“I never dance but by candlelight,”
remarked Unity. “A Congo in the heat of
the afternoon, a jig before sunset, la!
I had rather plough by moonlight. As well be
a grasshopper in a daisy field! Elegance by waxlight
becomes rusticity in the sunshine, and of
all things I would not be rustic! Oh, Mr. Cary,
I’ve caught my gown in this rosebush!”
Mr. Fairfax Cary knelt to release
the muslin prisoner. “Rusticity becomes
you so that if I were a king, you should dance with
me the livelong day. But I’ll not grumble
if only you’ll dance with me as soon as the
candles are lit! Last night you were all for that
booby, Ned Hunter!”
“He’s no booby,”
said Miss Dandridge. “He is bashful though,
indeed, I think he is only bashful in company!
We sat on the porch, and he told me the long history
of his life.”
“Confound his impudence ”
“Oh, it was interesting as as
the Mysteries of Udolpho! You are a long time
over that briar, Mr. Cary. There! thank you!
Listen to Mr. Pincornet’s fiddle. Scrape,
scrape, scrape! The children are dancing, and
Jacqueline is helping them. Jacqueline is always
helping some one. But Mr. Pincornet thinks it
is because she is in love with him. He is sorry
for her because he rather prefers me. I am in
love with him too. So is Molly Carter, so is
Anne Page, and so will be little Deb as soon as she
is old enough. He is fifty, and French, and a
dancing master, and he wears an old, old, lace cravat
and a powdered wig! When are we going back to
the house, Mr. Cary?”
“Let us walk a little farther!”
pleaded the gentleman. “It is cool and
pleasant, with no fuss, and no Ned Hunter, with the
history of his life, confound him! Other men
have histories as well as he! Your gown looks
so pretty against the leaves. Let us walk down
to the lower gate.”
Unity pursed her red lips, and considered
the distance with velvety black eyes. “I
have on my dancing shoes, but perhaps you
will help me across the brook!”
“I will,” declared Fairfax
Cary, and, when the brook was reached, was as good
as his word.
“I shall tell Uncle Dick to
put safer stepping-stones,” quoth Miss Dandridge,
with heightened colour. “How thick the mint
grows here! We are at the gate, Mr. Cary.”
“Let us walk to the bend of
the road! The wild honeysuckle is in bloom there;
I noticed it riding to Charlottesville the other morning.
It is just the colour of your gown.”
“Then it must be beautiful,”
said Miss Dandridge, “for this rose-coloured
muslin came from London. Ah, you looked so angry
and so beaten on Wednesday, when you came back from
Charlottesville!”
“I was not angry, and I was not beaten.”
“Fie! You mean that your brother was.”
“I mean nothing of the kind!”
cried the younger Cary hotly. “My brother,
at the importunity of his friends, and for the good
of the county, consented to stand against this pet
of Jefferson’s, this this vaurien
Lewis Rand. Some one had to stand. He knew
what the result would be. ’Twas but a skirmish just
a seat in a tri-colour Republican House of Delegates!
My faith! the honour’s not great. But wait
awhile, Miss Dandridge! The real battle’s
not yet. Beaten! Rands, Miss Dandridge,
don’t beat Carys!”
“La, so warm!” exclaimed
Unity. “I have never seen a man love a brother
so!”
“Ludwell Cary is worthy of any
man’s love or any woman’s either!”
“The pair of you ought to be
put in the wax-works, and labelled ’The Loving
Brothers.’ When you marry, there’ll
be no love left for your wife.”
“Just you try and see.”
“The man whom I marry,”
said Miss Dandridge, “must have no thought but
for me. He must swoon if I frown, laugh if I smile,
weep if I sigh, be altogether desperate if I look
another way. I am like Falkland in The Rivals.
Heigho! this is the bend of the road, Mr. Cary.”
“I am altogether desperate when
you look another way. When you looked at Ned
Hunter last night, I wanted to blow his brains out.
He hasn’t any, but I should like to try.”
“Then you would have been hanged
for murder,” remarked Miss Dandridge. “Think
how terrible that would be for us all! Did
you know that Mr. Hunter once dined with General Washington?”
“You are a royal coquette.
See, there is the honeysuckle! If I gather it
for you, will you wear one spray to-night?”
“It is a very stiff flower,”
said Unity thoughtfully, “and I have an idea
that Mr. Hunter will bring me violets. But I
will see if I can find a place for one small spray.”
She sat down upon a fallen tree, took
her round chin into her hand, and studied the point
of her morocco shoe, while her cavalier, not without
detriment to his pumps and silk stockings, scrambled
up the red bank to the rosy flowers.
The honeysuckles did not grow upon
the main road, but upon a rough and narrow cross-country
track, little used except by horsemen pressed for
time. Now, clear through the still afternoon,
a sound of hoofs gave warning that riders were coming
down the steep and dangerous hill beyond the turn.
Unity looked up with interest, and Fairfax Cary paused
with his hand upon a coral bough. Suddenly there
was a change in the beat, then a frightened shout,
and a sound of rolling stones and a wild clatter of
hoofs. Unity sprang to her feet; Cary came down
the bank at a run, tossed her his armful of blossoms,
and was in the middle of the road in time to seize
by the bridle the riderless horse which came plunging
around the bend.
Fairfax Cary was strong, the black
horse not quite mad with terror, and the man mastered
the brute. “Whose is he?” he asked.
“If you will hold him he is quite
quiet now I will go see.”
A negro came panting around the turn.
“Gawd-a-moughty, marster! did you cotch dat
horse? You, Selim, I’s gwine lam’
you, I’s gwine teach you er lesson dancin’
roun’ on yo’ two foots ’cause
you sees er scrap of paper! R’arin’
an’ pitchin’ an’ flingin’ white
folks on er heap of stones! I’ll larn you!
Yo’ marster was a-dreamin’, or you’d
never th’owed him! You jes wait twel I
git you home! Marse Fairfax Cary, dis debbil
done th’owed my marster, an’ he lyin’
by de roadside, an’ I don’ know whether
he live or daid!”
“I know you now,” exclaimed
the younger Cary. “You’re Mr. Lewis
Rand’s servant. Hadn’t you better
stay here, Miss Dandridge, until I see what really
is the matter? Here, boy, stop chattering your
teeth! Your master’s not killed. Was
it at the top of the hill?”
“Halfway down, Marse Fairfax,
whar de footpath goes down through de papaw bushes.
Joab’ll show you.”
“I’m coming too,” said Miss Dandridge.
“I’ll lead Selim.”
Without more ado the four rounded
the bend of the road and began to climb the hill.
Halfway up, as Joab had stated, they found their man.
He lay beside the papaw bushes, among the loose stones,
and he lay very still. One arm was doubled under
him. His head was thrown back, and his brown
hair was matted with blood.
“Oh!” cried Unity pitifully,
and went down upon her knees beside the unfortunate.
Cary examined the cut in the head.
“Well, he’s not dead, but he’s had
a pretty fall! What’s to be done?
Joab ”
“Joab,” commanded Miss
Dandridge, “ride straight to Fontenoy and tell
Colonel Dick to send Big Jim and a couple of men with
the old litter! and then ride to Charlottesville
and bring Dr. Gilmer ”
“Are you going to take him to
Fontenoy?” asked the younger Cary.
“Why not?” flashed Miss
Dandridge. “Would you leave him to bleed
to death by the roadside? ‘My enemy’s
dog ’ and so forth. Hurry, Joab!”
The negro mounted his horse that had
been grazing by the papaw bushes, and was off at a
gallop, leaving Unity and Cary with the luckless rider.
Cary brought water from the brook that brawled at the
foot of the steep hillside, and Unity wet the brow
and lips of the unconscious man, but he had given
no sign of life when the relief party arrived from
Fontenoy. This consisted of four stout negroes
bearing the litter, and of Colonel Dick Churchill
and Mr. Ned Hunter.
“Tut, tut!” cried Colonel
Dick. “What’s this? what’s this?
Damn this place! My mare Nelly threw me here
thirty years ago! I was coming home from
a wedding. Senseless and cut across the head! and
I don’t like the way that arm’s bent. Ned
Hunter, you take Big Jim’s corner of the litter
for a minute. Now, Big Jim, you lift Mr. Rand. So!
we’ll have him at Fontenoy in a jiffy, and in
bed in the blue room. Run ahead, Unity, and tell
Jacqueline and Mammy Chloe to make ready. His
boy’s gone for Gilmer. Easy now, men!
Yes, ’twas at this very spot my mare Nelly threw
me! it was Maria Erskine’s wedding.”
The sun was low in the heavens when
the good Samaritans and the unconscious man arrived
at the foot of the wide, white-pillared Fontenoy porch.
The arrival had many witnesses; for on hearing of the
accident the large party assembled for the dancing
class had at once dropped all employment and flocked
to various coigns of vantage. A bevy of young
girls looked from one parlour window, and another framed
Mr. Pincornet’s face and wig and flowered coat.
In the hall and on the porch the elders gathered,
while on the broad porch steps young men in holiday
dress waited to see if they might be of help.
Around the corner of the house peered the house negroes,
pleasurably excited by any catastrophe and any procession,
even that of a wounded man borne on a litter.
The cortege arrived. In the midst
of much ejaculation, and accompanied by a fire of
directions from Colonel Dick, Lewis Rand was borne
up the steps and across the porch into the cool, wide
hail. Here the litter was met by Jacqueline Churchill.
She came down the shadowy staircase in a white gown,
with a salver and a glass in her hand. “The
room is ready, Uncle Dick,” she said, in a steady
voice. “The blue room. Aunt Nancy
says you must make him take this cordial. I have
lint and bandages all ready. This way, Big Jim.
Mind the wall!”
She turned and preceded the men up
the stair, along a hallway and into a pleasant chamber
hung with blue and white. “Turn down the
sheet, Mammy Chloe,” she directed a negro woman
standing beside the bed. “Quick! quick!
he is bleeding so.”
Rand was laid upon the bed, and as
the men drew their arms from beneath him, he moved
his head, and his lips parted. A moment later
he opened his eyes. Colonel Dick heaved a sigh
of relief. “He’ll do now! Gilmer
shall come and bleed him, and he’ll be out again
before you can say Jack Robinson! I’ll
have that place in the road mended to-morrow.
Yes, yes, Mr. Rand, you’ve had an accident.
Lie still! you’re with friends. Hey, what
did you say?”
Rand had said nothing articulate.
His eyes were upon Jacqueline, standing at the foot
of the bed. The room was in the western wing of
the house, and where she stood she was bathed in the
light of the sinking sun. It made her brown hair
golden and like a nimbus. Rand made a straying
motion with his hand. “I did not believe
in heaven,” he muttered. “If I have
erred ”
“Lie still, lie still!”
said Jacqueline. In a moment she turned, left
the room, and went downstairs. “He is better,”
she told her cousin Unity, who with Fairfax Cary was
waiting in the lower hall; then went on to the library,
opened the door, and closed it softly behind her.
The room was dim, and she thought
it vacant. There was an old leather chair which
she loved, which had always stood beside the glass
doors that gave upon the sunset, in whose worn depths
she had, as a child, told herself fairy tales, and
found escape from childish woes. She went straight
to it now, sank into its old arms, and pressed her
cheek against the cool leather. She closed her
eyes, and sat very still, and tried to ease the throbbing
of her heart. Some one coughed, and she looked
up to find her Uncle Edward regarding her from his
own favourite chair.
“I did not know you were there,”
she exclaimed. “I thought the room was
empty. What are you reading?”
“A Treatise on Hospitality,”
answered Major Churchill, with great dryness.
“I suppose Dick is making posset in his best
racing cup? How is the interesting patient?”
Jacqueline coloured. “Uncle Dick ”
“Uncle Dick,” interrupted
the Major, “is the best of fellows, but he is
not perspicacious. I am, and I say again, why
the deuce did this damned Republican get himself thrown
at our very gates? In my day a horse might act
a little gaily, but a man kept his seat!”
Jacqueline coloured more deeply.
“It was that bad place on the hill road.
I do not suppose that Mr. Rand is a poor horseman.”
“Who said that he was?”
demanded the Major testily. “A poor horseman!
He and his old wolf of a father used to break all
the colts for twenty miles round! That place
in the road! Pshaw! I’ve ridden by
that place in the road for forty years, but I never
had the indecency to be brought on a litter into a
gentleman’s house who was not of my way of thinking!
And every man and woman on the place barring
poor Nancy out to receive him! I am
not at home among fools, so I came here though
the Lord knows there’s many a fool to be found
in a library! Well, are any bones broken?”
“Dr. Gilmer will tell us oh, he looked
like death!”
“Who? William Gilmer?”
demanded Uncle Edward with asperity. “Your
pronoun ‘he’ stands for your antecedent
‘Gilmer.’ But what’s the English
tongue when we have a Jacobin in the house! Women
like strange animals, and they are vastly fond of
pitying. But you were always a home body, Jacqueline,
and left Unity to run after the sea lions and learned
pigs! And now you sit there as white as your
gown!”
Jacqueline smiled. “Perhaps
I am of those who pity. I hear a horse upon the
road! It may be Dr. Gilmer!” and up she
started.
“The horse has gone by,”
said Uncle Edward. “Gilmer cannot possibly
be here for an hour. Sit down, child, and don’t
waste your pity. The Rands are used to hard knocks.
I’ve seen old Gideon in the ring, black and
blue and blind with blood, demanding proof that he
was beaten. The gentleman upstairs will take
care of himself. Bah! Where is Ludwell
Cary this afternoon?”
“He rode, I think, to Charlottesville.”
“You think! Don’t you know? What
woman was ever straightforward!”
Major Churchill opened his book, looked
at it, and tossed it aside; took The Virginia Federalist
from the table, and for perhaps sixty seconds appeared
absorbed in its contents, then with a loud “Pshaw!”
threw it down, and rising walked to a bookcase.
“I am reading Swift,” he said, and brought
a calf-bound volume to the window. “There
was a man who knew hatred and the risus sardonicus!
Listen to this, Jacqueline.”
Major Churchill read well, and it
was his habit to read aloud to Jacqueline, whose habit
it was to listen. Now she sat before the window,
in the old leather chair, her slender face and form
in profile, and her eyes upon the sunset sky.
It was her accustomed attitude, and Uncle Edward read
on with growing satisfaction, finding that he was upon
a passage which gave Democracy its due. He turned
a page, then another, glanced from the book, and discovered
that his niece was not attending. “Jacqueline!”
Jacqueline withdrew her eyes from
the fading gold, and, turning in her chair, faced
her uncle with a faint smile. She loved him dearly,
and he loved her, and they had not many secrets from
each other. Now she looked at him with a wavering
light upon her face, shook her head as if in answer
to some dim question of her own, and broke into silent
weeping.
“Bless my soul!” cried
Uncle Edward, and started up in alarm. He had
a contemptuous horror of women’s tears; but
Jacqueline was different, Jacqueline was not like
other women. He could not remember having seen
Jacqueline cry since she was a child, and the sight
troubled him immensely. She wept as though she
were used to weeping. He crossed to the chair
by the window and touched her bowed head with his wrinkled
hand. “What is it, child?” he asked.
“Tell Uncle Edward.”
But Jacqueline, it appeared, had nothing
to tell. After a little she wiped her eyes, and
brokenly laughed at herself; and then, a sound coming
through the window, she started to her feet. “That
is Dr. Gilmer! I hear his horse at the gate.
Joab must have met him upon the road!”
“Joab?”
“Mr. Rand’s servant.”
“You appear,” said the
Major, “to know a deal more than I do about Mr.
Rand. Where did you learn so much?”
Jacqueline, halfway to the door, turned
upon him her candid eyes. “Don’t
you remember?” she answered, “the month
that I spent, summer before last, at Cousin Jane Selden’s,
on the Three-Notched Road? I saw Mr. Rand very
often that summer. Cousin Jane liked him, and
he was welcome at her house. And when I used
to stay there as a child I saw him then, and and
was sorry for him. Don’t you remember?
I told you at the time.”
“No, I don’t remember,”
replied Uncle Edward grimly. “I have other
things to think of than the Rands. There should
have been no association though I am surprised
at nothing which goes on beneath Jane Selden’s
roof. Jane Selden has a most erratic mind. Don’t
sympathize too much, Jacqueline, with that damned
young Republican upstairs! He’s an enemy.”
The Major walked to the window. “It is Gilmer,
sure enough, and ah, it is Ludwell Cary
with him, riding Prince Rupert. Come look, Jacqueline!”
Receiving no answer, he turned to
find that his niece had vanished and he was alone
in the library. Presently he heard from the hail,
through the half-open door, the doctor’s voice
and Ludwell Cary’s expressions of concern, Jacqueline’s
low replies, a confusion of other voices, and finally,
from the head of the stairs, Colonel Dick’s hearty
“Come up, Gilmer, come up! D’ye remember
that damned place in the hill road where my mare Nelly
threw me, coming home at dawn from Maria Erskine’s
wedding?”
Steps and voices died away. The
evening shadows lengthened, and filled the library
where Uncle Edward sat, propping his lean old chin
upon his lean old hand, and staring at a dim old clock
in the corner, as if it could tell him more than the
time of day. He heard Mr. Pincornet’s fiddle
from the long parlour in the other wing. Since
the doctor was come, the younger part of the gathering
at Fontenoy had cheerfully returned to its business.
The dancing class was not long neglected. Uncle
Edward disliked France, disliked even monarchical and
emigre France. And he disliked all music but
Jacqueline’s singing, and disliked the fiddle
because Thomas Jefferson played it. He half rose
to shut the door and so keep out Mr. Pincornet’s
Minuet from Ariadne, but reflected that the door would
also keep out the doctor’s descending voice and
final dicta delivered at the stair-foot. Uncle
Edward was as curious as a woman, and the door remained
ajar. He tried to read, but the words conveyed
no meaning to his mind, which became more and more
frowningly intent upon the fact of Jacqueline’s
weeping. What had the child to weep for?
He determined to send to Richmond to-morrow for a certain
watch which he had in his mind, plain gold
with J.C. upon it in pearls. He reflected with
satisfaction that Cary as well as Churchill began with
a C.
The glass door led by a flight of
steps down to the flower garden. Deb came up
the steps and into the library. “Kiss me
good-night, Uncle Edward. It’s mos’
seven o’clock. I’ve had my supper
at the Quarter with Aunt Daphne. The scarlet
beans over her door are in bloom, and Uncle Mingo
told me about the rabbit and the fox. Miranda
is going to put me to bed because Mammy Chloe is busy
in the blue room with the doctor and the man whose
horse threw him.”
Uncle Edward put his one arm around
the child and drew her close to his chair. Deb
touched with her brown fingers the sleeve that was
pinned across his coat. “Does your arm
that is buried at Yorktown hurt you to-day, Uncle
Edward? Tell me a story about General Washington.”
“No; you tell me a story.”
Deb considered. “I’ll
tell you a story about the man upstairs in the blue
room.”
“What do you know about the man in the blue
room?”
“Jacqueline told me. She
knows,” answered Deb. “I am going
to begin now, Uncle Edward.”
“I am listening,” said the Major.
“Once upon a time there lived
on the Three-Notched Road a boy, a poor boy.
He lived in a log house that was not so good as an
overseer’s house, and there were pine trees
all around it, and wild flowers, but no other kinds
of flowers. And in the trees there were owls,
and in the bushes there were whip-poor-wills, and
sometimes a mockingbird, but no other kinds of birds,
and at night the fireflies were all about. And
outside the pine trees, all around the house, the tobacco
grew and grew. It grew so broad and high that
the children might have played I-spy in it, only
there weren’t any children. There was only
the boy, and he hated tobacco. He was poor, and
his father was a hard man. He had no time to
play or to learn he worked all day in the
fields like a hand. He had to work like the men
at the lower Quarter, like Domingo and Cato and Indian
Jim. He worked all the time. I never saw
the sun get up, but he saw it every day. In the
long afternoons when it was hot, and we make the rooms
cool and dark, and rest with a book, he was working,
working like a friendless slave. And at night,
when the moon rises, and we sit and watch it, and
wonder, and remember all the battles that were ever
won and lost, and all the songs that ever were sung,
he could only stumble to his own poor corner, and
sleep, and sleep, with a hot and heavy heart, and
the blisters on his poor, poor hands!”
Major Churchill sank back in his chair
and stared at his niece. “Good God, child!
whose words are you using?”
“Jacqueline’s,”
answered Deb, staring in her turn. “Jacqueline
told it to me just that way, one hot night when I
could not sleep, and there was heat lightning, and
she took me in her lap and we sat by the window.
Are you tired, Uncle Edward? Does your arm hurt?
Suppose I finish the story to-morrow?”
“No, I’m not tired,” said Uncle
Edward. “Finish it now.”
“The boy,” went on Deb,
using now her own and now Jacqueline’s remembered
words, “the boy did not want to work
all his life long in the tobacco-fields, working from
morning to night, with his hands, at the thing he
hated. He wanted books, he wanted to learn, and
to work with his mind in the world beyond the Three-Notched
Road. The older he grew the more he wanted it.
And Jacqueline said that the mind finds a way, and
that the boy got books together, and he studied hard.
You see, Jacqueline knows, for when she was a little
girl, she used to stay sometimes with Cousin Jane
Selden on the Three-Notched Road. And Cousin
Jane Selden’s farm was next to where the boy
lived. There was just a little stream between
them. There were no children at Cousin Jane Selden’s,
and Jacqueline was lonely. And she used to sit
under the apple tree on the bank of the little stream
and send chip boats down it, just as Miranda and I
do. Only she didn’t have Miranda, and she
was all by herself. And she could see the boy
working on the other side of the stream, and there
wasn’t any shade in the tobacco-field, and Jacqueline
was so sorry for him. And one day he came down
to the stream for water and they talked to each other.
And Jacqueline told Cousin Jane Selden, and Cousin
Jane Selden did not mind. She said she was sorry
for the boy, and that she had given his father a piece
of her mind, only he wouldn’t take
it. So Jacqueline used to see the boy often and
often, for she always played under the apple tree
by the stream, and he had a little time to rest every
day at noon, and he would come down to the shade on
his side of the stream, and Jacqueline told him all
about Fontenoy. And he told Jacqueline what he
was going to do when he was a man, and he asked her
if she had ever read Cæsar, and she had not, and he
told her all about it. And Jacqueline told him
fairy tales, but he said they were not true, and that
a harp could not sing by itself, nor a hen lay golden
eggs, nor a beanstalk grow a mile. He said he
did not like lies, which wasn’t very
polite. He was older, you see, than Jacqueline,
ever so much older. But she knew how to dance,
and she was taking music lessons, and so she seemed
older, and he liked Jacqueline very much. What
is the matter, Uncle Edward?”
“Nothing. Go on, child.”
“Then the summer was over, and
Jacqueline came back to Fontenoy. But the next
summer, when she went to Cousin Jane Selden’s,
there was the boy working in the tobacco on the other
side of the stream. And Jacqueline called to
him from under the apple tree. And then the month
that she was to stay with Cousin Jane Selden went
by, and she came back to Fontenoy. And the next
summer she didn’t go to the Three-Notched Road,
but one day the boy came to Fontenoy.”
“Ah!” said the Major.
“The boy’s father sent
him to pay some money that he owed to Uncle Dick.
Jacqueline says his father was an honest man, though
he was so unkind. And Uncle Dick sent for Jacqueline
and said, ’Jacqueline, this is young Lewis Rand.
Take him and show him the garden while I write this
receipt!’ So Jacqueline and the boy went into
the flower garden, and she showed him the roses and
the peacock and the sundial. And then he went
away, and she didn’t see him any more for years
and years, not till she was grown, and everything
was changed. And and that is the end
of the story. But the boy’s name was Lewis
Rand, and the man’s name, up in the blue room,
is Mr. Lewis Rand, and I heard Mr. Fairfax Cary say
that Lewis Rand was the Devil, but Jacqueline
wouldn’t have liked the Devil, would she, Uncle
Edward?”
“No, child, no, no!” exclaimed
Uncle Edward, with violence. He rose so suddenly
from his chair, and he looked so grim and grey, that
Deb was almost frightened.
“Didn’t you like the story,
Uncle Edward? I did like it so much when Jacqueline
told it to me only she would never tell
it to me again.”
“Yes, yes, I liked it, honey.
Don’t I like all your stories? But I don’t
like Mr. Rand.”
“Will he stay always upstairs in the blue room?”
“The Lord forbid!” cried Major Churchill.
The door opened wide, and Mr. Ned
Hunter put in an important face. “Are you
there, Major? Here’s the devil to pay.
Rand’s arm is broken and his ankle wrenched
and his head cut open! The doctor says he mustn’t
be moved for at least a fortnight. I thought
you’d like to know.” He was gone
to spread the news.
Major Churchill stood still for a
moment, then turned to the table, placed with deliberation
a marker between the leaves of Swift, took up the
volume, and restored it to its proper shelf.
“It is getting dark I
must go to bed,” said Deb. “Uncle
Edward, who pays the devil?”
“His hosts, child,” answered
Uncle Edward, looking very grim and very old.