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"We could look them up at their own homes; we could arrange meetings for them that they would like; we could work ourselves into their affections, by degrees, and _then_ the door would be open for us to bring Christ in. We could give them help too, where help is needed."
"_We_, Basil?"
"Don't you feel as I do? You said so," he answered with a grave smile.
"O, I do!" said Diana. "I cannot think of anything lovelier than to see those faces change with the knowledge of Christ."
"Then you would be willing to leave our present field of work?"
"It does not seem to want us as this does--not by many fold."
"Would your mother leave Pleasant Valley?"
"No."
"How, then, Di, about you?
"The first question is duty, Basil."
"I think mine is to come here."
"Then it must be mine," said Diana, with a sort of disappointment upon her that he should speak in that way.
"And would it be your pleasure too?"
"Why, certainly. Basil, I cannot _imagine_ pleasure to be apart from duty."
"Thank you," he said gently. "And I thank G.o.d, who has brought you so far in your lesson-learning as to know that."
Diana said no more. She was ready to cry, with the feeling that her husband thought himself to have so little to do with her pleasure.
Tears, however, were not much in her way, and she did not shed any, but she speculated. _Had_ he really to do with her pleasure? It was different certainly once. She had craved to be at a distance from him; she could remember the time well; but the time was past. Was it reasonable to expect him to know that fact? He had thoroughly learned the bitter truth that her heart was not his, and could never be his; what should tell him that the conditions of things were changed. _Were_ they changed? Diana was in great confusion. She began to think she did not know herself. She did not hate Mr. Masters any more; nay, she declared to herself she never had hated him; she always had liked him; only then she had loved Evan Knowlton, and now that was gone. She did not love anybody. There was no reason in the world why Mr. Masters should not be contented. "I think," said Diana to herself, "I give him enough of my heart to content him. I wonder what would content him? I do not care two straws for anybody else in all the world. He would say, if I told him that, he would say it is a negative proposition. Suppose I could go further"--and Diana's cheeks began to burn--"suppose I could, I could not possibly stand up and tell him so. I cannot. He ought to see it for himself. But he does not. He ought to be contented--I think he might be contented--with what I give him, if it isn't just"--
Diana broke off with her thoughts very much disturbed. She thought she did not love her husband, but things were no longer clear; except that Basil's persistent ignorance of the fact that they had changed, chafed and distressed her.
CHAPTER x.x.xVI.
THE PARTY.
The morning of the next day was spent in still further visits to still more mills. Mr. Brandt was much struck with the direction his guests'
attention seemed to take.
"You are very fond of machinery," he remarked to Diana.
"Yes--I don't know much about it," she answered.
"Surely that is not true after these two or three days' work?"
"I knew _nothing_ about it before. Yes, I do enjoy it, Mr. Brandt, with you and Mr. Masters to explain things to me; but it is the people that interest me most."
"The people!"--
"The mill hands?" Mrs. Brandt asked.
"Yes; the mill hands."
"What _can_ you find interesting in them? I am half afraid of them, for my part."
"They look as if they wanted friends so much."
"Friends?" repeated Mrs. Brandt. "I suppose they have friends among themselves. Why should not they? Well, it is time you had a change of society, I think. My husband has taken you among the mill people for two days; now to-night I will introduce you to a different set; some of your church people. I want you to take rest this afternoon, my dear Mrs. Masters--now won't you!--so as to be able to enjoy the evening. I am sure Brandt has fatigued you to death. I never can stand going up and down those stairs in the mills, and standing about; it kills me."
"I wonder how they bear standing at the looms or the other machines all day?"
"They? O, they are accustomed to it, I suppose. An hour or two of it breaks _me_ down. Now rest, will you? It's quite a great occasion to-night. One of our greatest men among the millowners, and one of the pillars of the church you and Mr. Masters are coming to take care of, gives an entertainment to his daughter to-night; a bride--married lately--just come home and just going away again. You'll see all our best people. Now please go and rest."
Diana went to her room and rested, outwardly. In her mind thoughts were very busy. And when it was time to dress, they were hardly diverted from their subjects. It was with a sort of unconscious instinct that Diana threw her beautiful hair into the wavy ma.s.ses and coils which were more graceful than she knew and crowned her so royally; and in the like manner that she put on a dress of soft white muslin. It had no adornment other than the lace which finished it at throat and wrists; she looked most like a bride herself. So Basil thought, when he came to fetch her; though he did not say his thought, fearing lest he might graze something in her mind which would pain her. He often withheld words for such a reason.
"Will it do?" said Diana, seeing him look at her.
"Too good for the occasion!" said Basil, shaking his head.
"Too much dressed?" said Diana. "I thought I must dress as much as I could. Is it too much, Basil?"
"n.o.body else will think so," said the minister with a queer smile.
"Do _you_ think so?"
"You are just as you ought to be. All the same, it is beyond the company. Never mind. Come!"
Downstairs another sort of criticism.
"My dear Mrs. Masters! Not a bit of colour! You will be taken for the bride yourself. All in white, except your beautiful hair! Wait, that won't do; let me try if I can't improve things a little--do you mind?--Just let me see how this will look." Diana submitted patiently, and Mrs. Brandt officiously fastened a knot of blue ribband in her bright hair. She was greatly pleased with the effect, which Diana could not see. However, when they had reached the house they were going to, and leaving the dressing-room Diana took her husband's arm to go down to the company, he detained her to let Mr. and Mrs. Brandt pa.s.s on before, and then with a quick and quiet touch of his fingers removed the blue bow and put it in his pocket.
"Basil!" said Diana, smiling,--"she will miss it."
"So shall I. It commonized the whole thing."
There was nothing common left, as every one instantly recognised who saw Diana that evening. A presence of such dignified grace, a face of such lofty and yet innocent beauty, so sweet a movement and manner, n.o.body there knew anything like it in Mainbridge. On the other hand, it was Diana's first experience of a party beyond the style and degree of Pleasant Valley parties. She found immediately that she was by much the plainest dressed woman in the company; but she forgot to think of the dresses, the people struck her with so much surprise.
Of course everybody was introduced to her; and everybody said the same things.
They hoped she liked Mainbridge; they hoped she was coming to live among them; Mr. Masters was coming to the church, wasn't he? and how did he like the looks of the place?