Part 34 (1/2)
She is a decided addition to the household; they all find her so. Even Mr. Longshanks brightens up, and makes a solitary remark at dinner; but, as n.o.body catches it, he is hardly as unhappy as otherwise a.s.suredly he would have been.
After dinner she proves herself as agreeable in the drawing-room (during that wretched half-hour devoid of men) as she had been when surrounded by them, and chatters on to Marcia and Molly of all things possible and impossible.
Presently, however, the conversation drifting toward people of whose existence Molly has. .h.i.therto been unaware, she moves a little apart from the other two, and amuses herself by turning over a book of Byron's beauties; while wis.h.i.+ng heartily those stupid men would weary of their wine,--vain wis.h.!.+
By degrees the voices on the other sofa wax fainter and fainter, then rise with sudden boldness, as Marcia, secure in her French--says in that language, evidently in answer to some remark, ”No; just conceive it,--she is totally uneducated, that is, in the accepted meaning of the word. The very morning after her arrival she confessed to me she knew nothing of French, nothing to signify of music, nothing, in fact, of anything.”
”But her air, her whole bearing,--it is inconceivable,” says Lady Stafford. ”She must have had some education surely.”
”She spoke of a National School! Consider the horror of it! I expect her brother must be a very low sort of person. If she can read and write it is as much as we need hope for. That is the worst of living in one of those petty villages, completely out of society.”
”What a pity, with her charming face and figure!” says Lady Stafford, also (I regret to say) so far forgetting herself as to speak in the language she believes falsely to be unknown to Molly.
”Yes, she is rather pretty,” admits Marcia, against her will; ”but beauty when attached to ignorance is only a matter of regret, as it seems to me.”
”True,” says Lady Stafford, pityingly, letting her eyes fall on Molly.
The latter, whose own eyes have been fixed vacantly on some distant and invisible object outside in the dark garden, now rises, humming softly, and going toward the window presses her forehead against one of the cool panes. So stationed, she is out of sight and hearing.
The door opens, and the men come in by twos. Luttrell makes straight for Molly, and as an excuse for doing so says out loud:
”Miss Ma.s.sereene, will you sing us something?”
”I don't sing,” returns Molly, in a distinct and audible tone,--audible enough to make Marcia raise her shoulders and cast an ”I told you so”
glance at Cecil Stafford.
Luttrell, bewildered, gazes at Molly.
”But----” he commences, rashly.
”I tell you I don't sing,” she says, again, in a lower, more imperative tone, although even now she repents her of the ill-humor that has balked her of a revenge so ready to her hand. To sing a French song, with her divine voice, before Marcia! A triumph indeed!
All night long the conversation between her cousin and Lady Stafford rankles in her mind. What a foolish freak it was her ever permitting Marcia to think of her as one altogether without education! Instinct might have told that her cousin would not scruple about applying such knowledge to her disadvantage. And yet why is Marcia her enemy? How has she ever injured her? With what purpose does she seek to make her visit unpleasant to her?
And to speak contemptuously of her to Lady Stafford, of all people, whom already she likes well enough to covet her regard in return,--it is too bad. Not for worlds would she have had her think so poorly of her.
At all events she will lose no time in explaining, on the morrow; and with this determination full upon her she retires to rest, with some small comfort at her heart.
CHAPTER XIII.
”Music hath charms.”
”May I come in?” says Molly, next day, knocking softly at Lady Stafford's door.
”By all means,” returns the plaintive voice from within; and Molly, opening the door, finds Cecil has risen, and is coming forward eagerly to meet her.
”I knew your voice,” says the blonde, gayly. ”Come in and sit down, do.
I am _ennuyee_ to the last degree, and will accept it as a positive charity if you will devote half an hour to my society.”