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"Tell them."
"Then, senores, we were thinking that you might be less stiff with each other."
The bride and bridegroom-elect hung their heads and smiled.
The good spirits of the supper party now broke forth in laughter and jokes. Pablito asked his future brother-in-law questions about horse racing, skating rinks, and other more or less enthralling topics of the kind.
Only Cecilia was silent in the intensity of her happiness, shown in the brilliant scarlet of her cheeks, the heat of which she tried in vain to cool with the back of her hand.
When she thought she was un.o.bserved she cast long, loving looks at her fiance, whose fine, insatiable appet.i.te, the sign of life and energy, surprised and captivated her; and she gazed at him in adoring admiration as a splendid type of masculine strength.
But these long, ecstatic looks did not escape Venturita, who managed by signs to draw the attention of Pablo and her mother to them. Gonzalo acknowledged the attentions of his fiancee with a rapid "Many thanks"
without looking at her, for fear of blus.h.i.+ng. When he did look up to speak to Pablo, his eyes always encountered Venturita's, and her smiling, mocking glance somewhat disconcerted him.
At last they left the table and dispersed. Don Rosendo and Ventura, disappeared, and Pablo, after a few minutes, following their example.
Dona Paula and the engaged couple remained alone in the dining-room, and all three sat on low chairs in a corner together. Soon nothing but soft whispers were audible, as if they were at the confessional. The three chairs were close together, and with their heads almost touching, they began an animated conversation.
Dona Paula soon broached the all-important question.
"This is the twenty-eighth of April. There are only four months from now to the first of September," and here she cast a long, knowing glance at the couple.
If it had been possible for Cecilia to get redder, she would have done so.
Gonzalo's lips wreathed in a meaningless smile, and he lowered his eyes.
After looking at them for a minute, as if enjoying their confusion, Dona Paula continued:
"It is necessary to think of the trousseau."
"Heavens! It is early for that," exclaimed the girl in dismay, while her heart leaped into her mouth.
"It is not so, Cecilia; you do not know the time the embroideresses take in such matters. Nieves took a month to embroider two petticoats for Dona Rosario's daughter--and Martina is slower than she."
"Nieves embroiders very well."
"There is no embroideress in the town to hold a candle to Martina. She has hands of gold."
"I prefer the embroideries of Nieves."
"Then, if you wish it, let her embroider your clothes, but I--" said Dona Paula, looking at her daughter in an offended, haughty sort of way.
"I don't say so," returned the girl in alarm; "I only say I like the work of Nieves better than Martina's."
The trousseau soon became the subject of conversation. It was discussed from every point of view, and with the gravity and the care it deserved.
To whom should they entrust the hemming of the linen sheets? To whom the common ones? Who should make the underlinen? Where should the mantles be bought, etc.? All these questions were discussed, weighed, and considered. Dona Paula gave her opinion; Cecilia affected to contradict, but in reality what did she care?
Her whole soul was so filled with the thought of her approaching marriage that her voice trembled with emotion, and she could hardly speak, while her eyes glowed with rapture, and shone like two fine stars on a soft summer night.
"How hot it is!" she exclaimed every now and then, putting her hands upon her flaming cheeks.
Gonzalo a.s.sented with an inane smile to what was said, and frequently changed the position of his long legs, which were cramped from the lowness of his chair.
When they had discussed the linen of the trousseau, they pa.s.sed on to the dresses, and the conversation became more animated, and Cecilia saw her betrothed without looking at him, and the eyes of Dona Paula, as she gazed at them both, grew softer and softer, their breath mingled, and the shoulders of the future bride and bridegroom touched each other.
The soft whispers, the lowered light of the lamp, which scarcely reached them, the frequent contact with the arm of her beloved, all combined to fill Cecilia with overwhelming emotion. Quite overcome, she got up two or three times and kissed her mother warmly; when she did this the third time, Dona Paula saw what it betokened and, with a compa.s.sionate, smiling glance, said:
"Poor little thing! My poor little thing!"
Cecilia covered her eyes with her hands, and remained so for some time.
"What is the matter?" said Dona Paula at last.
"Nothing, nothing."
But she kept her eyes covered.
"But what is the matter, my daughter?"
"Nothing," she replied at last, taking her hands from her face, and she smiled, but her eyes were wet.
"I know, I know," returned the mother. "You want the salts; you feel faint."
"No, I am not faint; I am quite well."
The conversation was then renewed, and Dona Paula expressed her wish that Gonzalo should come and live with them. This he rather objected to at first, as he knew his uncle would not like it, nevertheless he ended by conceding to the entreaties of both ladies. It was so natural that they should not want to be separated! "You can both be quite independent, I will take care of that. There is the large room, the blue one, you know, Cecilia; it has a large alcove; then you only want the study for Gonzalo. But I have thought of that. Just by the large room there is the wardrobe-room, that opens on the courtyard; it is nice and light. It is all in disorder now, but, with a little trouble, it could be turned into a very nice room. Would you like to see it, Gonzalo?"
The young man replied that it was not necessary, that he believed all she said, and that he had as good as seen it; but the lady insisted on it, and, taking a flat candlestick, she escorted him to the other end of the house.
"This is the room--large, is it not? Two windows. The alcove is large enough for two beds, let alone for one," she added, with a glance at her daughter, who turned aside to shut a window.
"Let us go and see the wardrobe-room--"
And leaving the apartment, crossing a pa.s.sage, and turning round a corner, they entered another room full of cupboards and lumber.
"Don't mind about the distance, for it is really next to the large room; it only wants a door of communication to be made between."
Gonzalo turned to his intended and said softly:
"Why does not mama thee and thou me as your papa does? Ask her from me--I do not like to."
Then Cecilia approached her mother's ear and said in a soft voice, which trembled with shyness:
"Gonzalo would like you to thee and thou him."
"What do you say, child?" asked Dona Paula, putting her hand to her ear.
Cecilia, with a great effort, raised her voice a little: