"I am sure he ought," Rachel could not help saying. Mrs. Carleton here

entreated her to listen, and seized her hand, so that there was no

escape. The tale was broken and confused, but there could be little

doubt of its correctness. Poor Bessie had been the bane of young

Carleton's life. She had never either decidedly accepted or repelled his

affection, but, as she had truly said, let him follow her like a little

dog, and amused herself with him in the absence of better game. He was

in his father's office, but her charms disturbed his application to

business and kept him trifling among the croquet lawns of Littleworthy,

whence his mother never had the resolution to banish her spoilt child.

At last Miss Keith's refusal of him softened by a half-implied hope,

sent him forth to his uncle at Rio, on the promise that if he did his

utmost there, he should in three years be enabled to offer Miss Keith

more than a competence. With this hope he had for the first time applied

himself to business in earnest, when he received the tidings of her

marriage, and like a true spoilt child broke down at once in resolution,

capacity, and health, so that his uncle was only too glad to ship him

off for England. And when Lady Keith made her temporary home in her old

neighbourhood, the companionship began again, permitted by her in good

nature, and almost contempt, and allowed by his family in confidence

of the rectitude of both parties; and indeed nothing could be more true

than that no harm had been intended. But it was perilous ground; ladies,

however highly principled, cannot leave off self-pleasing habits all at

once, and the old terms returned sufficiently to render the barrier but

slightly felt. When Lady Keith had spoken of her intention of leaving

Timber End, the reply had been the old complaint of her brother's

harshness and jealousy of his ardent and lasting affection, and reproof

had not at once silenced him. This it was that had so startled her as to

make her hurry to her brother's side, unheeding of her steps.

As far as Rachel could make out, the poor young man's grief and despair

had been poured out to his mother, and she, unable to soothe, had

come to try to extract some assurance that the catastrophe had been

unconnected with his folly. A very slight foundation would have served

her, but this Rachel would not give, honestly believing him the cause of

the accident, and also that the shock to the sense of duty higher than

he could understand had occasioned the excitement which had destroyed

the slender possibility of recovery. She pitied the unhappy man more

than she had done at first, and she was much pained by his mother's

endeavours to obtain a palliative for him, but she could not be untrue.

"Indeed," she said, "I fear no one can say it was not so; I don't think

anything is made better by blinking the reality."




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