"Alison has brought down a division or two to show me. How much alike

they are."

"Exactly alike, and excessively unruly and unmanageable," said Rachel.

"I pity your sister."

"More unmanageable in appearance than in reality," said the colonel:

"there's always a little trial of strength against the hand over them,

and they yield when they find it is really a hand. They were wonderfully

good and considerate when it was an object to keep the house quiet."

Rachel would not encourage him to talk of Lady Temple, so she turned to

Ermine on the business that had brought her, collecting and adapting

old clothes for emigrants.--It was not exactly gentlemen's pastime, and

Ermine tried to put it aside and converse, but Rachel never permitted

any petty consideration to interfere with a useful design, and as

there was a press of time for the things, she felt herself justified in

driving the intruder off the field and outstaying him. She succeeded; he

recollected the desire of the boys that he should take them to inspect

the pony at the "Jolly Mariner," and took leave with--"I shall see you

to-morrow."

"You knew him all the time!" exclaimed Rachel, pausing in her unfolding

of the Master Temples' ship wardrobe. "Why did you not say so?"

"We did not know his name. He was always the 'Major.'"

"Who, and what is he?" demanded Rachel, as she knelt before her victim,

fixing those great prominent eyes, so like those of Red Riding Hood's

grandmother, that Ermine involuntarily gave a backward impulse to her

wheeled chair, as she answered the readiest thing that occurred to

her,--"He is brother to Lord Keith of Gowan-brae."

"Oh," said Rachel, kneeling on meditatively, "that accounts for it. So

much the worse. The staff is made up of idle honourables."

"Quoth the 'Times!'" replied Ermine; "but his appointment began on

account of a wound, and went on because of his usefulness--"

"Wounded! I don't like wounded heroes," said Rachel; "people make such a

fuss with them that they always get spoilt."

"This was nine years ago, so you may forget it if you like," said

Ermine, diversion suppressing displeasure.

"And what is your opinion of him?" said Rachel, edging forward on her

knees, so as to bring her inquisitorial eyes to bear more fully.

"I had not seen him for twelve years," said Ermine, rather faintly.

"He must have had a formed character when you saw him last. The twelve

years before five-and-forty don't alter the nature."

"Five-and-forty! Illness and climate have told, but I did not think it

was so much. He is only thirty-six--"

"That is not what I care about," said Rachel, "you are both of you so

cautious that you tell me what amounts to nothing! You should consider

how important it is to me to know something about the person in whose

power my cousin's affairs are left."




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