The Doctor smiled grimly, but he was not satisfied. He was, on the contrary, furious in a quiet way. “I don’t need at this time of day to be told how clever you are, Lucilla,” said her father; “and I thought you had been superior to the ordinary folly of women—”
“Papa, for Heaven’s sake!” cried Miss Marjoribanks. She was really alarmed this time, and she did not hesitate to let it be apparent. “I do not mean to say that I always do precisely what I ought to do,” said Lucilla; “nobody does that I know of; but I am sure I never did anything to deserve that. I never was superior, and I hope I never shall be; and I know I never pretended to it,” she said, with natural horror; for the accusation, as everybody will perceive, was hard to bear.
The Doctor laughed again, but with increased severity. “We understand all that,” he said. “I am not in the secret of your actions, Lucilla. I don’t know what you intend, or how far you mean to go. The only thing I know is that I see that young fellow Cavendish a great deal oftener in the house and about it than I care to see him; and I have had occasion to say the same thing before. I know nothing about his means,” said Dr. Marjoribanks; “his property may be in the Funds, but I think it a great deal more likely that he speculates. I have worked hard for my money, and I don’t mean it to go in that way, Lucilla. I repeat, I am not in the secret of your proceedings—”
“Dear papa! as if there was any secret,” said Lucilla, fixing her candid eyes upon her father’s face. “I might pretend I did not understand you if there was anything in what you say, but I never go upon false pretences when I can help it. I am very fond of Mr. Cavendish,” she continued regretfully, after a pause. “There is nobody in Carlingford that is so nice; but I don’t see whom he can marry except Barbara Lake.” Miss Marjoribanks would have scorned to conceal the unfeigned regret which filled her mind when she uttered these words. “I am dreadfully sorry, but I don’t see anything that can be done for him,” she said, and sighed once more. As for the Doctor, he forgot all about his chestnuts, and sat and stared at her, thinking in his ignorance that it was a piece of acting, and not knowing whether to be angry or to yield to the amusement which began to rise in his breast.
“He may marry half a dozen Barbara Lakes,” said Dr. Marjoribanks, “and I don’t see what reason we should have to interfere: so long as he doesn’t want to marry you—”
“That would be impossible, papa,” said Lucilla, with pensive gravity. “I am sure I am very, very sorry. She has a very nice voice, but a man can’t marry a voice, you know; and if there was anything that I could do—I am not sure that he ever wished for that either,” Miss Marjoribanks added, with her usual candour. “It is odd, but for all that it is true.” For it was a moment of emotion, and she could not help giving utterance to the surprise with which this consideration naturally filled her mind.
“What is odd, and what is true?” said Dr. Marjoribanks, growing more and more bewildered. But Lucilla only put aside her plate and got up from her chair.
“Not any more wine, thank you,” she said. “I know you don’t want me any more, and I have so much to do. I hope you will let me invite Barbara here when they are married, and pay her a little attention; for nobody likes her in Grange Lane, and it would be so hard upon him. The more I think of it, the more sorry I am,” said Lucilla; “he deserved better, papa; but as for me, everybody knows what is my object in life.”
Thus Miss Marjoribanks left the table, leaving her father in a singular state of satisfaction and surprise. He did not believe a word of what she had been saying, with that curious perversity common to the people who surrounded Lucilla, and which arose not so much from doubt of her veracity as from sheer excess of confidence in her powers. He thought she had foiled him in a masterly manner, and that she was only, as people say, amusing herself, and had no serious intentions; and he laughed quietly to himself when she left him, in the satisfaction of finding there was nothing in it. Miss Marjoribanks, for her part, went on tranquilly with the arrangements for the marriage; one by one she was disembarrassing herself from the complications which had grown round her during the first year of her reign in Carlingford; and now only the last links of the difficulty remained to be unrolled.
The explanation she had with Mr. Cavendish himself was in every way more interesting. It happened pretty late one evening, when Lucilla was returning with her maid from the widow’s little cottage, which was so soon to be deserted. She was just at that moment thinking of the wistaria which had grown so nicely, and of all the trouble she had taken with the garden. Nobody could tell who might come into it now, after she had done so much for it; and Miss Marjoribanks could not but have a momentary sense that, on the whole, it was a little ungrateful on the part of Mrs. Mortimer, when everybody