The Clever Woman of the Family - Page 156/364

The croquet practice still survived. In truth, Fanny was afraid to ride

lest Lord Keith should join her, and was glad to surround herself with

companions. She could not see the enemy without a nervous trepidation,

and was eager to engross herself with anybody or thing that came to hand

so as to avoid the necessity of attending to him. More than once did she

linger among her boys "to speak to Mr. Touchett," that she might avoid

a ten minutes' walk with his lordship; and for nothing was she more

grateful than for the quiet and ever ready tact with which Bessie Keith

threw herself into the breach. That bright damsel was claimed by Lord

Keith as a kinswoman, and, accepting the relationship, treated him with

the pretty playfulness and coquetry that elderly men enjoy from lively

young girls, and thus often effected a diversion in her friend's favour,

to the admiration both of the Colonel and of Lady Temple herself; all,

however, by intuition, for not a word had been hinted to her of what

had passed during that game at croquet. She certainly was a most winning

creature; the Colonel was charmed with her conversation in its shades

between archness and good sense, and there was no one who did not look

forward with dread to the end of her visit, when after a short stay with

one of her married cousins, she must begin her residence with the blind

uncle to whose establishment she, in her humility, declared she should

be such a nuisance. It was the stranger that she should think so, as she

had evidently served her apprenticeship to parish work at Bishopsworthy;

she knew exactly how to talk to poor people, and was not only at home in

clerical details herself, but infused them into Lady Temple; so that, to

the extreme satisfaction of Mr. Touchett, the latter organized a treat

for the school-children, offered prizes for needlework, and once

or twice even came to listen to the singing practice when anything

memorable was going forward. She was much pleased at being helped to do

what she felt to be right and kind, though hitherto she had hardly known

how to set about it, and had been puzzled and perplexed by Rachel's

disapproval, and semi-contempt of "scratching the surface" by the

commonplace Sunday-school system.