"And my wise and prudent sister thought it could be 'stopped,'" chuckled Mr. Dimmerly.
"But remember, uncle, not a word of this to him, or I will refuse him though my heart break a thousand times. If he does not love me well enough to ask me of his own accord, or if he does not think I am fit to go with him, I would rather die than thrust myself upon him."
"Bless me, what a queer compound a woman is! It won't do for you to go West. You will set the prairies on fire. There, there, now don't be afraid. If you think I can say anything to my nephew—the thick-headed blunderbuss—which will prevent his getting down on his knees to ask for what he'll never deserve, you don't know the Dimmerly blood. Trust to the wisdom of my gray hairs and go to bed."
"But, uncle, I would rather you wouldn't say anything at all," persisted Lottie.
"Well, I won't, about you," said her uncle, in assumed irritability. "I can get the big ostrich to pull his head out of the sand and speak for himself, I suppose. He's my nephew, and I'm going to have a talk with him before he leaves for the West. So be off; I'm getting cross."
But Lottie gave him a kiss that stirred even his withered old heart.
"O, good gracious!" he groaned after she was gone, "why was I ever 'stopped'?"
The next morning Hemstead appeared at breakfast as calm, pale, and resolute as ever. His manner seemed to say plainly to Lottie, "Our old folly is at an end. I have remembered the nature of my calling, and I know only too well that you are unfitted to share in it."
She was all the more desponding as she remembered how conscientious he was.
"If he thinks it's wrong, there's no hope," she thought, drearily.