didnât come to see you for your pleasure; I came to make you say disagreeable thingsâand you canât like that. What sort of a gentleman is your brother?â
Mrs. Montgomeryâs illuminated gaze grew vague, and began to wander. She smiled a little, and for some time made no answer, so that the doctor at last became impatient. And her answer, when it came, was not satisfactory. âIt is difficult to talk about oneâs brother.â
âNot when one is fond of him, and when one has plenty of good to say.â
âYes, even then, when a good deal depends on it,â said Mrs. Montgomery.
âNothing depends on it for you.â
âI mean forâforââ and she hesitated.
âFor your brother himself. I see.â
âI mean for Miss Sloper,â said Mrs. Montgomery.
The doctor liked this; it had the accent of sincerity. âExactly; thatâs the point. If my poor girl should marry your brother, everythingâas regards her happinessâwould depend on his being a good fellow. She is the best creature in the world, and she could never do him a grain of injury. He, on the other hand, if he should not be all that we desire, might make her very miserable. That is why I want you to throw some light upon his character, you know. Of course, you are not bound to do it. My daughter, whom you have never seen, is nothing to you; and I, possibly, am only an indiscreet and impertinent old man. It is perfectly open to you to tell me that my visit is in very bad taste, and that I had better go about my business. But I donât think you will do this; because I think we shall interest youâmy poor girl and I. I am sure that if you were to see Catherine she would interest you very much. I donât mean because she is interesting in the usual sense of the word, but because you would feel sorry for her. She is so soft, so simpleminded, she would be such an easy victim! A bad husband would have remarkable facilities for making her miserable; for she would have neither the intelligence nor the resolution to get the better of him, and yet she would have an exaggerated power of suffering. I see,â added the doctor, with his most insinuating, his most professional laugh, âyou are already interested.â
âI have been interested from the moment he told me he was engaged,â said Mrs. Montgomery.
âAh, he says thatâhe calls it an engagement?â
âOh, he has told me you didnât like it.â
âDid he tell you that I donât like
him
?â
âYes, he told me that too. I said I couldnât help it,â added Mrs. Montgomery.
âOf course you canât. But what you can do is to tell me I am rightâto give me an attestation, as it were.â And the doctor accompanied this remark with another professional smile.
Mrs. Montgomery, however, smiled not at all; it was obvious that she could not take the humorous view of his appeal. âThat is a good deal to ask,â she said, at last.
âThere can be no doubt of that; and I must, in conscience, remind you of the advantages a young man marrying my daughter would enjoy. She has an income of ten thousand dollars in her own right, left her by her mother; if she marries a husband I approve, she will come into almost twice as much more at my death.â
Mrs. Montgomery listened in great earnestness to this splendid financial statement; she had never heard thousands of dollars so familiarly talked about. She flushed a little with excitement. âYour daughter will be immensely rich,â she said, softly.
âPreciselyâthatâs the bother of it.â
âAnd if Morris should marry her, heâheââ And she hesitated, timidly.
âHe would be master of all that money? By no means. He would be master of the ten thousand a year that she has from her mother; but I should leave every penny of my own fortune, earned in the laborious
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