Part 6 (2/2)
”What is it?” whispered Margaret, forgetting the dread interview before her, and her own unformed misgivings.
”She won't give me the letter. I'm to have it when I go home for good; and I'm to go home for good at the holidays,” whimpered Janey.
”Poor Janey!” said Margaret, petting the blonde head on her shoulder.
”Margaret s.h.i.+elds, come here!” cried Miss Marlett, in a shaky voice, from the boudoir.
”Come to the back music-room when she's done with you,” the other girl whispered. And Margaret marched, with a beating heart, into Miss Marlett's chamber.
”My dear Margaret!” said Miss Marlett, holding out her hands. She was standing up in the middle of the boudoir. She ought to have been sitting grimly, fortified behind her bureau; that was the position in which she generally received pupils on these gloomy occasions.
”My dear Margaret!” she repeated. The girl trembled a little as the school-mistress drew her closer, and made her sit down on a sofa.
”What has happened?” she asked. Her lips were so dry that she could scarcely speak.
”You must make up your mind to be very brave. Your father----”
”Was it an accident?” asked Margaret, suddenly. She knew pretty well what was coming. Often she had foreseen the end, which it needed no prophet to foretell. ”Was it anything very dreadful?”
”Mr. Maitland does not say. You are to be called for to-day. Poor Daisy!”
”Oh, Miss Marlett, I am so very unhappy!” the girl sobbed. Somehow she was kneeling now, with her head buried in the elder lady's lap. ”I have been horrid to you. I am so wretched!”
A little kindness and a sudden trouble had broken down Miss Margaret s.h.i.+elds. For years she had been living, like Dr. Johnson at college, with a sad and hungry heart, trying to ”carry it off by her wild talk and her wit.” ”It was bitterness they mistook for frolic.” She had known herself to be a kind of outcast, and she determined to hold her own with the other girls who had homes and went to them in the holidays. Margaret had not gone home for a year. She had learned much, working harder than they knew; she had been in the ”best set” among the pupils, by dint of her cheery rebelliousness. Now she suddenly felt all her loneliness, and knew, too, that she had been living, socially, in that little society at the expense of this kind queer old Miss Marlett's feelings.
”I have been horrid to you,” she repeated. ”I wish I had never been born.”
The school-mistress said nothing at all, but kept stroking the girl's beautiful head. Surrept.i.tiously Miss Marlett wiped away a frosty tear.
”Don't mind me,” at last Miss Marlett said. ”I never thought hardly of you; I understood. Now you must go and get ready for your journey; you can have any of the girls you like to help you to pack.”
Miss Marlett carried generosity so far that she did not even ask which of the girls was to be chosen for this service. Perhaps she guessed that it was the other culprit.
Then Margaret rose and dried her eyes, and Miss Marlett took her in her arms and kissed her and went off to order a travelling luncheon and to select the warmest railway rug she could find; for the teacher, though she was not a very learned nor judicious school-mistress, had a heart and affections of her own. She had once, it is true, taken the word _legibus_ (dative plural of lex, a law) for an adjective of the third declension, legibus, legiba, legib.u.m; and Margaret had criticised this grammatical subtlety with an unsparing philological ac.u.men, as if she had been Professor Moritz Haupt and Miss Marlett, Orelli. And this had led to the end of Latin lessons at the Dovecot, wherefore Margaret was honored as a G.o.ddess by girls averse to studying the cla.s.sic languages.
But now Miss Marlett forgot these things, and all the other skirmishes of the past.
Margaret went wearily to her room, where she bathed her face with cold water; it could not be too cold for her, A certain numb forgetfulness seemed to steep her mind while she was thus deadening her eyes again and again. She felt as if she never wished to raise her eyes from this chilling consolation. Then, when she thought she had got lid of all the traces of her trouble, she went cautiously to the back music-room. Janey was there, moping alone, drumming on the window-pane with her fingers.
”Come to my room, Janey,” she said, beckoning.
Now, to consort together in their bedrooms during school-hours was forbidden to the girls.
”Why, well only get into another sc.r.a.pe,” said Janey, ruefully.
”No, come away; I've got leave for you. You're to help me to pack”
”To pack!” cried Janey. ”Why, _you're_ not expelled, are you? You've done nothing. You've not even had a perfectly harmless letter from a boy who is just like a brother to you and whom you've known for years.”
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