Nuttie's Father. Yonge Charlotte Mary

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lost father, or to foster curiosity that might lead to some painful discovery, so she took refuge in an inarticulate sound.

      'I think Mr. Dutton knows,' proceeded Nuttie.

      'You don't mean to ask him?'

      'Catch me! I know how he would look at me.'

      'Slang! A forfeit!'

      'Oh, it's holiday time, and the boarders can't hear. There's Mr. Dutton's door!'

      This might in one way be a relief to Miss Nugent, but she did not like being caught upon the wall, and therefore made a rapid descent, though not without a moment's entanglement of skirt, which delayed her long enough to show where she had been, as Mr. Dutton was at the same moment advancing to his own wall on the opposite side of the Nugent garden. Perhaps he would have pretended to see nothing but for Nuttie's cry of glee.

      'You wicked elf,' said Miss Mary, 'to inveigle people into predicaments, and then go shouting ho! ho! ho! like Robin Goodfellow himself.'

      'You should have kept your elevation and dignity like me,' retorted Ursula; 'and then you would have had the pleasure of seeing Mr. Dutton climbing his wall and coming to our feet.'

      'Mischievous elves deserve no good news,' said Mr. Dutton, who was by no means so venerable that the crossing the wall was any effort or compromise of dignity, and who had by this time joined Mary on her grass plat.

      'Oh, what is it! Are we to go to Monks Horton?' cried Nuttie.

      'Here is a gracious permission from Lord Kirkaldy, the only stipulations being that no vestiges of the meal, such as sandwich papers or gooseberry skins, be left on the grass; and that nobody does any mischief,' he added in an awful tone of personality. 'So if I see anybody rooting up holly trees I shall be bound to interfere.'

      'Now, Mr. Dutton, it was only a baby holly in a chink.'

      'Only a holly tree! Just like the giant's daughter when she only carried off waggon, peasant, oxen, and all in her pinafore.'

      'It is not longer than my finger now!'

      'Well, remember, mischief either wanton or scientific is forbidden. You are to set an example to the choir-boys.'

      'Scientific mischief is a fatal thing to rare plants,' said Mary.

      'If I'm not to touch anything, I may as well stay at home,' pouted Nuttie.

      'You may gather as many buttercups and daisies as the sweet child pleases,' said Mr. Dutton; whereupon she threatened to throw her books at his head.

      Miss Nugent asked how they were to go, and Mr. Dutton explained that there was only a quarter of a mile's walk from the station; that return tickets would be furnished at a tariff of fourpence a head; and that there would be trains at 1.15 and 7.30.

      'How hungry the children will be.'

      'They will eat all the way. That's the worst of this sort of outing. They eat to live and live to eat.'

      'At least they don't eat at church,' said Nuttie.

      'Not since the peppermint day, when Mr. Spyers suspended Dickie Drake,' put in Mary.

      And the Spa Terrace Church people said it was incense.'

      'No. Nuttie!'

      'Indeed they did. Louisa Barnet attacked us about it at school, and I said I wished it had been. Only they mustn't eat peppermint in the train, for it makes mother quite ill.'

      'Do you mean that Mrs. Egremont will come?' exclaimed Mr. Dutton.

      'Oh yes, she shall. It is not too far, and it will be very good for her. I shall make her.'

      'There's young England's filial duty!' said Mary.

      'Why, I know what is good for her, and she always does as "I wish."'

      'Beneficent despotism!' said Mr. Dutton. 'May I ask if Miss Headworth is an equally obedient subject.'

      'Oh! Aunt Ursel is very seldom tiresome.'

      'Nuttie! Nuttie! my dear,' and a head with the snows of more than half a century appeared on the other side of the wall, under a cap and parasol. 'I am sorry to interrupt you, but it is cool enough for your mother to go into the town, and I wish you to go with her.'

      CHAPTER III

      HEIR HUNTING

      'And she put on her gown of green,

      And left her mother at sixteen,

      To marry Peter Bell!'—WORDSWORTH.

      In the shrubberies of Monks Horton were walking a lady somewhat past middle age, but full of activity and vigour, with one of those bright faces that never grow old, and with her a young man, a few years over twenty, with a grave and almost careworn countenance.

      More and more confidential waxed the conversation, for the lady was making fresh acquaintance with a nephew seldom seen since he had been her pet and darling as almost a baby, and he was experiencing the inexpressible charm of tone and manner that recalled the young mother he had lost in early boyhood.

      'Then your mind is made up,' she said; 'you are quite right to decide on having a profession; but how does your father take it?'

      'He is quite convinced that to repeat my uncle's life, dangling on as heir, would be the most fatal mistake.'

      'Assuredly, and all the legal knowledge you acquire is so much in favour of your usefulness as the squire.'

      'If I ever am the squire, of which I have my doubts.'

      'You expect Mr. Egremont to marry?'

      'Not a future marriage, but one in the past.'

      'A private marriage! Do you suspect it?'

      'I don't suspect it—I know it. I have been hoping to talk the matter over with you. Do you remember our first governess, Miss Headworth?'

      'My dear Mark, did I not lose at Pera the charms of your infancy?'

      'Then neither my mother nor my grandmother ever wrote to you about her?'

      'I do remember that it struck me that immunity from governesses was a compensation for the lack of daughters.'

      'Can you tell me no details,' said Mark anxiously. 'Have you no letters? It was about the time when Blanche was born, when we were living at Raxley.'

      'I am sorry to say that our roving life prevented my keeping old letters. I have often regretted it. Let me see, there was one who boxed May's ears.'

      'That was long after. I think it was that woman's barbarity that made my father marry again, and a very good thing that was. It was wretched before. Miss Headworth was in my own mother's time.'

      'I begin to remember something happening that your mother seemed unable to write about, and your grandmother said that she had been greatly upset by "that miserable affair," but I was never exactly told what it had been.'

      'Miss Headworth came when I was four or five years old. Edda, as we used to call her in May's language, was the first person

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