"And what did you say?" asked Molly, breathless.

"I did not answer it at all until another letter came, entreating for

a reply. By that time mamma had come home, and the old daily pressure

and plaint of poverty had come on. Mary Donaldson wrote to me often,

singing the praises of Mr. Preston as enthusiastically as if she had

been bribed to do it. I had seen him a very popular man in their set,

and I liked him well enough, and felt grateful to him. So I wrote and

gave him my promise to marry him when I was twenty, but it was to be

a secret till then. And I tried to forget I had ever borrowed money

of him, but somehow as soon as I felt pledged to him I began to hate

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him. I couldn't endure his eagerness of greeting if ever he found me

alone; and mamma began to suspect, I think. I cannot tell you all the

ins and outs; in fact, I didn't understand them at the time, and I

don't remember clearly how it all happened now. But I know that Lady

Cuxhaven sent mamma some money to be applied to my education, as

she called it; and mamma seemed very much put out and in very low

spirits, and she and I didn't get on at all together. So, of course,

I never ventured to name the hateful twenty pounds to her, but went

on trying to think that if I was to marry Mr. Preston, it need never

be paid--very mean and wicked, I daresay; but oh, Molly, I've been

punished for it, for how I abhor that man."

"But why? When did you begin to dislike him? You seem to have taken

it very passively all this time."

"I don't know. It was growing upon me before I went to that school

at Boulogne. He made me feel as if I was in his power; and by too

often reminding me of my engagement to him, he made me critical of

his words and ways. There was an insolence in his manner to mamma,

too. Ah! you're thinking that I'm not too respectful a daughter--and

perhaps not; but I couldn't bear his covert sneers at her faults, and

I hated his way of showing what he called his 'love' for me. Then,

after I had been a _semestre_ at Mdme. Lefevre's, a new English girl

came--a cousin of his, who knew but little of me. Now, Molly, you

must forget as soon as I've told you what I'm going to say; and she

used to talk so much and perpetually about her cousin Robert--he was

the great man of the family, evidently--and how he was so handsome,

and every lady of the land in love with him,--a lady of title into

the bargain."




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