“That was yesterday,” he said. “I had not really seen you; to-day I think differently.”
“It is just because you are sorry for me; I suppose I seem so lonely,” I whispered demurely.
“It is perfectly impossible—what you propose to do—to go and live by yourself at a London hotel—the idea drives me mad!”
“It will be delightful! no one to order me about from morning to night!”
“Listen,” he said, and he flung himself into an armchair. “You can marry me, and I will take you to Paris, or where you want, and I won’t order you about,—only I shall keep the other beasts of men from looking at you.”
But I told him at once I thought that would be very dull. “I have never had the chance of any one looking at me,” I said, “and I want to feel what it is like. Mrs. Carruthers always assured me I was very pretty, you know, only she said that I was certain to come to a bad end, because of my type, unless I got married at once, and then if my head was screwed on the right way it would not matter; but I don’t agree with her.”
He walked up and down the room impatiently.
“That is just it,” he said.” I would rather be the first—I would rather you began by me. I am strong enough to ward off the rest.”
“What does ’beginning by you’ mean?” I asked with great candour. “Old Lord Bentworth said I should begin by him, when he was here to shoot pheasants last autumn; he said it could not matter, he was so old; but I didn’t——”
Mr. Carruthers bounded up from his chair.