“Kathleen,” said she, “you never had a difficulty before you until now. They haven’t left me a leg to stand upon. Honest Jemmy never had any wish to make Edward a priest, and he tells my father that it was all a trick of the wife to get everything for her favorite; and he’s now determined to disappoint them. What will you do?”
“What would you recommend me?” asked Kathleen, looking at her with something of her own mood, for although her brow was serious, yet there was a slight smile upon her lips.
“Why,” said the frank and candid girl, “certainly to run away with Bryan M’Mahon; that, you know, would settle everything.”
“Would it settle my father’s heart,” said Kathleen, “and my mother’s?—would it settle my own character?—would it be the step that all the world would expect from Kathleen Cavanagh?—and putting all the world aside, would it be a step that I could take in the sight of God, my dear Hanna?”
“Kathleen, forgive me, darlin’,” said her sister, throwing her arms about her neck, and laying her head upon her shoulder; “I’m a foolish, flighty creature; indeed, I don’t know what’s to be done, nor I can’t advise you. Come out and walk about; the day’s dry an’ fine.”
“If your head makes fifty mistakes,” said her sister, “your heart’s an excuse for them all; but you don’t make any mistakes, Hanna, when you’re in earnest; instead of that your head’s worth all our heads put together. Come, now.”
They took the Carriglass road, but had not gone far when they met Dora M’Mahon who, as she said, “came down to ask them up a while, as the house was now so lonesome;” and she added, with artless naivete, “I don’t know how it is, Kathleen, but I love you better now than I ever did before. Ever since my darlin’ mother left us, I can’t look upon you as a stranger, and now that poor Bryan’s in distress, my heart clings to you more and more.”
Hanna, the generous Hanna’s eyes partook of the affection and admiration which beamed in Dora’s, as they rested on Kathleen; but notwithstanding this, she was about to give Dora an ironical chiding for omitting to say anything gratifying to herself, when happening to look back, she saw Bryan at the turn of the road approaching them.
“Here’s a friend of ours,” she exclaimed; “no less than Bryan M’Mahon himself. Come, Dora, we can’t go’ up to Carriglass, but we’ll walk back with you a piece o’ the way.”
Bryan, who was then on his return from Chevydale’s, soon joined them, and they proceeded in the direction of his father’s, Dora and Hanna having, with good-humored consideration, gone forward as an advanced guard, leaving Bryan and Kathleen to enjoy their tete-a-tete behind them.
“Dear Kathleen,” said Bryan, “I was very anxious to see you. You’ve h’ard of this unfortunate business that has come upon me?”
“I have,” she replied, “and I need not say that I’m sorry for it. Is it, or will it be as bad as they report?”