"Still, I don't see what I can do now, papa. Perhaps I've been

foolish; but what I did, I did of my own self. It was not suggested

to me. And I'm sure it was not wrong in morals, whatever it might

be in judgment. As I said, it's all over now; what I did ended the

affair, I am thankful to say; and it was with that object I did it.

If people choose to talk about me, I must submit; and so must you,

dear papa."

"Does your mother--does Mrs. Gibson--know anything about it?" asked

he with sudden anxiety.

"No; not a bit; not a word. Pray don't name it to her. That might

lead to more mischief than anything else. I have really told you

everything I am at liberty to tell."

It was a great relief to Mr. Gibson to find that his sudden fear that

his wife might have been privy to it all was ill-founded. He had been

seized by a sudden dread that she, whom he had chosen to marry in

order to have a protectress and guide for his daughter, had been

cognizant of this ill-advised adventure with Mr. Preston; nay, more,

that she might even have instigated it to save her own child; for

that Cynthia was, somehow or other, at the bottom of it all he had

no doubt whatever. But now, at any rate, Mrs. Gibson had not been

playing a treacherous part; that was all the comfort he could extract

out of Molly's mysterious admission, that much mischief might result

from Mrs. Gibson's knowing anything about these meetings with Mr.

Preston.

"Then, what is to be done?" said he. "These reports are abroad,--am

I to do nothing to contradict them? Am I to go about smiling and

content with all this talk about you, passing from one idle gossip to

another?"

"I'm afraid so. I'm very sorry, for I never meant you to have known

anything about it, and I can see now how it must distress you. But

surely when nothing more happens, and nothing comes of what has

happened, the wonder and the gossip must die away. I know you believe

every word I have said, and that you trust me, papa. Please, for my

sake, be patient with all this gossip and cackle."

"It will try me hard, Molly," said he.

"For my sake, papa!"

"I don't see what else I can do," replied he moodily, "unless I get

hold of Preston."

"That would be the worst of all. That would make a talk. And, after

all, perhaps he was not so very much to blame. Yes! he was. But

he behaved well to me as far as that goes," said she, suddenly

recollecting his speech when Mr. Sheepshanks came up in the Towers'

Park--"Don't stir, you have done nothing to be ashamed of."




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