"Bessie!" exclaimed her brother.

"Poor old fellow! you had excuse enough, lying on the sofa to the

tune of tap and click; but for a young lady in the advanced ranks of

civilization to abstain is a mere marvel."

"Surely it is a great waste of time," said Rachel.

"Ah! when I have converted you, you will wonder what people did with

themselves before the invention."

"Woman's mission discovered," quoth her brother.

"Also man's, unless he neglects it," returned Miss Elizabeth; "I wonder,

now, if you would play if Miss Curtis did."

"Wisdom never pledges itself how it will act in hypothetical

circumstances," was the reply.

"Hypothetical," syllabically repeated Bessie Keith; "did you teach him

that word, Miss Curtis? Well, if I don't bring about the hypothetical

circumstances, you may call me hyperbolical."

So they talked, Rachel in a state of bewilderment, whether she were

teased or enchanted, and Alexander Keith's quiet nonchalance not

concealing that he was in some anxiety at his sister's reckless talk,

but, perhaps, he hardly estimated the effect of the gay, quaint manner

that took all hearts by storm, and gave a frank careless grace to her

nonsense. She grew graver and softer as she came nearer Avonmouth,

and spoke tenderly of the kindness she had received at the time of her

mother's death at the Cape, when she had been brought to the general's,

and had there remained like a child of the house, till she had been sent

home on the removal of the regiment to India.

"I remember," she said, "Mrs. Curtis kept great order. In fact, between

ourselves, she was rather a dragon; and Lady Temple, though she had one

child then, seemed like my companion and playfellow. Dear little Lady

Temple, I wonder if she is altered!"

"Not in the least," returned both her companions at once, and she was

quite ready to agree with them when the slender form and fair young face

met her in the hall amid a cloud of eager boys. The meeting was a full

renewal of the parting, warm and fond, and Bessie so comported herself

on her introduction to the children, that they all became enamoured of

her on the spot, and even Stephana relaxed her shyness on her behalf.

That sunny gay good-nature could not be withstood, and Rachel, again

sharing Fanny's first dinner after an arrival, no longer sat apart

despising the military atmosphere, but listening, not without amusement,

to the account of the humours of the wedding, mingled with Alick Keith's

touches of satire.

"It was very stupid," said Bessie, "of none of those girls to have Uncle

George to marry them. My aunt fancied he would be nervous, but I know he

did marry a couple when Mr. Lifford was away; I mean him to marry me, as

I told them all."




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