<h2 id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<h3 id="We_Must_Always_be_True">WE MUST ALWAYS BE TRUE.</h3>
<p>Indeed, he drifted so far this evening, that
there is no knowing how sad a story this of
mine might have been, if the fates had not
been kinder to pretty Georgie Esmond than
they are to the generality of people. Surely it
must have been because she deserved something
better than the fortune of a disappointed
woman, that chance interposed in her behalf
before she went to sleep that night.</p>
<p>She had enjoyed herself very much during
Hector’s visit. She had sung her sweetest
songs, and had been in the brightest of good
spirits. Indeed, she had been very happy, and
perhaps had felt her innocent, warm heart
stirred a little, once or twice, by the young
man’s tender speeches, though she was very
far from being in the frame of mind to analyze
the reasons for her gentle pleasure.</p>
<p>When her visitor had taken his departure,
she came to the colonel’s arm-chair, and possibly
feeling somewhat conscience-stricken, because
she had left “papa” to his own resources
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
for so long a time, she applied herself to the task
of petting him in her most seductive manner.</p>
<p>“You are very quiet, papa,” she said, settling
herself upon a footstool, at his side. “I hope
you are not going to have the gout again, darling.
Mamma, what shall we do with him, if
he insists on having the gout, when I am going
to Pen’yllan? I shall have to stay at home,
and so will Lisbeth. He cannot possibly dispense
with us, when he has the gout.”</p>
<p>“But I am not going to have the gout,” protested
the colonel, stoutly. “I am quite well,
my dear; but the fact is—the fact is, I was
thinking of a discovery I made this evening—a
discovery about Anstruthers.”</p>
<p>“Hector?” exclaimed Georgie, half-unconsciously,
and then turned her bright eyes upon
the shining fender.</p>
<p>“Yes,” proceeded Colonel Esmond. “Hector
himself. I believe I have found out what
has changed him so—so deucedly, not to put
too fine a point upon it—during the last four
or five years. You remember what a frank,
warm-hearted lad he was, at three-and-twenty,
Jennie?” to Mrs. Esmond.</p>
<p>“Papa,” interposed Georgie, “do you really
think he has changed for the worse? In his
heart, I mean.”
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span></p>
<p>“He has not changed for the better,” answered
the colonel. “But his heart is all right,
my dear.”</p>
<p>“I am sure,” said Georgie, a little piteously.
“I am sure he is good at heart.”</p>
<p>“Of course he is,” said the colonel. “But
he has altered very much, in many respects.
And Jennie, my dear, I have discovered that
the trouble was the one you hinted at, in the
beginning. There was a woman in the case.
A woman who treated him shamefully.”</p>
<p>“She must have been very heartless,” said
Georgie. “Poor Hector!”</p>
<p>The colonel warmed up.</p>
<p>“She was shamefully heartless, she was disgracefully,
unnaturally heartless! Such cold-blooded,
selfish cruelty would have been unnatural
in a mature woman, and she was nothing
more than a school-girl, a mere child. I congratulate
myself that I did not learn her name.
The man who told me the story had not heard
it. If I knew it, and should ever chance to
meet her, by George!” with virtuous indignation,
“I don’t see how a man of honor could
remain in the same room with such a woman.”</p>
<p>And then he poured out what he had heard
of the story, and an unpleasant enough sound
it had, when related with all the additional
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
coloring confidential report had given it. It
was bad enough to begin with, but it was worse
for having passed through the hands of the
men who had gathered it together, by scraps,
and odds, and ends, and joined it as they
thought best.</p>
<p>“And the worst of it is,” ended Colonel
Esmond, “that he has not lived it down, as he
fancies he has done. At least there are those
who think so. It is said the girl is here in
town now, and though they are not friends,
Anstruthers cannot keep away from her altogether,
and is always most savage and reckless
when he has seen her.”</p>
<p>“Poor fellow!” said Georgie, in a low, quiet
voice. “Poor Hector!”</p>
<p>But she did not look up at any one, as she
spoke. Indeed she had not looked up, even
once, during the time in which this unpleasant
story had been told.</p>
<p>Having heard it, she confronted it very sensibly.
When, indeed, was she not sweet and
sensible? While she listened, a hundred past
incidents rushed back upon her. She remembered
things she had heard Hector say, and
things she had seen him do; she remembered
certain restless moods of his, certain desperate
whims and fancies, and she began to comprehend
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
what their meaning was. Her vague fancies
of his unhappiness found a firm foundation.
He was wretched, and broken in faith, because
this cruel girl had robbed him of his honest
belief in love, and truth, and goodness. Ah,
poor Hector! She did not say very much
while the colonel and Mrs. Esmond discussed
the matter, but she was thinking very deeply,
and when she bade them good night, and went
up to her room, there was a sad sort of thoughtfulness
in her face.</p>
<p>She did not begin to undress at once, but
sat down by her toilet table, and rested her
fresh cheek on her hand.</p>
<p>“I wonder who it was?” she said, softly.
“Who could it be? Whom did he know when
he was three-and-twenty?”</p>
<p>Surely some fate guided her eyes, just at
that moment, guided them to the small, half-opened
note, lying at her elbow; a note so
opened that the signature alone presented itself
to her glance. “Your affectionate Lisbeth.”</p>
<p>She gave a little start, and then flushed up
with a queer agitation.</p>
<p>“Lisbeth!” she said, “Lisbeth!” And
then, with quite a self-reproach in her tone,
“Oh, no! Not Lisbeth. How could I say it?
Not Lisbeth!” She put out her hand and
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span>
took up the note, protestingly. “I could not
bear to think it,” she said. “It might be any
one else, but not Lisbeth.” And yet the next
minute a new thought forced itself upon her, a
memory of some words of Lisbeth’s own.</p>
<p>“We were nothing but a couple of children
when we met at Pen’yllan,” that young lady
had said, a few days before, a trifle cavalierly.
“He was only three-and-twenty, and as for
me, what was I but a child, a school-girl, not
much more than sixteen.”</p>
<p>“But,” protested Georgie, her eyes shining
piteously, and the moisture forcing itself into
them, “but it might not have been she; and if
it was Lisbeth he loved, the story may have
been exaggerated. Such stories always are;
and if any part of it is true, she was so young,
and did not know what she was doing. It was
not half so wrong in Lisbeth as it would have
been in me, who have had mamma all my life
to teach me the difference between right and
wrong. She had nobody but the Misses Tregarthyn;
and people who are good are not
always wise.”</p>
<p>She was not very wise herself, poor, loving,
little soul! At least she was not worldly wise.
She could not bear the thought of connecting
that cruel story with her most precious Lisbeth,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
in whom she had never yet found a fault.
And if it must be connected with her, what
excuses might there not be! Oh, she was so
sure that it was an exaggerated story, and that,
if the truth were known, Lisbeth’s fault had
only risen out of Lisbeth’s youth and innocence.
She was so disturbed about her friend,
that it was quite a long time before she remembered
that she had a quiet little pain of her
own to contend with, only the ghost of a pain
as yet, but a ghost which, but for this timely
check, might have been very much harder to
deal with than it was.</p>
<p>“I think,” she said, at last, blushing a little at
the sound of her own words, “I think that, perhaps,
I was beginning to care for Hector more
than for any one else; and I am glad that papa
told me this, before—before it was too late.
I think I should have been more sorry, after
a little time, than I am now; and I ought to
be thankful. If I did not mean to be sensible,
instead of sentimental, perhaps I should try
to believe that what is said is not true, and
that he has really lived his trouble down; but
I would rather be sensible, and believe that he
only means to think of me as his friend, as he
has done all his life. I must think that,” she
thought, eagerly. “I must remember it always,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
when he is with me. It would be best.
And if it is Lisbeth he has loved, and he loves
her yet, I—I must try to help them to forgive
each other.” And here she bent her face, and
as she touched the note lightly with her lips, a
bright drop, like a jewel, fell upon the paper.
“We must always be true to each other,” she
whispered, tremulously. “This would be a sad
world if people were not true to each other,
and ready to make little sacrifices for the sake
of those they love.”</p>
<p>And thus it was that the innocent white rose
of love, just turning to the sun, folded its fresh
petals, and became a bud again. It was better
as it was, much better that it should be a bud
for a longer time, than that it should bloom
too early, and lose its too lavish beauty before
the perfect summer came.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span></p>
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