"Well!" said she, when her father stopped speaking.

"Well! what?" asked he, playfully.

"Oh! why, such a number of things. I've been waiting all day to ask

you all about everything. How is he looking?"

"If a young man of twenty-four ever does take to growing taller, I

should say that he was taller. As it is, I suppose it's only that he

looks broader, stronger--more muscular."

"Oh! is he changed?" asked Molly, a little disturbed by this account.

"No, not changed; and yet not the same. He's as brown as a berry for

one thing; caught a little of the negro tinge, and a beard as fine

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and sweeping as my bay-mare's tail."

"A beard! But go on, papa. Does he talk as he used to do? I should

know his voice amongst ten thousand."

"I didn't catch any Hottentot twang, if that's what you mean. Nor did

he say, 'Cæsar and Pompey berry much alike, 'specially Pompey,' which

is the only specimen of negro language I can remember just at this

moment."

"And which I never could see the wit of," said Mrs. Gibson, who had

come into the room after the conversation had begun; and did not

understand what it was aiming at. Molly fidgeted; she wanted to go on

with her questions and keep her father to definite and matter-of-fact

answers, and she knew that when his wife chimed into a conversation,

Mr. Gibson was very apt to find out that he must go about some

necessary piece of business.

"Tell me, how are they all getting on together?" It was an inquiry

which she did not make in general before Mrs. Gibson, for Molly and

her father had tacitly agreed to keep silence on what they knew or

had observed, respecting the three who formed the present family at

the Hall.

"Oh!" said Mr. Gibson, "Roger is evidently putting everything to

rights in his firm, quiet way."

"'Things to rights.' Why, what's wrong?" asked Mrs. Gibson quickly.

"The Squire and the French daughter-in-law don't get on well

together, I suppose? I am always so glad Cynthia acted with the

promptitude she did; it would have been very awkward for her to have

been mixed up with all these complications. Poor Roger! to find

himself supplanted by a child when he comes home!"

"You were not in the room, my dear, when I was telling Molly of the

reasons for Roger's return; it was to put his brother's child at once

into his rightful and legal place. So now, when he finds the work

partly done to his hands, he is happy and gratified in proportion."




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