"I am glad you said almost," said Ermine, trying to smile; but he had

absolutely brought tears into her eyes.

"Dear Ermine," he said, gently, "you need not fear my not trusting

him to the utmost. I know that he has been too much crushed to revive

easily, and that it may not be easy to make him appreciate our hopes

from such a distance; but I think such a summons as this must bring

him."

"I hope it will," said Ermine. "Otherwise we should not deserve that you

should have any more to do with us."

"Ermine, Ermine, do you not know that nothing can make any difference

between us?"

Ermine had collected herself while he spoke.

"I know," she said, "that all you are doing makes me thank and bless

you--oh! more than I can speak."

He looked wistfully at her, but, tearful as were her eyes, there was a

resolution, about her face that impressed upon him that she trusted to

his promise of recurring no more within the year to the subject so near

his heart; and he could say no more than, "You forgive me, Ermine, you

know I trust him as you do."

"I look to your setting him above being only trusted," said Ermine,

trying to smile. "Oh! if you knew what this ray of hope is in the dreary

darkness that has lasted so long!"

Therewith he was obliged to leave her, and she only saw him for a few

minutes in the morning, when he hurried in to take leave, since, if

matters went right at the magistrates' bench, he intended to proceed

at once to make such representations in person to Mr. Beauchamp and Dr.

Long, as might induce them to send an urgent recall to Edward in time

for the spring sessions, and for this no time must be lost. Ermine

remained then alone with Rose, feeling the day strangely long and

lonely, and that, perhaps, its flatness might be a preparation for the

extinction of all the brightness that had of late come into her life.

Colin had said he would trust as she did, but those words had made her

aware that she must trust as he did. If he, with his clear sense and

kindly insight into Edward's character, became convinced that his

absence proceeded from anything worse than the mere fainthearted

indifference that would not wipe off a blot, then Ermine felt that his

judgment would carry her own along with it, and that she should lose her

undoubting faith in her brother's perfect innocence, and in that case

her mind was made up; Colin might say and do what he would, but she

would never connect him through herself with deserved disgrace. The

parting, after these months of intercourse and increased knowlege of one

another, would be infinitely more wretched than the first; but, cost her

what it would--her life perhaps--the break should be made rather than

let his untainted name be linked with one where dishonour justly

rested. But with her constant principle of abstinence from dwelling on

contingencies, she strove to turn away her mind, and to exert herself;

though this was no easy task, especially on so solitary a day as this,

while Alison was in charge at Myrtlewood in Lady Temple's absence, and

Rachel Curtis was reported far too ill to leave her room, so that Ermine

saw no one all day except her constant little companion; nor was it till

towards evening that Alison at length made her appearance, bringing a

note which Colin had sent home by Lady Temple.




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