With Wolfe in Canada eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 455 pages of information about With Wolfe in Canada.

With Wolfe in Canada eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 455 pages of information about With Wolfe in Canada.

Chapter 6:  A Storm.

After breakfast next morning, the squire asked his friend to go with him into his study.

“I have been thinking this matter over,” he said, “very seriously, and, upon reflection, I agree with you that it is undesirable that Aggie should see much of Richard, until she is of an age to form a fair opinion for herself, and to compare him with other young men.  I agree with you, also, that we have not yet sufficient proofs that he is completely changed.  I hope that he is.  You think he is not.  At any rate, he must have a longer trial, and until it is proved to your satisfaction, as well as mine, that he is in every way a desirable husband for Aggie, the less they see of each other, the better.  I therefore propose to write at once to my friend Admiral Hewson, to ask him to use his influence, at the admiralty, to get the young fellow appointed to a ship.  Does that meet your approval, my friend?”

“Quite so,” the other said cordially.  “Nothing could be better.  In the meantime, as you say, should Richard turn out well, and the young people take a liking for each other, no match could be more satisfactory.  What I want is that she should take no girlish fancy for him, at present.”

“So be it, then,” the squire said.  “I think, you know, that we are a couple of old fools, to be troubling ourselves about Aggie’s future, at present.  Still, in a matter which concerns us both so nearly, we cannot be too careful.  If we had a woman with us, we could safely leave the matter in her hands; as it is, we must blunder on, as best we may.”

And so it was settled, and a week later, Richard Horton received an official letter from the admiralty, ordering him to proceed at once to Portsmouth to join the Thetis, to which he was appointed as fourth lieutenant.  The order gave Richard extreme satisfaction.  He was beginning to find his life desperately dull, and he was heartily sick of playing the attentive nephew.  He was well content with the progress he had made; nothing had gone wrong since he returned, his uncle had clearly taken him back into his favour, and he had no doubt that Aggie quite appreciated the pains he had bestowed to gain her liking.

He detested the squire’s companion, for he felt that the latter disliked and distrusted him, and that his projects would meet with a warm opposition on his part.  Still, with the squire and Aggie herself on his side, he did not fear the result.  As to James Walsham, whom he had come home prepared to regard as a possible rival, from his early intimacy with the child, and the fact that his mother was her governess, he now regarded him with contempt, mingled with a revengeful determination to pay off the old score, should a chance ever present itself.

He therefore started next day in high spirits, assuming, however, a great reluctance to tear himself away.  A few days later a letter came from him, saying that he hoped that he should be able to come back, sometimes, for a day or two, as the Thetis was at present to be attached to the Channel squadron, and it was not expected that she would, for some time, proceed on foreign service.

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With Wolfe in Canada from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.