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| author | nfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org> | 2025-03-08 12:46:01 -0800 |
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| committer | nfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org> | 2025-03-08 12:46:01 -0800 |
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diff --git a/41524-0.txt b/41524-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a93ef4a --- /dev/null +++ b/41524-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,8431 @@ +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41524 *** + + MARION BERKLEY + + A STORY FOR GIRLS + + BY ELIZABETH B. COMINS + + + PHILADELPHIA + HENRY T. COATES & CO + + Copyright, 1870, by A. K. Loring. + + + + + TO + MY TWIN SISTERS + THIS BOOK + IS MOST AFFECTIONATELY + _DEDICATED_. + + + + +[Illustration: THE TWO BOUQUETS.] + + + + +MARION BERKLEY. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +EN ROUTE FOR SCHOOL. + + +"Come on, Mab! the carriage is round; only fifteen minutes to get to the +depot." + +"Yes, I am coming. O mamma! do fasten this carpet-bag for me. Dear me! +there goes the button off my gloves. Was there ever any one in such a +flutter?" + +"Never mind, dear; it is too late to sew it on now. Here is your bag; +come, we must not stop another moment; there is Fred calling again." + +"I say, Mab," shouted the first speaker from the bottom of the stairs, +"if you're coming, why don't you come? I shan't leave until you bid me +good-by, and I know I shall lose the ball-match. You do keep a fellow +waiting so eternally long!" + +His sister was downstairs, and had her arms around his neck before he +had finished speaking, and said to him, in a tone of mock gravity, "Now, +Frederic, don't get excited; always follow my good example, and keep +cool. There now!" she exclaimed, as she gave him a hearty kiss; "be +off. I forgot all about your ball-match, and all the amends I can make +is to hope the Isthmians will beat the Olympics all to pieces." + +"Come, come," called Mrs. Berkley from the inside of the carriage, "we +have not a moment to lose." + +"Good-by, Hannah. One more kiss for Mab, Charlie. Good-by, all;" then to +the coachman, as she whisked into the carriage, "Drive on, John, just as +fast as you can." + +The carriage-door was shut with a snap; off went the horses, and Mrs. +Berkley and her daughter were soon at the Western depot, where the +latter was to take the cars for B----, a little New England town, where +she attended boarding-school. They were very late at the depot, and Mrs. +Berkley had only time for a fond kiss and a "Write often, darling," when +the bell rung, and she was forced to leave the car, feeling a little +uneasy that her daughter was obliged to take her journey alone. Just as +the cars were starting, Marion put her head out of a window, and called +to her mother, "O mamma! Flo is here; isn't that jolly? No fear now +of--" The last part of the sentence was unintelligible, and all Mrs. +Berkley got was a bright smile, and a wave of the hand, as the train +moved out of the depot. + +"Now, Flo, I call this providential," exclaimed Marion; "for, I can tell +you, I did not relish the prospect of my solitary ride. Just hand me +your bag, and I'll put it in the rack with my budgets. This seat is +empty; suppose we turn it over, and then we shall be perfectly +comfortable. Now I say this is decidedly scrumptious;" and she settled +herself back, with a sigh of satisfaction. + +"Why, Mab, what made you so late? I had been here fifteen minutes before +you came, all on the _qui vive_, hoping to see some one I knew; but I +never dreamed you would be here. I thought you were going up yesterday +with the Thayers." + +"I did intend to; but Fred had a sort of spread last night for the +Isthmians, so I stayed over. I expect Miss Stiefbach will give me one of +her annihilators, but I guess I can stand it. I've been withered so many +times, that the glances of those 'eagle eyes' have rather lost their +effect." + +"Well, I only wish I had a little more of your spirit of resistance. +What a lovely hat you have! Just suits your style. Where did you get +it?" + +"Why, it's only my old sun-down dyed and pressed over, and bound with +the velvet off my old brown rep. I trimmed it myself, and feel mighty +proud of it." + +"Trimmed it yourself!--really? Well, I never saw such a girl; you can do +anything! I couldn't have done it to save my life. I only wish to +gracious I could; it would be very convenient sometimes." + +And so the two girls rattled on for some time, in true school-girl +fashion; but at last they each took a book, and settled back into their +respective corners. Before very long, however, Marion tossed her book on +to the opposite seat; for they were coming to Lake Cochituate, and +nothing could be lovelier than the view which was stretching itself +before them. I do not think that half the people of Massachusetts +realize how beautiful this piece of water is; but I believe, if they had +seen it then, they surely must have appreciated its charms. + +It was about the middle of September, and the leaves were just beginning +to turn; indeed, some of them were already quite brilliant. The day was +soft and hazy,--just such a one as we often have in early autumn, and +the slight mist of the atmosphere served to soften and harmonize the +various colors of the landscape. The lake itself was as clear and smooth +as polished glass, and every tree on the borders was distinctly +reflected on its clear bosom; while the delicate blue sky, with the few +feathery clouds floating across it seemed to be far beneath the surface +of the water. + +Marion was at heart a true artist, and had all a true artist's intense +love of nature; she now sat at the window, completely absorbed in the +scene before her, her eye and mind taking in all the beauties of form, +color, and reflection; and as the cars bore her too swiftly by she +uttered a sigh of real regret. + +Perhaps there will be no better time than the present for giving my +young readers a description of my heroine. My tale will contain no +thrilling incidents, no hairbreadth escapes, or any of those startling +events with which ideas of heroism are generally associated. It will be +a simple story of a school-girl's life; its fun and frolic; its +temptations, trials, and victories. + +Marion Berkley was a remarkably beautiful girl; but she owed her beauty +chiefly to the singular contrast of her hair and eyes. The former was a +beautiful golden color, while her eyes, eyebrows, and lashes were very +dark. Her nose and mouth, though well formed, could not be considered in +any way remarkable. When in conversation her face became animated, the +expression changed with each inward emotion, and her eyes sparkled +brilliantly; but when in repose they assumed a softer, dreamier look, +which seemed to hint of a deeper nature beneath this gay and often +frivolous exterior. + +Mr. Berkley was very fond of his daughter. He had a large circle of +acquaintances, many of whom were in the habit of dining, or passing the +evening, at his house, and it pleased him very much to have them notice +her. Marion was by no means a vain girl; yet these attentions from those +so much older than herself were rather inclined to turn her head. +Fortunately, her mother was a very lovely and sensible woman, whose good +example and sound advice served to counteract those influences which +might otherwise have proved very injurious. + +And now that I have introduced my friends to Marion, it is no more than +fair that I should present them to her companion. Florence Stevenson was +a bright, pretty brunette, of sixteen. She and Marion had been friends +ever since they made "mud pies" together in the Berkleys' back yard. +They shared the same room at school, got into the same scrapes, kept +each other's secrets, and were, in short, almost inseparable. Florence +had lost her mother when she was very young, and her father's house was +ruled over by a well-meaning, but disagreeable maiden-aunt, who, by her +constant and oftentimes unnecessary fault-finding, made Florence so +unhappy, that she had hailed with delight her father's proposition of +going away to school. For three years Florence and Marion had been +almost daily together, being only separated during vacations, when, as +Florence lived five miles from Boston, it was impossible that they +should see as much of each other as they would have liked. + +About four in the afternoon, the girls reached their destination; rather +tired out by their long ride, but, nevertheless, in excellent spirits. +Miss Stiefbach, after a few remarks as to the propriety of being a day +before, rather than an hour behind time, dismissed them to their rooms +to prepare for supper, where for the present we will leave them. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +SCHOOL. + + +Miss Stiefbach and her sister Christine, were two excellent German +ladies who, owing to a sudden reverse of fortune, were obliged to leave +their mother-country, hoping to find means of supporting themselves in +America. They were most kindly received by the gentlemen to whom they +brought letters of introduction, and with their assistance they had been +able to open a school for young ladies; and now, at the end of seven +years, they found themselves free from debt, and at the head of one of +the best boarding-schools in the United States. + +Miss Stiefbach, the head and director of the establishment, was a stern, +cold, forbidding woman; acting on what she considered to be the most +strictly conscientious principles, but never unbending in the slightest +degree her frigid, repelling manner. To look at her was enough to have +told you her character at once. She was above the medium height, +excessively thin and angular in her figure, and was always dressed in +some stiff material, which, as Marion Berkley expressed it, "looked as +if it had been starched and frozen, and had never been thawed out." + +Miss Christine was fifteen years her junior, and her exact opposite in +appearance as well as in disposition: she was short and stout, and +rosy-cheeked, not at all pretty; but having such a kind smile, such a +thoroughly good-natured face, that the girls all thought she was really +beautiful, and would feel more repentance at one of her grieved looks, +than they would for forty of Miss Stiefbach's frigid reprimands. And +well they might love her, for she certainly was a kind friend to them. +Many a school-girl trick or frolic had she concealed, which, if it had +come under the searching eyes of her sister, would have secured the +perpetrators as stern a rebuke, and perhaps as severe a punishment, as +if they had committed some great wrong. + +Miss Stiefbach's school was by no means what is generally called a +"fashionable school." The parents of the young girls who went there +wished that their daughters should receive not only a sound education, +but that they should be taught many useful things not always included in +the list of a young lady's accomplishments. + +There were thirty scholars, ranging from the ages of seventeen to ten; +two in each room. They were obliged to make their own beds, and take all +the care of their rooms, except the sweeping. Every Saturday morning +they all assembled in the school-room to darn their stockings, and do +whatever other mending might be necessary. Formerly Miss Stiefbach +herself had superintended their work, but for the last year she had put +it under the charge of Miss Christine; an arrangement which was +extremely pleasing to the girls, making for them a pleasant pastime of +what had always been an irksome duty. After their mending was done, and +their Bible lesson for the following Sabbath learned, the rest of the +day was at their own disposal. Those who had friends in the neighborhood +generally went to visit them; while the others took long walks, or +occupied themselves in doing whatever best pleased them. There were of +course some restrictions; but these were so slight, and so reasonable, +that no one ever thought of complaining, and the day was almost always +one of real enjoyment. Miss Stiefbach herself was an Episcopalian, and +always required that every one, unless prevented by illness, should +attend that church in the morning; but, in the afternoon, any girl who +wished might go to any other church, first signifying her intention to +one or the other of the sisters. + +Some of Miss Stiefbach's ancestors had suffered from religious +persecutions in Germany, and, although she felt it her duty to have her +scholars attend what she considered to be the "true church," she could +not have it on her conscience to be the means of preventing any one from +worshipping God in whatever manner their hearts dictated. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +MONSIEUR BÉRANGER. + + +It was the half-hour intermission at school; and Marion and Florence had +taken Julia Thayer up into their room to give her a taste of some of the +goodies they had brought from home with them. Their room was one of the +largest in the house, having two deep windows; one in front, the other +on the side. The side window faced the west, and in it the girls had +placed a very pretty flower-stand filled with plants; an ivy was trained +against the side, and a lovely mirandia hung from the top. The front +window had a long seat fitted into it, and as it overlooked the street +it was here that the girls almost always sat at their work or studies. + +"Now, Julie," began Marion, "which will you have, sponge or currant?" + +"Why, you are getting awfully stingy!" exclaimed Flo; "give her some of +both." + +"No, she can't have both; it is altogether too extravagant. This is my +treat, and you need not make any comments." + +"Well, if I can't have but one, I think I'll try sponge." + +"Sensible girl! you knew it would not keep long. There, you shall have +an Havana orange to pay you for your consideration." + +"Please, ma'am," said Flo, in a voice of mock humility, "may I give her +some of my French candies?" + +"Yes, if you'll be a very good girl, and never interfere again when I am +'head-cook and bottle-washer.'" + +The girls sat round the room chatting and eating; Flora and Julia were +on the bed, when Marion, who was at the front window, jumped up on the +seat, and called out: "O Flo! Julie! do come here! Just look at this man +coming down the street. Such a swell!" + +The two girls rushed precipitately to the window, and they all stood +looking out with intense interest. + +"I do declare, he is coming in here! Who in the world can he be? How he +struts!" said Marion. "What a startling mustache! I do wonder who in the +world he is." + +"Allow me to see, young ladies; perhaps I can inform you," said a calm +voice directly in their ears; and, turning, they beheld Miss Stiefbach. +She had entered the room just as they began their comments, and now +stood directly behind them. Florence and Julia fell back in dismay, and +for a second a look of amazement passed over Marion's face; but it was +only a second, for she instantly replied to Miss Stiefbach, in the same +eager tone she had used when speaking to her companions: "Jump right up +here; you can see him better, for he is underneath on the steps." + +Miss Stiefbach looked at her aghast, and for once she was overpowered. +She, the calm, the dignified, the stately Miss Stiefbach--jump! It was +too much. If a glance could have transfixed her, Marion would have been +immovable for life. Miss Stiefbach's usually pale face was flushed to a +burning red, and her voice was choked with suppressed excitement, as she +said, "Young ladies, you will go at once to the school-room. Miss +Berkley, report to me in my study, immediately after the close of +school;" and she sailed out of the room. + +When she was gone, the girls stood and looked at each other, not exactly +knowing whether to laugh or cry; but Marion decided for herself, by +sitting down on the floor, and bursting into a fit of uncontrollable +laughter. Florence held up her finger warningly, "Hush-sh-sh! Mab, +she'll hop out from under the bed, like as not; do come downstairs." + +"O girls! girls! that look!" shouted Marion. "Oh, I shall die! She was +furious. Won't I catch it?" + +"O Mab, how did you dare? It was awfully impudent." + +"I know it, and I'm sure I don't know what made me say it. I never +stopped to think; it just popped out, and I would not have lost that +scene for anything;" and Marion went off again into one of her +laughing-fits. + +"O Mab, do stop!" said Julia, rather impatiently; "you'll get us into a +pretty scrape." + +"Well, I won't laugh another bit, if I can help it; come on!" and, +jumping up, Marion ran downstairs, the others following her, into the +school-room; when, what was their astonishment to see before them "the +swell," who had been the cause of all their trouble, standing talking to +Miss Stiefbach. They went quietly to their seats, wondering what would +happen next. Marion whispered to Flo, "The new French teacher; a man, as +I live, and not very old either. Won't we have fun?" + +"Young ladies of the first class in French go into the anteroom, where +M. Béranger will examine you. Miss Christine, accompany them, and +preserve order." As Miss Stiefbach said this in her usual calm tones, +Marion's recollections were almost too much for her; but she had a +little laugh all to herself, behind the cover of her desk, as she took +out her books. + +The former French teacher had been a little, quiet woman, who had +allowed herself to be ruled over by her pupils; but she had gone back to +France, and Miss Stiefbach had secured the services of M. Béranger, who +was recommended to her, both for his complete knowledge of his own +language, and for his high moral character. The latter was indeed to be +considered, for many foreigners, calling themselves professors, often +prove to be mere worthless adventurers, knowing very little themselves +of what they attempt to teach others, and being in other respects unfit +for respectable society. + +The young ladies were in quite a little flutter of expectation, as they +took their seats, for Mr. Stein, their old music-teacher, was the only +gentleman teacher of the establishment, and he was decidedly different +from this rather elegant-looking Frenchman. M. Béranger came in, bowed +in a dignified manner, took his chair, and at once began questioning the +girls as to what they had studied, how far they were advanced, etc. +Marion, who was ready for anything, and thought she might as well have a +little more fun for the scolding that she knew was in store for her, +tried hard to get up a little excitement; pretending not to understand +when M. Béranger spoke to her; replying to all his questions in English, +notwithstanding his repeated ejaculations of "Mademoiselle, je ne vous +comprends pas du tout; parlez Français." But Marion would not "parlez +Français," disregarding the beseeching looks of Miss Christine, and +either made no reply, or obstinately spoke in English. For some time M. +Béranger took no notice of her conduct, but went on questioning the rest +of the class; assuring the timid by his polite, considerate patience, +and quietly correcting the mistakes of the more confident. At last, +however, as Marion asked him some trifling question, he looked her +directly in the face, and simply replied, "M'lle Berkley, si vous parlez +l'Anglais, il faut que je vous mette dans la classe des petites filles." + +Marion looked at him a moment, in doubt whether he could be in earnest; +but there was no mistaking that calm, determined look. Two things were +before her: to rebel, and go down to the lower class in disgrace, or to +yield gracefully to what she knew to be right. She chose the latter, and +replied, "Monsieur, je pense que je resterai ici." As she said this, +there was a slight flush of shame on her cheeks, and she bent her head +with a little gesture, which seemed to beg pardon for her rudeness. At +any rate, M. Béranger so understood it, and he ever afterwards +entertained a secret respect and admiration for M'lle Berkley. + +That night, in her own room, Marion thus explained her singular conduct: +"You see, Flo, I wanted to find out, in the first place, what sort of +stuff he was made of; whether he was to rule us, or we him, as we did +poor little mademoiselle; and I found out pretty quickly. He came here +to teach, not to be made game of. In two weeks, I expect to have the +true Parisian accent, and to have entirely forgotten all the English I +ever knew. Bonne nuit, ma chère;" and Marion turned over, and was asleep +in five minutes. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +MARION'S SENTENCE. + + +Immediately after the close of school Marion betook herself to the +private study of Miss Stiefbach. This was a small room back of the +drawing-room, fitted up very cosily and comfortably, and which no one +but the sisters ever entered, except on state occasions, or under +circumstances like the present. It must be confessed that Marion did not +feel very comfortable as the door closed behind her, and Miss Stiefbach, +who was sitting at her desk, turned round, motioning her to be seated. +Marion knew she had done very wrong, and was really sorry for it, for, +although none of the scholars could be said to have much affection for +Miss Stiefbach, they all held her in the most profound respect, and no +such direct attack upon her dignity had ever been made within the memory +of any of the present pupils. + +Miss Stiefbach cleared her throat, and commenced speaking in her most +impressive and awful voice. "Miss Berkley" (the fact that she addressed +Marion in this very distant manner proved at once that she was very +angry), "your conduct to me this day has been such as I have never seen +in any young lady since I became the head of this establishment, and I +consider it deserves a severe punishment. The remarks which I overheard +this morning, as I entered your room, were enough in themselves to have +merited a stern rebuke, even if they had not been followed by a direct +insult to myself. I am surprised indeed, that any young ladies brought +up in refined society should have made use of such expressions as +'_swell_' and--and--other words of a like nature." It was evidently so +hard for Miss Stiefbach to pronounce the word, even in a tone of intense +disapproval, that Marion, despite her uneasiness, could not help being +amused; but no trace of her feelings could be seen in her face; she sat +before her teacher perfectly quiet,--so quiet, that Miss Stiefbach could +not tell whether she was deeply repentant or supremely indifferent. + +"I have decided," resumed Miss Stiefbach, "that as M. Béranger was +indirectly connected with the affair, you shall apologize to me before +the whole school, and in his presence, on the next French day, which +will be Friday. I should not have subjected you to this mortification, +if you had shown any willingness to apologize to me here; but as you +seem entirely insensible of the impropriety of your conduct, I consider +that the punishment is perfectly just." + +Marion rose; for one second her eyes had flashed ominously when her +sentence was delivered, but it was the only sign she gave of being +surprised or otherwise moved. Perceiving that Miss Stiefbach had nothing +more to say, she left the room as quietly as she had entered it. Several +of the girls were standing at the study door waiting for her to come +out, for the whole story had by this time become pretty freely +circulated, and every one was impatient to know the result of the +interview. Marion passed them without a glance, and without speaking, +but with the most perfect _sang froid_, and went directly upstairs to +her room. But once there her forced composure gave way, and, throwing +herself on the bed, she burst into a passion of tears. + +Florence, who had been anxiously waiting for Marion to come up, knelt +down beside her, smoothing her hair, calling her by all their fond, pet +names, and doing everything she could to soothe and quiet her, but never +once asking the questions that were uppermost in her own mind, for she +knew that, as soon as this first hysterical fit of weeping was over, her +friend would tell her all. She waited some time, until she became almost +frightened, for Marion's sobs shook her from head to foot, and she +seemed unable to control herself. + +Suddenly Marion sprang up, and exclaimed in the most excited, passionate +tones, "Florence! Florence! what do you think she is going to make me +do? Think of the most humiliating thing you can!" + +"Indeed, my darling, I cannot guess," replied Flo, while she had hard +work to restrain her own tears. + +"I have got to apologize to her before the whole school, and before M. +Béranger next Friday. Oh! I think it is abominable. She wouldn't have +made any other girl do it, but she knows how proud I am, and she thinks +now she'll humble me. Oh, it is too hard, too hard to bear!" and Marion +threw herself back on the pillow, and sobbed aloud. + +Poor Florence was completely overpowered. Distressed as she was for her +friend, and furiously indignant with Miss Stiefbach, she hardly dared to +comfort and sympathize with her, except by caresses, for fear of +increasing her excitement, and she could only throw her arms round +Marion's neck, kissing her repeatedly, and exclaiming again and again, +"I wish I could help you!--I wish I could help you!" + +But after a while the violence of Marion's grief and anger subsided, but +left its traces in a severe headache; her temples throbbed fearfully, +and her face and hands were burning hot. + +Florence wet a cloth in cold water, and laid it on her head, and, +knowing that Marion would prefer to be alone, she kissed her quietly, +and as her eyes were closed was about to leave the room without +speaking, when Marion called her back, exclaiming, "Don't tell the +girls anything about it; they'll find it out soon enough." + +"No, dear, I won't mention it, if I can help it. You lie still and try +to get to sleep. Don't come downstairs to supper. I will excuse you to +Miss Christine, and bring you up a cup of tea." + +"No! no! no!" excitedly repeated Marion; "do no such thing. I wouldn't +stay up from supper, if it killed me to go down; it would only prove to +old Stiffback how deep she has cut, and I mean she shall find it will +take more than _she_ can do to humble me. Be sure and let me know when +the bell rings. I don't think there is much danger of my going to sleep; +but for fear I should, you come up before tea,--won't you?" + +Flo promised, and giving her another kiss, and advising her again to lie +still and go to sleep,--a thing which she knew it was impossible for +Marion to do,--she left the room. + +Left to herself Marion became a prey to her own varying emotions. Pride, +anger, and mortification were rankling in her breast. When she thought +of the coming disgrace which she was to endure, she sobbed and wept as +if her heart would break; and then the image of Miss Stiefbach, with her +calm, cool face, and deliberate manner, seeming so much as if she +enjoyed giving such pain, rose before her mind, and she clenched her +hands, and shut her teeth together, looking as she felt, willing to do +almost anything to revenge herself. + +In her inmost heart she had been truly sorry for having spoken so +impertinently to her teacher, and she had gone to the study fully +prepared to acknowledge that she had done wrong, and to ask pardon for +her fault. But Miss Stiefbach, by presupposing that she felt no regret +for her conduct, or any desire to apologize, had frozen all such +feelings, and roused all the rebellious part of the girl's nature. + +For some time Marion tossed restlessly from side to side; but at last, +finding it impossible to quiet herself, much less to sleep, she got up, +bathed her face, and prepared to arrange her disordered hair. + +To her excited imagination, it seemed almost as if she could hear the +girls downstairs discussing the whole matter. Every laugh she heard she +believed to be at her expense, and she dreaded meeting her companions, +knowing full well that her looks and actions would be the subject of +general comment. + +Throughout the school Marion was not a general favorite; almost all the +girls admired her, but there were few who felt that they really knew +her. + +She was acknowledged by almost all her companions to be the brightest +and prettiest girl in the school, and was apparently on good terms with +all of them; but that was all. Many who would have liked to know her +better, and who would have been glad to make advances of intimate +friendship, felt themselves held back from doing so, by a certain +haughty, reserved manner, which she at times assumed, and by her own +evident disinclination for anything more than an amicable school-girl +acquaintance. + +Marion was quick to perceive the petty weaknesses and follies of these +around her, and her keen sense of the ludicrous, combined with a habit +of saying sharp, sarcastic things, often led her to draw out these +foibles, and show them up in their most absurd light. + +No one knew her faults better than Marion herself, and she was +constantly struggling to overcome them; but her pride and strong will +led her to conceal her real feelings, and often when she was at heart +angry with herself, and ashamed of her wilful, perhaps unkind, behavior, +she would assume an aspect of supreme indifference, effectually +deceiving every one as to what was really passing in her mind. + +She kept her struggles to herself. No one but her friend Florence and +Miss Christine knew how sincerely she longed to conquer her faults, and +how severe these struggles were. + +The knowledge of them had come to Miss Christine by accident. One day +Marion had said something unusually sharp and cutting to one of her +companions, but had appeared perfectly unconscious of having done +anything unkind, and had gone to her own room humming a tune, with the +most perfect nonchalance. + +Miss Christine shortly after followed her, wishing to talk with her, and +show her the folly and wickedness of persisting in such conduct. She had +found her door closed, and, knocking softly and receiving no answer, she +gently opened it, when what was her astonishment to find Marion +stretched upon the floor, weeping violently. She went to her, and, +kneeling down beside her, called her by name. Marion, thus surprised, +could not conceal her grief, or summon her cold, indifferent manner, +and, leaning her head on Miss Christine's shoulder, she sobbed out her +sorrow, shame, and repentance. + +Never since had Miss Christine in any way alluded to the event, or by +any means tried to force herself into Marion's confidence; but this +glimpse into her heart had showed her what she might otherwise never +have known, that Marion saw and regretted her own faults and failings, +and was resolved to conquer them. From that time a secret bond of +sympathy was established between pupil and scholar, and though no word +was spoken, a mild, reproachful glance from Miss Christine, or her hand +laid gently on Marion's shoulder, had often checked a rising +exclamation, or cutting sarcasm, which, no matter how sharply it might +have struck its victim, would have rebounded with greater and deeper +pain to the very heart of Marion. + +At home Marion had little or nothing to call forth the disagreeable +qualities of her disposition. Surrounded by love and admiration on every +side, the darling of her mother, and the pride and glory of her father, +to whom she appeared almost faultless, it was no wonder that she found +it hard to get on smoothly when thrown among a number of girls her own +age, many of whom, jealous of her superior beauty and intelligence, +would have been glad of any opportunity of getting her into trouble. + +Then it was that the worst side of her nature showed itself; and she was +shocked when she discovered how many faults she had which she had never +thought of before. + +Her sharp, sarcastic speeches gave her father infinite amusement when +she was at home; but there her remarks rarely wounded any one; but at +school she made her words tell, and she knew that her tongue was her +greatest enemy. + +But towards the younger girls Marion was always kind and good-natured. +No one ever told such delightful stories, or made such pretty +paper-dolls, or drew them such lovely pictures as Marion Berkley, and it +was always a mystery to them why the "big girls" did not all love her. + + * * * * * + +Downstairs poor Florence had been having a hard time. When she first +made her appearance in the library there had been a general rush towards +her, and she was greeted with a perfect volley of questions, which it +needed her utmost ingenuity to parry. + +She knew Julia Thayer had a right to know all, for she had been +personally concerned in the matter, besides being, next to Flo, Marion's +dearest friend; but she saw that she could not tell her without further +exciting the curiosity of the other girls, and she was forced to take +her book, and appear to be deeply interested in her studies. But, +although her lips monotonously whispered page after page of history, she +knew no more about her lesson than if she had been reading Hindoostanee. + +What was her astonishment when she heard close beside her Marion's +voice, asking, in a perfectly natural tone, "Did Miss Christine say six +pages of English History, or seven?" + +Florence gave a quick glance at Marion's face, and saw that, although +she was a little pale, she showed no signs of the storm that had so +lately disturbed her. Neither did she throughout the evening appear +other than bright and cheerful, effectually silencing by her own +apparent ease any surmises or questions in which her companions might +have indulged, and they all supposed that she had received a severe +reprimand, and that there the matter would end. + +But all agreed with Sarah Brown, who exclaimed, "How Miss Stiefbach had +ever swallowed that pill so easily was a perfect mystery!" + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +THE APOLOGY. + + +"Well, Flo, I've hit it!" exclaimed Marion to Florence, as they were +sitting together in their room Thursday afternoon. + +"What do you mean?--hit what?" + +"Why, I mean I've hit upon a plan; no, not exactly a plan;--I have +decided what my apology shall be." + +"Oh!" said Florence, "do you know just what you are going to say?" + +"No, not precisely; that is, I have not yet settled upon any exact form +of words, but I have got my ideas together, and I really think it will +be something quite out of the common line." + +Florence looked up inquisitively, for Marion's face or voice by no means +expressed the repugnance which she had heretofore shown whenever she had +spoken of the coming apology. In fact she looked rather triumphant, and +a little, amused smile played about the corners of her mouth, as she +bent over her work. + +"Now, Mab," exclaimed Florence, "I know you are up to something! Do tell +me what it is that evidently amuses you so much?" + +"Oh, nothing particular," replied Marion; but in a tone which said +plainly enough that there was something very particular indeed. + +"Now, Mab, you needn't tell me!" + +"That is exactly what I don't mean to do," provokingly replied Marion. + +"Oh, don't be disagreeable! You know I am positively dying with +curiosity; so out with it!" and Florence tossed her own work on to the +bed, and, catching hold of Marion's canvas, threw it behind her, as she +established herself on her friend's lap. + +"Well, I'm sorry, my dear; but if your life depends on my telling you +anything particular to-day, I am afraid you will come to an early +grave." + +Florence laid her hands on Marion's shoulders, and looked steadily into +her eyes. Marion met the look with a confident, amused smile, and +exclaimed, "Well, Flo, you look as sober as a judge. I really believe +you think I meditate murder; but I assure you Miss Stiefbach's life is +in no danger from my hands." + +"I'll tell you just what I do think, Marion. I believe you are going to +refuse to apologize, and if you do, you will be worse off than you've +been yet;" and Florence really looked as serious as if she were trying a +case in court. + +"No, Flo, you needn't trouble yourself on that score. I mean to +apologize before the whole school, and M. Béranger to boot,--just as old +Stiffy ordered." + +"Well, I am glad of it! Not glad that it _must_ be done, you know; but I +was afraid you would try to get rid of it in some way; and I know that +would make matters worse." + +"No, I don't mean to get rid of it; I shall do it in the most approved +style. Come, get up, miss; you're awfully heavy!" + +Florence jumped up, considerably relieved, but still a little suspicious +of her friend's intentions. At that moment Julia Thayer came into the +room. + +"O girls! you here?" she exclaimed. "I've been hunting for you +everywhere." + +"Well, I don't think you hunted much; we've been here ever since lessons +were done," replied Marion. + +"Take a seat, Miss Thayer, and make yourself at home," said Florence. + +"Thank you, I was only waiting to be asked. Now, Marion, do tell me; +have you decided what you are going to say to-morrow?" + +"It is no use asking her; you can't get anything out of her. I've just +tried my best." + +"What! don't you mean to tell us, beforehand?" + +"No." + +"Not a word? not a syllable? Well, I do declare! I tell you what it is, +Flo, she means to astonish us all by some wonderful production." + +"I suppose most of the girls _will_ be astonished, for I don't believe +they know there is to be any apology at all." + +"No, I don't think they suspect it," said Julia. "So much for knowing +how to hold one's tongue." + +"Well, Julia, I guess this is the first time you could be accused of +that," laughingly replied Flo. + +"That is a libel! Who held their tongue about Aunt Bettie's doughnuts, I +should like to know?" + +"Another rare instance," mischievously put in Marion; "put it down, +Julia, you'll never have another chance." + +"But, girls, what do you mean?" cried Julia, in a deprecating tone. "Do +you think I run and tell everything I know?" + +"No, dear, not a bit of it," replied Flo; "you are not quite so reserved +as Marion, but I never heard any one accuse you of telling what you +ought to keep to yourself, or, as the boys say, of 'peaching.'" + +"There, Julia, don't look so forlorn, for mercy's sake!" exclaimed +Marion. "You are so delightfully easy to tease; but I confess it was a +very poor reward for your silence of the past two days, which (she +added with a mischievous twinkle in her eyes) I know must have almost +killed you." + +Julia and Florence both laughed outright at this rather equivocal +consolation, and at that moment the supper-bell rang. + +Friday morning every girl was in her seat precisely as the clock struck +nine; for it was French day, and consequently only the second appearance +of M. Béranger, and the novelty of having him there at all had by no +means worn off. + +He entered the room, shortly after, and, having politely wished Miss +Stiefbach and her sister good-morning, was about to pass into the +anteroom, when Miss Stiefbach detained him. + +"Excuse me, M. Béranger, but I must trouble you to remain here a few +moments." + +M. Béranger bowed with his usual grace, and Miss Stiefbach continued:-- + +"I regret to say (she did not look as if she regretted it at all) that a +circumstance of a most painful nature has lately taken place in this +school. One of my young ladies has done that which makes me deem it +necessary to exact a public apology from her. As you were indirectly +concerned in the matter, I think it proper that the apology should be +made before you. Miss--" + +"But, madame," hastily interrupted the astonished Frenchman, "I cannot +imagine; there must be a meestake--I am a perfect stranger; if you will +have the goodness to excuse me, I shall be one tousand times obliged;" +and the poor man looked as if he himself was the culprit. + +"It is impossible, monsieur," decidedly replied Miss Stiefbach; "one +particular clause of her punishment was, that it should be made in your +presence. Miss Berkley, you will please come forward." + +During the above conversation a most profound silence had reigned +throughout the room; the girls, with the exception of the initiated +three, had looked from one to another, and then at the group on the +platform, with faces expressive of the most intense astonishment, +proving how wholly unsuspicious they had been; but as Marion's name was +pronounced a light broke in upon every one, and all eyes were turned +upon her as she left her seat. + +Miss Stiefbach stood with her hands folded over each other in her usual +stately attitude. M. Béranger looked infinitely annoyed and distressed, +and twirled his watch-chain in a very nervous manner. Miss Christine had +retired to the extreme end of the platform, and was trying to appear +interested in a book; but her face had a sad, pained look, which showed +how fully her sympathies were with her pupil. + +Florence Stevenson buried her face in her hands; she could not bear to +witness her friend's disgrace. Marion advanced quietly up between the +rows of desks, and as she stepped upon the platform turned so as to face +the school. + +She never looked lovelier in her life; a bright color burned in her +cheeks, and her eyes, always wonderfully beautiful, glowed with a +strange light; but the expression of her face would have baffled the +most scrutinizing observer. Calm, quiet, perfectly self-possessed, but +without a particle of self-assurance, she stood, the centre of general +observation. + +Presently she spoke in a full, clear voice: "Miss Stiefbach, as M. +Béranger evidently does not know how he is concerned in this matter, +perhaps I had better explain the circumstances to him." + +Miss Stiefbach bowed her consent, and Marion, turning towards the +bewildered Frenchman, thus addressed him:-- + +"M. Béranger, last Wednesday morning, as I, with two of my companions, +was in my room, which is in the front of the house, my attention was +attracted towards a gentleman who was coming down the street, and I +immediately called my two friends to the window that they might get a +good view of him. Our interest was of course doubly increased when we +saw the gentleman enter this garden. His whole appearance was so +decidedly elegant (here M. Béranger, who began to see that he was the +subject of her remarks, colored up to the roots of his hair) that we +could not help giving our opinions of him, and _I_ applied to him the +word 'swell,' which in itself I acknowledge to be very inelegant; but my +only excuse for using it is, that in this case it was so very +expressive." + +M. Béranger, despite his embarassment, could hardly conceal a smile, +while a suppressed murmur of amusement ran round the room. Miss +Stiefbach looked hard at Marion, but her face was composed, and her +manner quietly polite; she was apparently perfectly unconscious of +having said anything to cause this diversion. + +"While we were talking of him, Miss Stiefbach entered the room, and must +have, unintentionally of course, overheard our comments, for the first +intimation we had of her presence was this remark, which she made +standing directly behind us: 'Young ladies, allow me to see; perhaps I +can inform you.' And now occurred the remark which it was so exceedingly +improper in me to make, and which justly gave so much offence to Miss +Stiefbach." (Here Marion turned towards her teacher, who, as if to +encourage her to proceed, bowed quite graciously.) "I was standing on +the seat in the window, and consequently had the best view of the +gentleman. In the excitement of the moment, regardless of the difference +in our ages, and only remembering that we were impelled by one common +object, I asked her to _jump_ on to the seat beside me. Miss Stiefbach, +for that rudeness I most sincerely ask your pardon. It was wrong, very +wrong of me; I should have stepped aside, thus giving you an excellent +opportunity of gratifying your desire to look at what is rarely seen +here,--a handsome man." + +The perfect absurdity of Miss Stiefbach's jumping up in a window with a +party of wild school-girls, for the sake of looking at a handsome man, +or indeed for her to look at a man at any time with any degree of +interest, could only be appreciated by those who were daily witnesses of +her prim, stately ways. It certainly was too much for the gravity of the +inhabitants of that school-room. + +[Illustration: MARION APOLOGIZES.] + +M. Béranger bit his lip fiercely under his mustache; Miss Christine +became suddenly very much interested in something out in the back yard; +and the school-girls were obliged to resort to open books and +desk-covers to conceal their amusement. + +Marion alone remained cool and collected, looking at Miss Stiefbach as +if to ask if she had said enough. + +Miss Stiefbach's face was scarlet, and she shut her teeth tightly +together, striving for her usual composure. The sudden turn of Marion's +apology, which placed her in such a ridiculous light, had completely +disconcerted her, and she knew not what to do or say. + +If Marion's eyes had twinkled with mischief; if there had been the +slightest tinge of sarcasm in her tone, or of triumph in her manner, +Miss Stiefbach would have thought she intended a fresh insult; but +throughout the whole her bearing had been unusually quiet, ladylike, and +polite. There was no tangible point for her teacher to fasten on, and, +commanding herself sufficiently to speak, Miss Stiefbach merely said, +"It is enough; you may go to your seat." + +Even then, if Marion's self-possession had given way, she would have +been called back and severely reprimanded. But it did not; she passed +all her school-mates, whose faces were turned towards her brimming with +laughter and a keen appreciation of the affair, with a sort of +preoccupied air, and, taking her books from her desk, followed M. +Béranger into the anteroom. + +At recess the girls with one impulse flocked round her, exclaiming, "Oh! +it was too good; just the richest scene I ever saw." + +"What do you mean?" coolly replied Marion. + +"Why!" exclaimed Sarah Brown, an unencouraged admirer of Marion's, "the +way you turned the tables on Miss Stiefbach." + +"Indeed, Sarah, you are very much mistaken; I simply apologized to her +for a great piece of rudeness." + +And Marion turned away and ran upstairs to her own room, where Florence +and Julia were already giving vent to their long pent-up feelings in +only half-suppressed bursts of laughter. + +As Marion made her appearance it was the signal for another shout; but +she only replied by a quiet smile, which caused Julia to ejaculate in +her most earnest manner, "I declare, Marion, you don't look a bit +elated! If I had done such a bright thing as you have, I should be +beaming with satisfaction." + +"Well, Julia, I don't think I _have_ done anything so very smart. To be +sure I have had my revenge, and the only satisfaction I've got out of it +is to feel thoroughly and heartily ashamed of myself." + +"Marion Berkley, you certainly _are_ the queerest girl I ever did see," +exclaimed Julia. + +But Florence, who knew her friend best, said nothing, for she +understood her feelings, and admired her the more for them. + +Marion had been determined to make her apology such as would reflect +more absurdity on her teacher than on herself, and in that way to have +her revenge for what she rightly considered her very unjust punishment. +She had succeeded; but now that her momentary triumph was over, she +sincerely wished that it had never occurred. + +The next day she went to Miss Christine, and told her just how she felt +about it, and that, if she advised her to do so, she would go to Miss +Stiefbach and ask her forgiveness. But Miss Christine told her, that, +although she heartily disapproved of her conduct, she thought nothing +more had better be said about it, for Miss Stiefbach had only been half +inclined to believe that Marion could _intend_ a fresh impertinence. + +And so there the matter ended; but Marion could never fully satisfy her +own conscience on the subject. + +She wrote a long letter to her mother, telling her the whole thing from +beginning to end; and received one in reply, gently, but firmly, +rebuking her for her conduct. + +But the next day came four pages from her father, full of his amusement +and enjoyment of the whole matter, and highly complimenting her on what +he called "her brilliant coup d'état." + +No wonder Marion's better nature was sometimes crushed, when the inward +fires which she longed to extinguish were kindled by a father's hand. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +THE NEW SCHOLAR + + +"O girls, the new scholar has come!" shouted little Fannie Thayer, as +she bounced into the library one afternoon, where some of the older +girls were studying. + +"Do hush, Fannie!" exclaimed her sister Julia; "you do make such an +awful noise! Of course you've left the door open, and it's cold enough +to freeze one. Run away, child." + +"But, Julia," remonstrated Fannie, as her sister went on reading without +taking any notice of her communication, "you didn't hear what I +said,--the new scholar has come." + +"What new scholar?" inquired Florence Stevenson, looking up from her +book. "This is the first I have heard of any." + +"Why, don't you know?" answered little Fannie, glad to have a listener. +"Her name is--is--Well, I can't remember what it is,--something odd; but +she comes from ever so far off, and she's real pretty, kind of +sad-looking, you know." + +"What in the world is the child talking about?" broke in Marion. "Who +ever heard of Miss Stiefbach's taking a scholar after the term had +begun?" + +"I remember hearing something about it, now," said Julia. "The girl was +to have come at the beginning of the quarter; but she has been sick, or +something or other happened to prevent. I believe she comes from St. +Louis." + +"I wonder who she'll room with; she can't come in with us, that's +certain," said Marion, with a very decided air. + +"Why, of course she won't," replied Florence; "we never have but two +girls in a room. Oh! I know, she will go in with little Rose May; see if +she doesn't!" + +"Well, I tell you, I am sorry she's come!" ejaculated Marion. "I hate +new scholars; they always put on airs, and consider themselves sort of +privileged characters. I for one shall not take much notice of her." + +"Why, Marion," exclaimed Grace Minton, "I should think you would be +ashamed to talk so! She may be a very nice girl indeed. You don't know +anything about her." + +"I don't care if she is a nice girl. She ought to have come before. It +will just upset all our plans; the classes are all arranged, and +everything is going on nicely. There are just enough of us, and I say it +is a perfect bother!" + +"I really don't see why you need trouble yourself so much," broke in +Georgie Graham, who was always jealous of Marion, and never lost an +opportunity of differing with her, though in a quiet way that was +terribly aggravating. "I don't believe you will be called upon to make +any arrangements, and I don't see how one, more or less, can make much +difference any way." + +The entrance of Miss Christine prevented Marion's reply, and she +immediately took up her book and became apparently absorbed in her +studies. + +"O Miss Christine," they all exclaimed at once, "do tell us about the +new scholar." "Is she pretty?" "Will she be kind to us little girls?" +"How old is she?" and many other questions of a like nature, all asked +in nearly the same breath. + +"If you will be quiet, and not all speak at once, I will try and tell +you all you want to know. The name of the new scholar is Rachel Drayton. +She is about sixteen, and I think she is very pretty, although I do not +know as you will agree with me. She seems to have a very lovely +disposition, and I should think that after a while she might be very +lively, and a pleasant companion for you all; but at present she is very +delicate, as she has just recovered from a very severe illness brought +on by her great grief at the death of her father. They were all the +world to each other, and she was perfectly devoted to him. She cannot +yet reconcile herself to her loss. He has been dead about eight weeks. +Her mother died when she was a baby, and the nearest relation she has is +her father's brother, who is now in Europe. Poor child! she is all alone +in the world; my heart aches for her." + +Miss Christine's usually cheery voice was very low and sad, and the tear +that glistened in her eye proved that her expressions of sympathy were +perfectly sincere; if, indeed, any one could have doubted that kind, +loving face. As she ceased speaking, there was a perfect silence +throughout the room, and those who had felt somewhat inclined to side +with Marion felt very much conscience-stricken. + +Marion, however, continued studying, not showing the slightest signs of +having had her sympathies aroused. + +Miss Christine continued: "I hope, girls, you will be particularly kind +to Miss Drayton. She must naturally feel lonely, and perhaps diffident, +among so many strangers, and I want you all to do everything in your +power to make it pleasant for her. You in particular, Marion, having +been here longer than any of the others, will be able to make her feel +quite at home." + +"Indeed, Miss Christine, you must excuse me. You know taking up new +friends at a moment's notice, and becoming desperately intimate with +them, is not my forte." + +"Marion," replied Miss Christine, in a quiet, but reproving tone, "I do +not ask you to become desperately intimate with her, as you call it, or +anything of the kind. I merely wish you to show her that courtesy which +is certainly due from one school-girl to another." + +Marion made no reply, and Miss Christine sat down and commenced talking +to the girls in her usual pleasant manner. It was her evident interest +in everything which concerned them, that made her so beloved by her +pupils. + +They all knew that they could find in her a patient listener, and a +willing helper, whenever they chose to seek her advice; whether it was +about an important, or a very trifling matter. + +There was some little bustle and confusion as the girls laid aside their +books, and clustered round Miss Christine with their fancy-work, or +leaned back in their chairs, glad to have nothing in particular to do. + +"Miss Christine!" exclaimed little Rose May, "I do wish you would show +me how to 'bind off.' I keep putting my thread over and over, and, +instead of taking off stitches, it makes more every time. I think these +sleeves are a perfect nuisance. I wish I hadn't begun 'em!" + +"Why, you poor child," laughingly replied her teacher, "what are you +doing? You might knit forever and your sleeves would not be 'bound off,' +if you do nothing but put your worsted over. Who told you to do that?" + +"Julia Thayer did; she said knit two and then put over, and knit two and +then put over, all the time, and it would come all right." + +"Now, Rose, I didn't!" exclaimed Julia. "I said put your stitch over, +you silly child! I should think you might have known that putting your +worsted over would widen it." + +"I know you _didn't_ say put your stitch over," retorted Rose; "you just +said put over, and how was I going to know by that? I think you're real +mean; you never take any pains with us little ones; I don't--" + +"Hush, hush, Rose! You must not speak so," said Miss Christine, laying +her hands on the child's lips; then, turning to Julia, she said, "If you +had taken more pains with Rose, and tried to explain to her how she +ought to have done her work, it would have been much better for both of +you." + +"Well, Miss Christine, she came just as I was thinking up for my +composition, and I didn't want to be bothered by any one. As it was, she +put all my ideas out of my head." + +Miss Christine's only reply was a shake of the head and an incredulous +smile, which made Julia wish she had shown a little more patience with +the child. + +"There, Rose," said Miss Christine, as the little girl put the finishing +touch to her sleeves, "next time you will not have to ask any one to +show you how to 'bind off.' Your sleeves are very pretty, and I know +your mother will be glad her daughter took so much pains to please her." + +Rose glanced up at her teacher with a bright smile, and went skipping +off, ready for fun and frolic, now that those troublesome sleeves were +finished. But she had hardly reached the hall when she came running +back, saying, in a most mysterious sort of stage-whisper, "She's coming! +she's coming downstairs with Miss Stiefbach! Rebecca what's-her-name; +you know!" + +The girls looked up as Miss Stiefbach entered the room, and, although +they were too well-bred to actually stare at her companion, it must be +confessed that their faces betrayed considerable interest. + +Rachel Drayton, the "new scholar," was between sixteen and seventeen; +tall and very slight; her eyes were very dark; her face intensely pale, +but one saw at once it was the pallor of recent illness, or acute mental +suffering, not of continued ill-health. + +She was dressed in the deepest mourning, in a style somewhat older than +that generally worn by girls of her age. Her jet-black hair, which grew +very low on her forehead, was brushed loosely back, and gathered into a +rough knot behind, as if the owner was too indifferent to her personal +appearance to try to arrange it carefully. + +As she stood now, fully conscious of the glances that were +surreptitiously cast upon her, she appeared frightened and bewildered. +Her eyes were cast down, but if any one had looked under their long +lashes, they would have seen them dimmed with tears. + +Accustomed all her life to the society of older persons, no one who has +not experienced the same feeling can imagine how great an ordeal it was +for her to enter that room full of girls of her own age. To notice the +sudden hush that fell upon all as she came in; to feel that each one was +mentally making comments upon her, was almost more than she could bear. +If they had been persons many years older than herself, she would have +gone in perfectly at her ease; chatted first with this one, then with +that, and would have made herself at home immediately. + +Unfortunately the only young persons in whose society she had been +thrown were some young ladies she had met while travelling through the +West with her father. They had been coarse, foolish creatures, making +flippant remarks upon all whom they saw, in a rude, unladylike manner, +and from whom she had shrunk with an irresistible feeling of repugnance. +No wonder her heart had sunk within her when she thought that perhaps +her future companions might be of the same stamp. + +Miss Christine noticed her embarrassment at once, and kindly went +forward to meet her, saying as she did so, "Well, my dear, I am glad to +see you down here; I am not going to introduce you to your companions +now, you will get acquainted with them all in time; first I want you to +come into the school-room with me and see how you like it." + +And she took her hand and led her through the open door into the +school-room beyond; talking pleasantly all the time, calling her +attention to the view from the windows, the arrangement of the desks, +and various other things, until at last she saw her face light up with +something like interest, and the timid, frightened look almost entirely +disappear; then she took her back into the library. + +As they went in, Florence Stevenson, who stood near the fireplace, made +room for them, remarking as she did so, "It is very chilly; you must be +cold; come here and warm yourself. How do you like our school-room?" + +"Very much; that is, I think I shall. It seems very pleasant." + +"Yes, it is pleasant. It's so much nicer for being papered with that +pretty paper than if it had had dark, horrid walls like some I've seen. +What sort of a school did you use to go to?" + +"I never went to school before; I always studied at home;" and poor +Rachel's voice trembled as she thought of the one who had always +directed her studies; but Florence went bravely on, determined to do her +part towards making the new scholar feel at home. + +"Well, I'm afraid you will find it hard to get used to us, if you have +never been thrown with girls before. I don't believe but what you +thought we were almost savages; now honestly, didn't you feel afraid to +meet us?" + +"It was hard," replied Rachel; but as she glanced up at the bright, +animated face before her, she thought that if all her future companions +were like this one she should have no great fears for the future. + +Most of the scholars had left the room; the few who remained were +chatting together apparently unconscious of the stranger's presence, and +as Rachel stood before the fire, with her back to the rest of the room, +and Florence beside her talking animatedly, she was surprised to find +herself becoming interested and at ease, and before Miss Christine left +them the two girls were comparing notes on their studies, and gave +promise of soon becoming very good friends. + +When Marion left the library, she went directly to her room, locked the +door, and threw herself on the seat in the window in a tumult of +emotion. Paramount over all other feelings stood shame. She could not +excuse herself for her strange behavior, and she felt unhappy; almost +miserable. "Why did I speak so?" she asked herself. "Why should I feel +such an unaccountable prejudice against a person I never even heard of +before? I thought I had conquered all these old, hateful feelings, and +here they are all coming back again. I don't know what is the matter +with me. It is not jealousy; for how can I be jealous of a person I +never saw or heard of before in my life? I don't know what it is, and I +don't much care; there aren't four girls in the school that like me, and +only one _I_ really love, and that's dear old Flo. She's as good as +gold, and if any one should ever come between us I pity her! I'll bet +anything though, that she is downstairs making friends with that girl +this minute." + +This thought was not calculated to calm Marion's ruffled feelings, and +she sat brooding by the window in anything but an enviable mood. + +She was still in this state of mind when the tea-bell rang, and hastily +smoothing her hair she went downstairs. + +It chanced that just as she entered the dining-room Rachel Drayton and +Florence came in by the opposite door. Florence was evidently giving +Rachel an account of some of their school frolics, though in an +undertone, so that Marion could not catch the words, and her companion +was listening, her face beaming with interest. No circumstance could +have occurred which would have been more unfavorable for changing +Marion's wayward mood. + +Coming downstairs she had been picturing to herself the unhappiness and +loneliness of the poor orphan, and she had almost made up her mind to go +forward, introduce herself, and try by being kind and agreeable to make +amends for her former injustice; for although she knew Miss Drayton must +be entirely unconscious of it, she could not in her own heart feel at +rest until she had made some atonement. + +No one could have presented themselves to a perfect stranger,--a thing +which it is not easy for most persons to do,--with more grace and +loveliness than Marion, if she had been so inclined, for there was at +times a certain fascination about her voice and manner that few could +resist. + +She had expected to see a pale, sickly, utterly miserable-looking girl, +towards whom she felt it would be impossible to steel her heart; and she +saw one, who, although she was certainly pale enough, seemed to be +anything but miserable, and above all was evidently fast becoming on +intimate terms with her own dear friend Florence. + +That was enough; resolutely crushing down all kindly feelings that were +struggling for utterance, she took her seat at the table as if +unconscious of the stranger's existence. Miss Stiefbach sat at the head +of one very long table, and Miss Christine at another, having most of +the little girls at her end; while Marion sat directly opposite with +Florence on her right. Without changing this long-established order of +things, Miss Christine could not make room for Rachel by the side of +Florence as she would have liked, and the only place for her seemed to +be on Marion's left, as there were not so many girls on that side of the +table. Hoping that such close proximity would force Marion to unbend the +reserved manner which she saw she was fast assuming, Miss Christine, +before taking her own seat, went to that end of the table and introduced +Marion to Rachel, laughingly remarking that as they were the oldest +young ladies there, they would have to sustain the dignity of the table. + +This jesting command was certainly carried out to the very letter of the +law by Marion. + +She was intensely polite throughout the meal, but perfectly frigid in +the dignity of her manner, which so acted upon poor Rachel, that the +bright smiles which Florence had called forth were effectually +dispelled, and throughout the rest of the evening she was the same sad, +frightened girl who had first made her appearance in the library. + +When Marion knelt that night to pray, her lips refused to utter her +accustomed prayers. It seemed hypocrisy for her, who had so resolutely +made another unhappy, to ask God's blessings on her head, and she +remained kneeling long after Florence had got into bed, communing with +herself, her only inward cry being, "God forgive me!" + +But how could she expect God would forgive her, when day after day she +knowingly committed the same faults? + +Sick at heart, she rose from her knees, turned out the gas, and went to +bed, but not to sleep; far into the night she lay awake viewing her past +conduct. + +She did not try to excuse herself, or to look at her faults in any other +than their true light; but, repentant and sorrowful though she might be, +she could not as yet sufficiently conquer her pride to ask pardon of +those she had openly wounded, or to contradict an expressed opinion even +after she regretted ever having formed it. + +Poor child! she thought she had struggled long and fiercely with +herself; she had yet to learn that the battle was but just begun. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +AUNT BETTIE. + + +"Oh, dear!" yawned Grace Minton, "how I do hate stormy Saturdays!" + +"So do I!" exclaimed Georgie Graham; "they are a perfect nuisance, and +we were going up to Aunt Bettie's this afternoon." + +"Who's we?" + +"Oh, 'her royal highness' for one, and your humble servant for another; +Sarah Brown, Flo Stevenson, and Rachel Drayton, _of_ course. By the way, +how terribly intimate those two have grown! I don't believe 'her +highness' relishes their being so dreadfully thick." + +"What in the world makes you call Marion 'her highness'?" said Grace. + +"Oh, because she _is_ so high and mighty; she walks round here sometimes +as if she were queen and we her subjects." + +"No such thing, Georgie Graham!" exclaimed Sarah Brown, who came in just +as the last remark was made, and knew very well to whom it alluded; "she +doesn't trouble herself about us at all." + +"That's just it; she thinks herself superior to us poor _plebeians_." + +"Stuff and nonsense! You know you're jealous of her, and always have +been." + +"Oh, no!" replied Georgie, who, no matter how much she might be +provoked, always spoke _to_ any one in a soft purring voice. "Oh, no! +I'm not jealous of her; there is no reason why I should be. But really, +Sarah, I don't see why you need take up the cudgel for her so fiercely; +she always snubs you every chance she gets." + +Sarah tossed her head, blushing scarlet; for the remark certainly had a +good deal of truth in it, and was none the less cutting for being made +in a particularly mild tone. + +"Well, at any rate," said Grace Minton, for the sake of changing the +subject, "I think Rachel Drayton is lovely." + +"Lovely!" exclaimed Georgie, "she's a perfect stick! I don't see what +there is lovely about her, and for my part I wish she had never come +here." + +"Seems to me the tune has changed," broke in Sarah. "I thought you were +one of the ones who were so down on Marion Berkley for saying the same +thing." + +"Oh, that was before I had seen her," replied Georgie, not at all +disconcerted. + +"In other words, you said it just so as to have an opportunity to differ +with Marion," retorted Sarah. "I really believe you hate her!" + +"Sarah, how can you get so excited? it is so very unbecoming, you know," +purred Georgie. Sarah flounced out of the room too indignant for speech, +and just as she was going through the hall met Marion, who was in an +unusually pleasant mood. + +"See, Sarah, it is clearing off; we shall have a chance for our walk, I +guess, after all." + +"Do you think so? It will be awful sloppy though, won't it?" + +"No, I don't believe it will; besides who cares for that? We are not +made of sugar or salt." + +"How many are going?" asked Sarah. + +"I don't know exactly; let me see." And Marion counted off on her +fingers. "You for one, and I for another; that's two. Miss Drayton and +Florence are four. Grace Minton, if she wants to go, five; and Georgie +Graham six." + +At the mention of the last name, Sarah gave her head a toss, which was +so very expressive that Marion could not help laughing, and exclaimed, +"Oh, yes! you know 'her royal highness' must allow some of the +_plebeians_ among her subjects to follow in her train." + +Sarah laughed softly. "Did you hear?" she whispered. + +Marion nodded, and just at that moment Georgie came out of the room +where she had been sitting. "What was that you said, Marion, about 'her +highness'?" she asked. "Did you think that the title applied to +yourself?" + +"I shouldn't have thought of such a thing, Georgie, if I hadn't +overheard your remarks, and of course I could not but feel gratified at +the honorable distinction." + +"How do you know it was meant for an honorable distinction?" + +"How can I doubt it, Georgie, when it was bestowed upon me by such an +amiable young lady as yourself? Now if it had been Sarah, I might have +thought _she_ said it out of spite; but of course when Georgie Graham +said it, I knew it was intended as a tribute to my superiority;" and +Marion made a provokingly graceful courtesy. + +"There is nothing like having a good opinion of one's self," replied +Georgie. + +"But you see you are mistaken there, Georgie; it was you who seemed to +have such a high opinion of me. You know I didn't claim the +greatness,--it was 'thrust upon me;'" and Marion, satisfied with that +shaft, turned on her heel, and opening the front door went out on to +the piazza, followed by Sarah, who had been a silent but appreciative +witness of the scene. + +Georgie Graham shut her teeth, muttering in anything but her usual soft +tones, and with an expression in her eyes which was anything but +pleasant to see, "Oh, how I hate you! But I'll be even with you yet!" + +The shower which had so disconcerted the whole school was evidently +clearing off, and there was every prospect that the proposed plan of +walking to Aunt Bettie's directly after dinner might be carried into +execution. + +Aunt Bettie, as all the school-girls called her, was a farmer's wife, +who supplied the school with eggs, butter, and cheese, and during the +summer with fresh vegetables and berries. + +She lived about two or three miles from the school, on the same road, +and the girls often went to see her. She was fond of them all, although +she had her favorites, among whom was Marion; and she always kept a good +supply of doughnuts, for which she was quite famous, on hand for them +whenever they might come. + +The sun kept his promise, and before dinner-time the girls were all out +on the piazza, getting up an appetite they said, although that was not +often wanting with any of them. + +The party for Aunt Bettie's numbered eight,--Rose May and Fannie Thayer +having begged Marion to ask permission for them to go,--and they all set +out for their walk in high spirits. Although Marion treated Rachel with +a certain degree of politeness, she never spoke to her unless it was +absolutely necessary, and then always addressed her as Miss Drayton, +although every other girl in school had, by this time, become accustomed +to familiarly call her Rachel. Florence had done everything in her power +to draw Marion into their conversation at table, but seeing that she was +determined not to change her manner, she thought it best to take no +more notice of it, as by doing so it only made it the more apparent to +Rachel that Marion had no intention of becoming better acquainted with +her. + +Rachel had been there but a short time, and already Marion began to feel +that Florence was turning from her for a new friend. This was not really +the case, and Florence, who knew Marion's feelings, was secretly very +much troubled. + +She loved Marion as deeply and truly as ever; but she could not turn +away from that motherless girl, between whom and herself an instinctive +sympathy seem to have been established, arising from the loss which they +had each felt, and which naturally drew them closer to each other. +Florence had never known her mother, but the loss was none the less +great to her; she felt that there was a place in the heart that none but +a mother's love could ever have filled, and no matter how bright and +happy she might feel, there was at times a sense of utter loneliness +about her which she found hard to dispel. + +Rachel seemed to turn to her as her only friend among that crowd of +strangers, and she could not refuse to give her her friendship in +return, even at the risk of seeing Marion for a time estranged from her; +for she trusted to Marion's better nature, hoping that in the future she +would not be misjudged, and that all might be made pleasant and happy +again. + +And so to-day for the first time since they had been to school together, +Florence and Marion were taking their Saturday afternoon walk with +separate companions. Marion had Rose May by the hand, while she told +Sarah Brown to take care of little Fannie. Florence and Rachel were +directly in front of her, and she knew that they would have been happy +to have had her join in their conversation. In fact, they spoke so that +she could hear every word they said; but she occupied herself by +telling Rose a story of such remarkable length and interest as to +perfectly enchant the child, who exclaimed as they reached the +farm-house, "O Marion, you do tell the best stories; I really think you +_ought_ to write a book!" Marion laughed, but had no chance to answer, +for at that moment the door opened and Aunt Bettie appeared upon the +threshold. + +"Wall, gals, I be glad to see ye; this is a sight good for old eyes!" + +"Did you expect us, auntie?" asked Marion. + +"Spect yer, child! why, I been a-lookin' for yer these three Saturdays +past! What you been a-doin' that's kept yer so long?" + +"Well, nothing in particular; but you see the term has only just begun, +and we've hardly got settled." + +"Oh, yes, honey, I know; I haint laid it up agin yer. But who's this new +one?--yer haint introduced me." + +As Marion showed no inclination to perform the ceremony Florence +presented Rachel, remarking that she was a new scholar from the West. +But Aunt Bettie's keen eyes took in at a glance the deep mourning +apparel, and her kind heart at once divined its cause; and she exclaimed +with great heartiness as she took Rachel's hands in her own rough palms, +"Wall, child, you couldn't 'a come to a better place than Miss +Stiffback's, and you couldn't 'a got in with a better lot o' girls; take +em as they come, they're about as good a set as I knows on!" + +"O Aunt Bettie!" exclaimed Florence; "flattering, as I live! I wouldn't +have believed it of you." + +"Not a bit of it, child; just plain speakin', a thing that never hurt +anybody yet, according to my notion. But come in, gals; come in, you +must be tired after your long walk, and the tin box is most a-bustin' +its sides, I crammed it so full." + +The girls laughed, for they all knew what the tin box contained, and +were only too ready to be called upon to empty it. + +They all seated themselves in the large, old-fashioned kitchen, with its +low ceiling and tremendous open fireplace, surmounted by a narrow shelf, +on which was displayed a huge Bible, and a china shepherdess in a green +skirt and pink bodice, smiling tenderly over two glass lamps and a +Britannia teapot, at a china shepherd in a yellow jacket and sky-blue +smalls; being, I suppose, exact representations of the sheep-tenders of +that part of the country. + +Aunt Bettie bustled in and out of the huge pantry, bringing out a large +tin box filled to the top with delicious brown, spicy doughnuts, and a +large earthen pitcher of new milk. + +"There, gals," as she put a tray of tumblers on the table, "jest help +yerselves, and the more yer eat, why the better I shall be suited." + +"Suppose we should go through the box and not leave any for Jabe; what +should you say to that?" asked Marion. + +"Never you mind Jabe; trust him for getting his fill. Eat all yer want, +and then stuff the rest in yer pockets." + +"Oh, that wouldn't do at all!" exclaimed Marion; "you don't know what a +fuss we had about those Julia Thayer carried home last year! Miss +Stiefbach didn't like it at all; she said it was bad enough bringing +boxes from home, but going round the neighborhood picking up cake was +disgraceful. She never knew exactly who took them to school, for Julia +kept mum; but I don't think it would do to try it again." + +"Wall, I think that was too bad of Miss Stiffback; she knows nothin' +pleases me so much as to have you come here and eat my doughnuts, and if +you choose to carry some on 'em to school, what harm did it do? She +ought to remember that she was a gal once herself." + +"Oh, mercy! auntie, I don't believe she ever was," ejaculated +Marion. "She was born Miss Stiefbach, and I wouldn't be at all +surprised if she wore the same stiff dresses, and had the same +I'm-a-little-better-than-any-body-else look when she was a baby." + +"Wall, child, she's a good woman after all. You know there aint any of +us perfect; we all hev our faults; if it aint one thing it's another; +it's pretty much the same the world over." + +"You do make the best doughnuts, Aunt Bettie, _I_ ever eat," declared +Fannie Thayer, who was leaning with both elbows on the table, a piece of +a doughnut in one hand, and a whole one in the other as a reserve force. + +"Wall, child, I ginerally kalkerlate I ken match any one going on +doughnuts; but 't seemed to me these weren't 's good as common. I had +something on my mind that worrited me when I was mixin' 'em, and I +'spose I wasn't quite as keerful as usual." + +"If _you_ don't call these good, _I_ do!" ejaculated Miss Fannie. "Why, +I just wish you could have seen some Julia made last summer. She took a +cooking-fit, and tried most everything; mother said she wasted more eggs +and butter than she was worth, and her _doughnuts_!--Ugh! heavy, greasy +things!" + +"She must 'a let 'em soak fat!" exclaimed Aunt Bettie, who was always +interested in the cookery question; "that's the great trouble with +doughnuts; some folks think everything's in the mixin', but I say more'n +half depends on the fryin'. You must hev yer fat hot, and stand over 'em +all the time. I allers watch mine pretty close and turn 'em offen with a +fork, and then I hev a cullender ready to put 'em right in so't the fat +ken dreen off. I find it pays t' be pertickeler;" and Aunt Bettie +smoothed her apron, and leaned back in her chair with the air of one who +had said something of benefit to mankind in general. + +"But where is Julia?" she asked after a short pause. "Why didn't she +come?" + +"Oh, I forgot!" exclaimed Fannie; "she sent her love to you, and told me +to tell you not to let us eat up all your doughnuts this time, because +she'll be up before long and want some. She had a sore throat, and Miss +Stiefbach thought she had better not go out." + +"I'm sorry for that," replied Aunt Bettie; "I hope she aint a-goin' to +be sick." + +"Oh, no, it aint very bad. Julia thinks it's nothing but cankers; she +often has them." + +"Wall, it's always best to be on the safe side, any way," said Aunt +Bettie; "you tell her she needn't be afraid about the doughnuts; I'll +have a fresh batch ready agin the time she comes." + +The business of eating and drinking so occupied the girls' attention, +that they did not enter into conversation as readily as usual; and after +the first flush of excitement at meeting her young friends and +dispensing her hospitality was over, Aunt Bettie, too, subsided into a +quiet, subdued manner, which was quite foreign to her usual brisk +talkativeness. + +She sat in her high-backed rocking-chair, looking at the girls over her +silver-bowed spectacles, with a sad, musing expression, as if the sight +of them called up some unhappy thought. + +This unusual restraint on the part of their hostess communicated itself +in a certain degree to her visitors, though they did not themselves +remark the cause of their silence, and their visit was made shorter than +usual. + +It was Marion who first made the move to go; and although Aunt Bettie +pressed them to remain she did not urge it with her accustomed +eagerness. + +They had got just beyond the bend of the road which hid the old +farm-house from view, when Marion exclaimed, "You run on, Rose, with the +others; I believe I left my gloves on the table; don't wait for me, I'll +catch up with you;" and before Rose could beg to go back with her, she +had turned round and ran off up the road. She ran quickly, but +noiselessly along, and was back to the farm-house in a few moments, and +was surprised to find Aunt Bettie sitting on the door-step with her head +buried in her hands. Going up to her, she found her weeping as if her +heart would break. + +"Aunt Bettie!" she said, in her gentlest tones, "Aunt Bettie! It's only +Marion. What is the matter? I thought you seemed worried about +something, and came back to see if I couldn't help you; can't I?" + +"Oh, dear!" sobbed the poor woman. "It may be dreadful wicked of me, but +the sight of you young things, all lookin' so bright and happy, did make +me feel awful bad, for I couldn't help thinking o' my own darter +Jemimy." + +"Why, what is the matter with her, auntie? Where is she?" + +"The Lord knows, dear, I don't. Not a blessed word hev I heerd from her +it's going on eight weeks. I've writ, and Jabe he's writ, but we haint +had a sign of an answer, and I'm afraid she's dead, or perhaps wus;" and +the poor woman rocked herself back and forth, completely overcome by her +grief. + +"But, auntie," said Marion, laying her hand gently on the good woman's +shoulder, "don't you see there are forty things that might have happened +to prevent your hearing from her? You know a girl that lives out can't +always find time to write as often as she would like. Besides, she may +have got a new place, and in that case might not have received your +letters." + +"I thought o' that, child, and the last letter Jabe writ he directed to +the care of Miss Benson, the woman that keeps the intelligence office; +but that's two weeks an' more ago, and I haven't heerd a word. You see, +Miss Marion, there aint a better-hearted gal livin' than my Jemimy, but +she got kinder lonesome and discontented-like a livin' way off here, and +took it into her head she'd like the city better. She allus was a +high-sperrited gal, and 'twas dull for her here, that's a fact; but I +wish to the Lord I'd held my own and hadn't let her gone; for there's +awful places in them big cities, and my gal's pretty enough to make any +one look at her. I dunno, child, but I can't help feelin' somethin' +dreadful's happened to her." + +"O auntie, you must not get discouraged so easily. I thought you were +one of the kind who always looked on the bright side of things," said +Marion in a cheerful tone. + +"Wall, dear, I do ginerally; but this has just keeled me right over, and +I don't seem to know where I be. You see I haint got any one in the city +as I ken call upon to help me. I don't know a soul in the place I could +get to hunt her up. Sometimes I think I'll go down there; but where's +the use? I should be like a hen with her head cut off in such a great, +strange place as Boston." + +"Well, auntie, I'll try my best to help you. I tell you what I'll do: +you give me Jemima's address, and I'll write to my mother, and get her +to look her up. She has to go to those offices very often after +servants, and like as not she might stumble right on her. Now cheer up, +auntie, for I feel just as if we should find her;" and Marion passed her +hand over Aunt Bettie's wrinkled forehead and gray hair as tenderly as +if she were her own mother. + +Aunt Bettie looked at Marion with the tears still glistening in her +eyes, and a sad smile on her face, as she said:-- + +"Marion Berkley it aint every gal as would take so much trouble for an +old creetur like me, even if she noticed I was sad and worried. You've +comforted a poor, old woman who was most broken-hearted. May the Lord +bless you for it, an' I know he will." + +Marion smiled up at the tender, old face that looked down at her, while +her own flushed with pleasure at the words of commendation. + +It was a pity that there were no unobserved witnesses of the scene; for +Marion Berkley, cold and haughty, apparently indifferent alike to the +praise or blame of those around her, was a very different person from +this gentle girl. Her whole soul was shining through her eyes; all her +haughtiness, pride, and coldness had fallen from her, and she stood +almost like one transfigured, her face beaming with the light which +makes the plainest face seem almost divine,--that of pure, disinterested +sympathy for the sufferings and troubles of a fellow-being. + +For a moment there was silence between the two, while the tears rolled +down both of their cheeks; but Marion dashed hers away, as she exclaimed +in a cheery voice:-- + +"Come, auntie, it is getting late, and I must be off; so get me the +address, please." + +"To be sure, child! How thoughtless I be! I'll get it for yer right +away;" and Aunt Bettie went into the house with something of her usual +briskness, and returning, brought out a scrap of paper, on which was +written in a stiff, cramped, school-boy hand this direction:-- + + "MISS JEMIMA DOBBS, + _In Kare of Mis Benson_, + Number 22 Eest Crorfud Street, + Boston." + +Marion could hardly repress a smile of amusement at the remarkable +orthography; but remembering that in Aunt Bettie's eyes it was a perfect +monument to the glory of her son Jabe, she made no comments, and folding +it up, tucked it carefully away in her purse. Then, with a bright, +encouraging smile, she said good-by to Aunt Bettie, and hurried off down +the road. + +It was much later than she thought, and as the days were rapidly growing +shorter, it was quite dusk, and the girls were entirely out of sight and +hearing. + +But her thoughts kept her company on her long walk, and all the way home +she was turning over in her mind the probabilities and improbabilities +of her mother's being able to find the young, unknown country girl in a +large city like Boston. + +Miss Christine had begun to feel quite anxious about her by the time she +arrived, and Florence met her in the hall with a hearty caress, to which +she responded with her old warmth. + +"Why, you dear, old thing!" exclaimed Florence; "what has kept you so +long? It must have been forlorn walking home at this hour." + +"Oh, I did not mind it; I had something to think of," replied Marion, as +she pulled off her muddy rubbers before going upstairs. "I'll tell you +by and by; I must run up and get ready for supper." + +That night, after they got to bed, Marion gave Florence a synopsis of +her conversation with Aunt Bettie, and told her of her plan of writing +to her mother for assistance. + +"Well," said Florence, "I think it was real good of you to think of it. +What a queer girl you are! I knew we didn't have quite as jolly a time +as usual up there, but I never noticed there was anything the matter +with Aunt Bettie; and if I had I don't believe it would have occurred +to me to go back and comfort her. O Marion!"--and she threw her arm over +her friend's shoulder,--"how much good there is in you! Why won't you +let it all come out?" + +"I don't think there was anything particularly good in that. You see +there was no virtue in my being kind to the poor, old thing, because I +could not help it. If there had been any hateful feelings to overcome, +or any wounded pride to interfere, I probably should not have done it." + +"I'm not so sure of that, Marion. You do conquer yourself sometimes." + +"Not often, dear," Marion replied, with a little, nervous, forced laugh. +"It is too much trouble. Good-night, I must go to sleep." + +But it was long before sleep came to Marion. She laid perfectly still, +so as not to disturb Florence, but the small hours found her still +awake. She had been for some time thoroughly dissatisfied with herself, +and the thought that she had been of some comfort to any one was indeed +pleasant to her; but she would not attribute to herself credit that did +not belong to her. + +It was just as she had said to Florence; she could not help being kind +to the poor old woman in her trouble; she had obeyed the promptings of +her naturally warm heart. It had been an impulsive action, not one in +which a disagreeable duty had been plainly pointed out for her to +follow; and she determinedly put aside all feeling of self-satisfaction. +She knew that if Rachel Drayton had made a similar appeal to her +kindness and sympathy, her heart would have been resolutely closed +against her, and she would not have spoken a single encouraging word. + +This thought thrust itself upon her again and again. She tried to put it +from her, but it was no use; she could not evade it. She told herself +that she was ridiculously conscientious; that this girl had no claims +upon her; and that she had done all that Miss Christine asked of her; +treated Rachel politely and courteously; but she knew that her +politeness had been cold and formal, and her courtesy less kindly than +she would bestow upon a beggar at the door. But she said to herself, +Florence makes up for all my deficiencies. This bitter thought, in +various forms, had rankled in her breast day and night. She had often +said that nothing could ever make her jealous of Florence; their +affection had been too lasting, too much a part of themselves, for +either to suspect the other of inconstancy; and now she was the first to +doubt. + +But the last words of Florence, as they talked that night, came back to +her, and she remembered the fond embrace and the earnestness of her +voice as she besought her to act her real self. + +Should she doubt that generous heart, that had shown its love for her in +a thousand ways, because, when it was appealed to by a fatherless, +motherless girl, it had responded with all the warmth of its true, +generous nature? + +No, she could not do it; she felt that it was only another reason for +loving her more, and tears of shame and sorrow filled her eyes, as, +bending over in the darkness, she pressed a kiss upon the lips of her +sleeping companion. + +Her unjust suspicion of her friend vanquished and conquered forever, her +thoughts gradually wandered back to Aunt Bettie, and with her mind full +of plans and projects in her behalf, she at last fell asleep. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +AT CHURCH. + + +Sunday morning came bright and clear, but very cold, and many of the +girls made their appearance in the library, shaking and shivering, as if +they had never before experienced a northern winter. + +"Gracious me!" exclaimed Sarah Brown, "I'm almost frozen. My room is as +cold as a barn! My cheeks are as blue as a razor, and my nose looks like +a great cranberry. Do let me get near the fire, Georgie; you're keeping +the heat off of every one." + +Georgie made way for her, quietly remarking, as she did so:-- + +"Well, Sarah, I must say the cold is not very becoming to your style of +beauty; your nose and hair together ought to heat this room." + +"You needn't say anything, Miss Graham; you're not so killing handsome +yourself that you can afford to make fun of others!" hotly retorted +Sarah. + +It was a notable fact that these two could never come together without a +passage-at-arms. Grace's quietly hateful remarks always excited Sarah to +a most unmitigated degree, and she could not seem to learn by experience +that the only way to silence her was to take no notice of them; and +their disputes were often great sources of amusement to the other girls. + +Georgie, tall and rather distingué-looking, although not pretty, with +her quietly assured manner even when she knew herself beaten, and her +hypocritically soft tones, was almost always more than a match for +Sarah, who never could hide her feelings no matter what they were and +who always retorted as sharply and spitefully as she could. She was a +warm-hearted little thing, as honest and true as she was impulsive, and +Georgie's quiet, deliberate hatefulness was more than she could bear. + +If there was one subject on which Sarah was more sensitive than another +it was her hair. It was a rich, reddish-yellow; very thick, long and +curling, and any artist would have looked upon it with admiration; but +it was the bane of Sarah's existence. When she was a little girl it had +been really red, but time had softened its shade, and many a Parisian +belle might have envied Sarah its possession. Sarah could see no beauty +in it, for at home she was often greeted by the name of "carrot-top," +and "little red hen;" and once when she got into a very excited argument +with her brother, and stood shaking her head at him with the long curls +which she then wore, flying about her shoulders, he had run out of the +room, shouting as he got well out of reach:-- + +"I say, Sal! how much would you charge to stand on Boston common nights, +and light the city? Your head would save all the expense of gas!" + +You may be pretty sure it did not take Georgie Graham long to find out +Sarah's weakness, and so the poor child's bane was still kept before her +even at school, where there were no troublesome brothers. + +She resolutely brushed out her long curls, and braided them into soft, +heavy braids, winding them round and round at the back of her head until +it looked like a great golden bee-hive; but she could not keep the front +from rippling into soft, delicate waves; or the short hairs from +twisting themselves into numberless little curls, which all the +crimping-pins and hot slate-pencils in the world could not imitate. This +hair which Georgie Graham so affected to despise was in reality a great +object of her admiration, and she would have gladly exchanged it, with +its usual accompaniments of glowing cheeks and scarlet lips, for her own +sallow skin and scanty, drabbish-brown locks. But I have made a +digression; let us return to our group in the library. + +"What are you two quarrelling about this lovely Sunday morning?" asked +Florence Stevenson as she and Marion came into the room together. + +"Oh, we were not quarrelling," replied Georgie. "Sarah was only +remarking that her cheeks were as blue as razors and her nose like a +cranberry, and I agreed with her,--that was all." + +"Yes," exclaimed Sarah, "and I told you you weren't killing handsome, +and I dare say you agreed with me, though you didn't say so. But there +is one thing certain, if the cold makes frights of both of us, it makes +Marion look like a beauty!" and Sarah's eyes sparkled mischievously. + +Georgie only shrugged her shoulders and elevated her eyebrows, as she +replied, "Chacun à son gout." + +"But it doesn't happen to be your "gout," does it, Georgie?" +good-naturedly replied Marion, who knew very well that Sarah's +admiration of herself was thus publicly exhibited solely for the sake of +annoying Georgie. + +"Come, girls, let's declare peace, or at least a 'cessation of +hostilities;' it's a shame to commence the day with quarrels;" and +Florence knelt down on the rug between the two girls, looking up at them +with a smile that it would have been hard for any one to have resisted. + +Directly after this Miss Stiefbach entered, and all were quiet as she +read the morning prayers, and they joined in the responses. + +By ten o'clock the girls, with the exception of Julia Thayer, whose +throat was still troubling her, and Grace Minton, who was suffering from +a sick headache, were on their way to church. They did not walk in a +regular procession like so many convicts on their way to prison, but +each chose her own companion, and the walk was enlivened with pleasant +conversation. It so chanced that Marion and Georgie Graham were +together, not by choice of either party, but because they both happened +to come downstairs a little late, and the others had already got into +the street as they came out the front door. Florence Stevenson, Miss +Christine, and Rachel Drayton were all walking together, and Georgie, +observing this, thought it would be an excellent opportunity for making +Marion thoroughly uncomfortable. + +"It seems to me," she began, "you and Florence are not quite so fond of +each other as you used to be; or is it that she is not so fond of you?" + +"I don't think there is any difference on either side," quietly replied +Marion, determined not to lose her temper, or be led into saying cutting +things of which she would have to repent. + +"Oh, if you think so, I suppose it is all right; but I don't believe +there's a girl in the school who hasn't noticed how Florence has left +you to run after Rachel Drayton." + +Marion resolutely kept silence, and Georgie, thinking that her shots had +not taken effect, continued: "I don't see what there is about that girl, +I'm sure, to make Flo fancy her so much; she certainly isn't pretty, and +she's awfully lackadaisical." + +"I think she is very pretty," replied Marion; "and the reason she seems +lackadaisical is because she is not strong." + +"I thought you did not like her," said Georgie, "you certainly have not +troubled yourself much to entertain her." + +"I do not see as that is any reason why I should not think her pretty, +or why I should not see that she is quiet, because she is not only weak, +but very homesick and sad." + +"Why, really, Marion, I had not any idea you had taken enough notice of +her to see all that. What a farce you must have been acting all this +time, to seem so indifferent when you were _really_ so deeply +interested!" + +"If that is so, Georgie," replied Marion, as she looked her companion +steadily in the face, "I have been a better actress than you, for you +play your part so badly that the little boys in the amphitheatre might +see into the plot in the first act. I advise you to try another rôle." + +Georgie opened her eyes in pretended astonishment; but she knew very +well what Marion meant, and that her intentions of tormenting her +companion were fully understood. But that fact did not prevent her from +saying in a gently insinuating tone: "Now, Marion, don't be provoked, +but _don't_ you think that Florence is rather turning the cold shoulder +on you?" + +"No, Miss Graham, I do not," emphatically replied Marion, and for at +least five minutes Georgie said nothing. "I wonder!" she at last +exclaimed, "if Rachel Drayton is rich. I think she must be, for although +there is no style to her clothes, and she is of course very +dowdy-looking, still everything she has is made of the most expensive +material, and you know nice mourning costs awfully. Just look at her +vail now; see how long it is, and of the heaviest crépe; but she looks +like a ghost under it! I don't believe but what she is rich." + +"Well, Georgie," replied Marion, with the slightest possible curve of +her lip, "I can satisfy you on that point. She _is quite_ well off; her +father left about two millions, and with the exception of a few legacies +of two or three hundred thousand or so, mere trifles to her, she will +have it all; you see she is pretty well provided for." + +"Two millions!" exclaimed Georgie, startled out of her usual composure; +"two millions! why, I hadn't any idea of it." + +"No, I thought not," dryly replied Marion. + +"But, Marion, are you sure? How did you know it?" + +"I heard Miss Stiefbach tell Miss Christine so the day Miss Drayton came +here." + +"And you've known it all this time!" ejaculated Georgie, who could not +get over her astonishment. + +"Yes," replied Marion, "I've known it all this time, and actually +haven't toadied her yet; aren't you surprised?" and Marion's voice had, +by this time, assumed its most coolly sarcastic tones, and her eyes +flashed scorn and indignation upon her bewildered companion. + +"I wonder if Florence Stevenson knew it. I suppose of course she did," +musingly remarked Georgie. + +"No, she did not," sharply retorted Marion; "and she doesn't know it +now, I'm sure." + +"Well, I don't know what to make of it!" replied Georgie in an annoyed +tone; "an heiress in school and no one to know it!" + +"Don't you think her prettier than when you first saw her?" exclaimed +Marion, in such cutting, sarcastic tones that even Georgie winced; "and +her pale face, I'm sure you think there is something very distingué +about that, set off by her 'heavy, expensive crépe;' and then I know you +must think that there is something decidedly aristocratic about her +'lackadaisical' manner;" and Marion gave a little bitter laugh, +expressing quite as much scorn as her words. + +At that moment, they entered the church porch, and Georgie made no +reply, only too glad of an excuse for silence. + +Miss Stiefbach's scholars occupied the first six pews from the front; +three on each side of the broad aisle. Miss Stiefbach sat at the head of +one, with five of the youngest girls, and Miss Christine, on the +opposite side, also had some of the smaller girls with her, while the +rest of the scholars occupied the pews in front of their teachers. + +As Marion entered the church, and the girls quietly took their places +and knelt in prayer, the solemn stillness of the place struck painfully +upon her. She could not so soon shake off all outward impressions, and +the cutting words which had passed her lips, just as she entered that +holy place, were still ringing in her ears. + +She had risen that morning, her mind still filled with the pleasant +thoughts which had lulled her to sleep, and with good resolutions for +the future. She felt glad that it was Sunday, for she thought she was in +the mood to be benefited by the sacred influences of the day. + +But where now were her good resolutions? She had yielded to the first +temptation; she had broken the vows made on her knees that morning, and +she was utterly disheartened and discouraged. + +She knelt with the rest, her head bowed as if in prayer, but her mind in +a wild confusion of anger, shame, and remorse; but the anger died, +leaving nothing but the saddest, most wretched thoughts of all; the +sense of utter failure; of continued shortcomings, of broken resolutions +and disregarded vows, made sacred by the time and place of their +utterance. + +She thought she was wicked because she could not pray, because her +thoughts would not become composed, quiet, and peaceful, like the place +and hour, and she knelt on, her hands clasped tightly together, and her +head pressed down into them, the only cry that could silently shape +itself into words, breaking from her heart in very agony of doubt and +despair: "O God, help me! O God, save me from myself!" + +And who shall say that it was not enough? That that cry, coming from the +depths of a heart distressed, remorseful and repentant for errors that +to many would seem but trifles, did not reach the ear of Him who, +bending in mercy and love, sees into the hearts of all; reads the very +secrets of their souls; and to all who sincerely put their faith in Him +surely, sooner or later, sends them His consolation and peace? As the +others rose from their knees Marion was recalled to herself, and rising +with the rest, she opened her prayer-book and joined in the service, +which had just then commenced. + +Mrs. Berkley had requested, when Marion entered Miss Stiefbach's school, +that no sectarian influences should be brought to bear upon her +daughter's mind. She wished that her child should follow her own +inclinations and the dictates of her own conscience in religious +matters, for she understood her well enough to know that she would not +blindly follow any faith without first feeling sure that she clearly +comprehended and sincerely believed all that its doctrines taught. The +influences which of course continually surrounded, although in a quiet, +unobtrusive way, were not without their effect. She loved the service of +Miss Stiefbach's church, and joined in it heartily. It seemed to her +that it brought her nearer to God if she knelt the first thing when she +entered the church and asked his blessing on her head. Not that silent, +heartfelt prayers could not be uttered anywhere and in any position; but +it seemed to her as if there, on her knees, in the place sacredly +dedicated to his worship. God did not seem so far off--as if she could +more earnestly and fervently supplicate him. + +There was much in the service which she could not believe and accept as +it was intended it should be accepted; but she interpreted it as her own +heart dictated. The greater part, however, she believed and repeated +with reverence, and a feeling which could never come to her in her own +church; for there the intense simplicity and almost business-like manner +of conducting the service, struck harshly upon her sensibilities; and +she missed the participation in the prayers and responses which seemed +to draw her out of herself, and raise her thoughts above their common +level, even into the presence of the most High. + +But to-day the holy words, the prayers and selections had no power to +calm her troubled spirit; she tried to fix her thoughts upon the sermon, +and not let them wander to dwell upon her own troubles; but it was no +use; her mind was still in bitter confusion when she left the church. + +As she went down the path, Georgie, who seemed to have forgotten her +previous discomfiture, if not the subject of their conversation, joined +her and began plying her with fresh questions about Rachel Drayton. +Marion did her best to evade her remarks, but Georgie would not let her +alone, until, thoroughly exasperated and provoked beyond endurance, she +exclaimed shortly:-- + +"Georgie, I do wish you'd hold your tongue! I'm sick of your questions; +do let me alone!" + +"Dear me!" replied Miss Georgie, "you were very communicative this +morning; but it's not very strange that you should be rather annoyed, +considering Rachel has taken your best friend away." + +An angry retort rose to Marion's lips, but she controlled herself +sufficiently to keep from uttering it; although the expression of her +face warned Georgie that she had said quite enough, and the two +continued their walk in silence. + +Having received permission from Miss Stiefbach, Marion set off +immediately after dinner for the All Saints' church, and as the services +began a half hour before St. Mark's she had her walk all to herself; nor +was she sorry for this, for she did not feel like talking to any one. + +She was early; hardly any one was in the church, and without waiting for +the sexton to show her into a pew, she took the very front one, knowing +that it was almost always unoccupied. The hymns were read by the +clergyman of the parish; a good, earnest man, and one who in the homes +of the poor, and by the bedsides of the suffering and dying was often +seen, and most sincerely loved; but he had not the gift of preaching; he +rarely made his sermons go home to the hearts of his hearers, and Marion +felt disappointed when she saw him; she had hoped to hear some one else. + +Her surprise and pleasure was great, when Mr. More stepped forward and +announced that Mr. B., who had been pastor of that church fifteen years +before, would preach for them that day. + +The minister came forward, and bowing his head, remained for a moment in +silent prayer; when he lifted it again Marion felt as if she had seen +the face of an angel, so holy, peaceful, and patient was its expression. +He was a very old man; his hair hung long and white about his shoulders; +and as the beams of the afternoon's sun fell upon it, it gleamed with a +light which was almost unearthly, spiritualizing and sanctifying that +beautiful old face, until it seemed to many as if he were speaking to +them from the very gates of heaven. His sermon was short but impressive; +the gentle pathos of his voice, and the earnestness of his manner, were +felt by all who heard him. Bending over the pulpit as he closed his +discourse, his voice fell into a soft, musical cadence, which though +very low reached the most remote recesses of the church, and stretching +out his arms as if he would have taken each one by the hand and led them +to the haven where he had found rest and peace, he exclaimed, or rather +entreated:-- + +"O my friends! look down into your own hearts, and read each one of you +what is written there; pride, wilfulness, sin in many forms. Man's +greatest enemy is self. But who has said, 'He that conquereth himself is +greater than he that taketh a city'?--Jesus! Jesus the Saviour, who came +to wash out all our sins; to give us strength for the struggles and +trials which come to us all; to teach us patience, humility, and +charity. + +"Each one in this world, young or old, has his sorrows to bear; his +temptations to resist; his victories to gain; and to each one it seems +sometimes as if everything was darkness and desolation; the blackness of +night surrounds them on every side; darkness! darkness everywhere! no +light, no hope, no guide. Look up, my friends! look up! not to the +darkness; but above it, beyond it, to where Christ stands, ready, ay, +more than ready. He comes to meet you, his eyes beaming with +compassionate love, his hands outstretched. Grasp those hands, hold fast +and firm; they, and they alone, can lead you through storm and darkness, +through sorrow and fear; until kneeling at last in perfect peace and +happiness you shall behold the face of your Father in heaven." + +Then followed the Lord's Prayer; but Marion could not take her eyes from +that holy face. It seemed to her as if every word had been uttered for +her alone; as if the speaker had looked down into the secrets of her +heart and had tried to give her comfort and consolation. + +And this was partly true. As Mr. B. leaned forward and cast his eyes +over the congregation they fell upon the face of that young girl, +looking up at him with a longing, wistful, tearful glance that startled +him. For many years he had been settled over a fashionable society in +New York, where he often felt that the words he uttered were but as +"seed sown by the wayside" or "on stony ground;" but there was no +mistaking the earnestness of that face, over which was spread an +expression which it pained him to see in one so young; for he knew that +her trials, whatever they were, were but just begun, and thinking of the +years of struggling that would probably come to her, his heart yearned +over her in deepest sympathy. With the thought of her uppermost in his +mind he gave out the closing hymn; two verses only. Marion had heard +them often before, but their depth and meaning never came to her so +fully as now:-- + + "Give to the winds thy fears; + Hope and be undismayed; + God hears thy sighs, and counts thy tears; + He shall lift up thy head. + + "Through waves, through clouds and storms, + He gently clears thy way; + Wait thou his time, so shall the night + Soon end in glorious day." + +As the last notes of the choir died away, and Marion bowed her head to +receive the benediction, she felt strengthened and encouraged; and a +peace such as she had not known for months fell upon her heart. + +As she passed out of church she avoided meeting any one whom she knew, +and hurried out of hearing of the remarks of various members of the +congregation, who were commenting on the sermon in very much the same +manner as if it had been a theatrical performance. + +Such expressions as, "Very fine sermon, wasn't it?--hit some of us +pretty hard;" or "What a charming voice and manner! why, he really quite +touched me!" made by different persons in a flippant, off-hand tone, +jarred upon her ears, and she was thankful to leave them all behind. + +As she was about to cross the street, preparatory to turning off into +the road which led to school, she stopped to allow a carriage to pass; +as it reached her a gentleman leaned towards her, and looking up she met +the eyes of the minister bent down upon her with an expression of the +deepest interest. + +She never saw that face again; but the remembrance of it went with her +through her whole life. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +THE LETTER-BAG. + + +Monday morning Marion sent a long letter to her mother, in which she +gave a full account of her interview with Aunt Bettie; sent the address, +and gave as accurate a description as she was able of Miss Jemima Dobbs +herself. + +She waited anxiously for some days for an answer to her letter, and +could hardly keep the thought of Aunt Bettie out of her head. Friday +afternoon, when the postman came, she was the first to get to the door +and take the bag from him. As she went with it into the library, the +girls all crowded round her in eager expectation, while she stifled her +own impatience and slowly unstrapped the bag, looking provokingly +unconcerned, and quite regardless of the smiling, eager faces that were +bent over her. + +"O Marion!" exclaimed Sarah Brown, "don't you see I'm dying to know if +there's a letter for me? Do hurry up." + +"She doesn't expect a letter herself, so she doesn't care how long she +keeps us waiting," sullenly remarked Mattie Denton; "she likes to +torment us." + +"You're mistaken there, Mattie," replied Marion, with a teasing twinkle +in her eyes, "for I do expect a letter; but I like 'linked sweetness, +long drawn out,' you know. Hands off, girls!" as she slowly opened the +mouth of the bag, and two or three arms were stretched out for the +letters that filled it to the top; "hands off, I'm postman to-day, and I +won't have my rights interfered with. Let me see,--number one; that's +for Julia Thayer. Julia! where are you? Here, Fan, run upstairs and take +it to her. Number two, Grace Minton. Here, Grace, virtue recognized and +patience rewarded; you held your tongue, and see how well I've served +you;" and Marion rattled on a string of nonsense as she took out the +letters and handed them to their various owners. + +"Two letters and a pamphlet for Miss Stiefbach; one for Miss Christine; +and whose is this great, fat one, I wonder, with a foreign stamp? Rachel +Drayton, I do declare!" and she was about to add, "I'm glad she's got +it;" but her habit of always treating Rachel with supreme indifference +was too strong upon her, and she only remarked, "Here, who will take +this letter up to Miss Drayton's room?" + +Georgie Graham came forward and offered her services. "I am going +upstairs," she said; "I'll take it up to her." + +Marion handed it to her without speaking, but elevated her eyebrows in a +very expressive way; but at that moment Rachel herself came into the +room, and Georgie stepped forward and gave her the letter, saying in her +sweetest tones:-- + +"Ah, Rachel! are you here? Here is a letter for you, and I could not +resist giving myself the pleasure of delivering it." + +Rachel took the letter with a delighted smile, and, thanking Georgie, +ran upstairs that she might read it undisturbed; in the surprise and +pleasure of receiving it she did not notice Georgie's unusually affable +manner, or the astonished glances and expressive looks which passed +between the other girls. + +Marion mentally remarked, "The two millions are taking effect; Georgie +has begun to toady already." + +"Well, Marion, haven't you got a letter for me?" asked little Rose May, +who had stood patiently by Marion's side, saying nothing, but looking +longingly into the bag, the bottom of which was fast becoming visible. + +"You poor little thing, how good you have been!" and Marion bent down +and kissed the expectant, little face. "I'll look over these in a jiffy, +and we'll see if there isn't one for you. Susie Brastow, May Fowler, +_Marion Berkley_, and--yes, here is yours, Rose,--Miss Rose May in great +black letters." + +"Oh, it's from father! I'm so glad!" and Rose seated herself on the +floor in the bow-window, and was soon oblivious to everything but the +contents of her letter. + +"Here, Grace!" exclaimed Marion, as Grace Minton passed on her way into +the drawing-room, "just take this and hang it on the nail; that's a good +girl;" and she held the letter-bag towards her. + +"No, I thank you," laughingly replied Grace; "you're very anxious to be +postmaster when it comes to taking out the letters, but the rest of the +duties you want to shirk on to some one else; but I won't submit, I'm +going to do my practising." + +"Oh, you unnatural, ungrateful girl!" replied Marion; "you have read +your letter, and are not even thankful to me for giving it to you, +almost the first one; and here I am perfectly wild to read mine. +However," she exclaimed with martyr-like air, "it's only another proof +of the total depravity of the human race." + +"No ingratitude, Marion; but you _know_ you always get some one to hang +the bag up for you after _you_ have had the fun of taking out the +letters, and I don't think it is fair." + +"Perfectly," replied Marion, as she hung the bag up in the vestibule, +ready for the girls to make their various deposits, "perfectly; equal +distribution of labor you know." + +"Equal humbug!" replied Grace, who could not help laughing. + +"O Grace!" called out Marion over the banisters, as Grace was about to +turn into the drawing-room, "couldn't you find out what Georgie Graham +is going to practise, for when she is in the school-room, playing +Chopin's Polonaise, and you are in the drawing-room running the +scales,--at least, to one who is not especially fond of 'close +harmony,'--the effect is not so charming as it might be." + +Grace, whose musical powers were not very extensive, made up a face, and +slammed the drawing-room door, and Marion rushed precipitately into her +own room. + +"Don't sit down on that bed!" cried Florence; "don't you see I've got on +the ruffled tidies?" + +"O you old maid!" retorted Marion; "you know there's no place I enjoy +sitting to read my letters so much as on the bed. What possessed you to +put on those tidies to-day?" + +"Why, Marion, we have been back more than seven weeks, and have not had +them on yet. Now just see how nice they look." + +"They do look lovely, that's a fact;" replied Marion. "There's one thing +your respected aunt knows how to do to perfection, and that is to quill +ruffles. On the whole I'm glad you put them on; it will cure me of my +horrible habit of bouncing down on the bed; consequently save me an +innumerable amount of lectures, besides making our room look very +distingué; three excellent reasons for keeping them on, so I'll content +myself with our old seat." + +"Well, Mab, do tell me what your mother writes." + +"Why, I actually haven't had time to read it yet; there were crowds of +letters, and I, like a little goose, took the bag. I do hope she has +some good news of Jemima;" and Marion opened the letter and read it +aloud:-- + + "BOSTON, Nov. 16th. + + "MY DEAR MARION:--I was delighted to receive your letter, but + particularly so when I read it and found how much my dear daughter + was interesting herself for the good of others. + + "I have just been obliged to change our parlor girl, Mary having + gone home to be with her invalid mother, and was preparing myself + for going the usual round of the intelligence offices, when your + letter came. The address which you sent (I presume it was not a + specimen of Miss Stiefbach's instruction) I took with me, for I had + never heard of Mrs. Benson's office, and doubted very much if I + should be able to find it. + + "As events proved, I was right, for after having crossed the city + in every direction,--in cars, coaches and on foot,--I found that + the place must be in Crawford Street, East Boston, instead of East + Crawford Street, Boston; so I went to the East Boston ferry, and as + good luck would have it, there was a directory in the office, which + I looked over, and discovered that there was such a street, but + could find no Mrs. Benson; however, as the directory was an old + one, I did not trust to it, but crossed the ferry. I found the + street without any difficulty; but when I came to No. 22, behold, + it was occupied by a barber! I must say, I was discouraged; but + upon going in and making inquiries, I found that Mrs. Benson had + formerly occupied the store, but, as the colored gentleman informed + me, 'she had removed to Boston, thinking that the crowded + metropolis would afford her a better opportunity of carrying on her + business, so as to render it more lucrative.' He was so extremely + affable and polite, that I almost felt it my duty to sit down and + have all my hair cut off; but I contented myself with buying a new + kind of crimping-pin, which he assured me was the same as those + used by Her Royal Highness the Empress Eugénie. Of course I + believed him, and the crimping-pins will be ready for you when you + come home at Christmas. But to return to my story; Mr. Ambrose St. + Leger (don't be frightened, Marion, that is only the barber) gave + me minute directions how to find Mrs. Benson's office, and I came + back to the city, thankful to have some clue, however indirect it + might be. I found the office without any difficulty, and Mrs. + Benson, being of course very anxious to work herself into the good + graces of a Boston lady, was extremely loquacious and obliging, + notwithstanding I was unable to suit myself there with a servant. + To make a long story short, she told me that she had received + several letters for a Jemima Dobbs, but as she had never had any + such girl in her office, after keeping them some time, she had + burned them up. + + "I must say I felt extremely disheartened, for I thought that if I + found the right woman she would certainly be able to tell me + something about Jemima Dobbs. She produced her books, and upon + looking over them I found the name of Arabella Dobbs. It seemed + ridiculous to think that could be the same person I wanted, but I + had an inward conviction that it was, and I have still; though + don't get elated yet. Mrs. Benson, who relies more upon her memory + than her book-keeping, says she is sure she got Arabella Dobbs a + place in East Boston several weeks ago, and she is going to write + to the lady, to find out if she is still there, and if she ever had + the name Jemima. I thanked her for the interest she had taken in + the case, and gave her my address, as she promised to send me word + the instant she received an answer to her letter. + + "And now, my dear, that is all I have to tell you. Very + unsatisfactory I know it is; but I feel quite sure that Arabella + Dobbs and Jemima Dobbs are one and the same person, for it is very + seldom that one comes across a Yankee girl in these offices, and + Dobbs is a name one would not be likely to find there twice. + + "You will be the best judge of what it is best to do about telling + Mrs. Dobbs what I have written to you; perhaps it will be better to + wait until you hear something more conclusive; but the suspense + must be terrible for her to bear, and it may be some consolation + for her to know there is some one interesting herself for her here. + + "I will write just as soon as I hear from Mrs. Benson; and now, my + darling, I really have not another moment to spare you. + + "Your father sends his usual stock of love, and ever so many + messages, which I could not remember if I tried; but they were all + very affectionate and so complimentary, that perhaps it is just as + well you should not hear them. + + "Charlie is asleep, and Fred has not yet come in from baseball; so + you must content yourself with a whole heart-full of love from your + fond + + "MAMMA." + +"Now, Flo, was there ever such a darling mamma as mine? I do think she +is just perfection,--going all over Boston, and East Boston too, and +never saying she was tired, or anything of the sort. I don't think there +are many women that would do that; do you, Flo?" + +"No, I don't believe there are many like her; I think she is the +loveliest woman I ever knew. But, Marion, I don't see as you have found +out much about poor Jemima after all." + +"No, there is not much real, satisfactory information, that's a fact; +but I _feel_ just as if that girl was the right one, and I know mamma +must feel pretty sure of it too, or she would have waited for the answer +to that letter before she wrote me. I shall go up to auntie's as soon as +I can; but I'm afraid it won't be before Saturday, for you know +to-morrow is English composition day, and next day French abstract, and +I was so careless about mine last time that I really think I ought to +lay myself out this week." + +"Indeed you ought, Marion," exclaimed Florence; "it's a shame that a +girl who can write such compositions as you can, when you have a mind +to, should hand in such a flat, silly thing as your last one was. I'm +not complimentary, I know, but it's the truth; you know yourself it was +horrible." + +"Yes, I know it was; and that is why I'm particularly anxious to have a +good one this time; don't you see?" + +"But don't you think you will be able to get up to Aunt Bettie's before +Saturday?" asked Florence; "it seems hard to keep her in suspense." + +"I really don't see how I can find time, and then I'm in hopes that if I +wait, by that time the answer to that woman's letter will have come, and +I shall hear something decisive from mamma." + +"Well, I think after all perhaps it will be better for you to wait until +then. But do you know it is after four o'clock, and the girls have all +got through practising? We ought to go down and try our duet." + +"Sure enough!" exclaimed Marion, springing up. "I don't know my part at +all; haven't looked at the last two pages, and Mr. Stein comes +to-morrow." + +"Oh, you read music so quickly, that you'll play your part better at +sight than I shall after I've practised it a week. I wish I could read +faster." + +"Don't wish it, Flo; it is very nice sometimes, but I don't think people +who read easily ever play readily without their notes. Now for you to +know a piece once is to know it always, with or without your notes, +while I have to fairly pound it into my head." + +"There is more truth than poetry in that, I know," replied Florence, as +the two went downstairs together, "for I have heard Aunt Sue complain of +the same thing; nevertheless I wish I wasn't so awfully slow." + +But we will leave them to their music, and musical discussions, and +hurry on with our story. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +MARION'S RIDE. + + +Marion had no other letter from her mother during the week, and she was +so busy the whole time with her studies, music, etc., that it was not +until Saturday afternoon that she started on her errand. + +The weather had been unusually cold, and the previous night there had +been quite a heavy fall of snow, which, notwithstanding it was now only +the middle of November, still remained on the ground, and the thick, +gray sky gave promise that there was yet more to come; indeed before +Marion was fairly ready the flakes began to make their appearance, and +came lazily down, as if they did not all relish being called out so +early. + +But Marion did not mind wind or weather, and with her water-proof over +her thick sack, the hood drawn up over her head, and her feet encased in +rubbers, she set out for her long walk in the most excellent spirits. + +Florence went to the door with her and urged her to take an umbrella, +but Marion laughed at the idea, saying, "It was only a little flurry and +would be over in a minute;" but before she had reached Aunt Bettie's she +wished she had taken Florence's advice, for the snow came down thicker +and faster, beating against her face, and almost blinding her, so that +it was with great difficulty that she could see her way, and it was at +least an hour before she arrived at the farm-house. + +She went round to the back of the house, and without knocking lifted the +latch of the door, and entered a sort of shed or unplastered room, +which in summer was used as a kitchen, but which now served as a +wood-shed. + +"Aunt Bettie," cried Marion, "are you there?" and she stamped her feet, +and shook her clothes to get rid of the snow which covered her from head +to foot. + +"For the goodness' sakes, who's that?" exclaimed Aunt Bettie as she +jumped up from her seat by the kitchen fire, where she had fallen asleep +over her knitting, and hurried into the outer room. + +"Why, it's only me, auntie, to be sure," said Marion. + +"Marion Berkley! well, did I ever! but massy me," as she took hold of +Marion's water-proof, "you're as wet as a drownded rat; I'd no idee it +snowed so hard!" + +"Oh, it's only wet on the outside; _I'm_ not wet a bit;" and Marion took +off her water-proof and hung it over a chair to dry, pulling off her +rubbers and placing them on the floor beside it; "but why don't you ask +me what I came for, auntie?" + +"Wall, child, to tell the truth, I was so s'prised to see yer that I +didn't think anything 'bout what yer come for, and I aint going to ask +nuther, 'till you jist seat yourself in front o' that fire and toast +them feet o' yourn. I never see sich a child! To think o' your startin' +out sich weather's this to come and see me!" + +"It didn't snow much when I left school, and I hadn't the least idea it +would be such a storm; it's so early, you know. Florence wanted me to +bring an umbrella, but I wouldn't; I never will carry one if I can help +it." + +"Wall, it is a reg'lar out-and-outer," exclaimed Aunt Bettie, as she +stood peering through the window at the storm; "winter's sot in airly +this time, an' no mistake. I tell you what," as she came back to the +fire and seated herself beside Marion, "if you've come for anything +pertickler, I guess you better tell it right away, fur it won't do fur +you to stop long, it gathers so." + +"Well, I did come for something particular, auntie, but you must not +expect too much;" and Marion, who saw that Aunt Bettie was unusually +excited, notwithstanding she tried to appear composed, laid her hand on +her arm in a soothing, caressing way. "It is only a little bit of +comfort for you, not any real hope, except that you will perhaps feel +encouraged to know that you have friends in the city looking for your +daughter, and although I do not know anything certain about her, I think +mamma has got hold of some clue. But I'll read you what she says; you +know I promised to write her, and I did, and this is her answer." + +Aunt Bettie signed for Marion to go on; she was too much moved to speak, +although her emotion was caused quite as much by gratitude as anxiety, +for she had waited so long, and up to this time in such perfect silence, +that hope had almost died out within her, and she really did not expect +any joyful tidings. + +At the conclusion of the letter Marion looked up, almost dreading to +meet Aunt Bettie's glance, feeling sure that it must be one of +disappointment; but, contrary to her expectations, the good woman's face +was positively beaming through her tears, as she exclaimed in an almost +joyful tone:-- + +"The Lord bless you, Miss Marion, and your mother too, for you're a pair +of Christians if there ever was one! I'm jist sure that that Arabella +Dobbs is my Jemimy; an' I'll tell yer why I think so. Yer see the gal +that set my darter up to goin' to Boston used to visit some o' her +kinfolk down in the village, an' that's how she and Jemimy got +acquainted; she put it into my gal's head that _Jemimy_ was an awful +country kind of a name,--her own was Belindy,--and she always called +her Arabella, an' jist as like as not Jemimy was fool enough to go an' +give _that_ as her name. I declare she orter been ashamed of herself!" +and Mrs. Dobbs' indignation so far got the better of her grief, that if +Miss Jemimy had been there in the flesh it is quite probable she would +have received at least a good scolding. + +"Why, auntie, if that is so," replied Marion, "I've no doubt it's the +same girl; but how do you suppose she happened to go to East Boston +instead of Boston?" + +"Oh, like's not that Belindy Beers lived in East Boston, and jist said +Boston 'cause she thought 'twas smarter. I never could bear that gal +anyhow, an' if it hadn't been for her my darter'd been here now." + +"Well, you know I haven't really found her yet," said Marion, who was +afraid that Aunt Bettie's ire had caused her to lose sight of that fact; +"we only have some _probability_ of finding out where she is." + +"I know, dear, I know all that, but I do feel better; it does seem as if +there couldn't be two sich good creeturs as you an' your mother doin' +your best to help me, and no good to come of it. 'T any rate I aint +goin' to despond any more; it's like flyin' in the face o' Providence, +and until I hear wus news I shall jist hope for the best." + +"Aunt Bettie, I'm glad enough to hear you say so; I _can't_ help feeling +very hopeful myself, and I'm glad you can feel the same." + +"Well, child, I think it's the right way arter all; 'taint my nater +usually to be very despondent, but somehow I got entirely discouraged; +but _I should_ be an ungrateful woman enough if I didn't thank you over +and over again. I can't speak it all, but I feel it jist the same." + +"Indeed, auntie, it is not me, but mamma, that you must thank. I have +done nothing but write to her, and she has done all the work." + +"Yes, and how would she have known it, if it hadn't been for you? I +thank her, the Lord knows I do, from the bottom of my heart, but it's +all owin' to you, child, nevertheless. If you hadn't had quick eyes to +see into my troubles, and a warm heart to put you up to helpin' me, what +would she a' known about it? No, no, dear, you're the fust one I owe my +thanks to, and whether I ever find Jemimy again or not, I shall always +love you, and bless you for what you've done for me so long's I live." + +And Marion knew that Aunt Bettie meant every word she said, and she did +not again try to alter her opinion. It was pleasant indeed to know that +there was any one who could have such a high regard for her; and with a +warmth about her heart which it was pleasant to feel, and a light in her +eyes which it would certainly have done any one good to see, she sat +talking with Mrs. Dobbs, both of them oblivious to the fact that time +was fast slipping away, until, upon looking up, Marion was astonished to +see that it was long after four o'clock. + +"Why, auntie!" she exclaimed, "see how dark it is growing; we've been +talking nearly an hour. I must hurry off this minute, or I shall be +frightened to death before I get home." + +"Why, sure enough, it's most five o'clock! I'd no idee of it. But massy +sakes!" cried Aunt Bettie as she went to the window, "jest come here and +look out! Why, you can't walk home in this snow nohow; why, it's up to +your ankles! I never see snow gather so quick in my life." + +Marion went to the window, and took a survey of the scene. It certainly +did not look very promising. The snow had gathered so rapidly that the +roads were covered several inches deep, and darkness appeared to be fast +approaching. Marion looked decidedly troubled; but there was no help for +it; go she must; for she knew that Miss Stiefbach would be very much +worried about her; so putting on as good a face as possible she said:-- + +"Well, auntie, I haven't a moment to spare; it is really quite dark, and +it will take me longer to go than it did to come;" and Marion was +hurrying out of the room to get her water-proof when Aunt Bettie caught +hold of her:-- + +"You jest set down in that cheer, and don't you stir out of it till I +tell yer you may! Do you s'pose I'm goin' to send you home afoot when +it's sich walkin's this? No; not if my name's Sarey Ann Dobbs. You jest +wait, and you shall have one sleigh-ride this year if you don't ever get +another." + +"Aunt Bettie, what do you mean?" exclaimed Marion. + +"You jest wait, and you'll see what I mean." Auntie went into the outer +room, and opening the door shouted at the very top of her lungs in a +shrill, high key: "Jabe! Jabe Dobbs, be you there?" but Jabe did not +respond to the maternal call. "Jabe! Ja-a-a-be!" Then in an undertone, +"Plague take that boy! he's the laziest creetur I ever did see!" + +Presently there came a reply from one of the outside sheds in a slow, +drawling voice; very much as if the owner of it had heard the first +summons, but was not in a great hurry to heed it:-- + +"H-e-r-e!" + +"Wall, come in this minit, and don't keep me standin' here holdin' this +door open any longer!" + +In a few moments, but in what seemed to Marion almost an eternity, heavy +steps were heard on the flagstone, and directly after, a youth of about +sixteen made his appearance in the door-way, and slowly knocking the +snow off his boots, asked in the same drawling tone:-- + +"What do yer want?" + +"You come inside, and I'll tell yer," replied his mother. + +"Well, yer might o'--" but catching sight of Marion his head went down, +and Jabe stood sheepishly twirling his hat in his hands, shuffling from +one foot to the other, apparently too bashful for speech. + +"Don't stan' there twirlin' yer hat, and lookin' like a great idiot, but +jest step round and be spry. Did you get down the big sleigh t'other day +when I told yer to?" + +Jabe nodded assent. + +"Well, it's a wonder! Now you go out and tackle up Shadrack as quick as +ever you can, and hev him round to the door, less'n no time; no +shillyshallyin!" + +"What shall I put him into arter I get him tackled?" asked the hopeful +youth, with a momentary glance at Marion from under his shaggy eyebrows. + +"Why, put him into the sleigh, to be sure; what'd you s'pose?" + +"Well, you didn't tell me, an' I didn't know but p'r'aps she was goin' +to ride him," replied Jabe, with another glance at Marion, which almost +upset her gravity. + +"You didn't think any such a thing, and you know you didn't! You're to +drive Miss Marion back to school, and you jest hurry out; and don't let +the grass grow under yer feet either!" + +"Aint much danger," replied Jabe, as he shuffled off; "it's most through +sproutin' fur this year, and 'taint quite ready fur next." + +"Now, Miss Marion, did you _ever_ see sech a boy as that?" exclaimed +Aunt Bettie in righteous indignation; "he worries my life out of me!" + +"What is the matter with him?" asked Marion, who was intensely amused at +the ridiculous-looking object she had just seen, and his comical, +awkward ways; "there doesn't seem to be anything very bad about him." + +"Bad! of course there isn't, but he _is_ so powerful slow! There's no +doin' nothin' with him; he's too lazy to work, and he's too lazy to +study. But there's one thing, he's honest as he ken be, and I rally do +think he does set consid'rable store by me; though he _does_ try my +patience awfully." + +"Of course he thinks a great deal of you," replied Marion; "he's just at +a lazy age now. I dare say he'll get over it, and prove a great comfort +to you one of these days." + +"Oh, he's a comfort now, in a sort of a way. He's stiddy enough; but +laws! he's too lazy to be anything else." + +"He'll wake up yet, auntie, see if he doesn't. There's a twinkle in his +eyes that shows he's nobody's fool." + +"Oh, I never supposed he was quite as bad's that; but he haint found his +niche yet; when he does I s'pose he'll fit into it as tight as a +pertater does its skin." + +In much shorter time than Marion had expected, judging from what she had +seen of Jabe's activity, the jingle of bells was heard, and directly +after, the musical voice of Mrs. Dobbs' young hopeful called out:-- + +"I'm ready if you be!" + +Aunt Bettie opened the door, her face positively radiant with smiles and +the pleasure she felt at being able to give Marion a ride. + +As Marion's eyes beheld the equipage that stood ready for her use, it +must be confessed that her first sensation was anything but agreeable. +In common with most girls of her age, and I might say with girls +considerably older than herself, she had a great admiration for handsome +horses, elegant carriages, and a driver in keeping with the rest of the +establishment. + +Certainly no one could say, however, that her driver was not perfectly +in keeping with the establishment of which he evidently felt extremely +proud; for he sat on the front seat, holding the reins in both hands, as +if poor Shadrack was a four-in-hand team, or at least a tandem with a +very refractory leader. + +The sleigh itself was of such peculiar structure, that it would have +been almost impossible to have decided at what ancient period it must +have been made. In shape, it most resembled that elegant vehicle +commonly known as a "pung," excepting that it boasted of two seats, and +a back that nearly reached the top of Marion's head. Its color was a +beautiful pea-green, ornamented with various scrolls and devices in +bright yellow, which might have been a combination of the paternal and +maternal crests of Jabe's ancestors, but looked wonderfully like +squash-vines. + +Around old Shadrack's neck was hung a string of iron bells about the +size of small cannon-balls, which jingled most melodiously every time he +moved. But Marion's good sense would not allow her to yield to any +feeling of mortification which she might feel at the idea of appearing +at school in such a turn-out. She only thought of Aunt Bettie's kindness +in ordering out her old horse on such an unprecedented occasion; and +thanking her warmly and sincerely for her thoughtfulness, she stepped +into the sleigh and was driven off by Jabe, who flourished the whip over +Shadrack's ears, quite regardless of his mother's warning, "not to let +the critter trot fast, 'cause 'twas heavy haulin'; the snow was so +soggy." + +For some time they jogged along, the silence only broken by the +monotonous jingle of the bells. It had stopped snowing, and the sky was +quite bright in the west, making it much lighter than it was earlier in +the afternoon; touching up the trees with a rosy light, and casting a +soft glow on the fields, as they passed along. + +Marion forgot everything else in the pleasure of watching the fading +light, and was quite oblivious to the existence of Jabe, until she was +roused from her silent observations by a mild "ger-lang!" which reminded +her that it certainly was her duty to make herself agreeable to her +escort. + +She hardly knew what to say to him, but she ventured to remark "that the +horse did not look as if he was worked very hard." + +"Worked hard!" exclaimed Jabe. "Lord, he don't know what work is! I just +wish I had as easy a time as Shadrack." + +"What in the world did you name him Shadrack for?" exclaimed Marion. + +"Me!" replied Jabe, turning round slowly and looking at Marion out of +the corner of his eye, "'twant none o' my doin's, 'twas father's; he +allus liked something different from anybody else, and that time I think +he hit it." + +"Yes, I think he did," replied Marion, smiling in spite of herself; then +in a soberer tone she asked, "Do you remember your father, Jabe?" + +"No, he died 'fore I was two years old." + +"Don't you wish he could have lived?" + +"Well now, that depends on circumstances," replied Jabe in a +deliberating tone; "if he was such a fellow for work as the marm, I +can't say as I _should_ be very particular 'bout havin' him round." + +"Why, Jabe Dobbs!" exclaimed Marion, striving to conceal her laughter, +"aren't you ashamed of yourself? I dare say it would be better for you, +if your mother made you work a great deal harder than she does." + +"O Lord! Miss Marion!" cried Jabe, in the most horrified tone, but with +a twinkle in his eyes which Marion fully appreciated; "if she did I +couldn't live nohow. You see, work and I don't hitch hosses; we weren't +meant to go 'longside the same pole; and if one of us has got to stan' +still, I think it might's well be me, and let _work_ go." + +At this Marion laughed outright, but not a muscle of his face did Jabe +move, and if it had not been for that sly twinkle in his eye when he +lifted it to Marion's face one would have thought he was solving some +weighty problem. + +He sat round sideways, one leg on the seat, and the reins now hanging +loosely in his hands, as Shadrack jogged lazily on, while he was +evidently highly pleased and flattered by Marion's attention. + +"Well, Jabe," continued Marion, "perhaps, if you don't like to work, you +like to study. Do you ever go to school?" + +"I went last winter by spells, an' I s'pose I shall go this winter too." + +"Do you like it?" asked Marion; "what do you like best,--spelling?" + +"Spelling," repeated Jabe, in a ruminating tone,--"spelling, no, I don't +like it much, that is, I don't like it the way they larn you down there. +I think p'r'aps if they'd let a feller follow his own fashion I might +like it; but they put in so many letters that there aint no kind o' +sense in havin', that it jest confuses me, an' so I ginerally spells +accordin' to fancy." + +"O Jabe!" replied Marion, "that will never do in the world; but perhaps +you like arithmetic better." + +"'Rithmetic!" and Jabe fairly dropped the reins and struck an emphatic +blow on his knee, as he exclaimed again: "'rithmetic! I tell you _there_ +you got me. If there is anything I do hate on the face o' this airth, +it's 'rithmetic! Spellin's bad enough, but 'rithmetic's wus. When you +set me to doin' a sum it's jest like the feller that had to go through +the drill for the whole regiment; he got on fust-rate till they told him +to go form a holler-square; but he said _that_ 'wrenched him awfully.'" + +"O Jabe! Jabe!" cried Marion, now fairly convulsed with laughter, "I am +afraid you will never make much of a scholar anyway. But, indeed, you +ought to try and do better; just think what a comfort you might be to +your mother, if you would only----But stop the horse, stop the horse a +minute; I've got an idea!" + +Jabe drew up the reins with a sudden jerk, and looked at Marion as if +she had scattered every idea he ever possessed. + +"You jump out!" she exclaimed; "no, you needn't do that; just help me +over on to the front seat, and then you climb on to the back. I'm going +to drive up to school in style." + +Jabe dropped the reins, and did as he was told, with a very bewildered +expression on his great, round face, as he looked at Marion very much as +if he doubted her sanity; but she went on talking very fast as she +tucked in the almost worn-out robe, and took the reins in her hands. + +"Don't you see, we're almost to the school, and everybody will be on the +lookout for me; so I want to dash up to the door in very stunning +fashion. Now sit up straight; fold your arms; hold your head +up;--so,--that's it; you're my tiger; that means the groom, boy, you +know, who sits behind when the gentleman drives. Now, when I stop the +horse, you jump out just as quick as ever you can and rush to his head, +as if you thought he wouldn't stand still long enough for me to get +out. Do you understand?" + +"Yes," replied Jabe, who sat as straight as a ramrod, his eyes twinkling +under his bushy, fur cap, and his mouth stretched from ear to ear. If he +didn't love work, he certainly did a good joke, and he entered fully +into the spirit of the thing. + +"Well, now, keep sober, and don't forget what I told you." + +Marion braced her feet against the dasher; threw back her shoulders; +extended her arms at full length, and gave poor old Shadrack such a +tremendous "cut" with the whip that he sprang forward as if forty fiends +were after him; but Marion was used to driving, and only flourished the +old wooden-handled ox-whip, and urged him on the faster. + +Everything happened precisely as Marion wished. Of course Miss Stiefbach +had become considerably alarmed at her long absence, and every one had +come into the front of the house, and all were looking out for her, +their faces pressed up against the window-panes as they crowded +together. + +Just as Marion came in sight some one opened the front door; this was +what she wanted. Giving the whip an extra flourish, and saying in an +undertone to Jabe, "Be ready," she dashed up to the gate, and suddenly +drew the reins up short. Poor Shadrack, being thus brought to a very +unexpected stand-still, threw his head up in the air, and planted his +fore feet straight out in front of him, in a most warlike attitude. +Almost before they stopped Jabe sprang out and grasped the poor panting +beast by the head, as Marion threw the reins down, and stepping to the +ground exclaimed in a pompous tone, loud enough to be heard by those +standing in the door-way, "Rub him down well, Thomas, and give him an +extra measure of oats;" then, as she turned into the gate, "and Thomas, +have the tandem at the door in the cutter, to-morrow-morning at ten." + +Jabe, not to be outdone, touched his hat, sprang on to the seat, and +whisked Shadrack round and up the road, at a pace that would have made +his mother hold up her hands in holy horror. + +"Why, Marion Berkley, where _have_ you been?" exclaimed a chorus of +voices, Miss Stiefbach's actually among the number. + +"I've been taking an airing on the Western Avenue. How do you like my +turn-out? Neat but not gaudy, isn't it?" + +"Well, Marion, I don't know what you will do next," said Miss Christine; +"but where have you really been?" + +"Marion, I must ask you to give a strict account of yourself," said Miss +Stiefbach, who, now that she had recovered from her unusual surprise and +alarm, was her own stately self again. Whereupon Marion gave a brief and +satisfactory history of her afternoon's expedition, embellishing it with +sundry remarks and expressions of her own, which rendered it highly +entertaining to her younger hearers; and I might say to all but Miss +Stiefbach, for Miss Christine joined heartily in the general laugh at +Marion's first sleigh-ride of the season. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +LA SOIRÉE MUSICALE. + + +"Girls! what do you think's up?" exclaimed Sarah Brown, as she bounced +into the library one afternoon. "Miss Stiefbach and Mr. Stein have just +been having a long confab in the 'secret-chamber,' and they came out +just as I passed the door, and I heard Miss 'Stiffy' say, 'Yes, I knew +you would prefer Friday, so I ventured to invite them without seeing you +again; as yet the young ladies know nothing about it!' Now _I_ should +like to knew what in the world _it_ is." + +"Well, so should I!" exclaimed Julia Thayer. "What can she mean; +'invited them,' and 'the young ladies know nothing about it.' She must +be going to give a party." + +"Yes, that's it, you may be sure," said Marion; "she's going to give a +party, and she and Mr. Stein are going to lead the German. Won't they +look well dancing the 'deux-temps' together?" + +"O Marion, how perfectly ridiculous!" laughed Florence. "You know she +can't be going to have a party; but what can it mean?" + +"Are you sure you heard right, Sallie?" asked Grace Minton. "Why didn't +you break your shoe-string and stop to tie it up; or do something or +other to keep you there long enough to get something a little more +satisfactory?" + +"Why, I couldn't hang round the hall listening to what they said, could +I? But I know there is to be something going on here Friday; see if +there isn't." + +"Yes, and Miss Stiefbach isn't going to say anything about it to us +until the last moment, because she thinks our heads will be full of it," +ejaculated Marion. "I've a great mind to ask her myself." + +"If I was in the habit of betting, I would bet you anything that I know +all about it," remarked Georgie Graham, who had kept silent while the +other girls were making their comments. + +"Oh, what is it?" asked Marion; "my principles and my purse too will +stand a pound of candy." + +"And I another," cried Sarah. + +"Not so fast," replied Georgie. "I said _if_ I was in the habit of +betting, but I never bet; it is very unladylike." + +"Granted!" cried Marion; "but please reserve your lecture for another +time, and out with your secret." + +"I really don't know as I _ought_ to tell," said Georgie, as she counted +the stitches on her canvas in a provokingly cool way. "I knew it by +accident, and that is the reason I haven't spoken of it before." + +"Oh, if you got possession of it in the same way you have of several +other secrets here, I don't blame you for not wanting to tell of it," +retorted Sarah. + +"I don't know what you mean to insinuate, Sarah; but I heard of this +entirely by accident two weeks ago to-morrow," replied Georgie in the +same unmoved tone. "I was in the anteroom looking over an exercise which +monsieur wanted me to correct, when I heard Mr. Stein and Miss Stiefbach +talking together in very low tones in the school-room. Of course it did +not occur to me that there could be anything private in what they were +saying, or I should have let them know I was there"--("Of course," +laconically remarked Marion)--"but when they had got through their +conversation Miss Stiefbach said, 'We will say nothing about it to any +one, as I wish it should remain a secret for the present;'--so I said +nothing." + +"Well, don't you _intend_ to say anything?" cried Sarah Brown; "now that +we know there is something going on, don't you intend to tell us what it +is?" + +"I really don't think it would be very honorable in me," rejoined +Georgie, thoroughly enjoying her important position. + +"Don't trouble her, Sarah; we all know what her conscientious scruples +are. It would be a pity to have them disturbed," remarked Marion in a +cutting, sarcastic tone. "I can tell you what it all means in five +seconds." + +"What is it?--tell us, do!" cried all, with the exception of Georgie. + +"Miss Stiefbach intends to have some sort of a musical spread next +Friday, and we girls have got to play." + +"How did you know it?" exclaimed Georgie, thoroughly off her guard. + +"I didn't take your method of finding it out, you may be sure," replied +Marion. "I never heard a word about it before this afternoon; but if you +put two and two together they generally make four, that's all." + +"What do you mean by putting 'two and two together'?" impatiently asked +Julia Thayer. + +"Why, just this!" replied Marion. "Does Mr. Stein have an earthly thing +to do with this school except to give us music-lessons? and is there +anything that Miss Stiefbach could be getting up with him, that +concerned the 'young ladies' that didn't have something to do with our +music? and would she be inviting people here when it was convenient to +_him_ if it wasn't that they are going to give a musicale, and he is +going to make us play? So there you've got the whole matter; I don't +think it required much brilliancy to see that." + +"Well, I _never_ should have thought of it!" exclaimed Sarah. + +"Nor I either," said Florence. "But don't you think it is awfully mean +not to have let us known anything about it beforehand, so that we might +have had time to practise?" + +"I presume Mr. Stein has been secretly drilling us for it this long +time, though we poor, unconscious victims didn't suspect it," replied +Marion. "But there's Georgie, she has the advantage of us; she has +probably decided what she is going to play, and has learned it +perfectly." But there was no reply from Georgie as she had discreetly +left the room. + +"Oh, isn't she sly?" exclaimed Grace Minton. + +"Sly! sly isn't the word for it," put in Sarah Brown in her most +energetic tones; "she ought to have been named Foxy Graham!" + +"Well, there's one thing certain," said Grace Minton, "I shan't have to +play; I thank my stars for that!" + +"I wonder who will play," said Florence. "Georgie Graham of course; +Julia; and you Mab; and I rather guess I shall have to. Well, I don't +much care, I don't believe there will be many here, and I think it's +time I learned to play before strangers." + +"I don't know how I shall ever get on in the world," cried Marion in a +despairing tone; "that is about the only thing I never could do." + +"And I think it is so strange," remarked Julia Thayer; "for you see so +much company at home, and always seem so self-possessed wherever you +are, that it does seem queer that you are afraid to play before people." + +"I know it. I dare say every one thinks it is all affectation," replied +Marion, "for I know you all think I've got assurance enough to do most +anything; but it is the honest truth, that I'm frightened half to death +whenever I sit down to play to any one; and if I get along well at this +affair of Miss Stiefbach's, it will be nothing but my _will_ that +carries me through." + +"So you mean to play, do you?" asked Georgie Graham, who at this +juncture suddenly made her appearance in the room. + +"Yes, I mean to play if I'm asked, and I suppose I shall be, because I +think I ought. I am determined to overcome this ridiculous nervousness, +even if it is at the expense of fifty mortifying failures before I do +it; so, girls, look out and prepare yourselves for a public disgrace; +for of _course_ there is not one of you who would not take it quite to +heart if I should break down." + +"Well," replied Sarah Brown in the most energetic tone (Sarah almost +always spoke in italics), "I know I for one should feel dreadfully; +though of _course_ I can't answer for some of the rest of us;" and she +cast a meaning glance at Georgie. + +"I'm sure, Marion, I _hope_ you won't fail," said Georgie as she picked +up her work, her ostensible reason for coming back, and left the room. + +"I know one thing," exclaimed Sarah; "if that girl kept a list of all +the lies she tells in a week, white and black; she'd use up all the +letter-paper there is in the town." + +"O Sallie!" laughed Florence, "you're too severe. I'm afraid you don't +entertain a Christian spirit towards Georgie." + +"I don't, and I don't pretend to!" answered Sarah. "I never did like +her, and I never shall; she's always saying something to aggravate me." + +"But she didn't say anything to you then," said Julia Thayer, with a +mischievous twinkle in her eyes; "she was only _hoping_ that Marion +would not break down." + +"Yes, and a lot she hoped it!" excitedly replied Sarah; "there's +nothing would suit her better than to have Mab make a regular failure of +it; and I just wanted to let her know I thought so." + +"Now, Sarah," said Marion, in a half-laughing, half-serious tone, "don't +you trouble yourself to fight my battles. I think I am quite equal to it +myself; besides, you'll have your hands full to look after your own +squabbles." + +"There's ingratitude for you!" said Grace Minton. "If I were you, +Sallie, I never would trouble myself about her again; she doesn't +deserve such a champion." + +"Oh, I don't mind what she says," replied Sarah, good-naturedly; "she +can't make me hold my tongue, and I shall say just what I've a mind to, +to that Georgie Graham, so long as she keeps on tormenting me." + +That evening the whole school was informed that on the following Friday +Miss Stiefbach was to give a soirée musicale, at which ten of the +scholars were to perform. + +These were Marion Berkley, Florence Stevenson, Alice Howard, Mattie +Denton, Julia Thayer, Georgie Graham, Susie Snelling, Kate Brastow, and, +to the surprise of every one, little Rose May and Fannie Thayer. + +Of course nothing was talked of that week out of study hours, but the +soirée, and great indignation was expressed by most of the performers +that they had not been allowed more time to prepare themselves. But Mr. +Stein knew what he was about; he wished the musicale to be as much as +was possible an impromptu affair, as it was not his idea to make an +exhibition of the skill of his pupils, but to accustom them to play with +ease and self-possession before strangers. He gave his pupils a list of +their names in the order in which they were to play, selected from the +music belonging to each girl several pieces, from which she was to +choose one, exercising her own taste and judgment; decided himself upon +the duets he wished performed, and then informed them that his part in +the matter was ended; from that moment he was to be nothing but a +spectator. + +"But, Mr. Stein," exclaimed one, "just _please_ tell me, can I play this +well enough?" and then from a second, "O Mr. Stein, _would_ you play +this?" and "Oh, I never can play _any_ of these before any one!" from a +third, and many other exclamations and lamentations were poured upon +him; but he only held up his hands in a deprecating way. "Now, young +ladies, do not, do not, I beg of you, ask me another question! I +consider that you know any one of the pieces which I have laid aside for +you to choose from sufficiently well to play anywhere; it only remains +for you to decide which one you will play. Now, good-by until Friday; +you will not see me until then, when I shall not come as your teacher, +but as an invited guest, to have my ears delighted with the sweet sounds +which I shall expect to hear from that instrument;" and with a profound +bow the old German made his exit. + +But, notwithstanding his apparent unconcern as to the result of this new +whim of his, Mr. Stein was really quite excited about it; several of his +pupils at Miss Stiefbach's he considered were quite remarkable for their +age, and he looked forward to the coming musicale with a feeling of +pride not unmixed with fear, lest some of his favorites should fail to +do themselves credit. + +Marion had noticed that for two weeks before the secret was generally +known Georgie Graham had practised Chopin's Polonaise in A, every day, +but since the whole school had been informed of the musicale she had +only heard her play it twice. This induced her to think that Georgie, +taking advantage of the knowledge which she had surreptitiously gained, +had chosen that piece for Friday night, and having nearly perfected +herself in it, was avoiding practising it, so that none of the girls +might suspect what she intended to play. + +Marion would not have been likely to have thought of this, if she had +not taken the Polonaise about the same time that Georgie had, and had +often remarked that she thought Georgie played it better than anything +else, and very much better than she did herself. Remembering this, and +knowing that Georgie would be particularly anxious to excel her in the +eyes of the whole school, and before invited guests, she felt perfectly +confident that Chopin's Polonaise was the piece she had chosen. + +Now Georgie had certainly done everything she could to make Marion +thoroughly uncomfortable ever since they had been back at school, and +Marion had been actually longing for an opportunity to revenge herself. +Here was the opportunity. The soirée was to open with a duet by Mattie +Denton and Julia Thayer; then a solo by Florence, followed by a song +from Alice Howard; then a piano solo from Marion, and after her Georgie +Graham. This precedence over Georgie gave Marion the opportunity which +she could not resist. She would play the Polonaise herself, thus forcing +Georgie to choose another piece almost without a moment's notice. + +Do not despise her, my friends; she was very much like other girls, and +had a natural desire to punish Georgie for all the mean, petty +annoyances to which she had been subjected at her hands. A very wrong +desire, I grant you, and one for which she blamed herself very much; but +she had it, and consequently as a faithful chronicler I must write it. + +But do not for a moment suppose that she intended publicly to disgrace +her school-mate; nothing of the kind; she knew that Georgie was +perfectly capable, and perfectly willing to play any of her music before +no matter how many strangers. She only wanted to provoke her, and spoil +her nicely arranged plan of playing a very difficult and very brilliant +piece of music, better than any of the other girls would be able to +play, as they had not had the advantages of practising expressly for the +occasion which she had taken. She was not at all jealous of Georgie, for +although they were generally considered the rival pianists of the +establishment, the rivalry was entirely on Georgie's side. + +Many might say that they played equally well, but the few who truly +loved music for its own sake missed something in Georgie's playing which +they found in Marion's. + +The secret was this: Georgie played from a love of the admiration and +praise she received, and from an ambitious resolution she had made when +a little child, that no one she knew should play better than she did +herself. Consequently every one was struck with the accuracy and +rapidity of her execution, and the brilliancy of her touch in all +difficult music; but in more quiet pieces,--pieces that required that +the soul of the performer should thrill through every chord, and vibrate +with every touch of the piano, that the full depth and beauty of their +perfect harmony might be conveyed to the listener's ear,--then it was +that Georgie's playing seemed cold and mechanical, while that of Marion +seemed an interpretation of the purest ideas of the composer. + +Friday afternoon came at last. Throughout the house the two pianos had +been going at almost every hour in the day; early and late, before +breakfast and after supper, might be heard duets, solos, and songs, +until those scholars who were not to perform at the musical soirée +declared themselves thoroughly disgusted with the whole affair, and +hoped Miss Stiefbach would never have another. + +This afternoon, however, no one was allowed to go near the piano, and +every girl was obliged to learn her lessons for Monday, and take her +usual amount of exercise, notwithstanding that they had all begged and +entreated to be permitted to give their last moments to music. Miss +Stiefbach was obdurate and held her ground, for she knew the girls were +all very much excited, and that nothing but a strict attention to other +things would sufficiently calm them to enable them to play at all, that +night. + +But just before tea excitement reigned supreme. To be sure it was +divided and subdivided by being confined to the various rooms where the +scholars were dressing themselves for the evening; still, if an entire +stranger had walked through the lower part of the house where everything +was quiet, and no one was to be seen except Miss Christine, who was +arranging some beautiful flowers that had mysteriously made their +appearance that afternoon, he would have felt perfectly sure that some +event of an unusual and highly interesting nature was about to take +place. As a rule all the scholars dressed very plainly, for Miss +Stiefbach's motto regarding dress which she endeavored to instill into +the youthful minds about her was, "Neatness, not display." + +But notwithstanding the fact that ordinarily all finery was eschewed, +almost every girl had stowed away in her trunk at least one dress a +little more elaborate than the rest of her wardrobe; a set of pretty +jewelry, or handsome ribbons, "in case anything should happen;" and now +something was actually going to happen; the dull routine of school-life +was to be broken in upon, and consequently the little vanities of this +world would have a chance to air themselves. + +"To friz, or not to friz! that is the question!" exclaimed Marion, as +she turned from her looking-glass and appealed to Florence, who was +buttoning her best-fitting cloth boots. + +"Why, friz of course; you know it's the most becoming." + +"Oh, I know that well enough; but you see I was too sleepy to put it up +last night, and now I shall have to do it with hot slate-pencil, and +it's the ruination of the hair." + +"I guess it won't hurt it for just this once, and this is certainly a +great occasion," answered Florence; "what are you going to wear on +it,--cherry?" + +"Oh, no! that lovely gold band you gave me; it just suits my dress, and +lights up beautifully. I like to wear only one color when I can." + +"That is all very well for you to say (these boots are _rayther_ snug), +because you're a blonde, and look well in plain colors; but I'm such a +darkey that nothing but red and yellow suits me," said Florence. + +"So much the better. I don't think there is anything handsomer than a +rich orange or a bright scarlet, and sometimes a little of both is just +the thing. There! how does that look?" continued Marion, as she put the +last hair-pin in her back braids, gave an extra touch to the gleaming +waves of her front hair, and straightened the narrow gold satin band +which ran through them. + +"Perfectly lovely!" enthusiastically cried Florence; "you've got it just +high enough without being a bit too high, and those crimps are heavenly! +Now put on your dress; I want to see the whole effect before I get +myself up." + +"I don't think it is quite long enough, do you?" asked Marion, in a +doubtful tone, as she shook out the folds of a rich Irish poplin, and +threw it over her head; "it is so awfully hard to get a dress just +the right length, when you are not old enough for a train, and too old +to have it up to your knees! But there! how's that?" and she turned for +her friend's final verdict. + +"Lovely! just lovely! That is the prettiest shade of green I _ever_ saw; +and _such_ a poplin! Where did you get it?" + +"Uncle George brought it to me from Ireland; wasn't it good of him? But +come, Florence, you really must hurry; I expect the tea-bell will ring +any minute; it's a blessed thing Miss Stiefbach put tea off half an +hour, or we should never have been dressed beforehand. O Flo! what a +stunning dress! I never saw it before." + +"_Do_ you like it? I didn't show it to you, for I was afraid you would +think it was terribly niggery; but I saw it in Chandler's window, and +just walked in and bought it without saying boo to auntie, and it really +is quite becoming to me, I'm so black." + +"Becoming! I should think it was; I never saw you look so well in +anything in your life. If the thing had been made for you it couldn't +have suited your style better, and that Roman-gold jewelry is just right +for it; in fact, as mademoiselle used to say, you are decidedly 'comme +il faut.'" + +The two girls certainly made a charming picture as they stood together, +each interested and eager that the other should look her best. + +Marion's beautiful hair fell slightly over her forehead in soft, curling +waves, seeming even lighter and brighter than ever, and making the +contrast with her dark eyes and eyebrows all the more marked. Her fair +skin and glowing cheeks were set off to advantage by the rich green +dress she wore, which, though simply trimmed and in keeping with her +years, was very handsome. + +It would have been hard to choose between the two, for each in her own +style was certainly very lovely. + +Florence's hair was drawn off from her low, broad forehead, as she +always wore it, and she had nothing on it but a tiny gilt band, like a +golden thread encircling her head; which, though she did not know it, +was a perfect Clytie in contour. Her dress was a French poplin, the +ground a rich blue, while all over it, at regular intervals, were +embroidered singularly odd-shaped figures in the brightest-colored +silks, giving it a peculiar, piquante appearance, and perfectly suiting +the wearer's brunette beauty. + +Perhaps I have given too much time and space to dress; but parents and +guardians may skip the above passage, as it is written expressly for +young girls, who, I know from personal experience, are very naturally +interested in such matters. + +The hour at last arrived. The grand-piano stood between the +folding-doors which separated the two large parlors; in the back room +was Miss Christine, surrounded by all the school, and in the front sat +Miss Stiefbach and the invited guests, about twenty in number, all of +them refined, cultivated persons, many of them quite severe musical +critics. + +Mr. Stein fluttered from one room to the other, trying hard to appear +unconcerned; but I doubt if any of his pupils were in a greater state of +excitement than he. It had been an undecided question whether or no he +should stand by the piano and turn over the music; but the majority +concluded that he would only make them more nervous, so he retired to +the back of the front parlor, in a position where he could command a +view of every note in the key-board. + +M. Béranger made his appearance at an early hour, and declared his +intention of sitting with Miss Christine, to help her preserve order. +She remonstrated with him, telling him he could hear the music to much +better advantage in the other room; but nevertheless, when the company +was all seated, and silence reigned supreme preparatory to the opening +duet, M. Béranger quietly ensconced himself in the back parlor. + +The fatal moment had at last arrived; the musicale was about to +commence. + +Marion sat through the first duet, trying hard not to think of herself, +and to listen to the music; but she heard nothing but a confusion of +sounds, the beating of her own heart sounding loudest of all. Florence's +piece she did enjoy, and joined heartily in the applause which followed +its 'finale,' and gave her friend's hand a congratulatory squeeze, as +she came back to the seat beside her. But in a very few moments Alice +Howard's song was ended, and as the murmurs of approbation died away, +Marion took her seat at the piano. + +To all outward appearance she was calm and self-possessed, and with a +strong effort she summoned her almost indomitable will to her aid and +struck the first chords clearly and decisively. Through the first two +pages everything went well; but just as she was about to turn over her +music, she missed one or two notes with her left hand. No one who was +not perfectly familiar with every bar of the music would have noticed +the omission; but to Marion it seemed as if she had made a terrible +discord. Her forced composure left her, and all her nervousness came +back again; she turned over hastily; the music slipped from her fingers +and fell to the keys; she grasped it blindly with both hands, but the +loose sheets fluttered to the floor, and confused, embarrassed, and +mortified almost beyond endurance; she stooped to pick them up, amid a +silence which was unbroken, save by Miss Stiefbach, who said in cold, +hard tones:-- + +"Miss Berkley, do not attempt to repeat your piece; such carelessness is +unpardonable." + +The hot blood rushed to Marion's face; then as suddenly receded, leaving +it deathly white. She rose from the piano, and with a firm step and +untrembling lips walked quietly to her seat. But although externally she +was so calm as to appear almost indifferent, her mind was in a state of +the wildest excitement. The air immediately about her seemed filled with +a confusion of sounds, rushing, whirring, whirling about her; while the +dead silence of the room seemed to take palpable shape and weight, +crushing upon her, until she felt as if she must rush from the room to +break through the unbearable stillness, or scream aloud to silence the +imaginary sounds that were ringing in her ears. + +But she did neither; she sat quietly in her seat, the object of stealthy +but almost general scrutiny. Some of the girls looked at her with +pitying, sympathizing eyes; those who did not like her exchanged glances +of satisfaction; but all refrained from speaking to her, or otherwise +showing their sympathy,--all but Florence; she slipped her hand into her +friend's, and there it remained for the rest of the evening. + +When Marion first struck the piano, and Georgie Graham saw what she was +about to play, her rage and indignation knew no bounds; but when the +music fell, and Marion stood mortified, and, as she thought, disgraced +in the eyes of every one, her spirits rose to a most unparalleled +height, and elated and radiant with satisfaction she took her seat at +the piano, and played the Polonaise almost faultlessly; better than she +had ever played it before. + +With the exception of Marion, all the pupils acquitted themselves with a +great deal of credit; but for a while her failure seemed to cast a +slight shadow over the evening's enjoyment; for her beauty, and the +heroic manner with which she had borne her disgrace, aggravated as it +was by Miss Stiefbach's very unnecessary rebuke, had won for her the +admiration of all the guests, most of whom were entire strangers to her. + +After the close of the musicale, as pupils and guests were mingling +together, and the room was noisy with animated conversation, Miss +Christine went up to Marion, who was standing in a retired corner of the +room talking to M. Béranger, and taking her hand said:-- + +"Marion, now that we are apparently unobserved I must tell you how sorry +I was that Miss Stiefbach should have spoken so severely to you. I am +sure she was not aware how unkind it seemed; she did not intend to hurt +your feelings, and probably thought from your apparent calmness that you +were really not at all nervous, and that dropping your music was nothing +but carelessness and want of interest." + +Marion made no reply, her lips seemed glued together, and Miss Christine +continued:-- + +"I was surprised that Georgie should have played the Polonaise. I rarely +speak of the faults of one girl to another, and perhaps I ought not now, +but I must say, I did not think I had a scholar who would be so unkind +as to choose a piece she knew one of her companions had chosen." + +The rebuke intended for Georgie struck directly home to Marion. She had +been struggling with herself ever since Miss Christine had stood there, +knowing that she ought, before the evening was over, to tell her teacher +the unworthy part she had acted; now every sense of honor and justice +compelled her to do so. But directly beside her stood M. Béranger, and +her pride rebelled at being again disgraced in his eyes, for his +kindness and forbearance, ever since their first lesson, had won for +him her sincere esteem and regard. The struggle was severe, but +momentary, for raising her eyes to Miss Christine, she said:-- + +"It was a very contemptible thing, Miss Christine; nothing but an +intense desire for revenge could have induced me to select a piece I +knew Georgie had previously chosen." + +"You, Marion!" exclaimed Miss Christine; nothing else, just that +exclamation; but the tone of her voice cut Marion more deeply than any +harsh rebuke could have done. + +"Yes, Miss Christine, I chose it, knowing that Georgie had practised it +on purpose to play it to-night. I thought as I was to play first I +should be able to disconcert her. I am heartily ashamed of myself; my +disgrace was nothing but what I deserved." + +For a moment there was silence. Miss Christine was shocked to find +Marion could have done such a thing. Sarcastic, haughty, disagreeable to +her companions in many ways, she had known her to be, but mean never; +she could not understand it. + +If she had known the disgraceful part Georgie had really taken in the +affair; if she had heard of the eaves-dropping of which she had been +guilty in the school-room, to punish which had been quite as great an +inducement for Marion's conduct as a desire for revenge, she would have +felt very differently; but of that Marion said nothing. But Miss +Christine was too kind-hearted, and understood her pupil too well to +speak sternly to her; besides, she knew it must have cost Marion a +severe struggle to exonerate Georgie at the expense of herself, and +doubly so in the presence of M. Béranger. In fact, when the first shock +of surprise had passed off, she felt that the nobleness of Marion's +expiation had atoned for her fault, and she could not help thinking that +there were many girls in the school who would have held their tongues, +and been only too glad to thrust the blame on to one who was so +intensely disagreeable to them. + +These thoughts flashed through Miss Christine's mind in a moment, and +holding out her hand, she said in her kindest tones;-- + +"My dear Marion, I am sure this is the last time you will ever do +anything so unworthy of yourself." + +Marion's only reply was a warm pressure of that dear hand, as she turned +and left the room. + +"Do you not judge Mlle. Berkley too hasteelie?" whispered M. Béranger. +"There is something behind all this, which you do not yet perceive. I +feel verie sure that Mees Georgie do know more tan she do tell." + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +SARAH BROWN SPEAKS HER MIND. + + +"Now where do you suppose they came from, Marion? I don't know of any +one round here who has a conservatory; they must have come from +Springfield. Who could have sent them?" asked Sarah Brown. + +"I'm sure I don't know; aren't they lovely?" replied Marion; "but here +comes Miss Christine,--let's ask her. Miss Christine," she said, turning +round quickly as her teacher entered the room, "who sent you these +lovely flowers yesterday?" + +Miss Christine started at the abrupt, point-blank question, and looked a +trifle confused:-- + +"Why, really, Marion, I--that is,--M. Béranger sent them here; but, as +the box had no address, I presume they were for the benefit of the whole +school. I certainly did not intend to monopolize them." + +"No, of course you didn't, you dear old Christian!" exclaimed Marion +with the affectionate familiarity she often used towards her teacher; +"of course you didn't; and as they were meant for all of us, you won't +mind it a bit if I appropriate this little sprig of geranium, and do +just as I've a mind to with it, now will you?" + +"No, I don't think I could refuse that, although it does seem a pity to +take it out of water. Why, Marion, what are you going to do with +it?--put it in my hair! No, no, it's too pretty, and it will wither in +such a little while; do take it out!" + +"No, I shan't do any such a thing. You gave it to me to do just what I +chose with it, and I _choose_ to have it in your hair; so you must not +take it out." + +"No, Miss Christine, don't!" exclaimed Sarah Brown. "You ought to keep +it in, even if it's only to please Marion, for most girls would have +stuck it in their own heads; but she never _says_ anything or _does_ +anything like most girls." + +"Hold your tongue, Sarah!" peremptorily replied Marion; "you don't know +what you're talking about." + +"Yes, I do," replied Sarah, emphasizing every word with a shake of the +head. "I know perfectly well what I am talking about, and you know I +know it, and _I_ know I shan't know it much longer without letting +somebody else know it; so there!" + +"Well, Sarah," said Miss Christine, who could not resist joining Marion +in a hearty laugh at Sarah's excited and rather incoherent sentence, "if +you and Marion know what you are talking about, that is certainly more +than I can say, and as it is never polite to allude to a secret in the +presence of a third party. I think I ought to be that somebody else, +whom you are 'to let know it;'" and Miss Christine shook her head in +laughing imitation of Sarah. + +"Well, I'll tell you one thing, Miss Christine; it's about Marion's--" + +"Sarah Brown, hold your tongue!" cried Marion, at the same time clapping +her hand over Sarah's mouth. + +"Marion Berkley, I shan't!" cried Sarah, struggling to free herself, and +gasping out at intervals broken sentences perfectly unintelligible to +Miss Christine; then, as Marion loosed her hold, she shouted: "It's +about Marion's break-down! there!" + +"Sarah Brown, you'll be sorry for this!" cried Marion, her eyes flashing +with indignation. + +"Sarah! Marion!" exclaimed Miss Christine, looking from one to the +other in utter amazement. "I don't understand you at all; what is this +all about?" + +"She doesn't know what she is talking about, and I think she had better +mind her own business!" exclaimed Marion. + +"I do know what I'm talking about, and it's just as much my business as +it is any one else's; if it isn't, I'll make it so." + +"Girls! girls! you cannot think how you grieve and astonish me. Do you +know how you are talking? Your language is unladylike in the extreme. +But"--turning to Sarah--"even that is not so unpardonable as the +thoughtlessness which could lead you to speak of Marion's failure last +night, when you know it must be extremely unpleasant for her to have it +alluded to in any way." + +"Miss Christine, it's too bad for you to speak so to me," cried Sarah, +the tears now streaming down her cheeks, and her voice pitched to its +most excited tones. "You know I just worship Marion, only she won't let +me show it, and I never did an unkind thing to her in my life; but I +told her I should tell about the Polonaise, and so I will; no one shall +stop me!" + +"Sarah, you forget to whom you are speaking," quietly replied Miss +Christine, adding as she glanced at Marion, and noticed that she stood +with her lips tightly compressed, "If you have the affection for Marion +which you profess, you will cease to speak of a subject which evidently +annoys her." + +"Well, it has no business to annoy her, and I mean to tell every girl in +the school," retorted Sarah, now fairly beside herself; and raising her +voice until she fairly shouted, she called to the girls who were passing +the door, on the way to the library, "Come in here, girls! come in here, +every one of you! Yes, Georgie Graham, you too, I want you all. Now +listen to what I've got to say. You all thought Marion Berkley ought to +have been ashamed of herself to play the Polonaise when she knew Georgie +was going to play it; and you were all glad she broke down, because +almost all of you hate her, and are jealous of her because she's the +handsomest, and the smartest, and the very best girl in the school every +way; and because she doesn't say one thing to your back and another to +your face, the way most of you do; but I'll tell you why she played it. +She played it because that creature there--" pointing her finger at +Georgie, who happened to be the central figure in the group of +astonished listeners--"because that girl was in the anteroom +_listening_, _eaves-dropping_, as she always is, and knew all about the +musicale two weeks before any of us, and practised, and practised, by +stealth, just for no other reason than to show off before company, and +put Marion in the shade; and Marion played it just to punish Georgie for +that and fifty other mean things she's done. I suppose you think it was +hateful in Marion; but _I_ don't; I only just wish that for once she'd +had a little of Georgie's _brass_,--for _she's_ got enough for every +girl in the school,--and then she wouldn't have broken down. But I +haven't done yet," exclaimed the excited girl, after stopping to take +breath, "I haven't done yet; when Miss Christine told Marion how sorry +she was that Georgie should have played the piece she had chosen, Marion +told her the whole truth up and down. No, not the whole truth. She never +told about Georgie's listening to Miss Stiefbach; no, not a word! She +just told her she deserved to break down herself for having treated +Georgie so unkindly; and there aren't a dozen girls in the school but +what would have told on another to save herself. Now, who do you think +was the mean one, I should like to know?" and Sarah glanced round the +room with an air of triumph; then as suddenly changing her expression +to one of contempt, she exclaimed, "You needn't say anything. I know you +think just as Marion does, that I've been meddling in business that does +not concern me; but I don't care _that_ for one of you;" and, snapping +her fingers in the air, Sarah sat down in the nearest chair, completely +exhausted by her harangue. + +"Young ladies! young ladies! what is the meaning of this noise?" +exclaimed Miss Stiefbach, in utter amazement, as she entered the room by +another door from that around which almost all the scholars were +crowded. "Why are you not at work in the library? Miss Christine, +explain the cause of this excitement." + +Miss Christine, who had heretofore been completely overpowered by the +suddenness and volubility of Sarah's outbreak, saw at a glance that +something must be done at once to prevent her from going through the +whole again to Miss Stiefbach; for she dreaded the effect it might have +upon her sister, knowing that she would look upon the matter from her +cold, calculating point of view, and probably punish Sarah severely for +her disrespectful conduct, utterly ignoring the generous impulses which +had led to it. As for Georgie, when she hastily glanced at her, and saw +her usually haughty head hanging in shame and confusion, she felt that +for the present at least her punishment was sufficiently severe. So +stepping forward and laying her hand on Sarah's shoulder, at the same +time placing herself almost directly in front of her, she turned to Miss +Stiefbach and said:-- + +"Sarah has been rather disrespectful to me; but I do not think she was +intentionally rude. I shall have to send her to her own room to do her +mending by herself. The rest of the young ladies must go at once to the +library, and I will be with them, directly." + +Miss Stiefbach made no reply, although it did not escape her keen eye +that more had been going on than she was made aware of; but she knew by +previous experience that there were times when Miss Christine's judgment +was wiser than her own. She turned towards the door, and with a +commanding gesture waved the girls out. Marion hesitated, and would have +held back, but Miss Stiefbach coldly remarked:-- + +"Marion, unless you, too, are in disgrace, you will please leave the +room;" and motioning her to lead the way sailed out of the parlor. + +The instant they were gone Sarah threw her arms around her teacher's +neck and sobbed aloud. + +"I could not help it, Sarah; indeed I could not," said Miss Christine +with a troubled voice as she stroked her pupil's hair; "it certainly was +very wrong of you to behave so, and if I had not sent you to your room I +should have had to tell Miss Stiefbach all about it, and I am afraid she +would have punished you more severely than I have." + +"It isn't that, Miss Christine, it isn't that," sobbed Sarah. "I'd a +great deal rather go to my room; and you knew it when you sent me there. +It's about Marion; she said she'd never speak to me again if I told; she +didn't know I knew about it until this morning." + +"Well, how did you know it, dear; did any one tell you?" + +"No, and I wasn't listening either," exclaimed Sarah, raising her +flushed face; "but several of us knew how Georgie found out about the +musicale, and I noticed, just as Marion did, how much she had practised +the Polonaise, and last night I heard her tell one of the girls she was +glad Marion broke down, it just _did her good_; and I determined then +I'd pay her for it. I was standing very near you, though you did not +know it, when Marion told you all about it last night, and I thought it +was outrageous that she should bear all the blame; and before M. +Béranger too! It was a shame! But oh, dear, Miss Christine, it hasn't +done a bit of good! She'll just hate me now, I know she will, for she +almost made me promise not to tell." + +"I cannot say I quite approve of your method of doing Marion justice, +but I hardly think she will be very severe to such a disinterested +little champion," said Miss Christine, who could not help smiling at the +utter wretchedness of Sarah's tone; "however, here she comes to speak +for herself." + +"O Miss Christine, do come in there! I made an excuse to get me some +darning-cotton; but Miss Stiefbach's reading the most stupid book of +sermons; do come in and take her place! What!" as she caught sight of +Sarah, "is she here yet?" + +"Yes, Marion, she is here, and is making herself perfectly miserable, +because she believes she has made you an enemy for life. Don't you think +you can convince her of the contrary?" + +"O Marion!" sobbed Sarah, "please don't be mad with me, for I really +could not help it. I thought I was doing it all for your good, and when +I got started I _could_ not stop till I had it all out." + +"You little bit of a goose! did you really think I was going to be angry +with you after making such a thrilling stump-speech in my favor?" and +throwing herself on her knees beside Sarah's chair, Marion looked up at +her with a smiling face, but with eyes not undimmed by tears. + +"And you really think I did it from kindness?" + +"Yes, I certainly do!" + +"And you won't snub me any more?" cried Sarah, giving Marion a +passionate kiss. + +"Oh, I can't promise you that," laughed Marion; "a little, healthy +snub, now and then, does you good, and I shouldn't be doing my duty if I +didn't give it to you, but"--and her voice assumed the tender, +affectionate tone so rarely heard by her school-mates, and which touched +Sarah even more than her words--"I shall never be really unkind to you +again, and I promise to love you as much as you wish." + +"You really mean it, Marion? You really mean that you will love me?" + +"Yes, I really mean it. Miss Christine shall be my witness that I have +this day gained a friend." + +"Yes, my dear," answered Miss Christine, who had been a silent but +interested observer of this little scene: "and a truer one I do not +think you could have." + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +THE WANDERER RETURNS. + + +For several days the musicale, and the events connected with it, formed +the subjects of general conversation. At first Sarah's remarkable +address to her school-mates appeared likely to have a contrary effect +from that which she desired, being calculated to make Marion more +disliked than ever by those to whom she had been held up by her zealous +little champion as superior to themselves in every way. + +But Sarah, despite her quick temper, was a great favorite in the school, +for her warm heart and generous nature made her as ready to do any one a +kindness as she was to fly into a passion. She always spoke the truth, +and if she unintentionally wounded or even annoyed one of her companions +she was ever ready to make reparation. Perhaps many of them felt the +truth of her remarks, and thought that in this case silence was their +only safeguard. + +Miss Christine had spoken privately to the older scholars, entreating +them not to harbor any ill-will towards either of the three immediately +concerned, and so the matter was passed quietly over, and that which in +many instances could have had nothing but evil results seemed likely in +this one to be productive of good; for Marion, fearing that she had been +the means of depriving Sarah of some of her warmest friends, almost +unconsciously assumed a different bearing towards all her companions, +and for her new friend's sake exhibited an interest in persons and +things about her which she had heretofore treated with supreme +indifference. And so the days wore on, and Thanksgiving was rapidly +approaching. None of the girls who lived at a distance were going home +this year, and the house was filled with lamentations, and half-stifled +fears lest certain boxes should fail to make their appearance. + +Marion had as yet received no definite news from her mother regarding +Jemima Dobbs, and her heart was filled with disappointment when she +thought of the lonely Thanksgiving they were likely to have at the +farm-house in place of the bright and happy one she had pictured to +herself. + +She was sitting in her window one morning thinking of Aunt Bettie, when +her door suddenly opened, a voice cried, "Look out for your head!" and a +thick letter was shot into her lap. She caught it eagerly, not stopping +to think whose was the unerring hand that had so accurately hit its +mark, and tearing off the envelope in true school-girl fashion, she +glanced rapidly along the pages, when her eyes were caught with the +words: "Jemima will be at the B---- station Wednesday, when the seven +o'clock train arrives; be sure and have some one there to meet her." +With a cry of delight Marion ran to the door to call Florence, and was +met by that young woman at the head of the stairs. She received the +happy tidings as enthusiastically as Marion could possibly wish, and +going back to their room, and seating themselves in their usual window, +Marion read the letter aloud:-- + + "BOSTON, Nov. 24th. + + "MY DEAR DAUGHTER:--Papa has just gone down town; Fred is at + school; and Charley radiantly happy in the possession of a new + mechanical toy, which I expect will be demolished in a few moments, + as that young gentleman is developing a surprising fancy for + inquiring into the 'why and wherefore' of everything he takes hold + of. As everything seems to promise a quiet time for me, I think I + will devote myself to you, as I have quite a long story to tell + you. + + "I know you have been very much disappointed that my recent + letters have contained no news of your protégé; but I am in hopes + that this one will put all your anxiety to rest, and quite equal + your most ardent expectations. + + "After waiting some time, Mrs. Benson received a letter from the + lady in Charlestown, with whom the girl calling herself Arabella + Dobbs has gone to live, in which she wrote that Arabella had stayed + with her three weeks, but had left, thinking she could find work in + some wholesale clothing establishment, that would prove more + profitable than living out. + + "The lady also voluntarily wrote, that she had every reason to + think the girl was living under an assumed name, as she had + repeatedly answered questions directed to the cook, whose name was + Jemima, and seemed very much confused, when after doing so several + times, remarks were made, and excused herself by saying that her + mother used to call her Jemima 'just for fun.' + + "Of course we were not much longer in doubt as to the identity of + Miss Arabella, but we were, if possible, wider from the mark than + ever, for we had not the most remote idea to what clothing + establishment she had gone, and there being several in the city, it + did not seem very probable that without much difficulty we should + be able to find the right one. While I stood talking with Mrs. + Benson, as she was looking over the directory, a girl came up to + the desk. I moved aside that she might more easily speak to Mrs. + Benson, and she asked in a weak, tired voice, 'Any letters for me, + ma'am?'--'What name?' demanded Mrs. Benson, running her finger down + the column of the book, and not raising her eyes. 'Arabella Dobbs,' + replied the servant-girl. + + "Up jumped Mrs. Benson, slamming the covers of the directory + together with a report like a pistol, while I turned, equally + unable to conceal my astonishment, and looked at the girl as if she + had been a ghost. As you may imagine, such a proceeding could not + be very agreeable to the poor thing, and she looked from one to the + other with a bewildered, half-frightened expression. + + "I must say at my first glance I was not favorably impressed with + her. I had looked for a round-faced, good-natured-looking country + girl; perhaps a trifle 'airy' after her short experience of city + life; but I saw a thin, angular face and figure, the hair drawn + tightly off her forehead up to the very top of her head, and done + in an immense waterfall; a little, round hat tipped forward, the + brim just reaching her forehead, across which lay a row of + corkscrew curls; her dress, which had originally been a good, + serviceable delaine, but was now so soiled as to almost defy + description, was looped up and puckered into a great bunch behind, + in imitation of the panniers worn by the fashionable young ladies + of the day. All this I took in at a glance, and confess to being + rather disgusted with the young woman; but when I looked carefully + at her face all such uncharitable feelings vanished, for it bore + the marks of recent illness and real distress. + + "Do not think, my dear Mab, that I kept the poor creature standing + as long as it has taken me to write all this; my thoughts flew much + faster than my pen ever can. I went up to her, and putting out my + hand said, before Mrs. Benson could recover from her surprise, + "Jemima, I believe there are no letters for you now, but I can tell + you about your dear mother, who is very, very lonely without her + daughter." + + "It is useless to give you an account of our conversation, for I + cannot remember it myself; the poor girl was so overcome by my + unexpected kindness, and her own joy at finding a hand held out to + her when she most needed help, that she opened her heart to me at + once. The person who influenced her to come to Boston proved to be + anything but a friend, and Jemima has paid heavily for following + her advice; it was through her, as Mrs. Dobbs supposed, that she + was induced to give her name as Arabella, and that act was the + key-note to all her misfortune. She succeeded in getting work at a + clothing establishment, at what seemed to her country ears most + liberal terms; but work as hard as she could, she could earn but + little more than enough to pay her board. Crowded into a room with + more than twenty other girls, bending over her work in the stifled + atmosphere from morning until night, soon told upon her health, + accustomed as she had always been to pure country air and bodily + exercise, and she had hardly been at the place three weeks when she + was taken ill with a violent fever. The woman with whom she + boarded, although a cold, grasping creature, was prevented from + sending her away by the entreaties of the other boarders, who, as + the fever was not of a malignant nature, insisted upon having her + kept in the house. Some of the girls were very kind to her; but + they could give her but little attention, as their time was mostly + passed in the workroom. After the first severity of the fever + passed, and the tiresome days of convalescence were reached, the + poor thing yearned for home and dear, familiar faces; she had sent + her friends to Mrs. Benson's several times to inquire for letters, + but with most incredible short-sightedness had always told them to + give the name Arabella Dobbs, entirely forgetting that her mother + did not know she had thrown aside the countrified Jemima. + + "The day I saw her was the first day she had walked out, and she + had literally dragged herself along the street, and up the two long + flights leading to the office. She had given all her dresses, with + the exception of the one she had on, to her landlady, and the woman + had threatened to turn her out if she did not pay her five dollars + that night. I fortunately had the carriage with me, and drove with + Jemima to her boarding-place. The woman was all smiles and + blandishments when she saw me, and quite overpowered Jemima with + her tender inquiries as to how she felt after her walk; but I cut + her short by telling her I had come to take Jemima home with me, + and paid the five dollars she owed her. I think the woman would + have asked more if she had not seen I was pretty determined; and so + promising to send for Jemima's trunk, which was now almost entirely + empty, I brought the exhausted girl here, that she might rest a few + days and gain strength for her journey. She evidently is longing + for home, and I do not believe she will feel like herself until she + gets there. I am having her a good, warm dress made, and shall give + her my plain gray silk bonnet, that her mother's good sense need + not be shocked at sight of her hat, which is about the size of a + small saucer. I think she is very much humbled; she shows it in + many ways; most of all in her dress, and I am happy to say the + corkscrew ringlets no longer adorn her brow. Jemima will be at the + B---- station when the seven o'clock train arrives; be sure and + have some one there to meet her. + + "And now, my dear, I have only time to say that we are all well, + and hoping to hear from you soon. I know this letter will be more + interesting to you than if it contained pages of spicy news. I seem + to see you and Florence enjoying its contents. Give my love to her, + and accept more than ever a letter carried before for yourself, + from your fond + + "MAMMA." + +"She'll be here to-morrow, as true as you live!" exclaimed Marion. "Oh, +I am so glad! for now Aunt Bettie will have a Thanksgiving after all, +and I was afraid it would be anything but that." + +"Of course you'll go up there with her." + +"No, I shan't. I shall go this afternoon, if Miss Christine will let me, +and of course she will, and tell auntie that Jemima is found, and will +probably be with her by Saturday; then you see Jemima will surprise her +by getting there to-morrow, for I must have a surprise about it +somewhere. I shall tell auntie how sick Jemima has been, and that she +must not be the least bit harsh with her." + +"But I should think you would want to go too, so as to see the fun," +said Florence. + +"Fun! I don't think there'll be much fun in it. I believe it will be +rather a _teary_ time at first, and I prefer to be out of the way." + +"In other words, you think it would be a little easier for them to be by +themselves; so you give up seeing the 'grand tableau' at the close of +the play, which never would have happened but for you." + +"Don't be a goose, Flo!" laughed Marion, who, although radiant with +delight, and a secret sort of satisfaction, tried to remain cool, for +fear she should appear too much pleased with the part she had played in +the affair. + +"Who are you going to send to the station?" asked Florence. + +"I'm going myself." + +"Do you suppose Miss Stiffy's going to let you march off by yourself two +days in succession?" + +"Not a bit of it," replied Marion. "I'm going to get up a party to go to +the farm this afternoon, and I'll manage it so that I can hang back, and +tell the good news after you have all gone out." + +"And then rush off and not give her a chance to thank you." + +"I dare say," replied Marion; "but I mustn't stop here; it's time we +went down, for the clock struck five minutes ago." + +Marion was as good as her word, and arranged a party for Aunt Bettie's +that afternoon, taking care, however, to have Florence gain the required +permission, as she knew she should want the same favor the next day. She +managed to make Aunt Bettie understand in a few words all that was +necessary of her daughter's story, leaving it for Jemima to make up +deficiencies, and hurried off, overtaking her companions before they had +missed her. + +The next day, finding out at what hour the train in which Jemima was +coming would arrive, she walked to the village, made arrangements with +a man who was in the habit of doing errands for Miss Stiefbach, to have +a comfortable covered wagon ready to take Jemima and her trunk to the +farm, and then went to the station to await the arrival of the cars. As +she sat waiting, the station-master came into the room, and planting +himself in front of her, with both hands in his pockets, and chewing a +toothpick suddenly accosted her with:-- + +"Goin' deown?" + +"Going where?" asked Marion, not overpleased at his advances. + +"Deown--deown to Boston;" jerking his thumb over his shoulder, as if +that city was situated in the room directly behind him. + +"No, sir." + +"No? 'spectin' someun p'raps." + +Marion made no reply. + +"S'pose you're one o' them gals up t'the schule?" + +Marion still observed a dignified silence. + +"Spectin' one o' the gals?" queried the man, who, being a true Yankee, +was not at all abashed by the coldness with which his questions, or +rather comments, were received. + +"No, sir," replied Marion. + +"You ben't?--_not_ one o' the gals; you're marm, p'raps?" + +"No, sir." + +"Did you say as how you b'longed up t'the schule?" + +"No, I did not say so," replied Marion, too irritated to be amused at +his persistency. + +"Oh, you didn't; wall, I didn't know but p'raps you did, an' ef so, I +hed somethin' to tell yer, that's all;" and whistling a tune he was +about to walk off, when Marion exclaimed:-- + +"I didn't say whether I belonged to the school or not, because you +didn't ask me." + +"Didn't I jest say I s'posed you was one o' them gals up t'the schule?" +demanded the man, still chewing his toothpick, and looking at her as if +his last remark was a poser. + +"So you did," replied Marion; "you stated the fact, and as I didn't say +anything took it for granted I was one of the scholars. When you ask a +direct question perhaps I'll answer it." + +"Aint you a smart un?" exclaimed the man. "Wall now, that's what I call +right deown smart; jest answer to the pint, an' then yer don't git +cornered;" and he nodded his head at her in real admiration. "Wall, I +s'pose I must put it pretty sharp ef I expect to git an answer. Neow," +taking his hat off and rubbing his hands through his hair as if to +collect his ideas, "be you one o' them gals as goes t'the schule jest +abeout tew miles from here?" + +"Yes, I am," replied Marion, who, now that she saw the man had some +motive besides idle curiosity, descended from her loftiness. + +"Wall, I've got a box in here that came deown in the express train, an' +I didn't kneow but what you'd come to see 'bout it. It's fur one o' them +gals, an' 's I haint bin here long I haint much used to the business, +an' I didn't know heow to git it up there." + +"Who is it for?" asked Marion. + +"I don't remember; one o' yer highfalutin sort o' names. But you jest +come and see it;" and he led the way into the "gentleman's room," and +pointed to a large box standing in the corner. + +Marion walked up to it, and glancing at the address exclaimed: "Why, it +is for me!" + +"Wall, neow du tell!" exclaimed the station-master; "neow I call that +quite a coincydance, I du!" + +"Well, I call it a very nice box," laughed Marion; "and there comes a +man I've engaged to do a job for me, and he can take it in his wagon, +and leave it at the school." + +"You're a smart un, I tell you," remarked the man as he lifted the box +and carried it to the door; "you know how to do the bisness, an' no +mistake." + +Before Marion could reply, or take any notice of his remark, the whistle +of an engine was heard, and as she went out on to the platform the train +whizzed up and stopped If it had not have been for her mother's +preparation, she would never have recognized in the thin, subdued, pale +young woman who stepped from the cars, the bright, rosy country girl she +had seen so many times at Aunt Bettie's. + +She welcomed Jemima most cordially, making no allusions that could +embarrass the poor girl, and rattled on a string of good-natured +nothings, as she delivered the little hair trunk into the hands of her +charioteer, and then placed Jemima on the back seat. + +"Aint you goin', miss?" asked the driver. + +"Oh, no! I prefer to walk. Good-by, Jemima. Give my love to your mother, +and tell her I wish her a happy thanksgiving." + +Jemima grasped the hand Marion held out to her, and exclaimed under her +breath, just loud enough for Marion to catch the words, "God bless you, +miss!" It was the first time she had spoken since she arrived; but I +think Marion was satisfied. + +As Marion turned away from the wagon, her eyes fell upon the +station-master, who, with his legs planted at a most respectful distance +from each other, his hands still in the depths of his pockets, and his +head cocked on one side, had been watching all the proceedings with the +deepest interest. As she passed him he nodded his head slowly three +times in the most serious manner, and remarked, with even more than his +former emphasis, "You're a smart un!" + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +MARION'S THANKSGIVING PARTY. + + +"Where have you been?" exclaimed half-a-dozen girls as Marion entered +the gate; "here's a splendid great box just come for you." + +"And who do you think was with the man that brought it?" asked one. +"Why, Mimy Dobbs, as sure as you're born; you know she's been away ever +so long, and the cook told me people thought she'd run away, and was +never coming back at all, because she hated living with her mother up at +that poky old farm." + +"Stuff and nonsense!" exclaimed Marion. "I advise cook to pay more +attention to our dinners, and let other people's affairs alone. But that +is a box worth having, if the inside prove as good as the out. Come, +lend a hand, girls, and help me carry it upstairs, for if Miss Stiffy +sees it I shall have to open it down here, and she'll _advise_ me to put +most of the things in the larder, and that won't suit me at all." + +"Hush!" said Florence, as she took hold of one of the rope-handles with +which the box was provided; "don't make a noise. Miss Stiefbach is in +the secret-chamber; she passed through here a minute ago, and we girls +all hustled round the box, and covered it up with our skirts; for it's +such a bouncer we knew she'd make a fuss about it." + +"Come, ready now! You go first, and don't step on the back of your dress +and stumble," whispered Marion. "Isn't it heavy though? Sarah Brown, do +put your hands under, and give it a boost;--softly now!" + +Amid considerable pulling and tugging, accompanied with half-suppressed +screams, as the corners of the box came in dangerous proximity to the +wall, the two girls managed to get as far as the bend in the stairs, +when, alas! notwithstanding Marion's warning, Florence made a misstep, +and trod on her dress, which threw her violently back on to the stairs, +bringing the box down with full force upon one of her feet. + +"Oh, it's half killing me! it's half killing me! take it up quick, or I +shall scream right out!" exclaimed the poor girl, in low but agonized +tones, which ought to have roused the sympathies of the hardest heart; +but Marion and Sarah, notwithstanding they pitied Florence from the +bottom of their hearts, were so full of laughter that, although they +exerted to the utmost the little strength they had left, they could not +move the box an inch. + +Poor Florence writhed and moaned in perfect torture, and not being a +saint, but a very human girl, exclaimed, in tones of unmistakable anger, +"I wish the old box was where it came from. If you don't stop laughing, +and take it off my foot I'll yell at the top of my lungs!" + +Happily for all parties, Grace Minton and Julia Thayer, who had been +watching them from below, sprang up the stairs, and, lifting the box, +carried it into Marion's room. + +Florence could hardly move, and now that their laughter had subsided, +Marion and Sarah helped her up to her room, making up by their devotion +for their apparent thoughtlessness. + +"Oh, do be careful, Mab; it's almost killing me!" cried Florence, as she +sat down on the edge of the bed, and Marion proceeded to take off her +boot. "Oh! oh! just wait one minute till I brace myself,--there! Now +give one awful pull, and have it over with." + +Marion did as she was told; the boot came off, but poor Florence, +notwithstanding she shut her teeth tight, and clenched the coverlid +with both hands, could not suppress a groan as she threw herself back on +the bed. + +"Quick! quick! some camphor! cologne! rum! anything! she's going to +faint!" cried Sarah Brown, clasping her hands, and jumping straight up +and down, without offering to get either herself. + +"No, I'm not," said Florence, with considerable more energy than is +generally shown by fainting persons; "but it did hurt terribly! Now pull +off my stocking, please, and see if I've made a fuss about nothing. I +shall be provoked if it isn't black and blue!" + +"I know just how you feel," said Marion, as she carefully pulled off the +stocking; "it is a perfect satisfaction when one is hurt to have +something to show for it; but mercy! I never saw such a looking foot; +you'll be laid up for a week!" + +And there certainly seemed every reason to think Marion's prediction +likely to prove true, for the edge of the box had made a deep, red +groove across the instep, and the whole of the upper part of the foot +was rapidly turning black and blue. + +"Bring the wash-basin full of water, and some towels, and bathe her foot +very gently. I'll get some arnica and a roll of linen mother always has +me bring in case I get hurt. What a lucky thing I happened to have it! +Sarah, hand me a tumbler half full of water, and I'll put some arnica in +it; it won't do for her to have it on clear." + +"Marion is right in her element," remarked Florence; "there's nothing +she likes better than fussing over _wounds_." + +"Yes, particularly when they're of such a dangerous nature as this one," +laughed Marion, as she knelt down to apply the arnica. + +After some time had been spent in sympathy and bathing, the injured +foot was nicely bound up, and laid tenderly on the bed, but what to do +for a stocking and shoe was the next question, for the foot was so much +swollen that Florence could not possibly get on her own. + +"I tell you what I'll do," said Sarah Brown, who, now that there seemed +no danger that Florence would faint, had become as cool as it was +possible for her to be; "I'll just steal into Miss Stiffy's room, and +get a pair of stockings out of her drawer, and a slipper too; she's got +about forty pairs of creepers, and she won't miss 'em for a little +while." + +"But suppose you should get caught?" exclaimed Florence; "then it would +all come out, and we had better have told in the first place." + +"Not a bit of it! If we did it would spoil all our fun with Marion's +box, for of course she intends to give us a treat." + +"Of course," replied Marion; "but why don't you go down into the +laundry, and get Biddy to give you a pair? There are some there, I know, +and she'll never tell of us." + +"Why, don't you see, Miss Stiefbach knows exactly how many pairs she +puts into the wash, and if they didn't all come up she'd know it; but +she won't miss 'em if I take them out of the drawer." + +"Well, if you really aren't afraid to risk it; and do be quick about it; +don't make a bit of noise, for if Miss Stiefbach should catch you you'd +never hear the last of it, and I should be to blame," said Florence. + +Sarah hurried along the entry until she reached Miss Stiefbach's room, +which was directly over the private study, and then it occurred to her +that Miss Christine might be in there; so she spoke and called her by +name. Marion and Grace, who stood at the other door, exchanged glances +with Florence, who was still on the bed, and all three looked like +detected culprits. Sarah spoke again; but receiving no answer gently +pushed the door open. She nodded her head to the girls to let them know +that the coast was clear, and stealthily entered the room. Marion and +Grace heard her as she crossed the room; then followed a moment of +terrible silence; then they heard the creaking of the bureau-drawer as +she slowly opened it. + +"Oh!" whispered Marion, "if she _should_ pull it out too far, and the +whole thing come down on the floor with a bang! Miss Stiefbach would +certainly hear it, and know some one was in there." + +"Hush!" answered Grace, "don't suggest anything go horrible! There, +she's shutting it; so far so good; now for the slippers,--they're in the +closet." + +"I know it, and that closet-door creaks awfully!" + +The closet-door did "creak awfully" and no mistake, and it seemed to the +two girls, listening in almost breathless silence, that the noise was +loud enough to be heard all over the house. In a moment they heard Sarah +fumbling over the slippers, of which Miss Stiefbach always kept several +pairs on hand, as she never wore anything else in the house. They felt +comparatively safe now, for no sound was heard from below, except once +in a while a laugh from the girls in the library, and Miss Stiefbach +would not probably leave her study until supper time. They were just +about to turn back into the room to go to Florence, when they heard the +study-door open, and Miss Stiefbach's voice from below, saying, "In one +moment, I am going upstairs to my room." + +What if she had heard the noise and was coming up to ascertain the +cause! Marion rushed along the entry, reaching her teacher's room just +as Sarah was carefully closing and latching the closet-door. + +"O Sarah, hurry! hurry! she's coming upstairs; she's at the foot of the +stairs! Give me that slipper, and hide the stockings under your apron. +Run for your life! No, no, it's no use, she'll meet us; we must face it +out; don't look conscious." + +Sarah tucked the stockings under her apron, Marion slipped her arm +through her friend's, and hiding the slipper between them, with beating +hearts, and almost sure of detection, they walked slowly down the long +entry, directly in the face and eyes of Miss Stiefbach. As they +approached her she stopped, and with more than her usual mildness +remarked:-- + +"Ah! young ladies, thinking of home, I dare say; but I trust you will +have as pleasant a Thanksgiving here as there, although I am happy to +say there has not been the usual influx of boxes." + +The girls laughed slightly in reply, nudging each other quietly as she +passed on, restraining their desire to rush for Marion's room, and not +until the door was fairly closed behind them did their pent-up feelings +find vent, when Marion, tossing the slipper till it hit the ceiling, +shouted:-- + +"Victory! three cheers for General Brown, the Stonewall Jackson of +Massachusetts!" + +"But what in the world should I have done if you hadn't rushed in, and +told me she was coming?" exclaimed Sarah. "Why, I should have run right +into her!" + +"Lucky for you you didn't," remarked Grace; "she'd have given you +Jessie; if you know what that is." + +"Well, Marion and Sarah," said Florence, "I think you're both perfect +angels!" + +"Yes, dear, 'angels in disguise,'" remarked Marion. "Well, this angel +will proceed to put your foot into Miss Stiffy's delicate, little +stocking; the slipper will be a perfect fit, I know; you'll have the +most stylish foot in town. There! now see if you can step on it." + +"Take hold of me, please, for I know I shan't be able to bear my whole +weight on it!" + +"Don't be in a hurry; lean on my shoulder; put your well foot on the +floor, and set the other down very carefully." + +"O Mab, it hurts awfully! I don't see how I can ever get down to tea in +the world; but I shall have to grin and bear it, or else Miss Stiefbach +will find it out." + +"Suppose you go down now," suggested Sarah, "and we can help you into +the dining-room before the bell rings, and if we all crowd round you +Miss Stiefbach won't notice the slipper." + +"That's a capital plan," said Marion; "now put your arm way over my +shoulder, Flo. Grace, take hold of her that side, and Sallie go in front +as a spy. I think this is growing interesting." + +"Very--for you," remarked Florence. + +"You poor child! does it hurt terribly? Don't step on it, hobble along +as well as you can, and lean all your weight on us." + +With much hopping and halting, and little starts and agitated whispers, +as they thought they heard Miss Stiefbach or Miss Christine behind them, +they proceeded on their way, and after some little time reached the +dining-room in safety, and as the tea-bell rang immediately after, and +the scholars all came in together, nothing unusual was noticed; but they +dreaded the moment when they should have to leave the dining-room on +their way to the study, where Miss Stiefbach always read history aloud +for an hour after supper. Marion had been turning it over in her own +mind during the meal, and decided to make an attempt to get rid of the +reading that night. + +"Miss Stiefbach," she asked, as supper was almost over, "didn't you say +you hoped we should all have as pleasant a Thanksgiving as if we were at +home?" + +"I believe I said so, Marion. I certainly meant it." + +"Well, do you know, when I'm at home, our Thanksgiving begins the night +before, and we _never_ spend the evening reading history." + +Miss Stiefbach could not help joining in the general laugh, only her +laugh was a dignified smile, and replied, "I suppose that means that you +would like to give up our history to-night." + +"I don't think we should any of us weep if that should be the case." + +"No, I suppose not; and for fear you might if the reverse order of +things was to take place, I will dispense with the reading to-night, and +Miss Christine and myself will withdraw from the room, leaving you young +ladies to chat over your supper for a while longer." + +"Oh, splendid!" "Thank you, Miss Stiefbach." "Just what we wanted!" +etc., resounded from all sides, as, with a most unusually gracious bow, +Miss Stiefbach left the room with Miss Christine, who nodded and smiled +back at the girls, fully appreciating the pleasure they experienced at +being released from all restraint. + +The closing of the door was a signal for a general hubbub; every tongue +was unloosed, and the spirit of mischief reigned supreme. One girl drank +her tea to find it strongly flavored with salt; another raised her +goblet of water to her lips just as a piece of biscuit went splash to +the bottom of the glass, dashing the contents into her face; a third +turned suddenly on hearing her name called from the other side of the +table, only to be hit plump on the nose with a hard cracker; and so it +went on, a perfect Babel of shouts and cries; for the younger girls, +following the example of the older ones, went in for a regular train, +and pieces of bread and broken crackers were soon flying in every +direction. + +Marion and Sarah took advantage of the confusion to get Florence up to +her room; having succeeded in doing so, Marion produced a hammer, and +getting down on her knees prepared to open that wonderful Thanksgiving +box. + +"I mean to see what there is in it," she said, "and then if I can manage +it, I'll get some of the girls up here, and we'll have a jolly time." + +With much hammering, pulling, and chattering, the cover of the box was +at last removed, and Marion proceeded to display its contents to the +eager eyes of her companions. + +"First of all, here's a note from mamma; now curb your impatience while +I skim it over." + +Marion seated herself on the floor and having glanced down the page +commenced reading it aloud:-- + + "BOSTON, Nov. 21st. + + "DEAR MARION:--I have only a moment to spare, for I have been so + busy getting the box ready, that I have not had time to-day to + write you a long letter, and only scratch off this bit of a note to + let you know we are all well, and almost dreading to-morrow, + because you will not be with us. + + "I hope you will enjoy the contents of your box. I think it would + be an excellent plan for you to hand over some of the most + substantial articles to Miss Stiefbach for the use of the + community; but mind, I only make the suggestion, you can do as you + please about following it; only don't go too far with your frolic, + for I am perfectly sure you will have one. + + "Papa has made an addition to the bill of fare, which I submitted + to him for inspection, of which I am supposed to be entirely + ignorant; for, as he said, he was not entirely sure I would approve + if I knew the contents of the brown-paper box, which you will find + surrounded by your other goodies. As papa superintended the packing + of it himself, and seemed particularly anxious lest it should not + be sufficiently wrapped up, I cannot help suspecting that it has + breakable qualities; whatever it is, my dear daughter, be judicious + in your use of it. + + "My note has stretched into quite a letter. I am expecting the + express-man any moment, so must close now with a thousand loving + good-bys, + + "From your fond + + "MAMMA." + +"I wonder what it can be that papa has sent; something nice, I know! He +doesn't think there is anything in the world too good for me,--an idea +which I don't hesitate to encourage him in. Now, Sarah, just clear off +that table, please, and pull it out into the middle of the room, so I +can have a place to put all these things; toss the books and table-cover +on to the bed there, beside of Florence. + +"First and foremost here are two loaves of cake, and such cake! Flo, do +look at this one! That is some of Biddy's doings, I know; frosted +elegantly, and 'Marion' in the centre all in quirlyqus; that's just like +Bid! she's about as ridiculous over me as father is. What is the reason, +girls,"--and Marion stopped short with the cake in both hands, and a +change in her bright, joyous manner, "--that they all think so much of +me at home, and hardly any one likes me here?" + +"Because you don't--" + +"There, Sarah Brown, that will do; I don't want to hear the rest," +exclaimed Marion, putting up her hand with an impatient gesture. "I +asked a question hastily, without thinking of the consequences. I'll +take your answer for granted, and I know just as well what it would be +as if you'd spoken; so you'll oblige me by keeping quiet." + +"Of course when 'Her Royal Highness' commands, her loyal subjects can +have no choice but to obey," replied Sarah, with an air of mock humility +and submission. + +"Well, see that you do," laughed Marion, "and put this great turkey on +the table. I guess it will be policy for me to follow mamma's advice, +and that gobbler will be handed over to Miss Stiffy. But see here, as +true as you live, mamma has sent me a pair of cold ducks, and here's a +glass of currant jelly; she knows I must have jell with my ducks. Here +is a bundle of something, I'm sure I don't know what--oh, nuts! ever so +many kinds, all cracked; that's splendid! And here is another of +raisins, and a bundle of candy; take some, girls; hand it to Flo, Sarah, +she can open it. Take some of these cookies, do; they're delicious, and +lots of 'em, put in all round everywhere to fill up the cracks. I wish I +could get out papa's box, but all these things are wedged in round it; +besides, I must be careful not to break it, whatever _it_ is. Here's the +last thing,--a bundle of prunes and dates, and from Fred; he knows I've +a weakness for dates. And _now_ for papa's box; help me lift it out, +Sarah, and take it over to the bed. Oh! oh! it's champagne! it's +champagne, as sure as I'm a sinner; who would have believed it? Here's a +card: 'Miss Marion Berkley, with the compliments of her totally depraved +father.' That is papa right over! We always have a great joke about +champagne, because I never drink it, except a glass with him +Thanksgiving and Christmas day; you know I've always been home before, +and he didn't mean I should be cheated out of it this year. Here it is, +two bottles and a half-a-dozen glasses; we'll have a party to-night, a +regular goose party, and drink the health of the dear, old darling." + +"What _would_ Miss Stiefbach say," exclaimed Florence, "if she knew you +were going to have a regular Thanksgiving supper?" + +"Hold up her hands in holy horror; and of course it's a dreadful thing. +I haven't the least doubt but what mamma thought it was cider." + +"Whom are you going to invite?" asked Sarah. + +"Only three besides ourselves; that will be six--a good number. Whom +shall I ask, Flo?" + +"That's for you to say, I should think." + +"Well, you know it doesn't make much difference to me. I'll ask Grace, +of course; she helped get the box up here." + +"And Georgie Graham," dryly suggested Sarah. + +"I rather think not," replied Marion. "Grace Minton, Julia Thayer, and +who shall be the third? Come, say some one, Flo." + +"I wish you'd ask Rachel Drayton," said Florence, in the tone of one +pleading for a great favor. + +"I don't believe she'd come if I asked her." + +"Well, you might try it," said Sarah; "she can't do anything more than +refuse." + +"She won't refuse if Marion asks her cordially." + +"Well, Flo, I'll do it, considering you've been laid up in the cause." + +And Marion ran out of the room, and downstairs, to hunt up the three +girls, and let them know, in as quiet a way as possible, that she wanted +them up in her room in about fifteen minutes. In her inmost heart she +had wanted to ask Rachel Drayton, but did not like to mention her +herself, and she gave the invitation with so much warmth, despite the +necessity of a mysterious whisper, that Rachel accepted at once with a +nod, and a bright smile, such as Marion had never before called up on +that usually serious face. + +When Marion got back to her room, Sarah had arranged the various +articles on the table in something like order, although the variety and +quantity prevented them from making a very elegant appearance. + +"There! how does that look?" she asked as Marion made her appearance. + +"Well, I must say it does not exactly suit me; there's too much on the +table. We couldn't eat it half to-night, if we try; so what's the use of +such a spread? That turkey I'm going to present to Miss Stiefbach; so +that can go into the empty box. Flo, I'm going to appropriate your fancy +basket for the nuts and raisins; it will give a distingué air to the +table, you know. Now what shall we do for plates?" + +"Oh, never mind about plates," said Florence; "you can carve the ducks, +and put a bit of jelly on each piece, and we can eat with our fingers; +you mustn't be so particular." + +"But I've no idea of putting ducks and cakes, and cookies and dates, all +higgledy-piggledy on to the table together! Sarah, you're such a good +forager you won't mind running down the back way, and getting three or +four plates, now will you?" + +"I just as lief as not, and I'll bring some knives and forks, and a +spoon too, for the jelly." + +"You're a jewel! and be quick, or I'm afraid the girls will be here +before you get back." + +Marion fluttered about, putting such things as she wished to keep for a +future occasion on a shelf in the closet, chattering to Flo all the +time. "Now isn't this jolly, Florence? I mean to have a magnificent time +to-night, no matter what happens. Those bottles give quite a regal air +to the table, don't they? And your basket is equal to the greatest +achievement of the renowned Smith. I must say our supply of china +doesn't look very promising; however, we'll have all the more fun." + +"Are they here?" asked Sarah, coming in. "No? Well, I thought I was +pretty quick; here's one of the kitchen platters for the ducks, four +plates, two knives and forks and a spoon; that's the best I could do for +you." + +"Capital! Now I believe everything is ready;" and Marion stood back, and +surveyed the scene with perfect satisfaction. "There they are!" she +exclaimed, as a knock was heard at the door. "Stand in front of the +table, Sallie, so that the full splendors of the scene won't burst on +them at once, and I'll let them in,--that's it." + +"Hollo, girls! Come in quick; don't make a bit of noise, for fear Miss +Stiefbach should hear you." + +"O Mab, how splendid! elegant! what a treat!" exclaimed the girls, as +the full magnificence of the entertainment was revealed to them. + +"What a box that was!" said Grace Minton; "no wonder it half killed you, +Flo." + +"And how are you now?" asked Rachel Drayton, who naturally felt a little +out of place, for she had never been in the room before. Flo was rarely +if ever there without Marion, and had never invited her there, not +feeling sure of the reception she might meet with from her room-mate. + +"I'm feeling nicely now," she answered. "In fact, I've been so +interested in watching Marion, that I've hardly thought of myself. I +wonder if I couldn't get up, and stand by the table." + +"No, indeed!" exclaimed Marion; "you mustn't think of such a thing. You +are to be the belle of the party; Miss Drayton comes next on the list of +distinguished guests, and she must sit there;" placing a chair at the +foot of the bed, where Rachel could have a good view of Florence; "the +rest of you may sit where you've a mind to, and I'll do the honors." + +"I'll keep Florence company," said Julia Thayer, as she seated herself +on the foot of the bed. "Now, Miss Brown, you can help Miss Berkley open +the champagne." + +"Will it pop?" asked Sarah, clapping her hands over her ears. + +"Of course it will, if it's worth anything," replied Marion. "But you +needn't be frightened; I'm only going to loosen the wires a little; we +don't want to commence with champagne." + +"Wouldn't it be a joke," said Grace Minton, "if Miss Stiefbach should +walk in on us just as you got the cork out?" + +But hardly were the words spoken, when the door, which all supposed +locked, suddenly opened, and Miss Stiefbach appeared upon the threshold. +Oh! horror of horrors! Marion's experience in opening wines had not been +sufficient to teach her the force of champagne. As the door opened, she +was standing in the middle of the room, holding the bottle at arms' +length, fumbling at the wires; in her surprise and amazement at the +apparition before her, she gave an extra tug, when pop went the cork, +and with it half the contents of the bottle in Miss Stiefbach's face. + +Miss Stiefbach stood with uplifted hands, perfectly electrified with +astonishment at the sight before her. As for the six girls, each in her +turn was a perfect picture of horror; visions of fearful lectures, +perhaps expulsion from school, rising in the minds of all. + +But before Miss Stiefbach could collect her scattered senses, and wrap +herself in her mantle of frigid dignity, Marion set the bottle on the +table, and, springing forward, caught up a towel, and with profuse +lamentations and regrets for the accident, commenced wiping the stains +from her teacher's dress. + +"O Miss Stiefbach, what did you come so soon for? It was too bad of +you; it has just upset all our plans. We had only this moment got the +table set, and I had not had time to go down and invite you and Miss +Christine. I had no idea that horrid champagne would go off like that; +it frightened us half to death.--Sarah, put your hand over that bottle, +or we shall lose it all.--Now, Miss Stiefbach, _do_ sit down, and I'll +go right off and get Miss Christine." + +"Marion Berkley, do you mean to say that you expect me and Miss +Christine to sit down to a supper which you young ladies have secretly +prepared?" + +"Why, of course I do!" replied Marion, with an air of perfect simplicity +and confidence, which perfectly amazed her companions, who were +breathlessly awaiting the issue of the conversation; "of course I do! +Why, what did I ask you to give up the history for if it wasn't that I +might have time for my supper? I knew it would never do to have it down +in the dining-room, for then all the little girls would want to come, +and of course we couldn't have them; and I don't care to invite all the +old girls, only just those who would make a pleasant party. Now, Miss +Stiefbach, it would be positively cruel for you to refuse to join us!" +and Marion looked as if her whole future happiness depended on her +teacher's answer. + +Miss Stiefbach was in a dilemma; she could hardly bring herself to +believe that the supper was intended as a compliment to herself; but +nevertheless Marion's invitation was given with such apparent sincerity, +and without even a hint of a doubt as to the propriety of the affair, +that she was put quite off her guard, and hardly knew what to say. To +sit down with a parcel of school-girls to a table heaped with good +things, and crowned with champagne, was altogether too much for her +dignity, and a compromise suggested itself to her. + +"I thank you, Marion, for your implied compliment," she said with her +usual stately, polite manner, "but I really think it would be unbecoming +in me to enter into any festivities with a part of my scholars, from +which the rest were excluded; but I will send Miss Christine to keep you +company, as I could not think of leaving you alone." + +"Of course not," said Marion; "we never thought you would; but please +before you go let us drink your health in a glass of champagne?" + +"Might I ask where this champagne came from?" asked Miss Stiefbach, +glancing round the room at the other girls, who still maintained a +discreet silence. + +"Oh, papa sent it to me," replied Marion. "I presume mamma thought it +was cider; but papa always has me drink champagne with him Thanksgiving +day, and as I could not be home, the next best thing was to send it, so +I could drink it here. You don't think it was _very_ dreadful in him, do +you?" + +"I cannot say that I wholly approve of it; but perhaps under the +circumstances I must waive my objections." + +"Oh, please do, Miss Stiefbach, just this once; and oh, I forgot all +about it, here's a great turkey, and a loaf of cake for you; shall I +take it down?" + +"Thank you, you are very kind," replied Miss Stiefbach. "You may take it +down after you have finished your supper; but I will go now, and send +Miss Christine." + +"No! no! Miss Stiefbach, not yet. Papa would feel dreadfully if he knew +you refused his champagne; it never would do in the world. Here, Sarah, +hand these round to the girls;" and Marion filled the six glasses. "I +shall have to take a tumbler myself, but never mind; now are you all +ready? Well, here's to the health of Miss Stiefbach; may she live many +years at the head of this school, and may every Thanksgiving eve see her +as she is now, smiling encouragement upon the innocent pleasure of her +pupils." + +The toast was drank with smiles and bows, and Miss Stiefbach retired +from the room with a bland "Good-evening, young ladies, and a happy +Thanksgiving to you all." + +Poor woman! with all her learning, and the terrible dignity with which +she thought it necessary to enshroud herself, as a part of her position +as head of a large school, she was at heart as simple-minded as a child. + +"Girls!" exclaimed Marion, as she turned to her companions, and the door +closed after Miss Stiefbach, "you've been taught that there are seven +wonders in the world; after this I think you can add an eighth." + +"Indeed we can!" exclaimed Sarah Brown; "and that eighth will be Marion +Berkley!" + +"I don't mean myself at all, but the whole thing. Imagine Miss Stiffy +smiling benignly on an affair like this! But keep quiet, Miss Christine +will be here in a minute. She'll see through the whole thing, you may be +sure; but nevertheless we must carry it out just the same. Don't you +betray me; we'll have just as good a time, and better too, if she's +here; besides, no matter what happens now, Miss Stiefbach has +countenanced us. Don't stir off that bed, Julia, and keep your skirts +well over Flo's foot. How do you feel now, dear?" + +"All right; in fact, I had forgotten all about it; but here's Miss +Christine." + +Miss Christine came in with a comical smile on her face; but whatever +may have been her opinion of the affair, she said nothing, and took +everything just as it came. She was not so old but that she could enter +heartily into the girls' fun and nonsense, and yet her presence was a +restraint upon them, which, although unfelt, kept them from carrying +their hilarity too far. + +Mr. Berkley's contribution to the box was certainly a very injudicious +one, which the majority of parents would heartily condemn; and, as +Marion had conjectured, his wife had supposed the bottles contained +nothing more exciting than sweet cider. Fortunately, the unskilful +manner in which they were opened sent more of their contents round the +room than all that went into the glasses; so the amount consumed was +really very small. At ten o'clock the party broke up, and I am inclined +to think that for the rest of their lives those girls never forgot +Marion's Thanksgiving party. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +MISS CHRISTINE GOES TO A PARTY. + + +Thanksgiving day passed off very quietly, but nevertheless very +pleasantly, at school. The little dissipation of the night previous had +given such perfect satisfaction to all those who participated in it, and +they were the scholars who were generally the ringleaders in every +scheme for fun and frolic, that they were all willing to maintain a most +discreet behavior throughout the day. To be sure they entered into all +the lively conversation of the dinner-table, and amused some of the +younger ones afterwards with games and stories; but there was none of +that general uproar and confusion that one would expect to see in a +school full of all ages, when the whole day was fully understood to be +at their disposal and they were released from any apparent restraint. + +The quiet behavior of Marion and her set might have been readily +attributed to the fact of Florence's lameness, had that fact been known; +it took the united energies and tact of the six to get her up and down +stairs, and in and out of rooms so that her limping would not be +noticed, or attention attracted to the sudden growth of one of her feet. +She bore the pain like a martyr, and managed to conceal her sufferings +from the public, only giving vent to her feelings when she was perfectly +sure of not being observed. + +Of course Marion's supper could not remain a secret, and she and the +five whom she had honored with invitations were made to feel the scorn +of some of the older scholars, who were not of the favored few. +Mutterings of discontent, contemptuous shrugs of the shoulders, and +glances which were intended to be withering in the extreme, were +levelled at the obnoxious six, who were highly entertained at the +remarks and actions of some of the girls, and in various little ways +added fuel to the flame. + +Georgie Graham felt herself especially insulted, and did everything in +her power to rouse her companions to a realizing sense of their injured +dignity. + +"Why, really, Georgie," said Mattie Denton, "I don't see as there was +anything so very dreadful in Marion's asking the girls into her room. +She probably had those she wanted, and I don't blame her. I'm sure you +couldn't expect she would invite _you_!" + +"Expect she'd invite me!" retorted Georgie, with a scornful toss of her +head; "she knew very well I wouldn't have gone if she had." + +"Oh, well," quietly replied Mattie, "I suppose, of course, that was the +only reason she didn't ask you." + +"The idea of her having Rachel Drayton," continued Georgie, ignoring +Mattie's remark; "she has hardly treated her decently since she's been +here, and to start out all of a sudden, and be so _dreadfully_ intimate +as to invite her into her room with a _select_ party of friends, is +really too absurd--or would be if it wasn't so easy to see what she is +after!" + +"See what she is after! Why, what in the world do you mean?" asked +Mattie. "I don't imagine she's after anything." + +"Oh, no! I suppose not," scornfully laughed Georgie, tossing her head +still higher. "Of course not! you know the old saying, Mattie, 'None so +blind as those that won't see.'" + +"What in the world do you mean, Georgie Graham? I don't believe you know +yourself!" + +"Don't I, though? Well, now, do you suppose that Marion Berkley, who +holds her head so high, and doesn't condescend to take any notice of us +girls, would have whisked round all of a sudden, and been so very sweet +on Rachel Drayton, if she hadn't an object in view?" + +"You certainly are the strangest creature I ever saw," indignantly +replied Mattie. "As if Marion ever had been sweet on Rachel! No one but +you would ever have thought of such a thing! I presume she invited her, +because she is a friend of Flo's." + +"No such thing," replied Georgie, leaning across the table and speaking +every word slowly and distinctly. "She invited her because she is an +heiress, and Marion intends to toady round her until she gets into her +good graces." + +"I don't believe it," flatly declared Mattie. + +"She told me so herself." + +"What! told you she meant to toady Rachel!--a likely story!" + +"No, told me Rachel was an heiress." + +"Well, suppose she is an heiress, what of that? You know perfectly well +that Marion Berkley is not a girl to _toady_ any one, and you ought to +be ashamed of yourself for saying so. I'm sure every one could see that +she has not treated Rachel very cordially, and if she invited her into +her room it was on Flo's account, and I'm glad for one she showed her +some kindness. No one but _you_ would ever have put a bad motive on such +a simple action." + +"Thank you, Mattie, for defending me," quietly remarked Marion herself, +as she passed through the library where the two girls were sitting, and +went upstairs. + +"There, Miss Graham, I hope you feel better now!" exclaimed Mattie, who +was now thoroughly roused. + +"Pooh! I don't care; 'listeners never hear any good of themselves;' she +shouldn't have been eaves-dropping." + +"That sounds well, Georgie, I must say, coming from you," replied +Mattie. "She was in the school-room, and goodness knows we talked loud +enough. Next time you have any such agreeable insinuations to make +against one of your school-mates, you'll be kind enough to go to some +one else;" and Mattie turned away indignantly, and left Georgie to her +own reflections. + +Finding that she had not been able to rouse any ill-will towards Marion +in Mattie's breast, and inwardly provoked with herself for having +proclaimed Rachel to be an heiress,--a fact which for reasons of her own +she would have preferred to have remain a secret,--she left the hall, +and entered the drawing-room, where most of the girls were congregated, +thinking perhaps that there would be a better field for her operations. + +Poor Marion had been cut to the quick by Georgie's remark; not on +account of the source from which it came, but because she feared, that, +through Georgie's manoeuvring, it would become the general opinion of +the scholars, and in her inmost heart Marion had hoped that she might +not leave the school at the end of the year, without leaving behind her +a better reputation than she had borne before. + +She said nothing of this hope to any one, not even Florence, but had +tried in many little things, principally in her manner, to be more kind +to those of her school-mates who were not in any way attractive to her. + +Forgetful of the feelings of others as she so often appeared, she was +herself extremely sensitive, and nothing could have annoyed her more +than to be accused of toadying any one. She could not bear the idea of +having such an imputation fastened upon her, and she secretly resolved +that in the future she would treat Rachel Drayton with the same +coldness and hauteur she had shown in the past. If she had only known +that that was the very object at which Georgie was aiming! + +She had been thinking all day of Aunt Bettie's happiness, and the +thought of it had greatly contributed to her own; but now all her peace +of mind was quite destroyed. She knew the resolution she had made was +unworthy of herself; but every time she tried to reason against it, the +thought of how her conduct would be misrepresented if she should treat +Rachel with kindness and consideration, as she had made up her mind the +previous night she would do, proved too much for her sensitive pride, +and she determined to hold firmly to her first resolution. + +She knew it was miserably weak in her, to allow herself to be governed +by fear of the misrepresentation of any one whom she held in such utter +contempt as she did Georgie Graham; but she knew that the girl's +influence over some of the scholars was great, and though outwardly she +appeared indifferent to whatever they might think of her, at heart she +really longed for their good opinion. + +A still, small voice whispered in her ear, that if she would only follow +the dictates of her better nature she would certainly be worthy of their +good opinion, and in the sight of One who not only sees, but +understands, everything that passes in our minds, she would be doing +right. But she was not in a mood to listen to any such voice; she left +the room, and running down to the parlor, seated herself at the piano, +and for an hour played for the girls to dance, trying in that way to get +rid of the unpleasant thoughts that would force themselves upon her. + +"What do you think?" exclaimed Mattie Denton, going up to her almost out +of breath, after a furious gallop; "Miss Christine is going to a party." + +"A party!" exclaimed Marion; "when and where?" + +"To-night, at Mrs. Dickenson's; she has a family dinner-party, and a +few friends are invited in the evening; of course I don't suppose it's a +regular _party_, but quite an event for our Miss Christine." + +"I should think as much," replied Marion. "I am so glad she's going! +Wasn't Miss Stiefbach invited?" + +"Oh, yes, of course; but she declined. I suppose she thought it would +never do to leave us alone." + +"No, 'while the cat's away the mice _will_ play,' you know." + +"Yes, I should think the mice played a little last night," laughed +Mattie. + +"So they did; but then the cat was round. Come, I've played enough for +these girls. I mean to ask Miss Christine to let me do her hair. You +come with me, and I'll give you some of the good things the mice +_didn't_ play with." + +"O Marion!" wailed half-a-dozen girls; "aren't you going to play any +more?" + +"No, I can't. I've most banged my fingers off; ask Fannie." + +"But she doesn't play half as well as you do." + +"Much obliged for your flattery; but it's all wasted this time," +answered Marion, as she and Mattie left the room to hunt up Miss +Christine. + +"Sallie, do you know where Miss Christine is?" asked Marion, as they met +Sarah Brown on the stairs. + +"Yes, she's just gone to her room. Do you know she's going to a party!" + +"1 know it; isn't it splendid? I'm going up to ask her to let me do her +hair." + +"I don't believe she'll let you." + +"Yes, she will; I'll coax her into it, see if I don't." + +"Where are you going to do it? Do let me see you." + +"In my room, I guess, so that Flo can see me; but not until after tea." + +After depositing Mattie in her room with a plateful of goodies, Marion +proceeded to that of Miss Christine, which was directly opposite that of +Miss Stiefbach, and upon knocking was immediately told to "Come in" by +Miss Christine, who at that moment was shaking out the folds of a plain, +but handsome black silk. + +"O Miss Christine, isn't it splendid?" cried Marion, clasping her hands; +"you're going to a party!" + +Miss Christine laughed her dear, little, good-natured laugh. "Why, it +seems to be considered a most wonderful event. Sarah has just been up +here, and appears almost as pleased as if she were going herself." + +"Of course she is, and so am I; and I'm going to do your hair." + +"My dear," replied Miss Christine, "it will be too much trouble." + +"Trouble! why, I admire to do it. I always do mamma's when I'm home, and +she wants to look _very_ fine." + +"But you see I don't want to look very fine." + +"Oh, yes, you do; or if you don't I want you to; besides, I promise not +to do it any _fixy_ way,--braid the back _some_thing as you do, only put +it up with a little more style." + +Miss Christine laughed. "Well, as you are so very kind as to offer, I'll +let you; but when will you do it?" + +"Directly after supper, please; that will be time enough. Will you be +kind enough to bring your brushes into my room? I think the light is +better." + +"Very well, it does not make any difference to me. You run out now, and +I will be all ready but putting on my dress, before tea." + +Marion ran back to Mattie, and then went down to communicate the success +of her errand to Sarah and Florence. Immediately after supper they +helped Flo upstairs, and had just got her comfortably settled in the +only easy-chair in the room, with her foot on a cricket, and a shawl +thrown carelessly over it, as Miss Christine came in, brushes in hand. + +Marion seated her with her back to the glass, saying as she did so, "I +don't want you to see yourself until it is all done." + +"Don't make me look too fine," said Miss Christine. + +"No fear of that," replied Marion, as she rapidly undid the massive +braids, and brushed them until they shone like burnished gold. + +"There is some pleasure in doing such hair as yours," said Marion, with +all the enthusiasm of an Auguste; "no need of rats or yarn here." + +For a few moments she worked in silence, as her fingers flew in and out, +until two long shining braids were made; these she twisted gracefully +round at the back of Miss Christine's head, exclaiming as she put in the +last hair-pin:-- + +"There! who would ever suppose she had as much hair as that? Just look +at it, girls; isn't it lovely?" + +"Perfectly lovely!" cried Florence. "Why, Miss Christine, you don't make +any show of it at all." + +"I braid it up as tight as possible, and don't care for anything but to +have it stay firm and smooth." + +"Now, Miss Christine," said Marion, in a tone which seemed to imply that +she expected opposition, but meant to conquer it, "I'm going to crimp +the front." + +"My dear child, are you crazy? Why, I should not think of doing such a +thing!" + +"Of course you wouldn't, because you don't know how; but I'll do it now, +and teach you some other time." + +"Yes, yes," put in both Florence and Mattie; "your hair will be lovely +crimped, and _so_ becoming; do let her!" + +"But I am afraid you'll make me look ridiculous, Marion," said Miss +Christine, in a deprecating tone; "and perhaps you will burn it." + +"Indeed I won't; _your_ hair shan't suffer the way poor Meg's did in +'Little Women,' for I'll do it over a hot slate-pencil, and that _never_ +burnt mine." + +"You don't mean to say you want to friz my hair up the way yours is!" + +"No, indeed; I'll take more hair, and that will do it in large, soft +waves. Now you'll see how lovely I'll make it look;" and Marion already +had the pencil in the gas, and in a moment more was twisting over it a +lock of Miss Christine's hair. "Now for the other side; then I'll comb +it out, and it will be perfectly stunning!" + +"Marion, what an expression!" said Miss Christine, as she sat in +momentary expectation of having her hair singed off her head, or her +forehead blistered. "I wish you would correct yourself of the habit of +using slang words." + +"_Slang!_ why, that's not slang!" + +"Yes, my dear; I think it is." + +"Well, it is certainly a very mild form." + +"Mild or not, it is extremely unladylike, and I hope you will get over +the habit soon, or it will become fixed upon you." + +"Well, I'll try," said Marion, taking a hair-pin out of her mouth; "but +it will almost kill me. Stunning, and scrumptious, and jolly, and lots +of those things, express so much more than any old, prim, stuck-up +words. There! I suppose that's slang too! Well, never mind now, Miss +Christine; when I come back after Christmas vacation, I'm going to be +'Miss Piety promoted;' see if I'm not! Now look at yourself." + +"Why, Marion, haven't you crimped my hair a _little_ too much?" + +"No, indeed!" cried the three girls. + +"You look just as sweet as you can look," said Florence; "it's not a bit +too much, it's only lovely waves." + +"Now I'm to get your dress, and you must put it on in here," said +Marion; and before Miss Christine could utter a word of remonstrance she +was off, and in a moment came back with the dress over her arm, and a +lace collar in her hand. "I wish the skirt was a trifle longer," said +Marion, as she stooped, and pulled it down behind. + +"It's long enough for such a plain body as myself; you want to make a +fashionable lady of me." + +"I wouldn't have you a fashionable lady for the world! but I do want you +to look your very bestest." + +"You have forgotten my pin, dear; it was on the bureau beside my +collar." + +"No I haven't forgotten it," said Marion, who was opening and shutting +various boxes in her upper drawer. "Where in the world is that ribbon? +Here it is. Now, Miss Christine, I don't want you to wear the pin; it's +the same you wear every day, and you ought to have some color about you +somewhere; so I want you to wear this knot of blue satin, and I've got a +band to match. Please do, just for my sake!" + +"Why, Marion, you will make me absurd; you forget what an old maid I +am." + +"Old maid! I should think as much," replied Marion, pinning on the bow +in spite of all remonstrance,--"old maid indeed! You're nothing of the +sort, and what's more you know you never will be;" and Marion gave a +mischievous glance at her teacher. + +"Don't be impertinent, Marion," replied Miss Christine; but "old maid" +as she called herself, she could not keep a very girlish blush from +glowing on her cheeks at her pupil's words. + +"I think you are just as lovely as you can be!" exclaimed Marion. "Oh! I +forgot; the band for your hair;--there! now you're complete." + +"Why, Miss Christine, you'll hardly know yourself," said Florence; "just +look in the glass. Those crimps make you look five years younger." + +"I'm going down to get Sallie," said Marion. "Don't put your things on +yet, please; she wants to see you." + +Marion ran off, returning in a few moments with Sarah Brown, who, the +moment she saw her teacher, threw open her arms, and gave her a most +emphatic hug. + +"Now you look just as you ought. I'm perfectly delighted you're going, +and your hair is beautiful,--that band is so becoming." + +"That is all Marion's doings; in fact, I owe all my 'fine feathers' to +her, and without them I should not be such a 'fine bird' as you seem to +think me;" and Miss Christine laughed her dear, little laugh, that her +scholars loved so well, and glanced affectionately at the group of +admiring girls about her. + +"You are not a 'fine bird' at all," exclaimed Sarah, in her most +enthusiastic way; "you are just a dear, white dove." + +"O Sarah! a white dove in black silk and blue satin--rather +incongruous," said Miss Christine. + +The girls all joined Miss Christine in her laugh; but nevertheless +protested that Sarah's simile was not a bit exaggerated. + +"Well now, Miss Christine," said Marion, "if you are ready, I'll go down +and tell Biddy to put her things on." + +"Biddy isn't going with me," replied Miss Christine, who seemed very +busily engaged enveloping her head in a cloud, bringing it so far over +her face that not a vestige of her hair was visible. + +"Why, you're not going alone?" + +"No; M. Béranger was invited, and kindly offered to escort me," said +Miss Christine, bending her head to fasten her glove. + +"Oh!" said Marion; but she gave a sly glance at her companions, which +was not observed by Miss Christine, whose glove-buttons seemed to be +giving her a great deal of trouble. + +"Now, good-night, girls. I thank you a thousand times for all you have +done for me, Marion;" then, as she kissed them all, "I don't believe +there ever was a teacher had such affectionate scholars." + +"You mean there never were scholars that had such a perfectly lovely +teacher!" cried Sarah Brown, loud enough to be heard in the hall below. + +"'Sh!" said Miss Christine. "Monsieur is down there; he will hear you." + +"I guess it won't be any news to him," whispered Marion, as they hung +over the banisters watching the proceedings below. "Do you know, Sallie, +I believe she pulled that cloud over her head on purpose so that Miss +Stiefbach wouldn't see she had her hair crimped. I dare say if she had, +she'd have given her a lecture, when she got back, on the follies and +vanities of this world." + +"I dare say," replied Sarah. "She'd like to make Miss Christine just +such a stiff old maid as she is herself; but she won't succeed." + +"Not a bit of it," replied Marion. + +When Miss Christine came home from the party, and stood before her glass +preparatory to undressing, if she had been one of her own scholars she +would have said she had a "splendid time." Evening companies, even as +small as the one she had just attended, were something in which she +rarely indulged; in fact, she had often remained at home from +preference, sending her sister in her place, thinking she was much more +likely to shine in society than herself. But this night she had really +enjoyed herself. It certainly was very pleasant to know she looked +better than usual; and if the evidence of her own eyes, and the +admiration of her scholars, had not proved that, there had been some one +else who testified to the fact in a few respectful, but very earnest +words. + +As she unpinned the blue ribbons, she wondered if it had been foolish +and undignified in her to wear them; but the recollection of the loving +girls who had urged her to do so filled her heart with delight, and she +went to bed feeling that the affection of those young hearts was worth +more than all the elegance of manner, and extreme dignity, for which her +sister was noticeable, which, however it might inspire the awe and +respect of her pupils, never won their love. + +The next morning the girls noticed that Miss Christine's crimps were not +entirely "out." When she brushed her hair that morning, her first +impulse had been to straighten out the pretty waves with a dash of cold +water; then she thought, to please Marion, she would leave it as it was. +I wonder if it occurred to her that the only lesson for the day was +French? + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +THE HOLIDAYS. + + +The days and weeks at Miss Stiefbach's school quickly succeeded each +other, all passing very much as those I have already described, and the +Christmas holidays were close at hand. + +Shortly after Thanksgiving there had been another musicale, at which +Marion played without dropping her music, or making any mistakes, and +won universal admiration for the delicacy of her touch, and above all +for the depth and beauty of her expression. Not that so-called +expression which has lately become the fashion, which seems to consist +in playing half the piece in pp., rushing from that to ff., with a +rapidity which certainly astonishes the hearer, if it does nothing more; +but carefully noting the crescendos and diminuendos, which are to music +what the lights and shadows are to painting, and rendering the whole in +a manner that appealed to the heart rather than the senses. + +Marion was gradually, and without any noticeable effort on her part, +obtaining a different footing in the school. The girls who had admired +but feared her might now be said to only admire; for the cutting +sarcasms, the withering scorn, which had formerly led them to fear her, +were now very rarely observable in either her conversation or her +manners. + +Once or twice some of the scholars had spoken of the difference in +Marion's behavior, and, as one of them expressed it, "wondered what had +come over the spirit of her dreams;" but the answer to the query was +generally accepted as a fact, "that it was only one of her odd freaks, +and very likely would not last long." + +But it was not one of her freaks; far from it. A change was coming over +her whole character; slowly but surely it was approaching; manifesting +itself at present in certain ways, or perhaps not so much in certain +ways as in the absence of certain other ways, which had before been the +dark spots in a nature which God had intended to make broad, intense, +and noble. God had intended?--no, not that; for what could God intend +and not perform? The nature was there, heart and soul bearing the +impress of the Maker's hand; but like a beautiful garden having within +its borders flowers of surpassing beauty and luxurious growth, but +twined and intertwined with rank weeds and choking briers, which the +gardener must clear away,--not tearing them apart with rough and +ruthless hands, and by so doing killing the tender plant; but +delicately, carefully, as a mother would tend her babe; untwining +tendril after tendril, leaf after leaf, propping and sustaining the +flowers as he works, until at last the weeds lay withered and broken, +but a few moments trailing their useless branches on the ground, ere the +gardener with a firm grasp wrenches them from the soil. His hands may be +scratched and bleeding from contact with the briers; but what of that? +If the plants are rescued; if they raise up their drooping heads, and +gladden his eyes with the sight of their buds and blossoms, do you +suppose he will murmur or complain for any wounds he may have received? +Not he! The weeds and briers are gone, the blooming plants are +saved,--that is enough. + +Such a garden was Marion's heart, and she had already commenced the work +of the gardener; but so slowly did she proceed that sometimes she was +almost willing to let the work go, so hopeless did it seem to her; only +a few tendrils untwined, only a few leaves saved from the briers whose +roots as yet remained untouched. But such moments of discouragement did +not come to her often, or if they did, she tried not to yield to them. +The great trouble with her was the determination with which she held to +her resolution in regard to Rachel; she still treated her with the same +coldness, the same formal politeness, which she had shown her on her +first arrival; she had not succeeded in quieting the still, small voice, +which persisted in whispering in her ear; but though she could not help +hearing it, she resolutely forbore to heed it. + +Poor Florence had built high hopes on the easy, friendly manner with +which Marion had treated Rachel the night of the famous Thanksgiving +party, and had thought the pain she suffered with her foot but a small +price to pay for the bringing together of her old friend and her new; +but she had seen those hopes vanish one by one. As the friendship +between herself and Rachel increased, Marion's coldness became the more +distressing to both parties; for although Marion had never abated one +jot of her affection for Florence, there was a certain barrier between +them, which each from her heart deplored, but which seemed destined for +the present to remain uncrossed. + +But, my dear reader, I'm afraid you think I am growing fearfully prosy, +and if you don't I am sure I do; so I will hurry on with my story. + +It was the 23d of December, and the young ladies of Miss Stiefbach's +school were starting off en masse for their various homes; indeed, some +living at the West had already gone, having been called for by parents +or friends, and not a few by their older brothers on their way home from +college, who were not at all averse to spending one night in "that +stupid old town," for the sake of a peep at the pretty girls of the +school. + +Marion Berkley, Mattie Denton, the two Thayers, Florence Stevenson, and +Rachel Drayton, all went by the Boston train, and I don't believe a +merrier party ever started on a journey together. + +Florence, finding that Rachel was intending to spend the holidays at the +school, had written to her father, and obtained his permission to take +her new friend home with her. Rachel had at first demurred, dreading to +again encounter strangers; but Florence had plead so earnestly, +representing to her how forlorn and stupid it would be for her at the +school, at the same time promising that she should not see any company, +or participate in any gayety,--"they would just have a quiet time at +home and enjoy each other,"--that she had at last yielded. + +It was a most excellent thought of Florence, for anniversaries of any +kind were likely to prove very trying to Rachel; making her realize more +forcibly than ever the loss of her father,--a loss to which she had +tried to reconcile herself; but, strive hard as she would, it was ever +present in her mind, and if she had been left in that great house, with +none of the pupils with whose laughter, fun, and frolic the walls had so +often resounded, it is probable that the melancholy which had at first +seemed fixed upon her, but which the presence of so many bright young +lives around her had done much towards dispelling, would have returned +to her with double force, and taken a stronger hold upon her than ever. + +When Florence had communicated her intention to Marion, she answered not +a word; but no one knew what a hard struggle it was for her to keep +silent. + +Christmas vacation was always looked forward to by them both, with +greater anticipations of pleasure than any other, for Florence always +spent several days in the city with Marion in a round of pleasure. Not +balls and parties, but theatres, concerts, picture-galleries, etc., were +visited; in fact, every new thing that came to the city that week, and +was worth seeing, Mr. Berkley always made it a point to take the girls +to see, and those good times were talked over for weeks and weeks after +they were back at school. + +Marion had been looking forward to the holidays with more than her usual +eagerness, for then she thought she and Florence would be together just +as they used to be, without any barrier whatever between them; but when +she heard that Rachel would spend the vacation with Florence, she knew, +of course, that there would be an end to all the merry-makings; for even +if she and Rachel had been on good terms, the latter would not of course +have participated in such gayety. + +The girls were all met at the depot by their respective papas, mammas or +"big brothers," and after great demonstrations of delight at meeting, +and good-byes, and "Come round soon," etc., from the girls as they +parted, they all separated on their way to their various homes. + +"Marion," asked Mr. Berkley at the breakfast-table the next morning, as +he helped his daughter to the best chop on the platter, "who was that +young lady with Florence last night?" + +"Miss Drayton," replied Marion, with the slightest possible change of +manner,--"Rachel Drayton." + +"Rachel Drayton. That's rather an uncommon name. I don't think I ever +heard of a real bona fide Rachel before; handsome, isn't she?" + +"No, not exactly; perhaps she would be if she were well." + +"She's uncommon-looking," continued Mr. Berkley, as he helped himself to +another slice of toast; "didn't you notice her, Margaret?--tall, with +jet-black hair and eyes. Rachel is just the name for her." + +"I noticed her; in fact, Florence introduced her, but I was attracted +towards her first by the unusually sad expression of her face. I never +saw it so noticeable in one so young; and I suppose she is young, though +she looks much older than you or Florence." + +"She is only seventeen," replied Marion, busily engaged in giving +Charley sips of her coffee. + +"Oh, well," said Mr. Berkley in his hearty way, "we'll soon get rid of +that sad look; we'll have her in with Flo, and I guess after she's seen +Warren once or twice she'll learn how to laugh. What do you think, +Marion?" + +"It won't be any use for you to invite her, papa. She wouldn't come; +she's in deep mourning,--she lost her father just before she came to +school." + +"Poor child!" said Mrs. Berkley, whose heart always warmed towards any +one in trouble; "poor child! Where does her mother live?" + +"She has no mother either; she died when Rachel was a baby. In fact, she +has no relations at all except an uncle, who has been abroad for ten +years, and will not be at home until school closes next spring." + +"Well, I do pity the poor thing!" said Mr. Berkley, who, although death +had never robbed him of his own dear ones, felt the deepest sympathy for +all those who had been so stricken. "I think it is one of the saddest +cases I ever knew. I suppose Flo--bless her heart!--could sympathize +with her even more than the rest of you, having lost her mother too." + +"She and Rachel are great friends," replied Marion, wishing the subject +would ever be changed. + +"Is she well provided for?" asked Mr. Berkley. + +"She is immensely wealthy," replied Marion; "will have two or three +millions in her own right, when she is twenty-one." + +"Whew!" exclaimed Mr. Berkley; "pretty well provided for, I should +think. Well, I'm glad of it; she has had trouble enough already, without +having to worry about money matters. Marion, have another chop?" + +"No, I thank you, papa, I've had quite enough," replied Marion, rousing +herself, and speaking with her usual energy, the absence of which had +not escaped her mother's ear. "How soon will Fred be home? I'm crazy to +see him." + +"In about an hour, I expect," replied Mrs. Berkley; "he is quite as +anxious to see you as you are to see him." + +"I tell you what, Mab," said Mr. Berkley, "Fred is a pretty important +member of society since he got into college; you ought to hear him talk +about 'the men of our class;' it makes me feel old." + +"Oh! he'll get over that," laughed Marion. "I suppose he feels +particularly grand, because he's younger than most of his class." + +"Yes, I dare say," said Mrs. Berkley, with a little motherly anxiety in +her voice. "I wish he had waited a year; it would have been much better +for him." + +"Oh, nonsense!" answered Mr. Berkley, as he pushed his chair back from +the table; "the sooner he sows his 'wild oats' the better; besides, he's +sound enough, never fear. But I forgot, Marion; I'm getting to be almost +too old a beau for you; so I told Fred to bring some one home from +college to pass the vacation. He has invited a Mr. Thornton; he took a +great fancy to Fred, though _he is_ a junior; so you can't turn up your +nose at him." + +"I don't want to turn up my nose at him; but junior or not, he will not +be my escort. I'll hand him over to mamma; but wherever I go, you'll +have to take me, do you understand?" + +"Oh, yes, I understand perfectly. That all sounds very pretty, no doubt; +but you wait till you see Arthur Thornton. Such _heavenly_ eyes!" +exclaimed Mr. Berkley, disengaging himself from Marion, and clasping his +hands in the most enthusiastic manner, "and such a _magnificent_ figure! +and such a _stunning_ mustache, and such--such a--such a surprising +appetite!" + +"Now, papa," said Marion, laughing at her father's romantic gestures, +and the very unromantic conclusion of his sentence, "you know I never +rave so over young men; it's so silly!" + +"Now, mamma, just hear her," said Mr. Berkley, turning to his wife; "she +never raves over young men; oh, no! Wasn't little Bob Jones the +_loveliest_ dancer she ever saw? and didn't Walter Hargate sing the +'rainy day' so as to make one weep _oceans_ of tears? and wasn't Jack +Richards' profile 'enough to make one _wild_'? and wasn't--" + +"Stop! stop!" cried Marion, jumping up and putting her hand over her +father's mouth; "you shan't say another word; it isn't fair. That was +nearly two years ago, when I was young and foolish; now I am almost +eighteen, and, as Fred says, 'I'm going to come the heavy dignity.'" + +"All right," replied her father, as he gave her a kiss; "only don't come +it over me, that's all. Here they are now! Marion! Marion!" he cried, as +she broke from him, and made a rush for the front door, "that's very +undignified, very undignified indeed; you should receive them in the +parlor." + +But Marion paid no heed to his admonition, and in a moment more had her +arms round Fred's neck, utterly oblivious to the fact that a young +six-footer stood behind him. + +"Come in, Marion; what do you mean by keeping Mr. Thornton standing out +there in the cold?" said Mr. Berkley, with a mischievous twinkle in his +eyes. "I'm surprised at you! Come in, Mr. Thornton; glad to see you; my +daughter, _Miss_ Berkley." + +Mr. Thornton raised his hat, and bent that "magnificent figure" in the +most profound salutation, while Marion responded with a bow, which, as +her father whispered to her, "was dignity itself." + +After the usual bustle accompanying an arrival was over, and some little +time had been spent in chatting, Mr. Berkley said:-- + +"Come, Fred, you and Mr. Thornton must be hungry; go out and get some +breakfast; we have had ours, but Marion will do the honors." + +"We breakfasted before we left," answered Fred. "I knew we should be +late; but we'll do double duty at dinner." + +"I'm sorry for that," whispered Mr. Berkley to Marion, as he handed her +his meerschaum to fill, "for I wanted to prove the last part of my +description. I know you've accepted the first part already as perfect." + +"Hush, papa! don't be silly," answered Marion, as she dipped her fingers +into the tobacco-box. + +"Miss Berkley, can you fill a pipe?" asked Mr. Thornton. + +"Why, of course she can," said her father; "she's filled mine ever since +she was so high. I should have given up smoking long ago if it hadn't +been for her." + +"That's all nonsense, papa; you'll never stop smoking till the day of +your death; so I suppose I shall always fill your pipe." + +"Miss Berkley," said Mr. Thornton, with a graceful little bow, "I wish +while I am here I might be allowed the pleasure of having _my_ pipe +filled by those fair fingers." + +"I beg your pardon, Mr. Thornton," said Marion, with the least possible +toss of her head; "but I never fill any one's but papa's." + +Mr. Thornton bowed, flushing slightly as he rose to follow Fred to his +room, mentally resolving never to waste pretty speeches again on that +girl; and Mr. Berkley observed as he left the room, "A perfect scorcher, +Marion! If you keep that dignity up for the rest of his visit, there +won't be a piece of him left as big as a chicken's wing." + +The following morning was as bright and beautiful as ever a Christmas +morning could be, and indoors the merry party at Mr. Berkley's was quite +in keeping with the weather; such strife as to who could wish "Merry +Christmas" first, such an exhibition of presents, and such general +jollification, could only be found where every one was in the best of +spirits, and all determined to enjoy themselves to the utmost. + +The Christmas gifts had been arranged by Mr. and Mrs. Berkley the +previous night in the parlor, where the door was kept fastened until +directly after breakfast, when Mr. Berkley unlocked it, and let in the +whole family. Marion was in a perfect state of excitement over her +presents, quite forgetting the talked-of dignity in her admiration of +them; and the charming way in which she thanked Mr. Thornton for a +bouquet, bearing his card, quite did away with the effect of her hauteur +of the previous day. From her father and mother she received what she +had long expressed a wish for,--"Goethe's Female Characters illustrated +by Kaulbach," a book which her intense love for art enabled her to fully +appreciate; from Fred a beautiful amethyst ring; a pretty necktie from +Charley, which, as he said, "he choosed hisself;" a bust of Clytie from +her Uncle George; besides gloves, bows, embroidered handkerchiefs, etc., +too numerous to mention, from various aunts and cousins. + +"But, Marion, there is something else," said her mother; "lift up that +handkerchief and see what is under it." + +"Oh, is that for me? I didn't understand," said Marion, as she took up +the handkerchief that hid something from view. "O mamma, how perfect! +Isn't it lovely? She couldn't have given me anything I would have liked +half so well;" and the tears started to her eyes, for the present was +from Florence, and Marion had thought she had nothing from her, and was +cut to the quick; for they had always exchanged Christmas gifts ever +since they were children. This one was an exquisitely colored photograph +of Florence herself, beautifully framed in blue velvet and gilt. + +"She had it taken just before she went back to school," said Mrs. +Berkley, "and I colored it for her; isn't the frame lovely? She had it +made to order. I never saw one like it." + +"It is lovely; just exactly like her;" and Marion looked fondly at the +eyes that smiled into hers with such a sweet, affectionate expression, +and as she did so thoughts of the past and present flitted quickly +through her mind, and further speech just then was quite impossible. + +But it is useless to attempt a description of each of those many merry +days; they all passed only too quickly. Mr. Thornton proved himself to +be a very valuable addition to the home circle, as well as a most hearty +participator in all their schemes for going about here, there, and +everywhere. During the holidays Mr. and Mrs. Berkley received several +invitations to large parties, in which 'Miss Berkley' was included; but +all were declined, for Mrs. Berkley had no idea of having Marion go +into society for more than a year yet. Her father had said, in his +jolly, easy way, "Oh, let her go, it won't hurt her; why, you and I did +most of our courting before you were as old as she is." + +"I can't help it, my dear; because you and I were foolish is no reason +we should let her be," replied her mother. "I have no objections to her +going to the little 'Germans' given by girls of her age; but regular +balls and parties I can't allow." + +But Marion was not at all disturbed about the party question; she was +enjoying her vacation to the utmost. At first she missed Florence very +much. She had been out to see her once or twice. The first time she saw +her alone for a few moments, and thanked her warmly for her photograph, +receiving Florence's thanks in return for her present of a lovely +locket, and promising to have her own picture taken to put in it. + +"Marion," said Mrs. Berkley one day, "don't you intend to invite +Florence and Miss Drayton in here to spend the night?" + +"I don't think Rachel would come, if I asked her, mamma. You know we are +pretty gay now that Mr. Thornton is here." + +"But you need not ask any one else, and I don't believe she would mind +him;--he seems like one of the family." + +"I don't think she would come, mamma." + +"Very well, my dear, you know best;" and Mrs. Berkley did not again +refer to the subject. She felt instinctively that Marion did not +entertain the same friendship for Rachel that Florence did; but she said +nothing about it, never wishing to force herself into her daughter's +confidence, knowing well enough that, if she waited, that confidence +would come of its own accord. + +Everything must come to an end at last, and so did those Christmas +holidays, and Marion went back to school, and Fred and Mr. Thornton to +college; the latter young gentleman, if we might judge from a little +scrap of conversation he had with his chum on his return, not quite +heart-whole. + +"You see, Sam, I went home with Berkley more to please him than myself. +To be sure I knew I should have a stupid time loafing round here, and I +had no idea of going home; for the house is all shut up while the old +gentleman and mother are in Europe. So I thought, as Berk really seemed +to want me, I'd go, and I tell you I never had a jollier time in my +life;" and Arthur Thornton watched the wreaths of smoke as they curled +about his head, quite lost in recollections of the past two weeks. + +"What did you do?" asked his companion, knocking the ashes out of his +pipe. + +"Oh! went to the theatre, museum, concerts,--everything! Stayed at home +once or twice, and had a 'candy-scrape.' It's the best place in the +world to visit, and the most delightful family." + +"All of whom unite, I suppose, in worshipping Master Freddy." + +"Not by a long shot!" replied Arthur Thornton, energetically; "_he_ +unites with the rest of the family in worshipping at quite another +shrine." + +"And that is--" + +"His sister Marion; the most perfectly bewitching girl I ever saw in my +life!" + +"Arty, my boy, has it come to that?" solemnly asked his companion, as he +removed his pipe from his mouth, and looked at his friend with a face +expressive of the deepest dejection; "do you mean to say that you've +surrendered, and gone over to the enemy?" + +"I haven't gone over at all; but she certainly is the best specimen of a +girl I ever saw! None of your sentimental, simpering kind! I just wish +you'd seen her when I tried to make a pretty speech to her; didn't she +toss her head up, and flash those eyes at me? By Jove! I never felt so +small in my life!" + +"If she has the power of producing that effect upon you, she must be +something fearful," replied his friend, coolly surveying the six feet of +human frame which lay stretched on the sofa before him. "She flashes her +eyes, does she?" + +"Doesn't she? and such eyes!--great, dark-brown eyes with long black +lashes; and such hair!--golden hair! Do you hear? golden hair and dark +eyes, and--" + +"My dear fellow," replied Sam, languidly waving his hand before him, +"forbear! I entreat you to forbear; half of that description is enough +to do away with the quieting influences of this pipe; if you should +continue, I don't know what would become of me, to say nothing of +yourself. I see that you are lost to me forever. Farewell, my once +loved, never-to-be-forgotten friend; I see that you are--in for it." + +"Don't be a fool, Sam, and just wait till you've seen her yourself." + +"Until that blissful time arrives," replied his friend, rising to leave +the room, "I will occupy all my spare hours in hunting up an armor that +will be proof against the 'flashes' of those eyes." + +"You're an old idiot!" shouted Arthur; but Sam had dodged back, and +slammed the door, just in time to escape being hit by a boot-jack, which +his friend threw at him. + +To tell the truth, Mr. Thornton was just the least bit in the world +touched. Marion had done her best to entertain her brother's friend, and +indeed that was not a very severe task, when the individual in question +was a handsome young fellow, intelligent and agreeable, and not +possessing quite the usual amount of conceit that young men of his age +are troubled with. In fact, she succeeded so well in making herself +agreeable to him, that Fred told his mother in confidence, that "it was +easy enough to see Thornton was dead smashed with Mab, and 'twouldn't be +a bad thing for her if she should fancy him, for he was a 'regular +brick,' and hadn't he got the rocks!" + +For which inelegant expressions his mother most seriously reproved him, +at the same time saying that she thought Marion had taken a fancy to Mr. +Thornton, and that was all she ever would care for him; and it was very +silly to be talking about anything serious now, when she was nothing but +a child. + +Of course when the scholars all met again at school nothing was talked +of but the vacation; presents were shown and admired, and for days and +days after their return, as soon as study hours were over, little knots +of girls might be seen scattered all over the house, chattering away as +fast as their tongues could go, rehearsing again and again the delights +of the holidays. + +The first thing Marion did was to make a visit to Aunt Bettie's to thank +the good woman for her present of a barrel of as rosy-cheeked apples as +ever grew. She found the old lady well and happy, rocking away in the +sunshine, while Jemima made bread in the pantry, singing in a clear, +bright voice, which gave excellent proof of her recovered health and +contentment. + +She carried Jemima a couple of bright ribbons, and a pretty embroidered +linen collar, and Aunt Bettie a neat lace cap, which unexpected gifts +quite overpowered them, and caused Aunt Bettie to remark, "Seemed as how +some folks was a-doin' and a-doin' all the time, and could never do +enuff;" which remark, Marion declared, as she ran out of the house, +certainly did not apply to her. + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + +MARION'S MIDNIGHT WALK. + + +It was a clear, cold day, in the latter part of February; the ground had +been covered with snow ever since Christmas week, and seemed likely to +be so for some time yet; even quite a heavy rain had failed to melt away +King Winter's snowy mantle, for being followed by a freezing night it +had only served to crust everything with a thin coating of ice, and set +upon the old fellow's head a crown, which glittered and sparkled in the +sunlight rivalling in beauty that of many a lesser monarch. + +A sleigh was standing at the gate of the school, and Martin, the +Irishman who sawed the wood, built the fires, and did all the little odd +jobs generally of the establishment, stood with the reins in his hands; +evidently very much pleased with his new position as coachman. + +Miss Stiefbach was going away, fifteen miles into the country, to see a +friend who was very ill, and had sent her a very pressing letter, asking +her to come to her as soon as possible; and the most feasible way for +her to get there and back seemed to be, to hire a horse and sleigh in +the village, take Martin as driver, and return the next day. + +Nothing but the very urgent request of a sick friend would have called +Miss Stiefbach away from school just at this time; for the cook was sick +abed with a terribly sore throat; the laundress could hardly speak, on +account of a bad cold, and Bridget, the housemaid, was almost worn out +with doing a part of everybody's work, for the last three days. But +Miss Christine begged her sister to go; she would get the older girls to +help her with the extra work, and as it was only for one night, there +certainly seemed no danger but what they could get along without her; so +at two o'clock Miss Stiefbach started. Marion, Julia, and Sarah offered +their services to wash the dinner-dishes, and with sleeves rolled up, +and long aprons on, went into the business in earnest, laughing and +chattering like magpies. While they were at work Rachel Drayton came +into the room for a glass of water, and Sarah Brown, looking up, +exclaimed:-- + +"Why, Rachel, what in the world is the matter with you? You look like a +ghost!" + +"Only one of my headaches," said Rachel, making a feeble attempt to +smile. "I've had it all day." + +"But you are hoarse; you can hardly speak," said Julia. + +"Don't say anything about it; but my throat is terribly sore. Please +don't tell Miss Christine; there are enough sick in the house already +without me." + +"But you ought to do something for it, indeed you ought," said Sarah. "I +wish I could tell you of something; don't you know of anything for a +sore throat, Marion?" + +"I always gargle mine with salt and water," answered Marion +indifferently, without looking up from the buffet-drawer, where she was +arranging the silver. + +"Well, do try it, Rachel," said Julia; "it can't hurt you certainly; +here's some salt. How much do you put in a tumbler of water, Marion?" + +"I really don't know," replied Marion, still busy with the silver; "I +never measured it." + +"Well, can't you give me any idea?" asked Julia, rather impatiently. + +"Don't trouble Miss Berkley," said Rachel, in a voice which she tried +in vain to render steady, for, sick and suffering as she was, Marion's +indifference cut her to the heart. She turned away to leave the room, +the blinding tears rushed to her eyes, her head swam, and she staggered +forward, as Sarah cried: "Quick, Julia! catch her; she's fainting!" + +Marion started up in time to see Rachel, with a deathly white face and +closed eyes, stretch out her hands helplessly before her, as Julia and +Sarah caught her in their arms, and saved her from falling. + +The sight of that white face struck Marion with horror; but still she +did not move from the spot where she had stood ever since Rachel entered +the room; it seemed as if she _could_ not move, until Sarah exclaimed:-- + +"Marion, hand me a glass of water, for Heaven's sake; she'll faint +away." + +"No, I shan't," said Rachel, in a feeble voice, trying to raise her +head; "it was only a sudden dizziness. I often have it when my head +aches, only to-day it was worse than usual." + +"Lie still there," said Julia, as they led her to the sofa, "and keep +perfectly quiet; I'll go call Miss Christine." + +"No! no!" cried Rachel, jumping up, but sinking back again as the sudden +movement sent her head whizzing round; "please don't; she has gone up to +give cook her medicine, and indeed I shall be better soon." + +"I won't call her, if you'll promise to go to bed as soon as you are +able to walk." + +"Well, I will," answered Rachel. "I can go in a few minutes; would you +mind asking Florence to come here?" + +Sarah ran off to get Florence, and Julia sat down by Rachel, bathing her +head with cold water. Marion went on quietly putting away the dishes; +only now and then glancing at the white face in such fearful contrast +with its surroundings of black hair and dress. + +Florence came in, and, as soon as Rachel was able, helped her up to her +room, where she laid down on the bed without undressing, hoping to feel +well enough to go down to tea; but that was out of the question; her +head grew worse instead of better, and at last Florence insisted upon +calling Miss Christine. + +When Miss Christine came up, she told Marion to take Rachel into Miss +Stiefbach's room, and help her to undress at once, while she went to get +some hot water in which to bathe her feet. Very soon Rachel was in bed, +and begged Miss Christine to "go away and not mind her, for she knew she +should feel all right in the morning." + +But of this Miss Christine did not feel at all sure; the deadly pallor +of Rachel's face had been succeeded by a bright red spot in each cheek, +and the palms of her hands were burning hot. Leaving Florence to sit +with her friend, she went down to attend to her other duties. She went +into the dining-room to set the tea-table; but Marion and Sarah were +there before her. + +"How is Rachel?" asked Sarah; "do you think she is going to be ill?" + +"I hope not; indeed I think not, for you know she often has these +dreadful headaches; still she has a bad sore throat, and seems feverish. +I almost wish Miss Stiefbach had not gone." + +"It was too bad," said Sarah; "just now when everybody is sick! I don't +see why that lady had to send for her!" + +"Well, my dear, she could not possibly know that it was not convenient +for us to have Miss Stiefbach away, and she wanted to see her about +something very important; it could not be helped. I dare say everything +will come out right in the end. I must go now and help Bridget, or she +will get discouraged. O Marion," she said, as she was about to leave the +room, "will you please sleep with Rose? She'll be afraid to sleep alone, +and I have put Rachel into Miss Stiefbach's room, where I can be near +her if she should want anything in the night." + +"Oh, I don't want to," replied Marion, much to Miss Christine's +surprise. "Rose kicks awfully. Ask Florence." + +"Will she be any less likely to kick Florence than you?" asked Miss +Christine, quietly. + +"No, I suppose not; but you know Florence won't mind, as long as it's +for Rachel." + +"And you would, I am sorry to say." + +"I suppose it's no use for me to offer," said Sarah, "for that would +leave Jennie all alone, and she's an awful coward." + +"No, I thank you," said Miss Christine, as she left the room; "I will +ask Florence." + +Marion said nothing; she went on setting the table and talking to Sarah, +never in any way alluding to Rachel, and doing her best not to think of +her, or reproach herself for having treated her so unkindly; but no +matter what she did, she could not stifle the voice of conscience, and +its whisperings were far from pleasant to hear. + +That night, as she went up to bed, her better nature prompted her to +step into Rachel's room, and ask her if she felt any better; but "No," +she said to herself, "she will think it's all hypocrisy, and I won't do +it." + +She hurried and undressed herself as quickly as possible, so that she +was already in bed when Florence came in to get her night-clothes to +carry into Rose's room; but she did not speak or open her eyes. Florence +moved round as quietly as possible, getting her things together, and +then stepping to the bedside stooped down and kissed her friend; but +Marion did not speak or move; so Florence, thinking she was asleep, +turned out the gas, and left the room. When she was gone Marion buried +her head in the pillow, and wept bitter, bitter tears. + +It was a long time before she went to sleep, and then her rest was +disturbed by frightful dreams; she thought the house was on fire; that +she was safe, but Rachel and Florence were in the attic, where no one +could reach them, and they must burn to death while she stood looking +on. + +She awoke with a start, to see a bright light in the entry; springing +out of bed, she ran to the door just as Miss Christine, with a candle in +her hand, and a wrapper over her night-dress was passing by. + +"O Miss Christine," she cried, in an excited whisper, "is the house on +fire?" + +"No, indeed, dear, nothing of the sort; but Rachel is very ill, and I am +going down to make her some lemonade. Won't you please put something on, +and go in and sit with her? I cannot bear to leave her alone." + +Marion did not stop to answer; but running back into her room, threw a +shawl over her shoulders, and hastily thrusting her feet into her +slippers, hurried into Miss Stiefbach's room. There was only a dim light +in the chamber. Marion went up to the bed, and, leaning over, called +Rachel by name; but she made no answer, only moaned feebly, and tossed +her arms over her head, rolling her great black eyes from side to side. + +"Rachel," said Marion, thoroughly frightened, "don't you know me?" + +The voice seemed to rouse her, for she started up, and looked fixedly at +Marion; then putting her hands before her eyes, as if to shut out some +horrible sight, she cried, in a hoarse voice, "Go away! go away! you +hate me! you hate me! you're going to kill me!" + +Marion shuddered, for she knew Rachel must be delirious; she tried to +soothe her, but the sound of her voice only seemed to make her more +excited. She seemed to have a vague idea who she was, and that she was +there to do her harm. Once she sat up in bed, and, laying her hand on +Marion's arm, said in the most grieved, beseeching tone, "What makes you +hate me so? I never did you any harm." + +Marion, with tears in her eyes was about to speak, when suddenly the +tender, supplicating expression left Rachel's face, and one of intense +horror and grief took its place, as she grasped Marion's arm tightly +with one hand, stretching out her other arm, and pointing into a dark +corner of the room, exclaiming, in a voice that made her companion +shudder from head to foot: "See! see! you see they're taking it off! +they're taking it off! don't you see? It's my father! O father! father!" +she wailed, stretching out her arm as if entreating some person seen +only by herself, "don't leave me; for there'll be no one to love me +then. I'm all alone! all alone! all alone!" + +Marion's tears fell thick and fast, as the exhausted girl threw herself +back on the pillow and sobbed aloud; every unkind thought, every cold +glance, and every act of neglect which she had shown the poor, desolate +creature beside her pictured itself before her. Remorse was doing its +work, and her greatest fear was that Rachel would die while yet +delirious, and before she had an opportunity to ask her forgiveness, and +atone by her kindness in the future for her neglect of the past. But +although these thoughts passed rapidly through her mind, they were but +as the undercurrent of her immediate anxiety; it seemed as if Miss +Christine would never come, and Rachel still moaned and sobbed in a +heart-rending manner. + +When Miss Christine did at last enter the room, bringing the lemonade, +Marion hurried towards her, and whispered:-- + +"Oh, do you think she's going to die? Can't we do anything for her? +Can't _I_ do anything?" + +"I think she seems very ill indeed," replied Miss Christine, going to +the bedside, and laying a cloth wet in cold water on Rachel's head; then +coming back to Marion, "Will you stay with her while I go for the +doctor?" + +"Can't you send Bridget?" + +"No, the poor thing is half worn out with all she has had to do this +week. I would not call her up for anything. If you will stay with +Rachel, and keep changing the cloth on her head, I will go, for I dare +not wait until morning." + +"O Miss Christine!" exclaimed Marion, in a trembling whisper, "I can't +stay; indeed I can't, and hear her rave about her father; it is +dreadful! it goes right through me; you stay and _I'll_ go." + +"Marion, do you know it is almost midnight? You will be afraid." + +"You were not." + +"No, because I'm not nervous." + +"Well, I won't be nervous; if there's no danger for you, there is none +for me. I shall go." + +"Any _real_ danger I do not think there is, but of imaginary danger a +plenty, and if you should get seriously frightened I never should +forgive myself." + +"But I won't be frightened or nervous," said Marion, resolutely. "Here, +feel my hand; when Rachel was raving a moment ago, I _could_ not keep it +still; now it is as steady as yours. O Miss Christine, if you only +_knew_, you would let me go." + +"My dear child," said Miss Christine, laying her hand tenderly on +Marion's cheek, "I _do_ know, and if you really are courageous enough, +you may go. It is no use for me to wake up any of the girls; there is +not one of them that would dare go with you, I know." + +"I'll go alone, Miss Christine, and I know nothing will happen to me." + +Marion hurried back into her room, and dressed herself as quickly as +possible, putting on her thickest cloak, furs, and a warm hood. Miss +Christine stepped into the entry, and kissed her good-by, saying:-- + +"Don't be afraid, darling; you know nothing ever happens round here, and +if you bring the doctor back with you it may be the means of saving +Rachel's life." + +Marion made no reply, except by a glance full of meaning, and went +quietly downstairs, looking back as she reached the door, and nodding at +Miss Christine, who stood at the head of the stairs, holding a candle; +then she opened the door, and went out into the night alone. + +There were two roads which led to the village. By the road proper, on +which several residences bordered, the distance was about two miles; but +there was a shorter one, called the bridge road, which led through +several open fields, and crossed the B---- River, which was rarely +frequented except by the school-girls and farmers on their way to and +from market. This road kept a perfectly straight course to the village, +and although far more lonely than the other, on that account Marion +chose it. + +It was a perfect night; clear and cold, very cold; but of that Marion +thought nothing; she had braved New England winters all her life, and +was almost as hardy as a backwoodsman. The moon was full, and shone down +on as lovely a scene as one would wish to see; the trees with their +delicate coating of ice glistened and gleamed in its beams, as though +covered with myriads of jewels, and threw their fantastic shadows on the +shining snow. + +Marion hurried along the road, not giving herself time for fear, until +she had left the school-house some distance behind her. At any other +time she would have been wildly enthusiastic over the beauty of the +night; but looking at the moon from a comfortable sleigh, snugly tucked +up in buffalo robes, the stillness of the night broken by the jolly +jingling of bells and the laughter of merry friends, is a very different +thing from contemplating it on a lonely country road, no house in sight, +with your loudly beating heart for your only companion, and the hour +near midnight. + +At least Marion found it so; and, brave as she was, she could not keep +her heart from thumping against her side, or her hands from trembling +nervously, as she clasped them inside of her muff. Every bush she passed +took some fantastic shape, and as she strained her eyes before her to +make it assume some rational form, it seemed to move stealthily as if +about to spring upon her; the trees appeared to be stretching out their +naked branches, like long arms with ghostly fingers to clutch her as she +passed; now and then a twig, too heavily freighted with ice, would snap +off and come crackling to the ground, the sudden noise making her heart +stand still for an instant, only to start on again, beating more +violently than before. + +But still she pressed on, and soon the river, which was on the very +verge of the town, gleamed before her, and she quickened her pace, +thankful that so much of her journey was past; but who can describe the +horror and dismay she felt, when, upon reaching its banks, she found the +bridge was gone! The little river wound in and out for several miles, +doubling and redoubling itself, as it flowed among the woods and +fields, and was as quiet and placid a little river as ever could be, +with the exception of a number of rods above and below the bridge; here +its bed was filled with a quantity of rocks and stones, and the water, +rushing over and between them, formed innumerable cascades and +whirlpools, never freezing in the coldest weather. For some time the +bridge had been considered rather unsafe, and that afternoon the workmen +had taken away the floor, leaving the stays and beams still standing. + +Marion looked at the skeleton frame in utter despair. There lay the town +directly before her, the doctor's house being one of the first, and the +only means of getting to it were gone. To go up the bank of the river +and cross on the ice seemed out of the question, for there it was +bordered by thick woods, in which she could easily lose her way, and to +go back, and round by the regular road would take at least an hour +longer. Meanwhile Rachel might be dying, for aught she knew. She went +nearer the bridge, and inspected it more closely; the railings were +perfectly secure, and built upon two broad, solid beams which spanned +the river; the idea came into her head to cross the river on one of the +beams, holding firmly to the railing with both hands. She tied her muff +by the tassels round her neck, tightened the strings of her hood, and +stepped cautiously on to the beam. It seemed a fearful undertaking; her +heart almost misgave her; but the delirious cries of Rachel rang in her +ears and spurred her on. Step by step, slowly and carefully, as a little +child feels its way along a fence, she crept along; gaining confidence +with every movement, until she reached the middle of the bridge; then +she happened to look down. The black water seethed and foamed beneath +her, touched into brightness here and there by the moonlight. For an +instant her brain whirled, and she almost lost her balance. She shut her +eyes, and with a tremendous effort of her will was herself again. +Looking up to heaven, and inwardly beseeching God to sustain her, she +kept on, slowly and carefully as ever, moving first one foot then the +other, with both hands still firmly clasping the railing, until at last +the opposite side was reached, and she stepped upon the snow. + +Her first impulse was to throw herself upon the nearest rock, for now +that she had fairly crossed in safety, the extreme tension to which her +nerves had been subjected relaxed itself, and she was more inclined to +be alarmed at the loneliness of her situation than before. When on the +bridge all her thoughts had been concentrated upon getting over safely; +by force of will she had conquered her nervous fear, calling up all +sorts of imaginary dangers, which disappeared before the actual danger +which assailed her, and which, by presence of mind, she had been able to +overcome. But she would not indulge any of her wild fancies, though they +crowded themselves upon her against her will. She felt herself growing +weaker and weaker as she approached the end of her walk. The shadows +made by the trees and houses seemed even more gloomy than those of the +open road. Once a dog, chained in the neighborhood, broke the stillness +of the night by a long, mournful howl, which echoed through the air, +making Marion shudder as she heard it. At last the house was reached; +running up the steps she gave the bell a tremendous pull. She could hear +it ring through the house; then all was still again. She waited, what +seemed to her, standing there alone on the door-step, which did not even +offer the friendly shadow of a porch, a very long time; then rang again, +even more violently than before. In a moment she heard a window opened +above, and looking up beheld a night-capped head, and the doctor's voice +asked, "What's the row down there? Seems to me you're in a terrible +hurry." + +"Some one's sick, do let me in quick, Dr. Brown!--it's Marion Berkley." + +"Marion Berkley!" exclaimed the doctor, in astonishment. "Here, catch +this key; it's got a long string tied to it, and let yourself in; I'll +be down directly." + +Marion caught the key, and in a moment unlocked the door; once inside, +her strength forsook her, and she sank on the door-mat in total +darkness, perfectly thankful to be in a place of safety. Pretty soon she +heard a movement above, a light gleamed down the stairway, and she heard +the doctor's voice calling to some one in the back of the house to have +the horse harnessed, and brought round to the door immediately. + +In a few moments the doctor himself appeared, bearing a light in his +hand, and exclaiming, as he made his way downstairs, "How, in the name +of sense, did you come here at this time of night?" + +"I walked by the road," answered Marion, her teeth chattering with +nervousness. + +"By the town road," said the doctor; "and who came with you?" + +"I came alone, by the bridge road." + +"By the bridge road!" exclaimed the doctor, stopping short, as he was +putting on his great-coat. "Why, the bridge is down!" + +"I didn't know until I got to it," said Marion, wishing he would hurry, +and not stop to question her; "then it was too late to go back; so I +crossed on the beam." + +"The devil you did!" exclaimed the doctor; then catching up the candle +in one hand, he led her by the other into the dining-room. "There! just +sit down there! Your hands are shaking like old Deacon Grump's, and your +teeth chatter as if they were going to drop out. Now drink every drop of +that, while I go and wrap up." + +While he had been talking, the doctor had gone to the sideboard, and +poured out a generous glass of sherry, which he handed to Marion; she +took it and drank it all. It sent a genial warmth through her trembling +frame, and by the time the doctor called out to her that he was ready, +she felt quite like herself. + +After they were seated in the sleigh, and well tucked up with robes, the +doctor said, "Well now, young lady, if it's agreeable to you, I should +like to know who is sick enough to send you chasing over country roads, +across broken bridges, to rout up an old fellow like me." + +"Rachel Drayton, sir," said Marion; "she's had a bad cold for some time; +this afternoon she went to bed with a terrible headache and sore throat, +and now she's in a high fever, and out of her head." + +"Rachel Drayton; that's the one with the great black eyes, isn't it?" +said the doctor. "H'm! I remember her; very nervous sort of girl, isn't +she?" + +"No, I shouldn't think she was," replied Marion; "she has always seemed +very calm and quiet; you know she's an orphan." + +"Yes, I remember her. I saw her the last time I was there. She's just +the one to be delirious with even a very slight illness." + +"Then you don't think she's going to be very sick?" asked Marion, +eagerly. + +"My dear child," said the doctor, looking down at Marion, "how can I +tell until I've seen her? But good heavens! what's the matter with +you?" + +Marion had burst into a fit of laughter, and the doctor sat and looked +at her in perfect amazement. + +"What _is_ the matter, child? What are you laughing at?" + +But Marion laughed and laughed; throwing her head down into her muff as +if to control herself, and then looking up at the doctor, and laughing +harder than before. + +"What's the matter with you, child?" cried the poor man, really growing +uneasy. "Have you gone crazy, or was the wine too much for you?" + +"It isn't that, doctor, but you--you--" + +"What in the devil's the matter with me, I should like to know!" + +"You've--you've--got on your nightcap!" cried Marion, as well as she +could speak. + +The doctor dropped the reins, and put both hands to his head. Sure +enough, in the hurry of dressing he had forgotten to take off the +immense bandanna handkerchief he wore tied round his head every night; +and over it he had put his cloth cap, which, fitting tight to his head, +left the ends of the handkerchief sticking out each side like great +horns, giving an indescribably funny appearance to the doctor's jolly +round face. + +Now Dr. Brown, although he always considered himself privileged to say +and do anything he had a mind to, was excessively particular about his +toilet, and to take a moonlight drive with a young lady, with his +nightcap on, was quite contrary to his usual habits. However, it was +altogether too ridiculous a situation to do anything but laugh, and the +doctor could enjoy a joke even against himself. + +"Laugh on, Marion; I don't blame you a bit," he said. "I must cut a +pretty figure." + +"Just look at your shadow; then you'll see for yourself." + +The doctor looked over his shoulder. "The devil!" he exclaimed. "Why, I +look just like him, don't I? Depend upon it, that's what it is; I've +called upon his Satanic majesty so often, that now he's after me in good +earnest. Well, old fellow, I'll deprive you of your horns at any rate;" +and the doctor brought the ends of the handkerchief down, and tucked +them under his chin. + +"Marion, don't let me go into the house with this thing on. I won't take +it off now, as long as you've seen it, for it's very comfortable this +cold night; but I shouldn't like to shock Miss Stiefbach's dignity by +appearing before her in such a rig." + +"Miss Stiefbach is away," replied Marion. + +"You don't say so! And the cook sick abed too. Well, Miss Christine has +her hands full." + +"And both the other servants are half sick, and Martin went with Miss +Stiefbach." + +"And that accounts for your coming out on such a wild-goose chase." + +"I was chasing after you, sir," answered Marion, mischievously. + +"No insinuations, miss! There's the school-house; get up, Beauty; you're +growing lazy." + +Marion found the door unlocked, and entering the house quietly, only +stopping long enough for the doctor to divest himself of his fantastic +head-dress, she led the way upstairs. + +"How is she?" anxiously asked Marion of Miss Christine, who met them at +the chamber-door. + +"She is more quiet, but I am _very_ glad the doctor is here." + +The doctor took off his gloves, rubbed his hands together two or three +times, then went to the bedside. + +Rachel looked at him; but seemed to pay no attention to him or any one +else. He felt of her head and pulse, then asked Miss Christine if she +had ever seen her in a fever before. + +"No," replied Miss Christine; "but she often has severe headaches; she +has a sore throat now." + +"Bring the light nearer," said the doctor. "Now, my dear young lady, +will you please open your mouth?" + +But Rachel only moved her head, and showed signs of becoming restless. +The doctor stooped down, opened her mouth himself, and tried to look +down her throat; but she resisted him, and commenced sobbing and +muttering incoherently. The doctor soothed her as he would a little +child, and she became quiet. + +"Has she complained of pain in her back and limbs?" + +"None at all," replied Miss Christine. "I asked her particularly." + +"Give her a teaspoonful of this mixture every half hour until the fever +abates," handing a glass to Miss Christine, "I will come again to-morrow +morning." + +"O doctor," whispered Marion, who had silently watched every movement, +"is it scarlet fever?" + +Miss Christine said nothing, but her eyes asked the same question. + +"Of course I cannot tell yet," said the doctor, rising and drawing on +his gloves, "but I hardly think it is. I noticed her the other day, when +I was here, and remember thinking at the time that even a slight illness +would seem more severe with her than with most persons. She looks like a +person who had suffered and endured without complaint. I don't like to +see that sort of look on a young face. When she is ill this unnatural +self-control gives way, and she's out of her head, when any other +person would be all straight. However, I advise you to keep all the +scholars away from her for the present. As for this young lady," taking +hold of Marion's hand, "the best place for such adventurous young +females, who go about crossing broken bridges at midnight, is bed." + +"What do you mean by broken bridges, doctor?" asked Miss Christine. + +"Only that the bridge was down, and she crossed on the beams, that's +all. My prescription for her is a glass of hot lemonade with a drop of +something in it to keep it; you understand, Miss Christine;" and the +doctor nodded his head significantly as he left the room. + +"My dear Marion," whispered Miss Christine, as she threw her arms around +her, "you are the bravest girl I ever knew!" + +"Nonsense!" replied Marion, "and please don't say anything about it +downstairs in the morning; I won't be talked about." + +"I understand," said Miss Christine; "but now you must go straight to +bed. I'll heat the lemonade over the gas, and bring it in to you." + +"Miss Christine, you go and lie down yourself, and I'll sit up; indeed, +I couldn't sleep if I went to bed." + +"Yes, you will, and don't talk of sitting up, for I won't allow it; go +right away." + +Marion obeyed; in a very few moments she was in bed, had drank the +lemonade, and, before she knew she was even drowsy, was fast asleep. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +THE VICTORY. + + +The next day the scholars were all very much astonished to find Rachel +was really ill, so much so that the doctor had been sent for in the +night; but none were aware of Marion's midnight adventure, for Miss +Christine had kept her promise to say nothing about it. + +Recitations were given up until Miss Stiefbach should return, and the +scholars were all requested to keep as quiet as possible. Every one went +about with noiseless steps and hushed voices; some learning that Rachel +had been delirious, and had a fever, were seriously frightened lest it +should prove to be contagious, and it was as much as the older girls +could do to keep the little ones in order. + +About ten o'clock the doctor came, and the scholars all collected in the +school-room and library, waiting to hear his verdict. Marion and +Florence went to their own room, leaving the door ajar, that they might +hear the doctor when he went down, and learn from his own lips his +opinion of the case. + +He came at last, and Florence beckoned him into the room; she tried to +ask the question uppermost in her mind, but could not. The doctor knew +what she wanted, and said:-- + +"She is not so bad as I feared; the fever is not so high, and she is not +at all delirious." + +"Then you don't think it's scarlet fever?" anxiously asked Marion. + +"No, nor typhoid; I feared one or the other, but now I am confident it +is nothing contagious. She is pretty sick, but not dangerously so; but +how are you, Miss Marion? Walking over broken bridges at twelve o'clock +at night isn't a very good thing for red cheeks, is it?" + +"What did he mean?" asked Florence, as he left the room. + +"Some of his nonsense," replied Marion, from whose heart a great weight +had been lifted. + +"Marion, you don't put me off in that way," said Florence, laying her +hands on Marion's shoulders, and looking straight into her eyes. +Suddenly an idea seemed to flash into her head: "Did you go for the +doctor?" + +Marion nodded assent. + +"Tell me about it." + +"There is nothing to tell. I woke up in the night, and saw Miss +Christine, with a light in her hand, going downstairs. She told me +Rachel seemed very ill, and I went in and stayed with her while Miss +Christine was gone. Then she wanted to go for the doctor, for she would +not call Biddy; but I preferred going to being left with Rachel; so I +went; that's all." + +"But what about the broken bridge?" asked Florence. + +"The bridge was half down, and I crossed on the beams." + +"Marion, how could you? How did you dare?" said Florence, throwing her +arms round Marion, as if to shield her from present danger; "if your +feet had slipped you would certainly have fallen in, and there would not +have been a soul there to save you." + +"But my feet did not slip," said Marion. "I was frightened; I don't +pretend to say I wasn't; and once when I got to the middle of the bridge +I came near falling; but I shut my eyes, and the thought of Rachel gave +me strength and courage. O Florence! if you had heard her raving, and +talking about her father as I did, you would not wonder I went;" and +Marion bowed her head on her friend's shoulder, and gave vent to the +tears which she had been struggling to keep back. + +Florence held her close in her arms, saying nothing, but bending her own +head until it rested against Marion's cheek, and lightly passing her +hand over her hair until the violence of her emotion had passed away, +and she looked up, with a faint smile, saying, "Don't think me a baby, +Flo, but I haven't had a good cry with you for ever so long, and I +believe I needed it." + +"Think you a baby, darling! Indeed I don't; I think you're the noblest +girl I ever knew." + +"Yes, very noble, I should think!" exclaimed Marion, bitterly; "the way +I have treated Rachel has been nobleness itself!" + +"But, my dear Marion, you have been acting against your better nature +all the time. I knew you would come out all right." + +For a moment Marion was silent, then looking up suddenly, she said, +"Flo, I've been awfully wicked; I might as well have it all out now, and +done with it. When I heard Rachel was coming here I was provoked, +because I didn't like the idea of having a new scholar, that was all; +but when Miss Christine came in, and told us she was an orphan, it +flashed into my head, like a presentiment, that your heart would warm +towards her; that you would make her your friend; and from that moment I +determined to hate her. Don't look so shocked, dear, or I can't go on, +and I want to say it all now. It wasn't a very easy thing, you may be +sure, after I saw her; but I would not listen to my conscience, and only +steeled myself against her all the more, when I saw she had every +quality that would make her lovable, and many that were particularly +attractive to me. It was hard, you can't tell how hard, to see her day +by day taking the place with you that had always been mine. I knew it +was my own fault, because, if I had treated her as I ought, as I really +wanted to, we might all three have been warm friends; but I wanted you +all to myself. I was jealous, and I might as well say so! However, the +night before Thanksgiving I determined to overcome my wicked feelings, +and yield to my better nature. You know how I treated her that night, +and I should have done the same ever since if I hadn't been a +contemptible coward! I heard Georgie Graham tell Mattie Denton that I +was _toadying_ Rachel, because she was an heiress; and I was afraid if I +began to treat her kindly the whole school would think the same thing. +There! it is all out now; do you think I am a perfect wretch?" + +At first Florence made no answer; then she said very gently, "'He that +conquereth himself is greater than he that taketh a city.'" + +"I know it, Flo," answered Marion, with tears in her eyes; "I've thought +of that so many times. But this is such a _little_ victory, and there +really ought not to have been anything to conquer." + +"But there was, and you conquered it; if it were possible I should say I +love you more than ever." + +"Then Rachel has never taken my place entirely away?" + +"No, darling, never! I love Rachel very much, very much indeed; but +still it is not exactly as I love you. I can't explain the difference, +but I know it is there." + +"I am satisfied," said Marion, kissing her friend softly. "Do you think +Rachel will ever learn to love me?" + +"I know she will," replied Florence; "only act your own self; _follow_ +your good impulses instead of driving them away from you, and you will +make her love you whether she wants to or not." + + * * * * * + +For many days Rachel was very ill, and Miss Stiefbach and Miss Christine +were very anxious about her; still the doctor assured them there was no +cause for alarm; her illness would be likely to prove a tedious one, but +after she was fairly recovered she would be much stronger than she had +been for a long time. It seemed very sad to think of the poor girl, so +ill, without a relative near her, for Miss Stiefbach knew there was no +one for whom she could send, who would seem any nearer to Rachel, if as +near, as herself and Miss Christine. They procured an excellent nurse to +assist in taking care of her, but nevertheless devoted themselves to her +as much as it was possible to do, without neglecting their other duties. +It was a pity Miss Stiefbach's scholars could not have entered that +sick-room, and seen their teacher as she appeared there; they would have +learned to love her then as Rachel did. No one would have recognized, in +the gentle-voiced, tender-hearted woman who bent over the orphan girl +with almost a mother's watchful care, the cold, dignified superintendent +of the school. + +After a while the fever subsided, but Rachel was still very weak, and +the doctor's prediction, that her convalescence would be very slow, soon +proved itself true. She was very patient, yielding herself entirely to +those who so kindly watched over her. As soon as the fever was past, +Florence had begged permission to sit with her, promising not to talk, +as perfect rest and silence were most especially enjoined by the doctor. +One day when the nurse had gone to lie down, and Miss Stiefbach and Miss +Christine both had something which needed their immediate attention, +Marion offered to sit with her. She had not been in the room since the +first night of Rachel's illness, and was not prepared for the change +which had taken place in her: then a bright color burned in her cheeks; +now her face was so thin and pale as to be pitiable to look at. She was +sleeping quietly; so Marion seated herself at the foot of the bed, not +going any nearer for fear of disturbing her. She sat there some time, +her thoughts busy with the past, when she was very much startled at +hearing Rachel say, in a weak voice:-- + +"Miss Christine, is that you?" + +"No," answered Marion, rising, and going quickly to the bedside; "it's +Marion; can I do anything for you?" + +"You, Marion!" said Rachel, holding out her hand. "I'm so glad!" + +"Why?" asked Marion, kneeling by the bed, and taking Rachel's hand in +both of hers. + +"Because I wanted to see you so much. Miss Christine told me who went +for the doctor for me that night. I want to thank you." + +"Don't Rachel! don't!" said Marion, her voice trembling despite her +efforts to keep it steady. "Forgive me for all the unkind things I have +done; that is what I want." + +"Forgive you, Marion! As if after that night there could be anything to +forgive! I'll do better than that; I'll love you." + +Marion could not speak, but she bent forward and pressed a kiss upon +Rachel's lips. That kiss was the seal upon a bond of friendship which +was never broken by either. + +And so a few words, a silent action, cleared away all the unkindness and +doubt of the past. Why is it, that so often, in the lives of all of us, +such words are left unspoken, such actions go undone, the want of which +clouds not only our own happiness, but that of others? + +Soon after this, Rachel was able to be moved on to a lounge, and every +spare hour that Marion and Florence could get from their studies was +devoted to her. Marion would seat herself on the floor by the couch, and +Florence lean over the back as they talked of everything that was going +on downstairs, or made plans for their summer vacation. Sometimes their +conversation drifted on to quieter and graver subjects; then, as the +twilight gathered round them, they would draw nearer together, and hand +in hand sit in silence until Marion, fearing lest too much thinking +would have a bad effect upon Rachel, with some jesting remarks, would +jump up and light the gas. + +Lying there, in the daily companionship of her two friends, Rachel +regained her health and strength, and passed happier hours than she had +known since her father's death. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +THE WEDDING. + + +"I've got the greatest piece of news for you, you ever heard!" cried +Marion, bursting into the room where Florence, Rachel, Mattie, and Sarah +were sitting one morning in the early part of June. "Guess who's +engaged?" + +"Engaged!" echoed Sarah; "I'm sure I don't know." + +"Yourself," said Mattie. + +"Oh, pshaw! don't be ridiculous!" said Marion. "Come now, girls, guess +somebody rational." + +"Well, aren't you rational, I should like to know?" asked Rachel. + +"I shouldn't be if I were engaged," retorted Marion; "but guess now; +every one but Florence, for I think she would guess right." + +"Oh, tell us, Flo, do," urged Sarah; "Marion will keep it all night." + +"No, I won't," cried Marion; "it's _Miss Christine_." + +"Miss Christine!" shouted every girl, jumping to her feet in +astonishment,--"to whom?" + +"Why, M. Béranger, of course," said Florence; "who else could it be?" + +"Why, I never thought of such a thing," said Rachel. + +"Well, I don't know where your eyes have been," said Marion; "for I've +suspected it a long time, and so has Florence." + +"Oh, I thought he liked her, and she him; but I never thought of +_that_." + +"Well, I think it is perfectly horrid!" declared Sarah. + +"Why, Sallie, what do you mean?" said Marion; "I think it's splendid." + +"Oh, of course, it's all very nice for you girls who are going away at +the end of the term; but here I've got to stay another year, and I shall +_die_ without Miss Christine!" + +"But you'll have her just the same," said Marion; "they're going to live +here for a year at least; it almost makes me want to come back again." + +"Going to live here?" cried Sarah, clasping her hands with delight; +"then I _do_ think it's perfectly magnificent!" + +"Tell us all about it, Marion," asked Mattie; "how did you know it?" + +"Miss Christine told me herself. You ought to have seen how pretty she +looked! She blushed like any girl, and I just threw my arms round her +and gave her a good hug. She told me I might tell the girls who were +going to leave this term; but she didn't want the others to know it at +present, and here I've been, and let the cat out of the bag; for I +didn't see Sallie when I came in, and never dreamed she was here. +Sallie, if you lisp a word of it, I'll have you shut up, and kept on +bread and water for a week, and you shan't go to the wedding." + +"Is she going to be married during school?" + +"I shouldn't wonder; but I couldn't get it out of her when. Now, girls, +we must give her a handsome present." + +"It ought to be from the whole school," suggested Florence. + +"Yes, so I think; but don't you think it would be nice if we six girls, +who have been here four years together, should all work her something? +My idea is to make an ottoman: one work the middle, four the corners, +and the other fill it up; what do you say?" + +"A capital idea!" said Mattie; "and I choose the filling up, for that's +the only part I like to do." + +"You're welcome to it," said Marion, "for we all hate it." + +"Mab, couldn't you design it yourself?" asked Florence; "it would be so +much handsomer, and Miss Christine would think all the more of it." + +"Nothing I should like better, if you'll all trust me." + +"Of course we will," said Mattie; "you designed your carpet-bag, didn't +you? It is a perfect beauty!" + +"Let me see it," said Sarah. "It's a new one, isn't it?" + +"Oh, what handsome letters!" said Rachel. "There, now I see for the +first time why the girls call you Mab. I always thought it was such a +queer nickname for Marion." + +"Why, didn't you know?" answered Marion. "M. A. B., Marion Ascott +Berkley; but I never write my whole name; I like just the two, Marion +Berkley, a great deal better." + +"Do you know," said Sarah, in the most serious way, "I don't think 'Mab' +seems to suit you so well as it used to? then you were sort +of--well--but now you're kind of--I don't exactly know what, but +different from the other." + +"Sallie, you are a goose!" laughed Marion, as Sarah's lucid description +of the change in her character produced a shout from the girls. "I shall +have to muzzle you until you manage your tongue better;" and quick as a +flash Marion seized her satchel, and clapped it over Sarah's head, who +resisted violently; "will you be a good girl if I let you out?" + +"Yes! yes!" cried Sallie, from the inside of the bag, her voice almost +drowned by the laughter of the girls. + +"Well now, behave yourself," said Marion, as she released her prisoner, +"and next time don't talk of what you know nothing about." + +"Well, you are, any way!" cried Sarah, brushing the hair out of her +eyes. + +"Take care!" laughed Marion, shaking the satchel at Sarah; "you know +what you have to expect." + +"Come, girls, let's go downstairs and tell the others," said Rachel. + +"So we will," said Marion; "they ought to have known it as soon as we +did;" and down they all went. + +Miss Christine's engagement did not long remain a secret, and when the +knowledge became general, the little woman was fairly showered with +kisses and caresses. Her scholars had almost worshipped her before, but +now she seemed invested with a new importance, and was quite enveloped +in a perpetual incense of love and admiration. M. Béranger, in the +comparatively short time he had been with them, had won the respect of +all his pupils; but now that he was going to marry their Miss Christine +they made a perfect hero of him. + +It came out, at last, that the marriage was to take place the last day +of June, two days later than the usual one for closing school. Miss +Christine's first idea had been to be married very quietly in church, +inviting any of the scholars who chose to do so to remain over; but the +girls all begged her to have a "regular wedding," as they called it, and +she had consented. + +Every one of the scholars was perfectly delighted at the idea of staying +over to the wedding, and all were anxiously looking forward to the +important day. Invitations were sent to those of the parents with whom +Miss Christine was personally acquainted, and the girls had great fun +planning and replanning how all the guests were to be accommodated for +the night, as they would have to come the night previous. Great was the +delight of Marion, when Miss Christine told her that she wanted the six +graduates to be her bridesmaids, and she immediately ran off to find the +girls and plan their dresses. They had been as busy as bees ever since +they knew of the engagement; there were but a few stitches more to set +in the ottoman, and it was to be sent the next day to Mrs. Berkley, who +was to get it mounted, and bring it up when she came. + +As many of the scholars were very wealthy, while the parents of others +were in moderate circumstances, Marion had suggested that all +contributions for the present, from the whole school, should be put into +a closed box, through a hole in the cover, thus preventing any one from +having an uncomfortable consciousness that she had not been able to give +as much as another. When the box was opened, it was found to contain a +very large sum. This was forwarded by Marion, who seemed by general +consent to be considered chief of the committee of arrangements, to her +mother, with directions to use it in the purchase of a plain, but +handsome, gold watch and chain. There proved to be a surplus fund, with +which Mrs. Berkley bought a large album, in which were placed +photographs of all the girls in the school. + +Miss Stiefbach had so much to occupy her mind, that several times during +the week of the wedding she was actually seen to hurry through the hall, +quite forgetful of her usual dignified glide. In fact, she seemed quite +another person; the prospect of her sister's happiness had wrought a +great change in her, and made her quite unbend to those around her. + +Aunt Bettie came down several times with butter and eggs, never going +away without getting a glimpse of Marion, and for three or four days +before _the_ day, Jemima was at the house all the time, stoning raisins, +beating eggs, and making herself generally useful. + +At last the wedding-day actually arrived. Mr. and Mrs. Berkley, with +several other fathers and mothers, had arrived the night previous, and +every nook and corner of the house was filled to overflowing. Some of +the scholars slept three in a bed, others on mattresses laid on the +floor; but no one thought of complaining, and the more inconvenience +they had to put up with, the better they seemed to like it; for wasn't +it all for their Miss Christine? + +The six bridesmaids, with the other older girls, had been busy every +moment of the day before, making wreaths of wild flowers and roses; +these they hung early in the morning all over the lower part of the +house. The folding-doors were festooned, and trimmed with an arch of +flowers, and the walls of the little room back of them, in which Miss +Christine was to stand to receive her friends, were perfectly covered +with wreaths, garlands, and bouquets; so that it looked like a fairy +bower. + +They had also decorated the church, although of that neither Miss +Stiefbach nor Miss Christine was as yet aware. The chancel-rail was +trimmed with garlands of white flowers; down the aisle were four arches, +the one at the door being of bright, glowing colors, and each one +growing paler, until the one in front of the altar was of pure, bridal +white, and over that hung a "marriage bell" of marguerites. + +The girls had had to work hard, and had scoured the country far and near +for flowers; but they had done everything themselves, and not a bud was +twined in those decorations that did not take with it a loving thought +of the dear little woman in whose honor they were made. + +At last everything was completed; the bridesmaids were all dressed, and +collected in Marion's room, putting on their gloves, and Marion had gone +to put on the bridal veil,--a favor which she had begged, and which had +been most readily granted; in a few moments that was done and the party +started for the church, where Miss Stiefbach and her guests were already +arrived. I doubt if it would be possible to find a prettier bridal party +in all the world, than entered that little church that glorious June +morning. First came Mattie Denton and Grace Minton; then Julia Thayer +and Alice Howard; then Marion and Florence, and directly behind them M. +Béranger and Miss Christine. The bridesmaids wore simple white muslins, +short, the upper skirts looped with clematis and rose-buds, and delicate +wreaths of the same in their hair. The bride also wore white muslin, +over which hung the bridal veil of tulle, put on with a wreath of +natural orange-blossoms and myrtle, the work of Marion's hands. + +M. Béranger looked, and acted like a prince about to take possession of +his kingdom, and his clear "I vill" could be heard in every part of the +church. But the ceremony was soon over; the bridal party turned and +faced the eager, happy faces before them, and passed slowly down under +the arches of lovely flowers, out into the sunlight, the organ pealing +forth the glorious old wedding-march. Such a wedding-reception was never +seen before! There were no dignified ushers to lead you decorously up to +the bride, and whisk you off again before you got an idea into your +head; and if there had been, they would have been tremendously snubbed +by that throng of impetuous girls, who all crowded round Miss +Christine, or rather Madame Béranger, each one eager for the first kiss. +All formality was set aside; every one was radiantly happy, and, +literally, everything went merry as a marriage bell. + +It would be useless to attempt to describe Miss Christine's delight at +her many presents; for, in addition to those I have already mentioned, +almost every girl in the school gave her some little thing she had made +herself. M. Béranger also received many proofs of their regard. + +But the time soon arrived when the bride and bridesmaids, who were to +leave in the Boston train that afternoon, had to go and change their +dresses. The girls' trunks were all packed, and there was little enough +time for the adieus which naturally accompanied a final departure from +school. The carriage for the bride was at the door, and behind it +several wagons, of various descriptions, for the bridesmaids and their +friends. Miss Christine came down, looking so lovely, in her gray +travelling-suit, that there was a perfect rush at her for the final +good-by; but the last one was said, and in a moment she and her husband +were in the carriage and off. Sarah Brown threw an old shoe after them +for good luck, the wagons followed on, and the whole party started down +the road, amid the shouts and cheers of the girls, who crowded on to the +piazza, almost hiding poor Miss Stiefbach, as they waved their +handkerchiefs, and threw their farewell kisses in the air. + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +THE JOURNEY. + + +Rachel's intention had been to stay with Miss Stiefbach until the return +of her uncle, whom she expected during the month of October; but Marion +had urged her to go home with her, and join their family party in their +summer trip. Mrs. Berkley seconded the invitation so warmly that Rachel +had accepted with great pleasure. + +Finding that Mr. Stevenson's means were not sufficient to enable him to +allow Florence to join the party, Rachel, with the utmost delicacy and +tact, had invited her to go with them,--an arrangement which proved more +than satisfactory to all. + +I fear some of my readers have thought that Rachel's uncle must be a +cold, hard-hearted man to leave his orphan niece so long to the care of +strangers, and in justice to that gentleman I must give some explanation +of his seeming neglect. + +Although a man of great wealth, he had devoted himself to the study of +surgery, throwing into the pursuit as much energy as if he depended on +his skill for his daily bread. Having become quite famous as a surgeon, +he had for several years given his services to a charity hospital in +Berlin; but having been away from his native land for ten years, he +notified the directors of the hospital, a month previous to his +brother's death, that at the end of a year from that time he must leave +them. He signified his intention of donating to the hospital a sum of +money, the income of which would be sufficient to pay a handsome salary +to any one whom they might find competent to take his place. When the +news of his brother's death reached him, his first impulse had been to +start at once for America, and make a home for the orphan girl so +suddenly bereft of a father's care; but the same steamer brought him +letters from his lawyer and business agent, stating that, according to a +wish expressed in the will of his deceased brother, his niece had been +placed at an excellent boarding-school, where she would remain for a +year, unless other directions were received from him; so he deferred +leaving until the time Rachel's school would close; but as she wrote him +that she was well and happy, and had made such pleasant plans for the +summer, he postponed his return still later, finding that until that +time no surgeon could be procured whom he felt capable of filling his +responsible position. + +Mr. and Mrs. Berkley, Marion, Florence, and Rachel, with Fred and Mr. +Thornton, made up the travelling party. Mr. Berkley secured a +drawing-room car for their exclusive use, and in the best possible +spirits they set out for New York. The day after arriving there they +went up the Hudson to West Point, spending a week at that delightful +place, made up of enchanting scenery and still more enchanting cadets. +It would be useless to say the girls did not enjoy the latter quite as +much as the former, for what girl of eighteen ever could resist brass +buttons? + +For a day or two, Mr. Thornton and Fred escorted them about town, took +them to the review, and everywhere else that there was anything worth +seeing, but never introducing one of their military acquaintances, +notwithstanding said acquaintances gave them plenty of opportunities for +doing so. But such a state of things was not likely to last long; for +the young women, although apparently unconscious of the admiring +glances with which they were favored, in their secret hearts knew +perfectly well that those spruce cadets never met them whenever they +went out, or passed in front of their hotel-windows so many times a day, +for the sole purpose of getting a bow from Fred or Mr. Thornton. + +"The idea," exclaimed Marion, as the three girls were putting on their +hats for their usual walk, "of our going away from West Point without +having been introduced to a single cadet! I think it's outrageous!" + +"But, Marion," said Rachel, "don't you suppose if they wanted to know us +very much, they'd find a way to get introduced?" + +"How can they, when Fred and Arthur Thornton mount guard over us every +time we go out? Papa doesn't know any one but the old officers. Arthur +Thornton knows ever so many cadets, and I think it's _very_ strange he +doesn't bring them to call on us." + +"I'm sure," said Florence, "Mr. Thornton is very polite and attentive +himself; I think he's very nice." + +"Oh, so do I," replied Marion; "he's nice enough, but aren't we going to +have _him_ all summer? I tell you just how it is; he doesn't intend to +introduce any one, because he feels so grand taking us everywhere +himself!" + +"O Marion," laughed Rachel, "I'm afraid you're growing conceited." + +"No, I'm not, but what I say is true. If we didn't dress in the fashion, +and look pretty nice all the time, he'd be only too glad to get us off +his hands." + +"Seems to me you're rather hard on Mr. Thornton," said Florence, +smoothing the feather in her hat. "Why is he any more to blame than +Fred?" + +"Of course he is! Fred doesn't know any one, but some of the little +fellows, that Arthur Thornton hasn't introduced to him; besides, he's +just the age when it makes him feel important to have three young +females under his charge. But I tell you I'm going to put a stop to +this; I know there are plenty of young men here actually dying to be +presented to us. I think it is positively cruel to let them languish any +longer, and if there isn't more than one cadet introduced to us before +night, then my name is not Marion Berkley." + +That morning the whole party went to the armory with an old officer, who +was at West Point making a visit to his son, a member of the graduating +class. When they started from the hotel, Marion took her father's arm, +and joined with him in his conversation with the officer. Before they +reached the armory Col. Stranburg was perfectly delighted with her, and +the interest she evinced for his profession, and quite devoted himself +to her during the morning. + +"My dear young lady," he said as they were returning to the hotel, "I +should like to call on you and your friends this evening, and bring my +son with me." + +"I should be delighted," replied Marion, who had been wondering how she +should ask him to do that very thing without appearing too eager; "for +as yet we do not any of us know a single cadet." + +"What!" exclaimed the old gentleman, in unfeigned astonishment; "you +don't mean to say you've been at West Point three days, and don't know a +cadet! Why, I supposed that by this time you had a whole necklace of +brass buttons." + +"I haven't," laughed Marion, "and I don't think I care for one; but I +should like to know some one here." + +"Of course you would; and I don't understand it at all. Ah! now I see!" +he exclaimed, with a meaning glance at the two young men who were +walking in front with Florence and Rachel; "you have been monopolized, +but we'll alter the state of things." + +Col. Stranburg was as good as his word, and called that evening, +bringing with him, not only his son, but two other cadets, who proved to +be the very young gentlemen the girls had so often noticed. The next day +the young men called again, each bringing a friend, and so it went on; +every evening their parlor was crowded, and the girls were showered with +attentions and bouquets till the end of the week, when Mr. Berkley +carried them off, declaring that their heads would be completely turned +if they remained any longer. + +From West Point they went to the Catskills, spending several weeks +there. Marion, who had never travelled to any extent, was perfectly +delighted with everything she saw, but above all with the exquisite +beauty of the scenery. She would often wander away from the others, find +some unfrequented spot, and sit for hours drinking in the loveliness +about her, her whole nature expanding under its influence. + +From the Catskills they went to Saratoga, giving only one day and night +to that abode of fashion; from there to Montreal; then down the St. +Lawrence to Niagara, and from there home, arriving in Boston about the +last of September. + +It would be useless for me to attempt to give an account of all they saw +and did that summer; it would fill at least one small volume. Suffice it +to say, that every one enjoyed themselves to the utmost; that Rachel +could never thank Mrs. Berkley half enough for inviting her to join +their party; and Florence could never express half her gratitude to +Rachel for inviting her to go with her. + +I think I conveyed to my readers the idea that Mr. Thornton was somewhat +in love with Marion the first time he saw her; and the more he saw her +the better he liked her. Every one knows how easily people get +acquainted who are thrown together as they were, and before the summer +was half over, they felt as if they had known each other for years. + +Marion liked Mr. Thornton very much; in fact, once or twice she had been +guilty of indulging in certain little day-dreams, in which that young +gentleman figured quite extensively; but she had been heartily ashamed +of herself afterwards, and resolved in the future not to let her +imagination take such ridiculous flights. But she could not help +noticing, that, polite as he was to her friends, he was still more so to +her. There was a difference in the very way he spoke to her; not that he +was ever sentimental or tender; Marion would have had too much good +sense to allow anything of the kind, even if he had been inclined to be +so foolish, which I am happy to say he was not. But she remembered, that +throughout their whole journey she had never expressed a wish to go to +any particular place, or see any lovely view which the rest of the party +considered rather unattainable, but what, somehow or other, Mr. Thornton +cleared away all difficulties, and almost before she was aware of it the +wish was gratified. She would have been something more than human, if +such very chivalrous attentions had not been agreeable to her. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + +RACHEL'S UNCLE RETURNS. + + +"There, Rachel, I flatter myself that hangs just about right," said +Marion, walking across the room to display the train of her new black +silk. + +"And so it does," replied Rachel, turning away from the glass where she +had been putting on her fall hat; "the slope is quite perfect. Why, you +look positively queenly!" + +"Don't I though?" laughed Marion, only glancing now and then with an air +of great satisfaction at the folds of her train as it swept gracefully +beside her chair. "I've held out all summer, and would not put on a long +dress until I could have a train, and now I've got one." + +"I should certainly say you had," said her mother, entering at that +moment with her bonnet and shawl on. "Come Rachel, are you ready? The +carriage is at the door. I suppose Marion will spend her time, while we +are out, walking up and down the room, learning how to manage her train, +so as not to stumble over it the first time she goes downstairs." + +"You horrible mamma!" laughed Marion; "as if I could be so clumsy! +Besides, you know I am staying home on purpose to finish papa's slippers +in time for his birthday." + +"Oh, yes, we know," said Rachel, "I don't suppose there's any danger of +your having a caller while we are out." + +"No, I don't suppose there is," retorted Marion, knowing well the +meaning of Rachel's mischievous glance, "unless your uncle should +happen to come; if he does, I'll entertain him until you get back." + +"Oh, there's no danger of his interrupting the tête-à-tête," laughed +Rachel, as she ran downstairs; "your father said the steamer would not +be in until to-morrow morning." + +"O mamma," called out Marion, "won't you please stop on your way back, +and get me a cherry ribbon? I haven't a bright bow to my name, and papa +will have a fit to see me all in black." + +"I'll get you one," replied Mrs. Berkley, as she was closing the front +door; "but there's one in my upper drawer you can wear until I get +back." + +"It's not worth while," said Marion to herself, as she fastened her +sleeve-buttons; "I'll just put in this jet pin, for I know there won't +be any one here, and I haven't got time to prink." + +She seated herself at her work, and sewed away very industriously, only +glancing now and then at the folds of her alpaca, as they swept out so +gracefully beside her chair, looking "almost like a black silk." Her +mother and Rachel had not been gone very long, when Bridget, the cook, +came up, and said there was a gentleman downstairs. + +"Who is it, Biddy? didn't he send his name?" + +"Indade an' he didn't, miss. Ellen is out, and Sarey's just afther +changin' her dress, an' it's meself as had to go to the door, an' I +always gits so flustered that I laves me wits in the kitchen." + +"I should think you did," replied Marion, as she brushed the bits of +worsted off her dress. "Do you think it's Mr. Thornton?" + +"Misther Thorington! An' haven't I sane the likes o' him too many times +not to know him? Indade an' it aint, miss; it's a much oulder man than +him." + +"Oh, I know who it is!" exclaimed Marion. "I'll go right down;" and she +ran downstairs, not stopping to give a glance at the glass as she +certainly would have done if it had been Mr. Thornton, and thinking to +herself, "It must be Rachel's uncle. I am so glad the old gentleman has +got here at last; I do hope he will be like her father." + +She entered the parlor hastily, but before she had a chance to speak, or +even see who was there, she found herself encircled by a pair of strong +arms; a bearded face bent over her, kissing her repeatedly, and a manly +voice exclaimed: "My darling! have I got you at last?" + +Marion disengaged herself as quickly as possible, and sprang back, +looking at the stranger with an expression in which astonishment and +indignation were equally blended. + +He was a very handsome man, apparently about thirty-five; tall, and of a +commanding figure. His features were fine, that is, his nose and eyes; +the latter, when one could get a good look under the long black lashes +which shaded them, showed themselves to be clear, blue-gray; but the +lower part of his face was concealed by a soft, wavy beard and mustache +of rich, chestnut-brown. There was an air of dignity about him which did +not seem to be assumed for the occasion, and altogether he was the last +man to suspect as an impostor, although such Marion had mentally styled +him, deciding at the first glance that he could not be Rachel's uncle. +Before she could collect her bewildered ideas sufficiently to speak, he +again stretched out his arms as if to embrace her, saying in a +reproachful tone:-- + +"What! your astonishment at seeing me is greater than your joy? I assure +you, my dear, that is not the case with me." + +"Can you wonder at my astonishment, sir?" exclaimed Marion, retreating +as he came near her, and motioning him back with a haughty gesture; +"explain your singular conduct." + +"Have not I explained it sufficiently?" he asked. "You are a little +unreasonable, I think, although that queenly manner sets well upon you, +I must confess." + +"Sir!" exclaimed Marion, with flashing eyes, "if you do not instantly +leave this house, I will find means to compel you to do so." + +"Come, come, my darling," he answered, stepping forward and taking +possession of her hand, "your joke has gone quite far enough. I +acknowledge you're as perfect a little actress as I ever saw; but I want +something more than acting;" and he attempted to kiss her. + +But Marion sprang from him, throwing her head up, and looking at him +with a face expressive of the utmost scorn, as she exclaimed, "Sir, you +have the appearance of a gentleman, and for such I first took you, but I +find I was mistaken; if you do not instantly leave the house I will call +a policeman to put you out!" and Marion pointed to the door with a +gesture that would have done honor to a queen, as she stood waiting to +see him obey her command. + +But the stranger only looked at her a moment in silence, then said in an +injured, reproachful tone, "I expected to find you changed; a young lady +in fact; but that you should have chosen our first meeting for an +exhibition of what seems to be your favorite accomplishment is more than +I expected. I entreat you to drop this haughty indifference, which I +sincerely hope is assumed for this occasion only, and be once more the +little Rachel I left ten years ago." + +At the mention of the word Rachel, Marion's arm dropped to her side; +her haughty bearing gave place to an air of confusion, and she +exclaimed:-- + +"Rachel! Can it be that you thought I was Rachel Drayton?" + +For the first time it occurred to the stranger that he too might be +laboring under a mistake, and he bowed slightly, as he said:-- + +"I certainly took you for my niece, Rachel Drayton; but I see by your +face I am wrong. I most sincerely beg your pardon for what must have +seemed an act of unparalleled impudence." + +Marion bowed, flushing crimson at the recollection of the very +affectionate greeting he had given her; but she said in a charmingly +frank way:-- + +"No apology is necessary, sir; it was a mistake all round,--you took me +for Rachel, and I took you for an impostor, which certainly was not so +complimentary; but now I know you must be Dr. Robert Drayton." + +Dr. Drayton smiled, as he said, "And you are Miss Marion Berkley, I +presume?" + +"Yes," replied Marion, offering him a chair, and seating herself at the +same time. "Rachel is staying with me; she has gone out riding with +mamma. She did not expect you until to-morrow morning; but when the +servant told me a gentleman was down here, I thought it must be you, but +was sure I was mistaken when I saw you." + +"And why, may I ask?" inquired Dr. Drayton. + +"Oh!" laughed Marion, a trifle confused, "because I thought you were +quite an old gentleman; at least old enough to be my father." + +"And so I am, almost," replied Dr. Drayton, smiling; "but tell me, does +Rachel want to see me?" + +"Indeed she does; she has talked about you every day this summer, and +has hardly been able to wait for you to get here. But how did you +mistake me for her? We are not in the least alike." + +"You must remember it is ten years since I saw her; then she was a +little, dark-eyed thing with golden hair, something like yours; your +black dress, too, misled me." + +"Golden hair!" exclaimed Marion, wishing she had put on her mother's +bright bow, thus saving herself all her embarrassment,--"golden hair, I +can't imagine such a thing; she has jet-black now." + +"I dare say I don't remember it very correctly; has she grown much?" + +"She is very tall; much taller than I am." + +"I thought you were very tall just now when you ordered me out of the +house," said Dr. Drayton, with an amused smile. + +"I beg you will never allude to the subject again," said Marion, raising +her head involuntarily, with a slightly haughty gesture, as she +invariably did when she was annoyed, but did not wish to appear so; "it +was a mistake for which I sincerely beg your pardon." + +"As you said to me," replied Dr. Drayton, "no apology is needed. I +promise never to allude to the subject again without your permission." + +"Which I certainly shall never grant," laughed Marion, ashamed of her +unnecessary hauteur. "Now I shall be able to apply to you my one great +test of the worth of humanity, that is, try your powers of keeping a +secret." + +"I am willing to stand the test," laughed Dr. Drayton, "and feel sure +that before morning I shall have no secret to keep, for by that time you +will have told Rachel all about it." + +"I shall do no such thing," replied Marion, warmly; "but there is the +carriage. Excuse me, Dr. Drayton, and I will tell Rachel you are here." + +The meeting between Dr. Drayton and Rachel was far different from his +interview with Marion. Rachel had longed for his coming, for although +she could not remember him very distinctly, she could not feel him to be +a stranger to her; her father was very fond of his younger brother, and +had always been in the habit of talking with his daughter a great deal +about her Uncle Robert, until he had become almost a hero in her eyes. +She had been in the habit of associating him in her mind with her +father, so that she had quite forgotten he was many years his junior, +and was not prepared to find so young a man; in fact, only thirty-two, +although his beard gave him the appearance of being a few years older. +There was a certain sense of strength and power about him, which led her +to look upon him with the same feelings of deference and respect with +which she would look upon an older man, while at the same time, the fact +of his being younger put her upon an easier, more familiar footing with +him; in short, Rachel was delighted with him, and felt she would receive +from him all the affection and watchful care of a father, combined with +the more demonstrative attentions of an elder brother. + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + +DR. DRAYTON'S HOUSE-KEEPER. + + +"Mrs. Berkley, I'm in a dilemma," said Dr. Drayton, as he entered the +library one morning where that lady was sitting, and took a chair near +her. + +"Can I help you out of it?" + +"If you can't, I don't know of any one else to go to," said Dr. Drayton, +who had become a daily visitor at the Berkleys'. "I have bought a house, +and now I want a house-keeper. Even if I felt inclined to brave the +opinion of Mrs. Grundy, and settle down with Rachel at the head of my +establishment, I would not do it; she is too young to have so much care +on her shoulders; I want the rest of her life to be as bright and happy +as it is possible for me to make it. My idea is to get some cultivated, +refined, middle-aged lady to come and take the care of the +house-keeping, and be a person who would make it pleasant for Rachel, +and any young friends she might wish to have with her. But how can I get +such a person? I answered two advertisements last week, and had +interviews with the females themselves at the Tremont House. One of them +was old and thin, and had a sharp voice that sent a chill through me +every time she spoke,--would be about as cheerful a member of society as +an animated skeleton; the other fair, fat, and forty, but an incessant +talker, and looked as if she had not brushed her hair for a week. Now, +Mrs. Berkley, what shall I do? Here I am, a poor, forlorn bachelor, who +throws himself on your hands. You must help me somehow or other." + +"Well, the best thing I can advise," replied Mrs. Berkley, with an +amused smile, "is for you to cease to be a bachelor." + +Dr. Drayton shrugged his shoulders. "Impossible, madame!" + +"And why, I should like to know? You certainly are not bad-looking; your +name is quite surrounded by a fast-increasing halo of fame,--something +which is always attractive to the young ladies, you know,--and, what +would be above all to many, you have money." + +"Exactly," replied Dr. Drayton, with considerable energy. "When I first +settled down in Berlin, through some very influential friends the very +first society of the place was open to me, and I found myself the +recipient of marked attention from the heads of several families. I was +delighted with them. Such cordiality! such hospitality! I really felt +proud of myself for calling it forth, for then I was young, and the +little halo which you speak of had not shed its benign influence over +me; of course it was to my personal attractions, and nothing else, I +owed my popularity. I happened to speak to a young American friend of +mine, of the attentions I was constantly receiving,--invitations to +this, that, and the other house, and wondered why it was he was not +equally fortunate. 'My dear fellow,' said he, 'don't you know I haven't +got any money?' His answer was certainly a damper to my feelings; but it +was a good thing for me. I gave less time to balls and parties, and more +to my profession; gradually, as I showed myself less and less in +society, I received fewer invitations, and those from gentlemen all +having marriageable daughters. No, Mrs. Berkley, don't ask me to get +married; at least not at present. I don't know anything about American +girls; but I suppose they are all very much the same as other young +ladies, and not until I can find one who will love me for myself, and +not my money, will there ever be a Mrs. Drayton at the head of my +table." + +"That is certainly a good resolution," replied Mrs. Berkley, laughing; +"but I am afraid I could find you a wife much easier than a +house-keeper, such as you want. Of course you will want to put your +house in order, and furnish it; meanwhile we are delighted to keep +Rachel with us." + +"You are very kind, very kind indeed, and I certainly shall benefit +myself by your offer, for I don't like the idea of taking her to a +hotel. But you haven't asked me where my house is." + +"Sure enough," replied Mrs. Berkley; "but my mind has been too full of +your house-keeper to think of your house. Where is it?" + +"That house on the corner of Beacon Street and the street just below +here, I can't recall the name." + +"The free-stone house we noticed for sale the other day?" inquired Mrs. +Berkley. + +"Yes, that is the one. It is larger than I really need; but the +arrangement of the ground-floor suits me admirably, for I must have an +office." + +"Then you intend to practise?" + +"Certainly, I should be ashamed of myself if I gave up my profession; +but I do not intend to do anything out of office-hours, so it will not +confine me at all. I intend to take the entire charge of Rachel's +property until she is of age; meanwhile I want to give her a clear idea +of the value of money, so that she may be able to make a good use of her +immense fortune." + +"I will look about me," said Mrs. Berkley, "and if I hear of any lady +that I think will suit you in every way, I will let you know; but here +come the girls; they have been out to see Florence Stevenson." + +Rachel was delighted with the house her uncle had bought, for it was +only a few moments' walk from Mr. Berkley's, and she would be able to be +with Marion every day. The two girls commenced making plans for the +winter, Rachel deciding that the first thing she would do, when they got +into their new house, would be to have Florence in for a long visit. + +A few days after the conversation between Mrs. Berkley and Dr. Drayton, +Mr. Berkley received a letter from a distant cousin of his, a lonely +widow, who having lost her property, had written to him to see if he +could get her a situation as house-keeper in some refined family. Upon +showing this letter to his wife, she at once exclaimed that the lady was +the very person for Dr. Drayton. + +The necessary arrangements were soon made; the house was put in perfect +order, and elegantly furnished; and Dr. Drayton took his niece to as +delightful a home as one could wish to have, for Mrs. Marston proved to +be all that he desired. Cultivated and agreeable, she soon won his +heartfelt esteem, and Rachel loved her from their very first meeting. + +After the new household had got fairly settled, Dr. Drayton proposed to +Rachel that she should continue her German and French under his +direction. He spoke both languages as fluently as he did English, and +suggested that the lessons should consist entirely of conversation, and +reading aloud from some of the best French and German authors. Rachel +was very much pleased at his proposition, and asked if Marion might not +join with them. + +"Yes, if she likes," replied Dr. Drayton, in answer to her request; "but +I'm afraid her head will be too full of balls and parties, for her to +ever keep up a regular course of studies." + +"Why, Uncle Robert!" indignantly cried Rachel; "you don't know Marion at +all, or you would not say that!" + +"I don't pretend to," quietly replied the doctor; "but I suppose she is +very much like all other young ladies." + +"Indeed she is not," replied Rachel, energetically. "I don't know of a +girl that has as much strength of character as Marion." + +"Not even excepting Miss Florence?" + +"No, not even excepting her. I love Florence dearly; she is a lovely +girl, but there is something about Marion which _she_ has not got." + +"I should say so, decidedly," replied Dr. Drayton, with provoking +coolness. + +"Why, Uncle Robert, I never dreamed you didn't like Marion!" + +"Did I say I did not?" asked her uncle, as he unfolded the newspaper, +and glanced down its columns. + +"No, you didn't say exactly those words, but you implied it." + +"I was not aware of the fact," said the doctor, as he lighted his cigar. +"You said there was something about her different from Florence, and I +agreed with you. I suppose, with feminine perversity, you would have +preferred that I should have disagreed, thus giving you an opportunity +to make an argument in favor of your side of the question; next time +I'll remember." + +"Uncle Robert, you are perfectly provoking!" exclaimed Rachel, jumping +up, and taking the paper away from him; "there!--you shan't have it +until you've said something in Marion's favor." + +"Very well," replied her uncle, slightly raising his eyebrows; "you +enumerate the catalogue of her virtues, and I'll subscribe to all I +can." + +"In the first place, she's very handsome," commenced Rachel. + +"Well, no, not exactly what I call handsome," said the doctor in a +deliberating tone; "she's not large enough for that." + +"Beautiful then; that's better still." + +"Well, yes,--I suppose you think so." + +"But it isn't to be what I think," impatiently replied Rachel. "You +certainly _must_ acknowledge she has beautiful eyes; true as steel; the +kind of eyes you could trust!" + +"I'll examine them the next time I see her," replied Dr. Drayton, as he +laid back in his chair, and puffed a cloud of smoke into the air. +"Excellence No. 3, if you please, Rachel." + +"She's very intelligent, and an excellent scholar," replied Rachel, +tapping the floor with her foot, and trying not to get provoked. + +"As yet I have never had any conversation with her of any deeper import +than the shade of your window-curtains; but I've no doubt she's at home +with any subject, and is a perfect walking 'Encyclopædia Americana.'" + +"Uncle Robert, you are incorrigible! you are determined _not_ to see any +good in her." + +"Not at all, my dear; the difficulty is, that after a six weeks' +acquaintance, you expect me to be as enthusiastic over her as you are +after a lengthy _school-girl_ intimacy." + +"I know what you mean to insinuate by a 'school-girl intimacy,' and I +agree with you that as a general thing they don't amount to anything; +but just let me tell you what Marion did for me, and then see if you'll +wonder that I'm '_enthusiastic_' over her." + +"Go on; I am prepared for anything. I suppose she rescued you from a +'watery grave' in true novel fashion." + +"She did more than that; she risked finding one herself. She walked all +alone, at midnight, from our school to the doctor's house, which is at +least a mile and a half, and crossed the river on a bridge _that the +flooring was taken off, and nothing for her to walk on but the beam +where the railing was_!" + +"A heroine, as I live!" cried the doctor, holding up both hands; +"something of which I've always had an innate horror." + +"Uncle Robert," said Rachel, really hurt, "I thought after that you'd at +least show some regard for her, if only for my sake." + +"My dear girl," he replied, drawing her towards him, "I certainly will +acknowledge that it was very brave in her; now give me my newspaper." + +"You don't deserve it, but you shall have it, if you will let Marion +join our lessons." + +"I should be delighted to have her; and Miss Florence too." + +"Florence won't be able to give her time to it, I know. She can't come +to make me a visit until spring, for she was away all summer, and her +father can't spare her yet." + +"Very well; you arrange everything with Mrs. Berkley; only the time must +not interfere with office-hours; before or after that I am at your +service." + +"You're the dearest uncle in the world!" exclaimed Rachel, kissing him. + +"Even if I don't worship your heroine." + +"Oh, don't call her a _heroine_, for mercy's sake! and above all don't +ever let her know that I told you." + +"My lips shall be sealed on the subject. Now run off, and let me read my +paper in peace." + +Marion was very much pleased with the plan for the French and German +lessons, and it was arranged that they should devote two hours, twice a +week, to each language, meeting alternately at Marion's and Rachel's +houses. Marion was a very good French scholar, and could manage to make +herself understood in German; but she was really afraid of Dr. Drayton, +and never did herself justice at the lessons. He was very patient and +kind, but nevertheless very critical, and corrected the pronunciation of +their German so many times, that Marion at last declared she never would +say another word, for she knew she never could suit him; but she found +him even more determined than M. Béranger, and soon learned, that if the +lessons went on at all, his directions must be strictly attended to; and +after a while the girls never thought of speaking English, during their +French and German hours. Mr. Berkley, who happened to look in upon them +one day when they were carrying on quite an excited argument, declared +they were all jabbering just to hear themselves talk, for he knew +perfectly well they couldn't any one of them understand a word the +others were saying. + + * * * * * + +The intimacy between the two families increased daily, and the Berkleys +welcomed Dr. Drayton most cordially to their family circle, finding him +in every way a most delightful companion. Intelligent, cultivated, and +refined, and having travelled over almost every country in Europe, he +had the rare gift of describing everything he had seen in such a manner +as to bring it vividly before the minds of his hearers, without +incessantly introducing the personal pronoun, which, as a general thing, +finds its way so often into a traveller's account of his journeyings. + +He became a general favorite with the family. Charley always ran to +meet him, and commenced a raid upon his pockets, sure of finding +something stowed away there for his especial benefit; the baby crowed +with delight whenever he came near him; and Fred bestowed upon him, +after their first meeting, the highest compliment he could pay a +man,--"he was a regular brick!" But Marion declared "she thought they +made altogether too much fuss over him, and she did not intend to join +with the family in setting him up as a perfect hero; she must say she +thought he was rather conceited, for he never paid her any attention, +and when young people were there, and they were all having a nice time +in the parlor, he always sat off with papa and mamma, in the library, as +if he thought himself above such childish follies." + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + +THE DÉBUT INTO SOCIETY. + + +"And so it is to be a regular 'come-out party,'" said Dr. Drayton one +evening as he sat smoking with Mr. Berkley in the library, the rest of +the family being in the parlor. + +"Yes, a regular 'come-out party,'" repeated Mr. Berkley; "but I don't +intend to dash out, and make a great spread; hire Papanti's hall, etc. I +don't like that sort of thing. I shall invite enough to fill the house, +and yet not have it a perfect jam; have half-a-dozen pieces of music, +and a good supper; that's my idea of a party." + +"And a very correct idea, I should say," said the doctor. + +"Mrs. Berkley rather objected to giving it at all this winter. Marion is +still so young, she wanted me to wait another year; but you see, doctor, +I'm pretty proud of my only daughter, and I want her to go about in +society, before I get too old to go with her." + +"How old is Miss Marion?" asked Dr. Drayton. + +"Eighteen last May." + +"Older than Rachel; I thought her younger." + +"She looks younger, I think myself, and sometimes seems younger still; +but there's good stuff there. She's like her mother, and if I do say it, +she'll make a noble woman." + +"If she proves to be like her mother, she certainly will," replied Dr. +Drayton. "Mrs. Berkley is just my idea of what a wife and mother ought +to be." + +"That remark proves you a man of sense and discernment," said Mr. +Berkley, highly gratified, both by Dr. Drayton's words, and the warmth +of his tone. "But about this party; of course you will come, and dance +the 'German.'" + +"I certainly agree to come. It will be my first real entrance into +Boston society; but as for dancing, that's quite another thing; I gave +that up years ago." + +"Why, man alive!" exclaimed Mr. Berkley; "any one would think, to hear +you talk sometimes, you were a perfect Methuselah! Here, Marion!" he +cried, calling her in from the other room, "I want you to give Dr. +Drayton private lessons in dancing, so that he will be able to get +through the 'German' at your party." + +"I am much obliged to Miss Marion," said Dr. Drayton, quietly; "but it +is too late for me to begin now; I must decline her services." + +"Perhaps it would be as well if you waited until I offered them," +replied Marion, haughtily, piqued at the coolness of his manner. "I +certainly had no intentions of becoming a dancing-mistress for you or +any one else!" + +The doctor made no reply, but Mr. Berkley laughed aloud, as he +exclaimed: "Look here, Marion, that Thornton has spoiled you! You are so +used to having him consider it an honor to be allowed to pick up your +handkerchief, that you begin to think that every one else must do the +same." + +"Papa, how unkind!" said Marion, flushing to the roots of her hair; "I +don't know as Mr. Thornton ever picked up my handkerchief in his life, +and he wouldn't be so foolish as to consider it an honor if he had." + +"No?" replied her father, in the most provoking way; "but there,--you +shan't be teased any more! Just turn round, and smile sweetly on the +doctor, and tell him you don't think he's too old to come to your +party, and you'll let him, if he'll promise to be a good boy." + +"I don't care whether he comes or not," cried Marion, struggling to get +away from her father. + +"If that is the case," said Dr. Drayton, "I shall certainly come, simply +for my own amusement. I didn't know but my presence might be +particularly disagreeable to you; but as you seem so thoroughly +indifferent, I shall come, and look on with the other old folks." + +Marion bit her lips, and said nothing; but as her father still held her +hand, so that she could not get away, she seated herself on the arm of +his chair with her face turned towards the fire. + +"Doctor," said Mr. Berkley, "why don't you shave off that beard? It +makes you look five years older than you are." + +"That is my mask," replied the doctor, stroking his beard with his right +hand; "I could not part with it." + +"What, in the name of sense, do you want of a mask?" + +"Unluckily for me, my mouth is the telltale feature of my face. I found, +when I first became a surgeon, that my patients could tell by its +expression whether they were to live or die; so I covered it up with +this beard. After I had been at the hospital several years, and had seen +sights that the very telling of them would make you shudder; when I +performed operation after operation without flinching, or even having +the slightest feeling of repugnance, I thought I must have got my mouth +under perfect control, and so ventured to trim my mustache and shave my +beard. That very morning I had to attend a poor fellow who had had his +leg amputated the day before; during the examination I never looked at +him, for I felt his eyes were fixed on my face. Suddenly he exclaimed: +'It's no use, doctor; you can keep your eyes down, but you can't hide +your mouth,--that says death.' It was the truth; mortification had set +in, and he died the next morning. After that I let my beard grow, and so +long as I remain a surgeon, which I shall so long as my hand is steady +enough to guide the knife, it will stay as it is." + +"Well, I think you are right," said Mr. Berkley; "but by and by, when +you get a wife, perhaps she will think differently, and the beard, and +the profession too, may have to go. The last, I hear, pays you nothing." + +"If ever I get a wife," replied Dr. Drayton, "she will probably think as +I do,--that, as I have been blessed with more than an ample fortune, I +should be a heartless wretch, if I did not devote my skill to the relief +of the suffering poor." + +Marion, who had listened silently to the above conversation, finding her +father had released his hold of her hand, slipped quietly away. + +The weeks flew past, and the eventful day, when Marion was to make her +dêbut into fashionable society, at last arrived. + +Rachel, of course, would not go to the party, as she was still in deep +mourning; but Florence was to stay all night with Marion, and Rachel +went round early with her uncle, that she might see her two friends in +the full splendor of their first ball-dresses. She went directly to the +drawing-room, where she heard the voices of the girls, leaving her uncle +to find his way to the dressing-room. + +"Hands off these two pieces of dry-goods!" cried Fred, who was capering +round his sister and Florence, in a perfect state of delight, and all +the glories of his first dress-coat, when Rachel entered the room. "You +may admire as much as you please; but you can't touch 'em with a +ten-foot pole." + +"Get out of the way, Fred," said Marion, putting him aside as she went +forward to meet Rachel; "she shall touch me as much as she pleases. How +do you like it, Rachel? Is it just the thing?" + +"I should say it certainly was!" exclaimed Rachel, enthusiastically. "I +never saw anything so lovely in my life; and you two look so pretty +together!" + +"You see our dresses are made just alike," said Florence, buttoning her +gloves; "only my flowers are pink, and hers white." + +The two girls certainly did look lovely. Their dresses were of white +tarlatan, puffed and ruffled sufficiently to be quite à la mode, but +still so light and delicate as to give them a floating, airy appearance, +and not make them look like exaggerated fashion-plates. Marion's was +caught, here and there, with white daisies and delicate grasses, a +wreath of the same in her hair; while Florence's was trimmed with pink +roses and buds. + +"May I be allowed to come in at this early hour?" inquired Dr. Drayton, +as he appeared on the threshold. + +"Yes, indeed," laughed Marion, advancing to meet him, and stopping in +the centre of the room, to drop him a profound courtesy; "you are my +first arrival." + +"And as such claim your acceptance of this bouquet, which I hope you +will honor me by carrying during the evening." + +Marion looked up very much surprised, as he held towards her an +exquisite bouquet. He was the last man from whom she would have expected +such an attention. + +"I am very sorry, Dr. Drayton, but you see Fred has one in his hand +which I promised a week ago I would carry to-night; but I am just as +much obliged, and will set it on the stand close to where I sit in the +'German.'" + +"No, indeed," replied the doctor, without the slightest appearance of +annoyance; "my poor bouquet shall not be so set aside. Mrs. Berkley, +will you honor me?" + +"I say, Marion," exclaimed Fred, as Marion took her bouquet from his +hand, "what a pity you promised Thornton you'd carry his! The doctor's +is twice as handsome!" + +"So it's Mr. Thornton who has got ahead of me?" said the doctor. "Miss +Florence, I hope I am not to be equally unfortunate with you;" and he +presented her with a beautiful bouquet, which he had until that moment +held behind him. + +"Oh, thank you!" cried Florence, perfectly delighted; "you know it's not +my dêbut, and no one else has thought of honoring me; it was very kind +of you. See, Marion, isn't it lovely?" + +"Yes, very," replied Marion, as she bent over it, inwardly provoked with +herself for being annoyed because the doctor had not only handed over +her bouquet to her mother with such perfect nonchalance, but had also +brought one for Florence. + + * * * * * + +But guests were soon seen passing through the hall on their way to the +dressing-rooms, and Rachel was obliged to hurry off; soon the rooms +began to fill, and before long the wonderful "German" was at its height. + +The doctor felt himself a stranger in a strange land; he had been +introduced to, and conversed with, several young ladies, but now all +conversation was broken up by the "German," and he stood leaning against +the door-way, and watched the dance as it proceeded. He noticed several +men, much older than himself, dancing with fair young girls; and he +wondered within himself if they were really enjoying themselves, and why +it was that he stood like one shut out from all the pleasures of youth, +young in years but old in feelings; in fact, he was getting a trifle +misanthropical, when Marion floated slowly past him, waltzing with +Arthur Thornton. As they passed, so near that her draperies touched him, +he heard Mr. Thornton say, in a low tone full of meaning, "Marion you +are enough to make a man mad, to-night! You are almost too lovely!" + +"So," thought the doctor, as he turned away, "it is all settled. Well, I +supposed as much." + +He did not see Marion as she abruptly stopped dancing, and looked at +poor, infatuated Arthur with a frigid glance, which made his heart leap +to his throat, as she said, "Mr. Thornton, you forget yourself; will you +lead me to my seat?" + +Poor Arthur! it was his first rash act; he had loved Marion so well, and +tried so hard to conceal it until he was sure of her feelings; but +to-night as he said, she was almost too lovely, and before he had +thought of the consequences he had called her by name and told her so. +It was his first act of tenderness and his last, for now he knew as well +that to her he could never be anything more than a friend, as if she had +refused him point-blank. Poor fellow! it was a hard blow, but he did not +stagger under it; he danced the "German" with as much apparent gayety, +and hid his grief under as bright a smile as ever graced a ball-room. +But though he flattered himself that no one knew the pain he suffered, +there was one, who, although she neither heard his remark, nor Marion's +answer, witnessed the little scene between them, saw the frigid look in +Marion's eyes, and the light die out of his, and her heart ached for the +poor fellow, as only the heart of a young girl can ache, over the +sorrows of a man whose happiness is dearer to her than her own. + + * * * * * + +The next morning Rachel was in the dining-room, waiting for her uncle to +come to breakfast. She had watered and arranged the plants, and now +stood tapping impatiently on the window-pane, and wondering why he was +so late; but he soon made his appearance, coming in with Mrs. Marston. + +"O Uncle Robert!" she exclaimed, "I began to think you were never +coming; don't you know I'm dying to hear about the party?" + +"My dear, if I had known you were in such a terrible state of mind and +body," replied her uncle, as he seated himself at the table, "I would +have come down at six; but if you will take the trouble to look at the +clock, you will see it is you who are early, not I who am late." + +"Well, never mind that," impatiently replied Rachel; "how did Marion +look?" + +"Didn't you see for yourself?" + +"Oh! that was before any one had got there, and she was not at all +excited; she's always lovelier then, she has such a beautiful color, and +it makes her eyes handsomer than ever." + +"I don't think it's necessary for me to say anything, do you, Mrs. +Marston?" said the doctor, as he calmly stirred his coffee; "just +imagine her as you saw her, only a little excited, and you'll know +exactly how she looked." + +"Did she have much attention?" + +"You could hardly expect anything else, as the party was at her house." + +"Oh! of course people would be polite; but wasn't there anybody +particularly attentive? Didn't she get 'taken out' a great deal?" + +"'Taken out?'" repeated the doctor, with a puzzled expression. "Mrs. +Marston, can you enlighten me?" + +"Oh, yes!" laughed Mrs. Marston; "that is only one of the mysterious +phrases of the 'German,' which being interpreted means, did a great many +gentlemen ask her to dance?" + +"Oh, thank you," replied the doctor. "Yes, Rachel, she got 'taken out' a +great deal; in fact she seemed to be out all the time." + +"There! _that's_ what I wanted to know," said Rachel, in a tone of +satisfaction; "now tell me about Florence." + +"I'll try to answer you in the most approved style. She looked very +charming indeed; seemed to have plenty of admirers, for I noticed that +Miss Marion managed to have her share her honors, and made her the guest +of the evening; she was 'taken out' a great deal, and above all, +continued to carry my bouquet the whole evening without dropping it." + +"I'm so glad," cried Rachel, "but wasn't it a shame that Arthur Thornton +should have sent his bouquet to Marion first?" + +"A shame? Why, no indeed," answered her uncle, with the utmost +composure; "for if he had not, she would have been obliged to carry +mine, and I know she preferred Mr. Thornton's." + +"I don't believe it; yours was a great deal handsomer." + +"Oh! that's not the point! Of course you must see that Mr. Thornton is +to be _the_ man." + +"Uncle Robert, how absurd! I don't believe Marion would ever have him in +the world!" + +"And why not, I should like to know? He is handsome, intelligent,--in +fact, a very good fellow every way, and has plenty of money." + +"But Marion never will marry for money!" cried Rachel. + +"I don't say she will; but what is your objection to Mr. Thornton?" + +"I haven't any at all; I like him very much, but he would never do for +Marion. She wants a much stronger man than he." + +"Well, perhaps he will develop his muscle," replied Dr. Drayton, coolly. + +"Uncle Robert! you know I don't mean that kind of strength!--mental +strength; some one in every way superior to herself; in fact, some one +that she could feel was her master." + +"Master! I can't imagine Miss Marion yielding her own sweet will to any +one." + +"Rachel is right," said Mrs. Marston; "when Marion marries she will +choose a man much older than herself." + +"Well, time will show," said Dr. Drayton; "but Rachel, if Marion Berkley +is not engaged to Mr. Thornton at the end of six months, I'll give you +the handsomest diamond ring I can buy at Bigelow's." + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + +CONCLUSION. + + +The days and weeks flew by like hours, and Marion found herself +surrounded by a crowd of admirers, and one of the acknowledged belles of +the season. Balls, parties, receptions, matinées, and formal calls took +up all her time, and what with lying abed in the morning to make up for +her late hours, the days were fairly turned into night, and night into +day. Mrs. Berkley remonstrated as she saw her daughter drifting farther +and farther out on the sea of fashionable society, but it was now too +late; she could not refuse all the invitations that were showered upon +her, and those that she would have been glad to decline, her father +would not allow her to, for fear of giving offence. She had at first +made a struggle to keep up her French and German, but at last gave it up +as useless, for if she had no engagement for those hours, she was too +tired and worn out by her dissipation to attend to them properly. + +Rachel felt extremely sorry to be obliged to tell her uncle that his +prediction had proved true; that Marion's time was too much occupied +with balls and parties for her to attend the lessons; but she added a +saving clause, to the effect that when Lent put an end to the extreme +gayeties of the season, Marion would be glad to join them. + +"If she wishes to join us then, well and good," said Dr. Drayton; "but +Rachel, I want you to fully understand, that you must never ask her to +do so; she must come back to us as she left us, of her own free will." + +Marion felt far from satisfied with the life she was leading. At first +it was very delightful to find herself so much admired; to know that the +honor of her hand for the "German" was sought days in advance by the men +who were considered the bright, particular stars of the fashionable +world; to have hardly a day go by that did not bring her an exquisite +bouquet, or basket of flowers; never go to the theatre or opera that +several young exquisites did not come to her seat for a chat between the +acts! Oh, it was very delightful indeed; and for a while she thought she +had never been so happy in her life. But only for a while; she grew +tired at last of hearing the same things said to her night after night, +over and over again; she knew she was wasting her life; the precious +moments and hours that would never come again. Her health, too, began to +give way under this constant dissipation. She had frequent dull +headaches, and could not keep herself from being irritated at trifles +that she would never have noticed before. Even her father began to +complain that "she was going out almost too much; he never had a quiet +evening at home, and as for her music he had not heard her touch the +piano for weeks." + +Just about this time she received a letter from Mme. Béranger. She wrote +in a bright, happy strain, giving an account of what was going on at the +school, alluding with a little conjugal pride to the beneficial +influence which M. Béranger exerted over the scholars, and the respect +which he inspired, not only from them, but from Miss Stiefbach also. + +She concluded by saying:-- + + "And now, my dear Marion, I am going to speak of yourself, a + subject about which I know very well you do not care to have much + said; but you will bear it patiently I feel sure from your old + teacher, who says with truth, that, dear as all her scholars have + been to her, none ever came so near, so completely won her love, as + you have done. + + "I wanted to tell you, before the close of school last autumn, how + much I rejoiced in the victories which I saw you were daily gaining + over yourself; but the opportunity never seemed to arrive when I + could do so without appearing to force myself upon you. + + "It would make you happy, I know, if you could hear yourself spoken + of as I am almost daily in the habit of hearing your name mentioned + by one or more of the scholars, in the kindest, most affectionate + terms. + + "It is a good thing when a girl leaves school carrying with her the + love and admiration of her school-mates, and leaving behind her + nothing but regret that she is no longer there to join in their + studies, or lead them in their fun and frolic. + + "Now you have done with school-days, and it is very probable that + many of your school-mates you may never meet again; you will form + new friends wherever you go, and to a certain extent owe some + duties to society; but I cannot imagine you as among the class of + young ladies, who, the moment the doors of the school-room close + behind them, consider their education finished, and so straightway + give up all sensible occupations, and fritter away their time in + fashionable dissipation. I have seen too much of you, understand + your nature too well, to believe you capable of such folly; but + temptations of various kinds will come to you in the future, as + they have come in the past, and the same sense of right, the same + determination to conquer yourself, which helped you to overcome the + faults of your girlhood, will strengthen and sustain you in your + endeavors to attain a pure, noble womanhood. + + "But I fear you will think I am writing you a sermon, and that I + have forgotten that you have passed from under my authority, but + 'the spirit moved me,' and so I have spoken; if I have said more + than I ought, forgive me, and take it kindly from your old Miss + Christine. + + "My sister wished to be kindly remembered to you, and my husband + says: Faites mes amitiés à Mlle. Berkley. Good-by, my dear, + + "From your true friend, + + "CHRISTINE BÉRANGER." + +Marion's conscience smote her as she read the letter, and thought how +far short of all Mme. Béranger had hoped she would be, of all she had +determined for herself, was the life she was now leading. Day by day +she became more and more discontented with herself, as she saw how +completely she had given her time to what her teacher had rightly +called, "fashionable dissipation." + +Lent at last arrived, and Marion, although not an Episcopalian, welcomed +it with delight, for now there would be few if any, large parties, and +she would have a chance to rest. She was determined to commence a course +of history; practise at least two hours a day, and, if Rachel proposed +it, commence again her French and German, in which her friend had made +such astonishing progress as to make Marion thoroughly ashamed of +herself. But, much to Marion's surprise, Rachel did not propose it, +neither did Dr. Drayton, before whom she had mentioned several times how +sorry she was to find herself so far behind Rachel. She thought it very +strange that the doctor did not again offer to teach her with his niece, +and resolved, if she could ever manage to humble herself sufficiently to +ask a favor of him, she would tell him herself she wanted to rejoin the +class. + +An opportunity offered itself sooner than she had expected. The doctor +had a fine baritone voice, and was extremely fond of music. Rachel, as a +general thing, was able to play his accompaniments for him, but now and +then he bought a new song too difficult for her to manage, and he often +brought them, at Mr. Berkley's suggestion, for Marion to play for him. +One evening he made his appearance with a piece of music in his hand, +and said, as he shook hands with her:-- + +"Miss Marion, I have a song here that is most too much for Rachel: will +you do me the favor of playing the accompaniment?" + +"Yes," replied Marion, as she took the music, and glanced over it; "on +one condition." + +"And that is?" said the doctor. + +"That you will let me come back to the French and German readings." + +"Are you quite sure you want to come?" asked the doctor, looking down +upon her, and speaking very much as he would have done to a naughty +child. + +"Very sure," replied Marion, almost provoked with herself for not being +able to say the contrary. + +"Very well then, come," said the doctor, in a lower tone, as he arranged +the music for her. "You must want to very much, if you would be willing +to ask it as a favor from me." + +Marion bit her lips and said nothing. She had intended to make it appear +that she was granting the favor; but the doctor had reversed the order +of things. The next day the old studies were commenced, and Marion took +hold with a will, determined to conquer all difficulties and put herself +by the side of Rachel. She was at first extremely mortified to find how +many mistakes she made, and how much she had forgotten; but the doctor +was more patient than ever before, and she soon made great improvement. + +Of late Marion had seen very little of Mr. Thornton, and now that she +was not going about so much, she began to miss his bright, pleasant +face, and many little attentions: and as Saturday after Saturday went +by, and he did not make his appearance with Fred, as he had formerly +been so often in the habit of doing, she asked her brother what had +become of him. Fred's answer was, that "Thornton was cramming like +blazes; he meant to leave college with flying colors." + +At first Marion felt a little chagrined that he could so soon have +forgotten her, and had half a mind to write him a charming little note, +inviting him over to spend Sunday; but she knew it would only be holding +out a prospect of encouragement which she never really meant to give +him, and so she refrained. + +Summer at last arrived, and the Berkleys and Draytons were making +preparations for spending it among the White Mountains. Fred had urged +them to stay for "Class-day," as Arthur Thornton graduated this year; +but Marion's unusually pale cheeks told too plainly that either the +dissipations of the winter, or some other unexplainable cause, had made +a deep inroad on her health, and her parents were glad to get her away +from the city. + +Florence's father had married again, and had taken a cottage at the +beach for the summer; so she had declined Rachel's invitation to again +make one of their party. + +They travelled slowly through the mountains, stopping for days at a time +at whatever place seemed to them as particularly pleasant. It was too +early for the great rush of fashionable visitors, and they enjoyed +themselves the more on that account. + +After having spent several weeks in this manner, they settled down for +the rest of the summer at a little hotel unknown to fame, and rarely +visited except by pedestrians and artists wandering about in search of +the most beautiful views. + +Marion had by this time entirely regained her strength, and could climb +about the mountains, and take as long walks as any of the party; but +still she did not seem the same as in former days. Her father and mother +did not notice the change, for with them she was always as gay as ever, +and they were perfectly happy to see her so well,--slightly tanned with +the summer's sun, and a bright color always glowing in her cheeks. + +But Rachel wondered what had come over her, for when they were alone she +seemed so much more quiet and preoccupied, that her friend could hardly +realize it was the same Marion Berkley she had known at school. The +doctor, too, silently noticed her altered manner, and had his own +opinion as to the cause. + +One day towards the close of summer, Marion was sitting on a little +piazza, which belonged exclusively to the private parlor used by their +party. A book was in her lap, but her hands lay idly on its open pages, +as she sat lost in a reverie, from which she was roused by Dr. Drayton +as he came round the house, and stood holding a letter over her head, +exclaiming, "See what I have for you, Miss Marion! Can you tell the +writing from here?" + +"Oh, yes!" exclaimed Marion, in a delighted tone, reaching up her hand +to take it; "it's from Florence. Do let me have it." + +"Not until you promise me," said the doctor, holding the letter out of +her reach, "that you will tell me how you honestly feel about the most +important piece of news this letter contains." + +"I promise," said Marion, smiling. "It will probably be that her new +mamma has given her a lovely picture, and she is the dearest mamma in +the world." + +"Never mind what it is," said the doctor; "you have promised;" and he +leaned against the pillar opposite Marion, apparently engaged in reading +a letter which he had held open in his hand during their conversation, +but in reality furtively watching the expression of her face, for he +knew what news the letter contained, and wanted to judge of its effect +upon her. + +She read on, smiling to herself as Florence went into ecstasies over the +kindness of her new, darling mamma. Then suddenly an expression of +intense surprise passed over her face, which was succeeded by one which +it would be difficult to define, as the letter dropped into her lap, and +she sat looking straight before her, but evidently seeing nothing, and +entirely forgetful of the doctor's presence. + +"Poor child!" he thought, as he watched the tears slowly gathering in +her eyes; "it has come at last, and she so young! It is cruel in me to +watch her; but I _must_ know how deeply it affects her." + +Suddenly Marion sprang up with the letter in her hand, and was running +through the long parlor-window, when the doctor called to her:-- + +"Miss Marion, have you forgotten your promise?" + +"No, indeed!" answered Marion, without looking round. "Stay there; I'll +be back in a moment." + +Dr. Drayton put his letter in his pocket, and folded his arms across his +breast as he leaned against the pillar, like Marion looking straight +before him, but seeing nothing. "If she can hide her wounds so bravely, +cannot I do the same?" thought he; "it would be too cruel for me to make +her tell me herself; I can at least spare her that." He was so lost in +thought, that Marion had again stepped on to the piazza, and stood +beside him before he was aware of her presence. + +"Now, doctor," she said, startling him by the brightness of her tone, +"I'm ready to be questioned. There _was_ quite an important piece of +news in the letter." + +"You need not tell me," he said very gently, "I know it already." + +"And how did you know it?" asked Marion, in a disappointed tone of +voice. "I was to be the first one told, and then _I_ was to tell +Rachel." + +"Your letter was delayed probably, and mine from Fred, written the next +day, when every one knew it, came in the same mail." + +"But you don't seem a bit glad," said Marion. "_I_ am perfectly +delighted." + +He looked down at her silently for a few moments. Could she be acting? +He would put her to the test. + +"Miss Marion, I _will_ hold you to your promise; you said you would tell +me honestly how you felt about this piece of news." + +"And so I will," replied Marion, surprised at his serious manner. "Mr. +Thornton is as fine a young man as I know, and has always been a good +friend of mine. When I tell you that I think him in every way worthy of +Florence, you may know that is the highest compliment I can pay him; and +I am perfectly delighted they are engaged." + +"And this is on your honor?" + +"On my honor," answered Marion, looking up at him with her clear, +truthful eyes. + +"I believe you," he said; "but forgive me if I ask why, feeling so, the +tears should have come into your eyes when you read the letter?" + +"Dr. Drayton," cried Marion, her face flushing, "it was too bad of you +to watch me! It is cruel in you to ask me." + +"I know it is cruel," he answered; "but nevertheless I _must_ ask you." + +"I will tell you," replied Marion, hurriedly, "or you will misunderstand +me. Florence and I have been very, very dear friends; we have loved each +other all our lives, as I think few girls rarely do love; there has +never been a cloud between us that was not soon cleared away; and when I +first read that she was engaged to Arthur Thornton, I could not help +feeling a little bit of sorrow, in spite of my greater joy, to think +that now she would have some one to take my place away from me. But that +feeling is all gone now--or will be soon," she added, choking down a +sob, that would come in spite of her. + +"Marion," he almost whispered, as he bent over her, "are you sure you +never loved Arthur Thornton?" + +"Very sure," answered Marion, not daring to raise her eyes, and blushing +crimson as he for the first time called her by name. + +He bent lower still, and was about to lay his hand upon her arm, when +Rachel rushed through the parlor-window, exclaiming, "Uncle Robert, +Marion can't marry Mr. Thornton, if she wants to ever so much, and I +want my diamond ring!" + +"The six months are past," replied her uncle. + +"I don't think that's fair, do you, Marion?" But Marion had slipped +away, and was nowhere to be seen. + +A few evenings later the three were sitting on the piazza, enjoying +their last night at the mountains. Mr. and Mrs. Berkley had retired +early, so as to feel bright and fresh for their homeward journey the +next day, but the rest had declared their intention of sitting up to +watch the moon, as it went slowly down behind the distant hills. + +"Rachel," said Dr. Drayton, as he threw away his cigar, "how should you +like to go to Europe next spring?" + +"Like it!" exclaimed Rachel, clasping her hands with delight. "I should +be perfectly happy!" + +"Well, I thought so," replied her uncle, "and I am going to take you." + +"O Uncle Robert! you are too good! Marion, isn't that splendid?" + +But before Marion could answer, Dr. Drayton went on, as if he had not +heard Rachel's remark. "Of course, it will not do for you to go +travelling over Europe with only me." + +"Take Mrs. Marston!" exclaimed Rachel, determined to surmount all +difficulties; "take Mrs. Marston; she's just the one!" + +"Oh, no!" replied her uncle, in a very decided tone; "she wouldn't do at +all; she's too old. I've been thinking about it for some time; you want +a young person, and so I am going to get married." + +"O Uncle Robert!" cried Rachel, jumping up, and taking hold of his arm; +"don't get married! please don't! I'd rather never go to Europe as long +as I live, than to have you do that!" + +"I am sure you are very kind indeed," replied her uncle, "to give up +your pleasure on my account; but really I don't see as I can very well +help being married now, for I've asked the lady, and she said yes." + +"O uncle! uncle! to think of your getting married just for the sake of +having some one to go to Europe with me! It's dreadful!" + +"Yes, dear, I think it would be, if that were the case; but to tell you +the truth I am very much in love with the lady myself." + +"Then I shall hate her!" exclaimed Rachel, dropping her uncle's arm,--"I +know I shall hate her!" + +Marion had been sitting perfectly quiet during this conversation, with +her back turned towards the speaker; she now rose, and attempted to pass +by Dr. Drayton into the parlor; but he caught her with both hands, and +turned her round towards his niece, saying, as he did so, "Allow me, +Rachel, to introduce you to your future aunt; if you don't love her for +my sake, try to for her own; she's worth it." + +Rachel stood in speechless astonishment, and Marion, also, could not +utter a word. + +"This is a pretty state of things, I must say," said the doctor. +"Rachel, won't you kiss your Aunt Marion?" + +"Kiss her!" exclaimed Rachel, finding her voice, and throwing her arms +round Marion's neck; "I thought I loved her before, but _now_ I shall +fairly worship her! I never was so happy in my life!" + +"Nor I either," whispered Marion, very softly. + +"But I don't understand it," cried Rachel, still in a state of +bewilderment. "I never thought of such a thing. I thought you didn't +like Marion at all, Uncle Robert." + +"I know it, my dear, and she thought the same; but I have satisfied her +to the contrary, and I guess I can you." + +"Ah! Uncle Robert," said Rachel, archly, "I guess I _shan't_ have the +handsomest diamond-ring at Bigelow's; I suppose Marion has that." + +"No, she has not," replied the doctor, lifting Marion's left hand, on +which Rachel could see in the moonlight a heavy, plain, gold ring. + +"What!--not diamonds?" + +"No," replied the doctor, as he held the hand in both his own; "my wife +shall have all the diamonds she wants, but this ring must be plain +gold." + +"Are you satisfied, Marion?" asked Rachel. + +Marion gave a quick glance up at the doctor, then looked at Rachel, as +she answered, "Perfectly." + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Marion Berkley, by Elizabeth B. Comins + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41524 *** |
