"Labour is light, where love (quoth I) doth pay; Fleda pushed open the parlour door, and preceded her convoy, in a kind of tip-toe state of spirits. The first thing that met her eyes was her aunt, in one of the few handsome silks which were almost her sole relic of past wardrobe prosperity, and with a face uncommonly happy and pretty; and the next instant she saw the explanation of this appearance in her cousin Charlton, a little palish, but looking better than she had ever seen him, and another gentleman, of whom her eye took in only the general outlines of fashion and comfortable circumstances, now too strange to it to go unnoted. In Fleda's usual mood her next movement would have been made with a demureness that would have looked like bashfulness. But the amusement and pleasure of the day just passed had for the moment set her spirits free from the burden that generally bound them down; and they were as elastic as her step, as she came forward and presented to her aunt "Dr. Quackenboss," and then turned to shake her cousin's hand. "Charlton! Where did you come from? We didn't expect you so soon." "You are not sorry to see me, I hope?" "Not at all very glad;" and then as her eye glanced towards the other new-comer, Charlton presented to her "Mr. Thorn," and Fleda's fancy made a sudden quick leap on the instant to the old hall at Montepoole, and the shot dog. And then Dr. Quackenboss was presented, an introduction which Captain Rossitur received coldly, and Mr. Thorn with something more than frigidity. The doctor's elasticity, however, defied depression, especially in the presence of a silk dress and a military coat. Fleda presently saw that he was agonizing her uncle. Mrs. Rossitur had drawn close to her son. Fleda was left to take care of the other visitor. The young men had both seemed more struck at the vision presented to them than she had been on her part. She thought neither of them was very ready to speak to her. "I did not know," said Mr. Thorn, softly, "what reason I had to thank Rossitur for bringing me home with him to-night he promised me a supper and a welcome but I find he did not tell me the half of my entertainment." "That was wise in him," said Fleda; "the half that is not expected is always worth a great deal more than the other." "In this case, most assuredly," said Thorn, bowing, and, Fleda was sure, not knowing what to make of her. "Have you been in Mexico, too, Mr. Thorn?" "Not I! that's an entertainment I beg to decline. I never felt inclined to barter an arm for a shoulder-knot, or to abridge my usual means of locomotion for the privilege of riding on parade or selling one's-self for a name. Peter Schlemil's selling his shadow I can understand; but this is really lessening one's-self that one's shadow may grow the larger." "But you were in the army?" said Fleda. "Yes, it wasn't my doing. There is a time, you know, when one must please the old folks I grew old enough and wise enough to cut loose from the army before I had gained or lost much by it." He did not understand the displeased gravity of Fleda's face, and went on insinuatingly "Unless I have lost what Charlton has gained something I did not know hung upon the decision Perhaps you think a man is taller for having iron heels to his boots?" "I do not measure a man by his inches," said Fleda. "Then you have no particular predilection for shooting-men?" "I have no predilection for shooting anything, Sir?" "Then I am safe!" said he, with an arrogant little air of satisfaction. "I was born under an indolent star, but I confess to you, privately, of the two I would rather gather my harvests with the sickle than the sword. How does your uncle find it?" "Find what, Sir?" "The worship of Ceres? I remember he used to be devoted to "Are they rival deities?" "Why I have been rather of the opinion that they were too many for one house to hold," said Thorn, glancing at Mr. Rossitur. "But perhaps the Graces manage to reconcile them." "Did you ever hear of the Graces getting supper?" said Fleda. "Because Ceres sometimes sets them at that work. Uncle Rolf," she added as she passed him "Mr. Thorn is inquiring after Apollo will you set him right, while I do the same for the tablecloth?" Her uncle looked from her sparkling eyes to the rather puzzled expression of his guest's face. "I was only asking your lovely niece," said Mr. Thorn, coming down from his stilts, "how you liked this country life." Dr. Quackenboss bowed, probably in approbation of the epithet. "Well, Sir, what information did she give you on the subject?" "Left me in the dark, Sir, with a vague hope that you would enlighten me." "I trust Mr. Rossitur can give a favourable report?" said the doctor, benignly. But Mr. Rossitur's frowning brow looked very little like it. "What do you say to our country life, Sir?" "It's a confounded life, Sir," said Mr. Rossitur, taking a pamphlet from the table to fold and twist as he spoke; "it is a confounded life; for the head and the hands must either live separate, or the head must do no other work but wait upon the hands. It is an alternative of loss and waste, Sir." "The alternative seems to be of a limited application," said the doctor, as Fleda, having found that Hugh and Barby had been beforehand with her, now came back to the company. "I am sure this lady would not give such a testimony." "About what?" said Fleda, colouring under the fire of so many eyes. "The blighting influence of Ceres' sceptre," said Mr. Thorn. "This country life," said her uncle "do you like it, Fleda?" "You know, uncle," said she, cheerfully, "I was always of the old Douglass's mind I like better to hear the lark sing than the mouse squeak." "Is that one of Earl Douglass's sayings," said the doctor. "Yes, Sir," said Fleda with quivering lips, "but not the one you know an older man." "Ah!" said the doctor, intelligently, "Mr. Rossitur speaking of hands I have employed the Irish very much of late years they are as good as one can have, if you do not want a head." "That is to say if you have a head," said Thorn. "Exactly!" said the doctor, all abroad "and when there are not too many of them together. I had enough of that, Sir, some years ago, when a multitude of them were employed on the public works. The Irish were in a state of mutilation, Sir, all through the country." "Ah!" said Thorn, "had the military been at work upon them?" "No, Sir, but I wish they had, I am sure; it would have been for the peace of the town. There were hundreds of them. We were in want of an army." "Of surgeons, I should think," said Thorn. Fleda saw the doctor's dubious air and her uncle's compressed lips; and, commanding herself, with even a look of something like displeasure, she quitted her seat by Mr. Thorn, and called the doctor to the window to look at a cluster of rose acacias just then in their glory. He admired, and she expatiated, till she hoped everybody but herself had forgotten what they had been talking about. But they had no sooner returned to their seats than Thorn began again. "The Irish in your town are not in the same mutilated state now, I suppose, Sir?" "No, Sir, no," said the doctor: "there are much fewer of them to break each other's bones. It was all among themselves, Sir." "The country is full of foreigners," said Mr. Rossitur, with praiseworthy gravity. "Yes, Sir," said Dr. Quackenboss, thoughtfully, "we shall have none of our ancestors left in a short time, if they go on as they are doing." Fleda was beaten from the field, and, rushing into the breakfast-room, astonished Hugh by seizing hold of him and indulging in a most prolonged and unbounded laugh. She did not show herself again till the company came in to supper; but then she was found as grave as Minerva. She devoted herself particularly to the care and entertainment of Dr. Quackenboss till he took leave; nor could Thorn get another chance to talk to her through all the evening. When he and Rossitur were at last in their rooms, Fleda told her story. "You don't know how pleasant it was, aunt Lucy how much I enjoyed it seeing and talking to somebody again. Mrs. Evelyn was so very kind." "I a very glad, my darling," said Mrs. Rossitur, stroking away the hair from the forehead that was bent down towards her "I am glad you had it to-day, and I am glad you will have it again to-morrow." "You will have it too, aunt Lucy. Mrs. Evelyn will be here in the morning she said so." "I shall not see her." "Why? Now, aunt Lucy! you will." "I have nothing in the world to see her in I cannot." "You have this?" "For the morning? A rich French silk? It would be absurd. "But you will have to dress in the morning for Mr. Thorn? he will be here to breakfast." "I shall not come down to breakfast. Don't look so, love! I can't help it." "Why was that calico got for me and not for you!" said Fleda, bitterly. "A sixpenny calico!" said Mrs. Rossitur, smiling "it would be hard if you could not have so much as that, love." "And you will not see Mrs. Evelyn and her daughters at all! and I was thinking that it would do you so much good!" Mrs. Rossitur drew her face a little nearer and kissed it, over and over. "It will do you good, my darling that is what I care for much more." "It will not do me half as much," said Fleda, sighing. Her spirits were in their old place again; no more a tiptoe to-night. The short light of pleasure was overcast. She went to bed feeling very quiet indeed; and received Mrs. Evelyn and excused her aunt the next day, almost wishing the lady had not been as good as her word. But though in the same mood she set off with her to drive to Montepoole, it could not stand the bright influences with which she found herself surrounded. She came home again at night with dancing spirits. It was some days before Captain Rossitur began at all to comprehend the change which had come upon his family. One morning Fleda and Hugh, having finished their morning's work, were in the breakfast-room waiting for the rest of the family, when Charlton made his appearance, with the cloud on his brow which had been lately gathering. "Where is the paper?" said he. "I haven't seen a paper since I have been here." "You mustn't expect to find Mexican luxuries in Queechy, Captain Rossitur," said Fleda pleasantly. "Look at these roses, and don't ask me for papers!" He did look a minute at the dish of flowers she was arranging for the breakfast table, and at the rival freshness and sweetness of the face that hung over them. "You don't mean to say you live without a paper?" "Well, it's astonishing how many things people can live without," said Fleda, rather dreamily, intent upon settling an uneasy rose that would topple over. "I wish you'd answer me really," said Charlton. "Don't you take a paper here?" "We would take one, thankfully, if it would be so good as to come; but, seriously, Charlton, we haven't any," she said, changing her tone. "And have you done without one all through the war?" "No we used to borrow one from a kind neighbour once in a while, to make sure, as Mr. Thorn says, that you had not bartered an arm for a shoulder-knot." "You never looked to see whether I was killed in the meanwhile, I suppose?" "No never," said Fleda, gravely, as she took her place on a low seat in the corner "I always knew you were safe before I touched the paper." "What do you mean?" "I am not an enemy, Charlton," said Fleda, laughing. "I mean that I used to make aunt Miriam look over the accounts before I did." Charlton walked up and down the room for a little while in sullen silence; and then brought up before Fleda. "What are you doing?" Fleda looked up a glance that, as sweetly and brightly as possible, half asked, half bade him be silent and ask no questions. "What are you doing?" he repeated. "I am putting a patch on my shoe." His look expressed more indignation than anything else. "What do you mean?" "Just what I say," said Fleda, going on with her work. "What in the name of all the cobblers in the land do you do it for?" "Because I prefer it to having a hole in my shoe; which would give me the additional trouble of mending my stockings." Charlton muttered an impatient sentence, of which Fleda only understood that "the devil" was in it, and then desired to know if whole shoes would not answer the purpose as well as either holes or patches. "Quite if I had them," said Fleda, giving him another glance, which, with all its gravity and sweetness, carried also a little gentle reproach. "But do you know," said he, after standing still a minute looking at her, "that any cobbler in the country would do what you are doing much better for sixpence?" "I am quite aware of that," said Fleda, stitching away. "Your hands are not strong enough for that work." Fleda again smiled at him, in the very dint of giving a hard push to her needle a smile that would have witched him into good humour if he had not been determinately in a cloud, and proof against everything. It only admonished him that he could not safely remain in the region of sunbeams; and he walked up and down the room furiously again. The sudden ceasing of his footsteps presently made her look up. "What have you got there? Oh, Charlton, don't! please put that down! I didn't know I had left them there. They were a little wet, and I laid them on the chair to dry." "What do you call this?" said he, not minding her request. "They are only my gardening gloves I thought I had put them away." "Gloves!" said he, pulling at them disdainfully "why, here are two one within the other what's that for?" "It's an old-fashioned way of mending matters two friends covering each other's deficiencies. The inner pair are too thin alone, and the outer ones have holes that are past cobbling." "Are we going to have any breakfast to-day?" said he, flinging the gloves down. "You are very late!" "No," said Fleda, quietly "it is not time for aunt Lucy to be down yet." "Don't you have breakfast before nine o'clock?" "Yes by half-past eight generally." "Strange way of getting along on a farm! Well, I can't wait, I promised Thorn I would meet him this morning Barby! I wish you would bring me my boots!" Fleda made two springs, one to touch Charlton's mouth, the other to close the door of communication with the kitchen. "Well! what is the matter? can't I have them?" "Yes, yes, but ask me for what you want. You mustn't call upon "Why not? Is she too good to be spoken to? What is she in the kitchen for?" "She wouldn't be in the kitchen long if we were to speak to her in that way," said Fleda. "I suppose she would as soon put your boots on for you as fetch and carry them. I'll see about it." "It seems to me Fleda rules the house," remarked Captain "Well, who should rule it?" said Hugh. "Not she!" "I don't think she does," said Hugh; "but if she did, I am sure it could not be in better hands." "It shouldn't be in her hands at all. But I have noticed since I have been here that she takes the arrangement of almost everything. My mother seems to have nothing to do in her own family." "I wonder what the family or anybody in it would do without "What is there for me to know?" "Fleda does everything." "So I say and that is what I don't like." "How little you know what you are talking about!" said Hugh. "I can tell you she is the life of the house, almost literally, we should have had little enough to live upon this summer if it had not been for her." "What do you mean?" impatiently enough. "Fleda if it had not been for her gardening and management she has taken care of the garden these two years, and sold I can't tell you how much from it. Mr. Sweet, the hotelman at the Pool, takes all we can give him." "How much does her 'taking care of the garden' amount to?" "It amounts to all the planting, and nearly all the other work, after the first digging by far the greater part of it." Charlton walked up and down a few turns in most unsatisfied silence. "How does she get the things to Montepoole?" "I take them." "You! When?" "I ride with them there before breakfast. Fleda is up very early to gather them." "You have not been there this morning?" "Yes." "With what?" "Pease and strawberries." "And Fleda picked them?" "Yes with some help from Barby and me." "That glove of hers was wringing wet." "Yes, with the pea-vines, and strawberries too; you know they get so loaded with dew. Oh, Fleda gets more than her gloves wet. But she does not mind anything she does for father and mother." "Humph! and does she get enough when all is done to pay for the trouble?" "I don't know," said Hugh, rather sadly. "She thinks so. It is no trifle." "Which, the pay or the trouble?" "Both. But I meant the pay. Why, she made ten dollars last year from the asparagus beds alone, and I don't know how much more this year." "Ten dollars! The devil!" "Why?" "Have you come to counting your dollars by the tens?" "We have counted our sixpences so a good while," said Hugh, quietly. Charlton strode about the room again in much perturbation. Then came in Fleda, looking as bright as if dollars had been counted by the thousand, and bearing his boots. "What on earth did you do that for?" said he, angrily. "I could have gone for them myself." "No harm done," said Fleda, lightly; "only I have got something else instead of the thanks I expected." "I can't conceive," said he, sitting down and sulkily drawing on his foot-gear, "why this piece of punctiliousness should have made any more difficulty about bringing me my boots than about blacking them." A sly glance of intelligence, which Charlton was quick enough to detect, passed between Fleda and Hugh. His eye carried its question from one to the other. Fleda's gravity gave way. "Don't look at me so, Charlton," said she, laughing; "I can't help it, you are so excessively comical! I recommend that you go out upon the grass-plat before the door and turn round two or three times. "Will you have the goodness to explain yourself? Who did black these boots?" "Never pry into the secrets of families," said Fleda. "Hugh and I have a couple of convenient little fairies in our service that do things unknownst." "I blacked them, Charlton," said Hugh. Captain Rossitur gave his slippers a fling that carried them clean into the corner of the room. "I will see," he said, rising, "whether some other service cannot be had more satisfactory than that of fairies!" "Now, Charlton," said Fleda, with a sudden change of manner, corning to him and laying her hand most gently on his arm, "please don't speak about these things before uncle Rolf or your mother please do not, Charlton. It would only do a great deal of harm, and do no good." She looked up in his face, but he would not meet her pleading eye, and shook off her hand. "I don't need to be instructed how to speak to my father and mother; and I am not one of the household that has submitted itself to your direction." Fleda sat down on her bench and was quiet, but with a lip that trembled a little and eyes that let fall one or two witnesses against him. Charlton did not see them, and he knew better than to meet Hugh's look of reproach. But for all that, there was a certain consciousness that hung about the neck of his purpose and kept it down in spite of him; and it was not till breakfast was half over that his ill-humour could make head against this gentle thwarting and cast it off. For so long the meal was excessively dull; Hugh and Fleda had their own thoughts; Charlton was biting his resolution into every slice of bread-and-butter that occupied him; and Mr. Rossitur's face looked like anything but encouraging an inquiry into his affairs. Since his son's arrival he had been most uncommonly gloomy; and Mrs. Rossitur's face was never in sunshine when his was in shade. "You'll have a warm day of it at the mill, Hugh," said Fleda, by way of saying something to break the dismal monotony of knives and forks. "Does that mill make much?" suddenly inquired Charlton. "It has made a new bridge to the brook, literally," said Fleda gaily; "for it has sawn out the boards; and you know you mustn't speak evil of what carries you over the water." "Does that mill pay for the working?' said Charlton, turning with the dryest disregard from her interference, and addressing himself determinately to his father. "What do you mean? It does not work gratuitously," answered "But, I mean, are the profits of it enough to pay for the loss of Hugh's time?" "If Hugh judges they are not, he is at liberty to let it alone." "My time is not lost," said Hugh; "I' don't know what I should do with it." "I don't know what we should do without the mill," said Mrs. That gave Charlton an unlucky opening. "Has the prospect of farming disappointed you, father?" "What is the prospect of your company?" said Mr. Rossitur, swallowing half an egg before he replied. "A very limited prospect!" said Charlton, "if you mean the one that went with me. Not a fifth part of them left." "What have you done with them?" "Showed them where the balls were flying, Sir, and did my best to show them the thickest of it." "Is it necessary to show it to us too?" said Fleda. "I believe there are not twenty living that followed me into "Was all that havoc made in one engagement?" said Mrs. "Yes, mother; in the course of a few minutes." "I wonder what would pay for that loss," said Fleda, indignantly. "Why, the point was gained! and it did not signify what the cost was, so we did that. My poor boys were a small part of it." "What point do you mean?" "I mean the point we had in view, which was taking the place." "And what was the advantage of gaining the place?" "Pshaw! the advantage of doing one's duty." "But what made it duty?" said Hugh. "Orders." "I grant you," said Fleda; "I understand that but bear with me, Charlton what was the advantage to the army or the country?" "The advantage of great honour if we succeeded, and avoiding the shame of failure." "Is that all?" said Hugh. "All!" said Charlton. "Glory must be a precious thing, when other men's lives are so cheap to buy it," said Fleda. "We did not risk theirs without our own," said Charlton, colouring. "No; but still theirs were risked for you." "Not at all; why, this is absurd! you are saying that the whole war was for nothing." "What better than nothing was the end of it? We paid Mexico for the territory she yielded to us, didn't we, uncle Rolf?" "Yes." "How much?" "Twenty millions, I believe." "And what do you suppose the war has cost?" "Hum I don't know a hundred." "A hundred million! Besides how much besides! And don't you suppose, uncle Rolf, that for half of that sum Mexico would have sold us peaceably what she did in the end?" "It is possible I think it is very likely." "What was the fruit of the war, Captain Rossitur?" "Why, a great deal of honour to the army and the nation at large." "Honour again! But granting that the army gained it, which they certainly did, for one I do not feel very proud of the nation's share." "Why, they are one," said Charlton, impatiently. "In an unjust war?" "It was not an unjust war." "That's what you call a knock-downer," said Fleda, laughing. "But I confess myself so simple as to have agreed with Seth Plumfield, when I heard him and Lucas disputing about it last winter, that it was a shame to a great and strong nation like ours to display its might in crushing a weak one." "But they drew it upon themselves. They began hostilities." "There is a diversity of opinion about that." "Not in heads that have two grains of information." "I beg your pardon. Mrs. Evelyn and Judge Sensible were talking over that very question the other day at Montepoole; and he made it quite clear to my mind that we were the aggressors." "Judge Sensible is a fool!" said Mr. Rossitur. "Very well!" said Fleda, laughing; "but as I do not wish to be comprehended in the same class, will you show me how he was wrong, uncle?" This drew on a discussion of some length, to which Fleda listened with profound attention, long after her aunt had ceased to listen at all, and Hugh was thoughtful, and Charlton disgusted. At the end of it, Mr. Rossitur left the table and the room, and Fleda subsiding, turned to her cold coffee-cup. "I didn't know you ever cared anything about politics before," said Hugh. "Didn't you?" said Fleda, smiling. "You do me injustice." Their eyes met for a second, with a most appreciating smile on his part; and then he too went off to his work. There was a few minutes' silent pause after that. "Mother," said Charlton, looking up and bursting forth, "what is all this about the mill and the farm? is not the farm doing well?" "I am afraid not very well," said Mrs. Rossitur, gently. "What is the difficulty?" "Why, your father has let it to a man by the name of Didenhover, and I am afraid he is not faithful; it does not seem to bring us in what it ought." "What did he do that for?" "He was wearied with the annoyances he had to endure before, and thought it would be better and more profitable to have somebody else take the whole charge and management. He did not know Didenhover's character at the time." "Engaged him without knowing him!" Fleda was the only third party present, and Charlton unwittingly allowing himself to meet her eye, received a look of keen displeasure that he was not prepared for. "That is not like him," he said, in a much moderated tone. "But you must be changed too, mother, or you would not endure such anomalous service in your kitchen." "There are a great many changes, dear Charlton," said his mother, looking at him with such a face of sorrowful sweetness and patience that his mouth was stopped. Fleda left the room. "And have you really nothing to depend upon but that child's strawberries and Hugh's wood-saw?" he said, in the tone he ought to have used from the beginning. "Little else." Charlton stifled two or three sentences that rose to his lips, and began to walk up and down the room again. His mother sat musing by the tea-board still, softly clinking her spoon against the edge of her tea-cup. "She has grown up very pretty," he remarked, after a pause. "Pretty!" said Mrs. Rossitur. "Why?" "No one that has seen much of Fleda would ever describe her by that name." Charlton had the candour to think he had seen something of her that morning. "Poor child!" said Mrs. Rossitur, sadly, " I can't bear to think of her spending her life as she is doing wearing herself out, I know, sometimes and buried alive." "Buried!" said Charlton, in his turn. "Yes; without any of the advantages and opportunities she ought to have. I can't bear to think of it. And yet how should I ever live without her" said Mrs. Rossitur, leaning her lace upon her hands. "And if she were known she would not be mine long. But It grieves me to have her go without her music, that she is so fond of, and the book she wants; she and Hugh have gone from end to end of every volume there is in the house, I believe, in every language, except Greek." "Well, she looks pretty happy and contented, mother." "I don't know!'" said Mrs.. Rossitur, shaking her head. "Isn't she happy?" "I don't know," said Mrs. Rossitur, again; "she has a spirit that is happy in doing her duty, or anything for those she loves; but I see her sometimes wearing a look that pains me exceedingly. I am afraid the way she lives, and the changes in our affairs, have worn upon her more than we know of she feels doubly everything that touches me, or Hugh, or your father. She is a gentle spirit!" "She seems to me not to want character," said Charlton. "Character! I don't know who has so much. She has at least fifty times as much character as I have. And energy. She is admirable at managing people she knows how to influence them somehow, so that everybody does what she wants." "And who influences her?" said Charlton. "Who influences her? Everybody that she loves. Who has the most influence over her, do you mean? I am sure I don't know Hugh, if anybody but she is rather the moving spirit of the household." Captain Rossitur resolved that he would be an exception to her rule. He forgot, however, for some reason or other, to sound his father any more on the subject of mismanagement. His thoughts, indeed, were more pleasantly taken up. |