The daughters of CANAAN.
May, beautiful May, had brought the
golden flowers, and the trees in the valley behind
the sleepy old town of Calcombe Pomeroy were decking
themselves in the first wan green of their early spring
foliage. The ragged robins were hanging out, pinky
red, from the hedgerows; the cuckoo was calling from
the copse beside the mill stream; and the merry wee
hedge-warblers were singing lustily from the topmost
sprays of hawthorn, with their full throats bursting
tremulously in the broad sunshine. And Ernest
Le Breton, too, filled with the season, had come down
from Dunbude for a fortnight’s holiday, on his
premised visit to his friend Oswald, or, to say the
truth more plainly, to Oswald’s pretty little
sister Edie. For Ernest had fully made up his
mind by this time what it was he had come for, and
he took the earliest possible opportunity of taking
a walk with Edie alone, through the tiny glen behind
the town, where the wee stream tumbles lazily upon
the big slow-turning vanes of the overshot mill-wheel.
‘Let us sit down a bit on the
bank here, Miss Oswald,’ he said to his airy
little companion, as they reached the old stone bridge
that crosses the stream just below the mill-house;
’it’s such a lovely day one feels loath
to miss any of it, and the scenery here looks so bright
and cheerful after the endless brown heather and russet
bracken about Dunbude. Not that Exmoor isn’t
beautiful in its way, too—all Devonshire
is beautiful alike for that matter; but then it’s
more sombre and woody in the north, and much less
spring-like than this lovely quiet South Devon country.’
‘I’m so glad you like
Calcombe,’ Edie said, with one of her unfailing
blushes at the indirect flattery to herself implied
in praise of her native county; ’and you think
it prettier than Dunbude, then, do you?’
’Prettier in its own way, yes,
though not so grand of course; everything here is
on a smaller scale. Dunbude, you know, is almost
mountainous.’
‘And the Castle?’ Edie
asked, bringing round the conversation to her own
quarter, ’is that very fine? At all like
Warwick, or our dear old Arlingford?’
‘Oh, it isn’t a castle
at all, really,’ Ernest answered; ’only
a very big and ugly house. As architecture it’s
atrocious, though it’s comfortable enough inside
for a place of the sort.’
’And the Exmoors, are they nice
people? What kind of girl is Lady Hilda, now?’
Poor little Edie? she asked the question shyly, but
with a certain deep beating in her heart, for she had
often canvassed with herself the vague possibility
that Ernest might actually fall in love with Lady
Hilda. Had he fallen in love with her already,
or had he not? She knew she would be able to guess
the truth by his voice and manner the moment he answered
her. No man can hide that secret from a woman
who loves him. Yet it was not without a thrill
and a flutter that she asked him, for she thought to
herself, what must she seem to him after all the grand
people he had been mixing with so lately at Dunbude?
Was it possible he could see anything in her, a little
country village girl, coming to her fresh from the
great ladies of that unknown and vaguely terrible society?
‘Lady Hilda!’ Ernest answered,
laughing—and as he said the words Edie
knew in her heart that her question was answered, and
blushed once more in her bewitching fashion.
’Lady Hilda! Oh, she’s a very queer
girl, indeed; she’s not at all clever, really,
but she has the one virtue of girls of her class—their
perfect frankness. She’s frank all over—no
reserve or reticence at all about her. Whatever
she thinks she says, without the slightest idea that
you’ll see anything to laugh at or to find fault
with in it. In matters of knowledge, she’s
frankly ignorant. In matters of taste, she’s
frankly barbaric. In matters of religion, she’s
frankly heathen. And in matters of ethics, she’s
frankly immoral—or rather extra-moral,’
he added, quickly correcting himself for the misleading
expression.
’I shouldn’t think from
your description she can be a very nice person,’
Edie said, greatly relieved, and pulling a few tall
grasses at her side by way of hiding her interest in
the subject. ’She can’t be a really
nice girl if she’s extra-moral, as you call
it.’
’Oh, I don’t mean she’d
cut one’s throat or pick one’s pocket,
you know,’ Ernest went on quickly, with a gentle
smile. ’She’s got a due respect for
the ordinary conventional moralities like other people,
no doubt; but in her case they’re only social
prejudices, not genuine ethical principles.
I don’t suppose she ever seriously asked herself
whether anything was right or wrong or not in her
whole lifetime. In fact, I’m sure she never
did; and if anybody else were to do so, she’d
be immensely surprised and delighted at the startling
originality and novelty of thought displayed in such
a view of the question.’
‘But she’s very handsome,
isn’t she?’ Edie asked, following up
her inquiry with due diligence.
’Handsome? oh, yes, in a bold
sort of actress fashion. Very handsome, but
not, to me at least, pleasing. I believe most
men admire her a great deal; but she lacks a feminine
touch dreadfully. She dashes away through everything
as if she was hunting; and she does hunt too,
which I think bad enough in anybody, and horrible in
a woman.’
’Then you haven’t fallen
in love with her, Mr. Le Breton? I half imagined
you would, you know, as I’m told she’s
so very attractive.’
’Fallen in love with her,
Miss Oswald! Fallen in love with Hilda Tregellis!
What an absurd notion! Heaven forbid it!’
‘Why so, please?’
’Why, in the first place, what
would be the use of it? Fancy Lady Exmoor’s
horror at the bare idea of her son’s tutor falling
in love with Lady Hilda! I assure you, Miss Oswald,
she would evaporate at the very mention of such an
unheard-of enormity. A man must be, if not an
earl, at least a baronet with five thousand a year,
before he dare face the inexpressible indignation
of Lady Exmoor with an offer of marriage for Lady
Hilda.’
‘But people don’t always
fall in love by tables of precedence,’ Edie
put in simply. ’It’s quite possible,
I suppose, for a man who isn’t a duke himself
to fall in love with a duke’s daughter, even
though the duke her papa mayn’t personally happen
to approve of the match. However, you don’t
seem to think Lady Hilda herself a pleasant girl,
even apart from the question of Lady Exmoor’s
requirements?’
‘Miss Oswald,’ Ernest
said, looking at her suddenly, as she sat half hiding
her face with her parasol, and twitching more violently
than ever at the tall grasses; ’Miss Oswald,
to tell you the truth, I haven’t been thinking
much about Hilda Tregellis or any of the other girls
I’ve met at Dunbude, and for a very sufficient
reason, because I’ve had my mind too much preoccupied
by somebody else elsewhere.’
Edie blushed even more prettily than
before, and held her peace, half raising her eyes
for a second in an enquiring glance at his, and then
dropping them hastily as they met, in modest trepidation.
At that moment Ernest had never seen anything so beautiful
or so engaging as Edie Oswald.
‘Edie,’ he said, beginning
again more boldly, and taking her little gloved hand
almost unresistingly in his; ’Edie, you know
my secret. I love you. Can you love me?’
Edie looked up at him shyly, the tears
glistening and trembling a little in the corner of
her big bright eyes, and for a moment she answered
nothing. Then she drew away her hand hastily and
said with a sigh, ’Mr. Le Breton, we oughtn’t
to be talking so. We mustn’t. Don’t
let us. Take me home, please, at once, and don’t
say anything more about it.’ But her heart
beat within her bosom with a violence that was not
all unpleasing, and her looks half belied her words
to Ernest’s keen glance even as she spoke them.
‘Why not, Edie?’ he said,
drawing her down again gently by her little hand as
she tried to rise hesitatingly. ’Why not?
tell me. I’ve looked into your face, and
though I can hardly dare to hope it or believe it,
I do believe I read in it that you really might love
me.’
‘Oh, Mr. Le Breton,’ Edie
answered, a tear now quivering visibly on either
eyelash, ’don’t ask me, please don’t
ask me. I wish you wouldn’t. Take
me home, won’t you?’
Ernest dropped her hand quietly, with
a little show of despondency that was hardly quite
genuine, for his eyes had already told him better.
‘Then you can’t love me, Miss Oswald,’
he said, looking at her closely. ’I’m
sorry for it, very sorry for it; but I’m grieved
if I have seemed presumptuous in asking you.’
This time the two tears trickled slowly
down Edie’s cheek—not very sad tears
either—and she answered hurriedly, ’Oh,
I don’t mean that, Mr. Le Breton, I don’t
mean that. You misunderstand me, I’m sure
you misunderstand me.’
Ernest caught up the trembling little
hand again. ’Then you can love me,
Edie?’ he said eagerly, ‘you can love me?’
Edie answered never a word, but bowed
her head and cried a little, silently. Ernest
took the dainty wee gloved hand between his own two
hands and pressed it tenderly. He felt in return
a faint pressure.
‘Then why won’t you let
me love you, Edie?’ he asked, looking at the
blushing girl once more.
‘Oh, Mr. Le Breton,’ Edie
said, rising and moving away from the path a little
under the shade of the big elm-tree, ’it’s
very wrong of me to let you talk so. I mustn’t
think of marrying you, and you mustn’t think
of marrying me. Consider the difference in our
positions.’
‘Is that all?’ Ernest
answered gaily. ’Oh, Edie, if that’s
all, it isn’t a very difficult matter to settle.
My position’s exactly nothing, for I’ve
got no money and no prospects; and if I ask you to
marry me, it must be in the most strictly speculative
fashion, with no date and no certainty. The only
question is, will you consent to wait for me till
I’m able to offer you a home to live in?
It’s asking you a great deal, I know; and you’ve
made me only too happy and too grateful already; but
if you’ll wait for me till we can marry, I shall
live all my life through to repay you for your sacrifice.’
‘But, Mr. Le Breton,’
Edie said, turning towards the path and drying her
eyes quickly, ’I really don’t think you
ought to marry me. The difference in station
is so great—even Harry would allow the
difference in station. Your father was a great
man, and a general and a knight, you know; and though
my dear father is the best and kindest of men, he
isn’t anything of that sort, of course.’
A slight shade of pain passed across
Ernest’s face. ‘Edie,’ he said,
’please don’t talk about that—please
don’t. My father was a just and good man,
whom I loved and honoured deeply; if there’s
anything good in any of us boys, it comes to us from
my dear father. But please don’t speak
to me about his profession. It’s one of
the griefs and troubles of my life. He was a
soldier, and an Indian soldier too; and if there’s
anything more certain to me than the principle that
all fighting is very wrong and indefensible, it’s
the principle that our rule in India is utterly unjust
and wicked. So instead of being proud of my father’s
profession, much as I respected him, I’m profoundly
ashamed of it; and it has been a great question to
me always how far I was justified at all in living
upon the pension given me for his Indian services.’
Edie looked at him half surprised
and half puzzled. It was to her such an odd and
unexpected point of view. But she felt instinctively
that Ernest really and deeply meant what he said, and
she knew she must not allude to the subject again.
‘I beg your pardon,’ she said simply,
’if I’ve put it wrong; yet you know I can’t
help feeling the great disparity in our two situations.’
‘Edie,’ said Ernest, looking
at her again with all his eyes—’I’m
going to call you “Edie” always now, so
that’s understood between us. Well, I shall
tell you exactly how I feel about this matter.
From the first moment I saw you I felt drawn towards
you, I felt that I couldn’t help admiring you
and sympathising with you and loving you. If
I dared I would have spoken to you that day at Iffley;
but I said to myself “She will not care for
me; and besides, it would be wrong of me to ask her
just yet.” I had nothing to live upon,
and I oughtn’t to ask you to wait for me—you
who are so pretty, and sweet and good, and clever—I
ought to leave you free to your natural prospect of
marrying some better man, who would make you happier
than I can ever hope to do. So I tried to put
the impulse aside; I waited, saying to myself that
if you really cared for me a little bit, you would
still care for me when I came to Calcombe Pomeroy.
But then my natural selfishness overcame me—you
can forgive me for it, Edie; how could I help it when
I had once seen you? I began to be afraid some
other man would be beforehand with you; and I liked
you so much I couldn’t bear to think of the
chance that you might be taken away from me before
I asked you. All day long, as I’ve been
walking alone on those high grey moors at Dunbude,
I’ve been thinking of you; and at last I made
up my mind that I must come and ask you to be
my wife—some time—whenever we
could afford to marry. I know I’m asking
you to make a great sacrifice for me; it’s more
than I have any right to ask you; I’m ashamed
of myself for asking it; I can only make you a poor
man’s wife, and how long I may have to wait
even for that I can’t say; but if you’ll
only consent to wait for me, Edie, I’ll do the
best that lies in me to make you as happy and to love
you as well as any man on earth could ever do.’
Edie turned her face towards his,
and said softly, ’Mr. Le Breton, I will wait
for you as long as ever you wish; and I’m so
happy, oh so happy.’
There was a pause for a few moments,
and then, as they walked homeward down the green glen,
Edie said, with something more of her usual archness,
’So after all you haven’t fallen in love
with Lady Hilda! Do you know, Mr. Le Breton,
I rather fancied at Oxford you liked me just a little
tiny bit; but when I heard you were going to Dunbude
I said to myself, “Ah, now he’ll never
care for a quiet country girl like me!” And
when I knew you were coming down here to Calcombe,
straight from all those grand ladies at Dunbude, I
felt sure you’d be disenchanted as soon as you
saw me, and never think anything more about me.’
‘Then you liked me, Edie?’
Ernest asked eagerly. ’You wanted me really
to come to Calcombe to see you?’
’Of course I did, Mr. Le Breton.
I’ve liked you from the first moment I saw you.’
‘I’m so glad,’ Ernest
went on quickly. ’I believe all real love
is love at first sight. I wouldn’t care
myself to be loved in any other way. And you
thought I might fall in love with Lady Hilda?’
’Well, you know, she is sure
to be so handsome, and so accomplished, and to have
had so many advantages that I have never had.
I was afraid I should seem so very simple to you after
Lady Hilda.’
‘Oh, Edie!’ cried Ernest,
stopping a moment, and gazing at the little light
airy figure. ’I only wish you could know
the difference. Coming from Dunbude to Calcombe
is like coming from darkness into light. Up there
one meets with nobody but essentially vulgar-minded
selfish people—people whose whole life is
passed in thinking and talking about nothing but dogs,
and horses, and partridges, and salmon; racing, and
hunting, and billiards, and wines; amusements, amusements,
amusements, all of them coarse and most of them cruel,
all day long. Their talk is just like the talk
of grooms and gamekeepers in a public-house parlour,
only a little improved by better English and more
money. Will So-and-so win the Derby? What
a splendid run we had with the West Somerset on Wednesday!
Were you in at the death of that big fox at Coulson’s
Corner? Ought the new vintages of Madeira to
be bottled direct or sent round the Cape like the
old ones? Capital burlesque at the Gaiety, but
very slow at the Lyceum. Who will go to the Duchess
of Dorsetshire’s dance on the twentieth:—and
so forth for ever. Their own petty round of selfish
pleasures from week’s end to week’s end—no
thought of anybody else, no thought of the world at
large, no thought even of any higher interest in their
own personalities. Their politics are just a
selfish calculation of their own prospects—land,
Church, capital, privilege. Their religion (when
they have any) is just a selfish regard for their
own personal future welfare. From the time I
went to Dunbude to this day, I’ve never heard
a single word about any higher thought of any sort—I
don’t mean only about the troubles or the aspirations
of other people, but even about books, about science,
about art, about natural beauty. They live in
a world of amusing oneself and of amusing oneself
in vulgar fashions—as a born clown would
do if he came suddenly into a large fortune. The
women are just as bad as the men, only in a different
way—not always even that; for most of them
think only of the Four-in-hand Club and the pigeon-shooting
at Hurlingham—things to sicken one.
Now, I’ve known selfish people before, but not
selfish people utterly without any tincture of culture.
I come away from Dunbude, and come down here to Calcombe:
and the difference in the atmosphere makes one’s
very breath come and go freer. And I look at you,
Edie, and think of you beside Lady Hilda Tregellis,
and I laugh in my heart at the difference that artificial
rules have made between you. I wish you knew
how immeasurably her superior you are in every way.
The fact is, it’s a comfort to escape from Dunbude
for a while and get down here to feel oneself once
more, in the only true sense of the word, in a little
good society.’
While these things were happening
in the Bourne Close, palsied old Miss Luttrell, mumbling
and grumbling inarticulately to herself, was slowly
tottering down the steep High Street of Calcombe Pomeroy,
on her way to the village grocer’s. She
shambled in tremulously to Mrs. Oswald’s counter,
and seating herself on a high stool, as was her wont,
laid herself out distinctly for a list of purchases
and a good deliberate ill-natured gossip.
‘Two pounds of coffee, if you
please, Mrs. Oswald,’ she began with a quaver;
’coffee, mind, I say, not chicory; your stuff
always has the smallest possible amount of flavour
in it, it seems to me, for the largest possible amount
of quantity; all chicory, all chicory—no
decent coffee to be had now in Calcombe Pomeroy.
So your son’s at home this week, is he?
Out of work, I suppose? I saw him lounging about
on the beach, idling away his time, yesterday; pity
he wasn’t at some decent trade, instead of hanging
about and doing nothing, as if he was a gentleman.
Five pounds of lump sugar, too; good lump sugar, though
I expect I shall get nothing but beetroot; it’s
all beetroot now, my brother tells me; they’ve
ruined the West Indies with their emancipation fads
and their differential duties and the Lord knows what—we
had estates in the West Indies ourselves, all given
up to our negroes nowadays—and now I believe
they have to pay the French a bounty or something
of the sort to induce them to make sugar out of beetroot,
because the negroes won’t work without whipping,
so I understand; that’s what comes in the end
of your Radical fal-lal notions. Well, five pounds
of lump, and five pounds of moist, though the one’s
as bad as the other, really. A great pity about
your son. I hope he’ll get a place again
soon. It must be a trial to you to have him so
idle!’
‘Well, no, ma’am, it’s
not,’ Mrs. Oswald answered, with such self-restraint
as she could command. ’It’s not much
of a trial to his father and me, for we’re glad
to let him have a little rest after working so hard
at Oxford. He works too hard, ma’am, but
he gets compensation for it, don’t ’ee
see, Miss Luttrell, for he’s just been made
a Fellow of the Royal Society—“for
his mathematical eminence,” the “Times”
says—a Fellow of the Royal Society.’
Even this staggering blow did not
completely crush old Miss Luttrell. ‘Fellow
of the Royal Society,’ she muttered feebly through
her remaining teeth. ’Must be some mistake
somewhere, Mrs. Oswald—quite impossible.
A very meritorious young man, your son, doubtless;
but a National schoolmaster’s hardly likely to
be made a Fellow of the Royal Society. Oh, I
remember you told me he’s not a National schoolmaster,
but has something to do at one of the Oxford colleges.
Yes, yes; I see what it is—Fellow of the
Royal Geographical Society. You subscribe a guinea,
and get made a Fellow by subscription, just for the
sake of writing F.R.G.S. after your name; it gives
a young man a look of importance.’
’No, Miss Luttrell, it isn’t
that; it’s the Royal Society; and if you’ll
wait a moment, ma’am, I’ll fetch you the
president’s letter, and the diploma, to let
you see it.’
‘Oh, no occasion to trouble
yourself, Mrs. Oswald!’ the old lady put in,
almost with alacrity, for she had herself seen the
announcement of Harry Oswald’s election in the
‘Times’ a few days before. ’No
occasion to trouble yourself, I’m sure; I daresay
you may be right, and at any rate it’s no business
of mine, thank heaven. I never want to poke my
nose into anybody else’s business. Well,
talking of Oxford, Mrs. Oswald, there’s a very
nice young man down here at present; I wonder if you
know where he’s lodging? I want to ask
him to dinner. He’s a young Mr. Le Breton—one
of the Cheshire Le Bretons, you know. His father
was Sir Owen Le Breton, a general in the Indian army—brother
officer of Major Standish Luttrell’s and very
nice people in every way. Lady Le Breton’s
a great friend of the Archdeacon’s, so I should
like to show her son some little attention.
He’s had a very distinguished career at Oxford—your
boy may have heard his name, perhaps—and
now he’s acting as tutor to Lord Lynmouth, the
eldest son of Lord Exmoor, you know; Lady Exmoor was
a second cousin of my brother’s wife; very nice
people, all of them. The Le Bretons are a really
good family, you see; and the Archdeacon’s exceedingly
fond of them. So I thought if you could tell
me where this young man is lodging—you shop-people
pick up all the gossip in the place, always—I’d
ask him to dinner to meet the Rector and Colonel Turnbull
and my nephew, who would probably be able to offer
him a little shooting.’
‘There’s no partridges
about in May, Miss Luttrell,’ said Mrs. Oswald,
quietly smiling to herself at the fancy picture of
Ernest seated in congenial converse with the Rector,
Colonel Turnbull, and young Luttrell; ’but as
to Mr. Le Breton, I do happen to know where he’s
stopping, though it’s not often that I know any
Calcombe gossip, save and except what you’re
good enough to tell me when you drop in, ma’am;
for Mr. Le Breton’s stopping here, in this house,
with us, ma’am, this very minute.’
‘In this house, Mrs. Oswald!’
the old lady cried with a start, wagging her unsteady
old head this time in genuine surprise; ’why,
I didn’t know you let lodgings. I thought
you and your daughter were too much of fine ladies
for that, really. I’m glad to hear
it. I’ll leave a note for him.’
’No, Miss Luttrell, we don’t
let lodgings, ma’am, and we don’t need
to,’ Mrs. Oswald answered, proudly. ’Mr.
Le Breton’s stopping here as my son’s
guest. They were friends at Oxford together:
and now that Mr. Le Breton has got his holiday, like,
Harry’s asked him down to spend a fortnight
at Calcombe Pomeroy. And if you’ll leave
a note I’ll be very happy to give it to him as
soon as he comes in, for he’s out walking now
with Harry and Edith.’
Old Miss Luttrell sat for half a minute
in unwonted silence, revolving in her poor puzzled
head what line of tactics she ought to adopt under
such a very singular and annoying combination of
circumstances. Stopping at the village grocer’s!—this
was really too atrocious! The Le Bretons were
all as mad as hatters, that she knew well; all except
the mother, who was a sensible person, and quite rational.
But old Sir Owen was a man with the most absurd religious
fancies—took an interest in the souls of
the soldiers; quite right and proper, of course, in
a chaplain, but really too ridiculous in a regular
field officer. No doubt Ernest Le Breton had
taken up some equally extraordinary notions—liberty,
equality, fraternity, and a general massacre, probably;
and he had picked up Harry Oswald as a suitable companion
in his revolutionary schemes and fancies. There
was no knowing what stone wall one of those mad Le
Bretons might choose to run his head against.
Still, the practical difficulty remained—how
could she extricate herself from this awkward dilemma
in such a way as to cover herself with glory, and
inflict another bitter humiliation on poor Mrs. Oswald?
If only she had known sooner that Ernest was stopping
at the Oswalds, she wouldn’t have been so loud
in praise of the Le Breton family; she would in that
case have dexterously insinuated that Lady Le Breton
was only a half-pay officer’s widow, living on
her pension; and that her boys had got promotion at
Oxford as poor scholars, through the Archdeacon’s
benevolent influence. It was too late now, however,
to adopt that line of defence; and she fell back accordingly
upon the secondary position afforded her by the chance
of taking down Mrs. Oswald’s intolerable insolence
in another fashion.
‘Oh, he’s out walking
with your daughter, is he?’ she said, maliciously.
’Out walking with your daughter, Mrs. Oswald,
not with your son. I saw her passing down
the meadows half an hour ago with a strange young
man; and her brother stopped behind near the millpond.
A strange young man; yes, I noticed particularly that
he looked like a gentleman, and I was quite surprised
that you should let her walk out with him in that
extraordinary manner. Depend upon it, Mrs. Oswald,
when young gentlemen in Mr. Le Breton’s position
go out walking with young women in your daughter’s
position, they mean no good by it—they
mean no good by it. Take my advice, Mrs. Oswald,
and don’t permit it. Mr. Le Breton’s
a very nice young man, and well brought up no doubt—I
know his mother’s a woman of principle—still,
young men will be young men; and if your son goes bringing
down his fine Oxford acquaintances to Calcombe Pomeroy,
and you and your husband go flinging Miss Jemima—her
name’s Jemima, I think—at the young
men’s heads, why, then, of course, you must take
the consequences—you must take the consequences!’
And with this telling Parthian shot discharged carefully
from the shadow of the doorway, accompanied by a running
comment of shrugs, nods, and facial distortions, old
Miss Luttrell successfully shuffled herself out of
the shop, her list unfinished, leaving poor Mrs. Oswald
alone and absolutely speechless with indignation.
Ernest Le Breton never got a note of invitation from
the Squire’s sister: but before nightfall
all that was visitable in Calcombe Pomeroy had heard
at full length of the horrid conspiracy by which those
pushing upstart Oswalds had inveigled a son of poor
Lady Le Breton’s down to stop with them, and
were now trying to ruin his prospects by getting him
to marry their brazen-faced hussey, Jemima Edith.
When Edie returned from her walk that
afternoon, Mrs. Oswald went up into her bedroom to
see her daughter. She knew at once from Edie’s
radiant blushing face and moist eyes what had taken
place, and she kissed the pretty shrinking girl tenderly
on her forehead. ‘Edie darling, I hope
you will be happy,’ she whispered significantly.
‘Then you guess it all, mother
dear?’ asked Edie, relieved that she need not
tell her story in set words.
‘Yes, darling,’ said the
mother, kissing her again. ’And you said
“yes.”’
Edie coloured once more. ’I
said “yes,” mother, for I love him dearly.’
‘He’s a dear fellow,’
the mother answered gently; ’and I’m sure
he’ll do his best to make you happy.’
Later on in the day, Harry came up
and knocked at Edie’s door. His mother
had told him all about it, and so had Ernest.
‘Popsy,’ he said, kissing her also, ’I
congratulate you. I’m so glad about it.
Le Breton’s the best fellow I know, and I couldn’t
wish you a better or a kinder husband. You’ll
have to wait for him, but he’s worth waiting
for. He’s a good fellow and a clever fellow,
and an affectionate fellow; and his family are everything
that could be desired. It’ll be a splendid
thing for you to be able to talk in future about “my
mother-in law, Lady Le Breton.” Depend upon
it, Edie dear, that always counts for something in
society.’
Edie blushed again, but this time
with a certain tinge of shame and disappointment.
She had never thought of that herself, and she was
hurt that Harry should think and speak of it at such
a moment. She felt with a sigh it was unworthy
of him and unworthy of the occasion. Truly the
iron of Pi and its evaluations had entered deeply
into his soul!