Volume I Part 21 (2/2)
Before the supper was more than half over, however, the rattling of spoons and plates, the requests for ”boned turkey,” and the flirting over mottoes were suddenly interrupted, and everything hushed for a moment, by calls for a doctor! ”Where is Dr. Van Horne?” ”Have you seen Dr. A?” ”There is Dr. B.”
”Alonzo, the fainting-room; remember,” said Mrs. Hilson.
But it proved to be none of the company who required a physician.
A stranger, a sailor, some one said, who had been for the last week at a low tavern opposite, had been seized with a fit; Dr.
Van Horne was soon found, and hastened to the relief of the sick man. The interruption was soon forgotten; the mottoes and boned turkey were again in demand. Dr. Van Horne did not return, however; his family went home without him; and Mrs. Clapp, on looking around for her husband, found that he also had disappeared.
”I saw Clapp going into the tavern last evening,” observed Uncle Josie. ”Perhaps this poor fellow is some client of his; he may have gone to look after him.”
Mrs. Clapp was obliged to ask Uncle Dozie to accompany her home; and as he was no somnambulist, with all his napping, he carried his niece safely to her own door.
Miss Wyllys was one of those who left the house immediately after supper. Adeline and Jane ran up stairs before Elinor and herself--like the Siamese twins, each with an arm encircling the other's waist. The close intimacy between Jane and Adeline continued to surprise Elinor. She began to think there must be something more than common, something of the importance of a mystery which drew them so often together, causing so many confidential meetings. Even when the two girls were in society, she could not but observe that Adeline often made some allusion, or whispered some remark that seemed both pleasing and embarra.s.sing to Jane. Miss Taylor was evidently playing confidante, and occasionally Jane appeared to wish her less open and persevering in the affair. As for Mrs. Graham, she was too much occupied with the care of her younger children to pay much attention to her daughter's intimacies. She rather disliked Adeline and all her family, and Mr. Graham had a real antipathy for Mr. Taylor; still Jane was allowed to do as other young girls about her, select whom she pleased for her a.s.sociates. Mrs.
Graham was one of those mothers who devote themselves with great a.s.siduity to the care of their childrens' {sic} bodies, their food and raiment, pains and aches--leaving all anxiety for their minds to the school-mistress, and their characters to themselves.
With the eldest daughter this plan had succeeded very well; Louisa Graham was clever and well-disposed, and had taken of her own accord what is called a good turn; and Mr. Robert Hazlehurst had every reason to congratulate himself upon his choice of a wife. Mrs. Graham seemed to take it as a matter of course that the same system would succeed equally well with all her family.
But Jane's disposition was very different from her sister Louisa's; she had no strength of character, and was easily led by those about her. The greatest fault in her disposition was thought by her family to be indolence; but Miss Wyllys sometimes wished that she had less selfishness, and more frankness.
{”Siamese twins” = Chang and Eng (1811-1874), born joined together in Thailand (Siam), of Chinese parents, who were exhibited in America for many years by P.T. Barnum; the condition was named after them}
Elinor was not a little startled at something which pa.s.sed in Miss Hubbard's dressing-room, between Jane and Miss Taylor, and which she accidentally overheard, before she was aware the conversation was confidential.
”Don't pretend any longer, Jane, that you didn't know it,”
whispered Adeline, as they were stooping together over a bundle of hoods and shawls. Jane made no answer. ”Now, confess that you knew he was serious before you left Paris.”
”I did not think much of it for some time,” said Jane.
”Well, I supposed from your letters that you knew long ago that he was desperately in love with you. Trust me, we'll settle it all between us.”
”Oh, hush,” said Jane, ”there is somebody coming--I know it's wrong--”
”Nonsense--wrong indeed! I should like to know where is the great harm if he does break his engagement?”
Elinor moved away when she found the conversation was meant to be private. But she had unintentionally heard enough to make her anxious for Jane. ”Was not Adeline leading her into difficulty?”
She felt uneasy, and thought of nothing else during her drive home. It would not do to consult Miss Wyllys; but she determined to speak to Jane herself, the first time she saw her.
Unfortunately, her cousin was going to New York, and nothing could be done until she returned to pa.s.s a fortnight at Wyllys-Roof before going to town for the winter.
CHAPTER XV.
-------------------------”the reward Is in the race we run, not in the prize.”
ROGERS.
{Samuel Rogers (English poet, 1763-1855), ”Italy: A Character”
lines 39-40}
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