I must really rest a little before I can get on any farther. When I have
reclined for a few minutes, with my eyes closed, and when Louis has refreshed my
poor aching temples with a little eau-deCologne, I may be able to proceed.
No. I am able to proceed, but not to sit up. I will recline and dictate.
Louis has a horrid accent, but he knows the language, and can write. How very
convenient!
Her ladyship, the Countess, explained her unexpected appearance at the inn by
telling Fanny that she had come to bring one or two little messages which Miss
Halcombe in her hurry had forgotten. The Young Person thereupon waited anxiously
to hear what the messages were, but the Countess seemed disinclined to mention
them (so like my sister's tiresome way!) until Fanny had had her tea. Her
ladyship was surprisingly kind and thoughtful about it (extremely unlike my
sister), and said, "I am sure, my poor girl, you must want your tea. We can let
the messages wait till afterwards. Come, come, if nothing else will put you at
your ease, I'll make the tea and have a cup with you." I think those were the
words, as reported excitably, in my presence, by the Young Person. At any rate,
the Countess insisted on making the tea, and carried her ridiculous ostentation
of humility so far as to take one cup herself, and to insist on the girl's
taking the other. The girl drank the tea, and according to her own account,
solemnised the extraordinary occasion five minutes afterwards by fainting dead
away for the first time in her life. Here again I use her own words. Louis
thinks they were accompanied by an increased secretion of tears. I can't say
myself. The effort of listening being quite as much as I could manage, my eyes
were closed.
Where did I leave off? Ah, yes--she fainted after drinking a cup of tea with
the Countess--a proceeding which might have interested me if I had been her
medical man, but being nothing of the sort I felt bored by hearing of it,
nothing more. When she came to herself in half an hour's time she was on the
sofa, and nobody was with her but the landlady. The Countess, finding it too
late to remain any longer at the inn, had gone away as soon as the girl showed
signs of recovering, and the landlady had been good enough to help her upstairs
to bed.
Left by herself, she had felt in her bosom (I regret the necessity of
referring to this part of the subject a second time), and had found the two
letters there quite safe, but strangely crumpled. She had been giddy in the
night, but had got up well enough to travel in the morning. She had put the
letter addressed to that obtrusive stranger, the gentleman in London into the
post, and had now delivered the other letter into my hands as she was told. This
was the plain truth, and though she could not blame herself for any intentional
neglect, she was sadly troubled in her mind, and sadly in want of a word of
advice. At this point Louis thinks the secretions appeared again. Perhaps they
did, but it is of infinitely greater importance to mention that at this point
also I lost my patience, opened my eyes, and interfered.
Louis endeavoured and translated. In other words, he descended immediately
into a bottomless pit of confusion, and the Young Person followed him down. I
really don't know when I have been so amused. I left them at the bottom of the
pit as long as they diverted me. When they ceased to divert me, I exerted my
intelligence, and pulled them up again.
It is unnecessary to say that my interference enabled me, in due course of
time, to ascertain the purport of the Young Person's remarks.
I discovered that she was uneasy in her mind, because the train of events
that she had just described to me had prevented her from receiving those
supplementary messages which Miss Halcombe had intrusted to the Countess to
deliver. She was afraid the messages might have been of great importance to her
mistress's interests. Her dread of Sir Percival had deterred her from going to
Blackwater Park late at night to inquire about them, and Miss Halcombe's own
directions to her, on no account to miss the train in the morning, had prevented
her from waiting at the inn the next day. She was most anxious that the
misfortune of her fainting-fit should not lead to the second misfortune of
making her mistress think her neglectful, and she would humbly beg to ask me
whether I would advise her to write her explanations and excuses to Miss
Halcombe, requesting to receive the messages by letter, if it was not too late.
I make no apologies for this extremely prosy paragraph. I have been ordered to
write it. There are people, unaccountable as it may appear, who actually take
more interest in what my niece's maid said to me on this occasion than in what I
said to my niece's maid. Amusing perversity!
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