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and set that in order due upon its appropriate bed of coals.
"La sakes! Governor!" said Karen, in a sort of fond admiration, -- "ha'n't you forgot nothin'?"
"Now Karen," said Winthrop, when she had covered the bottom of the hot iron with her thin cakes, -- "you set the table and I'll take care of 'em."
"There's the knife, then," said Karen. "Will ye know when to turn them? There ain't fire enough to bake 'em by the blaze."
"I've not forgotten so much," said Winthrop. "Let's have a cup and saucer and plate, Karen."
"Ye sha'n't have _one_," said Karen, casting another inquisitive and doubtful glance towards the silent, pale, fixed figure sitting in the middle of her kitchen. He did have one, however, before she had got the two ready; despatched Karen from the table for sugar and cream; and then poured out himself a cup of his own preparation, and set it on Karen's half-spread table, and came to Elizabeth. He did not ask her if she would have it, nor say anything in fact; but gently raising her with one hand, he brought forward her chair with the other, and placed both where he wanted them to be, in the close neighbourhood of the steaming coffee. Once before, Elizabeth had known him take the same sort of superintending care of her, when she was in no condition to take care of herself. It was inexpressibly soothing; and yet she felt as if she could have knelt down on the floor, and given forth her very life in tears. She looked at the coffee with a motionless face, till his hand held it out to her. Not to drink it was impossible, though she was scarcely conscious of swallowing anything but tears. When she took the cup from her lips, she found an egg, hot out of the water, on her plate, which was already supplied also with b.u.t.ter. Her provider was just adding one of the cakes he had been baking.
"I can't eat!" said Elizabeth, looking up.
"You must, --" Winthrop answered.
In the same tone in which he had been acting. Elizabeth obeyed it as involuntarily.
"Who is the lady, Governor?" Karen ventured, when she had possessed herself of the cake-knife, and had got Winthrop fairly seated at _his_ breakfast.
"This lady is the mistress of the place, Karen."
"The mistress! Ain't you the master?" -- Karen inquired instantly.
"No. I have no right here any longer, Karen."
"I heered it was selled, but I didn't rightly believe it," the old woman said sadly. "And the mistress 'll be turning _me_ away now?"
"Tell her no," whispered Elizabeth.
"I believe not, Karen, unless you wish it."
"What should I wish it for? I've been here ever since I come with Mis' Landholm, when she come first, and she left me here; and I want to stay here, in her old place, till I'm called to be with her again. D'ye think it'll be long, Governor?"
"Are you in haste, Karen?"
"I don't want fur to stay" said the old woman. "She's gone, and I can't take care o' you no longer, nor no one. I'd like to be gone, too -- yes, I would."
"You have work to do yet, Karen. You may take as good care as you can of this lady."
Again Karen looked curiously and suspiciously at her, for a minute in silence.
"Is she one of the Lord's people?" she asked suddenly.
Elizabeth looked up on the instant, in utter astonishment at the question; first at Karen and then at Winthrop. The next thing was a back-sweeping tide of feeling, which made her drop her bread and her cup from her hands, and hide her face in them with a bitter burst of tears. Winthrop looked concerned, and Karen confounded. But she presently repeated her question in a half whisper at Winthrop.
"Is she? --"
"There is more company coming, Karen, for you to take care of," he said quietly. "I hope you have cakes enough. Miss Haye -- I see the boat-load has arrived -- will you go into the other room?"
She rose, and not seeing where she went, let him lead her. The front part of the house was unfurnished; but to the little square pa.s.sage-way where the open door let in the breeze from the river, Winthrop brought a chair, and there she sat down.
He left her there and went back to see to the other members of the party, and as she guessed to keep them from intruding upon her. She was long alone.
The fresh sweet air blew in upon her hot face and hands, reminding her what sort of a world it came from; and after the first few violent bursts of pain, Elizabeth presently raised her head to look out and see, in a sort of dogged willingness to take the contrast which she knew was there. The soft fair hilly outlines she remembered, in the same August light; -- the bright bend of the river -- a sloop sail or two pus.h.i.+ng lazily up; -- the same blue of a summer morning overhead; -- the little green lawn immediately at her feet, and the everlasting cedars, with their pointed tops and their hues of patient sobriety -- all stood nearly as she had left them, how many years before. And herself -- Elizabeth felt as if she could have laid herself down on the doorstep and died, for mere heart-heaviness. In this bright sunny world, what had she to do? The sun had gone out of her heart. What was to become of her? What miserable part should she play, all alone by herself? She despised herself for having eaten breakfast that morning. What business had she to eat, or to have any appet.i.te to eat, when she felt so? But Winthrop had made her do it.
What for? Why should he? It was mere aggravation, to take care of her for a day, and then throw her off for ever to take care of herself. How soon would he do that? --
She was musing, her eyes on the ground; and had quite forgotten the sunny landscape before her with all its gentle suggestions; when Winthrop's voice sounded pleasantly in her ear, asking if she felt better. Elizabeth looked up.
"I was thinking," she said, "that if there were nothing better to be had in another world, I could almost find it in my heart to wish I had never been born into this!"
She expected that he would make some answer to her, but he did not. He was quite silent; and Elizabeth presently began to question with herself whether she had said something dreadful.
She was busily taking up her own words, since he had not saved her the trouble. She found herself growing very much ashamed of them.
"I suppose that was a foolish speech," she said, after a few moments of perfect silence, -- "a speech of impatience."
But Winthrop neither endorsed nor denied her opinion; he said nothing about it; and Elizabeth was exceedingly mortified.
"If you wanted to rebuke me," she thought, "you could not have done it better. I suppose there is no rebuke so sharp as that one is obliged to administer to oneself. And your cool keeping silence is about as effectual a way of telling me that you have no interest in my concerns as even you could have devised."
Elizabeth's eyes must have swallowed the landscape whole, for they certainly took in no distinct part of it.
"How are you going to make yourself comfortable here?" said Winthrop presently; -- "these rooms are unfurnished."
She might have said that she did not expect to be comfortable anywhere; but she swallowed that too.
"I will go and see what I can do in the way of getting some furniture together," he went on. "I hope you will be able to find some way of taking rest in the mean time -- though I confess I do not see how."
"Pray do not!" said Elizabeth starting up, and her whole manner and expression changing. "I am sure you are tired to death now."
"Not at all. I slept last night."
"How much? Pray do not go looking after anything! You will trouble me very much."
"I should be sorry to do that."
"I can get all the rest I want."
"Where?"
"On the rocks -- on the gra.s.s."
"Might do for a little while," said Winthrop; -- "I hope it will; but I must try for something better."
"Where can you find anything -- in this region?"
"I don't know," said he; "but it must be found. If not in this region, in some other."
"To-morrow, Mr. Landholm."
"To-morrow -- has its own work," said he; and went.