<h2 id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</h2>
<h3 id="A_Confession">A CONFESSION.</h3>
<p>Georgie turned to her, taking sudden courage.</p>
<p>“Lisbeth,” she said, “you never told me
much about your acquaintance with Hector
Anstruthers. I wonder how it was. You
knew him very well, it seems.”</p>
<p>“I wish,” broke out Lisbeth, almost angrily,
“that I had never known him at all.”</p>
<p>The faithful heart, beating in the breast of
the girl at her side, leaped nervously.</p>
<p>“It was Lisbeth,” said she to herself. “It
was Lisbeth.”</p>
<p>“I wish,” repeated Lisbeth, frowning at the
sea, “that I had never seen him.”</p>
<p>“Why?” was Georgie’s quiet question.</p>
<p>“Because—because it was a bad thing for
us both,” in greater impatience than ever.</p>
<p>Georgie looked up at her sadly.</p>
<p>“Why, again?” she ventured, in her soft
voice. She could not help it.</p>
<p>But for a moment Lisbeth did not answer.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>
She had risen, and stood leaning against the
rock, a queer look on her face, a queer darkening
in her eyes. At length she broke into a
little, hard laugh, as if she meant to defy herself
to be emotional.</p>
<p>“How horror-stricken you would be, if I
were to tell you why,” she said.</p>
<p>“Does that mean,” Georgie put it to her
“that you were unkind to him?”</p>
<p>“It means,” was her strange reply—“it
means that it was I who ruined his life forever.”</p>
<p>She made the confession fairly, in spite of
herself. And she was emotional—vehement.
She could not stand this innocent Georgie, and
her beliefs any longer. She had been slowly
approaching this mood for months, and now
every inner and outer influence seemed to combine
against her natural stubborn secretiveness.
Perhaps Pen’yllan, the sea, the shore,
the sky, helped her on to the end. At any
rate, she must tell the truth this once, and hear
what this innocent Georgie would say to it.</p>
<p>“I ruined his life for him,” she repeated.
“I broke his faith. I believe I am to blame
for every evil change the last few years have
wrought in him. I, myself—Lisbeth. Do you
hear, Georgie?”
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span></p>
<p>The face under Georgie’s straw hat was
rather pale, but it was not horror-stricken.</p>
<p>“You were too young,” she faltered, “to
understand.”</p>
<p>“Too young?” echoed Lisbeth. “I never
was young in my life. I was born old. I
was born a woman, and I was born cold and
hard. That was it. If I had been like other
girls, he would have touched my heart, after
he had touched my vanity, or he might
even have touched my heart first. You
would have loved him with all your soul.
Are you willing to hear the whole history,
Georgie?”</p>
<p>“Quite willing. Only,” and she raised her
face with a bright, resolute, affectionate look,
“you cannot make me think harshly of you.
So, don’t try, Lisbeth.”</p>
<p>Lisbeth regarded her with an entirely new
expression, which had, nevertheless, a shade of
her old wonder in it.</p>
<p>“I really do not believe I could,” she said.
“You are very hard to deal with; at least I find
it hard to deal with you. You are a new experience.
If there was just a little flavor of insincerity
or uncharitableness in you, if you
would be false to your beliefs now and then,
I should know what to do; but, as it is, you
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
are perplexing. Notwithstanding, here comes
the story.”</p>
<p>She put her hands behind her, and bracing
herself against the rock, told it from beginning
to end, in her coolest, most daring way, even
with a half-defiant air. If she had been telling
some one else’s story, she could not have been
more caustic and unsparing, more determined
to soften no harsh outline, or smooth over anything.
She set the girl Lisbeth before her listener,
just as Lisbeth Crespigny at seventeen
had been. Selfish, callous, shallow, and deep, at
once: restless, ungrateful, a half-ripe coquette,
who, notwithstanding her crudeness, was yet
far too ripe for her age. She pictured the honest,
boyish young fellow, who had fallen victim
to her immature fascinations, simply because
he was too guileless and romantic to see in
any woman anything but a goddess. She described
his sincerity, his unselfish willingness to
bear her caprices, and see no wrong in them;
his lavish affection for every thing and every
one who shared his love for her; his readiness
to believe, his tardiness to doubt and see her
as she really was; the open-hearted faith which
had made the awakening so much harder to
bear, when it forced itself upon him at last.
She left out the recital of no petty wrong she
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
had done him, and no small tyranny or indignity
she had made him feel. She told the
whole story, in fact, as she saw it now; not
as she had seen it in that shallow, self-ruled
girlhood; and when she had touched upon
everything, and ended with that last scene in
the garden, among Aunt Clarissa’s roses, she
stopped.</p>
<p>And there was a silence.</p>
<p>Georgie’s eyelashes were wet, and so were
her cheeks. A tear or so stained her pink
cravat. It was so sorrowful. Poor Hector
again! And then, of course, poor Lisbeth!
By her own showing, Lisbeth deserved no pity;
but the warm young heart gave her pity
enough, and to spare. Something had been
wrong somewhere. Indeed, it seemed as if
everything had been wrong, but—Poor Lisbeth!
She was so fond of Lisbeth herself, and
mamma was so fond of her, and the Misses Tregarthyn.
So many people were fond of Lisbeth.</p>
<p>And then Lisbeth’s voice startled her. A
new voice, tremulous and as if her mood was a
sore and restive one.</p>
<p>“You are crying, of course, Georgie? I knew
you would.”</p>
<p>“I have been crying.”
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span></p>
<p>Pause enough to allow of a struggle, and
then—</p>
<p>“Well, since you are crying, I suppose I may
cry, too. It is queer enough that I should cry,
but—” And to Georgie’s amazement and trouble,
Lisbeth put her hand up on the rough rock,
and laid her face against it.</p>
<p>“Lisbeth!” cried the girl.</p>
<p>“Wait a moment,” said Lisbeth. “I don’t
know what has come over me. It is a new
thing for me. I—I——”</p>
<p>It was a new thing, indeed, and it did not
last very long. When she raised her head, and
turned again, her eyelashes were wet, too, and
she was even pale.</p>
<p>“Ah, Lisbeth!” said Georgie, pitying her,
“you are sorry.”</p>
<p>Lisbeth smiled, faintly.</p>
<p>“I never was sorry before for anything I
had done; never, in my life,” she answered.
“I have had a theory that people should take
care of themselves, as I did. But now—Well,
I suppose I am sorry—for Hector Anstruthers;
and perhaps a little for myself. No
one will offer me such an unreasoning love
again. Very few women are offered such a
love once; but I always got more than my
share of everything. It is my way. I suppose
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span>
I was born under a lucky star. Georgie, what
do you think of me now?”</p>
<p>Georgie got up, and kissed her, in a most
earnest fashion.</p>
<p>“What?” cried Lisbeth, with a dubious
smile. “You can’t be moral, and improving,
and sanctimonious, even now. Think what an
eloquent lecture you might read me! I have
sometimes thought I was merely created to
point a moral, or adorn a tale! See how reckless
I am, after all. You ought to be down on
me, Georgie. It is your duty, as a well-trained
young woman of the period.”</p>
<p>“Then,” said Georgie, “I can’t do my duty.
You are so different from other people. How
can I pretend to understand what has made
you do things that other people are not
tempted to do? And then you know how
fond I am of you, Lisbeth.”</p>
<p>“You are a good, pure little soul!” cried
Lisbeth, her pale face flushing excitedly. “And
the world is a thousand times better for your
being in it. I am better myself, and Heaven
knows I need something to make me better.
Here, let me take hold of your hand, and let
us go home.”</p>
<p>And as they turned homeward, on the beach,
hand-in-hand, like a couple of children, Georgie
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span>
saw that there were tears in the inconsistent
creature’s eyes again.</p>
<p>They did not say much upon the subject
after this. That wise young woman, Miss Esmond,
felt that it was a subject of far too delicate
a nature to be lightly touched upon. It
had been Lisbeth’s secret so long, that, even
after this confidence, she could not help regarding
it as Lisbeth’s secret still. Perhaps she
felt in private that there were certain little confidences
of her own, which she would scarcely
be willing even for Lisbeth to refer to, as if
they were her own property. For instance,
that accidental confession, made in the bedroom,
on the first night they had spent in it
together. How glad she had been that Lisbeth
had let it pass, as if she had not noticed
it very particularly. But though the subject
was not discussed, is it to be supposed that it
was not brought to mind at all, but was buried
in oblivion? Certainly not. While that terse
young woman, Miss Esmond, said little, she
thought much, and deeply. She had constantly
before her a problem, which she was very
anxious to work out. Was it not possible that
these two interesting beings might be brought
to—might be induced to—well, not to put too
fine a point upon it—to think better of each
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
other, and the unfortunate past, and the world
generally? Would it not be dreadful to think
that so much poetic material had been lost?
That these two who might have been so happy,
should drift entirely apart, and leave their romance
incomplete, as the most unsatisfactory
of novels? Probably, having sensibly, even if
with a little pang, given up that bud of a romance
of her own, the girl felt the need of
some loving plot to occupy her mind; and if
so, it was quite natural and very charming, that
she should turn to her friend. Hector would
make his appearance one of these fine days,
and then, perhaps, Pen’yllan, and its old familiar
scenes, would soften his heart, as she had
an idea they had softened Lisbeth’s. Surely,
old memories would touch him tenderly, and
make him more ready to forgive his injuries.
In fact, Miss Georgie painted for herself some
very pretty mental pictures, in which the figures
of Lisbeth and her ex-lover were always
the prominent features. Lisbeth in the trysting-place,
the sea-breeze blowing her beautiful
hair about, and coloring her pale face; that
queer mist of tears in her mysterious eyes.
Lisbeth, in one of her soft moods, making
those strange, restive, unexpected speeches,
which were so fascinating, because so unlookedfor,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
and Hector Anstruthers standing by, and
listening. Such interesting little scenes as
these she imagined, and, having imagined them,
positively drew some consolation from their
phantom existence.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span></p>
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