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"But he is a different man from Freddy--with different tastes, different aspirations, different----He's different," emphatically, "in _every_ way!"
"To be different from the person one loves is not to be a bad man," says Joyce slowly, her eyes on the ground.
"My dear girl, who has called Mr. Beauclerk a bad man?"
"You don't like him," says Miss Kavanagh, still more slowly, still with thoughtful eyes downcast.
"I like Mr. Dysart better if you mean that."
"No, I don't mean that. And, besides, that is no answer."
"Was there a question?"
"Yes. Why don't you like Mr. Beauclerk?"
"Have I said I didn't like him?"
"Not in so many words, but----Well, why don't you?"
"I don't know," rather lamely.
Miss Kavanagh laughs a little satirically, and Mrs. Monkton, objecting to mirth of that description, takes fire.
"Why do you _like_ him?" asks she defiantly.
"I don't know either," returns Joyce, with a rueful smile. "And after all I'm not sure that I like him so _very_ much. You evidently imagine me to be head over ears in love with him, yet I, myself, scarcely know whether I like him or not."
"You always look at him so kindly, and you always pull your skirts aside to give him a place by your side."
"I should do that for Tommy."
"Would you? That would be _too_ kind," says Tommy's mother, laughing.
"It would mean ruin to your skirts in two minutes."
"But, consider the gain. The priceless sc.r.a.ps, of wisdom I should hear, even whilst my clothes were being demolished."
This has been a mere interlude, unintentional on the part of either, and, once over, neither knows how to go on. The question _must_ be settled one way or the other.
"There is one thing," says Mrs. Monkton, at length, "You certainly prefer Mr. Beauclerk to Mr. Dysart."
"Do I? I wish I knew as much about myself as you know about me. And, after all, it is of no consequence whom I like. The real thing is----Come, Barbara, you who know so much can tell me this----"
"Well?" says Mrs. Monkton, seeing she has grown very red, and is evidently hesitating.
"No. This absurd conversation has gone far enough. I was going to ask you to solve a riddle, but----"
"But what?"
"You are too serious about it."
"Not _too_ serious. It is very important."
"Oh, Barbara, do you _know_ what you are saying?" cries the girl with an angry little stamp, turning to her a face pale and indignant. "You have been telling me in so many words that I am in love with either Mr.
Beauclerk or Mr. Dysart. Pray now, for a change, tell me which of them is in love with _me_."
"Mr. Dysart," says Barbara quietly.
Her sister laughs angrily.
"You think everybody who looks at me is in love with me."
"Not _every_one!"
"Meaning Mr. Beauclerk."
"No," slowly. "I think he likes you, too, but he is a man who will always _think_. You know he has come in for that property in Hampshire through his uncle's death, but he got no money with it. It is a large place, impossible to keep up without a large income, and his uncle left every penny away from him. It is in great disrepair, the house especially. I hear it is falling to pieces. Mr. Beauclerk is an ambitious man, he will seek means to rebuild his house."
"Well what of that? It is an interesting bit of history, but how does it concern me? Take that troubled look out of your eyes, Barbara. I a.s.sure you Mr. Beauclerk is as little to me as I am to him."
She speaks with such evident sincerity, with such an undeniable belief in the truth of her own words, that Mrs. Monkton, looking at her and reading her soul through her clear eyes, feels a weight lifted from her heart.
"That is all right then," says she simply. She turns as if to go away, but Miss Kavanagh has still a word or two to say.
"I may go to the Court?" says she.
"Yes; I suppose so."
"But you won't be vexed if I go, Barbie?"
"No; not now."
"Well," slipping her arm through hers, with an audible sigh of delight.
"_That's_ settled."
"Things generally _do_ get settled the way you want them to be," says Mrs. Monkton, laughing. "Come, what about your frocks, eh?"
From this out they spend a most enjoyable hour or two.
CHAPTER VI.
"Or if they sing, 'tis with so dull a cheer, That leaves look pale, thinking the winter's near."
The visit to the Court being decided on, Miss Kavanagh undertakes life afresh, with a joyous heart. Lord and Lady Baltimore are the best host and hostess in the world, and a visit to them means unmixed pleasure while it lasts. The Court is, indeed, the pleasantest house in the county, the most desirable in all respects, and the gayest. Yet, strange and sad to add, happiness has found no bed within its walls.
This is the more remarkable in that the marriage of Lord and Lady Baltimore had been an almost idealistic one. They had been very much in love with each other. All the hosts of friends and relations that belonged to either side had been delighted with the engagement. So many imprudent marriages were made, so many disastrous ones; but _here_ was a marriage where birth and money went together, and left no guardians or parents lamenting. All Belgravia stood still and stared at the young couple with genuine admiration. It wasn't often that love, pure and simple, fell into their midst, and such a _satisfactory_ love too! None of your erratic darts that struck the wrong b.r.e.a.s.t.s, and created confusion for miles round, but a thoroughly proper, respectable winged arrow that pierced the bosoms of those who might safely be congratulated on the reception of it.