asked her the question plainly, she would answer him openly. And if he could induce her to say that she would return to her old ways, return to them she would in a hearty manner. But he could not do this just at present. It was but a day or two since Mr. Crawley had been with him, and was it not probable that Mr. Crawley had been sent thither by Lady Lufton? His own hands were not clean enough for a remonstrance at the present moment. He would cleanse them, and then he would remonstrate.
"Would you like to live part of the year in Barchester?" he said to his wife and sister that evening.
"I think that two houses are only a trouble," said his wife; "and we have been very happy here."
"I have always liked a cathedral town," said Lucy; "and I am particularly fond of the Close."
"And Barchester Close is the closest of all closes," said Mark. "There is not a single house within the gateways that does not belong to the chapter."
"But, if we are to keep up two houses, the additional income will soon be wasted," said Fanny, prudently.
"The thing would be to let the house furnished every summer," said Lucy.
"But I must take my residence as the terms come," said the vicar; "and I certainly should not like to be away from Framley all the winter; I should never see any thing of Lufton." And perhaps he thought of his hunting, and then, thought again of that cleansing of his hands.
"I should not a bit mind being away during the winter," said Lucy, thinking of what the last winter had done for her.
"But where on earth should we find money to furnish one of those large, old-fashioned houses? Pray, Mark, do not do any thing rash." And the wife laid her hand affectionately on her husband's arm. In this manner the question of the prebend was discussed between them on the evening before he started for London.
Success had at last crowned the earnest effort with which Harold Smith had carried on the political battle of his life for the last ten years. The late Lord Petty Bag had resigned in disgust, having been unable to digest the prime minister's ideas on Indian Reform, and Mr. Harold Smith, after sundry hitches in the business, was installed in his place. It was said that Harold Smith was not exactly the