"I hope you notice the difference in our occupations, Mr. Hamley.

Molly, you see, devotes herself to the useful, and I to the

ornamental. Please, under what head do you class what you are doing?

I think you might help one of us, instead of looking on like the

Grand Seigneur."

"I don't know what I can do," said he, rather plaintively. "I should

like to be useful, but I don't know how; and my day is past for

purely ornamental work. You must let me be, I'm afraid. Besides, I'm

really rather exhausted by being questioned and pulled about by those

good doctors."

"Why, you don't mean to say they have been attacking you since

lunch!" exclaimed Molly.

"Yes; indeed, they have; and they might have gone on till now if Mrs.

Gibson had not come in opportunely."

"I thought mamma had gone out some time ago!" said Cynthia, catching

wafts of the conversation as she flitted hither and thither among the

flowers.

"She came into the dining-room not five minutes ago. Do you want her,

for I see her crossing the hall at this very moment?" and Osborne

half rose.

"Oh, not at all!" said Cynthia. "Only she seemed to be in such a

hurry to go out, I fancied she had set off long ago. She had some

errand to do for Lady Cumnor, and she thought she could manage to

catch the housekeeper, who is always in the town on Thursday."

"Are the family coming to the Towers this autumn?"

"I believe so. But I don't know, and I don't much care. They don't

take kindly to me," continued Cynthia, "and so I suppose I'm not

generous enough to take kindly to them."

"I should have thought that such a very unusual blot in their

discrimination would have interested you in them as extraordinary

people," said Osborne, with a little air of conscious gallantry.

"Isn't that a compliment?" said Cynthia, after a pause of mock

meditation. "If any one pays me a compliment, please let it be short

and clear. I'm very stupid at finding out hidden meanings."

"Then such speeches as 'you are very pretty,' or 'you have charming

manners,' are what you prefer. Now, I pique myself on wrapping up my

sugar-plums delicately."

"Then would you please to write them down, and at my leisure I'll

parse them."

"No! It would be too much trouble. I'll meet you half-way, and study

clearness next time."

"What are you two talking about?" said Molly, resting on her light

spade.

"It's only a discussion on the best way of administering

compliments," said Cynthia, taking up her flower-basket again, but

not going out of the reach of the conversation.




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