'Poor Amy and I are a ladies' league,' the girl joylessly joked—'as we now take in the 'Journal' regardless of expense.'
'Oh then you practically
'At far-off Salsomaggiore—by the papers? No doubt indeed he isn't spared even the worst,' said Lady Grace —'and no doubt too it's a drag on his cure.'
Her companion seemed struck with her lack of assurance. 'Then you don't—if I may ask—hear from him?'
'I? Never a word.'
'He doesn't write?' Hugh allowed himself to insist.
'He doesn't write. And I don't write either.'
'And Lady Sandgate?' Hugh once more ventured.
'Doesn't
'Doesn't
'I've asked her not to tell me,' his friend replied—'that is if he simply holds out.'
'So that as she doesn't tell you'—Hugh was clear for the inference—'he of course does hold out.' To which he added almost accusingly while his eyes searched her: 'But your case is really bad.'
She confessed to it after a moment, but as if vaguely enjoying it. 'My case is really bad.'
He had a vividness of impatience and contrition. 197
'And it's I who—all too blunderingly!—have made it so?'
'I've made it so myself,' she said with a high head-shake, 'and you, on the contrary—!' But here she checked her emphasis.
'Ah, I've so
'To the last point—as I tell you. But it's not to that I refer,' she explained; 'it's to the ground of complaint I've given
'You mean—?' But he could only wonder—till, however, it glimmered upon him. 'You gave up your protest?'
'I gave up my protest. I told him that—so far as I'm concerned!—he might do as he liked.'
Her poor friend turned pale at the sharp little shock of it; but if his face thus showed the pang of too great a surprise he yet wreathed the convulsion in a gay grimace. 'You leave me to struggle alone?'
'I leave you to struggle alone.'
He took it in bewilderingly, but tried again, even to the heroic, for optimism. 'Ah well, you decided, I suppose, on some new personal ground.'
'Yes; a reason came up, a reason I hadn't to that extent looked for and which of a sudden—quickly, before he went—I
He turned it over. 'To
'To act in the matter'—she went through with it—'after the high stand I had taken.'
Still he studied it. 'I see—I see. It's between you and your father.'
'It's between him and me—yes. An engagement not again to trouble him.'
Hugh, from his face, might have feared a still greater complication; so he made, as he would probably have said, a jolly lot of this. 'Ah, that was nice of you. And natural.
'No'—she spoke from a deeper depth—'it's altogether wrong. For whatever happens I must now accept it.'
'Well, say you must'—he really declined not to treat it almost as rather a 'lark'—'if we can at least go on talking.'
'Ah, we
He set free again with a joyous gesture all his confidence. 'Well, what more
It took her a moment to say, and even then she didn't. 'Is it enough for
'What
'I didn't get his consent!'—she had turned away from the searching eyes, but she faced them again to rectify: