Wives and Daughters: An Every-Day Story - Page 425/572

Miss Browning went to Mrs. Dawes' and began civilly enough to make

inquiries concerning the reports current in Hollingford about Molly

and Mr. Preston; and Mrs. Dawes fell into the snare, and told all the

real and fictitious circumstances of the story in circulation, quite

unaware of the storm that was gathering and ready to fall upon her

as soon as she stopped speaking. But she had not the long habit of

reverence for Miss Browning which would have kept so many Hollingford

ladies from justifying themselves if she found fault. Mrs. Dawes

stood up for herself and her own veracity, bringing out fresh

scandal, which she said she did not believe, but that many did; and

adducing so much evidence as to the truth of what she had said and

did believe, that Miss Browning was almost quelled, and sate silent

and miserable at the end of Mrs. Dawes' justification of herself.

"Well!" she said at length, rising up from her chair as she spoke,

"I'm very sorry I've lived till this day; it's a blow to me just as

if I had heard of such goings-on in my own flesh and blood. I suppose

I ought to apologize to you, Mrs. Dawes, for what I said; but I've

no heart to do it to-day. I ought not to have spoken as I did; but

that's nothing to this affair, you see."

"I hope you do me the justice to perceive that I only repeated what

I had heard on good authority, Miss Browning," said Mrs. Dawes in

reply.

"My dear, don't repeat evil on any authority unless you can do some

good by speaking about it," said Miss Browning, laying her hand on

Mrs. Dawes' shoulder. "I'm not a good woman, but I know what is good,

and that advice is. And now I think I can tell you that I beg your

pardon for flying out upon you so; but God knows what pain you were

putting me to. You'll forgive me, won't you, my dear?" Mrs. Dawes

felt the hand trembling on her shoulder, and saw the real distress of

Miss Browning's mind, so it was not difficult for her to grant the

requested forgiveness. Then Miss Browning went home, and said but a

few words to Phoebe, who indeed saw well enough that her sister had

heard the reports confirmed, and needed no further explanation of

the cause of scarcely-tasted dinner, and short replies, and saddened

looks. Presently Miss Browning sate down and wrote a short note. Then

she rang the bell, and told the little maiden who answered it to

take it to Mr. Gibson, and if he was out to see that it was given

to him as soon as ever he came home. And then she went and put on

her Sunday cap; and Miss Phoebe knew that her sister had written

to ask Mr. Gibson to come and be told of the rumours affecting his

daughter. Miss Browning was sadly disturbed at the information she

had received, and the task that lay before her; she was miserably

uncomfortable to herself and irritable to Miss Phoebe, and the

netting-cotton she was using kept continually snapping and breaking

from the jerks of her nervous hands. When the knock at the door was

heard,--the well-known doctor's knock,--Miss Browning took off her

spectacles, and dropped them on the carpet, breaking them as she

did so; and then she bade Miss Phoebe leave the room, as if her

presence had cast the evil-eye, and caused the misfortune. She wanted

to look natural, and was distressed at forgetting whether she usually

received him sitting or standing.