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    Chapter 5 - Page 2

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    Charlotte come, and have a
    cup of tea with me, squire, I'd be glad.' And he said, 'When?' And I
    said, 'This afternoon. I am fair lonely without Steve.' And he said,
    'I'm agreeable. She'll be glad enough to come.' And I said, 'Thank'ee,
    squire, I'll be glad enough to see her.' But what _is_ the matter,
    Charlotte? The squire has been in his airs with Steve ever so long."

    Then Charlotte's face grew like a flame; and she answered, in a tone of
    tender sadness, "Father thinks Steve loves me; and he says there is no
    love-line between our houses, and that, if there were, it is crossed
    with sorrow, and that neither the living nor the dead will have marriage
    between Steve and me."

    "I thought that was the trouble. I did so. As for the living, he speaks
    for himself; as for the dead, it is your grandmother Sandal he thinks
    of. She was a hard, proud woman, Charlotte. Her two daughters rejoiced
    at their wedding-days, and two out of her three sons she drove away from
    their home. Your father was on the point of going, when his brother
    Launcie's death made him the heir. Then she gave him a bit more respect,
    and for pretty Alice Morecombe's sake he stayed by the old squire. Ten
    years your mother waited for William Sandal, Charlotte."

    "Yes, I know."

    "Do you love Steve, Charlotte? I am Steve's mother, dear, and you may
    speak to me as if you were talking to your own heart. I would never tell
    Steve either this way or that way for any thing. Steve would not thank
    me if I did. He is one of them that wants to reach his happiness in his
    own way, and by his own hand. And I have good reasons for asking you
    such a question, or I would not ask it; you may be sure I have, that you
    may."

    Charlotte had put down her cup, and she sat with her hands clasped upon
    her lap, looking down into it. Ducie's question took her by surprise,
    and she was rather offended by it. For Charlotte Sandal had been taught
    all the reticences of good society, and for a moment she resented a
    catechism so direct and personal; but only for a moment. Before Ducie
    had done speaking, she had remembered that nothing but true kindness
    could have prompted the inquiry. Ducie was not a curious, tattling,
    meddlesome woman; Charlotte had never known her to interfere in any
    one's affairs. She had few visitors, and she made no calls. Year in and

    year out, Ducie could always be found at home with herself.

    "You need not tell me, dear, if you do not know; or if you do not want
    to tell me."

    "I do know, Ducie; and I do not mind telling you in the least. I love
    Stephen very dearly. I have loved him ever since--I don't know when."

    "And you have always had as good and as true as
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