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'I thought he was quite a different sort!' 'Perhaps, after all, your thoughts were not wrong; and he only
fancied, poor boy, that he had found a pretty way of thanking you.' This did not greatly comfort Gillian, who might prefer feeling that
she was insulted rather than that she had been cruelly unkind, and
might like to blame Alexis rather than herself. And, indeed, in any
case, she had sense enough to perceive that this very unacceptable
compliment was the consequence of her own act of independence of more
experienced heads. The next person Miss Mohun met was Fergus, lugging upstairs, step by
step, a monstrous lump of stone, into which he required her to look
and behold a fascinating crevice full of glittering spar. 'Where did you get that, Fergus?' 'Up off the cliff over the quarry.' 'Are you sure that you may have it?' 'Oh yes; White said I might. It's so jolly, auntie! Frank Stebbing
is gone away to the other shop in the Apennines, where the old boss
lives. What splendiferous specimens he must have the run of! Our
Stebbing says 'tis because Kally White makes eyes at him; but any
way, White has got to do his work while he's away, and go all the
rounds to see that things are right, so I go after him, and he lets
me have just what I like - such jolly crystals.' 'I am sure I hope it is all right.' 'Oh yes, I always ask him, as you told me; but he is awfully slow and
mopy and down in the mouth to-day. Stebbing says he is sweet upon
Gill; but I told him that couldn't be, White knew better. A
general's daughter, indeed! and Will remembers his father a
sergeant.' 'It is very foolish, Fergus. Say no more about it, for it is not
nice talk about your sister.' 'I'll lick any one who does,' said Fergus, bumping his stone up
another step. Poor Aunt Jane! There was more to fall on her as soon as the door
was finally shut on the two rooms communicating with one another,
which the sisters called their own. Mrs. Mount's manipulations of
Miss Adeline's rich brown hair were endured with some impatience,
while Miss Mohun leant back in her chair in her shawl-patterned
dressing-gown, watching, with a sort of curious wonder and
foreboding, the restlessness that proved that something was in store,
and meantime somewhat lazily brushing out her own thinner darker
locks. 'You are tired, Miss Jane,' said the old servant, using the pet name
in private moments. 'You had better let me do your hair.' 'No, thank you, Fanny; I have very nearly done,' she said, marking
the signs of eagerness on her sister's part. 'Oh, by the bye, did
that hot bottle go down to Lilian Giles?' 'Yes, ma'am; Mrs. Giles came up for it.' 'Did she say whether Lily was well enough to see Miss Gillian?' Mrs. Mount coughed a peculiar cough that her mistresses well knew to
signify that she could tell them something they would not like to
hear, if they chose to ask her, and it was the younger who put the
question -
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