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France was herself again. The prospect of a week to quietly think the
matter out was a great deal. And who knew what even a week might bring
forth?
It was settled that they should go together; Lady Dynely’s consent had
been won at last.
“But, remember,” she said at parting, looking anxiously into Terry’s
eyes, “you are to return in a week, and meantime you are to say nothing
to Miss Higgins. This I insist upon. When you have heard what I have to
say—”
He looked at her in anxious wonder. What could it be, he thought, to
make Lady Dynely wear that face of pale affright? What secret was here?
He would obey her in all things; she hardly needed the assurance, and
yet it was with a darkly troubled face she stood on the portico steps
and watched the two young men disappear.
“Thank fortune,” France breathed devoutly, “we shall have a quiet week.
Men are a mistake in a household, I begin to find. Like yeast in small
beer, they turn the peaceful stream of woman’s life into seething
ferment.”
“France,” the elder lady said, taking both the girl’s hands, and looking
earnestly down into her eyes, “you are to give Eric his answer when he
returns—I know that. When does he return?”
“In a week.”
“And the answer will be—”
“Lady Dynely, you have no right to ask that. When the week ends, and
Eric returns to claim it, the answer shall be given to him.”
She dropped the hands and turned away with a heavy sigh.
“I will do my duty, I hope—I pray,” France went on, quietly. “If Eric’s
happiness were involved—if, indeed, he loved me, after the tacit
consent I have given all these years—I would not hesitate one moment,
at any sacrifice to myself. But he does not love me—he is incapable of
loving anyone but himself. Oh, yes! Lady Dynely, even you must hear the
truth sometimes about Eric. As a brother, I could like him well
enough—be proud of his good looks, his graceful manner, as you are; as
a husband, if he is ever that, I shall detest him.”
“France!”
“I shock, I anger you, do I not? It is true, though, and he will tire of
me before the honeymoon is over. If we marry, it will be a fatal
mistake; and yet, if you all hold me to this compact, what is left me
but to yield?”
“You are a romantic girl, France; you want a hero—a Chevalier Bayard—a
Sir Launcelot. Dear child, there are none left. Like the fairies, they
sailed away from England years ago—went out of fashion with tilt and
tournament. You will marry Eric, I foresee, and make a man of him. He
will go into parliament, make speeches, and be a most devoted husband to
the fairest and happiest wife in England. Oh, France, take my boy! I
love you so well that I will break my heart if this marriage does not
take place.”
“And I will break mine if it does,” France answers, with a curious
little laugh. “Let us not talk of it any more, ma m�re. We are due at
De Vere’s, are we not? We have a week’s grace, and much may happen in a
week. I have the strongest internal conviction that I will never be Lady
Dynely.”
CHAPTER VIII.
“WHO IS SHE?”
Scene, an old-fashioned country garden of an old-fashioned country
house; time, the mellow, amber hour before sunset; dramatis personďż˝, a
young man and a young girl; names of dramatis personďż˝, Mr. Terence
Dennison, of Her Majesty’s –-th Dragoons, and Miss Christabel Higgins,
eighth daughter of the Rev. William Higgins, Vicar of Starling, and
beauty of the family.
A beauty? Well, as Tony Lumpkin says, “That’s as may be.” If you liked a
complexion of milk-white and rose-pink, the eighth Miss Higgins had it;
if you liked big, childish, surprised-looking, turquoise blue eyes,
there they were for you; if you liked a dear little, dimpled, rosy
mouth, there it was also; if you liked a low, characterless forehead, a
round, characterless chin, and a feathery aureole of palest blonde hair,
the eighth Miss Higgins rejoiced in all these pretty and pleasant gifts.
If you fancied a waist you might span, a shape, small, slim, fragile as
a lily-stalk, little Crystal would have been your ideal, certainly.
Pretty? Yes, with a tender, dove-like, inane sort of prettiness, that
does its work with a certain sort of men. Mind, she had none; depth, she
had none; knowledge of this big, wicked world, she had none; in short,
she was man’s ideal of perfect womanhood, infringing on no claim
whatever of the lordly sex. And Terry Dennison was her abject slave and
adorer.
She was seventeen this sunny August afternoon. It seemed to Terry he had
idolized her—idolized was the way Mr. Dennison thought it—ever since
she had been seven. She knew she was pretty—dove-like innocence to the
contrary—and rejoiced in that prettiness as thoroughly as any embryo
coquette. Had she not been caressed, and kissed, and praised for those
blue eyes and golden tresses ever since the days of bibs and tuckers?
Had she not seen her seven elder sisters snubbed and passed over, and
the cakes and the sugar-plums always presented to her? It would be so
forever, Crystal thought. In the eternal fitness of things it had been
ordered so—the seven elder Cinderellas worked in kitchen and chamber,
sewed, baked, and mended; she, like the lilies of the field, toiled not
nor spun. The cakes and sugar-plums of life were to be hers always; they
belonged by right divine to pretty people with pale yellow hair and
turquoise eyes. Let the snub-noses, and freckled complexions, and the
dry-as-dust colored hair do the work. She would marry Terry Dennison
some day, and be, as Terry was, an offshoot of the aristocracy. This
great lady, who was Terry’s patroness and friend, would take her up,
would present her at court, would invite her to her parties, and the
world of her dreams would become the world of realities. She would see
this handsome Lord Eric Dynely, of whom Terry never tired talking—this
elegant Miss France Forrester, who was to marry him. And, who
knew—these beings of the upper world might condescend even to admire
her in turn.
Miss Crystal Higgins, strolling with her Tennyson or her Owen Meredith
in her hand through the old vicarage garden, had dreamed her dreams, you
see. That was the simple little life she had mapped out for herself. She
would marry Terry—that was settled. Terry had never asked her, but, ah!
the simplest little lassie of them all can read mankind like a book when
they have that complaint. Terry was in love with her, had always been;
she knew it just as well as Terry himself. And she liked Terry very
well; she wasn’t in love with him at all, but still she was fonder of
him than of any other young man she knew; and he was a dragoon, and
that threw a sort of halo over him. It was a pity, she was wont to
sigh, regretfully, that he was so homely; even being a dragoon could not
entirely do away with the fact that he was homely, and had red hair.
None of the heroes of Miss Higgins’ pet novels ever had hair of that
obnoxious hue. Still one mustn’t expect everything in this lower
world—papa and mamma instilled that into her sentimental little
noddle—it is only for beings of that upper world—like Miss Forrester,
for instance, to look for husbands handsome as Greek gods, titled,
wealthy. Less-favored mortals must take the goods their gods provide,
and be thankful. The wife of a dragoon, with five hundred a year, looked
a brilliant vista to the “beauty daughter” of the Vicar of Starling.
And now the question resolved itself. Why didn’t Terry speak? He had
written of his good fortune, of Lady Dynely’s boundless kindness, and
the Reverend Mr. and Mrs. Higgins congratulated themselves that
“Crissy’s” fortune was insured. Crissy herself simpered and cast down
her blonde eyelashes, and saw with secret satisfaction, the sour and
envious regards of the seven elder Misses Higgins, who were verging
helplessly toward the sere and yellow leaf. Then Terry wrote of his
speedy visit. “And I really think, Christabel, my love,” said Mamma
Higgins, “we might begin making up the outfit. It will take some time,
and of course he comes down with but one intention, that of proposing
immediately.” And a few things were commenced. The first week of August
came, the big dragoon with it, his frank face and good-humored eyes
fairly luminous with delight at being with them again. Those eager,
loving eyes actually devoured Crystal; not for five minutes at a stretch
could they leave that pretty doll face. He haunted her everywhere, as a
big, lumbering Newfoundland might follow a little curled, silky King
Charles. He looked love, he hinted love, he acted love, in ten thousand
different ways, but he never spoke it. He blushed if she suddenly looked
at him, stammered if she suddenly addressed him, touched the little
lily-leaf hand she gave him with the timidity characteristic of big,
warm-hearted men, very far gone indeed; but beyond that he never got.
“Miss Crystal Higgins, will you marry me?” was a conundrum he never
propounded. And Mamma Higgins’ matronly eyes began to look at him
wrathfully over her spectacles, the seven elder Misses Higgins to cast
sisterly, satirical glances after the beauty, and Crystal herself to
open those innocent turquoise orbs of hers to their widest, and wonder
what made Terry so awfully bashful. The last day but one of the visit
had come and Terry had not spoken.
It was Crystal’s birthday, and there was to be a little f�te; croquet in
the back garden—the family bleaching-ground on ordinary occasions—a
tea-drinking under the apple-trees afterward, and a dance by moonlight.
The company had begun to gather; but there were Mamma Higgins and the
seven other Misses Higgins to receive and entertain them, so Terry drew
his idol’s hand inside his coat-sleeve, and led her away for a little
last ramble “o’er the moor among the heather.”
“I go back to-morrow, and I cannot tell exactly how long Lady Dynely may
detain me, so let me gather my roses while they bloom,” said Terry,
growing poetical, as many young gentlemen do when in love.
“It seems to me, Terry,” said the eighth Miss Higgins, rather pettishly,
“you are a sort of companion for Lady Dynely’s lap-dog, to fetch and
carry, to come and go, as you are told. You are too big, I should think,
to let yourself be treated like a little boy all your life.”
It was not often Mlle. Crystal made so determined a stand as this, or
uttered so spirited a speech. But mamma had told her this very day that
something must be done; that if she couldn’t bring Terry to the point
herself, papa must ask his intentions. A little firing of blank
cartridge is very well, but if you want to bring down your bird, you
must use real powder and shot.
Terry’s face flushed. He understood the reproof, and felt he deserved
it. Love may be blind, but not quite stone blind; he saw well enough
what was expected of him by the vicar’s family, by the little beauty
herself, and knew he was exciting anger and blame for not doing what he
was dying to do. He deserved this reproof, and reddened guiltily. What
if Crystal knew it was by Lady Dynely’s command he did not dare speak,
how she would
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