Hopes and Fears Part 49
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she answered, with vexation in her tone.
'I'll be here by eleven or twelve,' he replied, avoiding the altercation; 'but I must get back now. I shall be waited for.'
'Who is it that can't wait?' asked Rashe.
'Oh! just an English acquaintance of mine. There, goodbye. I wish I had come in time to surprise the modern St. Kevin! Are you sure there was no drowning in the lake?'
'You know it was blessed to drown no one after Kathleen.'
'Rea.s.suring! Only mind you put a chapter about it into the tour.' Under the cover of these words he was gone.
'I declare there's some mystery about his companion!' exclaimed Horatia.
'Suppose it were Calthorp himself?'
'Owen is not so lost to respect for his sister.'
'But did you not see how little he was surprised, and how much preoccupied?'
'Very likely; but no one but you could imagine him capable of such an outrage.'
'You have been crazy ever since you entered Ireland, and expect every one else to be the same. Seriously, what damage did you antic.i.p.ate from a little civility?'
'If you begin upon that, I shall go out and finish my sketch, and not unpack one of the boxes.'
Nevertheless, Lucilla spent much fretting guesswork on her cousin's surmise. She relied too much on Owen's sense of propriety to entertain the idea that he could be forwarding a pursuit so obviously insolent, but a still wilder conjecture had been set afloat in her mind. Could the nameless one be Robert Fulmort? Though aware of the anonymous nature of brother's friends, the secrecy struck her as unusually guarded; and to one so used to devotion, it seemed no extraordinary homage that another admirer should be drawn along at a respectful distance, a satellite to her erratic course; nay, probably all had been concerted in Woolstone-lane, and therewith the naughty girl crested her head, and prepared to take offence. After all, it could not be, or why should Owen have been bent on returning, and be so independent of her? Far more probably he had met a college friend or a Westminster schoolfellow, some of whom were in regiments quartered in Ireland, and on the morrow would bring him to do the lions of Glendalough, among which might be reckoned the Angel Anglers!
That possibility might have added some grains to the satisfaction of making a respectable toilette next day. Certain it is that Miss Sandbrook's mountain costume was an exquisite feat of elaborate simplicity, and that the completion of her sketch was interrupted by many a backward look down the pa.s.s, and many a contradictory mood, sometimes boding almost as harsh a reception for Robert as for Mr. Calthorp, sometimes relenting in the thrill of hope, sometimes accusing herself of arrant folly, and expecting as a _pis aller_ the diversion of dazzling and tormenting an Oxonian, or a soldier or two! Be the meeting what it might, she preferred that it should be out of Horatia's sight, and so drew on and on to the detriment of her distances.
Positively it was past twelve, and the desire to be surprised unconcernedly occupied could no longer obviate her restlessness, so she packed up her hair-pencil, and, walking back to the inn, found Rashe in solitary possession of the coffee-room.
'You have missed him, Cilly.'
'Owen? No one else?'
'No, not the Calthorp; I am sorry for you.'
'But who was here? tell me, Rashe.'
'Owen, I tell you,' repeated Horatia, playing with her impatience.
'Tell me; I will know whether he has any one with him.'
'Alack for your disappointment, for the waste of that blue bow; not a soul came here but himself.'
'And where is he? how did I miss him?' said Lucilla, forcibly repressing the mortification for which her cousin was watching.
'Gone. As I was not in travelling trim, and you not forthcoming, he could not wait; but we are to be off to-morrow at ten o'clock.'
'Why did he not come out to find me? Did you tell him I was close by?'
'He had to join his friend, and go to the Vale of Avoca. I've found out the man, Cilla. No, don't look so much on the _qui vive_; it's only Jack Hastings!'
'Jack Hastings!' said Lucilla, her looks fallen. 'No wonder he would not bring him here.'
'Why not, poor fellow? I used to know him very well before he was up the spout.'
'I wish Owen had not fallen in with him,' said the sister, gravely. 'Are you certain it is so, Rashe?'
'I taxed him with it, and he did not deny it; only put it from him, laughing. What's the harm? Poor Jack was always a good-natured, honourable fellow, uncommonly clever and amusing--a well-read man, too; and Owen is safe enough--no one could try to borrow of him.'
'What would Honor's feelings be?' said Lucilla, with more fellow-feeling for her than for months past. Lax as was the sister's tolerance, she was startled at his becoming the a.s.sociate of an avowedly loose character under the stigma of the world, and with perilous abilities and agreeableness; and it was another of Horatia's offences against proper feeling, not only to regard such evil communications with indifference, but absolutely to wish to be brought into contact with a person of this description in their present isolated state. Displeased and uneasy, Lucilla a.s.sumed the _role_ of petulance and quarrelsomeness for the rest of the day, and revenged herself to the best of her abilities upon Rashe and Owen, by refusing to go to inspect the scene of Kathleen's fatal repulse.
True to his appointment, Owen arrived alone on a car chosen with all regard to Horatia's comfort, and was most actively attentive in settling on it the ladies and their luggage, stretching himself out on the opposite side, his face raised to the clouds, as he whistled an air; but his eye was still restless, and his sister resolved on questioning him.
Opportunities were, however, rare; whether or not with the design of warding off a _tete-a-tete_, he devoted himself to his cousin's service in a manner rare to her since she had laid herself out to be treated as though her name were Horace instead of Horatia. However, Lucilla was not the woman to be balked of a settled purpose; and at their hotel, at Dublin, she nailed him fast by turning back on him when Horatia bade them good night. 'Well, what do you want?' he asked, annoyed.
'I want to speak to you.'
'I hope it is to beg me to write to ask Honor to receive you at home, and promise to behave like a decent and respectable person.'
'I want neither a judge nor an intercessor in you.'
'Come, Lucy, it really would be for every one's good if you would go and take care of poor Honor. You have been using her vilely, and I should think you'd had enough of Rashe for one while.'
'If I have used her vilely, at least I have dealt openly by her,' said Lucilla. 'She has always seen the worst of me on the surface. Can you bear to talk of her when you know how you are treating her?'
He coloured violently, and his furious gesture would have intimidated most sisters; but she stood her ground, and answered his stammering demand what she dared to imply.
'You may go into a pa.s.sion, but you cannot hinder me from esteeming it shameful to make her mission a cover for a.s.sociating with one whom she would regard with so much horror as Jack Hastings.'
'Jack Hastings!' cried Owen, to her amazement, bursting into a fit of laughter, loud, long, and explosive. 'Well done, Rashe!'
'You told her so!'
'She told me so, and one does not contradict a lady.'
'Something must have put it into her head.'
'Only to be accounted for by an unrequited attachment,' laughed Owen; 'depend on it, a comparison of dates would show Hastings's incarceration to have been the epoch of Rashe's taking to the high masculine line--
'"If e'er she loved, 'twas him alone Who lived within the jug of stone."'
'For shame, Owen; Rashe never was in love.'
But he went on laughing at Rashe's disappointment at his solitary arrival till she said, tartly, 'You cannot wonder at our thinking you must have some reason for neither mentioning your companion's name nor bringing him with you.'
'In fact, no man not under a cloud could abstain from paying homage to the queen of the anglers.'
It was so true as to raise an angry spot on her cheek, and provoke the hasty excuse, 'It would have been obvious to have brought your friend to see your cousin and sister.'
Hopes and Fears Part 49
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Hopes and Fears Part 49 summary
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