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"But ain't you in a hurry to open them, mistress?" asked Dinah, pretending to go, still hanging on her heel.
"Maybe I am; maybe I ain't." Mrs Bosenna picked up the two envelopes with a carelessness which was slightly overdone. They were sealed, the pair of them. She broke the seal of the first carefully, drew out the letter, and read--
"HONOURED MADAM,--You will doubtless be surprised--"
She turned to the last page and read the subscription--
"Yours obediently,"
"TOBIAS HUNKEN."
"Who's it from, mistress?" asked Dinah, making pretence of a difficulty with the oven door.
"n.o.body that concerns you," snapped Mrs Bosenna, and hastily stowed the letter in the bosom of her bodice. She picked up the other. Of that, in turn, she broke the seal--
"HONOURED MADAM,--"
The handwriting was somewhat superior.
"HONOURED MADAM,--You will doubtless be surprised by the purport of this letter; as by the communication I feel myself impelled to make to you--"
Mrs Bosenna, mildly surprised, in truth, turned the epistle over.
It was signed--
"Your obedient servant,
"CAIUS HOCKEN."
She drew the first letter from her bodice. After the perusal of its first few sentences her cheeks put on a rosy glow.
But of a sudden she started, turned to the first letter again, and spread it on her lap.
"Well, if I ever!" breathed she, after a pause.
"A proposal! I knew it was!" cried Dinah, swinging about from the oven door.
Mrs Bosenna, if she heard, did not seem to hear. She was holding up both letters in turn, staring from the one to the other incredulously.
Her roseal colour came and went.
"Them and their parrots! I'll teach 'em!"
Before Dinah could ask what was the matter, a bell sounded. It was the front door bell, which rang just within the porch.
Dinah smoothed her ap.r.o.n and bustled forth. It had always been her grievance--and her mistress shared it--against the nameless architect of Rilla farmstead, that he had made its long kitchen window face upon the strawyard, whereas a sensible man would have designed it to command the front door in flank, with its approaches. This mistake of his cost Dinah a circuit by way of the apple-room every time she answered the porch bell; for as little as any porter of old in a border fortress would she have dreamed of admitting a visitor without first making reconnaissance.
A minute later she ran back and thrust her head in at the kitchen-door.
"Mistress," she whispered excitedly, "it's _them!_"
"Oh!" exclaimed Mrs Bosenna, as the bell jangled again. "They seem in a hurry, too." She smiled, and the smile, if the curve of her mouth forbade it to be grim, at any rate expressed decision. She picked up the two letters and slipped them into her pocket. "You can show them in."
"Where, mistress?"
"Here. And, Dinah, nothing about the post, mind! Now, run!"
CHAPTER XVII.
APPARENTLY DIVIDES INTO THREE.
"You'll pardon us, ma'am, for calling so early," began Cai. He was too far embarra.s.sed to be conscious of any surprise at being ushered into the kitchen.
"--You do the apologisin', of course," had been 'Bias's words in the front porch. "Yours was the first letter written: and, besides, you're a speaker."
"You are quite welcome, the both of you," Mrs Bosenna a.s.sured him as he came to a halt. Her tone was polite, but a faint note of interrogation sounded in it. "You have had your breakfast?"
"Yes, ma'am."
"Ah, you are early indeed! I was just about to sit down to mine."
"We don't want to interrupt, ma'am, but--" Here Cai looked helplessly at 'Bias.
"Go on," growled 'Bias.
"We--we don't want to seem rude--"
"Never mind rude," growled 'Bias again. "Get it over."
"The fact is, there's been a mistake: a painful mistake. At least,"
said Cai, growing more and more nervous under Mrs Bosenna's gaze of calm inquiry, "it _would_ be painful, if it weren't so absurd." He forced a laugh.
"Don't make noises like that," commanded 'Bias. "Get it over."
"It's about those letters, ma'am."
"Letters?" Mrs Bosenna opened her dark eyes wide; and turned them interrogatively upon Dinah. "Letters?"
"Letters?" repeated Dinah, taking her cue.
Relief broke like a sun-burst over Cai's face. "But perhaps you don't read your letters, ma'am, until after breakfast? And, if so, we're in time."
"_What_ letters?" asked Mrs Bosenna.
"They've surely been delivered, ma'am? In fact we met the postman coming from the house."
"Dear me--and did he tell you he had been deliverin' letters here?"