Molly Bawn Part 41
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"Yes, your wife. You don't seem over and above pleased at my news."
"Is a man always pleased at his wife's unexpected appearance?" asks Sir Penthony, recovering himself with a rather forced laugh. "I had no idea she was here. I---- Is she a friend of yours?"
"The dearest friend I have. I know no one," declares her ladys.h.i.+p, fervently, "I love so fondly."
"Happy Lady Stafford! I almost think I would change places with her this moment. At all events, whatever faults she may possess, she has rare taste in friends."
"You speak disparagingly. Has she a fault?"
"The greatest a woman can have: she lacks that one quality that would make her a 'joy forever.'"
"Your severity makes you unkind. And yet, do you know she is greatly liked. Nay, she has been _loved_. Perhaps when you come to know her a little better (I do not conceal from you that I have heard something of your story), you will think more tenderly of her.
Remember, 'beauty is only skin deep.'"
"Yes,"--with a light laugh,--"But 'ugliness goes to the bone.'"
"That is the retort discourteous. I see it is time wasted to plead my friend's cause. Although, perhaps,"--reproachfully,--"not blessed with actual beauty, still----"
"No, there's _not_ much beauty about her," says Sir Penthony, with something akin to a groan. Then, "I beg your pardon," he murmurs; "pray excuse me. Why should I trouble a stranger with my affairs?" He stands aside, with a slight bow, to let her pa.s.s. "And you won't tell me your name?" he cannot resist saying before losing sight of her.
"Make haste with your dressing; you shall know then," glancing back at him, with a bewitching smile.
"Be sure I shall waste no time. If, in my hurry, I appear to less advantage than usual to-night, you must not be the one to blame me."
"A very fair beginning," says Cecil, as she slips away. "Now I must be firm. But, oh dear, oh dear! he is much handsomer even than I thought."
CHAPTER XV.
"If I am not worth the wooing, I surely am not worth the winning."
--_Miles Standish._
The minutes, selfishly thoughtless of all but themselves, fly rapidly.
Cecil makes her way to the drawing-room, where she is followed presently by Molly, then by Luttrell; but, as these two latter refuse to converse with each other, conversation is rather one-sided.
Mr. Amherst, contrary to his usual custom, appears very early on the field, evidently desirous of enjoying the fray to its utmost. He looks quite jubilant and fresh for him, and his nose is in a degree sharper than its wont. He opens an animated discourse with Cecil; but Lady Stafford, although _distrait_ and with her mind on the stretch, listening for every sound outside, replies brilliantly, and, woman-like, conceals her anxiety with her tongue.
At length the dreaded moment comes. There is a sound of footfalls, nearer--nearer still--then, "clearer, deadlier than before," and the door opens, to discover Sir Penthony upon the threshold.
Lady Stafford is sitting within the embrasure of the window.
"Fortune favors me," she says hurriedly to Molly, alluding to the other guests' non-appearance.
"Your wife is staying with me," Mr. Amherst begins, complacently; and, pointing to Cecil, "Allow me to introduce you to----"
"Lady Stafford," Cecil interrupts, coming forward while a good deal of rich crimson mantles in her cheeks. She is looking lovely from excitement; and her pretty, rounded, graceful figure is shown off to the best advantage by the heavy fall of the red draperies behind her.
Sir Penthony gazes, spell-bound, at the gracious creature before him; the color recedes from his lips and brow; his eyes grow darker.
Luttrell with difficulty suppresses a smile. Mr. Amherst is almost satisfied.
"You are welcome," Cecil says, with perfect self-possession, putting out her hand and absolutely taking his; for so stunned is he by her words that he even forgets to offer it.
Drawing him into a recess of the window, she says, reproachfully, "Why do you look so astonished? Do you not know that you are gratifying that abominable old man? And will you not say you are glad to see me after all these long three years?"
"I don't understand," Sir Penthony says, vaguely. "Are there two Lady Staffords? And whose wife are you?"
"Yours! Although you don't seem in a hurry to claim me," she says, with a rarely pretty pout.
"Impossible!"
"I am sorry to undeceive you, but it is indeed the truth I speak."
"And whose picture did I get?" he asks, a faint glimmer of the real facts breaking in upon him.
"The parlor-maid's," says Cecil, now the strain is off her, laughing heartily and naturally,--so much so that the other occupants of the room turn to wonder enviously what is going on behind the curtains.
"The parlor-maid! And such a girl as she was! Do you remember her nose?
It was celestial. When that deed on which we agreed was sealed, signed, and delivered, without hope of change, I meant to send you my real photo, but somehow I didn't. I waited until we should meet; and now we have met and---- Why do you look so disconsolate? Surely, surely, I am an improvement on Mary Jane?"
"It isn't that," he says, "but--what a fool I have been!"
"You have indeed," quickly. "The idea of letting that odious old man see your discomfiture! By the bye, does my 'ugliness go to the bone,'
Sir Penthony?"
"Don't! When I realize my position I hate myself."
"Could you not even see my hair was yellow, whilst Mary Jane's was black,--a sooty black?"
"How could I see anything? Your veil was so thick, and, besides, I never doubted the truth of----"
"Oh, that veil! What trouble I had with it!" laughs Cecil. "First I doubled it, and then nearly died with fright lest you should imagine me the Pig-faced Lady, and insist on seeing me."
"Well, and if I had?"
"Without doubt you would have fallen in love with me," coquettishly.
"Would not that have been desirable? Is it not a good thing for a man to fall in love with the woman he is going to marry?"
"Not unless the woman falls in love with him," with a little expressive nod that speaks volumes.
"Ah! true," says Sir Penthony, rather nettled.
"However, you showed no vulgar curiosity on the occasion, although I think Mr. Lowry, who supported you at the last moment, suggested the advisability of seeing your bride. Ah, that reminds me he lives near here. You will be glad to renew acquaintance with so particular a friend."
"There was nothing particular about our friends.h.i.+p; I met him by chance in London at the time, and--er--he did as well as any other fellow."
Molly Bawn Part 41
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Molly Bawn Part 41 summary
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