<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
<p class="p2">Mrs. Nowell Corklemore by this time was
well established at the Hall, and did not mean in
her kind rich heart to quit the place prematurely.
Almost every day, however, she made some feint
of departure, which rendered every one more alive
to the value of her presence.</p>
<p>“How could her dear Nowell exist without her?
She felt quite sure he would come that day—yes,
that very day—to fetch her, in their little simple
carriage, that did shake her poor back so dreadfully”—back
thrown into prominence here, being
an uncommonly pretty one—“but oh, how thankful
she ought to be for having a carriage at all,
and so many poor things—quite as good, quite as
refined, and delicate—could scarcely afford a perambulator!
But she hoped for dear Sir Cradockʼs
sake, and that sweet simple–minded Eoa—who
really did require some little cultivation—that,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</SPAN></span>
now she understood them both, and could do her
little of ministering, Mr. Corklemore would let her
stay, if it were only two days longer. And then
her Flore, her sweet little Flore! An angel of
light among them.”</p>
<p>Georgie had been married twice; and she was
just the sort of woman who would have been married
a dozen times, if a dozen, save one, of husbands
were so unfortunate as to leave her. Her
first lord, or rather vassal, had been the Count de
Vance—“a beggarly upstart Frenchman,” in the
language of his successor, who, by–the–by, had
never seen, but heard of him too often; but,
according to better authority, “a man one could
truly look up to; so warm–hearted, so agreeable;
and never for a moment tired, dear, of his poor
little simple wife.”</p>
<p>Perhaps it is needless to state that Mr. Corklemore
long had been so scientifically henpecked that
he loved the operation. Only he was half afraid
to say “Haw,” when his wife was there to cry
“Pshaw.”</p>
<p>Sir Cradock Nowell, of course, had seen a good
deal of what is called the world; but his knowledge
of women was only enough to teach him the extent
of that subject. He never was surprised much at
anything they did; but he could not pretend to
tell the reason of their doing it, even when they
had any, of which he did not often suspect them.
He believed that they would have their way, whenever
they could, wherever, and by whatever means;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</SPAN></span>
that very few of them meant what they said, and
none of them knew what they meant; that the
primal elements, in the entire body feminine, were
jealousy, impulsiveness, vanity, and contrariety.</p>
<p>Georgie Corklemore soon found out that he had
adopted this, the popular male opinion; and she
did not once attempt to remove it, knowing, as she
did, that nothing could be more favourable to her
purposes. So she took up the part—which suited
her as well as any, and enabled her to say many
things which else would have given offence—the
part of the soft, impulsive, warm–hearted, foolish
woman, who is apt among men to become a great
pet, if she happens to be good–looking.</p>
<p>Eoa would gladly have yielded her prerogatives
to Georgie, but Mrs. Corklemore was too wide
awake to accept any one of them. “No, darling,”
she replied, “for your own sake I will not. It is
true that Uncle Cradock wishes it, and so, no doubt,
do you; but you are bound to acquire all this
social knowledge of which you have now so little;
and how can you do so except by instruction and
practice?”</p>
<p>“Oh,” cried Eoa, firing up, “if Uncle Cradock
wishes it, I am sure Iʼll leave it to you, and not be
laughed at any longer. Iʼll go to him at once, and
tell him so. And, as for being bound, I <i>wonʼt</i> be
bound to learn any nonsense I donʼt like. My
papa was as wise as any of you, and a great deal
better; and he never made such a fuss about
rubbish as you do here<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</SPAN></span>.”</p>
<p>“Stop, sweet child, stop a moment——”</p>
<p>“I am not a sweet child, and I wonʼt stop. And
another thing Iʼll tell you. I had made up my
mind to it before this, mind—before you tried to
turn me out of my place—and itʼs this. You may
call me what you like, but I donʼt mean to call you
‘Cousin Georgie’ any longer. In the first place, I
donʼt like you, and never shall as long as I live;
for I never half believe you: and, in the next
place, you are no cousin of mine; and social usage
(or whatever it is you are always bothering me
about) may require me to tell some stories, but not
that one, I should fancy. Or, at any rate, I wonʼt
do it.”</p>
<p>“Very well,” replied Mrs. Corklemore, looking
up from the softest of fancy–work, with the very
sweetest of smiles; “then I shall be obliged, in
self–defence, to address you as ‘Miss Nowell.’”</p>
<p>“To be sure. Why shouldnʼt you?”</p>
<p>“Well, it can be shown, perhaps, that you are
entitled to the name. Only at first it will seem
absurd when applied to a baby like you.”</p>
<p>“A baby like me, indeed!” This was Eoaʼs
sore point; and Georgie, who delighted in making
her outrageous, was always harping upon it. “Mrs.
Corklemore, how dare you call me, at my age, a
baby?”</p>
<p>Eoa looked down at Georgie, with great eyes
flashing fire, and her clear, bright forehead wrinkling,
and her light form poised like an antelopeʼs<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</SPAN></span>
on the edge of a cliff. Mrs. Corklemore, not
thinking it worth while to look up at her, carelessly
threw back a curl, and went on with her rug–work.</p>
<p>“Because you are a baby, and nothing more,
Eoa.”</p>
<p>In a moment she was tossed through the air, and
sitting on Eoaʼs head, low satin chair and all. She
had not time to shriek, so rapid was her elation.
Little Flore, running in at the moment, clapped
her hands and shouted, “Oh, ma, have a yide, a
nice yide, same as me have yesterday. Me next,
me next. Oh, ah!”</p>
<p>Eoa, with the greatest ease, her figure as straight
as a poplar–tree, bore the curule chair and its occupant
to the end of the room, and there deposited
them carefully on a semi–grand piano.</p>
<p>“Thatʼs how we nurse the babies in India,” she
cried, with a smile of sweet temper, “but it takes
a big baby to do it, and some practice, I can tell
you. Now, Iʼll not let you down, Mrs. Corklemore,—and
if visitors come in, what will they
think of our social usages? Down you donʼt come,
till you have promised solemnly never to call me a
baby again.”</p>
<p>“My dear,” began Georgie, trying hard not to
look ridiculous—though the position was so unfavourable—“my
dear child——”</p>
<p>“No, not my dear child, even! <i>Miss Nowell</i>,
if you please, and nothing else<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</SPAN></span>.”</p>
<p>“Miss Nowell, if you will only lift me down—oh,
it is polished so nastily, I am slipping off already—I
will promise solemnly to call you only
what you like, all the rest of my life.”</p>
<p>Eoa lifted her off in an instant. “But mind, I
will be even with you,” cried Georgie, through her
terror, when safe on the floor once more.</p>
<p>“I donʼt care <i>that</i> for you,” answered Eoa, snapping
her fingers like a copper–cap; “only I will
have proper respect shown to me by people I particularly
dislike. People I love may call me what,
or do with me what, they please. My father was
just the same; and I donʼt want to be any better
than he was; and I donʼt believe God wants it.”</p>
<p>“He must be easily contented, then.”</p>
<p>Georgie, with all her deliciousness, could never
pass a chance of sarcasm.</p>
<p>“Now Iʼll go and have it out with Uncle Cradock,
about having you for my ayah.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Corklemore trembled far more at those
words than at finding herself on the piano. This
strange girl—whom she had so despised—was
baffling all her tactics, and with no other sword
and shield but those of truth and candour.</p>
<p>“Iʼve been a fool,” said Georgie to herself, for
about the first time in her life; “I have strangely
underrated this girl, and shall have hard work
now to get round her. But it must be done.
Come, though I have been so rash, I have two to
one in my favour, now I see the way to handle it.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</SPAN></span>
But she must not tell the old noodle; that will
never do.”</p>
<p>“I thought, Miss Nowell,” she continued aloud,
“that it would not be considered honourable, even
among East Indians, to repeat to a third person
what was said familiarly and in confidence.”</p>
<p>“Of course not. What makes you speak of
it? Do you mean to say I would do such a
thing?”</p>
<p>“No, I am sure you would not, knowingly.
But if you think for a moment, you will see that
what I said just now, especially as to Sir Cradockʼs
opinions, was told to you in pure confidence, and
meant to go no further.”</p>
<p>“Oh,” answered Eoa, “then please not to tell
me anything in pure confidence again, because I
canʼt keep secrets, and you have no right to load
me with them, without ever asking my leave even.
But Iʼll try not to let it out, unless you provoke
me before him.”</p>
<p>With this half promise Georgie was obliged to
be content. She knew well enough that, if Eoa
brought the question before her uncle, the truth
would come out that Sir Cradock had never
dreamed for a moment of substituting Georgie,
the daughter of his cousin, for Eoa, the only
daughter of his only brother Clayton. He knew,
of course, that the Eastern maiden had no artificial
polish; but he saw that she had an inborn
truth, a delicacy of feeling, and a native sympathy,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</SPAN></span>
which wanted only experience to be better
than any polish.</p>
<p>From that day forth, Mrs. Corklemore (aided
perhaps by physical terror) formed a higher
estimate of Eoaʼs powers. So she changed her
tactics altogether, and employed her daughter,
that sharp little Flore, to cover the next advance.
Flore was a little beauty; so far as anything
artificial can be really beautiful. Dressed, as she
was, in the height of French fashion, and herself
nine–tenths of a Frenchwoman—for there is no
such thing as a French <i>girl</i>, as we Englishmen
understand girlhood—she always looked like a
butterfly, just born in and just about to pop out
of a bower; for little Flore was “divinely beautiful.”</p>
<p>This angel was now nearly four years old,
and would look at you with the loveliest eyes that
ever appealed from the cradle to heaven, and
throw her exaggerated little figure back, and tell
you the biggest lie that an angel ever wiped her
mouth over. Oh, you lovely child! I would
rather have Loo Jupp, who knows a number of
bad words, which you would faint to hear of.
But Loo wonʼt tell a lie. Her father beat her out
of it the very first time she tried.</p>
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