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was to some extent a favourite. He was actually a relative, having in his veins blood of the De Guests, and was not the less a favourite because he was the heir to Allington, and because the blood of the Dales was older even than that of the noble family to which he was allied. When Bernard should come to be the squire, then indeed there might be cordial relations between Guestwick Manor and Allington; unless, indeed, the earlโ€™s heir and the squireโ€™s heir should have some fresh cause of ill-will between themselves.

They found Lady Julia sitting in her drawing-room alone, and introduced to her Mr. Crosbie in due form. The fact of Lilyโ€™s engagement was of course known at the manor, and it was quite understood that her intended husband was now brought over that he might be looked at and approved. Lady Julia made a very elaborate curtsey, and expressed a hope that her young friend might be made happy in that sphere of life to which it had pleased God to call her.

โ€œI hope I shall, Lady Julia,โ€ said Lily, with a little laugh; โ€œat any rate I mean to try.โ€

โ€œWe all try, my dear, but many of us fail to try with sufficient energy of purpose. It is only by doing our duty that we can hope to be happy, whether in single life or in married.โ€

โ€œMiss Dale means to be a dragon of perfection in the performance of hers,โ€ said Crosbie.

โ€œA dragon!โ€ said Lady Julia. โ€œNo; I hope Miss Lily Dale will never become a dragon.โ€ And then she turned to her nephew. It may be as well to say at once that she never forgave Mr. Crosbie the freedom of the expression which he had used. He had been in the drawing-room of Guestwick Manor for two minutes only, and it did not become him to talk about dragons. โ€œBernard,โ€ she said, โ€œI heard from your mother yesterday. I am afraid she does not seem to be very strong.โ€ And then there was a little conversation, not very interesting in its nature, between the aunt and the nephew as to the general health of Lady Fanny.

โ€œI didnโ€™t know my aunt was so unwell,โ€ said Bell.

โ€œShe isnโ€™t ill,โ€ said Bernard. โ€œShe never is ill; but then she is never well.โ€

โ€œYour aunt,โ€ said Lady Julia, seeming to put a touch of sarcasm into the tone of her voice as she repeated the wordโ โ€”โ€œyour aunt has never enjoyed good health since she left this house; but that is a long time ago.โ€

โ€œA very long time,โ€ said Crosbie, who was not accustomed to be left in his chair silent. โ€œYou, Dale, at any rate, can hardly remember it.โ€

โ€œBut I can remember it,โ€ said Lady Julia, gathering herself up. โ€œI can remember when my sister Fanny was recognized as the beauty of the country. It is a dangerous gift, that of beauty.โ€

โ€œVery dangerous,โ€ said Crosbie. Then Lily laughed again, and Lady Julia became more angry than ever. What odious man was this whom her neighbours were going to take into their very bosom! But she had heard of Mr. Crosbie before, and Mr. Crosbie also had heard of her.

โ€œBy the by, Lady Julia,โ€ said he, โ€œI think I know some very dear friends of yours.โ€

โ€œVery dear friends is a very strong word. I have not many very dear friends.โ€

โ€œI mean the Gazebees. I have heard Mortimer Gazebee and Lady Amelia speak of you.โ€

Whereupon Lady Julia confessed that she did know the Gazebees. Mr. Gazebee, she said, was a man who in early life had wanted many advantages, but still he was a very estimable person. He was now in Parliament, and she understood that he was making himself useful. She had not quite approved of Lady Ameliaโ€™s marriage at the time, and so she had told her very old friend Lady De Courcy; butโ โ€”And then Lady Julia said many words in praise of Mr. Gazebee, which seemed to amount to this; that he was an excellent sort of man, with a full conviction of the too great honour done to him by the earlโ€™s daughter who had married him, and a complete consciousness that even that marriage had not put him on a par with his wifeโ€™s relations, or even with his wife. And then it came out that Lady Julia in the course of the next week was going to meet the Gazebees at Courcy Castle.

โ€œI am delighted to think that I shall have the pleasure of seeing you there,โ€ said Crosbie.

โ€œIndeed!โ€ said Lady Julia.

โ€œI am going to Courcy on Wednesday. That, I fear, will be too early to allow of my being of any service to your ladyship.โ€

Lady Julia drew herself up, and declined the escort which Mr. Crosbie had seemed to offer. It grieved her to find that Lily Daleโ€™s future husband was an intimate friend of her friendโ€™s, and it especially grieved her to find that he was now going to that friendโ€™s house. It was a grief to her, and she showed that it was. It also grieved Crosbie to find that Lady Julia was to be a fellow guest with himself at Courcy Castle; but he did not show it. He expressed nothing but smiles and civil self-congratulation on the matter, pretending that he would have much delight in again meeting Lady Julia; but, in truth, he would have given much could he have invented any manoeuvre by which her ladyship might have been kept at home.

โ€œWhat a horrid old woman she is,โ€ said Lily, as they rode back down the avenue. โ€œI beg your pardon, Bernard; for, of course, she is your aunt.โ€

โ€œYes; she is my aunt; and though I am not very fond of her, I deny that she is a horrid old woman. She never murdered anybody, or robbed anybody, or stole away any other womanโ€™s lover.โ€

โ€œI should think not,โ€ said Lily.

โ€œShe says her prayers earnestly, I have no doubt,โ€ continued Bernard, โ€œand gives away money to the poor, and would sacrifice tomorrow any desire of her

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