Hopes and Fears Part 66
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'Yes, yes, he is your brother, and all that. You may feel for him what you like. But I must say this: it was a shameful thing, and a betrayal of confidence, such as it grieves me to think of in his father's son. I am sorry for her, poor thing! whom I should have looked after better; and I am very sorry indeed for you, Cilla; but I must tell you that to bury the poor girl next to Mrs. Sandbrook, as your brother's wife, would be a scandal.'
'Don't speak so loud; he will hear.'
His mild face was unwontedly impatient as he said, 'I can see how you gave in to the wish; I don't blame you, but if you consider the example to the parish.'
'After what I told you in my letter, I don't see the evil of the example; unless it be your _esprit de corps_ about the registrar, and they could not well have requested you to officiate.'
'Cilla, you were always saucy, but this is no time for nonsense. You can't defend them.'
'Perhaps you are of your Squire's opinion--that the bad example was in the marrying her at all.'
Mr. Prendergast looked so much shocked that Lucilla felt a blush rising, conscious that the tone of the society she had of late lived with had rendered her tongue less guarded, her cheek less shamefaced than erst, but she galloped on to hide her confusion. 'You were their great cause.
If you had not gone and frightened her, they might have philandered on all this time, till the whole affair died of its own silliness.'
'Yes, no one was so much to blame as I. I will trust no living creature again. My carelessness opened the way to temptation, and Heaven knows, Lucilla, I have been infinitely more displeased with myself than with them.'
'Well, so am I with myself, for putting her in his way. Don't let us torment ourselves with playing the game backwards again--I hate it.
Let's see to the next.'
'That is what I came for. Now, Cilla, though I would gladly do what I could for poor Owen, just think what work it will make with the girls at Wrapworth, who are nonsensical enough already, to have this poor runaway brought back to be buried as the wife of a fine young gentleman.'
'Poor Edna's history is no encouragement to look out for fine young gentlemen.'
'They will know the fact, and sink the circ.u.mstances.'
'So you are so innocent as to think they don't know! Depend upon it, every house in Wrapworth rings with it; and won't it be more improving to have the poor thing's grave to point the moral?'
'Cilla, you are a little witch. You always have your way, but I don't like it. It is not the right one.'
'Not right for Owen to make full compensation? Mind, it is not Edna Murrell, the eloped schoolmistress, but Mrs. Sandbrook, whom her husband wishes to bury among his family.'
'Poor lad, is he much cut up?'
'So much that I should hardly dare tell him if you had refused. He could not bear another indignity heaped on her, and a wound from you would cut deeper than from any one else. You should remember in judging him that he had no parent to disobey, and there was generosity in taking on him the risk rather than leave her to a broken heart and your tender mercy.'
'I fear his tender mercy has turned out worse than mine; but I am sorry for all he has brought on himself, poor lad!'
'Shall I try whether he can see you?'
'No, no; I had rather not. You say young Fulmort attends to him, and I could not speak to him with patience. Five o'clock, Sat.u.r.day?'
'Yes; but that is not all. That poor child--Robert Fulmort, you, and I must be sponsors.'
'Cilla, Cilla, how can I answer how it will be brought up?'
'Some one must. Its father talks of leaving England, and it will be my charge. Will you not help me? you who always have helped me. My father's grandson; you cannot refuse him, Mr. Pendy,' said she, using their old childish name for him.
He yielded to the united influence of his rector's daughter and the memory of his rector. Though no weak man, those two appeals always swayed him; and Lucilla's air, spirited when she defended, soft when she grieved, was quite irresistible; so she gained her point, and felt restored to herself by the exercise of power, and by making her wonted impression. Since one little dog had wagged his little tail, she no longer doubted 'If I be I;' yet this only rendered her more nervously desirous of obtaining the like recognition from the other, and she positively wearied after one of Robert's old wistful looks.
A _tete-a-tete_ with him was necessary on many accounts, and she lay in wait to obtain a few moments alone with him in the study. He complied neither eagerly nor reluctantly, bowed his head without remark when she told him about the funeral, and took the sponsors.h.i.+p as a matter of course. 'Very well; I suppose there is no one else to be found. Is it your brother's thought?'
'I told him.'
'So I feared.'
'Oh! Robert, we must take double care for the poor little thing.'
'I will do my best,' he answered.
'Do you know what Owen intends?' said Lucilla, in low, alarmed accents.
'He has told you? It is a wild purpose; but I doubt whether to dissuade him, except for your sake,' he added, with his first softening towards her, like balm to the sore spot in her heart.
'Never mind me, I can take care of myself,' she said, while the muscles of her throat ached and quivered with emotion. 'I would not detain him to be pitied and forgiven.'
'Do not send him away in pride,' said Robert, sadly.
'Am I not humbled enough?' she said; and her drooping head and eye seemed to thrill him with their wonted power.
One step he made towards her, but checked himself, and said in a matter-of-fact tone, 'Currie, the architect, has a brother, a civil engineer, just going out to Canada to lay out a railway. It might be an opening for Owen to go as his a.s.sistant--unless you thought it beneath him.'
These last words were caused by an uncontrollable look of disappointment.
But it was not the proposal: no; but the change of manner that struck her. The quiet indifferent voice was like water quenching a struggling spark, but in a moment she recovered her powers. 'Beneath him! Oh, no.
I told you we were humbled. I always longed for his independence, and I am glad that he should not go alone.'
'The work would suit his mathematical and scientific turn. Then, since you do not object, I will see whether he would like it, or if it be practicable in case Miss Charlecote should approve.'
Robert seized this opportunity of concluding the interview. Lucy ran up-stairs for the fierce quarter-deck walking that served her instead of tears, as an ebullition that tired down her feelings by exhaustion.
Some of her misery was for Owen, but would the sting have been so acute had Robert Fulmort been more than the true friend?
Phoebe's warning, given in that very room, seemed engraven on each panel.
'If you go on as you are doing now, he does not think it would be right for a clergyman.'
Could Lucilla have looked through the floor, she would have seen Robert with elbows on the window-sill, and hands locked over his knitted brows; and could she have interpreted his short-drawn sighs, she would have heard, 'Poor child! poor child! It is not coquetry. That was injustice.
She loves me. She loves me still! Why do I believe it only too late?
Why is this trial sent me, since I am bound to the scheme that precludes my marriage? What use is it to see her as undisciplined--as unfit as ever? I know it! I always knew it. But I feel still a traitor to her!
She had warning! She trusted the power of my attachment in spite of my judgment! Fickle to her, or a falterer to my higher pledge? Never! I must let her see the position--crush any hope--otherwise I cannot trust myself, nor deal fairly by her. Heaven help us both!'
When they next met, Robert had propounded his Canadian project, and Owen had caught at it. Idleness had never been his fault, and he wanted severe engrossing labour to stun pain and expel thought. He was urgent to know what standard of attainments would be needful, and finding Robert ignorant on this head, seized his hat, and dashed out in the gaslight to the nearest bookseller's for a treatise on surveying.
Robert was taken by surprise, or he might have gone too. He looked as if he meditated a move, but paused as Lucy said, 'Poor fellow, how glad he is of an object!'
'May it not be to his better feelings like suns.h.i.+ne to morning dew?' said Robert, sighing. 'I hear a very high character of Mr. Currie, and a right-minded, practical, scientific man may tell more on a disposition like his--'
'Than parsons and women,' said Lucilla, with a gleam of her old archness.
'Exactly so. He must see religion in the world, not out of it.'
Hopes and Fears Part 66
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Hopes and Fears Part 66 summary
You're reading Hopes and Fears Part 66. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Charlotte M. Yonge already has 615 views.
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