"Oh! she was over-tired by the ball. Papa has seen her, and says she

will be all right very soon."

"I wonder if she wants change of air?" said Roger, meditatively. "I

wish--I do wish we could have her at the Hall; you and your mother

too, of course. But I don't see how it would be possible--or else how

charming it would be!"

Molly felt as if a visit to the Hall under such circumstances would

be altogether so different an affair to all her former ones, that she

could hardly tell if she should like it or not.

Roger went on,--

Advertisement..

"You got our flowers in time, did you not? Ah! you don't know how

often I thought of you that evening! And you enjoyed it too, didn't

you?--you had plenty of agreeable partners, and all that makes a

first ball delightful? I heard that your sister danced every dance."

"It was very pleasant," said Molly, quietly. "But, after all, I'm not

sure if I want to go to another just yet; there seems to be so much

trouble connected with a ball."

"Ah! you are thinking of your sister, and her not being well?"

"No, I was not," said Molly, rather bluntly. "I was thinking of the

dress, and the dressing, and the weariness the next day."

He might think her unfeeling if he liked; she felt as if she had only

too much feeling just then, for it was bringing on her a strange

contraction of heart. But he was too inherently good himself to put

any harsh construction on her speech. Just before he went away, while

he was ostensibly holding her hand and wishing her good-by, he said

to her in a voice too low to be generally heard,--

"Is there anything I could do for your sister? We have plenty of

books, as you know, if she cares for reading." Then, receiving no

affirmative look or word from Molly in reply to this suggestion,

he went on,--"Or flowers? she likes flowers. Oh! and our forced

strawberries are just ready--I will bring some over to-morrow."

"I am sure she will like them," said Molly.

For some reason or other, unknown to the Gibsons, a longer interval

than usual occurred between Osborne's visits, while Roger came almost

every day, always with some fresh offering by which he openly sought

to relieve Cynthia's indisposition as far as it lay in his power.

Her manner to him was so gentle and gracious that Mrs. Gibson became

alarmed, lest, in spite of his "uncouthness" (as she was pleased

to term it), he might come to be preferred to Osborne, who was so

strangely neglecting his own interests, in Mrs. Gibson's opinion. In

her quiet way, she contrived to pass many slights upon Roger; but the

darts rebounded from his generous nature that could not have imagined

her motives, and fastened themselves on Molly. She had often been

called naughty and passionate when she was a child; and she thought

now that she began to understand that she really had a violent

temper. What seemed neither to hurt Roger nor annoy Cynthia made

Molly's blood boil; and now she had once discovered Mrs. Gibson's

wish to make Roger's visits shorter and less frequent, she was

always on the watch for indications of this desire. She read her

stepmother's heart when the latter made allusions to the Squire's

loneliness, now that Osborne was absent from the Hall, and that Roger

was so often away amongst his friends during the day,--




Most Popular