Of High Descent - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"And pray what did he say?"
"That he would not go on the Continent."
"What?"
"That he would not leave home with this terrible weight upon his mind."
Aunt Marguerite sat bolt upright in her chair for a few moments without speaking, and the look she gave her brother was of the most withering nature.
"Am I to understand," she said at last, "that you prefer to stay here and visit and nurse your Dutch friend?"
Her brother looked at her, but there was no trace of anger in his glance.
Aunt Marguerite lowered her eyes, and then turned them in a supercilious way upon Louise.
"May I count upon your companions.h.i.+p," she said, "if I decide to go through Auvergne and stay there for a few days, on my way to Hyeres?"
"If you go, aunt?" said Louise wonderingly.
"There is a certain estate in the neighbourhood of Mont d'Or," she continued; "I wish to see in what condition it is kept. These things seem to devolve now on me, who am forced to take the lead as representative of our neglected family."
"For Heaven's sake, Marguerite!" cried Vine impetuously. "No--no, no,"
he muttered, checking himself hastily. "Better not--better not."
"I beg your pardon, brother," she said, raising her gla.s.s.
"Nothing--nothing," he replied.
"Well, Louise, child, I am waiting," she continued, turning her eyes in a half-pitying, condescending way upon her niece. "Well? May I count upon you?"
"Aunt, dear--"
"It will do you good. You look too pale. This place crushes you down, and narrows your intellect, my child. A little French society would work a vast change in you."
"Aunt, clear," said Louise, rising and crossing to her to lay her hands upon the old lady's shoulder, "don't talk about such things now. Let me come up to your room, and read to you a little while."
Aunt Marguerite smiled.
"My dear Louise, why do you talk to me like this? Do you take me for a child?"
George Vine heaved a deep sigh, and turned in his chair.
"Do you think I have lived all these years in the world and do not know what is best for such a girl as you?"
"But indeed, aunt, I am not ill. I do not require a change."
"Ah, poor young obstinacy! I must take you well in hand, child, and see if I cannot teach you to comport yourself more in accordance with your position in life. I shall have time now, especially during our little journey. When would it be convenient for you to be ready?"
"Aunt dear! It is impossible; we could not go."
"Impossible! Then I must speak. You will be ready in three days from now. I feel that I require change, and we will go."
"Margaret!" cried Vine, who during the past few minutes had been writhing in his seat, "how can you be so absurd!"
"Poor George!" she said, with a sigh, as she rose from her chair. "I wish I could persuade him to go. Mind, Louise, my child, in three days from now. We shall go straight to Paris, perhaps for a month. You need not trouble about dress. A few necessaries. All that you will require we can get in Paris. Come in before you go to bed; I may have a few more words to say."
She sailed slowly across the room, waving her fan gently, as if it were a wing which helped her progress, as she preserved her graceful carriage. Then the door closed behind her, and Louise half ran to her father's side.
"Shall I go up with her?" she whispered anxiously.
Her father shook his head.
"But did you not notice how strange she seemed?"
"No more strange, my dear, than she has often been before, after something has agitated her greatly. In her way she was very fond of poor Harry."
"Yes, father, I know; but I never saw her so agitated as this."
"She will calm down, as she has calmed down before."
"But this idea of going abroad?"
"She will forget it by to-morrow. I was wrong to speak as I did. It only sets her thinking more seriously. Poor Margaret! We must be very patient and forbearing with her. Her life was turned out of its regular course by a terrible disappointment. I try always to remember this when she is more eccentric--more trying than usual."
Louise shrank a little more round to the back of her father's chair, as he drew her hand over his shoulder, and she laid her cheek upon his head as, with fixed eyes, she gazed straight before her into futurity, and a spasm of pain shot through her at her father's words, "a terrible disappointment," "eccentric." Had Aunt Marguerite ever suffered as she suffered now? and did such mental agony result in changing the whole course of a girl's young life?
The tears stood in her eyes and dimmed them; but in spite of the blurring of her vision, she seemed to see herself gradually changing and growing old and eccentric too. For was not she also wasting with a terrible disappointment--a blow that must be as agonising as any Aunt Marguerite could have felt?
The outlook seemed so blank and terrible that a strange feeling of excitement came over her, waking dream succeeding waking dream, each more painful than the last; but she was brought back to the present by her father's voice.
"Why, my darling," he said, "your hand is quite cold, and you tremble.
Come, come, come, you ought to know Aunt Margaret by now. There, it is time I started for Van Heldre's. I faithfully promised to go back this evening. Perhaps Luke will be there."
"Yes, father," she said, making an effort to be calm, "it is time you went down. Give my dear love to Madelaine."
"Eh? Give your love? why, you are coming too."
"No, no," she said hastily; "I--I am not well this evening."
"No, you are not well," he said tenderly. "Your hands are icy, and-- yes, I expected so, your forehead burns. Why, my darling, you must not be ill."
"Oh, no, dear. I am not going to be ill, I shall be quite well to-morrow."
"Then come with me. The change will do you good."
"No; not to-night, father. I would rather stay."
"But Madelaine is in sad trouble too, my child, and she will be greatly disappointed if you do not come."