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For the change had been working in Aubrey ever since Leonard had altered his career. The boy was at a sentimental age, and had the susceptibility inseparable from home breeding; his desire to become a clergyman had been closely connected with the bright visions of the happy days at Coombe, and had begun to wane with the first thwarting of Leonard’s plans; and when the terrible catastrophe of the one friend’s life occurred, the other became alienated from all that they had hoped to share together. Nor could even Dr. May’s household be so wholly exempt from the spirit of the age, that Aubrey was not aware of the strivings and trials of faith at the University. He saw what Harvey Anderson was, and knew what was passing in the world; and while free from all doubts, shrank boyishly from the investigations that he fancied might excite them. Or perhaps these fears of possible scruples were merely his self-justification for gratifying his reluctance.

At any rate, he came home from his two months’ tour, brown, robust, with revived spirits, but bent on standing an examination for the academy at Woolwich. He had written about it several times before his return, and his letters were, as his father said, ‘so appallingly sensible that perhaps he would change his mind.’ But it was not changed when he came home; and Ethel, though sorely disappointed, was convinced by her own sense as well as by Richard’s prudence, that interference was dangerous. No one in Israel was to go forth to the wars of the Lord save those who ‘willingly offered themselves;’ and though grieved that her own young knight should be one of the many champions unwilling to come forth in the Church’s cause, she remembered the ordeal to Norman’s faith, and felt that the exertion of her influence was too great a responsibility.

‘You don’t like this,’ said Tom, after a pause. ‘It is not my doing, you know.’

‘No, I did not suppose it was,’ said Ethel. ‘You would not withhold any one in these days of exceeding want of able clergymen.’

‘I told him it would be a grief at home,’ added Tom, ‘but when a lad gets into that desperate mood, he always may be a worse grief if you thwart him; and I give you credit, Ethel, you have not pulled the curb.’

‘Richard told me not.’

‘Richard represents the common sense of the family when I am not at home.’

Tom was going the next day to his course of study at the London hospitals, and this—the late afternoon—was the first time that he and his sister had been alone together. He had been for some little time having these short jerks of conversation, beginning and breaking off rather absently. At last he said, ‘Do those people ever write?’

‘Prisoners, do you mean? Not for three months.’

‘No—exiles.’

‘Mary has heard twice.’

He held out Mary’s little leathern writing-case to her.

‘O, Tom!’

‘It is only Mary.’

Ethel accepted the plea, aware that there could be no treason between herself and Mary, and moreover that the letters had been read by all the family. She turned the key, looked them out, and standing by the window to catch the light, began to read—

‘You need not be afraid, kind Mary,’ wrote Averil, on the first days of her voyage; ‘I am quite well, as well as a thing can be whose heart is dried up. I am hardened past all feeling, and seem to be made of India-rubber. Even my colour has returned—how I hate to see it, and to hear people say my roses will surprise the delicate Americans. Fancy, in a shop in London I met an old school-fellow, who was delighted to see me, talked like old times, and insisted on knowing where we were staying. I used to be very fond of her, but it was as if I had been dead and was afraid she would find out I was a ghost, yet I talked quite indifferently, and never faltered in my excuses. When we embarked, it was no use to know it was the last of England, where he and you and home and life were left. How I envied the poor girl, who was crying as if her heart would break!’

On those very words, broke the announcement of Mr. Cheviot. Tom coolly held out his hand for the letters, so much as a matter of course, that Ethel complied with his gesture, and he composedly pocketed them, while she felt desperately guilty. Mary’s own entrance would have excited no compunction, Ethel would have said that Tom wanted to hear of the voyage; but in the present case, she could only blush, conscious that the guest recognized her sister’s property, and was wondering what business she had with it, and she was unwilling to explain, not only on Tom’s account, but because she knew that Mr. Cheviot greatly disapproved of petitioning against the remission of capital sentences, and thought her father under a delusion.

After Tom’s departure the next day, she found the letters in her work-basket, and restored them to Mary, laughing over Mr. Cheviot’s evident resentment at the detection of her doings.

‘I think it looked rather funny,’ said Mary.

‘I beg your pardon,’ said Ethel, much astonished; ‘but I thought, as every one else had seen them—’

‘Tom always laughed at poor Ave.’

‘He is very different now; but indeed, Mary, I am sorry, since you did not like it.’

‘Oh!’ cried Mary, discomfited by Ethel’s apology, ‘indeed I did not mean that, I wish I had not said anything. You know you are welcome to do what you please with all I have. Only,’ she recurred, ‘you can’t wonder that Mr. Cheviot thought it funny.’

‘If he had any call to think at all,’ said Ethel, who was one of those who thought that Charles Cheviot had put a liberal interpretation on Dr. May’s welcome to Stoneborough. He had arrived after the summer holidays as second master of the school, and at Christmas was to succeed Dr. Hoxton, who had been absolutely frightened from his chair by the commissions of inquiry that had beset the Whichcote foundation; and in compensation was at present perched on the highest niche sacred to conservative martyrdom in Dr. May’s loyal heart.

Charles Cheviot was a very superior man, who had great influence with young boys, and was admirably fitted to bring about the much required reformation in the school. He came frequently to discuss his intentions with Dr. May, and his conversation was well worth being listened to; but even the Doctor found three evenings in a week a large allowance for good sense and good behaviour—the evenings treated as inviolable even by old friends like Dr. Spencer and Mr. Wilmot, the fast waning evenings of Aubrey’s home life.

The rest were reduced to silence, chess, books, and mischief, except when a treat of facetious small talk was got up for their benefit. Any attempt of the ladies to join in the conversation was replied to with a condescending levity that reduced Ethel to her girlhood’s awkward sense of forwardness and presumption; Mary was less disconcerted, because her remarks were never so aspiring, and Harry’s wristbands sufficed her; but the never-daunted Daisy rebelled openly, related the day’s events to her papa, fearless of any presence, and when she had grown tired of the guest’s regular formula of expecting to meet Richard, she told him that the adult school always kept Richard away in the winter evenings; ‘But if you want to see him, he is always to be found at Cocksmoor, and he would be very glad of help.’

‘Did he express any such wish?’ said Mr. Cheviot, looking rather puzzled.

‘Oh dear, no; only I thought you had so much time on your hands.’

‘Oh no—oh no!’ exclaimed Mary, in great confusion, ‘Gertrude did not mean—I am sure I don’t know what she was thinking of.’

And at the first opportunity, Mary, for once in her life, administered to Gertrude a richly-deserved reproof for sauciness and contempt of improving conversation; but the consequence was a fancy of the idle younglings to make Mary accountable for the ‘infesting of their evenings,’ and as she was always ready to afford sport to the household, they thus obtained a happy outlet for their drollery and discontent, and the imputation was the more comical from his apparent indifference and her serene composure; until one evening when, as the bell rung, and mutterings passed between Aubrey and Gertrude, of ‘Day set,’ and ‘Cheviot’s mountains lone,’ the head of the family, for the first time, showed cognizance of the joke, and wearily taking down his slippered feet from their repose, said, ‘Lone! yes, there’s the rub! I shall have to fix days of reception if Mary will insist on being so attractive.’