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'That was play.'
'Then what do you call work?'
'Well, reading law rather comes into that category.'
'You expect to go on reading law?'
'For the present. I approve of finis.h.i.+ng things when they are begun.'
'Mr. Dallas, what are you going to _do?_ In what, after all, are you going to be unlike other men? Your mother seems to apprehend some disastrous and mysterious change in all your prospects; I cannot see the necessity of that. In what are you going to be other than she wishes you to be? Are not her fears mistaken?'
Pitt smiled a grave smile; again stopped in his work and stood opposite her.
'I might say "yes" and "no,"' he answered. 'I do not expect to have a red cross embroidered on my sleeve, like the old crusaders. But judge yourself. Can those who live to do the will of G.o.d be just like those whose one concern is to do their own will?'
'Mr. Dallas, you insinuate, or your words might be taken to insinuate, that all the rest of us are in the latter cla.s.s!'
'Whose will do you do?' he said.
There was no answer, for Betty had too much pluck to speak falsely, and too much sense not to know what was truth. She accordingly did not say anything, and after waiting a minute or two Pitt went on with his preparations, locking up drawers, packing up boxes, taking down and putting away the many objects that filled the room. There was not a little work of this sort to be done, and he went on with it busily, and with an evidently trained and skilled hand.
'Then, after finis.h.i.+ng with law, do you expect to come back here and unpack all these pretty things again?' she said finally.
'Perhaps. I do not know.'
'Perhaps you will settle in England?'
'I do not yet know what is the work that I have to do in the world. I _shall_ know, but I do not know now. It may be to go to India, or to Greenland; or it may be to come here. Though I do not now see what I should do in Seaforth that would be worth living for.'
India or Greenland! For a young man who was heir to no end of money, and would have acres of land! Miss Betty perceived that here was something indeed very different from the general run of rich young men, and that Mrs. Dallas had not been so far wrong in her forebodings. 'How very absurd!' she said to herself as she went away down the open staircase; 'and what a pity!'
CHAPTER x.x.xIX.
_SKIRMIs.h.i.+NG_.
To the great chagrin of his mother, and, indeed, of everybody, Pitt took his departure a few days before the necessary set termination of his visit. He must, he declared, have a few days to run down from London into the country and find out the Gainsborough family; if Colonel Gainsborough and his daughter had really gone home, he must know.
'What on earth do you want to know for?' his lather had angrily asked.
'What concern is it to you, in any way? Pitt, I wish you would take all the time you have and use it to make yourself agreeable to Miss Frere.
Where could you do better?'
'I have no time for that now, sir.'
'Time! What is time? Don't you admire her?'
'Everyone must do that.'
'I have an idea she don't dislike you. It would suit your mother and me very well. She has not money, but she has everything else. There has been no girl more admired in Was.h.i.+ngton these two winters past; no girl. You would have a prize, I can tell you, that many a one would like to hinder your getting.'
'I have no time, sir, now; and I must find out my old friends, first of all.'
'Do you mean, you want to marry _that_ girl?' said Mr. Dallas, imprudently flaming out.
Pitt was at the moment engaged in mending up a precious old volume, which by reason of age and use had become dangerously dilapidated. He was manipulating skilfully, as one accustomed to the business, with awl and a large needle, surrounded by his glue-pot and bits of leather and paper. At the question he lifted up his head and looked at his father.
Mr. Dallas did not like the look; it was too keen and had too much recognition in it; he feared he had unwarily showed his play. But Pitt answered then quietly, going on with his work again.
'I said nothing of that, sir; I do not know anything about that. My old friends may be in distress; both or one of them; it is not at all unlikely, I think. If things had gone well with them, you would have been almost sure to hear of their whereabouts at least. I made a promise, at any rate, and I am bound to find them, one side or the other of the Atlantic.'
'Don Quixote!' muttered his father. 'Colonel Gainsborough, I have no doubt, has gone home to his people, whom he ought never to have left.'
'In that case I can certainly find them.'
Mr. Dallas seldom made the mistake of spoiling his cause with words; he let the matter drop, though his mouth was full of things he would have liked to speak.
So the time came for Pitt's departure, and he went; and the two women he left behind him hardly dared to look at each other; the one lest she should betray her sorrow, and the other lest she should seem to see it.
Betty honestly suffered. She had found Pitt's society delightful; it had all the urbanity without the emptiness of that she was accustomed to. Whether right or wrong, he was undoubtedly a person in earnest, who meant his life to be something more than a dream or a play, and who had higher ends in view than to understand dining, or even to be an acknowledged critic of light literature, or a leader of fas.h.i.+on. Higher ends even than to be at the head of the State or a leader of its armies. There was enough natural n.o.bleness in Betty to understand Pitt, at least in a degree, and to be mightily attracted by all this. And his temper was so fine, his manners so pleasant, his tender deference to his mother so beautiful. Ah, such a man's wife would be well sheltered from some of the harshest winds that blow in the face of human nature!
Even if he were a little fanatical, it was a fanaticism which Betty half hoped, half inconsistently feared, would fade away with time. He had stayed just long enough to kindle a tire in her heart, which now she could not with a blow or a breath extinguish; not long enough for the fire to catch any loose tinder lying about on the outskirts of his.
Pitt rode away heart-whole, she was obliged to confess to herself, so far, at least, as she was concerned; and Betty had nothing to do now but to feel how that fire bit her, and to stifle the smoke of it. Mrs.
Dallas was a woman and a mother, and she saw what Betty would not have had her see for any money.
'_I_ think Pitt was taken with her,' she said to her husband, as one seeks to strengthen a faint belief by putting it into words.
'He is taken with nothing but his own obstinacy!' growled Mr. Dallas.
'His obstinacy never troubled you,' said the mother. 'Pitt was always like that, but never for anything bad.'
'It's for something foolish, then; and that will do as well.'
'Did you sound him?'
'Yes!'
'And what did he say?'
'Said he must see Esther Gainsborough first, confound him!'
'Esther Gainsborough! But he tried and could not find them.'
'He will try on the other side now. He'll waste his time running all over England to discover the family place; and then he will know that there is more looking to be done in America.'
'And he talked of coming over next year! Husband, he must not come. We must go over there.'
'Next summer. Yes, that is the only thing to do.'
'And we will take Betty Frere along with us.'