at the first moment.
"Wants us all!" said Mrs Dale. "How many does the all mean?" Then she
opened Lady Julia's note and read it, not moving from her position at
the foot of the ladder.
"Do let me see, mamma," said Lily; and then the note was handed up to
her. Had Mrs Dale well considered the matter she might probably have
kept the note to herself for a while, but the whole thing was so
sudden that she had not considered the matter well.
My dear Mrs Dale [the letter ran],
I send this inside a note from my brother to Mr Dale. We
particularly want you and your two girls to come to us for
a week from the seventeenth of this month. Considering our
near connection we ought to have seen more of each other
than we have done for years past, and of course it has been
our fault. But it is never too late to amend one's ways;
and I hope you will receive my confession in the true
spirit of affection in which it is intended, and that you
will show your goodness by coming to us. I will do all I
can to make the house pleasant to your girls, for both of
whom I have much real regard.
I should tell you that John Eames will be here for the same
week. My brother is very fond of him, and thinks him the
best young man of the day. He is one of my heroes, too, I
must confess.
Very sincerely yours,
JULIA DE GUEST.
Lily, standing on the ladder, read the letter very attentively.
The squire meanwhile stood below speaking a word or two to his
sister-in-law and niece. No one could see Lily's face, as it was
turned away towards the window, and it was still averted when she
spoke. "It is out of the question that we should go, mamma;--that
is, all of us."
"Why out of the question?" said the squire.
"A whole family!" said Mrs Dale.
"That is just what they want," said the squire.
"I should like of all things to be left alone for a week," said Lily,
"if mamma and Bell would go."
"That wouldn't do at all," said the squire. "Lady Julia specially
wants you to be one of the party."
The thing had been badly managed altogether. The reference in Lady
Julia's note to John Eames had explained to Lily the whole scheme at
once, and had so opened her eyes that all the combined influence of
the Dale and De Guest families could not have dragged her over to the
Manor.
"Why not do?" said Lily. "It would be out of the question, a whole
family going in that way, but it would be ve
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