Ma pur mostrava anchor grand' arroganza, A few minutes before Margaret was setting out for Chirke Weston, Mr. Grey called her into the library, where he was standing at one of the windows, with a letter in his hand. Margaret threaded her way through the heavy carved oak furniture, and joined her uncle. A groom was leading a beautiful bay horse slowly to and fro before the windows. "Oh, uncle! is it really—I can hardly "Yes, my child, if he suits, which I feel no doubt of—for Claude is very careful, and he writes me word that the horse was the property of a lady. You will meet him at the Gages, and he comes on here after the ball. You may tell him, I take it very kind that he bore in mind that I was looking out for a horse, and that I feel sure I shall buy him." Margaret much as she felt obliged to Mr. Haveloc for having found her a horse, had no intention of giving him Mr. Grey's message. It was an exertion to which she could not feel equal, unless he should introduce the subject. She arrived at Chirke Weston about an hour before dinner, and having made her toilet, came down to the drawing-room with some trepidation; for Miss Gage had told her that there was a large party expected. Sir Evan and Lady Conway were already Harriet, the younger sister, fixed her immense dark eyes upon her, and then said, laughing, "You are too young to be stared at—but it is a great temptation." Margaret felt glad that she had come to that determination, but she liked the appearance of Miss Harriet more than that of her sister. She appeared to be in very ill-health; her hair had been cut off in an illness, and was now beginning to grow in tendrils all round her small head. She was very thin and pale, and her dress was made high, and finished with costly lace. And whenever a person ventures upon such a toilet, it gives an air of 'retenue' to the figure, which might almost point out to other women, that there is a little want of refinement in the wanton exposure with which they too often favour the public. Nothing, on that score, however, could be urged against Elizabeth and Margaret, who though they conformed to fashion, were careful to mark a distinction in their dress between a gentlewoman and an opera-dancer. Mrs. Somerton and her daughter now made their appearance; then some people who were entire strangers to Margaret; then Mr. Conway with his glass in his eye; and after him Hubert Gage and Mr. Haveloc. These last both made their way to Margaret at the same time. Mr. Blanche Somerton, who was sitting near, did not quite like this prolonged conversation. She turned round and summoned him to her side. "I am so sorry to trouble you, Mr. Hubert," she said, "but do look at my bouquet. I came away in such a hurry—see, it will not fit my bouquetiÉre; the stalks are too long." "That is a difficulty very easy to remedy," said Hubert, taking the bouquet from her. "Now I wish young ladies were "No, but what sort of things?" asked Blanche. "Do tell me, I so long to know. I really believe that you are very severe upon women." "By no means. I am too sincere an admirer of the fair sex to be exacting. Stay, this is not quite right yet—let me shorten these stalks again." "You will spoil that nice penknife, I am afraid." "That is not of the slightest consequence," said he laughing, "particularly as it is not my property." "Then you mean to say that if it was yours—" "I should feel double pleasure in sacrificing it of course. Dinner already! Now you must take my arm, you see. I have not quite finished the arrangement of your flowers. It is certainly a beautiful bouquet. I hardly know which to admire most, the flowers or the bouquetiÉre. Quite Every body was rising and pairing off—Hubert Gage, with Blanche on his arm, sauntered past Margaret, arranging the bouquet as he walked along. Margaret looked after him with some surprise; his attendance had been a thing that she was so certain of late to meet with, that she could scarcely comprehend his transferring it to somebody else. There was a little mortification in her mind for a minute, for no one likes to be robbed of an admirer, however willing she may be to give him up. But she understood it in a moment. Love hangs on such a slender thread with every one, that she could never, and did never regard Hubert Gage with a warmer interest than what might belong to a pleasant acquaintance. She was too romantic, too exacting in her ideas of love to suppose, for a moment, that a man who once entertained a serious thought of her could be engrossed in her presence by another woman. Mr. Haveloc was at her side almost as soon as Hubert passed, and she felt grateful for the attention. It prevented the awkwardness of seeming to wait till some one was desired to take her in to dinner. Just as all the company were arranging themselves round the table, George Gage clattered into the room exactly as he came off his journey, not appearing to have thought it worth while to undergo the trouble of dressing for dinner. He noticed two or three people at table, found a vacant chair just opposite to Margaret, and seeing a new and beautiful face, glared at her over his soup-plate without remorse. Certainly there was a great contrast between the two brothers. Whereas Hubert endeavoured, for no earthly motive, to efface all traces of his profession from his dress and language, George Gage, with as little show of reason, seemed never for a moment to forget his calling. He stalked about as if the world was made for his sole benefit and pleasure, and contrived to make such a great jingling when He was attached to his father; though, These several traits, however, did not flash upon Margaret all at once, but became evident in the course of her acquaintance with him. At present she was merely aware that his great blue eyes were perusing her with an expression to which she was not accustomed, and to which no modest woman can ever become accustomed—the critical and scrutinising expression of a Turk in a Slave Market. It was a relief to her to turn to Mr. Haveloc, who was rendering her the common courtesies of the table, with an earnestness which formed a sufficient contrast to the laughing manner of Hubert Gage. It seemed almost as if meeting at a strange house put them more at ease with each other. "You remain here some days, do you not?" asked Mr. Haveloc. "Yes, until after the races and the ball, and the early flower show at S——." "You mean to see a great deal of the world then before you come back to Ashdale." "Yes," said Margaret, "I shall have so much to tell my uncle about." Mr. Haveloc gave her one of those softened smiles, which changed so entirely the expression of his features. "You look forward with pleasure," he said, "to giving Mr. Grey an account of your adventures." "I do indeed," said Margaret. "And so do I." "You, Mr. Haveloc!" "Yes, I shall come in for the narrative. Perhaps you do not know that I shall return to Ashdale before you do." "Yes, my uncle told me so," said Margaret, with something like a sigh. Now, nothing in general so much offends "You don't look so glad as you ought," he said, with a smile, "which is rather ungrateful on your part; for to me Ashdale would lose very much of its attraction if you were absent." It was enough to make her blush, such a marked compliment, and from such a person; and, to heighten her confusion, there was George Gage still staring at her on the other side of the table, as only a military man can stare. "I suppose," said Mr. Haveloc, "the truth is, that you think you cannot tell Mr. Grey your little secrets when I am present; that is why you wish me away." Margaret had not said she wished him away, but she did not contradict him. "Of course I should not tell my uncle many things before you," she said, "because little circumstances, which are new to "Don't you know," said Mr. Haveloc, "that first impressions are always interesting? You must not therefore prevent my hearing yours." Miss Gage was rising at this moment, and Margaret availed herself of the move to avoid giving a reply. When the ladies returned to the drawing-room, they gathered round the fire, and began to discuss the amusements of the next day. Margaret, who was standing by Elizabeth Gage, looked earnestly in her face to see whether she could really enter into conversation of so trifling a nature as that which was going on among the ladies. Yes,—Elizabeth patiently heard Miss Lawson Smith's complaints of her crape ball dress, which had not been trimmed with roses of the proper tint, and gave as much comfort as she could under the "Recollect, my dear Lucy," said she, "that if the Fates grant us a fine day to-morrow, it will be made up of a bright sun and a keen north wind; the only advantage of an airy toilet, is to make you look blue upon the course, and send you home with a severe cold." The prospect of a cold did not seem to frighten Lucy, but she was keenly alive to the disadvantages of looking blue. Harriet Conway looking up from the footstool upon which she was seated close to the fire, remarked that, "her costume gave her no sort of trouble, as she was to ride on horseback to the races." Margaret looked at her with some surprise and no little envy, thinking what a bold, accomplished horsewoman she must be. "How do you feel to-night, darling?" asked her mother. "Oh! very comfortable," said Harriet, leaning her head on her mother's lap, as Lady Conway took the arm-chair beside her; "quite well as long as I have nothing to do that I don't like." "How I wish that you could go to the ball to-morrow, dearest," said her mother. "Thank you," said Harriet, "but that is one of the things I don't like; besides, after being on horseback all the morning, I shall be glad to go to bed as soon as I have seen you all off in your finery." "Such a pity, so well as you dance the Mazourka," said Lucy Conway, "for one meets such nice people at this ball. I really think if you took proper care—" "Oh! we will run no risks," said Lady Conway, anxiously, "you coughed at dinner, I observed." "It was the pepper, mamma mia," said Harriet; "but I have no intention of going to the ball. Bessy! send me over "What say you," asked Elizabeth smiling, "will you venture?" Margaret complied with a little timidity in her manner. "Why, you don't mean to say you are afraid of me," said Harriet taking Margaret's hand in her long, slender fingers, "I would excuse you, if I were a man. Well now, are you fond of riding?" "I am just going to learn," said Margaret "it is the thing of all others I wish for." "You ought to have begun younger," said Harriet, "but we will see what we can make of you. What is the colour of your riding-habit?" "Blue," replied Margaret. "True blue," said Harriet looking intently into the fire; "how do you like Hubert Gage?" "I don't see how that follows," said Margaret smiling; "but I like him very well." "Good," said Harriet; "I see it is not a tender subject. You know the Gages are relations of ours. Are you not, Bessy?" "Connexions, my dear Harriet; but I am quite ready to acknowledge the relationship." "And is this your first ball?" said Harriet, turning again to Margaret. "Yes." "Don't you feel very nervous, and pleased, and frightened, and impatient?" "Not very," said Margaret. "I wish very much to go, and I know Bessy and—and—two or three people." "Are you engaged yet?" "No. But if I do not dance, I shall be so amused with looking on, that it will be no disappointment to me." "Very modest on your part; but I hear the gentlemen coming, so I must leave this charming footstool, or I shall be accused of fifty things. Here in this corner is room for two, so let us continue our conversation." "Everything is so new to me," said Margaret, as she surveyed the room lit up with clusters of lamps, the heavy crimson curtains, the splendid gilt furniture, and the groups of gentlemen standing about the lady's chairs, drinking coffee, "this seems to me a very grand party; but perhaps it appears to you nothing." "An ordinary dinner party," said Harriet; "perhaps they run rather large at this house. Uncle Gage, have you quite made up your book? Because I shall be happy to offer you odds upon Rory O'More." Captain Gage who was passing with Sir Evan Conway, stopped short before the two girls. "I will have nothing to do with you," he said to Harriet, "you are far too deep for me. I believe you are hand in glove with Lord Raymond's groom." Sir Evan and Captain Gage both laughed very much at this charge. Harriet with a deepened colour protested Captain Gage turned to Margaret, and asked if she had been taking lessons in the science of book-making; adding, "that as she must be a novice as yet, he was willing to risk a pair of gloves with her." Margaret said "she was not going to bet at all; that Bessy had advised her not." "Bessy is a prude," said Captain Gage, looking much pleased, "you should never mind anything she says to you." Margaret laughed, and shook her head, and the gentlemen passed on. Then Hubert Gage made his way to the sofa, and began to rally Harriet and Margaret upon the retired spot they had chosen, admired Margaret's fan, and Harriet's gloves, and in fact went on as young men generally do when they wish to render themselves agreeable; in the midst of which discourse, Mr. Haveloc walked straight up to Margaret, and without any prologue, begged Margaret blushed and consented, and Mr. Haveloc bowed and walked away, while Hubert Gage drawing a chair close to the sofa, dropped into it and laughed immoderately. "I never knew such a fellow," he exclaimed, "just at the moment that I was gaining courage to make such a request, he must needs step forwards and cut me out. It is too bad—don't you pity me? The second quadrille then, if you have any compassion." "Mr. Hubert," said Blanche Somerton coming up, "we want your help so very much in this glee of GÖdbe's. Will you take the tenor part?" "Oh! if I am wanted," said Hubert, rising. "Miss Capel, I do not mean to stir without your answer." "The second quadrille?" said Margaret. "Exactly; unless you prefer the first Mazourka." "Oh! but you do not know the Mazourka." "No; but you can teach me so nicely in the morning." "I will not undertake you," said Margaret laughing. "Then I fall back upon the quadrille. Miss Somerton I am at your service." Mr. George Gage now loitered up the room very slowly, and planted himself against the wall, close to Margaret. He first took her cup out of her hand and set it down, and then after a very careful survey of her from head to foot, he "hoped he should be so fortunate as to secure her hand for the first waltz. He confessed that he never danced quadrilles." Margaret hesitated; she did not at all like the prospect of such a partner, but as she had no wish to sit still thenceforward, she accepted. Mr. Gage set down her embarrassment to his own infinite attractions, and was satisfied. He then made a few ordinary remarks "I should be sorry to disturb you," he replied coldly; and removed to a little distance as he spoke. Margaret made up a little romance in her mind directly; in which Harriet figured as an obdurate lady, and Mr. Gage as a desponding lover. She had leisure for these fancies, for Harriet became silent, and George Gage, though standing near, did not renew his conversation. Some of the older people were playing at cards; Lucy Conway was at the harp, Hubert almost held prisoner by Blanche Somerton, and Elizabeth was moving about among the guests with "My dear Harriet," said Lady Conway coming up to her, "it is very late, and you are looking fagged. Do recollect what is before you to-morrow; and slip out of the room without the ceremony of a good night." "I cannot very well," replied Harriet, "for I must ring for a shawl. I dare not leave this hot room without one." Margaret offered to fetch Miss Conway a shawl of her own. "No, not for worlds you kind little creature," said Harriet laying her hand on Margaret's arm, "it will do me no harm in the world to sit quietly here until the good people choose to separate." While this was going on, Mr. Gage went up to Elizabeth, and said something to her; she fetched a shawl from one of the sofas, and he crossed over to Miss Harriet, and begged to have the honour of putting it on. Harriet opened wide her large transparent eyes, with the crimson spot deepening on her cheek; thanked him, regretted to have given him the trouble; and then wrapping the large Cachemere completely round her, walked out of the room. George Gage stood with folded arms looking after her for some moments, and then threw himself on the sofa by the side of Margaret. She was not disposed to be pleased with him; but she could not deny that his manner possessed a certain charm, when he chose to exert it. It was true that he said nothing either witty or profound, but his language was easy and well chosen; and the softness of his tone, together with the exceeding interest he pretended to feel for the replies of his companion, could scarcely fail of making a favourable impression. The great drawback to his demeanour, was his remorseless and unceasing stare. Sometimes Margaret thought that something must be the matter with her sleeve, sometimes that her hair was coming The evening passed quickly enough. Some young ladies sang, some played. George Gage remained lounging on the sofa by her side. Hubert was in great request at the piano, for he sang very well, and read music easily at sight. Mr. Gage asked Margaret if she exhibited, as he called it—thanked Heaven, with praiseworthy fervour, that he was not guilty of such a failing himself, and advised her to let him drive her to the course in his phaeton the |