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diff --git a/7231-8.txt b/7231-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3bc19f9 --- /dev/null +++ b/7231-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11012 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Light O' The Morning, by L. T. Meade + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Light O' The Morning + +Author: L. T. Meade + + +Release Date: January, 2005 [EBook #7231] +This file was first posted on March 29, 2003 +Last Updated: May 28, 2013 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIGHT O' THE MORNING *** + + + + +Produced by Anne Folland, Tiffany Vergon,Charles Franks +and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team + + + + + + + + +LIGHT O' THE MORNING + +_The Story of an Irish Girl_ + + +By L. T. Meade + + + +CONTENTS. + + +CHAPTER + +I. NORA + +II. "SOME MORE OF THE LAND MUST GO" + +III. THE WILD MURPHYS + +IV. THE INVITATION + +V. "I AM ASHAMED OF YOU" + +VI. THE CAVE OF THE BANSHEE + +VII. THE MURPHYS + +VIII. THE SQUIRE'S TROUBLE + +IX. EDUCATION AND OTHER THINGS + +X. THE INVITATION + +XI. THE DIAMOND CROSS + +XII. A FEATHER-BED HOUSE + +XIII. "THERE'S MOLLY" + +XIV. BITS OF SLANG + +XV. TWO LETTERS + +XVI. A CHEEKY IRISH GIRL + +XVII. TWO DESCRIPTIONS + +XVIII. A COMPACT + +XIX. "SHE WILL SOON TAME DOWN" + +XX. STEPHANOTIE + +XXI. THE ROSE-COLORED DRESS + +XXII. LETTERS + +XXIII. THE BOX OF BON-BONS + +XXIV. THE TELEGRAM + +XXV. THE BLOW + +XXVI. TEN POUNDS + +XXVII. ADVENTURES--AND HOME AGAIN + +XXVIII. THE WILD IRISH + +XXIX. ALTERATIONS + +XXX. THE LION IN His CAGE + +XXXI. RELEASE OF THE CAPTIVE + +XXXII. ANDY + +XXXIII. THE CABIN ON THE MOUNTAIN + +XXXIV. A DARING DEED + +XXXV. THE COT WHERE HE WAS BORN + +XXXVI. "I'M A HAPPY MAN" + + + + +CHAPTER I. + + +NORA. + +"Why, then, Miss Nora--" + +"Yes, Hannah?" + +"You didn't see the masther going this way, miss?" + +"What do you mean, Hannah? Father is never at home at this hour." + +"I thought maybe--" said Hannah. She spoke in a dubious voice, backing a +little away. + +Hannah was a small, squat woman, of a truly Irish type. Her nose was +celestial, her mouth wide, her eyes dark, and sparkling with fun. She +was dressed in a short, coarse serge petticoat, with what is called a +bedgown over it; the bedgown was made of striped calico, yellow and red, +and was tied in at the waist with a broad band of the same. Hannah's +hair was strongly inclined to gray, and her humorous face was covered +with a perfect network of wrinkles. She showed a gleam of snowy teeth +now, as she looked full at the young girl whom she was addressing. + +"Ah, then, Miss Nora," she said, "it's I that am sorry for yez." + +Before Nora O'Shanaghgan could utter a word Hannah had turned on her +heel. + +"Come back, Hannah," said Nora in an imperious voice. + +"Presently, darlint; it's the childer I hear calling me. Coming, Mike +asthore, coming." + +The squat little figure flew down a side walk which led to a paddock: +beyond the paddock was a turnstile, and at the farther end of an +adjacent field a cabin made of mud, with one tiny window and a thatched +roof. Hannah was making for the cabin with rapid, waddling strides. Nora +stood in the middle of the broad sweep which led up to the front door of +the old house. + +Castle O'Shanaghgan was a typical Irish home of the ancient régime. The +house, a great square pile, was roomy and spacious; it had innumerable +staircases, and long passages through which the wind shrieked on stormy +nights, and a great castellated tower at its north end. This tower was +in ruins, and had been given up a long time ago to the exclusive tenancy +of the bats, the owls, and rats so large and fierce that the very dogs +were afraid of them. In the tower at night the neighbors affirmed that +they heard shrieks and ghostly noises; and Nora, whose bedroom was +nearest to it, rejoiced much in the distinction of having twice heard +the O'Shanaghgan Banshee keening outside her window. Nora was a slender, +tall, and very graceful girl of about seventeen, and her face was as +typical of the true, somewhat wild, Irish beauty as Hannah Croneen's was +the reverse. + +In the southwest of Ireland there are traces of Spanish as well as +Celtic blood in many of its women; and Nora's quantities of thick, soft, +intensely black hair must have come to her from a Spanish ancestor. So +also did the delicately marked black brows and the black lashes to her +dark and very lovely blue eyes; but the clear complexion, the cheeks +with the tenderest bloom on them, the softly dimpled lips red as coral, +and the little teeth white as pearls were true Irish characteristics. + +Nora waited for a moment after Hannah had left her, then, shading her +eyes from the westerly sun by one hand, she turned slowly and went into +the house. + +"Where is mother, Pegeen?" she said to a rough-looking, somewhat +slatternly servant who was crossing the hall. + +"In the north parlor, Miss Nora." + +"Come along, then, Creena; come along, Cushla," said the girl, +addressing two handsome black Pomeranians who rushed to meet her. The +dogs leaped up at her with expressions of rapture, and girl and dogs +careered with a wild dance across the great, broad hall in the direction +of the north parlor. Nora opened the door with a somewhat noisy bang, +the dogs precipitated themselves into the room, and she followed. + +"Ah, then, mother dear! and have I disturbed you?" she said. + +A pale-faced lady, who was lying full-length on a very old and hard +sofa, rose with a querulous expression on her face when Nora entered. + +"I wish someone would teach you thoughtfulness," she said; "you are the +most tiresome girl in the world. I have been two hours trying to get a +wink of sleep, and just when I succeed you come in and wake me." + +"It's sorry I am to my heart's core," said Nora. She went up to her +mother, dropped on one knee, and looked with her rosy face into the worn +and faded one of the elder woman. "Here I am, mammy," she said again, +"your own little Nora; let me sit with you a bit--may I?" + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan smiled faintly. She looked all over the girl's slim +figure, and finally her eyes rested on the laughing, lovely face. Then a +cloud crossed her forehead, and her eyes became dim with tears. + +"Have you heard the last thing, Nora?" + +"There are so many last things, mother," said Nora. + +"But the very last. Your father has to pay back the money which Squire +Murphy of Cronane lent him. It is the queerest thing; but the mortgagee +means to foreclose, as he calls it, within three months if that money is +not paid in full. I know well what it means." + +Nora smiled. She took her mother's hand in hers, and began to stroke it +gently. + +"I suppose," she said, "it means this. It means that we must part with a +little more of the beloved land, every sod of which I love. We certainly +do seem to be getting poorer and poorer; but never mind--nothing will +ever alter the fact that--" + +"That what, child?" + +"That we O'Shanaghgans are the proudest and oldest family in the county, +and that there is scarcely an Englishman across the water who would not +give all he possesses to change places with us." + +"You talk like a silly child," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan; "and please +remember that I am English." + +"Oh, mummy, I am so sorry!" said the girl. She laid her soft head down +on the sofa, pressing it against her mother's shoulder. + +"I cannot think of you as English," she said. "You have lived here +all, all my life. You belong to father, and you belong to Terence and +me--what have you to do with the cold English?" + +"I remember a time," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, "when I thought Ireland +the most desolate and God-forsaken place on the earth. It is true I have +become accustomed to it now. But, Nora, if you only could realize what +my old home was really like." + +"I don't want to realize any home different from this," said the girl, a +cloud shading her bright eyes for the moment. + +"You are silly and prejudiced," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan. "It is a great +trial to me to have a daughter so unsympathetic." + +"Oh, mummy! I don't mean to be unsympathetic. There now, we are quite +cozy together. Tell me one of the old stories; I do so love to listen." + +The frown cleared from Mrs. O'Shanaghgan's forehead, and the peevish +lines went out of her face. She began to talk with animation and +excitement. Nora knew exactly what she was going to say. She had +heard the story so often; but, although she had heard it hundreds and +thousands of times, she was never tired of listening to the history of +a trim life of which she knew absolutely nothing. The orderly, +well-dressed servants, the punctual meals, the good and abundant food, +the nice dresses, the parties, the solid education, the discipline so +foreign to her own existence, all--all held their proper fascination. +But although she listened with delight to these stories of a bygone +time, she never envied her mother those periods of prosperity. Such a +life would have been a prison to her; so she thought, although she never +spoke her thought aloud. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan began the old tale to-night, telling it with a little +more _verve_ even than usual. She ended at last with a sigh. + +"Oh, the beautiful old times!" she said. + +"But you didn't know father then," answered Nora, a frown coming to her +brows, and an angry feeling for a moment visiting her warm heart. "You +didn't have father, nor Nora, nor Terry." + +"Of course not, darling, and you make up for much; but, Nora dear, +although I love my husband and my children, I hate this country. I hate +it!" + +"Don't, mother," said Nora, with a look of pain. She started to her +feet. At that moment loud, strong steps were heard in the hall; a hearty +voice exclaimed: + +"Where's Light o' the Morning? Where have you hidden yourself, witch?" + +"It's father," said Nora. She said the words with a sort of gasp of +rejoicing, and the next moment had dashed out of the room. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + + +"SOME MORE OF THE LAND MUST GO." + +Squire O'Shanaghgan was a tall, powerfully built man, with deep-set eyes +and rugged, overhanging brows; his hair was of a grizzled gray, very +thick and abundant; he had a shaggy beard, too, and a long overhanging +mustache. He entered the north parlor still more noisily than Nora had +done. The dogs yelped with delight, and flung themselves upon him. + +"Down, Creena! down, Cushla!" he said. "Ah, then, Nora, they are as +bewitching as yourself, little woman. What beauties they are growing, to +be sure!" + +"I reared them," said Nora. "I am proud of them both. At one time I +thought Creena could not live; but look at her now--her coat as black as +jet, and so silky." + +"Shut the door, won't you, Patrick?" said his wife. + +"Bless me! I forgot," said the Squire. He crossed the room, and, with +an effort after quietness, closed the door with one foot; then he seated +himself by his wife's side. + +"Better, Eileen?" he said, looking at her anxiously. + +"I wish you would not call me Eileen," she said. "I hate to have my name +Irishized." + +The Squire's eyes filled with suppressed fun. + +"Ah, but you are half-Irish, whether you like it or not," he said. "Is +not she, colleen? Bless me, what a day it has turned out! We are +getting summer weather at last. What do you say to going for a drive, +Eileen--Ellen, I mean? Black Bess is eating her head off in the stables. +I want to go as far as Murphy's place, and you might as well come with +me." + +"And I too?" said Nora. + +"To be sure, child. Why not? You run round to the stables, Norrie, and +give the order." + +Nora instantly left the room, the dogs following her. + +"What ails her?" said the Squire, looking at his wife. + +"Ails her, Pat? Nothing that I know of." + +"Then you know very little," was his answer. "I never see that sort +of anxious frown between the colleen's brows without knowing there's +mischief in the wind. Somebody has been worrying her, and I won't have +it." He put down his great hand with a thump on the nearest table. + +"Don't, Pat. You quite shatter my nerves." + +"Bless you and your nerves, Ellen. I want to give them all possible +consideration; but I won't have Light o' the Morning worried." + +"You'll spoil that girl; you'll rue it yet." + +"Bless her heart! I couldn't spoil her; she's unspoilable. Did you ever +see a sweeter bit of a thing, sound to the core, through and through?" + +"Sweet or not," said the mother, "she has got to learn her lesson of +life; and it is no good to be too tender with her; she wants a little +bracing." + +"You have been trying that on--eh?" + +"Well, not exactly, Pat; but you cannot expect me to keep all our +troubles to ourselves. There's that mortgage, you know." + +"Bother the mortgage!" said the Squire. "Why do you harp on things the +way you do? I'll manage it right enough. I am going round to see Dan +Murphy now; he won't be hard on an old friend." + +"Yes; but have you not to pay up?" + +"Some day, I suppose." + +"Now listen, Patrick. Do be reasonable. Whenever I speak of money you +fight shy of the subject." + +"I don't--I don't," said the Squire restlessly; "but I am dead tired. +I have had a ride of thirty miles; I want my tea. Where is Nora? Do you +mind my calling her? She'll order Pegeen to bring the tea here." + +"No; I won't have it. We'll have tea in the dining room presently. I +thought you objected to afternoon tea." + +"So I do, as a rule; but I am mighty dhry--thirsty, I mean, Ellen. Well, +all the better; I'll get more to drink in the dining room. Order the tea +as soon as you please." + +"Ring the bell, Patrick." + +The Squire strode to the mantelpiece, pulled a bell-cord which hung from +the ceiling, a distant bell was heard ringing in noisy fashion, and a +moment afterward Pegeen put in her head. + +"Come right in, Margaret," said her mistress. + +"Aw! then, I'm sorry, ma'am, I forgot," said the girl. She came in, +hiding both her hands under her apron. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan uttered an impatient sigh. + +"It is impossible to train these creatures," she said under her breath. +Aloud, she gave her order in quiet, impassive tones: + +"Tea as soon as possible in the west parlor, and sound the gong when it +is ready." + +"Why, then, wasn't I getting it?" said Pegeen. She left the room, +leaving the door wide open. + +"Just like them," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan. "When you want the door open +they invariably shut it, and when you want it shut they leave it open." + +"They do that in England too, as far as I can tell," said the Squire, +with a slightly nettled tone in his voice. + +"Well, now, Patrick, while we have a few moments to ourselves, I want to +know what you mean to do about that ten thousand pounds?" + +"I am sure, Ellen, it is more than I can tell you." + +"You will have to pay it, you know." + +"I suppose so, some day. I'll speak to Dan to-night. He is the last man +to be hard on a chap." + +"Some more of the land must go," said the wife in a fretful tone. "Our +rent-roll will be still smaller. There will be still less money to +educate Terence. I had set my heart on his going to Cambridge or Oxford. +You quite forget that he is eighteen now." + +"Cambridge or Oxford!" said the Squire. "Not a bit of it. My son shall +either go to Old Trinity or he does without a university education. +Cambridge or Oxford indeed! You forget, Ellen, that the lad is my son as +well as yours." + +"I don't; but he is half an Englishman, three parts an Englishman, +whatever his fatherhood," said the Squire's wife in a tone of triumph. + +"Well, well! he is Terence O'Shanaghgan, for all that, and he will +inherit this old place some day." + +"Much there will be for him to inherit." + +Eager steps were heard on the gravel, and the next instant Nora entered +by the open window. + +"I have given the order," she said; "Angus will have the trap round in a +quarter of an hour." + +"That's right, my girl; you didn't let time drag," said her father. + +"Angus wants you and mother to be quite ready, for he says Black Bess is +nearly off her head with spirit. Now, then, mother, shall I go upstairs +and bring down your things?" + +"I don't mind if you do, Nora; my back aches a good bit." + +"We'll put the air-cushion in the trap," said the Squire, who, +notwithstanding her fine-lady airs, had a great respect and admiration +for his wife. "We'll make you right cozy, Ellen, and a rattle through +the air will do you a sight of good." + +"May I drive, father?" said Nora. + +"You, little one? Suppose you bring Black Bess down on her knees? That +horse is worth three hundred pounds, if she's worth a penny." + +"Do you think I would?" said the girl reproachfully. "Now, dad, that is +about the cruelest word you have said to your Nora for many a day." + +"Come and give me a hug, colleen," said the Squire. + +Nora ran to him, clasped her arms round his neck, and kissed him once or +twice. He had moved away to the other end of the room, and now he looked +her full in the face. + +"You are fretting about something?" + +"Not I--not I," said the girl; but she flushed. + +"Listen to me, colleen," said the Squire; "if it is that bit of a +mortgage, you get it right out of your head. It's not going to worry +_me_. I am going this very evening to have a talk with Dan." + +"Oh, if it is Dan Murphy you owe it to," said the girl. + +"Ah, he's all right; he's the right sort; a chip of the old block--eh? +He wouldn't be hard on a brother in adversity?" + +"He wouldn't if he could help it," said Nora; but the cloud had not left +her sensitive face. Then, seeing that father looked at her with intense +anxiety, she made a valiant effort. + +"Of course, I believe in you," she said; "and, indeed, what does the +loss of money matter while we are together?" + +"Right you are! right you are!" said the Squire, with a laugh. He +clapped her on the shoulder. "Trust Light o' the Morning to look at +things in the right direction," he said. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + + +THE WILD MURPHYS. + +Terence made his appearance at the tea table. In every respect he was +a contrast to Nora. He was very good-looking--strikingly handsome, in +fact; tall, with a graceful elegance of deportment which was in striking +contrast to the burly figure of the old Squire. His face was of a +nut-brown hue; his eyes dark and piercing; his features straight. Young +as he was, there were the first indications of a black silky mustache on +his short upper lip, and his clustering black curls grew in a high ridge +off a lofty brow. Terence had the somewhat languid air which more or +less characterized all his mother's movements. He was devoted to her, +and took his seat now by her side. She laid her very thin and slender +hand on his arm. He did not respond by look or movement to the gesture +of affection; but had a very close observer been present he would have +noticed that he drew his chair about the tenth of an inch nearer to +hers. + +Nora and her father at the other end of the table were chattering +volubly. Nora's face was all smiles; every vestige of that little cloud +which had sat between her dark brows a few moments before had vanished. +Her blue eyes were sparkling with fun. + +The Squire made brilliant sally after sally, to which she responded with +all an Irish girl's aptitude for repartee. + +Terence and his mother conversed in low tones. + +"Yes, mother," he was saying, "I had a letter from Uncle George this +morning; he wants me to go next week. Do you think you can manage?" + +"How long will you be away, Terence?" + +"I don't know; a couple of months, perhaps." + +"How much money will it cost?" + +"I shall want an evening suit, and a new dress-suit, and something for +everyday. These things are disgraceful," said the lad, just glancing at +the frayed coat-sleeve, beneath which showed a linen cuff of immaculate +whiteness. + +Terence was always the personification of fastidiousness in his dress, +and for this trait in his character alone Mrs. O'Shanaghgan adored him. + +"You shall have it," she said--"somehow." + +"Well, I must reply tonight," he continued. "Shall I ask the governor, +or will you?" + +"We won't worry him, Terry; I can manage." + +He looked at her a little anxiously. + +"You are not going to sell any more of them?" he said. + +"There is a gold chain and that diamond ring; I never wear either. I +would fifty times rather think that you were enjoying yourself with my +relations in England. You are fitted to grace any society. Do not say +another word, my boy." + +"You are the very best and noblest mother in the world," said the lad +with enthusiasm. + +Meanwhile, Nora and her father continued their gay conversation. + +"We will take a basket with us," said Nora, "and Bridget shall give me a +couple of dozen more of those little brown eggs. Mrs. Perch shall have a +brood of chicks if I can manage it." + +"Trust the girleen for that," said the Squire, and then they rose from +table. + +"Ellen," he continued, addressing his wife, "have you and Terence done +colloguing together? for I hear Black Bess coming to the front door." + +"Oh, hasten, mother; hasten!" said Nora. "The mare won't stand waiting; +she is so fresh she is just ready to fly." + +The next few moments witnessed a scene of considerable bustle. Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan, with all her English nerves, had plenty of pluck, and +would scorn to show even a vestige of fear before the hangers-on, as she +called the numerous ragged urchins who appeared from every quarter on +each imaginable occasion. Although she was shaking from head to foot +with absolute terror at the thought of a drive behind Black Bess, she +stepped into her seat in the tall dog-cart without a remark. The mare +fidgeted and half reared. + +"Whoa! whoa! Black Bess, my beauty!" said the Squire. The groom, a +bright-faced lad, with a wisp of yellow hair falling over his forehead, +held firmly to the reins. Nora jumped up beside her mother. + +"Are you going to drive?" asked that lady. + +"Yes, mummy; you know I can. Whoa, Black Bess! it's me," said the girl. +She took the reins in her capable little hands; the Squire sprang up +behind, and Black Bess flew down the avenue as if on the wings of the +wind. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan gave one hurried pant of suppressed anguish, and then +sat perfectly still, her lips set, her hands tightly locked together. +She endured these drives almost daily, but had never yet got accustomed +to them. Nora, on the contrary, as they spun through the air, felt her +spirits rising; the hot young blood coursed through her veins, and her +eyes blazed with fun and happiness. She looked back at her father, who +nodded to her briefly. + +"That's it, Nora; keep her well in. Now that we are going uphill you can +give her her head a bit. Whoa, Black Bess! Whoa!" + +The mare, after her first wild canter, settled into a more jog-trot +gait, and the dog-cart did not sway so violently from side to side. They +were soon careering along a wide, well-made road, which ran for many +miles along the top of some high cliffs. Below them, at their feet, the +wild Atlantic waves curled and burst in innumerable fountains of spray; +the roar of the waves came up to their ears, and the breath of the salt +breeze, the freshest and most invigorating in the world, fanned their +cheeks. Even Mrs. O'Shanaghgan felt her heart beating less wildly, and +ventured to put a question or two to Nora with regard to the clucking +hen, Mrs. Perch. + +"I have not forgotten the basket, mammy," said the girl; "and Hannah +will put the eggs under the hen tonight." + +"I am quite certain that Hannah mismanaged the last brood," said Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan; "but everything goes wrong at the Castle just now." + +"Oh, mother, hush! he will hear," said Nora. + +"It is just like you, Nora; you wish to keep----" + +"Oh, come, now," said the Squire; "I hear the grumbles beginning. No +grumbles when we are having our ride--eh, Ellen? I want you to come back +with a hearty appetite for dinner, and a hearty inclination to sleep +tonight." + +They drove faster and faster. Occasionally Nora touched the mare the +faintest little flick with the end of her long whip. The creature +responded to her touch as though girl and horse were one. + +At last they drew up outside a dilapidated gate, one hinge of which +was off. The Squire jumped down from his seat, came round, and held the +horse's head. + +"Whoa! whoa!" he said. "Hullo, you, Mike! Why aren't you in your place? +Come and open the gate this minute, lad." + +A small boy, with bare feet and ragged trousers, came hurrying, head +over heels, down the road. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan shuddered and shut her +eyes. The gate was swung open. Nora led the mare skillfully round a +somewhat sharp corner, and the next instant they were dashing with +headlong speed up a steep avenue. It was neglected; weeds grew all over +it, and the adjacent meadows were scarcely distinguishable from the +avenue itself. + +The Squire ran after the dog-cart, and leaped up while the mare was +going at full speed. + +"Well done, father!" called back Nora. + +"Heaven preserve us!" thought Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, who still sat +speechless, and as if made of iron. + +At last they reached a long, rambling old house, with many small +windows, interspersed with a few of enormous dimensions. These were +called parliament windows, and had been put into many houses of that +period in order to avoid the window-tax. Most of the windows were open, +and out of some of them ragged towels were drying in the evening breeze. +About half a dozen dogs, most of which were of mongrel breed, rushed +forward at the sound of the wheels, barking vociferously. Nora, with +a dexterous touch of her hand, drew the mare up just in front of the +mansion, and then sprang lightly to her feet.' + +"Now, mother, shall I help you down?" + +"You had better find out first if Mrs. Murphy is in," said the Squire's +wife. + +A ragged urchin, such as seemed to abound like mushrooms in the place, +came and held the reins close to the horse's mouth. The creature stood +trembling from the violence of her exertions, and pouring down moisture +at every pore. "She wants to be well rubbed down," said the Squire. "She +doesn't get half exercise enough; this will never do. What if I have to +make money on her, and she is spoiled?" + +The low words which came to his lips were not heard by anyone; there +was a frown, very like Nora's own, between his brows. The next moment a +small man, with reddish hair, in a very shabby suit of half-worn tweed, +appeared on the steps of the front door. + +"Hullo, O'Shanaghgan, is that yourself?" he called out. "How are you, +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan? Right glad to see you. You'll step inside--won't you? +I believe the wife is somewhere round. Neil, my man, go and look for the +missus. Tell her that Madam O'Shanaghgan is here, and the Squire. Well, +Nora, I suppose you are wanting a chat with Bridget? You won't find her +indoors this fine evening." + +"Where is she, Mr. Murphy?" asked the girl. "I do want to have a talk +with her." + +"Ah! what's the basket for?" + +"I want her to give me some of the pretty brown eggs." + +"Well, go right down there by the sea-path, and you'll find her, as +likely as not." + +"Very well," answered Nora. Slinging her basket on her arm, she +started for her walk. As soon as she was out of sight she began to run. +Presently she stopped and began whistling "The Wearing of the Green," +which was responded to in a moment by another voice, sweet as that of +a blackbird. She looked to right and left, and presently saw a pair of +laughing black eyes looking down at her from beneath the shelter of a +huge oak tree. + +"Here I am. Will you climb up?" said the voice of Bridget Murphy. + +"Give me a hand, and I'll be up with you in a moment," said Nora. She +tossed her basket on the ground; a very firm, little brown hand was +extended; and the next moment the girls were seated side by side on a +stout branch of the tree. + +"Well, and what has brought you along here?" said Bridget. + +"I came with father and mother in the dog-cart," replied Nora. "Father +let me drive Black Bess. I had a jolly time; but she did pull a bit--my +wrists are quite stiff." + +"I am glad you have come," said the other girl. "I was having a concert +all by myself. I can imitate the thrush, the blackbird, and most of the +birds round here. Shall I do the thrush for you?" + +Before Nora could speak she began imitating the full liquid notes of the +bird to perfection. + +"I declare you have a genius for it," said Nora. "But how are you +yourself, Biddy?" + +"What should ail me?" replied Biddy. "I never had a care nor a worry nor +a trouble yet; the day is long, and my heart is light. I am at peace, +and I never had an ache in my body yet. But what is up with you, Nora +alannah?" + +"It's that mortgage, you know," said Nora, dropping her voice. "What is +your father going to do?" + +"Oh, the mortgage," said Bridget. "Mr. Morgan came down from Dublin +yesterday; he and father had a long talk. I don't know. I believe +there's worry in the air, and when there is I always steer clear of it." + +"Your father, you mean?" + +"I can't tell you; don't question me. I am glad you have come. Can't you +stay for the night?" + +"No, I can't. I must go back with father and mother. The fact is this, +Bridget, I believe your father would do anything in the world for you." + +"I suppose he would. What do you want to coax out of me now? Oh, +Nora alannah! don't let us talk of worries. Come down to the sea with +me--won't you? I have found the most lovely cave. I mean to explore it +with lanterns. You go into the cave, and you can walk in nearly half a +mile; and then it takes a sudden turn to the right, and they say there's +an entrance into another cave, and just beyond that there's a ghost +supposed to be. Some people say it is the home of the O'Shanaghgans' +Banshee; but whatever it is, I mean to see all about it." + +"Do you mean the Sea-Nymphs' Cave?" said Nora. "But you can only get to +that by crossing the bay." + +"Yes. Well, I am going tomorrow night; the moon is at the full. You will +come over and go with me--won't you?" + +"Oh! I wish I could." + +"But why can't you? Don't let us worry about fathers and mothers. We're +a pair of girls, and must have our own larks. There's Neil and there's +Mike; they will get the boat all ready, and we can start off for the +cave just when the tide is high; we can only get in then. We'll run the +boat in as far as it will go, and we'll see what we'll see. You will +come--won't you, Nora?" + +"I should like it of all things in the world," said Nora. + +"Well, why not? You can come over tomorrow afternoon, and stay the night +here. Just say that I have asked you." + +"But mother does not much like my sleeping out." + +"You mean that she does not like you to sleep at the house of the wild +Murphys--that's what you mean, Nora. Then, get away; I don't want to +force my company on you. I am as good as any other girl in Ireland; I +have the blood of the old Irish kings in my veins; but if you are too +proud to come, why----" + +"I am not, and you know it," said Nora; "but mother is an Englishwoman, +and she thinks we are all a little rough, you and I into the bargain. +All the same, I'll come to-morrow. I do want to explore that cave. Yes, +I'll come if you give me a proper invitation before mother." + +"Oh, mercy me!" said the girl, "must I go back to the house? I am so +precious shabby, and your lady-mother has got such piercing eyes. But +there, we can smuggle in the back way. I'll go up to my room and put on +my bits of finery. Bedad! but I look as handsome as the best when I am +dressed up. Come along, Nora; we'll get in the back way, and I'll give +the invitation in proper style." + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + + +THE INVITATION. + +Bridget and Nora began to climb up a very steep and narrow winding path. +It was nothing more than a grass path in the midst of a lot of rock and +underwood, but the girls were like young chamois, and leaped over such +obstacles with the lightness of fawns. Presently they arrived at the +back entrance of Cronane, the Murphys' decidedly dilapidated residence. +They had to cross a courtyard covered with rough cobbles and in a sad +state of neglect and mess. Some pigs were wallowing in the mire in one +corner, and a rough pony was tethered to a post not far off; he was +endeavoring, with painful insistence, to reach a clump of hay which was +sticking out of a hayrick a foot or two away. Nora, seeing his wistful +eyes, sprang forward, pulled a great handful of the hay, and held it to +his mouth. The little creature almost whinnied with delight. + +"There you are," said Bridget. "What right have you to give our hay to +that pony?" + +"Oh, nonsense," said Nora; "the heart in him was starving." She flung +her arms round the pony's neck, pressed a kiss on his forehead, and +continued to cross the yard with Biddy. Two or three ragged urchins +soon impeded their path; one of them was the redoubtable Neil, the other +Mike. + +"Is it to-morrow night you want the boat, Miss Biddy?" said Neil. + +Bridget dropped her voice to a whisper. + +"Look here, Neil," she said, "mum's the word; you are not to let it +out to a soul. You and Mike shall come with us, and Miss Nora is coming +too." + +Neil cast a bashful and admiring glance at handsome Nora, as she stood +very erect by Biddy's side. + +"All right, miss," he said. + +"At ten o'clock," said Bridget; "have the boat in the cove then, and +we'll be down there and ready." + +"But they say, miss, that the Banshee is out on the nights when the moon +is at the full." + +"The O'Shanaghgans' Banshee," said Biddy, glancing at Nora, whose face +did not change a muscle, although the brightness and wistfulness in her +eyes were abundantly visible. She was saying to herself: + +"I would give all the world to speak to the Banshee alone--to ask her to +get father out of his difficulty." + +She was half-ashamed of these thoughts, although she knew and almost +gloried in the fact that she was superstitious to her heart's core. + +She and Biddy soon entered the house by the back entrance, and ran up +some carpetless stairs to Biddy's own room. This was a huge bedroom, +carpetless and nearly bare. A little camp-bed stood in one corner, +covered by a colored counterpane; there was a strip of carpet beside the +bed, and another tiny strip by a wooden washhand-stand. The two great +parliament windows were destitute of any curtain or even blind; they +stared blankly out across the lovely summer landscape as hideous as +windows could be. + +It was a perfect summer's evening; but even now the old frames rattled +and shook, and gave some idea of how they would behave were a storm +abroad. + +Biddy, who was quite accustomed to her room and never dreamed that any +maiden could sleep in a more luxurious chamber, crossed it to where a +huge wooden wardrobe stood. She unlocked the door, and took from its +depths a pale-blue skirt trimmed with quantities of dirty pink flounces. + +"Oh, you are not going to put _that_ on," said Nora, whose own training +had made her sensitive to incongruity in dress. + +"Yes, I am," said Biddy. "How can I see your lady-mother in this style +of thing?" + +She went and stood in front of Nora with her arms akimbo. + +"Look," she said, "my frock has a rent from here to here, and this +petticoat is none of the best, and my stockings--well, I know it is my +own fault, but I _won't_ darn them, and there is a great hole just above +the heel. Now, this skirt will hide all blemishes." + +"But what will your mother say?" + +"Bless her!" said Biddy, "she won't even notice. Here, let's whip on the +dress." + +She hastily divested herself of her ragged cotton skirt, and put on the +pale blue with the dirty silk flounces. + +"What are you looking so grave for?" she said, glancing up at Nora. "I +declare you're too stately for anything, Nora O'Shanaghgan! You stand +there, and I know you criticise me." + +"No; I love you too much," replied Nora. "You are Biddy Murphy, one of +my greatest friends." + +"Ah, it's sweet to hear her," said Biddy. + +"But, all the same," continued Nora, "I don't like that dress, and it's +terribly unsuitable. You don't look ladylike in it." + +"Ladylike, and I with the blood of----" + +"Oh, don't begin that," said Nora; "every time I see you you mention +that fact. I have not the slightest doubt that the old kings were +ruffians, and dressed abominably." + +"If you dare," said Biddy. She rushed up to the bed, dragged out her +pillow, and held it in a warlike attitude. "Another word about my +ancestors, and this will be at your devoted head!" she cried. + +Nora burst into a merry laugh. + +"There, now, that's better," said Biddy. She dropped the pillow and +proceeded with her toilet. The dirty skirt with its tawdry flounces was +surmounted by a bodice of the same material, equally unsuitable. + +Biddy brushed out her mop of jet-black hair, which grew in thick curls +all over her head and stood out like a mop round her shoulders. She was +a plain girl, with small, very black eyes, a turned-up nose, and a wide +mouth; but there was an irresistible expression of drollery in her face, +and when she laughed, showing her milk-white teeth, there were people +who even thought her attractive. Nora really loved her, although the +two, standing side by side, were, as far as appearances were concerned, +as the poles asunder. + +"Now, come along," said Biddy. "I know I look perfectly charming. Oh, +what a sweet, sweet blue it is, and these ducky little flounces! It was +Aunt Mary O'Flannagan sent me this dress at Christmas. She wore it at a +fancy ball, and said it might suit me. It does, down to the ground. Let +me drop a courtesy to you, Nora O'Shanaghgan. Oh, how proper we look! +But I don't care! Now I'm not afraid to face anyone--why, the old kings +would have been proud of me. Come along--do." + +She caught Nora's hand; they dashed down the wide, carpetless stairs, +crossed a huge hall, and entered a room which was known as the drawing +room at Cronane. It was an enormous apartment, but bore the same traces +of neglect and dirt which the whole of the rest of the house testified +to. The paper on the walls was moldy in patches, and in one or two +places it had detached itself from the wall and fell in great sheets +to the ground. One loose piece of paper was tacked up with two or three +huge tacks, and bulged out, swaying with the slightest breeze. The +carpet, which covered the entire floor, was worn threadbare; but, to +make up for these defects, there were cabinets of the rarest and most +exquisite old china, some of the pieces being worth fabulous sums. Vases +of the same china adorned the tall marble mantelpiece, and stood on +brackets here and there about the room. There were also some +exquisite and wonderfully carved oak, a Queen Anne sofa, and several +spindle-legged chairs. An old spinet stood in a distant window, and the +drab moreen curtains had once been handsome. + +Standing on the hearth, with his elbow resting on the marble mantelpiece +close to a unique vase of antique design, stood Squire O'Shanaghgan. He +was talking in pleasant and genial tones to Mrs. Murphy, a podgy little +woman, with a great likeness to Biddy. + +Mrs. Murphy wore a black alpaca dress and a little three-cornered +knitted shawl across her shoulders. She had gray hair, which curled +tightly like her daughter's; on top of it was a cap formed of rusty +black velvet and equally rusty black lace. She looked much excited at +the advent of the Squire, and her cheeks testified to the fact by the +brightness of their color. + +Mr. Murphy was doing penance opposite to Mrs. O'Shanaghgan. He was +dreadfully afraid of that stately lady, and was glancing nervously round +at his wife and the Squire from moment to moment. + +"Yes, madam," he was saying, "it's turnips we are going to plant in that +field just yonder. We have had a very good crop of hay too. It is a fine +season, and the potatoes promise to be a sight for sore eyes." + +"I hate the very name of that root," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan in her most +drawling tones. + +"Why, then, ma'am, you don't say so," answered Murphy; "it seems hard +on the poor things that keep us all going. The potheen and the +potatoes--what would Ireland be without 'em? Glory be to goodness, it's +quite awful to hear you abusing the potato, ma'am." + +"I am English, you know," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan. + +On this scene Nora and Biddy entered. Mr. Murphy glanced with intense +relief at his daughter. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan slightly raised her brows. It +was the faintest of movements, but the superciliousness of the action +smote upon Nora, who colored painfully. + +Biddy, taking her courage in her hand, went straight up to the august +lady. + +"How do you do?" she said. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan extended her hand with a limp action. + +"Oh, dear!" panted Biddy. + +"What is up, my dear Bridget?" said her mother, turning round and +looking at her daughter. "Oh, to goodness, what have you put that on +for? It's your very best Sunday-go-to-meeting dress, and you won't have +another, I can tell you, for six months." + +"There now, mother, hush, do," said Biddy. "I have put it on for a +purpose. Why, then, it's sweet I want to make myself, and I believe it's +sweet I look. Oh, there's the mirror; let me gaze at myself." + +She crossed the room, and stood in front of a long glass, examining her +unsuitable dress from the front and side; and then, being thoroughly +satisfied with the elegance of appearance, she went back and stood in +front of Mrs. O'Shanaghgan. + +"It's a request I want to make of you, ma'am," she said. + +"Well, Biddy, I will listen to it if you will ask me properly," said +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan. + +"Yes, to be sure," said Biddy. "How shall I say it?" + +"Speak quietly, my dear." + +"Yes, Biddy, I do wish you would take pattern by Nora, and by Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan," said Mrs. Murphy, who in her heart of hearts envied Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan's icy manners, and thought them the most perfect in all the +world. She was in mortal fear of this good lady, even more terrified of +her than her husband was. + +"Well, Biddy," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan. + +"May Nora come and spend tomorrow night here?" + +"No," was on Mrs. O'Shanaghgan's lips; but just then the Squire came +forward. + +"To be sure she may; it will do her a sight of good. The child hardly +ever goes from home." + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan raised displeased eyes to her husband's face. + +"Girls of Nora's age ought to stay at home," she said. + +"Yes, to be sure, to be sure," said the Squire; "and we would miss her +awfully if she was away from us; but a day or two off duty--eh, madam?" +He glanced at his wife. + +"You have your answer, Biddy," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan; "her father +wishes Nora to accept your invitation. She may stay away for one +night--no longer." + +Biddy winked broadly round at Nora. + +"Now, then," she said, "come along." She seized her friend by the arm, +and whisked her out of the room. + +"It was the dress that did it," she said; "it is the loveliest garment +in all the world. Come along now, and let's take it off. I want to +gather those eggs for you." + +She ran upstairs again, followed by Nora. The dress was disposed of +in the large wooden wardrobe, the old torn frock readjusted on Biddy's +stout form, and the girls went out into the lovely summer air. The eggs +which Nora required were put into the little basket, and in half an +hour the O'Shanaghgans' party were returning at full speed to Castle +O'Shanaghgan. Nora glanced once into her father's face, and her heart +gave a great leap. Her high spirits left her as if by magic; she felt a +lump in her throat, and during the rest of the drive hardly spoke. + +The Squire, on the contrary, talked incessantly. He talked more than +ever after Nora had looked at him. He slapped his wife on the shoulder, +and complimented her on her bravery. Nora's driving was the very best in +all the world; she was a born whip; she had no fear in her; she was his +own colleen, the Light o' the Morning, the dearest, sweetest soul on +earth. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghan replied very briefly and coldly to her husband's +excited words. She treated them with what she imagined the contempt they +deserved; but Nora was neither elated just then by her father's praise +nor chilled by her mother's demeanor. Every thought of her heart, +every nerve in her highly strung frame, was concentrated on one fact +alone--she had surprised a look, a look on the Squire's face, which told +her that his heart was broken. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + + +"I AM ASHAMED OF YOU." + +It was late that same evening, and the household at the Castle had all +retired to rest. Nora was in her own room. This room was not furnished +according to an English girl's fancy. It was plain and bare, but, +compared to Biddy Murphy's chamber, it was a room of comfort and +even luxury. A neat carpet covered the floor, there were white dimity +curtains to the windows, and the little bed in its distant recess looked +neat and comfortable. It is true that the washhand-stand was wooden, and +the basin and jug of the plainest type; but Mrs. O'Shanaghgan herself +saw that Nora had at least what she considered the necessaries of life. +She had a neat hanging-press for her dresses, and a pretty chest of +drawers, which her mother herself had saved up her pin-money to buy for +her. + +Nora now stood by one of the open windows, her thick and very long black +hair hanging in a rippling mass over her neck and shoulders. Suddenly, +as she bent out of the window, the faint, very faint perfume of a cigar +came up on the night air. She sniffed excitedly for a moment, and then, +bending a little more forward, said in a low tone: + +"Is that you, Terry?" + +"Yes--why don't you go to bed?" was the somewhat ungracious response. + +"I am not sleepy. May I come down and join you?" + +"No." + +"Will you come up and join me?" + +The answer was about to be "No"; there was a moment's hesitation, +then Nora's voice said pleadingly, "Ah, do now, Terry; I want to say +something so badly." + +"But if anybody hears?" + +"They can't hear. Father and mother's room is at the other end of the +house." + +"All right; don't say any more; you'll wake people with that chatter of +yours. I'm coming." + +In a couple of minutes there was a knock at Nora's door. She flew to +open it, and Terence came in. + +"What do you want?" he said. + +"To talk to you; I have got something to say. Come over and sit by the +window." + +Terence obeyed. + +"The first thing to do is to put out that light," said Nora. She ran +to the dressing table, and before her brother could prevent her had +extinguished the candle. + +"Now, then, there is the dear old lady moon to look down upon us, and +nothing else can see us." + +"Why don't you go to bed, Nora? Hannah would say that you are losing +your beauty-sleep sitting up at this, hour." + +"As if anything about me mattered just now," said Nora. + +"Why, what's up?" + +"The old thing, Terry; you must know what's up." + +"What old thing? I am sure I can't guess." + +"Well, then, if you can't you ought. Father is in a peck of trouble--a +peck of trouble." + +Nora's voice broke and trembled. Terence, who disliked a scene beyond +anything, fidgeted restlessly. He leaned out of the window, and dropped +his cigar ash on the ground beneath. + +"And you are his only son and the heir to Castle O'Shanaghgan." + +"The heir to a pack of ruins," said the boy impatiently. + +"Terry, you don't deserve to be father's son. How dare you speak like +that of the--the beloved old place?" + +"Come, come, Nora, if you are going into heroics I think I'll be off to +bed," said Terence, yawning. + +"No, you won't; you must listen. I have got something most important to +say." + +"Well, then, I will give you five minutes; not another moment. I know +you, Nora; you always exaggerate things. You are an Irishwoman to your +backbone." + +"I am, and I glory in the fact." + +"You ought to be ashamed to glory in it. Don't you want to have anything +to do with mother and her relations?" + +"I love my mother, but I am glad I don't take after her," said Nora; +"yes, I am glad." + +The moon shone on the two young faces, and Nora looked up at her +brother; he put on a supercilious smile, and folded his arms across his +broad chest. + +"Yes," she replied; "and I should like to shake you for looking like +that. I am glad I am Irish through and through and _through_. Would +I give my warm heart and my enthusiasm for your coldness and +deliberation?" + +"Good gracious, Nora, what a little ignorant thing you are! Do you +suppose no Englishman has enthusiasm?" + +"We'll drop the subject," said Nora. "It is one I won't talk of; it puts +me into such a boiling rage to see you sitting like that." + +Terence did not speak at all for a moment; then he said quietly: + +"What is this thing that you have got to tell me? The five minutes are +nearly up, you know." + +"Oh, bother your five minutes! I cannot tell you in five minutes. +When my heart is scalded with unshed tears, how can I measure time by +_minutes_? It has to do with father; it is worse than anything that has +ever gone before." + +"What is it, Norrie?" Her brother's tone had suddenly become gentle. He +laid his hand for a moment on her arm; the gentleness of the tone, the +unexpected sweetness of the touch overcame Nora; she flung her arms +passionately round his neck. + +"Oh, and you are the only brother I have got!" she sobbed; "and I could +love you--I could love you like anything. Can't you be sympathetic? +Can't you be sweet? Can't you be dear?" + +"Oh, come, come!" said Terence, struggling to release himself from +Nora's entwining arms; "I am not made like you, you know; but I am not a +bad chap at heart. Now, what is it?" + +"I will try and tell you." + +"And for goodness' sake don't look so sorrowfully at me, Nora; we can +talk, and we can act and do good deeds, without giving ourselves away. I +hate girls who wear their hearts on their sleeves." + +"Oh! you will _never_ understand," said Nora, starting back again; all +her burst of feeling turned in upon herself. "I can't imagine how you +are father's son," she began. But then she stopped, waited for a moment, +and then said quietly, "There is a fresh mortgage, and it is for a very +big sum." + +"Oh, is that all?" said Terence. "I have heard of mortgages all my life; +it seems to be the fashion at O'Shanaghgan to mortgage to any extent. +There is nothing in that; father will give up a little more of the +land." + +"How much land do you think is left?" + +"I am sure I can't say; not much, I presume." + +"It is my impression," said Nora--"I am not sure; but it is my +impression--that there is _nothing_ left to meet this big thing but +the--the--the land on which"--her voice broke--"Terry, the land on which +the house stands." + +"Really, Nora, you are so melodramatic. I don't know how you can know +anything of this." + +"I only guess. Mother is very unhappy." + +"Mother? Is she?" + +"Ah, I have touched you there! But anyhow, father is in worse trouble +than he has been yet; I never, _never_ saw him look as he did tonight." + +"As if looks mattered." + +"The look I saw tonight does matter," said Nora. "We were coming home +from Cronane, and I was driving." + +"It is madness to let you drive Black Bess," interrupted Terence. "I +wonder my father risks spoiling one of his most valuable horses." + +"Oh, nonsense, Terry; I can drive as well as you, and better, thanks," +replied Nora, much nettled, for her excellent driving was one of the few +things she was proud of. "Well, I turned round, and I saw father's face, +and, oh! it was just as if someone had stabbed me through the heart. +You know, or perhaps you don't, that the last big loan came from Squire +Murphy." + +"Old Dan Murphy; then we are as safe as we can be," said Terence, rising +and whistling. "You really did make me feel uncomfortable, you have such +a queer way; but if it is Dan Murphy, he will give father any amount of +time. Why, they are the best of friends." + +"Well, father went to see him on the subject--I happen to know that--and +I don't think he has given him time. There is something wrong, anyhow--I +don't know what; but there _is_ something very wrong, and I mean to find +out tomorrow." + +"Nora, if I were you I wouldn't interfere. You are only a young girl, +and these kind of things are quite out of your province. Father has +pulled along ever since you and I were born. Most Irish gentlemen are +poor in these days. How can they help it? The whole country is going to +ruin; there is no proper trade; there is no proper system anywhere. The +tenants are allowed to pay their rent just as they please----" + +"As if we could harry them," said inconsistent Nora. "The poor dears, +with their tiny cots and their hard, hard times. I'd rather eat dry +bread all my days than press one of them." + +"If these are your silly views, you must expect our father to be badly +off, and the property to go to the dogs, and everything to come to an +end," said the brother in a discontented tone. "But there, I say once +more that you have exaggerated in this matter; there is nothing more +wrong than there has been since I can remember. I am glad I am going to +England; I am glad I am going to be out of it all for a bit." + +"You going to England--you, Terry?" + +"Yes. Don't you know? Our Uncle George Hartrick has asked me to stay +with him, and I am going." + +"And you can go? You can leave us just now?" + +"Why, of course; there will be fewer mouths to feed. It's a good thing +every way." + +"But Uncle George is a rich man?" + +"What of that?" + +"I mean he lives in a big place, and has heaps and heaps of money," said +Nora. + +"So much the better." + +"You cannot go to him _shabby_. What are you going to do for dress?" + +"Mother will manage that." + +"Mother!" Nora leaped up from the window-ledge and stood facing her +brother. "You have spoken to mother?" + +"Of course I have. Dear me, Nora, you are getting to be quite an +unpleasant sort of girl." + +"You have spoken to mother," repeated Nora, "and she has promised to +help you? How will she do it?" + +Terence moved restlessly. + +"I suppose she knows herself how she will do it." + +"And you will let her?" said Nora--"you, a man, will let her? You know +she has no money; you know she has nothing but her little trinkets, and +you allow her to sell those to give you pleasure? Oh, I am ashamed of +you! I am sorry you are my brother. How can you do it?" + +"Look here, Nora, I won't be scolded by you. After all, I am your elder, +and you are bound, at any rate, to show me decent outward respect. If +you only mean to talk humbug of this sort I am off to bed." + +Terence rose from his place on the window-ledge, and, without glancing +at Nora, left the room. When he did so she clasped her hands high above +her head, and sat for a moment looking out into the night. Her face was +quivering, but no tears rose to her wide-open eyes. After a moment she +turned, and began very slowly to undress. + +"I will see the Banshee tomorrow, if it is possible," she whispered +under her breath. "If ruin can be averted, it shall be. I don't mind +leaving the place; I don't mind starving. I don't mind _anything_ but +that look on father's face. But father's heart shall not be broken; not +while Nora O'Shanaghgan is in the world." + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + + +THE CAVE OF THE BANSHEE. + +At ten o'clock on the following evening two eager excited girls might +have been seen stealing down a narrow path which led to Murphy's Cove. +Murphy's Cove was a charming little semicircular bay which ran rather +deeply into the land. The sand here was of that silvery sheen which, +at low tide, shone like burnished silver. The cove was noted for +its wonderful shells, producing many cowries and long shells called +pointers. + +In the days of her early youth Nora had explored the treasures of this +cove, and had secured a valuable collection of shells, as well as very +rare seaweeds, which she had carefully dried. Her mother had shown her +how to make seaweeds and shells into baskets, and many of these amateur +productions adorned the walls of Nora's bedroom. + +All the charm of these things had passed away, however; the time had +come when she no longer cared to gather shells or collect seaweeds. She +felt that she was turning very fast into a woman. She had all an Irish +girl's high spirits; but she had, added to these, a peculiarly warm +and sensitive heart. When those she loved were happy, no one in all the +world was happier than Nora O'Shanaghgan; but when any gloom fell on +the home-circle, then Nora suffered far more than anyone gave her credit +for. + +She had passed an anxious day at home, watching her father intently, +afraid to question him, and only darting glances at him when she +thought he was not looking. The Squire, however, seemed cheerful enough, +plodding over his land, or arranging about the horses, or doing the +thousand-and-one small things which occupied his life. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan seemed to have forgotten all about the mortgage, and +was eagerly discussing ways and means with Terence. Terence avoided +Nora's eyes, and rode off early in the evening to see the nearest +tailor. It was not likely that this individual could make a fitting suit +for the young heir to O'Shanaghgan; but the boy must have something +to travel in, and Mrs. O'Shanaghgan gave implicit directions as to the +London tailor whom he was to visit as soon as he reached the Metropolis. + +"For you are to look your best, and never to forget that you are my +son," was her rejoinder; and Terence forgot all about Nora's words +on the previous evening. He was to start in two days' time. Even Nora +became excited over his trip and in her mother's account of her Uncle +Hartrick. + +"I wish you were going, Nora," said the mother. "I should be proud of +you. Of course you are a little rough colt; but you could be trained;" +and then she looked with sudden admiration at her handsome daughter. + +"She has a face in a thousand," she thought, "and she is absolutely +unconscious of her beauty." + +At five o'clock Nora had started off in the pony-trap to visit her +friend Biddy. The trap had been brought back by one of the numerous +gossoons who abounded all over O'Shanaghgan, and Biddy and Nora had a +few hours before the great secret expedition was to take place. And now +the time had come. The girls had put on thick serge petticoats, short +jackets, and little tight-fitting caps on their heads. There was always +a breeze blowing round that extreme corner of the Atlantic. Never did +the finest summer day find the waves calm there. Nora and Biddy had been +accustomed to these waves since their earliest girlhood, and were not +the least afraid. They stood now waiting in the little cove, and looking +round wonderingly for the appearance of Mike and Neil upon the scene. +They were to bring the boat with them. The girls were to wade through +the surf to get into it, and Biddy was stooping down to take off her +shoes and stockings for the purpose. + +"Dear, dear!" she cried. "Do you see that ugly bank of clouds just +behind the moon? I hope my lady moon is not going to hide herself; we +can do nothing in the cave if we have not light." + +"But the cave is dark, surely?" + +"Yes. But don't you know there is a break in the cliffs above, just in +the center? And it is down there the moon sends its shafts when it is at +the full; it is there the Banshee will meet us, if we are to see her at +all. The shafts from the moon will only enter the cave at midnight. I +have counted the times, and I know everything." + +"I want to see the Banshee so badly," said Nora. + +"You won't be frightened, then, Nora?" + +"Frightened? No. Not of our own Banshee." + +"They say," began Biddy, "that if you see a spirit, and come face to +face with it, you are good for--" + +"What?" said Nora. + +"If you hold out during the year you have seen the spirit, you are good +to live for another ten; but during that first year you are in extreme +danger of dying. If you escape that fate, however, and are whole and +sound, you will be quite safe to live for ten more years. They say +nothing can send you out of the world; not sickness, nor accidents, nor +fire, nor water; but the second year you are liable to an accident, +and the year after to a misfortune; then in the fourth year your luck +turns--in the fourth year you find gold, in the fifth year health, in +the sixth year beauty. Oh, I would give anything to be beautiful!" + +"You are very well as you are, Biddy." + +"Very well as I am? What nonsense! Look at my turned-up nose." Here +Biddy pressed her finger on the feature in question. + +"It looks very racy," answered Nora. + +"Bedad, then, it does that," replied Biddy. "I believe I got it sound +and safe from one of the old----" + +"You needn't go on," cried Nora. "I know what you are going to say." + +"And why shouldn't I say it? You would be proud enough to be descended +from----" + +"Oh, I have a very fine descent of my own," answered Nora, with spirit. + +"Now, if I was like you," began Biddy, "wouldn't I be proud, just? But +dear, dear! there never were two Irish girls farther asunder as far as +appearance goes. See here, let me describe myself, feature by feature. +Oh, here's a clear pool. I can get a glimpse of myself in it. You come +and look in too, Nora. Now, then, we can see ourselves. Oh, holy poker! +it's cruel the difference between us. Here's my forehead low and bumpy, +and my little nose, scarcely any of it, and what there is turned right +up to the sky; and my wide mouth, and my little eyes, and my hair just +standing straight up as rakish as you please. And look at you, with your +elegant features and your--oh, but it's genteel you are!--and I love +you, Nora alannah; I love you, and am not a bit jealous of you." + +Here the impulsive girl threw her arms round her friend's neck and +kissed her. + +"All the same," she added, "I wish those clouds were not coming up. +It has been so precious hot all day that I should not be the least +surprised if we had a thunderstorm." + +"A thunderstorm while we are in the cave would be magnificent," said +Nora. + +"Does anything ever frighten you, Nora?" + +"I don't think anything in nature could frighten me; but there are some +things I am frightened at." + +"What? Do tell me. I should like to know." + +"You'll keep it a secret--won't you, Biddy?" + +"To be sure I will. When did I ever blaze out anything you told me? If I +am plain, I am faithful." + +"Well, I am afraid of _pain_," said Nora. + +"Pain! You? But I have seen you scratch yourself ever so deep and not so +much as wink; and I mind that time when you twisted your ankle and you +didn't even pretend you were hurt." + +"Oh, it is not that sort of pain. I am terrified of pain when it affects +those I love. But there! don't ask me any more. Here are the boys; we'll +jump into the boat and be off. Why, it is half-past ten, and it will +take half-an-hour's good rowing to cross the bay, and then we have to +enter the cave and----" + +"I don't like those clouds," said Biddy. "I wonder if it is safe to go." + +"Safe?" said Nora. "We must go. Mother won't allow me to spend another +night here, and I shall lose my chance. I am determined to speak to the +Banshee or die in the attempt." + +The splash of oars was now distinctly audible, and the next moment a +four-oared gig swiftly turned the little promontory and shot with a +rapid movement into the bay. + +"Why," said Biddy, running forward, "who's in the boat?" + +A lad and a man now stood upright and motioned to the girls. + +"Where's Neil?" said Biddy. + +"Neil could not come, Miss Biddy, so I'm taking his place," said the +deep voice of a powerful-looking man. He had a black beard down to his +waist, flashing black eyes, a turned-up nose, and a low forehead. A +more bull-dog and ferocious-looking individual it would be hard to find. +Biddy, however, knew him; he was Neil's father--Andy Neil, as he was +called. He was known to be a lawless and ferocious man, and was very +much dreaded by most of the neighbors around. Neither Nora nor Biddy, +however, felt any reason to fear him and Nora said almost cheerfully: + +"As we are to have such a stiff row, it is just as well to have a man in +the boat." + +"Faix, now, young ladies, come along, and don't keep me waiting," said +Andy, rising and brandishing one of his oars in a threatening way. +"There's a storm coming on, and I want to be out of this afore it +overtakes us. Oh, glory be to goodness, there's a flash of lightning!" + +There came a flash on the edge of the horizon, lighting up the thick +bank of rapidly approaching clouds. + +"Nora, had we better go tonight?" said Biddy. She had as little fear as +her friend, but even she did not contemplate with pleasure a wild storm +in the midst of the Atlantic. + +The man Neil looked gravely round. + +"Och! good luck to ye now, young ladies; don't be kaping me waiting +after the botheration of coming to fetch yez. Come along, and be quick +about it." + +"To be sure," said Nora. She splashed bravely into the surf, for the +boat could not quite reach the shore. The waves reached high above her +pretty, rosy ankles as she stepped into the boat. + +Biddy followed in her wake; and then Nora, producing a rough towel, +began to dry her feet. Both girls put on their shoes and stockings again +in absolute silence. + +Neil had now faced the boat seaward, and with great sweeps with a pair +of sculls was taking it out to sea. The tide was in their favor, and +they went at a rapid rate. The man did not speak at all, and his face +was in complete shadow. Nora breathed hard in suppressed excitement and +delight. Biddy crouched at the bottom of the boat and watched the clouds +as they came up. + +"I wish I hadn't come," she muttered once or twice. + +The boy Mike sat at the stern. The two girls had nothing whatever to do. + +"Shall I take an oar, Andy?" said Nora at last. + +"You, miss?" + +"I can take a pair of oars and help you," said the girl. + +"If it plazes you, miss." The man hastily stepped to the back of the +boat. Nora took her place, and soon they were going at greater speed +than ever. She was a splendid oarswoman, and feathered her oars in the +most approved fashion. + +In less than the prescribed half-hour they reached the entrance to the +great cave. + +They were safe. A hollow, booming noise greeted them as they came close. +Andy bent forward and gave Nora a brief direction. + +"Ship your oars now, miss. Aisy now; aisy now. Now, then, I'll take one +pull; pull your left oar again. Now, here we are." + +He spoke with animation. Nora obeyed him implicitly. They entered the +shadow of the cave, and the next instant found themselves in complete +darkness. The boat bobbed up and down on the restless water, and just +at that instant a flash of vivid lightning illuminated all the outside +water, followed by a crashing roar of thunder. + +"The storm is on us; but, thank the Almighty, we're safe," said Mike, +with a little sob. "I wish to goodness we hadn't come, all the same." + +"And so do I," said Biddy; "it is perfectly awful being in a cave like +this. What shall we do?" + +"Do!" said Neil. "Hould your tongues and stay aisy. Faix, it's the +Almighty is having a bit of a talk; you stay quiet and listen." + +The four oars were shipped now, and the boat swayed restlessly up and +down. + +"Aren't we going any farther?" said Nora. + +"Not while this storm lasts. Oh, for goodness' sake, Nora, do stay +quiet," said Biddy. + +Andy now produced out of his pocket a box of matches and a candle. He +struck a match, applied it to the candle, and the next moment a feeble +flame shot up. It was comparatively calm within the cave. + +"There! that will light us a bit," said Andy. "The storm won't last +long. It's well we got into shelter. Now, then, we'll do fine." + +"You don't think," said Biddy, in a terrified tone, "that the cave will +be be crashed in?" + +"Glory be to Heaven, no, miss--we have cheated the storm coming here." +The man smiled as he spoke, showing bits of broken teeth. His words were +gentle enough, but his whole appearance was more like that of a wild +beast than a man. Nora looked full at him. The candle lit up her pale +face; her dark-blue eyes were full of courage; a lock of her black hair +had got loose in the exertion of rowing, and had fallen partly over her +shoulder and neck. "Faix, then, you might be the Banshee herself," said +Andy, bending forward and looking at her attentively. + +"If the moon comes out again we may see the Banshee," whispered Nora. +"Can we not go farther into the cave? Time is flying." She took her +watch from her pocket and looked at the hour. It was already past eleven +o'clock. + +"The storm will be over in good time," said the man. "Do you want to +get the gleam of moonlight in the crack of the inner cave? Is that what +you're afther, missy?" + +"Yes," said Nora. + +"Well, you stay quiet; you'll reach it right enough." + +"Nora wants to see the Banshee, Andy," called out Biddy. "Oh, what a +flash! It nearly blinded me." + +"The rain will soon be on us, and then the worst of the storm will be +past," said the man. + +Mike uttered a scream; the lightning was now forked and intensely blue. +It flashed into every cranny in the cave, showing the barnacles on the +roof, the little bits of fern, the strange stalactites. After the flash +had passed, the darkness which followed was so intense that the light of +the dim candle could scarcely be seen. Presently the rain thundered +down upon the bare rock above with a tremendous sound; there were great +hailstones; the thunder became less frequent, the lightning less vivid. +In a little more than half an hour the fierce storm had swept on to +other quarters. + +"Now, then, we can go forward," said Andy. He took up his oars. "You had +best stay quiet, missies; just sit there in the bottom of the boat, and +let me push ahead." + +"Then I will hold the candle," said Nora. + +"Right you are, miss." + +She took it into her cold fingers. Her heart was beating high with +suppressed excitement; she had never felt a keener pleasure in her life. +If only she might see the Banshee, and implore the spirit's intercession +for the fortunes of her house! + +The man rowed on carefully, winding round corners and avoiding many +dangers. At last they came bump upon some rocks. + +"Now, then," he said, "we can't go a step farther." + +"But we must," said Nora. "We have not reached the chasm in the rock. We +must." + +"We dare not, miss; the boat hasn't water enough to float her." + +"Well, then, I shall wade there. How far on is the chasm?" + +"Oh, Nora! Nora! you won't be so mad as to go alone?" called out Biddy. + +"I shan't be a scrap afraid," said Nora. + +"But there's water up to your knees; you dare not do it," said Biddy. + +"Yes, I dare; and the tide is going down--is it not?" + +"It will be down a good bit in half an hour," said the man, "and we'll +be stranded here as like as not. These are bad rocks when the tide is +low; we must turn and get out of this, miss, in a quarter of an hour at +the farthest." + +"Oh, I could just do it in a quarter of an hour," said Nora. + +She jumped up, and the next moment had sprung out of the boat into the +water, which nearly reached up to her knees. + +"Oh, Nora! Nora! you'll be lost; you'll slip and fall in that awful +darkness, and we'll never see you again," said Biddy, with a cry of +terror. + +"No, no; let her go," said Andy. "There ain't no fear, miss; you have +but to go straight on, holding your candle and avoiding the rocks to +your left, and you'll come to the opening. Be as quick as you can, Miss +Nora; be as quick as you can." + +His voice had a queer note in it. Nora gave him a look of gratitude, +and proceeded on her dangerous journey. Her one fear was that the candle +might go out; the flame flickered as the air got less good; the hot +grease scalded her fingers; but suddenly a breeze of fresher air reached +her, and warned her that she was approaching the aperture. There came a +little puff of wind, and the next moment the brave girl found herself in +total darkness. The candle had gone out. Just at that instant she +heard, or fancied she heard, a splash behind her in the water. There was +nothing for it now but to go forward. She resolved not to be terrified. +Perhaps it was a water-rat; perhaps it was the Banshee. Her heart beat +high; still she had no fear. She was going to plead for her father. What +girl would be terrified with such a cause in view? She walked slowly +and carefully on, and at last the fresher air was followed by a welcome +gleam of light; she was approaching the opening. The next moment she had +found it. She stood nearly up to her knees in the water; the shaft of +moonlight was piercing down into the cave. Nora went and stood in the +moonlight. The hole at the top was little more than a foot in width; +there was a chasm, a jagged chasm, through which the light came. She +could see a bit of cloudless sky, and the cold moonlight fell all over +her. + +"Oh, Banshee!--Lady Spirit who belongs to our house, come and speak to +me," cried the girl. "Come from your home in the rock and give me a word +of comfort. A dark time is near, and we implore your help. Come, come, +Banshee--it is the O'Shanaghgans who want you. It is Nora O'Shanaghgan +who calls you now." + +The sound of a laugh came from the darkness behind her, and the next +instant the startled girl saw the big form of Andy Neil approaching. + +"Don't you be frightened, Miss Nora," he said. "I aint the Banshee, but +I am as good. Faix, now, I want to say something to you. I have come +here for the purpose. There! don't be frightened. I won't hurt ye--not +I; but I want yez to promise me something." + +"What is that?" said Nora. + +"I have come here for the purpose. _She_ aint no good." He indicated +with a motion of his thumb the distant form of Biddy within the dark +recess of the cave. + +"Does Miss Murphy know you have followed me?" said Nora. + +"No, she don't know it; she's in the dark. There's the little lad Mike +will look after her. She won't do nothing until we go back." + +"Oh, I did want to see the Banshee!" + +"The Banshee may come or not," said the man; "but I have my message to +yez, and it is this: If you don't get Squire O'Shanaghgan to let me keep +my little bit of land, and to see that I aint evicted, why, I'll--you're +a bonny lass, you're as purty a young lady as I ever set eyes on, but +I'll drownd yez, deep down here in this hole. No one will ever know; +they'll think you has fallen and got drowned without no help from +me. Yes, I'll do it--yes, I will--unless you promises that Squire +O'Shanaghgan shan't evict me. If I go out, why, you goes out first. +Now, you'll do it; you'll swear that you'll do it? You'll leave no stone +unturned. You'll get 'em to leave me my cabin where I was born, and the +childer was born, and where the wife died, or I'll drownd yez deep down +here in the Banshee's hole. Look!" said the man as the moon nickered +on a deep pool of water; "they say there is no bottom to it. Just one +shlip, and over you goes, and nobody will ever see Nora O'Shanaghgan +again." + +"I'm not going to be frightened; you wouldn't do it, Andy," said the +girl. + +"Wouldn't I just? You think that I'd be afraid?" + +"I don't think so. I am sure you are afraid of nothing." + +"Then why shouldn't I do it?" + +"Because you wouldn't be so bad, not to an innocent girl who never +harmed you." + +"Oh! wouldn't I just? Ain't I a-stharving, and aint the childer +stharving, and why should they turn us out of our bit of a cabin? Swear +you'll do it; swear you won't have me evicted; you has got to promise." + +"_I_ wouldn't evict you--never, never!" said Nora. "Oh, never!" she +added, tears, not of fright, but of pity, filling her eyes. "But how can +I control my father?" + +"That's for you to see to, missy; I must go back now, or we'll none of +us leave this cave alive. But you'll just shlip into that water, and +you'll never be heard of again unless you promises. I'll go back; they +none of 'em will know I followed yez. You'll be drowned here in the deep +pool, and I'll go back to the boat, or you promises and we both goes +back." + +"But, Andy, what am I to promise?" + +"That you won't have me evicted. You say solemn here: 'Andrew Neil, +I would rather die myself or have my tongue cut out, and may the Holy +Mother cast me from her presence forever, and may the evil spirits take +me, if I don't save you, Andy.' You has to say that." + +"No, I won't," said Nora with sudden spirit. "I am not afraid. I'll do +my very, very best for you; but I won't say words like those." + +The man looked at her attentively. + +"I was a little frightened at first," continued Nora; "but I am not now. +I would rather you pushed me into that pool, I would rather sink and +die, than take an awful vow like that. I won't take it. I'll do my very +best to save you, but I won't make a vow." + +"Faix, then, miss, it's you that has the courage; but now if I let yez +off this time, will ye do yer best?" + +"Yes, I'll do my best." + +"If yer don't, bonny as you are, and the light of somebody's eyes, +you'll go out of the world. But, come, I trust yez, and we must be +turning back." + +The man took the matches from his pocket, struck one, and lit the +candle. Then, Andy going in front of Nora, they both turned in the +direction where the boat was waiting for them. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + + +THE MURPHYS. + +It was between two and three in the morning when the girls found +themselves back again in the desolate mansion of Cronane. Biddy had left +a window open; they had easily got in by it and gone up to Biddy's big +room on the first floor. They were to sleep together in Biddy's small +bed. Personally, discomforts did not affect them; they had never been +accustomed to luxury, and rather liked the sense of hardship than +otherwise. + +"I brought up a bit of supper beforehand," said Biddy. "I am real +hungry. What do you say to cold bacon and taters--eh? I went down to the +larder and got a good few early this morning. I put them in the cupboard +in a brown bowl with a plate over it. You're hungry--aren't you, +Norrie?" + +"No, not very," answered Nora. + +"What's come to you, you're so quiet? You have lost all your spirit. I +thought we would have a real rollicking time over our supper, laughing +and talking, and telling our adventures. Oh! it was awful in that cave; +and when you were away talking to the lady Banshee I did have a time of +it. I thought that awful Andy was going to murder me. I had a sort of +feeling that he was getting closer and closer, and I clutched hold +of little Mike. I think he was a bit surprised; I'll give him a penny +to-morrow, poor gossoon. But aren't you hungry, and won't you laugh, and +shan't we have a jolly spree?" + +"Oh, I shall be very glad to eat something," said Nora; "and I am a +little cold, too. I took a chill standing so long in that icy water." + +"Oh, dear, oh, dear! it's the rheumatics you'll be getting, and then +you'll lose your beautiful straight figure. I must rub your legs. There, +sit on the bed and I'll begin." + +Nora submitted to Biddy's ministrations. The room was lit by a small dip +candle, which was placed in an old tin candlestick on the mantelpiece. + +"Dear, dear! the light will be coming in no time, and we can quench the +glim then," said Biddy. "I've got to be careful about candles. We're +precious short of everything at Cronane just now. We're as poor as +church mice; it's horrid to be so desperately poor as that. But, hurrah +for the cold taters and bacon! We'll have a right good meal. That will +warm you up; and I have a little potheen in a black bottle, too. I'll +put some water to it and you shall have a drink." + +"I never touch it," said Nora, shuddering. + +"But you must tonight, or you'll catch your death of cold. There, the +best thing you can do is to get right into bed. Why, you're shivering, +and your teeth are chattering. It's a fine state Mrs. O'Shanaghgan will +be in tomorrow when you go back to her." + +"I must not get ill, Biddy; that would never do," said Nora, pulling +herself together with an effort. "Yes, I'll get into bed; and I'll take +a little of your potheen--very, very weak, if you'll mix it for me--and +I'll have some of the bacon and potatoes. Oh! I would eat anything +rather than be ill. I never was really ill in my life; but now, of all +times, it would never do." + +"Well, then, here you go. Tumble into bed. I'll pile the blankets on +you. Now, isn't that better?" + +Biddy bustled, intent on hospitality. She propped Nora up with pillows, +pulled a great rug over her shoulders, and heaped on more and more +blankets, which she pulled expeditiously from under the bed. "They +always stay here in the summer," said Biddy. "That's to keep them aired; +and now they're coming in very handy. You have got four doubled on you +now; that makes eight. I should think you'd soon be warm enough." + +"I expect I shall soon be too hot," said Nora; "but this is very nice." + +She sipped the potheen, ate a little bacon and cold potatoes, and +presently declared herself well again. + +"Oh, I am perfectly all right!" she said; "it was coming home in the +boat in my wet things. I wish I had taken a pair of sculls again; then I +wouldn't even have been cold." + +"Now you'll tell me," said Biddy, who sat on the edge of the bed +munching great chunks of bacon and eating her cold potatoes with extreme +relish. "Oh! it's hungry I am; but I want to hear all about the lady +Banshee. Did she come? Did you see her, Nora?" + +"No, she didn't come," said Nora very shortly. + +"Didn't come? But they say she never fails when the moon is at the full. +She rises up out of that pool--the bottomless pool it is called--and she +floats over the water and waves her hand. It's awful to see her if you +don't belong to her; but to those who belong to her she is tender and +sweet, like a mother, they say; and her breath is like honey, and her +kiss the sweetest you ever got in all your life. You mean to say you +didn't see her? Why, Nora, what has come to you? You're trembling +again." + +"I cannot tell you, Biddy; don't ask me any more. I didn't see the +Banshee. It was very, very cold standing up to my knees in the water. +I suppose I did wrong to go; but that's done and over now. Oh, I am so +tired and sleepy! Do get into bed, Biddy, and let us have what little +rest we can." + +Early the next morning Nora returned to O'Shanaghgan. All trace of ill +effects had vanished under Biddy's prompt treatment. She had lain under +her eight blankets until she found them intolerable, had then tossed +most of them off, and fallen into deep slumber. In the morning she +looked much as usual; but no entreaties on the part of Biddy, joined in +very heartily by Squire Murphy and also by Mrs. Murphy, could induce her +to prolong her visit. + +"It's a message I'll take over myself to your father if you'll but stay, +Nora," said the Squire. + +"No, no; I must really go home," answered Nora. + +"It's too fine you are for us, Nora, and that's the truth; and don't go +for to be denying it," said Mrs. Murphy. + +"No; I hope I may never be too fine for my real friends," said Nora a +little sadly. "I must go back. I believe I am wanted at home." + +"You're a very conceited colleen; there's no girl that can't be spared +from home sometimes," said Mrs. Murphy. "I thought you would help Biddy +and me to pick black currants. There are quarts and quarts of 'em in +the garden, and the maids can't do it by themselves, poor things. Well, +Biddy, you have got to help me today." + +"Oh, mammy, I just can't," answered Biddy. "I'm due down at the shore, +and I want to go a bit of the way back with Nora. You can't expect me to +help you today, mammy." + +"There she is, Nora--there she is!" exclaimed the good lady, her face +growing red and her eyes flashing fire; "not a bit of good, not worth +her keep, I tell her. Why shouldn't she stay at home and help her +mother? Do you hear me, Squire Murphy? Give your orders to the girl; +tell her to stay at home and help her mother." + +"Ah, don't be bothering me," said Squire Murphy. "It's out I'm going +now. I have enough on my own shoulders without attending to the +tittle-tattle of women." + +He rose from the table, and the next moment had left the room. + +"Dear, dear! there are bad times ahead for poor Old Ireland," said Mrs. +Murphy. "Children don't obey their parents; husbands don't respect their +wives; it's a queer state of the country. When I was young, and lived at +my own home in Tipperary, we had full and plenty. There was a bite and a +sup for every stranger who came to the door, and no one talked of +money, nor thought of it neither. The land yielded a good crop, and the +potatoes--oh, dear! oh, dear! that was before the famine. The famine +brought us a lot of bad luck, that it did." + +"But the potatoes have been much better the last few years, and this +year they say we're going to have a splendid crop," said Nora. "But I +must go now, Mrs. Murphy. Thank you so much for asking me." + +"You're looking a bit pale; but you're a beautiful girl," said the good +woman admiringly. "I'd give a lot if Biddy could change places with +you--that is, in appearance, I mean. She's not a credit to anybody, +with her bumpy forehead and her cocked nose, and her rude ways to her +mother." + +"Mammy, I really cannot help the way I am made," said Biddy; "and as to +staying in this lovely day picking black currants and making jam, and +staining my fingers, it's not to be thought of. Come along out, Nora. +If you must be off back to O'Shanaghgan, I mean to claim the last few +moments of your stay here." + +The girls spent the morning together, and early in the afternoon Nora +returned to O'Shanaghgan. Terence met her as she was driving down the +avenue. + +"How late you are!" he said; "and you have got great black shadows under +your eyes. You know, of course, that I have to catch the early train in +the morning?" + +"To be sure I do, Terry; and it is for that very reason I have come back +so punctually. I want to pack your things my own self." + +"Ah, that's a good girl. You'll find most of them laid out on the bed. +Be sure you see that all my handkerchiefs are there--two dozen--and all +marked with my initials." + +"I never knew you had so many." + +"Yes; mother gave me a dozen at Christmas, and I have not used them yet. +I shall want every bit of decent clothing I possess for my visit to my +rich Uncle Hartrick." + +"How is mother, Terence?" + +"Mother? Quite well, I suppose; she is fretting a bit at my going; +you'll have to comfort her. The place is very rough for her just now." + +"I don't see that it is any rougher than it has ever been," said Nora a +little fiercely. "You're always running down the place, Terry." + +"Well, I can't help it. I hate to see things going to the dogs," said +the young man. He turned on his heel, called a small fox-terrier, who +went by the name of Snap, to follow him, and went away in the direction +of the shore. + +Nora whipped up her pony and drove on to the house. Here she was greeted +by her father. He was standing on the steps; and, coming down, he lifted +her bodily out of the dog-cart, strained her to his heart, and looked +full into her eyes. + +"Ah, Light o' the Morning, I have missed you," he said, and gave a great +sigh. + +The girl nestled up close to him. She was trembling with excess of +feeling. + +"And I have missed you," she answered. "How is the mother?" + +"I suppose she is all right, Nora; but there, upon my word, she does +vex me sometimes. Take the horse to the stables, and don't stand staring +there, Peter Jones." The Squire said these latter words on account of +the fixed stare of a pair of bright black eyes like sloes in the head +of the little chap who had brought the trap for Nora. He whipped up the +pony, turned briskly round, and drove away. + +"Come out for a bit with me round the grounds, Nora. It's vexed I am, +sometimes; I feel I cannot stand things. I wish my lady would not have +all those fine airs. But there, I have no right to talk against your +mother to you, child; and of course she is your mother, and I am +desperately proud of her. There never was her like for beauty and +stateliness; but sometimes she tries me." + +"Oh! I know, father; I know. But let's go round and look at the new calf +and the colt. We can spare an hour--can we not?" + +"Yes; come along quick, Nora," answered the Squire, all smiles and jokes +once more. "The mother doesn't know you have come back, and we can have +a pleasant hour to ourselves." + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + + +THE SQUIRE'S TROUBLE. + +Nora and her father went slowly down a shady walk, which led in the +direction of the shore. Soon they found themselves in a hay-field. The +crop here was not particularly good. The hay had been spoiled by rains, +which had soaked down on the lands a fortnight ago. It was stunted in +height, and in some parts had that impoverished appearance which is so +painful to the heart of the good farmer. + +Squire O'Shanaghgan, notwithstanding his somewhat careless ways, was +really a capital farmer. He had the best interests of the land at heart, +and did his utmost to get profit out of his many acres. He now shook his +head over the hay-crop. + +"It's just like all the rest, Norrie--everything going to ruin--the +whole place going to the dogs; and yet--and yet, colleen, it's about the +sweetest bit of earth in all God's world. I wouldn't give O'Shanaghgan +for the grandest place in the whole of England; and I told your +lady-mother so this morning." + +"Why did you say it, father? Had mother been--" + +"Oh, nothing, child--nothing; the old grumbles. But it's her way, poor +dear; she can't help herself; she was born so. It's not to be expected +that she who was brought up in that prim land over yonder, where +everything is cut and dry, and no one ever thinks of managing anything +but by the rule of three, would take to our wild ways. But there, +Norrie, it's the freedom of the life that suits me; when I am up and +away on Black Bess or on Monarch, I don't think there is a happier +fellow in the world. But there, when I come face to face with money, +why, I'm bothered--I'm bothered entirely, child." + +"Father," said Nora, "won't you tell me what is worrying you?" + +"How do you know I am worried about anything, colleen?" + +"How do I know, father?" answered Nora a little playfully. She turned +and faced him. "I know," she said; "that is enough; you are worried. +What is it?" + +The Squire looked at her attentively. He was much the taller of the two, +and his furrowed face seemed to the girl, as she looked up at him, like +a great rock rising above her. She was wont to sun herself in his smile, +and to look to him always as a sure refuge in any perplexity. She +did not love anyone in the whole world as she loved her father. His +manliness appealed to her; his generous ways suited her; but, above all +these things, he was her father; he was Irish to his backbone, and so +was she. + +"You must tell me," she said. "Something is troubling you, and Nora has +to know." + +"Ah, my Light o' the Morning! what would I do without you?" answered the +Squire. + +"Prove that you trust me," said Nora, "and tell me what worries you." + +"Well, Nora, you cannot understand; and yet if you could it would be +a relief to unburden my mind. But you know nothing about mortgages--do +you, little woman?" + +"More than you think," said Nora. "I am not a child--I am nearly +seventeen; and I have not lived at O'Shanaghgan all my life for nothing. +Of course we are poor! I don't know that I want to be rich." + +"I'll tell you what I want," said the Squire; "I want to forget that +there is such a thing as money. If it were not for money I would say to +myself, 'There's not a better lot than mine.' What air we have here!" +He opened his mouth and took in a great breath of the pure Atlantic +breezes. "What a place it is! Look at the beauty of it! Look round, +Norrie, and see for yourself; the mountains over there; and the water +rolling up almost to our doors; and the grand roar of the waves in our +ears; and those trees yonder; and this field with the sun on it; and +the house, though it is a bit of a barrack, yet it is where my forebears +were born. Oh, it's the best place on earth; it's O'Shanaghgan, and it's +mine! There, Nora, there; I can't stand it!" + +The Squire dashed his hand to his brow. Nora looked up at him; she was +feeling the exposure and excitement of last night. Her pallor suddenly +attracted his attention. + +"Why, what's the matter with you, colleen?" he said. "Are you well--are +you sure you're well?" + +"Absolutely, perfectly well, father. Go on--tell me all." + +"Well, you know, child, when I came in for the estate it was not to say +free." + +"What does that mean, father?" + +"It was my father before me--your grandfather--the best hunter in the +county. He could take his bottle of port and never turn a hair; and he +rode to hounds! God bless you, Nora! I wish you could have seen your +grandfather riding to hounds. It was a sight to remember. Well, he +died--God bless him!--and there were difficulties. Before he died those +difficulties began, and he mortgaged some of the outer fields and +Knock Robin Farm--the best farm on the whole estate; but I didn't think +anything of that. I thought I could redeem it; but somehow, child, +somehow rents have been going down; the poor folk can't pay, and I'm the +last to press them; and things have got worse and worse. I had a tight +time of it five years ago; I was all but done for. It was partly the +fact of the famine; we none of us ever got over that--none of us in this +part of Ireland, and many of the people went away. Half the cabins were +deserted. There's half a mile of 'em down yonder; every single one had +a dead man or woman in it at the time of the famine, and now they're +empty. Well of course, you know all about that?" + +"Oh, yes, father; Hannah has told me of the famine many, many times." + +"To be sure--to be sure; but it is a dark subject, and not fit for a +pretty young thing like you. But there, let me go on. It was five years +ago I mortgaged some of the place, a good bit, to my old friend Dan +Murphy. He lent me ten thousand pounds--not a penny more, I assure +you. It just tided me over, and I thought, of course, I'd pay him back, +interest and all, by easy stages. It seemed so easy to mortgage the +place to Murphy, and there was nothing else to be done." + +The Squire had been walking slowly; now he stopped, dropped Nora's hand +from his arm, and faced her. + +"It seemed so easy to mortgage the land to Dan Murphy," he said, +dropping his voice, "so very easy, and that money was so handy, and I +thought--" + +"Yes, father?" said Nora in a voice of fear. "You said these words +before. Go on--it was so easy. Well?" + +"Well, a month ago, child, I got a letter from Murphy's lawyer in +Dublin, to say that the money must be paid up, or they would foreclose." + +"Foreclose, father. What is that?" + +"Take possession, child--take possession." + +"A month ago you got that letter? They would take possession--possession +of the land you have mortgaged. Does that mean that it would belong to +Squire Murphy, father?" + +"So I thought, my dear colleen, and I didn't fret much. The fact is, +I put the letter in the fire and forgot it. It was only three days ago +that I got another letter to know what I meant to do. I was given three +months to pay in, and if I didn't pay up the whole ten thousand, with +the five years' interest, they'd foreclose. I hadn't paid that, Nora; I +hadn't paid a penny of it; and what with interest and compound interest, +it mounted to a good round sum. Dan charged me six per cent, on the +money; but there, you don't understand figures, child, and your pretty +head shan't be worried. Anyhow, I was to pay it all up within the three +months--I, who haven't even fifty pounds in the bank. It was a bit of a +staggerer." + +"I understand," said Nora; "and that was why you went the day before +yesterday to see Squire Murphy. Of course, he'll give you time; though, +now I come to think of it, he is very poor himself." + +"He is that," said the Squire. "I don't blame him--not a bit." + +"But what will you do, father?" + +"I must think. It is a bit of a blow, my child, and I don't quite see +my way. But I am sure to, before the time comes; and I have got three +months." + +"But won't he let you off, father? Must you really pay it in three +months?" + +"God help me, Norrie! I can't, not just now; but I will before the time +comes." + +"But what did he say, father? I don't understand." + +"It's this, Nora. Ah, you have a wise little head on your shoulders, +even though you are an Irish colleen. He said that he had sold my +mortgage to another man, and had got money on it; and the other man--he +is an Englishman, curse him!--and he wants the place, Nora, and he'll +take it in lieu of the mortgage if I don't pay up in three months." + +"The place," said Nora; "O'Shanaghgan--he wants O'Shanaghgan?" + +"Yes, yes; that's it; he wants the land, and the old house." + +"But he can't," said Nora. "You have not--oh! you have not mortgaged the +house?" + +"Bless you, Nora! it is I that have done it; the house that you were +born in, and that my father, and father before him, and father before +him again, were born in, and that I was born in--it goes, and the land +goes, the lake yonder, all these fields, and the bit of the shore; all +the bonny place goes in three months if we cannot pay the mortgage. It +goes for an old song, and it breaks my heart, Nora." + +"I understand," said Nora very gravely. She did not cry out; the tears +pressed close to the back of her eyes, and scalded her with cruel pain; +but she would not allow one of them to flow. She held her head very +erect, and the color returned to her pale cheeks, and a new light shone +in her dark-blue eyes. + +"We'll manage somehow; we must," she said. + +"I was thinking of that," said the Squire. "Of course we'll manage." He +gave a great sigh, as if a load were lifted from his heart. "Of course +we'll manage," he repeated; "and don't you tell your mother, for the +life of you, child." + +"Of course I will tell nothing until you give me leave. But how do you +mean to manage?" + +"I am thinking of going up to Dublin next week to see one or two old +friends of mine; they are sure to help me at a pinch like this. They +would never see Patrick O'Shanaghgan deprived of his acres. They know me +too well; they know it would break my heart. I was thinking of going up +next week." + +"But why next week, father? You have only three months. Why do you put +it off to next week?" + +"Why, then, you're right, colleen; but it's a job I don't fancy." + +"But you have got to do it, and you ought to do it at once." + +"To be sure--to be sure." + +"Take me with you, father; let us go tomorrow." + +"But I have not got money for us both. I must go alone; and then your +mother must not be left. There's Terence gallivanting off to England to +visit his fine relations, and that will take a good bit. I had to give +him ten pounds this morning, and there are only forty now left in the +bank. Oh, plenty to tide us for a bit. We shan't want to eat much; and +there's a good supply of fruit and vegetables on the land; and the +poor folk will wait for their wages. Of course there will be more rents +coming in, and we'll scrape along somehow. Don't you fret, colleen. I +declare it's light as a feather my heart is since I told you the truth. +You are a comfort to me, Norrie." + +"Father," said Nora suddenly, "there's one thing I want to say." + +"What is that, pet?" + +"You know Andy Neil?" + +"What! Andrew Neil--that scoundrel?" The Squire's brow grew very black. +"Yes, yes. What about him? You have not seen him, have you?" + +"Yes, father, I have." + +"Over at Murphy's? He knew he dare not show his face here. Well, what +about him, Nora?" + +"This," said Nora, trembling very much; "he--he does not want you to +evict him." + +"He'll pay his rent, or he'll go," thundered the Squire. "No more of +this at present. I can't be worried." + +"But, oh, father! he--he can't pay it any more than you can pay the +mortgage. Don't be cruel to him if you want to be dealt with mercifully +yourself; it would be such bad luck." + +"Good gracious, Nora, are you demented? The man pays his rent, or he +goes. Not another word." + +"Father, dear father!" + +"Not another word. Go in and see your mother, or she'll be wondering +what has happened to you. Yes, I'll go off to Dublin to-morrow. If Neil +doesn't pay up his rent in a week, off he goes; it's men like Andrew +Neil who are the scum of the earth. He has put my back up; and pay his +rent he will, or out he goes." + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + + +EDUCATION AND OTHER THINGS. + +The next day the Squire and Terence went off together. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan +was very angry with her husband for going, as she expressed it, to amuse +himself in Dublin. Dirty Dublin she was fond of calling the capital of +Ireland. + +"What do you want to go to Dirty Dublin for?" she said. "You'll spend +a lot of money, and God knows we have little enough at the present +moment." + +"Oh, no, I won't, Ellen," he replied. "I'll be as careful as careful can +be; the colleen can witness to that. There's a little inn on the banks +of the Liffey where I'll put up; it is called the 'Green Dragon,' and +it's a cozy, snug little place, where you can have your potheen and +nobody be any the wiser." + +"I declare, Patrick," said his lady, facing him, "you are becoming +downright vulgar. I wish you wouldn't talk in that way. If you have no +respect for yourself and your ancient family, you ought to remember your +daughter." + +"I'm sure I'm not doing the colleen any harm," said the Squire. + +"That you never could, father," replied Nora, with a burst of +enthusiasm. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan surveyed her coldly. + +"Go upstairs and help Terence to pack his things," she said; and Nora +left the room. + +The next day the travelers departed. As soon as they were gone Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan sent for Nora to come and sit in the room with her. + +"I have been thinking during the night how terribly neglected you +are," she said; "you are not getting the education which a girl in your +position ought to receive. You learn nothing now." + +"Oh, mother, my education is supposed to be finished," answered Nora. + +"Finished indeed!" said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan. + +"Since Miss Freeman left I have had no governess; but I read a good bit +alone. I am very fond of reading," answered Nora. + +"Distasteful as it all is to me," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, "I must take +you in hand myself. But I do wish your Uncle George would invite you +over to stay with them at The Laurels. It will do Terence a wonderful +lot of good; but you want it more, you are so unkempt and undignified. +You would be a fairly nice-looking girl if any justice was done to you; +but really the other day, when I saw you with that terrible young person +Bridget Murphy, it gave my heart quite a pang. You scarcely looked a +lady, you were laughing in such a vulgar way, and quite forgetting your +deportment. Now, what I have been thinking is that we might spend some +hours together daily, and I would mark out a course of instruction for +you." + +"Oh, mammy," answered Nora, "I should be very glad indeed to learn; you +know I always hated having my education stopped, but father said--" + +"I don't want to hear what your father said," interrupted Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan. + +"Oh, but, mother dear, I really must think of father, and I must respect +what he says. He told me that my grandmother stopped her schooling at +fourteen, and he said she was the grandest lady, and the finest and +bonniest, in the country, and that no one could ever put her to shame; +for, although she had not much learning to boast of, she had a smart +answer for every single thing that was said to her. He said you never +could catch her tripping in her words, never--never; and he thinks, +mother," continued Nora, sparkling and blushing, "that I am a little +like my grandmother. There is her miniature upstairs. I should like to +be like her. Father did love her so very, very much." + +"Of course, Nora, if those are your tastes, I have nothing further to +say," answered Mrs. O'Shanaghgan; "but while you are under my roof and +under my tuition, I shall insist on your doing a couple of hours' good +reading daily." + +"Very well, mother; I am quite agreeable." + +"I suppose you have quite forgotten your music?" + +"No, I remember it, and I should like to play very much indeed; but the +old piano--you must know yourself, mother dear, that it is impossible to +get any music out of it." + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan uttered a groan. + +"We seem to be beset with difficulties at every step," she said. "It is +such a mistake your father going to Dublin now, and throwing away his +little capital. Has he said anything to you about the mortgage, by the +way, Nora?" + +Nora colored. + +"A little," she answered in a low voice. + +"Ah, I see--told it as a secret; so like the Irish, making mysteries +about everything, and then blabbing them out the next minute. I don't +want, my dear, to encroach upon your father's secrets, so don't be +at all afraid. Now, bring down your Markham's History of England and +Alison's History of Europe, and I will set you a task to prepare for me +for to-morrow." + +Nora went slowly out of the room. She hated Markham's History of +England. She had read it five or six times, and knew it by heart. She +detested George and Richard and Mary, and their conversations with their +mother were simply loathsome to her. Alison's History, however, was +tougher metal, and she thought she would enjoy a good stiff reading of +it. She was a very intelligent girl, and with advantages would have done +well. + +She returned with the books. Her mother carelessly marked about twenty +pages in each, told her to read them in the course of the day, and to +come to her the next morning to be questioned. + +"You can go now," she said. "I was very busy yesterday, and have a +headache. I shall lie down and go to sleep." + +"Shall I draw down the blind, mother?" + +"Yes, please; and you can put that rug over me. Now, don't run shouting +all over the house; try to remember you are a young lady. Really and +truly, no one would suppose that you and Terence were brother and +sister. He will do great credit to my brother George; he will be proud +of such a handsome young fellow as his nephew." + +Nora said nothing; having attended to her mother's comforts, she left +the room. She went out into the sunshine. In her hand she carried the +two books. Her first intention was to take them down to one end of the +dilapidated garden and read them steadily. She was rather pleased than +otherwise at her mother's sudden and unlooked-for solicitude with regard +to her education. She thought it would be pleasant to learn even under +her mother's rather peculiar method of tutelage; but, as she stood on +the terrace looking across the exquisite summer scene, two of the dogs, +Creena and Cushla, came into view. They rushed up to Nora with cries +and barks of welcome. Down went the books on the gravel, and off ran the +Irish girl, followed by the two barking dogs. A few moments later she +was down on the shore. She had run out without her hat or parasol. What +did that matter? The winds and sea-breezes had long ago taken their +own sweet will on Nora's Irish complexion; they could not tan skin like +hers, and had given up trying; they could only bring brighter roses into +her cheeks and more sweetness into her dark-blue eyes. She forgot +her troubles, as most Irish girls will when anything calls off their +attention, and ran races with the dogs up and down the shore. Nora was +laughing, and the dogs were barking and gamboling round her, when the +stunted form of Hannah Croneen was seen approaching. Hannah wore her +bedgown and her short blue serge petticoat; her legs and feet were bare; +the breezes had caught up her short gray locks, and were tossing them +wildly about. She looked very elfin and queer as she approached the +girl. + +"Why, then, Miss Nora, it's a word I want with you, a-colleen." + +"Yes--what is it, Hannah?" answered Nora. She dropped her hands to her +sides and turned her laughing, radiant face upon the little woman. + +"Ah, then, it's a sight for sore eyes you are, Miss Nora. Why, it is a +beauty you are, Miss Nora honey, and hondsomer and hondsomer you gets +every time I see yez. It's the truth I'm a-telling yez, Miss Nora; it's +the honest truth." + +"I hope it is, Hannah, for it is very pleasant hearing," answered Nora. +"Do I really get handsomer and handsomer? I must be a beauty like my +grandmother." + +"Ah, she was a lady to worship," replied Hannah, dropping a courtesy to +the memory; "such ways as she had, and her eyes as blue and dark as the +blessed night when the moon's at the full, just for all the world like +your very own. Why, you're the mortal image of her; not a doubt of it, +miss, not a doubt of it. But there, I want to say a word to yez, and +we need not spend time talking about nothing but mere looks. Looks is +passing, miss; they goes by and leaves yez withered up, and there are +other things to think of this blessed morning." + +"To be sure," answered Nora. + +"And it's I that forgot to wish yez the top of the morning," continued +the little woman. "I hear the masther and Masther Terry has gone to +foreign parts--is it true, miss?" + +"It is not true of my father," replied Nora; "he has only gone to +Dublin." + +"Ah, bless him! he's one in a thousand, is the Squire," said Hannah. +"But what about the young masther, him with the handsome face and the +ways?--aye, but he aint got your nice, bonny Irish ways, Miss Nora--no, +that he aint." + +"He has gone to England for a time to visit some of my mother's +relations," replied Nora. "I am, sure it will do him a great deal of +good, and dear mother is so pleased. Now, then, Hannah, what is it?" + +Hannah went close to the girl and touched her on her arm. + +"What about your promise to Andy Neil?" she asked. + +"My promise to Andy Neil," said Nora, starting and turning pale. "How do +you know about it?" + +"A little bird told me," replied Hannah. "This is what it said: 'Find +out if Miss Nora, the bonniest and handsomest young lady in the place, +has kept her word to Andy.' Have you done it, Miss Nora? for it's word I +have got to take the crayther, and this very night, too." + +"Where?" said Nora. "Where are you going to meet him?" + +"In the haunted glen, just by the Druid's Stone," replied the woman. + +"At what hour?" + +"Tin o'clock, deary. Aw, glory be to God! it's just when the clock +strikes tin that he'll be waiting for me there." + +"I have no message," said Nora. + +"Are you sure, Miss Nora?" + +"Quite sure." + +"When will you have?" + +"Never." + +"Miss Nora, you don't mane it?" + +"Yes, I do, Hannah. I have nothing to do with Andy Neil. I did what +I could for him, but that little failed. You can tell him that if you +like." + +"But is it in earnest you are, Miss Nora? Do you mane to say that you'll +let the poor crayther have the roof taken off his cabin? Do you mane it +miss?" + +"I wouldn't have the roof taken off his cabin," said Nora; "but father +is away, and he is Andy's landlord, and Andy has done something to +displease him. He had better come and talk to father himself. I kept +my word, and spoke; but I couldn't do anything. Andy had better talk to +father himself; I can do no more." + +"You don't guess as it's black rage is in the crayther's heart, and +that there's no crime he wouldn't stoop to," whispered Hannah in a low, +awestruck voice. + +"I can't help it, Hannah; I am not going to be frightened. Andy would +not really injure me, not in cold blood." + +"Oh, wouldn't he just? The man's heart is hot within him; it's the +thought of the roof being taken off his cabin. I have come as his +messenger. You had best send some sort of message to keep him on the +quiet for a bit. Don't you send a hard message of that sort, heart +asthore; you'll do a sight of mischief if you do." + +"I can only send him a true message," replied the girl. + +"Whisht now, Miss Nora! You wouldn't come and see him yourself tonight +by the Druid's Stone?" + +Nora stood for a moment considering. She was not frightened; she had +never known that quality. Even in the cave, when her danger was extreme, +she had not succumbed to fear; it was impossible for her to feel it now, +with the sunlight filling her eyes and the softest of summer breezes +blowing against her cheeks. She looked full at Hannah. + +"I won't go," she said shortly. + +"Miss Nora, I wouldn't ask yez if I could help myself. It's bothered I +am entirely, and frightened too. You'll come with me, Miss Nora--won't +yez?" + +"I will not come," answered Nora. "My mother is alone, and I cannot +leave her; but I tell you what I will do. Just to show Andy that I am +not afraid of him, when father returns I will come. Father will be back +in a couple of days; when he returns I will speak to him once more about +Andy, and I will bring Andy the message; and that is all I can promise. +If that is all you want to say to me, Hannah, I will go home now, for +mother is all alone." + +Hannah stood with her little, squat figure silhouetted against the +sky; she had placed both her arms akimbo, and was gazing at Nora with a +half-comical, half-frightened glance. + +"You're a beauty," she said, "and you has the courage of ten women. I'll +tell Andy what you say; but, oh, glory! there's mischief in that man's +eyes, or I'm much mistook." + +"You can't frighten me," said Nora, with a laugh. "How are the +children?" + +"Oh, bless yez, they're as well and bonny as can be. Little Mike, he +said he'd stand and wait till you passed by the gate, he's that took up +with you, Miss Nora. You'd be concaited if you heard all he says about +you." + +Nora thrust her hand into her pocket. + +"Here," she said, "is a bright halfpenny; give it to Mike, and tell him +that Nora loves him very much. And now I am going home. Hannah, you'll +remember my message to Andy, and please let him understand that he is +not going to frighten me into doing anything I don't think right." + + + + +CHAPTER X. + + +THE INVITATION. + +Squire O'Shanaghgan came home in a couple of days. He entered the house +in noisy fashion, and appeared to be quite cheerful. He had a great +deal to say about Dublin, and talked much of his old friends during the +evening that followed. Nora, however, try as she would, could never meet +his eye, and she guessed, even before he told her, that his mission +had been a failure. It was early the next morning that he gave her this +information. + +"I tried them, one and all, colleen," he said, "and never were fellows +more taken aback. 'Is it you to lose your property, O'Shanaghgan?' they +said. They wouldn't believe me at first." + +"Well, father, and will they help?" said Nora. + +"Bless you, they would if they could. There's not a better-natured man +in the length and breadth of Ireland than Fin O'Hara; and as to John +Fitzgerald, I believe he would take us all into his barrack of a house; +but they can't help with money, Nora, because, bedad, they haven't got +it. A man can't turn stones into money, even for his best and dearest +friends." + +"Then what is to be done, father?" + +"Oh, I'll manage somehow," said Squire O'Shanaghgan; "and we have three +months all but a week to turn round in. We'll manage by hook or by +crook. Don't you fret your pretty little head. I wouldn't have a frown +on the brow of my colleen for fifty O'Shanaghgans, and that's plain +enough. I couldn't say more, could I?" + +"No, father dear," answered Nora a little sadly. + +"And tell me what you were doing while I was away," said the Squire. +"Faith! I thought I could never get back fast enough, I seemed to pine +so for you, colleen; you fit me down to the ground." + +Nora began to relate the small occurrences which had taken place. The +Squire laughed at Mrs. O'Shanaghgan's sudden desire that Nora should be +an educated lady. + +"I don't hold with these new fashions about women," he said; "and you +are educated enough for me." + +"But, father, I like to read, I like to learn," said the girl. "I am +very, very anxious to improve myself. I may be good enough for you, dear +father, for you love me with all my faults; but some day I may pine for +the knowledge which I have not got." + +"Eh! is it that way with you?" said the Squire, looking at her +anxiously. "They say it's a sort of a craze now amongst women, the +desire to beat us men on our own ground; it's very queer, and I don't +understand it, and I am sorry if the craze has seized my girleen." + +"Oh! never mind, father dear; I wouldn't fret you for all the learning +in Christendom." + +"And I wouldn't fret you for fifty estates like O'Shanaghgan," said the +Squire, "so it strikes me we are both pretty equal in our sentiments." +He patted her cheek, she linked her hand in his, and they walked +together down one of the sunny meadows. + +Nora thought of Neil, but determined not to trouble her father about +him just then. Notwithstanding her cheerfulness, her own heart was very +heavy. She possessed, with all her Irish ways, some of the common sense +of her English ancestors, and knew from past experience that now there +was no hope at all of saving the old acres and the old house unless +something very unexpected turned up. She understood her father's +character too well; he would be happy and contented until a week before +the three months were up, and then he would break down utterly--go +under, perhaps, forever. As to turning his back on the home of his +ancestors and the acres which had come to him through a long line, Nora +could not face such a possibility. + +"It cannot be; something must happen to prevent it," she thought. + +She thought and thought, and suddenly a daring idea came into her mind. +All her life long her mother's relations had been brought up to her as +the pink of propriety, the souls of wealth. Her uncle, George Hartrick, +was, according to her mother, a wealthy man. Her mother had often +described him. She had said that he had been very angry with her for +marrying the Squire, but had confessed that at times he had been heard +to say that the O'Shanaghgans were the proudest and oldest family in +County Kerry, and that some day he would visit them on their own estate. + +"I have prevented his ever coming, Nora," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan; "it +would be such a shock to him. He thinks we live in a castle such as +English people live in, with suites of magnificent rooms, and crowds and +crowds of respectably dressed servants, and that we have carriages and +horses. I have kept up this delusion; he must never come over to see the +nakedness of the land." + +But now the fact that her Uncle George had never seen the nakedness of +the land, and that he was attached to her mother, and proud of the fact +that she had married an Irish gentleman of old descent, kept visiting +Nora again and again. If she could only see him! If she could only beg +of him to lend her father a little money just to avert the crowning +disgrace of all--the O'Shanaghgans leaving their home because they could +not afford to stop there, Nora thought, and the wild idea which had +crept into her head gathered strength. + +"There is nothing for it; something desperate must be done," she +thought. "Father won't save himself, because he does not know how. He +will just drift on until a week of the fatal day, and then he will have +an illness. I cannot let father die; I cannot let his heart be broken. +I, Nora, will do something." + +So one day she locked herself in her room. She stayed there for a couple +of hours, and when she came out again a letter was thrust into her +pocket. Nora was not a good letter-writer, and this one had taken nearly +two hours to produce. Tears had blotted its pages, and the paper on +which it was written was of the poorest, but it was done at last. +She put a stamp on it and ran downstairs. She went to Hannah's cabin. +Standing in front of the cabin was her small admirer Mike. He was +standing on his head with the full blaze of the sunlight all over him, +his ragged trousers had slipped down almost to his knees, and his +little brown bare legs and feet were twinkling in the sun. His bright +sloe-black eyes were fixed on Nora as she approached. + +"Come here, Mike," said the girl. Mike instantly obeyed, and gave a +violent tug to one of his front locks by way of salutation. He then +stood with his legs slightly apart, watching Nora. + +"Mike, I want you to go a message for me." + +"To be sure, miss," answered Mike. + +"Take this letter to the post-office; put it yourself into the little +slit in the wall. I will give you a penny when you have done it." + +"Yes, miss," answered Mike. + +"Here is the letter; thrust it into your pocket. Don't let anyone see +it; it's a secret." + +"A saycret, to be sure, miss," answered Mike. + +"And you shall have your penny if you come up to the Castle tonight. Now +good-by; run off at once and you will catch the mail." + +"Yes, to be sure," said Mike. He winked at Nora, rolled his tongue in +his cheek, and disappeared like a flash down the dusty road. + +The next few days seemed to drag themselves somehow. Nora felt limp, and +not in her usual spirits. The Squire was absent a good deal, too. He +was riding all over the country trying to get a loan from his different +friends. He was visiting one house after another. Some of the houses +were neat and well-to-do, but most of them sadly required funds to put +them in order. At every house Squire O'Shanaghgan received a hearty +welcome, an invitation to dinner, and a bed for the night; but when he +made his request the honest face that looked into his became sorrowful, +the hands stole to the empty pockets, and refusals, accompanied by +copious apologies, were the invariable result. + +"There's no one in all the world I would help sooner, Pat, if I could," +said Squire O'Grady; "but I have not got it, my man. I am as hard +pressed as I can be myself. We don't get in the rents these times. Times +are bad--very bad. God help us all! But if you are turned out, what an +awful thing it will be! And your family the oldest in the place. You're +welcome, every one of you, to come here. As long as I have a bite and +sup, you and yours shall share it with me." And Squire Malone said +the same thing, and so did the other squires. There was no lack of +hospitality, no lack of good will, no lack of sorrow for poor Squire +O'Shanaghgan's calamities; but funds to avert the blow were not +forthcoming. + +The Squire more and more avoided Nora's eyes; and Nora, who now had a +secret of her own, and a hope which she would scarcely dare to confess +even to herself, avoided looking at him. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan was a little more fretful than usual. She forgot +all about the lessons she had set her daughter in her laments over her +absent son, over the tattered and disgraceful state of the Castle, and +the ruin which seemed to engulf the family more and more. + +Nora, meanwhile, was counting the days. She had made herself quite _au +fait_ with postal regulations during these hours of waiting. She knew +exactly the very time when the letter would reach Mr. Hartrick in his +luxurious home. She thought she would give him, perhaps, twelve hours, +perhaps twenty-four, before he replied. She knew, then, how long the +answer would take on its way. The night before she expected her letter +she scarcely slept at all. She came down to breakfast with black shadows +under her eyes and her face quite wan. + +The Squire, busy with his own load of trouble, scarcely noticed her. +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan took her place languidly at the head of the board. She +poured out a cup of tea for her daughter and another for her husband. + +"I must send to Dublin for some better tea," she said, looking at the +Squire. "Can you let me have a pound after breakfast, Pat? I may as well +order a small chest while I am about it." + +The Squire looked at her with lack-luster eyes. Where had he got one +pound for tea? But he said nothing. + +Just then the gossoon Mike was seen passing the window with the +post-bag hung over his shoulder. Mike was the postman in general for +the O'Shanaghgan household for the large sum of twopence a week. He went +daily to fetch the letters, and received his money proudly each Saturday +night. Nora now jumped up from the table. + +"The letters!" she gasped. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan surveyed her daughter critically. + +"Sit down again, Nora," she said. "What is the matter with you? You know +I don't allow these manners at table." + +"But it is the post, mammy," said the girl. + +"Well, my dear, if you will be patient, Margaret will bring the post +in." + +Nora sat down again, trembling. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan gave her a cold stare, +and helped herself languidly to a small snippet of leathery toast. + +"Our cook gets worse and worse," she said as she broke it. "Dear, dear! +I think I must make a change. I have heard of an excellent cook just +about to leave some people of the name of Wilson in the town. They are +English people, which accounts for their having a good servant." + +At that moment the redoubtable Pegeen did thrust in her head, holding +the post-bag at arm's length away from her. + +"Here's the post, Miss Nora," she said; "maybe you'll fetch it, miss. +I'm a bit dirty." + +Nora could not restrain herself another moment. She rushed across the +room, seized the bag, and laid it by her father's side. As a rule, the +post-bag was quickly opened, and its small contents dispersed. These +consisted of the local paper for the Squire, which was always put up +with the letters, a circular or two, and, at long intervals, a letter +for Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, and perhaps one from an absent friend for the +Squire. No one was excited, as a rule, about the post at the Castle, and +Nora's ill-suppressed anxiety was sufficiently marked now to make even +her father look at her in some surprise. To the girl's relief, her +mother unexpectedly came to the rescue. + +"She thinks, perhaps, Terence will write," she said; "but I told him not +to worry himself writing too often. Stamps cost money, and the boy will +need every penny to keep up a decent appearance at my brother's." + +"All the same, perhaps he will be an Irish boy enough to write a letter +to his own sister," said the Squire. "So here goes; we'll look and see +if there is anything inside here for you, my little Norrie." + +The Squire unlocked the bag and emptied the contents on the table. They +were very meager contents; nothing but the newspaper and one letter. The +Squire took it up and looked at it. + +"Here we are," he said; "it is for you, my dear." + +"For me," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, holding out her hand. "Pass it across, +Nora." + +"No, it is not for you, my lady, as it happens. It is for Nora. Here, +Norrie, take it." + +Nora took it up. She was shivering now, and her hand could scarcely hold +it. It was addressed to her, beyond doubt: "Miss O'Shanaghgan, Castle +O'Shanaghgan," etc. + +"Read it at once, Nora," said her mother. "I have not yet had any letter +to speak of from Terry myself. If you read it aloud it will entertain +us. It seems to be a thick letter." + +"I don't think--I don't think it--it is from Terence," answered Nora. + +"Nonsense, my dear." + +"Open it, Norrie, and tell us," said the Squire. "It will be refreshing +to hear a bit of outside news." + +Nora now opened the envelope, and took a very thick sheet of paper out. +The contents of the letter ran as follows: + +"My Dear Nora--Your brother Terence came here a week ago, and has told +us a great deal about you. We are enjoying having him extremely; but he +has made us all anxious to know you also. I write now to ask if you will +come and pay us a visit at once, while your brother is here. Ask your +mother to spare you. You can return with Terence whenever you are tired +of us and our ways. I have business at Holyhead next Tuesday, and could +meet you there, if you could make it convenient to cross that day. +I inclose a paper with the hours that the boats leave, and when they +arrive at Holyhead. I could then take you up with me to London, and we +could reach here that same evening. Ask my sister to spare you. You will +be heartily welcome, my little Irish niece.--Your affectionate uncle, + +"George Hartrick." + +Nora could scarcely read the words aloud. When she had finished she let +the sheet of paper flutter to the floor, and looked at her mother with +glowing cheeks and sparkling eyes. + +"I may go? I must go," she said. + +"My dear Nora," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, "why that must?" + +"Oh, mammy! oh, daddy! don't disappoint me," cried the girl. "Do--do let +me go, please, please." + +"Nora," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan again, "I never saw you so unreasonable +in your life; you are quite carried away. Your uncle, after long years, +has condescended to send you an invitation, and you speak in this +impulsive, unrestrained fashion. Of course, it would be extremely nice +for you to go; but I doubt for a single moment if it can be afforded." + +"Oh, daddy, daddy! please take my part!" cried Nora. "Please let me go, +daddy--oh, daddy!" She rushed up to her father, flung her arms round his +neck, and burst into tears. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan rose from the table in cold displeasure. "Give me your +uncle's letter," she said. + +Nora did not glance at her; she was past speaking. So much hung on this; +all the future of the O'Shanaghgans; the Castle, the old Castle, the +home of her ancestors, the place in which she was born, the land she +loved, the father she adored--all, all their future hung upon Nora's +accepting the invitation which she had asked her uncle to give her. Oh! +if they ever found out, what would her father and mother say? Would they +ever speak to her again? But they must not find out, and she must go; +yes, she must go. + +"What is it, Nora? Do leave her alone for a moment, wife," said the +Squire. "There is something behind all this. I never saw Light o' the +Morning give way to pure selfishness before." + +"It isn't--it isn't," sobbed Nora, her head buried on the Squire's +shoulder. + +"My darling, light of my eyes, colleen asthore, acushla machree!" said +the Squire. He lavished fond epithets upon the girl, and finally took +her into his arms, and clasped her tight to his breast. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, after staring at the two in speechless indignation +for a moment, left the room. When she reached the door she turned round. + +"I cannot stand Irish heroics," she said. "This is a disgraceful scene. +Nora, I am thoroughly ashamed of you." + +She carried her brother's letter away with her, however, and retired +into the drawing room. There she read it carefully. + +How nice it would be if Nora could go! And Nora was a beauty, too--an +Irish beauty; the sort of girl who always goes down in England. She +would want respectable dress; and then--with her taking ways and those +roguish, dark-blue eyes of hers, with that bewitching smile which showed +a gleam of the whitest and most pearly teeth in the world, with the +light, lissome figure, and the blue-black hair--what could not Irish +Nora achieve? Conquests innumerable; she might make a match worthy of +her race and name; she might--oh, she might do anything. She was only a +child, it is true; but all the same she was a budding woman. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan sat and pondered. + +"It seems a great pity to refuse," she said to herself. "And Nora +does need discipline badly; the discipline of England and my brother's +well-ordered home will work wonders with her. Poor child, her father +will miss her. I really sometimes think the Squire is getting into his +dotage. He makes a perfect fool of that girl; to see her there speaking +in that selfish way, and he petting her, and calling her ridiculous +names, with no meaning in them, and folding her in his arms as if she +were a baby, and all for pure, downright selfishness, is enough to make +any sensible person sick. Nora, too, who has always been spoken of as +the unselfish member of the family, who would not spend a penny to save +her life if she thought the Squire was going to suffer. Now she wants +him to put his hand into his pocket for a considerable amount; for +the child cannot go to my brother without suitable clothes--that is a +foregone conclusion. But, dear me! all women are selfish when it comes +to mere pleasure, and Nora is no better than the rest. For my part, +I admire dear Terence's downright method of asking for so-and-so, and +getting it. Nora is deceitful. I am much disappointed in her." + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + + +THE DIAMOND CROSS. + +But although Mrs. O'Shanaghgan spoke of her daughter to herself as +deceitful, she did not at all give up the idea of her accepting her +uncle's invitation. George Hartrick had always had an immense influence +over his sister Ellen. He and she had been great friends long ago, when +the handsome, bright girl had been glad to take the advice of her elder +brother. They had almost quarreled at that brief period of madness in +Ellen Hartrick's life, when she had fallen in love with handsome Squire +O'Shanaghgan; but that quarrel had long been made up. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan +had married the owner of O'Shanaghgan Castle, and had rued her brief +madness ever since. But her pride had prevented her complaining to her +brother George. George still imagined that she kept her passionate love +intact for the wild Irishman. Only one thing she had managed ever since +their parting, many years ago, and that was, that her English brother +should not come to see her in her Irish home. One excuse after the other +she had offered, and at last she had told him frankly that the ways of +the Irish were not his ways; and that, when he really wanted to see his +sister, he must invite her to come to England to visit him. + +Hartrick was hurt at Ellen's behavior, and as he himself had married +about the same time, and his own young family were growing up around +him, and the making of money and the toil of riches were claiming him +more and more, he did not often think of the sister who was away in the +wilds of Ireland. She had married one of the proud old Irish chiefs. +She had a very good position in her way; and when her son and daughter +required a little peep into the world, Hartrick resolved that they +should have it. He had invited Terence over; and now Nora's letter, with +its perplexity, its anguish, its bold request, and its final tenderness, +had come upon him with a shock of surprise. + +George Hartrick was a much stronger character than his sister. He was a +very fine man, indeed, with splendid principles and downright ways; and +there was something about this outspoken and queer letter which touched +him in spite of himself. He was not easily touched; but he respected the +writer of that letter. He felt that if he knew her he could get on with +her. He resolved to treat her confidence with the respect it seemed +to him it deserved; and, without hesitation, he wrote her the sort of +letter she had asked him to write. She should pay him a visit, and +he would find out for himself the true state of things at Castle +O'Shanaghgan. Whether he would help the Squire or not, whether there was +any need to help him, he could not say, for Nora had not really revealed +much of the truth in her passionate letter. She had hinted at it, but +she had not spoken; she would wait for that moment of outpouring of her +heart until she arrived at The Laurels. + +Now, Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, standing alone in her big, empty drawing room, +and looking out at the summer landscape, thought of how Nora might enter +her brother's house. Fond as Mrs. O'Shanaghgan was of Terence--he was in +truth a son after her own heart--she had a queer kind of pride about her +with regard to Nora. Wild and untutored as Nora looked, her mother knew +that few girls in England could hold a candle to her, if justice were +done her. There was something about the expression in Nora's eyes which +even Mrs. O'Shanaghgan could scarcely resist at times, and there were +tones and inflections of entreaty in Nora's voice which had a strange +power of melting the hearts of those who listened to her. + +After about an hour Mrs. O'Shanaghgan went very slowly upstairs. Her +bedroom was over the drawing room. It was just as large as the drawing +room--a great bare apartment. The carpet which covered the floor was +so threadbare that the boards showed through in places; the old, faded +chintz curtains which hung at the windows were also in tatters; but they +were perfectly clean, for Mrs. O'Shanaghgan did her best to retain that +English cleanliness and order which she felt were so needed in the land +of desolation, as she was pleased to call Ireland. + +A huge four-post bedstead occupied a prominent place against one of the +walls; there was an enormous mahogany wardrobe against another; but the +whole center of the room was bare. The dressing-table, however, +which stood right in the center of the huge bay, was full of pretty +things--silver appointments of different kinds, brushes and combs +heavily mounted in silver, glass bottles with silver stoppers, perfume +bottles, pretty knick-knacks of all sorts. When Nora was a little child +she used to stand fascinated, gazing at her mother's dressing-table. It +was the one spot where any of the richness of the Englishwoman's early +life could still be found. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan went up now and looked at +her dressing-table, sweeping her eyes rapidly over its contents. +The brushes and combs, the bottles of scent, the button-hooks, the +shoe-horns, the thousand-and-one little nothings, polished and bright, +stood upon the dressing-table; and besides these there was a large, +silver-mounted jewel-case. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan was not at all afraid to leave this jewel-case out, +exposed to view day after day, for no one all round the place would have +touched so much as a pin which belonged to the Squire's lady. The people +were poor, and would think nothing of stealing half a bag of potatoes, +or helping themselves to a good sack of fruit out of the orchard; but +to take the things from the lady's bedroom or anything at all out of +the house they would have scorned. They had their own honesty, and they +loved the Squire too much to attempt anything of the sort. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan now put a key into the lock of the jewel-case and +opened it. When first she was married it was full of pretty things--long +strings of pearls, a necklet of very valuable diamonds, a tiara of the +same, rings innumerable, bracelets, head ornaments of different kinds, +buckles for shoes, clasps for belts, pins, brooches. Mrs. O'Shanaghan, +when Nora was a tiny child, used on every one of the little girl's +birthdays to allow her to overhaul the jewel case; but of late years +Nora had never looked inside it, and Mrs. O'Shanaghgan had religiously +kept it locked. She opened it now with a sigh. The upper tray was quite +empty; the diamonds had long ago been disposed of. They had gone to +pay for Terence's schooling, for Terence's clothes, for one thing and +another that required money. They had gone, oh! so quickly; had melted +away so certainly. That first visit of her son's to England had cost +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan her long string of pearls, which had come to her as an +heirloom from her mother before her. They were very valuable pearls, +and she had sold them for a tenth, a twentieth part of their value. The +jeweler in Dublin, who was quite accustomed to receiving the poor lady's +trinkets, had sent her a check for fifty pounds for the pearls, knowing +well that he could sell them himself for at least three hundred pounds. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan now once more rifled the jewel case. There were some +things still left--two or three rings and a diamond cross. She had never +wanted to part with that cross. She had pictured over and over how +it would shine on Nora's white neck; how lovely Nora would look when +dressed for her first ball, having that white Irish cross, with its +diamonds and its single emerald in the center, shining on her breast. +But would it not be better to give Nora the chance of spending three +or four months in England, the chance of educating herself, and let the +cross go by? It was so valuable that the good lady quite thought that +she ought to get seventy pounds for it. With seventy pounds she could +fit Nora up for her English visit, and have a little over to keep in +her own pocket. Only Nora must not go next Tuesday; that was quite +impossible. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan quickly determined to make the sacrifice. She could +still supply Nora with a little, very simple pearl necklet, to wear with +her white dress during her visit; and the cross would have to go. There +would be a few rings still left; after that the jewel case would be +empty. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan packed the precious cross into a little box, and took +it out herself to register it, and to send it off to the jeweler who +always bought the trinkets she sent him. She told him that she expected +him to give her, without the smallest demur, seventy pounds for the +cross, and hoped to have the money by the next day's post. + +Having done this and dispatched her letter, she walked briskly back to +the Castle. She saw Nora wandering about in the avenue. Nora, hatless +and gloveless, was playing with the dogs. She seemed to have forgotten +all about her keen disappointment of the morning. When she saw her +mother coming up the avenue she ran to meet her. + +"Why, mammy," she said, "how early you are out! Where have you been?" + +"I dislike extremely that habit you have, Nora, of calling me mammy; +mother is the word you should address your parent with. Please remember +in future that I wish to be called mother." + +"Oh, yes, mother!" answered Nora. The girl had the sweetest temper in +the world, and no amount of reproof ever caused her to answer angrily. +"But where have you been?" she said, her curiosity getting the better of +her prudence. + +"Again, Nora, I am sorry to say I must reprove you. I have been to the +village on business of my own. It is scarcely your affair where I choose +to walk in the morning." + +"Oh, of course not, mam--I mean mother." + +"But come with me down this walk. I have something to say to you." + +Nora eagerly complied. There was something in the look of her mother's +eyes which made her guess that the usual subject of conversation--her +own want of deportment, her ignorance of etiquette--was not to be the +theme. She felt her heart, which had sunk like lead within her, rise +again to the surface. Her eyes sparkled and smiles played round her rosy +lips. + +"Yes, mother," she said; "yes." + +"All impulse," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan--she laid her hand on Nora's +arm--"all impulse, all Irish enthusiasm." + +"I cannot help it, you know," said Nora. "I was born that way. I am +Irish, you know, mammy." + +"You are also English, my dear," replied her mother. "Pray remember that +fact when you see your cousins." + +"My cousins! My English cousins! But am I to see them? Mother, mother, +do you mean it?" + +"I do mean it, Nora. I intend you to accept your uncle's invitation. +No heroics, please," as the girl was about to fling her arms round her +mother's neck; "keep those for your father, Nora; I do not wish for +them. I intend you to go and behave properly; pray remember that when +you give way to pure Irishism, as I may express your most peculiar +manners, you disgrace me, your mother. I mean you to go in order to have +you tamed a little. You are absolutely untamed now, unbroken in." + +"I never want to be broken in," whispered Nora, tears of mingled +excitement and pain at her mother's words brimming to her eyes. "Oh, +mother!" she said, with a sudden wail, "will you never, never understand +Nora?" + +"I understand her quite well," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, her voice +assuming an unwonted note of softness; "and because I do understand Nora +so well," she added--and now she patted the girl's slender arm--"I want +her to have this great advantage, for there is much that is good in you, +Nora. But you are undisciplined, my dear; wild, unkempt. Little did I +think in the old days that a daughter of mine should have to have +such things said to her. Our more stately, more sober ways will be +a revelation to you, Nora. To your brother Terence they will come as +second nature; but you, my dear, will have to be warned beforehand. +I warn you now that your Uncle George will not understand the wild +excitement which you seem to consider the height of good breeding at +O'Shanaghgan." + +"Mother, mother," said Nora, "don't say anything against O'Shanaghgan." + +"Am I doing so?" said the poor lady. She stood for a moment and looked +around her. Nora stopped also and when she saw her mother's eyes travel +to the rambling old house, to the neglected lawn, the avenue overgrown +with weeds, it seemed to her that a stab of the cruelest pain was +penetrating her heart. + +"Mother sees all the ugliness; she is determined to," thought Nora; "but +I see all the beauty. Oh! the dear, dear old place, it shan't go if Nora +can save it." Then, with a great effort, she controlled herself. + +"How am I to go?" she said. "Where is the money to come from?" + +"You need not question me on that point," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan. "I +will provide the means." + +"Oh, mother!" said Nora; "no, I would rather stay." But then she +remembered all that this involved; she knew quite well that her mother +had rifled the jewel-case; but as she had done so over and over again +just for Terence's mere pleasure, might she not do so once more to save +the old place? + +"Very well," she said demurely; "I won't ask any questions." + +"You had better not, for I have not the slightest idea of replying to +them," answered Mrs. O'Shanaghgan. "I shall write to your uncle to-day. +You cannot go next week, however." + +"Oh! why not? He said Tuesday; he would meet me at Holyhead on Tuesday." + +"I will try and provide a fit escort for you to England; But you cannot +go next Tuesday; your wardrobe forbids it," answered Mrs. O'Shanaghgan. + +"My wardrobe! Oh, mother, I really need not bother about clothes!" + +"You may not bother about them, Nora; but I intend to," replied Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan. "I must buy you some suitable dress." + +"But how will you do it?" + +"I have not been away from Castle O'Shanaghgan for a long time," said +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, "and it will be a nice change for me. I shall take +you to Dublin, and get you what things are necessary. I will then see +you off on board the steamer." + +"But would not father be best?" + +"Your father can come with us or not, just as he pleases; but I am the +person who will see to your wardrobe for your English visit," replied +her mother. + +Nora, excited, bewildered, charmed, had little or nothing to oppose +to this plan. After all, her mother was coming out in a new light. How +indifferent she had been about Nora's dress in the past! For Terence +were the fashionable coats and the immaculate neckties and the nice +gloves and the patent-leather boots. For Nora! Now and then an old dress +of her mother's was cut down to fit the girl; but as a rule she wore +anything she could lay hands on, made anyhow. It is true she was never +grotesque like Biddy Murphy; but up to the present dress had scarcely +entered at all as a factor into her life. + +The next few days passed in a whirl of bewildered excitement. Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan received, as she expected, by return of post, seventy +pounds from the Dublin jeweler for her lovely diamond cross. This man +was rapidly making his fortune out of poor Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, and he +knew that he had secured a splendid bargain for himself when he bought +the cross. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, therefore, with a full purse, could give directions +to her household during her brief absence, and altogether was much +brightened and excited at the thought of Nora's visit. She had written +herself to her brother, saying that she would be very glad to spare her +daughter, and giving him one or two hints with regard to Nora's manners +and bringing up. + +"The Irish have quite different ideas, my dear brother," she wrote, +"with regard to etiquette to those which were instilled into us; but you +will bear patiently with my little wild Irish girl, for she has a very +true heart, and is also, I think you will admit, nice-looking." + +Mr. Hartrick, who read between the lines of his sister's letter, wrote +to say that business would bring him to Holyhead on the following +Tuesday week also, and, therefore, it would be quite convenient for him +to meet Nora on that day. + +The evening before she was to depart arrived at last. The Squire had +spent a busy day. From the moment when Nora had told him that her mother +had provided funds, and that she was to go to England, he had scarcely +reverted to the matter. In truth, with that curious Irish phase in his +character which is more or less the inheritance of every member of his +country, he contrived to put away the disagreeable subject even from his +thoughts. He was busy, very busy, attending to his farm and riding round +his establishment. He was still hoping against hope that some money +would come in his way long before the three months were up, when the +mortgagee would foreclose on his property. He was not at all unhappy, +and used to enter his house singing lustily or whistling loudly. Nora +sometimes wondered if he also forgot how soon she was going to leave +him. His first call when he entered the house had always been "Light +o' the Morning, where are you? Come here, asthore; the old dad has +returned," or some such expression. It came to the excited girl's heart +with a pang how he would miss her when she was no longer there; how he +would call for her in vain, and feel bewildered for a moment, and then +remember that she was far away. + +"But I shan't be long away," she thought; "and when I come back and +save him and the old place, oh, how glad he will be! He will indeed then +think me his Light o' the Morning, for I shall have saved him and the +old home." + +But the last evening came, and Nora considered whether she ought to +recall the fact that she was going away, perhaps for a couple of months, +to her father. He came in as usual, sat down heavily on the nearest +settee, and stretched out his long legs. + +"I wonder if I am getting old?" he said. "I declare I feel a bit tired. +Come along here, Nora, and cheer me up. What news have you this evening, +little woman?" + +"Oh, father! don't you know?" + +"Well, your eyes look bright enough. What is it, girleen?" + +"I am going away to Dublin to-morrow." + +"You? Bless you! so you are," said the Squire, with a hearty laugh. +"Upon my soul I forgot all about it. Well, and you are going to have a +good time, and you'll forget the old dad--eh?--you'll forget all about +the old dad?" + +"Father, father, you know better," said Nora--she flung her arms round +his neck and laid her soft cheek against his--"as if I could ever forget +you for a single moment," she said. + +"I know it, a-colleen; I know it, heart's asthore. Of course you won't. +I am right glad you are going; it will be a nice change for you. And +what about the bits of duds--eh?--and the pretty trinkets? Why, you'll +be going into grand society; you'll be holding your little head like a +queen. Don't you forget, my pet, that you're Irish through and through, +and that you come of a long line of brave ancestors. The women of your +house never stooped to a shabby action, Nora; and never one of them +sacrificed her honor for gold or anything else; and the men were brave, +girleen, very brave, and had never fear in one of them. You remember +that, and keep yourself upright and brave and proud, and come back to +the old dad with as pure and loving a heart as you have now." + +"Oh, father, of course, of course. But you will miss me? you will miss +me?" + +"Bedad! I expect I shall," said the Squire; "but I am not going to fret, +so don't you imagine it." + +"Have you," said Nora in a low whisper--"have you done anything +about-about the mortgage?" + +"Oh, you be aisy," said the Squire, giving her a playful poke; "and if +you can't be aisy, be as aisy as you can," he continued, referring to +the old well-known saying. "Things will come right enough. Why, the +matter is weeks off yet. It was only yesterday I heard from an old +friend, Larry M'Dermott, who has been in Australia, and has made a fine +pile. He is back again, and I am thinking of seeing him and settling +up matters with him. Don't you have an uneasy thought in your head, my +child. I'll write to you when the thing is fixed up, as fixed it will +be by all that's likely in a week or fortnight from now. But look here, +Norrie, you'll want something to keep in your pocket when you are away. +I had best give you a five-pound note." + +"No, no," said Nora. "I wouldn't touch it; I don't want it." + +"Why not? Is it too proud you are?" + +"No; mother is helping me to this visit. I don't know how she has got +money. I suppose in the old way." + +"Poor soul!" said the Squire. "To tell you the truth, Norrie, I can't +bear to look at that jewel-case of hers. I believe, upon my word, that +it is nearly empty. She is very generous, is your mother. She's a very +fine woman, and I am desperate proud of her. When M'Dermott helps me to +tide over this pinch I'll have all those jewels back again by hook or by +crook. Your mother shan't suffer in the long run, and I'll do a lot to +the old place--the old house wants papering and painting. We'll dance a +merry jig at O'Shanaghgan at your wedding, my little girl; and now don't +keep me, for I have got to go out to meet Murphy. He said he would look +around about this hour." + +Nora left her father, and wandered out into the soft summer gloaming. +She went down the avenue, and leaned for a time over the gate. The white +gate was sadly in need of paint, but it was not hanging off its hinges +as the gate was which led to the estate of Cronane. Nora put her feet on +the last rung, leaned her arms on the top one, and swayed softly, as +she thought of all that was about to happen, and the glorious adventures +which would in all probability be hers during the next few weeks. As she +thought, and forgot herself in dreams of the future, a low voice calling +her name caused her to start. A man with shaggy hair and wild, bright +eyes had come up to the other side of the gate. + +"Why, then, Miss Nora, how are ye this evening?" he said. He pulled his +forelock as he spoke. + +Nora felt a sudden coldness come over all her rosy dreams; but she was +too Irish and too like her ancestors to feel any fear, although she +could not help remembering that she was nearly half a mile away from the +house, and that there was not a soul anywhere within call. + +"Good-evening, Andy," she said. "I must be going home now." + +"No, you won't just yet," he answered. He came up and laid his dirty +hand on her white sleeve. + +"No, don't touch me," said Nora proudly. She sprang off the gate, and +stood a foot or two away. "Don't come in," she continued; "stay where +you are. If you have anything to say, say it there." + +"Bedad! it's a fine young lady that it is," said the man. "It aint +afeared, is it?" + +"Afraid!" said Nora. "What do you take me for?" + +"Sure, then, I take yez for what you are," said the man--"as fine and +purty a slip of a girleen as ever dwelt in the old Castle; but be yez +twice as purty, and be yez twice as fine, Andy Neil is not the man to +forget his word, his sworn word, his oath taken to the powers above and +the powers below, that if his bit of a roof is taken off his head, why, +them as does it shall suffer. It's for you to know that, Miss Nora. I +would have drowned yez in the deep pool and nobody would ever be the +wiser, but I thought better of that; and I could here--yes, even now--I +could choke yez round your pretty soft neck and nobody would be any the +wiser, and I'd think no more of it than I'd think of crushing a fly. I +won't do it; no I won't, Miss Nora; but there's _thim_ as will have to +suffer if Andy Neil is turned out of his hut. You spake for me, Miss +Nora; you spake up for me, girleen. Why, the Squire, you're the light of +his eyes; you spake up, and say, 'Lave poor Andy in his little hut; +lave poor Andy with a roof over him. Don't mind the bit of a rint.' Why, +then, Miss Nora, how can I pay the rint? Look at my arrum, dear." As the +man spoke he thrust out his arm, pushing up his ragged shirt sleeve. The +arm was almost like that of a skeleton's; the skin was starting over the +bones. + +"Oh, it is dreadful!" said Nora, all the pity in her heart welling +up into her eyes. "I am truly, truly sorry for you, Andy, I would do +anything in my power. It is just this: you know father?" + +"Squire? Yes, I guess I know Squire," said the man. + +"You know," continued Nora, "that when he takes what you might call +the bit between his teeth nothing will move him. He is set against you, +Andy. Oh, Andy! I don't believe he will listen." + +"He had betther," said the man, his voice dropping to a low growl; +"he had betther, and I say so plain. There's that in me would stick at +nothing, and you had best know it, Miss Nora." + +"Can you not go away, Andy?" + +"I--and what for?" + +"But can you?" + +"I could, but I won't." + +"I don't believe father will yield. I will send you some money from +England if you will promise to go away." + +"Aye; but I don't want it. I want to stay on. Where would my old bones +lie when I died if I am not in my own counthry? I'm not going to leave +my counthry for nobody. The cot where I was born shall see me die; and +if the roof is took off, why, I'll put it back again. I'll defy him +and his new-fangled ways and his English wife to the death. You'll see +mischief if you don't put things right, Miss Nora. It all rests with +yez, alannah." + +"I am awfully sorry for you, Andy; but I don't believe you would +seriously injure father, for you know what the consequences would be." + +"Aye; but when a man like me is sore put to it he don't think of +consequences. It's just the burning wish to avenge his wrongs; that's +what he feels, and that's what I feel, Miss Nora, and so you had best +take warning." + +"Well, I am going away to-morrow," said the girl. "My father is in great +trouble, and wants money very badly himself, and I am going to England." + +"To be out of the way when the ruin comes. I know," said the man, with a +loud laugh. + +"No; you are utterly mistaken. Andy, don't you remember when I was a +little girl how you used to let me ride on your shoulder, and once you +asked me for a tiny bit of my hair, that time when it was all in curls, +and I gave you just the end of one of my curls, and you said you would +keep it to your dying day? Would you be cruel to Nora now, and just when +her heart is heavy?" + +"Your heart heavy? You, one of the quality--'taint likely," said the +man. + +"It is true; my heart is very heavy. I am so anxious about father; you +won't make me more anxious--will you? You won't do anything--anything +wrong--while I am away? Will you make me a promise that you will let me +go with an easy mind?" + +"You ask your father to give me three months' longer grace, and then +we'll see." + +"I will speak to him," said Nora very slowly. "I am sorry, because he +is worried about other things, and he does not take it kindly when I +interfere in what he considers his own province; but I'll do my best. I +cannot stay another moment now, Andy. Good-by." + +She waved her hand to him, and ran down the avenue, looking like a white +wraith as she disappeared into the darkness. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + + +A FEATHER-BED HOUSE. + +Before she went to sleep that night Nora wrote a tiny note to her +father: + +"DEAREST DAD: + +"For the sake of your Light o' the Morning, leave poor Andy Neil in his +little cottage until I come back again from England. Do, dear dad; this +is the last wish of Nora before she goes away. + +"YOUR COLLEEN." + +She thought and thought, and felt that she could not have expressed +herself better. Fear would never influence the Squire; but he would do a +good deal for Nora. She laid the letter just where she knew he would see +it when he entered his ramshackle study on the following day; and the +next morning, with her arms clasped round his neck and her kisses on his +cheeks, she gave him one hearty hug, one fervent "God bless you, dad," +and rushed after her mother. + +The outside car was ready at the door. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan was already +mounted. Nora sprang up, and they were rattling off into the world, "to +seek my fortune," thought the girl, "or rather the fortune of him I love +best." + +The Squire, with his grizzled locks and his deep-set eyes, stood in the +porch to watch Nora and her mother as they drove away. + +"I'll be back in a twinkling, father; never you fret," called out his +daughter, and then a turn in the road hid him from view. + +"Why, Nora, what are you crying for?" said her mother, who turned round +at that moment, and encountered the full gaze of the large dark-blue +eyes swimming in tears. + +"Oh, nothing. I'll be all right in a moment," was the answer, and then +the sunshine broke all over the girl's charming face; and before they +reached the railway station Nora was chatting to her mother as if she +had not a care in the world. + +Her first visit to Dublin and the excitement of getting really pretty +dresses made the next two or three days pass like a flash. Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan with money in her pocket was a very different woman from +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan without a penny. She enjoyed making Nora presentable, +and had excellent taste and a keen eye for a bargain. She fitted up +her daughter with a modest but successful wardrobe, bought her a proper +trunk to hold her belongings, and saw her on board the steamer for +Holyhead. + +The crossing was a rough one, but the Irish girl did not suffer from +seasickness. She stood leaning over the taffrail chatting to the +captain, who thought her one of the most charming passengers he ever had +to cross in the _Munster_; and when they arrived at the opposite side, +Mr. Hartrick was waiting for his niece. He often said since that he +would never forget his first sight of Nora O'Shanaghgan. She was wearing +a gray tweed traveling dress, with a little gray cap to match; the +slender young figure, the rippling black hair, and the brilliant face +flashed for an instant on the tired vision of the man of business; then +there came the eager outstretching of two hands, and Nora had kissed him +because she could not help herself. + +"Oh, I am so glad to see you, Uncle George!" The words, the action, the +whole look were totally different from what his daughters would have +said or done under similar circumstances. He felt quite sure that his +sister's description of Nora was right in the main; but he thought her +charming. Drawing her hand through his arm, he took her to the railway +station, where the train was already waiting to receive its passengers. +Soon they were flying in _The Wild Irish Girl_ to Euston. Nora was +provided with innumerable illustrated papers. Mr. Hartrick took out a +little basket which contained sandwiches, wine, and different cakes, +and fed her with the best he could procure. He did not ask her many +questions, not even about the Castle or her own life. He was determined +to wait for all these things. He read something of her story in her +clear blue eyes; but he would not press her for her confidence. He was +anxious to know her a little better. + +"She is Irish, though, and they all exaggerate things so dreadfully," +was his thought. "But I'll be very good to the child. What a contrast +she is to Terence! Not that Terence is scarcely Irish; but anyone +can see that this child has more of her father than her mother in her +composition." + +They arrived at Euston; then there were fresh changes; a cab took them +to Waterloo, where they once again entered the train. + +"Tired, my dear niece?" said her uncle as he settled her for the final +time in another first-class compartment. + +"Not at all. I am too excited to be tired," was her eager answer. And +then he smiled at her, arranged the window and blind to her liking, and +they started once more on their way. + +Mr. Hartrick lived in a large place near Weybridge, and Nora had her +first glimpse of the lovely Surrey scenery. A carriage was waiting for +the travelers when they reached their destination--a carriage drawn by +a pair of spirited grays. Nora thought of Black Bess, and secretly +compared the grays to the disadvantage of the latter. But she was +determined to be as sweet and polite and English as her mother would +desire. For the first time in her whole existence she was feeling a +little shy. She would have been thoroughly at home on a dog cart, or on +her favorite outside car, or on the back of Black Bess, who would have +carried her swift as the wind; but in the landau, with her uncle seated +by her side, she was altogether at a loss. + +"I don't like riches," was her inward murmur. "I feel all in silken +chains, and it is not a bit pleasant; but how dear mammy--oh, I must +think of her as mother--how mother would enjoy it all!" + +The horses were going slowly uphill, and now they paused at some +handsome iron gates. These were opened by a neatly dressed woman, who +courtesied to Mr. Hartrick, and glanced with curiosity at Nora. The +carriage bowled rapidly down a long avenue, and drew up before a front +door. A large mastiff rose slowly, wagged his tail, and sniffed at +Nora's dress as she descended. + +"Come in, my dear; come in," said her uncle. "We are too late for +dinner, but I have ordered supper. You will want a good meal and then +bed. Where are all the others? Where are you, Molly? Where are you, +Linda? Your Irish cousin Nora has come." + +A door to the left was quickly opened, and a graceful-looking lady, in +a beautiful dress of black silk and quantities of coffee lace, stood on +the threshold. + +"Is this Nora?" she said. "Welcome, my dear little girl." She went up +to Nora, laid one hand on her shoulder, and kissed her gravely on the +forehead. There was a staid, sober sort of solemnity about this kiss +which influenced Nora and made a lump come into her throat. + +This gracious English lady was very charming, and she felt at once that +she would love her. + +"The child is tired, Grace," said her husband to Mrs. Hartrick. "Where +are the girls? Why are they not present?" + +"Molly has been very troublesome, and I was obliged to send her to her +room," was her reply; "but here is Terence. Terence, your sister has +come." + +"Oh, Terry!" cried Nora. + +The next moment Terence, in full evening dress, and looking extremely +manly and handsome, appeared upon the scene. Nora forgot everything else +when she saw the familiar face; she ran up to her brother, flung her +arms round his neck, and kissed him over and over. + +"Oh, it is a sight for sore eyes to see you!" she cried. "Oh, Terry, how +glad, how glad I am that you are here!" + +"Hush! hush! Nonsense, Nora. Try to remember this is an English house," +whispered Terence; but he kissed her affectionately. He was glad to see +her, and he looked at her dress with marked approval. "She will soon +tame down, and she looks very pretty," was his thought. + +Just then Linda was seen coming downstairs. + +"Has Nora come?" called out her sweet, high-bred voice. "How do you do, +Nora? I am so glad to see you. If you are half as nice as Terence, you +will be a delightful addition to our party." + +"Oh, but I am not the least bit like Terence," said Nora. She felt +rather hurt; she did not know why. + +Linda was a very fair girl. She could not have been more than fifteen +years of age, and was not so tall as Nora; but she had almost the +manners of a woman of the world, and Nora felt unaccountably shy of her. + +"Now take your cousin up to her room. Supper will be ready in a quarter +of an hour," said Mrs. Hartrick. "Come, George; I have something to say +to you." + +Mr. and Mrs. Hartrick disappeared into the drawing-room. Linda took +Nora's hand. Nora glanced at Terence, who turned on his heel and went +away. + +"See you presently, sis," he called out in what he considered a very +manly tone; and Nora felt her heart, as she expressed it, sink down into +her boots as she followed Linda up the richly carpeted stairs. Her feet +sank into the velvety pile, and she hated the sensation. + +"It is all a sort of feather-bed house," she said to herself, "and I +hate a feather-bed house. Oh, I can understand my dad better than ever +to-night; but how mother would enjoy this!" + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + + +"THERE'S MOLLY." + +As they were going upstairs Linda suddenly turned and looked full at her +cousin. + +"How very grave you are! And why have you that little frown between your +brows? Are you vexed about anything?" + +"Only I thought Terry would be more glad to see me," replied Nora. + +"More glad!" cried Linda. "I saw you hugging him as I ran downstairs. +He let you. I don't know how any one could show gladness more. But +come along; this is your room. It is next to Molly's and mine. Isn't it +pretty? Molly and I chose it for you this morning, and we arranged those +flowers. You will have such a lovely view, and that little peep of the +Thames is so charming. I hope you will like your room." + +Nora entered one of the prettiest and most lovely bedrooms she had ever +seen in her life. Never in her wildest dreams had she imagined anything +so cozy. The perfectly chosen furniture, the elegant appointments of +every sort and description, the view from the partly opened windows, the +view of winding river and noble trees--all looked rich and cultivated +and lovely; and the Irish girl, as she gazed around, found suddenly a +great, fierce hatred rising up in her heart against what she called the +mere prettiness. She turned and faced Linda, who was watching her with +curiosity in her somewhat small blue eyes Linda was essentially English, +very reserved and quiet, very self-possessed, quite a young lady of the +world. She looked at Nora as if she meant to read her through. + +"Well, don't you think the view perfect?" she said. + +"Have you ever been in Ireland?" was Nora's answer. + +"Never. Oh, dear me! have you anything as pretty as this in Ireland?" + +"No," said Nora fiercely--"no." She left the window, turned back, and +began to unpin her hat. + +"You look as if you did not care for your room." + +"It is a very, very pretty room," said Nora, "and the view is very, very +pretty, but I am tired to-night. I did not know it; but I am. I should +like to go to bed soon." + +"So you shall, of course, after you have had supper. Oh, how awfully +thoughtless of me not to know that you must be very tried and hungry! +Molly and I are glad you have come." + +"But where is Molly? I should like to see her." + +Linda went up to Nora and spoke in a low whisper. + +"She is in disgrace." + +"In disgrace? Has she done anything naughty?" + +"Yes, fearfully naughty. She is in hot water as usual." + +"I am sorry," said Nora. She instantly began to feel a strong sensation +of sympathy for Molly. She was sure, in advance, that she would like +her. + +"But is she in such dreadful disgrace that I may not see her?" she asked +after a pause. + +"Oh, I don't know. I don't suppose so." + +Just then there was heard at the room door a gay laugh and a kind of +scamper. A knock followed, but before Nora could answer the door was +burst open, and a large, heavily made, untidy-looking girl, with a dark +face and great big black eyes, bounded into the apartment. + +"I have burst the bonds, and here I am," she said. "How do you do, Nora? +I'm Molly. I am always and always in hot water. I like being in hot +water. Now, tell-tale-tit, you can go downstairs and acquaint mother +with the fact that I have burst the bonds, for kiss little Irish Nora I +will." + +"Oh, I am glad to see you," said Nora. Her depression vanished on the +spot. She felt that, naughty as doubtless Molly was, she could get on +with her. + +"Come, let's take a squint at you," said the eldest Miss Hartrick; "come +over here to the light." + +Molly took Nora by both hands over to the window. + +"Now then, let's have a category of your charms. Terence has been +telling us that you are very pretty. You are. Come, Linda; come and look +at her. Did you ever see such black hair? And it's as soft as silk." + +Molly put up a rather large hand and patted Nora somewhat violently on +the head. + +"Oh, don't!" said Nora, starting back. + +"My dear little cousin, I am a very rough specimen, and you must put up +with me if you mean to get on at The Laurels. We are all stiff and +staid here; we are English of the English. Everything is done by rule +of thumb--breakfast to the minute, lunch to the minute, afternoon tea +to the minute, dinner to the minute, even tennis to the minute. Oh! it's +detestable; and I--I am expected to be good, and you know there's not a +bit of goodness in me. I am all fidgets, and you can never be sure of me +for two seconds at a time. I am a worry to mother and a worry to father; +and as to Terence--oh, my dear creature, I am so truly thankful you are +not like Terence! Here I drop a courtesy to his memory. What an awfully +precise man he will make by and by! I did not know you turned out that +kind of article in Ireland." + +Nora's face, over which many emotions had been flitting, now looked +grave. + +"You know that Terence is my brother?" she said slowly. + +Molly gazed at her; then she burst into a fit of hearty laughter. + +"You and I will get on," she said. "I like you for sticking up for your +brother. But now, my dear, I must go back. I am supposed to stay in my +bedroom until to-morrow morning. Linda, if you tell--well, you'll have +to answer to me when we are going to bed, that's all. By-by, Nora. I'll +see you in the morning. Do get her some hot water, Linda. She's worth +waiting on; she's a very nice sort of child, and very, very pretty. If +that is the Irish sort of face, I for one shall adore it. Good-by, Nora, +for the present." + +Molly banged herself away--her mode of exit could scarcely be called by +any other name. As soon as the door had closed behind her Linda laughed. + +"I ought to tell, you know," she said in her precise voice; "it is very, +very wrong of Molly to leave her bedroom when mother is punishing her." + +"But what has she done wrong?" asked Nora. + +"Oh, went against discipline. She is at school, you know, and she would +write letters during lessons. It is really very wrong of her, and Miss +Scott had to complain; so mother said she should stay in her room, +instead of being downstairs to welcome you. She is a good soul enough; +but we none of us can discipline her. She is very funny; you'll see a +lot of her queer cranks while you are here." + +"How old is she?" asked Nora. + +"Between sixteen and seventeen; too old to be such a romp." + +"Only a little older than I am," said Nora. "And how old are you, +Linda?" + +"Fifteen; they all tell me I look more." + +"You do; you look eighteen. You are very old for your age." + +"Oh, thank you for the compliment. Now, then, do brush your hair and +wash your hands; there's the supper-gong. Mother will be annoyed if we +are not down in a jiffy. Now, do be quick." + +Nora washed her hands, brushed her hair, and ran downstairs with her +cousin. As she ate during the somewhat stiff meal that followed she +thought many times of Molly. She felt that, naughty as Molly doubtless +was, she would make the English house tolerable. Terence sat near her +at supper, by way of extending to her brotherly attentions; but all the +time he was talking on subjects of local interest to his aunt and uncle. + +Mr. Hartrick evidently thought Terence a very clever fellow, and +listened to his remarks with a deference which Nora thought by no means +good for him. + +"He wants one of the dear old dad's downright snubs," was her inward +comment. "I must have a talk with him to-morrow. If he progresses +at this rate toward English refinement he will be unbearable at +O'Shanaghgan when he returns; quite, quite unbearable. Oh, for a sniff +of the sea! oh, for the wild, wild wind on my cheeks! and oh, for +my dear, darling, bare bedroom! I shall be smothered in that heavily +furnished room upstairs. Oh, it is all lovely, I know--very lovely; but +I'm not made to enjoy it. I belong to the free, and I don't feel free +here. The silken chains and the feather-bed life won't suit me; of that +I am quite sure. Thank goodness, however, there's Molly; she is in a +state of rebellion, too. I must not sympathize with her; but I am truly +glad she is here." + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + + +BITS OF SLANG. + +Early the next morning Nora was awakened from a somewhat heavy sleep by +someone pulling her violently by the arm. + +"Wake up! wake up!" said a voice; and then Nora, who had been dreaming +of her father, and also of Andy Neil, started up, crying as she did so, +"Oh, don't, Andy! I know father will let you stay a little longer in the +cot. Don't, don't, Andy!" + +"Who, in the name of fortune, is Andy?" called the clear voice of Molly +Hartrick. "Do wake up, Nora, and don't look so dazed. You really are a +most exciting person to have staying in the house. Who is Andy, and what +cot are you going to turn him out of? Is he a baby?" + +Nora now began to laugh. + +"I quite forgot that I was in England," she said. "Am I really in +England? Are you--are you----Oh, now I remember everything. You are +Molly Hartrick. What is the hour? Is it late? Have I missed breakfast?" + +"Bless you, child! lie down and keep quiet; it's not more than six +o'clock. I wanted to see some more of you all by myself. I am out of +punishment now; it ended at midnight, and I am as free as anybody else; +but as it is extremely likely I shall be back in punishment by the +evening, I thought we would have a little chat while I was able to have +it. Just make way for me in your bed; I'll nestle up close to you, and +we'll be ever so jolly." + +"Oh, do," said Nora, in a hearty tone. + +Molly scrambled in, taking the lion's share of the bed, Nora lay on the +edge. + +"I am glad you are facing the light, for I can examine your features +well," said Molly. "You certainly are very nice-looking. How prettily +your eyebrows are arched, and what white teeth you have! And, although +you have that wonderful black hair, you have a fair skin, and your +cheeks have just enough color; not too much. I hate florid people; but +you are just perfect." + +"I wish you would not flatter me, Molly," said Nora; "nobody flatters me +in Ireland." + +"They don't? But I thought they were a perfect nation of flatterers. I +am sure it is always said of them." + +"Oh, if you mean the poor people," said Nora; "they make pretty +speeches, but nobody thinks anything about that. Everybody makes pretty +speeches to everybody else, except when we are having a violent scold by +way of a change." + +"How delicious!" said Molly. "And what sort of house have you? Like +this?" + +"No, not the least like this," answered Nora. + +"With what emphasis you speak. Do you know that father told me you +lived in a beautiful place, a castle hanging over the sea, and that your +mountains and your sea and your old castle were things to be proud of?" + +"Did he? Did your father really say that?" asked Nora. She sat up on +her elbow; her eyes were shining; they assumed a look which Nora's eyes +often wore when she was, as she expressed it, "seeing things out of +her head." Far-off castles in the clouds would Nora look at then; +rainbow-tinted were they, and their summits reached heaven. Molly gazed +at her with deepening interest. + +"Yes, Nora," she said; "he did say it. He told me so before Terence +came; but I--do forgive me--I don't care for Terence." + +"You must not talk against him to me," said Nora, "because he happens to +be my brother; but I'll just whisper one thing back to you, Molly--if he +was not my brother he would not suit me." + +"How nice of you to say that! We shall get on splendidly. Of course, you +must stick up for him, being your brother; he stuck up for you before +you came. It is very nice and loyal of you, and I quite understand. But, +dear me! I am not likely to see much of you while you are here." + +"Why not? Are you not going to stay here?" + +"Oh, my dear, yes; I'll stay. School has just begun over again, you +know, and I am always in hot water. I cannot help it; it is a sort of +way of mine. This is the kind of way I live. Breakfast every morning; +then a lecture from mother or from father. Off I go in low spirits, +with a great, sore heart inside me; then comes the hateful discipline +of school; and every day I get into disgrace. I have a lot of lessons +returned, and am low down in my class, instead of high up, and am +treated from first to last as a naughty child. By the middle of the day +I am a very naughty child indeed." + +"But you are not a child at all, Molly; you are a woman. Why, you are +older than I." + +"Oh, what have years to do with it?" interrupted Molly. "I shall be +a child all my days, I tell you. I shall never be really old. I like +mischief and insubordination, and--and--let me whisper it to you, little +Nora--vulgarity. Yes, I do love to be vulgar. I like shocking mother; +I like shocking father. Since Terence came I have had rare fun shocking +him. I have learned a lot of slang, and whenever I see Terence I shout +it at him. He has got quite nervous lately, and avoids me. He likes +Linda awfully, but he avoids me. But, to go on with my day. I am back +from school to early dinner, generally in disgrace. I am not allowed to +speak at dinner. Back again I go to school, and I am home, or supposed +to be home, at half-past four; but not a bit of it, my dear; I don't +get home till about six, because I am kept in to learn my lessons. It is +disgraceful, of course; but it is a fact. Then back I come, and mother +has a talk with me. However busy mother may be, and she is a very busy +woman, Nora--you will soon find that out--she always has time to find +out if I have done anything naughty; and, as fibs are not any of my +accomplishments, I always tell her the truth; and then what do you think +happens? An evening quite to myself in my bedroom; my dinner sent up to +me there, and I eating it in solitary state. They are all accustomed to +it. They open their eyes and almost glare at me when by a mere chance I +do come down to dinner. They are quite uncomfortable, because, you see, +I am waiting my opportunity to fire slang at one of them. I always do, +and always will. I never could fit into the dull life of the English." + +"You must be Irish, really," said Nora. + +"You don't say so! But I am afraid I am not. I would give all the world +to be, but am quite certain I am not. There, now, of course I'd be +awfully scolded if it was found out that I had awakened you at this +hour, and had confided my little history to you. I am over sixteen. +I shall be seventeen in ten months' time. And that is my history, +insubordination from first to last. I don't suppose anybody really likes +me, unless it is poor Annie Jefferson at school." + +"Who is Annie Jefferson, Molly?" + +"A very shabby sort of girl, who is always in hot water too. I have +taken to her, and she just adores me. There is no one else who loves me; +and she, poor child, would not be admitted inside these walls; she is +not aristocratic enough. Dear me, Nora! it is wrong of me to give you +all this information so soon; and don't look anxious about me, little +goose, for I have taken an enormous fancy to you." + +"I will tell you one thing," said Nora after a pause, "if you will never +tell again." + +"Oh, a secret!" said Molly. "Tell it out, Nora. I love secrets. I'll +never betray; I have no friends to betray them to. You may tell me with +all the heart in the world." + +"Well, it is this," said Nora; "we are not at all rich at home. We are +poor, and have no luxuries and the dear old house is very bare; and, oh! +but, Molly, there is no place like it--no place like it. It's worth all +the world to me; and when I came here last night, and saw your great, +rich, beautiful house, I--I quite hated it, and I almost hated Linda +too; and even my uncle, who has been so kind, I could not get up +one charitable thought for him, nor for your mother, who is such a +beautiful, gracious lady; and even Terence--oh! Terry seemed quite +English. Oh, I was miserable! But when I saw you, Molly, I said to +myself, 'There is one person who will fit me'; and--oh, don't Molly! +What is it?" + +"Only, if you say another word I shall squeeze you to death in the hug +I am giving you," said Molly. Her arms were flung tightly round Nora's +neck. She kissed her passionately three or four times. + +"We'll be friends. I'll stick up for you through thick and thin," said +Molly. "And now I'm off; for if Linda caught me woe betide me." + +"One word before you go, Molly," called out Nora. + +"Yes," said Molly, standing at the door. + +"Try to keep straight to-day, for my sake, for I shall want to say a +great deal to you to-night." + +"Oh, yes, so I will," answered Molly. "Now then, off I go." + +The door was banged behind her. It awoke Mrs. Hartrick, who turned +slowly on her pillow, and said to herself, "I am quite certain that +wicked girl Molly has been disturbing our poor little traveler." But +she fell asleep, and Nora lay thinking of Molly. How queer she was! And +yet--and yet she was the only person in the English home who had yet +managed to touch Nora's warm Irish heart. + +The rest of the day passed somewhat soberly. Molly and Linda both +started for school immediately after an early breakfast. Terence went +to town with his uncle, and Nora and her aunt were left alone. She had +earnestly hoped that she might have had one of her first important talks +with Mr. Hartrick before he left that morning; but he evidently had no +idea of giving her an opportunity. He spoke to her kindly, but seemed +to regard her already as quite one of the family, and certainly was not +disposed to alter his plans or put out his business arrangements on +her account. She resolved, with a slightly impatient sigh, to abide her +time, and followed her aunt into the morning-room, where the good lady +produced some fancywork, and asked Nora if she would like to help her +to arrange little squares for a large patchwork quilt which was to be +raffled for at a bazar shortly to be held in the place. + +Nora gravely took the little bits of colored silk, and, under her aunt's +supervision, began to arrange them in patterns. She was not a neat +worker, and the task was by no means to her taste. + +"What time ought I to write in order to catch the post?" she said, +breaking the stillness, and raising her lovely eyes to Mrs. Hartrick's +face. + +"The post goes out many times in the day, Nora; but if you want to catch +the Irish mail, you must have your letter in the box in the hall by +half-past three. There is plenty of time, my dear, and you will find +notepaper and everything you require in the escritoire in the study. You +can always go there if you wish to write your letters." + +"Thank you," answered Nora. + +"When you are tired of work, you can go out and walk about the grounds. +I will take you for a drive this afternoon. I am sorry that you have +arrived just when the girls have gone back to school; but you and Linda +can have a good deal of fun in the evenings, you know." + +"But why not Molly too?" asked Nora. She felt rather alarmed at +mentioning her elder cousin's name. + +Mrs. Hartrick did not speak at all for a moment; then she gave a sigh. + +"I am sorry to have to tell you, Nora, that Molly is by no means a good +girl. She is extremely rebellious and troublesome; and if this state of +things goes on much longer her father and I will be obliged to send her +to a very strict school as a boarder. We do not wish to do that, as my +husband does not approve of boarding-schools for girls. At present she +is spending a good deal of her time in punishment." + +"I hope she won't be in punishment to-night," said Nora. "I like her so +much." + +"Do you, my dear? I hope she won't influence you to become +insubordinate." + +Nora felt restless, and some of the bits of colored silk fluttered to +the floor. + +"Be careful, my dear Nora," said her aunt in a somewhat sharp voice; +"don't let those bits of silk get about on the carpet. I am most +particular that everything in the house should be kept neat and in +order. I will get you a little work-basket to keep your things in when +next I go upstairs." + +"Thank you, Aunt Grace," answered Nora. + +"And now, as we are alone," continued the good lady, "you might tell +me something of your life. Your uncle is very anxious that your mother +should come and pay us a visit. He is very much attached to his sister, +and it seems to me strange that they should not have met for so many +years. You have a beautiful place at home, Nora--have you not?" + +"Yes," said Nora; "the place is"--she paused, and her voice took an +added emphasis--"beautiful." + +"How emphatically you say it, dear! You have a pretty mode of speech, +although very, very Irish." + +"I am Irish, you see, Aunt Grace," answered Nora. + +"Yes, dear, you need scarcely tell me that; your brogue betrays you." + +"But mother was always particular that I should speak correctly," +continued the girl. "Does my accent offend you, Aunt Grace?" + +"No, dear; your uncle and I both think it quite charming. But tell me +some more. Of course you are very busy just now with your studies, Nora. +A girl of your age--how old did you say you were--sixteen?--a girl of +your age has not a moment to lose in acquiring those things which are +essential to the education of an accomplished woman of the present day." + +"I am afraid I shall shock you very much indeed, Aunt Grace, when I tell +you that my education is supposed to be finished." + +"Finished!" said Mrs. Hartrick. She paused for a moment and stared full +at Nora. "I was astonished," she continued, "when your uncle suggested +that you should pay us a visit now. I said, as September had begun, +you would be going back to school; but you accepted the invitation, or +rather your mother did for you, without any allusion to your school. +You must have got on very well, Nora, to be finished by now. How many +languages do you know?" + +"I can chatter in Irish after a fashion," said Nora; "and I am supposed, +after a fashion also, to know my own tongue." + +"Irish!" said Mrs. Hartrick in a tone of quivering scorn. "I don't +mean anything of that sort. I allude to your acquaintance with French, +German, and Italian." + +"I do know a very little French," said Nora; "that is, I can read one or +two books in French. Mother taught me what I know; but I do not know any +German or any Italian. I don't see that it matters," she continued, a +flush coming into her cheeks. "I should never talk German or Italian in +Ireland. I wouldn't be understood if I did." + +"That has nothing to do with it, Nora; and your tone, my dear, without +meaning it, of course, was just a shade pert just now. It is essential +in the present day that all well-educated women should be able to speak +at least in three languages." + +"Then I am sorry, Aunt Grace, for I am afraid you will despise me. I +shall never be well educated in that sense of the word." + +Mrs. Hartrick was silent. + +"I will speak to your uncle," she said after a pause. "While you are +here you can have lessons. It would be possible to arrange that you went +to school with Linda and Molly, and had French and German lessons while +there." + +"But I don't expect to be very long in England," said Nora, a note of +alarm in her voice. + +"Oh, my dear child, now that we have got you, we shall not allow you to +go in a hurry. It is such a nice change for you, too; this is your first +visit to England, is it not?" + +"Yes, Aunt Grace." + +"We won't let you go for some time, little Nora. Your brother is a dear +fellow; your uncle and I admire him immensely, and he is quite well +educated and so adaptable; and I am sure you would be the same, my dear, +when you have had the many chances which will be offered to you here. +You must look upon me as your real aunt, dear, and tell me anything that +you wish. Don't be shy of me, my love; I can quite understand that a +young girl, when she first leaves her mother, is rather shy." + +"I never felt shy at home," answered Nora; "but then, you know, I was +more with father than with mother." + +"More with your father! Does he stay at home all day, then?" + +"He is always about the place; he has nothing else to do." + +"Of course he has large estates." + +"They are not so very large, Aunt Grace." + +"Well, dear, that is a relative term, of course; but from your uncle's +description, and to judge from your mother's letters, it must be a very +large place. By the way, how does she manage her servants? She must have +a large staff at Castle O'Shanaghgan." + +"I don't think we manage our servants particularly well," said Nora. "It +is true they all stay with us; but then we don't keep many." + +"How many, dear?" + +"There's Pegeen--she is the parlor-maid--and there's the cook--we do +change our cook sometimes, for mother is rather particular; then there +is the woman who attends to the fowls, and the woman who does the +washing, and--I think that is about all. Oh, there's the post-boy; +perhaps you would consider him a servant, but I scarcely think he ought +to be called one. We give him twopence a week for fetching the letters. +He is a very good little boy. He stands on his head whenever he sees me; +he is very fond of me, and that is the way he shows his affection. It +would make you laugh, Aunt Grace, if you saw Michael standing on his +head." + +"It would make me shudder, you mean," said Mrs. Hartrick. "Really, Nora, +your account of your mother's home is rather disparaging; two or three +very rough servants, and no more. But I understood you lived in castle." + +"Oh, a castle may mean anything; but it is not fair for you and Uncle +George to think we are rich, for we are very poor. And," continued +Nora, "for my part, I love to be poor." She stood up abruptly. In her +excitement all her bits of silk tumbled to the floor. "May I go out +and have a run, Aunt Grace?" she said. "I feel quite stiff. I am not +accustomed to being indoors for so long at a time." + +"You can go out, Nora, if you like," said her aunt in a displeased +tone; "but, first, have the goodness to pick up all those bits you have +dropped." + +Nora, with flushed cheeks, stooped and picked up the bits of silk. She +wrapped them in a piece of paper and put them on the table. + +"You can stay out for an hour, my dear; but you are surely not going +without a hat." + +"I never wear a hat at home," said Nora. + +"You must run upstairs and fetch your hat," said Mrs. Hartrick. + +Poor Nora never felt more tried in the whole course of her life. + +"I shall get as bad as Molly if this goes on," she thought to herself. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + + +TWO LETTERS. + +"DEAR MOTHER [wrote Nora O'Shanaghgan later on that same morning]: I +arrived safely yesterday. Uncle George met me at Holyhead, and was very +kind indeed. I had a comfortable journey up to town, and Uncle George +saw that I wanted for nothing. When we got to London we drove across the +town to another station, called Waterloo, and took a train on here. A +carriage met us at the station with a pair of beautiful gray horses. +They were not as handsome as Black Bess, but they were very beautiful; +and we arrived here between eight and nine o'clock. This is just the +sort of place you would like, mother; such thick carpets on the stairs, +and such large, spacious, splendidly furnished rooms; and Aunt Grace +has meals to the minute; and they have lots and lots of servants; and my +bedroom--oh, mother! I think you would revel in my bedroom. It has such +a terribly thick carpet on the floor--I mean it has a thick carpet on +the floor; and there is a view from the window, the sort you have so +often described to me--great big trees, and a lawn like velvet, and four +or five tennis-courts, and a shrubbery with all the trees cut so exact +and round and proper, and a peep of the River Thames just beyond. My +cousins keep a boat on the river, and they often go out in the summer +evenings. They are going to take me for a row on Saturday, when the +girls have a holiday. + +"I saw Terence almost immediately after I arrived. He looked just as you +would like to see him, so handsome in his evening dress. He was a little +stiff--at least, I mean he was very correct in his manner. We had supper +when we arrived. I was awfully hungry, but I did not like to eat too +much, for Terence seemed so correct--nice in his manner, I mean--and +everything was just as you have described things when you were young. +There are two girls, my cousins--Linda, a very pretty girl, fair, and +so very neatly dressed; and Molly, who is not the least like the others. +You would not like Molly; she is rather rough; but of course I must not +complain of her. I have been sitting with Aunt Grace all the morning, +until I could bear it no longer--I mean, until I got a little stiff +in my legs, and then I had a run in the garden. Now I am writing this +letter in Aunt Grace's morning-room, and if I look round I shall see her +back. + +"Good-by, dear mother. I will write again in a day or two.--Your +affectionate daughter, + +"NORA O'SHANAGHGAN." + +"There," said Nora, under her breath, "that's done. Now for daddy." + +She took out another sheet of paper, and began to scribble rapidly. + +"Darling, darling, love of my heart! Daddy, daddy, oh! but it's I that +miss you. I am writing to you here in this could, could country. Oh, +daddy, if I could run to you now, wouldn't I? What are you doing without +your Light o' the Morning? I am pent up, daddy, and I don't think I can +stand it much longer. It's but a tiny visit I'll pay, and then I'll come +back again to the mountains and the sea, and the old, old house, and the +dear, darling dad. Keep up your heart, daddy; you'll soon have Light o' +the Morning home. Oh! it's so proper, and I'm wrapped up in silk chains; +they are surrounding me everywhere, and I can't quite bear it. Aunt +Grace is sitting here; I am writing in her morning-room. Oh! if I could, +wouldn't I scream, or shout, or do something awfully wicked; but I must +not, for it is the English way. They have got the wild bird Nora into +the English cage; and, darling dad asthore, it's her heart that will be +broke if she stays here long. There's one comfort I have--or, bedad! I +don't think I could bear it--and that's Molly. She's a bit of a romp and +a bit of a scamp, and she has a daring spirit of her own, and she hates +the conventionalities, and she would like to be Irish too. She can't, +poor colleen; but she is nice and worth knowing, and she'll just keep my +heart from being broke entirely. + +"How are they all at home? Give them lashins and lavins of love from +Nora. Tell them it's soon I'll be back with them. You go round and give +a message to each and all; and don't forget Hannah Croneen, and little +Mike, and Bridget Murphy, and Squire Murphy, and the rest--all and +every one who remembers Nora O'Shanaghgan. Tell them it's her heart is +imprisoned till she gets back to them; and she would rather have one +bit of her own native soil than all the gold in the whole of England. +I declare it's rough and wild I am getting, and my heart is bleeding. I +have written a correct letter to mother, and given her the news; but I +am telling you a bit of my true, true heart. Send for me if you miss me +too much, and I'll fly back to you. Oh! it's chains wouldn't keep me, +for go I must if this state of things continues much longer.--Your + +"LIGHT O' THE MORNING." + +The two letters were written, the last one relieving Nora's feelings not +a little. She put them into separate envelopes and stamped them. + +Mrs. Hartrick rose, went over to her desk, and saw Nora's letters. + +"Oh, you have written to your parents," she said. "Quite right, my dear. +But why put them into separate envelopes? They could go nicely in one. +That, really, is willful waste, Nora, which we in England never permit." + +"Oh, please, don't change them, Aunt Grace," said Nora, as Mrs. Hartrick +took the two letters up and paused before opening one of the envelopes. +"Please, please, let them go as they are. It's my own stamp," she +continued, losing all sense of grammar in her excitement. + +"Well, my dear, just as you please. There, don't excite yourself, Nora. +I only suggested that, when one stamp would do, it was rather wasteful +to spend two." + +"Oh, daddy does like to get his own letters to his own self," said Nora. + +"Your father, you mean. You don't, surely, call him by the vulgar word +daddy?" + +"Bedad! but I do," answered Nora. + +Mrs. Hartrick turned and gave her niece a frozen glance. Presently she +laid her hand on the girl's shoulder. + +"I don't want to complain or to lecture you," she said; "but that +expression must not pass your lips again while you are here." + +"It shan't. I am ever so sorry," said the girl. + +"I think you are, dear; and how flushed your cheeks are! You seem quite +tired. Now, go upstairs and wash your hands; the luncheon-gong will ring +in five minutes, and we must be punctual at meals." + +Nora slowly left the room. + +"Oh! but it's like lead my heart is," she said to herself. + +The day passed very dismally for the wild Irish girl. After lunch she +and her aunt had a long and proper drive. They drove through lovely +country; but Nora was feeling even a little bit cross, and could not see +the beauties of the perfectly tilled landscape, of the orderly fields, +of the lovely hedgerows. + +"It is too tidy," she said once in a choking sort of voice. + +"Tidy!" answered Mrs. Hartrick. She looked at Nora, tittered a sigh, and +did not speak of the beauties of the country again. + +When they got back from their drive things were a little better, for +Linda and Molly had returned from school; and, for a wonder, Molly was +not in disgrace. She looked quite excited, and darting out of the house, +took Nora's hand and pulled it inside her arm. + +"Come and have a talk," she said. "I am hungering for a chat with you." + +"Tea will be ready in fifteen minutes, Molly," called out Mrs. Hartrick, +then entered the house accompanied by Linda. + +Meanwhile Molly and Nora went round to the shrubbery at the back of the +house. + +"What is the matter with you?" said Molly. She turned and faced her +companion. + +Nora's eyes filled with sudden tears. + +"It is only that I am keeping in so much," she said; "and--and, oh! I +do wish you were not all quite so tidy. I am just mad for somebody to be +wild and unkempt. I feel that I could take down my hair, or tear a +rent in my dress--anything rather than the neatness. Oh! I hate your +landscapes, and your trim hedges, and your trim house, and your--" + +"Go on," said Molly; "let it out; let it out. I'll never repeat it. You +must come in, in about a quarter of an hour, to a stiff meal. You will +have to sit upright, let me tell you, and not lounge; and you will have +to eat your bread and butter very nicely, and sip your tea, and not eat +overmuch. Mother does not approve of it. Then when tea is over you will +have to leave the room and go upstairs and get things out for dinner." + +"My things out for dinner?" gasped Nora. "What do you mean?" + +"Your evening-dress. Do you suppose you will be allowed to dine in your +morning-dress?" + +"Oh, to be sure," said Nora, brightening; "now I understand. Mother did +get me a white frock, and she had it cut square in the neck, and the +sleeves are a little short." + +"You will look sweet in that," said Molly, gazing at her critically; +"and I will bring you in a bunch of sweet-peas to put in your belt, and +you can have a little bunch in your hair, too, if you like. You know you +are awfully pretty. I am sure Linda is just mad with jealousy about +it; I can see it, although she does not say anything. She is rather +disparaging about you, is Linda; that is one of her dear little ways. +She runs people down with faint praise. She was talking a lot about +you as we were going to school this morning. She began: 'You know, I do +think Nora is a pretty girl; but it is such a pity that--'" + +"Oh, don't," said Nora, suddenly putting out her hand and closing +Molly's lips. + +"What in the world are you doing that for?" said Molly. + +"Because I don't want to hear; she did not mean me to know that she said +these things." + +"What a curiosity you are!" said Molly. "So wild, so defiant, and +yet--oh, of course, I like you awfully. Do you know that the vision of +your face kept me good all day? Isn't that something to be proud of? I +didn't answer one of my teachers back, and I did have a scolding, let me +tell you. Oh, my music; you don't know what I suffer over it. I have not +a single particle of taste. I have not the faintest ghost of an ear; but +mother insists on my learning. I could draw; I could sketch; I can +do anything with my pencil; but that does not suit mother. It must be +music. I must play; I must play well at sight; I must play all sorts of +difficult accompaniments for songs, because gentlemen like to have +their songs accompanied for them; and I must be able to do this the very +moment the music is put before me. And I must not play too loud; I must +play just right, in perfect time; and I must be ready, when there is +nothing else being done, to play long pieces, those smart kind of things +people do play in the present day; and I must never play a wrong note. +Oh, dear! oh, dear! and I simply cannot do these things. I don't know +wrong notes from right. I really don't." + +"Oh, Molly!" cried Nora. + +"There you are; I can see that you are musical." + +"I think I am, very. I mean I think I should always know a wrong note +from a right one; but I have not had many opportunities of learning." + +"Oh, good gracious me! what next?" exclaimed Molly. + +"I don't understand what you mean," said Nora. + +"My dear, I am relieving my feelings, just as you relieved yours a short +time ago. Oh, dear! my music. I know I played atrociously; but that +dreadful Mrs. Elford was so cross; she did thump so herself on the +piano, and told me that my fingers were like sticks. And what could I +do? I longed to let out some of my expressions at her. You must know +that I am feared on account of my expressions--my slang, I call them. +They do shock people so, and it is simply irresistible to see them +shudder, and close their eyes, and draw themselves together, and then +majestically walk out of the room. The headmistress is summoned then, +and I--I am doomed. I get my pieces to do out of school; and when I +come home mother lectures me, and sends me to my bedroom. But I am free +to-night. I have been good all day; and it is on account of you, Nora; +just because you are a little Irish witch; and I sympathize with you to +the bottom of my soul." + +"Molly! Molly!" here called out Linda's voice; "mother says it's time +for you and Nora to come in to wash your hands for tea." + +"Oh, go to Jericho!" called out Molly. + +Linda turned immediately and went into the house. + +"She is a tell-tale-tit," said Molly. "She will be sure to repeat that +to mother; and do you think I shall be allowed any cake? There is a very +nice kind of rice-cake which cook makes, and I am particularly fond +of it. You'll see I am not to have any, just because I said 'Go to +Jericho!' I am sure I wish Linda would go." + +"But those kind of things are rather vulgar, aren't they?" said Nora. +"Father wouldn't like them. We say all kinds of funny things at home, +but not things like that. I wish you would not." + +"You wish I would not what?" + +"Use words like 'Go to Jericho!' Father would not like to hear you." + +"You are a very audacious kind of girl, let me tell you, Nora," said +Molly. She colored, and looked annoyed for a moment, then burst into a +laugh. "But I like you all the better for not being afraid of me," she +continued. "Come, let's go into the house; we can relieve our feelings +somehow to-night; we'll have a lark somehow; you mark my words. In the +meantime mum's the word." + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + + +A CHEEKY IRISH GIRL. + +At tea the girls were very stiff. Molly and Nora were put as far as +possible asunder. They did not have tea in the drawing room, but in the +dining room, and Mrs. Hartrick presided. There was jam on the table, and +two or three kinds of cake, and, of course, plenty of bread and butter. + +As Molly had predicted, however, the news of her expression "Go to +Jericho!" had already reached Mrs. Hartrick's ears, and the fiat had +gone forth that she was only to eat bread and butter. It was handed to +her, in a marked way, by her mother, and Linda's light-blue eyes flashed +with pleasure. Nora felt at that moment that she almost hated Linda. She +herself ate resignedly, and without much appetite. Her spirits were +down to zero. It seemed far less likely than it did before she left +O'Shanaghgan that she could help her father out of his scrape. It +was almost impossible to break through these chains of propriety, of +neatness, of order. Would anybody in this trim household care in the +very least whether the old Irishman broke his heart or not? whether he +and the Irish girl had to go forth from the home of their ancestors? +whether the wild, beautiful, rack-rent sort of place was kept in the +family or not? + +"They none of them care," thought Nora. "I don't believe Uncle George +will do anything; but all the same I have got to ask him. He was nice +about my letter, I will own that; but will he really, really help?" + +"A penny for your thoughts, Nora, my dear," said Mrs. Hartrick at this +moment. + +Nora glanced up with a guilty flush. + +"Oh, I was only thinking," she began. + +"Yes, dear, what about?" + +"About father." Nora colored as she spoke, and Linda fixed her eyes on +her face. + +"Very pretty indeed of you, my dear, to think so much of your father," +said Mrs. Hartrick; "but I cannot help giving you a hint. It is not +considered good manners for a girl to be absent-minded while she is in +public. You are more or less in public now; I am here, and your cousins, +and it is our bounden duty each to try and make the others pleasant, +to add to the enjoyment of the meal by a little graceful conversation. +Absent-mindedness is very dull for others, my dear Nora; so in future +try not to look quite so abstracted." + +Nora colored again. Molly, at the other end of the table, bit her lip +furiously, and stretched out her hand to help herself to another thick +piece of bread and butter. In doing so she upset a small milk-jug; a +stream of milk flowed down the tablecloth, and Mrs. Hartrick rose in +indignation. + +"This is the fourth evening running you have spilt something on the +tablecloth, Molly. Go to your room immediately." + +Molly rose, dropped a mocking courtesy to her mother, and left the room. + +"Linda dear, run after your sister, and tell her that, for her +impertinence to me, she is to remain in her room until dinner-time." + +"Oh! please forgive her this time; she didn't mean it really," burst +from Nora's lips. + +"Nora!" said Mrs. Hartrick. + +"Oh! I am sorry for her; please forgive her." + +"Nora!" repeated her aunt again. + +"It is because you do not understand her that she goes on like that; she +is such a fine girl, twice--twice as fine as Linda. Oh, I do wish you +would forgive her!" + +"Thank you," said Linda in a mocking voice. She had got as far as the +door, and had overheard Nora's words. She now glanced at her mother, as +much as to say, "I told you so," and left the room. + +Nora had jumped to her feet. She had forgotten prudence; she had +forgotten politeness; her eyes were bright with suppressed fire, and her +glib Irish tongue was eager to enter into the fray. + +"I must speak out," she said. "Molly is more like me than anybody else +in this house, and I must take her part. She would be a very, very good +girl if she were understood." + +"What are your ideas with regard to understanding Molly?" said Mrs. +Hartrick in that very calm and icy voice which irritated poor Nora +almost past endurance. She was speechless for a moment, struggling with +fresh emotion. + +"Oh! I wish----" she began. + +"And I wish, my dear Nora, that you would remember the politeness due to +your hostess. I also wish that you would consider how very silly you +are when you speak as you are now doing. I do not know what your Irish +habits are; but if it is considered in Ireland rather a virtue than +otherwise to spill a milk jug, and allow the contents to deface the +tablecloth, I am sorry for you, that is all." + +"You cannot understand. I--I am sorry I came," said Nora. + +She burst into sudden tears, and ran out of the room. In a few moments +Linda came back. + +"Molly is storming," she said; "she is in an awful rage." + +"Sit down, Linda, and don't tell tales of your sister," answered Mrs. +Hartrick in an annoyed voice. + +"Dear me, mother!" said Linda; "and where is Nora?" + +"Nora is a very impertinent little girl. She is wild, however, and +unbroken. We must all have patience with her. Poor child! it is terrible +to think that she is your father's niece. What a contrast to dear +Terence! He is a very nice, polite boy. I am sorry for Nora. Of course, +as to Molly, she is quite different. She has always had the advantage of +my bringing-up; whereas poor Nora--well, I must say I am surprised at my +sister-in-law. I did not think your father's sister would have been so +remiss." + +"There is one thing I ought to say," said Linda. + +"What is that, dear? Linda, do sit up straight, and don't poke your +head." + +Linda drew herself up, and looked prettily toward her mother. + +"What do you wish to say?" + +"It is this. I think Nora will be a very bad companion for Molly. Molly +will be worse than ever that Nora is in the house." + +"Well, my dear Linda, it is your duty to be a good deal with your +cousin. You are too fond of poking holes in others; you are a little +hard upon your sister Molly. I do not wish to excuse Molly; but it is +not your place as her younger sister to, as it were, rejoice in her many +faults." + +"Oh, I don't, mother," said Linda, coloring. + +"Linda dear, I am afraid you do. You must try and break yourself of that +very unchristian habit. But, on the whole, my dear, I am pleased +with you. You are careful to do what I wish; you learn your lessons +correctly; I have good reports of you from your schoolmistresses; and if +you are careful, my dear, you will correct those little habits which mar +the perfect whole." + +"Thank you, dear mother," said Linda. "I will try to do what you wish." + +"What I particularly want you to do just now is to be gentle and +patient with your cousin; you must remember that she has never had your +advantages. Be with her a good deal; talk to her as nicely as you can; +hint to her what I wish. Of course, if she becomes quite incorrigible, +it will be impossible for me to have her long with you and Molly; but +the child is much to be pitied; she is a very pretty creature, and with +a little care could be made most presentable. I by no means give her +up." + +"Dear mother, how sweetly Christian-like and forgiving you are!" said +Linda. + +"Oh, hush, my dear; hush! I only do my duty; I hope I shall never fail +in that." + +Mrs. Hartrick rose from the tea-table, and Linda soon afterward followed +her. Mr. Hartrick was seen coming down the avenue. He generally walked +from the station. He came in now. + +"What a hot day it is!" he said. "Pour me out a cup of tea, Linda. I am +very thirsty." + +He flung himself into an easy chair, and Linda waited on him. + +"Well," he said, "where are the others? Where is the little Irish witch, +and where is Molly?" + +"I am sorry to say that Molly is in disgrace, as usual," said Mrs. +Hartrick. + +"Oh, dear, dear!" said Mr. Hartrick; "we ought to send her to school, +poor child! I am sorry for her." + +"And I intended to give her quite a pleasant evening," said Mrs. +Hartrick, "in honor of her cousin's arrival. She was in disgrace +yesterday when Nora arrived; and I had thought of giving the girls +a delightful evening. I had it all planned, and was going to ask the +Challoners over; but really Molly is so incorrigible. She was very pert +to me, although she did bring a better report from school; she used some +of her objectionable language to Linda, and was more awkward even than +usual." + +"Look at the tablecloth, father," said Linda. + +"I think, Linda, you had better run out of the room," said Mr. Hartrick. +He spoke in an annoyed voice. + +"Certainly, father, I will go; but don't you want another cup of tea +first?" + +"Your mother shall pour it out for me. Go, my dear--go." + +"Only, mother, is it necessary that we should not ask the Challoners +because Molly is naughty? The rest of us would like to have them." + +"I will let you know presently, Linda," said her mother; and Linda was +obliged, to her disgust, to leave the room. + +"Now, then, my dear," said Mr. Hartrick, "I don't at all like to call +you over the coals; but I think it is a pity to speak against Molly so +much as you do in her sister's presence. Linda is getting eaten up +with conceit; she will be an intolerable woman by and by, so +self-opinionated, and so pleased with herself. After all, poor Molly may +have the best of it in the future; she is a fine child, notwithstanding +her naughtiness." + +"I thought it likely you would take her part, George; and I am sorry," +answered Mrs. Hartrick in a melancholy tone; "but I am grieved to tell +you that there is something else to follow. That little Irish girl is +quite as cheeky, even more cheeky than Molly. I fear I must ask you to +say a word to her; I shall require her to be respectful to me while she +is here. She spoke very rudely to me just now, simply because I found it +my duty to correct Molly." + +"Oh, that won't do at all," said Mr. Hartrick. "I must speak to Nora." + +"I wish you would do so." + +"I will. By the way, Grace, what a pretty creature she is!" + +"She is a beautiful little wildflower," said Mrs. Hartrick. "I have +taken a great fancy to her, notwithstanding her rudeness. She has never +had the smallest care; she has simply been allowed to grow up wild." + +"Well, Nature has taken care of her," said Mr. Hartrick. + +"Yes, dear, of course; but you yourself know the advantage of bringing +up a girl nicely." + +"And no one is more capable of doing that than you are," said Mr. +Hartrick, giving his wife an admiring glance. + +"Thank you, dear, for the compliment; but I should be glad if you would +speak to Nora. Now that she is here, I have no doubt that we shall soon +discipline her; and I should like her to pay quite a long visit--that +is, of course, if she becomes conformable to my ways." + +"She will be sure to do that, Grace," replied the husband. "I am glad +you mean to be good to her, and to take her in hand, poor little lass!" + +"I thought she might have some good masters and get some valuable +lessons while she is here," said Mrs. Hartrick. "Would you believe +it, George?--that little girl of sixteen calmly informed me that her +education was finished. At the same time, she said she knew no language +but her own, and just a smattering of that dead tongue, Irish. She +cannot play; in short, she has no accomplishments whatever, and yet her +education is finished. I must say I do not understand your sister. I +should have thought that she was a little more like you." + +"There never was a more particular girl than Ellen used to be," said +Mr. Hartrick; "but I must have a long talk with Nora. I'll see her this +evening. I know she has a good deal she wants to talk to me about." + +"A good deal she wants to talk to you about, George?" + +"Oh, yes, my dear; but I will explain presently. She is a proud little +witch, and must not be coerced; we must remember that her spirit has +never been broken. But I'll talk to her, I'll talk to her; leave the +matter in my hands, Grace." + +"Certainly, dear; she is your niece, remember." + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + + +TWO DESCRIPTIONS. + +Some of Nora's words must have sunk into Mrs. Hartrick's heart, for, +rather to Molly's own astonishment, she was allowed to dress nicely for +dinner, and to come down. Her somewhat heavy, dark face did not look to +the best advantage. She wore a dress which did not suit her; her hair +was awkwardly arranged; there was a scowl on her brow. She felt so sore +and cross, after what she considered her brave efforts to be good during +the morning, that she would almost rather have stayed up in her room. +But Nora would not hear of that. Nora had rushed into Molly's room, and +had begged her, for her sake, to come downstairs. Nora was looking +quite charming in that pretty white frock which Mrs. O'Shanaghgan had +purchased for her in Dublin. Her softly rounded figure, her dazzlingly +fair complexion, were seen now for the first time to the best advantage. +Her thick black hair was coiled up becomingly on her graceful little +head, and, with a bunch of sweet peas at her belt, there could scarcely +have been seen a prettier maiden. When she appeared in the drawing room, +even Terence was forced to admit that he had seldom seen a more lovely +girl than his sister. He went up to her and began to take notice of her. + +"I am sorry I was obliged to be out all day. I am studying the different +museums very exhaustively," said Terence in that measured tone of his +which drove poor Nora nearly wild. She replied to him somewhat pertly, +and he retired once more into his shell. + +"Pretty as my sister is," he soliloquized, "she really is such an +ignorant girl that few fellows would care to speak to her. It is a sad +pity." + +Terence, the last hope of the house of O'Shanaghgan, was heard to +sigh profoundly. His aunt, Mrs. Hartrick, and his cousin Linda would, +doubtless, sympathize with him. + +"Dinner was announced, and the meal went off very well. Molly was +absolutely silent; Nora, taking her cue from her, hardly spoke; and +Linda, Terence, and Mrs. Hartrick had it all their own way. But just +as dessert was placed on the table, Mr. Hartrick looked at Nora and +motioned to her to change seats and to come to one close to him. + +"Come now," he said, "we should like to hear your account of Castle +O'Shanaghgan. Terence has told us all about it; but we should like to +hear your version." + +"And a most lovely place it must be," said Mrs. Hartrick from the other +end of the table. "Your description, Terence, makes me quite long to see +it; and if it were not that I am honestly very much afraid of the Irish +peasantry, I should be glad to go there during the summer. But those +terrible creatures, with their shillalahs, and their natural aptitude +for firing on you from behind a hedge, are quite too fearful to +contemplate. I could not run the risk of assassination from any of them. +They seem to have a natural hatred for the English and--why, what is the +matter, Nora?" + +"Only it's not true," said Nora, her eyes flashing. "They are not a +bit like that; they are the most warmhearted people in the whole world. +Terence, have you been telling lies about your country? If you have, I +am downright ashamed of you." + +"But I have not. I don't know what you mean," answered Terence. + +"Oh, come, come, Nora!" said her uncle, patting her arm gently; but +Nora's eyes blazed with fire. + +"It's not a bit true," she continued. "How can Aunt Grace think of that? +The poor things have been driven to desperation, because--because their +hearts have been trampled on." + +"For instance," said Terence in a mocking voice, which fell like ice +upon poor Nora's hot, indignant nature--"for instance, Andy Neil--he's a +nice specimen, is he not?" + +"Oh," said Nora, "he--he is the exception. Don't talk of him, please." + +"That's just it," said Terence, laughing. "Nora wants to give us all +the sweets, and to conceal all the bitters. Now, I am honest, whatever I +am." + +"Oh, are you?" said Nora, in indignation. "I should like to know," she +continued, "what kind of place you have represented Castle O'Shanaghgan +to be." + +"I don't know why I should be obliged to answer to you for what I say, +Nora," cried her brother. + +"You describe it now, Nora. We will hear your description," said her +uncle. + +Nora sat quite still for a moment; then she raised her very dark-blue +eyes. + +"Do you really want me to tell you about O'Shanaghgan?" she said slowly. + +"Certainly, my dear." + +"Certainly, Nora. I am sure you can describe things very well," said her +aunt, in an encouraging voice, from the other end of the table. + +"Then I will tell you," said Nora. She paused for a moment, then, to the +astonishment and disgust of Mrs. Hartrick, rose to her feet. + +"I cannot talk about it sitting down," she said. "There's the sea, you +know--the wild, wild Atlantic. In the winter the breakers are--oh! I +have sometimes seen them forty feet high." + +"Come, come, Nora!" said Terence, + +"It is true, Terry; the times when you don't like to go out." + +Terence retired into his shell. + +"I have seen the waves like that; but, oh! in the summer they can be so +sweet and conoodling." + +"What in the world is that?" said Mrs. Hartrick. + +"Oh, it is one of our Irish words; there's no other way to express it. +And then there are the cliffs, and the great caves, and the yellow, +yellow sands, and the shells, and the seaweeds, and the fish, and the +boating, and--and--" + +"Go on, Nora; you describe the sea just like any other sea." + +"Oh, but it is like no other sea," said Nora. "And then there are the +mountains, their feet washed by the waves." + +"Quite poetical," said Mrs. Hartrick. + +"It is; it is all poetry," said Nora. "You are not laughing at me, are +you, Aunt Grace? I wish you could see those mountains and that sea, and +then the home--O'Shanaghgan itself." + +"Yes, Nora; tell us," said her uncle, who did not laugh, and was much +interested in the girl's description. + +"The home," cried Nora; "the great big, darling, empty house." + +"Empty! What a very peculiar description!" said Mrs. Hartrick. + +"Oh, it is so nice," said Nora. "You don't knock over furniture when you +walk about; and the dining-room table is so big that, even if you did +spill a jug of milk, father would not be angry." + +Mrs. Hartrick uttered a sigh. + +"Oh, we are wild over there," continued Nora; "we have no +conventionalities. We share and share alike; we don't mind whether we +are rich or poor. We are poor--oh! frightfully poor; and we keep very +few servants; and--and the place is bare; because it can be nothing but +bare; but there's no place like O'Shanaghgan." + +"But what do you mean by bare?" said Mrs. Hartrick. + +"Bare?" said Nora. "I mean bare; very few carpets and very little +furniture, and--and----But, oh! it's the hearts that are warm, and that +is the only thing that matters." + +"It must be a right-down jolly place; and, by Jehoshaphat! I wish I was +there," interrupted Molly. + +"Molly!" said her mother. + +"Oh, leave her alone for the present," said Mr. Hartrick. "But do you +mean," he continued, looking at Nora in a distressed way, "that--that my +sister lives in a house of that sort?" + +"Mother?" said Nora. "Of course; she is father's wife, and my mother; +she is the lady of O'Shanaghgan. It is a very proud position. We don't +want grand furniture nor carpets to make it a proud position. She is +father's wife, and he is O'Shanaghgan of Castle O'Shanaghgan. He is a +sort of king, and he is descended from kings." + +"Well, Terence, I must say this does not at all coincide with your +description," said his uncle, turning and looking his nephew full in the +face. + +"I didn't wish to make things too bad, sir. Of course, we are not very +rich over there; but still, Nora does exaggerate." + +"Look here, Nora," said her uncle, suddenly turning and pulling her down +to sit beside him, "you and I must have a little chat. We will just +go and have it right away. You shall tell me your version of the story +quite by ourselves." He then rose and drew her out of the room. + +"Where shall we go?" he said when they stood for a moment in the +conservatory, into which the big dining room opened. + +"Do you really mean it?" said Nora. + +"Mean what, dear?" + +"To talk to me about--about my letter? Do you mean it?" + +"Certainly I do, and there is no time like the present. Come--where +shall we go?" + +"Where we can be alone; where none of the prim English can interrupt." + +"Nora, you must not be so prejudiced. We are not so bad as all that." + +"Oh, I know it. I wish you were bad; it's because you are so awfully +good that I hate--I mean, that I cannot get on with any of you." + +"Poor child! you are a little wild creature. Come into my study; we +shall be quite safe from interruption there." + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + + +A COMPACT. + +Mr. Hartrick, still holding Nora's hand, took her down a corridor, +and the next moment they found themselves in a large room, with oak +bookcases and lined with oak throughout; but it was a stately sort of +apartment, and it oppressed the girl as much as the rest of the house +had done. + +"I had thought," she murmured inwardly, "that his study would be a +little bare. I cannot think how he can stand such closeness, so much +furniture." She sighed as the thought came to her. + +"More and more sighs, my little Irish girl," said Mr. Hartrick. "Why, +what is the matter with you?" + +"I cannot breathe; but I'll soon get accustomed to it," said Nora. + +"Cannot breathe? Are you subject to asthma, my dear?" + +"Oh, no, no; but there is so much furniture, and I am accustomed to so +little." + +"All right, Nora; but now you must pull yourself together, and try to be +broad-minded enough to take us English folk as we are. We are not +wild; we are civilized. Our houses are not bare; but I presume you must +consider them comfortable." + +"Oh, yes," said Nora; "yes." + +"Do you dislike comfortable houses?" + +"Hate them!" said Nora. + +"My dear, dear child!" + +"You would if you were me--wouldn't you, Uncle George?" + +"I suppose if I were you I should feel as you do, Nora. I must honestly +say I am very thankful I am not you." + +Nora did not reply at all to that. + +"Ah, at home now," she said, "the moon is getting up, and it is making +a path of silver on the waves, and it is touching the head of Slieve +Nagorna. The dear old Slieve generally keeps his snow nightcap on, and I +dare say he has it by now. In very hot weather, sometimes, it melts and +disappears; but probably he has got his first coat of snow by now, just +on his very top, you know. Then, when the moon shines on it and then on +the water--why, don't you think, Uncle George, you would rather look at +Slieve Nagorna, with the snow on him and the moon touching his forehead, +and the path of silver on the water, than--than be just comfortable?" + +"I don't see why I should not have both," said Mr. Hartrick after +a pause; "the silver path on the water and the grand look of Slieve +Nagorna (I can quite fancy what he is like from your description, Nora), +and also have a house nicely furnished, and good things to eat, and----. +But I see we are at daggers drawn, my dear niece. Now, please tell me +what your letter means." + +"Do you really want me to tell you now?" + +"Yes." + +"Do you know why I have really come here?" + +"You said something in your letter; but you did not explain yourself +very clearly." + +"I came here," said Nora, "for a short visit. I want to go back again +soon. Time is flying. Already a month of the three months is over. In +two months' time the blow will fall unless--unless you, Uncle George, +avert it." + +"The blow, dear? What blow?" + +"They are going," said Nora--she held out both her hands--"the place, +the sea, the mountains, the home of our ancestors, they are going +unless--unless you help us, Uncle George." + +"My dear Nora, you are very melodramatic; you must try and talk plain +English. Do you mean to say that Castle O'Shanaghgan--" + +"Yes, that's it," said Nora; "it is mortgaged. I don't quite know what +mortgaged means, but it is something very bad; and unless father can get +a great deal of money--I don't know how much, but a good deal--before +two months are up, the man to whom Castle O'Shanaghgan is mortgaged will +take possession of it. He is a horrid Englishman; but he will go there, +and he will turn father out, and mother out, and me--oh, Terence doesn't +matter. Terence never was an Irishman--never, never; but he will turn us +out. We will go away. Oh, it does not greatly matter for me, because I +am young; and it does not greatly matter for mother, because she is an +English woman. Oh, yes, Uncle George, she is just like you--she likes +comfort; she likes richly furnished rooms; but she is my mother, and of +course I love her; she will stand it, for she will think perhaps we will +come here to this country. But it is father I am thinking of, the old +lion, the old king, the dear, grand old father. He won't understand, +he'll be so puzzled. No other place will suit him; he won't say a word; +it's not the way of the O'Shanaghgans to grumble. He won't utter a word; +he will go away, and he will--die. His heart will be broken; he will +die." + +"Nora, my dear child!" + +"It is true," said Nora. Her face was ghastly white; her words came out +in broken sobs. "I see him, Uncle George; every night I see him, with +his bowed head, and his broken heart, and his steps getting slower +and slower. He'll be so puzzled, for he is such a true Irishman, Uncle +George. You don't know what we are--happy one day, miserable the next. +He thinks somehow, somehow, that the money will be paid. But, oh, Uncle +George!--I suppose I have got a little bit of the English in me after +all--I know it will not be paid, that no one will lend it to him, not +any of his old friends and cronies; and he will have to go, and it +will break his heart, unless, unless you help him. I thought of you; +I guessed you must be rich. I see now that you are very rich. Oh, how +rich!--rich enough for carriages, and thick carpets, and easy-chairs, +and tables, and grand dresses, and--and all those sort of things; and +you will help--won't you? Please, do! please, do! You'll be so glad some +day that you helped the old king, and saved him from dying of a broken +heart. Please, help him, Uncle George." + +"My dear little girl!" said Mr. Hartrick. He was really affected by +Nora's speech; it was wild; it was unconventional; there was a great +deal of false sentiment about it; but the child herself was true, and +her eyes were beautiful, and she looked graceful, and young, and full +of passion, almost primeval passion, as she stood there before him. Then +she believed in him. If she did not believe in anyone else in the house, +she believed in him. She thought that if she asked him he would help. + +"Now, tell me," he said after a pause, "does your mother know what you +have come here for?" + +"Mother? Certainly not; I told you in my letter that you must not +breathe a word of it to mother; and father does not know. No one knows +but I--Nora, I myself." + +"This has been completely your own idea?" + +"Completely." + +"You are a brave girl." + +"Oh, I don't know about being brave. I had to do something. If you +belonged to Patrick O'Shanaghgan you would do something for him too. +Have you ever seen him, Uncle George?" + +"Yes, at the time of my sister's wedding, but not since." + +"And then?" + +"He was as handsome a fellow as I ever laid eyes on, and Irish through +and through." + +"Of course. What else would he be?" + +"I have not seen him since. My sister, poor Ellen, she was a beautiful +girl when she was young, Nora." + +"She is stately, like a queen," said Nora. "We all admire her very, very +much." + +"And love her, my dear?" + +"Oh yes, of course I love mother." + +"But not as well as your father?" + +"You could not, Uncle George, if you knew father." + +"Well, I shall not ask any more. You really do want me to help?" + +"If you can; if it will not cost you too much money." + +"And you mean that your father is absolutely, downright poor?" + +"Oh, I suppose so. I don't think that matters a bit. We wouldn't like to +be rich, neither father nor I; but we do want to keep O'Shanaghgan." + +"Even without carpets and chairs and tables?" said Mr. Hartrick. + +"We don't care about carpets and chairs and tables," said Nora. "We want +to keep O'Shanaghgan, the place where father was born and I was born." + +"Well, look here, Nora. I can make you no promises just now; but I +respect you, my dear, and I will certainly do something--what I cannot +possibly tell you, for I must look into this matter for myself. But I +will do this: I will go to O'Shanaghgan this week and see my sister, and +find out from the Squire what really is wrong." + +"You will?" said Nora. She thought quickly. Her father would hate it; +but, after all, it was the only chance. Even she had sufficient common +sense to know that Mr. Hartrick could not help unless he went to the old +place. + +"Oh, you will do it when you see it," she said, with sudden rapture. +"And you'll take me home with you?" + +"Well, I think not, Nora. Now that you are here you must stay. I am fond +of you, my little girl, although I know very little about you; but I do +think that you have very mistaken ideas. I want you to love your English +cousins for your mother's sake, and to love their home for your mother's +sake also; and I should like you to have a few lessons, and to take some +hints from your Aunt Grace, for you are wild, and need training. If I go +to O'Shanaghgan for you, will you stay at The Laurels for me?" + +"I will do anything, anything for you, if you save father," said Nora. +She fell on her knees before her uncle could prevent her, took his hand, +and kissed it. + +"Then it is a compact," said Mr. Hartrick; "but remember I only promise +to go. I cannot make any promises to help your father until I have seen +him." + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + + +SHE WILL SOON TAME DOWN. + +"I am going to Ireland to-morrow, Grace," said Mr. Hartrick to his wife +that evening. + +"To Ireland!" she cried. "What for?" + +"I want to see my sister Ellen. I feel that I have neglected her too +long. I shall run over to O'Shanaghgan, and stay there for two or three +nights." + +"Why are you doing this, George?" said Mrs. Hartrick very slowly. + +Mr. Hartrick was silent for a moment; then he said gravely: + +"I have heard bad news from that child." + +"From Nora?" + +"Yes, from Nora." + +"But Terence has never given us bad news." + +"Terence is not a patch upon Nora, my dear Grace." + +"There I cannot agree with you. I infinitely prefer Terence to Nora," +was Mrs. Hartrick's calm reply. + +"But I thought you admired the child." + +"Oh, I admire what the child may become," was the cautious answer. "I +cannot admire a perfectly wild girl, who has no idea of self-discipline +or self-restraint. And remember one thing, George: whatever she says to +you, you must take, to use a vulgarism, with a grain of salt. An +Irish girl cannot help exaggerating. She has doubtless exaggerated the +condition of things." + +"I only pray God she has," was Mr. Hartrick's reply. + + +"If things are even half as bad as she represents them, it is high time +that I should pay my sister a visit." + +"Why? What does she say?" + +"She has given me a picture of the state of affairs at that house which +wrings my heart, Grace. To think that my beautiful sister Ellen should +be subjected to such discomforts, to such miseries, is intolerable. I +intend to go to O'Shanaghgan to-morrow, and will see how matters are for +myself." + +Mrs. Hartrick was again silent for a moment or two; then she said +gravely: + +"Doubtless you are right to do this; but I hope, while you are away, you +will do nothing rash." + +"What do you mean?" + +"I mean that, from the little I have seen of Nora, she is a very +impetuous creature, and has tried perhaps to wring a promise from you." + +"I will tell you quite simply what she has said, Grace, and then you +will understand. She says her father has mortgaged the Castle evidently +up to the hilt. The mortgagees will foreclose in a couple of months, +unless money can be found to buy them off. Now, it has just occurred +to me that I might buy Castle O'Shanaghgan for ourselves as a sort of +summer residence, put it in order, and allow Patrick O'Shanaghgan to +live there, and my sister. By and by the place can go to Terence, as +we have no son of our own. I have plenty of money. What do you think of +this suggestion, Grace?" + +"It might not be a bad one," said Mrs. Hartrick; "but I could not +possibly go to a place of that sort unless it were put into proper +repair." + +"It is, I believe, in reality a fine old place, and the grounds are +beautiful," said Mr. Hartrick. "A few thousand pounds would put it into +order, and we could furnish it from Dublin. You could have a great many +guests there, and--" + +"But what about the O'Shanaghgans themselves?" + +"Well, perhaps they would go somewhere else for the couple of months we +should need to occupy the house during the summer. Anyhow, I feel that I +must do something for Ellen's sake; but I will let you know more after I +have been there." + +Mrs. Hartrick asked a few more questions. After a time she said: + +"Is Nora to remain here?" + +"Yes. I was going to speak to you about that. It is a sad pity that so +pretty a girl should grow up wild. We had better keep her with us for +the next two or three years. She will soon tame down and learn our +English habits; then, with her undeniable Irish charm and great beauty, +she will be able to do something with her life." + +"I shall be quite pleased to have her," said Mrs. Hartrick in a cordial +tone. "I like training young girls, and Nora is the sort who would do me +credit if she really were willing to take pains." + +"I am sure she will be; she is an honest little soul." + +"Oh, I see you are bewitched by her." + +"No, not bewitched; but I admire honesty and candor, and the child has +got both." + +"Well, well!" said Mrs. Hartrick, "if it is arranged that Nora is to +stay here, I will go and see Miss Flowers at Linda's and Molly's school +to-morrow, and ask if Nora can be admitted as a pupil. There is no use +in losing time, and she may as well start her lessons next week. By all +means, George, go and do your best for the poor things. Of course your +sister ought not to be allowed to be in money difficulties." + +"I should think not," said Mr. Hartrick. + +The next day Mr. Hartrick bade Nora and his own family good-by, +and started on his expedition to Ireland. Nora was quivering with +impatience. When she had seen the last of him she turned back into the +house, and was there met by her brother Terence. + +"Come here, Nora. I want to speak to you," he said. + +She followed him into the nearest room. He closed the door behind them. + +"May I ask what you have been saying to Uncle George?" + +"You may ask, of course, Terry; but I don't mean to tell you," answered +Nora. + +"It is because of you he is going to Ireland?" + +"It is because of something I have said." + +"How do you think our mother will like it? You know how proud she is; +how all these years she has determined to put a good face on things, and +not to allow her relations in England to know the truth. I have followed +her cue, and have been careful to make the very best of things at Castle +O'Shanaghgan." + +"Oh, it is easy to tell lies," said Nora, with scorn. + +"Nora, you talk in a very silly way, and I often have no patience with +you," answered her brother. "If I have regard to my mother's feelings, +why should you despise me? You are supposed to consider our father's +feelings." + +"That is very different; the whole thing is different," said Nora. She +flushed, bit her lip, and then turned away. + +"You must hear me," said Terence, looking at her with some impatience; +"you must, you shall. You are quite intolerable with your conceit and +your silly, silly Irish ways." + +"Well, go on. What have you to say to me?" + +"That I think you were guilty of dishonor in talking as you did at +dinner last night. You spoke of the place and the poverty in a way which +quite put me to the blush. I hope in future, while you are here, you +will cease to run the O'Shanaghgans down. It is not worthy of you, Nora, +and I am ashamed of you." + +"Run them down--I?" said poor Nora in astonishment. + +"Yes, you." + +She was silent for a moment; she was making a great effort to recover +her equanimity. Was Terence right? Had she done wrong to speak before +her aunt and cousins as she had done? Of course her uncle was different; +it was absolutely necessary that he at least should know the truth. +A distressful sense of dismay at her own impetuosity came over her. +Terence watched her narrowly. He was fond of Nora in his heart of +hearts, and also proud of her; and now that he saw she was really sorry +he went up to her, put his arm round her neck, and kissed her. + +"Never mind, little girl," he said, "you are young. Try to be guided by +me in future, and do not give yourself away. We Irish wear our hearts on +our sleeves, and that sort of thing does not go down in England." + +"Oh, how I hate this cold England!" said the Irish girl, with passion. + +"There you are again, all your feelings expressed too broadly. You will +never endure life if you go on as you have begun, Nora." + +"Terence," said Nora, looking up at him, "when are you going home?" + +"When am I going home? Thank you, I am very comfortable here." + +"Don't you think that just at present, when father is in trouble, his +only son, the heir of O'Shanaghgan, ought to be with him?" + +"Poor old O'Shanaghgan," said the lad, with impatience; "you think that +it comprises the whole of the world. I tell you what it is, Nora, I am +made differently, and I infinitely prefer England. My uncle has been +kind enough to offer me a small post in his business. Did I not tell +you?" + +"No, no; I never knew what my uncle's business was." + +"He is a merchant prince, Nora; an enormously rich man. He owns +warehouses upon warehouses. He has offered me a post in one--a very good +post, and a certain income." + +"And you mean to accept?" said Nora, her eyes flashing fire. + +"Well, I am writing to mother on the subject. I think it would be well +to do so." + +"You, an O'Shanaghgan, will descend to trade?" replied the girl. + +"Oh, folly! folly! Nora, your ideas are really too antiquated." + +Nora did not speak at all for a moment; then she walked toward the door. + +"I cannot understand you," she said. "I am awfully sorry. I was born +different; I was made different. I cannot understand why you should +bring dishonor to the old place." + +"By earning a little money to keep us all from beggary," retorted the +lad in a bitter tone; but Nora did not hear him; she had left the +room. Her eyes were smarting with unshed tears. She went out into the +shrubbery in search of Molly. + +"But for Molly I should break my heart," she thought. + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + + +STEPHANOTIE. + +Mrs. Hartrick made all necessary arrangements, and on the following +Monday Nora accompanied her cousin to school. Molly was much delighted. + +"Now I shall be able to work," she said, "and I won't be guilty of slang +when you are by. Don't whisper it to Linda. She would be in the seventh +heaven of bliss, and I detest pleasing her; but I would do anything in +the world for you, Nora creena." + +Nora gave her cousin's arm an affectionate squeeze. + +"I have never been to school," said Nora; "you must instruct me what I +am to do." + +"Oh, dear, dear!" said Molly, "you won't need instruction; you are as +sharp and smart as any girl could be. You'll be a little puzzled at +first about the different classes, and I'll give you hints about how to +take notes and all that sort of thing. But you will quickly get into the +way of it, and then you'll learn like a house on fire." + +"I wish you two wouldn't whisper together so much," said Linda in an +annoyed voice. "I am going over my French parsing to myself, and you do +interrupt me so." + +"Then walk a little farther away from us," said Molly rudely. + +She turned once more to her cousin. + +"I will introduce you to the very nicest girls in my form," she said. "I +do hope you'll be put into my form, for then in the evenings you and I +can do our work together. I expect you know about as much as I do." + +"But that's just it--I don't," said Nora. "I have not learned a bit in +the school way. I had a governess for a time, but she did not know +a great deal. Of course mother taught me too; but I have not had +advantages. I should not be surprised if I were put into the lowest +form." + +They now arrived at the school, and a few minutes later Nora found +herself in a huge classroom in which about sixty other girls were +assembled. Miss Flowers presently sent a pupil-teacher to ask Miss +O'Shanaghgan to have an interview with her in her private room. + +Miss Flowers was about fifty years of age. She had white hair, calm, +large, well-opened blue eyes, a steadfast mouth, and a gracious and at +the same time dignified manner. She was not exactly beautiful; but she +had the sort of face which most girls respected and which many loved. +Nora looked earnestly at her, and in her wild, impulsive Irish fashion, +gave her heart on the spot. + +"What is your name, my dear?" said the head-mistress kindly. + +Nora told it. + +"You are Irish, Mrs. Hartrick tells me." + +"Yes, Miss Flowers, I have lived all my life in Ireland." + +"I must find out what sort of instruction you have had. Have you ever +been at school before?" + +"Never." + +"How old are you?" + +"Sixteen, Miss Flowers." + +"What things have you been taught?" + +"English subjects of different sorts," replied Nora. "A little +music--oh, I love music, I do love music!--and a little French; and I +can speak Irish," she added, raising her beautiful, dark-blue eyes, and +fixing them on the face of the head-mistress. That winsome face touched +Miss Flowers' heart. + +"I will do what I can for you," she said. "For the present you had +better study alone. At the end of a week or so I shall be able to +determine what form to put you in. Now, go back to the schoolroom and +ask Miss Goring to come to me." + +Miss Goring was the English mistress. Miss Flowers saw her alone for a +minute or two. + +"Do what you can for the Irish girl," she said. "She is a very pretty +creature; she is evidently ignorant; but I think she has plenty of +talent." + +Miss Goring went back, and during the rest of the morning devoted +herself to Nora. Nora had varied and strange acquirements at her +finger's ends. She was up in all sorts of folk lore; she could clothe +her speech in picturesque and striking language. She could repeat +poetry from Sir Walter Scott, from Shakspere, from the old Irish bards +themselves; but her grammar was defective, although her reading aloud +was very pretty and sweet. Her knowledge of history was vague, and might +be best described by the expression, up and down. She knew all about +the Waldenses; she had a vivid picture in her mind's eye of St. +Bartholomew's Eve. The French Revolution appalled and, at the same time, +attracted her. The death of Charles I. drew tears from her eyes; but she +knew nothing whatever of the chronological arrangements of history; and +the youngest girl in the school could have put her to shame with regard +to the Magna Charta. It was just the same with every branch of knowledge +which Nora had even a smattering of. + +At last the great test of all came--could she play or could she not? She +had spoken often of her passionate love for music. Miss Goring took her +into the drawing room, away from the other girls. + +"I am not supposed to be musical," she said, "but I think I know music +when I hear it. If you have talent, you shall have plenty of advantages +here. Now, sit down and play something for me." + +"What! At that piano?" said Nora, her eyes sparkling. Miss Goring had +opened a magnificent Broadwood grand. + +"Yes," she said. "It is rather daring of me to bring you here; but I +want you to have fair play." + +"I never played on a really good piano in my life," said Nora. "May I +venture?" + +"Yes. I do not believe you will injure it." + +"May I play as loud as I like, and as soft as I like?" + +"Certainly. You may play exactly as you please; only play with all your +heart. You will be taught scientific music doubtless; but I want to know +what you can do without education, at present." + +Nora sat down. At first she felt a little shy, and all her surroundings +were so strange, the piano was so big; she touched it with her small, +taper fingers, and it seemed to her that the deep, soft notes were going +to overpower her. Then she looked at Miss Goring and felt uncomfortable; +but she touched the notes again, and she began to forget the room, and +Miss Goring, and the grand piano; and the soul of music stood in +her eyes and touched the tips of her fingers. The music was quite +unclassical, quite unconventional; but it was music--a wild kind of +wailing chant--the notes of the Banshee itself. Nora played on, and the +tears filled her eyes and streamed down her cheeks. + +"Oh, it hurts so!" she said at last, and she looked full up at Miss +Goring. Behold, the cold, gray eyes of the English teacher were also +full of tears. + +"You terrify me," she said. "Where did you hear anything like that?" + +"That is the wail of the Banshee. Shall I play any more?" + +"Nothing more so eerie." + +"Then may I sing for you?" + +"Can you sing?" + +"I was never taught; but I think I can sing." Nora struck a few chords +again. She sang the pathetic words, "She is Far from the Land," and Miss +Goring felt the tears filling her eyes once more. + +"Upon my word!" she said, as she led her pupil back to the schoolroom, +"you can play and you can sing; you have music in you. It would be worth +while to give you good lessons." + +Nora's musical education was now taken up with vigor. Miss Goring +spoke to Miss Flowers about it, and Miss Flowers communicated with Mrs. +Hartrick; and Mrs. Hartrick was extremely pleased to find that she had +a musical genius in her midst, and determined to give that same musical +genius every chance. Accordingly, the very best master in the school +arranged to give Nora lessons, and a mistress of striking ability took +her also in hand. Nora's wild music, the music that came from her heart, +and the song that bubbled from her lips, were absolutely silenced. She +must not sing at will; she must on no account play at will. The dullest +of exercises were given to her for the purpose of molding her fingers, +and the dullest of voice exercises were also given to her for the +purpose of molding her voice. She struggled against the discipline, and +hated it. She was essentially a child of nature, and this first putting +on of the chains of education was the reverse of pleasant. + +"Oh, Molly," she said, "what is the good of singing those hateful, +screaming exercises, and those scales? They are too detestable, and +those little twists and turns. My fingers absolutely feel quite nervous. +What is the use? What is the use?" + +Molly also sighed and said, "What is the use?" But then the musical +mistress and the great master looked at Nora all over when she made +similar remarks, and would not even vouchsafe to answer. + +"Father would never be soothed with that sort of music," she said. "I +think he would be very glad we had not a good piano. Oh, Molly, what +does it all mean?" + +"I don't know," said Molly. "It's like all other education, nothing but +grind, grind; but I suppose something will come of it in the long run." + +"What are you talking about, girls?" said Mrs. Hartrick, who just then +appeared upon the scene. "Nora, I am pleased; to get very good reports +of your music." + +"Oh!" said Nora, "I am glad you have come, Aunt Grace; and I shall be +able to speak to you. Must I learn what takes all the music out of me?" + +"Silly child. There is only one road to a sound musical education, and +that is the road of toil. At present you play by ear, and sing by ear. +You have talent; but it must be cultivated. Just believe that your +elders know what they are about." + +Nora did not say anything. Mrs. Hartrick, after looking at her gravely +for a moment, continued her gentle walk round the shrubbery. Molly +uttered a sigh. + +"There's no good, Nora," she said. "You'll have to go through with it. I +suppose it is the only way; but it's hard to believe it." + +"Well, at any rate, I enjoy other things in my school life," said Nora. +"Miss Goring is so nice, and I quite love Miss Flowers; and, after all, +I am in your form, Molly, and we do like doing our lessons together." + +"To be sure we do; life is quite a different thing for me since you have +come here," was Molly's retort. + +"And you have been very good indeed about your naughty words, you know," +said Nora, nestling up to her cousin. + +"Have I? Well, it's owing to you. You see, now, I have someone to help +me--someone to understand me." + +"Ah!" said Nora; "but I won't be here very long." + +"Not here very long! Why, you must. What is the use of beginning school +and then stopping it?" + +"School or no school, my place is by father's side. It is a long, long +time since we heard from Uncle George. As soon as ever he comes back I +go." + +"Father has been a whole month in Ireland now," said Molly. "I cannot +imagine what he is doing. I think mother fidgets rather. She has very +long letters from him, and----" + +"And, do you know," said Nora, "that father has not written to me +once--no, not once since Uncle George went over? I am absolutely in the +dark." + +"I wonder you stand it," said Molly. "You are so impetuous. I cannot +imagine why you don't fly back." + +"I could not," said Nora. + +"Could not? What is there to hinder you?" + +"I have given my word." + +"Your word? To whom?" + +"To your father. He went to Ireland to please me." + +"Oh, did he? That's exciting," said Molly. "Father went to Ireland to +please a little chit like you. Now, what does this mean?" + +"It means exactly what I have said. He went because I begged him to; +because I explained things to him, and he said he would go. But he made +a condition, and I am bound to stick to my part of it." + +"And that was----How your eyes shine, Nora!" + +"That was, that I am to stay patiently here, and get as English as ever +I can. Oh! I must stick to my part of the bargain." + +"Well, I cannot say you look very happy," said Molly, "although you are +such a favorite at the school. If I was not very fond of you myself I +should be jealous. If I had a friend whom I really worshiped, before you +appeared on the scene, it was Stephanotie Miller, the American girl." + +"Oh, isn't she charming?" said Nora. "She makes me laugh. I am sure she +has Irish blood in her." + +"Not a bit of it; she's a Yankee of the Yankees." + +"Well, she has been sent to school to get tame, just as I have been," +said Nora; "but I don't want you to lose her friendship. After all, +I care very little for anyone in the school but you, Molly; only +Stephanotie makes me laugh." + +"We'll have her to tea tomorrow. I'll run in now and ask mother. I +shan't mind a bit if you are not going quite to take her from me. After +all, she can be friends with both of us. I'll run into the house this +moment, and ask mother if we may have Stephanotie to tea." + +Molly rushed into the house. Her mother was seated in the morning room, +busily writing. + +"Well, my dear, well?" she said. "I hear you--you need not bang the +door. What is it, Molly?" + +"Oh, mother! do look up and listen." + +Mrs. Hartrick raised her head slowly. + +"Yes, dear?" she said. + +"I have behaved a great deal better lately--have I not, mother?" + +"You certainly have, Molly; and I am pleased with you. If you would +restrain some of your impetuosity, I should be glad to tell you how +pleased I am." + +"It is all owing to Nora." + +"To Nora, my dear! Nora is as wild as you are." + +"All the same, it is owing to Nora; and she is not as wild as I am. I +mean that I have been downright vulgar; but if you think there is one +trace of that in little Nora, it is because you do not know her a bit." + +"What is your special request, Molly? I am very busy just now, and +cannot discuss your cousin's character. You have improved, and I am +pleased with you." + +"Then, if you are pleased with me, mother, will you do me a favor?" + +"What is that?" + +"Stephanotie Miller has never been at our house." + +"Stephanotie Miller. What an outlandish name! Who is she?" + +"She is a dear, jolly, sweet, handsome American girl. She came to school +last term, and she is in the same form with Nora and me; and we both +adore her, yes we do. Whatever she does, and whatever she says, we think +simply perfection; and we want to ask her here. She is staying with a +rather tiresome aunt, in a little house in the village, and she has come +over to be Englishized. May she have tea with us tomorrow?" + +"I will inquire about her from Miss Flowers; and if she seems to be a +nice girl I shall have no objection." + +"But we want her to come tomorrow," said Molly. "It is Saturday, you +know, and a whole holiday. We thought she might come to lunch, or, if +you objected to that, immediately after lunch." + +"And what about Linda? Does Linda like her?" + +"Holy Moses, no!" said Molly. + +"Molly!" + +"Oh, mother! do forgive me, and don't say she mustn't come because I +said 'Holy Moses.' It's all Linda; she excites the vulgar in me always. +But may Stephie come, mother? You are always having Linda's friends +here." + +"I will not be reproved by you, Molly." + +"But, please, dear mother, let her come. Nora and I want her so badly." + +"Well, dear, I will try and see Miss Flowers tomorrow morning." + +"Won't you judge of her for yourself, mother? There never was a better +judge than you are." + +This judicious flattery had its effect on Mrs. Hartrick, She sat quite +still for a moment, pondering. After all, to be a pupil at Mrs. Flowers' +school was in itself a certificate of respectability, and Molly had been +very good lately--that is, for her; and if she and Nora wanted a special +friend to spend the afternoon with them, it would be possible for Mrs. +Hartrick quickly to decide whether the invitation was to be repeated. + +"Very well," she said, looking at her daughter, "for this once you may +have her; and as you have wisely expressed it, Molly, I can judge for +myself." + +"Oh, thank you, thank you, mother!" + +Molly rushed out of the room. She was flying headlong down the passage, +when she came plump up against Linda. + +"Now, what is up?" said that young person. "Really, Molly!" + +"Oh, hurrah! I have won my way for once," said Molly. "Stephanotie is +coming tomorrow to spend the whole afternoon." + +"Stephanotie--that horrid Yankee?" said Linda. + +"Horrid Yankee yourself!" was Molly's vulgar retort. + +"But she cannot come. I have asked Mabel and Rose Armitage, and you know +they cannot stand Stephanotie." + +"Well, you, and your Mabel and Rose, can keep away from +Stephanotie--that's all," said Molly. "Anyhow, she is coming. Don't keep +me. I must tell Nora." + +Linda made way for her sister to fly past her, as she afterward +expressed it, like a whirlwind. She stood still for a moment in deep +consideration. Stephanotie was a daring, bright, go-ahead young person, +and had she ever taken, in the very least, to Linda, Linda would have +worshiped her. Stephanotie was extremely rich, and the bouquets she +brought to school, and the bon-bons she kept in her pocket, and the +pretty trinkets she wore, and the dresses she exhibited had fascinated +Linda more than once. For, rich as the Hartricks were, Mrs. Hartrick +had far too good taste to allow her daughters more pocket-money, or more +trinkets, or more bon-bons than their companions. Linda, in her heart +of hearts, had greatly rebelled against her mother's rule in this +particular, and had envied Stephanotie what she called her free life. +But Stephanotie had never taken to Linda, and she had taken to Molly, +and still more had she taken to Nora; and, in consequence, Linda +pretended to hate her, and whenever she had an opportunity used to run +her down. + +Linda and her friends, Rose and Mabel Armitage, with several other +girls, formed quite a clique in the school against Stephanotie and what +she termed her "set"; and now to think that this very objectionable +American girl was to spend the next day at The Laurels because Molly, +forsooth! wished it, was quite intolerable. + +Linda thought for a moment, then went into the room where her mother was +busy writing. Mrs. Hartrick had just finished her letter. She looked up +when Linda approached. + +"Well, darling?" she said. Mrs. Hartrick was very fond of Linda, and +petted her a great deal more than Molly. + +"Oh, mother! I am vexed," said Linda. "Is it quite settled?" + +"Is what settled, my dear?" + +"Is it quite settled that Stephanotie is to come to-morrow?" + +"By the way, I was going to ask you about her, Linda. What sort of girl +is she?" + +"I do not wish to say anything against my schoolfellows, mother; but if +you could only see her--" + +Mrs. Hartrick raised her eyebrows in alarm. + +"Molly has taken so violently to her," she answered, "and so has Nora; +and I thought that just for once--" + +"So you have given leave, mother?" + +"Yes; I have." + +"And my friends are coming--those two charming girls, the Armitages." + +"Yes, dear; I greatly admire both the Armitage girls. I am glad they are +coming; but why should not Miss Miller come also?" + +"Only, she is not in their 'set,' mother--that is all. I wish--I do wish +you would ask her to postpone her visit. If she must come, let her come +another Saturday." + + +"I will think about it," said Mrs. Hartrick. "I have certainly promised +and----But I will think about it." + +Linda saw that she could not press her mother any further. She went away +in great disquietude. + +"What is to be done?" she thought. "If only mother would speak to Molly +at once; but Molly is so impetuous; and once Stephanotie is asked, there +will be no getting out of it. She is just the sort of girl to tell that +unpleasant story about me, too. If mother knew that, why, I should at +last be in her black books. Well, whatever happens, Stephanotie must not +be asked to spend the afternoon here to-morrow. I must somehow contrive +to put some obstacle in the way." + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + + +THE ROSE-COLORED DRESS. + +Meanwhile Molly rushed off to Nora. "Linda means mischief, and I must +put my foot down immediately," she said. + +"Why, Molly, what is up?" + +"Put on your hat, darling, and come with me as fast as ever you can." + +"Where to?" + +"Mother has given in about Stephanotie. Linda will put her finger in the +pie if she possibly can. I mean Stephanotie to get her invitation within +the next five minutes. Now, then, come along, Nora. Do be quick." + +Mrs. Hartrick never allowed the girls to go out except very neatly +dressed; but on this occasion they were seen tearing down the road with +their garden hats on and minus their gloves. Had anyone from The Laurels +observed them, good-by to Molly's liberty for many a long day. No one +did, however. Linda during the critical moment was closeted with her +mother. When she reappeared the girls were halfway to the village. They +reached it in good time, and arrived at the house of Miss Truefitt, +Stephanotie's aunt. + +Miss Truefitt was an old-fashioned and precise little lady. She had +gone through a great deal of trouble since the arrival of her niece, and +often, as she expressed it, did not know whether she stood on her head +or her heels; but she was fond of Stephanotie, who, notwithstanding her +wild ways, was very affectionate and very taking. And now, when she saw +Molly and Nora appearing, she herself entered the hall and opened the +door for them. + +"Well, my dears," she said, "Stephie is in her bedroom; she has a +headache, and wanted to lie down for a little." + +"Oh, just let me run up to her. I won't keep her a minute," said Molly. + +"Come in here with me," said Miss Truefitt to Nora. She opened the +door of her neat little parlor. Nora entered. The room was full of gay +pictures and gay books, and scattered here and there were very large +boxes of bon-bons. + +"How she can eat them all is what puzzles me," said Miss Truefitt; +"she seems to live on them. The quantity she demolishes would wreck the +health of any English girl. Ah, here comes Molly." + +But Molly did not come downstairs alone; the American girl was with her. +Stephanotie rushed into the room. + +"I am going to The Laurels to-morrow, auntie. I am going quite early; +this dear old Molly has asked me. You guess I'll have a good time. There +will be a box of bon-bons for Nora, sweet little Irish Nora; and a box +for dear little Molly, a true native of England, and a fine specimen to +boot. Oh, we shall have a nice time; and I am so glad I am asked!" + +"It is very kind of Mrs. Hartrick to send you an invitation, Stephie," +said her aunt. + +"Oh, bother that, Aunt Violet! You know perfectly well she would not ask +me if Molly and Nora had not got it out of her." + +"Well, we did try our best and most conoodling ways," said Nora in a +soft voice. + +"Ah, didn't you, you little Irish witch; and I guess you won, too. Well, +I'm going; we'll have a jolly lark with Linda. If for no other reason, I +should be glad to go to upset her apple cart." + +"Dear me, Stephie! you are very coarse and vulgar," said Miss Truefitt. + +"Not a bit of it, auntie. Have a bon-bon, do." Stephanotie rushed across +the room, opened a big box of bon-bons, and presented one, as if it were +a pistol, full in Miss Truefitt's face. + +"Oh, no, thank you, my dear!" said that lady, backing; "the indigestion +I have already got owing to the way you have forced your bon-bons upon +me has almost wrecked my health. I have lost all appetite. Dear me, +Stephie! I wish you would not be so dreadfully American." + +"The process of Englishizing me is a slow one," said Stephanotie. She +turned, walked up to the glass, and surveyed herself. She was dressed in +rich brown velveteen, made to fit her lissome figure. Her hair was of +an almost fiery red, and surrounded her face like a halo; her eyes were +very bright china-blue, and she had a dazzlingly fair complexion. There +were people who thought Stephanotie pretty; there were others who did +not admire her at all. She had a go-ahead, very independent manner, and +was the sort of girl who would be idolized by the weaker members of the +school. Molly, however, was by no means a weak member of the school, +nor, for that matter, was Nora, and they both took great pleasure out of +Stephanotie. + +"My bark is worse than my bite," said that young person. "I am something +like you, Molly. I am a bit of a scorcher; but there, when I am trained +in properly I'll be one of the best of good creatures." + +"Well, you are booked for to-morrow now," said Molly; "and Jehoshaphat! +if you don't come in time--" + +"Oh, Molly!" whispered Nora. + +"There, I won't say it again." + +Poor Miss Truefitt looked much shocked. Molly and Nora bade her good-by, +and nodded to Stephanotie, who stood upon the doorstep and watched them +down the street; then she returned to her aunt. + +"I did think," said Miss Truefitt slowly, "that the girls belonging to +your school were ladylike; but to come here without gloves, and that +eldest girl, Miss Hartrick, to use such a shocking expression." + +"Oh, bless you, Aunt Vi! it's nothing to the expressions she uses at +school. She's a perfect horror of a girl, and I like her for that very +reason. It is that horrid little Linda would please you; and I must say +I am sorry for your taste." + +Stephanotie went upstairs to arrange her wardrobe for the next day. +She had long wished to visit Molly's home. The Laurels was one of +the prettiest places in the neighborhood, and Molly and Linda were +considered as among the smartest girls at the school. Stephanotie wished +to be hand-and-glove with Molly, not because she was supposed to be +rich, or respectable, or anything else, but simply because her nature +fitted to that of the wild, enthusiastic American girl. But, all the +same, now that she had got the _entrée_, as she expressed it, of the +Hartricks' home, she intended to make a sensation. + + "When I do the thing I may as well do it properly," she said to +herself. "I will make them open their eyes. I have watched Mrs. Hartrick +in church; and, oh dear me! have not I longed to give her a poke in the +back. And as to Linda, she thinks a great deal of her dress. She +does not know what mine will be when I take out my very best and most +fascinating gown." + +Accordingly Stephanotie rifled her trunk, and from its depths she +produced a robe which would, as she said, make the members of The +Laurels sit up. It was made of rose-colored silk, and trimmed with +quantities of cream lace. The skirt had many little flounces on it, and +each was edged with lace. The bodice was cut rather low in the neck, and +the sleeves did not come down anything like as far as the wrists. The +rose-colored silk with its cream lace trimmings was altogether the sort +of dress which might be worn in the evening; but daring Stephanotie +intended to appear in it in the morning. She would encircle her waist +with a cream-colored sash, very broad, and with much lace upon it; and +would wear many-colored beads round her neck, and many bracelets on her +arms. + +"The whole will have a stylish effect, and will at any rate distinguish +me from everyone else," was her inward comment. She shook out the dress, +and then rang the bell. One of the servants appeared. + +"I want to have this robe ironed and made as presentable as possible," +said Stephanotie; "see you have it all done and put in my wardrobe ready +for wear tonight. I guess it will fetch 'em," she added, and then she +rushed like a whirlwind into the presence of Miss Truefitt. + +"Auntie," she said, "would you like to see me done up in style?" + +"I don't know, I am sure, my dear," said Miss Truefitt, looking at her +with nervous eyes. + +"Oh, dear, Aunt Vi! if you were to see mother now you wouldn't know her; +she is wonderfully addicted to the pleasures of the toilet. There is +nothing so fascinating as the pleasures of the toilet when once you +yield to its charms. She rigged me up pretty smart before I left New +York, and I am going to wear my rose-colored silk with the cream lace +to-morrow." + +"But you are not going to an evening party, my dear." + +"No; but I shall stay all the evening, and I know I'll look killing. The +dress suits me down to the ground. It is one of my fads always to be in +something red; it seems to harmonize with my hair." + +Miss Truefitt uttered a deep sigh. + +"What are you sighing for, Aunt Vi?" + +"Nothing, dear; only please don't offer me a bon-bon. The mere sight of +those boxes gives me a feeling of nausea." + +"But you have not tried the crystallized figs," cried Stephanotie; "they +are wonderfully good; and if you feel nausea a peppermint-drop will set +you right. I have a kind of peppermint chocolate in this box which is +extremely stimulating to the digestive organs." + +"No, no, Stephie. I beg--I really do beg that you will take all the +obnoxious boxes out of the room." + +"Very well, auntie; but you'll come up to-morrow to see me in my dress?" + +The next day was Saturday, a holiday of course. Stephanotie had put her +hair into Hinde's curlers the night before, and, in consequence, it was +a perfect mass of frizzle and fluff the next morning. Miss Truefitt, +who wore her own neat gray locks plainly banded round her head, gave a +shudder when she first caught sight of Stephanotie. + +"I was thinking, dear, during the night," she said, "of your pink silk +dress, and I should very much prefer you to wear the gray cashmere +trimmed with the neat velvet at the cuffs and collar. It would tone down +your--" + +"Oh, don't say it," said Stephanotie; "my hair is a perfect glory this +morning. Come yourself and look at it--here; stand just here; the sun is +shining full on me. Everyone will have to look twice at me with a head +like this." + +"Indeed, that is true," said Miss Truefitt; "and perhaps three times; +and not approve of you then." + +"Oh, come, auntie, you don't know how bewitching I look when I am got up +in all my finery." + +"She is hopelessly vulgar," thought poor Miss Truefitt to herself; "and +I always supposed Agnes would have such a nice, proper girl, such as she +was herself in the old days; but that last photograph of Agnes shows +a decided falling off. How truly glad I am that I was never induced to +marry an American! I would rather have my neat, precise little house and +a small income than go about like a figure of fun. That poor child will +never be made English; it is a hopeless task. The sooner she goes back +to America the better." + +Meanwhile Stephanotie wandered about the house, thinking over and over +of the happy moment when she would appear at The Laurels. She thought +it best to put on her rose-colored dress in time for early dinner. +It fitted her well, but was scarcely the best accompaniment to her +fiery-red hair. + +"Oh, lor', miss!" said Maria, the servant, when she first caught sight +of Stephanotie. + +"You may well say, 'Oh, lor'!' Maria," replied Stephanotie, "although it +is not a very pretty expression. But have a bon-bon; I don't mean to be +cross." + +She whirled across the room, snatched hold of one of her boxes of +bon-bons, and presented it to Maria. Maria was not averse to a chocolate +peppermint, and popped one into her mouth. The next instant Miss +Truefitt appeared. "Now, Stephanotie," she said, "do you think for a +single moment--Oh, my dear child, you really are too awful! You don't +mean to say you are going to The Laurels like that?" + +"Have a bon-bon?" was Stephanotie's response. + +"You are downright rude. I will not allow you to offer me bon-bons +again." + +"But a fresh box of them has just arrived. I got them by the eleven +o'clock post to-day," was Stephanotie's reckless answer; "and, oh, such +beauties! And I had a letter from mother to say that I might order as +many as ever I liked from Fuller's. I mean to write to them to ask them +to send me ten shillings' worth. I'll ask for the newest varieties. +There surely must be bon-bons which would not give you indigestion, Aunt +Vi." + +"I must ask you to take off that dress, Stephanotie. I forbid you to go +to The Laurels in such unsuitable attire." + +"Oh, lor'! and it's lovely!" said Maria, _sotto voce_, as she was +leaving the room. + +"What an unpleasant smell of peppermint!" said Miss Truefitt, sniffing +at that moment. "You know, Stephanotie, how I have begged of you not to +eat those unpleasant sweets in the dining room." + +"I didn't," said Stephanotie; "it was only Maria." + +Maria backed out of the room with another violent "Oh, lor'!" and ran +down to the kitchen. + +"I'll have to give notice," she said. "It's Miss Stephanotie; she's the +most dazzlingly brilliant young lady I ever set eyes on; but mistress +will never forgive me for eating that peppermint in her presence." + +"Rinse the mouth out, and take no notice," was the cook's somewhat +heartless rejoinder. "How do you say she was dressed, Maria?" + +"Pink, the color of a rose, and that ravishing with lace. I never see'd +such a dress," said Maria. "She's the most beautiful young lady and the +queerest I ever set eyes on." + +Stephanotie and her aunt were having a battle upstairs, and in the end +the elder lady won. Stephanotie was obliged to take off the unsuitable +dress and put on the gray cashmere. As subsequent events proved, it was +lucky for her that she did do so. + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + + +LETTERS. + +By the post on the following morning there came two letters for Nora. +She hailed them with a cry of delight. + +"At last!" she said. + +Mrs. Hartrick was not in the room; she had a headache, and did not get +up to breakfast. Terence had already started for town. He had secured +the post he desired in his uncle's office, and thought himself a very +great man of business. Linda did not count for anything. + +Nora flung herself into an easy-chair, and opened the first of her +letters. It was from her mother. She was soon lost in its contents. + +"MY DEAR NORA [wrote Mrs. O'Shanaghgan]: Be prepared for very great, +startling, and at the same time gratifying, news. Your dear Uncle +George, who has been spending the last three weeks with us, has made +an arrangement which lifts us, my dear daughter, out of all pecuniary +embarrassments. I will tell you as briefly as possible what has taken +place. He had a consultation with your father, and induced him, at my +suggestion, to unburden his mind to him. You know the Squire's ways. +He pooh-poohed the subject and fought shy of it; but at last I myself +brought him to task, and the whole terrible and disgraceful state of +things was revealed. My dear Nora, my dear little girl, we were, it +appears, on the brink of bankruptcy. In a couple of months O'Shanaghgan +would no longer have been ours. + +I cannot say that I should ever have regretted leaving this ramshackle +and much-dilapidated place, but of course I should have shrunk from the +disgrace, the exposure, the feeling that I was the cynosure of all eyes. +That, indeed, would have cut me to the quick. Had your father consented +to sell O'Shanaghgan and live in England, it would have been a moment +of great rejoicing for me; but the place to be sold up over his head +was quite a different matter. This, my dear Nora, seems to have been the +position of affairs when your dear uncle, like a good providence or a +guardian angel, appeared on the scene. Your uncle, my dearest Nora, is +a very rich man. My dear brother has been careful with regard to money +matters all his life, and is now in possession of a very large supply +of this world's goods. Your dear uncle was good enough to come to the +rescue, and has bought O'Shanaghgan from the man to whom your father +owed the mortgage. O'Shanaghgan now belongs to your Uncle George." + +"Never!" cried Nora, springing to her feet. + +"What is the matter, Nora?" said Linda. + +"Don't talk to me for the present, or I'll say something you won't like +to hear," replied Nora. + +"Really, I must say you are copying Molly in your manner." + +"Don't speak to me," said Nora. Her face was crimson; she had never felt +such a wild, surging sense of passion in the whole of her existence. +Linda's calm gray eyes were upon her, however. She managed to suppress +any more emotion, saw that her cousin was burning with curiosity, and +continued the letter. + +"Although, my dearest Nora, Castle O'Shanaghgan now belongs to your +Uncle George, don't suppose for a single moment that he is going to be +unkind to us. Far from it. To all appearance the place is still ours; +but with, oh! such a difference. Your father is still, in the eyes of +the tenants and of the country round, the owner of Castle O'Shanaghgan; +but, after consulting with me, your Uncle George felt that he must not +have the reins. His Irish nature, my dear--But I need not discuss that. +You know as well as I do how reckless and improvident he is." + +"Oh, mother!" gasped Nora. She clenched her little white teeth, and +had great difficulty in proceeding with her letter. Linda's curiosity, +however, acted as a restorative, and she went on with her mother's +lengthy epistle. + +"All things are now changed, and I may as well say that a glorious era +has begun. Castle O'Shanaghgan is now your uncle's property, and it will +soon be a place to be proud of. He is having it refurnished from attic +to cellar; carpets, curtains, mirrors, furniture of all sorts have +already begun to arrive from one of the most fashionable shops in +Dublin. Gardeners have been got to put the gardens to rights, the weeds +have been removed from the avenue, the grass has been cut, the lawns +have been mown; the whole place looks already as if it had undergone a +resurrection. My bedroom, dear Nora, is now a place suitable for your +mother to sleep in; the bare boards are covered with a thick Brussels +carpet. The Axminster stair carpets arrived yesterday. In the dining +room is one of the most magnificent Turkey carpets I have ever seen; +and your uncle has insisted on having the edge of the floor laid with +parquetry. Will you believe me, Nora?--your father has objected to +the sound of the hammering which the workmen make in putting in the +different pieces of wood. You can scarcely believe it possible; but I +state a fact. The stables are being filled with suitable horses; +and with regard to that I am glad to say your father does take some +interest. A victoria has arrived for me, and a pony-trap for you, dear; +for it seems your Uncle George has taken a great fancy to you, my little +Nora. Well, dear, all this resurrection, this wonderful restoration of +Castle O'Shanaghgan has occurred during your absence. You will come back +to a sort of fairyland; but it is one of your uncle's stipulations +that you do not come back at present; and, of course, for such a fairy +godfather, such a magician, no promise is too great to give. So I have +told him, dear Nora, that you will live with your kind and noble Aunt +Grace, and with your charming cousin Linda, and your cousin Molly--about +whom I do not hear so much--as long as he wishes you to do so. You will +receive the best of educations, and come back at Christmas to a suitable +home. You must have patience until then. It is your uncle's proposal +that at Christmas-time you and your cousins also come to O'Shanaghgan, +and that we shall have a right good old-fashioned Christmas in this +place, which at last is beautiful and worthy of your ancient house. You +must submit patiently, therefore, dear Nora, to remaining in England. +You will probably spend the greater portion of your time there for the +next few years, until you are really accomplished. But the holidays you, +with your dear cousins and your uncle and aunt, will always spend at +O'Shanaghgan. You must understand, dear, that the house really belongs +to your uncle; the place is his, and we are simply his tenants, from +whom he nobly asks no rent. How proud I am of my dear brother, and how I +rejoice in this glorious change!--Your affectionate mother, + +"ELLEN O'SHANAGHGAN.". + +The letter dropped from Nora's fingers. + +"And was it I who effected all this?" she said to herself. "And I +thought I was doing good." + +The other letter lay unopened on her lap. She took it up with trembling +hands, and broke the seal. It was a short letter compared to her +mother's, but it was in the handwriting she loved best on earth. + +"LIGHT O' THE MORNING [it began]: Why, then, my darling, it's done--it +is all over. The place is mine no longer; it belongs to the English. To +think I, O'Shanaghgan of Castle O'Shanaghgan, should live to write the +words. Your mother put it to me, and I could not refuse her; but, oh, +Nora asthore, heart of my life, I can scarcely bear to live here now. +What with the carpets and the curtains, and the fuss and the misery, and +the whole place being turned into a sort of furniture-shop, it is past +bearing. I keep out most of my time in the woods, and I won't deny +to you, my dearest child, that I have shed some bitter tears over +the change in O'Shanaghgan; for the place isn't what it was, and it's +heart-breaking to behold it. But your mother is pleased, and that's one +comfort. I always did all I could for her; and when she smiles at me and +looks like the sun--she is a remarkably handsome woman, Nora--I try to +take a bit of comfort. But I stumble over the carpets and the mats, and +your mother is always saying, 'Patrick, take care where you are going, +and don't let the dogs come in to spoil the new carpets.' And the +English servants that we have now taken are past bearing; and it's just +as if I were in chains, and I would almost as lief the place had been +sold right away from me as see it in its changed condition. I can add no +more now, my child, except to say that, as I am under great and bitter +obligations to your Uncle George, + +I must agree to his request that you stay in England for the present; +but Christmas is coming, and then I'll clasp you in my arms, and I'll +have a grain of comfort again.--Your sorrowful old father, + +PATRICK O'SHANAGHGAN." + +Nora's cheeks flushed brighter than ever as she read these two letters. +The first had cut her to the heart; the second had caused that desire +for weeping which unless it is yielded to amounts to torture. + +Oh! if Linda would not stay in the room. Oh! if she might crouch away +where she, too, could shed tears over the changed Castle O'Shanaghgan. +For what did she and her father want with a furniture-shop? Must she, +for all the rest of her days, live in a sort of feather-bed house? Must +the bareness, the space, the sense of expansion, be hers no more? She +was half a savage, and her silken fetters were tortures to her. + +"It will kill him," she murmured. She said the words aloud. + +"What will kill him? What is wrong? Do, please, tell me," said Linda. + +Nora looked at her with flashing eyes. + +"How bright your cheeks are, Nora, and how your eyes shine! But you look +very, very angry. What can be the matter?" + +"Matter? There is plenty the matter. I cannot tell you now," said Nora. + +"Then I'll go up and ask mother; perhaps she will tell me. It has +something to do with that old place of yours, I have not the slightest +doubt. Mother has got a very long letter from Ireland; she will tell me +perhaps." + +"Yes, go; and don't come back again," said Nora, almost rudely. + +"She gets worse and worse," thought Linda as she slowly mounted the +stairs. "Nora is anything but a pleasure in the house. At first when she +came she was not quite so bad; she had a pretty face, and her manners +had not been coarsened from contamination with Molly. Now she is much +changed. Yes, I'll go to mother and talk to her. What an awful afternoon +we are likely to have with that American girl here and Nora changing for +the worse hour by hour." + +Linda knocked at her mother's door. Mrs. Hartrick was not well, and was +sitting up in bed reading her letters. + +"My head is better, Linda," she said. "I shall get up presently. What is +it, darling?" + +"It is only the usual thing," said Linda, with a deep sigh. "I am always +being rubbed the wrong way, and I don't like it." + +"So it seems, my pet. But how nicely you have done your hair this +morning! How very neat and ladylike you are becoming, Linda! You are a +great comfort to me, dear." + +"Thank you, mother; I try to please you," said Linda. She seated herself +on her mother's bed, suppressed a sigh, then said eagerly: + +"Nora is awfully put out. Is there bad news from that wild place, Castle +O'Shanaghgan?" + +"Bad news?" cried Mrs. Hartrick. "Has the child had letters?" + +"Yes, two; she had been reading them instead of eating her breakfast, +and the sighs and the groans, and the flashing eyes and the clenched +teeth, and the jumping to her feet and the flopping herself down again +have been past bearing. She won't let out anything except that she is +downright miserable, and that it is a burning shame." + +"What can she mean, mother? Is the old place sold? I always expected they +were terribly poor." + +"The best, most splendid news," said Mrs. Hartrick. "My dear Linda, you +must be mistaken. Your father says that he has given your aunt and +uncle leave to tell Nora everything. I thought the child would be in the +seventh heaven of bliss; in fact, I was almost dreading her arrival on +the scene, she is so impetuous." + +"Well, mother, she is not in any seventh heaven of bliss," replied +Linda; "so perhaps they have not told her. But what is it, mother dear? +Do tell me." + +"It is this, darling--your father has bought Castle O'Shanaghgan." + +"Oh! and given it to the O'Shanaghgans. Why did he do that?" + +"He has bought it, but he has not given it to the O'Shanaghgans. Some +day, if Terence turns out worthy, the old place will doubtless be +his, as we have no son of our own; but at present it is your father's +property; he has bought it." + +"Then no wonder poor Nora is sad," said Linda. "I can understand her; +she is fond of the old place." + +"But why should she be sad? They are not going; they are to stay there, +practically owners of all they possess; for, although the property +is really your father's, he will only exercise sufficient control to +prevent that poor, wild, eccentric uncle of yours from throwing good +money after bad. To all intents and purposes the O'Shanaghgans still +hold possession; only now, my dear Linda, they will have a beautiful +house, magnificently furnished. The grounds are carefully attended to, +good gardeners provided, English servants sent for, and the whole place +made suitable for your father's sister." + +"But does Nora know of this?" + +"I suppose so. I know your father said she was to be told." + +"She is very miserable about something. I cannot understand her," said +Linda. "I tell you what, I'll just go down and tell her. Perhaps those +two letters were nothing but grumbles; and the O'Shanaghgans did not +know then the happiness that was in store for them." + +"You can tell her if you like, dear." + +"I will, I will," said Linda. She jumped off her mother's bed and ran +downstairs. + +Nora was standing in the conservatory. She was gazing straight before +her, not at the great, tall, flowering cactus nor the orchids, nor +the mass of geraniums and pelargoniums of every shade and hue--she was +seeing a picture of a wild, wild lonely place, of a bare old house, of +a seashore that was like no other seashore in the world. She was looking +at this picture with all the heart of which she was capable shining in +her eyes; and she knew that she was looking at it in imagination only, +and that she would never see the real picture again, for the wild old +place was wild no longer, and in Nora's opinion the glory had departed. +She turned when Linda's somewhat mincing voice fell upon her ears. + +"How you startled me!" she said. "What is it?" + +"Oh, good news," said Linda. "I am not quite so bad as you think +me, Nora, and I am delighted. Mother has told me everything. Castle +O'Shanaghgan is yours to live in as long as ever you care to do so. Of +course it belongs to us; but that does not matter, and it is furnished +from attic to cellar most splendidly, and there are English servants, +and there are--" + +"Everything abominable and odious and horrible!" burst from Nora's +lips. "Oh, don't keep me; don't keep me! I am smothered at the +thought--O'Shanaghgan is ruined--ruined!" + +She ran away from her cousin out into the air. At headlong speed did +she go, until at last she found herself in the most remote and least +cultivated part of the plantation. + +Oh, to be alone! Now she could cry, and cry she did right bitterly. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + + +THE BOX OF BON-BONS. + +It occurred to Stephanotie that, as she could not wear the rose-colored +dress, as she must go perforce to the Hartricks' in her dove-colored +cashmere, with its very neat velvet collar and cuffs, she would at least +make her entrance a little striking. + +"Why not take a box of bon-bons to Mrs. Hartrick?" she said to herself. +"There's that great big new box which I have not opened yet It contains +dozens of every kind of sweetmeat. I'll present it to her; she'll be +pleased with the attention." + +The box was a very large one; on its lid was painted a picture of two or +three cupids hovering in the air, some of them touching the shoulders of +a pretty girl who was supposed to be opening a box of chocolates. There +was a good deal of color and embossed writing also on the cover, and +altogether it was as showy and, in Stephanotie's opinion, as handsome a +thing as anybody could desire. + +She walked through the village, holding the box, tied with great bunches +of red ribbon, in her hand. She scorned to put a brown-paper cover +over it; she would take it in all its naked glory into the midst of the +Hartrick household. + +On her way she met the other two girls who were also going to spend an +afternoon at The Laurels. Rose and Mabel Armitage were the daughters of +a neighbouring squire. They were nice girls, but conventional. + +There was nothing original about either of them; but they were very +much respected in the school, not only on account of their father's +position--he represented the county in the House--but also because they +were good, industrious, and so-called clever. The Armitages took prizes +at every examination. Their French was considered very nearly Parisian +in accent; their drawings were all in absolutely perfect proportions. +It is true the trees in Rose's landscapes looked a little stiff; but how +carefully she laid on her water-colors; how honestly she endeavored to +copy her master's smallest requirements! Then Mabel played with great +correctness, never for a single moment allowing a wrong note to appear; +and they both sang, very prettily, simple little ballads; and they were +dressed with exquisite neatness and propriety in very quiet colors--dark +blues, very dark reds, pretty, neat blouses, suitable skirts. Their hair +was shiny, and sat in little tight tendrils and pretty curls round their +heads. They were as like as two peas--each girl had a prim little mouth +with rosy lips; each girl possessed an immaculate set of white teeth; +each girl had a little, straight nose and pretty, clear gray-blue eyes; +their foreheads were low, their eyebrows penciled and delicately marked. +They had neat little figures; they were neat in every way, neat in soul +too; admirable little people, but commonplace. And, just because they +were commonplace, they did not like fiery-red-haired Stephanotie; they +thought Molly the essence of vulgarity; they secretly admired beautiful +Nora, but thought her manners and style of conversation deplorable; and +they adored Linda as a kindred spirit. + +Seeing them walking on in advance, like a little pair of doves, +Stephanotie quickened her steps until she came up to them. + +"Hallo!" she said; "you guess where I'm off to?" + +"I am sure I cannot say," answered Rose, turning gently round. + +Mabel was always Rose's echo. + +"I cannot say," she repeated. + +"Well, I can guess where you're going. You're going to have a right down +good time at The Laurels--guess I'm right?" + +"We are going to spend an afternoon at The Laurels," said Rose. + +"An afternoon at The Laurels," echoed Mabel. + +"And so am I--that's the best of the fun," said Stephanotie; "and I mean +to give her something to remember me by." + +"Whom do you mean?" said Rose. + +"Why, my good, respected hostess, Mrs. Hartrick." + +"What do you mean to give her?" asked Rose. + +"This. How do you like it? It's full of bon-bons." + +Rose, notwithstanding her virtuous and commonplace mind, had a secret +leaning toward bon-bons. She did not dare to confess it even to Mabel; +for Mabel also had a secret leaning, and did not dare to confess it to +Rose. It was not _comme il faut_ in their family for the girls of the +house to indulge in bon-bons; but still, they would have liked some of +those delicious sweets, and had often envied Stephanotie when she was +showing them to her companions. + +Of course, not for worlds would they have been friendly with the +terrible American girl; but they did envy her her boxes of sweets. + +"How gay!" said Rose, looking at the startling cover, with its cupids +and its greedy-looking maiden. + +"How jolly," said the American girl--"how luscious when you're eating +them! Would you like to see them inside?" + +"Oh, I think not," said Rose. + +"Better not," said Mabel. + +"But why better not?" continued Stephanotie. "It's natural that girls +like us should like sweetmeats, bon-bons, or anything of that sort. +Here, there's a nice little bit of shelter under this tree, and there's +no one looking. I'll untie the ribbons; just hold the box, Rose." + +Rose held it. Stephanotie hastily pulled off the red ribbons and lifted +the cover. Oh, how delicious the inside did look!--rows upon rows of +every imaginable sweet--cream-colored sweets, rose-colored, green, +white; plums, apples, pears, figs, chocolates; every sort that the heart +of girl could desire lay before them in rows on rows. + +"They are, every one of them, for Mrs. Hartrick," said Stephanotie, "and +you mustn't touch them. But I have got two boxes in my pocket; they make +it bulge out; I should be glad to get rid of them. We'll tie this up, +but you'll each have one of my boxes." + +In a jiffy the big box was tied up again with its huge crimson bows, and +each of the Armitage girls possessed one of the American girl's boxes of +bon-bons. + +"Aren't they pretty? Do have some; you don't know how long you may be +kept waiting for your tea," said Stephanotie as she danced beside her +companions up the avenue. + +In this fashion, therefore, did the three enter the house, for both +of the Armitages had yielded to temptation, and each girl was just +finishing a large bon-bon when they appeared on the scene. + +Mrs. Hartrick was standing in the great square central hall, waiting for +her guests. + +Stephanotie ran up to her. + +"It's very good of you indeed to ask me," she said; "and please accept +this--won't you? It's from an American girl, a trophy to remember her +by." + +"Indeed?" said Mrs. Hartrick, flushing very brightly. She stepped back a +little; the huge box of bon-bons was forced into her hands. + +"Jehoshaphat!" exclaimed Molly. + +"Molly!" said her mother. + +Linda uttered a little sigh. Rose and Mabel immediately became as +discreet and commonplace and proper as they could be; but Stephanotie +knew that the boxes of bon-bons were reposing in each of their pockets +and her spirits rose higher than ever. + +"Where is Irish Nora?" she said. "It's she that is fond of a good sweet +such as they make for us in the States. But have the box--won't you, +Mrs. Hartrick? I have brought it to you as a token of my regard." + +"Indeed? Thank you very much, Miss Miller," said Mrs. Hartrick in a +chilly voice. She laid the box on a side-table. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + + +THE TELEGRAM, + +The girls went out into the grounds. The afternoon happened to be a +perfect one; the air was balmy, with a touch of the Indian summer +about it. The last roses were blooming on their respective bushes; the +geraniums were making a good show in the carefully laid out beds. There +were clumps of asters and dahlias to be seen in every direction; some +late poppies and some sweet-peas and mignonette made the borders still +look very attractive, and the chrysanthemums were beginning to appear. + +"In a week's time they will be splendid," said Linda, piloting her two +friends through the largest of the greenhouses. + +"Do come away," said Molly; "when Linda speaks in that prim voice +she's intolerable. Come, Nora; come, Stephie--we'll just have a run by +ourselves." + +Nora was still looking rather pale. The shock of the morning had caused +the color to fade from her cheeks; she could not get the utterly changed +O'Shanaghgan out of her head. She longed to write to her father, and yet +she did not dare. + +Stephanotie looked at her with the curious, keen glance which an +American girl possesses. + +"What is it? Do say," she said, linking her hand inside Nora's. "Is it +anything that a bon-bon will soothe, or is it past that?" + +"It is quite past that; but don't ask me now, Stephie. I cannot tell +you, really." + +"Don't bother her," said Molly; "she has partly confided in me, but not +wholly. We'll have a good time by ourselves. What game do you think we +had best play, Stephie?" + +"I'm not one for games at all," answered Stephanotie. "Girls of my +age don't play games. They are thinking seriously of the business of +life--the flirtations and the jolly time they are going to have before +they settle down to their staid married life. You English are so very +childish." + +"And we Irish are childish too," said Nora. "It's lovely to be +childish," she added. "I hate to put away childish things." + +"Oh, dear! so that is the Irish and English way," said Stephanotie. "But +there, don't let us talk nationalities; let's be cozy and cheerful. I +can tell you I did feel annoyed at coming here such a dowd; it was not +my fault. I meant to make an impression; I did, really and truly. It +was very good of you, Molly, to ask me; and I know that proud lady, +your mother, didn't want to have me a bit. I am nothing but Stephanotie +Miller, and she doesn't know the style we live in at home. If she did, +maybe she would open her eyes a little; but she doesn't, and that's +flat; and I am vulgar, or supposed to be, just because I am frank and +open, and I have no concealment about me. I call a spade a spade." + +"Oh, hurrah! so do I," said Molly, the irrepressible. + +"Well, my dear, I don't use your words; they wouldn't suit me at all," +said the American girl. "I never call out Jehoshaphat the way you do, +whoever Jehoshaphat _is_; but I have my little eccentricities, and they +run to pretty and gay dresses--dresses with bright colors and quantities +of lace on them--and bon-bons at all hours, in season and out of season. +It's easy to content me, and I don't see why my little innocent wishes +should not be gratified." + +"But you are very nicely dressed now," said Nora, looking with approval +at the gray cashmere. + +"Me nicely dressed!" screamed Stephanotie. "Do you call this dress nice? +Why, I do declare it's a perfect shame that I should be made such a +spectacle. It don't suit my hair. When I am ordering a dress I choose +shades of red; they tone me down. I am fiery to-day--am I not, Molly?" + +"Well, you certainly are," said Molly. "But what--what did you do to +it?" + +"To my locks, do you mean?" + +"Yes. They do stick out so funnily. I know mother was shocked; she likes +our heads to be perfectly smooth.' + +"Like the Armitages', for instance," said Stephanotie. + +"Well, yes; something like theirs. They are pretty girls, are they not?" + +"Yes," said Stephanotie; "but don't they give you the quivers? Don't you +feel as if you were rubbed the wrong way the moment you speak to them?" + +"I don't take to them," said Molly; "but I think they're pretty." + +"They're just like what O'Shanaghgan is now," thought Nora, who did +not speak. "They are all prim and proper; there's not a single wildness +allowed to come out anywhere." + +"But they're for all the world like anybody else," said Stephanotie. +"Don't they love sweeties just! If you' had seen them--the greedy way +they took the bon-bons out of the little boxes I gave them. Oh, they're +just like anybody else, only they are playing parts; they are little +actors; they're always acting. I'd like to catch them when they were +not. I'd like to have them for one wild week, with you, Molly, and you, +Nora. I tell you there would be a fine change in them both." + +"There's a telegraph-boy coming down the avenue," cried Molly suddenly. +"I'll run and see what is the matter?" + +Nora did not know why her heart beat. Telegrams arrived every day at The +Laurels. Nevertheless she felt sure that this was no ordinary message; +she stood now and stared at that boy as though her eyes would start from +their sockets. + +"What is the matter?" said Stephanotie. + +"Nothing--nothing." + +"You're vexed about something. Why should you be so distant with me?" + +"I am not, Stephie. I am a little anxious; it is difficult always to be +just the same," said Nora. + +"Oh, don't I know it, my darling; and if you had as much to do with Aunt +Vi Truefitt as I have, you would realize how often _my_ spirits turn +topsy-turvy. I often hope that I'll be Englishized quickly, so that I +may get back to my dear parents. But there, Molly is coming back." + +"The telegram was for mother," she said. "Do let us play." + +Nora looked at Molly. Her face was red; it was usually pale. Nora +wondered what had brought that high color into her cheeks. Molly seemed +excited, and did not want to meet her cousin's eyes. + +"Come, let us have a race," she said. "I don't want to put away childish +things. I want to have a good game while I am in the humor. Let us see +who will get first to the top of that hill. I like running uphill. I'm +off; catch me who may!" + +Molly started. Her figure was stout, and she ran in a somewhat awkward +way. Nora flew after her. She soon reached her side. + +"There, stop running," she said. "What is up?" + +"What is up?" echoed Molly. + +"Yes; what was in that telegram?" + +"The telegram was for mother." + +"But you know what was in it. I know you do." + +"Nothing--nothing, Nora. Come, our race isn't over yet. I'm off again; +you cannot catch me this time." + +Molly ran, panting as she did so. + +"I cannot tell her; I won't," she said to herself. "I wish her eyes were +not so sharp. She is sure to find out; but I have begged and prayed of +mother not to tell her, at least until after Stephanotie and the others +have gone. Then, I suppose, she must know." + +Molly reached the top of the hill. She was so blown that she had to +fling herself on the grass. Nora again reached her side. + +"Tell me, Molly," she said; "there is something the matter?" + +"There is a telegram for mother, and I cannot tell you anything whatever +about it," said Molly in a cross voice. "There, I'm off once more. I +promised Linda that I would help her to look after the Armitage girls. +Prim and proper as they are, they are sometimes a little bit too much +for my dainty sister Linda. You take care of Stephie; she's right good +fun. Let me go, Nora; let me go." + +Molly pulled her hand almost roughly out of her cousin's grip, and the +next moment was rushing downhill as fast as she could in the direction +of the summer-house. There she knew she would find Linda and her two +friends. + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + + +THE BLOW. + +Notwithstanding all the efforts of at least five merry girls, there was +a cloud over the remainder of that afternoon. Nora's face was anxious; +her gay laugh was wanting; her eyes wore an abstracted, far-away look. +The depression which the letters of the morning had caused was now +increased tenfold. If she joined in the games it was without spirit; +when she spoke there was no animation in her words. Gone was the Irish +wit, the pleasant Irish humor; the sparkle in the eyes was missing; the +gay laughter never rose upon the breeze. At tea things were just as bad. +Even at supper matters had not mended. + +Molly now persistently avoided her cousin. Stephanotie and she were +having a wild time. Molly, to cover Nora's gloom, was going on in a more +extravagant way than usual. She constantly asked Jehoshaphat to come to +her aid; she talked of Holy Moses more than once; in short, she exceeded +herself in her wildness. Linda was so shocked that she took the Armitage +girls to a distant corner, and there discoursed with them in low +whispers. Now and then she cast a horrified glance round at where +her sister and the Yankee, as she termed Stephanotie, were going on +together. To her relief, toward the end of the evening, Mrs. Hartrick +came into the room. But even her presence could not suppress Molly now. +She was beside herself; the look of Nora sitting gloomily apart from the +rest, pretending to be interested in one of Sir Walter Scott's novels, +was too much for her. She knew that a bad time was coming for Nora, +and her misery made her reckless. Mrs. Hartrick, hearing some of her +naughtiest words, said in an icy tone that Miss Truefitt had sent a maid +for Stephanotie; and a few moments afterward the little party broke up. + +As soon as the strange girls had departed, Mrs. Hartrick turned +immediately to Molly. + +"I am shocked at your conduct," she said. "In order to give you pleasure +I allowed Miss Miller to come here; but I should have been a wiser and +happier woman if I had taken dear Linda's advice. She is not the sort +of girl I wish either you or Nora ever to associate with again. Now, go +straight to your room, and don't leave it until I send for you." + +Molly stalked off with a defiant tread and eyes flashing fire; she would +not even glance at Nora. Linda began to talk in her prim voice. Before +she could utter a single word Nora had sprung forward, caught both her +aunt's hands, and looked her in the face. + +"Now," she said, "I must know. What did that telegram say?" + +"What telegram, Nora? My dear child, you forget yourself." + +"I do not forget myself, Aunt Grace. If I am not to go quite off my +head, I must know the truth." + +"Sit down, Nora." + +"I cannot sit; please put me out of suspense. Please tell me the worst +at once." + +"I am sorry for you, dear; I really am." + +"Oh, please, please speak! Is anything--anything wrong with father?" + +"I hope nothing serious." + +"Ah! I knew it," said Nora; "there is something wrong." + +"He has had an accident." + +"An accident? An accident? Oh, what? Oh! it's Andy; it must be Andy. Oh, +Aunt Grace, I shall go mad; I shall go mad!" + +Mrs. Hartrick did not speak. Then she looked at Linda. She motioned to +Linda to leave the room. Linda, however, had no idea of stirring. She +was too much interested; she looked at Nora as if she thought her really +mad. + +"Tell me--tell me; is father killed?" + +"No, no, my poor child; no, no. Do calm yourself, Nora. I will let you +see the telegram; then you will know all that I know." + +"Oh, please, please!" + +Mrs. Hartrick took it out of her pocket. Nora clutched it very hard, but +her trembling fingers could scarcely take the little flimsy pink sheet +out of its envelope. At last she had managed it. She spread it before +her; then she found that her dazed eyes could not see the words. What +was the misery of the morning to the agony of this moment? + +"Read it for me," she said in a piteous voice. "I--I cannot see." + +"Sit down, my dear; you will faint if you don't." + +"Oh! everything is going round. Is he--is he dead?" + +"No, dear; nothing very wrong." + +"Read--read!" said Nora. + +Mrs. Hartrick did read. The following words fell upon the Irish girl's +ears: + +"O'Shanaghgan was shot at from behind a hedge this, morning. Seriously +injured. Break it to Nora." + +"I must go to him," said Nora, jumping up. "When is the next train? Why +didn't you tell me before? I must go--I must go at once." + +Now that the worst of the news was broken, she had recovered her courage +and some calmness. + +"I must go to him," she repeated. + +"I have telegraphed. I have been mindful of you. I knew the moment +you heard this news you would wish to be off to Ireland, so I have +telegraphed to know if there is danger. If there is danger you shall go, +my dear child; indeed, I myself will take you." + +"Oh! I must go in any case," repeated Nora. "Danger or no danger, he is +hurt, and he will want me. I must go; you cannot keep me here." + +Just then there came a loud ring at the hall-door. + +"Doubtless that is the telegram," said Mrs. Hartrick. "Run, Linda, and +bring it." + +Linda raced into the hall. In a few moments she came back with a +telegram. + +"The messenger is waiting, mother," she said. + +Mrs. Hartrick tore it open, read the contents, uttered a sigh of relief, +and then handed the paper on to Nora to read. + +"There," she said; "you can read for yourself." + +Nora read: + +"Better. Doctor anticipates no danger. Tell Nora I do not wish her to +come. Writing. + +"HARTRICK." + +"There, my dear, this is a great relief," said Mrs. Hartrick. + +"Oh! I am going all the same," said Nora. + +"No; that I cannot possibly allow." + +"But he wants me, even if he is not in danger. It was bad enough to +be away from him when he was well; but now that he is ill----You don't +understand, Aunt Grace--there is no one can do anything for father as I +can. I am his Light o' the Morning." + +"His what?" said Mrs. Hartrick. + +"Oh, that is what he calls me; but I have no time to explain now. I must +go; I don't care." + +"You are an ungrateful girl, Nora. If you had lived through the misery I +have lived through the last few hours this telegram would fill you with +thankfulness. It is your duty to stay here. You are under a promise +to your kind uncle. He has rescued your father and mother from a most +terrible position, and your promise to him saying that you would stay +quietly here you cannot in all honor break. If your father were in +danger it would be a different matter. As it is, it is your duty to stay +quietly here, and show by your patience how truly you love him." + +Nora sat silent. Mrs. Hartrick's words were absolute. The good lady felt +that she was strictly following the path of duty. + +"I can understand the shock you have had," she continued, looking at +the girl, who now sat with her head slightly drooping, her hands clasped +tightly together, her attitude one of absolute despair. + +"Linda," she said, turning to her daughter, "fetch Nora a glass of wine. +I noticed, my dear, that you ate scarcely any supper." + +Nora did not speak. + +Linda returned with a glass of claret. + +"Now drink this off, Nora," said her aunt; "I insist." + +Nora was about to refuse, but she suddenly changed her mind. + +"I shall go whether she gives me leave or not," was her inward thought. +"I shall want strength." She drank off the wine, and returned the empty +glass to her cousin. + +"There now, that is better," said Mrs. Hartrick; "and as you are +unaccustomed to wine you will doubtless sleep soundly after it. Go up to +your bedroom, dear. I will telegraph the first thing in the morning to +O'Shanaghgan, and if there is the slightest cause for alarm will promise +to take you there immediately. Be content with my promise; be patient, +be brave, I beg of you, Nora. But, believe me, your uncle knows best +when he says you are not to go." + +"Thank you, Aunt Grace," said Nora in a low voice. She did not glance at +Linda. She turned and left the room. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + + +TEN POUNDS. + +Molly was standing by the open window of her room when Nora came in. +She entered quite quietly. Every vestige of color had left her face; her +eyes, dark and intensely blue, were shining; some of her jet-black hair +had got loosened and fell about her neck and shoulders. Molly sprang +toward her. + +"Oh, Nora!" she said. + +"Hush!" said Nora. "I have heard; father is hurt--very badly hurt, and I +am going to him." + +"Are you indeed? Is mother going to take you?" said Molly. + +"No; she has refused. A telegram has come from my uncle; he says I am +not to go--as if a thousand telegrams would keep me. Molly, I am going." + +"But you cannot go alone." + +"I am going." + +"When?" said Molly. + +"Now--this very minute." + +"What nonsense! There are no trains." + +"I shall leave the house and stay at the station. I shall take the very +next train to town. I am going." + +"But, Nora, have you money?" + +"Money?" said Nora. "I never thought of that." + +"Mother won't give you money if she does not wish you to go." + +"I'll go to my room and see." Nora rushed away. She came back in a few +moments with her purse; she flung the contents on Molly's bed. Molly +took up the silver coins as they rattled out of Nora's purse. Alack and +alas! all she possessed was eight shillings and a few coppers. + +"You cannot go with that," said Molly; "and I have nothing to lend you, +or I would; indeed, I would give you all I possess, but mother only +gives me sixpence a week. Nothing would induce her to give me an +allowance. I have sixpence a week just as if I were a baby, and you can +quite understand I don't save out of that. What is to be done?" + +Nora looked nonplused. For the first time the vigorous intention, the +fierce resolve which was bearing her onward, was checked, and checked +by so mighty a reason that she could not quite see her way out of the +present difficulty. To ask her Aunt Grace for money would be worse than +useless. Nora was a sufficient reader of character to be quite certain +that Mrs. Hartrick when she said a thing meant it. She would be kind to +Nora up to a certain point. Were her father in what they called danger +she herself would be the first to help Nora to go to him. + +"How little they know how badly he wants me!" thought the girl; "how +all this time he is pining for me--he who never knew illness in his +life--pining, pining for me! Nothing shall keep me from him. I would +steal to go to him; there is nothing I would not do." + +"Nora, how queer you look!" said Molly. + +"I am thinking," said Nora. "I wonder how I am to get that money? Oh, I +have it. I'll ask Stephanotie to lend it to me. Do you think she would?" + +"I don't know. I think it very likely. She is generous, and she has +heaps of money." + +"Then I'll go to her," said Nora. + +"Stay, Nora; if you really want to run away----" + +"Run away?" said Nora. "If you like to call it so, you may; but I'm +going. My own father is ill; my uncle and aunt don't hold the same +position to me that my father holds. I will go to him--I will." + +"Then I tell you what it is," said Molly, "you must do this thing +carefully or you'll be locked up in your bedroom. Mother would think +nothing of locking the door of your bedroom and keeping you there. You +don't know mother when once her back is up. She can be immensely kind up +to a certain point, and then--oh! I know it--immensely cruel." + +"What is to be done?" said Nora. "I hate doing a thing in this kind of +way--in the dark, as it were." + +"You must listen to me," said Molly; "you must be very careful. I have +had some little scampers in my time, and I know how to manage matters. +There is only one way for you to go." + +"What is that?" + +"You and I must go off and see Stephanotie; but we cannot do so until +everyone is in bed." + +"How can we go then?" + +"We can easily climb down from this window. You see this pear-tree; it +almost touches the window. I have climbed down by it more than once; we +can get in again the same way." + +"Oh, yes. If we must sneak out of the house like thieves," said Nora, +"it's as good as any other way." + +"I tell you it's the only way," said Molly. "We must be off on our +way to London before mother gets up tomorrow morning. You don't know +anything whatever about trains." + +"But I can look them out," said Nora. + +"Well, go back to your room. Mother will not be going to bed for quite +an hour. We cannot help it; we can do nothing until she is safe in bed. +Go away at once, Nora; for if she finds you here talking to me she +will suspect something. I cannot tell you what mother is when once her +suspicions are aroused; and she has had good cause to suspect me before +now." + +"But do you really mean to say you'll come with me?" + +"I certainly mean to say I won't let you go alone. Now then, go away; +just pack a few things, and slip back to me when I knock on the wall. +I know when mother has gone to bed; it is necessary that she should be +asleep, and that Linda should be asleep also; that is all we require. +Leave the rest to me." + +"And you are certain Stephanotie can lend us the money?" + +"We can but ask her. If she refuses we must only come back again and +make the best of things." + +"I will never come back," said Nora. "I will go to the first +pawnbroker's and pawn everything of value I possess; but go to my father +I will." + +"I admire your courage," said Molly. "Now then, go back to your room and +wait for my signal." + +Nora returned to her room. She began to open and shut her drawers. She +did not care about being quiet. It seemed to her that no one could +keep her from her father against her will. She did not recognize the +all-potent fact that she had no money herself for the journey. Still, +the money must be obtained. Of course Stephanotie had it, and of course +Stephanotie would lend it; it would only be a loan for a few days. When +once Nora got to Ireland she would return the money immediately. + +She opened her drawers and filled a little black bag which she had +brought with her from home. She put in the trifles she might need on her +journey; the rest of her things could stay; she could not be bothered +with them one way or the other. Then she sat quite still on the edge +of her bed. How earnestly she wished that her aunt would retire for +the night, that Linda would be quiet! Linda's room adjoined Nora's--it +opened into Nora's--and Linda, when occasions roused her suspicions, +could be intensely watchful. She did not seem to be going to bed; she +kept moving about in her room. Poor Nora could scarcely restrain herself +from calling out, "Oh, do be quick, Linda! What are you staying up for?" +but she refrained from saying the fatal words. Presently she heard the +creak of Linda's bed as she got into it. This was followed by silence. + +Nora breathed a sigh of relief, but still the dangers were not past. Her +little black bag lay quite ready on the chair, and she herself sat on +the edge of her bed. Mrs. Hartrick's steps were heard coming up the +stairs, and the next moment the door of Nora's room was opened and the +good lady looked in. + +"Not in bed, Nora," she said; "but this is very wrong." + +"Oh, I could not sleep," said Nora. + +Mrs. Hartrick went up to her. + +"Now, my dear child," she said, "I cannot rest until I see you safe in +bed. Come, I must undress you myself. What a wan little face! My dear +girl, you must trust in God. Your uncle's telegram assures us that there +is no danger; and if there is the smallest occasion I will take you +myself to your father tomorrow." + +"Oh! if you would only promise to take me," said poor Nora, suddenly +rising to her feet, twining her arms round her aunt's neck, and looking +full into her face. "Oh! don't say you will take me to my father if +there is danger; say you'll take me in any case. It would break my heart +to stay away. I cannot--cannot stay away from him." + +"Now, you are talking in an unreasonable way, Nora--in a way I cannot +for a moment listen to. Your uncle wishes you to stay where you are. +He would not wish that if there was the least occasion for you to go to +Ireland." + +"Then you will not take me tomorrow?" + +"Not unless your father is worse. Come, I must help you to get your +things off." + +Nora felt herself powerless in Mrs. Hartrick's hands. The good lady +quickly began to divest her of her clothes, soon her night-dress was +popped on, and she was lying down in bed. + +"What is that black bag doing here?" said Mrs. Hartrick, glancing at the +bag as she spoke. + +"I was packing my things together to go to father." + +"Well, dear, we must only trust there will be no necessity. Now, +goodnight. Sleep well, my little girl. Believe me, I am not so +unsympathetic as I look." + +Nora made no reply. She covered her face with the bedclothes; a sob came +from her throat. Mrs. Hartrick hesitated for a moment whether she would +say anything further; but then, hoping that the tired-out girl would +sleep, she went gently from the room. In the passage she thought for a +moment. + +"Why did Nora pack that little bag?" she said to herself. "Can it be +possible--but no, the child would not do it. Besides, she has no money." + +Mrs. Hartrick entered her own room at the other end of the corridor and +shut the door. Then stillness reigned over the house--stillness absolute +and complete. + +No light had been burning under Molly's door when Mrs. Hartrick had +passed. Molly, indeed, wiser than Nora, had got into bed and lay there, +dressed, it is true, but absolutely in the dark. Nora also lay in her +bed; every nerve was beating frantically; her body seemed to be all one +great pulse. At last, in desperation, she sprang out of bed--there came +the welcome signal from Molly's room. Nora struck a light and began to +dress feverishly. In ten minutes she was once more in her clothes. She +now put on the dark-gray traveling dress she had worn when coming to +The Laurels. Her hat and jacket were quickly put on, and, carrying the +little black bag, she entered Molly's room. + +"What hour is it?" said Nora. "It must be long past midnight." + +"Oh, no; nothing of the kind. It is not more than eleven o'clock." + +"Oh! I thought it was one or two. Do you know that your mother came to +see me and insisted on my getting into bed?" + +"You were a great goose, Nora. You should have lain down as I did, in +your clothes; that would have saved a little time. But come, mother has +been quite quiet for half an hour and more; she must be sound asleep. We +had better go." + +"Yes, we had better go," said Nora. "I packed a few things in this bag; +it is quite light, and I can carry it. My money is in it, too--eight +shillings and fivepence. I do trust Stephanotie will be able to lend us +the rest." + +Molly had not been idle while Nora was in her room. She had taken care +to oil the hasp of the window; and now, with extreme caution, she lifted +it up, taking care that it did not make the slightest sound as she did +so. The next moment both girls were seated on the window-ledge. Molly +sprang on to the pear-tree, which creaked and crackled under her weight; +but Mrs. Hartrick was already in the land of dreams. Molly dropped on to +the ground beneath, and then it was Nora's turn. + +"Shall I shut the window before I get on to the pear-tree?" whispered +Nora. + +"No, no; leave it open. Come just as you are." + +Nora reached out her arms, grasped the pear tree, and slipped down to +the ground. + +"Now then, we must be off," said Molly. "I hope Pilot won't bark." She +was alluding to the big watchdog. "But there, I'll speak to him; he is +very fond of me." + +The girls stole across the grass. The dew lay heavy on it; their +footsteps made no sound. Presently they reached the front of the house, +and Pilot, with a deep bay, flew to meet them. + +"Pilot! Pilot! quiet; good dog!" said Molly. She went on her knees, +flung her arms round the dog, and began to whisper in his ear. + +"He understands," she said, looking up at Nora. The great creature +seemed to do so; he wagged his feathery tail from side to side and +accompanied the girls as far as the gate. + +"Now, go home, go home," said Molly. She then took Nora's hand, and they +ran down the road in the direction of the village. + +"If it were not that you are so miserable I should enjoy this awfully," +said Molly. + +"But how do you mean to wake Stephie?" asked Nora at last. + +"Well, luckily for us, her aunt, Miss Truefitt, is rather deaf. Miss +Truefitt has a bedroom at the back of the house, and Stephanotie sleeps +in front. I shall fling gravel at the window. There is not a soul, as +you see, in the streets. It's well that it is such a quiet place; it +will serve our purpose all the better." + +They now found themselves outside Miss Truefitt's house. Molly took up +a handful of gravel and flung it in a great shower at Stephanotie's +window. Both girls then waited eagerly for a response. At first there +was none; once again Molly threw the gravel. + +"I do hope she will wake soon," she said, turning to Nora; "that gravel +makes a great noise, and some of the neighbors may pop out their heads +to see what is the matter. There! I saw a flicker of light in the room. +She is thinking it is thieves; she won't for a single moment imagine +that we are here. I do hope Miss Truefitt won't awaken; it will be all +up with us if she does." + +"No, no, it won't," said Nora; "there's not a person in this place I +could not get to help me in a cause like this. The one who is absolutely +invulnerable, who cannot be moved, because she imagines herself to be +right, is your mother." + +"There's Stephie at the window now," said Molly. A little figure in a +night-dress was seen peeping out. + +"It's us, Stephie. Let us in; it's most awfully important," whispered +Molly's voice in deep sepulchral tones from below. + +"But say, what's the matter?" called Stephanotie, opening her window and +popping out her curly head. + +"I can't talk to you in the street. Slip down and open the hall-door and +let us in," said Molly. "It's most vital." + +"It's life or death," whispered Nora. There was something in Nora's +tremulous tones which touched Stephanotie, and at the same time +stimulated her curiosity to such an extent that she flew into her +clothes, dashing about perfectly reckless of the fact that she was +making a loud noise; but, luckily for her, Miss Truefitt was deaf and +the servants slept in a remote part of the old house. Soon Stephanotie +was tumbling downstairs, the chain was taken off the door, and the two +girls were admitted. + +"Where shall I take you?" said Stephanotie. "It's all as dark as pitch. +You know Aunt Vi won't hear of gas in the house. But stay, we can +go into the dining room. I suppose you can tell me by the light of a +solitary glim." As she spoke she pointed to the candle which she was +holding high above her head. + +"Yes, yes, or with no light at all," said Nora. + +Stephanotie now opened the door of the dining room, and the three girls +entered. Stephanotie placed the candle on the table and turned and faced +them. + +"Well," she said, "what's up? What do you want me to do?" + +"I want you to lend me all the money you have," said Nora. + +"All the money I have--good gracious!" + +"Oh, Jehoshaphat! be quick about it," said Molly. "We cannot stand here +talking; we want to catch the very next train to town." + +"But why should I lend you all the money I have?" + +"Oh, I'll tell her, Nora; don't you speak," said Molly. "Nora's father +has been awfully hurt; he was shot at from behind a hedge by some +scoundrel in Ireland. A telegram came to-day about him to mother, and +mother won't take Nora to Ireland unless her father is in danger, and +Nora is determined to go." + +"I guess I'd about do the same," said Stephanotie, nodding her head. +"If poppa was shot at from behind a hedge, I guess there's nothing would +keep me away from him. But is it for that you want the money?" + +"Yes," said Nora, plunging her hands into the depths of her black bag; +"there's only eight shillings and five-pence here, and I can't get to +Ireland with that." + +"Haul out the spoil," said Molly; "make no bones about it. I'm going +with Nora, because the child isn't fit to travel alone." + +"You coming with me?" said Nora. "I didn't know that." + +"I don't mean to leave you, my dear, until I see you safe in the midst +of your family; besides, I have a bit of curiosity with regard to that +wonderful old place of yours." + +"Oh, it's lost, the place is quite lost," said Nora, remembering for the +first time since the blow had fallen the feather-bed condition of Castle +O'Shanaghgan. + +"Well, lost or found, I'd like to have a peep at it," said Molly; "so +fork out the spoil, Stephie, and be quick." + +"I will, of course," said Stephanotie. "But how much do you want?" + +"All you possess, my dear; you cannot give us more than all you +possess." + +"And when am I likely to have it back?" + +"Oh, as if that mattered," said Molly; "the thing is to get Nora home. +You won't be any the worse for this, if that is what you mean." + +"Oh, I am not really thinking of that; but my school fees have to be +paid, and the money only came from America two days ago for the purpose. +You know Aunt Vi is very poor." + +"Poor or rich, don't keep us waiting now," said Molly. "Look at Nora. +Do you think for a single moment that your school bills matter when her +heart is breaking?" + +"And you shall have the money back, Stephie, every farthing, if I die to +get it for you," said Nora with sudden passion. + +"I don't doubt you, darling," said the generous-hearted American girl. +"Well, I'll go up to my room and see what I can do." She left the room, +ran upstairs, and quickly returned with a fat purse. It contained gold +and notes; and very soon Molly found, to her infinite delight, that it +would be by no means necessary for her and Nora to take all Stephie's +wealth. + +"Ten pounds will be sufficient," said Molly. "I have not the slightest +idea what the fares to Ireland are, but I have no doubt we shall do +nicely with this sum. May we have these two five-pounds notes, Stephie?" + +"You may and welcome," said Stephanotie. "I have nearly thirty pounds +here; but it's on account of the school bills. As a rule, poppa is not +quite so generous. He says it is better for young girls like me not to +have too much money. I guess I'd eat too many bon-bons if I had a lot of +money at my disposal. But had you not better take it in gold? It is much +easier to change." + +"To be sure," said Molly. "Holy Moses! it's you that have got the sense, +Stephie." + +"Thank you for the compliment," replied Stephanotie. "Well, then, here +you are--ten sovereigns. Good luck to you both. What do you mean to do?" + +"Go to the station and find out about the trains, and start the very +first moment possible," said Molly. + +"I do wish I was going with you. It would be no end of a lark." + +"Why don't you come?" asked Molly. + +"I wish I might; but there, I suppose I had better not. I must look +perfectly innocent to-morrow, or I may get into an awful scrape for +this. You must both go now, or Aunt Vi when she turns in her sleep may +wake. She turns in her sleep about three times during the night; and +whenever she turns she wakes, so she tells me. I guess it's about time +for her first turn now, so the sooner you are off the better." + +"Oh, thank you, Stephie! I shall never, never forget your kindness," +said Nora. She flung her arms impulsively round Stephanotie's neck, and +the next moment the girls left the house. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + + +ADVENTURES--AND HOME AGAIN. + +The girls now went straight to the railway station; the hour was a +quarter to twelve. They entered and asked at once if there was a train +up to town. Yes; the last train would be due in ten minutes. Molly now +took the management of affairs; she purchased a third-class ticket for +herself and another for Nora. + +"If we go third-class we shall not be specially remarked," she said. +"People always notice girls who travel first-class." + +The tickets being bought, the girls stood side by side on the platform. +Molly had put on her shabbiest hat and oldest jacket; her gloves had +some holes in them; her umbrella was rolled up in such a thick, ungainly +fashion that it looked like a gamp. Nora, however, exquisitely neat and +trim, stood by her companion's side, betraying as she did so traces of +her good birth and breeding. + +"You must untidy yourself a bit when we get into the train," said Molly. +"I'll manage it." + +"Oh, never mind about my looks; the thing is to get off," said Nora. +"I'm not a scrap afraid," she added; "if Aunt Grace came to me now she +could not induce me to turn back; nothing but force would make me. I +have got the money, and to Ireland I will go." + +"I admire you for your determination," said Molly. "I never knew that an +Irish girl could have so much spunk in her." + +"And why not? Aren't we about the finest race on God's earth?" + +"Oh, come, come," said Molly; "you mustn't overdo it. Even you sometimes +carry things a trifle too far." + +Just then the train came in. There was the usual bustle of passengers +alighting and others getting in; the next moment the girls had taken +their seats in a crowded compartment and were off to town. They arrived +in London between twelve and one o'clock, and found themselves landed at +Waterloo. Now, Waterloo is not the nicest station in the world for two +very young girls to arrive at midnight, particularly when they have not +the faintest idea where to go. + +"Let us go straight to the waiting room and ask the woman there what we +had best do," said Molly, who still immensely enjoyed taking the lead. + +Nora followed her companion quite willingly. Her worst fears about her +father were held in abeyance, now that she was really on her way to +him. The girls entered the waiting room. A tired-looking woman was busy +putting out the gas, and reducing the room to darkness for the night. +She turned round as the girls came in. + +"I'm shutting up, ladies," she said. + +"Oh, but please advise us," said Molly. + +"How so, miss? What am I to do?" + +"You'll be paid well," said Molly, "so you need not look so angry. Can +you take us home to your place until the morning?" + +"What does this mean?" said the woman. + +"Oh, I'll explain," said Molly. "We're two runaways. I don't mind +telling you that we are, because it's a fact. It is important that +we should leave home. We don't want to be traced. Will you give us +lodging?--any sort. We don't mind how small the room is. We want to be +at Euston at an early hour in the morning; we are going to Holyhead." + +"Dear, dear!" said the woman; "and does this really mean money?" + +"It means five shillings," said Molly. + +"Ten" was on Nora's lips; but Molly silenced her with a look. + +"There's no use in overpaying her; she won't be half as civil," +whispered Molly to Nora. + +"It's five shillings you'll get," she repeated in a firm voice. "Here, I +have got the change; you can look in my purse." + +"Molly opened her purse as she spoke. The woman, a Mrs. Terry by name, +did look in. She saw the shine of gold and several half-crowns. + +"Well, to be sure!" she said. "But you'll promise not to get me into a +scrape?" + +"We won't even ask you your name. You can let us out of the house in +time for us to catch the first train from Euston. We shall be off and +away before we are discovered." + +"And we'll remember you all our lives if you'll help us," said Nora. +Then she added, tears filling her pretty eyes, "It's my father, please, +kind woman; he has been shot at and is very ill." + +"And who wants to keep you from your father, you poor thing?" said the +woman. "Oh, if it's that, and there's no lovers in the question, I don't +mind helping you both. It don't do for young girls to be wandering about +the streets alone at night. You come with me, honeys. I can't take you +for nothing, but I'll give you supper and breakfast, and the best bed I +can, for five shillings." + +Accordingly, in Mrs. Terry's company, the two girls left Waterloo +Station. She walked down a somewhat narrow side-street, crossed another, +and they presently found themselves in a little, old-fashioned square. +The square was very old indeed, belonging to quite a dead-and-gone +period of the world. The woman stopped at a house which once had been +large and stately; doubtless in days gone by it had sheltered goodly +personages and had listened to the laughter of the rich and well-to-do; +but in its old age the house was let out in tenements, and Mrs. Terry +owned a couple of rooms at the very top. + +She took the girls up the dirty stairs, opened the door of a not +uncomfortable sitting room, and ushered them in. + +"There now, honeys," she said; "the best I can do for you both is the +sofa for one and my bed for the other." + +"No, no," said Nora, "we would not dream of taking your bed; and, for +that matter, I could not sleep," she added. "If you will let me have a +couple of chairs I shall lie down on them and wait as best I can until +the morning. Oh, I have often done it at home and thought it great fun." + +"Well, you must each have a bit of supper first; it don't do for young +girls to go to bed hungry, more particularly when they have a journey +before them. I'll get you some bread and cheese and a glass of milk +each--unless, indeed, you would prefer beer?" + +"Oh, no, we would much rather have milk," said Molly. + +The woman bustled about, and soon came in with a jug of milk, a couple +of glasses, some bread, and some indifferent butter. + +"You can have the cheese if you really want it," she said. + +"No; this will do beautifully," answered Nora. + +"Well then, my dears, I'll leave you now for the night. The lamp will +burn all night. It will be lonely for young girls to be in the dark; and +I'll promise to call you at five o'clock. There's a train leaves Euston +between six and seven that you had better catch, unless you want them as +is hindering you from flight to stop you. I am interested in this poor +young lady who wants to see her father." + +"Oh, thank you; you are a perfect darling!" said Nora. "I'll come and +see you some day when I am happy again, and tell you all about it." + +"Bless your kind heart, honey! I'm glad to be able to do something for +those who are in trouble. Now then, lie down and have a bit of sleep. +I'll wake you sure and certain, and you shan't stir, the two of you, +until you have had a hot cup of tea each." + +Mrs. Terry was as good as her word. She called the girls in good time, +and gave them quite a comfortable breakfast before they started. The tea +was hot; the bread was good--what else did they want? + +Nora awoke from a very short and broken slumber. + +"Soon I shall be back again," she thought. "No matter how changed and +ruined the place is, I shall be with him once more. Oh, my darling, my +heart's darling, I shall kiss you again! Oh! I am happy at the thought." + +Mrs. Terry herself accompanied them to Euston. It was too early to get a +cab; she asked them if they were good walkers. They said they were. She +took them by the shortest routes; and, somewhat tired, but still full of +a strange exultation, they found themselves at the great station. Mrs. +Terry saw them into their train, and with many loudly uttered blessings +started them on their journey. She would not touch anything more than +the five shillings, and tears were in her eyes as she looked her last at +them. + +"God bless them, and particularly that little Irish girl. Haven't she +just got the cunningest, sweetest way in all the world?" thought the +good woman. "I do hope her father will be better when she gets to him. +Don't she love him just!" + +Yes, it had been the most daring scheme, the wildest sort of adventure, +for two girls to undertake, and yet it was crowned with success. They +were too far on their journey for Mrs. Hartrick, however much she might +wish it, to rescue them. She might be as angry as she pleased; but +nothing now could get them back. She accordingly did the very best +thing she could do--telegraphed to Mr. Hartrick to say that they had +absolutely run away, but begged of him to meet them in Dublin. This +the good man did. He met them both on the pier, received them quietly, +without much demonstration; but then, looking into Nora's anxious face, +his own softened. + +"You have come, Nora, and against my will," he said. "Are you sorry?" + +"Not a bit, Uncle George," she answered. "I would have come against the +wills of a thousand uncles if father were ill." + +"Then I have nothing to say," he answered, with a smile, "at least to +you; but, Molly, I shall have something to talk to you about presently." + +"It was very good of you to meet us, father. Was mother terribly angry?" + +"What could you expect her to be? You have behaved very badly." + +"I don't think so. I did the only possible thing to save Nora's heart +from breaking." + +"It seems to me," said Mr. Hartrick slowly, "that you all think of +nothing but the heart of Nora. I am almost sorry now that I ever asked +her to come to us in England." + +"Oh, it's home again; it's home again!" cried the Irish girl as she +paced up and down the platform. "Molly, do listen to the brogue. Isn't +it just delicious? Come along, and let's talk to this poor old Irish +beggar." + +"Oh, but he doesn't look at all pleasant," said Molly, backing a little. + +"Bless the crayther, but he is pleasant," said Nora. "I must go and have +a chat with him." She caught hold of Molly's hand, and dragged her to +the edge of the pavement, where an old man, with almost blind eyes, was +seated in front of a large basket of rosy apples. + +"And how are you this morning, father?" said Nora. + +"Oh, then, it's the top of the morning to yez, honey," was the instant +reply. "And how is yourself?" + +"Very well indeed," said Nora. + +"Then it's I that am delighted to see yez, though see yez I can't. Oh, +then, I hope that it's a long life and plenty you'll have before you, +my sweet, dear, illigant young lady--a good bed to lie on, and plenty to +eat and drink. If you has them, what else could ail yez? Good-by to yez; +good-by to yez." + +Nora slipped a couple of pence into his hand. + +"The blessings of the Vargin and all the Saints be on your head, miss. +Oh! it's I that am glad to see yez. God's blessing on yez a thousand +times." + +Nora took the old man's hand and wrung it. He raised the white little +hand to his lips and kissed it. + +"There now," he said, "I have kissed yez; and these lips shan't see +wather again for many a long day--that they shan't. I wouldn't wash off +the taste of your hand, honey, for a bag of yellow gold." + +"What an extraordinary man!" said Molly. "Have you known him all your +life?" + +"Known him all my life!" said Nora. "Never laid eyes on him before; +that's the way we always talk to one another. Oh, I can tell you we love +each other here in Ireland." + +"It seems so," answered Molly, in some astonishment. "Dear me! if you +address a total stranger so, how will you speak to those you really +love?" + +"You wait and see," answered Nora, her dark-blue eyes shining, and a +mist of tears dimming their brightness; "you wait and see. Ah, it's past +words we are sometimes; but you wait and you'll soon see." + +Mr. O'Shanaghgan was pronounced better, although Mr. Hartrick had to +admit that he was weak and fretful; and, now that Nora had come, it was +extremely likely that her presence would do her father a sight of good. + +"I knew it, Uncle George," she answered as they seated themselves in the +railway carriage preparatory to going back to O'Shanaghgan--"I knew it, +and that was why I came. You, uncle, are very wise," she added; "and +yours is a beautiful, neat, orderly country; and you are very kind, and +very clever; and you have been awfully good to the Irish girl--awfully +good; and she is very ignorant; and you know a great deal; but one thing +she does know best, and that is, the love and the longing in the heart +of her own dear father. Oh, hurrah! I'm home again; I'm home again! Erin +go bragh! Erin go bragh!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + + +THE WILD IRISH. + +The somewhat slow Irish train jogged along its way; it never put itself +out, did that special train, starting when it pleased, and arriving when +it chose at its destination. Its guard, Jerry by name, was of a like +mind with itself; there was no hurry about Jerry; he took the world +"aisy," as he expressed it. + +"What's the good of fretting?" he used to say. "What can't be cured must +be endured. I hurry no man's cattle; and my train, she goes when she +likes, and I aint going to hurry her, not I." + +On one occasion Jerry was known to remark to a somewhat belated +traveler: + +"Why, then, miss, is it hurrying ye are to meet the train? Why, then, +you can take your time." + +"Oh, Jerry!" said this anxious person, fixing her eyes on his face in +great excitement, "I forgot a most important parcel at a shop half a +mile away." + +"Run and fetch it, then, honey," replied Jerry, "and I'll keep her a bit +longer." + +This the lady accordingly did. When she returned, the heads of all the +other angry passengers were out of the windows expostulating with Jerry +as to the cause of the delay. + +"Hurry up, miss," he said then. He popped her into a compartment, and +she, as he called the train, moved slowly out of the station. + +At times, too, without the smallest provocation, Jerry would stop this +special train because a little "pigeen" had got off one of the trucks +and was running along the line. He and the porter shouted and raced +after the animal, caught it, and brought it back to the train. On +another occasion he calmly informed a rather important passenger, "Ye +had best get out here, for she's bust." "She" happened to be the engine. + +Into this train now got English Molly and Irish Nora. Mr. Hartrick +pronounced it quite the vilest service he had ever traveled by. He began +to grumble the moment he got into the train. + +"It crawls," he said; "and it absolutely has the cheek to call itself an +express." + +But Nora, with her head out of the window, was shouting to Jerry, who +came toward her full of blessings, anxious to shake her purty white +hand, and telling her that he was as glad as a shower of gould to have +her back again in the old country. + +At last, however, the slow, very slow journey came to an end; and just +after sunset the party found themselves at the little wayside station. +Here a sight met Nora's eyes which displeased her exceedingly. Instead +of the old outside car which her father used to drive, with the shabby +old retainer, whose livery had long ago seen its best days, there +arrived a smart groom, in the newest of livery, with a cockade in his +hat. He touched his hat respectfully to Mr. Hartrick, and gave a quick +glance round at Nora and Molly. + +"Is the brougham outside, Dennis?" was Mr. Hartrick's response. + +"Yes, sir; it has been waiting for half an hour; the train is a bit +late, as usual, sir." + +"You need not tell me that this train is ever in time," said Mr. +Hartrick. "Well, girls, come along; I told Dennis to meet us, and here +we are." + +Molly thought nothing at all of the neat brougham, with its pair of +spirited grays; she was accustomed to driving in the better-class of +carriage all her life; but Nora turned first pale and then crimson. She +got into the carriage, and sat back in a corner; tears were brimming to +her eyes. + +"This is the first. How am I to bear all the rest?" she said to herself. + +Mr. Hartrick, who had hoped that Nora would be pleased with the +brougham, with Dennis himself, with the whole very stylish get-up, was +mortified at her silence, and, taking her hand, tried to draw her out. + +"Well, little girl," he said, "I hope you will like the improvements +I have made in the Castle. I have done it all at your instigation, +remember." + +"At my instigation?" cried Nora. "Oh, no, Uncle George, that you have +not." + +He looked at her in some amazement, then closed his lips, and said +nothing more. Molly longed to get her father alone, in order to explain +Nora's peculiar conduct. + +"It is difficult for an Englishman to understand her," thought Molly. +"I do, and I think her altogether charming; but father, who has gone to +this enormous expense and trouble, will be put out if she does not show +a little gratitude. I will tell her that she must; I will take the very +first opportunity." + +And now they were turning in at the well-known gates. These gates were +painted white, whereas they had been almost reduced to their native +wood. The avenue was quite tidy, no weeds anywhere; but Nora almost +refused to look out. One by one the familiar trees seemed to pass by her +as she was bowled rapidly along in the new brougham, as if they were so +many ghosts saying good-by. But then there was the roar--the real, real, +grand roar--of the Atlantic in her ears. No amount of tidiness, nothing +could ever alter that sound. + +"Oh, hurrah for the sea!" she said. She flung down the window and popped +out her head. + +Mr. Hartrick nodded to Molly. "She will see a great deal more to delight +her than just the old ocean," he said. + +Molly was silent. They arrived at the house; the butler was standing on +the steps, a nice, stylish-looking Englishman, in neat livery. He came +down, opened the carriage door, let down the steps, and offered his arm +to Nora to alight; but she pushed past him, bounded up the steps, and +the next moment found herself in her mother's arms. + +"How do you do, my dear Nora?" said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan. "I am glad to +see you, dear, but also surprised. You acted in your usual headstrong +fashion." + +"Oh, another time, mother. Mummy, how are you? I am glad to see you +again; but don't scold me now; just wait. I'll bear it all patiently +another time. How is the dad, mummy?--how is the dad?" + +"Your father is doing nicely, Nora; there was not the slightest occasion +for you to hurry off and give such trouble and annoyance." + +"I don't suppose I have given annoyance to father," said Nora. "Where is +he--in his old room?" + +"No; we moved him upstairs to the best bedroom. We thought it the wisest +thing to do; he was in considerable pain." + +"The best bedroom? Which is the best bedroom?" said Nora. "Your room, +mummy?" + +"The room next to mine, darling. And just come and have a look at the +drawing room, Nora." + +"I will go to father first," said Nora. "Don't keep me; I can't stay." + +She forgot Molly; she forgot her uncle; she even forgot her mother. In +a moment she was bounding upstairs over those thick Axminster +carpets--those awful carpets, into which her feet sank--down a corridor, +also heavily lined with Axminster, past great velvet curtains, which +seemed to stifle her as she pushed them aside, and the next instant she +had burst open a door. + +In the old days this room had been absolutely destitute of furniture. In +the older days again it had been the spare room of Castle O'Shanaghgan. +Here hospitality had reigned; here guests of every degree had found a +hearty welcome, an invitation to stay as long as they pleased, and the +best that the Castle could afford for their accommodation. When Nora had +left O'Shanaghgan, the only thing that had remained in the old room +was a huge four-poster. Even the mattress from this old bed had been +removed; the curtains had been taken from the windows; the three great +windows were bare of both blinds and curtains. Now a soft carpet covered +the entire floor; a neat modern Albert bed stood in a recess; there +were heavy curtains to the windows, and Venetian blinds, which were so +arranged as to temper the light. But the light of the sunset had already +faded, and it was twilight when Nora popped her wild, excited little +face round the door. + +In the bed lay a gaunt figure, unshaven, with a beard of a week's +growth. Two great eyes looked out of caverns, then two arms were +stretched out, and Nora was clasped to her father's breast. + +"Ah, then, I have you again; may God be praised for all His mercies," +said the Squire in a great, deep hoarse voice. + +Nora lay absolutely motionless for nearly half a minute in his arms, +then she raised herself. + +"Ah," she said, "that was good. I hungered for it." + +"And I also hungered for it, my darling," said the Squire. "Let me look +at you, Light o' the Morning; get a light somehow, and let me see your +bonny, bonny, sweet, sweet face." + +"Ah, there's a fire in the grate," said Nora. "Are there any matches?" + +"Matches, bedad!" said the Squire; "there's everything that's wanted. +It's perfectly horrible. They are in a silver box, too, bedad! What do +we want with it? Twist up a bit of paper, do, Nora, like a good girl, +and light the glim the old way." + +Nora caught at her father's humor at once. She had already flung off her +hat and jacket. + +"To be sure I will," she said, "and with all the heart in the world." +She tore a long strip from the local paper, which was lying on a chair +near by, twisted it, lit it in the fire, and then applied it to a +candle. + +"Only light one candle, for the love of heaven, child," said the Squire. +"I don't want to see too many of the fal-lals. Now then, that's better; +bring the light up to the bed. Oh, what I have suffered with curtains, +and carpets, and---" + +"It's too awful, father," said Nora. + +"That's it, child. That's the first cheery word I have heard for the +last six weeks--too awful I should think it is. They are smothering me +between them, Nora. I shall never get up and breathe the free air again; +but when you came in you brought a breath of air with you." + +"Let's open the window. There's a gale coming up, We'll have some air," +said Nora. + +"Why, then, Light o' the Morning, they say I'll get bronchitis if the +window is opened." + +"They! Who are they?" said Nora, with scorn. + +"Why, you wouldn't believe it, but they had a doctor down from Dublin to +see me. I don't believe he had a scrap of real Irish blood in him, for +he said I was to be nursed and messed over, and gruels and all kinds of +things brought to my bedside--I who would have liked a fine potato with +a pinch of salt better than anything under the sun." + +"You'll have your potato and your pinch of salt now that I am back," +said Nora. "I mean to be mistress of this room." + +The Squire gave a laugh. + +"Isn't it lovely to hear her?" he said. "Don't it do me a sight of good? +There, open the window wide, Nora, before your mother comes in. Oh, your +mother is as pleased as Punch, and for her sake I'd bear a good deal; +but I am a changed man. The old times are gone, never to return. Call +this place Castle O'Shanaghgan. It may be suitable for an English +nobleman to live in, but it's not my style; it's not fit for an Irish +squire. We are free over here, and we don't go in for luxuries and +smotherations." + +"Ah, father, I had to go through a great deal of that in England," +said Nora. "It's awful to think that sort of life has come here; but +there--there's the window wide open. Do you feel a bit of a breeze, +dad?" + +"To be sure I do; let me breathe it in. Prop me up in bed, Nora. They +said I was to lie flat on my back, but, bedad! I won't now that you have +come back." + +Nora pushed some pillows under her father, and sat behind him to support +him, and at last she got him to sit up in bed with his face turned to +the wide-open window. + +The blinds were rattling, the curtains were being blown into the room, +and the soft, wild sound of the sea fell on his ears. + +"Ah, I'm better now," he said; "my lungs are cleared at bit. You had +best shut the window before your lady-mother comes in. And put the +candle so that I can't see the fal-lals too much," he continued; "but +place it so that I can gaze at your bonny face." + +"You must tell me how you were hurt, father, and where." + +"Bedad! then, I won't--not to-night. I want to have everything as +cheerful as possible to-night. My little girl has come back--the joy +of my heart, the light of my eyes, the top of the morning, and I'm not +going to fret about anything else." + +"You needn't--you needn't," said Nora. "Oh! it is good to see you again. +There never was anybody like you in all the world. And you were longing +for Nora?" + +"Now, don't you be fishing." + +"But you were--wern't you?" + +"To be sure--to be sure. Here, then, let me grip hold of your little +hand. I never saw such a tiny little paw. And so they haven't made a +fine English lady of you?" + +"No, not they," said Nora. + +"And you ran away to see your old dad? Why, then, you have the spirit of +the old O'Shanaghgans in you." + +"Horses would not have kept me from you," said Nora. + +"I might have known as much. How I laughed when your mother brought in +the telegram from your Aunt Grace this morning! And weren't they in a +fuss, and wasn't your Uncle George as cross as he could be, and your +mother rampaging up and down the room until I said, 'If you want to +bring on the fever, you'll go on like that, Ellen; and then she went +out, and I heard her talking to your uncle in the passage. Clap, clap +went their tongues. I never knew anything like English people; they +never talk a grain of anything amusing; that's the worst of it. Why, +it's the truth I'm telling you, darling; I haven't had a hearty laugh +since you left home. I'll do fine now. When they were out of the room +didn't I give way! I gave two loud guffaws, that I did, when I thought +of the trick you had played them. Ah, you're a true daughter of the old +race!" + +Nora nestled up to her father, squeezing his hand now and then, and +looking into his face. + +"We'll have a fine time to-morrow, and the next day, and the next day, +and the next," she said. "Oh! I am determined to be near you. But isn't +there one little place in the house left bare, father, where we can go +and have a happy moment?" + +"Never a square inch," said the Squire, looking at her solemnly. "It's +too awful; even the attics have been cleared out and put in order, for +the servants, forsooth! says your Uncle George." + +"What do we want so many retainers for? I am sure, now, if they would +take a good houseful of some of the poor villagers and plant them up in +those attics, there would be some sense in it." + +"Oh, Nora, couldn't we get a bit of a place just like the old place, all +to ourselves?" + +"I'll think it over," said Nora; "we'll manage somehow. We can't stand +feather-beds for ever and ever, father." + +"Hark to her," said the Squire; "you're a girl after my own heart, Light +o' the Morning, and it's glad I am to see you, and to have you back +again." + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + + +ALTERATIONS. + +While Nora and her father were talking together there came a sound of a +ponderous gong through the house. + +"What's that?" said Nora, starting. + +"You may well ask 'What's that?'" replied the Squire. "It's the +dinner-gong. There's dinner now in the evening, bedad! and up to seven +courses, by the same token. I sat out one or two of them; but, bless my +soul! I couldn't stand too much of that sort of thing. You had best go +and put on something fine. Your mother dresses in velvet and silk and +jewels for dinner. She looks wonderful; she is a very fine woman indeed, +is your mother. I am as proud as Punch of her; but, all the same, it is +too much to endure every day. She is dressed for all the world as though +she were going to a ball at the Lord-Lieutenant's in Dublin. It's past +standing; but you had best go down and join 'em, Norrie." + +"Not I. I am going to stay here," said Nora. + +"No, no, darling pet; you had best go down, enjoy your dinner, and come +back and tell me about it. It will be fun to hear your description. You +mimic 'em as much as you like, Norrie; take 'em off. Now, none of your +coaxing and canoodling ways; off you go. You shall come back later on, +and tell me all about it. Oh, they are stiff and stately, and they'll +never know you and I are laughing at 'em up our sleeves. Now, be off +with you." + +So, unwillingly, Nora went. In the corridor outside she met her cousin +Molly. + +"Why, you haven't begun to dress yet," said Molly; "and I'm going down +to dinner." + +"Bother dress!" said Nora. "I am home again. Mother can't expect me +to dress." She rushed past her cousin. She was too excited to have any +sympathy then with English Molly. She ran up to her own room, and stood +with a sense of dismay on the threshold. It had always been a beautiful +room, with its noble proportions and its splendid view; and it was now +furnished exquisitely as well. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan had great taste. She had taken immense pains with +Nora's room; had thought it all out, and got it papered and painted +after a scheme of color of her own. The furniture was of light wood--the +room was fit to be the bower of a gracious and lovely maiden; there were +new books in the little bookcase hanging up by the bedside. Everything +was new and everything was beautiful. There was no sense of bad taste +about the room; it was furnished harmoniously. + +Nora stood and gazed at it, and her heart sank. + +"Oh! it is kind of mother; it is beautiful," she said to herself; "but +am I never, never, never to lie down in the little old bed again? Am I +never to pour water out of the cracked old jug? Am I never to look +at myself in the distorted glass? Oh, dear! oh, dear! how I did love +looking at myself in the old glass, which made one cheek much more +swollen than the other, and one eyebrow went up a quarter of an inch +above the other, and my mouth was a little crooked! It is perfectly +horrid to know one's self all one's life long with a swollen cheek and a +crooked mouth, and then see classical features without a scrap of fun in +them. Oh, dear! But I suppose I had best get ready." + +So Nora washed her face and hands, and ran downstairs. The dining +room looked heavy and massive, and the footman and the butler attended +noiselessly; and Mr. Hartrick at the foot of the table and Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan at the head looked as stately a pair as could be found in +the length and breadth of the land. + +Molly, nicely dressed in her dinner-frock, was quite in keeping with the +elder pair; but wild Nora, still wearing her gray traveling-dress, felt +herself out of place. Her cheeks were flushed with the excitement of +seeing her father; her hair was wild and disarranged. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan +looked at her all over with marked disapproval. + +"Why, she looks scarcely pretty," thought the mother to herself. "How +tired and fagged she appears! Dear, dear! if after all the trouble I +have gone to, Nora disappoints me in this way, life will really not be +worth living." + +But Mrs. O'Shanaghgan could scarcely suppress the joy which was now +filling her life. She was the mistress of a noble home; she was at the +head of quite the finest establishment in the county. Already all the +best county folk had called upon her several times. + +It is sad to state that these great and rich people had rather neglected +the lady of the Castle during the last few years; but now that she drove +about behind a pair of horses, that her house was refurnished, that +wealth seemed to have filled all her coffers, she was certainly worth +attending to. + +"Now that you have come back, Nora," said her mother in the course of +the meal, "I wish to say that I have several invitations for you, and +that Molly can accept too." She looked with kindness at Molly, who, if +only Nora had been happy, would have thoroughly enjoyed herself. + +"I must show you the drawing room after dinner, my dear," said her +mother. "It is really a magnificent room. And I must also show you my +morning room, and the library, and your father's smoking room." + +"This is a splendid house, you know, Ellen," said Mr. Hartrick to his +sister, "and pays for doing up. Why, a house like this in any habitable +part of England would fetch a colossal fortune." + +Nora sighed and shrugged her shoulders. Molly glanced at her, and the +word "Jehoshaphat!" was almost trembling on her lips. She kept it back, +however; she was wonderfully on her good behavior to-night. At last the +long and dreary meal came to an end. Nora could scarcely suppress her +yawns of utter weariness. She began to think of nothing but lying down, +shutting her eyes, and going into a long and dreamless slumber. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan rose from the table and sailed out of the room. A +footman flung open the door for her, and Nora and Molly followed in her +wake. + +"I'll be with you presently in the drawing room, Ellen," said Mr. +Hartrick to his sister; "but first of all I'll just go up and have a +smoke with O'Shanaghgan. You found your father much better to-night, did +you not, Nora?" + +"I thought father looked very bad indeed," said Nora. She could not add +another word; she went out into the hall. + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan took her hand, squeezing it up in a tight pressure. + +"You ought not to speak in that tone to your uncle," she said; "you can +never, never know all that he has done for us. He is the noblest, the +most generous, the best man in the world." + +"Oh, I know all that, mother; I know all that," said Nora. She did not +add, "But for me he would never have done it. It was I who inserted the +thin edge of the wedge." Her tone was gentle; her mother looked at her +with a softening of her own face. + +"Well, dear," she said, "your Uncle George has taken a great fancy +to you. Notwithstanding your eccentricities, Nora--and they are +considerable--he says you have the making of a fine girl. But come, we +must not neglect your cousin. Come here, dear Molly; you and Nora will +be interested in seeing what a beautiful place Castle O'Shanaghgan is +now." + +Molly took hold of Nora's other hand, and they entered the drawing room. +It was lit with soft candles in many sconces; the blinds were down; +across the windows were drawn curtains of Liberty silk of the palest, +softest shade of rose. On the floor was a carpet of many soft colors +cunningly mingled. The walls were painted a pale artistic green, large +mirrors were introduced here and there, and old family portraits, all +newly framed, of dead and gone O'Shanaghgans, hung on the painted +walls. There were new tables, knick-knacks--all the various things which +constitute the drawing room of an English lady. + +Nora felt for one brief, passionate, angry moment that she was back +again at The Laurels; but then, seeing the light in her mother's eyes, +the pink flush of happiness on her cheeks, she restrained herself. + +"It makes you happy, mummy," she said, "and----" + +"But what do you think of it, my darling?" + +"It is a very beautiful room." + +"Ah! that is right. I thought my little wildflower would appreciate +all these things when she came back again. Ah, Nora! you have been a +naughty, wild imp; but your father was delighted when he heard what you +had done. Of course I am terribly angry." + +"No, you are not, mummy; you are pleased to see me again." + +"I am glad to have you back, Nora; but as to being pleased, how could I +be? However, you can stay here for a fortnight or so now that you have +come; and then, when your dear uncle leaves us, you and Molly can go +back with him." + +Nora did not say anything; but a stubborn look came into her face which +her mother knew of old. + +From the drawing room they went to the library, which had also undergone +complete rejuvenation. The walls were laden with standard works of +different kinds; but some of the shelves were still empty. + +"The old books, your uncle says, were of great value," said Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan, "and he sent them all to Dublin to be rebound. They have +not come back yet. They are to be bound in old calf, and will suit the +rest of the room. Is it not a magnificent apartment?" + +Nora said "Yes" in a somewhat dreamy voice. + +They then went to her mother's morning-room, and then on to the Squire's +smoking-room. + +"They might at least have left this alone," thought the girl. "They +might at least have left this one room, where he could retire when he +felt quite choked by all the furniture in the rest of the place." + +But even the Squire's smoking-room was changed into the smoking-room of +an English gentleman. There were deep easy-chairs covered with leather; +there were racks for pipes, and great brass dogs before the fireplace; +on the floor was a thick carpet. Nora felt as if she longed to give it a +savage kick. + +At last the terrible ordeal of going through the--to her, utterly +ruined--house was over, and she and Molly found themselves alone. + +"I will go up to your father for a few minutes," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, +nodding to Nora. "You and your cousin will like to have a chat; and +then, my dears, I should recommend you both to go to bed as early as +possible." + +When they were back again in the big drawing room Nora gave Molly a wild +look. + +"Come out," she said; "at least out of doors the air is the same as of +old." + +Molly caught up a shawl and wrapped it round her head; but Nora went out +just as she was. + +"You'll catch cold," said English Molly. + +"I catch cold in my native land!" replied Irish Nora. "How little you +know me! Oh, come, Molly, I am going to be wild; I am going to give +way." + +They both stepped outside on the broad gravel sweep. The moon was up, +and it was shining over everything. In the moonlight Castle O'Shanaghgan +looked very much as it had done before. The moon had always glorified +the old place, and it glorified it still. Nora stood and gazed around +her; up to the tops of the mountains, with their dark summits clearly +defined against the evening sky; across the wide breadth of the +Atlantic; over the thick plantations, the fields, and the huge trees in +the background. + +"It's all the same," she said, with a glad laugh; "thank God it is all +the same. Even your father, Molly, cannot destroy the place outside, at +least." + +"Oh Nora, it is such a lovely, lovely place!" said Molly. "Cannot you be +happy in it with its modern dress?" + +"Happy," said Nora, suddenly brought back to her sense of misery by the +word. "I am thankful that my father is not so ill; but--but you must +help, Molly. Promise that you will." + +"I am sure I'd do anything in the world," said Molly. "I think I have +been very good to-day. I have kept in my naughty words, Jehoshaphat and +Moses and Elephants, and all the rest. What do you want me to do, Nora?" + +"We must get him out of that room," said Nora. + +"Him? You mean your father?" + +"Yes; he will never recover there. I have been thinking and thinking, +and I'll have my plan ready by the morning; only you must help me. I'll +get Hannah Croneen to come in, and we'll do it between us if you can +help me." + +"But what is it?" said Molly. + +"I'll tell you in the morning; you wait and see." + + + + +CHAPTER XXX. + + +THE LION IN HIS CAGE. + +The Squire was better, and not better. He had received a very nasty +flesh-wound in the thigh; but the bullet had been extracted. There was +not the slightest clew to the identity of his would-be murderer. The +Squire himself had said nothing. He had been found almost bleeding +to death by the roadside; the alarm had been given, and in terror and +consternation his own tenants had brought him home. + +The Squire could have said a good deal, but he said nothing. The police +came and asked him questions, but he kept his lips closed. + +"I didn't see the man," he said after a pause. "Somebody fired, of +course; but I can't tell who, for I saw no one; it was from behind the +hedge. Why the scoundrel who wanted to do for me didn't shoot a little +higher up puzzles me. But there, let it rest--let it rest." + +And the neighbors and the country had to let it rest, for there was no +evidence against anyone. Amongst those who came to inquire after the +Squire was Andy Neil. He came often, and was full of commiseration, and +loudly cursed the brute who had very nearly done for his old landlord. +But the neighbors had suspicions with regard to Andy, for he had been +turned out of his cot in the mountains, and was living in the village +now. They scowled at him when he passed, and turned aside; and his own +face looked more miserable than ever. Still, he came daily up to the big +kitchen to inquire for the Squire. + +The doctor said there was no reason whatever why Mr. O'Shanaghgan should +not get quite well. He was by no means old--not more than fifty; +there was not the slightest occasion for a break-down, and yet, to all +appearance, a break-down there was. The Squire got morose; he hardly +ever smiled; even Nora's presence scarcely drew a hearty guffaw from his +lips. The doctors were puzzled. + +"What can be wrong?" they said. But Nora herself knew very well what was +wrong. She and her father were the only ones who did know. She knew that +the old lion was dying in captivity; that he was absolutely succumbing +to the close and smothered life which he was now leading. He wanted the +free air of his native mountains; he wanted the old life, now gone for +ever, back again. + +"It is true the place is saved, Norrie," he said once to his daughter, +"and I haven't a word to say. I would be the most ungrateful dog in +existence if I breathed a single word of complaint. The place is saved; +and though it nominally belongs now to your Uncle George, to all intents +and purposes it is my place, and he gives me to understand that at my +death it goes to my boy. Yes, he has done a noble deed, and of course I +admire him immensely." + +"And so do I, father," said Nora; but she looked thoughtful and +troubled; and one day, after she had been in her father's room for some +time, when she met her uncle in the avenue she spoke to him. + +"Well, my dear girl," he said, "what about coming back with me to +England when I go next week?" + +"It is not to be thought of, Uncle George. How can I leave my father +while he is ill?" + +"That is true. I have been thinking about him. The doctors are a little +distressed at his growing weakness. They cannot quite understand it. +Tonics have been given to him and every imaginable thing has been done. +He wants for nothing; his nourishment is of the best; still he makes no +way. It is puzzling." + +"I don't think so," said Nora. + +"What do you mean, my dear girl?" + +"You might do all that sort of thing for an eagle, you know," said Nora, +raising her clear eyes and fixing them on her uncle's face. "You might +give him everything in his prison, much more than he had when he was +free; but, all the same, he would pine and--and he would die." Tears +rose to the girl's eyes; she dashed them away. + +"My dear little Nora, I don't in the least see the resemblance," said +Mr. Hartrick, who felt, and perhaps justly, rather nettled. "You seem +to imply by your words that I have done your father an injury when I +secured the home of his ancestors for him." + +"Oh, forgive me, Uncle George," said Nora. "I don't really mean to say +anything against you, for you are just splendid." + +Mr. Hartrick did not reply; he looked puzzled and thoughtful. Nora, +after a moment's silence, spoke again. + +"I am most grateful to you. I believe you have done what is best--at +least what you think best. You have made my mother very happy, and +Terence will be so pleased; and the tenants--oh! they will get their +rights now, their cabins will be repaired, the roofs mended, the windows +put in fresh, the little gardens stocked for them. Oh, yes, you are +behaving most generously. Anyone would suppose the place belonged to +you." + +"Which it does," muttered Mr. Hartrick under his breath. + +"You have made a great many people happy, only somehow--somehow it is +not quite the way to make my father happy, and it is not the way to make +me happy. But I have nothing more to say, except that I cannot leave my +father now." + +"You must come to us after Christmas, then," said Mr. Hartrick. "I must +go back next week, and I shall probably take Molly with me." + +"Oh! leave her with me here," said Nora suddenly. "I do wish you would; +the air here is so healthy. Do let her stay, and then perhaps after +Christmas, when things are different, we might both go back." + +"Of course things will be different," said Mr. Hartrick. "A new doctor +is coming to see your father next week, and he will probably change the +_régime_; he may order him fresh air, and before long we shall have +him strong and well amongst us again. He has absolutely nothing wrong +except----" + +"Except that he has everything wrong," said Nora. + +"Well, well, my dear child, I will think over your suggestion that +Molly should stay with you; and in the meantime remember that we are all +coming to O'Shanaghgan for Christmas." + +"All of you!" said Nora in dismay. + +"Yes, all of us. Your aunt has never spent a real old-fashioned +Christmas in her life, and I mean her to have it this year. I shall +bring over some of our English habits to this place. We will roast an ox +whole, and have huge bonfires, and all kinds of things, and the tenantry +shall have a right good time. There, Nora, you smile; that pleases you." + +"You are so kind," she said. She clasped his hands in both of hers, and +then turned away. + +"There never was anyone kinder," thought the girl to herself; "but all +the same he does not understand." She re-entered the house and went up +to her father's room. + +The Squire was lying on his back. The days were now getting short, for +November had begun. There was a big fire in the grate; the Squire panted +in the hot room. + +"Just come in here," he said to Nora. "Don't make much noise; lock the +door--will you, pet?" + +Nora obeyed. + +"Now fling the window wide open; let me get a breath of air." + +Nora did open the window, but the air was moist and damp from the +Atlantic, and even she, fearless as she was, hesitated when she heard +her father's cough. + +"There, child, there," he said; "it's the lungs beginning to work +properly again. Now then, you can shut it up; I hear a step. For +Heaven's sake, Nora, be quick, or your mother may come in, and won't she +be making a fuss! There, unlock the door." + +"But you are worse, father; you are worse." + +"What else can you expect? They don't chain up wild animals and expect +them to get well. I never lived through anything of this sort before, +and it's just smothering me." + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan entered the room. + +"Patrick," she said, "would you like some sweetbread and a bit of +pheasant for your dinner?" + +"Do you know what I'd like?" roared the Squire. "A great big mealy +potato, with a pinch of salt." + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan uttered a sigh, and the color rushed into her pale +cheeks. + +"Upon my word," she said, "you are downright vulgar." + +The Squire gave a feeble guffaw. Nora's heart beat as she noticed how +feeble it was. She left the room, because she could not stay there +another moment. The time had come to act. She had hesitated long, but +she would hesitate no longer. She ran downstairs. The first person she +saw was Molly. + +"Well," said Molly, "how is he?" + +"Very bad indeed," said Nora; "there's not a moment to lose. Something +must be done, and quickly." + +"What can be done?" + +"Come out with me; I have a thought in my head." + +Nora and Molly went outside. They crossed the avenue, went along the +plantation at the back, and soon found themselves in the huge yard which +flanked the back of the house. In a distant part of the yard was a barn, +and this barn Nora now entered. It was untidy; the doors fitted badly; +the floor was of clay. It was quite empty. + +Nora gave a sigh of relief. + +"I dreamed of this barn last night," she said. "I think it is the very +place." + +"For what, Nora; for what?" + +"I am going to have father moved here to-day." + +"Nora, what nonsense you are talking! You will kill him." + +"Save his life, you mean," said Nora. "I am going to get a bedstead, a +straw paillasse, and an old hard mattress, and I am going to have them +put here; and we'll get a bit of tarpaulin to put on the floor, to +prevent the damp coming up; and I'll put a curtain across this window so +that he needn't have too much draught, the darling; and there shall +be nothing else in the room except a wooden table. He shall have his +potatoes and salt, and his bit of salt bacon, if he wishes, and he shall +have his great big bare room. I tell you what it is, Molly, he'll never +get well unless he is brought here." + +"What a girl you are! But how will you do it?" + +"Leave it to me. Do you mind driving with me on the outside car as far +as Cronane?" + +"The outside car? I have never been on it yet." + +"Oh, come along; I'll introduce you to the sweetest conveyance in the +world." + +Nora's spirits rose at the thought of immediate action. + +"Won't it surprise and delight him?" she said. She went up to one of +the grooms. He was an English groom, and was somewhat surprised at the +appearance of the young lady in the yard. + +"What can I do for you, miss?" he said. + +"I want Angus," answered Nora. "Where is he?" + +Angus was one of the few old Irish servants who were still left at +Castle O'Shanaghgan. He now came forward in a sheepish kind of way; but +when he saw Nora his face lit up. + +"Put one of the horses to the outside car at once--Black Bess if you +can," said Nora. + +"Yes, miss," said the man, "with all the pleasure in life." + +"Don't take it round to the front door. Miss Molly and I want to drive +to Cronane. You needn't come with us, Angus; just put the horse to, and +I'll drive myself." + +Accordingly, in less than ten minutes' time the two girls were +driving in the direction of Cronane. Molly, brave as she was, had some +difficulty in keeping on. She clung to the sides of the car and panted. + +"Nora, as sure as Jehoshaphat and Elephants, I'll be flung out on to the +highroad!" cried Molly. + +"Sit easy and nothing will happen," said Nora, who was seated +comfortably herself at the other side and was driving with vigor. + +Presently they reached Cronane, which looked just as dilapidated as +ever. + +"Oh, the darling place! Isn't it a relief to see it?" said Nora. "Don't +I love that gate off its hinges! It's a sight for sore eyes--that it +is." + +They dashed up the avenue and stopped before the hall door. + +Standing on the steps--where, indeed, he spent most of his time--and +indulging in the luxury of an old church-warden pipe, was Squire Murphy. +He raised a shout when he saw Nora, and ran down the steps as fast as he +could. + +"Why, my bit of a girl, it's good to see you!" he cried. "And who is +this young lady?" + +"This is my cousin, Molly Hartrick. Molly, may I introduce you to Squire +Murphy?" + +"Have a grip of the paw, miss," said Squire Murphy, holding out his +great hand and clasping Molly's. + +"And now, what can I do for you, Nora alannah? 'Tis I that am glad to +see you. There's Biddy in the house, and the wife; they'll give you a +hearty welcome, and no mistake. You come along right in, the pair of +yez; come right in." + +"But I cannot," said Nora. "I want to speak to you alone and at once. +Can you get one of the boys to hold the horse?" + +"To be sure. Dan, you spalpeen! come forward this minute. Now then, hold +Black Bess, and look alive, lad. Well, Nora, what is it?" + +Molly stood on the gravel sweep, Nora and the Squire walked a few paces +away. + +"It's this," said Nora; "you haven't asked yet how father is." + +"But he is doing fine, they tell me. I see I'm not wanted at +O'Shanaghgan; and I'm the last man in the world to go there when the +cold shoulder is shown to me." + +"Oh! they would never mean that," said Nora, in distress. + +"Oh, don't they mean it, my dear? Haven't I been up to the Castle day +after day, and asking for the Squire with my heart in my mouth, and +ready to sit by his side and to colleague with him about old times, +and raise a laugh in him, and smoke with him; and haven't I been +repelled?--the Squire not well enough to see me; madam herself not at +home. Oh, I know their ways. When you were poor at O'Shanaghgan, then +Squire Murphy was wanted; but now that you're rich, Squire Murphy can go +his own way for aught you care." + +"It is not true, Mr. Murphy," said the girl, her bright blue eyes +filling with tears. "Oh!" she added, catching his hand impulsively, +"don't I know it all? But it's not my father's fault; he would give the +world to see you--he shall see you. Do you know why he is ill?" + +"Why so, Nora? Upon my word, you're a very handsome girl, Nora." + +"Oh, never mind about my looks now. My father is ill because--because of +all the luxury and the riches." + +"Bedad, then, I'm glad to hear it," said the Squire of Cronane. He +slapped his thigh loudly. "It's the best bit of news I have heard +this many a day; it surprised me how he could put up with it. And it's +killing him?" + +"That's about it," said Nora. "He must be rescued." + +"I'll do what I can," said Squire Murphy. "Will you do this? Will you +this very day get out the long cart and have an old bedstead put into +it, and an old paillasse and an old mattress; and will you see that it +is taken over this very afternoon to O'Shanaghgan? I'll be there, and +the bedstead shall be put up in the old barn, and father shall sleep in +the barn to-night, and you and I, Squire, and Hannah Croneen, and Molly, +will help to move him while the rest of the family are at tea." + +The Squire stared at Nora so long after she had made these remarks that +she really thought he had taken leave of his senses; then he burst into +a great loud laugh, clapped his hand to his side, and wrung Nora's until +she thought he would wring it off. Then he turned back to the house, +walking so fast that Nora had to run after him. But she knew that she +had found her ally, and that her father would be saved. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXI. + + +RELEASE OF THE CAPTIVE. + +All Nora's wishes were carried into effect. The long cart was got out. +An old mattress was secured, also an old bedstead. The mattress happened +to be well aired, for, indeed, it was one on which the Squire himself +had slept the previous night; but, as he remarked, he would gladly give +the bed from under him for the sake of his old friend O'Shanaghgan. + +Molly helped, also Biddy and Nora, in all the preparations, and at +last the three girls jumped upon the outside car and returned to +O'Shanaghgan. Biddy felt that she was anything but welcome. She was +certainly not looking her best. Her dress was of the shabbiest, and her +turned-up nose looked more celestial than ever. Molly was gazing at her +just as if she were a sort of curiosity, and finally Biddy resented this +close scrutiny, and turned to Nora, grasping her by the hand. + +"Tell her," said Biddy, "that it is very rude to stare in that sort of +stolid way. If she were an Irish girl she would give a flashing glance +and then look away again; but that way of staring full and stiff puts a +body out. Tell her it is not true Irish manners." + +"Oh, Jehoshaphat!" exclaimed Molly, "I hear you both whispering +together. What is it all about? I am nearly wild trying to keep myself +on this awful car, and I know you are saying something not in my favor." + +"We are that," cried Biddy; "we are just wishing you would keep your +English manners to yourself." + +Molly flushed rather indignantly. + +"I did not know that I was doing anything," she said. + +"Why, then," cried Biddy, "is it nothing when you are bringing the +blushes to my cheeks and the palpitation to my heart; and is it nothing +to be, as it were, exposed to the scorn of the English? Why, then, +bedad! I have got my nose from the old Irish kings, from whom I am +descended, as true as true. Blue is my blood, and I am as proud of my +ancestry as if I was Queen Victoria herself. I see that you have neat, +straight features; but you have not got a scrap of royal blood in +you--now, have you?" + +"I don't think so," answered Molly, laughing in spite of herself. "Well, +if it offends you, I will try not to look at you again." + +The drive came to an end, and Nora entered the big, splendidly furnished +hall, accompanied by Molly and Biddy. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan happened to be +standing there. She came hurriedly forward. + +"My dear Nora," she began, but then her eyes fell upon Biddy. Her brows +went up with a satirical action; she compressed her lips and kept back a +sigh of annoyance. + +"How do you do, Miss Murphy?" she said. + +"I am fine, thank you kindly, ma'am," replied Biddy; "and it is sorry I +am that I had not time to change my dress and put on the pink one with +the elegant little flounces that my aunt sent me from Dublin." + +"Oh, your present dress will do very well," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, +suppressing an internal shudder at the thought of Biddy at the renovated +Castle of O'Shanaghgan in her dirty pink dress with the flounces. + +"But, Miss Murphy," she continued, "I am sorry that I cannot ask you +to stay. The Squire is too unwell to admit of our having friends at +present." + +"Oh, glory!" cried Biddy, "and how am I to get back again? Why, it was +on your own outside car that I came across country, and I cannot walk +all the way back to Cronane. Oh, but what a truly beautiful house! I +never saw anything like it. Why, it is a sort of palace!" + +Biddy's open admiration of the glories of O'Shanaghgan absolutely made +the good mistress of the mansion smile. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan felt that Nora +did not really care for the beautiful place--the grandly furnished rooms +had brought no enthusiasm or delight to her heart. Nora had tried very +hard to keep in her real feelings; but her mother was quite sharp enough +to know what they were. There was little pleasure in taking a girl round +rooms, corridors, and galleries when she was only forcing herself to say +pretty things which she did not feel. Molly, of course, had always lived +in a beautiful and well-furnished house; therefore there was nothing +exciting in showing her the present magnificence of O'Shanaghgan, and +half Mrs. O'Shanaghgan's pleasure was showing the place in its now regal +state to her friends. Biddy's remark, therefore, was most fortunate. +Even wild, unkempt, untaught Irish Biddy was better than no one. + +"I tell you what it is," said the good lady, with quite a gracious +expression stealing over her features, "if you will promise to walk +softly, and not to make any loud remarks, I will take you through the +suite of drawing rooms and the big dining room and my morning room; but +you must promise to be very quiet if I give you this great pleasure." + +"And it is glad I'll be, and as mum as a mouse. I'll hold my hands to my +heart, and keep in everything; but, oh, Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, if I am fit +to burst now and then, you will let me run to the window and give a +big sigh? It is all I'll ask, to relieve myself; but mum's the word for +everything else." + +On these terms Mrs. O'Shanaghgan conducted her unwelcome guest through +the rooms, and after a brief tour Biddy joined her companions in the +yard. Nora was busy sweeping out the barn herself, and, with the aid +of Hannah Croneen and Molly, was already beginning to put it to rights. +Biddy was now free to join the other conspirators, and the girls quickly +became friends under these conditions. + +Hannah proved herself a most valuable ally. She whisked about, dashing +here and there, raising a whirlwind of dust, but, in Nora's opinion, +effecting wonders. Angus also was drawn into the midst of the fray. His +delight and approval of Nora's scheme was almost beyond bounds. + +"Ah, then," he said; "it's this will do the masther good. Oh, then, Miss +Nora, it's you that has the 'cute ways." + +A tarpaulin was found and laid upon the floor. From Hannah's cottage a +small deal table was fetched. A washstand was given by Angus; a cracked +basin and jug were further secured; and Nora gave implicit directions +with regard to the boiling of the mealy potatoes and the little scrap of +bacon on which the Squire was to sup. + +"You will bring them in--the potatoes, I mean--in their jackets," said +the Irish girl, "and have them hot as hot can be." + +"They shall screech, that they shall," replied Hannah; "and the bacon, +it shall be done as tasty and sweet as bacon can be. I'll give the last +bit of my own little pigeen, with all the heart in the world, for the +Squire's supper." + +Accordingly, when the long cart arrived from Cronane, accompanied by +the Squire and his factotum, Mike, the barn was ready to receive the +bedstead, the straw paillasse, and the mattress. Nora managed to +convey, from the depths of the Castle, sheets, blankets, pillows, and +a counterpane, and everything was in apple-pie order by the time the +family was supposed to assemble for afternoon tea. This was the +hour that Nora had selected for having the Squire removed from his +feather-bed existence to the more breezy life of the barn. It was now +the fashion at O'Shanaghgan to make quite a state occasion of afternoon +tea. The servants, in their grand livery, were all well to the fore. +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, dressed as became the lady of so beautiful a place, +sat in her lovely drawing room to receive her guests; and the guests +came up in many conveyances--some in carriages, some on outside cars, +some on dog-carts, some on foot; but, come as they would, they came, day +after day, to show their respects to the lady whom now the whole country +delighted to honor. + +On these occasions Mr. Hartrick sat with his sister, and helped her to +entertain her visitors. It had been one of the sore points between Nora +and her mother that the former would not appear to afternoon tea. Nora +had made her sick father her excuse. On the present occasion she took +good care not even to show her face inside the house. But Molly kept +watch, just behind the plantation, and soon rushed into the yard to say +that the carriages were beginning to appear. + +"A curious party have come just now," said Molly, "in such a droll +carriage, with yellow wheels and a glass body. It looks like a sort of a +Lord Mayor's coach." + +"Why, it must be the coach of the O'Rorkes," cried Nora. "Fancy Madam +coming to see mother! Why, Madam will scarcely pay a visit to royalty +itself. There is no doubt that mother is thought a lot of now. Oh, dear, +oh, dear, what a frightfully society life we shall have to lead here in +future! But I have no time to think of mother and her friends just now. +Squire, will you come upstairs with me to see father? Hannah, please +wait down here to be ready to help? Angus, you must also come upstairs, +and wait in the passage outside the Squire's room until I send for you." + +Having given her directions, Nora entered the house. All was quiet and +peaceful. The well trained English servants were, some of them, in the +kitchen premises, and some of them attending in the hall and drawing +rooms, where the guests were now arriving thick and fast. Nora had +chosen her hour well. She entered her father's room, accompanied by +Squire Murphy. + +The old Squire was lying, half-dozing, in his luxurious bed. The fire +had been recently built up. The room felt close. + +"Ah, dear!" said Squire Murphy, "it is difficult to breathe here! And +how's yourself, O'Shanaghgan, my man? Why, you do look drawn and pulled +down. I am right glad to see ye, that I am." + +The Squire of Cronane grasped the hand of the Squire of O'Shanaghgan, +and the Squire of O'Shanaghgan looked up at the other man's +weather-beaten face with a pathetic expression in his deep-set, +hawk-like, dark eyes. + +"I am bad, Murphy--very bad," said the Squire; "it's killing me they are +amongst them." + +"Why, then, it looks like it," said Squire Murphy. "I never was in such +a smotheration of a place before. Faix, then, why don't you have the +window open, and have a bit of air circulating through the room?" + +"It's forbid I am," said the Squire. "Ah, Murphy! it's killing me, it's +killing me." + +"But it shall kill you no longer, father," said Nora. "Oh, father! +Squire Murphy and I have made up such a lovely, delicious plan. What +would you say to a big, bare room again, father; and a hard bed again, +father; and potatoes and a pinch of salt and a little bit of bacon +again, father?" + +"What would I say?" cried the Squire. "I'd say, glory be to Heaven, and +all the Saints be praised; but it is too good luck to be true." + +"Not a bit of it," said Squire Murphy; "it is going to be true. You just +do what you are bid, and you will be in the hoight of contentment." + +The wonder-stricken Squire now had to listen to Nora's plan. + +"We have done it," she cried, in conclusion; "the barn is ready. It +makes a lovely bedroom; there are no end of draughts, and you'll get +well in a jiffy." + +"Then let's be quick," said the Squire, "or your lady-mother will be +up and prevent me. Hurry, Nora, for Heaven's sake! For the life of me, +don't give me a cup of cold water to taste, and then dash it from my +lips. If we are not quick, we'll be caught and prevented from going. I +am ready; wrap me up in a rug, and carry me out. I am ready and willing. +Good-by to feather bed-dom. I don't want ever to see these fal-lals +again." + +The next few moments were ones of intense excitement; but before ten +minutes had elapsed the Squire was lying in the middle of the hard +bed, gazing round him with twinkling eyes and a smile on his lips. The +appearance of Hannah Croneen, with a dish of steaming potatoes and a +piece of boiled bacon, was the final crown to his rapture. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXII. + + +ANDY. + +Are there any words in the language to describe the scene which took +place at O'Shanaghgan when Mrs. O'Shanaghgan discovered what Nora had +done? She called her brother to her aid; and, visiting the barn in her +own august person, her company dress held neatly up so as to display her +trim ankles and pretty shoes, solemnly announced that her daughter +Nora was guilty of the murder of her own father, and that she, Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan, washed her hands of her in the future. + +"Yes, Nora," said the irate lady, "you can go your own way from this +time. I have done all that a mother could do for you; but your wildness +and insubordination are past bearing. This last and final act crowns +all. The servants shall come into the barn, and bring your poor father +back to his bedroom, and you shall see nothing of him again until the +doctor gives leave. Pray, George," continued Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, "send +one of the grooms at once for Doctor Talbot. I doubt if my poor husband +has a chance of recovery after this mad deed; but we must take what +steps we can." + +"Now, look here, Ellen," said the Squire; "if you can't be aisy, be +as aisy as you can. There's no sort of use in your putting on these +high-falutin airs. I was born an Irishman. I opened my eyes on this +world in a good, sharp draught, and, if I am to die, it's in a draught +I'll leave the world; but, once for all, no more smotherations for me. +I've had too much of 'em. You say this child is likely to be the death +of me. Why, then, Ellen--God forgive yer ignorance, my poor wife--but +it's the life of me she'll be, not the death. Isn't it in comfort I'm +lying for the first time since that spalpeen behind the hedge tried to +fell me to the earth? Isn't it a good meal I've just had?--potatoes in +their jackets, and a taste of fat bacon; and if I can wash it down, as +I mean to later on, with a drop of mountain-dew, why, it's well I'll +slumber to-night. You're a very fine woman, me lady, and I'm proud as +Punch of you, but you don't know how to manage a wild Irishman when he +is ill. Now, Nora, bless her pretty heart, saw right through and through +me--the way I was being killed by inches; the hot room and the horrid +carpets and curtains; and the fire, not even made of decent turf, but +those ugly black coals, and never a draught through the chamber, except +when I took it unbeknownst to you. Ah, Nora guessed that her father was +dying, and there was no way of saving him but doing it on the sly. Well, +I'm here, the girleen has managed it, and here I'll stay. Not all the +doctors in the land, nor all the fine English grooms, shall take me back +again. I'll walk back when I'm fit to walk, and I'll do my best to bear +all that awful furniture; but in future this is my bedroom, and now you +know the worst." + +The Squire had a great color in his face as he spoke; his eyes were +shining as they had not shone since his accident, and his voice was +quite strong. Squire Murphy, who was standing near, clapped him on the +shoulder. + +"Why, Patrick," he said, "it's proud of you I am; you're like your old +self again--blest if you're not." + +Nora, who was kneeling by her father's bed, kept her face slightly +turned away from her mother; the tears were in her eyes, but there was +a well of thanksgiving in her heart. In spite of her mother's angry +reproaches, she knew she had done the right thing. Her father would get +well now. After all, his Irish daughter knew what he wanted, and she +must bear her English mother's anger. + +In an incredibly short space of time two or three of the men-servants +appeared, accompanied by Dr. Talbot. They stood in the entrance to the +barn, prepared to carry out orders; but now there stole past them the +Irish groom, Angus, and Hannah Croneen. These two came and stood near +Nora at the head of the bed. Dr. Talbot examined the patient, looked +round the cheerless barn, and said, with a smile, glancing from Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan to O'Shanaghgan's own face: + +"This will never do; you must get back to your own comfortable room, my +dear sir--that is, if I am to continue to attend you." + +"Then, for God's sake, leave off attending me, Talbot," said the Squire. +"You must be a rare ignoramus not to see that your treatment is killing +me out and out. It's fresh air I want, and plenty of it, and no more +fal-lals. Is it in my grave you'd have me in a fortnight's time? You get +out of this, and leave me to Mother Nature and the nursing of my Irish +colleen." + +This was the final straw. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan left the barn, looking more +erect and more stately even than when she had entered it. Mr. Hartrick +followed her, so did the enraged Dr. Talbot, and lastly the English +servants. Squire Murphy uttered the one word, "Routed!" and clapped his +hand on his thigh. + +The Squire, however, spoke sadly. + +"I am sorry to vex your lady mother, Nora," he said; "and upon my soul, +child, you must get me well as quick as possible. We must prove to her +that we are in the right--that we must." + +"Have a dhrop of the crayther, your honor," said Hannah, now coming +forward. "It's truth I'm telling, but this is me very last bottle of +potheen, which I was keeping for me funeral; but there, his honor's +wilcome to every drain of it." + +"Pour me out a little," said the Squire. + +He drank off the spirit, which was absolutely pure and unadulterated, +and smacked his lips. + +"It's fine I'll be to-night," he said; "it's you that have the 'cute +ways, Nora. You have saved me. But, indeed, I thank you all, my friends, +for coming to my deliverance." + +That night, in her smoke-begrimed cabin, Hannah Croneen described with +much unction the way madam and the English doctor had been made to know +their place, as she expressed it. + +"'Twas himself that put them down," said Hannah. "Ah, but he is a grand +man, is O'Shanaghgan." + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan spent a very unhappy night. No comfort could she +derive even from Mr. Hartrick's words. Nora was an out-and-out rebel, +and must be treated accordingly; and as to the Squire--well, when Nora +attended his funeral her eyes might be opened. The good lady was quite +certain that the Squire would have developed pneumonia by the morning; +but when the reports reached her that he looked heartier and better than +he had since his illness, she could scarcely believe her ears. This, +however, was a fact, for Mother Nature did step in to cure the Squire; +and the draughty barn, with its lack of every ordinary comfort, was so +soothing to his soul that it began to have an equally good effect upon +his body. + +Notwithstanding that it poured rain outside, and that great eddies of +wind came from under the badly-fitting doors and in at the cracks of +the small windows, the Squire ate his food with appetite, and began once +again to enjoy life. In the first place, he was no longer lonely. It +was impossible for his old friends and retainers to visit him in the +solitude of his grand bedroom; but it was perfectly easy, not only for +Squire Murphy and Squire Fitzgerald, and half the other squireens of +the neighborhood, to slip into the barn and have a "collogue," as they +expressed it; but also the little gossoons in their ragged trousers +and bare feet, and the girleens, with their curly hair, and roguish +dark-blue eyes, to scuttle in also. For could they not dart under the +bed like so many rabbits if madam's step was heard, and didn't the +Squire, bless him! like to have them with him when madam was busy with +her English friends? Then Nora herself, the darling of his heart, was +scarcely ever away from him now. Didn't she sit perched like a bird +on the foot of the hard bed and cause him to roar with laughter as +she described the English and their ways? Molly, too, became a prime +favorite with the Squire. It is sad to relate that he encouraged her in +her naughty words, and she began to say "Jehoshaphat!" and "Elephants!" +and "Holy Moses!" more frequently than ever. + +The grand fact of all, however, was this: the Squire was getting well +again. + +About a week after his removal to the barn Nora was out rather late by +herself. She had been visiting her favorite haunts by the seashore, and +was returning laden with seaweeds and shells, when she was startled by +hearing her name spoken in a low tone just behind her. The sound issued +from a plantation of thick underwood. The girl paused, and her heart +beat a little faster. + +"Yes. What is it?" she said. + +The next moment a long and skinny hand and arm were protruded, Nora's +own arm was forcibly taken possession of, and she was dragged, against +her will, into the underwood. Her first impulse was to cry out; but +being as brave a girl as ever walked, she quickly suppressed this +inclination, and turned and faced the ragged and starved-looking man +whom she expected to meet. + +"Yes, Andy, I knew it was you," said Nora. "What do you want with me +now? How dare you speak to me?" + +"How dare I! What do you mane by that, Miss Nora?" + +"You know what I mean," answered the girl. "Oh, I have been patient +and have not said a word; but do you think I did not know? When all the +country, Andy Neil, were looking for my father's would-be murderer, I +knew where I could put my hand on him. But I did not say a word. If my +father had died I must--I must have spoken; but if he recovered, I felt +that in me which I cannot describe as pity, but which yet prevented my +giving you up to the justice you deserve. But to meet me here, to dare +to waylay me--it is too much." + +"Ah, when you speak like that you near madden me," replied Andy. "Look +at me, Miss Nora; look well; look hard. Here's the skin tight on me +arums, and stretched fit to burst over me cheek-bones; and it's empty +I am, Miss Nora, for not a bite nor sup have I tasted for twenty-four +hours. The neighbors, they 'as took agen me. It has got whispering +abroad that it's meself handled the gun that laid the Squire on what +might have been his deathbed, and they have turned agen me, and not even +a pitaty can I get from 'em, and I can't get work nowhere; and the roof +is took off the little bit of a cabin in which I was born, and two of +the childers have died from cowld and hunger. That's my portion, Miss +Nora; that's my bitter portion; and yet you ashk me, miss, why I spake +to ye." + +"You know why I said it," answered Nora. "There was a time when I pitied +you, but not now. You have gone too far; you have done that which no +daughter can overlook. Let me go--let me go; don't attempt to touch +me, or I shall scream out. There are neighbors near who will come to my +help." + +"No, there are not," said Andy. "I 'as took good care of that. You may +scream as loud as you please, but no one will hear; and if we go farther +into the underwood no one will see. Come, my purty miss; it's my turn +now. It's my turn at last. Come along." + +Nora was strong and fearless, but she had not Andy's brute strength. +With a clutch, now so fierce and desperate that she wondered her arm was +not broken, the man, who was half a madman, dragged her deeper into the +shade of the underwood. + +"There now," said Andy, with a chuckle of triumph; "you has got to +listen. You're the light o' his eyes and the darlin' o' his heart. But +what o' that? Didn't my childer die of the cowld and the hunger, and the +want of a roof over them, and didn't I love them? Ah! that I did. Do you +remember the night I said I'd drown ye in the Banshee's pool, and didn't +we make a compact that if I let ye go you'd get the Squire to lave me my +bit of a cabin, and not to evict me? And how did ye kape your word? Ah, +my purty, how did ye kape your word?" + +"I did my best for you," said Nora. + +"Yer bhest. A poor bhest when I've had to go. But now, Miss Nora, I aint +waylaid you for nothin'. The masther has escaped this time, and you +has escaped; but as shure as there is a God in heav'n, if you don't get +Squire to consint to let me go back, there'll be mischief. There now, +Miss Nora, I've spoken. You're purty, and you're swate, and 'tis you +has got a tinder heart; but that won't do you no good, for I'm mad with +misery. It's me bit of a cabin I want to die in, and nothing less will +contint me. You may go back now, for I've said what I come to say; but +it's to-morrow night I'll be here waiting for ye, and I warn ye to bring +me the consint that I crave, for if you don't come, be the powers! ye'll +find that you've played with fire when you neglected Andy Neil." + +Having uttered these words, the miserable man dropped Nora's arm and +vanished into the depths of the plantation. Nora stood still for a +moment, then returned thoughtfully and slowly to the house. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIII. + + +THE CABIN ON THE MOUNTAIN. + +Nora slept little that night. She had a good deal to think of, and very +anxious were her thoughts. She knew the Irishman, Andy Neil, well, and +she also knew his ferocious and half-savage temperament. Added to his +natural fierceness of character, he now undoubtedly was possessed by +temporary insanity. This had been brought on by hunger, cold, and great +misery. The man was desperate, and would think little of desperate +deeds. After all, his life was of small value to him compared to his +revenge. Whenever did an Irishman, at moments like the present, consider +life? Revenge came first, and there was that in the man's gleaming dark +eyes, in his high cheek-bones, in his wild, unkempt, starved appearance, +which showed that he would, if something was not quickly done, once +again attempt the Squire's life. What was she to do? Nora wondered and +wondered. Her father was getting better; the open air treatment, the +simple food, and the company of his friends were effecting the cure +which the luxurious life in the heavily furnished chamber had failed to +do. The Squire would soon be well and strong again. If he were careful, +he would once again stand in health and strength on his ancestral acres. + +He would get accustomed to the grandeur of the restored Castle +O'Shanaghgan; he would get accustomed to his English relatives and their +ways. He would have his barn to retire to and his friends to talk +to, and he would still be the darling, the best-loved of all, to his +daughter Nora; but at the present moment he was in danger. In the barn, +too, he was in much greater danger than he had been when in the safe +seclusion of the Castle. It would be possible for any one to creep up +to the barn at night, to push open the somewhat frail windows or +equally frail door, and to accomplish that deed which had already +been attempted. Nora knew well that she must act, she must do +something--what, was the puzzle. Squire O'Shanaghgan was one of the +most generous, open-hearted, and affectionate of men. His generosity was +proverbial; he was a prime favorite with his tenants; but he had, +like many another Irishman of his type, a certain hard phase in his +character--he could, on occasions, be almost cruel. He had taken a great +dislike to Andy Neil and to some other tenants of his class; he had been +roused to stronger feeling by their open resistance, and had declared +that not all the Land Leagues in Ireland, not all the Fenians, not all +the Whiteboys, were they banded together in one great insurrection, +should frighten him from his purpose. + +Those tenants who defied him, who refused to pay the scanty rent which +he asked for their humble cabins, should go out; they should, in short, +be evicted. The other men had submitted to the Squire's iron dictation. +They had struggled to put their pence and shillings together, and with +some difficulty had met the question of the rent; but Andy Neil either +could not or would not pay; and the Squire had got the law, as he +expressed it, to evict the man. There had come a day when the wild +tenant of the little cabin on the side of the bare mountain had come +home to find his household goods exposed to the airs of heaven, the roof +off his cabin, the door removed from its hinges; the hearth, it is true, +still warm with the ashes of the sods of turf which were burning there +in the morning, but the whole home a ruin. The Squire had not himself +witnessed this scene of desolation, but had given his stern orders, and +they had been executed by his agent. When Andy saw the ruins of his home +he gave one wild howl and rushed down the side of the mountain. His +sick children--there were two of them in the cabin at the time--had been +taken pity on by some neighbors almost as poor as himself; but the shock +(or perhaps their own bad health) had caused the death of both boys, and +the man was now homeless and childless. No wonder his brain gave way. He +vowed vengeance. Vengeance was the one last thing left to him in life; +he would revenge his wrongs or die. So, waiting his opportunity, he had +crouched behind a hedge, and, with an old gun which he had stolen from +a neighbor, had fired at the Squire. In the crucial moment, however, his +hand shook, and the shot had lodged, not in the Squire's body, but in +his leg, causing a nasty but scarcely a dangerous wound. The only one in +all the world who suspected Andy was the Squire's daughter Nora; but it +was easy for her to put two and two together. The man's words to her in +the cave, when he threatened to drown her, returned to her memory. She +suspected him; but, with an Irish girl's sympathy, she would not speak +of her suspicions--that is, if her father's life was spared. + +But now the man himself had come to her and threatened fresh mischief. +She hated to denounce the poor, starved creature to the police, and +yet she _must_ protect her father. The Squire was much better; but +his temper could be roused to great fury at times, and Nora dreaded to +mention the subject of Andy Neil. She guessed only too well that fear +would not influence the fierce old Squire to give the man back his +cabin. The one thing the wretched creature now craved was to die under +the shelter of the roof where he had first seen the light; but this +natural request, so dear to the heart of the Squire himself, under +altered circumstances, would not weigh with him under existing +conditions. The mere fact that Andy still threatened him would make him +more determined than ever to stick to his purpose. Nora did not dare to +give her father even a hint with regard to the hand which had fired that +shot; and yet, and yet--oh, God help her! she must do something, or the +consequences might be too fearful to contemplate. + +As she was dressing on the following morning she thought hard, and the +idea came to her to take the matter into her own hands, and herself give +Andy leave to go back to his cabin; but, on reflection, she found that +this would be no easy matter, for the cabins from which the tenants were +evicted were often guarded by men whose business it was to prevent the +wretched creatures returning to them. No doubt Andy's cabin would be +now inaccessible; still, she might go and look at it, and, if all other +means failed, might venture to beg of her father's agent to let the man +return to it; but first of all she would see the place. Somewhat cheered +as this determination came to her, she ran downstairs. Mr. Hartrick was +returning to England by an early train, and the carriage, which was to +convey him to the station, was already at the door. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan +was almost tearful at the thought of parting with her beloved brother. +Molly, delighted at being allowed to stay on at the Castle, was also +present; but Nora's entrance on the scene caused Mrs. O'Shanaghgan to +speak fretfully. + +"Late as usual, Nora," said that lady, turning and facing her daughter +as she appeared. "I am glad that you condescended to appear before your +uncle starts for England. I wonder that you have taken the trouble." + +"Oh, do not scold her, Ellen," said Mr. Hartrick, kindly. "I begin to +understand something of the nature of my Irish niece. When the Squire +is well again she will, I am sure, return to England and resume her +studies; but at present we can scarcely expect her to do so." + +"I will come back some time, Uncle George," said Nora; "and oh!" she +added, "I do thank you for all your great and real kindness. I may +appear ungrateful, but indeed, indeed I am not so in my heart, and it +is very good of you to allow Molly to stay; and I will promise to take +great care of her, and not to let her get too wild." + +"Thank you. Any message for your aunt, Nora?" said Mr. Hartrick gravely. +"I should like you, my dear," he added, coming up to the girl, and +laying his hand on her shoulder and looking with his kind eyes into her +face, "to send your Aunt Grace a very special message; for you did try +her terribly, Nora, when you not only ran away yourself, but induced +Molly to accompany you." + +Nora hesitated for a moment, the color flamed into her face, and her +eyes grew very bright. + +"Tell her, Uncle George," she said, speaking slowly and with great +emphasis, "that I did what I did for _father_. Tell her that for no one +else but father would I hurt her, and ask her to forgive me just because +I am an Irish girl; and I love--oh! I love my father so dearly." + +"I will take her your message, my dear," said Mr. Hartrick, and then he +stooped and kissed his niece. + +A moment later he was about to step into the carriage, when Nora rushed +up to him. + +"Good-by; God bless you!" she cried. "Oh, how kind you have been, and +how I love you! Please, please, do not misunderstand me; I have many +cares and anxieties at present or I would say more. You have done +splendidly, only----" + +"Only what, Nora?" said her uncle. + +"Only, Uncle George," answered the girl, "you have done what you have +done to please my mother, and you have done it all in the English way; +and oh! the English way is very fine, and very noble, and very generous; +but--but we _did_ want the old bare rooms and the lack of furniture, and +the place as it always has been; but we could not expect--I mean father +and I could not expect--you and mother to remember that." + +"It was impossible, Nora," said her uncle. "What I did I did, as you +express it, my dear, in the English way. The retrograde movement, Nora, +could not be expected from an Englishman; and by-and-by you, at least, +will thank me for having brought civilization to O'Shanaghgan." + +A moment later Mr. Hartrick went away, and Nora returned to the house. +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan had left the room, and Nora found herself alone with +her cousin Molly. + +"What is it, Nora?" said Molly. "You look quite pale and anxious." + +"I look what I feel," said Nora. + +"But can I help you in any way, Nora?" + +"Yes. Will you come for a drive with me this morning?" + +"Of course I will. You know well that I should like nothing better." + +"Then, Molly dear, run round to the yard and tell Angus put Black +Bess to the outside car, and to bring it round to the corner of the +plantation. I do not want any one to know, and tell Angus that I will +drive Black Bess myself." + +"All right," replied Molly, running off on her errand. + +Nora did not stay long with her father that morning, and soon after ten +o'clock she and Molly were flying through the boreens and winding roads +in the direction of Slieve Nagorna. At the foot of the mountain they +dismounted. Nora fastened Black Bess's reins to the trunk of a tree +which stood near, and then she and Molly began to ascend the mountain. +It was a glorious winter's day; the air was mild, as it generally is in +the west of Ireland, and the sun shone with power. Nora and Molly walked +quickly. Nora, who was accustomed to climbing from her earliest years, +scaled the rocks, and jumped from one tiny projection in the ground to +another; but Molly found her ascent more difficult. She was soon out of +breath, and called in laughing tones to Nora to wait for her. + +"Forgive me," said Nora; "I sometimes forget that you are not an Irish +girl." + +"You also forget that I am practically a London girl," answered Molly. +"I have seldom or never climbed even a respectable hill, far less a +mountain with sides like this one." + +"We will reach the spot which I am aiming for before long," said Nora; +"but if you are tired, do sit down, and I'll go on alone." + +This, however, Molly would not hear of, and presently the girls reached +a spot where once a small cabin had stood. The walls of the cabin +were still there, but the thatched roof had disappeared, the doors and +windows had been removed, and the blackened earth where the hearth had +been alone bore evidence to the fact that fires had been burnt there for +long generations. But there was no fire now on the desolate hearth. + +"Oh, dear!" said Nora. "It makes me cry to look at the place. Once, +long, long ago, when Terry and I were tiny children, we came up here. +Andy's wife was alive then, and she gave us a hot potato each and a +pinch of salt. We ate the potatoes just here, and how good they tasted! +Little Mike was a baby, such a pretty little boy, and dear Kathleen +was so proud of him. Oh! it was a _home_ then, whereas now it is a +desolation." + +"A very poor sort of home I should say," answered Molly. "What a truly +desolate place! If anybody ever lived here, that person must be glad +to have got away. It makes me shudder even to think of any human being +calling this spot a home." + +"Oh!" answered Nora, "it was a very pretty home, and the one who +lived in it is broken-hearted--nay, more, he is almost crazed, all and +entirely because he has been driven away. He deserved it, I know; but +it has gone very hard with him; it has torn out his heart; it has turned +him from a man into a savage. Oh! if I had only money, would not I build +up these walls, and put back the roof, and light the fire once more, and +put the man who used to have this house as a home back again? He would +die in peace then. Oh! if only, _only_ I had money." + +"How queer you look!" said Molly. "How your eyes shine! I don't +understand you. I love you very much, but I confess I don't understand +you. Why, this desolate spot would drive most people mad." + +"But not Irish people who were born here," said Nora. "There! I have +seen what I wanted to see, and we had best be going back. I want to +drive to the village, and I want to see John Finnigan. I hope I shall +find him at home." + +"Who is John Finnigan?" asked Molly. + +"The man who _does_ these sort of things," said Nora, the red, angry +blood rushing to her cheeks. + +She turned and quickly walked down the mountain, Molly racing and +stumbling after her. Black Bess was standing motionless where her +mistress had placed her. Nora unfastened the reins and sprang upon the +car, Molly followed her example, and they drove almost on the wings of +the wind back to the village. There they were fortunate enough to find +John Finnigan. Leaving Molly holding Black Bess's reins, Nora went into +the house. It was a very small and shabby house, furnished in Irish +style, and presided over by Mrs. Finnigan, a very stout, untidy, and +typical Irishwoman, with all the good nature and _savoir-faire_ of her +countrywomen. + +"Aw, then, Miss Nora," she said, "I am glad to see you. And how's the +Squire?" + +"Much better, thank you," said Nora. "Is your husband in, Mrs. +Finnigan?" + +"To be sure, deary. Finnigan's abed still. He was out late last night. +Why, listen; you can hear him snoring; the partition is thin. He snores +loud enough to be heard all over the house." + +"Well, do wake him, please, Mrs. Finnigan," said Nora. "I want to see +him on a most important matter at once." + +"Then, that being the case, honey, you just step into the parlor while I +go and get Finnigan to rise and dress himself." + +Mrs. Finnigan threw open the door of a very untidy and small room. +Several children were having breakfast by a table which bore traces of +fish-bones, potato-peelings, and bacon-rinds. The children were untidy, +like their mother, but had the bright, very dark-blue eyes and curly +hair of their country. Nora knew them all, and was soon in the midst of +a clamorous group, while Mrs. Finnigan went out to get her husband to +rise. Finnigan himself appeared in about a quarter of an hour, and Nora +went with him into his little study. + +"Well, now," said that worthy, "and what can I do for you, Miss +O'Shanaghgan?" + +Nora looked very earnest and pleading. + +"My father is better," she said, "but not well enough yet to be troubled +with business. I understand that you are doing some of his business for +him, Mr. Finnigan." + +"Some, it is true," answered the gentleman, frowning as he spoke, +"but not all, by no means all. Since that English fine gentleman, Mr. +Hartrick, came over, he has put the bulk of the property into the hands +of Steward of Glen Lee. Steward is a Scotchman, and why he should get +work which is rightly my due is hard on me, Miss Nora--very hard on me." + +"Well," said Nora restlessly, "I know nothing about the matter. I am +sorry; but I am afraid I am powerless to interfere." + +"Oh, Miss Nora!" said Finnigan, "you know very well that you have kissed +the Blarney Stone, and that no one can resist you. If you were to say a +word to the Squire he would give me my due; and now that so much money +has been put into O'Shanaghgan, it would be a very fine thing for me to +have the collecting of the rents. I am a poor man, Miss Nora, and this +business ought not to be given over my head to a stranger." + +"I will speak to father by-and-by," said Nora; "but I doubt if I can do +anything. But I have come to-day to ask you to do something for me." + +"And what is that, Miss Nora? I am sure I'd be proud to help such a +beautiful young lady in any way." + +"I dislike compliments," said Nora, coloring with annoyance. "Please +listen. You know the man you evicted from the cabin on the side of +Slieve Nagorna--Andy Neil?" + +"Perfectly well, perfectly well," answered Finnigan, + +"You had my father's orders?" + +"I had that, Miss Nora." + +"I want you, Mr. Finnigan, now to take my orders and to give Andy +back his cabin. Put a bit of roof over it--anything, even an old +tarpaulin--anything, so that he may sleep there if he likes to-night. I +want you to do this for me, and allow me to take the risk of offending +my father." + +"What!" said Finnigan, "and risk myself all chance of getting the +agency. No, no, Miss Nora. Besides, what would all the other tenants say +who have been evicted in their time? The man shall get his cabin back +and a fresh roof and new windows, by the same token, when he pays his +rent, and not before." + +"But he has no money to pay his rent." + +"Then he must stay out, Miss Nora." + +"I wish, I wish," said Nora, clasping her hands and speaking with +passion, "that you would oblige me in this. Indeed, it is of the utmost +importance." + +"What!" said Finnigan, going up to her and staring into her face; "has +that scoundrel threatened? Is it possible?" + +"No, no, no; you are mistaken," said Nora eagerly. "I only meant that +I--I--pitied him so much." + +"That being the case, Miss Nora, I will say nothing further. But the +fact is, I have before had my suspicions as to the hand which pulled +that trigger which sent the shot into the Squire's leg, and it would be +an extremely graceful act on my part to have that person arrested, and +would doubtless insure the agency for me. But I will say no more; only, +please understand, under _no_ circumstances, except the payment of the +rent, can Andy Neil get back his cabin." + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIV. + + +A DARING DEED. + +Having failed to get any help from John Finnigan, Nora returned to the +Castle. As she drove quickly home she was very silent. Even loquacious +Molly did not care to interrupt her thoughts. As soon as they reached +the Castle she turned to her cousin and spoke quickly. + +"Go to the barn and look after father, Molly. Talk as many naughty words +as ever you like; make him laugh; keep him occupied. After dinner I +shall probably want your aid again. In the meantime you will help me +best by taking father off my hands." + +"And I desire nothing better," answered Molly. "I love the Squire; it is +the height of entertainment, as he would call it, to talk to him." + +Molly accordingly ran off. The Squire was now well enough to sit up in a +great easy-chair made of straw, which had been carted over from Cronane +for his special benefit, for the padded and velvet-covered chairs of the +Castle would not at all have suited his inclinations. He sat back in the +depths of his chair, which creaked at his every movement, and laughed +long and often at Molly's stories. + +"But where's Light o' the Morning herself?" he said after a pause. "Why +don't she come to visit her old father? Why, it's craving for a sight of +her I am." + +"I think Nora is very busy to-day," answered Molly, "May I read the +paper to you, Squire?" + +"You read the paper to me?" answered Squire O'Shanaghgan. "Why, bless +yer little heart, my pretty girleen, but I must decline with thanks. It +is perfect torture to listen to your English accent when you are trying +to do the rich Irish brogue. Irish papers should be read by Irish +colleens, and then you get the flavor. But what did you say my colleen +was after--business, is it? She's very fond of poking that little finger +of hers into other people's pies. What is she after now at all, at all?" + +"I cannot tell you," answered Molly, coloring slightly as she spoke. + +The Squire looked annoyed and suspicious. + +"You go and call her to me," he said. "Tell her to come along this +blessed minute; say it's wanting her I am." + +Molly ran out of the barn. She found Nora in earnest conversation with +Angus, while Hannah Croneen stood close by plucking now and then at +the girl's skirt, looking eagerly into her face, and uttering such +ejaculations as "Oh, glory!" "Be the powers!" "Did ye ever hear the +like?" "Well, well, that beats all!" + +"Nora," said Molly, "will you go to your father? He wants you +immediately." + +"Have you let out anything?" said Nora, turning and looking anxiously at +Molly. + +"No; but he asked after you, and I said you were busy. The Squire said +then, 'I hope she is not poking her little finger into other people's +pies.'" + +"Well, I will go to him," said Nora. "I'll manage him. You stay where +you are, Molly." + +Nora's black hair was curling in crisp waves all round her beautiful +white forehead. Her dark-blue eyes were darker and more shining than +ever, there was a richer bloom on her cheeks, and there were sweeter +smiles on her lips than she had ever perhaps worn before as she now +entered the Squire's room. + +"Well, father?" she said. + +Squire O'Shanaghgan, who had been sitting wrapped in thought, roused +himself on her entrance, gave her a smile, and motioned her to come to +his side. + +"Kneel down by me, colleen," he said. + +Nora knelt. The Squire took his big hand and put it under her chin; he +raised her blooming face and looked into her eyes, which looked back +again at him. As he did so he uttered a quick sigh. + +"You're after something, mavoureen," he said. "What's up, little girl? +What's fretting that tender heart of yours?" + +"Something, father," said Nora then. + +"And you won't tell your old dad?" + +"I would rather not. Won't you trust me?" + +"Trust her, is it?" cried the Squire. "I'd trust her with all I possess. +I'd trust her with my hopes of heaven itself. Trust her, is it? Nora, +you fret me when you talk like that." + +"Then _do_ trust me, father, and don't ask me any questions. I'll tell +you by and by--yes, I faithfully promise, but I shall be busy to-day. I +may have to be away from you for a great part of to-day, and I may want +Molly to help me. Can you do without me?" + +"Why, now, the conceit of the creature," said the Squire. "As if I +cannot do without you, you little piece of impertinence. To be sure, and +to be sure I can. Why, there is your lady mother; she'll come and sit +with me for an hour or so, and let out at me all her grumbles. Nora, my +heart, it is dreadful to hear her; but it's good penance too, and maybe +it's too comfortable you have been making me, and I ought to have a bit +of what I do not like to keep me humble. You go along now, and come back +when you have done that which is filling your heart to the brim." + +Nora kissed her father very gravely; she then went out of the barn, and +returned to where Angus and Hannah, and also Molly, were waiting for +her. + +"I have thought how I can manage, Miss Nora," said Angus. "When those +Englishmen--bad cess to 'em!--are at dinner I'll get the long cart out +of the yard, and I'll put the white pony to it, and then it's easy to +get the big tarpaulin that we have for the hayrick out of its place in +the west barn. I have everything handy; and if you could come along with +me, Miss Nora, and the other young lady, and if Hannah here will lend +a hand, why we'll do up the place a bit, and the poor forsaken crayther +can die there at least." + +"Do not forget the basket of provisions, Hannah," said Nora, "the +potatoes, and the bacon, and a tiny bottle of potheen; and do not forget +some fagots and bits of turf to kindle up the fire again. Oh, and, +Hannah, a blanket if you can manage it; and we might get a few wisps +of straw to put in the bottom of the cart. The straw would make a fine +bed." + +"To be sure," said Hannah. "You lave it to me, me beautiful young lady." + +The two servants now departed, and Nora and her cousin went into the +house. The early dinner, or rather lunch, as it was now called, was +served soon afterwards; and almost immediately after the meal was over +Nora and Molly ran down to the bottom of the plantation, where they +found Angus, Hannah, the long cart with the pony harnessed to it, and +the tarpaulin, straw, basket of provisions, etc., all placed in the +bottom. + +"Jump in, Molly," said Nora. + +Molly scrambled in as best she could; Nora followed her; and Hannah, +climbing in over the left wheel, sat down at the bottom of the cart. +Angus jumped on the driver's seat, and whipped up the pony. The pony +was stout and very strong, and well accustomed to Irish hills. They were +off. Molly had never been so rattled and bumped and shaken in the whole +course of her life, but she enjoyed it, as she said, immensely. Only, +what was Nora doing? The tarpaulin had been carefully hidden from view +by the straw which Angus had cunningly placed over and not under it; and +it was well that this was the case, as after the little party had left +O'Shanaghgan a couple of miles, they were met by John Finnigan driving +on his outside car. + +"Why, then, Miss Nora, what are you doing now?" he said. + +"Having a drive for my own pleasure," replied Nora, nodding gayly. + +Finnigan looked with suspicion at the party, but as there was nothing +contraband in anybody driving in a long cart, and as he could not +possibly guess what they were doing, he drove on his own way without +saying anything further. After less than an hour's driving they reached +the foot of Slieve Nagorna, and here the real toil began, for it was +quite impossible for the pony, willing as he was, to lug the cart up the +mountain. Where there is a will, however, there is generally a way; and +although the pony could not drag the cart up, he could go up himself, +being very sure-footed and quite willing to be turned into a beast of +burden for the nonce. The heavy tarpaulin, therefore, was fastened on +his back, and, with Angus leading and Hannah following with the +basket of provisions, and the two girls making up the rear, the little +cavalcade started forward. Oh, how hot it seemed, and oh, how tired +Molly got! But never mind; they were making progress. After a time they +reached the site of Andy's cabin, and then Angus and Hannah developed +strength which fairly took Molly's breath away, for the tarpaulin was +absolutely lifted up and deposited as a sort of temporary roof over the +roofless walls; and when this had been done Angus managed to cut a hole +in the center to make a chimney; then the fagots were placed on the +hearth and the turf put on top of them, and the remainder of the turf +laid handy near by; and the straw was ready, soft and inviting, in a +corner not too far away from the fire, and the blankets were spread over +it; and the basket of provisions, cold boiled potatoes, cold bacon, +and the little bottle of potheen were all left handy. It was indeed +a miserable home, but, compared to the desolate appearance it had +presented, it now looked almost comfortable. Nora laughed with pleasure. +"He shall come back here. It is better than nothing. He shall stop here. +I will explain things to my father by and by," said the girl; and then +they all turned their steps homeward. + +At the appointed hour that evening Nora went down to the shore. She +fully expected to find Andy Neil waiting for her. Wild and half-insane +as he was, he kept his selfmade appointments, as a rule. She wandered +about, fearing that someone would notice her; for she knew that if John +Finnigan thought for a single moment that she was secretly befriending +Andy, he would not leave a single stone unturned to circumvent her. He +was very proud of his powers of evicting tenants, and, as he had the +Squire's permission to do his worst on this occasion, would be the last +man in the world to relax his iron grip. Nora, however, wandered about +in vain; there was no sign of Andy. She even ventured to go to the +borders of the plantation and softly call his name. + +"Andy--Andy Neil," called the girl, but no Andy responded. She now +felt really nervous. Why was Andy not there? What could possibly have +happened? She returned slowly and thoughtfully to the house. It +would not do to show any alarm, but she certainly felt the reverse of +comfortable. What had happened to the man? She did not for a moment +think that he could be dead; on the contrary, she pictured him alive +and still more insane than the night before, still more desperate in his +mind, still more darkly pursued by the grim phantom of revenge. Was Andy +now so really insane that he had even forgotten his appointment with +Nora? This was probably the case. But although the man was too insane to +think of meeting the girl, he was probably not at all too insane to make +another attempt on the Squire's life. He was perhaps so desperate now +that his one idea was to carry out his revenge before he died. What was +Nora to do? She thought and thought, and walked up to the house with +more and more lagging footsteps. Finally she made up her mind. There was +nothing whatever left for it but for her to sit up with the Squire +that night; she herself must be his guardian angel, for he must not be +alarmed, and yet most certainly he must be protected. Nora carefully +considered this idea. She had made the little cabin quite ready for +Andy's reception; he could creep into it once more, light his fire, eat +his food, and lie down on the bed at least, as good as any other bed he +had ever slumbered on; and if death came to him, it would find him in +his old house, and perhaps God would forgive him, seeing that he was so +desperate and life had been so hard. Yes, Nora felt that God was very +merciful--far more merciful than man. But to-night--how was to-night to +be got through? She had now reached the yard, and found herself face to +face with Angus. + +"Is there nothing I can do for you, miss?" said the young man, touching +his hat respectfully to the girl. + +"If you could be near somewhere, Angus, and if it were necessary, and we +wanted the long cart to-night, could we get it?" + +"You ask me, Miss Nora, what we could get and what we could not get at +O'Shanaghgan," answered Angus; "and I answer ye back that what ye want, +Miss Nora, ye shall have, if it is the heart out of me body. The long +cart, is it? To be sure, me pretty lady, and at a moment's notice, too. +Why, it's meself will slape in the bottom of the long cart this blessed +night, and all you has to do is to come and pull the front lock of me +hair, and I'll be up in a jiffy. You give it a sharp tug, Miss Nora, +for I slapes heavy; but if you come, the long cart and the powny will be +there." + +"Then that's all right," answered Nora. + +She went into the barn. The Squire had now contrived to renew all his +old accustomed habits. On the little wooden table was a small lamp which +smoked badly; the local paper was laid on the table, and the pipe which +the Squire best loved lay near. He had been enjoying a good smoke, and +was thinking of turning in, as he expressed it, when Nora appeared. + +"Good-night, father," she said. She went up to him, and bent down over +him, to give him her accustomed kiss. + +"Why, then, it's sleepy I am," said the Squire. "I am thinking of +turning into bed. I am getting on fine; and Angus, boy that he is, +always comes and gives me a helping hand on to my bed. I cannot see +your face with the smoke of that lamp, mavoureen; but things are all +right--aren't they?" + +"That they are, father," replied the girl; "but I am a little tired; and +if Angus is coming to help you, and you do not want anything more from +me, I will go to bed myself." + +"Do that," said the Squire. "Your voice sounds peaky; you have been +doing too much." + +Nora lingered another moment or two. How thankful she felt that that +smoky lamp prevented her father reading the anxiety in her eyes! She +could not keep all the tiredness out of her voice, but she could at +least keep anxiety from it; and the Squire bade her a hearty goodnight, +and parted with her with one of his usual jokes. Nora then went into +the house. The hour for late dinner was over; she herself had not been +present, but Molly had managed to appear as usual. Nora ran down to the +kitchen premises. The cook, a very stately English woman, stared when +she saw the young lady of the Castle appear in the great kitchen. + +"What is it, Miss O'Shanaghgan?" she said, gazing at Nora all over. +What did this wild and eccentric girl want? How was it possible that she +could demean herself by coming so freely into the servants' premises? + +"I want to know, Mrs. Shaw," said Nora, "if you will oblige me?" + +"Of course I will, Miss O'Shanaghgan; if I can." + +"Will you pack a little basket with some cold pie, and anything else +tasty and nourishing which you have got; and will you put a tiny bottle +of brandy into the basket, and also a bottle of water; and can I have it +at once, for I am in a great hurry?" + +"Well, there is a fresh pigeon pie in the larder," answered the cook; +"but why should you want it?" + +"Oh! please, Mrs. Shaw," answered Nora, "will you give it to me without +asking questions? I will love you for all the rest of my life if you +will." + +"Love me, is it?" thought the cook. "A pretty creature like that love +me!" + +"Your love is cheaply purchased, miss," she said aloud, and then went +without a word into the larder, and soon returned with a well-filled +basket, which she placed in Nora's hand. "And I added some fruit, a +little cup of jelly, and a knife and fork and a spoon, and some salt; +but why you, Miss Nora, should need a picnic in the middle of the night +beats me." + +"Remember our compact," said Nora. "You say nothing of this, and--I love +you;" and then, overcome by a sudden impulse, she bent forward and laid +the lightest of kisses on the astonished Mrs. Shaw's forehead. + +Mrs. Shaw felt slightly overawed. "Bless her! What a beautiful young +lady she is!" thought the good woman. "But the ways of the Irish beat +all comprehension." + + + + +CHAPTER XXXV. + + +THE COT WHERE HE WAS BORN. + +Nora avoided Molly that night. On reflection, it occurred to her that +it would be best for Molly to know nothing of her design. If she were +in complete ignorance, no amount of questioning could elicit the truth. +Nora went into her bedroom, and changed her pretty jacket and skirt and +neat sailor hat for a dark-blue skirt and blouse of the same material. +Over these she put a long, old-fashioned cloak which at one time +had belonged to her mother. Over her head she tied a little red +handkerchief, and, having eaten a small portion of Mrs. Shaw's +provisions, she left the room. It was already night-time; and Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan, Molly, and the servants had gone to bed. Nora now locked +her door from the outside, slipped the key into her pocket, and her +basket of provisions partly hidden under the falls of her cloak, ran +downstairs. The dogs generally slept in the big hall; but they knew +Nora's step, and rose slowly, wagging their heavy tails. Nora patted +them on their heads, gave them each an endearing word, and stooped to +kiss pretty Cushla on her black forehead. She then softly unbolted one +of the windows, lifted the sash, and got out. She carefully shut the +window as noiselessly as she had opened it. She now found herself on +the grassy sward in the neighborhood of the drawing-room. Under the old +_régime_ that sward was hard, and knotty tufts of weed as well as grass +grew up here and there in profusion; but already, under the English +government, it was beginning to assume the velvet-like appearance which +a properly kept lawn ought to have. + +Nora hated to feel such softness; she disliked everything which seemed +to her to flavor of the English and their ways. There was a hot, +rebellious feeling in her heart. Why should these things be? Why should +not her Irish land and her Irish people be left in their wild freedom? +She ran round to the yard. Angus had received instructions to leave the +little postern door on the latch, and Nora now opened it and went softly +in. The moon was beginning to rise, but was not at the full. There +was, however already sufficient light for her to see each object with +distinctness. She went and sat down in the shadow made by the great +barn. She sat on the step to the barn, wrapping her warm cloak tightly +round her, and keeping her basket of provisions by her side. Here she +would sit all night, if necessary. Her vigil might have no result, but +at any rate it would insure her father from danger. For now only over +Nora's dead body could the wild Andy Neil approach the Squire. + +"Andy shall kill me first," she thought; "and if I die, I will scream +and father will awaken. Angus is on the watch; the alarm will be given; +at least my father's life will be spared. But why do I think of danger +of this sort? Andy will not kill me. I place my trust in God. I am doing +the right thing--I know I am doing the right thing." + +When Nora had let herself in at the postern door she had immediately +drawn the bolt at the other side, thus preventing anyone else from +entering the great yard by the same way; but she knew that, although +Andy could not now enter the yard, in all probability he was already +hiding there. There were no end to the ways and devices of a wild +Irishman of Andy's sort. He was so thin and emaciated, too, that he +could squeeze himself into the tiniest space. It lay in his power to +remain motionless all night, until the moment when his revenge was ripe. +Nora sat on. She heard the old clock in the ancient tower of the Castle +strike the hours. That old clock had been severely animadverted on by +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan on account of the cracked sound in the bell; but Nora +felt relieved to find that, amongst all the modern innovations, the old +clock still held its own; it had not, at least, _yet_, been removed from +the tower. It struck solemnly now the hour of midnight. + +"The witching hour," thought the girl. "The hour when the Banshee walks +abroad. I wonder if I shall see her. I should like to see her. Did she +hear me when I called to her in the cave? Would she help me if she came +to my rescue now? She belongs to us; she is our own Banshee; she has +belonged to our family for many, many generations." + +Nora thought these thoughts; but then the feeling that _Someone_ else +who never fails those who trust Him was also watching her during this +silent hour came to her with a sense of comfort. She could hear her +father turning once or twice in the creaky old wooden bed. She was glad +to feel that, unknown to him, she was his guardian angel. She began to +think about the future, and almost to forget Andy and the possible and +very great peril of the present, when, shortly before the hour of one, +all her senses were preternaturally excited by the sound of a footfall. +It was a very soft footfall--the noise made by a bare foot. Nora heard +it just where the shadow was deepest. She stood up now; she knew that, +from her present position, the one who was making this dead sort of +heavy sound could not possibly see her. She waited, her breath coming +hard and fast. For a minute, or perhaps more, there was again absolute +and complete silence. The night was a breathless one; there was not a +sound abroad; overhead the sky was of an inky blue-black, the stars were +shining gloriously, and the moon was growing brighter and more clear, +and more nearly approaching her meridian each moment. The girl stood +with her hand pressed against her beating heart; she had flung aside her +little red handkerchief, and her hair had fallen loose and was tumbling +over her shoulders; she raised her other hand to her left ear to listen +more intently--she was in the attitude of one about to spring. + +Again there came the sound which she expected, and which, now that it +had arrived, caused her heart to beat no longer with fear, but with a +sort of wild exultation. Her suspicions had been right--the danger +was real; her father's most precious life was in peril. The steps came +quicker and more quick; they approached the other window of the barn. +This window lay in complete shadow. Nora now stepped out of her hiding +place, and, going with two or three quick strides down the yard, waited +within a foot or two of the man, who now proceeded to lift himself up by +the window ledge preparatory to opening the barn window. With the aid +of a claspknife he could very easily push back the quaint and imperfect +fastening; then it was but to push in the glass, and he could enter the +barn. He sat on the window ledge with his back to Nora. His huge, gaunt +form looked larger than ever, intensified now by the light of the moon. +He breathed quickly; his breathing proclaimed that he himself was in +physical suffering. + +"Andy," said Nora in a low, very low whisper. + +But this low tone was as startling to the madman on the window as though +a pistol shot had been sounded in his ears. + +"Be the powers!" he said, and he tumbled so quickly off the window sill +that Nora herself held out her hand to help him. Then he turned fiercely +and faced the girl. She saw the light of madness gleaming in his sunken +eyes; his wild face looked more cadaverous than ever; his great, skinny, +long hand shook. He raised it as if to fell the girl to the ground, but +paused to look in her face, and then his hand hung feebly to his side. + +Nora had enacted all this scene beforehand to herself; she now thrust +into Andy's face, within an inch or two of his nose, a great lump of +bread and a slab of cold pie. + +"Before you do anything more, eat," she said; "eat quickly; make no +noise." + +It was as impossible for the famished man to resist the good and +tempting food as it would have been impossible for a needle to resist +the influence of a powerful magnet. He grasped the bread, thrust the +knife into his wretched shirt, and, tearing the bread in fragments, +began to stuff it into his mouth. For a couple of minutes there was no +sound but that of the starved creature tearing the bread and feeding +himself. When he had slightly satisfied the first cravings of his +starved body Nora took his hand. + +"You have not had enough yet," she said. "You have fasted long, and are +very hungry; there is more where this came from." + +She took his hand quite unresistingly, and led him round to the entrance +of the barn. + +"I am up," she said, "but no one else. No one else knows of this. You +have come without a gun?" + +"I have a knife instead," he said. His eye glittered strangely. + +"Give me your knife," said the girl. "I will give you food in exchange +for it." + +The famished creature began to gibber now in the most horrible manner; +he pointed to his breast and uttered a laugh. + +"Laugh again, and I will call those who will soon put a stop to your +wild and terrible purposes, Andy," said the girl, "Here's food--fruit, +jelly, bread. You shall have them all--all, when you give me that +knife." + +The man looked at the food, and now his eyes softened. They became full +not only of rapture, but also of laughter. He gave a low guttural sound, +sank down on the ground, and held out both his hands imploringly for +some of the nourishment. + +"The knife," said Nora. + +He thrust his hands into his bosom and held the knife out to her. It was +a huge clasp knife, and Nora noticed with a shudder that it had all the +appearance of having been newly sharpened. The moment she got it she +put it in her pocket, and then invited the man to feed. He sat now quite +humbly. Nora helped him to pie. She had already taken the precaution to +hide the knife which Mrs. Shaw had supplied her with. The man ate and +ate, until his consuming hunger was satisfied. Nora now gave him a very +little of the brandy mixed with water. He lay back at last, exhausted +and also satisfied. + +"It's wake I am, it's wake I am--it's wake I am entoirely," said he. +"Why are you so good to me, Miss Nora? It was to take the life of the +Squire I was afther to-night." + +"I knew that," said Nora, "and I thought I would prevent you. Why did +you not meet me this evening down by the shore?" + +The miserable creature now raised his hand and pushed back a gray lock +of unkempt hair from his forehead. + +"Why, then," he said, "it was bothered I was entoirely. I knew there was +something I had got to do. It was waker and waker I was getting, for I +did not touch bite nor sup since I saw you last, except a morsel of a +cold pitatie; and there was not much of the nourishment in that; and as +the night came, I could not think of anything except to keep me word and +have me victory." + +"Well, you have had it," said Nora. + +"What do you mane now, missie?" + +"You have conquered yourself; that is the best victory of all. But come, +you made a bargain with me last night, and I am prepared to keep it. I +went down to the shore to tell you that I would do what you wanted me +to do. The cabin is ready on Slieve Nagorna; we have made it fairly +comfortable for you; and I will do better--yes, I will try to do better +by and by. I will speak to my father when he is strong enough. Go to +Slieve Nagorna now, and you will find the old cot in which you were +born. You can sleep there, and--and _I_--I will see that you are not +interfered with." + +"The old cot in which I was born," said Neil very slowly. "The old cot, +and I'll see it again. Is it a-joking me you are, Miss Nora?" + +"Would I joke with you just now, Andy? Would I?" + +"I know it's saft you are making me. There was a lump of ice in me; but, +somehow, it's melted. It's the food and your bonny face, and yer ways. +But do you know that it was your _father_ I wanted to kill--t'ould +Squire? There, I have said it!" + +"I know--and I have saved him," answered Nora. "But come, he may hear +us speaking; he would wonder. I do not want him to know anything of this +night. When he is stronger I will plead with him. Come, Andy, come; your +home is ready for you. Go back to it." + +The man tottered to his feet, and began to stagger across the barn. + +"Stay! you are not strong enough," said the girl. "Come outside the +yard, here; come with me." + +She walked across the yard, reached the little postern gate, and opened +it. + +"Come out and wait," she said in a mysterious voice. "You cannot walk to +Slieve Nagorna, and yet you must get there; but I will get Angus to take +you." + +"Angus! ay, he is a true Irish boy. Aw, I'd trust him." + +"You well may; he is a broth of a boy," said Nora. "Sit there. I will +soon be back with you." + +She shut Andy out, bolting the little gate. The man heard the bolt being +drawn, but did not move; he had not the slightest fear but that Nora +would keep her word. She ran across the yard and opened the door of the +barn at the farther end. Angus was already awake; he heard her light +step. + +"Is it me you're wanting, Miss Nora?" + +"Angus, all is well," she said. "What I wanted to do I have succeeded +in doing. It is Andy Neil who is without; he is broken down and is very +weak. Get the long cart and take him to the foot of Slieve Nagorna, help +him up the mountain, and see him into the old cot where he was born. +Good-night, Angus, and God bless you." + +Nora returned to her own bedroom. She unlocked the door and let herself +in. Without waiting even to undress, she flung herself on the bed, +curled herself up, and went off into dreamless slumber. When she woke +again it was broad daylight, and Molly was standing over her. + +"Why, Nora, you have lain undressed all night! What--what has happened?" + +"Do not ask me," said Nora. "Do not ask me. I have done what I wanted to +do, and I am thankful." + +"And you won't really tell me?" + +"No, I won't. I cannot ever. There is more to attend to, Molly; you and +I have got to go to Slieve Nagorna immediately after breakfast." + +Molly did not ask anything further. + +"I brought your hot water," she said. "You do not want any of the grand +English servants to see you look like this." + +"What a dear old thing you are!" said Nora. "I am so grateful to you." + +She got up, took off her clothes, indulged in a hot bath, and came down +to breakfast looking exactly as if she had spent an ordinary night. Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan was a little more fretful than ever, and told Nora that her +conduct was making her mother quite ridiculous in the neighborhood. + +"I met those remarkably nice people, the Setons of Seton Court, +yesterday," said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan--"charming English people--and they +asked me if it was really true that my husband, the owner of Castle +O'Shanaghgan, was sleeping in a barn." + +"And what did you answer, mother?" asked Nora, her dark-blue eyes bright +with sudden fun. + +"Well, my dear, I made the best of it. I could not deny such a patent +fact. I said that the eccentricities of Irish squires were proverbial. +But you can imagine, my dear Nora, my mortification as I had to make +this admission. If this sort of thing goes on I shall ask your uncle to +let the place, and allow us all to live in England." + +"Oh, come, mother," said her daughter. "You ought to be thankful this +morning--you ought to be. Oh, mother! do give me a loving kiss. It is so +long, so long since you have done so, and somehow I am tired, mother." + +"Tired!" said Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, alarmed and surprised by the new tone +in Nora's voice. "You look tired. How black those shadows are under your +eyes! and you have lost some of your color. There! of course I will +kiss you, and I hope I am thankful, for we certainly have had wonderful +mercies since your dear Uncle George came over and delivered us all. But +what do you mean by special thankfulness this morning?" + +"Never mind, mother," said Nora. "Only _do_ be thankful, _do_ thank God +for His mercies; and oh, mother, do give me that kiss!" + +"There, child! of course you shall have it." + +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan pressed her lips lightly to Nora's cheek. + +"Now eat your breakfast," she said. "These eggs are quite fresh, and +the honey was bought only yesterday--you know you are fond of honey--and +these hot cakes are made in a new and particularly nice way. Eat plenty, +Nora, and do, my dear, try to restrain your emotions. It is quite +terrible what wear and tear you give yourself over these feelings. It +is really, my dear girl, unladylike; and let me tell you another thing, +that when you lose your fresh wild-rose color, you will lose the greater +part of your beauty. Dear me! it will not stay long with you if you +excite yourself about every hand's turn in the ridiculous way you are +doing." + +Nora did not say any more. She sat down to the breakfast table. Was her +mother right? Was she indeed exciting herself over every hand's turn, +and was that thing which had happened last night--which, now that it +was over, caused her heart to beat a trifle too fast, and brought that +tired, that very tired feeling into her sensitive frame--was that indeed +but a trifling thing? Thank God--oh, thank God--she had been in time! + +Soon after breakfast Nora and Molly started once more for Slieve +Nagorna. They went on the outside car this time, and Nora found her +strength and courage returning as she handled the reins and urged Black +Bess to speed. They presently reached their destination. Nora fastened +up the horse as she had done on the previous day, and the girls began to +climb the mountain. + +"You must not be afraid when you see Andy," said Nora. "He was very weak +last night, and will in all probability be in his house. I am going to +arrange to have provisions sent to him every day. He will stay there now +that he has got back again." + +"But how has he got back again? You will remember you never told me what +happened last night." + +"And you must not ask me, Molly. What happened last night can never be +told by me to any human being. Only Angus knows something of it; and +Angus will not tell anyone else." + +"And you were frightened? You look, Nora, as if you had gone through a +great deal." + +"I went through more than anyone will ever know," said Nora, "but I am +very thankful." + +The girls had now reached the old cabin. The tarpaulin was over the +roof, but there was no smoke issuing from the hole. + +"I wonder he did not light his fire," said Nora in an anxious voice. +"Will you go in with me, Molly, or shall I go alone?" + +"I'll go in with you," said Molly stoutly. "If you are not afraid, +neither will I be." + +"I afraid now?" said Nora, with a smile. "Come, Molly, I hope the poor +creature is not very ill." + +Both girls entered the cabin. The tarpaulin had been so contrived that a +piece hung over, and formed a temporary door. Nora now pushed it aside, +and they both stepped into the miserable cabin. Andy was lying on the +straw; the basket of provisions had not yet been touched, nor was the +fire lit. Andy lay very still and quiet on the straw. Nora went up to +him; his eyes were shut, and his head was slightly turned round, so that +she could not at first get a proper glimpse of his face. She went on +her knees, then presently touched his forehead with her own slim hand, +calling his name softly at the same time. There was no answer--there +would never be an answer again, for the wild Irishman was dead. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVI. + + +"I'M A HAPPY MAN!" + +It was just before Christmas, and the preparations for the festive +season were great at Castle O'Shanaghgan. The Squire was quite well +again. Once more he walked all over his estate; once more he talked to +his tenants; once more he joked and laughed with the other squires of +the neighborhood. To a certain extent he had grown accustomed to the +grand house with its grand furniture; to the terrible late dinner, at +which he stoutly declined to appear in evening dress; to the English +servants who knew none of his ways. He began to bear with these things, +for Light o' the Morning, as he called his beloved Nora, was always +by his side, and at night he could cast off the yoke which was so +burdensome, and do what he liked in the barn. At Mrs. O'Shanaghgan's +earnest request this barn was now rendered a tolerably comfortable +bedroom; the walls had been papered, and the worst of the draughts +excluded. A huge fireplace had been built out at one end, and the Squire +did not object at all to a large turf fire on a cold night; but the old +bedstead from Cronane still occupied its old place of honor in the best +position in the room, the little deal table was destitute of cloth or +ornament of any kind, and the tarpaulin on the floor was not rendered +more luxurious by the presence of rugs. + +"Rugs indeed!" said the Squire, snorting almost like a wild beast when +his wife ventured to suggest a few of these comforts. "It is tripping me +up you'd be? Rugs indeed! I know better." + +But compared to its condition when the Squire first occupied it, the +barn was now a fairly comfortable bedroom, and Squire Murphy, Squire +Fitzgerald, Squire Terence Malone, and the other squires of the +neighborhood had many a good smoke there, and many a hearty laugh, +as they said, quite "unbeknownst" to the English lady and her grand +friends. And Nora, Molly, and even Biddy Murphy often shared in these +festive times, laughing at the best jokes, and adding sundry witticisms +on their own account. + +It was now, however, Christmas Eve, and Mrs. O'Shanaghgan's nearest +English relatives were coming to spend the festive season at the Castle. +Mrs. Hartrick, for the first time in her life, was to find herself +in Old Ireland. Linda was also accompanying her mother, and Terence +O'Shanaghgan was coming back for a brief visit to the home which one day +would be his. Terence was now permanently settled in his uncle's office, +and was likely to make an excellent man of business. Mr. Hartrick was +glad of this, for he would much prefer the O'Shanaghgans to have money +of their own in the future, rather than to depend on him to keep up the +old place. Inwardly the Squire was fretting and fuming a good bit at Mr. +Hartrick really owning Castle O'Shanaghgan. + +"I must say, after all's said and done, the man is a gentleman," he +remarked to his daughter; "but it frets me sore, Nora, that I should +hold the place under him." + +"It's better, surely, than not having it at all," answered Nora. + +"Yes, be the powers! it is that," said the Squire; "but when I say so, +it's about all. But I'll own the truth to you now, Nora: when they were +smothering me up in that dreadful bedroom before you came, mavourneen, I +almost wished that I had sold the place out and out." + +"Oh, but, father, that time is long over," answered Nora; "and I believe +that, after all, it will be good for the poor people round here that you +should stay with them, and that there should be plenty of money to make +their cabins comfortable, and to give them a chance in life." + +"If I thought that, there'd not be another grumble out of me," said the +Squire. "I declare to you, Nora, I'd even put on that abominable dinner +suit which your lady mother ordered from the best Dublin tailors. My +word! but it's cramped and fussed I feel in it. But I'd put it on, and +do more than that, for the sake of the poor souls who have too little of +this world's goods." + +"Then, father, do believe that it is so," said Nora; and now she put one +of her soft arms round his neck, and raised herself on tiptoe and kissed +his cheek. "Believe that it is so, for this morning I went round to the +people, and in every cabin there was a bit of bacon, and a half-sack of +potatoes, and fagots, and a pile of turf; and in every cabin they were +blessing you, father; they think that you have sent them these Christmas +gifts." + +"Ah, ah!" said the Squire, "it's sore to me that I have not done it; +but I must say it's thoughtful of George Hartrick--very thoughtful. I am +obliged to him--I cannot say more. Did you tell me the things were sent +to every cabin, Nora--all over the place, alannah?" + +"Every cabin, father," answered his daughter. + +"Then, that being the case, I'll truss myself up tonight. I will truly. +Mortal man couldn't do more." + +The preparations, not only outside but inside, for the arrival of the +English family were going on with vigor. Pretty suites of rooms were +being put into their best holiday dress for the visitors. Huge fires +blazed merrily all over the house. Hothouse flowers were in profusion; +hothouse fruit graced the table. The great hall quite shone with +firelight and the gleam of dark old oak. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan dressed +herself in her most regal black velvet dress for this auspicious +occasion; and Nora, Molly, and even Biddy Murphy, all in white, danced +excitedly in the hall. For Biddy Murphy, at Nora's special suggestion, +had been asked to spend Christmas at the Castle. It was truly good to +see her. Notwithstanding her celestial nose and very wide mouth, it +would have been difficult to have looked at a happier face than hers. +And, Irish as Biddy was, she had got the knack of coming round Mrs. +O'Shanaghgan. She did this by her simple and undisguised admiration. + +"Oh, Mrs. O'Shanaghgan!" Biddy would cry, "it is the very most lovely +thing I have ever clapped eyes on. I never saw anything so magnificent +as this room. It's fairyland; the whole place is fairyland;" and as +Biddy spoke her eyes would twinkle, and her big mouth would open, +showing her immaculate white teeth. So much did she contrive to win over +Mrs. O'Shanaghgan that that lady presented her with a soft white muslin +dress for the present occasion. If Biddy was proud before, she was +almost rampant with pleasure now. She twirled round, and gazed at +herself in the long mirrors which had been inserted in the hall between +the oak panels. + +"Why, then, it's proud me ancestors, the old Irish kings, would be of me +now," she was even heard to say. + +But, all things being ready, the time at last approached when the tired +travelers would arrive. At the eleventh hour there had come a great +surprise to Nora and Molly; for Mrs. Hartrick and Linda were bringing +Stephanotie with them. How this came to pass was more than either girl +could possibly conjecture; but they both felt that it was the final +crown of their happiness. + +"Can I ever forget," said Nora, "that but for Stephanotie lending us +that money I should not have been able to run away to Ireland, and my +dear, dearest father might not now have been alive?" + +But the sound of wheels was at last heard without. + +"Come, girleens, and let's give them a proper Irish welcome," said the +Squire, standing on the steps of the old house. + +Nora ran to him, and he put his arm round her waist. + +"Now then, Nora, as the carriage comes up, you help me with the big +Irish cheer. Hip, hip, hurrah! and _Caed Mille a Faitha_. Now then, let +every one who has got a drop of Irish blood in him or her raise the old +cheer." + +Poor gentle English Mrs. Hartrick turned quite pale when she heard these +sounds; but Mr. Hartrick was already beginning to understand his Irish +relatives; and as to Stephanotie, she sprang from the carriage, +rushed up the steps, and thrust a huge box of bon-bons into Squire +O'Shanaghgan's face. + +"I am an American girl," she said; "but I guess that, whether one +is Irish or American, one likes a right-down good sweetheart. Have a +bon-bon, Squire O'Shanaghgan, for I guess that you are the man to enjoy +it." + +"Why then, my girl, I'd like one very much," said the Squire; "but don't +bother me for a bit, for I have to speak to my English relatives." + +"Oh, come along in, Stephanotie, do," said Molly. "I see that you are +just as eccentric and as great a darling as ever." + +"I guess I'm not likely to change," answered Stephanotie. "I was born +with a love of bon-bons, and I'll keep it to the end of the chapter." + +But now Mrs. Hartrick and Mrs. O'Shanaghgan had met. The two English +ladies immediately began to understand each other. Mrs. O'Shanaghgan, +without a word, slipped her hand inside her sister-in-law's arm, and +they walked slowly across the magnificent hall and up the wide stairs to +the palatial bedroom got ready for the traveler. + +Then the fun and excitement downstairs became fast and furious. The +Squire clapped his brother-in-law, George Hartrick, on the shoulder; the +Squire laughed; the Squire very nearly hallooed. Terence looked round +him in undisguised amazement. + +"I would not have known the old place," he said, turning to Nora. + +Nora gave a quick sigh. + +"Where is my mother?" said the lad then. + +"She has gone upstairs with Aunt Grace; but run after her, Terry, do," +said his sister. + +Terence gave another glance round, in which pride for the home where +he was born kindled once more in his dark eyes. He then rushed up the +stairs three steps at a time. + +"Why, then," said the Squire, "it's cramped and bothered I am in these +clothes. What possesses people to make Merry-andrews of themselves +night after night beats my comprehension. In my old velveteen jacket and +knee-breeches I am a man--in this tomfoolery I do not feel as good as my +own footman." + +"You look very well in your dinner dress all the same, O'Shanaghgan," +said Mr. Hartrick. And he added, glancing from Nora to her father, "I am +glad to see you quite recovered." + +"Ah! it's she has done it," said the Squire, drawing Nora forward and +pressing her close to his heart. "She's a little witch. She has done +fine things for me, and I am a happy man to-night. Yes, I will own to +it now, I'm a happy man; and perhaps there are more things in the world +than we Irish people know of. Since I have my barn to sleep in I can +bear the house, and I am much obliged to you, George--much obliged to +you. But, all the same, it's downright I'd have hated you, when you +altered this old place past knowing, had it not been for my little girl, +Light o' the Morning, as I call her." + + +THE END. + + + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Light O' The Morning, by L. T. 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