After all, it was not difficult to comfort him; the cloud soon passed away from his face, and in a little while they were talking as happily together as though no unkind words had been said.
They had a quiet, peaceful Sunday together, and then Richard went back to Oatlands, on the understanding that he was to return on Wednesday night and take Bessie down to Cliffe the next day.
Bessie was not sorry to be left alone for two days to realize her own happiness; but, all the same, she was glad to welcome him back again on Wednesday, though she was secretly amused when Richard declared those two days of absence had been intolerably long; still she liked to hear him say it.
It was a happy evening to Bessie when she saw Richard for the first time in her own dear home, making one of the family circle, and looking as though he had been there for years. How kindly they had all greeted him! She saw by her mother’s expression how pleased and excited she was. She took the young man under her motherly wing at once, and petted and made much of him; and it was easy to see how proud her father was of his son-in-law elect. Bessie thought she had never seen Richard to such advantage before. There was no awkwardness in his manner; he was alert, cheerful, and at his ease, ready to talk to Christine or to the younger girls, and full of delicate little attentions to his fiancée.
“A fine, manly fellow!” observed Dr. Lambert, as he wished his daughter good-night. “You have won a prize, my girl; I am perfectly satisfied with my future son-in-law,” and Bessie blushed and smiled over her father’s encomium.
But the most comfortable moment was when she had her mother to herself, for Mrs. Lambert had stolen upstairs after Bessie.
“Oh, mother, this is what I wanted,” she said, drawing her mother down into the low chair beside the fire, and kneeling on the rug beside her. “How good of you to come up to me! I was so longing for a talk.”
“I think your father wanted Mr. Sefton to himself, so I left them together.”
“You must call him Richard,” corrected Bessie; “he wants you to do so. It was so nice to see him with you to-night; he will never want a mother now. You like him, do you not?” rather shyly.
“Yes, indeed; we all like him; there is something so genuine about him. My darling, I have not felt so happy since our poor Hatty’s death.”