The Golden Butterfly. Walter Besant

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The Golden Butterfly - Walter Besant

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head in silence. Phil, in silence, too, stood opposite him, her eyes upon the ground.

      She looked up stealthily and trembled.

      Jack Dunquerque was troubled as he met her look.

      "Forgive me, Phil," he said humbly. "It was wrong – I ought not. Only forgive me, and tell me we shall be friends all the same."

      "Yes," she replied, not quite knowing what she said; "I forgive you. But, Jack, please don't do it again."

      Then he returned to the drawings, sitting at the table, while she stood over him and told him what they were.

      There was no diffidence or mock-modesty at all about her. The drawings were her life, and represented her inmost thoughts. She had never shown them all together to a single person, and now she was laying them all open before the young man whom yesterday she had met for the first time.

      It seemed to him as if she were baring her very soul for him to read.

      "I like to do them," she said, "because then I can recall everything that I have done or seen. Look! Here is the dear old house at Highgate, where I stayed for thirteen years without once going beyond its walls. Ah, how long ago it seems, and yet it is only a week since I came away! And everything is so different to me now."

      "You were happy there, Phil?"

      "Yes; but not so happy as I am now. I did not know you then, Jack."

      He beat down the temptation to take her in his arms and kiss her a thousand times. He tried to sit calmly critical over the drawings. But his hand shook.

      "Tell me about it all," he said softly.

      "These are the sketches of my Highgate life. Stay; this one does not belong to this set. It is a likeness of you, which I drew last night when I came home."

      "Did you really draw one of me? Let me have it. Do let me have it."

      "It was meant for your face. But I could do a better one now. See, this is Mr. Beck, the American gentleman; and this is Captain Ladds. This is Mr. Cassilis."

      They were the roughest unfinished things, but she had seized the likeness in every one.

      Jack kept his own portrait in his hand.

      "Let me keep it."

      "Please, no; I want that one for myself."

      Once more, and for the last time in his life, a little distrust crossed Jack Dunquerque's mind. Could this girl, after all, be only the most accomplished of all coquettes? He looked up at her face as she stood beside him, and then abused himself for treachery to love.

      "It is like me," he said, looking at the pencil portrait; "but you have made me too handsome."

      She shook her head.

      "You are very handsome, I think," she said gravely.

      He was not, strictly speaking, handsome at all. He was rather an ugly youth, having no regularity of features. And it was a difficult face to draw, because he wore no beard – nothing but a light moustache to help it out.

      "Phil, if you begin to flatter me you will spoil me; and I shall not be half so good a friend when I am spoiled. Won't you give this to me?"

      "No; I keep my portfolio all to myself. But I will draw a better one, if you like, of you, and finish it up properly, like this."

      She showed him a pencil-drawing of a face which Rembrandt himself would have loved to paint. It was the face of an old man, wrinkled and crows-footed.

      "That is my guardian, Mr. Dyson. I will draw you in the same style. Poor dear guardian! I think he was very fond of me."

      Another thought struck the young man.

      "Phil, will you instead make me a drawing – of your own face?"

      "But can you not do it for yourself?"

      "I? Phil, I could not even draw a haystack."

      "What a misfortune! It seems worse than not being able to read."

      "Draw me a picture of yourself, Phil."

      She considered.

      "Nobody ever asked me to do that yet. And I never drew my own face. It would be nice, too, to think that you had a likeness of me, particularly as you cannot draw yourself. Jack, would you mind if it were not much like me?"

      "I should prefer it like you. Please try. Give me yourself as you are now. Do not be afraid of making it too pretty."

      "I will try to make it like. Here is Mrs. Cassilis. She did not think it was very good."

      "Phil, you are a genius. Do you know that? I hold you to your promise. You will draw a portrait of yourself, and I will frame it and hang it up – no, I won't do that; I will keep it myself, and look at it when no one is with me."

      "That seems very pleasant," said Phil, reflecting. "I should like to think that you are looking at me sometimes. Jack, I only met you yesterday, and we are old friends already."

      "Yes; quite old familiar friends, are we not? Now tell all about yourself."

      She obeyed. It was remarkable how readily she obeyed the orders of this new friend, and told him all about her life with Mr. Dyson – the garden and paddock, out of which she never went, even to church; the pony, the quiet house, and the quiet life with the old man who taught her by talking; her drawing and her music; and her simple wonder what life was like outside the gates.

      "Did you never go to church, Phil?"

      "No; we had prayers at home; and on Sunday evenings I sang hymns."

      Clearly her religions education had been grossly neglected. "Never heard of a Ritualist," thought Jack, with a feeling of gladness. "Doesn't know anything about vestments; isn't learned in school feasts; and never attended a tea-meeting. This girl is a Phænix." Why – why was he a Younger Son?

      "And is Mr. Cassilis a relation of yours?"

      "No; Mr. Cassilis is Mr. Dyson's nephew. All Mr. Dyson's fortune is left to found an institution for educating girls as I was educated – "

      "Without reading or writing?"

      "I suppose so. Only, you see, it is most unfortunate that my own education is incomplete, and they cannot carry out the testator's wishes, Mr. Jagenal tells me, because they have not been able to find the concluding chapters of his book. Mr. Dyson wrote a book on it, and the last chapter was called the 'Coping-stone.' I do not know what they will do about it. Mr. Cassilis wants to have the money divided among the relations, I know. Isn't it odd? And he has so much already."

      "And I have got none."

      "O Jack! take some of mine – do! I know I have such a lot somewhere; and I never spend anything."

      "You are very good, Phil; but that will hardly be right. But do you know it is five o'clock? We have been talking for three hours. I must go – alas, I must go!"

      "And you have told me nothing at all yet about Mr. Colquhoun."

      "When I see you next I will tell you

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