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So Barbara begins.
"I am afraid," she says, smiling all the while, but growing as red as the bunch of late roses in my breast, "that I looked horribly _pleased_!
One ought to look as if one did not care, ought not one?"
"Ought one?" say I, with interest, then beginning to laugh vociferously.
"At least you were not as bad as the old maid who late in life received a very wealthy offer, and was so much elated by it that she took off all her clothes, and kicked her bonnet round the room!"
Barbara laughs.
"No, I was not quite so bad as that."
"And how did he do it?" pursue I, inquisitively. "Did he write or speak"
"He spoke."
"And what did he say? How did he word it? Ah!"--(with a sigh)--"I suppose you will not tell me _that_?"
She has abandoned her chair, and has fallen on her knees before me, hiding her face in my lap. Delicious waves of color, like the petals of a pink sweet-pea, are racing over her cheeks and throat.
"Was ever any one known to tell it?" she says, indistinctly.
"Yes," reply I, "_I_ was. I told you what Roger said, word for word--all of you!"
"_Did_ you?"--(with an accent of astonished incredulity).
"Yes," say I, "do not you remember? I promised I would before I went into the drawing-room that day, and, when I came out, I wanted the boys to let me off, but they would not."
A pause.
"I wish," say I, a little impatiently, "that you would look up! Why need you mind if you _are_ rather red? What do _I_ matter? and so--and so--you are _pleased_!"
"_Pleased!_"
She has raised her head as I bid her, and on her face there is a sort of scorn at the poverty and inadequacy of the expression, and yet she replaces it with no other; only the sapphire of her eyes is dimmed and made more tender by rising tears.
Clearly we were never meant to be joyful, we humans! In any bliss greater than our wont, we can only hang out, to demonstrate our felicity, the sign and standard of woe.
"Nancy!"--(taking my hand, and looking at me with wistful earnestness)--"do you think it _can_ last? Did ever any one feel as I do for _long_?"
"I do not know--how can I tell?" reply I, discomfortably, as I absently eye the two halves of my paper-knife, which, after having given one or two warning cracks, has now snapped in the middle. Then Roger enters, and our talk ends.
CHAPTER XLII.
"G.o.d made a foolish woman, making me!"
"Have you any idea whom we shall meet?"
It is Barbara who asks this one morning at breakfast. The question refers to a three days' visit that it has become our fate to pay to a house in the neighborhood--a house not eight miles distant from Tempest, and over which we are grumbling in the minute and exhaustive manner which people mostly employ when there is a question of making merry with their friends.
I shake my head.
"I have not an idea, that is to say, except Mrs. Huntley, and she goes without saying!"
"Why?"
"We are known to be such inseparables, that she is always asked to meet us," reply I, with that wintry smile, which is my last accomplishment.
"We pursue her round the country, do not we, Roger?"
Barbara opens her great eyes, but, with her usual tact, she says nothing. She sees that she has fallen on stony ground.
"She is _the oldest friend that we have in the world_!" continue I, laughing pleasantly.
Roger does not answer, he does not even look up, but by a restless movement that he makes in his chair, by a tiny contraction of the brows, I see that my shot has told. I am becoming an adept in the infliction of these pin-p.r.i.c.ks. It is one of the few pleasures I have left.
The day of our visit has come. We have relieved our feelings by grumbling up to the hall-door. Our murmuring must per force be stilled now, though indeed, were we to _shout_ our discontents at the top of our voices, there would be small fear of our being overheard by the master of the house, he being the boundlessly deaf old gentleman who paid his respects at Tempest on the day of Mrs. Huntley's first call, and insisted on mistaking Barbara for me. Whether he is yet set right on that head is a point still enveloped in Cimmerian gloom.
It is a bachelor establishment, as any one may perceive by a cursory glance at the disposition of the drawing-room furniture, and at the unfortunate flowers, tightly jammed, packed as thickly as they will go in one huge central bean-pot.
As we arrived rather late and were at once conducted to our rooms, we still remain in the dark as to our co-guests. Personally, I am not much interested in the question. There cannot be anybody that it will cause me much satisfaction to meet. It would give me a faint relief, indeed, to find that there were some matron of exalteder rank than mine to save me from my probable fate of bowling dark sayings at our old host, General Parker, from the season of clear soup to that of peaches and nuts. I dress quickly. The toilet is never to me a work of art. It is not that from my lofty moral stand-point I look down upon meretricious aids to faulty Nature. If I thought that it would set me on a fairer standing with Mrs. Zephine, I would paint my cheeks an inch thick; would prune my eyebrows; daub my eyes, and make my hair yellower than any b.u.t.tercups in the meadow; but I know that it would be of no avail. I should still be, compared to her, as a sign-painting to a t.i.tian. For a long time now I have cared naught for clothes. I used greatly to respect their power, but they have done _me_ no good; and so my reverence for them is turned into indifference and contempt.
I think that I must be late. Roger went down some minutes ago, at my request, so that there might be _one_ representative of the family in time.
I hasten down-stairs, fastening my last bracelet as I go, and open the drawing-room door. I was wrong. There is no one down yet: even Roger has disappeared. I am the first. This is my impression for a moment: then I perceive that there is some one in the bow-window, half hidden by the drooped curtains; some one who, hearing my entry, is advancing to meet me. It is Musgrave! My first impulse, a wrong one, I need hardly say, is to turn and flee. I have even laid hold of the just abandoned handle, when he speaks.
"Are you going?" he says in a low voice, marked by great and evidently ungovernable agitation; "do not! if you wish, I will leave the room."
I look at him, and our eyes meet. He always was a pale young man--no bucolic beef-and-beer ruddiness about him--always of a healthy swart pallor; but now he is deadly white!--so, by-the-by, I fancy am I! His dark eyes burn with a shamed yet eager glow.
With the words and tones of our last parting ringing in our ears, we both feel that it would be useless affectation to attempt to meet as ordinary acquaintance.
"No," say I, faintly, almost in a whisper, "it--it does not matter! only that I did not know that you were to be here!"
"No more did I, until this morning!" he answers, eagerly; "this morning--at the last moment--young Parker asked me to come down with him--and I--I knew we must meet sooner or later--that it could not be put off forever, and so I thought we might as well get over it here as anywhere else!"
Neither of us has thought of sitting down. He is speaking with rapid, low emotion, and I stand stupidly listening.
"I suppose so," I answer lazily. I cannot for the life of me help it, friends. I am back in Brindley Wood. He has come a few steps nearer me.
His voice is always low, but now it is almost a whisper in which he is so rapidly, pantingly speaking.
"I shall most likely not have another opportunity, probably we shall not be alone again, and I _must_ hear, I _must_ know--have you forgiven me?"
As he speaks, the recollection of all the ill he has done me, of my lost self-respect, my alienated Roger, my faded life, pa.s.s before my mind.
"_That_ I have not!" reply I, looking full at him, and speaking with a distinct and heavy emphasis of resentment and aversion, "and, by G.o.d's help, I never will!"