书城公版WIVES AND DAUGHTERS
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第38章 FORESHADOWS OF LOVE PERILS (4)

The words were not quite an inquiry, he was so certain of his answer.There was a mixture of tenderness and trust in his eyes, as he awaited the reply, which came in a moment.'She's a darling! I cannot tell you how fond the squire and I are of her;both of us.I am so delighted to think she is not to go away for a long time.The first thing I thought of this morning when I wakened up, was that she would soon have to return to you, unless I could persuade you into leaving her with me a little longer.And now she must stay - oh, two months at least.' It was quite true that the squire had become very fond of Molly.The charm of having a young girl dancing and singing inarticulate ditties about the house and garden, was indescribable in its novelty to him.And then Molly was.so willing and so wise; ready both to talk and to listen at the right times.Mrs Hamley was quite right in speaking of her husband's fondness for Molly.But either she herself chose a wrong time for telling him of the prolongation of the girl's visit, or one of the fits of temper to which he was liable, but which he generally strove to check in the presence of his wife, was upon him; at any rate, he received the news in anything but a gracious frame of mind.'Stay longer! Did Gibson ask for it?' 'Yes! I don't see what else is to become of her; Miss Eyre away and all.It's a very awkward position for a motherless girl like her to be at the head of a household with two young men in it.' 'That's Gibson's look-out; he should have thought of it before taking pupils, or apprentices, or whatever he calls them.' 'My dear squire! why, I thought you'd be as glad as I was - as I am to keep Molly.I asked her to stay for an indefinite time; two months at least.' 'And to be in the house with Osborne! Roger, too, will be at home.' By the cloud in the squire's eyes, Mrs Hamley read his mind.'Oh, she's not at all the sort of girl young men of their age would take to, We like her because we see what she really is; but lads of one or two and twenty want all the accessories of a young woman.' 'Want what?' growled the squire.'Such things as becoming dress, style of manner.They would not at their age even see that she is pretty; their ideas of beauty would include colour.' 'I suppose all that's very clever; but I don't understand it.All I know is, that it's a very dangerous thing to shut two young men of one and three and twenty up in a country-house like this, with a girl of seventeen -choose what her gowns may be like, or her hair, or her eyes.And I told you particularly I didn't want Osborne, or either of them, indeed, to be falling in love with her.I'm very much annoyed.' Mrs Hamley's face fell; she became a little pale.'Shall we make arrangements for their stopping away while she is here;staying up at Cambridge, or reading with some one? going abroad for a month or two?' 'No; you've been reckoning this ever so long on their coming home.I've seen the marks of the weeks on your almanack.I'd sooner speak to Gibson, and tell him he must take his daughter away, for it's not convenient to us -- ' 'My dear Roger! I beg you will do no such thing.It will be so unkind;it will give the lie to all I said yesterday.Don't, please, do that.For my sake, don't speak to Mr Gibson!' 'Well, well, don't put yourself in a flutter,' for he was afraid of her becoming hysterical; 'I'll speak to Osborne when he comes home, and tell him how much I should dislike anything of the kind.' 'And Roger is always far too full of his natural history and comparative anatomy, and messes of that sort, to be thinking of falling in love with Venus herself, He has not the sentiment and imagination of Osborne.' 'Ah, you don't know; you never can be sure about a young man! But with Roger it wouldn't so much signify.He would know he couldn't marry for years to come.' All that afternoon the squire tried to steer clear of Molly, to whom he felt himself to have been an inhospitable traitor.But she was so perfectly unconscious of his shyness of her, and so merry and sweet in her behaviour as a welcome guest, never distrusting him for a moment, however gruff he might be, that by the next morning she had completely won him round, and they were quite on the old terms again.At breakfast this very morning, a letter was passed from the squire to his wife, and back again, without a word as to its contents; but - 'Fortunate!' 'Yes! very!' Little did Molly apply these expressions to the piece of news Mrs Hamley told her in the course of the day; namely, that her son Osborne had received an invitation to stay with a friend in the neighbourhood of Cambridge, and perhaps to make a tour on the Continent with him subsequently; and that, consequently, he would not accompany his brother when Roger came home.Molly was very sympathetic.'Oh, dear! I am so sorry!' Mrs Hamley was thankful her husband was not present, Molly spoke the words so heartily.'You have been thinking so long of his coming home.I am afraid it is a great disappointment.' Mrs Hamley smiled - relieved.'Yes! it is a disappointment certainly, but we must think of Osborne's pleasure.And with his poetical mind, he will write us such delightful travelling letters.Poor fellow! he must be going into the examination to-day! Both his father and I feel sure, though, that he will be a high wrangler.' Only - I should like to have seen him, my own dear boy.But it is best as it is.' Molly was a little puzzled by this speech, but soon put it out of her head.

It was a disappointment to her, too, that she should not see this beautiful, brilliant young man, his mother's hero.From time to time her maiden fancy had dwelt upon what he would be like; how the lovely boy of the picture in Mrs Hamley's dressing-room would have changed in the ten years that had elapsed since the likeness was taken; if he would read poetry aloud;if he would even read his own poetry.However, in the never-ending feminine business of the day, she soon forgot her own disappointment; it only came back to her on first wakening the next morning, as a vague something that was not quite so pleasant as she had anticipated, and then was banished as a subject of regret.Her days at Hamley were well filled up with the small duties that would have belonged to a daughter of the house had there been one.She made breakfast for the lonely squire, and would willingly have carried up madam's, but that daily piece of work belonged to the squire, and was jealously guarded by him.She read the smaller print of the newspapers aloud to him, city articles, money and corn-markets included.She strolled about the gardens with him, gathering fresh flowers, meanwhile, to deck the drawing-room against Mrs Hamley should come down.She was her companion when she took her drives in the close carriage; they read poetry and mild literature together in Mrs Hamley's sitting-room upstairs.She was quite clever at cribbage now, and could beat the squire if she took pains.Besides these things, there were her own independent ways of employing herself.

She used to try to practise a daily hour on the old grand piano in the solitary drawing-room, because she had promised Miss Eyre she would do so.And she had found her way into the library, and used to undo the heavy bars of the shutters if the housemaid had forgotten this duty, and mount the ladder, sitting on the steps, for an hour at a time, deep in some book of the old English classics.The summer days were very short to this happy girl of seventeen.