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"Mrs. Reverdy doesn't seem to be uneasy."
"She? no," said Gertrude with a laugh; "nothing makes _her_ uneasy.
Except thinking that Evan has fallen in love with somebody."
"She must expect that sooner or later," said Diana, with a calmness which told her companion nothing.
"Ah, but she would rather have it later. She don't want to lose Evan.
She is very proud of him."
"Would she lose him in such a case?" Diana asked, smiling, though she wished the talk ended.
"Why, you know brothers are good for nothing to sisters after they are married--worse! they are tantalizing. You are obliged to see what you used to have in somebody else's possession--and much more than ever you used to have; and it's tiresome. I'm glad I've no brothers. Basil is a good deal like a brother, and I am jealous of _him_."
"It must be very uncomfortable to be jealous," said Diana,
"Horrid! You saw a good deal of Evan, didn't you?"
A question that might have embarra.s.sed Diana if she had not had an instant perception of the intent of it. She answered thereupon with absolute self-possession,
"I don't know what you would call a 'good deal.' I saw what _I_ call a good deal of him that day in the blackberry field."
"Don't you think he is charming?"
Diana laughed, and was vexed to feel her cheeks grow warm.
"That's a word that belongs to women."
"Not to many of 'em!" said Gertrude, with a slight turning up of her pretty nose. Then, struck with the fine, pure face and very lovely figure before her, she suddenly added, "Didn't he think you charming?"
"Are you laughing at me?" said Diana.
"No, indeed I am not. Didn't he?" said Gertrude caressingly.
Amus.e.m.e.nt almost carried off the temptation to be provoked. Diana laughed merrily as she answered, "Do you think a person of so good taste would?"
"Yes, I do," said Gertrude, half sulkily, for she was baffled, and besides, her words spoke the truth. "I am sure he did. Isn't life very stupid up here in the mountains, when visitors are all gone away?"
"I don't think so. We never depend upon visitors."
"It has been awfully slow at Elmfield since Mr. Knowlton went away. We sha'n't stay much longer. I can't live where I can't dance."
"What is that?" said a voice close at hand--a peculiarly clear, silvery voice.
"Cousin Basil!" cried Gertrude, starting. "What did you come here for?
I brought Miss Starling here to have a good talk with her."
"Have you had it?"
"I haven't had time. I was just beginning."
"What! about dancing?"
"I was not speaking for you to hear. I was relieving myself by the confession that I can't live--happily, I mean--without it."
"Choice of partners immaterial?"
"I couldn't bear a dull life!"
"Nor I."
He looked as if he certainly did not know what dulness was, Diana thought. She listened, much amused.
"But you think it is wrong to dance, don't you?" Gertrude went on.
"'Better not' is wrong to a Christian," he replied.
"It must be dreadful to be a Christian!"
"Because--?" he said, with a quiet and good-humoured glance and tone of inquiry.
"O, because it is slavery. So many things you cannot do, and dresses you cannot wear."
"By what rule?" Mr. Masters asked.
"O, people think you are dreadful if you do those things; the Church, and all that. So I think it is a great deal better to keep out of it, and make no pretensions."
"Better to keep out of what? let me understand," said the minister.
"You are getting my ideas in a very involved state."
"No, I am not! I say, it is better to make no profession."
"Better than what? What is the alternative?"
"O, you know. Now you are catechizing me. It is better to make no profession, than to make it and not live up to it."
"I understand. That is to say, it is wicked to pay your debts with counterfeit notes, so it is better not to pay them at all."
"Nonsense, Basil! I am not talking of paying debts."
"But I am."
"What have debts got to do with it?"
"I beg your pardon. I understood you to declare your disapprobation of false money, and your preference for another sort of dishonesty."
"Dishonest, Basil! there is no dishonesty."
"By what name do you call it?"