education and insolent by temper, she had very little real pride and no dignity in her character. To be noticed and caressed by Algernon was to her a sufficient compensation for almost any indignity. There was but one passion of her nature which had any chance of resisting his personal influence, and that passion had never yet been fully aroused, although frequently irritated. Her jealousy was like a young tiger that had never yet tasted blood. "What's the matter, little woman?" repeated Algernon, seating himself beside her, and putting his arm round her waist. She shrugged her shoulders fretfully, but at the same time nestled herself nearer to his side. She loved him, and it put her at an immense disadvantage with him. "Don't you mean to vouchsafe me an answer, Mrs. Algernon Ancram Errington?" "Oh, I daresay you're very sorry that I am Mrs. Errington. I have no doubt you repent." "Really! And is that what you were crying for?" No reply. "It looks rather as if you repented, madam!" "Oh, you know I don't; unless you like other people better than you like me!" "'Other people' don't cry in my company." "No; because they don't care for you. And because they're——they're nasty, artful minxes!" "Hear, hear! A charming definition! Castalia, you are really impayable sometimes. How my lord would enjoy that speech of yours!" "No, he wouldn't. Uncle Val would never enjoy what vexed me. My lady might; nasty, disagreeable old thing!" "There, I can agree with you. A vulgar kind of woman—though she is my blood-relation—thoroughly coarse in the grain. But now that we have relieved our feelings, and spoken our minds on that score, suppose we converse rationally?" "I don't want to converse rationally." "Why not?" "Because that means that you are going to scold me." "Well—that might be highly rational, certainly; only I never do it." "Well, but you'll manage to make out that I'm in the wrong and you're in the right, somehow or other." "Cassy, I want you to write a letter." "A letter? Whom do you want me to write to?" Her tears were completely dried, and she looked up at him with a faint smile on her