I called that day on Mrs. Poyntz,
and communicated to her the purport of the glad news
I had received.
She was still at work on the everlasting
knitting, her firm fingers linking mesh into mesh
as she listened; and when I had done, she laid her
skein deliberately down, and said, in her favourite
characteristic formula,
“So at last? that is settled!”
She rose and paced the room as men
are apt to do in reflection, women rarely need such
movement to aid their thoughts; her eyes were fixed
on the floor, and one hand was lightly pressed on the
palm of the other, the gesture of a musing
reasoner who is approaching the close of a difficult
calculation.
At length she paused, fronting me, and said dryly,
“Accept my congratulations.
Life smiles on you now; guard that smile, and when
we meet next, may we be even firmer friends than we
are now!”
“When we meet next, that
will be to-night you surely go to the mayor’s
great ball? All the Hill descends to Low Town
to-night.”
“No; we are obliged to leave
L this afternoon; in less than
two hours we shall be gone, a family engagement.
We may be weeks away; you will excuse me, then, if
I take leave of you so unceremoniously. Stay,
a motherly word of caution. That friend of yours,
Mr. Margrave! Moderate your intimacy with him;
and especially after you are married. There is
in that stranger, of whom so little is known, a something
which I cannot comprehend, a something
that captivates and yet revolts. I find him disturbing
my thoughts, perplexing my conjectures, haunting my
fancies, I, plain woman of the world!
Lilian is imaginative; beware of her imagination,
even when sure of her heart. Beware of Margrave.
The sooner he quits L the better,
believe me, for your peace of mind. Adieu!
I must prepare for our journey.”
“That woman,” muttered
I, on quitting her house, “seems to have some
strange spite against my poor Lilian, ever seeking
to rouse my own distrust of that exquisite nature
which has just given me such proof of its truth.
And yet and yet is that woman
so wrong here? True! Margrave with his wild
notions, his strange beauty! true true he
might dangerously encourage that turn for the mystic
and visionary which distresses me in Lilian.
Lilian should not know him. How induce him to
leave L ? Ah, those experiments
on which he asks my assistance! I might commence
them when he comes again, and then invent some excuse
tosend him for completer tests to the famous chemists
of Paris or Berlin.”