<h4>CHAPTER L.</h4>
<h3>CYNTHIA AT BAY.<br/> </h3>
<p>Mrs. Gibson was slow in recovering her strength after the influenza,
and before she was well enough to accept Lady Harriet's invitation to
the Towers, Cynthia came home from London. If Molly had thought her
manner of departure was scarcely as affectionate and considerate as
it might have been,—if such a thought had crossed Molly's fancy for
an instant, she was repentant for it as soon as ever Cynthia
returned, and the girls met together face to face, with all the old
familiar affection, going upstairs to the drawing-room, with their
arms round each other's waists, and sitting there together hand in
hand. Cynthia's whole manner was more quiet than it had been, when
the weight of her unpleasant secret rested on her mind, and made her
alternately despondent or flighty.</p>
<p>"After all," said Cynthia, "there's a look of home about these rooms
which is very pleasant. But I wish I could see you looking stronger,
mamma! that's the only unpleasant thing. Molly, why didn't you send
for me?"</p>
<p>"I wanted to do," began Molly—</p>
<p>"But I wouldn't let her," said Mrs. Gibson. "You were much better in
London than here, for you could have done me no good; and your
letters were very agreeable to read; and now Helen is better, and I'm
nearly well, and you've come home just at the right time, for
everybody is full of the Charity Ball."</p>
<p>"But we are not going this year, mamma," said Cynthia decidedly.
"It's on the 25th, isn't it? and I'm sure you'll never be well enough
to take us."</p>
<p>"You really seem determined to make me out worse than I am, child,"
said Mrs. Gibson, rather querulously, she being one of those who,
when their malady is only trifling, exaggerate it, but when it is
really of some consequence, are unwilling to sacrifice any pleasures
by acknowledging it. It was well for her in this instance that her
husband had wisdom and authority enough to forbid her going to this
ball, on which she had set her heart; but the consequence of his
prohibition was an increase of domestic plaintiveness and low
spirits, which seemed to tell on Cynthia—the bright gay Cynthia
herself—and it was often hard work for Molly to keep up the spirits
of two other people as well as her own. Ill-health might account for
Mrs. Gibson's despondency, but why was Cynthia so silent, not to say
so sighing? Molly was puzzled to account for it; and all the more
perplexed because from time to time Cynthia kept calling upon her for
praise for some unknown and mysterious virtue that she had practised;
and Molly was young enough to believe that, after any exercise of
virtue, the spirits rose, cheered up by an approving conscience. Such
was not the case with Cynthia, however. She sometimes said such
things as these, when she had been particularly inert and
<span class="nowrap">desponding:—</span></p>
<p>"Ah, Molly, you must let my goodness lie fallow for a while! It has
borne such a wonderful crop this year. I have been so
pretty-behaved—if you knew all!" Or, "Really, Molly, my virtue must
come down from the clouds! It was strained to the utmost in
London—and I find it is like a kite—after soaring aloft for some
time, it suddenly comes down, and gets tangled in all sorts of briars
and brambles; which things are an allegory, unless you can bring
yourself to believe in my extraordinary goodness while I was
away—giving me a sort of right to fall foul of all mamma's briars
and brambles now."</p>
<p>But Molly had had some experience of Cynthia's whim of perpetually
hinting at a mystery which she did not mean to reveal in the Mr.
Preston days, and, although she was occasionally piqued into
curiosity, Cynthia's allusions at something more in the background
fell in general on rather deaf ears. One day the mystery burst its
shell, and came out in the shape of an offer made to Cynthia by Mr.
Henderson—and refused. Under all the circumstances, Molly could not
appreciate the heroic goodness so often alluded to. The revelation of
the secret at last took place in this way. Mrs. Gibson breakfasted in
bed: she had done so ever since she had had the influenza; and,
consequently, her own private letters always went up on her
breakfast-tray. One morning she came into the drawing-room earlier
than usual, with an open letter in her hand.</p>
<p>"I've had a letter from aunt Kirkpatrick, Cynthia. She sends me my
dividends,—your uncle is so busy. But what does she mean by this,
Cynthia?" (holding out the letter to her, with a certain paragraph
indicated by her finger). Cynthia put her netting on one side, and
looked at the writing. Suddenly her face turned scarlet, and then
became of a deadly white. She looked at Molly, as if to gain courage
from the strong serene countenance.</p>
<p>"It means—mamma, I may as well tell you at once—Mr. Henderson
offered to me while I was in London, and I refused him."</p>
<p>"Refused him—and you never told me, but let me hear it by chance!
Really, Cynthia, I think you're very unkind. And pray what made you
refuse Mr. Henderson? Such a fine young man,—and such a gentleman!
Your uncle told me he had a very good private fortune besides."</p>
<p>"Mamma, do you forget that I have promised to marry Roger Hamley?"
said Cynthia quietly.</p>
<p>"No! of course I don't—how can I, with Molly always dinning the word
'engagement' into my ears? But really, when one considers all the
uncertainties,—and after all it was not a distinct promise,—he
seemed almost as if he might have looked forward to something of this
sort."</p>
<p>"Of what sort, mamma?" said Cynthia, sharply.</p>
<p>"Why, of a more eligible offer. He must have known you might change
your mind, and meet with some one you liked better: so little as you
had seen of the world." Cynthia made an impatient movement, as if to
stop her mother.</p>
<p>"I never said I liked him better,—how can you talk so, mamma? I'm
going to marry Roger, and there's an end of it. I will not be spoken
to about it again." She got up and left the room.</p>
<p>"Going to marry Roger! That's all very fine. But who is to guarantee
his coming back alive? And if he does, what have they to marry upon,
I should like to know? I don't wish her to have accepted Mr.
Henderson, though I am sure she liked him; and true love ought to
have its course, and not be thwarted; but she need not have quite
finally refused him until—well, until we had seen how matters turn
out. Such an invalid as I am too! It has given me quite a palpitation
at the heart. I do call it quite unfeeling of Cynthia."</p>
<p>"Certainly,—" began Molly; but then she remembered that her
stepmother was far from strong, and unable to bear a protest in
favour of the right course without irritation. So she changed her
speech into a suggestion of remedies for palpitation; and curbed her
impatience to speak out her indignation at the contemplated falsehood
to Roger. But when they were alone, and Cynthia began upon the
subject, Molly was less merciful. Cynthia
<span class="nowrap">said,—</span></p>
<p>"Well, Molly, and now you know all! I've been longing to tell
you—and yet somehow I could not."</p>
<p>"I suppose it was a repetition of Mr. Coxe," said Molly, gravely.
"You were agreeable,—and he took it for something more."</p>
<p>"I don't know," sighed Cynthia. "I mean I don't know if I was
agreeable or not. He was very kind—very pleasant—but I did not
expect it all to end as it did. However, it's of no use thinking of
it."</p>
<p>"No!" said Molly, simply; for to her mind the pleasantest and kindest
person in the world put in comparison with Roger was as nothing; he
stood by himself. Cynthia's next words,—and they did not come very
soon,—were on quite a different subject, and spoken in rather a
pettish tone. Nor did she allude again in jesting sadness to her late
efforts at virtue.</p>
<p>In a little while Mrs. Gibson was able to accept the often-repeated
invitation from the Towers to go and stay there for a day or two.
Lady Harriet told her that it would be a kindness to Lady Cumnor to
come and bear her company in the life of seclusion the latter was
still compelled to lead; and Mrs. Gibson was flattered and gratified
with a dim unconscious sense of being really wanted, not merely
deluding herself into a pleasing fiction. Lady Cumnor was in that
state of convalescence common to many invalids. The spring of life
had begun again to flow, and with the flow returned the old desires
and projects and plans, which had all become mere matters of
indifference during the worst part of her illness. But as yet her
bodily strength was not sufficient to be an agent to her energetic
mind, and the difficulty of driving the ill-matched pair of body and
will—the one weak and languid, the other strong and stern,—made her
ladyship often very irritable. Mrs. Gibson herself was not quite
strong enough for a "<i>souffre-douleur</i>;" and the visit to the Towers
was not, on the whole, quite so happy a one as she had anticipated.
Lady Cuxhaven and Lady Harriet, each aware of their mother's state of
health and temper, but only alluding to it as slightly as was
absolutely necessary in their conversations with each other, took
care not to leave "Clare" too long with Lady Cumnor; but several
times when one or the other went to relieve guard they found Clare in
tears, and Lady Cumnor holding forth on some point on which she had
been meditating during the silent hours of her illness, and on which
she seemed to consider herself born to set the world to rights. Mrs.
Gibson was always apt to consider these remarks as addressed with a
personal direction at some error of her own, and defended the fault
in question with a sense of property in it, whatever it might happen
to be. The second and the last day of her stay at the Towers, Lady
Harriet came in, and found her mother haranguing in an excited tone
of voice, and Clare looking submissive and miserable and oppressed.</p>
<p>"What's the matter, dear mamma? Are not you tiring yourself with
talking?"</p>
<p>"No, not at all! I was only speaking of the folly of people dressing
above their station. I began by telling Clare of the fashions of my
grandmother's days, when every class had a sort of costume of its
own,—and servants did not ape tradespeople, nor tradespeople
professional men, and so on,—and what must the foolish woman do but
begin to justify her own dress, as if I had been accusing her, or
even thinking about her at all. Such nonsense! Really, Clare, your
husband has spoilt you sadly, if you can't listen to any one without
thinking they are alluding to you. People may flatter themselves just
as much by thinking that their faults are always present to other
people's minds, as if they believe that the world is always
contemplating their individual charms and virtues."</p>
<p>"I was told, Lady Cumnor, that this silk was reduced in price. I
bought it at Waterloo House after the season was over," said Mrs.
Gibson, touching the very handsome gown she wore in deprecation of
Lady Cumnor's angry voice, and blundering on to the very source of
irritation.</p>
<p>"Again, Clare! How often must I tell you I had no thought of you or
your gowns, or whether they cost much or little; your husband has to
pay for them, and it is his concern if you spend more on your dress
than you ought to do."</p>
<p>"It was only five guineas for the whole dress," pleaded Mrs. Gibson.</p>
<p>"And very pretty it is," said Lady Harriet, stooping to examine it,
and so hoping to soothe the poor aggrieved woman. But Lady Cumnor
went <span class="nowrap">on,—</span></p>
<p>"No! you ought to have known me better by this time. When I think a
thing I say it out. I don't beat about the bush. I use
straightforward language. I will tell you where I think you have been
in fault, Clare, if you like to know." Like it or not, the
plain-speaking was coming now. "You have spoilt that girl of yours
till she does not know her own mind. She has behaved abominably to
Mr. Preston; and it is all in consequence of the faults in her
education. You have much to answer for."</p>
<p>"Mamma, mamma!" said Lady Harriet, "Mr. Preston did not wish it
spoken about." And at the same moment Mrs. Gibson exclaimed,
"Cynthia—Mr. Preston!" in such a tone of surprise, that if Lady
Cumnor had been in the habit of observing the revelations made by
other people's tones and voices, she would have found out that Mrs.
Gibson was ignorant of the affair to which she was alluding.</p>
<p>"As for Mr. Preston's wishes, I do not suppose I am bound to regard
them when I feel it my duty to reprove error," said Lady Cumnor
loftily to Lady Harriet. "And, Clare, do you mean to say that you are
not aware that your daughter has been engaged to Mr. Preston for some
time—years, I believe,—and has at last chosen to break it off,—and
has used the Gibson girl—I forget her name—as a cat's-paw, and made
both her and herself the town's talk—the butt for all the gossip of
Hollingford? I remember when I was young there was a girl called
Jilting Jessy. You'll have to watch over your young lady, or she will
get some such name. I speak to you like a friend, Clare, when I tell
you it's my opinion that girl of yours will get herself into some
more mischief yet before she's safely married. Not that I care one
straw for Mr. Preston's feelings. I don't even know if he's got
feelings or not; but I know what is becoming in a young woman, and
jilting is not. And now you may both go away, and send Bradley to me,
for I'm tired, and want to have a little sleep."</p>
<p>"Indeed, Lady Cumnor—will you believe me?—I do not think Cynthia
was ever engaged to Mr. Preston. There was an old flirtation. I was
<span class="nowrap">afraid—"</span></p>
<p>"Ring the bell for Bradley," said Lady Cumnor, wearily: her eyes
closed. Lady Harriet had too much experience of her mother's moods
not to lead Mrs. Gibson away almost by main force, she protesting all
the while that she did not think there was any truth in the
statement, though it was dear Lady Cumnor that said it.</p>
<p>Once in her own room, Lady Harriet said, "Now, Clare, I'll tell you
all about it; and I think you'll have to believe it, for it was Mr.
Preston himself who told me. I heard of a great commotion in
Hollingford about Mr. Preston; and I met him riding out, and asked
him what it was all about; he didn't want to speak about it,
evidently. No man does, I suppose, when he's been jilted; and he made
both papa and me promise not to tell; but papa did—and that's what
mamma has for a foundation; you see, a really good one."</p>
<p>"But Cynthia is engaged to another man—she really is. And another—a
very good match indeed—has just been offering to her in London. Mr.
Preston is always at the root of mischief."</p>
<p>"Nay! I do think in this case it must be that pretty Miss Cynthia of
yours who has drawn on one man to be engaged to her,—not to say
two,—and another to make her an offer. I can't endure Mr. Preston,
but I think it's rather hard to accuse him of having called up the
rivals, who are, I suppose, the occasion of his being jilted."</p>
<p>"I don't know; I always feel as if he owed me a grudge, and men have
so many ways of being spiteful. You must acknowledge that if he had
not met you I should not have had dear Lady Cumnor so angry with me."</p>
<p>"She only wanted to warn you about Cynthia. Mamma has always been
very particular about her own daughters. She has been very severe on
the least approach to flirting, and Mary will be like her!"</p>
<p>"But Cynthia will flirt, and I can't help it. She is not noisy, or
giggling; she is always a lady—that everybody must own. But she has
a way of attracting men, she must have inherited from me, I think."
And here she smiled faintly, and would not have rejected a
confirmatory compliment, but none came. "However, I will speak to
her; I will get to the bottom of the whole affair. Pray tell Lady
Cumnor that it has so fluttered me the way she spoke, about my dress
and all. And it only cost five guineas after all, reduced from
eight!"</p>
<p>"Well, never mind now. You are looking very much flushed; quite
feverish! I left you too long in mamma's hot room. But do you know
she is so much pleased to have you here?" And so Lady Cumnor really
was, in spite of the continual lectures which she gave "Clare," and
which poor Mrs. Gibson turned under as helplessly as the typical
worm. Still it was something to have a countess to scold her; and
that pleasure would endure when the worry was past. And then Lady
Harriet petted her more than usual to make up for what she had to go
through in the convalescent's room; and Lady Cuxhaven talked sense to
her, with dashes of science and deep thought intermixed, which was
very flattering, although generally unintelligible; and Lord Cumnor,
good-natured, good-tempered, kind, and liberal, was full of gratitude
to her for her kindness in coming to see Lady Cumnor, and his
gratitude took the tangible shape of a haunch of venison, to say
nothing of lesser game. When she looked back upon her visit, as she
drove home in the solitary grandeur of the Towers' carriage, there
had been but one great enduring rub—Lady Cumnor's crossness—and she
chose to consider Cynthia as the cause of that, instead of seeing the
truth, which had been so often set before her by the members of her
ladyship's family, that it took its origin in her state of health.
Mrs. Gibson did not exactly mean to visit this one discomfort upon
Cynthia, nor did she quite mean to upbraid her daughter for conduct
as yet unexplained, and which might have some justification; but,
finding her quietly sitting in the drawing-room, she sate down
despondingly in her own little easy chair, and in reply to Cynthia's
quick pleasant greeting
<span class="nowrap">of—</span></p>
<p>"Well, mamma, how are you? We didn't expect you so early! Let me take
off your bonnet and shawl!" she replied
<span class="nowrap">dolefully,—</span></p>
<p>"It has not been such a happy visit that I should wish to prolong
it." Her eyes were fixed on the carpet, and her face was as
irresponsive to the welcome offered as she could make it.</p>
<p>"What has been the matter?" asked Cynthia, in all good faith.</p>
<p>"You! Cynthia—you! I little thought when you were born how I should
have to bear to hear you spoken about."</p>
<p>Cynthia threw back her head, and angry light came into her eyes.</p>
<p>"What business have they with me? How came they to talk about me in
any way?"</p>
<p>"Everybody is talking about you; it is no wonder they are. Lord
Cumnor is sure to hear about everything always. You should take more
care about what you do, Cynthia, if you don't like being talked
about."</p>
<p>"It rather depends upon what people say," said Cynthia, affecting a
lightness which she did not feel; for she had a prevision of what was
coming.</p>
<p>"Well! I don't like it, at any rate. It is not pleasant to me to hear
first of my daughter's misdoings from Lady Cumnor, and then to be
lectured about her, and her flirting, and her jilting, as if I had
had anything to do with it. I can assure you it has quite spoilt my
visit. No! don't touch my shawl. When I go to my room I can take it
myself."</p>
<p>Cynthia was brought to bay, and sate down; remaining with her mother,
who kept sighing ostentatiously from time to time.</p>
<p>"Would you mind telling me what they said? If there are accusations
abroad against me, it is as well I should know what they are. Here's
Molly" (as the girl entered the room, fresh from a morning's walk).
"Molly, mamma has come back from the Towers, and my lord and my lady
have been doing me the honour to talk over my crimes and
misdemeanors, and I am asking mamma what they have said. I don't set
up for more virtue than other people, but I can't make out what an
earl and a countess have to do with poor little me."</p>
<p>"It was not for your sake!" said Mrs. Gibson. "It was for mine. They
felt for me, for it is not pleasant to have one's child's name in
everybody's mouth."</p>
<p>"As I said before, that depends upon how it is in everybody's mouth.
If I were going to marry Lord Hollingford, I make no doubt every one
would be talking about me, and neither you nor I should mind it in
the least."</p>
<p>"But this is no marriage with Lord Hollingford, so it is nonsense to
talk as if it was. They say you've gone and engaged yourself to Mr.
Preston, and now refuse to marry him; and they call that jilting."</p>
<p>"Do you wish me to marry him, mamma?" asked Cynthia, her face in a
flame, her eyes cast down. Molly stood by, very hot, not fully
understanding it; and only kept where she was by the hope of coming
in as sweetener or peacemaker, or helper of some kind.</p>
<p>"No," said Mrs. Gibson, evidently discomfited by the question. "Of
course I don't; you have gone and entangled yourself with Roger
Hamley, a very worthy young man; but nobody knows where he is, and if
he's dead or alive; and he has not a penny if he is alive."</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon. I know that he has some fortune from his mother;
it may not be much, but he is not penniless; and he is sure to earn
fame and great reputation, and with it money will come," said
Cynthia.</p>
<p>"You've entangled yourself with him, and you've done something of the
sort with Mr. Preston, and got yourself into such an imbroglio" (Mrs.
Gibson could not have said "mess" for the world, although the word
was present to her mind), "that when a really eligible person comes
forward—handsome, agreeable, and quite the gentleman—and a good
private fortune into the bargain, you have to refuse him. You'll end
as an old maid, Cynthia, and it will break my heart."</p>
<p>"I daresay I shall," said Cynthia, quietly. "I sometimes think I'm
the kind of person of which old maids are made!" She spoke seriously,
and a little sadly.</p>
<p>Mrs. Gibson began again. "I don't want to know your secrets as long
as they are secrets; but when all the town is talking about you, I
think I ought to be told."</p>
<p>"But, mamma, I didn't know I was such a subject of conversation; and
even now I can't make out how it has come about."</p>
<p>"No more can I. I only know that they say you've been engaged to Mr.
Preston, and ought to have married him, and that I can't help it, if
you did not choose, any more than I could have helped your refusing
Mr. Henderson; and yet I am constantly blamed for your misconduct. I
think it's very hard." Mrs. Gibson began to cry. Just then her
husband came in.</p>
<p>"You here, my dear! Welcome back," said he, coming up to her
courteously, and kissing her cheek. "Why, what's the matter? Tears?"
and he heartily wished himself away again.</p>
<p>"Yes!" said she, raising herself up, and clutching after sympathy of
any kind, at any price. "I'm come home again, and I'm telling Cynthia
how Lady Cumnor has been so cross to me, and all through her. Did you
know she had gone and engaged herself to Mr. Preston, and then broken
it off? Everybody is talking about it, and they know it up at the
Towers."</p>
<p>For one moment his eyes met Molly's, and he comprehended it all. He
made his lips up into a whistle, but no sound came. Cynthia had quite
lost her defiant manner since her mother had spoken to Mr. Gibson.
Molly sate down by her.</p>
<p>"Cynthia," said he, very seriously.</p>
<p>"Yes!" she answered, softly.</p>
<p>"Is this true? I had heard something of it before—not much; but
there is scandal enough about to make it desirable that you should
have some protector—some friend who knows the whole truth."</p>
<p>No answer. At last she said, "Molly knows it all."</p>
<p>Mrs. Gibson, too, had been awed into silence by her husband's grave
manner, and she did not like to give vent to the jealous thought in
her mind that Molly had known the secret of which she was ignorant.
Mr. Gibson replied to Cynthia with some sternness:</p>
<p>"Yes! I know that Molly knows it all, and that she has had to bear
slander and ill words for your sake, Cynthia. But she refused to tell
me more."</p>
<p>"She told you that much, did she?" said Cynthia, aggrieved.</p>
<p>"I could not help it," said Molly.</p>
<p>"She didn't name your name," said Mr. Gibson. "At the time I believe
she thought she had concealed it—but there was no mistaking who it
was."</p>
<p>"Why did she speak about it at all?" said Cynthia, with some
bitterness. Her tone—her question stirred up Mr. Gibson's passion.</p>
<p>"It was necessary for her to justify herself to me—I heard my
daughter's reputation attacked for the private meetings she had given
to Mr. Preston—I came to her for an explanation. There's no need to
be ungenerous, Cynthia, because you've been a flirt and a jilt, even
to the degree of dragging Molly's name down into the same mire."</p>
<p>Cynthia lifted her bowed-down head, and looked at him.</p>
<p>"You say that of me, Mr. Gibson? Not knowing what the circumstances
are, you say that?"</p>
<p>He had spoken too strongly: he knew it. But he could not bring
himself to own it just at that moment. The thought of his sweet
innocent Molly, who had borne so much patiently, prevented any
retractation of his words at the time.</p>
<p>"Yes!" he said, "I do say it. You cannot tell what evil constructions
are put upon actions ever so slightly beyond the bounds of maidenly
propriety. I do say that Molly has had a great deal to bear, in
consequence of this clandestine engagement of yours, Cynthia—there
may be extenuating circumstances, I acknowledge—but you will need to
remember them all to excuse your conduct to Roger Hamley, when he
comes home. I asked you to tell me the full truth, in order that
until he comes, and has a legal right to protect you, I may do so."
No answer. "It certainly requires explanation," continued he. "Here
are you,—engaged to two men at once to all appearances!" Still no
answer. "To be sure, the gossips of the town haven't yet picked out
the fact of Roger Hamley's being your accepted lover; but scandal has
been resting on Molly, and ought to have rested on you, Cynthia—for
a concealed engagement to Mr. Preston—necessitating meetings in all
sorts of places unknown to your friends."</p>
<p>"Papa," said Molly, "if you knew all you wouldn't speak so to
Cynthia. I wish she would tell you herself all that she has told me."</p>
<p>"I am ready to hear whatever she has to say," said he. But Cynthia
<span class="nowrap">said,—</span></p>
<p>"No! you have prejudged me; you have spoken to me as you had no right
to speak. I refuse to give you my confidence, or accept your help.
People are very cruel to me"—her voice trembled for a moment—"I did
not think you would have been. But I can bear it."</p>
<p>And then, in spite of Molly, who would have detained her by force,
she tore herself away, and hastily left the room.</p>
<p>"Oh, papa!" said Molly, crying, and clinging to him, "do let me tell
you all." And then she suddenly recollected the awkwardness of
telling some of the details of the story before Mrs. Gibson, and
stopped short.</p>
<p>"I think, Mr. Gibson, you have been very very unkind to my poor
fatherless child," said Mrs. Gibson, emerging from behind her
pocket-handkerchief. "I only wish her poor father had been alive, and
all this would never have happened."</p>
<p>"Very probably. Still I cannot see of what either she or you have to
complain. Inasmuch as we could, I and mine have sheltered her! I have
loved her; I do love her almost as if she were my own child—as well
as Molly, I do not pretend to do."</p>
<p>"That's it, Mr. Gibson! you do not treat her like your own child."
But in the midst of this wrangle Molly stole out, and went in search
of Cynthia. She thought she bore an olive-branch of healing in the
sound of her father's just spoken words: "I do love her almost as if
she were my own child." But Cynthia was locked into her room, and
refused to open the door.</p>
<p>"Open to me, please," pleaded Molly. "I have something to say to
you—I want to see you—do open!"</p>
<p>"No!" said Cynthia. "Not now. I am busy. Leave me alone. I don't want
to hear what you have got to say. I don't want to see you. By-and-by
we shall meet, and <span class="nowrap">then—"</span>
Molly stood quite quietly, wondering what
new words of more persuasion she could use. In a minute or two
Cynthia called out, "Are you there still, Molly?" and when Molly
answered "Yes," and hoped for a relenting, the same hard metallic
voice, telling of resolution and repression, spoke out, "Go away. I
cannot bear the feeling of your being there—waiting and listening.
Go downstairs—out of the house—anywhere away. It is the most you
can do for me now."</p>
<p><SPAN name="c51" id="c51"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
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