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"I daresay he is nicer," says Kit, artfully. Then she tucks her arm into her sister's, and looks fondly in her face. "He must have said _something_ to you," she says. "Darling love, why won't you tell your own Kitten all about it?"
A little smile quivers round Monica's lips.
"Well, I will, then," she says. In her heart I believe she is glad to confide in somebody, and why not in Kit the sympathetic? "First, he made me feel he was delighted to meet me again. Then he asked me to go for a walk _alone_ with him; then he said he was--my lover!"
"Oh!" says Kit, s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g up her small face with delight.
"And then he asked me to meet him again to-day with _you_."
"With _me_! I think that was very delicate of him." She is evidently flattered by this notice of her existence. Plainly, if not _the_ rose in his estimation, she is to be treated with the respect due to the rose's sister. It is all charming! she feels wafted upwards, and incorporated, as it were, in a real love affair. Yes, she will be the guardian angel of these thwarted lovers.
"And what did you say?" she asks, with a gravity that befits the occasion.
"I refused," in a low tone.
"To meet him?"
"Yes."
"With _me_?" says this dragon of propriety.
"Yes."
"But why?"
"Because of Aunt Priscilla." And then she tells her all about Aunt Priscilla's speech in the carriage, and her reply to it.
"I never heard such a rubbishy request in my life!" says the younger Miss Beresford, disdainfully. "It is really beneath notice. And when all is told it means nothing. As _I_ read it, it seems you have only promised to forget you ever spoke to Mr. Desmond: you haven't promised never to speak to him again." Thus the little Jesuit.
"That was not what Aunt Priscilla meant."
"If she meant anything, it was folly. And, after all, what is this dreadful quarrel between us and the Desmonds all about? It lives in Aunt Priscilla's brain. I'll tell you what I think, Monica. I think Aunt Priscilla was once in love with old Mr. Desmond, and mother cut her out; and now, just because she has been disappointed in her own love-affair, she wants to thwart you in yours."
"She doesn't, indeed. Any one but Mr. Desmond might show me attention, and she would be pleased. She was quite glad when Mr. Ryde--well--when he made himself agreeable to me."
"From all you told me of him, he must have made himself _dis_-agreeable.
I'm perfectly certain I should hate Mr. Ryde, and I'm equally sure I should like Mr. Desmond. What did he say to you, darling, when you refused to meet him even with _me_?" She lays great stress on this allusion to herself.
"He said I might do as I chose, but that he would meet me again, whether I liked it or not, and _soon_!"
"Now, that's the lover for _me_!" says Kit, enthusiastically. "No giving in, no s.h.i.+lly-shallying, but downright determination. He's an honest man, and we all know what an honest man is,--'the n.o.blest work of G.o.d.'
I'm certain he will keep his word, and I do hope I shall be with you when next you meet him, as I should like to make friends with him."
At this moment it occurs to Monica that she never before knew how very, _very_ fond she is of Kit.
"Oh, well, I don't suppose I _can_ see him again for ever so long," she says. But even as the words pa.s.s her lips she knows she does not mean them, and remembers with a little throb of pleasure that he had said he would see her again _soon_. _Soon!_ why, that might mean this evening,--now,--_any_ moment! Instinctively she lifts her head and looks around her, and there, just a little way off, is a young man coming quickly towards her, bareheaded and in evening dress.
"I told you how it would be," says Kit, in a nervous whisper, taking almost a bit out of poor Monica's arm in her excitement. "Oh, when I have a lover I hope he will be like _he_."
Her grammar has gone after her nerve.
Monica is silent: some color has gone from her cheeks, and her heart is beating faster. It is her very first _affaire_, so we must forgive her: a little frightened shadow has fallen into her eyes, and altogether she looks a shade younger than usual: she is troubled in spirit, and inclined to find fault with the general management of things.
After all, she might as well have gone to the river this evening for what good her abstinence has done her: the poverty of our strength to conquer faith and the immutability of its decrees fills her with consternation and a fretful desire for freedom. Yet above and beyond all these vain imaginings is a gladness and a pride that her power is strong enough to draw her lover to her side in spite of all difficulties.
The bareheaded young man has come up to her by this time, and is holding out his hand: silently she lays her own in it, and colors treacherously as his fingers close on hers in a close, tender, and possessive fas.h.i.+on.
"I found the river too chilly," he says, smiling, "so I came on here.
Having been unsuccessful all the afternoon and morning, I _knew_ I should find you _now_."
This might be hieroglyphics to others, but is certainly English to her, however she may pretend otherwise; she doesn't pretend much, to do her justice.
"This is your sister?" goes on Desmond, looking at Kit, who is regarding him with an eye that is quite a "piercer."
"Yes," says Monica. "Kit, this is Mr. Desmond."
"I know that," says this _enfant terrible_, still fixing him with a glance of calm and searching scrutiny that is well calculated to disconcert even a bolder man. Then all at once her mind seems made up, and, coming forward, she holds out her hand, and says, "How d'ye do?" to him, with a sudden, rare sweet smile that convinces him at once of her sisterhood to Monica.
"We are friends?" he says, being attracted to the child for her own grace alone, as well as for the charm of her relations.h.i.+p to the pale snowdrop of a girl beside her.
"Yes. If you prove true to my Monica."
"Oh, Kit!" says Monica, deeply shocked; but Kit pays no heed, her eyes being fastened gravely upon the man before her. He is quite as grave as she is.
"If our friends.h.i.+p depends upon that, it will be a lasting one," he says, quietly. "My whole life is at your sister's service."
Something in his tones touches Monica: slowly she lifts her eyes until they reach his.
"I wish, I _wish_ you would not persist in this," she says, sadly.
"But why? To think of you is my chiefest joy. Do you forbid me to be happy?"
"No--but--"
"In the morning and the afternoon I went to the river, to look for you--in vain; after dinner I went too, still hoping against hope; and now at last that I _have_ found you, you are unkind to me!" He speaks lightly, but his eyes are earnest. "Miss Katherine," he says appealingly to Kit, "of your grace, I pray you to befriend me."
"Monica would not go to the river this evening because she remembered an absurd promise she made to Aunt Priscilla, and because she feared to meet you there. It is the most absurd promise in the world: wait till you hear it." Whereupon Kit, who is in her element, proceeds to tell him all about Miss Priscilla's words to Monica, and Monica's answer, and her (Kit's) interpretation thereof. "She certainly didn't promise never to speak to you again," concludes she, with a nod Solomon might have envied.
Need it be said that Mr. Desmond agrees with her on all points?
"There is no use in continuing the discussion," says Monica, turning aside a little coldly. "I should not have gone to the river, _anyway_."
This chilling remark produces a blank indescribable, and conversation languishes: Monica betrays an interest in the horizon never before developed; Mr. Desmond regards with a moody glance the ripening harvest; and Kit, looking inward, surveys her mental resources and wonders what it is her duty to do next.
"For aught that ever I could read, Could ever hear by tale or history, The course of true love never did run smooth."
_This_ much she knows; and to any one blessed with a vision sharp as hers it is very apparent now that there is a roughness somewhere. She knows too, through many works of fiction, that those in attendance on loving couples should at certain seasons see cause to absent themselves from their duty, and search for a supposit.i.tious handkerchief or sprain an unoffending ankle, or hunt diligently in hedgerows for undiscoverable flowers. Three paths therefore lie open to her; which to adopt is the question. To return to the house for a handkerchief would be a decidedly risky affair, calculated to lead up to stiff and d.a.m.ning cross-examination from the aunts, which might prove painful; to sprain an ankle might prove even painfuller; but to dive into the innocent hedgerow for the extraction of summer flowers, what can be more effectual and reasonable? she will do it at once.