Part 8 (1/2)
”Her mother has arranged for the semi-annual payment of a sum quite sufficient to defray all necessary expenses, including tuition at school; but she urges me, if compatible with my clerical duties, to retain the school fees, and teach the child at home, as she dreads outside contaminating a.s.sociations, and wishes the little one reared with rigid ideas of rect.i.tude and propriety. Will you receive her among your music pupils?”
”Have I a heart of steel, and a soul of flint? And since when did you successfully trace my pedigree to its amiable source in--
'Gorgons and hydras and chimeras dire'?
”What is her name?”
Mr. Hargrove hesitated a moment, and, detecting the faint colour that tinged his olive cheek, his sister smilingly relieved him.
”Never mind, dear. What immense lat.i.tude we are allowed! If she prove a meek, sweet cherub, a very saint in bib-ap.r.o.ns,--with velvety eyes brown as a hazel nut, and silky chestnut ringlets,--I shall gather her into my heart and coo over her as--Columba, or Umilta, or Umbeline, or Una; but should we find her spoiled, and thoroughly leavened with iniquity,--a blonde, yellow-haired tornado,--then a proper regard for the 'unities will suggest that I vigorously enter a Christian protest, and lecture her grimly as Jezebel, Tomyris,--Fulvia or Clytemnestra.'”
”She shall be called Regina Orme, and if it will not too heavily tax your kindness, I should like to give her the small room next your own, and ask Dougla.s.s to move across the hall and take the front chamber opening on the verandah. The little girl may be timid, and it would comfort her to feel that you are within call should she be sick or become frightened. I am sure Dougla.s.s will not object to the change.”
”Certainly not. Blessings on his royal heart! He would not be my own n.o.ble boy if he failed to obey any wish of yours.”
I will at once superintend the transfer of his books and clothes, for if the child comes to-day you have left me little time for preparation.
She put away the crochet basket and, looking affectionately at the grave face that watched her movements, said soberly:
”Do not look so lugubrious; remember Abraham's example of hospitality, and let us do all we can for this motherless lamb, or kid,--whichever she may prove. One thing more, and here-after I shall hold my peace. You need not live in chronic dread, lest the Guy Fawkes of female curiosity pry into, and explode your mystery; for I a.s.sure you, Peyton, I shall never directly or indirectly question the child, and until you voluntarily broach the subject I shall never mention it to you. Are you satisfied?”
”Fully satisfied with my sister, and inexpressibly grateful for her unquestioning faith in me.”
She swept him an exaggerated courtesy, and, despite the grey threads that began to glint in her auburn hair, ran up the stairway as lightly as a girl of fifteen.
For some time he stood with his hands behind him, gazing abstractedly through the open window, and now and then he heard the busy patter of hurrying feet in the room over head, while s.n.a.t.c.hes of Easter anthems, and the swelling ”Amen” of a ”Gloria” rolled down the steps, a.s.suring him that all doubt and suspicion had been ejected from the faithful, fond, sisterly heart.
Taking his broad-brimmed gardening hat from the table, the pastor went down among his flower-beds, followed by Biorn, to whose innate asperity of temper was added the snarling fretfulness of old age.
A fine young brood of white Brahma chickens, having surrept.i.tiously effected an entrance into the sacred precincts of the flower-garden, were now diligently prosecuting their experiments in entomotomy right in the heart of a border of choice carnations. When Biorn had chased the marauders to the confines of the poultry yard, and watched the last awkward fledgling scramble through the palings, his master began to repair the damage, and soon became absorbed in the favourite task of tying up the spicy tufts of bloom that deluged the air with perfume as he lifted and bent the slender stems. His straw hat shut out the sight of surrounding objects, and he only turned his head when Mrs. Lindsay put her hand on his shoulder, and exclaimed:
”Peyton, 'the Philistines _be_ upon thee'!”
”Do you mean that she has come?”
”I think so; there is a carriage at the gate, and I noticed a trunk beside the driver.”
He rose hastily, and stood irresolute, visibly embarra.s.sed.
”Why, Peyton! Recollect your text last Sunday: 'No man having put his hand to the plough,' etc., etc., etc. It certainly is rather hard to be pelted with, one's own sermons, but it would never do to turn your back upon this benevolent furrow. Come, pluck up courage, and front the inevitable.”
”Elise, how can you jest? I am sorely burdened with gloomy forebodings of coming ill. You cannot imagine how I shrink from this responsibility.”
”It is rather too late, dear, to climb upon the stool of repentance.
Take this beast of Bashan by the horns, and have done with it. There is the bell! Shall I accompany you?”
”Oh, certainly.”
Hannah met them, and held up a card.