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'I find a seat here,' said he, 'which I should prefer to a throne. As to an account of myself, it is soon given. I met a friend, whose company induced me to come to Calais rather than travel thro' Normandy; and the haste he was in made it impossible for me to stop him. Miss Mowbray had refused to give me any commission for you; and I had nothing to say to you that would have given you any pleasure. I was, therefore, unwilling to trouble you merely with a pa.s.sing enquiry.'
'But whence comes it that you sail only to-night, if your friend was so much hurried?'
'He went four days ago; but I--I was kept--I was detained at Calais.'
Emmeline felt a strange curiosity to know what could have detained him; but dared not ask such a question.
They then talked of Lord and Lady Westhaven.
'Lord Delamere is, I conclude, much better?' said G.o.dolphin.
'When I took leave of Lord and Lady Westhaven,' coldly answered Emmeline, 'I did not think him much better than when we first saw him.
His servant said he was almost as ill as when you, Sir, with friends.h.i.+p so uncommon, attended him.'
'Call it not uncommon, Madam!--It was an office I would have performed, not only for any Englishman in another country, but I hope for any human being in any country, who had needed it. Should I then allow you to suppose there was any great merit in my rendering a slight service to the brother of Lady Westhaven; and who is besides _dear to one_ to whom _I_ owe obligations so infinite.'
The stress he laid on these words left Emmeline no doubt of his meaning.
She was, however, vexed and half angry that he persisted in believing her so entirely attached to Delamere; and, for the first time she had ventured to think steadily on the subject, meditated how to undeceive him. Yet when she reflected on the character of Delamere; and remembered that his father would now claim an authority to controul her actions--that one would think himself at liberty to call any man to an account who addressed her, and the other to refuse his consent to any other marriage than that which would be now so advantageous to the family--she saw only inquietude to herself, and hazard to the life so dear to her, should she suffer the pa.s.sion of G.o.dolphin openly to be avowed.
'Is it not remarkable,' said Mrs. Stafford, 'that you should voluntarily have conducted us to France, and by chance escort us home?'
'Yes,' answered G.o.dolphin.--'And a chance so fortunate for me I should think portended some good, was I sanguine, and had I any faith in omens.'
'Are you going immediately to London?'
'Immediately.'
'And from thence to East Cliff?'
'I believe I shall be obliged to stay in town a week or ten days.--But my continuance there shall be longer, if you or Miss Mowbray will employ me.'
The night now grew cold; and the dew fell so heavily, that Mrs. Stafford expressed her apprehensions that Emmeline would find some ill effects from it, and advised her to go down.
'Oh! no,' said G.o.dolphin, with uncommon anxiety in his manner--'do not go down. There are so many pa.s.sengers in the cabin, and it is so close, that you will find it extremely disagreeable. It will not now be half an hour before we see the lights of Dover; and we shall presently be on sh.o.r.e.'
Emmeline, who really apprehended little from cold, acquiesced; and they continued to converse on general topics 'till they landed.
G.o.dolphin saw them on sh.o.r.e immediately, and attended them to the inn.
He then told them he must go back to see after the baggage, and left them hastily. They ordered a slight refreshment; and when it was brought in, Emmeline said--'Shall we not wait for Mr. G.o.dolphin?'
'The Gentleman is come in, Madam,' said the waiter, 'with another lady, and is a.s.sisting her up stairs. Would you please I should call him?'
Emmeline felt, without knowing the nature of the sensation, involuntary curiosity and involuntary uneasiness.
'No, do not call him,' said Mrs. Stafford--'I suppose he will be here immediately. But send the French servant to us.'
Le Limosin attending, she gave him some requisite orders, and then again enquired for Captain G.o.dolphin.
Le Limosin answered, that he was gone to a.s.sist a lady to her room, who had been very ill during the pa.s.sage.
'Of which nation is she, Le Limosin?'
'I am ignorant of that, Madam, as I have not heard her speak. _Monsieur Le Capitaine_ is very sorry for her, and has attended her the whole way, only the little time he was upon deck.'
'Is she a young lady?' enquired Mrs. Stafford.
'Yes, very young and pretty.'
The curiosity of Mrs. Stafford was now, in spite of herself, awakened.
And the long stay G.o.dolphin made, gave to Emmeline such acute uneasiness, as she had never felt before. It is extraordinary surely, said she to herself, that he should be thus anxious about an acquaintance made in a pacquet boat.
She grew more and more disturbed at his absence; and was hardly able to conceal her vexation from Mrs. Stafford, while she was ashamed of discovering it even to herself. In about ten minutes, which had appeared to her above an hour, G.o.dolphin came in; apologised, without accounting, for his stay, and while they made all together a slight repast, enquired how they intended to proceed to London and at what time.
On hearing that they thought of setting out about noon, in a chaise, he proposed their taking a post coach; 'and then,' added he, 'you may suffer me to occupy the fourth place.' To this Mrs. Stafford willingly agreed; and Emmeline, glad to find that at least he did not intend waiting on his pacquet boat acquaintance to London, retired with somewhat less uneasiness than she had felt on her first hearing that he had brought such an acquaintance on sh.o.r.e.
After a few hours sleep, the fair travellers arose to continue their journey. They heard that Mr. G.o.dolphin had long left his room, and was at breakfast with the lady whom he had been so careful of the preceding morning. At this intelligence Emmeline felt all her anxiety revive; and when he came into the room where they were to speak to them, hardly could she command herself to answer him without betraying her emotion.
'Miss Mowbray is fatigued with her voyage,' said he, tenderly approaching her--'The night air I am afraid has affected her health?'
'No, Sir;' coldly and faintly answered Emmeline.
'How is the young lady you was so good as to a.s.sist on sh.o.r.e, Sir?' said Mrs. Stafford. 'I understand she was ill.'
G.o.dolphin blushed; and replied, with some little embarra.s.sment, 'she is better, Madam, I thank you.'
'So,' thought Emmeline, 'he makes then no mystery of having an interest in this lady.'
'Are you acquainted with her?' enquired Mrs. Stafford.
'Yes.'
Politeness would not admit of another question: yet it was impossible to help wis.h.i.+ng to ask it. G.o.dolphin, however, turned the discourse, and soon afterwards went out. Emmeline felt ready to cry, yet knew not for what, and dreaded to ask herself whether she had not admitted into her heart the tormenting pa.s.sion of jealousy.
'Why should I be displeased,' said she. 'Why should I be unhappy? Mr.
G.o.dolphin believes me attached to Delamere, and has ceased to think of me; wherefore should I lament that he thinks of another; or what right have I to enquire into his actions--what right have I to blame them?'
The post coach was now ready. Emmeline, attended by Madelon, Mrs.
Stafford, and G.o.dolphin, got into it, and a lively and animated conversation was carried on between the two latter. Emmeline, in the approaching interview with her uncle, and in the wretchedness of Delamere, which she never ceased to lament, had employment enough for her thoughts; but in spite of herself they flew perpetually from those subjects to the acquaintance which Captain G.o.dolphin had brought with him from Calais.
[Footnote 38: Confidential servant.]
CHAPTER VIII
When they arrived at Canterbury, the ladies were shewn into a parlour, where G.o.dolphin did not join them for near half an hour. Emmeline had accounted for her lowness of spirits by her dread of meeting her uncle on such terms as they were likely to meet; but Mrs. Stafford knew the human heart too well to be ignorant that there was another and a concealed source of that melancholy which overwhelmed her. It was in vain she had attempted to dissemble. It was, to her friend, evident, that her compa.s.sion, her good wishes, were Delamere's, but that her heart was wholly G.o.dolphin's, and was now pierced with the poignant thorns of new-born jealousy and anxious mistrust.