Wives and Daughters: An Every-Day Story - Page 423/572

"Nonsense. I am so well prepared for misfortune by the frequent

contemplation of its possibility that I believe I can receive any ill

news with apparent equanimity and real resignation. Besides, when you

said yesterday at breakfast-time that you meant to give up the day

to making your drawers tidy, I was aware that some misfortune was

impending, though of course I could not judge of its magnitude. Is

the Highchester Bank broken?"

"Oh no, sister!" said Miss Phoebe, moving to a seat close to her

sister's on the sofa. "Have you really been thinking that! I wish I

had told you what I heard at the very first, if you've been fancying

that!"

"Take warning, Phoebe, and learn to have no concealments from me. I

did think we must be ruined, from your ways of going on: eating no

meat at dinner, and sighing continually. And now what is it?"

"I hardly know how to tell you, Dorothy. I really don't."

Miss Phoebe began to cry; Miss Browning took hold of her arm, and

gave her a little sharp shake.

"Cry as much as you like when you've told me; but don't cry now,

child, when you're keeping me on the tenter-hooks."

"Molly Gibson has lost her character, sister. That's it."

"Molly Gibson has done no such thing!" said Miss Browning

indignantly. "How dare you repeat such stories about poor Mary's

child? Never let me hear you say such things again."

"I can't help it. Mrs. Dawes told me; and she says it's all over the

town. I told her I did not believe a word of it. And I kept it from

you; and I think I should have been really ill if I'd kept it to

myself any longer. Oh, sister! what are you going to do?"

For Miss Browning had risen without speaking a word, and was leaving

the room in a stately and determined fashion.

"I'm going to put on my bonnet and things, and then I shall call upon

Mrs. Dawes, and confront her with her lies."

"Oh, don't call them lies, sister; it's such a strong, ugly word.

Please call them tallydiddles, for I don't believe she meant any

harm. Besides--besides--if they should turn out to be truth? Really,

sister, that's the weight on my mind; so many things sounded as if

they might be true."

"What things?" said Miss Browning, still standing with judicial

erectness of position in the middle of the floor.

"Why--one story was that Molly had given him a letter."

"Who's him? How am I to understand a story told in that silly way?"

Miss Browning sat down on the nearest chair, and made up her mind to

be patient if she could.