What She Could - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"You do not know how to make them."
"Aunt Erminia told me. But I shall want your help, Tilly, for the fish has to be carefully picked all to pieces; and if we leave a bit as big as a sixpence, there'll be a row."
"But the fish isn't soaked, Maria."
"It is in hot water on the stove now. It will be done by morning."
Matilda sighed again deeply, and knelt down before the table where her Bible was open. "Buying up opportunities" floated through her head; with "works, and love, and service, and faith, and patience, and works"* [*Alford's translation.]--"Christ pleased not Himself"--and the little girl's head went down upon the open page. How much love she must have, to meet all the needs for it! to do all the works, have all the patience, buy up all the opportunities! Tilly's one prayer was that she might be full of love, first to G.o.d and then to everybody.
Such prayers are apt to be answered; and the next morning saw her go through all the details of its affairs with a quiet patience and readiness which must have had a deep spring somewhere. She helped Maria in the tedious picking out of the fish; she roasted her cheeks in frying the b.a.l.l.s, while her sister was making porridge; she attended to the coffee; and she met her aunt and cousin at breakfast with an unruffled quiet sweetness of temper. It was just the drop of oil needed to keep things going smoothly; for Maria was tired and out of humour, and Mrs. Candy disposed to be ill-pleased with both the girls for their being out at the Band meeting. She did not approve of the whole thing, she said. However, the suns.h.i.+ne scattered the clouds away. And when, after a busy morning and a pretty well got-up dinner, Matilda asked leave to go out and take a walk, she had her reward. Mrs. Candy gave permission.
"Won't you come too, Maria?" she asked, when they went to their own room.
"There's no fun in walking," Maria answered, disconsolately.
"I am going to Lilac Lane."
"I hope you don't think there is any fun in _that_."
"But, Maria!----"
"Well, what?"
"I think there is something a great deal better than fun."
"You may have it all then, for me."
"Maria," said her little sister, gently, "I wish you wouldn't mind.
Mamma will get well by and by, and this will be all over; and we are getting along so nicely. Aunt Candy was quite pleased with the dinner."
"There's another dinner to get to-morrow," said Maria; "and I don't know what you mean by this being 'all over' when mamma gets well. What difference will her getting well make? She will help, to be sure; but we should have the same things to do--just the same."
Matilda had not reckoned on that, for she looked sober a minute or two.
"Well, Maria," she said then, clearing up, "I don't care. If Jesus has given us this to do, you know, I _like_ to do it; because He has given it to us to do."
Maria turned away impatiently.
"Maria," said her little sister, drawing nearer and speaking solemnly, "do you intend to ask Mr. Richmond to baptize you the next time he has the baptismal service?"
"If I do," said Maria, "_you_ need not trouble yourself about it."
And Matilda thought she had better let the subject and her sister both alone for the present. She had got herself ready, and now taking her Bible she went out. It was but a little way to the corner. There she turned in the opposite direction from the one which would have taken her to church, and crossed the main street. In that direction, farther on, lay the way to Lilac Lane; but at the other corner of the street Matilda found an interruption. Somebody stopped her, whom she knew the next instant to be Norton Laval.
"Why, it is Matilda Englefield!" he said. "You are just the one I want to see."
"Am I?" said Matilda.
"I should think so. Come along; our house lies that way; don't you recollect?"
"Oh, but I am not going that way now," said Matilda.
"Oh yes, but you are! Mamma says contradicting is very rude, but I can't help it sometimes. Can you help it, Matilda?"
"People ought to be contradicted sometimes," Matilda said, with an arch bridling of her head, which, to be sure, the child was quite unconscious of.
"Not I," said Norton. "Come!"
"Oh, but I cannot, Norton. I wish I could. Not this time."
"Where are you going?"
"Up that way."
"n.o.body lives up that way."
"n.o.body? Just look at the houses."
"n.o.body lives in those houses," said Norton.
"Oh, very well; then I am going to see n.o.body."
"No, Matilda; you are coming to see mamma. And I have something to show you; a new beautiful game, which mamma has got for me; we are going to play it on the lawn, when the gra.s.s is in order, by and by; and I want you to come and see it now, and learn how to play. Come, Matilda, I want to show it to you."
Matilda hesitated. It did not seem very easy to get rid of Norton; but what would become of the poor people in Lilac Lane? Would another time do for them? Here was Norton waiting for her; and a little play would be so pleasant. As she stood irresolute, Norton, putting his arm round her affectionately, and applying a little good-humoured force, gave her shoulders without much difficulty the turn he wished them to take. The two began to move down the street towards Norton's home. But as soon as this was done, Matilda began to have qualms about her dress. Norton was in a brown suit that fitted him, fresh and handsome; his cap sat jauntily on his thick, wavy hair; he was nice from head to foot. And Matilda had come out in the home dress she had worn while she and Maria had been was.h.i.+ng up the dinner dittoes. Looking down she could see a little wet spot on the skirt now. That would dry. But then her boots were her everyday boots, and they were a little rusty; and she had on her common school hat. The only thing new and bright about her was her Bible under her arm. As her eye fell upon it, so did her companion's eye.
"What book have you got there?" he asked, and then put out his hand to take it. "A Bible! Where were you going with this, Matilda?"
"It is my Bible," said the little girl.
"Yes; but you do not take your Bible out to walk with you, do you, as babies do their dolls?"
"Of course not."
"Then what for, Matilda?"
"Business."
"What sort of business?"
"Why do you want to know, Norton? It was private business."
"I like that," said Norton. "Why do I want to know? Because you are Matilda Englefield, and I like to know all about you."
"You do not know much yet," said Matilda, looking with a pleased look, however, up into her companion's face. It was smiling at her, with a complacent look to match.
"I shan't know _much_ when I know all," he said. "How old are you? You can't make much history in ten years."
"No, not much," said Matilda. "But still--it may not be history to other people, but I think it is to one's self."