Part 8 (2/2)
She shook her head gravely.
”In the first place,” she answered, ”it makes me feel as if the dust of ages was acc.u.mulating in my pathway, and in the second, it is not safe for her.”
”Why, again?” he demanded.
”She is far too pretty, and her knowledge of the world is far too limited. She secretly believes in Lord Burleigh, and clings to the poetic memory of King Cophetua and the Beggar-maid.”
”And you do not?”
She held up her small forefinger and shook it at him.
”If ever there was an artful little minx,” she said, ”that Beggar-maid was one. I never believed in her. I doubted her before I was twelve.
With her eyes cast down and her sly tricks! She did not cast them down for nothing. She did it because she had long eyelashes, and it was becoming. And it is my impression she knew more about the king than she professed to. She had studied his character and found it weak.
Beggar-maid me no beggar-maids! She was as deep as she was handsome.”
Of course he laughed again. Her air of severe worldly experience and that small warning forefinger were irresistible.
”But Mollie,” he said, ”with all her belief in Cophetua, you think there is not enough of the beggar-maid element in her character to sustain her under like circ.u.mstances?”
”If she met a Cophetua,” she answered, ”she would open her great eyes at his royal purple in positive delight, and if he caught her looking at him she would blush furiously and pout a little, and be so ashamed of her weakness that she would be ready to run away; but if he was artful enough to manage her aright, she would believe every word he said, and romance about him until her head was turned upside down. My fear is that some false Cophetua will masquerade for her benefit some day. She would never doubt his veracity, and if he asked her to run away with him I believe she would enjoy the idea. We shall have to keep sharp watch upon her.”
”You never were so troubled about Aimee?” Gowan suggested.
”Aimee!” she exclaimed. ”Aimee has kept us all in order, and managed our affairs for us ever since she wore Berlin wool boots and a coral necklace. She regulated the household in her earliest years, and will regulate it until she dies or somebody marries her, and what we are to do then our lares and penates only know. Aimee! n.o.body ever had any trouble with Aimee, and n.o.body ever will. Mollie is more like me, you see,--shares my weaknesses and minor sins, and always sees her indiscretions ten minutes too late for redemption. And then, since she is the youngest, and has been the baby so long, we have not been in the habit of regarding her as a responsible being exactly. It has struck me once or twice that Bloomsbury Place hardly afforded wise training to Mollie. Poor little soul!” And a faint shadow fell upon her face and rested there for a moment.
But it faded out again as her fits of gravity usually did, and in a few minutes she was giving him such a description of Lady Augusta's unexpected appearance upon a like occasion in time past, that he laughed until the room echoed, and forgot everything else but the audacious grotesqueness of her mimicry.
It being agreed upon that Mollie's birthday was to be celebrated, the whole household was plunged into preparations at once, though, of course, they were preparations upon a small scale and of a strictly private and domestic nature. Belinda, being promptly attacked with inflammation of the throat, which was a chronic weakness of hers, was rather inconveniently, but not at all to the surprise of her employers, incapacitated from service, and accordingly Dolly's duties became varied and mult.i.tudinous.
Sudden inflammation on the part of Belinda was so unavoidable a consequence of any approaching demand upon her services as to have become proverbial, and the swelling of that young person's ”tornsuls,”
as she termed them, was antic.i.p.ated as might be antic.i.p.ated the rising of the sun. Not that it was Belinda's fault, however; Belinda's anxiety to be useful amounted at all times to something very nearly approaching a monomania; the fact simply was, that, her ailment being chronic, it usually evinced itself at inopportune periods. ”It's the luck of the family,” said Phil. ”We never loved a tree or flower, etc.”
And so Belinda was accepted as an unavoidable inconvenience, and was borne with cheerfully, accordingly.
It was not expected of her that she should appear otherwise on the eventful day than with the regulation roll of flannel about her neck.
Dolly did not expect it of her at least, so she was not surprised, on entering the kitchen in the morning, to be accosted by her grimy young handmaiden in the usual form of announcement:--
”Which, if yer please, miss, my tornsuls is swole most awful.”
”Are they?” said Dolly. ”Well, I am very sorry, Belinda. It can't be helped, though; Mollie will have to run the errands and answer the door-bell, and you must stay with me and keep out of the draught.
You can help a little, I dare say, if you are obliged to stay in the kitchen.”
”Yes, 'm,” said Belinda, and then sidling up to the dresser, and rubbing her nose in an abas.e.m.e.nt of spirit, which resulted in divers startling adornments of that already rather highly ornamented feature. ”If yer please, 'm,” she said, ”I 'm very sorry, Miss Dolly. Seems like I ain't never o' no use to yer?”
”Yes, you are,” said Dolly, cheerily, ”and you can't help the sore throat, you know. You are a great deal of use to me sometimes. See how you save my hands from being spoiled; they would n't be as white as they are if I had to polish the grates and build the fires. Never mind, you will be better in a day or so. Now for the cookery-book.”