“You are right, Wilton, you are right,” replied the Duke: “I see you are right, although I judged it hazardous at first. You shall see what confidence I have in you. I will write the letter directly;” and he turned away with him from the window.
Laura had watched the conference with some anxiety, and the Duke’s guests with some surprise; but when the Duke ended by saying aloud, “I fear I must beg your pardon, ladies, for two minutes, but I must write a short note of immediate importance; Wilton, my dear young friend, be kind enough to order dinner, and help Laura to entertain my friends here till I return, which will be before they have covered the table,” every one looked in the face of the other; and they all mentally said, “The matter is clearly settled, and the hand of this rich and beautiful heiress is promised to an unknown man of no rank whatever.”
Knowing the feelings that were in his own heart, being quite sure of the interpretation that would be put upon the Duke’s words, and yet having some doubts still whether the Duke himself had the slightest intention of giving them such a meaning, Wilton cast down his eyes and coloured slightly. But Laura, to whom those words were anything but painful—though she blushed a little too, which but confirmed the opinion of those who remarked it—could not restrain altogether the smile of pleasure that played upon her lips, as she turned her happy eyes for a moment to the countenance of the man she loved.
There was not an old lady or gentleman, of high rank, in the room, possessed of a marriageable son, who would not at that moment have willingly raised Wilton to the final elevation of Haman, by the same process which that envious person underwent; and yet it is wonderful how courteous and cordial, and even affectionate, they all were towards the young gentleman whom, for the time, they mortally hated. Wilton felt himself awkwardly situated for the next few minutes, not choosing fully to assume the position in which the Duke’s words had placed him. He well knew that if he did enact to the full the part of that nobleman’s representative, every one would charge him with gross and shameful presumption, and would most likely talk of it, each in his separate circle, during the whole of the following day.