. But what I most care for is the not being with Cynthia to the
last; and then, papa'--she stopped, for she could hardly go on
without open crying, and she did not want to do that. Then she
cleared her voice. 'Papa,' she continued, 'has so looked forward to
this holiday,--and seeing--and--, and going--oh! I can't tell you
where; but he has quite a list of people and sights to be seen,--and
now he says he should not be comfortable to leave me all alone for
more than three days,--two for travelling, and one for the wedding.'
Just then Mrs. Gibson came in, ruffled too after her fashion, though
the presence of Lady Harriet was wonderfully smoothing.

'My dear Lady Harriet--how kind of you! Ah, yes, I see this poor
unfortunate child has been telling you of her ill-luck; just when
everything was going on so beautifully; I am sure it was that open
window at your back, Molly,--you know you would persist that it
could do you no harm, and now you see the mischief I am sure I
shan't be able to enjoy myself--and at my only child's wedding
too--without you; for I can't think of leaving you without Maria. I
would rather sacrifice anything myself than think of you, uncared
for, and dismal at home.'

'I am sure Molly is as sorry as any one,' said Lady Harriet.

'No. I don't think she is,' said Mrs. Gibson, with happy disregard of
the chronology of events, 'or she would not have sate with her back
to an open window the day before yesterday, when I told her not. But
it can't be helped now. Papa too--but it is my duty to make the best
of everything, and look at the cheerful side of life. I wish I could
persuade her to do the same' (turning and addressing Lady Harriet).
'But you see it is a great mortification to a girl of her age to
lose her first visit to London.'

'It is not that,' began Molly; but Lady Harriet made her a little
sign to be silent while she herself spoke.

'Now, Clare! you and I can manage it all, I think, if you will but
help me in a plan I have got in my head. Mr. Gibson shall stay as
long as ever he can in London; and Molly shall be well cared for,
and have some change of air and scene too, which is really what she
needs as much as anything, in my poor opinion. I can't spirit her to
the wedding and give her a sight of London; but I can carry her off
to the Towers, and nurse her myself; and send daily bulletins up to
London, so that Mr. Gibson may feel quite at case, and stay with you
as long as you like, What do you say to it, Clare?'

'Oh, I could not go,' said Molly; 'I should only be a trouble to
everybody.'

'Nobody asked you for your opinion, little one. If we wise elders
decide that you are to go, you must submit in silence.'

Meanwhile Mrs. Gibson was rapidly balancing advantages and
disadvantages. Amongst the latter, jealousy came in predominant.
Amongst the former,--it would sound well; Maria could then accompany
Cynthia and herself as 'their maid,'--Mr. Gibson would stay longer
with her, and it was always desirable to have a man at her beck and
call in such a place as London; besides that, this identical man was
gentlemanly and good-looking, and a favourite with her prosperous
brother-in-law. The ayes had it.

'What a charming plan! I cannot think of anything kinder or
pleasanter for this poor darling. Only--what will Lady Cumnor say? I
am modest for my family as much as for myself. She won't--'

'You know mamma's sense of hospitality is never more gratified than
when the house is quite full; and papa is just like her. Besides she
is fond of you, and grateful to our good Mr. Gibson, and will be fond
of you, little one, when she knows you as I do.'

Molly's heart sank within her at the prospect. Excepting on the one
evening of her father's wedding-day, she had never even seen the
outside of the Towers since that unlucky day in her childhood when
she had fallen asleep on Clare's bed. She had a dread of the
countess, a dislike to the house, only it seemed as if it was a
solution to the problem of what to do with her, which had been
perplexing every one all morning, and so evidently that it had
caused her much distress. She kept silence, though her lips quivered
from time to time. Oh, if the Miss Brownings had not chosen this
very time of all others to pay their monthly visit to Miss
Hornblower! if she could only have gone there, and lived with them
in their quaint, quiet, primitive way, instead of having to listen,
without remonstrance, to hearing plans discussed about her, as if
she was an inanimate chattel.

'She shall have the south pink room, opening out of mine by one
door, you remember; and the dressing-room shall be made into a cozy
little sitting-room for her, in case she likes to be by herself.
Parkes shall attend upon her, and I am sure Mr. Gibson must know
Parkes's powers as a nurse by this time. We shall have all manner of
agreeable people in the house to amuse her downstairs; and when she
has got rid of this access of cold, I will drive her out every day,
and write daily bulletins, as I said. Pray tell Mr. Gibson all that,
and let it be considered as settled. I will come for her in the
close carriage to-morrow, at eleven. And now may I see the lovely
bride elect, and give her mamma's present, and my own good wishes?'

So Cynthia came in, and demurely received the very proper present,
and the equally correct congratulations, without testifying any very
great delight or gratitude at either; for she was quite quick enough
to detect that there was no great afflux. of affection accompanying
either. But when she heard her mother quickly recapitulating all the
details of the plan for Molly, Cynthia's eyes did sparkle with
gladness; and almost to Lady Harriet's surprise, she thanked her as
if she had conferred a personal favour upon her, Cynthia. Lady
Harriet saw, too, that in a very quiet way, she had taken Molly's
hand, and was holding it all the time, as if loth to think of their
approaching separation--somehow, she and Lady Harriet were brought
nearer together by this little action than they had ever been
before.

If Molly had hoped that her father might have raised some obstacles
to the project, she was disappointed. But, indeed, she did not when
she perceived how he seemed to feel that, by placing her under the
care of Lady Harriet and Parkes, he should be relieved from anxiety;
and how he spoke of this change of air and scene as being the very
thing he had been wishing to secure for her; country air, and
absence of excitement as this would be; for the only other place
where he could have secured her these advantages, and at the same
time sent her as an invalid, was to Hamley Hall; and he dreaded the
associations there with the beginning of her present illness.

So Molly was driven off in state the next day, leaving her own home
all in confusion with the assemblage of boxes and trunks in the
hall, and all the other symptoms of the approaching departure of the
family for London and the wedding. All the morning Cynthia had been
with her in her room, attending to the arrangement of Molly's
clothes, instructing her what to wear with what, and rejoicing over
the pretty smartnesses, which, having been prepared for her as
bridesmaid, were now to serve as adornments for her visit to the
Towers. Both Molly and Cynthia spoke about dress as if it was the
very object of their lives; for each dreaded the introduction of
more serious subjects; Cynthia more for Molly than herself. Only
when the carriage was announced, and Molly was preparing to go
downstairs, Cynthia said,--

'I am not going to thank you, Molly, or to tell you how I love you.'

'Don't,' said Molly, 'I can't bear it.'

'Only you know you're to be my first visitor, and if you wear brown
ribbons to a green gown, I'll turn you out of the house!' So they
parted. Mr. Gibson was there in the hall to hand Molly in. He had
ridden hard; and was now giving her two or three last injunctions as
to her health.

'Think of us on Thursday,' said he. 'I declare I don't know which of
her three lovers she may not summon at the very last moment to act
the part of bridegroom. I'm determined to be surprised at nothing;
and will give her away with a good grace to whoever comes.'

They drove away, and until they were out of sight of the house,
Molly had enough to do to keep returning the kisses of the hand
wafted to her by her stepmother out of the drawing-room window,
while at the same time her eyes were fixed on a white handkerchief
fluttering out of the attic from which she herself had watched
Roger's departure nearly two years before. What changes time had
brought!

When Molly arrived at the Towers she was convoyed into Lady Cumnor's
presence by Lady Harriet. It was a mark of respect to the lady of
the house, which the latter knew that her mother would expect; but
she was anxious to get it over, and take Molly up into the room
which she had been so busy in arranging for her. Lady Cumnor was,
however, very kind, if not positively gracious.

'You are Lady Harriet's visitor, my dear,' said she, 'and I hope she
will take good care of you. If not, come and complain of her to me.'
It was as near an approach to a joke as Lady Cumnor ever
perpetrated, and from it Lady Harriet knew that her mother was
pleased by Molly's manners and appearance.

'Now, here you are in your own kingdom; and into this room I shan't
venture to come without express permission. Here is the last new
~Quarterly~, and the last new novel, and the last new essays. Now,
my dear, you need not come down again to-day unless you like it.
Parkes shall bring you everything and anything you want. You must
get strong as fast, as you can, for all sorts of great and famous
people are coming to-morrow and the next day, and I think you'll
like to see them. Suppose for to-day you only come down to lunch,
and if you like it, in the evening. Dinner is such a wearily long
meal, if one is not strong; and you would not miss much, for there
is only my cousin Charles in the house now, and he is the
personification of sensible silence.'

Molly was only too glad to allow Lady Harriet to decide everything
for her. It had begun to rain, and was, altogether, a gloomy day for
August; and there was a small fire of scented wood burning
cheerfully in the sitting-room appropriated to her. High up, it
commanded a wide and pleasant view over the park, and from it could
be seen the spire of Hollingford Church, which gave Molly a pleasant
idea of neighbourhood to home. She was left alone, lying on the
sofa--books near her, wood crackling and blazing, wafts of wind
bringing the beating rain against the window, and so enhancing the
sense of indoor comfort by the outdoor contrast. Parkes was
unpacking for her. Lady Harriet had introduced Parkes to Molly by
saying, 'Now, Molly, this is Mrs. Parkes, the only person I ever am
afraid of. She scolds me if I dirty myself with my paints, just as
if I was a little child; and she makes me go to bed when I want to
sit up,'--Parkes was smiling grimly all the time;--'so to get rid
of her tyranny I give her you as victim. Parkes, rule over Miss
Gibson with a rod of iron; make her eat and drink, and rest and
sleep, and dress as you think wisest and best.'

Parkes had begun her reign by putting Molly on the sofa, and saying,
'If you will give me your keys, Miss, I will unpack your things, and
let you know when it is time for me to arrange your hair,
preparatory to luncheon.' For if Lady Harriet used familiar
colloquialisms from time to time, she certainly had not learnt it
from Parkes, who piqued herself on the correctness of her language.

When Molly went down to lunch she found 'cousin Charles,' with his
aunt, Lady Cumnor. He was a certain Sir Charles Morton, the son of
Lady Cumnor's only sister: a plain, sandy-haired man of thirty-five
or so; immensely rich, very sensible, awkward, and reserved. He had
had a chronic attachment, of many years' standing, to his cousin,
Lady Harriet, who did not care for him in the least, although it was
the marriage very earnestly desired for her by her mother. Lady
Harriet was, however, on friendly terms with him, ordered him about,
and told him what to do, and what to leave undone, without having
even a doubt as to the willingness of his obedience. She had given
him his cue about Molly.

'Now, Charles, the girl wants to be interested and amused without
having to take any trouble for herself; she is too delicate to be
very active either in mind or body. Just look after her when the
house gets full, and place her where she can hear and see everything
and everybody, without any fuss and responsibility.'

So Sir Charles began this day at luncheon by taking Molly under his
quiet protection. He did not say much to her; but what he did say
was thoroughly friendly and sympathetic; and Molly began, as he and
Lady Harriet intended that she should, to have a kind of pleasant
reliance upon him. Then in the evening while the rest of the family
were at dinner--after Molly's tea and hour of quiet repose, Parkes
came and dressed her in some of the new clothes prepared for the
Kirkpatrick visit, and did her hair in some new and pretty way, so
that when Molly looked at herself in the cheval-glass, she scarcely
knew the elegant reflection to be that of herself. She was fetched
down by Lady Harriet into the great long formidable drawing-room,
which, as an interminable place of pacing, had haunted her dreams
ever since her childhood. At the further end sate Lady Cumnor at her
tapestry work; the light of fire and candle seemed all concentrated
on that one bright part where presently Lady Harriet made tea, and
Lord Cumnor went to sleep, and Sir Charles read passages aloud from
the ~Edinburgh Review~ to the three ladies at their work.

When Molly went to bed she was constrained to admit that staying at
the Towers as a visitor was rather pleasant than otherwise; and she
tried to reconcile old impressions with new ones, until she fell
asleep. There was another comparatively quiet day before the
expected guests began to arrive in the evening. Lady Harriet took
Molly a drive in her little pony-carriage; and for the first time
for many weeks Molly began to feel the delightful spring of
returning health; the dance of youthful spirits in the fresh air
cleared by the previous day's rain.


CHAPTER LVIII


REVIVING HOPES AND BRIGHTENING PROSPECTS


'If you can without fatigue, dear, do come down to dinner to-day;
you'll then see the people one by one as they appear, instead of
having to encounter a crowd of strangers. Hollingford will be here
too. I hope you'll find it pleasant.'

So Molly made her appearance at dinner that day; and got to know, by
sight at least, some of the most distinguished of the visitors at
the Towers. The next day was Thursday, Cynthia's wedding-day; bright
and fine in the country, whatever it might be in London. And there
were several letters from the home-people awaiting Molly when she
came downstairs to the late breakfast. For every day, every hour,
she was gaining strength and health, and she was unwilling to
continue her invalid habits any longer than was necessary. She
looked so much better that Sir Charles noticed it to Lady Harriet;
and several of the visitors spoke of her this morning as a very
pretty, lady-like, and graceful girl. This was Thursday; on Friday,
as Lady Harriet had told her, some visitors from the more immediate
neighbourhood were expected to stay over the Sunday: but she had not
mentioned their names, and when Molly went down into the
drawing-room before dinner, she was almost startled by perceiving
Roger Hamley in the centre of a group of gentlemen, who were all
talking together eagerly, and, as it seemed to her, making him the
object of their attention. He made a hitch in his conversation, lost
the precise meaning of a question addressed to him, answered it
rather hastily, and made his way to where Molly was sitting, a
little behind Lady Harriet. He had heard that she was staying at the
Towers, but he was almost as much surprised as she was by his
unexpected appearance, for he had only seen her once or twice since
his return from Africa, and then in the guise of an invalid. Now in
her pretty evening dress, with her hair beautifully dressed, her
delicate complexion flushed a little with timidity, yet her
movements and manners bespeaking quiet ease, Roger hardly recognized
her, although he acknowledged her identity. He began to feel that
admiring deference which most young men experience when conversing
with a very pretty girl: a sort of desire to obtain her good opinion
in a manner very different to his old familiar friendliness. He was
annoyed when Sir Charles, whose especial charge she still was, came
up to take her in to dinner. He could not quite understand the smile
of mutual intelligence that passed between the two, each being aware
of Lady Harriet's plan of sheltering Molly from the necessity of
talking, and acting in conformity with her wishes as much as with
their own. Roger found himself puzzling, and watching them from time
to time during dinner. Again in the evening he sought her out, but
found her again preoccupied with one of the young men staying in the
house, who had had the advantage of two days of mutual interest, and
acquaintance with the daily events and jokes and anxieties of the
family-circle. Molly could not help wishing to break off all this
trivial talk and to make room for Roger: she had so much to ask him
about everything at the Hall; he was, and had been such a stranger
to them all for these last two months, and more. But though each
wanted to speak to the other more than to any one else in the room,
it so happened that everything seemed to conspire to prevent it.
Lord Hollingford carried off Roger to the cluster of middle-aged
men; he was wanted to give his opinion upon some scientific subject.
Mr. Ernulphus Watson, the young man referred to above, kept his place
by Molly, as the prettiest girl in the room, and almost dazed her by
his never-ceasing flow of clever small-talk. She looked so tired and
pale at last that the ever-watchful Lady Harriet sent Sir Charles to
the rescue, and after a few words with Lady Harriet, Roger saw Molly
quietly leave the room; and a sentence or two which he heard Lady
Harriet address to her cousin made him know that it was for the
night. Those sentences might bear another interpretation to the
obvious one.

'Really, Charles, considering that she is in your charge, I think
you might have saved her from the chatter and patter of Mr. Watson; I
can only stand it when I am in the strongest health.'

Why was Molly in Sir Charles' charge? why? Then Roger remembered
many little things that might serve to confirm the fancy he had got
into his head; and he went to bed puzzled and annoyed. It seemed to
him such an incongruous, hastily-got-up sort of engagement, if
engagement it really was. On Saturday they were more fortunate; they
had a long tete-a-tete in the most public place in
the house--on a sofa in the hall where Molly was resting at Lady
Harriet's command before going upstairs after a walk. Roger was
passing through, and saw her, and came to her. Standing before her,
and making pretence of playing with the gold-fish in a great marble
basin close at hand,--

'I was very unlucky,' said he. 'I wanted to get near you last night,
but it was quite impossible. You were so busy talking to Mr. Watson,
until Sir Charles Morton came and carried you off--with such an air
of authority! Have you known him long?'

Now this was not at all the manner in which Roger had predetermined
that he would speak of Sir Charles to Molly; but the words came out
in spite of himself.

'No! not long. I never saw him before I came here--on Tuesday. But
Lady Harriet told him to see that I did not get tired, for I wanted
to come down; but you know I have not been strong. He is a cousin of
Lady Harriet's, and does all she tells him to do.'

'Oh! he is not handsome; but I believe he is a very sensible man.'

'Yes! I should think so. He is so silent though, that I can hardly
judge.'

'He bears a very high character in the county,' said Roger, willing
now to give him his full due.

Molly stood up.

'I must go upstairs,' she said; 'I only sate down here for a minute
or two because Lady Harriet bade me.'

'Stop a little longer,' said he. 'This is really the pleasantest
place; this basin of water-lilies gives one the idea, if not the
sensation, of coolness; besides--it seems so long since I saw you,
and I have a message from my father to give you. He is very angry
with you.'

'Angry with me?' said Molly, in surprise.

'Yes! He heard that you had come here for change of air; and he was
offended that you had not come to us--to the Hall, instead. He said
that you should have remembered old friends!'

Molly took all this quite gravely, and did not at first notice the
smile on his face.

'Oh! I am so sorry!' said she. 'But will you please tell him how it
all happened. Lady Harriet called the very day when it was settled
that I was not to go to--' Cynthia's wedding she was going to add,
but she suddenly stopped short, and, blushing deeply, changed the
expression,--'go to London, and she planned it all in a minute, and
convinced mamma and papa, and had her own way. There was really no
resisting her.'

'I think you will have to tell all this to my father yourself, if
you mean to make your peace. Why can you not come on to the Hall
when you leave the Towers?'

To go in the cool manner suggested from one house to another, after
the manner of a royal progress, was not at all according to Molly's
primitive home-keeping notions. She made answer,--

'I should like it very much, some time. But I must go home first.
They will want me more than ever now--'

Again she felt herself touching on a sore subject, and stopped
short. Roger became annoyed at her so constantly conjecturing what
he must be feeling on the subject of Cynthia's marriage. With
sympathetic perception she had discerned that the idea must give him
pain; and perhaps she also knew that he would dislike to show the
pain: but she had not the presence of mind or ready wit to give a
skilful turn to the conversation. All this annoyed Roger, he could
hardly tell why. He determined to take the metaphorical bull by the
horns. Until that was done, his footing with Molly would always be
insecure; as it always is between two friends, who mutually avoid a
subject to which their thoughts perpetually recur.

'Ah, yes!' said he. 'Of course you must be of double importance now
Miss Kirkpatrick has left you. I saw her marriage in ~The Times~
yesterday.'

His tone of voice was changed in speaking of her, but her name had
been named between them, and that was the great thing to accomplish.

'Still,' he continued, 'I think I must urge my father's claim for a
short visit, and all the more, because I can really see the apparent
improvement in your health since I came,--only yesterday. Besides,
Molly,' it was the old familiar Roger of former days who spoke now,
'I think you could help us at home. Aimee is shy and awkward
with my father, and he has never taken quite kindly to her,--yet I
know they would like and value each other, if some one could but
bring them together,--and it would be such a comfort to me if this
could take place before I have to leave.'

'To leave--are you going away again?'

'Yes. Have you not heard? I did not complete my engagement. I am
going again in September for six months.'

'I remember. But somehow I fancied--you seemed to have settled down
into the old ways at the Hall.'

'So my father appears to think. But it is not likely I shall ever
make it my home again; and that is partly the reason why I want my
father to adopt the notion of Aimee's living with him. Ah, here
are all the people coming back from their walk. However, I shall see
you again: perhaps this afternoon we may get a little quiet time,
for I have a great deal to consult you about.'

They separated then, and Molly went upstairs very happy, very full
and warm at her heart; it was so pleasant to have Roger talking to
her in this way, like a friend; she had once thought that she could
never look upon the great brown-bearded celebrity in the former
light of almost brotherly intimacy, but now it was all coming right.
There was no opportunity for renewed confidences that afternoon.
Molly went a quiet decorous drive as fourth with two dowagers and
one spinster; but it was very pleasant to think that she should see
him again at dinner, and again to-morrow. On the Sunday evening, as
they all were sitting and loitering on the lawn before dinner, Roger
went on with what he had to say about the position of his
sister-in-law in his father's house: the mutual bond between the
mother and grandfather being the child; who was also, through
jealousy, the bone of contention and the severance. There were many
little details to be given in order to make Molly quite understand
the difficulty of the situations on both sides; and the young man
and the girl became absorbed in what they were talking about, and
wandered away into the shade of the long avenue. Lady Harriet
separated herself from a group and came up to Lord Hollingford, who
was sauntering a little apart, and putting her arm within his with
the familiarity of a favourite sister, she said,--

'Don't you think that your pattern young man, and my favourite young
woman are finding out each other's good qualities?'

He had not been observing as she had been.

'Who do you mean?' said he.

'Look along the avenue; who are those?'

'Mr. Hamley and--is it not Miss Gibson? I can't quite make out. Oh!
if you're letting your fancy run off in that direction, I can tell
you it's quite waste of time. Roger Hamley is a man who will soon
have an European reputation!'

'That's very possible, and yet it does not make any difference in my
opinion. Molly Gibson is capable of appreciating him.'

'She is a very pretty, good little country-girl. I don't mean to say
anything against her, but--'

'Remember the Charity Ball; you called her "unusually intelligent"
after you had danced with her there. But after all we are like the
genie and the fairy in the ~Arabian Nights' Entertainment~, who each
cried up the merits of the Prince Caramalzaman and the Princess
Badoura.'

'Hamley is not a marrying man.'

'How do you know?'

'I know that he has very little private fortune, and I know that
science is not a remunerative profession, if profession it can be
called.'

'Oh, if that's all--a hundred things may happen--some one may leave
him a fortune--or this tiresome little heir that nobody wanted, may
die.'

'Hush, Harriet, that's the worst of allowing yourself to plan far
ahead for the future; you are sure to contemplate the death of some
one, and to reckon upon the contingency as affecting events.'

'As if lawyers were not always doing something of the kind!'

'Leave it to those to whom it is necessary. I dislike planning
marriages or looking forward to deaths about equally.'

'You are getting very prosaic and tiresome, Hollingford!'

'Only getting!' said he smiling. 'I thought you had always looked
upon me as a tiresome matter-of-fact fellow.'

'Now, if you're going to fish for a compliment, I am gone. Only
remember my prophecy when my vision comes to pass; or make a bet,
and whoever wins shall spend the money on a present to Prince
Caramalzaman or Princess Badoura, as the case may be.'

Lord Hollingford remembered his sister's words as he heard Roger say
to Molly as he was leaving the Towers on the following day,--

'Then I may tell my father that you will come and pay him a visit
next week? You don't know what pleasure it will give him.' He had
been on the point of saying 'will give us,' but he had an instinct
which told him it was as well to consider Molly's promised visit as
exclusively made to his father.

The next day Molly went home; she was astonished at herself for
being so sorry to leave the Towers; and found it difficult, if not
impossible, to reconcile the long-fixed idea of the house as a place
wherein to suffer all a child's tortures of dismay and forlornness
with her new and fresh conception. She had gained health, she had
had pleasure, the faint fragrance of a new and unacknowledged hope
had stolen into her life. No wonder that Mr. Gibson was struck with
the improvement in her looks, and Mrs. Gibson impressed with her
increased grace.

'Ah, Molly,' said she, 'it's really wonderful to see what a little
good society will do for a girl. Even a week of association with
such people as one meets with at the Towers is, as somebody said of
a lady of rank whose name I have forgotten, "a polite education in
itself." There is something quite different about you--a ~je ne
scais quoi~--that would tell me at once that you have been
mingling with the aristocracy. With all her charms, it was what my
darling Cynthia wanted; not that Mr. Henderson thought so, for a more
devoted lover can hardly be conceived. He absolutely bought her a
parure of diamonds, I was obliged to say to him that I had studied
to preserve her simplicity of taste, and that he must not corrupt
her with too much luxury. But I was rather disappointed at their
going off without a maid. It was the one blemish in the
arrangements, the spot in the sun. Dear Cynthia, when I think of
her, I do assure you, Molly, I make it my nightly prayer that I may
be able to find you just such another husband. And all this time you
have never told me who you met at the Towers?'

Molly ran over a list of names. Roger Hamley's came last.

'Upon my word! That young man is pushing his way up!'

'The Hamleys are a far older family than the Cumnors,' said Molly,
flushing up.

'Now, Molly, I can't have you democratic. Rank is a great
distinction. It is quite enough to have dear papa with democratic
tendencies. But we won't begin to quarrel. Now that you and I are
left alone we ought to be bosom friends, and I hope we shall be.
Roger Hamley did not say much about that unfortunate little Osborne
Hamley, I suppose.'

'On the contrary. He says his father dotes on the child; and he
seemed very proud of him, himself.'

'I thought the squire must be getting very much infatuated with
something. I daresay the French mother takes care of that. Why! he
has scarcely taken any notice of you for this month or more, and
before that you were everything.'

It was about six weeks since Cynthia's engagement had become
publicly known, and that might have had something to do with the
squire's desertion, Molly thought. But she said,--

'The squire has sent me an invitation to go and stay there next week
if you have no objection, mamma. They seem to want a companion for
Mrs. Osborne Hamley, who is not very strong.'

'I can hardly tell what to say,--I don't like your having to
associate with a Frenchwoman of doubtful rank; and I can't bear the
thought of losing my child--my only daughter now. I did ask Helen
Kirkpatrick, but she can't come for some time; and the house is
going to be altered. Papa has consented to build me another room at
last, for Cynthia and Mr. Henderson will, of course, come and see us;
we shall have many more visitors, I expect, and your bedroom will
make a capital lumber-room; and Maria wants a week's holiday. I am
always so unwilling to put any obstacles in the way of any one's
pleasure,--weakly unwilling, I believe,--but it certainly would be
very convenient to have you out of the house for a few days; so, for
once, I will waive my own wish for your companionship, and plead
your cause with papa.'

The Miss Brownings came to call and hear the double batch of news.
Mrs. Goodenough had come the very day on which they had returned from
Miss Hornblower's, to tell them the astounding fact of Molly Gibson
having gone on a visit to the Towers; not to come back at night, but
to sleep there, to be there for two or three days, just as if she
was a young lady of quality. So the Miss Brownings came to hear all
the details of the wedding from Mrs. Gibson, and the history of
Molly's visit at the Towers as well. But Mrs. Gibson did not like
this divided interest, and some of her old jealousy of Molly's
intimacy at the Towers had returned.

'Now, Molly,' said Miss Browning, 'let us hear how you behaved among
the great folks. You must not be set up with all their attention;
remember that they pay it to you for your good father's sake.'

'Molly is, I think, quite aware,' put in Mrs. Gibson, in her most
soft and languid tone, 'that she owes her privilege of visiting at
such a house to Lady Cumnor's kind desire to set my mind quite at
liberty at the time of Cynthia's marriage. As soon as ever I had
returned home, Molly came back; indeed I should not have thought it
right to let her intrude upon their kindness beyond what was
absolutely necessary.'

Molly felt extremely uncomfortable at all this, although perfectly
aware of the entire inaccuracy of the statement.

'Well, but, Molly!' said Miss Browning, 'never mind whether you went
there on your own merits, or your worthy father's merits, or Mrs
Gibson's merits; but tell us what you did when you were there.'

So Molly began an account of their sayings and doings, which she
could have made far more interesting to Miss Browning and Miss
Phoebe if she had not been conscious of her stepmother's critical
listening. She had to tell it all with a mental squint; the surest
way to spoil a narration. She was also subject to Mrs. Gibson's
perpetual corrections of little statements which she knew to be
facts. But what vexed her most of all was Mrs. Gibson's last speech
before the Miss Brownings left.

'Molly had fallen into rambling ways with this visit of hers, of
which she makes so much, as if nobody had ever been in a great house
but herself. She is going to Hamley Hall next week,--getting quite
dissipated in fact.'

Yet to Mrs. Goodenough, the next caller on the same errand of
congratulation, Mrs. Gibson's tone was quite different. There had
always been a tacit antagonism between the two, and the conversation
now ran as follows:--

Mrs. Goodenough began,--

'Well! Mrs. Gibson, I suppose I must wish you joy of Miss Cynthia's
marriage; I should condole with some mothers as had lost their
daughters; but you're not one of that sort, I reckon.'

Now, as Mrs. Gibson was not quite sure to which 'sort' of mothers the
greatest credit was to be attached, she found it a little difficult
how to frame her reply.

'Dear Cynthia!' she said. 'One can't but rejoice in her happiness!
And yet--' she ended her sentence by sighing.

'Ay. She was a young woman as would always have her followers; for,
to tell the truth, she was as pretty a creature as ever I saw in my
life. And all the more she needed skilful guidance. I am sure I, for
one, am as glad as can be she's done so well by herself. Folks say
Mr. Henderson has a handsome private fortune over and above what he
makes by the law.' 'There is no fear but that my Cynthia will have
everything this world can give!' said Mrs. Gibson with dignity.

'Well, well! she was always a bit of a favourite of mine; and as I
was saying to my grand-daughter there' (for she was accompanied by a
young lady, who looked keenly to the prospect of some wedding-cake),
'I was never one of those who ran her down and called her a flirt
and a jilt. I'm glad to hear she's like to be so well off. And now,
I suppose, you'll be turning your mind to doing something for Miss
Molly there?'

'If you mean by that, doing anything that can, by hastening her
marriage, deprive me of the company of one who is like my own child,
you are very much mistaken, Mrs. Goodenough. And pray remember, I am
the last person in the world to match-make. Cynthia made Mr
Henderson's acquaintance at her uncle's in London.'

'Ay! I thought her cousin was very often ill, and needing her
nursing, and you were very keen she should be of use. I am not
saying but what it is right in a mother; I'm only putting in a word
for Miss Molly.'

'Thank you, Mrs. Goodenough,' said Molly, half-angry, half-laughing.
'When I want to be married, I'll not trouble mamma. I'll look out
for myself.'

'Molly is becoming so popular, I hardly know how we shall keep her
at home,' said Mrs. Gibson. 'I miss her sadly; but, as I said to Mr
Gibson, let young people have change, and see a little of the world
while they are young. It has been a great advantage to her being at
the Towers while so many clever and distinguished people were there.
I can already see a difference in her tone of conversation: an
elevation in her choice of subjects. And now she is going to Hamley
Hall. I can assure you I feel quite a proud mother, when I see how
she is sought after. And my other daughter--my Cynthia--writing such
letters from Paris!'

'Things is a deal changed since my days, for sure,' said Mrs
Goodenough. 'So, perhaps, I'm no judge. When I was married first,
him and me went in a postchaise to his father's house, a matter of
twenty mile off at the outside; and sate down to as good a supper
amongst his friends and family as you'd wish to see. And that was my
first wedding jaunt. My second was when I better knowed my worth as
a bride, and thought that now or never I must see London. But I were
reckoned a very extravagant sort of a body to go so far, and spend
my money, though Harry had left me uncommon well off. But now young
folks go off to Paris, and think nothing of the cost: and it's well
if wilful waste don't make woeful want before they die. But I'm
thankful somewhat is being done for Miss Molly's chances, as I said
afore. It's not quite what I should have liked to have done for my
Bessy though. But times are changed, as I said just now.'


CHAPTER LIX


MOLLY GIBSON AT HAMLEY HALL


The conversation ended there for the time. Wedding-cake and wine
were brought in, and it was Molly's duty to serve them out. But
those last words of Mrs. Goodenough's tingled in her ears, and she
tried to interpret them to her own satisfaction in any way but the
obvious one. And that, too, was destined to be confirmed; for
directly after Mrs. Goodenough took her leave, Mrs. Gibson desired
Molly to carry away the tray to a table close to an open corner
window, where the things might be placed in readiness for any future
callers; and underneath this open window went the path from the
house-door to the road. Molly heard Mrs. Goodenough saying to her
grand-daughter,--

'That Mrs. Gibson is a deep un. There's Mr. Roger Hamley as like as
not to have the Hall estate, and she sends Molly a-visiting--' and
then she passed out of hearing. Molly could have burst out crying,
with a full sudden conviction of what Mrs. Goodenough had been
alluding to: her sense of the impropriety of Molly's going to visit
at the Hall when Roger was at home. To be sure Mrs. Goodenough was a
commonplace, unrefined woman. Mrs. Gibson did not seem to have even
noticed the allusion. Mr. Gibson took it all as a matter of course
that Molly should go to the Hall as simply now, as she had done
before. Roger had spoken of it in so straightforward a manner as
showed he had no conception of its being an impropriety,--this
visit,--this visit until now so happy a subject of anticipation.
Molly felt as if she could never speak to any one of the idea to
which Mrs. Goodenough's words had given rise; as if she could never
be the first to suggest the notion of impropriety, which presupposed
what she blushed to think of. Then she tried to comfort herself by
reasoning. If it had been wrong, forward, or indelicate, really
improper in the slightest degree, who would have been so ready as
her father to put his veto upon it? But reasoning was of no use
after Mrs. Goodenough's words had put fancies into Molly's head. The
more she bade these fancies begone the more they answered her (as
Daniel O'Rourke did the man in the moon, when he bade Dan get off
his seat on the sickle, and go into empty space), 'The more ye ask
us the more we won't stir.' One may smile at a young girl's miseries
of this description; but they are very real and stinging miseries to
her. All that Molly could do was to resolve on a single eye to the
dear old squire, and his mental and bodily comforts; to try and heal
up any breaches which might have occurred between him and
Aimee; and to ignore Roger as much as possible. Good Roger!
Kind Roger! Dear Roger! It would be very hard to avoid him as much
as was consistent with common politeness; but it would be right to
do it; and when she was with him she must be as natural as possible,
or he might observe some difference; but what was natural? How much
ought she avoid being with him? Would he ever notice if she was more
chary of her company, more calculating of her words? Alas! the
simplicity of their intercourse was spoilt henceforwards! She made
laws for herself; she resolved to devote herself to the squire and
to Aimee, and to forget Mrs. Goodenough's foolish speeches; but
her perfect freedom was gone; and with it half her chance, that is
to say, half her chance would have been lost over any strangers who
had not known her before: they would probably have thought her stiff
and awkward, and apt to say things and then retract them. But she
was so different from her usual self that Roger noticed the change
in her as soon as she arrived at the Hall. She had carefully
measured out the days of her visit; they were to be exactly the same
number as she had spent at the Towers. She feared lest if she stayed
at the Hall a shorter time the squire might be annoyed. Yet how
charming the place looked in its early autumnal glow as she drove
up! And there was Roger at the hall-door waiting to receive her,
watching for her coming. And now he retreated, apparently to summon
his sister-in-law, who came now timidly forwards in her deep widow's
mourning, holding her boy in her arms as if to protect her shyness;
but he struggled down, and ran towards the carriage, eager to greet
his friend the coachman, and to obtain a promised ride. Roger did
not say much himself: he wanted to make Aimee feel her place as
daughter of the house; but she was too timid to speak much, And she
only took Molly by the hand and led her into the drawing-room,
where, as if by a sudden impulse of gratitude for all the tender
nursing she had received during her illness, she put her arms round
Molly and kissed her long and well. And after that they came to be
friends.

It was nearly lunch-time, and the squire always made his appearance
at that meal, more for the pleasure of seeing his grandson eat his
dinner, than for any hunger of his own. To-day Molly quickly saw the
whole state of the family affairs. She thought that even had Roger
said nothing about them at the Towers, she should have found out
that neither the father nor the daughter-in-law had as yet found the
clue to each other's characters, although they had now been living
for several months in the same house. Aimee seemed to forget
her English in her nervousness; and to watch with the jealous eyes
of a dissatisfied mother all the proceedings of the squire towards
her little boy. They were not of the wisest kind it must be owned;
the child sipped the strong ale with evident relish, and clamoured
for everything which he saw the others enjoying. Aimee could
hardly attend to Molly for her anxiety as to what her boy was doing
and eating; yet she said nothing. Roger took the end of the table
opposite to that at which sate grandfather and grandchild. After the
boy's first wants were gratified the squire addressed himself to
Molly.

'Well! and so you can come here a-visiting though you have been
among the grand folks. I thought you were going to cut us, Miss
Molly, when I heard you was gone to the Towers--could not find any
other place to stay at while father and mother were away, but an
earl's, eh?'

'They asked me, and I went,' said Molly; 'now you've asked me, and
I've come here.'

'I think you might ha' known you'd be always welcome here, without
waiting for asking. Why, Molly! I look upon you as a kind of a
daughter more than Madam there!' dropping his voice a little, and
perhaps supposing that the child's babble would drown the
signification of his words.--'Nay, you need not look at me so
pitifully--she does not follow English readily.'

'I think she does!' said Molly, in a low voice, not looking up,
however, for fear of catching another glimpse at Aimee's sudden
forlornness of expression and deepened colour. She felt grateful, as
if for a personal favour, when she heard Roger speaking to
Aimee the moment afterwards in the tender tones of brotherly
friendliness; and presently these two were sufficiently engaged in a
tete-a-tete conversation to allow Molly and the
squire to go on talking.

'He's sturdy chap, is not he?' said the squire, stroking the little
Roger's curly head. 'And he can puff four puffs at grandpapa's pipe
without being sick, can't he?'

'I s'ant puff any more puffs,' said the boy, resolutely. 'Mamma says
no. I s'ant.'

'That's just like her!' said the squire, dropping his voice this
time however. 'As if it could do the child any harm!'

Molly made a point of turning the conversation from all personal
subjects after this, and kept the squire talking about the progress
of his drainage during the rest of lunch. He offered to take her to
see it; and she acceded to the proposal, thinking, meantime, how
little she need have anticipated the being thrown too intimately
with Roger, who seemed to devote himself to his sister-in-law. But,
in the evening, when Aimee had gone upstairs to put her boy to
bed, and the squire was asleep in his easy chair, a sudden flush of
memory brought Mrs. Goodenough's words again to her mind. She was
virtually tete-a-tete with Roger, as she had been
dozens of times before, but now she could not help assuming an air
of constraint: her eyes did not meet his in the old frank way; she
took up a book at a pause in the conversation, and left him puzzled
and annoyed at the change in her manner. And so it went on during
all the time of her visit. If sometimes she forgot and let herself
go into all her old naturalness, by-and-by she checked herself, and
became comparatively cold and reserved. Roger was pained at all
this--more pained day after day; more anxious to discover the cause.
Aimee, too, silently noticed how different Molly became in
Roger's presence. One day she could not help saying to Molly,--

'Don't you like Roger? You would if you only knew how good he was!
He is learned, but that is nothing: it is his goodness that one
admires and loves.'

'He is very good,' said Molly. 'I have known him long enough to know
that.'

'But you don't think him agreeable? He is not like my poor husband,
to be sure; and you knew him well, too. Ah! tell me about him once
again. When you first knew him? When his mother was alive?'

Molly had grown very fond of Aimee: when the latter was at her
case she had very charming and attaching ways; but feeling uneasy in
her position in the squire's house, she was almost repellent to him;
and he, too, put on his worst side to her. Roger was most anxious to
bring them together, and had several consultations with Molly as to
the best means of accomplishing this end. As long as they talked
upon this subject she spoke to him in the quiet sensible manner
which she inherited from her father; but when their discussions on
this point were ended, she fell back into her piquant assumption of
dignified reserve. It was very difficult to her to maintain this
strange manner, especially when once or twice she fancied that it
gave him pain; and she would go into her own room and suddenly burst
into tears on these occasions, and wish that her visit was ended,
and that she was once again in the eventless tranquillity of her own
home. Yet presently her fancy changed, and she clung to the swiftly
passing hours, as if she would still retain the happiness of each.
For, unknown to her, Roger was exerting himself to make her visit
pleasant. He was not willing to appear as the instigator of all the
little plans for each day, for he felt as if somehow he did not hold
the same place in her regard as formerly. Still, one day Aimee
suggested a nutting expedition--another day they gave little Roger
the unheard-of pleasure of tea out-of-doors--there was something
else agreeable for a third; and it was Roger who arranged all these
simple pleasures--such as he knew Molly would enjoy. But to her he
only appeared as the ready forwarder of Aimee's devices. The
week was nearly gone, when one morning the squire found Roger
sitting in the old library--with a book before him, it is true, but
so deep in thought that he was evidently startled by his father's
unexpected entrance.

'I thought I should find thee here, my lad! We'll have the old room
done up again before winter; it smells musty enough, and yet I see
it's the place for thee! I want thee to go with me round the
five-acre. I'm thinking of laying it down in grass. It's time for
you to be getting into the fresh air, you look quite woebegone over
books, books, books; there never was a thing like 'em for stealing a
man's health out of him!'

So Roger went out with his father, without saying many words till
they were at some distance from the house. Then he brought out a
sentence with such abruptness that he repaid his father for the
start the latter had given him a quarter of an hour before.

'Father, you remember I'm going out again to the Cape next month!
You spoke of doing up the library. If it is for me, I shall be away
all the winter.'

'Can't you get off it?' pleaded his father. 'I thought maybe you'd
forgotten all about it--'

'Not likely!' said Roger, half-smiling.

'Well, but they might have found another man to finish up your
work.'

'No one can finish it but myself. Besides, an engagement is an
engagement. When I wrote to Lord Hollingford to tell him I must come
home, I promised to go out again for another six months.'

'Ay. I know. And perhaps it will put it out of thy mind. It will
always be hard on me to part from thee. But I daresay it's best for
you.'

Roger's colour deepened. 'You are alluding to--to Miss
Kirkpatrick--Mrs. Henderson, I mean. Father, let me tell you once for
all I think that was rather a hasty affair. I am pretty sure now
that we were not suited to each other. I was wretched when I got her
letter--at the Cape I mean--but I believe it was for the best.'

'That's right. That's my own boy,' said the squire, turning round
and shaking hands with his son with vehemence. 'And now I'll tell
you what I heard the other day, when I was at the magistrates'
meeting. They were all saying she had jilted Preston.'

'I don't want to hear anything against her: she may have her faults,
but I can never forget how I once loved her.'

'Well, well! Perhaps it's right. I was not so bad about it, was I,
Roger? Poor Osborne need not ha' been so secret with me. I asked
your Miss Cynthia out here--and her mother and all--my bark is worse
than my bite. For if I had a wish on earth it was to see Osborne
married as befitted one of an old stock, and he went and chose out
this French girl, of no family at all, only a--'

'Never mind what she was; look at what she is! I wonder you are not
more taken with her humility and sweetness, father!'

'I don't even call her pretty,' said the squire, uneasily, for he
dreaded a repetition of the arguments which Roger had often used to
make him give Aimee her proper due of affection and position.
'Now your Miss Cynthia was pretty, I will say that for her, the
baggage! and to think that when you two lads flew right in your
father's face, and picked out girls below you in rank and family,
you should neither of you have set your fancies on my little Molly
there. I daresay I should ha' been angry enough at the time, but the
lassie would ha' found her way to my heart, as never this French
lady, nor t' other one, could ha' done.'

Roger did not answer.

'I don't see why you might not put up for her still. I'm humble
enough now, and you're not heir as Osborne was who married a
servant-maid. Don't you think you could turn your thoughts upon
Molly Gibson, Roger.'

'No!' said Roger, shortly. 'It's too late--too late. Don't let us
talk any more of my marrying. Is not this the five-acre field?' And
soon he was discussing the relative values of meadow, arable and
pasture land with his father, as heartily as if he had never known
Molly, or loved Cynthia. But the squire was not in such good
spirits, and went but heavily into the discussion. At the end of it
he said ~apropos de bottes~,--

'But don't you think you could like her if you tried, Roger?'

Roger knew perfectly well to what his father was alluding, but for
an instant he was on the point of pretending to misunderstand. At
length, however, he said, in a low voice,--

'I shall never try, father. Don't let us talk any more about it. As
I said before, it is too late.'

The squire was like a child to whom some toy has been refused; from
time to time the thought of his disappointment in this matter
recurred to his mind; and then he took to blaming Cynthia as the
primary cause of Roger's present indifference to womankind.

It so happened that on Molly's last morning at the Hall, she
received her first letter from Cynthia--Mrs. Henderson. It was just
before breakfast-time: Roger was out of doors, Aimee had not as
yet come down; Molly was alone in the dining-room, where the table
was already laid. She had just finished reading her letter when the
squire came in, and she immediately and joyfully told him what the
morning had brought to her. But when she saw the squire's face she
could have bitten her tongue out for having named Cynthia's name to
him. He looked vexed and depressed.

'I wish I might never hear of her again. I do. She's been the bane
of my Roger, that's what she has. I have not slept half the night,
and it's all her fault. Why, there's my boy saying now that he has
no heart for ever marrying, poor lad! I wish it had been you, Molly,
my lads had taken a fancy for. I told Roger so t'other day, and I
said that for all you were beneath what I ever thought to see them
marry,--well--it's of no use--it's too late, now, as he said. Only
never let me hear that baggage's name again, that's all. And no
offence to you, either, lassie. I know you love the wench; but if
you'll take an old man's word, you're worth a score of her. I wish
young men would think so too,' he muttered as he went to the
side-table to carve the ham, while Molly poured out the tea--her
heart very hot all the time, and effectually silenced for a space.
It was with the greatest difficulty that she could keep tears of
mortification from falling. She felt altogether in a wrong position
in that house, which had been like a home to her until this last
visit. What with Mrs. Goodenough's remarks, and now this speech of
the squire's, implying--at least to her susceptible
imagination--that his father had proposed her as a wife to Roger,
and that she had been rejected, she was more glad than she could
express, or even think, that she was going home this very morning.
Roger came in from his walk while she was in this state of feeling.
He saw in an instant that something had distressed Molly; and he
longed to have the old friendly right of asking her what it was. But
she had effectually kept him at too great a distance during the last
few days for him to feel at liberty to speak to her in the old
straightforward brotherly way; especially now, when he perceived her
efforts to conceal her feelings, and the way in which she drank her
tea in feverish haste, and accepted bread only to crumble it about
her plate, untouched. It was all that he could do to make talk under
these circumstances; but he backed up her efforts as well as he
could until Aimee came down, grave and anxious; her boy had not
had a good night, and did not seem well; he had fallen into a
feverish sleep now, or she could not have left him. Immediately the
whole table was in a ferment. The squire pushed away his plate, and
could eat no more; Roger was trying to extract a detail or a fact
out of Aimee, who began to give way to tears. Molly quickly
proposed that the carriage, which had been ordered to take her home
at eleven, should come round immediately--she had everything ready
packed up, she said,--and bring back her father at once. By leaving
directly, she said it was probable they might catch him after he had
returned from his morning visits in the town, and before he had set
off on his more distant round. Her proposal was agreed to, and she
went upstairs to put on her things. She came down all ready into the
drawing-room, expecting to find Aimee and the squire there; but
during her absence word had been brought to the anxious mother and
grandfather that the child had wakened up in a panic, and both had
rushed up to their darling. But Roger was in the drawing-room
awaiting Molly, with a large bunch of the choicest flowers.

'Look, Molly!' said he, as she was on the point of leaving the room
again, on finding him there alone. 'I gathered these flowers for you
before breakfast.' He came to meet her reluctant advance.

'Thank you!' said she. 'You are very kind. I am very much obliged to
you.'

'Then you must do something for me,' said he, determined not to
notice the restraint of her manner, and making the rearrangement of
the flowers which she held a sort of link between them, so that she
could not follow her impulse, and leave the room.--'Tell
me,--honestly as I know you will if you speak at all,--have not I
done something to vex you since we were so happy at the Towers
together?'

His voice was so kind and true,--his manner so winning yet wistful,
that Molly would have been thankful to tell him all; she believed
that he could have helped her more than any one to understand how
she ought to behave rightly; he would have disentangled her
fancies,--if only he himself had not lain at the very core and
centre of all her perplexity and dismay. How could she tell him of
Mrs. Goodenough's words troubling her maiden modesty? How could she
ever repeat what his father had said that morning, and assure him
that she, no more than he, wished that their old friendliness should
be troubled by the thought of a nearer relationship?

'No, you never vexed me in my whole life, Roger,' said she, looking
straight at him for the first time for many days.

'I believe you, because you say so. I have no right to ask further.
Molly, will you give me back one of those flowers, as a pledge of
what you have said?'

'Take whichever you like,' said she, eagerly offering him the whole
nosegay to choose from.

'No; you must choose, and you must give it me.'

Just then the squire came in. Roger would have been glad if Molly
had not gone on so eagerly to ransack the bunch for the choicest
flower in his father's presence; but she exclaimed,--

'Oh, please, Mr. Hamley, do you know which is Roger's favourite
flower?'

'No. A rose, I daresay. The carriage is at the door, and, Molly my
dear, I don't want to hurry you, but--'

'I know. Here, Roger,--here is a rose!

('And red as a rose was she.')

I will find papa as soon as ever I get home. How is the little boy?'

'I'm afraid he's beginning of some kind of a fever.'

And the squire took her to the carriage, talking all the way of the
little boy; Roger following, and hardly heeding what he was doing in
the answer to the question he kept asking himself: 'Too late--or
not? Can she ever forget that my first foolish love was given to one
so different?'

While she, as the carriage rolled away, kept saying to herself,--'We
are friends again. I don't believe he will remember what the dear
squire took it into his head to suggest, for many days. It is so
pleasant to be on the old terms again; and what lovely flowers!'


CHAPTER LX


ROGER HAMLEY'S CONFESSION


Roger had a great deal to think of as he turned away from looking
after the carriage as long as it could be seen. The day before, he
had believed that Molly had come to view all the symptoms of his
growing love for her,--symptoms which he thought had been so
patent,--as disgusting inconstancy to the inconstant Cynthia; that
she had felt that an attachment which could be so soon transferred
to another was not worth having; and that she had desired to mark
all this by her changed treatment of him, and so to nip it in the
bud. But this morning her old sweet, frank manner had returned--in
their last interview, at any rate. He puzzled himself hard to find
out what could have distressed her at breakfast-time. He even went
so far as to ask Robinson whether Miss Gibson had received any
letters that morning; and when he heard that she had had one, he
tried to believe that the letter was in some way the cause of her
sorrow. So far so good. They were friends again after their unspoken
difference; but that was not enough for Roger. He felt every day
more and more certain that she, and she alone, could make him happy.
He had felt this, and had partly given up all hope, while his father
had been urging upon him the very course he most desired to take. No
need for 'trying' to love her, he said to himself,--that was already
done. And yet he was very jealous on her behalf. Was that love
worthy of her which had once been given to Cynthia? Was not this
affair too much a mocking mimicry of the last? Again just on the
point of leaving England for a considerable time! If he followed her
now to her own home,--in the very drawing-room where he had once
offered to Cynthia! And then by a strong resolve he determined on
this course. They were friends now, and he kissed the rose that was
her pledge of friendship. If he went to Africa, he ran some deadly
chances; he knew better what they were now than he had done when he
went before. Until his return he would not even attempt to win more
of her love than he already had. But once safe home again, no weak
fancies as to what might or might not be her answer should prevent
his running all chances to gain the woman who was to him the one who
excelled all. His was not the poor vanity that thinks more of the
possible mortification of a refusal than of the precious jewel of a
bride that may be won. Somehow or another, please God to send him
back safe, he would put his fate to the touch. And till then he
would be patient. He was no longer a boy to rush at the coveted
object; he was a man capable of judging and abiding.

Molly sent her father, as soon as she could find him, to the Hall;
and then sate down to the old life in the home drawing-room, where
she missed Cynthia's bright presence at every turn. Mrs. Gibson was
in rather a querulous mood, which fastened itself upon the injury of
Cynthia's letter being addressed to Molly, and not to herself.

'Considering all the trouble I had with her trousseau, I think she
might have written to me.'

'But she did--her first letter was to you, mamma,' said Molly, her
real thoughts still intent upon the Hall--upon the sick child--upon
Roger, and his begging for the flower.

'Yes, just a first letter, three pages long, with an account of her
crossing; while to you she can write about fashions, and how the
bonnets are worn in Paris, and all sorts of interesting things. But
poor mothers must never expect confidential letters, I have found
that out.'

'You may see my letter, mamma,' said Molly, 'there is really nothing
in it.'

'And to think of her writing, and crossing to you who don't value
it, while my poor heart is yearning after my lost child! Really life
is somewhat hard to bear at times.'

Then there was a silence--for a while.

'Do tell me something about your visit, Molly. Is Roger very
heartbroken? Does he talk much about Cynthia?'

'No. He does not mention her often; hardly ever, I think.'

'I never thought he had much feeling. If he had had, he would not
have let her go so easily.'

'I don't see how he could help it. When he came to see her after his
return, she was already engaged to Mr. Henderson--he had conic down
that very day,' said Molly, with perhaps more heat than the occasion
required.

'My poor head!' said Mrs. Gibson, putting her hands up to her head.
'One may see you've been stopping with people of robust health,
and--excuse my saying it, Molly, of your friends--of unrefined
habits, you've got to talk in so loud a voice. But do remember my
head, Molly. So Roger has quite forgotten Cynthia, has he? Oh! what
inconstant creatures men are! He will be falling in love with some
grandee next, mark my words! They are making a pet and a lion of
him, and he's just the kind of weak young man to have his head
turned by it all; and to propose to some fine lady of rank, who
would no more think of marrying him than of marrying her footman.'

'I don't think it is likely,' said Molly, stoutly. 'Roger is too
sensible for anything of the kind.'

'That's just the fault I always found with him; sensible and
cold-hearted! Now, that's a kind of character which may be very
valuable, but which revolts me. Give me warmth of heart, even with a
little of that extravagance of feeling which misleads the judgment,
and conducts into romance. Poor Mr. Kirkpatrick! That was just his
character. I used to tell him that his love for me was quite
romantic. I think I have told you about his walking five miles in
the rain to get me a muffin once when I was ill?'

'Yes!' said Molly. 'It was very kind of him.'

'So imprudent, too! Just what one of your sensible, cold-hearted,
commonplace people would never have thought of doing. With his cough
and all.'

'I hope he didn't suffer for it?' replied Molly, anxious at any cost
to keep off the subject of the Hamleys, upon which she and her
stepmother always disagreed, and on which she found it difficult to
keep her temper.

'Yes, indeed, he did! I don't think he ever got over the cold he
caught that day. I wish you had known him, Molly. I sometimes wonder
what would have happened if you had been my real daughter, and
Cynthia dear papa's, and Mr. Kirkpatrick and your own dear mother had
all lived. People talk a good deal about natural affinities. It
would have been a question for a philosopher.' She began to think on
the impossibilities she had suggested.

'I wonder how the poor little boy is?' said Molly, after a pause,
speaking out her thoughts.

'Poor little child! When one thinks how little his prolonged
existence is to be desired, one feels that his death would be a
boon.'

'Mamma! what do you mean?' asked Molly, much shocked. 'Why every one
cares for his life as the most precious thing! You have never seen
him! He is the bonniest, sweetest little fellow that can be! What do
you mean?'

'I should have thought that the squire would have desired a
better-born heir than the offspring of a servant,--with all his
ideas about descent, and blood, and family. And I should have
thought that it was a little mortifying to Roger--who must naturally
have looked upon himself as his brother's heir--to find a little
interloping child, half French, half English, stepping into his
shoes!'

'You don't know how fond they are of him,--the squire looks upon him
as the apple of his eye.'

'Molly! Molly! pray don't let me hear you using such vulgar
expressions. When shall I teach you true refinement--that refinement
which consists in never even thinking a vulgar, commonplace thing?
Proverbs and idioms are never used by people of education. "Apple of
his eye!" I am really shocked.'

'Well, mamma, I'm very sorry; but after all, what I wanted to say as
strongly as I could was, that the squire loves the little boy as
much as his own child; and that Roger--oh! what a shame to think
that Roger--' And she stopped suddenly short, as if she were choked.

'I don't wonder at your indignation, my dear!' said Mrs. Gibson. 'It
is just what I should have felt at your age. But one learns the
baseness of human nature with advancing years. I was wrong, though,
to undeceive you so early--but depend upon it, the thought I alluded
to has crossed Roger Hamley's mind!'

'All sorts of thoughts cross one's mind--it depends upon whether one
gives them harbour and encouragement,' said Molly.

'My dear, if you must have the last word, don't let it be a truism.
But let us talk on some more interesting subject. I asked Cynthia to
buy me a silk gown in Paris, and I said I would send her word what
colour I fixed upon--I think dark blue is the most becoming to my
complexion; what do you say?'

Molly agreed, sooner than take the trouble of thinking about the
thing at all; she was far too full of her silent review of all the
traits in Roger's character which had lately come under her notice,
and that gave the lie direct to her stepmother's supposition. Just
then they heard Mr. Gibson's step downstairs. But it was some time
before he made his entrance into the room where they were sitting.

'How is little Roger?' said Molly, eagerly.

'Beginning with scarlet fever, I'm afraid. It's well you left when
you did, Molly. You've never had it. We must stop up all intercourse
with the Hall for a time. If there's one illness I dread, it is
this.'

'But you go and come back to us, papa.'

'Yes. But I always take plenty of precautions. However, no need to
talk about risks that lie in the way of one's duty. It is
unnecessary risks that we must avoid.'

'Will he have it badly?' asked Molly.

'I can't tell. I shall do my best for the wee laddie.'

Whenever Mr. Gibson's feelings were touched, he was apt to recur to
the language of his youth. Molly knew now that he was much
interested in the case.

For some days there was imminent danger to the little boy; for some
weeks there was a more chronic form of illness to contend with; but
when the immediate danger was over and the warm daily interest was
past, Molly began to realize that, from the strict quarantine her
father evidently thought it necessary to establish between the two
houses, she was not likely to see Roger again before his departure
for Africa. Oh! if she had but made more of the uncared-for days
that she had passed with him at the Hall! Worse than uncared for;
days on which she had avoided him; refused to converse freely with
him; given him pain by her change of manner; for she had read in his
eyes, heard in his voice, that he had been perplexed and pained, and
now her imagination dwelt on and exaggerated the expression of his
tones and looks.

One evening after dinner, her father said,--

'As the country-people say, I've done a stroke of work to-day. Roger
Hamley and I have laid our heads together, and we have made a plan
by which Mrs. Osborne and her boy will leave the Hall.'

'What did I say the other day, Molly?' said Mrs. Gibson,
interrupting, and giving Molly a look of extreme intelligence.

'And go into lodgings at Jennings' farm; not four hundred yards from
the Park-field gate,' continued Mr. Gibson. 'The squire and his
daughter-in-law have got to be much better friends over the little
fellow's sick-bed; and I think he sees now how impossible it would
be for the mother to leave her child, and go and be happy in France,
which has been the notion running in his head all this time. To buy
her off, in fact. But that one night, when I was very uncertain
whether I could bring him through, they took to crying together, and
condoling with each other; and it was just like tearing down a
curtain that had been between them; they have been rather friends
than otherwise ever since. Still Roger'--(Molly's cheeks grew warm
and her eyes soft and bright; it was such a pleasure to hear his
name)--'and I both agree that his mother knows much better how to
manage the boy than his grandfather does. I suppose that was the one
good thing she got from that hardhearted mistress of hers. She
certainly has been well trained in the management of children. And
it makes her impatient, and annoyed, and unhappy, when she sees the
squire giving the child nuts and ale, and all sorts of silly
indulgences, and spoiling him in every possible way. Yet she's a
coward, and doesn't speak out her mind. Now by being in lodgings,
and having her own servants--nice pretty rooms they are, too; we
went to see them, and Mrs. Jennings promises to attend well to Mrs
Osborne Hamley, and is very much honoured, and all that sort of
thing--not ten minutes' walk from the Hall, too, so that she and the
little chap may easily go backwards and forwards as often as they
like, and yet she may keep the control over her child's discipline
and diet. In short, I think I've done a good day's work,' he
continued, stretching himself a little; and then with a shake
rousing himself, and making ready to go out again; to see a patient
who had sent for him in his absence.

'A good day's work!' he repeated to himself as he ran downstairs. 'I
don't know when I have been so happy!' For he had not told Molly all
that had passed between him and Roger. Roger had begun a fresh
subject of conversation just as Mr. Gibson was hastening away from
the Hall, after completing the new arrangement for Aimee and
her child.

'You know that I set off next Tuesday, Mr. Gibson, don't you?' said
Roger, a little abruptly.

'To be sure. I hope you'll be as successful in all your scientific
objects as you were the last time, and have no sorrows awaiting you
when you come back.'

'Thank you. Yes. I hope so. You don't think there's any danger of
infection now, do you?'

'No! If the disease were to spread through the household, I think we
should have had some signs of it before now. One is never sure,
remember, with scarlet fever.

Roger was silent for a minute or two. 'Should you be afraid,' he
said at length, 'of seeing me at your house?'

'Thank you; but I think I would rather decline the pleasure of your
society there at present. It's only three weeks or a month since the
child began. Besides, I shall be over here again before you go. I'm
always on my guard against symptoms of dropsy. I have known it
supervene.'

'Then I shall not see Molly again!' said Roger, in a tone and with a
look of great disappointment.

Mr. Gibson turned his keen, observant eyes upon the young man, and
looked at him in as penetrating a manner as if he had been beginning
with an unknown illness. Then the doctor and the father compressed
his lips and gave vent to a long intelligent whistle. 'Whew!' said
he.

Roger's bronzed cheeks took a deeper shade.

'You will take a message to her from me, won't you? A message of
farewell?' he pleaded.

'Not I. I'm not going to be a message-carrier between any young man
and young woman. I'll tell my womankind I forbade you to come near
the house, and that you're sorry to go away without bidding good-by.
That's all I shall say.'

'But you do not disapprove?--I see you guess why. Oh! Mr. Gibson,
just speak to me one word of what must be in your heart, though you
are pretending not to understand why I would give worlds to see
Molly again before I go.'

'My dear boy!' said Mr. Gibson, more affected than he liked to show,
and laying his hand on Roger's shoulder. Then he pulled himself up,
and said gravely enough,--

'Mind, Molly is not Cynthia. If she were to care for you, she is not
one who could transfer her love to the next corner.'

'You mean not as readily as I have done,' replied Roger. 'I only
wish you could know what a different feeling this is to my boyish
love for Cynthia.'

'I wasn't thinking of you when I spoke; but, however, as I might
have remembered afterwards that you were not a model of constancy,
let us hear what you have to say for yourself.'

'Not much. I did love Cynthia very much. Her manners and her beauty
bewitched me; but her letters,--short, hurried letters,--sometimes
showing that she really hadn't taken the trouble to read mine
through,--I cannot tell you the pain they gave me! Twelve months'
solitude, in frequent danger of one's life--face to face with
death--sometimes ages a man like many years' experience. Still I
longed for the time when I should see her sweet face again, and hear
her speak. Then the letter at the Cape!--and still I hoped. But you
know how I found her, when I went to have the interview which I
trusted might end in the renewal of our relations,--engaged to Mr
Henderson. I saw her walking with him in your garden, coquetting
with him about a flower, just as she used to do with me. I can see
the pitying look in Molly's eyes as she watched me; I can see it
now. And I could beat myself for being such a blind fool as to--What
must she think of me? how she must despise me, choosing the false
Duessa.'

'Come, come! Cynthia isn't so bad as that. She's a very fascinating,
faulty creature.'

'I know! I know! I will never allow any one to say a word against
her. If I called her the false Duessa it was because I wanted to
express my sense of the difference between her and Molly as strongly
as I could. You must allow for a lover's exaggeration. Besides, all
I wanted to say was,--Do you think that Molly, after seeing and
knowing that I had loved a person so inferior to herself, could ever
be brought to listen to me?'

'I don't know. I can't tell. And even if I could, I would not. Only
if it's any comfort to you, I may say what my experience has taught
me. Women are queer, unreasoning creatures, and are just as likely
as not to love a man who has been throwing away his affection.'

'Thank you, sir!' said Roger, interrupting him. 'I see you mean to
give me encouragement. And I had resolved never to give Molly a hint
of what I felt till I returned,--and then to try and win her by
every means in my power. I determined not to repeat the former scene
in the former place,--in your drawing-room,--however I might be
tempted. And perhaps, after all, she avoided me when she was here
last.'

'Now, Roger, I've listened to you long enough. If you've nothing
better to do with your time than to talk about my daughter, I have.
When you come back it will be time enough to enquire how far your
father would approve of such an engagement.'

'He himself urged it upon me the other day--but then I was in
despair--I thought it was too late.'

'And what means you are likely to have of maintaining a wife,--I
always thought that point was passed too lightly over when you
formed your hurried engagement to Cynthia. I'm not mercenary,--Molly
has some money independently of me,--that she by the way knows
nothing of,--not much;--and I can allow her something. But all these
things must be left till your return.'

'Then you sanction my attachment?'

'I don't know what you mean by sanctioning it. I can't help it. I
suppose losing one's daughter is a necessary evil. Still,'--seeing
the disappointed expression on Roger's face--'it is but fair to you
to say I'd rather give my child,--my only child, remember!--to you,
than to any man in the world!'

'Thank you!' said Roger, shaking hands with Mr. Gibson, almost
against the will of the latter. 'And I may see her, just once,
before I go?'

'Decidedly not. There I come in as doctor as well as father. No!'

'But you will take a message, at any rate?'

'To my wife and to her conjointly. I will not separate them. I will
not in the slightest way be a go-between.'

'Very well,' said Roger. 'Tell them both as strongly as you can how
I regret your prohibition. I see I must submit. But if I don't come
back, I'll haunt you for having been so cruel.'

'Come, I like that. Give me a wise man of science in love! No one
beats him in folly. Good-by.'

'Good-by, You will see Molly this afternoon!'

'To be sure. And you will see your father. But I don't heave such
portentous sighs at the thought.'

Mr. Gibson gave Roger's message to his wife and to Molly that evening
at dinner. It was but what the latter had expected, after all her
father had said of the very great danger of infection; but now that
her expectation came in the shape of a final decision, it took away
her appetite. She submitted in silence; but her observant father
noticed that after this speech of his, she only played with the food
on her plate, and concealed a good deal of it under her knife and
fork.

'Lover ~versus~ father!' thought he, half sadly. 'Lover wins.' And
he, too, became indifferent to all that remained of his dinner. Mrs
Gibson pattered on; and nobody listened.

The day of Roger's departure came. Molly tried hard to forget it in
working away at a cushion she was preparing as a present to Cynthia;
people did worsted-work in those days. One, two, three. One, two,
three, four, five, six, seven; all wrong; she was thinking of
something else, and had to unpick it. It was a rainy day, too; and
Mrs. Gibson, who had planned to go out and pay some calls, had to
stay indoors. This made her restless and fidgety. She kept going
backwards and forwards to different windows in the drawing-room to
look at the weather, as if she imagined that while it rained at one
window, it might be fine weather at another.

'Molly--come here! who is that man wrapped up in a
cloak,--there,--near the Park wall, under the beech-tree--he has
been there this half-hour and more, never stirring, and looking at
this house all the time! I think it's very suspicious.'

Molly looked, and in an instant recognized Roger under all his
wraps. Her first instinct was to draw back. The next to come
forwards, and say,--'Why, mamma, it's Roger Hamley! Look now--he's
kissing his hand; he's wishing us good-by in the only way he can!'
And she responded to his sign; but she was not sure if he perceived
her modest quiet movement, for Mrs. Gibson became immediately so
demonstrative that Molly fancied that her eager foolish pantomimic
motions must absorb all his attention.

'I call this so attentive of him,' said Mrs. Gibson, in the midst of
a volley of kisses of her hand. 'Really it is quite romantic. It
reminds me of former days--but he will be too late! I must send him
away; it is half-past twelve!' And she took out her watch and held
it up, tapping it with her forefinger, and occupying the very centre
of the window. Molly could only peep here and there, dodging now up,
now down, now on this side, now on that, of the perpetually-moving
arms. She fancied she saw something of a corresponding movement on
Roger's part. At length he went away, slowly, slowly, and often
looking back, in spite of the tapped watch. Mrs. Gibson at last
retreated, and Molly quietly moved into her place to see his figure
once more before the turn of the road hid it from her view. He, too,
knew where the last glimpse of the Gibsons' house was to be
obtained, and once more he turned, and his white handkerchief
floated on the air. Molly waved hers high up, with eager longing
that it should be seen. And then, he was gone! and Molly returned to
her worsted-work, happy, glowing, sad, content, and thinking to
herself how sweet is--friendship!

When she came to a sense of the present, Mrs. Gibson was saying,--

'Upon my word, though Roger Hamley has never been a great favourite
of mine, this little attention of his has reminded me very forcibly
of a very charming young man--a ~soupirant~, as the French would
call him--Lieutenant Harper--you must have heard me speak of him,
Molly?'

'I think I have!' said Molly, absently.

'Well, you remember how devoted he was to me when I was at Mrs
Duncombe's, my first situation, and I only seventeen. And when the
recruiting party was ordered to another town, poor Mr. Harper came
and stood opposite the schoolroom window for nearly an hour, and I
know it was his doing that the band played "The girl I left behind
me," when they marched out the next day. Poor Mr. Harper! It was
before I knew dear Mr. Kirkpatrick! Dear me. How often my poor heart
has had to bleed in this life of mine! not but what dear papa is a
very worthy man, and makes me very happy. He would spoil me, indeed,
if I would let him. Still he is not as rich as Mr. Henderson.'

That last sentence contained the germ of Mrs. Gibson's present
grievance. Having married. Cynthia, as her mother put it--taking
credit to herself as if she had had the principal part in the
achievement--she now became a little envious of her daughter's good
fortune in being the wife of a young, handsome, rich and moderately
fashionable man, who lived in London. She naively expressed her
feelings on this subject to her husband one day when she was really
not feeling quite well, and when consequently her annoyances were
much more present to her mind than her sources of happiness.

'It is such a pity!' said she, 'that I was born when I was. I should
so have liked to belong to this generation.'

'That's sometimes my own feeling,' said he. 'So many new views seem
to be opened in science, that I should like, if it were possible, to
live till their reality was ascertained, and one saw what they led
to. But I don't suppose that's your reason, my dear, for wishing to
be twenty or thirty years younger.'

'No, indeed. And I did not put it in that hard unpleasant way; I
only said I should like to belong to this generation. To tell the
truth, I was thinking of Cynthia. Without vanity, I believe I was as
pretty as she is--when I was a girl, I mean; I had not her dark
eye-lashes, but then my nose was straighter. And now look at the
difference! I have to live in a little country town with three
servants, and no carriage; and she with her inferior good looks will
live in Sussex Place,' and keep a man and a brougham, and I don't
know what. But the fact is, in this generation there are so many
more rich young men than there were when I was a girl.'

'Oh, ho! so that's your reason, is it, my dear. If you had been
young now you might have married somebody as well off as Walter?'

'Yes!' said she. 'I think that was my idea. Of course I should have
liked him to be you. I always think if you had gone to the bar you
might have succeeded better, and lived in London, too. I don't think
Cynthia cares much where she lives, yet you see it has come to her.'

'What has--London?'

'Oh, you dear, facetious man. Now that's just the thing to have
captivated a jury. I don't believe Walter will ever be so clever as
you are. Yet he can take Cynthia to Paris, and abroad, and
everywhere. I only hope all this indulgence won't develope the
faults in Cynthia's character. It's a week since we heard from her,
and I did write so particularly to ask her for the autumn fashions
before I bought my new bonnet. But riches are a great snare.'

'Be thankful you are spared temptation, my dear.'

'No, I'm not. Every body likes to be tempted. And, after all, it's
very easy to resist temptation, if one wishes.'

'I don't find it so easy,' said her husband.

'Here's medicine for you, mamma,' said Molly, entering with a letter
held up in her hand. 'A letter from Cynthia.'

'Oh, you dear little messenger of good news! There was one of the
heathen deities in Mangnall's ~Questions~ whose office that was. The
letter is dated from Calais. They're coming home! She's bought me a
shawl and a bonnet! The dear creature! Always thinking of others
before herself. good fortune cannot spoil her. They've a fortnight
left of their holiday! Their house is not quite ready; they're
coming here. Oh, now, Mr. Gibson, we must have the new dinner service
at Watts's I've set my heart on so long! "Home" Cynthia calls this
house. I'm sure it has been a home to her, poor darling! I doubt if
there is another man in the world who would have treated his
stepdaughter like dear papa! And, Molly, you must have a new gown.'

'Come, come! Remember I belong to the last generation,' said Mr
Gibson.

'And Cynthia will not notice what I wear,' said Molly, bright with
pleasure at the thought of seeing her again.

'No! but Walter will. He has such a quick eye for dress, and I think
I rival papa; if he is a good stepfather, I'm a good stepmother, and
I could not bear to see my Molly shabby, and not looking her best, I
must have a new gown too. It won't do to look as if we had nothing
but the dresses which we wore at the wedding!'

But Molly stood against the new gown for herself, and urged that if
Cynthia and Walter were to come to visit them often, they had better
see them as they really were, in dress, habits, and appointments.
When Mr. Gibson had left the room, Mrs. Gibson softly reproached Molly
for her obstinacy.

'You might have allowed me to beg for a new gown for you, Molly,
when you knew how much I had admired that figured silk at Brown's
the other day. And now, of course, I can't be so selfish as to get
it for myself, and you to have nothing. You should learn to
understand the wishes of other people. Still, on the whole, you are
a dear, sweet girl, and I only wish--well, I know what I wish; only
dear papa does not like it to be talked about. And now cover me up
close, and let me go to sleep, and dream about my dear Cynthia and
my new shawl!'




End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Wives and Daughters
by Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell

