"Heighty-teighty! Miss Molly! don't you remember that I am old enough

to be your mother, and that it is not pretty behaviour to speak so to

us--to me! 'Chatter' to be sure. Really, Molly--"

"I beg your pardon," said Molly, only half-penitent.

"I daresay you did not mean to speak so to sister," said Miss

Phoebe, trying to make peace.

Molly did not answer all at once. She wanted to explain how much

mischief might be done by such reports.

"But don't you see," she went on, still flushed by vexation, "how

bad it is to talk of such things in such a way? Supposing one of

them cared for some one else, and that might happen, you know; Mr.

Preston, for instance, may be engaged to some one else?"

"Molly! I pity the woman! Indeed I do. I have a very poor opinion of

Mr. Preston," said Miss Browning, in a warning tone of voice; for a

new idea had come into her head.

"Well, but the woman, or young lady, would not like to hear such

reports about Mr. Preston."

"Perhaps not. But for all that, take my word for it, he's a great

flirt, and young ladies had better not have much to do with him."

"I daresay it was all accident their meeting in Heath Lane," said

Miss Phoebe.

"I know nothing about it," said Molly, "and I daresay I have been

impertinent, only please don't talk about it any more. I have my

reasons for asking you." She got up, for by the striking of the

church clock she had just found out that it was later than she had

thought, and she knew that her father would be at home by this time.

She bent down and kissed Miss Browning's grave and passive face.

"How you are growing, Molly!" said Miss Phoebe, anxious to cover

over her sister's displeasure. "'As tall and as straight as a

poplar-tree!' as the old song says."

"Grow in grace, Molly, as well as in good looks!" said Miss Browning,

watching her out of the room. As soon as she was fairly gone, Miss

Browning got up and shut the door quite securely, and then sitting

down near her sister, she said, in a low voice, "Phoebe, it was

Molly herself that was with Mr. Preston in Heath Lane that day when

Mrs. Goodenough saw them together!"

"Gracious goodness me!" exclaimed Miss Phoebe, receiving it at once

as gospel. "How do you know?"

"By putting two and two together. Didn't you notice how red Molly

went, and then pale, and how she said she knew for a fact that Mr.

Preston and Cynthia Kirkpatrick were not engaged?"




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