Part 40 (1/2)

May I tell you of ourselves some time, when a good opportunity offers for a quiet talk?”

”I'd like nothing better,” said Mother Fisher, heartily. ”If there is one person I like more than another, who isn't of our family, or any of our home friends, it's Mrs. Selwyn,” she had confided to the little doctor just a few days before. ”She hasn't any nonsense about her, if she is an earl's daughter.”

”Earl's daughter,” sniffed the little doctor, trying to slip a collar b.u.t.ton into a refractory binding. ”Dear me, now that's gone--no, 'tisn't--that's luck,” as the b.u.t.ton rolled off into a corner of the bureau-top where it was easily captured.

”Let me do that for you, Adoniram,” said Mother Fisher, coming up to help him.

”I guess you'll have to, wife, if it's done at all,” he answered, resigning himself willingly to her hands; ”the thing slips and slides like all possessed. Well, now, I was going to say that I wouldn't hate a t.i.tle so much, if there was a grain of common sense went along with it. And that Mrs. Selwyn just saves the whole lot of English n.o.bility, and makes 'em worth speaking to, in my opinion.”

And after they had their dinner, and were scattered in groups in the bright suns.h.i.+ne, sitting on the wooden benches by the long tables, or taking photographs, or watching through the big gla.s.s some mountain climbers on one of the snowy spurs of the Matterhorn, ”the good opportunity for a quiet talk” came about.

”Now,” said Mother Fisher, with a great satisfaction in her voice, ”may we sit down here on this bench, Mrs. Selwyn, and have that talk?”

Tom's mother sat down well pleased, and folding her hands in her lap, this earl's daughter, mistress of a dozen languages, as well as mistress of herself on all occasions, began as simply and with as much directness as a child.

”Well, you know my father. Let me tell you, aside from the eccentricities, that are mere outside matters, and easily explained, if you understood the whole of his life, a kinder man never lived, nor a more reasonable one. But it was a misfortune that he had to be left so much alone, as since my mother's death a dozen years ago has happened.

It pained me much.” A shadow pa.s.sed over her brow, but it was gone again, and she smiled, and her eyes regained their old placid look. ”I live in Australia with my husband, where my duty is, putting the boys as fast as they were old enough, and the little girls as well, into English schools. But Tom has always been with my father at the vacations, for he is his favourite, as of course was natural, for he is the eldest. And though you might not believe it, Mrs. Fisher, my father was always pa.s.sionately fond of the boy.”

”I do believe it,” said Mother Fisher, quietly, and she put her hand over the folded ones. Mrs. Selwyn unclasped hers, soft and white, to draw within them the toil-worn one.

”Now, that's comfortable,” she said, with another little smile.

”And here is where his eccentricity became the most dangerous to the peace of mind of our family,” continued Mrs. Selwyn. ”My father seemed never able to discover that he was doing the lad harm by all sorts of indulgence and familiarity with him, a sort of hail-fellow-well-met way that surprised me more than I can express, when I discovered it on my last return visit to my old home. My father! who never tolerated anything but respect from all of us, who were accustomed to despotic government, I can a.s.sure you, was allowing Tom!--well, you were with him on the steamer,” she broke off abruptly. The placid look was gone again in a flash.

”Yes,” said Mother Fisher, her black eyes full of sympathy; ”don't let that trouble you, dear Mrs. Selwyn; Tom was pure gold down underneath--we saw that--and the rest is past.”

”Ah,”--the placid look came back as quickly--”that is my only comfort--that you did. For father told the whole, not sparing himself.

Now he sees things in the right light; he says because your young people taught it to him. And he was cruelly disappointed because you couldn't come down to visit him in his home.”

”We couldn't,” said Mother Fisher, in a sorry voice, at seeing the other face.

”I understand--quite,” said Tom's mother, with a gentle pressure of the hand she held. ”And then the one pleasure he had was in picking out something for Polly.”

”Oh, if the little red leather case _had_ gone back to the poor old man!” ran through Mother Fisher's mind, possessing it at once.

”I don't think his judgment was good, Mrs. Fisher, in the selection,”

said Mrs. Selwyn, a small pink spot coming on either cheek; ”but he loves Polly, and wanted to show it.”

”And he was so good to think of it,” cried Mother Fisher, her heart warming more and more toward the little old earl.

”And as he couldn't be turned from it, and his health is precarious if he is excited, why, there was nothing to be done about it. And then he insisted that Tom and I come off for a bit of a run on the Continent, the other children being with him. And as my big boy”--here a loving smile went all over the plain face, making it absolutely beautiful--”had worried down deep in his heart over the past, till I was more troubled than I can tell you, why, we came. And then G.o.d was good--for then we met you! Oh, Mrs. Fisher!”

She drew her hands by a sudden movement away, and put them on Mother Fisher's shoulders. And then that British matron, rarely demonstrative with her own children, even, leaned over and kissed Polly's mother.

”I can't see why it's so warm up here,” said Polly, racing over to their bench, followed by the others. ”Dear me, it's fairly hot.” And she pulled off her jacket.

”Don't do that, Polly,” said her mother.

”Oh, Mamsie, it's so very hot,” said Polly; but she thrust her arms into the sleeves and pulled it on again.