him out of the house when he had made a discovery,
was monstrous—fiendishly cunning. However,
Lady Romfrey, as that woman appears to be at last,
covered it all. You know she has one of those
passions for Captain Beauchamp which completely blind
women to right and wrong. He is her saint, let
him sin ever so! The story’s in everybody’s
mouth. By the way, Palmet saw her. He describes
her pale as marble, with dark long eyes, the most
innocent look in the world, and a walk, the absurd
fellow says, like a statue set gliding. No doubt
Frenchwomen do walk well. He says her eyes are
terrible traitors; I need not quote Palmet. The
sort of eyes that would look fondly on a stone, you
know. What her reputation is in France I have
only indistinctly heard. She has one in England
by this time, I can assure you. She found her
match in Captain Beauchamp for boldness. Where
any other couple would have seen danger, they saw
safety; and they contrived to accomplish it, according
to those horrid talebearers. You have plenty of
time to dress, my dear; I have an immense deal to
talk about. There are half-a-dozen scandals in
London already, and you ought to know them, or you
will be behind the tittle-tattle when you go to town;
and I remember, as a girl, I knew nothing so excruciating
as to hear blanks, dashes, initials, and half words,
without the key. Nothing makes a girl look so
silly and unpalatable. Naturally, the reason
why Captain Beauchamp is more talked about than the
rest is the politics. Your grand reformer should
be careful. Doubly heterodox will not do!
It makes him interesting to women, if you like, but
he won’t soon hear the last of it, if he is for
a public career. Grancey literally crowed at
the story. And the wonderful part of it is, that
Captain Beauchamp refused to be present at the earl’s
first ceremonial dinner in honour of his countess.
Now, that, we all think, was particularly ungrateful:
now, was it not?’
‘If the countess—if ingratitude had
anything to do with it,’ said Cecilia.
She escaped to her room and dressed impatiently.
Her boudoir was empty: Beauchamp had departed.
She recollected his look at her, and turned over the
leaves of the book he had been hastily scanning, and
had condescended to approve of. On the two pages
where the paper-cutter was fixed she perceived small
pencil dots under certain words. Read consecutively,
with a participle termination struck out to convey
his meaning, they formed the pathetically ungrammatical
line:
‘Hear: none: but: accused:
false.’
Treble dots were under the word ‘to-morrow.’
He had scored the margin of the sentences containing
his dotted words, as if in admiration of their peculiar
wisdom.
She thought it piteous that he should be reduced to
such means of communication. The next instant
Cecilia was shrinking from the adept intriguer—French-taught!
In the course of the evening her cousin remarked: