"If there is one thing I dislike," said Cynthia to Mr. Gibson, after

he had pronounced tonics to be the cure for her present state, "it is

the way doctors have of giving tablespoonfuls of nauseous mixtures as

a certain remedy for sorrows and cares." She laughed up in his face

as she spoke; she had always a pretty word and smile for him, even in

the midst of her loss of spirits.

"Come! you acknowledge you have 'sorrows' by that speech: we'll make

a bargain: if you'll tell me your sorrows and cares, I'll try and

find some other remedy for them than giving you what you are pleased

to term my nauseous mixtures."

"No," said Cynthia, colouring; "I never said I had sorrows and cares;

I spoke generally. What should I have a sorrow about?--you and Molly

are only too kind to me," her eyes filling with tears.

"Well, well, we'll not talk of such gloomy things, and you shall have

some sweet emulsion to disguise the taste of the bitters I shall be

obliged to fall back upon."

"Please, don't. If you but knew how I dislike emulsions and

disguises! I do want bitters--and if I sometimes--if I'm obliged

to--if I'm not truthful myself, I do like truth in others--at least,

sometimes." She ended her sentence with another smile, but it was

rather faint and watery.

Now the first person out of the house to notice Cynthia's change of

look and manner was Roger Hamley--and yet he did not see her until,

under the influence of the nauseous mixture, she was beginning to

recover. But his eyes were scarcely off her during the first five

minutes he was in the room. All the time he was trying to talk

to Mrs. Gibson in reply to her civil platitudes, he was studying

Cynthia; and at the first convenient pause he came and stood before

Molly, so as to interpose his person between her and the rest of the

room; for some visitors had come in subsequent to his entrance.

"Molly, how ill your sister is looking! What is it? Has she had

advice? You must forgive me, but so often those who live together in

the same house don't observe the first approaches of illness."

Now Molly's love for Cynthia was fast and unwavering, but if anything

tried it, it was the habit Roger had fallen into of always calling

Cynthia Molly's sister in speaking to the latter. From any one else

it would have been a matter of indifference to her, and hardly to be

noticed; it vexed both ear and heart when Roger used the expression;

and there was a curtness of manner as well as of words in her reply.




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