of artificial flies wreathed round his straw hat, and the various oddly contrived pockets of his grey shooting-coat.

In the distance at the end of the lane there appeared two walking figures. 'Mrs. Wortley!' exclaimed the young lady.

'No, surely not out so soon!' was the answer. 'She is in the depth of lessons.'

'No, but Edmund, it is, look, and Agnes too! There, Ranger has better eyes than you; he is racing to them.'

'Well, I acknowledge my mistake,' said Edmund, drawing up his rein as they came upon the pair,--a pleasing lady, and a pretty blue-eyed girl of fourteen. 'I did not believe my eyes, Mrs. Wortley, though Marian tried to persuade me. I thought you were always reading Italian at this time in the morning, Agnes'.

'And I thought you were reading Ph?drus with Gerald,' said Mrs. Wortley.

'Ay,' said Agnes, 'we did not know what to make of you coming up the lane; you with your lance there, like the Red Cross Knight himself, and Marian with her palfry for Una.'

'The knight must have borrowed the dwarf's ass,' said Edmund, laughing, and putting his lance in rest.

'And where have you been, then, at this portentous time of day, Agnes?' asked Marian.

'We heard a report of Betty Lapthorn's child having another fit,' said Agnes, 'and set off to see; but it turned out to be a false alarm. And now we are going up to the Manor House to ask Lady Arundel if she has any arrowroot for it, for ours is all used up.'

'Shall we find her at leisure?' added Mrs. Wortley.

'Yes,' said Marian. 'Gerald has finished his lessons by this time. Mamma thought it would be too far for him to go with us, and besides he frightens the fish.'

'Which you are in too good training to do, Marian,' said Mrs. Wortley. 'And how is your papa to-day?'

'Oh, it is a good day,' said Marian: 'he was up before we set off.'

'Down stairs? For perhaps we had better not go now, just after he is tired with coming down,' said Mrs. Wortley. 'Now, Mr. Arundel, you will tell me honestly, and this arrowroot will do just as well another time; or if Marian will carry home the message--'

'Well,' said Edmund, smiling, 'to give you a proof of my sincerity, I think you had better perhaps go rather later in the day. My uncle very unnecessarily hurried himself, thinking that he was keeping me waiting to help him down stairs, and I thought he seemed rather tired; but he will be very glad to see you in the afternoon. Indeed, he would be very glad now, only you asked me as a question of prudence.'

'Don't make civil speeches at the end to spoil just such a reply as I wanted,' said Mrs. Wortley. 'I am afraid you do not think Sir Edmund much better since you were last at home.'

Edmund shook his head. 'If he has not lost ground, it is well,' said he, 'and I think at least there is less pain.'

'Well, I will not keep you any longer,' said Mrs. Wortley; 'good-bye, and good sport to you.'

And with a wave of the hand on rode the two cousins, Edmund and Marian Arundel.

'What an excellent thing it is for the village that those Wortleys are come!' said Edmund.

'Yes; now that mamma cannot attend much to the school and poor people, I don't know what we should do without them. How different it was in old Mr. May's time! I hope we shall get the Church set to rights now, when papa is well enough to attend to it.'

Вы читаете The Two Guardians
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