<p><SPAN name="c59" id="c59"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h4>CHAPTER LIX.</h4>
<h3>MOLLY GIBSON AT HAMLEY HALL.<br/> </h3>
<p>The conversation ended there for the time. Wedding-cake and wine were
brought in, and it was Molly's duty to serve them out. But those last
words of Mrs. Goodenough's tingled in her ears, and she tried to
interpret them to her own satisfaction in any way but the obvious
one. And that, too, was destined to be confirmed; for directly after
Mrs. Goodenough took her leave, Mrs. Gibson desired Molly to carry
away the tray to a table close to an open corner window, where the
things might be placed in readiness for any future callers; and
underneath this open window went the path from the house-door to the
road. Molly heard Mrs. Goodenough saying to her
grand-<span class="nowrap">daughter,—</span></p>
<p>"That Mrs. Gibson is a deep 'un. There's Mr. Roger Hamley as like as
not to have the Hall estate, and she sends Molly
<span class="nowrap">a-visiting—"</span> and
then she passed out of hearing. Molly could have burst out crying,
with a full sudden conviction of what Mrs. Goodenough had been
alluding to: her sense of the impropriety of Molly's going to visit
at the Hall when Roger was at home. To be sure, Mrs. Goodenough was a
commonplace, unrefined woman. Mrs. Gibson did not seem to have even
noticed the allusion. Mr. Gibson took it all as a matter of course
that Molly should go to the Hall as simply now, as she had done
before. Roger had spoken of it in so straightforward a manner as
showed he had no conception of its being an impropriety,—this
visit,—this visit until now so happy a subject of anticipation.
Molly felt as if she could never speak to any one of the idea to
which Mrs. Goodenough's words had given rise; as if she could never
be the first to suggest the notion of impropriety, which presupposed
what she blushed to think of. Then she tried to comfort herself by
reasoning. If it had been wrong, forward, or indelicate, really
improper in the slightest degree, who would have been so ready as her
father to put his veto upon it? But reasoning was of no use after
Mrs. Goodenough's words had put fancies into Molly's head. The more
she bade these fancies begone the more they answered her (as Daniel
O'Rourke did the man in the moon, when he bade Dan get off his seat
on the sickle, and go into empty space):—"The more ye ask us the
more we won't stir." One may smile at a young girl's miseries of this
kind; but they are very real and stinging miseries to her. All that
Molly could do was to resolve on a single eye to the dear old Squire,
and his mental and bodily comforts; to try and heal up any breaches
which might have occurred between him and Aimée; and to ignore Roger
as much as possible. Good Roger! Kind Roger! Dear Roger! It would be
very hard to avoid him as much as was consistent with common
politeness; but it would be right to do it; and when she was with him
she must be as natural as possible, or he might observe some
difference; but what was natural? How much ought she avoid being with
him? Would he even notice if she was more chary of her company, more
calculating of her words? Alas! the simplicity of their intercourse
was spoilt henceforwards! She made laws for herself; she resolved to
devote herself to the Squire and to Aimée, and to forget Mrs.
Goodenough's foolish speeches; but her perfect freedom was gone; and
with it half her chance—that is to say, half her chance would have
been lost over any strangers who had not known her before; they would
probably have thought her stiff and awkward, and apt to say things
and then retract them. But she was so different from her usual self
that Roger noticed the change in her as soon as she arrived at the
Hall. She had carefully measured out the days of her visit; they were
to be exactly the same number as she had spent at the Towers. She
feared lest if she stayed at the Hall a shorter time the Squire might
be annoyed. Yet how charming the place looked in its early autumnal
glow as she drove up! And there was Roger at the hall-door, waiting
to receive her, watching for her coming. And now he retreated,
apparently to summon his sister-in-law, who came now timidly forwards
in her deep widow's mourning, holding her boy in her arms as if to
protect her shyness; but he struggled down, and ran towards the
carriage, eager to greet his friend the coachman, and to obtain a
promised ride. Roger did not say much himself; he wanted to make
Aimée feel her place as daughter of the house; but she was too timid
to speak much. And she only took Molly by the hand and led her into
the drawing-room, where, as if by a sudden impulse of gratitude for
all the tender nursing she had received during her illness, she put
her arms round Molly and kissed her long and well. And after that
they came to be friends.</p>
<p>It was nearly lunch-time, and the Squire always made his appearance
at that meal, more for the pleasure of seeing his grandson eat his
dinner than for any hunger of his own. To-day Molly quickly saw the
whole state of the family affairs. She thought that even had Roger
said nothing about them at the Towers, she should have seen that
neither the father nor the daughter-in-law had as yet found the clue
to each other's characters, although they had now been living for
several months in the same house. Aimée seemed to forget her English
in her nervousness; and to watch with the jealous eyes of a
dissatisfied mother all the proceedings of the Squire towards her
little boy. They were not of the wisest kind, it must be owned; the
child sipped the strong ale with evident relish and clamoured for
everything which he saw the others enjoying. Aimée could hardly
attend to Molly for her anxiety as to what her boy was doing and
eating; yet she said nothing. Roger took the end of the table
opposite to that at which sat grandfather and grandchild. After the
boy's first wants were gratified the Squire addressed himself to
Molly.</p>
<p>"Well! and so you can come here a-visiting though you have been among
the grand folks. I thought you were going to cut us, Miss Molly, when
I heard you was gone to the Towers. Couldn't find any other place to
stay at while father and mother were away, but an earl's, eh?"</p>
<p>"They asked me, and I went," said Molly; "now you've asked me, and
I've come here."</p>
<p>"I think you might ha' known you'd be always welcome here, without
waiting for asking. Why, Molly! I look upon you as a kind of a
daughter more than Madam there!" dropping his voice a little, and
perhaps supposing that the child's babble would drown the
signification of his words.—"Nay, you needn't look at me so
pitifully, she doesn't follow English readily."</p>
<p>"I think she does!" said Molly, in a low voice,—not looking up,
however, for fear of catching another glimpse at Aimée's sudden
forlornness of expression and deepened colour. She felt grateful, as
if for a personal favour, when she heard Roger speaking to Aimée the
moment afterwards in the tender tones of brotherly friendliness; and
presently these two were sufficiently engaged in a separate
conversation to allow Molly and the Squire to go on talking.</p>
<p>"He's a sturdy chap, isn't he?" said the Squire, stroking the little
Roger's curly head. "And he can puff four puffs at grandpapa's pipe
without being sick, can't he?"</p>
<p>"I s'ant puff any more puffs," said the boy, resolutely. "Mamma says
'No.' I s'ant."</p>
<p>"That's just like her!" said the Squire, dropping his voice this time
however. "As if it could do the child any harm!"</p>
<p>Molly made a point of turning the conversation from all personal
subjects after this, and kept the Squire talking about the progress
of his drainage during the rest of lunch. He offered to take her to
see it; and she acceded to the proposal, thinking, meantime, how
little she need have anticipated the being thrown too intimately with
Roger, who seemed to devote himself to his sister-in-law. But, in the
evening, when Aimée had gone upstairs to put her boy to bed, and the
Squire was asleep in his easy-chair, a sudden flush of memory brought
Mrs. Goodenough's words again to her mind. She was virtually
tête-à-tête with Roger, as she had been dozens of times before, but
now she could not help assuming an air of constraint; her eyes did
not meet his in the old frank way; she took up a book at a pause in
the conversation, and left him puzzled and annoyed at the change in
her manner. And so it went on during all the time of her visit. If
sometimes she forgot, and let herself go into all her old
naturalness, by-and-by she checked herself, and became comparatively
cold and reserved. Roger was pained at all this—more pained day
after day; more anxious to discover the cause. Aimée, too, silently
noticed how different Molly became in Roger's presence. One day she
could not help saying to
<span class="nowrap">Molly,—</span></p>
<p>"Don't you like Roger? You would, if you only knew how good he is! He
is learned, but that is nothing: it is his goodness that one admires
and loves."</p>
<p>"He is very good," said Molly. "I have known him long enough to know
that."</p>
<p>"But you don't think him agreeable? He is not like my poor husband,
to be sure; and you knew him well, too. Ah! tell me about him once
again. When you first knew him? When his mother was alive?"</p>
<p>Molly had grown very fond of Aimée; when the latter was at her ease
she had very charming and attaching ways; but feeling uneasy in her
position in the Squire's house, she was almost repellent to him; and
he, too, put on his worst side to her. Roger was most anxious to
bring them together, and had several consultations with Molly as to
the best means of accomplishing this end. As long as they talked upon
this subject, she spoke to him in the quiet sensible manner which she
inherited from her father; but when their discussions on this point
were ended, she fell back into her piquant assumption of dignified
reserve. It was very difficult for her to maintain this strange
manner, especially when once or twice she fancied that it gave him
pain; and she would go into her own room and suddenly burst into
tears on these occasions, and wish that her visit was ended, and that
she was once again in the eventless tranquillity of her own home. Yet
presently her fancy changed, and she clung to the swiftly passing
hours, as if she would still retain the happiness of each. For,
unknown to her, Roger was exerting himself to make her visit
pleasant. He was not willing to appear as the instigator of all the
little plans for each day, for he felt as if, somehow, he did not
hold the same place in her regard as formerly. Still, one day Aimée
suggested a nutting expedition—another day they gave little Roger
the unheard-of pleasure of tea out-of-doors—there was something else
agreeable for a third; and it was Roger who arranged all these simple
pleasures—such as he knew Molly would enjoy. But to her he only
appeared as the ready forwarder of Aimée's devices. The week was
nearly gone, when one morning the Squire found Roger sitting in the
old library—with a book before him, it is true, but so deep in
thought that he was evidently startled by his father's unexpected
entrance.</p>
<p>"I thought I should find thee here, my lad! We'll have the old room
done up again before winter; it smells musty enough, and yet I see
it's the place for thee! I want thee to go with me round the
five-acre. I'm thinking of laying it down in grass. It's time for you
to be getting into the fresh air, you look quite wobegone over books,
books, books; there never was a thing like 'em for stealing a man's
health out of him!"</p>
<p>So Roger went out with his father, without saying many words till
they were at some distance from the house. Then he brought out a
sentence with such abruptness that he repaid his father for the start
the latter had given him a quarter of an hour before.</p>
<p>"Father, you remember I'm going out again to the Cape next month! You
spoke of doing up the library. If it is for me, I shall be away all
the winter."</p>
<p>"Can't you get off it?" pleaded his father. "I thought maybe you'd
forgotten all about it."</p>
<p>"Not likely!" said Roger, half smiling.</p>
<p>"Well, but they might have found another man to finish up your work."</p>
<p>"No one can finish it but myself. Besides, an engagement is an
engagement. When I wrote to Lord Hollingford to tell him I must come
home, I promised to go out again for another six months."</p>
<p>"Ay. I know. And perhaps it will put it out of thy mind. It will
always be hard on me to part from thee. But I daresay it's best for
you."</p>
<p>Roger's colour deepened. "You are alluding to—to Miss
Kirkpatrick—Mrs. Henderson, I mean. Father, let me tell you once for
all, I think that was rather a hasty affair. I'm pretty sure now that
we were not suited to each other. I was wretched when I got her
letter—at the Cape I mean—but I believe it was for the best."</p>
<p>"That's right. That's my own boy," said the Squire turning round and
shaking hands with his son with vehemence. "And now I'll tell you
what I heard the other day, when I was at the magistrates' meeting.
They were all saying she had jilted Preston."</p>
<p>"I don't want to hear anything against her; she may have her faults,
but I can never forget how I once loved her."</p>
<p>"Well, well! Perhaps it's right. I was not so bad about it, was I,
Roger? Poor Osborne need not ha' been so secret with me. I asked your
Miss Cynthia out here—and her mother and all—my bark is worse than
my bite. For, if I had a wish on earth, it was to see Osborne married
as befitted one of an old stock, and he went and chose out this
French girl, of no family at all, only
<span class="nowrap">a—"</span></p>
<p>"Never mind what she was; look at what she is! I wonder you are not
more taken with her humility and sweetness, father!"</p>
<p>"I don't even call her pretty," said the Squire uneasily, for he
dreaded a repetition of the arguments which Roger had often used to
make him give Aimée her proper due of affection and position. "Now
your Miss Cynthia was pretty, I will say that for her, the baggage!
And to think that when you two lads flew right in your father's face,
and picked out girls below you in rank and family, you should neither
of you have set your fancies on my little Molly there. I daresay I
should ha' been angry enough at the time, but the lassie would ha'
found her way to my heart, as never this French lady, nor t' other
one, could ha' done."</p>
<p>Roger did not answer.</p>
<p>"I don't see why you mightn't put up for her still. I'm humble enough
now, and you're not heir as Osborne was who married a servant-maid.
Don't you think you could turn your thoughts upon Molly Gibson,
Roger?"</p>
<p>"No!" said Roger, shortly. "It's too late—too late. Don't let us
talk any more of my marrying. Isn't this the five-acre field?" And
soon he was discussing the relative values of meadow, arable and
pasture land with his father, as heartily as if he had never known
Molly, or loved Cynthia. But the squire was not in such good spirits,
and went but heavily into the discussion. At the end of it he said
àpropos de
<span class="nowrap">bottes,—</span></p>
<p>"But don't you think you could like her if you tried, Roger?"</p>
<p>Roger knew perfectly well to what his father was alluding, but for an
instant he was on the point of pretending to misunderstand. At
length, however, he said, in a low
<span class="nowrap">voice,—</span></p>
<p>"I shall never try, father. Don't let us talk any more about it. As I
said before, it's too late."</p>
<p>The Squire was like a child to whom some toy has been refused; from
time to time the thought of his disappointment in this matter
recurred to his mind; and then he took to blaming Cynthia as the
primary cause of Roger's present indifference to womankind.</p>
<p>It so happened that on Molly's last morning at the Hall, she received
her first letter from Cynthia—Mrs. Henderson. It was just before
breakfast-time; Roger was out of doors, Aimée had not as yet come
down; Molly was alone in the dining-room, where the table was already
laid. She had just finished reading her letter when the Squire came
in, and she immediately and joyfully told him what the morning had
brought to her. But when she saw the Squire's face, she could have
bitten her tongue out for having named Cynthia's name to him. He
looked vexed and depressed.</p>
<p>"I wish I might never hear of her again—I do. She's been the bane of
my Roger, that's what she has. I haven't slept half the night, and
it's all her fault. Why, there's my boy saying now that he has no
heart for ever marrying, poor lad! I wish it had been you, Molly, my
lads had taken a fancy for. I told Roger so t'other day, and I said
that for all you were beneath what I ever thought to see them
marry,—well—it's of no use—it's too late, now, as he said. Only
never let me hear that baggage's name again, that's all, and no
offence to you either, lassie. I know you love the wench; but if
you'll take an old man's word, you're worth a score of her. I wish
young men would think so too," he muttered as he went to the
side-table to carve the ham, while Molly poured out the tea—her
heart very hot all the time, and effectually silenced for a space. It
was with the greatest difficulty that she could keep tears of
mortification from falling. She felt altogether in a wrong position
in that house, which had been like a home to her until this last
visit. What with Mrs. Goodenough's remarks, and now this speech of
the Squire's, implying—at least to her susceptible imagination—that
his father had proposed her as a wife to Roger, and that she had been
rejected—she was more glad than she could express, or even think,
that she was going home this very morning. Roger came in from his
walk while she was in this state of feeling. He saw in an instant
that something had distressed Molly; and he longed to have the old
friendly right of asking her what it was. But she had effectually
kept him at too great a distance during the last few days for him to
feel at liberty to speak to her in the old straightforward brotherly
way; especially now, when he perceived her efforts to conceal her
feelings, and the way in which she drank her tea in feverish haste,
and accepted bread only to crumble it about her plate, untouched. It
was all that he could do to make talk under these circumstances; but
he backed up her efforts as well as he could until Aimée came down,
grave and anxious: her boy had not had a good night, and did not seem
well; he had fallen into a feverish sleep now, or she could not have
left him. Immediately the whole table was in a ferment. The Squire
pushed away his plate, and could eat no more; Roger was trying to
extract a detail or a fact out of Aimée, who began to give way to
tears. Molly quickly proposed that the carriage, which had been
ordered to take her home at eleven, should come round
immediately—she had everything ready packed up, she said,—and bring
back her father at once. By leaving directly, she said, it was
probable they might catch him after he had returned from his morning
visits in the town, and before he had set off on his more distant
round. Her proposal was agreed to, and she went upstairs to put on
her things. She came down all ready into the drawing-room, expecting
to find Aimée and the Squire there; but during her absence word had
been brought to the anxious mother and grandfather that the child had
wakened up in a panic, and both had rushed up to their darling. But
Roger was in the drawing-room awaiting Molly, with a large bunch of
the choicest flowers.</p>
<p>"Look, Molly!" said he, as she was on the point of leaving the room
again, on finding him there alone. "I gathered these flowers for you
before breakfast." He came to meet her reluctant advance.</p>
<p>"Thank you!" said she. "You are very kind. I am very much obliged to
you."</p>
<p>"Then you must do something for me," said he, determined not to
notice the restraint of her manner, and making the re-arrangement of
the flowers which she held a sort of link between them, so that she
could not follow her impulse, and leave the room.</p>
<p>"Tell me,—honestly as I know you will if you speak at all,—haven't
I done something to vex you since we were so happy at the Towers
together?"</p>
<p>His voice was so kind and true,—his manner so winning yet wistful,
that Molly would have been thankful to tell him all. She believed
that he could have helped her more than any one to understand how she
ought to behave rightly; he would have disentangled her fancies,—if
only he himself had not lain at the very core and centre of all her
perplexity and dismay. How could she tell him of Mrs. Goodenough's
words troubling her maiden modesty? How could she ever repeat what
his father had said that morning, and assure him that she, no more
than he, wished that their old friendliness should be troubled by the
thought of a nearer relationship?</p>
<p>"No, you never vexed me in my whole life, Roger," said she, looking
straight at him for the first time for many days.</p>
<p>"I believe you, because you say so. I have no right to ask further.
Molly, will you give me back one of those flowers, as a pledge of
what you have said?"</p>
<p>"Take whichever you like," said she, eagerly offering him the whole
nosegay to choose from.</p>
<p>"No; you must choose, and you must give it me."</p>
<p>Just then the Squire came in. Roger would have been glad if Molly had
not gone on so eagerly to ransack the bunch for the choicest flower
in his father's presence; but she exclaimed:</p>
<p>"Oh, please, Mr. Hamley, do you know which is Roger's favourite
flower?"</p>
<p>"No. A rose, I daresay. The carriage is at the door, and, Molly my
dear, I don't want to hurry you,
<span class="nowrap">but—"</span></p>
<p>"I know. Here, Roger,—here is a rose!</p>
<div class="center">
<table style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0"><tr><td>
("And red as a rose was she.")
</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p class="noindent">I will find
papa as soon as ever I get home. How is the little boy?"</p>
<p>"I'm afraid he's beginning of some kind of a fever."</p>
<p>And the Squire took her to the carriage, talking all the way of the
little boy; Roger following, and hardly heeding what he was doing in
the answer to the question he kept asking himself: "Too late—or not?
Can she ever forget that my first foolish love was given to one so
different?"</p>
<p>While she, as the carriage rolled away, kept saying to herself,—"We
are friends again. I don't believe he will remember what the dear
Squire took it into his head to suggest for many days. It is so
pleasant to be on the old terms again! and what lovely flowers!"</p>
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