The Green Mummy - Page 80/191

Sometimes Hope came to dine at the Pyramids, and on these occasions

Mrs. Jasher was present in her character of chaperon. As Miss Kendal was

helping the widow to marry Professor Braddock, she in her turn did her

best to speed Archie's wooing. Certainly the young couple were engaged

and there was no understanding to be brought about. Nevertheless, Mrs.

Jasher was a useful article of furniture to be in the room when they

were together, for Gartley, like all English villages, was filled with

scandalmongers, who would have talked, had Hope and Lucy not employed

Mrs. Jasher as gooseberry. Sometimes Donna Inez came with the widow,

while her father was hunting for the mummy in Pierside, and then Sir

Frank Random would be sure to put in an appearance to woo his Dulcinea

in admiring silence. Mrs. Jasher declared that the two must have made

love by telepathy, for they rarely exchanged a word. But this was all

the better, as Archie and Lucy chattered a great deal, and two pair of

magpies--Mrs. Jasher declared--would have been too much for her nerves.

She made a very good chaperon, as she allowed the young people to act as

they pleased, only sanctioning the meetings by her elderly presence.

One evening Mrs. Jasher was due to dinner, and Hope had already arrived.

No one else was expected, as Don Pedro had taken his daughter to the

theatre at Pierside and Sir Frank had gone to London in connection with

his military duties. It was a bitterly cold night, and already a fall

of snow had hinted that there was to be a real English Christmas of

the genuine kind. Lucy had prepared an excellent dinner for three, and

Archie had brought a set of new patience cards for Mrs. Jasher, who was

fond of the game. While the widow played, the lovers hoped to make love

undisturbed, and looked forward to a happy evening. But there was one

drawback, for although the dinner hour was supposed to be eight o'clock,

and it was now thirty minutes past, Mrs. Jasher had not arrived. Lucy

was dismayed.

"What can be keeping her?" she asked Archie, to which that young

gentleman replied that he did not know, and, what was more, he did not

care. Miss Kendal very properly rebuked this sentiment. "You ought to

care, Archie, for you know that if Mrs. Jasher does not come to dinner,

you will have to go away."

"Why should I?" he inquired sulkily.

"People will talk."

"Let them. I don't care."

"Neither do I, you stupid boy. But my father will care, and if people

talk he will be very angry."

"My dear Lucy," and Archie put his arm round her waist to say this, "I

don't see why you should be afraid of the Professor. He is only your

step-father, and you aren't so very fond of him as to mind what he says.

Besides, we can marry soon, and then he can go hang."