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"Oh, I see. I suppose that if I'd any real interest in your welfare, I ought to refuse, but as you'd do as you please in any event, I'm quite at your service."
"Thanks. Mamma will be here presently. She's announced her intention of attending early service, and if she does----"
"She might interrupt another, and that would be awkward."
"Dreadfully. She does not wish me to marry Lieutenant Kingsland--I think she would rather I married you."
"Is she so bitter? Well, make your own mind easy, I won't ask her."
"But you must."
"What!!!"
"Nothing short of a proposal would deter her from going to service."
"But, I thought you----!"
"Oh, I'll promise to be unavailable by the time you've finished,-- Sh!
she's coming. Remember your promise to help me, and wish me luck."
"With all my heart," he cried, as she vanished through the door, and the Dowager entered the hall.
Stanley wished the old lady good-morning which she received with chilling condescension, and neither of them spoke for some moments; a precious gain of time, during which her Ladyship put on her gloves, rearranged her cloak, unrolled and re-rolled her sunshade, paced the long hall, alternated glimpses out of the windows by glances up the great stairway, and betrayed every sign of impatient waiting for a tardy companion. The Secretary stood watching her and counting the minutes, which seemed to pa.s.s unusually slowly.
Finally the Dowager's patience got the better of her reserve; she faced round and demanded if he had seen her daughter.
"Yes," he replied, very deliberately. "I believe she was in the hall when I came down."
"Believe. Do you not know, Mr. Stanley?"
"I certainly caught a glimpse of her," he admitted.
"But she's not here now."
The Secretary made a careful inspection, from his point of vantage on the hearthstone, of every cobweb and corner of the great apartment, and in the end found himself forced to agree with the Marchioness'
statement.
"Where has she gone, then?" was her next question.
"Really," he replied, "it is not your daughter's custom to keep me posted as to her movements."
"But you've eyes, haven't you?" she retorted, testily. "At least you know how she left this hall."
The Secretary sighed as he saw the end of his little manoeuvre.
"She went out at the front door," he said.
"Why couldn't you have told me that to begin with?"
"You didn't ask me."
"Don't be so distressingly literal. I'm late for the service as it is.
My daughter has probably misunderstood our arrangements, and is waiting for me at the church." And the Marchioness showed unmistakable signs of preparing to leave.
Even allowing a most liberal leeway to the maundering old parson, Stanley knew he could not yet have reached that pa.s.sage beginning, "All ye that are married," and ending in "amazement," for which there is a canonical time-allowance of at least five minutes; it therefore behoved him to play his last trump.
The Dowager, like a hen preening her feathers, had given the last touches to her garments, and was already half-way to the door, when the Secretary, stepping forward, arrested her progress by remarking:
"I feel that I owe you some explanation of what occurred last night, Lady Port-Arthur."
"Perhaps it's as well that you should explain," she replied, pausing at the door, "though I should have supposed it would have been unnecessary after our last interview."
"I've not forgotten it."
"You appeared to have done so last evening."
"Really, you know," he said, piqued by her rudeness, "I couldn't refuse to escort your daughter down to dinner when my hostess requested me to do so."
"If Mrs. Roberts so honoured you as to permit you to take in Lady Isabelle, naturally----"
"Yes, that is the way I should have put it."
"I do not pretend to say how you should have expressed yourself, but I wish to point out that your place at dinner was no excuse for your place afterwards."
"Oh, in the conservatory. Well, you see, the fact is, I was telling Lady Isabelle----"
"Yes, Mr. Stanley. What were you telling my daughter?"
He glanced at the clock. Seven minutes had elapsed since the Dowager entered the hall. He hoped they would shorten the service.
"I was asking her a question," he continued.
"Well?"
The Dowager was far below zero.
"I asked her if she cared for me."
"And she naturally referred you to her mother."
"She told me a few minutes ago that you were coming here," he replied, noticing that his companion's mercury was rapidly rising.
"I'm glad," continued the Marchioness, "that you've taken so early an opportunity to explain what I could only consider as very singular conduct. For dear Isabelle's sake I'll consent to overlook what has occurred in the past, and if you can make suitable provision----"
Five minutes only remained before the time of early service. He thought his income large enough to fill the interval, and interrupted with:
"The woman I marry would have----," and then he told the Dowager all about it, in sterling and decimal currency.