Molly stood still for a minute, then, looking up, she said, softly,--

"Would you mind coming with me, please?"

"No! not I!" said Mrs. Kirkpatrick, seeing that her compliance was

likely to be the most speedy way of getting through the affair; so

she took Molly's hand, and, on the way, in passing the group at the

piano, she said, smiling, in her pretty genteel manner,--

"Our little friend here is shy and modest, and wants me to accompany

her to Lady Cumnor to wish good-night; her father has come for her,

and she is going away."

Molly did not know how it was afterwards, but she pulled her hand out

of Mrs. Kirkpatrick's on hearing these words, and going a step or

two in advance came up to Lady Cumnor, grand in purple velvet, and

dropping a curtsey, almost after the fashion of the school-children,

she said,--

"My lady, papa is come, and I am going away; and, my lady, I wish

you good-night, and thank you for your kindness. Your ladyship's

kindness, I mean," she said, correcting herself as she remembered

Miss Browning's particular instructions as to the etiquette to be

observed to earls and countesses, and their honourable progeny, as

they were given that morning on the road to the Towers.

She got out of the saloon somehow; she believed afterwards, on

thinking about it, that she had never bidden good-by to Lady

Cuxhaven, or Mrs. Kirkpatrick, or "all the rest of them," as she

irreverently styled them in her thoughts.

Mr. Gibson was in the housekeeper's room, when Molly ran in, rather

to the stately Mrs. Brown's discomfiture. She threw her arms round

her father's neck. "Oh, papa, papa, papa! I am so glad you have

come;" and then she burst out crying, stroking his face almost

hysterically as if to make sure he was there.

"Why, what a noodle you are, Molly! Did you think I was going to give

up my little girl to live at the Towers all the rest of her life? You

make as much work about my coming for you, as if you thought I had.

Make haste, now, and get on your bonnet. Mrs. Brown, may I ask you

for a shawl, or a plaid, or a wrap of some kind to pin about her for

a petticoat?"

He did not mention that he had come home from a long round not half

an hour before, a round from which he had returned dinnerless and

hungry; but, on finding that Molly had not come back from the Towers,

he had ridden his tired horse round by Miss Brownings', and found

them in self-reproachful, helpless dismay. He would not wait to

listen to their tearful apologies; he galloped home, had a fresh

horse and Molly's pony saddled, and though Betty called after him

with a riding-skirt for the child, when he was not ten yards from his

own stable-door, he refused to turn back for it, but went off, as

Dick the stableman said, "muttering to himself awful."




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