<h2 id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</h2>
<h3 id="We_Won_t_Go_Yet">WE WON’T GO YET.</h3>
<p>Having coolly laid her plans for leaving the
two to enjoy themselves, Lisbeth retired upon
her laurels, with the intention of finding amusements
of her own. She had entertained herself
before, easily enough, why not again?
Naturally, as they had fallen in love with each
other, they would not want her; even Georgie
would not want her. And it was quite natural
that they should have fallen in love. They
were the sort of people to do it. And Georgie
would make a charming wife, and, if her husband
proved a tyrant, would still go down upon
her knees and adore him, and thank Heaven
for her prince’s affection, and his perfections,
to the end of her innocent days. As for herself,
it was no business of hers, when she had
done her duty toward her friend. The best
thing she could do, would be to leave them
alone, and she left them alone, and gave them
every opportunity to be lover-like, if they had
chosen.</p>
<p>But one day, Miss Clarissa, looking up from
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span>
her sewing, started, quite nervously, at the sudden
impression made upon her of something
new in her dear Lisbeth’s appearance.</p>
<p>“My dear Lisbeth!” she exclaimed, “how
pale and ill you look!”</p>
<p>“I am always pale,” said Lisbeth.</p>
<p>“But, my love,” protested Miss Clarissa,
“you are pale, to-day, in a different way. You
must be suffering. Dear! dear! How careless
in us not to have remarked it before! I almost
believe—nay, indeed, I am sure—that you look
thin, actually thin!”</p>
<p>“I am always thin,” said Lisbeth.</p>
<p>But Miss Clarissa was not to be consoled by
any such coolness of manner. When she looked
again more closely, she was quite sure that she
was right, that her dear Lisbeth showed unmistakable
signs of being in a dreadful state of
health. She fell into a positive condition of
tremor and remorse. She had been neglected;
they had been heartlessly careless, not to see
before that she was not strong. It must be
attended to at once. And really, if Lisbeth
had not been very decided, it is not at all unlikely
that she would have been put to bed,
and dosed, and wept over by all three spinsters
at once.</p>
<p>“I hope it is not that Pen’yllan does not
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span>
agree with you,” faltered Miss Hetty. “We
always thought the air very fresh and bracing,
but you certainly do not look like yourself, Lisbeth.”</p>
<p>And the truth was that she did not look
like herself. Much as she might protest against
the assertion, she was thinner and paler than
usual.</p>
<p>“I am not ill,” she said, “whether I look ill
or not. I never was better in my life. I have
not slept very well of late; that is all. And I
must beg you to let me have my own way
about it, Aunt Clarissa. It is all nonsense.
Don’t fuss over me, I implore you. You will
spoil Georgie’s love story for her, and make
Mr. Anstruthers uncomfortable. Men hate
fuss of any kind. Leave me alone, when they
are in the house, and I will take all the medicine
you choose to give me in private, though
it is all nonsense, I assure you.”</p>
<p>But was it nonsense? Alas! I must confess,
though it is with extreme reluctance, that the
time came when the invincible was beaten, and
felt that she was. It was not nonsense.</p>
<p>One afternoon, after sitting at her bedroom
window for an hour, persuading herself that
she was reading, while Georgie and Anstruthers
enjoyed a <i xml:lang="fr">tête-à-tête</i> in the garden below, she
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span>
suddenly closed her book, and, rising from her
chair, began to dress to go out.</p>
<p>She was down stairs, and out upon the beach,
in five minutes; and, once away from the house,
she began to walk furiously. She looked neither
to right nor left, as she went. She was not in
the humor to have her attention distracted from
her thoughts by any beauty of sea, or sky, or
shore. She saw the yellow sand before her,
and that was all. She reached the old trysting-place,
among the rocks, before she stopped.
Once there, she gave herself time to breathe,
and, standing still, looked back at the ground
over which she had come. There was a worn-out
expression in her face, such as the Misses
Tregarthyn had never yet seen, even when they
thought her at her worst. And yet, in a minute
more, she smiled with actual grimness.</p>
<p>“I am being punished now,” she said, aloud.
“I am being punished now for everything I
have ever done in my life. Now I begin to
understand.”</p>
<p>There was humiliation enough in her soul
then to have made her grovel in the sand at
her feet, if she had been prone to heroics or
drama. Yes, she was beginning to understand.
It was her turn now. Oh, to have come to
this! To have learned this!
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span></p>
<p>It was characteristic of her nature—an unfortunate
nature at this time, passing through
a new experience, and battling fiercely against
it—that when, immediately afterward, the tears
began to fill her eyes, and roll down her cheeks,
they were the bitter, bitter tears of passionate
mortification and anger. She could almost
have killed herself, for very self-contempt and
shame.</p>
<p>“What reason is there in it?” she said.
“None. What has brought me to it? Nothing.
Is he as worthy now as he was then?
No! Isn’t it sheer madness? Yes, it is.”</p>
<p>She spoke truly, too. There was no reason
in it. It was madness. He had done nothing
to touch her heart, had made no effort to
reach it. And yet he had reached and touched
it. It would not have been like her to love a
man because he was good, because he had
made love to her; indeed, because of anything.
Her actions were generally without any cause
but her own peremptory fancies; and here,
some strange, sudden caprice of emotion had
been too much for her. How she had suffered
since she discovered her weakness, no one but
herself would ever know. She had writhed
under it, burned under it, loathed it, and yet
been conquered by it. Almost every blade of
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span>
Pen’yllan grass reminded her of some wrong
she had done to the kindly, impetuous young
fellow, who had loved her in the past. Almost
every grain of Pen’yllan sand taunted her with
some wanton selfishness, or cruelty, which must
be remembered by the man who could have
nothing but dislike for her in the present.</p>
<p>“I should be grateful now,” she cried, bitterly.
“Yes! Grateful for a tithe of what I
once had under foot. This is eating dirt with
a vengeance.”</p>
<p>She might well frighten Miss Clarissa with
her pallor and wretched looks. The intensity
of her misery and humiliation was wearing her
out, and robbing her of sleep and appetite.
She wanted to leave Pen’yllan, but how could
she suggest it? Georgie was so happy, she
told herself, with a vindictive pleasure in her
pain, that it would be a pity to disturb her.</p>
<p>She walked up and down the beach for half
an hour before she returned home; and when
she went her way, she was so tired as to be
fairly exhausted. At the side door, by which
she entered the house, she met Georgie, who
held an open letter in her hand.</p>
<p>“Whom from?” asked Lisbeth, for lack of
something to say.</p>
<p>“Mamma,” was the girl’s answer. “She
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>
wonders when we are going home; but I am
enjoying Pen’yllan so much——”</p>
<p>She paused, and blushed. Just lately it had
occurred to her that it might be possible that
Lisbeth misunderstood her relation to Hector,
and something in Lisbeth’s face made her stop
and blush in this opportune manner.</p>
<p>“The weather is so lovely,” she ended, “that
I don’t think I want to go yet.”</p>
<p>Lisbeth smiled, but her smile was an abstracted
sort of affair.</p>
<p>“No,” she said. “We won’t go yet. Pen’yllan
is doing both of us good; and it is doing Mr.
Anstruthers good, too. We won’t go yet. Tell
Mrs. Esmond so, Georgie.”</p>
<p>And then she carried her absent smile up
stairs.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />