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"I have told you."
"But the painter man could change it."
"I am afraid not, Tommy. He is dead."
"Why didn't he do it before he died then? Why didn't somebody show him what to do?"
"I don't fancy he wanted any hints. And besides, he had to be true to his ideal. It was a terrible time. They did really throw the Christians to the lions, you know."
"Of course I know that," says Tommy with a superior air. "But why didn't they cast another one?"
"Eh?" says Mr. Monkton.
"That's why it's unfair!" says Tommy. "There is one poor lion there, and he hasn't got any Christian! Why didn't Mr. Dory give him one?"
Tableau!
"Barbara!" says Mr. Monkton faintly, after a long pause. "Is there any brandy in the house?"
But Barbara is looking horrified.
"It is shocking," she says. "Why should he take such a twisted view of it. He has always been a kind-hearted child; and now----"
"Well. He has been kind-hearted to the lions," says Mr. Monkton. "No one can deny that."
"Oh! if you persist in encouraging him. Freddy!" says his wife with tears in her eyes.
"Believe me, Barbara," breaks in Joyce at this moment, "it is a mistake to be soft-hearted in this world." There is something bright but uncomfortable in the steady gaze she directs at her sister. "One should be hard, if one means to live comfortably."
"Will you take me soon again to see pictures?" asks Tommy, running to Joyce and scrambling upon the seat she is occupying. "Do!"
"But if you dislike them so much."
"Only some. And other places may be funnier. What day will you take me?"
"I don't think I shall again make an arrangement beforehand," says Joyce, rising, and placing Tommy on the ground very gently. "Some morning just before we start, you and I, we will make our plans."
She does not look at Barbara this time, but her tone is eloquent.
Barbara looks at her, however, with eyes full of reproach.
CHAPTER x.x.xVII.
"Love is its own great loveliness always, And takes new beauties from the touch of time; Its bough owns no December and no May, But bears its blossoms into winter's clime."
"I have often thought what a melancholy world this would be without children."
"Oh, Felix--is it you!" says Mrs. Monkton in a dismayed tone. Her hansom is at the door and, arrayed in her best bib and tucker, she is hurrying through the hall when Dysart, who has just come, presents himself. He was just coming in, in fact, as she was going out.
"Don't mind me," says he; "there is always to-morrow."
"Oh, yes,--but----"
"And Miss Kavanagh?"
"It is to recover her I am going out this afternoon." It is the next day, so soon after her rupture with Joyce, that she is afraid to even hint at further complications. A strong desire to let him know that he might wait and try his fortune once again on her return with Joyce is oppressing her mind, but she puts it firmly behind her, or thinks she does. "She is lunching at the Brabazons'," she says; "old friends of ours. I promised to lunch there, too, so as to be able to bring Joyce home again."
"She will be back, then."
"In an hour and a half at latest," says Mrs. Monkton, who after all is not strong enough to be quite genuine to her better judgments. "But,"
with a start and a fresh determination to be cruel in the cause of right, "that would be much too long for you to wait for us."
"I shouldn't think it long," says he.
Mrs. Monkton smiles suddenly at him. How charming--how satisfactory he is. Could any lover be more devoted!
"Well, it would be for all that," says she. "But"--hesitating in a last vain effort to dismiss, and then losing herself--, "suppose you do not abandon your visit altogether; that you go away, now, and get your lunch at your club--I feel," contritely, "how inhospitable I am--and then come back again here about four o'clock. She--I--will have returned by that time."
"An excellent plan," says he, his face lighting up. Then it clouds again. "If she knows I am to be here?"
"Ah! that is a difficulty," says Mrs. Monkton, her own pretty face showing signs of distress. "But anyhow, risk it."
"I would rather she knew, however," says he steadily. The idea of entrapping her into a meeting with him is abhorrent to him. He had had enough of that at the Dore Gallery; though he had been innocent of any intentional deception there.
"I will tell her then," says Mrs. Monkton; "and in the meantime go and get your----"
At this moment the door on the right is thrown open, and Tommy, with a warhoop, descends upon them, followed by Mabel.
"Oh! it's Felix!" cries he joyfully. "Will you stay with us, Felix?
We've no one to have dinner with us to-day. Because mammy is going away, and Joyce is gone, and pappy is nowhere; and nurse isn't a bit of good--she only says, 'Take care you don't choke yourselves, me dearies!'" He imitates nurse to the life. "And dinner will be here in a minute. Mary says she's just going to bring it upstairs."
"Oh, do--do stay with us," supplements little Mabel, thrusting her small hand imploringly into his. It is plain that he is in high favor with the children, however out of it with a certain other member of the family--and feeling grateful to them, Dysart hesitates to say the "No"
that is on his lips. How hard it is to refuse the entreaties of these little clinging fingers--these eager, lovely, upturned faces!
"If I may----?" says he at last, addressing Mrs. Monkton, and thereby giving in.
"Oh! as for that! You know you may," says she. "But you will perfectly hate it. It is too bad to allow you to accept their invitation. You will be bored to death, and you will detest the boiled mutton. There is only that and--rice, I think. I won't even be sure of the rice. It may be tapioca--and that is worse still."
"It's rice," says Tommy, who is great friends with the cook, and knows till her secrets.
"That decides the question," says Felix gravely. "Every one knows that I adore rice. It is my one weakness."
At this, Mrs. Monkton gives way to an irrepressible laugh, and he, catching the meaning of it, laughs, too.