Part 15 (1/2)

”And Marcia will be an heiress, I suppose?”

”She and Philip will divide everything, people say, the place, of course, going to Philip. Lucky he! Any one might envy him. You know they both live there entirely, although Marcia's mother is alive and resides somewhere abroad. Philip was in some dragoon regiment, but sold out about two years ago: debt, I fancy, was the cause, or something like it.”

”Marcia is the girl you ought to have fallen in love with, Ted.”

”No, thank you; I very much prefer her cousin. Besides, I should have no chance, as she and Philip are engaged to each other: they thought it a pity to divide the twenty thousand pounds a year. Do you know, Molly, I never knew what it was to covet my neighbor's goods until I met you?

so you have that to answer for; but it does seem hard that one man should be so rich, and another so poor.”

”Are you poor, Teddy?”

”Very. Will that make you like me less?”

”Probably it will make me like you more,” replies she, with a bewitching smile, stroking down the hand that supports the obnoxious umbrella (the other is supporting herself) almost tenderly. ”It is only the very nicest men that haven't a farthing in the world. I have no money either, and if I had I could not keep it: so we are well met.”

”But think what a bad match you are making,” says he, regarding her curiously. ”Did you never ask yourself whether I was well off, or otherwise?”

”Never!” with a gay laugh. ”If I were going to marry you next week or so, it might occur to me to ask the question; but everything is so far away, what does it signify? If you had the mines of Golconda, I should not like you a bit better than I do.”

”My own darling! Oh, Molly, how you differ from most girls one meets.

Now, in London, once they find out I am only the third son, they throw me over without warning, and generally manage to forget the extra dance they had promised, while their mothers look upon me, and such as me, as a pestilence. And you, sweetheart, you never once asked me how much a year I had!”

”You have your pay, I suppose?” says Molly, doubtfully. ”Is that much?”

”Very handsome,” replies he, laughing; ”a lieutenant's pay generally is. But I have something besides that; about as much as most fellows would spend on their stabling. I have precisely five hundred and fifty pounds a year, neither more nor less, and I owe two hundred pounds.

Does not that sound tempting? The two hundred pounds I owe don't count, because the governor will pay up that; he always does in the long run; and I haven't asked him for anything out of the way now for fully eight months.” He says this with a full consciousness of his own virtue.

”I call five hundred and fifty pounds a year a great deal,” says Molly, with a faint ring of disappointment in her tone. ”I fancied you downright poor from what you said. Why, you might marry to-morrow morning on that.”

”So I might,” agrees he, eagerly; ”and so I will. That is, not to-morrow, exactly, but as soon as ever I can.”

”Perhaps you will,” says Molly, slowly; ”but, if so, it will not be me you will marry. Bear that in mind. No, we won't argue the matter: as far as I am concerned it doesn't admit of argument.” Then recurring to the former topic: ”Why, John has only seven hundred pounds, and he has all the children and Let.i.tia and me to provide for, and he keeps Lovat--that is the eldest boy--at a very good school as well. How _could_ you call yourself poor, with five hundred pounds a year?”

”It ought to be six hundred and fifty pounds; but I thought it a pity to burden myself with superfluous wealth in my palmy days, so I got rid of it,” says he, laughing.

”Gambling?”

”Well, yes, I suppose so.”

”Cards?”

”No, horses. It was in India,--stupid part, you know, and nothing to do. Potts suggested military races, and we all caught at it. And--and I didn't have much luck, you know,” winds up Luttrell, ingenuously.

”I don't like that young man,” says Molly, severely. ”You are always talking of him, and he is my idea of a ne'er-do-weel. Your Mr. Potts seems never to be out of mischief. He is the head and front of every offense.”

”Are you talking of Potts?” says her lover, in grieved amazement. ”A better fellow never stepped. Nothing underhand about Potts. When you see him you will agree with me.”

”I will not. I can see him in my mind's eye already. I know he is tall, and dark, and insinuating, and, in fact, a Mephistopheles.”

Luttrell roars.