Part 4 (1/2)
”Calls herself a mother, does she? Jolly more like a step-mother, I should say,” objected Erica.
”Pretty grizzly to be boxed up with Hilary for a whole term,” lamented Betty.
”I'm _not going_ to be 'mothered' by her,” proclaimed Peggy with energy.
”She's only two years older than I am, and yet from the airs she gives herself you'd think she was Methuselah.”
”You don't _look_ like her daughter,” remarked Betty, who was literal-minded to a fault.
Peggy made an eloquent grimace.
”I'm an undutiful one, at any rate,” she laughed. ”I'm afraid Hilary will find me somewhat of a handful.”
Up in the little ivy room, however, matters were going somewhat better.
Diana and Loveday, after a few minor differences, dovetailed both their possessions and their dispositions so as to admit of the least possible friction. It was fortunate for Diana, for she had a side to her character that would have bristled into porcupine quills had she been placed with Hilary. Loveday's particular temperament soothed her down.
”I'm falling in love with her,” she admitted to Wendy. ”I was taken with her, of course, the moment I saw her, but I believe now I'm going to have it badly. I think she's beautiful! If there were a Peach Compet.i.tion, she'd win at a canter.”
Such a pandering to the ”pomps and vanities” as a Beauty Show was certainly not an item in the list of new experiments at Pendlemere, but there was a general consensus of opinion that Loveday held the palm in the matter of looks. She was a fair, slender girl, with delicate features, a clear complexion, and a quant.i.ty of long flaxen hair. She spoke prettily, but without affectation, and always gave an impression of great refinement. The wistful look that sometimes shaded her blue eyes was, on the whole, attractive.
”She's like a picture I once saw of Eve just turned out of Paradise,”
commented Diana, sitting with Wendy and Tattie in the window-seat on the stairs.
”Not half a bad shot,” said Wendy. ”In fact, it just about hits the mark. In a way, Loveday _is_ turned out of Paradise. That's to say, I suppose, if her grandfather hadn't gambled, the Abbey would have belonged to her.”
”What Abbey?”
”Why, this, of course, stupid!”
”Do you mean to say Loveday's folks used to _own_ this place?”
”They did. Owned it for hundreds of years. They were an old Border family, and mixed up with the rebellion of 1745, and all sorts of interesting things. Loveday's grandfather was the regular old-fas.h.i.+oned sporting kind of squire you read about in books. He gambled the whole property away. I suppose it used to be a fine place in his day. I've heard he kept eight hunters, and always had the house full of guests while his money lasted. Then there was a grand smash up, and everything had to be sold--house, horses, furniture, and all. He went abroad and died of a broken heart--never smiled again, and all that sort of thing, you know.”
”How fearfully romantic!” gasped Diana. ”Of course it was his own fault for gambling, but still one feels sorry for him. Did Loveday live here too when she was little?”
Wendy shook her head.
”I shouldn't think so. I believe it happened ever such a long time ago; before she was born, even.”
”Couldn't her father get it back?”
”I suppose not. Besides, he's dead too. Loveday is an orphan. She's neither father nor mother.”
”Where does she live, then, when she's at home?”
”With an uncle and aunt--her mother's relations. But she never talks very much about them, so we fancy they're not particularly nice to her.
She has no brothers or sisters. I think she feels lonely, if you ask my opinion, but she's too proud to say so.”
”And Pendlemere ought to be hers! How romantic!” repeated Diana. ”I wanted to stay in a real old-fas.h.i.+oned mediaeval British house, and here I'm plumped into a story as well. It's most exciting! What's going to happen next? Is Loveday going to get it back? Will she marry the man who owns it? Or will somebody leave her a fortune? Or will she find a lost will? How do stories generally end?” continued Diana, casting her mind over a range of light literature which she had skimmed and half forgotten.
Wendy disposed of each of the suggestions in turn.