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"Do I puzzle you now?" she asked.
"Inexpressibly!"
"How amusing! But how?"
"One can generally see at a glance, or pretty soon, the general trend of a character. But not with you. Nothing that I might hear of you in the future, would very much surprise me. I should say to myself, 'Yes, the germ was there.'"
Hadria paled a little. "Either good or bad you mean?"
"Well----"
"Yes, I understand." She drew herself together, crossing her arms, and looking over the hills, with eyes that burned with a sort of fear and defiance mingled. It was a singular expression, which the Professor noted with a sense of discomfort.
Hadria slowly withdrew her eyes from the horizon, and bent them on the ground.
"You must have read some of my thoughts," she said. "I often wonder how it is, that the world can drill women into goodness at all." She raised her head, and went on in a low, bitter tone: "I often wonder why it is, that they don't, one and all, fling up their _roles_ and revenge themselves to the best of their ability--intentionally, I mean--upon the world that makes them live under a permanent insult. I think, at times, that I should thoroughly enjoy spending my life in sheer, unmitigated vengeance, and if I did"--she clenched her hands, and her eyes blazed--"if I did, I would not do my work by halves!"
"I am sure you would not," said the Professor dryly.
"But I shall not do anything of the kind," she added in a different tone; "women don't. They always try to be good, always, _always_--the more fools they! And the more they are good, the worse things get."
"Ah! I thought there was some heterodox sentiment lurking here at high pressure!" exclaimed the Professor.
Hadria sighed. "I have just been receiving good advice from Mrs.
Gordon," she said, flushing at the remembrance, "and I think if you knew the sort of counsel it was, that you would understand one's feeling a little fierce and bitter. Oh, not with her, poor woman! She meant it in kindness. But the most cutting thing of all is, that what she said is _true!_"
"That _is_ exactly the worst thing," said the Professor, who seemed to have divined the nature of Mrs. Gordon's advice.
Hadria coloured. It hurt as well as astonished her, that he should guess what had been said.
"Ah! a woman ought to be born without pride, or not at all! I wish to heaven that our fatal s.e.x could be utterly stamped out!"
The Professor smiled, a little sadly, at her vehemence.
"We are accused of being at the bottom of every evil under heaven," she added, "and I think it is true. _That_ is some consolation, at any rate!"
In spite of her immense reverence for the Professor, she seemed to have grown reckless as to his opinion.
The next few days went strangely, and not altogether comprehensibly.
There was a silent warfare between Professor Fortescue and Hubert Temperley.
"I have never in my life before ventured to interfere in such matters,"
the Professor said to Miss Du Prel; "but if that fellow marries Hadria, one or both will live to rue it."
"I think it's the best thing that could happen to her," Miss Du Prel declared.
"But they are not suited to one another," said the Professor.
"Men and women seldom are!"
"Then why----?" the Professor began.
"He is about as near as she will get," Valeria interrupted. "I will never stand in the way of a girl's marrying a good, honest man. There is not one chance in ten thousand that Hadria will happen to meet exactly the right person. I have made a mistake in my life. I shall do all in my power to urge her to avoid following in my footsteps."
It was useless for the Professor to remonstrate.
"I pity Mr. Temperley, though I am so fond of Hadria," said Miss Du Prel. "If he shatters _her_ illusions, she will certainly shatter _his_."
The event that they had been expecting, took place. During one of the afternoon practices, when, for a few minutes, Mrs. Fullerton had left the room, Temperley startled Hadria by an extremely elegant proposal of marriage. He did not seem surprised at her refusal, though he pleaded his cause with no little eloquence. Hadria found it a painful ordeal.
She shrank from the ungracious necessity to disappoint what appeared to be a very ardent hope. Happily, the interview was cut short by the entrance of Mr. Fullerton. The old man was not remarkable for _finesse_.
He gave a dismayed "Oh!" He coughed, suppressed a smile, and murmuring some lame enquiry as to the progress of the music, turned and marched out of the room. The sound of laughter was presently heard from the dining-room below.
"Father is really too absurd!" cried Hadria, "there is _no_ tragedy that he is incapable of roaring at!"
"I fear his daughter takes after him," said Temperley with a tragi-comic smile.
When Hadria next met her father, he asked, with perfect but suspicious gravity, about the music that they had been practising that afternoon.
He could not speak too highly of music as a pastime. He regretted having rushed in as he did--it must have been so disturbing to the music. Why not have a notice put up outside the door on these occasions: "Engaged"?
Then the meanest intelligence would understand, and the meanest intelligence was really a thing one had to count with, in this blundering world!
CHAPTER X.
Hubert Temperley left Drumgarren suddenly. He said that he had business to attend to in town.
"That foolish girl has refused him!" exclaimed Valeria, when she heard of it.
"Thank heaven!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Professor Fortescue.
Valeria's brow clouded. "Why are you so anxious about the matter?"
"Because I know that a marriage between those two would end in misery."
Valeria spoke very seriously to Hadria on the subject of marriage, urging the importance of it, and the wretchedness of growing old in solitude.
"Better even that, than to grow old in uncongenial company," said Hadria.
Valeria shrugged her shoulders. "One could go away when it became oppressive," she suggested, at which Hadria laughed.
"What an ideal existence!"
"Are you still dreaming of an ideal existence?"
"Why not?"
"Well, dream while you may," said Miss Du Prel. "My time of dreaming was the happiest of all."