Part 34 (2/2)
”But you are sure I am not in the way?” asks Molly, hesitating; ”you are not--busy?”
”Busy! Oh, what a stranger I am to you, my dear,” exclaims Cecil, elevating her brows: ”it is three long years since last I was busy. I am sure I wish I were: perhaps it might help me to get through the time. I have spent the last hour wondering what on earth brought me to this benighted spot, and I really don't know yet.”
”Grandpapa's invitation, I suppose,” says Molly, laughing.
”Well, yes, perhaps so; and something else,--something that I verily believe brings us all!--the fact that he has untold money, and can leave it where he pleases. There lies the secret of our yearly visitations. We outsiders don't of course hope to be the heir,--Philip is that, or Marcia, or perhaps both; but still there is a good deal of ready money going, and we all hope to be 'kindly remembered.' Each time we sacrifice ourselves by coming down here, we console ourselves by the reflection that it is at least another hundred tacked on to our legacy.”
”What if you are disappointed?”
”I often think of that,” says her ladys.h.i.+p, going off into a perfect peal of laughter. ”Oh, the fun it would be! Think of our expressions. I a.s.sure you I spend whole hours picturing Maud Darley's face under the circ.u.mstances; you know she takes those long drives with him every day in the fond hope of cutting us all out and getting the lion's share.”
”Poor woman! it is sad if she has all her trouble for nothing. I do not think I should like driving with grandpapa.”
”I share your sentiments: neither should I. Still, there is a charm in money. Every night before going to bed I tot up on my fingers the amount of the bequest I feel I ought to receive. It has reached two thousand pounds by this. Next visit will commence a fresh thousand.”
”You are sanguine,” says Molly. ”I wonder if I shall go on hoping like you, year after year.”
”I request you will not even insinuate such a thing,” cries Lady Stafford in pretended horror. ”'Year after year!' Why, how long do you mean him to live? If he doesn't die soon, I shall certainly throw up my chance and cut his acquaintance.” Then, with sudden self-reproach, ”Poor old fellow,” she says, ”it is a shame to speak of him like this even in jest. He may live forever, as far as I am concerned. Now tell me something about yourself, and do take a more comfortable chair: you don't look half cozy.”
”Don't make me too comfortable, or perhaps I shall bore you to death with the frequency of my visits. You will have me again to-morrow if you don't take care.”
”Well, I hope so. Remember you have _carte blanche_ to come here whenever you choose. I was fast falling into the blues when I heard you knock, so you may fancy how welcome you were, almost as welcome as my cousin.”
”Marcia?” asks Molly, feeling slightly disappointed at the ”almost.”
”Oh, dear, no,--not Marcia; she and I don't get on a bit too well together, and she was excessively disagreeable all this morning: she is her grandfather's own child. I am sure she need not visit Philip's defection on me; but she has a horrible temper, and that's the truth.
No, I meant Tedcastle; he is my cousin also. I do so like Tedcastle: don't you?”
”Very much indeed,” coloring faintly. ”But,” hastily, ”I have not yet told you what brought me here to-day.”
”Do you mean to tell me you had an object in coming?” cries her ladys.h.i.+p, throwing up her little white jeweled hands in affected reproach. ”That something keener than a desire for my society has brought you to my boudoir? You reduce me to despair! I did for one short quarter of an hour believe you 'loved me for myself alone.'”
”No,” laughing, and blus.h.i.+ng, too, all through her pale clear skin, ”I confess to the object. I--the fact is--I have felt a little deceitful ever since last night. Because--in spite of Marcia's superior information on the subject, I have had some slight education, and I _do_ know a little French!”
”Ah!” cries Lady Stafford, rising and blus.h.i.+ng herself, a vivid crimson: ”you heard, you understood all. Well,” with a sudden revival, and a happy remembrance of her own words, ”I didn't say anything bad, did I?”
”No, no: I would not have come here if you had. You said all there was of the kindest. You were _so_ kind. I could not bear to deceive you or let you retain a false opinion of me. Marcia, indeed, outdid herself, though I am guiltless of offense toward her. She is evidently not aware of the fact that one part of my life was spent in London with my aunt, my father's sister, and that while with her I had the best masters to be found. I am sorry for Marcia, but I could not bring myself to speak just then.”
Cecil burst into a merry, irresistible laugh.
”It is delicious!” cries she, wickedly. ”A very comedy of errors. If we could but manage some effective way of showing Marcia her mistake. Can you,” with sudden inspiration, ”sing?”
”I can,” says Molly, calmly.
”You can. That sounds promising. I wonder you don't say 'a little,' as all young ladies do, more especially when they sing a good deal more than any one wants them to! Come here, and let me see what you mean by that uncompromising 'can.'”
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