Part 2 (2/2)

she said, abruptly, turning round on Markworth as if she were going to snap him up. ”Who is he, and what does he want, shoving himself in?”

Tom hastened to introduce him, saying that he was an old friend, Mr Allynne Markworth, who had been very kind to him, and whom he had ventured to invite down according to the express stipulation of his mother.

”Humph!” she muttered, ”oh! that's it, is it; why did you not say so before instead of letting him stand staring there like an idiot? But you never had a head, Thomas, and never will as long as you live! You are only fit to be a lazy soldier to flaunt about all day in a patchwork uniform and do nothing. The only sense you ever have shown was in selecting your profession! So this is Mr Markworth, is it? Humph! I daresay he's like the rest of them--all calf's head and shrimp sauce!

How do you do, Mr Markworth?” She now spoke without the former asperity, and curtseyed low in an old-fas.h.i.+oned manner. ”Any friend of my son is welcome to my house, poor as it is! Please go on and lead the way, Thomas, with your friend, you will find a room ready prepared for him, and you know your own. We dine at the regular hour, five o'clock, and it only wants half-an-hour to that, so don't be late. I don't want any dressing or fal-lalling!” The old lady then turned into the shrubbery, evidently after the recreant George, and she muttered to herself as she ambled along, ”He's taller than Thomas, and a handsome puppy; but I don't like him--he's a rogue, or I'll eat my boots.”

There was no need for such an unusual repast on the part of the Dowager; she might have been wider from the mark in her casual conjecture.

Punctually at five o'clock the tones of some huge clanging old bell clanked through the house, proclaiming the hour; and Tom tapping at Markworth's door, told him that dinner was ready. The latter at once appeared outside as elaborately dressed as if he were going to attend a Lord Mayor's banquet.

”By Jove!” exclaimed Tom, turning his companion round and gazing upon him with eyes of wonder; ”why, what on earth led you to get yourself up so fearfully?” as he led the way to the dining-parlour--a long, low, dismal room on the ground floor.

”I always mind little things,” replied the other; ”I never sacrifice appearances:” in truth he never did.

Tom, on the way down in the train, had explained all about his sister's infirmity--that she was ”Not quite right here, you know,” tapping his forehead significantly; so Markworth was not surprised to see a tall, pale, slim-looking girl seated at the table with her eyes bent down on her plate. She looked up in a sort of painful wonder when they entered, which changed into a pleased, unmeaning smile when she recognised Tom, and immediately again dropped her eyes.

She was dressed in a scarlet dress, made of some stuffy material. Her one weakness--if weakness it were--was for bright colours; she had often told Tom that they made her ”feel warm and happy.” Poor child! So she always wore scarlet or light-blue, or orange--the former hue was her favourite one, and she had evidently put on that dress to-day in honour of Tom, to show that she was glad and happy to see him.

Susan Hartshorne looked older perhaps than she really was; she had beautiful features, but her face was without expression, save that Markworth could perceive--for he had been intently watching her--an occasional careworn or agonised look pa.s.s across it whenever her mother spoke, which she did every now and then in sharp accents to the old woman servant who waited on them at table. The Dowager had taken no notice of Markworth in a conversational sense, although she eyed him frequently, except to mutter ”c.o.xcomb!” in an underbreath (which he however distinctly heard), when he first entered the room, and once to ask him to be helped to some dish before her.

The meal was a good one. The old lady received a portion of her rents ”in kind,” and was never at a loss for fresh poultry, fish, or vegetable, not to speak of game; but it was soon over, for the presiding genius evidently looked upon it in the light of a serious business which was not to be trifled with. When the last dish had been brought in and removed, the dowager got up from her seat and stalked majestically out of the room, followed silently by her daughter, who seemed to glide rather than move.

”Rum old party, ain't she? But she's good, though, and I like her in my way, you know, the same as she does me,” observed Tom.

”Yes,” said Markworth, neither affirmatively nor in a questioning tone of voice, but with a mixture of both inflections. ”Where, however, is that governess you were talking about to me?”

”Oh! Miss Kingscott! 'Pon my soul I don't know. Let's go and hunt her up; I have not seen her yet.”

Just then they heard the melancholy notes of an organ in the distance, as they turned into the pa.s.sage.

”That's Susan,” observed her brother. ”I daresay Miss Kingscott is with her.”

They followed the strains, which grew louder as they penetrated into the back and apparently deserted quarters of the house.

”Here we are,” said Tom, as he opened the door of the room from whence the music proceeded.

A dark, haughty, ladylike girl, clad in rustling black silk, stood up and faced the door as they entered.

”Miss Kingscott, I presume?” Tom asked, bowing politely with his usual frankness.

”Whew! By jingo!” e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Markworth, between his teeth. ”I'm blessed if it isn't Clara!”

Volume 1, Chapter IV.

MISS KINGSCOTT.

”Who was Miss Kingscott?”

<script>