A STOLEN TREASURE
When Ermengarde left the room, Susy
looked round her. She was a thoroughly comfortable
young person; her nature had plenty of daring in it,
and she was not prone to timidity. She was not
much afraid of being caught, and she did not feel
at all inclined to hurry out of the governess’s
room.
Susy was one of those unfortunate
little mortals whose pretty face, instead of bringing
with it a blessing, as all beauty ought, had quite
the reverse effect upon her. It made her discontented.
Like many other foolish little maids, she longed to
have been born in a higher station than Providence
intended; she longed to be rich and a lady.
Susy was an only child, and her mother,
who had once been a lady’s-maid, always dressed
her neatly and with taste. Susy spoke with a
more refined accent than most children of her class;
her dress, too, was better than theirs; she thought
a very little would make her what she most desired
to be, a lady. And when Ermengarde began to take
notice of her, she felt that her ambition was all but
fulfilled.
Ermie had often met Susy in the grounds,
and, attracted by her beautiful little face, had talked
to her, and filled the poor child with conceit.
Mr. Wilton had once seen Ermengarde and Susy chatting
in a very confidential manner together. He at
once separated the children, told Ermie she was not
to make a friend of Susan Collins, and told Susan
Collins that she was to mind her place, and go back
to her mother. These instructions he further
reiterated to Miss Nelson and to Susan’s father.
The children were forbidden to speak, and Ermengarde,
proud, rebellious, without any real sense of right
or honor, instantly contrived to evade her father’s
commands, and saw more of Susy than ever.
Not until to-day, however, had Susan
Collins been inside Wilton Chase. Over and over
she had longed to see the interior of what her mother
was pleased to call the ‘noble pile.’
But not until to-day had this longing been gratified.
In a most unexpected way she at last found herself
at the Chase. She had enjoyed a good dinner there.
That dinner had been followed by nearly an hour of
great misery and terror. Still, she had been
there, and she reflected with pride that, in consequence,
she could now hold up her head higher than ever.
She was certainly not in a hurry to
go away. Miss Nelson’s room seemed a magnificent
apartment to Susy. She was sure no one could come
into it at present, and she walked round and round
it now, examining its many treasures with a critical
and somewhat envious spirit.
Once again, in the course of her wanderings,
she came opposite the picture of the old-fashioned
child-the child whose hair was curled in
primitive and stiff ringlets, whose blue eyes looked
out at the world with a somewhat meaningless stare,
and whose impossible and rosy lips were pursed up
in an inane smile.
Susy gazed long at this old-world
portrait. It was set in a deep frame of blue
enamel, and inside the frame was a gold rim. Susy
said to herself that the picture, old-fashioned though
it was, had a very genteel appearance. Then she
began to fancy that the blue eyes and the lips of
the child resembled her own. She pursed up her
cherub mouth in imitation of the old-world lady.
She smiled into the pictured eyes of the child of
long ago.
In short Susy became fascinated by
the miniature; she longed to possess it. With
the longing came the temptation. Why should she
not take it? The theft, if it could be called
by such an ugly name, could never be traced to her.
Not a soul in the place would ever know that she had
been shut up in Miss Nelson’s room. Only
Ermengarde would know, and Ermie would not dare to
tell.
Susy looked and longed and coveted.
She thought of the pleasure this picture would give
her in her own little attic-room at home. How
she would gaze at it, and compare her face with the
face of the old-fashioned child. Susy hated Miss
Nelson, and if that good lady valued the picture,
she would be only the more anxious to deprive her
of it.
Miss Nelson had often and often snubbed
Susy; she had also been cruel to Ermengarde.
Susy could avenge Ermie as well as herself, if she
took away the miniature.
Susan was not the child long to withstand
any sudden keen desire. She stretched up her
hand, lifted the little miniature from its hook on
the wall, and slipped it into the pocket of her pink
frock.
Its place looked empty and deserted.
Susy did not want its loss to be discovered too soon.
She looked around her, saw another miniature on the
mantelpiece; without waiting even to look at it, she
hung it in the place where the child’s picture
had been, and then, well pleased, turned to go.
First of all, however, she performed an action which
she thought particularly clever and praiseworthy.
Poor Ermengarde had left the cupboard
open when she rushed from the room, but Susy took
the precaution to lock it, and taking out the key,
threw it carelessly on the floor behind a chair.
Then, satisfied that she had done her best both for
Ermie and herself, she left Miss Nelson’s room,
running fearlessly down the now deserted back-stairs,
and out into the courtyard.
She went round to the laurel bush
behind which she had concealed her basket of eggs,
picked it up, delivered its contents to the cook, and
ran home singing a gay song.
Her mother remarked on Susy’s
long absence, but when the little girl said she had
been tempted to linger in the meadows, Mrs. Collins
did not question her any further. She hastened
to prepare an extra good tea for her darling, for
of course Susy’s dinner with Ermengarde could
not be mentioned.
Meanwhile all went merrily in the
hay-field. Eric excelled himself in his rare
power of story-telling. Basil and Ermie sat side
by side, and whispered together. Miss Nelson
had seldom seen a softer look on her elder pupil’s
face than now. She determined that Basil and his
sister should be together as much as possible during
the holidays.
Presently the little ones went home,
and by and by the elder children followed their example.
Miss Nelson saw that Marjorie was tired-that
Ermie, too, looked pale-and she made them
both go to bed early.
It was rather late when the governess
returned to the schoolroom. She only went there
to fetch one of her pupils’ exercise-books, but
seeing Basil reading on one of the sofas, she stopped
to talk to him. She was a very direct person,
and in conversation she always went straight to the
point.
“It is a great comfort to me
to have you at home, Basil,” she said.
Basil looked up at her. Then
he dropped his book and started to his feet.
“Won’t you sit down?” he said politely.
“No, I am going into my own
room directly. I repeat that I am glad you are
at home, Basil. There was a talk of your going
north instead, was there not?”
“Yes. Uncle Charlie wanted me to fish with
him.”
“It is on Ermengarde’s account that I
am glad,” pursued the governess.
Basil nodded.
“I came back on account of Ermie,”
he said. Then he colored, and added quickly,
“But I like being at home best.”
“Yes, my dear boy, I understand.
You are unselfish. You and Marjorie are remarkably
unselfish. Basil, you have a great influence over
your eldest sister; oh yes, I can see. In many
respects Ermengarde is a difficult child; I want you
to use your influence well, and-Will
you come into my room, Basil?”
Basil picked up his book. Of
course he would go. He did not want to; he thought
it was rather fudge talking about his influence; and
as to his being unselfish, he liked his own way as
well as any one else. Had he not almost blubbered
about not going to Scotland, and although he had thought
of Ermie, still he had given up his desires with a
pang. He hated Miss Nelson to think better of
him than he deserved, but he did not know how to explain
himself, and he followed her in rather a limp fashion
into her private sitting-room.
“By Jove!” he exclaimed,
when he got there, “what a tiny room! Do
they put you off with this? Oh, I say, I call
it a shame!”
Miss Nelson loved her private sitting-room,
and hated to hear it abused. She also particularly
disliked the expression with which Basil had commenced
his speech.
“I don’t wish to interfere,
my dear boy, but those words-you will excuse
me-I am shocked.”
“Do you mean ’by Jove’?”
“Yes; don’t repeat the
expression. It sounds like a calling upon false
gods.”
“Oh, I say, all our fellows do it.”
“Does that make it right?”
Basil fidgeted, and wished himself back in the schoolroom.
“You were going to speak about Ermie,”
he said.
Miss Nelson seated herself by the
open window. It was a warm and very beautiful
summer’s night. A gentle breeze came in,
and fanned the governess’s tired brow.
“What about Ermie?” said
Basil. He wanted to get back to his book, and
to the unrestraint of the dear old schoolroom.
“I think you have a good influence
over Ermengarde,” said Miss Nelson, raising
her face to his.
“Yes, yes,” he answered
impatiently; “more than one person has said
that to me. I have a good influence, but why should
I have a good influence? I mean, why is it necessary?
Ermie isn’t worse than other people. It
sounds as if you were all abusing her when you talk
of my good influence. I hate humbug. I’m
no better than other fellows. I’m fond
of Ermie I suppose, and that’s about the beginning
and end of my influence.”
“Exactly,” said Miss Nelson.
She was not listening to all the boy’s words.
Her thoughts were far away.
“Ermie is difficult,”
she began. Then she stopped and uttered an exclamation.
“Look, Basil, is that a key at your feet?”
Basil stooped, and picked up the key of Miss Nelson’s
cupboard.
“Put it in the lock of the cupboard
behind you, my boy. I am glad it is found-truly
glad. I thought I could not have put it away.
And yet Ermengarde seemed so sure that it was not
in the lock when she was in the room.”
“Oh, it fell out, I suppose,”
said Basil. He was not interested in the key,
and he stood up now, prepared to go.
“Those photographs I spoke about
are in the cupboard, Basil. I could not bring
them to you because I could not find the key.
Would you like to see them now?”
“Thanks,” said Basil.
“Perhaps, if you don’t mind, I had better
look at them by daylight.”
When Basil said this, Miss Nelson
also stood up. He looked at her, being quite
sure now she would wish him good-night and let him
go. Her eyes had a peculiar, terrified, staring
expression. She rushed to the mantelpiece; then
she turned and grasped the boy’s arm.
“Basil,” she said, “the picture
is gone!”
“What picture?” he asked.
He was really frightened at the anguished expression
in Miss Nelson’s matter-of-fact face.
“Mine,” she answered,
clasping his hand tighter. “My treasure,
the picture of my-” here
she broke off. “It is gone, Basil-see,
and another put in its place! My miniature is
gone! it has been stolen!”
“No, no,” said Basil.
“It couldn’t have been. People don’t
steal pictures at the Chase. There are no thieves.
Let me look for it for you.”
“My miniature-my
portrait. I don’t speak of it-I
can’t!” Her voice shook. “No,
no; it is gone. You see, Basil, it always hung
here, and now another has been put on the same hook.
That shows that the deed was intentional; the miniature
is stolen!”
She sat down and clasped her hands
over her face; her thin long fingers trembled.
“I’m awfully sorry for
you,” said Basil. He could not understand
such emotion over any mere picture, but he had the
kindest of hearts, and distress of any sort always
moved him.
“I’m awfully sorry,” he repeated.
Miss Nelson looked up at his tone.
“Basil,” she said, “when
you have very few things to love, you value the few
intensely. I did-I do. You don’t
know, my boy, what it is to be a lonely woman.
May you never understand my feelings. The miniature
is gone; it was stolen, purposely.”
“Oh, we’ll find the thief,”
said Basil. “If you are sure the picture
was taken, we’ll make no end of a fuss, and my
father will help. Of course you must not lose
anything you value in this house. You shall have
it back; we’ll all see to that.”
“Thank you, Basil; I’m sure you’ll
do your best.”
Miss Nelson’s face looked as unhappy as ever.
“You must try and cheer up,
Miss Nelson,” said the school-boy. “You
shall have your picture, that I promise you.”
Miss Nelson was silent for a minute.
“Perhaps I shall get it back,”
she said after a pause. “But it won’t
be the same to me again. No, nothing can be the
same. I’ve got a shock. Basil, I have
worked for you all. When your mother died, I
came-I came at her request. A more
brilliant governess could have taught your sisters,
but I can truly say no one more conscientious could
have ministered to them, and no one on the whole could
have loved them more faithfully. I have, however,
been misunderstood. Only one of your sisters
has responded to me. Marjorie has been sweet and
true and good; the others-not that I blame
little Lucy much-a child is always led
by her elders-but-
“What does all this mean?”
said Basil, almost sternly. He knit his brows.
He felt that he was going to be somebody’s champion,
and there was fight in his voice.
“This is what it means, Basil,”
said Miss Nelson. “I am sorry to pain you,
but I believe Ermengarde has taken my miniature.”
“Ermie a thief? What do
you mean? She’s my sister-she’s
a Wilton! How can you say that sort of thing,
Miss Nelson? No wonder poor Ermie does not quite
get on with you.”
“She never gets on with me,
Basil. She is disobedient, she is unresponsive.
I have taken more pains for her than for the others.
To-day I was obliged to punish her for two offenses
of a very grave character. She took my miniature
out of revenge; I am sure of it.”
“No, I am certain you are mistaken.
You have no right to accuse her like this.”
“I wish I could think I was
mistaken, Basil, but all circumstances point to the
fact that Ermengarde in revenge took away my portrait.
I locked her into this room as a punishment, as a
severe punishment for a most grave offense. She
was very angry and very defiant. The picture
was in its usual place when I locked her into the room.
She spent the greater part of the day here. When
I come here to-night the portrait has been exchanged
for another.”
“Yes; your room has been empty
for hours. Some one else has come in and done
the thing, if indeed it has been done at all.”
“What do you mean? The picture is gone!”
“The housemaid may have been dusting, and put
another in its place.”
“No, Basil, the housemaid would
not touch my private possessions; I dust them and
arrange them myself. I dusted my miniature only
this morning, and this white rosebud and maidenhair
I placed under it. I always put fresh flowers
under my portrait; I did so to-day as usual.
No, as you say, there are no thieves at Wilton Chase.
Ermie has taken the miniature out of revenge.
She knew I valued it.”
“You are mistaken,” said Basil, “and
I think you are cruel!”
He left the room in a great rage.