书城公版WIVES AND DAUGHTERS
19897600000245

第245章 MOLLY GIBSON FINDS A CHAMPION(4)

He could not help the touch of insolence that accompanied these last words.It was not in the words themselves, nor in the tone in which they were spoken, nor in the look which accompanied them, it was in all; it implied a doubt of Lady Harriet's right to question him as she did; and there was something of defiance in it as well.But this touch of insolence put Lady Harriet's mettle up; and she was not one to check herself, in any course, for the opinion of an inferior.

'Then, sir! are you aware of the injury you may do to a young lady's reputation if you meet her, and detain her in long conversations, when she is walking by herself, unaccompanied by any one? You give rise - you have given rise to reports.'

'My dear Harriet, are not you going too far? You don't know - Mr Preston may have intentions - unacknowledged intentions.'

'No, my lord.I have no intentions with regard to Miss Gibson.She may be a very worthy young lady - I have no doubt she is.Lady Harriet seems determined to push me into such a position that I cannot but acknowledge myself to be - it is not enviable - not pleasant to own - but I am, in fact, a jilted man; jilted by Miss Kirkpatrick, after a tolerably long engagement.My interviews with Miss Gibson were not of the most agreeable kind - as you may conclude when I tell you she was, I believe, the instigator - certainly, she was the agent in this last step of Miss Kirkpatrick's.

Is your ladyship's curiosity' (with an emphasis on this last word) 'satisfied with this rather mortifying confession of mine?'

'Harriet, my dear, you've gone too far - we had no right to pry into Mr Preston's private affairs.'

'No more I had,' said Lady Harriet, with a smile of winning frankness:

the first smile she had accorded to Mr Preston for many a long day; ever since the time, years ago, when, presuming on his handsomeness, he had assumed a tone of gallant familiarity with Lady Harriet, and paid her personal compliments as he would have done to an equal.

'But he will excuse me, I hope,' continued she, still in that gracious manner which made him feel that he now held a much higher place in her esteem than he had had at the beginning of their interview, 'when he learns that the busy tongues of the Hollingford ladies have been speaking of my friend, Miss Gibson, in the most unwarrantable manner; drawing unjustifiable inferences from the facts of that intercourse with Mr Preston, the nature of which he has just conferred such a real obligation on me by explaining.'

'I think I need hardly request Lady Harriet to consider this explanation of mine as confidential,' said Mr Preston.

'Of course, of course!' said the earl; 'every one will understand that.'

And he rode home, and told his wife and Lady Cuxhaven the whole conversation between Lady Harriet and Mr Preston; in the strictest confidence, of course.

Lady Harriet had to stand a good many strictures on manners, and proper dignity for a few days after this.However, she consoled herself by calling on the Gibsons; and, finding that Mrs Gibson (who was still an invalid)was asleep at the time, she experienced no difficulty in carrying off the unconscious Molly for a walk, which Lady Harriet so contrived that they twice passed through all the length of the principal street of the town, loitered at Grinstead's for half an hour, and wound up by Lady Harriet's calling on the Miss Brownings, who, to her regret, were not at home.

'Perhaps, it is as well,' said she, after a minute's consideration.

'I'll leave my card, and put your name down underneath it, Molly.'

Molly was a little puzzled by the manner in which she had been taken possession of, like an inanimate chattel, for all the afternoon, and exclaimed, -'Please, Lady Harriet - I never leave cards; I have not got any, and on the Miss Brownings, of all people; why, I run in and out whenever Ilike.'

'Never mind, little one.To-day you shall do everything properly, and according to full etiquette.

'And now tell Mrs Gibson to come out to the Towers for a long day; we will send the carriage for her whenever she will let us know that she is strong enough to come.Indeed, she had better come for a few days; at this time of the year it does not do for an invalid to be out in the evenings, even in a carriage.' So spoke Lady Harriet, standing on the white door-steps at Miss Brownings', and holding Molly's hand while she wished her good-by.

'You'll tell her, dear, that I came partly to see her - but that finding her asleep, I ran off with you, and don't forget about her coming to stay with us for change of air - mamma will like it, I'm sure - and the carriage, and all that.And now good-by, we've done a good day's work! And better than you're aware of,' continued she, still addressing Molly, though the latter was quite out of hearing.'Hollingford is not the place I take it to be, if it doesn't veer round in Miss Gibson's favour after my to-day's trotting of that child about.'