; but what do you
think of my having known it ever since last summer, and held my tongue
all that time?'
'A great effort, indeed,' said Philip, smiling. 'It would have
been greater, I suppose, if the engagement had been positive, not
conditional.'
'Oh! every one knew what it must come to. No one could have the least
fear of Sir Guy. Yes; I saw it all. I gave my little aid, and I am
sure I have a right to be bridesmaid, as I am to be. Oh! won't it be
charming? It is to be the grandest wedding that ever was seen. It is to
be on Whit-Tuesday; and papa is going to take me and Aunt Charlotte;
for old Aunt Mabel says Aunt Charlotte must go. There are to be six
bridesmaids, and a great party at the breakfast; everything as splendid
as possible; and I made Mrs. Edmonstone promise from the first that we
should have a ball. You must go, Maurice.'
'I shall be on the high seas!'
'Oh yes, that is horrid! But you don't sail with the regiment, I think,
Captain Morville. You surely go?'
'I am not certain,' said Philip; especially disgusted by hearing of the
splendour, and thinking that he had supposed Guy would have had more
sense; and it showed how silly Amy really was, since she was evidently
only anxious to enjoy the full paraphernalia of a bride.
'Not certain!' exclaimed Maurice and Eveleen, in a breath.
'I am not sure that I shall have time. You know I have been intending to
make a walking tour through Switzerland before joining at Corfu.'
'And you really would prefer going by yourself--"apart, unfriended,
melancholy, slow."'
'Very slow, indeed,' said Maurice.
'A wedding is a confused melancholy affair,' said Philip. 'You know I am
no dancing man, Lady Eveleen; one individual like myself can make little
difference to persons engrossed with their own affairs; I can wish my
cousins well from a distance as well as at hand; and though they
have been kind enough to ask me, I think that while their house is
overflowing with guests of more mark, my room will be preferred to my
company.'
'Then you do not mean to go?' said Lady Kilcoran. 'I do not,' she
continued, 'for my health is never equal to so much excitement, and it
would only be giving poor Mrs. Edmonstone additional trouble to have to
attend to me.'
'So you really mean to stay away?' said Eveleen.
'I have not entirely decided.'
'At any rate you must go and tell old Aunt Mabel all about them,' said
Eveleen. 'She is so delighted. You will be quite wo
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