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She hoped to explain and lament the next morning, after church. He would surely come to talk it over with her; but he only returned a civil note with his receipt, and she did not see him again before his departure. She was greatly vexed; she had wanted so much to tell him how it was, and then came an inward consciousness that she would probably have told him a great deal too much.

Was it that tiresome prudence of his again that would think for her and prevent impulsive and indignant disclosures? It made her bring down her foot sharply on the pavement with vexation as she suspected that he thought her so foolish, and then again her heart warmed with the perception of self-denying care for her. She trusted to that same prudence for no delusive hopes having been given to Mark and his wife.

She did so justly. Mr. Dutton had thought the matter far too uncertain to be set before them. The Canoness’s vague hopes had been the fruit of a hint imprudently dropped by Nuttie herself in a letter to Blanche. She had said more to Miss Nugent, but Mary was a nonconductor. Mr. Dutton’s heart sank as he looked at the houses, and he had some thoughts of going to her first for intelligence, but Annaple had spied him, and ran out to the gate to welcome him.

‘Oh, Mr. Dutton, I’m so glad! Mark will be delighted.’

‘Is he at home?’

‘Oh no, at the office, wading through seas of papers with Mr. Greenleaf, but he will come home to eat in a quarter of an hour. So come in;’ then, as her boy’s merry voice and a gruffer one were heard, ‘That’s the bailiff. He is Willie’s devoted slave.’

‘I hoped to have been in time to have saved you that.’

‘Well, I’m convinced that among the much maligned races are bailiffs. I wonder what I could get by an article on prejudice against classes! I was thinking how much beer I should have to lay in for this one, and behold he is a teetotaller, and besides that amateur nurse-maid, parlour-maid, kitchen-maid, etc. etc.–‘

‘What bailiff could withstand Mrs. Egremont? Perhaps you have tamed him?’

‘Not I. The cook did that. Indeed I believe there’s a nice little idyll going on in the kitchen, and besides he wore the blue ribbon, and was already a devoted follower of young Mr. Godfrey!’

‘However, if the valuation is ready, I hope you may be relieved from him, if you won’t be too much concerned at the parting!’

‘Mrs. Egremont told us that our people are very good to us,’ said Annaple, ‘and don’t mean to send us out with nothing but a pack at our backs. It is very kind in them and in you, Mr. Dutton, to take the trouble of it! No, I’ll not worry you with thanks. The great point is, hope for something for Mark to do. That will keep up his spirits best! Poor Mr. Greenleaf is so melancholy that it is all I can do to keep him up to the mark.’

‘I have been making inquiries, and I have three possible openings, but I hardly like to lay them before you.’

‘Oh, we are not particular about gentility! It is work we want, and if it was anything where I could help that would be all the better! I’m sure I only wonder there are so many as three. I think it is somebody’s doing. Ah! there’s Mark,’ and she flew out to meet him. ‘Mark!’ she said, on the little path, ‘here’s the good genius, with three chances in his pocket. Keep him to luncheon. I’ve got plenty. Poor old man, how hot you look! Go and cool in the drawing-room, while I wash my son’s face.’

And she disappeared into the back regions, while Mark, the smile she had called up vanishing from his face, came into the drawing-room, and held out a cordial, thankful hand to his friend, whose chief intelligence was soon communicated. ‘Yes,’ said Mark, when he heard the amount entrusted by the family to Mr. Dutton, ‘that will save all my wife’s poor little household gods. Not that I should call them so, for I am sure she does not worship them. I don’t know what would become of me if she were like poor Mrs. Greenleaf, who went into hysterics when the bailiff arrived, and has kept her room ever since. I sometimes feel as if nothing could hurt us while Annaple remains what she is.’

Mr. Dutton did not wonder that he said so, when she came in leading her little son, with his sunny hair newly brushed and shining, and carrying a little bouquet for the guest of one La Marque rosebud and three lilies of the valley.

‘Take it to Mr. Dutton, Billy-boy; I think he knows how the flowers came into the garden. You shall have daddy’s button-hole to take to him next. There, Mark, it is a pansy of most smiling countenance, such as should beam on you through your accounts. I declare, there’s that paragon of a Mr. Jones helping Bessy to bring in dinner! Isn’t it very kind to provide a man-servant for us?’

It might be rattle, and it might be inconsequent, but it was much pleasanter than hysterics. Billy-boy was small enough to require a good deal of attention at dinner, especially as he was more disposed to open big blue eyes at the stranger, than to make use of his spoon, and Annaple seemed chiefly engrossed with him, though a quick keen word at the right moment showed that she was aware of all that was going on, as Mark and Mr. Dutton discussed the present situation and future measures.

It was quite true that a man concerned in a failure was in great danger of being left out of the race for employment, and Mr. Dutton did not think it needful to mention the force of the arguments he was using to back his recommendation of Mark Egremont. The possibilities he had heard of were a clerkship at a shipping agent’s, another at a warehouse in their own line, and a desk at an insurance office. This sounded best, but had the smallest salary to begin with, and locality had to be taken into account. Mr. Dutton’s plan was, that as soon as Mark was no longer necessary for what Annaple was pleased to call the fall of the sere and withered leaf, the pair should come to stay with him, so that Mark could see his possible employers, and Annaple consider of the situations. They accepted this gratefully, Mark only proposing that she should go either to his stepmother or her own relations to avoid the final crisis.

‘As if I would!’ she exclaimed. ‘What sort of a little recreant goose do you take me for?’

‘I take you for a gallant little woman, ready to stand in the breach,’ said Mark.

‘Ah, don’t flatter yourself! There is a thing I have not got courage to face–without necessity, and that’s Janet’s triumphant pity. Mr. Dutton lives rather too near your uncle, but he is a man, and he can’t be so bad.’

This of course did not pass till Mr. Dutton had gone in to greet the ladies next door, to promise to tell them of their child at length when the business hours of the day should be over.

Shall it be told? There was something in his tone–perfectly indefinable, with which he spoke of ‘Miss Egremont,’ that was like the old wistfully reverential voice in which he used to mention ‘Mrs. Egremont.’ It smote Mary Nugent’s quiet heart with a pang. Was it that the alteration from the old kindly fatherliness of regard to ‘little Nuttie’ revealed that any dim undefined hope of Mary’s own must be extinguished for ever; or was it that she grieved that he should again be wasting his heart upon the impracticable?

A little of both, perhaps, but Mary was as ready as ever to sympathise, and to rejoice in hearing that the impetuous child had grown into the forbearing dutiful woman.

CHAPTER XXIX.
A FRESH START.

‘Did you say that Mark and his wife were come to Springfield House?’

‘They come the day after to-morrow,’ answered Ursula. ‘Mark could not finish up the business sooner.’

‘Well, I suppose we must have them to dinner for once. He has made a fool of himself, but I won’t have the Canoness complaining that I take no notice of him; and it is easier done while he is there than when he has got into some hole in the City–that is if he ever gets anything to do.’

‘Mr. Dutton has several situations in view for him.’

‘In view. That’s a large order. Or does it mean living on Dutton and doing something nominal? I should think Dutton too old and sharp a hand for that, though he is quartering them on himself.’

‘I believe there is nothing Mr. Dutton would like better, if he thought it right for them, but I am quite sure Mark and Annaple would not consent.’

‘Ha, ha!’ and Mr. Egremont laughed. ‘Their nose is not brought to the grindstone yet! Say Saturday, then, Ursula.’

‘Am I to ask Mr. Dutton?’

‘Of course; I’m not going to have a tete-a-tete with Master Mark.’

So Ursula had the satisfaction of writing a more agreeable note to Mr. Dutton than her last, and her invitation was accepted, but to her vexation Mr. Egremont further guarded himself from anything confidential by verbally asking Mr. Clarence Fane on that very day, and as that gentleman was a baronet’s son, she knew she should fall to his lot at dinner, and though she was glad when this was the case at their ordinary parties, it was a misfortune on the present occasion. She had not seen Annaple since her marriage, except at the family gathering on the Canon’s death, when she was very much absorbed by the requirements of the stricken household; and Nuttie expected to see her in the same subdued condition. All Mr. Dutton had said or Mary Nugent had written about her courage and cheerfulness had given the impression of ‘patience smiling at grief,’ and in a very compassionate mood she started for a forenoon call at Springfield House; but, early as it was, nobody was at home, unless it might be the little boy, whose voice she thought she heard while waiting at the gate.

She was out driving with her father afterwards in the long summer evening, and only found Mark’s card on returning just in time to dress. It was a bright glaring day, and she was sitting by the window, rather inattentively listening to Mr. Fane’s criticism of a new performance at one of the theatres, when she heard the bell, and there entered the slight, bright creature who might still have been taken for a mere girl. The refined though pronounced features, the transparent complexion, crispy yellow hair and merry eyes, were as sunbeam-like as at the Rectory garden-party almost five years ago, and the black dress only marked the contrast, and made the slenderness of the figure more evident.

Mark looked older, and wrung his cousin’s hand with a pressure of gratitude and feeling, but Annaple’s was a light little gay kiss, and there was an entire unconsciousness about her of the role of poor relation. She made an easy little acknowledgment of the introduction of Mr. Fane, and, as Mr. Egremont appeared the next moment, exchanged greetings with him in a lively ordinary fashion.

This was just what he liked. He only wanted to forget what was unpleasant, and, giggling Scotch girl as she was, he was relieved to find that she could not only show well-bred interest in the surface matters of the time, but put in bright flashes of eagerness and originality, well seconded by Mr. Dutton. Mr. Fane was always a professor of small talk, and Nuttie had learnt to use the current change of society, so that though Mark was somewhat silent, the dinner was exceedingly pleasant and lively; and, as Mr. Fane remarked afterwards, he had been asked to enliven a doleful feast to ruined kindred, he could only say he wished prosperity always made people so agreeable.

‘This is all high spirit and self-respect,’ thought Nuttie. ‘Annaple is talking as I am, from the teeth outwards. I shall have it out with her when we go upstairs! At any rate my father is pleased with her!’

Nuttie made the signal to move as soon as she could, and as they went upstairs, put her arm round the slim waist and gave a sympathetic pressure, but the voice that addressed her had still the cheery ring that she fancied had been only assumed.

‘I’m sorry I missed you, but we set out early and made a day of it; and oh! we’ve been into such funny places as I never dreamt of! You didn’t see my boy?’

‘No. I thought I heard him. I must see him to-morrow.’

‘And I must see yours. May it not be a pleasure to-night? I’ve no doubt you go and gloat over him at night.’

‘Well, I do generally run up after dinner; but after your day, I can’t think of dragging you up all these stairs.’

‘Oh, that’s nothing! Only you see it is jollier to have my Billy-boy in the next room.’

They were mounting all the time, and were received in the day nursery by the old Rectory nurse, much increased in dignity, but inclined to be pathetic as she inquired after ‘Mr. Mark,’ while Annaple, like a little insensible being, answered with provoking complacency as to his perfect health, and begged Mrs. Poole to bring Master Alwyn to play in the garden at Springfield with her Willie. In fact there was a general invitation already to Alwyn to play there, but his attendants so much preferred the society of their congeners in the parks that they did not avail themselves of it nearly as often as Ursula wished.

Little Alwyn asleep was, of course, a beautiful sight, with a precious old headless rabbit pressed tight to his cheek; Annaple’s face grew tender as she looked at the motherless creature; and she admired him to any extent except saying that he excelled her own. Being more than a year the elder, there could be no rivalry as to accomplishments; but as soon as they were out of the nursery hush, Annaple laughed her way down again with tales of Billy-boy’s wonder at his first experiences of travelling. They sat down among the plants in the balcony, as far from the lamps as possible, and talked themselves into intimacy over Micklethwayte. There are two Eden homes in people’s lives, one that of later childhood, the other the first of wedded happiness, and St. Ambrose Road had the same halo to both of these; for both had been uprooted from it against their will; the chief difference being that Ursula could cast longing, lingering looks behind, while Annaple held herself resolutely steeled against sentiment, and would only turn it off by something absurd. Nothing was absolutely settled yet; Mark had been presenting himself at offices, and she had been seeing rooms and lodgings.

‘The insurance office sounds the best, and would be the least shock to our belongings,’ said Annaple; ‘but it seems to lead to nothing. He would not get on unless we had capital to invest, and even if we had any, you wouldn’t catch us doing that again!’

‘Does Mr. Dutton advise that?’

‘No, he only thought we should like it better; but we are quite past caring for people’s feelings in the matter. They couldn’t pity us worse than they do. I incline to Stubbs and Co. One of them was once in the Greenleaf office, and has a regard for anything from thence; besides Mark would have something to do besides desk work. He would have to judge of samples, and see to the taking in and storing of goods. He does know something about that, and I’m sure it would agree with him better than an unmitigated high stool, with his nose to a desk.’

‘I should like it better.’

‘That’s right! Now I have got some one to say so. Besides, rising is possible, if one gets very useful. I mean to be Mrs. Alderman, if not my Lady Mayoress, before we have done. Then they have a great big almost deserted set of rooms over the warehouse, where we might live and look after the place.’

‘Oh! but should you like that?’

‘Mr. Dutton wants us to live out in some of the suburban places, where it seems there is a perfect population of clerks’ families in semi-detached houses. He says we should save Mark’s railway fare, rent, and all in doctors’ bills. But people, children and all, do live and thrive in the City; and I think Mark’s health will be better looked after if I am there to give him his midday bite and sup, and brush him up, than if he is left to cater for himself; and as to exercise for the Billy-boy, ’tis not so far to the Thames Embankment. The only things that stagger me are the blacks! I don’t know whether life is long enough to be after the blacks all day long, but perhaps I shall get used to them!’

‘Well, I think that would be worse.’

‘Perhaps it would; and at any rate, if the blacks do beat me, we could move. Think, no rent, nor rates, nor taxes–that is an inducement to swallow–no–to contend with, any number of blackamoors, isn’t it? even if they settle on the tip of Billy-boy’s nose.’

‘I could come to see you better there than out in a suburb,’ said Nuttie. ‘But what do these rooms look out upon?’

‘On one side into their own court, on the other into Wulstan Street– a quiet place on the whole–all walls and warehouses; and there’s an excellent parish church, Mr. Underwood’s; so I think we might do worse.’

Nuttie was very sorry that the gentlemen came up, and Mr. Fane wandered out and began asking whether they were going to the rose show. Somehow on that evening she became conscious that Annaple looked at her and Mr. Fane rather curiously; and when they met again the next day, and having grown intimate over the introduction of the two little boys, were driving out together, there were questions about whether she saw much of him.

‘Oh, I don’t know! He is the nicest, on the whole, of papa’s friends; he can talk of something besides’–Nuttie paused over her ‘besides,’–‘horseyness, and all that sort of thing–he is not so like an old satyr as some of them are; and so he is a resource.’

‘I see. And you meet him elsewhere, don’t you, in general society?’

‘I don’t go out much now that Lady Kirkaldy is not in town; but he always seems to turn up everywhere that one goes.’

‘Ursula, I’m very glad of that tone of yours. I was afraid–‘

‘Afraid of what?’ cried Nuttie in a defiant tone.

‘That you liked him, and he is not really nice, Nuttie. Mark knows all about him; and so did I when I lived with the Delmars.’

Nuttie laughed rather bitterly. ‘Thank you, Annaple. As if I could care for that man–or he for me, for that matter! I know but too well,’ she added gravely, ‘that nobody nice is ever intimate at home.’

‘I beg your pardon. I would not have worried you about it, only I think you must take care, Nuttie, for Blanche mentioned it to us last winter.’

‘Blanche is an arrant gossip! If she saw a grandfather and great grandmother gossiping she would say they were going to be married.’

‘Yes, as Mark says, one always swallows Blanche with a qualification.’

‘You may be quite sure, Annaple, that nothing like that will ever be true about me! Why, what would ever become of my poor little Wyn if I was so horrid as to want to go and marry?’

She said it with an ineffable tone of contempt, just like the original Nuttie, who seemed to be recalled by association with Annaple.

That sojourn of Mark and his wife at Springfield House was a bright spot in that summer. If it had been only that Annaple’s presence gave the free entree to such an island of old Micklethwayte, it would have been a great pleasure to her; but there was besides the happiness of confidence and unrestraint in their society, a restful enjoyment only to be appreciated by living the guarded life of constraint that was hers. She was so seldom thrown among people whom she could admire and look up to. Annaple told her husband of Nuttie’s vehement repudiation of any intention of marriage. ‘I am sure she meant it,’ she observed, ‘it was only a little too strong. I wonder if that poor youth who came to her first ball, and helped to pick us out of the hole in Bluepost Bridge, had anything to do with it.’

Annaple had an opportunity of judging. Mr. Dutton would not have brought about a meeting which might be painful and unsettling to both; but one afternoon, when Nuttie was ‘off duty’ with her father, and had come in to share Annaple’s five o’clock tea, Gerard Godfrey, looking the curate from head to foot, made his appearance, having come up from the far east, about some call on Mr. Dutton’s purse.

The two shook hands with pleased surprise, and a little heightening of colour, but that was all. Nuttie had been out to luncheon, and was dressed ‘like a mere fashionable young lady’ in his eyes; and when, after the classes and clubs and schools of his district had been discussed, he asked, ‘And I suppose you are taking part in everything here?’

‘No, that I can’t!’

‘Indeed! I know Porlock, the second curate here very well, and he tells me that his vicar has a wonderful faculty of finding appropriate work for every one. Of course you know him?’

‘No, I don’t;’ said Nuttie.

‘Miss Egremont has her appropriate work,’ said Mr. Dutton, and the deacon felt himself pushed into his old position at Micklethwayte. He knew the clergy of the district very well, and how persistently either Mr. Egremont, or perhaps Gregorio, prevented their gaining admittance at his house; and he guessed, but did not know, that Nuttie could not have got into personal intercourse with them without flat disobedience.

Annaple threw herself into the breach, and talked of St. Wulstan’s; and the encounter ended, leaving the sense of having drifted entirely away from one another, and being perfectly heart whole, though on the one hand Ursula’s feeling was of respect and honour; and Gerard’s had a considerable element of pity and disapprobation.

‘No!’ said Annaple when they were gone, ‘he will not cry like the kloarek in the Breton ballad who wetted three great missals through with his tears at his first mass. He is very good, I am sure, but he is a bit of a prig!’

‘It is very hard to youth to be good without priggishness,’ said Mr. Dutton. ‘Self-assertion is necessary, and it may easily be carried too far.’

‘Buttresses are useful, but they are not beauties,’ rejoined Annaple.

The warehouse arrangement was finally adopted, and after the three weeks necessary for the cleaning and fitting of their floor, and the bringing in of their furniture, Mark and Annaple began what she termed ‘Life among the Blacks.’

Nuttie had great designs of constantly seeing Annaple, sending her supplies from the gardens and preserves at Bridgefield, taking her out for drives, and cultivating a friendship between Alwyn and Willie, who had taken to each other very kindly on the whole. They could not exactly understand each other’s language, and had great fights from time to time over toys, for though there was a year between them they were nearly equal in strength; but they cared for each other’s company more than for anything else, were always asking to go to one another, and roared when the time of parting came; at least Alwyn did so unreservedly, for Nuttie had begun to perceive with compunction that Billy-boy was much the most under control, and could try to be good at his mother’s word, without other bribe than her kiss and smile. Ah! but he had a mother!

CHAPTER XXX.
NUTTIE’S PROSPECTS.

‘Three hundred pounds and possibilities.’ Merry Wives of Windsor.

Again Nuttie’s plans were doomed to be frustrated. It did not prove to be half so easy to befriend Mr. and Mrs. Mark Egremont as she expected, at the distance of half London apart, and with no special turn for being patronised on their side.

Her father took a fancy for almost daily drives with her in the park, because then he could have Alwyn with him; and the little fellow’s chatter had become his chief amusement. Or if she had the carriage to herself, there was sure to be something needful to be done which made it impossible to go into the city to take up and set down Mrs. Mark Egremont; and to leave her to make her way home would be no kindness. So Nuttie only accomplished a visit once before going out of town, and that was by her own exertions–by underground railway and cab. Then she found all going prosperously; the blacks not half so obnoxious as had been expected (of course not, thought Nuttie, in the middle of the summer); the look-out over the yard very amusing to Billy-boy; and the large old-fashioned pannelled rooms, so cool and airy that Annaple was quite delighted with them, and contemned the idea of needing a holiday. She had made them very pretty and pleasant with her Micklethwayte furniture, whose only fault was being on too small a scale for these larger spaces, but that had been remedied by piecing, and making what had been used for two serve for one.

The kitchen was on the same floor, close at hand, which was well, for Annaple did a good deal there, having only one young maid for the rougher work. She had taken lessons in the School of Cookery, and practised a good deal even at Micklethwayte, and she was proud of her skill and economy. Mark came in for his mid-day refreshment, and looked greatly brightened, as if the worst had come and was by no means so bad as he expected. All the time he had been at Mr. Dutton’s he had been depressed and anxious, but now, with his boy on his knee, he was merrier than Nuttie had ever known him. As to exercise, there were delightful evening walks, sometimes early marketings in the long summer mornings before business began–and altogether it seemed, as Nuttie told her father afterwards, as if she had had a glimpse into a little City Arcadia.

‘Hein!’ said he, ‘how long will it last?’

And Nuttie was carried away to Cowes, where he had been persuaded to recur to his old favourite sport of yachting. She would have rather liked this if Clarence Fane had not been there too, and continually haunting them. She had been distrustful of him ever since Annaple’s warning, and it became a continual worry to the motherless girl to decide whether his civil attentions really meant anything, or whether she were only foolish and ridiculous in not accepting them as freely and simply as before.

Of one thing she became sure, namely, that Gregorio was doing whatever in him lay to bring them together.

In this seaside temporary abode, great part of the London establishment was left behind, and Gregorio condescended to act the part of butler, with only a single man-servant under him, and thus he had much more opportunity of regulating the admission of visitors than at home; and he certainly often turned Mr. Fane in upon her, when she had intended that gentleman to be excluded, and contrived to turn a deaf or uncomprehending ear when she desired that there should be no admission of visitors unless her father was absolutely ready for them; and also there were times when he must have suggested an invitation to dinner, or a joining in a sail. No doubt Gregorio would have been delighted to see her married, and to be thus free from any counter influence over his master; but as she said to herself, ‘Catch me! Even if I cared a rush for the man, I could not do it. I don’t do my poor father much good, but as to leaving poor little Alwyn in his clutches–I must be perfectly demented with love even to think of it.’

There was a desire on the valet’s part to coax and court little Alwyn of which she felt somewhat jealous. The boy was naturally the pet of every one in the household, but he was much less out of Gregorio’s reach in the present confined quarters, and she could not bear to see him lifted up in the valet’s arms, allowed to play with his watch, held to look at distant sails on board the yacht, or even fed with sweet biscuits or chocolate creams.

The Rectory nursery had gone on a strict regimen and nurse was as angry as Nuttie herself; but there was no preventing it, for his father was not above cupboard love, and never resisted the entreaties that were always excited by the sight of dainties, only laughing when Nuttie remonstrated, or even saying, ‘Never mind sister, Wynnie, she’s got Mrs. Teachem’s cap on,’ and making the child laugh by pretending to smuggle in papers of sweets by stealth, apart from the severe eyes of sister or nurse.

That cut Nuttie to the heart. To speak of the evils for which self- indulgence was a preparation would only make her father sneer at her for a second Hannah More. It was a language he did not understand; and as to the physical unwholesomeness, he simply did not choose to believe it. She almost wished Alwyn would for once be sick enough to frighten him, but that never happened, nor would he accept nurse’s statement of the boy being out of order.

Poor little Alwyn, he was less and less of an unmixed joy to her as he was growing out of the bounds of babyhood, and her notions of discipline were thwarted by her father’s unbounded indulgence. To her the child was a living soul, to be trained for a responsible position here and for the eternal world beyond; to her father he was a delightful plaything, never to be vexed, whose very tempers were amusing, especially when they teased the serious elder sister.

‘Oh father! do you ever think what it will come to?’ Nuttie could not help saying one day when Mr. Egremont had prevented her from carrying him off in disgrace to the nursery for tying the rolls up in dinner napkins to enact Punch and Judy, in spite of his own endeavours to prevent the consequent desolation of the preparations.

Mr. Egremont shrugged his shoulders, and only observed, ‘An excuse for a little home tyranny, eh? No, no, Wyn; we don’t want tame little muffs here.’

Nuttie was obliged to run out of the room and–it must be confessed– dance and stamp out her agony of indignation and misery that her father should be bent on ruining his child, for she could not understand that all this was simply the instinctive self-indulgence of a drugged brain and dulled conscience.

She did, however, get a little support and help during a brief stay in the shooting season at Bridgefield. The Canoness was visiting the Condamines at the Rectory, and very soon understood all the state of things, more perhaps from her former nurse than from Ursula. She was witness to one of those trying scenes, when Nuttie had been forbidding the misuse of a beautiful elaborate book of nursery rhymes, where Alwyn thought proper to ‘kill’ with repeated stabs the old woman of the shoe, when preparing to beat her progeny.

Just as she was getting the dagger paper-knife out of his little hand, and was diverting the pout on his swelling lip, his father became aware of the contest, and immediately the half conquered boy appealed to him. ‘Sister naughty. Won’t let Wynnie kill cross ugly old woman, beating poor little children.’

‘A fellow feeling! eh, sister? Kill her away, boy, tear her out! Yes, give her to sister, and tell her that’s the way to serve sour females! I declare, Ursula, she has got something of your expression.’

‘Oh Wynnie, Wynnie!’ said Nuttie, as he trotted up to her, ‘is sister cross and ugly?’ and she opened her arms to him.

‘Sister, Wyn’s own sister,’ said the child affectionately, letting himself be kissed as he saw her grieved. ‘She shan’t be ugly old woman–ugly old woman go in fire.’

So perilously near the flame did he run to burn the old woman that Mr. Egremont shouted to her that in spite of all that humbug, she was perfectly careless of the child, although if she had withheld him she would probably have been blamed for thwarting him.

‘Are you quite fair towards Ursula?’ the aunt ventured to say when the girl had gone to dress for walking down with her to the Rectory. ‘It is hard on her, and not good for the boy to upset her authority.’

‘Eh? Why, the girl is just a governess manquee, imbued with the spirit of all those old women who bred her up. A nice life the poor child would have of it, but for me.’

‘I am sure she is devotedly attached to him.’

‘Hein! So she thinks; but trust human nature for loving to wreak discipline on the child who has cut her out.’

‘That is scarcely just, Alwyn. She was greatly relieved to be cut out.’

Mr. Egremont laughed at this, and his sister-in-law indignantly added with all the authority of a successful parent, ‘Anyway, nothing is so bad for a child as collision between the authorities in a family. Ursula is doing her best to act as a mother to that child, and it will be very injurious to him to interfere with her influences.’

‘She’s a good girl enough–gives very little trouble,’ he allowed, ‘but I’m not going to have the boy sat upon.’

As he spoke the words, Nuttie returned, and as soon as she was out of the house and out of hearing she exclaimed, ‘Oh, Aunt Jane, you see how it is! How am I to prevent my boy from being utterly ruined?’

‘I have been speaking to your father,’ said Mrs. Egremont, ‘but he does not seem to understand. Men don’t. A child’s faults and fancies seem such trifles to them that they can’t see the harm of indulging them, and, besides, they expect to be amused.’

‘And is that poor dear little fellow to grow up spoilt?’ said Nuttie, her eyes hot with unshed tears.

‘I hope not, Ursula. I have great confidence in your influence, for I see you are a sensible girl.’ This was astonishing praise from the Canoness. ‘But you will throw away your chances if you keep up a continual opposition to what your father allows. It will be much less hurtful if Alwyn does get too much indulgence, and does a little unnecessary mischief, than for him to learn to think you the enemy of his pleasures, always wanting to check and punish him. Oh yes,’ as Nuttie was going to answer, ‘I know it is for his real good, but how is that baby to understand that? Indeed, my dear, I know how it is; I have gone through the same sort of thing with Basil.’

‘Oh, it could never have been so bad!’

‘No, of course not; but I have had to allow what I did not like for the child rather than let him see the shadow of difference of opinion between us, and I don’t think it has done him any harm. The great point is that you should keep that poor little fellow’s affection and respect, and make him unwilling to vex you.’

‘That he is, dear little man. He is sorry when he sees sister grieved. He is always distressed if anything is hurt or pained. He is really tender-hearted.’

‘Yes, but boys are boys. That feeling will fail you if you work it too hard, and especially if you show vexation at his pleasures. Keep that for real evils, like falsehood or cruelty.’

‘Not for disobedience?’

‘The evil of disobedience depends much more upon the authority of an order than on the child itself. If he disobeys you under his father’s licence, you cannot make much of it. You have him a good deal to yourself?’

‘Yes.’

‘Then make use of that time to strengthen his principles and sense of right and wrong, as well as to secure his affections. My dear, I never saw a girl in a more difficult position than yours, but I see you are doing your utmost; only I am afraid the love of sedatives is the same.’

‘Oh aunt, I did think he had given it up!’

‘You are inexperienced, my dear. I see it in his eyes. Well, I’m afraid there is no stopping that.’

‘Mother–‘ and Nuttie’s voice was choked.

‘She did her best, but you have not the same opportunities. It can’t be helped with a man of that age. Mark might have done something, but he is out of the question now, poor fellow!’

‘Indeed, Aunt Jane, I think Mark and Annaple are some of the happiest people I ever saw. I only wish my poor Alwyn were as forward as their Billy, but I’m not even allowed to teach him his letters, because once he cried over them.’

‘I wish they had anything to fall back upon,’ said Mrs. Egremont anxiously. ‘They are so unwilling to let any one know of their difficulties that I feel as if I never knew in what straits they may be. You will be sure to let me know, Ursula, if there is anything that I can do for them.’

That conversation was a great comfort and help to Nuttie, who was pleased to find herself treated as a real friend by her aunt, and perceived the wisdom of her advice. But the watching over the Mark Egremonts was a very difficult matter to accomplish, for when she went back to London she was warned that Billy had the whooping cough, rendering them unapproachable all the winter, so that she could only hear of them through Mr. Dutton, whom she continued to see occasionally whenever there was anything to communicate. Mr. Egremont rather liked him, and on meeting him in the street, would ask him casually in to dinner, or to make up a rubber, or play piquet, for he excelled in these arts, and still more in chess, and an evening with Mr. Dutton was quite a red-letter time with Nuttie. It gave her an indefinable sense of safety and protection; but it was not always to be had, for her friend had many engagements, being one of the active lay church workers, and devoting two regular evenings in each week to Gerard Godfrey’s eastern district, where he kept all the accounts, had a model court and evening class, besides hospitably resting tired clergymen and their wives in his pleasant quiet house.

In the spring Mr. Egremont was laid up with the worst rheumatic attack he had yet had, in consequence of yielding to the imperious will of his son, who had insisted on standing in a bleak corner to see the Life Guards pass by. On this occasion Nuttie did not prove herself the heaven-born nurse that the true heroine ought to be, but was extremely frightened, and altogether dependent on Gregorio, who knew all about the symptoms, and when to send for the doctor and a garde-malade. Gregorio always talked French to Nuttie when he felt himself in the ascendant, as he certainly was at present; but he became much less gracious when he heard that Mrs. William Egremont might be expected, declaring that madame would only excite his master, and that her presence was quite unnecessary. Her coming had been volunteered, but it was a great boon to Ursula, who was thus helped out in many perplexities, although Mrs. Egremont was a great deal at her step-son’s, and neither lady was of much avail in the sick-room, during the stress of the illness. It was never actually dangerous, but there was great suffering and much excitement, and for four or five days the distress and anxiety were considerable. After this passed off Ursula was surprised to find her company preferred to that of her aunt. She was a better souffre-douleur, was less of a restraint, and was besides his regular reader and amanuensis, so that as the force of the attack abated, he kept her a good deal in his room during the latter part of the day, imparting scraps of intelligence, skimming the papers for him, and reading his letters.

There was a lease to be signed, and, as soon as might be, Mr. Bulfinch, the Redcastle solicitor, brought it up, and had to be entertained at luncheon. While he was waiting in the drawing-room for Mr. Egremont to be made ready for him, he looked with deep interest on the little heir, whom Ursula presently led off to the other end of the room to the hoard of downstair toys; and an elaborate camp was under construction, when by the fireside, the Canoness inquired in a low confidential tone, ‘May I ask whether you came about a will?’

‘No, Mrs. Egremont. I wish I were. It is only about the lease of Spinneycotes farm.’

‘Then there is none?’

‘None that I am aware of. None has ever been drawn up by us. Indeed, I was wishing that some influence could be brought to bear which might show the expedience of making some arrangement. Any melancholy event is, I trust, far distant, but contingencies should be provided for.’

‘Exactly so. He is recovering now, but these attacks always leave effects on the heart, and at his age, with his habits, no one knows what may happen. Of course it would not make much difference to the boy.’

‘No, the Court of Chancery would appoint the most suitable natural guardians.’

‘But,’ said Mrs. Egremont, ‘I am afraid that the personal property when divided would not be much of a provision for her.’

‘You are right. The investments are unfortunately and disproportionately small.’

‘She ought either to have them all, or there should be a charge on the estate,’ said the Canoness decisively. ‘If possible, he must be made to move.’

‘Oh, don’t!’ cried Nuttie, jumping up from the floor. ‘He mustn’t be upset on any account.’

‘My dear, I had no notion that you heard us!’ exclaimed her aunt. ‘I thought Alwyn was making too much noise with his soldiers.’

‘I beg your pardon,’ said Nuttie, ‘perhaps I should have spoken sooner, but indeed he must not be worried and disturbed,’ she added, somewhat fiercely.

‘Don’t be afraid, my dear,’ said her aunt. ‘Mr. Bulfinch knows that your father is in no condition to have such matters brought before him.’

‘Certainly,’ said the old lawyer politely;’ and we will trust that Miss Egremont’s prospects may soon come forward on a more auspicious occasion.’

Nuttie could have beaten him, but she was obliged to content herself with such a sweeping charge of her Zulus among Alwyn’s Englishmen, that their general shrieked out in indignation against such a variation of the accustomed programme of all their games.

Nuttie thought she had defended her patient sufficiently, but she found she had been mistaken, for when her aunt had left them, some days later, her father began, ‘We are well quit of her. Those troublesome dictatorial women always get worse when they are left widows–taking upon them to say what their dear husbands would have said, forsooth.’

‘Aunt Jane was very kind to me,’ said Ursula, not in the least knowing what he was thinking of.

‘To you. Ay, I should think so, taking upon her to lecture me about securing a provision for you.’

‘Oh! I hoped–‘

‘What?’ he broke in. ‘You knew of it! You set her on, I suppose.’

‘Oh! no, no, father. She and Mr. Bulfinch began about it, not meaning me to hear–about a will, I mean–and I told them I wasn’t going to have you worried, and I thought I had stopped it altogether.’

‘Stop a woman bent on her duty? Hein! But you are a good girl, and shall come to no loss when we have to make your marriage settlement.’

‘You won’t have to do that, father!’

‘Hein! What do you keep that poor fellow Clarence Fane dangling in attendance on you for? ‘

‘I don’t! I’m sure I don’t want him. I would do anything to keep him at a distance!’

‘How now! I thought your Grace condescended to him more than to any one else.’

‘I don’t dislike him unless he has _that_ in his head; but as to marrying him! Oh–h–h,’ such a note of horror that elicited a little laugh.

‘So hot against him, are we? Who is it then? Not the umbrella fellow?’

‘Father! how can you?’ she cried, with a burning flush of indignation. He–why–he! He has always been a sort of uncle, ever since I was a little girl.’

‘Oh yes, adopted uncles are very devout when young ladies rush out to morning prayers at unearthly hours–‘

‘Father!’ with her voice trembling, ‘I assure you he doesn’t–I mean he always goes to St. Michael’s, unless he has anything particular to say to me.’

‘Oh yes, I understand,’ and Mr. Egremont indulged in a hearty laugh, which almost drove poor Nuttie beside herself.

‘Indeed–indeed,’ she stammered, in her confusion and suppressed wrath; ‘it is nothing of that sort. He is a regular old bachelor–he always was.’

‘At what age do men become old bachelors? For he seems to me about the age of poor Clarry, whom you seem to view as a bugbear.’

‘I wish you would not think of such things, father; I have not the slightest intention of leaving you and dear little Wynnie! Nothing should tempt me!’

‘Nothing? Hein! Then you may as well be on your guard, Miss Egremont, or we shall have pleadings that you have encouraged them– church and world–or both, maybe. You pious folk take your little diversions and flirtations just like your poor sisters whom you shake your heads at, never guessing how Gregorio and I have looked out at you and your adopted uncle parading the street.’

‘I wish Gregorio would mind his own business, and not put such things in your head!’ burst out Nuttie.

At which Mr. Egremont laughed longer and louder than ever.

Poor Nuttie! It was terrible discomfiture, not only for the moment, but a notion had been planted in her mind that seemed cruel, almost profane, and yet which would not be dismissed, and made her heart leap with strange bounds at the wild thought, ‘Could it be true?’ then sink again with shame at her own presumptuous folly in entertaining such a thought for a moment.

Yet whenever she actually encountered Mr. Dutton her habitual comfort and reliance on him revived, and dispelled all the embarrassment which at other times she expected to feel in his presence.

CHAPTER XXXI.
SPES NON FRACTA.

Summer had quite set in before Mr. Egremont was able to go out for a drive, and then he was ordered to Buxton.

Nuttie only once saw her cousins before leaving town, for their little boy fulfilled the nursery superstition by whooping till May; and all intercourse was prohibited, till he had ceased for a whole week to utter a suspicious sound. Mr. Dutton had insisted on the family spending a fortnight at Springfield House for change of air, and it was there that Nuttie was permitted to see them, though the children were still forbidden to meet.

Annaple looked very thin, but rattled as merrily as ever. ‘No one could guess,’ she said, ‘what a delight it was not to know what one was to have for dinner?’

‘To do more than know, I am afraid,’ said Ursula.

‘Well, next to the delight of knowing nothing at all about it–and even that is only good for a holiday–is the delight of seeing a pudding come out smooth and comfortable and unbroken from its basin. “Something attempted, something done,” you know. It is quite as good a work of art as a water-coloured drawing.’

‘Only not quite so permanent.’

‘No; it is only one’s first pudding that one wants to embalm in a glass case for being so good as not to leave its better part behind in the basin, or to collapse as soon as it is in the dish.’

‘Which my puddings always did in the happy days of old, but then I was always hunted ignominiously out of the kitchen and told I wasted good food,’ said Nuttie.

‘Yes, and waste is fearful when Mark and Billy have to eat it all the same, like the poor cows with spoilt hay. I wonder whether your old experiences recall the joy of finding trustworthy eggs within your price.’

‘Ah, I was not housekeeper. I only remember being in disgrace for grumbling when there was no pudding, because the hens would not lay.’

‘Though I heard a woman declaring the other day that there ought to be a machine for them. Oh, the scenes that I encounter when I am marketing! If I only could describe them for Punch! I walked home once with our porter’s wife, carrying two most brilliant sticks of rhubarb, all carmine stalk and gamboge leaf, and expressing a very natural opinion that the rhubarb tree must be very showy to look at, and curious to know in what kind of fruit the medicine grew.’

‘Oh, Annaple! do you go yourself in that way?’

‘Mark used to go with me, but, poor old fellow, he has ruinous ideas about prices and quantities, and besides, now he is so hard worked-up and down all day–he wants a little more of his bed in the morning.’

‘And what do you want?’

‘I never was a sleepy creature, and I get back in time to dress the boy. I generally find him at high-jinks on his father’s bed. It uses up a little superfluous energy before the dressing.’

‘But surely you have a servant now?’

‘I’ve come to the conclusion that a workman’s wife charing is a better institution. No. 1, a pet of Miss Nugent’s, was a nice creature, but the London air did for her at once. No. 2, also from Micklethwayte, instantly set up a young man, highly respectable, and ready to marry on the spot, as they did, though their united ages don’t amount to thirty-nine. No. 3 was a Cockney, and couldn’t stay because the look-out was so dull; and No. 4 gossiped with her kind when I thought her safe in the Temple Gardens with Billy, whereby he caught the whooping-cough, and as she also took the liberty of wearing my fur cloak, and was not particular as to accuracy, we parted on short notice; and I got this woman to come in every day to scrub, help make the bed, etc. It is much less trouble, and the only fault I have to find with her is an absolute incapability of discerning blacks. I believe she thinks I have a monomania against them.’

Still Annaple insisted that she did not work half so hard as her nieces, Muriel and Janet, in their London season, and that her economy was not nearly so trying and difficult as that which Lady Delmar had been practising for years in order to afford them a summer there; nor was her anxiety to make both ends meet by any means equal to her sister’s in keeping up appearances, and avoiding detrimentals. The two sisters met occasionally, but Lady Delmar was so compassionate and patronising that Annaple’s spirit recoiled in off- hand levity and rattle, and neither regretted the occupation that prevented them from seeing much of one another.

A year passed by, chiefly spent by Mr. Egremont in the pursuit of comparative health, at Buxton, Bagneres, and Biarritz, during which his daughter could do little but attend to him and to little Alwyn. The boy had been enough left to her and nurse during his father’s acute illness to have become more amenable. He was an affectionate child, inheriting, with his mother’s face, her sweetness and docility of nature, and he was old enough to be a good deal impressed with the fact that he had made poor papa so ill by teasing him to stand in the cold. Mr. Egremont was not at rest without a sight of the child every day, if only for a moment, and the helplessness and suffering had awed the little fellow a good deal. It was touching to see him pause when galloping about the house when he went past the sick-room, and hush his merry voice of his own accord.

And in the journeys, when his father’s invalided state would have made a fractious or wilful child a serious inconvenience, his good temper and contentment were invaluable. He would sit for hours on his sister’s lap, listening to whispered oft-told tales, or playing at impromptu quiet games; he could go to sleep anywhere, and the wonderful discoveries he made at each new place were the amusement of all his auditors. Sister was always his playfellow and companion whenever she could be spared from her father, and she had an ever- increasing influence over him which she did her best to raise into principle.

Perhaps she never had a happier moment than when she heard how he had put his hands behind him and steadily refused when Gregorio had offered to regale him at a stall of bonbons forming only a thin crust to liqueurs, which unfortunately he had already been taught to like.

‘But I told him sister said I mustn’t have them,’ said Alwyn. ‘And then he made a face and said something in French about you. I know ’twas you, for he said “soeur.” What was it?’

‘Never mind, Wynnie dear. We had much better never know. You were sister’s own dear steadfast boy, and you shall kiss mother’s picture.’

Nuttie had a beautiful coloured photograph of her mother, finished like a miniature, which had been taken at Nice, in the time of Alice Egremont’s most complete and matured beauty. She had taught Alwyn to kiss and greet it every evening before his prayers, and such a kiss was his reward when he had shown any special act of goodness, for which, as she told him, ‘mother would have been pleased with her little son.’

Such another boon was his one Sunday evening at Biarritz, when she found that while she was shut up at dinner with her father he had voluntarily gone to church with nurse instead of playing on the beach with some other English children. ‘It was all very long and tiresome,’ he said, when asked if he liked it.

‘Then why did you go, old man? There was no need to drag you there,’ said his father.

‘She didn’t drag me,’ said the boy; ‘I walked.’

‘You need not have walked then, Master Dignity.’

‘Poor nursie couldn’t go without me,’ said Alwyn, ‘and sister says there’s a blessing on those that go.’

‘A blessing? eh! and what idea does that little head entertain of a blessing?’ said Mr. Egremont.

Alwyn lifted his soft brown eyes reverently and said, ‘It is something good,’ speaking, as he always did, in a baby lisp inimitable here.

‘Well?’

‘And it comes from God.’

‘Well, what is it? Can you see it?’

‘No’–he looked in perplexity towards Nuttie, who was in agony all the time, lest there should be a scoff that might remain in the child’s mind.

‘Never mind sister. Can you feel it?’

‘Yes;’ and the little face lighted with such a reality that the incipient mockery turned into wonder on the next question.

‘And how does it feel?’

‘Oh, so nice! It makes Wynnie glad here,’ and he spread his hands over his breast; and gave a little caper like a kid for very gladness.

‘There!’ said Mr. Egremont, leaning back fairly conquered. ‘Any one might envy Wynnie! Goodnight, my boy, blessing and all. I wonder if one felt like that when one was a little shaver,’ he pursued, as Alwyn went off to his bed.

‘I think I did sometimes,’ said Nuttie, ‘but I never was half as good as Wynnie!’

‘What?’ exclaimed her father. ‘You! bred up among the saints.’

‘Ah! but I hadn’t the same nature. I never was like–_her_.’

‘Well–’tis very pretty now, and I don’t know how we could stand a young Turk, but you mustn’t make a girl of him.’

‘There’s no fear of that,’ said Nuttie. ‘He is full of spirit. That old bathing woman calls him “un vrai petit diable d’Anglais,” he is so venturous.’

Which delighted Mr. Egremont as much as the concession that the boy’s faith was ‘pretty’ delighted Ursula. Indeed, he went a little further, for when she came back from her few minutes at Alwyn’s bedside he proceeded to tell her of the absolute neglect in which his mother, a belle of the Almacks days, had left her nursery. It was the first time he had ever hinted at a shadow of perception that anything in his own life had been amiss, and Ursula could not but feel a dreamy, hopeful wonder whether her sweet little Alwyn could be the destined means of doing that in which her mother had failed. It was at least enough to quicken those prayers which had been more dutiful than trustful.

And then her hope sank again when she realised that her father’s days were spent between the lull of opiate, followed by a certain serenity, then in a period of irritability, each being more or less prolonged, according to health, weather, or entertainment, and closed again by the sedatives in various forms. It relieved her indeed, but she felt it a wickedness to be glad of the calm, and she was aware that the habit was making inroads on her father’s powers. Between that and his defect of eyesight, he was often much confused, especially about money matters, and was more and more dependent.

Would that it had been only upon her, but she was constantly certain that Gregorio was taking advantage of his master’s helplessness, and keeping it up by all means in his power. Yet what could be done? For the valet was absolutely necessary to his comfort, and yet she sometimes thought her father half in dread of him, and afraid to expostulate about personal neglects, which became more frequent. Things, that would have enraged him from others, were only grumbled and fretted over, when Gregorio caused him real inconvenience by absence or forgetfulness, and made very insufficient apology. It seemed like a bondage; Nuttie thought of her mother’s efforts, and blamed herself in vain.

It was during this journey that she heard of good Miss Headworth’s death. The old lady’s mind had long failed, and the actual present loss to Nuttie was not great; but it seemed to close a long account of gratitude such as she had not thoroughly felt or understood before; and the link with Micklethwayte was severed.

For Mark and Annaple prevailed on Mrs. Egremont to install Miss Nugent as governess to Rosalind and Adela. In that capacity Nuttie hoped to see a good deal of her; but of course was again disappointed, for her father would not hear of returning to Bridgefield. It was draughty, and dull, and desolate, and nothing suited him but London.

CHAPTER XXXII.
BLACKS IN THE ASCENDANT.

‘Man’s work ends with set of sun,
Woman’s work is never done.’–Proverb.

It was far on in May when Ursula found herself again in the sitting- room over the warehouse. Somehow it had not the dainty well-cared- for air of erst. The pretty table ornaments were out of sight; the glass over the clock was dim, the hands had stopped; some of Annaple’s foes, the blacks, had effected a lodgment on the Parian figures; the chintzes showed wear and wash, almost grime; the carpet’s pattern was worn; a basket full of socks was on the sofa; and on the table a dress, once belonging to Annaple’s trousseau, was laid out, converted into its component parts. The wails of a baby could be heard in the distance, and the first person to appear was Master William, sturdy and happy in spite of wofully darned knees to his stockings.

‘Mother’s coming, if baby will stop crying,’ he said, ‘and lie in her cradle.’

‘Your little sister! What’s her name?’

‘Jane Christian,’ said the boy, with a much more distinct enunciation than Alwyn, though a year older, had yet acquired. ‘She does cry so! She won’t let mother make my new knickies out of her blue gown!’

Thoughts of the suits that Alwyn was discarding came across Nuttie. Could they be offered without offence? She asked, however, ‘Do you remember Alwyn–my Wynnie?’

‘Wynnie gave me my horse,’ cried the boy, unstabling a steed which had seen hard service since the presentation. ‘Where’s Wynnie?’

‘He is at home. You must come and see him,’ said Nuttie, who had not been allowed to bring him till secure of a clean bill of health. ‘But see, just outside the door, there’s something for Billy.’

She had made her servant bring up the parcels to the passage outside, and Billy was soon hugging a magnificent box of soldiers, wherewith he pranced off to show them to his mother, leaving the doors open, so that Ursula could more decidedly hear the baby’s voice, not a healthy child’s lusty cry, but a poor little feeble wail, interspersed with attempts at consolation. ‘Come, won’t she go to Emily? Oh, Billy- boy, how splendid! I hope you thanked Cousin Ursula. Baby Jenny, now can’t you let any one speak but yourself? Oh! shall I never teach you that “Balow, my babe,” is not “bellow, my babe.” That’s better! Now can’t you let Emily have you, while I go to Cousin Nuttie?’

‘Let me come! Mayn’t I?’ exclaimed Ursula, invading the room that served as kitchen, where Annaple was trying to hush off the child and make her over to a little twelve years old maid, who stood in waiting, helping Willie meantime to unpack his soldiers, with smothered exclamations of delight.

‘Oh, Nuttie, how good of you! Please to excuse the accompaniment. There never was such a young lady for self-assertion to make up for there being so little of her.’

And Annaple, very thin and tired looking, held up the child, fearfully small and pinched for four months old, to be kissed by Nuttie.

‘Does she always go on like this?’

”Cept when she is asleep,’ said Willie.

‘Poor wee lassie,’ said Annaple; ‘there’s great excuse for her, for the food has not yet been invented that suits her ladyship.’

‘You must come and consult nurse.’

‘And how are you all? I’m glad you are at hand, Nuttie! Is Mr. Egremont better?’

‘As well as ever he is–lame and altogether an invalid,–but he has not had such bad attacks of pain lately.’

‘And his eyes?’

‘About the same. He can write, and tell one card from another, but he can’t read–or rather it hurts him to do so, and he can’t bear a strong light. But, Annaple, how are you? That child is wearing you to a shadow.’

‘Oh! I’m quite well–perfectly. There, I think she is gone off at last. You had better walk her about a little, Emily; she will break out again if we try to put her in the cradle.’

And having handed over the child with only a very low murmur, Annaple left her combined kitchen and nursery. She flew at the flowers Nuttie had brought like a thirsty person, crying, as she buried her face in them, ‘Now for beauty! Now Mark will be refreshed! Ah! here’s a pretty pickle for a reception room.’

‘Oh, don’t put it away! I could help you; I do so like that kind of work. It is so like old times.’

‘It must be put away, thank you, for Mark will be coming in. And the saying about the public washing of garments is specially true of one’s own husband. Ways and means are worrying to the masculine mind.’

‘I thought it was too early for Mark?’

‘He has an appointment to keep at Charing Cross or thereabouts, so I made him promise to come in in time to “put a bit in his head,” as our Irish charwoman says.’

‘Then I can take him. I have the carriage, and I must be at home by half-past twelve. I wish you would come too, Annaple. There’s plenty of room. You could show the baby to nurse, and the boys could have a good game. I would send you back in the evening. Mark could come on after his business is done.’

‘Thank you, Nuttie, I can’t to-day–for a whole heap of domestic reasons; but, if you can get Mark to come, do, it would be so good for him.’

‘How is Mark?’

‘He is well, quite well,’ said Annaple; ‘and so good and patient. But you see, it does take it out of a man when that doleful little noise won’t stop all night! We are both acquiring a form of somnambulism, but when there’s real out-of-door business to be done, it is not like proper sleep.’

‘Or when there’s woman’s indoor business, I am afraid,’ said Nuttie, much concerned at the extreme thinness of Annaple’s face and hands, and the weary look of her large eyes.

‘Oh, one makes that up at odd times!’ she answered brightly. ‘One thing is, this work suits Mark, he feels that he can do it, and he gets on well with the men. They asked him to join in their club, and he was so much pleased. He gets up subjects for them, and I am so glad he has such a pleasure and interest to keep him from missing the society he was used to.’

‘It must be very good for them too. Mr. Dutton said he really thought Mark had kept them from going in for a strike.’

‘Besides the glory of the thing,’ said Annaple drawing herself up, ‘Mr. Dobbs thought so too, and raised us ten pounds; which made us able to import that little Bridgefield lassie to hold baby–when– when Miss Jenny will let her. He has some law copying to do besides, but I don’t like that; it burns the candle at both ends, and he does get bad headaches sometimes, and goes on all the same.’

‘You must both come and see my Wyn.’

‘Ah! I had never asked after him. I suppose he is as pretty as ever,’ said Annaple, who secretly thought his beauty too girlish compared with her sturdy Billy.

‘Prettier, I think, as he gets more expression. We can’t persuade ourselves to cut his hair, and it looks so lovely on his sailor suit. And he is so good. I could not have believed a child could be so quiet and considerate on a journey. You should have seen him standing by my father’s knee in the railway carriage, and amusing him with all that was to be seen, and stopping at the least hint that he was chattering too much.’

‘Billy is wonderfully helpful. Ah–‘ and Annaple’s eyes lighted up as the step that had music in’t came up the stair; and as Mark came in, Nuttie thought him grown older, his hair thinner, his shoulders rounded, and his office coat shabby, but she saw something in his countenance there had never been before. Ever since she had known him he had worn a certain air of depression, or perhaps more truly of failure and perplexity, which kept before her conscious mind the Desdichado on Ivanhoe’s shield, even when he was a gentleman at ease at the luxurious Rectory; but there was now not only the settled air of a man who had found his vocation, but something of the self- respect and eagerness of one who was doing it well, and feeling himself valued.

‘Is baby–‘ he began. ‘Oh, Nuttie! Are you there? Mr. Dutton told me you were coming. How is my uncle?’ And the voice was much brisker than in the days of lawn-tennis.

‘Father, father, look!’ cried the boy.

‘Why, Billy-boy, you are set up! Zouaves and chasseurs! I see where they came from.’

During the mixture of greetings and inquiries, admiration of the flowers, and the exhibition of Billy’s treasures, Annaple glided away, and presently placed before him a tray, daintily benapkinned and set forth with a little cup of soup.

‘Baby is really asleep, and Emily as proud as a Hielandman,’ she said. ‘Now eat this, without more ado, for that good Nuttie is going to set you down at Charing Cross.’

‘This is the way we spoil our husbands, Nuttie,’ said Mark. ‘Refections served up at every turn.’

‘Only bones! The immortal pot au feu,’ said Annaple. ‘And you are to go on after you have interviewed your man of steel, and have tea with Nuttie, and pay your respects to your uncle, like a dutiful nephew.’

‘No, that I can’t, Nannie; I promised Dobbs to go and see a man for him, and I must come back as soon as I can after that.’

He looked–as to figure and air–much more like his old self when he had changed his coat. They fed him, almost against his will, with a few of the forced strawberries Nuttie had brought. Billy pressed on him wonders from a Paris bonbon box, and Annaple fastened a rose and a pink in his button-hole, and came down to the street door with her boy to see him off.

‘What do you think of her?’ was Mark’s first inquiry.

‘Think! As Mr. Dutton said long ago, never was braver lady!’

‘Never was there a truer word! I meant as to her health? As to courage, spirits, and temper, there is no question; I never saw them fail; but are they not almost too much for the frame?’ he asked anxiously.

It echoed Nuttie’s fear, but she tried to frame a cheerful answer. ‘She is very thin, but she seems well.’

‘She never complains, but I am sure her strength is not what it was. She cannot walk out as she did at first. Indeed, she gets no real rest day nor night, and there’s no relieving her!’

‘She says you don’t get much rest either.’

‘More than my share,’ said Mark. ‘The poor little thing never sleeps except in someone’s arms, and if awake, is not content for a moment except in her mother’s.’

‘And that has been going on four months?’

‘Three. Ever since we brought her back from Redcastle. I have nearly determined to move into some suburb when I get a rise at Michaelmas, unless she improves.’

‘Nurse might suggest something.’

‘Or at any rate tell us what to think. We showed her to a doctor, and all he could propose was some kind of food, which was no more successful than the rest. Did you look at her, Nuttie? She is a pretty little thing when she is quiet, but she dwindles away–at least so it seems to me, though Annaple will not see it, and–and if we are not permitted to keep the little one, I dread what the effect may be on her.’

Nuttie said something about bravery and goodness, thinking in her heart that, if the blow fell, it would be better for all than the perpetual suffering of the poor little sickly being.

‘Ah! you don’t know what her affections are,’ said Mark. ‘You did not see her when she lost her mother, and there had been no strain on her powers then. However, I’ve no business to croak. Many a child gets over troubles of this kind, and, as Annaple says, little Jenny will be all the more to us for what we go through with her.’

The carriage stopped, and Nuttie asked him if it would delay him too long if she executed a commission about her father’s glasses. He had plenty of time, but she was delayed longer than she expected, and on her return was surprised to find that he had dropped asleep.

‘Ah! that’s what comes of a moment’s quiet;’ he said, smiling.

‘Fine quiet in the roar of Ludgate Hill!’

‘To a Cockney ’tis as the mill to the miller! I like the full stir and tide,’ he added, looking out upon it. ‘I never knew what life was before!’

‘I should have thought you never knew what hardness and hard work were.’

‘That’s just it,’ he answered, smiling. ‘The swing of it is exhilaration–very different from being a cumberer of the ground.’

‘Oh, Mark, all the privations and anxiety!’

‘The privation! that’s nothing. Indeed I am afraid–yes, I am ashamed to say–it falls more on my dear wife than myself, but if we can only wear through a year or two we shall get a further rise, and my poor Annaple may get out of this drudgery. Please God, she and the little one can stand it for a time, and I think she has a spring within her that will;’ then, as he saw tears in his cousin’s eyes, he added, ‘Don’t be unhappy about it, Nuttie; I have had it in my mind ever so long to tell you that the finding you at Micklethwayte was the best thing that ever happened to me!’

Yes, so far as character went, Ursula could believe that it had been so. He was twice the man he would have been without the incentive to work, and the constant exercise of patience and cheerfulness; but her heart was heavy with apprehension that the weight of the trial might be too heavy. To her eyes the baby’s life seemed extremely doubtful, and Annaple looked so fragile that the increase of her burthens, any saddening of the heart, might destroy her elasticity, and crush her outright; while even Mark seemed to her to be toiling so close within the limits of his powers that a straw might break the camel’s back!

She longed to talk to Mr. Dutton about them, but she found herself doomed to a day that perhaps Annaple would have thought more trying than her harrowed life. She was a little later than she had intended, and her father had been waiting impatiently to have a note read to him, so he growled at her impatience to run after ‘that Scotch girl.’ And the note happened to be of an irritating nature; moreover, the cutlets at luncheon were said to be akin to indiarubber, and there was the wrong flavour in the sauce. Ursula let that cook do what she pleased without remonstrance.

Even Alwyn did not afford as much satisfaction as usual, for the boy was in high spirits and wanted to blow a little trumpet, which was more than his father could stand. He was very good when this was silenced, but he then began to rush round the room daring his sister to catch the wild colt as he went by. This had likewise to be stopped, with the murmur that Ursula spoilt the child.

She tried to compose matters by turning out the old toys in the ottoman, but Alwyn had outgrown most of them, and did not care for any except a certain wooden donkey, minus one ear and a leg, which went by the name of Sambo, and had absorbed a good deal of his affection. He had with difficulty been consoled for Sambo being left behind, and now turned over everything with considerable clatter in search of him. Alas! Sambo could nowhere be found in the room, and Alwyn dashed off to inquire of all the household after him. His father meanwhile growled at the child’s noise, and went on trying the glasses Nuttie had brought, and pronouncing each pair in turn useless, vowing that it was no use to send her anywhere.

Upon this, back came Alwyn, terribly distressed and indignant, for he had extracted from the housemaid left in charge, who was as cross as she was trustworthy, ‘What! that old broken thing, Master Egremont? I threw it on the fire! I’d never have thought a young gentleman of your age would have cared for such rubbish as that.’

‘You are a wicked cruel woman,’ returned Alwyn, with flashing eyes; ‘I shall tell papa and sister of you.’

And in he flew, sobbing with grief and wrath for the dear Sambo, feeling as if it had been a live donkey burnt to death, and hiding his face on his sister’s breast for consolation.

‘Come, come, Wyn,’ said his father, who did not brook interruption; ‘here’s half a sovereign to go and buy a new donkey.’

‘It won’t be Sambo,’ said Alwyn ruefully.

‘But you should thank papa,’ said Nuttie.

‘Thank you, papa,’ he said, with quivering lip, ‘but I don’t want a new one. Oh Sambo, Sambo! burnt!’ and he climbed on Nuttie’s lap, hid his face against her and cried, but her comfortings were broken off by, ‘How can you encourage the child in being so foolish? Have done, Wyn; don’t be such a baby! Go out with nurse and buy what you like, but I can’t have crying here.’

He tried to stop in sheer amazement, but the ground swell of sob could not be controlled. Nuttie was going to lead him away, and console him with more imaginative sympathy than could be expected from the maids, but her father sharply called her back. He wanted her himself, and indeed there was no question which was the worse spoilt child. He might idolise Alwyn, but not so as to clash with his own comforts. The glasses being unsuccessful, Nuttie proposed to drive back to Ludgate Hill for him to choose for himself, but he would not hear of going into the heat of the City, and growled at her for thinking of such a thing.

They took an aimless drive instead in the park, and Nuttie was nearly baked while the carriage was stopped for her father to have a long talk over the prospects of the Derby day with one of his most unpleasant associates, who stood leaning over the door on the shady side of the carriage, no one recking how little protection she derived from her small fringed parasol.

She came home tired out, and thankful that her father went to rest in his own room. She climbed to the nursery, thinking to share Alwyn’s tea and comfort him, but she found only nurse there. Nurse had a bad foot, and dreaded hot pavement, so she had sent Master Alwyn out with her subordinate, a country girl, to play in Mr. Dutton’s garden till it should be cool enough to go and make his purchase, and a message had since arrived that he was going to drink tea there, and Mr. Dutton would take him out.

His sister envied him the green shades, and had just done her best to cool the back drawing-room and rest herself with a book, when Mr. Fane was announced. He talked pleasantly enough, and lingered and lingered, no doubt intending to be asked to dinner, but she was equally determined to do no such thing. She had heard enough of races for one day, she thought, and at last he took his leave, only just before she dressed for dinner.

‘I thought Fane was here,’ said Mr. Egremont as he came in; no doubt told by Gregorio.

‘He has been, but he is gone.’

‘You didn’t ask him to stay and dine?’

‘I did not know you wished it.’

‘You might have known that I should have liked to see him. I suppose you think your sweet self society enough for any man?’

‘I am sorry–‘

‘I’m sick of hearing you are sorry! I believe there’s nothing you like so well as doing an ungracious thing to a friend of mine.’

Nuttie had learnt to hold her tongue on such occasions.

Dinner was nearly over, and her father had been grumbling again at having no one to take a hand at cards with him, when the door opened a little way, and Alwyn’s pretty glowing face looked in. He was come to say good-night rather later than usual, and he ran up to his sister with a little bouquet of yellow banksia and forget-me-nots. ‘Mithter Button’–so Alwyn called him–‘sent you this. He said you would like it, ’cause it came from one that grew at Mittletwait. And oh, look, look!’

He was hugging a little ship, which he proudly exhibited, while his father’s brow had darkened at the message. ‘Did you buy that?’ asked his sister.

‘Yes, Mr. Button went with me, and we sailed it. We sailed it by the fountain in Mr. Button’s garden, And we made a storm!’

He danced about with glee, and Mr. Egremont observed, ‘A dear purchase for ten shillings. Did it cost all that, Wyn?’

‘They gived me a big silver half-crown, and I gived that to a little boy what came to speak to Mr. Button, and had his toes through his boots, and he was so glad.’

‘Your money is not for beggars, Wyn.’

‘The little boy was not a beggar, papa. He came with a newspaper to Mr. Button, and he is so good to his poor sick mother,’ said Alwyn. ‘See, see, sister!’ turning the prow of his small vessel towards her, and showing a word on it in pencil which he required her to spell out. It was Ursula.

‘Oh Wynnie!’ she said, duly flattered, ‘did Mr. Dutton do that?’

‘He held my hand, and I did!’ cried Alwyn, triumphantly, ‘and he will paint it on Saturday. Then it will dry all Sunday, and not come off, so it will be the Ursula for ever and always.’

Here nurse claimed her charge; and when the goodnights were over, and a murmur recommenced, Nuttie suggested that if Mr. Dutton was at home perhaps he would come in and make up the game, but she encountered the old humour. ‘I’ll tell you what, Ursula, I’ll not have that umbrella fellow encouraged about the house, and if that child is to be made the medium of communication, I’ll put a stop to it.’

The words were spoken just as Gregorio had entered the room with a handkerchief of his master’s. Nuttie, colouring deeply at the insult, met his triumphant eyes, bit her lips, and deigned no word of reply.

An undefined but very slight odour, that told her of opium smoke, pervaded the stairs that night. It was the only refuge from fretfulness; but her heart ached for her father, herself, and most of all for her little brother. And was she to be cut off from her only counsellor?

CHAPTER XXXIII.
THE LOST HEIR.

‘Seemed to the boy some comrade gay
Led him forth to the woods to play.’–SCOTT.

Though it was the Derby day, Mr. Egremont’s racing days were over, and he only took his daughter with him in quest of the spectacles he wanted. When they came back, Nuttie mounted to the nursery, but no little brother met her on the stairs, and she found nurse in deep displeasure with her subordinate.

‘I sent him out with Ellen to play in the garden at Springfield, and swim his ship, where he couldn’t come to no harm,’ said nurse; ‘being that my foot is that bad I can’t walk the length of the street; and what does the girl do but lets that there Gregorio take the dear child and go–goodness knows where–without her.’

‘I’m sure, ma’am,’ said the girl crying, ‘I would never have done it, but Mr. Gregory said as how ’twas his papa’s wish.’

‘What was?’ said Nuttie.

‘That he shouldn’t never go and play at Mr. Dutton’s again,’ said Ellen.

‘I told her she was to take her orders off me, and no one else,’ returned nurse, ‘except, of course, you, Miss Egremont, as has the right.’

‘Quite so; you should have told Mr. Gregorio so, Ellen.’

‘I did, ma’am, but he said those was Mr. Egremont’s orders; and he said,’ cried the girl, unable to withstand the pleasure of repeating something disagreeable, ‘that Mr. Egremont wouldn’t have no messengers between you and a low tradesman fellow, as made umbrellas, and wanted to insinuate himself in here.’

‘That’s quite enough, Ellen; I don’t want to hear any impertinences. Perhaps you did not understand his foreign accent. Did he say where he was going?’

‘I think he said he’d take him to the Serpentine to sail his ship,’ said Ellen, disposed to carry on asseverations of the correctness of her report, but nurse ordered her off the scene, and proceeded, as a confidential servant, ‘The girl had no call to repeat it; but there’s not a doubt of it he did say something of the sort. There’s not one of us but knows he is dead against Mr. Dutton, because he tried to get master to get to sleep without that nasty opium smoke of his.’

There was bitter feud between nurse and valet, and Nuttie could have exchanged with her many a lament, but she contented herself with saying, ‘I wish he would let Master Alwyn alone. It is high time they should come in.’

‘The child will be tired to death, and all dirt! His nice new sailor suit too! Going grubbing about at the Serpentine with no one knows who, as isn’t fit for a young gentleman,’ moaned nurse.

This, however, was the worst fear she entertained, and it was with a certain malicious satisfaction that she heard her master’s bell for Gregorio.

Nuttie descended to explain, and whereas the need was not very urgent, and she looked distressed and angered at the valet, her father received her complaint with, ‘Well, the boy is getting too big to be tied for ever to a nursery-maid. It will do him good to go about with a man.’

But as dressing-time came on, and still neither Gregorio nor Alwyn appeared, Mr. Egremont became impatient, and declared that the valet had no business to keep the child out so long; indeed, he would sooner have taken alarm but for Nuttie’s manifest agony of anxiety, starting and rushing to listen at every ring at the bell or sound of wheels near at hand. At last, at eight o’clock, there was a peal of the servants’ bell, and the footman who answered it turned round to the anxious crowd: ‘Mr. Gregory! He just asked if the child was come home, and went off like lightning.’

‘The villain! He’s lost him!’ shrieked nurse, with a wild scream. ‘Run after him, James! Catch him up!’ suggested the butler at the same moment. ‘Make him tell where he saw him last!’

James was not a genius, but the hall boy, an alert young fellow, had already dashed down the steps in pursuit, and came up with the valet so as to delay him till the other servants stood round, and Gregorio turned back with them, pale, breathless, evidently terribly dismayed and unwilling to face his master, who stood at the top of the steps, white with alarm and wrath.

‘Sir,’ cried Gregorio, with a stammering of mixed languages, ‘I have been searching everywhere! I was going to give notice to the police. Je ferai tout! Je le trouverai.’

‘Where did you lose him?’ demanded Mr. Egremont in a hoarse voice, such as Nuttie had never heard.

‘In the Park, near the bridge over the Serpentine. I was speaking for a few moments to a friend. Bah! Il etait parti. Mais je le trouverai. Parker, he seeks too. Fear not, sir, I shall find him.’

‘Find him, you scoundrel, or never dare to see me again! I’ve borne with your insolences long, and now you’ve brought them to a height. Go, I say, find my boy!’ exclaimed Mr. Egremont, with a fierce oath and passionate gesture, and Gregorio vanished again.

‘Bring the carriage–no, call a cab;’ commanded Mr. Egremont, snatching up his hat. ‘Who is this Parker?’

The servants hesitated, but the butler said he believed the man to be a friend of Gregorio’s employed at one of the clubs. Nuttie meanwhile begging her father not to go without her, flew upstairs to put on her hat, and coming down at full speed found that Mr. Dutton, passing by and seeing the open door and the terrified servants on the steps, had turned in to ask what was the matter, and was hearing in no measured terms from Mr. Egremont how the child had been taken away from his nurse and lost in the Park while that scamp Gregorio was chattering to some good-for-nothing friend.

To Nuttie’s great relief, Mr. Dutton offered to go with the father to assist in the search, and the coachman, far too anxious and excited to let his master go without him in a cab, contrived to bring up the carriage. Some of the servants were ordered off to the various police offices. Poor nurse, who was nearly distracted, started in a hansom on her own account, persuaded that she should see and recognise traces of her darling at the scene of his loss, and she almost raced the carriage, which was bound for the same spot.

Sluggish natures like Mr. Egremont’s can sometimes be roused to great violence, and then pour forth the long pent-up accumulations kept back by indolence and indifference. His only occupation during the rapid drive was to vituperate his valet, the curse of his life, he said. To hear him talk, it would have seemed as if Gregorio had been the tyrant who had kept him in bondage all these years, fully aware of his falsehood, peculation, and other rascality, but as unable to break the yoke as if he had been in truth the slave of anything but his own evil habit and helpless acquiescence.

Would it last if Gregorio made his appearance at that instant with Alwyn in his hand? Or even, as Mr. Dutton confidently predicted, a policeman might bring the boy home, before many hours were passed. The chief doubt here was that Alwyn’s defective pronunciation, which had been rather foolishly encouraged, might make it difficult to understand his mode of saying his own name, or even that of the street, if he knew it perfectly; but the year he had been absent from London had prevented him from acquiring the curious ready local instinct of the true town child, and he had been so much guarded and watched that he was likely to be utterly at a loss when left alone; and Nuttie was wretched at the thought of his terror and loneliness, even while Mr. Dutton told her of speedy recoveries of lost children through kind people or the police.

They found all the officials of the Park already aware and on the alert, and quite certain of the impossibility of nurse’s prime dread that the boy had fallen into the water unseen by any one and been drowned. She was even ready to look into every bush, in case he had been frightened and hidden himself; and nothing would satisfy her but to stay making these researches, when her master had decided on endeavouring to find ‘Parker’ at the club, and to ascertain from him particulars of time and place.

He was found there. The dinner-hour had brought him back, he being a man in authority there, very well dressed and deferential, declaring himself immensely distressed at the occurrence, and at having accosted Gregorio and attracted his attention. It was about four o’clock, he thought, and he described the exact spot where the little boy had been sailing his vessel fastened to a string. They might have been talking twenty minutes or half an hour when Gregorio missed his charge, and since that time both had been doing all in their power to find him, until half-past seven, when he had to return to his club, and Gregorio went to see whether the child had been taken home.

By this time Mr. Egremont looked so utterly exhausted, that Mr. Dutton availed himself of the hope that the boy might be found safe at home to take him back; but alas! nothing had been heard there.

The poor man was in a restless, unmanageable state of excitement, almost as terrifying to his daughter as the distress that occasioned it. He swallowed a tumblerful of claret, but would not eat nor go to bed; and indeed, Gregorio alone having had the personal charge of him, latterly sleeping in his dressing-room, none of the other servants knew what to do for him. Mr. Dutton agreed with her that it would be better to send for his doctor, as probably he ought to have a sedative, and neither would take the responsibility of giving it; while he himself declared he neither would nor could rest till he had his boy again.

The doctor was dining out, and they had two terrible hours; while Mr. Egremont paced to the windows; threw himself on the sofa; denounced Gregorio; or, for a change, all the system of police which had made no discovery; and Ursula for letting the boy be so helpless. Mr. Dutton sometimes diverted his attention for a few minutes, and hoped he would doze, but the least sound brought him to his feet again, and the only congenial occupation was the composition of a description of poor little Alwyn’s person and dress, which set Nuttie crying so uncontrollably, that she had to run out of the room.

Dr. Brownlow came at last, and was very kind and helpful, taking the command, and insisting that Mr. Egremont should go to bed, and take the dose which he mixed. Broadbent, the butler, was to take Gregorio’s place, but he was a ponderous man, without much tact, and unused to the valet’s office. ‘I might just as well have a rhinoceros about me,’ said Mr. Egremont, in a fit of irritation; and it ended, Nuttie hardly knew how, in Mr. Dutton’s going upstairs to smooth matters. He came down after a time and said: ‘I am not satisfied to leave him alone or to Broadbent; I have his consent to my sleeping in the dressing-room. I am just going home to fetch my things. Let me find you gone when I come back. You will hear no more to-night. Even if he is found, they will keep him till morning.’

‘It is of no use; I can’t sleep.’

‘Even if you don’t, the mere restful position will make you fitter for the morrow. Will you promise me to undress and really go to bed?’

‘Oh yes! if you say I must,’ said Nuttie drearily; following an instinct of obedience.

‘And remember,’ he said, ‘though I do not say it will be so, this may be deliverance from bondage.’

‘But what a terrible deliverance!’

‘Bonds are not burst without something terrible. No; don’t be frightened. Remember there is safekeeping for that sweet little fellow, wherever he may be.’

‘Oh, Mr. Dutton, if I could pray for him; but the turmoil seems to have driven away all such things! My boy, my boy, where is he now? Who has heard him say his little prayers?’

‘His Heavenly Father has; of that we may be secure. You will feel it in the quiet of your own room. Good-night.’

‘And I shall know you are praying, better than I can,’ murmured Nuttie, as she returned his good-night, and crept up to her chamber.

CHAPTER XXXIV.
FETTERS RENT.

‘The gods are just, and of our pleasant sins Make whips to scourge us.’–King Lear.

There was no real sleep for Ursula that short summer night. She saw the early dawn, listened to the distant roll of market-carts, and wondered when it would be reasonable to be afoot, and ready to hear, if aught there was to hear. At any hour after seven, surely the finders would have mercy and bring the welcome news. And just before seven she fell asleep, deeply, soundly, and never woke till past eight, but that was just enough to revive the power of hope, and give the sense of a new day. But there was nothing to hear–no news. She found Mr. Dutton in the dining-room. He had had to administer another draught to her father, and had left him in a sleep which would probably last for some time. If she would go and sit in the outer room, after her breakfast, he would go out to obtain intelligence.

‘You must have some breakfast,’ she said, ringing the bell, and wistfully looking over the blinds; then exclaiming: ‘Oh, there’s Mark! Has he heard anything?’ and out she darted, opening the door before he rang. ‘Mark! have you found him?’

‘Yes,’ he said gravely, looking utterly amazed as she clasped her hands, and seemed ready to fling herself on his neck with joy. ‘I came because it will be a great shock to my uncle.’

‘Then it is so! Nurse was right,’ said Nuttie, turning deadly pale, and standing as if before a iring platoon. ‘Tell me, Mark, where did they find him?’

‘At the Faringdon Station. I was sent for to identify him.’

‘Stay,’ said Mr. Dutton, as there was a wild horrified look in Nuttie’s eyes. ‘Do you mean little Alwyn?’

‘Little Alwyn! No, certainly not. What of him?’

‘Gregorio managed to lose him in the park yesterday,’ put in Mr. Dutton.

‘That accounts for it, then,’ said Mark. ‘No, it was Gregorio himself, poor man. He was knocked down by the engine, and killed on the spot, just by the station, at eleven o’clock last night. Our name was found on him, and I was sent for early this morning. There was no doubt about it, so I came on here at once to let my uncle know, little thinking–‘

‘Oh, it is dreadful!’ cried Nuttie, sinking into a chair. ‘Do you remember, my father told him never to see his face again unless he found Alwyn?’

Broadbent came in at the moment with the coffee-pot, and stood suspended, as he was told what had happened, Mark adding the detail: ‘He was crossing the line in front of the engine.’

‘Yes, sir,’ said the butler. ‘It is an awful dispensation. No doubt he knew it was all up with him. You may not be aware, sir, of the subject of his conversation in the park. Mr. Parker had just seen a telegram of the result of the Derby, and he had heavy bets on Lady Edina. I am afraid, sir, there can be no doubt that he found a voluntary grave.’

‘We will not talk of that. We cannot judge,’ said Mark, shuddering. ‘I said I would send some one from here to arrange what was to be done after the inquest.’

Broadbent immediately undertook to go, if his master did not require him, and this was thought advisable, as his services were certainly not acceptable to Mr. Egremont. Mark had thought himself likely to be detained and had provided for his absence, and the awe-stricken trio were consulting together over the breakfast-table, eating mechanically, from the very exhaustion of agitation, when the door opened, and Mr. Egremont in his dressing-gown was among them, exclaiming: ‘You are keeping it from me.’ He had been wakened by the whispers and rushes of the excited maids, had rung his bell in vain,