Dora re-considered her arguments while
putting on her bonnet, and the instant the walking
party were outside the front door, she began again.
’But, Rupert, it would be committing murder to
kill Winifred, even if she had the Fidophobia.’
‘No, no, Dora,’ said Rupert,
’it is your mamma and Lizzie who have the Fidophobia.’
‘What can you mean?’ said
Helen; ’how can you frighten the child so, Rupert?’
‘Do not you know, Helen,’
said Elizabeth, ’’tis his vocation.
He is a true Knight Rupert.’
‘Expound, most learned cousin,’
said Rupert; ‘you are too deep.’
‘You must know,’ said
Elizabeth, ’that Knecht Ruprecht is the German
terrifier of naughty children, the same as the
chimney-sweeper in England, or Coeur de Lion in Palestine,
or the Duke of Wellington in France.
’Baby, baby, he’s
a giant,
Tall and black as Rouen steeple;
And he dines and sups, ’tis said,
Every day, on naughty people.’
‘I should have thought,’
said Rupert, ’that considering my namesake’s
babe-bolting propensities, and his great black dog,
that he would have been more likely to be held up
in terrorem in England.’
‘I suppose there was some old
grim Sir Rupert in Germany,’ said Elizabeth;
‘but my dictionary is my only authority.’
‘You are taking knecht to mean
a knight,’ said Anne, ’contrary to your
argument last night. Knecht Ruprecht’s
origin is not nearly so sublime as you would make
it out. Keightley’s Fairy Mythology says
he is only our old friend Robin Good-fellow, Milton’s
lubber fiend, the Hob Goblin. You know, Rupert,
and Robert, and Hob, are all the same name, Rudbryht,
bright in speech.’
‘And a hobbish fellow means
a gentleman as clumsy as the lubber fiend,’
said Elizabeth.
‘No doubt he wore hob-nails in his shoes,’
said Rupert.
’And chimney hobs were so called,
because his cream bowl was duly set upon them,’
said Anne.
‘And he was as familiar as the
Robin Redbreast,’ said Elizabeth.
‘And wore a red waistcoat like
him, and like Herb Robert,’ said Anne.
‘As shabby as this flower,’
said Elizabeth, gathering a ragged Robin from the
hedge.
‘Well done, etymology,’
said Rupert; ‘now for syntax and prosody.’
‘I hope we have been talking
syntax all this time,’ said Elizabeth; ’we
will keep prosody for the evening, and then play at
Conglomeration.’
They now came to some bright green
water-meadows, which bordered the little stream as
soon as it left the town. There was a broad dry
path by the river side, and as they walked along it,
there was no lack of laughter or merriment in anyone
but Helen, and she could find no amusement in anything
she saw or heard. At last, however, she was
highly delighted at the sight of some plants of purple
loose-strife, growing on the bank. ‘Oh!’
cried she, ’that is the flower that is so beautiful
at Dykelands.’
‘What! the loose strife?’
said Elizabeth, ’it is common enough in all
damp places.’
Poor Helen! as if this slight to the
flower she admired were not a sufficient shock to
her feelings, Rupert, perfectly unconscious on what
tender ground he was treading, said, ’If it is
a lover of damp, I am sure it can nowhere be better
suited than at Dykelands. Did you grow web-footed
there, Helen?’
‘O Rupert,’ said Helen,
‘I am sure the garden is always quite dry.’
‘Except when it is wet,’ said Elizabeth.
‘That was certainly the case
when I was there two years ago,’ observed Rupert;
’I could not stir two steps from the door without
meeting with a pool deep enough to swim a man-of-war.’
‘Rupert,’ said Elizabeth,
’I hereby give notice, that whosoever says one
single word against the perfect dryness, cleanliness,
and beauty, of dear Dykelands, commits high treason
against Miss Helen Woodbourne; and as protecting disconsolate
damsels is the bounden duty of a true knight and cavalier,
I advise you never to mention the subject, on pain
of being considered a discourteous recreant.’
‘Lizzie, how can you?’ said Helen peevishly.
‘How strange it is,’ said
Anne, ’that so many old family houses should
have been built in damp places.’
‘Our ancestors were once apparently
frogs,’ said Rupert; unhappily reminding Helen
of her sister’s parody.
‘Well,’ said Elizabeth,
’I can understand why monasteries should have
been built in damp places, near rivers or bogs, both
for the sake of the fish, and to be useful in draining;
but why any other mortal except Dutchmen, tadpoles,
and newts, should delight in mud and mire, passes
my poor comprehension.’
Rupert pointed to a frog which Dora’s
foot had startled from its hiding-place, and said,
’Pray, why, according to my theory, should not
the human kind have once been frogs? leap-frog being
only a return to our natural means of progression.’
‘And bull-frogs in a course
of becoming stalwart gentlemen,’ said Anne.
‘Yes, we often hear of a croaking
disposition, do not we, Helen?’ said Elizabeth;
’you see both that propensity, and a love of
marshes, are but indications of a former state of
existence.’
’And I am sure that your respectable
neighbour, Mr. Turner, is a toad on his hind legs,’
said Rupert.
‘Minus the precious jewel,’ said Elizabeth.
‘By-the-bye,’ said Rupert,
’is there not some mystery about that gentleman?
This morning I hazarded a supposition, in the drawing-room,
that the lost darling we have heard so much of, might
have been dissected for the benefit of Mr. Turner’s
pupils, and thereupon arose a most wonderful whispering
between Kate and one of your sweet cousins there,
Lizzie, about some nephew, an Adolphus or Augustus,
or some such name; but the more questions I asked,
the more dark and mysterious did the young ladies
become.’
‘I wonder if it is possible!’
cried Elizabeth, with a sudden start.
‘What is possible?’ asked Anne.
‘That Rupert should be right,’
said Elizabeth; ’was Mrs. Hazleby in the room
when you spoke?’
‘Yes, but what of that?’ said Rupert.
‘That you, talking at random,’
said Elizabeth, ’very nearly betrayed Harriet’s
grand secret.’
‘Really, the affair becomes
quite exciting,’ said Rupert; ’pray do
not leave me in suspense, explain yourself.’
‘I do not think I can, Rupert,’
said Elizabeth, not wishing to expose Harriet, for
Mrs. Woodbourne’s sake.
‘Then I am to understand,’
said Rupert, ’that Miss Hazleby has presented
Fido to this noble Adolphus, as a pledge of the tenderest
friendship, and that you and Kate act as confidants.’
‘Nonsense, Rupert,’ said
Anne, trying to check him by a look.
‘And I suppose,’ proceeded
Rupert, ’that the gentleman is to extract poor
Fido’s faithful heart, and wear it next his own.
I never should have devised so refined and sentimental
a souvenir. It is far beyond forget-me-nots
and arrows. So professional too.’
Elizabeth and Anne laughed so much
that they could neither of them speak for some moments;
but when Anne recovered, she took her brother by the
arm and whispered, ’Rupert, the less you say
about the Turners or Fido, the better. I will
explain it all to you when we have an opportunity.’
Elizabeth thanked her by a look; and
at this moment Dora, who had been far in advance with
Katherine and the Hazlebys, came running back to beg
Rupert to gather for her some fine bulrushes which
grew on the brink of the river. Rupert was very
willing to comply with her request; but Elizabeth
recommended Dora to leave them till they should return,
and not to take the trouble of carrying them to Whistlefar
Castle and back again.
Leaving the river, they began to ascend
a steep chalky lane, which had been wet all the winter,
and was now full of rough hardened wheel-ruts and
holes made by slipping horses. Elizabeth thought
that Robert Bruce’s calthorps could hardly have
made the ground more uneven, and she was just going
to say so, when Helen groaned out, ’What a horrid
place! I slip and bruise my ancle every minute.’
Upon which she immediately took the other side of
the question, and answered, ’It is not nearly
so bad as the long lane on the down, and you never
complain of that.’
‘Oh! but this is all up-hill,’ said Helen.
‘I am not in the least tired,
Helen,’ said Dora, who with Rupert’s assistance
was taking flying leaps over the ruts.
‘You? no, I should think not,’
said Helen, in so piteous a tone, that Rupert very
good-naturedly waited till she came up to him, and
then offered her his arm.
On seeing this, Harriet was rather
vexed that she had not been first noticed by the gentleman,
and began to make heavy complaints of the badness
of the road, but no one paid much attention to her.
Elizabeth however gave her arm to Lucy, who never
could bear much fatigue.
After they had gained the top of the
hill, they walked on for some distance between high
hedges, and as none of the party knew the way further
than the river, except from some directions given them
by Mr. Walker, the Curate, they begun to think that
they must have missed a turn to the left, which he
had told them to take. Harriet and Helen both
declared that they had passed the turning; Katherine
was sure they had not; and Elizabeth said that she
had seen a turn to the right some way behind them,
but that to the left was yet to come. As they
could not agree upon this question, Rupert walked
onwards to explore, leaving the young ladies to rest
on the trunk of a tree lying by the side of the road.
While he was gone, Elizabeth drew Helen aside, saying,
’Helen, you had better take care, I hope Rupert
has not observed how much out of humour you are.’
‘I am not out of humour,’
said Helen, according to the usual fashion of denying
such a charge.
‘Then why do you look and speak
as if you were?’ said her sister; ’you
had better watch yourself.’
‘I think you are enough to vex
anyone, Lizzie,’ said Helen; ’bringing
me ever so far out of the way on such a road as this,
and then scolding me for saying I do not like it.’
‘I see,’ answered Elizabeth,
’you are not in a fit state to be reasoned with.’
‘No,’ retorted Helen,
who had indulged in her ill-humour till she hardly
knew what she said, ’you will never condescend
to hear what I have to say. Perhaps it might
be as well sometimes if you would.’
‘Yes, Helen,’ said Elizabeth,
colouring and turning away, ’it would indeed.
I know I have given you a right to upbraid me.’
At this moment Rupert came back, cheering
the drooping courage of the wearied and heated damsels
with intelligence, that ’there is no lane without
a turning,’ and he had found the one they were
seeking.
Things now went on better; they came
to a shady green path by the side of a wood, and Helen
was more silent, her temper having perhaps been a
little improved by the coolness. Soon, however,
they had to cross two long fields, where gleaning
was going on merrily; Helen made several complaints
of the heat and of the small size of her parasol; and
Elizabeth had to catch Dora, and hold her fast, to
prevent her from overheating herself by a race after
Rupert through the stubble. At the first stile,
Harriet thought proper to make a great outcry, and
was evidently quite disposed for a romp, but Rupert
helped her over so quietly that she had no opportunity
for one. They now found themselves in a grass
field, the length of which made Helen sigh.
‘Why, Helen, how soon you are
tired!’ said Rupert; ’I am afraid Dykelands
did not agree with you.’
‘Helen is only a little cross,
she will be better presently,’ said Dora, in
so comical a tone, that Rupert, Katherine, and Harriet
all laughed, and Helen said sharply, ‘Dora,
do not be pert.’
Rupert was really a very good-natured
youth, but it would have required more forbearance
than he possessed, to abstain from teazing so tempting
a subject as poor Helen was at this moment.
‘And how do you know that Helen
is a little cross, Dora, my dear?’ said he.
‘Because she looks so,’ said Dora.
‘And how do people look when they are a little
cross, Dora?’
‘I do not know,’ answered Dora.
‘Do they look so, my dear?’
said Rupert, mimicking poor Helen’s woe-begone
face in a very droll way.
Dora laughed, and Helen was still
more displeased. ’Dora, it is very naughty,’
said she.
‘What! to look cross?’
said Rupert; ‘certainly, is it not, Dora?’
Elizabeth and Anne were far in the
rear, reaching for some botanical curiosity, on the
other side of a wet ditch, or they would certainly
have put a stop to this conversation, which was not
very profitable to any of the parties concerned.
Dora was rather a matter-of-fact little person, and
a very good implement for teazing with, as she did
not at all suspect the use made of her, until a sudden
thought striking her, she stopped short, saying very
decidedly, ’We will not talk of this any more.’
‘Why not?’ said Rupert,
rather sorry to be checked in the full enjoyment of
his own wit.
‘Because Helen does not like it,’ said
Dora.
‘But, Dora,’ said Rupert,
wishing to try the little girl rather further, ‘do
not you think she deserves it, for being out of temper?’
‘I do not know,’ said
Dora gravely, ’but I know it is not right or
kind to say what vexes her, and I shall not stay with
you any longer, Rupert, if you will do it.’
So saying, Dora, well-named Discreet
Dolly, ran away to Lucy, of whom she was very fond.
Rupert was both amused and surprised
at Dora’s behaviour, and perhaps, at the same
time, a little ashamed and piqued by a little girl
of seven years old having shewn more right feeling
and self-command than he had displayed; and to cover
all these sensations, he began to talk nonsense to
Katherine and Harriet as fast as he could.
In the mean time Helen walked on alone,
a little behind the rest of the party; for by this
time Elizabeth and Anne had come up with the others,
and had passed her. As they entered a little
copse, she began to recollect herself. She had
from her infancy been accustomed to give way to fits
of peevishness and fretfulness, thinking that as long
as her ill-humour did not burst forth in open name,
as Elizabeth’s used formerly to do, there was
no great harm in letting it smoulder away, and make
herself and everyone else uncomfortable. Some
time ago, something had brought conviction to her
mind that such conduct was not much better than bearing
malice and hatred in her heart, and she had resolved
to cure herself of the habit. Then came her visit
to Dykelands, where everything went on smoothly, and
there was little temptation to give way to ill-humour,
so that she had almost forgotten her reflections on
the subject, till the present moment, when she seemed
suddenly to wake and find herself in the midst of one
of her old sullen moods. She struggled hard
against it, and as acknowledging ill temper is one
great step towards conquering it, she soon recovered
sufficiently to admire the deep pink fruit of the skewer-wood,
and the waxen looking red and yellow berries of the
wild guelder rose, when suddenly the rear of the darkness
dim which over-shadowed her spirits was scattered
by the lively din of a long loud whistle from Rupert,
who was concealed from her by some trees, a little
in advance of her. She hastened forwards, and
found him and all the others just emerged from the
wood, and standing on an open bare common where neither
castle nor cottage was to be seen, nothing but a carpet
of purple heath, dwarf furze, and short soft grass
upon which a few cows, a colt, and a donkey, were
browsing. The party were standing together, laughing,
some moderately, others immoderately.
‘What is the matter?’ asked Helen.
‘I do not know,’ said
Elizabeth, ’unless Rupert is hallooing because
he is out of the wood.’
‘Wait till you have heard my
reasons unfolded,’ said Rupert; ’did you
never hear how this celebrated fortress came by its
name?’
‘Never,’ said several voices.
‘Then listen, listen, ladies
all,’ said Rupert. ’You must know
that once upon a time there was a most beautiful princess,
who lived in a splendid castle, where she received
all kinds of company. Well, one day, there arrived
an old grim palmer, just like the picture of Hopeful,
in the Pilgrim’s Progress, with a fine striped
cockle-shell sticking upright in his hat-band.
Well, the cockle-shell tickled the Princess’s
fancy very much, and she made her pet knight (for she
had as many suitors as Penelope) promise that he would
steal it from him that very night. So at the
witching hour of midnight, the knight approached the
palmer’s couch, and gently abstracted the cockle
hat and staff, placing in their stead, the jester’s
cap and bells, and bauble. Next morning when
it was pitch dark, for it was the shortest day, up
jumped the palmer, and prepared to resume his journey.
Now it chanced that the day before, the lady had
ordered that the fool should be whipped, for mocking
her, when she could not get the marrow neatly out of
a bone with her fingers, and peeped into it like a
hungry magpie; so that the moment the poor palmer
appeared in the court-yard, all the squires and pages
set upon him, taking him for the fool, and whipped
him round and round like any peg-top. Suddenly,
down fell the cap and bells, and he saw what had been
done; upon which he immediately turned into an enchanter,
and commanded the Princess and all her train to fall
into a deep sleep, all excepting the knight who had
committed the offence, who is for ever riding up and
down the castle court, repenting of his discourtesy,
with his face towards the tail of a cream-coloured
donkey, wearing a cap and bells for a helmet, with
a rod for a lance, and a cockle-shell for a shield,
and star-fishes for spurs, and the Princess can only
be disenchanted by her devoted champion doing battle
with him. All, however, has vanished away from
vulgar eyes, and can only be brought to light by being
thrice whistled for. A slight tradition has
remained, and the place has ever since been known by
the mysterious name of Whistlefar.’
‘And has no one ever found it?’ said Dora.
‘I cannot say,’ answered Rupert.
’A deed of such high emprise
can only be reserved for the great Prince Rupert himself,’
said Elizabeth.
‘How can such nonsensical traditions
be kept up?’ said Harriet; ’I thought
everyone had forgotten such absurd old stories, only
fit to frighten children.’
‘Oh! you know nobody believes them,’ said
Katherine.
‘But, Rupert,’ said Helen,
’this must be a modern story, it cannot be a
genuine old legend, it is really not according to the
spirit of those times to say that a palmer could be
an enchanter, or so revengeful.’
‘Oh!’ said Rupert, ’you
know everything bad is to be learnt among the Saracens.’
‘Still,’ said Helen, ’if
you consider the purpose for which the Palmers visited
the Holy Land, you cannot think them likely to learn
the dark rites of the Infidels, and scarcely to wish
to gratify personal resentment.’
‘The frock does not make the
friar,’ said Rupert, ’and this may have
been a bad palmer. Think of the Knights Templars.’
‘Besides,’ said Helen,
’how could the squires see either palmer or
jester when it was pitch dark?’
‘I suppose there were lamps
in the court,’ said Rupert; ’but
“I cannot tell how
the truth may be,
I tell the tale as ‘twas told to
me."’
‘But who told you, Rupert?’ said Helen.
‘Why, the story of Red Mantle,
Helen, cannot you see?’ said Elizabeth; ‘it
was on the table all the morning.’
‘O Lizzie, was there ever anything
so cruel?’ cried Rupert; ’Edie Ochiltree
was nothing to you. Everyone was swallowing it
so quietly, and you will not even let me enjoy the
credit of originality.’
‘I am sure I give you credit
due,’ said Elizabeth; ’it is really an
ingenious compound of Red Mantle, the Sleeping Beauty,
Robert of Paris, and Triermain, and the cockle-shell
shield and star-fish spurs form an agreeable variation.’
‘I never will tell another story
in your presence, Lizzie,’ said Rupert, evidently
vexed, but carrying it off with great good humour;
‘you are worse than Quarterly, Edinburgh, and
Blackwood put together.’
‘I really think you deserved
it, Rupert,’ said Anne; ’I cannot pity
you, you ought not to laugh at the pilgrims.’
‘Oh! I dare not open my
lips before such devotees of crusading,’ said
Rupert.
‘And pray, Rupert,’ said
Elizabeth, ’what did you mean by comparing me
to Edie Ochiltree? did you mean to say that you were
like Monkbarns? I never heard that that gentleman
fabricated either legends or curiosities, and made
them pass for genuine ancient ones.’
At this moment, happily for Rupert,
they came to the top of a small rising ground, and
beheld a farmhouse at about a hundred yards before
them. Rupert whistled long and loud and shrill,
and two or three of the young ladies exclaimed, ‘Is
this Whistlefar Castle?’
‘It is only enchanted,’
said Elizabeth; ’clear away the mist of incredulity
from your eyes, and behold keep, drawbridge, tower
and battlement, and loop-hole grates where captives
weep.’
It cannot be denied that the young
party were a little disappointed by the aspect of
the renowned Whistlefar, but they did ample justice
to all that was to be seen; a few yards of very thick
stone wall in the court, a coat of arms carved upon
a stone built into the wall upside down, and the well-turned
arch of the door-way. Some, putting on Don Quixote’s
eyes for the occasion, saw helmets in milk-pails, dungeons
in cellars, battle-axes in bill-hooks, and shields
in pewter-plates, called the baby in its cradle the
sleeping Princess, agreed that the shield must have
been reversed by order of the palmer, and that one
of the cows was the mischievous knight’s cream-coloured
donkey; so that laughter happily supplied the place
of learned lore.
On the way home the party were not
quite so merry, although Helen was unusually agreeable,
and enjoyed a very pleasant conversation with Rupert
and Anne, who, she was pleased to find, really thought
her worth talking to. Elizabeth was occupied
with Dora, who was tired, and wanted to be cheered
and amused. She did not however forget her bulrushes,
and when they came in sight of them, she ran forwards
to claim Rupert’s promise of gathering some
for her and her little brother and sister. This
was a service of difficulty, for some of the bulrushes
grew in the water, and others on deceitful ground,
where a pool appeared wherever Rupert set his foot.
With two or three strides and leaps, however, he
reached a little dry island, covered with a tuft of
sedges, in the midst of the marsh, and was reaching
some of the bulrushes with the hook of Anne’s
parasol, when he suddenly cried out, ‘Hollo,
what have we here?’
‘What?’ said some of the girls.
‘A dead dog, I believe,’ said Rupert.
‘Oh! let me see,’ cried Harriet, advancing
cautiously over the morass.
‘Are you curious in such matters.
Miss Hazleby?’ said Rupert, laughing, as Harriet
came splashing towards him through the wet, holding
up her frock with one hand, and stretching out the
other to him, to be helped upon the island.
He pulled her upon it safely, but it quaked fearfully;
and there was hardly room for them both to stand on
it, while Harriet, holding fast by Rupert’s
hand, bent forwards, beheld the object of her curiosity,
uttered a loud scream, lost her balance, and would
have fallen into the river had she not been withheld
by Rupert’s strength of arm. They both
slipped down on the opposite sides of the island,
into the black mud, and Harriet precipitately retreated
to the mainland.
‘Well, what is the matter?’ said Elizabeth.
‘Oh! my poor dear little doggie!’ cried
Harriet.
‘Is it Fido?’ said Elizabeth;
’then, Harriet, there is no fear of your eating
him in a sausage; you may be at rest on that score.’
‘But can it really be Fido?’ said Katherine,
pressing forwards.
‘Do you wish to see?’
said Rupert, ’for if so, I advise you to make
haste, the island is sinking fast.’
‘I am splashed all over, so
I do not care. Can I have one more look?’
said Harriet, in a melancholy voice.
Rupert handed her back to the island,
where she took her last farewell of poor Fido, all
his long hair drenched with water, and the very same
blue ribbon which she had herself tied round his neck
the day before, floating, a funeral banner, on the
surface of the stream. She contemplated him until
her weight and Rupert’s had sunk the island so
much, that it was fast becoming a lake, while Elizabeth
whispered to Anne to propose presenting her with a
forget-me-not, on Fido’s part.
‘I hope,’ said Rupert,
as they proceeded with their walk, ’that you
are fully sensible of poor Fido’s generous self-sacrifice;
he immolated himself to remove, by the manner of his
death, any suspicions of Winifred’s having the
Fidophobia.’
‘Perhaps,’ said Elizabeth,
’he had some knowledge of the frightful suspicions
which attached to him, and, like the Irish varmint
in St. Patrick’s days,
“went
flop,
Slap
bang into the water,
And
thus committed suicide
To
save himself from slaughter."’
They now began to consider how Fido
could have met with his death. Harriet was sure
that some naughty boy must have thrown him in.
Lucy thought that in that case he would have lost
his blue ribbon; Dora indignantly repelled the charge
of cruelty from the youth of Abbeychurch; Elizabeth
said such a puppy was very likely to fall off the
bridge; and Rupert decided that he had most probably
been attacked by a fit, to which, he said, half-grown
puppies were often liable.
Rupert and Anne then began talking
about a dog which they had lost some time ago in nearly
the same manner; and during this dialogue the party
divided, Harriet and Katherine walked on in close consultation,
and Lucy and Helen began helping Dora to sort and
carry her bulrushes, which detained them behind the
others.
‘What appears to me the most
mysterious part of the story,’ said Rupert,
’is how the beloved Fido, petted and watched
and nursed and guarded as he seems to have been, should
have contrived to stray from your house as far as
to the river.’
‘Oh! that is no mystery at all,’
said Elizabeth; ’we crossed the bridge twice
yesterday evening, and I dare say we left him behind
us there.’
‘What could you have been doing
on the bridge yesterday evening?’ said Rupert.
’Oh! I know; I saw the people coming away
from a tee-total entertainment; you were certainly
there, Anne, I hope you enjoyed it.’
‘How very near the truth you
do contrive to get, Rupert,’ said Elizabeth.
‘Then,’ cried Rupert,
with a start, ’I see it all. I thought
you all looked very queer at breakfast. I understand
it all. You have been to the Mechanics’
Institute.’
‘Yes, Rupert,’ said Elizabeth.
‘No, but you do not mean to
say that you really have, Lizzie and Anne,’
cried Rupert, turning round to look into their faces.
Each made a sign of assent; and Rupert,
as soon as he had recovered from his astonishment,
burst into a violent fit of laughter, which lasted
longer than either his sister or cousin approved, and
it was not till after he had been well scolded by
both, that he chose to listen to their full account
of all that had passed on the subject.
‘The worst of it is, now,’
said Elizabeth, ’that as soon as Mrs. Hazleby
hears that Fido has been found in the river, she will
ask how he came near it.’
‘And what then?’ said Anne.
’Why, she well knows that the
bridge is not a place to which we are likely to resort;
she will ask what took us there; I would not trust
Harriet to tell the truth, and I have promised not
to betray her, so what is to be done if Mrs. Hazleby
asks me?’ said Elizabeth.
‘I hope she will not ask her
youngest daughter,’ said Anne.
‘That she shall not do,’
said Elizabeth: ’I will tell her myself
that Fido was found in the river, and answer all her
questions as best I can.’
‘It is rather a pity,’
said Anne archly, ’that Miss Hazleby did not
actually fall into the river, for the sensation caused
by Rupert’s rescuing her would quite have absorbed
all the interest in Fido’s melancholy fate.’
‘Thank you, Anne,’ said
Rupert; ’I am sure I only wonder she was not
submerged. I never could have guessed any fair
lady could be so heavy. I am sure I feel the
claw she gave my arm at this moment.’
‘How very ungallant!’ said Anne.
‘Still,’ said Rupert,
’without appearing as the preserver of the fair
Harriet from a watery grave, I think I have interest
enough with Mrs. Hazleby to be able to break the fatal
news to her, and calm her first agonies of grief and
wrath.’
‘You, Rupert?’ said Anne.
‘Myself, Anne,’ replied
Rupert; ’you have no notion what friends Mrs.
Hazleby and I have become. We had a tete-a-tete
of an hour and a half this morning.’
‘What could you find to talk about?’ said
Anne.
‘First,’ said Rupert,
’she asked about my grouse shooting; where I
went, and with whom, and whether I had seen any of
the Campbells of Inchlitherock. Of course we
embarked in a genealogy of the whole Campbell race;
then came a description of the beauties of Inchlitherock.
Next I was favoured with her private history; how
she, being one of thirteen, was forced, at eighteen,
to leave the lovely spot, and embark with her brother
for India.’
‘On speculation,’ said Elizabeth.
‘And finally, how she came to marry the Major.’
‘O Rupert, that is too much; you must have invented
it!’ cried Anne.
‘Indeed I did not, Anne,’
said Rupert; ’it is a fact that she lived somewhere
in the Mofussil with her brother, and there she encountered
the Major. You, young ladies, may imagine how
she fascinated him, and how finally her brother seems
to have bullied the Major into marrying her.’
‘Poor man!’ said Elizabeth,
’I always wondered how he chanced to fall into
her clutches. But did you hear no more?’
‘No more of her personal history,’
said Rupert; ’she kindly employed the rest of
her time in giving me wise counsels.’
‘Oh! pray let us have the benefit
of them,’ said Anne, who had by this time pretty
well forgotten her prudence.
‘There were many regrets that
I was not in the army,’ said Rupert, ’and
many pieces of advice which would have been very useful
if I had, but which I am afraid were thrown away upon
me, ending with wise reflections upon the importance
of a wise choice of a wife, especially for a young
man of family, exposed to danger from designing young
ladies, with cautions against beauty because of its
perishable nature, and learning, because literary
ladies are fit for nothing.’
‘Meaning to imply,’ said
Elizabeth, ’how fortunate was Major Hazleby in
meeting with so sweet a creature as the charming Miss
Barbara Campbell, possessed of neither of these dangerous
qualities.’
‘I do not know,’ said
Anne; ’I think she might have possessed some
of the former when she left Inchlitherock.’
’Before twenty years of managing
and scolding had fixed her eyes in one perpetual stare,’
said Elizabeth. ‘But here we are at home.’
They found the hall table covered
with parcels, which shewed that Mrs. Woodbourne and
her party had returned from their drive, and the girls
hastened up-stairs.
Anne found her mamma in her room,
as well as Sir Edward, who was finishing a letter.
‘Well, Mamma, had you a prosperous journey?’
said she.
‘Yes, very much so,’ said
Lady Merton: ’Mrs. Hazleby was in high
good-humour, she did nothing but sing Rupert’s
praises, and did not scold Mrs. Woodbourne as much
as usual.’
‘And what have you been doing,
Miss Anne?’ said Sir Edward; ’you are
quite on the qui vive.’
’Oh! I have been laughing
at the fun which Rupert and Lizzie have been making
about Mrs. Hazleby,’ said Anne; ’I really
could not help it, Mamma, and I do not think I began
it.’
‘Began what?’ said Sir Edward.
’Why, Mamma was afraid I should
seem to set Lizzie against her step-mother’s
relations, if I quizzed them or abused them,’
said Anne.
’I do not think what you could
say would make much difference in Lizzie’s opinion
of them,’ said Sir Edward, ’but certainly
I should think they were not the best subjects of
conversation here.’
‘But I have not told you of
the grand catastrophe,’ said Anne; ’we
have found poor Fido drowned among the bulrushes.’
‘I hope Mrs. Woodbourne will
be happy again,’ said Lady Merton.
‘And, Mamma, he must have fallen
in while we were at the Mechanics’ Institute,’
said Anne; ’there is one bad consequence of our
folly already.’
‘I cannot see what induced you
to go,’ said Sir Edward; ’I thought Lizzie
had more sense.’
’I believe the actual impulse
was given by a dispute between Lizzie and me on the
date of chivalry,’ said Anne.
’And so Rupert’s friends,
the Turners, are great authorities in history,’
said Sir Edward; ‘I never should have suspected
it.’
‘Now I think of it,’ said
Anne, ’it was the most ridiculous part of the
affair, considering the blunder that Lizzie told me
Mrs. Turner made about St. Augustine. What could
we have been dreaming of?’
‘Midsummer madness,’ said Sir Edward.
‘But just tell me, Papa,’
said Anne, ’do you not think Helen quite the
heroine of the story?’
‘I think Helen very much improved
in appearance and manners,’ said Sir Edward;
’and I am quite willing to believe all that I
see you have to tell me of her.’
‘Do not wait to tell it now,
Anne,’ said Lady Merton, ’or Mrs. Woodbourne
will not think us improved in appearance or manners.
It is nearly six o’clock.’
‘I will keep it all for the
journey home,’ said Anne, ’when Papa’s
ears will be disengaged.’
‘And his tongue too, to give
you a lecture upon Radicalism, Miss,’ said Sir
Edward, with a fierce gesture, which drove Anne away
laughing.
Elizabeth had finished dressing, a
little too rapidly, and had gone to find Mrs. Woodbourne.
‘Well, Mamma,’ said she, as soon as she
came into her room, ’Winifred has lived to say
‘the dog is dead’.’
‘What do you mean, my dear?’ said Mrs.
Woodbourne.
‘The enemy is dead, Mamma,’
said Elizabeth; ’we found him drowned by the
green meadow.’
‘Poor little fellow! your aunt
will be very sorry,’ was kind Mrs. Woodbourne’s
remark.
‘But now, Mamma,’ said
Elizabeth, ’you may be quite easy about Winifred;
he could not possibly have been mad.’
‘How could he have fallen in,
poor little dog?’ said Mrs. Woodbourne.
’He must have strayed about
upon the bridge while we were at the Mechanics’
Institute,’ said Elizabeth; ’it was all
my fault, and I am afraid it is a very great distress
to Lucy. Helen might well say mischief would
come of our going.’
’I wish the loss of Fido was
all the mischief likely to come of it, my dear,’
said Mrs. Woodbourne, with a sigh; ’I am afraid
your papa will be very much annoyed by it, with so
much as he has on his mind too.’
‘Ah! Mamma, that is the
worst of it, indeed,’ said Elizabeth, covering
her face with her hands; ‘if I could do anything ’
‘My dearest child,’ said
Mrs. Woodbourne, ’do not go on making yourself
unhappy, I am very sorry I said anything about your
Papa; you know he cannot be angry with one who grieves
so sincerely for what she has done amiss. I
am sure you have learnt a useful lesson, and will be
wiser in future. Now do put your scarf even,
and let me pin this piece of lace straight for you,
it is higher on one side than the other, and your
band is twisted.’
On her side, Lucy, trembling as she
entered her mother’s room, but firm in her purpose
of preserving her sister from the temptation to prevaricate,
by taking all the blame which Mrs. Hazleby chose to
ascribe to her, quietly communicated the fatal intelligence
to Mrs. Hazleby. Her information was received
with a short angry ‘H m,’ and
no more was said upon the matter, as Mrs. Hazleby was
eager to shew Harriet some wonderful bargains which
she had met with at Baysmouth.