<h2 id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</h2>
<h3 id="A_Visitor">A VISITOR.</h3>
<p>In the meantime, however, she made herself
very agreeable and attractive to her hostesses,
and enjoyed Pen’yllan very much, in a girlish
way. She explored the tiny village, and the
rude shore. She made friends with fishermen,
and their wives, and sturdy children. She won
admiration on every side by her pretty interest
in everything appertaining to the Pen’yllanites.
She took long walks on the sands, and brought
home shells, and sea-weed, and pebbles, with
such honest delight in any trifling rarity, as
made Lisbeth look on and feel restless, and the
Misses Tregarthyn grow young again, unitedly.</p>
<p>“I wish, my dear,” said Miss Clarissa to
Lisbeth, “that you enjoyed yourself as much;
but—but I am afraid you do not. I am afraid
you find Pen’yllan rather dull.”</p>
<p>“I never found Pen’yllan so pleasant in my
life before, but you know I am not like Georgie,”
said Lisbeth. “Pen’yllan is all right, Aunt
Clarissa, and I enjoy myself here more than I
should anywhere else.”
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span></p>
<p>“I am glad to hear you say that, my love,”
Miss Clarissa faltered. “Sometimes, do you
know, I have really fancied that you were not
quite—quite happy?”</p>
<p>Lisbeth got up from her chair, and came to
the window, her incomprehensible eyes reaching
far out to sea.</p>
<p>“Happy!” she echoed, absently. “Is anybody
happy? What a conundrum to answer?
As for me, I give it up.”</p>
<p>She gave up a good many things during these
weeks at Pen’yllan. She was wont to be fond
of a certain cool class of metaphysics, but
somehow things of that order seemed to slip
from her grasp. She was not so sure of her
self as she had been—not so obstinately complacent.
Indeed, she had never been so ill-satisfied
and out of patience with Lisbeth Crespigny
in her life.</p>
<p>In the course of a week or so, Hector Anstruthers
came, as he had promised. One quiet
afternoon, Miss Millicent, who was sitting at the
window, looked out into the garden, with a sudden
expression of surprise.</p>
<p>“Sister Clarissa!” she exclaimed, “Miss Esmond,
there is a gentleman coming up the
walk; a young gentleman, and really a very
handsome one. Do either of you know him?
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
Dear me, his face seems very familiar. It can’t
be——”</p>
<p>Georgie ran to the window, and the next
minute was waving her kind little hand to the
individual in question, and smiling, and nodding
her head.</p>
<p>“You ought to know him, Miss Tregarthyn,”
she said. “It is Mr. Hector Anstruthers.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” broke forth Miss Clarissa, in some
distress.</p>
<p>“And Lisbeth is here! I do hope, sister
Millicent——”</p>
<p>“He saw Lisbeth very often when she was at
home,” explained Georgie, feeling very guilty,
and extremely fearful of committing herself.
“I know Lisbeth did not like him very well
at first, but he was one of Mrs. Despard’s favorites,
and—he is a sort of cousin of mine.”</p>
<p>It was a great relief to the Misses Tregarthyn,
this piece of news. They remembered
various unpleasant little episodes of the past
too well, to have confronted serenely the re-responsibility
of bringing their dear Lisbeth
face to face with this young man again. Indeed,
Miss Millicent had turned pale, and Miss
Clarissa had lost her breath at the mere thought
of it. They had hardly recovered themselves,
when the visitor was handed into the room.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span>
But, of course, what Miss Esmond said must
be correct, and, under such circumstances, how
delightful it would be to welcome this genius
and hero to Pen’yllan once more.</p>
<p>They had heard wondrous reports of his career
from chance visitors, even though the beloved
Lisbeth had been so reticent. They had
heard of his good fortune, his good looks, his
talent, his popularity, and, remembering the
fair-haired, blue-eyed young fellow, whom Lisbeth
had snubbed so persistently, they had
wondered among themselves if all they heard
could possibly be true. But here was the admirable
Crichton to speak for himself, and so
changed was his appearance, so imposing his
air, so amiable his condescension, that each
gentle spinster owned in secret that really,
after all, it seemed probable that rumor, for
once, had not exaggerated. And it is not to
be denied that Mr. Hector Anstruthers was
shown to an advantage upon this occasion.
On his way from the small bandbox of a station,
he had been reminded of many a little
incident in that far-distant past, which had
somehow or other warmed his heart toward
these good, simple souls. They had been true
and kind, at least. They had never failed him
from first to last; they had pitied and tried to
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
comfort him when his fool’s paradise had been
so rudely broken into. He remembered how
Miss Clarissa had stolen down into the garden,
that last, bitter night, and finding him lying
full length, face downward, upon the dewy
grass, among the roses, had bent over him, and
put her timid hand upon his shoulder, and cried
silently, as she tried to find words with which
she could console him, and still be loyal to her
faithful affection for that wretched girl. He
remembered, too, how fiercely he had answered
her, like a passionate young cub as he was;
telling her to leave him alone, and let him fight
it out with himself and the devil, for he had
had enough of women. She had not been
offended, good little Miss Clarissa, though she
had been dreadfully shocked and troubled.
She had cried more than ever, and patted his
sleeve, and begged him to think of his dear
mother, and forgive—forgive; ending by sobbing
into her dainty handkerchief.</p>
<p>So, when he entered the pretty parlor, and
saw this kind friend standing near Georgie, a
trifle tremulous and agitated at the sudden sight
of him, everything but his memory of what a
true, generous little soul she was, slipped out of
his mind, and he actually blushed with pleasure.</p>
<p>“My dear Miss Clarissa!” he said; and, with
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
a sudden frank boyishness, such as Georgie had
never seen him give way to before, he put one
strong young arm about her, and kissed her
withered cheek twice.</p>
<p>“My dear boy!” said Miss Clarissa. A moment
before she had been on the verge of making
him her best bow, and calling him “Mr.
Anstruthers.” “How pleasant it is to see
you! How pleasant it is!”</p>
<p>The brightest of sweet smiles dimpled Miss
Georgie’s mouth. How good, and honest, and
unaffected he was, after all! How kind at
heart! How she wished that Lisbeth could
have seen him just then! Indeed, she found
it necessary to hold herself very bravely in
check for a moment or so, for fear she should
be tempted to give way to any weak impulse
of feeling; he seemed so worthy to be admired
and loved.</p>
<p>But Lisbeth was not in the house. No one
knew where she was, exactly. Lately she had
indulged in the habit of taking even longer
walks than Georgie’s, and often lonely ones.
Sometimes, in the morning, or afternoon, they
would miss her for an hour or so, and she would
come back rather fagged, and well blown about,
and at such times it always appeared that she
had been for a walk.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span></p>
<p>“For the good of my health,” she once said
to Georgie. “I find it benefits me, physically
and morally. Pen’yllan is a queer place,
and is productive of queer effects upon people.”</p>
<p>Among other things, Georgie discovered that
she, too, sometimes talked to the children who
played upon the sands, and that she had her
favorites, to whom she had once or twice even
condescended to tell certain tales of fairies and
mermaids. When Georgie mentioned this
discovery, she laughed and colored, as if half
ashamed of herself, and explained the matter
in her usual style.</p>
<p>“The fact is,” she said, “I do it as a sort of
penance. When I was a girl, and lived here,
the children were afraid of me, and it was no
wonder. I used to concoct horrible eerie tales
about the devil-fish, to frighten them, and I
rather enjoyed my reputation as a sort of hobgoblin
creature, who had an uncanny knowledge
of the terrors of the sea. Some of them used
to delight me by screaming, and running away,
when they caught sight of me; and now I have
arrived at years of discretion, I feel as if I ought
to do something to retrieve myself with this
second generation. Poor little imps! Their
lives are not too easy.”
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span></p>
<p>She was away, indulging in one of these
walks, this afternoon.</p>
<p>“We could find her somewhere on the shore,
I know,” said Georgie, in answer to Miss Tregarthyn’s
inquiry. “She is fond of the shore,
and always goes there for her strolls. If Hector
is equal to a sea-breeze, and a mile or so of
sand, after his journey, he might even go in
search of her.”</p>
<p>And it having been proved satisfactorily that
Hector was not only equal to such exertion,
but anxious to enjoy it; after an hour’s chat
with Miss Millicent, and Miss Clarissa, and
Miss Hetty, Georgie ran up stairs for her hat,
and returning to the parlor, took charge of the
expedition.</p>
<p>It really seemed one of the peculiarities of
Pen’yllan to be on its good behavior at opportune
times.</p>
<p>“It is bluer than ever, to-day,” said Georgie,
nodding at her friend, the sea, as they strolled
toward it. “And the crests of the little waves
are whiter, and the sea-gulls are in a better
temper than they usually are, and more satisfied
with their lot.”</p>
<p>She had never looked brighter or more attractive
herself, and this was her companion’s
mental comment. The many resplendent
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
young swains who admired Miss Georgie Esmond,
as she appeared in London ball-rooms,
would surely have become more hopelessly
enamored than ever, had they seen her with
the Pen’yllan roses on her cheeks, and the
sparkle of the sun-lit sea in her eyes.</p>
<p>“Where is there another creature like her?”
said Hector Anstruthers to himself. “Where
is there another creature as fresh, as good, as
natural and unspotted?”
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span></p>
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