<h2 id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</h2>
<h3 id="Pen_yllan">PEN’YLLAN.</h3>
<p>Emulating the example of the Misses Tregarthyn,
Pen’yllan had put on its best dress to
grace the occasion of the arrival of the visitors.
As they drove from the little railway station,
Lisbeth was of the opinion that she had never
seen the sea so blue, and cool, and sparkling,
the sands so silver white, or the village so picturesque.
The truth was, the sight of it quite
subdued her, and invested her with one of her
softest and most charitable moods.</p>
<p>“I did not know it was so pretty,” she said.
“I believe we shall enjoy ourselves, Georgie.”</p>
<p>Georgie was enraptured. Everything pleased
her. The sea, the beach, the sky, the quaint,
white cottages, the bare-legged children, the old
Welsh women in their steeple hats and woollen
petticoats. The up-hill streets of the village
were delightful; the little bandbox of a railway
station was incomparable. She had been rather
pale and tired during the journey, but as soon
as she set her feet upon the platform at Pen’yllan,
her pallor and fatigue disappeared. The
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
fresh breeze from the sea tinged her cheeks,
and made her eyes sparkle, and she was in the
best of good spirits.</p>
<p>“I never saw such a dear little place in my
life,” she said, delightedly. “Enjoy ourselves,
Lisbeth? Why, as you know, I feel just as I
used to when we were all children, and went to
the sea-side with mamma and the nurses, and
dug caves in the sand with wooden spades, and
built forts, and looked for shells. I am going
to make friends with those little urchins on the
beach to-morrow, and ask them to play with
me.”</p>
<p>Behold the Tregarthyn household, arrayed in
all its modest splendor, when the carriage drove
up to the garden gate. Behold the neatest of
young handmaidens, brisk and blue-eyed, and
the smallest of pages standing ready to assist
with the boxes, and admire the young ladies
with an exceeding admiration. Behold, also,
the three Misses Tregarthyn, in the trimmest
of “company” dresses, and in such a state of
affectionate tremor and excitement, that they
kissed their dear Lisbeth on the tip of the nose
by one consent, instead of bestowing their delighted
caresses upon her lips.</p>
<p>“So very happy to see you, my love,” said
Miss Clarissa, squeezing Georgie’s hand, as she
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
led the way into the parlor. “Our dear Lisbeth’s
friend, I hope you are not tired, and
that you left your mamma and papa quite well.
Our dear Lisbeth is so tenderly attached to
your mamma and papa, that if such a thing
were possible, we should be quite jealous.”</p>
<p>“They are quite as much attached to her, I
can assure you,” answered Georgie, in her pretty,
earnest way. “Indeed, we all are, Miss
Clarissa. Everybody is fond of Lisbeth.” And
thereby rendered her position as a favorite
secure at once.</p>
<p>Indeed, she found her way to the heart of
the spinster household in an incredibly short
space of time. Miss Millicent, and Miss Hetty,
and Miss Clarissa were charmed with her. Her
pretty face and figure, her girlish gayety, her
readiness to admire and enjoy everything, were
attractions enough to enchant any spinster trio,
even if she had not possessed that still greater
charm of being Lisbeth’s dearest friend.</p>
<p>The two girls shared Lisbeth’s old room together;
a cool nest of a place, with white draperies,
and quaint ornaments, and all the child
Lisbeth’s treasures, of land and sea, still kept
in their original places.</p>
<p>“It looks exactly as it did when I went away
with Mrs. Despard,” said Lisbeth, glancing
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span>
round, with a sigh, which meant she scarce
knew what. “I gathered that sea-weed when
I was fourteen, and I was always engaged in
difficulties with the cooks, because I would bring
in more shells than I wanted, and leave piles
of them in the kitchen. Aunt Clarissa sent
one woman away because we had a row, and
she said I was ‘a imperent young minx, allus
litterin’ the place with my rubbidge.’ How
the dear old souls did spoil me. If I had
brought a whale into the drawing-room, they
would have regretted, but never resented it.
I had my own way often enough when I ought
to have had my ears boxed.”</p>
<p>“You must have been very happy in their
loving you so,” said Georgie, who had drawn a
low wicker chair to the open window, and was
enjoying the moonlight and the sea.</p>
<p>“You would have been,” returned Lisbeth,
drawing up chair number two. “And you
would have behaved yourself better than I did.
I was an ill-conditioned young person, even in
those days.”</p>
<p>They were both silent for a while after this.
There was a lovely view from the window, and
all was so still that neither cared to stir for a
few moments. Then the thoughtfulness on
Georgie’s face attracted Lisbeth’s attention.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span></p>
<p>“I should like to know,” she said, “what
you are thinking about?”</p>
<p>The girl drew a positively ecstatic little sigh.</p>
<p>“I was thinking how sweet and quiet everything
looked,” she said, innocently; “and how
much happier I am.”</p>
<p>“Happier?” exclaimed Lisbeth. “When
were you unhappy, Georgie?”</p>
<p>The surprise in her tone brought Georgie to
a recognition of what her words had unconsciously
implied. She found herself blushing,
and wondering at her own simplicity. She had
not meant to say so much. She could not
comprehend why she should have said anything
of that kind at all.</p>
<p>“It is strange enough to hear that you can
be made happier than you always seem to be,”
said Lisbeth. “You speak as if—” And then,
her quick eye taking in the girl’s trepidation,
she stopped short. “You never had a trouble,
Georgie?” she added, in a voice very few of
her friends would have known; it was so soft.</p>
<p>“No,” said Georgie. “Oh, no, Lisbeth!
Not a trouble, exactly; not a trouble at all,
indeed; only—” And suddenly she turned
her bright, appealing eyes to Lisbeth’s face.
“I don’t know why I said it,” she said. “It
was nothing real, Lisbeth, or else I am sure
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
you would have known. But it—Well, I
might have had a trouble, and I was saved from
it, and I am glad, and—thankful.” And, to
Miss Crespigny’s surprise, she bent forward,
and kissed her softly on the cheek.</p>
<p>Lisbeth asked her no questions. She was
not fond of asking questions, and she was a
young person of delicacy and tact, when she
was in an affectionate mood. She was too partial
to Georgie to wish to force her into telling
her little secrets. But a certain thought flashed
through her mind, as she sat with her eyes resting
on the sea.</p>
<p>“She is the sort of girl,” she said, sharply,
to herself, “who would be likely to have no
trouble but a love trouble. Who has been
making love to her, or rather, who, among
all her admirers, would be likely to touch her
heart?”</p>
<p>But this mental problem was by no means
easy to solve. There were so many men who
admired Georgie Esmond, and such a large proportion
of them were men whom any girl might
have loved.</p>
<p>It was one of Lisbeth’s chief wonders, that
Georgie, who was so soft of heart, and ready
with affection, should have held her own so
long against so agreeable a multitude of adorers.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
Certainly, if she had lived through any little
romance, she had kept her secret well. She
did not look like a love-lorn young lady when
she came down, the next morning, fresh and
rosy, and prepared to explore Pen’yllan in all
its fastnesses. It was exhilarating to see her;
and the Misses Tregarthyn were delighted beyond
bounds. She made a pilgrimage through
half the up-and-down-hill little streets in the
village, and, before dinner, had managed to drag
Lisbeth a mile along the shore, against a stiff
breeze, which blew their long, loose hair about,
and tinted their cheeks brilliantly. Lisbeth
followed her with an amused wonder at her enthusiasm,
mingled with discontent at her own
indifference. It was she who ought to have
been in raptures, and she was not in raptures
at all. Had she no natural feeling whatever?
Any other woman would have felt a sentimental
tenderness for the place which had been her
earliest home.</p>
<p>They had found a comfortable nook behind
a cluster of sheltering rocks, and were sitting
on the sand, when Lisbeth arrived at this stage
of thought. The place was an old haunt of
hers, and Hector Anstruthers had often followed
her there in their boy and girl days;
and the sight of the familiar stretch of sea and
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span>
sand irritated her somehow. She picked up a
shell, and sent it skimming away toward the
water, with an impatient gesture.</p>
<p>“Georgie,” she said, “I should like to know
what you see in Pen’yllan to please you so.”</p>
<p>“Everything,” said Georgie. “And then,
somehow, I seem to know it. I think its chief
attraction is, that you lived here so long.”</p>
<p>Lisbeth picked up another shell, and sent it
skimming after the other.</p>
<p>“What a girl you are!” she said. “It is
always your love and your heart that are
touched. You are all heart. You love people,
and you love everything that belongs to
them: their homes, their belongings, their relations.
It is not so with me; it never was.
You are like what Hector Anstruthers was,
when I first knew him. Bah!” with a shrug
of her shoulders. “How fond the foolish fellow
was of Aunt Hetty, and Aunt Millicent,
and Aunt Clarissa.”</p>
<p>Her tongue had slipped, just as Georgie’s
had done the night before. For the moment
she forgot herself entirely, and only remembered
that old sentimental affection of her
boyish lover; that affection for her spinster
relatives, which, in the past, had impressed her
as being half troublesome and half absurd.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span></p>
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