Part 17 (1/2)
”Yes,” he answered apathetically.
Elizabeth paused. Then she took her bull by the horns.
”Are you going to marry Beatrice, Mr. Davies?” she asked.
”I don't know,” he answered slowly and without surprise. It seemed natural to him that his own central thought should be present in her mind. ”I love her dearly, and want to marry her.”
”She refused you, then?”
”Yes.”
Elizabeth breathed more freely.
”But I can ask her again.”
Elizabeth frowned. What could this mean? It was not an absolute refusal.
Beatrice was playing some game of her own.
”Why did she put you off so, Mr. Davies? Do not think me inquisitive. I only ask because I may be able to help you.”
”I know; you are very kind. Help me and I shall always be grateful to you. I do not know--I almost think that there must be somebody else, only I don't know who it can be.”
”Ah!” said Elizabeth, who had been gazing intently at the little holes in the beach which she had now cleared of the sand. ”Of course that is possible. She is a curious girl, Beatrice is. What are those letters, Mr. Davies?”
He looked at them idly. ”Something your sister was writing while I talked to her. I remember seeing her do it.”
”G E O F F R E--why, it must be meant for Geoffrey. Yes, of course it is possible that there is somebody else, Mr. Davies. Geoffrey!--how curious!”
”Why is it curious, Miss Granger? Who is Geoffrey?”
Elizabeth laughed a disagreeable little laugh that somehow attracted Owen's attention more than her words.
”How should I know? It must be some friend of Beatrice's, and one of whom she is thinking a great deal, or she would not write his name unconsciously. The only Geoffrey that I know is Mr. Geoffrey Bingham, the barrister, who is staying at the Vicarage, and whose life Beatrice saved.” She paused to watch her companion's face, and saw a new idea creep across its stolidity. ”But of course,” she went on, ”it cannot be Mr. Bingham that she was thinking of, because you see he is married.”
”Married?” he said, ”yes, but he's a man for all that, and a very handsome one.”
”Yes, I should call him handsome--a fine man,” Elizabeth answered critically; ”but, as Beatrice said the other day, the great charm about him is his talk and power of mind. He is a very remarkable man, and the world will hear of him before he has done. But, however, all this is neither here nor there. Beatrice is a curious woman, and has strange ideas, but I am sure that she would never carry on with a married man.”
”But he might carry on with her, Miss Elizabeth.”
She laughed. ”Do you really think that a man like Mr. Bingham would try to flirt with girls without encouragement? Men like that are as proud as women, and prouder; the lady must always be a step ahead. But what is the good of talking about such a thing? It is all nonsense. Beatrice must have been thinking of some other Geoffrey--or it was an accident of something. Why, Mr. Davies, if you for one moment really believed that dear Beatrice could be guilty of such a shameless thing as to carry on a flirtation with a married man, would you have asked her to marry you?
Would you still think of asking such a woman as she must be to become your wife?”
”I don't know; I suppose not,” he said doubtfully.
”You suppose not. I know you better than you know yourself. You would rather never marry at all than take such a woman as she would be proved to be. But it is no good talking such stuff. If you have a rival you may be sure it is some unmarried man.”
Owen reflected in his heart that on the whole he would rather it was a married one, since a married man, at any rate, could not legally take possession of Beatrice. But Elizabeth's rigid morality alarmed him, and he did not say so.