All the stupor and languor which immediately
followed Nan’s fall passed off during her drive
home; she chatted and laughed, her cheeks were flushed,
her eyes bright. Hester turned with a relieved
face to Miss Danesbury.
“My little darling is all right,
is she not?” she said. “Oh, I was
so terrified oh, how thankful I am no harm
has been done!”
Miss Danesbury did not return Hester’s
full gaze; she attempted to take little Nan on her
knee, but Nan clung to Hetty. Then she said:
“You must be careful to keep
the sun off her, dear hold your parasol
well down just so. That is better.
When we get home, I will put her to bed at once.
Please God, there is nothing wrong; but one
cannot be too careful.”
Something in Miss Danesbury’s
manner affected Hester strangely; she clasped Nan’s
slight baby form closer and closer to her heart, and
no longer joined in the little one’s mirth.
As the drive drew to a close, Nan again ceased talking,
and fell into a heavy sleep.
Miss Danesbury’s face grew graver
and graver, and, when the wagonette drew up at Lavender
House, she insisted on lifting the sleeping child out
of Hester’s arms, and carrying her up to her
little crib. When Nan’s little head was
laid on the cool pillow, she again opened her eyes,
and instantly asked for a drink. Miss Danesbury
gave her some milk and water, but the moment she drank
it she was sick.
“Just as I feared,” said
the governess; “there is some little mischief not
much, I hope but we must instantly send
for the doctor.”
As Miss Danesbury walked across the
room to ring the bell, Hester followed her.
“She’s not in danger?”
she whispered in a hoarse voice. “If she
is, Annie is guilty of murder.”
“Don’t, my dear,”
said the governess; “you must keep quiet for
Nan’s sake. Please God, she will soon be
better. All I really apprehend is a little excitement
and feverishness, which will pass off in a few days
with care. Hester, my dear, I suddenly remember
that the house is nearly empty, for all the servants
are also enjoying a holiday. I think I must send
you for Dr. Mayflower. The wagonette is still
at the door. Drive at once to town, my dear,
and ask the coachman to take you to N, The Parade.
If you are very quick, you will catch Dr. Mayflower
before he goes out on his afternoon rounds.”
Hester glanced for half an instant
at Nan, but her eyes were again closed.
“I will take the best care of
her,” said the governess in a kind voice; “don’t
lose an instant, dear.”
Hester snatched up her hat and flew
down stairs. In a moment she was in the wagonette,
and the driver was speedily urging his horses in the
direction of the small town of Sefton, two miles and
a half away. Hester was terrified now so
terrified, in such an agony, that she even forgot
Annie; her hatred toward Annie became of secondary
importance to her. All her ideas, all her thoughts,
were swallowed up in the one great hope Should
she be in time to reach Dr. Mayflower’s house
before he set off on his afternoon rounds? As
the wagonette approached Sefton she buried her face
in her hands and uttered a sharp inward cry of agony.
“Please God, let me find the
doctor!” It was a real prayer from her heart
of hearts. The wagonette drew up at the doctor’s
residence, to discover him stepping into his brougham.
Hester was a shy child, and had never seen him before;
but she instantly raised her voice, and almost shouted
to him:
“You are to come with me; please,
you are to come at once. Little Nan is ill she
is hurt. Please, you are to come at once.”
“Eh! young lady?” said
the round-faced doctor “Oh! I see; you are
one of the little girls from Lavender House.
Is anything wrong there, dear?”
Hester managed to relate what had
occurred; whereupon the doctor instantly opened the
door of the wagonette.
“Jump out, young lady,”
he said; “I will drive you back in my brougham.
Masters,” addressing his coachman, “to
Lavender House.”
Hester sat back in the soft-cushioned
carriage, which bowled smoothly along the road.
It seemed to her impatience that the pace at which
they went was not half quick enough she
longed to put her head out of the window to shout
to the coachman to go faster. She felt intensely
provoked with the doctor, who sat placidly by her
side reading a newspaper.
Presently she saw that his eyes were
fixed on her. He spoke in his quietest tones.
“We always take precisely twenty
minutes to drive from the Parade to Lavender House twenty
minutes, neither more or less. We shall be there
now in exactly ten minutes.”
Hester tried to smile, but failed;
her agony of apprehension grew and grew. She
breathed more freely when they turned into the avenue.
When they stopped at the wide stone porch, and the
doctor got out, she uttered a sigh of relief.
She took Dr. Mayflower herself up to Nan’s room.
Miss Danesbury opened the door, the doctor went inside,
and Hester crouched down on the landing and waited.
It seemed to her that the good physician would never
come out. When he did she raised a perfectly blanched
face to his, she opened her lips, tried to speak,
but no words would come. Her agitation was so
intense that the kind-hearted doctor took instant pity
on her.
“Come into this room, my child,”
he said. “My dear, you will be ill yourself
if you give way like this. Pooh! pooh! this agitation
is extreme is uncalled for. You have
got a shock. I shall prescribe a glass of sherry
at once. Come down stairs with me, and I will
see that you get one.”
“But how is she, sir how
is she?” poor Hester managed to articulate.
“Oh! the little one sweet,
pretty, little darling. I did not know she was
your sister a dear little child. She
got an ugly fall, though came on a nasty
place.”
“But, please, sir, how is she?
She she she is not in danger?”
“Danger? by no means, unless
you put her into it. She must be kept very quiet,
and, above all things, not excited. I will come
to see her again to-morrow morning. With proper
care she ought to be quite herself in a few days.
Ah! now you’ve got a little color in your cheek,
come down with me and have that glass of sherry, and
you will feel all right.”