Part 9 (1/2)
Stella led the way to a room much larger and more handsomely furnished than Lucy's old one at home, though it all looked so strange and unfamiliar, that she wondered whether it would ever seem home to her.
Stella showed her all its conveniences and arrangements for her comfort, and then observed, ”But you're not to have it all to yourself;” which Lucy heard with some disappointment, for she had been always accustomed at home to have a room to herself, and hoped to have one still.
”Amy's to sleep with you, and I think you'll like her. She's a good little thing, though she's not a bit pretty; and she's named after your mamma, you know, who was my Aunt Amy. It sounds odd, doesn't it?
Ada and I sleep together, because we get on best; and Sophy can't be troubled with a child sleeping with her, especially as Amy is delicate, and sometimes restless at night. Do you think you'll mind having her?”
”Oh no!” said Lucy, somewhat relieved. ”I always used to think I should like to have a little sister of my own.”
”Here she is, to speak for herself,” said Stella, as the door opened, and a fragile-looking little girl of about seven timidly peeped in.
”Come in, Amy, and be introduced.”
The child stole quietly in, encouraged by Lucy's smile, and held out to her a hand so thin and tiny, that she thought she had never felt anything like it before. Amy had fair hair and a colourless complexion; but when the soft grey eyes looked up wistfully at Lucy, and a sweet smile lighted up the pale face, her cousin thought Stella hardly justified in calling her ”not a bit pretty.”
”So you're my little cousin Amy?” said Lucy, kissing her. ”And you're going to sleep with me and be my little sister, are you not?”
Amy nodded. She evidently had not Stella's flow of language.
”Shall I help you to unpack, Lucy?” interposed her loquacious cousin, ”or would you rather lie down and rest awhile?”
Lucy preferred the latter. She wanted to be alone; and as she was very tired with the fatigue and excitement of the journey and arrival, it is scarcely to be wondered at that, when she was left alone, she found relief in a hearty fit of crying. However, she soon remembered she could do something better than that, so she knelt to thank her heavenly Father for His protecting care during her journey. She asked, too, that as she was far away from all dear home friends and familiar surroundings, she might be helped to love those around her now, and to do her duty in her new circ.u.mstances.
Her heart was much lighter and calmer now, and she was nearly ready to go down to dinner, when Stella came in to help her, and to insist on arranging her hair in a new fas.h.i.+on she had lately learned, before escorting her down to the dining-room. Lucy had dreaded a good deal her introduction to her uncle, of whom she had not a very pleasant impression. He was a brisk, shrewd-looking man, a great contrast to his listless-looking son; and his manner, though patronizing, was not ungenial, as Lucy had feared it would be, from his harsh opinions, quoted by Stella, in regard to the poor. All the rest of the family she had already seen, Edwin being the only son who had survived, and on that account, probably, a good deal spoilt.
Lucy could not help noticing the very slight mourning worn by the family, if indeed it could be called mourning at all. But even this slight mark of respect would hardly have been accorded to Mr.
Raymond's memory, but for Lucy's coming among them in her deep mourning. ”People would notice, and it wouldn't look well,” Sophy had said; and this decided the question, though the girls grumbled a good deal at the inconvenience of it, especially at a time of the year when they were usually so gay, and wanted to wear colours. Stella was the only one who did not object. She had imbibed a strong respect for her uncle, and wore her black dress with a certain satisfaction, in the feeling that she was doing honour to his memory.
There was a good deal of lively talk during dinner, almost unintelligible, however, to Lucy, from her ignorance of the persons and things talked about. The tone of conversation, however, was as uncongenial as were the subjects. Edwin had a cynical air, partly real, partly affected; and the girls' remarks were characterized by the same sort of flippancy which had often jarred upon her in Stella.
After dinner Edwin disappeared, Mr. Brooke became absorbed in his newspapers, Sophy was soon engrossed with a novel, and Ada and her mother employed themselves in some very pretty worsted embroidery.
Lucy, of course, had no work as yet, and Stella resorted to her old fas.h.i.+on of lounging about doing nothing in particular, except talking. She expatiated largely, for Lucy's benefit, upon the cla.s.ses and masters in the fas.h.i.+onable school to which her cousin was to accompany her, giving her various sc.r.a.ps of information respecting her future cla.s.smates, with a list of their foibles and peculiarities amusingly described, but rather wearisome to a stranger. Mrs. Brooke questioned Lucy about her previous studies, looking doubtful when she heard of Latin and mathematics, and saying she was afraid ”she had been made a little of a blue.” At her aunt's request, she sat down at the handsome piano, and rather nervously got through a simple air, the only one she knew by heart. She felt she had not done herself justice, and Stella said apologetically, ”You know she never had any teacher but Mrs. Steele, and she has no style.”
Lucy's cheek flushed at the disparaging remark, but Mrs. Brooke only said, ”I hope you will play better than that, my dear, when you have had Signor Goldoni for awhile. Do you sing?”
”Only hymns, aunt. We often sing them on Sundays at home.”
”Well, if you have anything of a voice, you will soon do better than that. Any one can sing hymns.”
Lucy made no reply, but she privately thought that very few could sing them like her Aunt Mary. Then, recollecting that Stella had told her how well Sophy played and sang, she turned rather timidly to her with the request, ”Won't you sing, Cousin Sophy?”
”Do, Sophy,” added her mother and Stella, both at once.
But Sophy, reclining in a luxurious easy-chair near the fire, and absorbed in a sensational novel, was too comfortable to think of moving.
”I really can't just now,” she said rather coldly. ”I'm tired, and I'm just at the most interesting place in this book.”
”Sophy never will sing to please any one but herself and--_some_ people,” said Stella mischievously. ”And then, sometimes, if she takes the notion, there's no stopping her. Now, if a certain person I know were here--”
Ada laughed. Sophy just said haughtily, ”I'll be much obliged to you, Stella, not to disturb me;” at which Stella, with mock gravity, put her finger on her lip.