<h2 id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</h2>
<h3 id="Georgie_Esmond">GEORGIE ESMOND.</h3>
<p>It suited Lisbeth to be charming this morning,
and she was really very agreeable indeed.
She knew enough of art to appear to advantage
among pictures, and she had, withal, a certain
demure and modest way of admitting her
ignorance, which was by no means unattractive.
She was bright, amiable, and, as it seemed, in
the best of spirits. She made friends with Miss
Georgie, and delighted Colonel Esmond; she
propitiated Miss Estabrook, and rendered that
inflammable elderly beau, her brother, supremely
happy by her friendly condescension; she
treated Anstruthers as if there had been no
other event in their two lives but this one
morning and this one nice little party. She
made the luncheon even more entertaining
than such small feasts usually were; in short,
she was Lisbeth Crespigny at her best, her
spiciest, and in her most engaging mood.</p>
<p>“Oh!” said that open-hearted Georgie, when
she shook hands with her as they parted—“Oh,
I have enjoyed myself so much! I am so glad
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
to have met you. I hope we shall see each
other again. Please ask me to call, Mrs. Despard,”
laughing prettily. “I should like it so
much. I do so hate to lose people whom I like.”</p>
<p>“Does that mean that you are so good as to
like me a little?” said Lisbeth, in her sweetest
tone, wondering, at the same time, how on
earth the girl could have lived so long, and yet
have retained that innocent, believing air and
impulsive way. “I hope it does.”</p>
<p>Georgie quite blushed with innocent fervor.</p>
<p>“Indeed it does,” she answered. “I should
not say it, if it did not. And I am sure that,
if I see you more, I shall like you better and
better. It is so delightful to meet somebody
one is sure one can be fond of.”</p>
<p>It was an odd thing, but as Lisbeth looked
at her for a moment, she positively felt that
she blushed faintly herself, blushed with a
sense of being a trifle ashamed of Lisbeth Crespigny.
It would be dreadful to have such
a girl as this find her out; see her just as she
was; read her record just as the past had left
it. She was half inclined to put such a thing
beyond the pale of possibility by drawing
back.</p>
<p>“I want mamma to know you,” said Georgie.
“Mamma is so fond of clever people, that it
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
makes me wish, often enough, that I was not
such an ordinary sort of girl.”</p>
<p>“We shall be delighted to see you, my dear,”
said Mrs. Despard. “You may be sure of that.
Come as soon, and as often as possible.”</p>
<p>And so the matter was decided, and Lisbeth
had not the power to draw back, if she had
determined to do so.</p>
<p>“You must have known Miss Crespigny quite
a long time,” Georgie Esmond said, cheerfully,
to Anstruthers, before she went away with her
father. “Mrs. Despard said something about
your having met her at that little Welsh place,
Pen’yllan wasn’t it? And you haven’t been at
Pen’yllan to stay for two or three years.”</p>
<p>“You ought not to have kept such a charming
creature to yourself for three years, my
boy,” said the old colonel.</p>
<p>“I should think not, indeed,” chimed in
Miss Georgie. “It was selfish, and we are
never selfish with him, are we, papa? We
show him all our nice people, don’t we?”</p>
<p>“But,” said Anstruthers, “I have not seen
Miss Crespigny once during the three years.
After leaving Pen’yllan, we lost sight of each
other, somehow or other, and did not meet
again until a short time ago, and then it was
quite by accident.”
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span></p>
<p>“It was very careless of you to lose her
then,” protested Miss Georgie. “I would not
have lost her for the world. Gentlemen are
so cold in their friendships. I don’t believe
you ever really loved any of your friends in
your life, Mr. Hector.”</p>
<p>Anstruthers smiled a satirical smile.</p>
<p>“Ought I to have loved Miss Crespigny?”
he demanded. “Ought I to begin to love her
now? If you think it is my duty, I will begin
to do it at once, Georgie.”</p>
<p>The girl shook her pretty head reproachfully.</p>
<p>“Oh!” she said, “that is always the way
you talk, you grand young gentlemen. It is
the fashion to be sarcastic, and not to admire
anybody very much, or anything but yourselves,”
saucily. “And you would sneer at
your best friends rather than not be in the
fashion. I am sure I don’t know what the
world is coming to.”</p>
<p>“Who is sarcastic now, I should like to
know?” said Anstruthers. “I think it is Miss
Georgie Esmond, who out-Herods Herod. Admire
ourselves, indeed! We only do what we
are taught to do. What women themselves
teach us——”</p>
<p>“What!” exclaimed Georgie. “Do we
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
teach you to admire yourselves, and nothing
else?”</p>
<p>“No,” was his answer. “You do not teach
us that, but you do worse. Not you, my kind,
honest Georgie, but women who would have us
believe they are as honest and tender. They
teach us that if we cling to our first beliefs, we
are fools, and deserve to be laughed at; they
teach us to sneer, and then scold us prettily for
sneering; they leave us nothing to believe in,
and then make sad, poetic speeches about our
want of faith. There are men in the world
for whom it would have been better if they had
never seen a woman.”</p>
<p>Georgie Esmond’s eyes opened wider and
wider. She did not understand such bitterness.
She was a simple, healthful-minded girl, and
had seen very little of the world but its pleasant
side.</p>
<p>“Why!” she said, “this is dreadful. And you
say it as if you actually meant it. I shall
have to talk to mamma about you, Hector.
Such cases as yours are too much for me to
deal with. What good is all your money, and
your genius, and your popularity, and—and
good looks?” making a charming, mischievous
bow. “What pleasure can you derive from
your pretty rooms, and lovely pictures, and
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
fine articles of <i xml:lang="fr">vertu</i>, if you have such wicked
thoughts as those? Somebody ought to take
your things from you, as we do Harry’s toys,
when he is willful; and they ought to be locked
up in a cupboard, until you are in a frame of
mind to enjoy them.”</p>
<p>Anstruthers looked at her sweet, bright face
with a kind of sad admiration. Why had he
not fallen in love with this girl, instead of with
the other? It was a hard fate which had led
or driven him. What a different man he might
have been, if, three years ago, Georgie Esmond
had stood in Lisbeth Crespigny’s place!</p>
<p>“You don’t quite understand, Georgie,” he
said, in a low, rather tender tone. “You are
too good and kind, my dear, to quite comprehend
what makes people hard, and bitter, and
old before their time.”</p>
<p>And Colonel Esmond coming into the room
to take her away, at this moment, he gave her
nice little hand the ghost of an affectionate
pressure, when she offered it to him in farewell.</p>
<p>And while Mr. Hector Anstruthers was railing,
in this exalted strain, at the falseness of
womankind, the fair cause of his heresy was
driving home in a rather unpleasant frame of
mind. It is never pleasant to find that one
has lost power, and it was a specially galling
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
thing to Lisbeth Crespigny to find herself at
any time losing influence of any kind. She did
not find it agreeable to confront the fact that
one of her slaves had purchased his freedom,
with his experience. Petty as the emotion
was, she had felt something akin to anger this
morning, when she had been compelled to
acknowledge, as once or twice she had been,
that her whilom victim could address her
calmly, meet her glance with polite indifference,
regard her, upon the whole, as he would
have regarded any far less accomplished
woman.</p>
<p>“Less than four years ago,” she said to herself,
with scorn, “if I had trampled upon him,
he would have kissed my feet. To-day, he
only sees in me an unpleasant young woman,
whom he overrated, and accordingly cherishes a
grudge against. I have no doubt he looked at
that pretty, fresh, Esmond girl, as we sat
together, and drew invidious comparisons between
us.”</p>
<p>Let us give her credit for one thing, however.
She felt no anger against the girl, who
she fancied had taken her place. Somehow
Georgie Esmond, with her bright eyes, and her
roses, and her ready good-nature, had found a
soft spot in Lisbeth’s rather hard heart. Miss
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
Crespigny could not have explained why it
was, but she had taken a fancy to Georgie
Esmond. She liked her, and she wanted the
feeling to be a mutual one. She would have
experienced something very like a pang, even
thus early in their acquaintance, if she had
thought that the sweet, honest young creature
would ever see her with Hector Anstruthers’
eyes.</p>
<p>“Men are always disproportionately bitter,”
she said, to herself. “It is their way to make
themselves heard when they are hurt. They
seem to have a kind of pride in their pain.
Any ordinarily clever woman could see that
my lord of the studio had a grievance.”</p>
<p>“Lisbeth,” said Mrs. Despard, breaking in
upon her reverie, “isn’t it rather astonishing
how that boy has improved?”</p>
<p>“He has improved,” said Lisbeth, “because
he has ceased to be a boy. He is a man in
these days.”</p>
<p>“And a very personable and entertaining
man, I must say,” returned Mrs. Despard, nodding
her head, in approval of him. “He is
positively handsome. And that luncheon was
a very pretty, graceful affair, and quite unique.
I shall pay him a visit again one of these fine
days.”
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span></p>
<p>Being thus installed as one of Mrs. Despard’s
favorites, it was not at all singular that they
should see a great deal of the young gentleman.
And they did see him pretty often. Gradually
he forgot his objection to meeting Lisbeth, and
rather sneered in secret at the violence of that
first shock of repulsion. It was all over, now,
he said, and why should such a woman trouble
him? Indeed, what greater proof of his security
could he give himself than the fact that he
could meet her almost daily, and still feel indifferent?
It must be confessed that he rather
prided himself upon his indifference. He was
drawn also into greater familiarity with the
household through Georgie Esmond. For, in
expressing her wish to make friends with Lisbeth,
Georgie had been sincere, as was her
habit. A very short time after the luncheon
her first visit was made, and the first visit was
the harbinger of many others. “Mamma,”
who was her daughter’s chief admiration, came
with her, and “mamma” was as much charmed,
in her way, as Georgie had been in hers. It
was impossible for Lisbeth to help pleasing
people when she was in the right mood; and
Mrs. Esmond and Georgie invariably put her
in the right mood. She could not help showing
her best side to these two sweet natures.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span></p>
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