‘Can I have a few minutes’ talk with you?’ he said to her, whispering into her ear as they left the drawing-room together. So she led the way into her own sitting-room, telling him, as she asked him to be seated, that she supposed that something special must have brought him over to Framley. ’I should have asked you to come up here, even if you had not spoken.’
‘Then perhaps you know what has brought me over?’ said the archdeacon.
‘Not in the least,’ said Lady Lufton. ’I have not an idea. But I did not flatter myself that you would come so far on a morning call to see us three ladies. I hope you did not want to see Ludovic, because he will not be back till tomorrow.’
‘I wanted to see you, Lady Lufton.’
’That is lucky, as here I am. You may be pretty sure to find me here any day in the year.’
After this there was a little pause. The archdeacon hardly knew how to begin his story. In the first place he was in doubt whether Lady Lufton had ever heard of the preposterous match which his son had proposed to himself to make. In his anger at Plumstead he had felt sure that she knew all about it, and that she was assisting his son. But this belief had dwindled as his anger had dwindled; and as the chaise had entered the parish of Framley he had told himself that it was quite impossible that she should know anything about it. Her manner had certainly been altogether in her favour since he had been in her house. There had been nothing of the consciousness of guilt in her demeanour. But, nevertheless, there was the coincidence! How had it come to pass that Grace Crawley and his son should be at Framley together? It might, indeed, be just possible that Flurry might have been wrong, and that his son had not been there at all.
‘I suppose Miss Crawley is at the parsonage?’ he said at last.
’Oh, yes; she is still there, and will remain there I should think for the next ten days.’
‘Oh; I did not know,’ said the archdeacon very coldly.