“I SHOULD LIKE TO SEE MORE OF SLOWBRIDGE.”
When he announced at breakfast his
intention of taking his departure on the midday train,
Lucia wondered again what would happen; and again,
to her relief, Lady Theobald was astonishingly lenient.
“As your friends expect you,
of course we cannot overrule them,” she said.
“We will, however, hope to see something of you
during your stay at Broadoaks. It will be very
easy for you to run down and give us a few hours now
and then.”
“Tha-anks,” said Capt. Barold.
He was decently civil, if not enthusiastic,
during the few remaining hours of his stay. He
sauntered through the grounds with Lucia, who took
charge of him in obedience to her grandmother’s
wish. He did not find her particularly troublesome
when she was away from her ladyship’s side.
When she came out to him in her simple cotton gown
and straw hat, it occurred to him that she was much
prettier than he had thought her at first. For
economical reasons she had made the little morning-dress
herself, without the slightest regard for the designs
of Miss Chickie; and as it was not trimmed at all,
and had only a black-velvet ribbon at the waist, there
was nothing to place her charming figure at a disadvantage.
It could not be said that her shyness and simplicity
delighted Capt. Barold, but, at least, they did
not displease him; and this was really as much as could
be expected.
“She does not expect a fellow
to exert himself, at all events,” was his inward
comment; and he did not exert himself.
But, when on the point of taking his
departure, he went so far as to make a very gracious
remark to her.
“I hope we shall have the pleasure
of seeing you in London for a season, before very
long,” he said: “my mother will have
great pleasure in taking charge of you, if Lady Theobald
cannot be induced to leave Slowbridge.”
“Lucia never goes from home
alone,” said Lady Theobald; “but I should
certainly be obliged to call upon your mother for her
good offices, in the case of our spending a season
in London. I am too old a woman to alter my mode
of life altogether.”
In obedience to her ladyship’s
orders, the venerable landau was brought to the door;
and the two ladies drove to the station with him.
It was during this drive that a very
curious incident occurred,—an incident
to which, perhaps, this story owes its existence, since,
if it had not taken place, there might, very possibly,
have been no events of a stirring nature to chronicle.
Just as Dobson drove rather slowly up the part of
High Street distinguished by the presence of Miss Belinda
Bassett’s house, Capt. Barold suddenly appeared
to be attracted by some figure he discovered in the
garden appertaining to that modest structure.
“By Jove!” he exclaimed,
in an undertone, “there is Miss Octavia.”
For the moment he was almost roused
to a display of interest. A faint smile lighted
his face, and his cold, handsome eyes slightly brightened.
Lady Theobald sat bolt upright.
“That is Miss Bassett’s
niece, from America,” she said. “Do
I understand you know her?”
Capt. Barold turned to confront
her, evidently annoyed at having allowed a surprise
to get the better of him. All expression died
out of his face.
“I travelled with her from Framwich
to Stamford,” he said. “I suppose
we should have reached Slowbridge together, but that
I dropped off at Stamford to get a newspaper, and
the train left me behind.”
“O grandmamma!” exclaimed
Lucia, who had turned to look, “how very pretty
she is!”
Miss Octavia certainly was amazingly
so this morning. She was standing by a rosebush
again, and was dressed in a cashmere morning-robe of
the finest texture and the faintest pink: it
had a Watteau plait down the back, jabot of
lace down the front, and the close, high frills of
lace around the throat which seemed to be a weakness
with her. Her hair was dressed high upon her
head, and showed to advantage her little ears and
as much of her slim white neck as the frills did not
conceal.
But Lady Theobald did not share Lucia’s enthusiasm.
“She looks like an actress,”
she said. “If the trees were painted canvas
and the roses artificial, one might have some patience
with her. That kind of thing is scarcely what
we expect in Slowbridge.”
Then she turned to Barold.
“I had the pleasure of meeting
her yesterday, not long after she arrived,”
she said. “She had diamonds in her ears
as big as peas, and rings to match. Her manner
is just what one might expect from a young woman brought
up among gold-diggers and silver-miners.”
“It struck me as being a very
unique and interesting manner,” said Capt.
Barold. “It is chiefly noticeable for a
sang-froid which might be regarded as rather
enviable. She was good enough to tell me all about
her papa and the silver-mines, and I really found
the conversation entertaining.”
“It is scarcely customary for
English young women to confide in their masculine
travelling companions to such an extent,” remarked
my lady grimly.
“She did not confide in me at
all,” said Barold. “Therein lay her
attraction. One cannot submit to being ‘confided
in’ by a strange young woman, however charming.
This young lady’s remarks were flavored solely
with an adorably cool candor. She evidently did
not desire to appeal to any emotion whatever.”
And as he leaned back in his seat,
he still looked at the picturesque figure which they
had passed, as if he would not have been sorry to see
it turn its head toward him.
In fact, it seemed that, notwithstanding
his usual good fortune, Capt. Barold was doomed
this morning to make remarks of a nature objectionable
to his revered relation. On their way they passed
Mr. Burmistone’s mill, which was at work in
all its vigor, with a whir and buzz of machinery,
and a slight odor of oil in its surrounding atmosphere.
“Ah!” said Mr. Barold,
putting his single eyeglass into his eye, and scanning
it after the manner of experts. “I did not
think you had any thing of that sort here. Who
put it up?”
“The man’s name,”
replied Lady Theobald severely, “is Burmistone.”
“Pretty good idea, isn’t
it?” remarked Barold. “Good for the
place—and all that sort of thing.”
“To my mind,” answered
my lady, “it is the worst possible thing which
could have happened.”
Mr. Francis Barold dropped his eyeglass
dexterously, and at once lapsed into his normal condition—which
was a condition by no means favorable to argument.
“Think so?” he said slowly.
“Pity, isn’t it, under the circumstances?”
And really there was nothing at all
for her ladyship to do but preserve a lofty silence.
She had scarcely recovered herself when they reached
the station, and it was necessary to say farewell
as complacently as possible.
“We will hope to see you again
before many days,” she said with dignity, if
not with warmth.
Mr. Francis Barold was silent for
a second, and a slightly reflective expression flitted
across his face.
“Thanks, yes,” he said
at last. “Certainly. It is easy to
come down, and I should like to see more of Slowbridge.”
When the train had puffed in and out
of the station, and Dobson was driving down High Street
again, her ladyship’s feelings rather got the
better of her.
“If Belinda Bassett is a wise
woman,” she remarked, “she will take my
advice, and get rid of this young lady as soon as possible.
It appears to me,” she continued, with exalted
piety, “that every well-trained English girl
has reason to thank her Maker that she was born in
a civilized land.”
“Perhaps,” suggested Lucia
softly, “Miss Octavia Bassett has had no one
to train her at all; and it may be that—that
she even feels it deeply.”
The feathers in her ladyship’s bonnet trembled.
“She does not feel it at all!”
she announced. “She is an impertinent—minx!”