The Laurel Walk

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"Won't you go on with what you were telling me?" he said, with a slight touch of diffidence, "that is to say, if you are sure you don't in the least mind doing so. Perhaps you wouldn't think so of me," he went on, "but there's something of the antiquary about me. Old bits of family history always have a fascination for me."

"_This_ bit," said Frances, "is, as I was saying, rather commonplace. It is simply that an ancestress of ours--no, scarcely an ancestress--a certain Elizabeth Morion, a grand-aunt of my father's, in whom the whole of the family possessions at that time centred, played _his_ father false by promising what she never did. That is, by leaving a will which gave everything to the elder of her two nephews, the--yes, the great-grandfather of your--" here she hesitated and looked up inquiringly. "What is the present Mr Morion to you, by-the-by?" she asked.

"Nothing, nothing whatever," said Mr Littlewood. "A brother's brother-in-law is no relation."

"N-no," Frances half agreed, "but it's a connection. Let me see, your brother married his sister?"

"Yes, that's it," he answered. "Ryder Morion's sister is my sister-in-law. There, now, that puts it neatly. Then, this capricious spinster broke her word to your grandfather, did she?"

"Well, yes, we must suppose so, unless--there has always been the alternative possibility that she _did_ make the right will, and that it got lost or mislaid."

"H-m-m!" murmured Mr Littlewood thoughtfully. "I suppose that does happen sometimes, but rarely, I should think. I don't know if I have peculiarly little faith in human nature, but in a general way there's been something worse than accident at work in such cases. Was the old lady on good terms with both nephews?"

"I believe so," Frances replied. "Though she was much more in awe of the elder. He had made an extremely good marriage, and, besides coming into the more important Morion place, his wife had heaps of money. I have always thought," she went on, "that great-grand-aunt Elizabeth was a little afraid of telling him that she had left this property, small as it is, away from him. For, you see, it has the family name; yet, elder branch though they are, its owners have never cared for it. So," with a slightly rising colour which it was too dark for him to see, and a half-deprecating tone in her voice which he was quick to hear, "there is some excuse for the way we feel about it, though certainly Betty need not have blurted it out as she did the other day for your benefit!"

"On the contrary," exclaimed her companion, "I enter most thoroughly into her feelings. And it is delightful to come across some one that isn't afraid to speak out her mind. But--now, do scold me if I am indiscreet--considering these very natural feelings, which your father must realise to the full, is it not rather a pity to have settled down here, in constant, hourly view of what should have been your home?"

"Well, yes," said Frances, "on the face of it I can understand it striking you so, but circumstances often lead up to the very things one would originally have avoided. So it has been with us. My grandfather bought our present little house, which did not belong to the Morions though surrounded by the property, for a very small sum: he kept a sort of foothold in the place I fancy, in case--just _in case_--of the will, in whose existence he never lost faith, turning up; and also perhaps out of a sort of not unnatural self-assertion. And when papa retired--he was many years in India, you know, and married rather late--it seemed the best place for us to come to. We three were tiny children, and Anglo-Indians of all people believe in country air for their children, and here we have been ever since, our income, unfortunately, having creased as time went on, instead of improving."

For a moment or two Mr Littlewood walked on in silence. He was really of an impressionable nature, despite appearances, and the girl's simple words told him even more than she was conscious of.

"Dull little lives," he thought to himself. "Poor children! If my people come down here they must try to do something for them, though I see it must be done with tact. Dear me! what a clumsy fool I must have seemed to that sweet little Betty."

Then turning to Frances:

"Thank you," he said gently, "thank you so much for telling me about it. I quite see the whole thing. I wonder," he went on, with a slight laugh, "I wonder if anything will turn up some day?"

"Oh, no," said Frances, "it's far too long ago now. We amuse ourselves sometimes by building castles in the air about it, but I am not sure that it is a very wholesome occupation."

"It would be very good fun," said the young man, "if our living in the house somehow led to any discovery! By-the-by," he added suddenly, "it would make a splendid groundwork for a ghost story. If the old lady is repentant for breaking her word, she shouldn't be having a peaceful time of it; or even if she were not to blame, and the will were in existence, that's the sort of thing ghosts should come back to set right, isn't it?"

"Well, yes," said Frances, "I suppose so, but the queer thing about ghosts is that they so much more often appear for no reason than for a sensible one." But there was a certain repression in her tone which returned to his mind afterwards.

They had crossed the park by this time, and were close to the door into the road, where a little way farther on stood Fir Cottage. The voices of the two girls in front sounded softly now, and here in this more sheltered spot the evening breeze had grown gentle and caressing in its dainty touch. The moon, too, had come out, and the whole feeling of the evening breathed peace and restfulness.

"It scarcely seems like late autumn now, does it?" said Frances. "And, oh!" she went on, "isn't the glimpse of the old church pretty, Mr Littlewood?"

From where they stood, the windows at one side and the ivy-covered tower of the venerable building, more picturesque than beautiful in the full daylight, had caught the silvery gleam.

"Yes," he agreed, "it looks at its best, doesn't it? If Ryder was more here, he'd have gone in for restoring it by now; and, inside, I must say, it would be an improvement, though it would almost seem a pity to tear down that ivy. I looked over it this morning."

"Oh, did you?" said Frances. "It is getting to be almost a survival. The day must come, I suppose, for overhauling it, if it is to hold its own much longer. Papa says the masonry is becoming very bad. I should like to see it really well done, though I am heathen enough to have a queer affection for it as it stands."

"Do the visitors from Craig Bay come up here?" Mr Littlewood inquired.

"Not regularly," Frances replied. "There is a very modern, tidy little church near the station. Were you thinking of funds for restoring this one when you spoke of the visitors? Our old vicar is too old, I suppose, to take any interest in doing it up, otherwise something might be done."

"Oh, _funds_ can't be the difficulty," said Mr Littlewood quickly. "Ryder Morion has far more money than he knows what to do with. I dare say he has restored other people's churches more than once; that sort of thing is rather in his line."

"Then, why doesn't he begin at home?" asked a clear voice, startling them a little. It was Eira's. Frances and Mr Littlewood, gazing at the church, which stood just outside the park wall in the opposite direction from Fir Cottage, had not observed that the two younger girls had retraced their steps some little way, and now were standing close behind them.

Again Frances felt annoyed, though she could not help being glad that this time the offender was not Betty. But her companion was on his guard: he answered gently, in a matter-of-fact tone, of itself conciliatory, "You may well ask. I shall tell Ryder what I think about it when I see him," he said. "Why, he has never been here that any of you can remember, has he?" There was no immediate reply. It was, naturally enough, a trifle mortifying that on the few occasions--rare enough, it must be allowed--on which the owner of Craig-Morion had visited the place, he had taken no notice, direct or indirect, of his kindred at Fir Cottage. But the three sisters were nothing if not candid--candid and ingenuous in a very unconventional degree--and the silence was almost immediately broken by Frances' clear, quiet voice.

"Oh, yes," she said, "he has been here several times for a few days together, but we don't know him at all, not even by sight." Again Mr Littlewood anathematised his bad luck.

"Really?" he said, with apparent carelessness.

"I can't call him exactly a genial person," he went on, "and you know, I suppose, that his wife died a few years ago, which has not made him less of a recluse. All the same,"--for the young man was on common ground with his new friends so far as a constitutional love of candour goes--"all the same, I'm very much attached to him. He's been a good friend to me in more ways than one."

"I'm glad to hear it," said Frances. "One can never be without interest in the head of one's family, it seems to me."

They had been strolling on during the last few moments towards their own gate, and, there arrived, Frances held out her hand.

"Good-night, Mr Littlewood," she said simply, adding no invitation to come in with them.

"Good-night," he repeated, shaking hands with each in turn, "but--it need not be `Good-bye,' as I don't leave till the day after to-morrow. Do you think Lady Emma would allow me to look in some time in the afternoon?"

"Y-yes, I will tell her," was Frances' rather ambiguous reply; and as the young man re-entered the park, his thoughts busied themselves with the glimpse, the almost pathetic glimpse, he had had into these young lives.

CHAPTER SIX.

"NOT AT HOME."

"What in the world," said Betty, "what in the whole world, Frances, did you get to talk about to him, all that long way across the park?"

"Really, Betty," said Frances, for _her_, almost crossly, "you are too bad! Did I elect to have a _tete-a-tete_ with Mr Littlewood? If it were worth while I might blame you and Eira seriously for the way you behaved--like two--"

Betty was on the point of interrupting with some vehement repetition of the dislike she had taken, and that not causelessly, to their uninvited visitor, when a significative tug at her sleeve from Eira startled her into silence, though thereby Frances' intended lecture made no further way, as the interruption came from Eira instead.

"You are not to say `silly school-girls,'" she exclaimed. "I know that's what you were going to say. We simply walked on because three women and one man seem--are--so stupid. Why does it always seem as if there were too many women?"

"In a family where there are no brothers it couldn't very well seem anything else," replied Frances, rather shortly; but she did not resume her remonstrances, for by this time they were by the front door, and she hurried into the drawing-room, where, as she expected, tea, and a somewhat ruffled Lady Emma, were awaiting them.

"You are very late, why--" were the words that greeted her; but before hearing more, Eira softly closed the door, holding back Betty for a moment's confabulation in the hall.

"What is it, Eira?" said Betty impatiently. "You tug my sleeve, and then you pull me back when I'm tired and want some tea. What is it you want to say?"

"We had better leave our cloaks outside," said Eira, rapidly unbuttoning her own garment as she spoke. "What I want to say can't be said in a moment, it is something too tremendous! I only felt that I must give you a hint to be more careful in your way of speaking about Mr Littlewood."

"Why?" asked Betty, opening her dark eyes to their widest.

"Because," said Eira, "I am not at all sure but what a most wonderful thing is going to happen, or, for that matter, has happened. Betty, suppose--just suppose--that _he_ has fallen in love with Frances."

Betty gasped, unable for a moment to articulate.

"That man!" she at last ejaculated.

"Well, why not?" returned Eira. "_You've_ taken a dislike to him of some kind, or you fancy you have, and of course I don't mean to say that I think he's good enough, but still--but I can't speak about it just now, only take care!"

She had certainly succeeded in taking Betty's breath away. The girl would scarcely have been capable of a coherent reply, but she was not called upon for one. The drawing-room door opened, and their elder sister's voice was heard.

"Do come in to tea," she said, "and, Eira, you run and tell papa it is ready. I had no idea it was so late," she went on. "Poor mamma has been wondering what was keeping us," she added, in a deprecatory tone, as Betty followed her into the room.

"We can't blame Mr Littlewood for it," said Betty eagerly; "we were walking almost all the time we were talking to him, so _he_ can't have delayed us!"

"Mr Littlewood?" repeated Lady Emma, in the high-pitched tone which with her was one of the signs of disturbed equanimity. "Mr Littlewood? What is she talking about? You don't intend to say that you have been a walk with a--perfect stranger! Frances, what does this mean? I insist on your telling me."

"I have not the very _least_ objection to telling you, mamma," said Frances. "In fact, I have a message for you from Mr Littlewood, which I was just going to deliver."

Her tone was absolutely respectful, but there was a touch of coldness in it, not without its effect on her mother. In her heart Lady Emma not only trusted her eldest daughter entirely, but looked up to her in a way which showed her own involuntary consciousness of the superiority in many ways of the girl's character to her own. But any approach to acknowledgment of this real underlying admiration and respect would have seemed to her so strange and paradoxical, considering their mutual relations, as to be almost equivalent to a reversal of the fifth commandment.

She contented herself with replying in a calmer tone, "Did you meet Mr Littlewood, then? Naturally I can't understand things till you explain them."

"Yes," Frances replied, "we met him on our way home, not in the park, but in the little copse on the Massingham road."

"I am glad you were not in the park," said Lady Emma.

"But we did come through it after meeting him," said Frances. "It would have been affected to do otherwise just because he is staying at the house, and I suppose, as he was walking our way, he could scarcely have avoided walking on beside us. He asked me if he might call to say good-bye to you, mamma, to-morrow afternoon?"

The last words, unfortunately as it turned out, were overheard by Mr Morion as he entered the room. His wife, taught by long experience, made no reply, so the message remained uncommented upon, unless a doubtful grunt from the depths of the arm-chair where the master of the house had settled himself could have been taken as referring to it.

Silence, not an unusual state of things at Fir Cottage, ensued, and as soon as the two younger girls could escape from the room they hastened to their own quarters, a small and in wintertime decidedly dreary little chamber, which in old days had been used as their schoolroom. It looked out to the side of the house and was ill lighted. But its propinquity to the kitchen was, practically speaking, in cold weather no small boon, preventing its ever becoming very chilly, for, though it boasted a fireplace, the restrictions as to fuel formed one of the most disagreeable economies in practice at Fir Cottage. In summer, on the other hand, the schoolroom was apt to become unbearably hot; but in summer, if it is anything like a normal season, and in the country, life usually presents itself under a very different aspect. Such things as fires and chilblains do not enter into one's calculations; one's own room, in nine cases out of ten, is a pleasant resort, and even if not so, are there not out-of-doors boudoirs by the dozen?

Dreary enough, though, the little room looked this evening, when by the light of one candle Betty and Eira established themselves as comfortably as circumstances allowed of, that is to say, on two little low basket-chairs, dismissed from the drawing-room long ago as too shabby, which had been one of their few luxuries in lessons days. Just now, also, the extraordinary possibilities which they were about to discuss so filled their imaginations that the uninviting surroundings over which they often groaned would have passed unnoticed had they been ten times worse. And worse they might have been most assuredly! For one fairy gift was shared alike by the three sisters--the gift of dainty orderliness; and where this reigns one may defy poverty to do its worst, for with such a background the tiniest attempt at prettiness or grace is trebled in pleasing effect.

"Eira," said Betty in an almost awe-struck whisper, "do you really, really mean what you said? Do you think it _possible_? And--" with a touch of hesitation, quaint and almost touching in its contrast to the outspoken treatment of such subjects by the typical maiden of to-day, "if--if he had--fallen in love with Frances, _could_ she ever care for him, I wonder?"

A dreamy questioning came into her eyes as she spoke.

"I don't see why she shouldn't," said Eira. "Of course neither you nor I can picture to ourselves _any_ man being good enough for Frances, so we need not expect the impossible. But taking that for granted, I don't see why she mightn't get to care for this man. Indeed, she has liked him from the beginning, and stuck up for him against you. And as men go--of course we really don't know any, but I suppose _some_ books are more or less true to life?--as men go, I suppose any one would consider him very attractive."

"Perhaps," said Betty gently, for she was already beginning to see her _bete noire_ through very different spectacles, "perhaps. And then," she added, with an amusing little air of profound worldly wisdom, "he must be rich, and made a good deal of, and all that sort of thing, and for a man of that kind to find out what a girl really _is_, in spite of her plain simple life, and way of dressing, and all that--though, of course, nobody can say that Francie is not good-looking, far more than merely pretty--don't you think, Eira, that that of itself shows that he must have a great deal of good in him?"

"Yes," Eira agreed, "I do. Though it doesn't do to be too humble, Betty, even about external things. Remember, however poor we are, that as far as family and ancestry go we could scarcely be better. No one need think it a condescension to marry a Morion."

"Of course," said Betty, speaking half absently. "Oh, Eira, how interesting it will be when he comes to-morrow! Do let us think what we can do to--to show everything to advantage. If we _could_ persuade Francie to sing, for her voice is so lovely!"

"She never would," said Eira, "not to any one like that, who is pretty sure to be a good judge, for she knows her voice is untrained. Why, she has never had a lesson in her life! Can't we do anything about her _dress_, however? She always looks nice, perfectly nice, but almost too plain, too severe, as if she had retired from the world and was above such things as dress and looks."

"Perhaps it's just that that attracts him in her," said Betty--"the difference, I mean, between her and the fashionable girls he is accustomed to."

"Yes," replied Eira, "up to a certain point that's all very well, but no man would like to have a wife, however beautiful she was, who did not to some extent look like other people. Betty, how could we contrive to make her wear her own black silk blouse to-morrow? It is even more becoming to her than ours are, and a little handsomer. Don't you remember her saying when we got them that hers mustn't look too young? She is rather absurd about her age, for certainly she doesn't look older than twenty-four at most."

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