So Sir Charles began this day at luncheon by taking Molly under his

quiet protection. He did not say much to her; but what he did say was

thoroughly friendly and sympathetic; and Molly began, as he and Lady

Harriet intended that she should, to have a kind of pleasant reliance

upon him. Then in the evening while the rest of the family were at

dinner--after Molly's tea and hour of quiet repose, Parkes came and

dressed her in some of the new clothes prepared for the Kirkpatrick

visit, and did her hair in some new and pretty way, so that when

Molly looked at herself in the cheval-glass, she scarcely knew the

elegant reflection to be that of herself. She was fetched down by

Lady Harriet into the great long formidable drawing-room, which as

an interminable place of pacing, had haunted her dreams ever since

her childhood. At the further end sat Lady Cumnor at her tapestry

work; the light of fire and candle seemed all concentrated on that

one bright part where presently Lady Harriet made tea, and Lord

Cumnor went to sleep, and Sir Charles read passages aloud from the

_Edinburgh Review_ to the three ladies at their work.

When Molly went to bed she was constrained to admit that staying at

the Towers as a visitor was rather pleasant than otherwise; and she

tried to reconcile old impressions with new ones, until she fell

asleep. There was another comparatively quiet day before the expected

guests began to arrive in the evening. Lady Harriet took Molly a

drive in her little pony-carriage; and for the first time for many

weeks Molly began to feel the delightful spring of returning health;

the dance of youthful spirits in the fresh air cleared by the

previous day's rain.




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