At Love's Cost eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 572 pages of information about At Love's Cost.

At Love's Cost eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 572 pages of information about At Love's Cost.

All this was very hard to bear; but a burden still heavier was provided for her in the conduct of her cousin Joseph.  On the evening of her arrival he had been gracious enough to bestow upon her an admiration of which she was then unconscious; but his admiration grew, and he began to pay her what persons of his class call “attentions.”  He came in much earlier of an evening than he did before, and he sat beside her, and, with his small eyes fixed on her pale and downcast face, told her anecdotes of the office and his fellow-clerks.  He was under the impression that he possessed a voice, and with a certain amount of artfulness he got her to play his accompaniments, bestowing killing looks at her as he sang the “Maid of Athens,” or “My Pretty June”—­with a false note in every third bar.  Sometimes he came home to lunch, explaining to them that there was nothing doing in the city, and went with Ida and Isabel on one of their walks.  On these occasions he was got up in a Norfolk jacket and knickerbockers, and enjoyed the flattering conviction that he looked like a country gentleman.  He addressed his conversation exclusively to Ida, and endeavoured, as he would have said, to make himself agreeable.

It was all lost upon Ida, whose head was in the clouds, whose mind was dwelling on the past; but his mother and sister noticed it, and Mrs. Heron began to sniff by way of disapproval of his conduct.  With a mother’s sharp eyes, Mrs. Heron understood why Joseph had launched out into new suits and brilliant neckties, why he came home earlier than was his wont, and why he hung about the pale-faced girl who seemed unconscious of his presence.  Mrs. Heron began to feel, as she would have expressed it, that she had taken a viper into her bosom.  She was ambitious for her only son, and wanted to see him married to one of the daughters of a retired city man who had settled in Woodgreen.  Ida was all very well, but she was absolutely penniless and not a good enough match for so brilliant and promising a young man as Joseph.  Mrs. Heron began to regard her with a certain amount of coldness and suspicion; but Ida was as unconscious of the change in Mrs. Heron’s manner as she was of the cause of Mr. Joseph’s attention; to her he was just an objectionable young man of quite a new and astonishing type, to whom she was obliged to listen because he was the son of the man whose bread she ate.

He had often invited Ida to accompany him and Isabel to a matinee, but Ida always declined.  Not only was her father’s death too recent to permit of her going to the theatre, but she shrank from all public places of amusement.  When she had left Herondale it had been with the one desire to conceal herself, and, if possible, to earn her own living.  Mr. Joseph was very sulky over her refusal, and Isabel informed her that he had been so ill-tempered at the theatre that she did not know what to make of him.

One day he came in soon after luncheon, and, when Mrs. Heron had left the room, informed Ida and Isabel that he had got tickets for a concert at the Queen’s Hall that evening.

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At Love's Cost from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.