'Yes, sir, and very kind.'
'I daresay. Will you promise never to marry him?'
As Mr Prothero asked this question, he looked Gladys full in the face.
She blushed again, but returned his gaze with a quiet, grave look that seemed to wonder at the question. She did not reply at once, and Mr Prothero repeated it, louder than before, with the additional one of 'Do you hear, girl?'
'Sir, I don't like to make promises,' said Gladys; 'suppose the temptation to break it ever came, and proved too strong for me. I might perjure myself.'
'Then you mean to marry my son Owen?'
'No, sir, I don't think I shall ever marry him. As far as I can see now, I am sure I never shall.'
'Name o' goodness, what does the girl mean? You don't mean to marry him, and yet you 'ont promise--what do you mean?'
'I scarcely know myself, sir. But I cannot tell what G.o.d may appoint for me in the future, and so I cannot make a solemn promise.'
'Then I 'spose you're going to run off like Netta?'
'No, sir, never.'
'Why, "no, sir," if you 'ont promise?'
'Because I could never do what you and my mistress would dislike.'
'Then you can promise, perhaps, never to marry my son Owen without my consent.'
'Yes, sir, I can--do--that--'
Gladys said these words very slowly, and turned very pale as she said them. She clasped her hands firmly together with a visible effort.
'Well, you're an odd girl; you 'ont promise one thing, and yet you as good as promise it in another way. What's the difference?'
Again the colour came and went.
'It would be wrong, sir, in me to make a son disobey a father, and I wouldn't like to do it; so I can promise that; and maybe you may change.'
'Then you love the boy? Tell me the treuth.'
Gladys began to cry, and was a few moments before she could say, somewhat more resolutely than usual,--
'Sir, my feelings are my own. Mr Owen has been like a brother to me, and the mistress like a mother--and you--oh, sir! should I not love his mother's son?'
Mr Prothero was touched; he could ask no more questions.
'There, there--go you and get ready directly. I promised Miss Gwynne to bring you back to Glanyravon, where she means to make you schoolmistress and lady's maid, and all the rest. I suppose you don't want to go to Ireland?'
'No, sir.'
'Have you any relations there?'
'No, sir.'
'You don't want to leave Glanyravon parish?'
'No, sir. I would rather live and die there than anywhere else in the world.'
'Then go you and get ready; and, mind you, have some ale before you start. I must keep my promise to Miss Gwynne; mind you yours to me. You 'ont encourage my son Owen without my consent'
'No, sir--never. And I do not wish or mean ever to marry any one, if you will only believe me.'
'I don't believe any young 'ooman who says that. You may as well go into a nunnery. But I believe the rest till I find you out to the contrary.
Now, go you and get ready.'
'Thank you, sir--thank you.'
Soon after this conversation the farmer had mounted his good mare, who was as much refreshed as her master by a night's rest, and with Gladys, _en croupe_, and Lion running by his side, he jogged back to his home.
'We shall have a fine long journey, and a tiresome one enough,' he muttered. 'Thirty mile and carrying double is too much for my mare.--take the 'oomen! they'll be the death 'o me, one way and another.
There's mother, and Netta, and Miss Gwynne, and now this Gladys! This is the last time I'll put myself out for any of 'em, or my name isn't David Prothero.'
CHAPTER XXVII.
THE MISSIONARY.
It was about half-past ten o'clock when Mr Prothero and Gladys started on their homeward journey. When they had gone about half way, they stopped for an hour to bait the mare, which brought them to nearly two o'clock, and reduced Mr Prothero to a state of great ill humour. Poor Gladys had to bear many reproachful speeches, which reached her between a very animated conversation which he kept up with the mare and Lion alternately. He did not talk much to her, but contented himself with making her eat and drink a great deal more than was pleasant for her, because, as he phrased it, 'People shouldn't think she was starved at Glanyravon.'
In truth, there was a great contrast between the farmer's rosy, broad, good-humoured countenance, which not even his present angry feelings could make morose, and Gladys' pale, wearied face, rendered more palid than usual by her late fatigue and anxiety. It was with some difficulty that she could keep her seat behind Mr. Prothero, as the mare trotted on at an equal but somewhat rough pace, and made her long for rest.
However, all things come to an end, and within about five miles of Glanyravon, Mr Prothero muttered,--'Confound the 'ooman! Shall we ever get home; 'tis enough to kill the mare. Come along, old girl! Good dog!
Lion, old boy!'--which sentences were interrupted by the address of a stranger on horseback, who asked if he were right for Glanyravon Park.
'Quite right, sir,' said Mr Prothero, pleased at any break in a ride that had been peculiarly devoid of adventure. 'I am going half a mile beyond the Park myself, and shall be proud to show you the way if you aren't in a hurry.'
'By no means. I am too tired to ride very fast myself, for I have been a great traveller of late. I came down from London to Glamorganshire two days ago, and have come across country in coaches and dogcarts to the "Coach and Horses." I daresay you know the inn?'
'Oh yes, sir. That's the "Coach and Horses" mare you're upon now?'
'Yes; I borrowed her to come to Glanyravon, and have promised to ride her back to-night, but I am sure I shall not be able. How far are we from Glanyravon?'
'About four mile and a half.'