Part 36 (1/2)
'We will recollect that in thirty years' time.'
'When our children go to a Christmas-tree.'
'And we sit over the fire instead.'
'Oh! but should we ever not care for a dear, delightful Christmas-tree?'
'If we had each other instead.'
'Then we would all go still together!'
'And tell our little boys and girls all about this one, and the b.u.t.terfly's Ball!'
'Perhaps our husbands would want us, and not let us go.'
'Oh! I don't want a husband. He'd be in the way. We'd send him off to India or somewhere, like Aunt Lily's.'
'Don't, Fly; it is not at all nice to have papa away.'
'Oh yes, it would be ten hundred times better if he were at home.'
Such were the mingled sentiments of the triad, as they went upstairs to bed, linked together in their curious fas.h.i.+on.
Some time later, a bedroom discussion of affairs was held by Lady Merrifield and Miss Mohun, who had not had a moment alone together all day, to converse upon the two versions of the disaster which the latter had extracted from Dolores and Constance, and which fairly agreed, though Constance had been by far the most voluble, and somewhat ungenerously violent against her former friend, at least so Lady Merrifield remarked.
'You should take into account the auth.o.r.ess's disappointed vanity.'
'Yes, poor thing! How he must have nattered her!'
'Besides, there is the loss of the money, which, I fear, falls as seriously on good Miss Hacket as on the goose herself.'
'Does it, indeed? That must not be. How much is it?'
'Fifteen pounds; and that foolish Constance fancies that poor Dolores a.s.sisted in duping her. I really had to defend the girl; though I am just as angry myself when I watch her adamantine sullenness.'
'I am the person to be angry with for having allowed the intimacy, in spite of your warnings, Jenny.'
'You were too innocent to know what girls are made of. Oh yes, you are very welcome to have six of your own, but you might have six dozen without knowing what a girl brought up at a second-rate boarding-school is capable of, or what it is to have had no development of conscience.
What shall you do? send her to school?'
'After that recommendation of yours?'
'I didn't propose a second-rate boarding-school, ma'am. There's a High School starting after the holidays at Rockstone. Let me have her, and send her there.'
'Ada would not like it.'
'Never mind Ada, I'll settle her. I would keep Dolly well up to her lessons, and prevent these friends.h.i.+ps.'
'I suppose you would manage her better than I have been able to do,'
said Lady Merrifield, reluctantly. 'Yet I should like to try again; I don't want to let her go. Is it the old story of duty and love, Jane?