Part 59 (1/2)
Usually I'd have gone on sleeping, but Sh.e.l.ley was so sweet and lovely, and she kissed me so hard, that I remembered it was going to be a most exciting day, so I came to quick as snap and jumped right up, for I didn't want to miss a single thing that might happen.
The carriage was s.h.i.+ning when it came to the gate, so was father.
I thought there was going to be a vacant seat beside him, and I asked if I might go along. He said: ”Yes, if mother says so.” He always would stick that in. So I ran to ask her, and she didn't care, if Sh.e.l.ley made no objections. I was just starting to find her, when here she came, all s.h.i.+ning too, but Laddie was with her. I hadn't known that he was going, and I was so disappointed I couldn't help crying.
”What's the matter?” asked Sh.e.l.ley.
”Father and mother both said I might go, if you didn't care.”
”Why, I'm dreadfully sorry,” said Sh.e.l.ley, ”but I have several things I want Laddie to do for me.”
Laddie stooped down to kiss me good-bye and he said: ”Don't cry, Little Sister. The way to be happy is to be good.”
Then they drove to Groveville, and we had to wait. But there was so much to do, it made us fly to get all of it finished. So mother sent Leon after Mrs. Freshett to help in the kitchen, while Candace wore her white dress, and waited on the table. Mother cut flowers for the dining table, and all through the house. She left the blinds down to keep the rooms cool, chilled b.u.t.termilk to drink, and if she didn't think of every single, least little thing, I couldn't see what it was.
Then all of us put on our best dresses. Mother looked as glad and sweet as any girl, when she sat to rest a little while. I didn't dare climb the catalpa in my white dress, so I watched from the horse block, and when I saw the grays come over the top of the hill, I ran to tell.
As mother went to the gate, she told May and me to walk behind, to stay back until we were spoken to, and then to keep our heads level, and remember our manners. I don't know where Leon went. He said he lost all interest when he found there was to be another weak-eyed towhead in the family, and I guess he was in earnest about it, because he wasn't even curious enough to be at the gate when Mr. Paget came.
Father stopped with a flourish, Laddie hurried around and helped Sh.e.l.ley, and then Mr. Paget stepped down. Goodness, gracious, sakes alive! Little? Towhead? He was taller than Laddie. His hair was most as black as ink, and wavy. His eyes were big and dark; he was broad and strong and there was the cleanest, freshest look about him.
He put his arm spang around Sh.e.l.ley, right there in the road, and mother said: ”Hold there! Not so fast, young man! I haven't given my consent to that.”
He laughed, and he said: ”Yes, but you'ah going to!” And he put his other arm around mother, so May and I crowded up, and we had a family reunion right between the day lilies and the s...o...b..ll bush. We went into the house, and he LIKED us, his room, and everything went exactly right. He was crazy about the cold b.u.t.termilk, and while he was drinking it Leon walked into the dining-room, because he thought of course Mr. Paget and Sh.e.l.ley would be on the davenport in the parlour.
When he saw Robert he said lowlike to Sh.e.l.ley: ”Didn't Mr. Paget come?
Who's that?”
Sh.e.l.ley looked so funny for a minute, then she remembered what she had told him and she just laughed as she said: ”Mr. Paget, this is my brother.”
Robert went to shake hands, and Leon said right to his teeth: ”Well a divil of a towhead you are!”
”Towhead?” said Robert, bewildered-like.
”Sh.e.l.ley said you were a little bit of a man, with watery blue eyes, and whiter hair than mine.”
”Oh I say!” cried Robert. ”She must have been stringin' you!”
Leon just whooped; because while Mr. Paget didn't talk like the 'orse, 'ouse people, he made you think of them in the way he said things, and the sound of his voice. Then we had dinner, and I don't remember that we ever had quite such a feast before. Mother had put on every single flourish she knew. She used her very best dishes, and linen, and no cook anywhere could beat Candace alone; now she had Mrs. Freshett to help her, and mother also. If she tried to show Mr. Paget, she did it!
No visitor was there except him, but we must have been at the table two hours talking, and eating from one dish after another. Candace LIKED to wear her white dress, and carry things around, and they certainly were good.
And talk! Father, Laddie, and Robert talked over all creation. Every once in a while when mother saw an opening, she put in her paddle, and no one could be quicker, when she watched sharp and was trying to make a good impression. Sh.e.l.ley was very quiet; she scarcely spoke or touched that delicious food. Once the Paget man turned to her, looking at her so fondlike, as he picked up one of her sauce dishes and her spoon and wanted to feed her. And he said: ”Heah child, eat your dinnah! You have nawthing to be fussed ovah! I mean to propose to you, and your parents befowr night. That is what I am heah for.”
Every one laughed so, Sh.e.l.ley never got the bite; but after that she perked up more and ate a little by herself.
At last father couldn't stand it any longer, so he began asking Robert about his trip to England, and the case he had won. When the table was cleared for dessert, Mr. Paget asked mother to have Candace to bring his satchel. He opened it and spread papers all over, so that father and Laddie could see the evidence, while he told them how it was.
It seemed there was a law in England, all of us knew about it, because father often had explained it. This law said that a man who had lots of money and land must leave almost all of it to his eldest son; and the younger ones must go into law, the army, be clergymen, or enter trade and earn a living, while the eldest kept up the home place. Then he left it to his eldest son, and his other boys had to work for a living. It kept the big estates together; but my! it was hard on the younger sons, and no one seemed even to think about the daughters. I never heard them mentioned.
Now there was a very rich man; he had only two sons, and each of them married, and had one son. The younger son died, and sent his boy for his elder brother to take care of. He pretended to be good, but for sure, he was bad as ever he could be. He knew that if his cousin were out of the way, all that land and money would be his when his uncle died. So he went to work and he tried for years, and a lawyer man who had no conscience at all, helped him. At last when they had done everything they could think of, they took a lot of money and put it in the pocket of the son they wanted to ruin; then when his father missed the money, and the house was filled with policemen, detectives, and neighbours, the bad man said he'd feel more comfortable to have the family searched too, merely as a formality, so he stepped out and was gone over, and when the son's turn came, there was the money on him!
That made him a public disgrace to his family, and a criminal who couldn't inherit the estate, and his father went raving mad and tried to kill him, so he had to run away. At first he didn't care what he did, so he came over here. Robert said that man was his best friend, and as men went, he was a decent fellow, so he cheered him up all he could, and went to work with all his might to prove he was innocent, and to get back his family, and his money for him.