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"By what chain of reasoning, Miss Faith?"
"I know by the sound of your voice. And you eat nothing to-day. Do you like cocoa, Mr. Linden?" she added eagerly.
He smiled a little and answered yes.
"Then I shall bring you some!"
Faith stayed for no answer to that remark, but ran off. Half an hour good had pa.s.sed away, but very few minutes more, when her soft tap was heard at the door again and herself entered, accompanied with the cup of cocoa and a plate of dainty tiny strips of toast.
"Aunt Dilly left some here," she said as she presented the cup,--"and she says it is good; and she shewed me how to make it. Aunt Dilly has lived all her life with a brother who has lived a great part of _his_ life with a French wife--so Aunt Dilly has learned some of her ways--and this is one of them."
But Mr. Linden looked as if he thought 'the way' belonged emphatically to somebody else.
"And so I am under the rule of the blue ribbands still!" he said as he raised himself up to do honour to the cup of cocoa. "Miss Faith, do you know you are subjecting yourself to the penalty of extra lessons?"
"How, Mr. Linden?"
"Don't you know that is one of the punishments for bad conduct? It's a great act of insubordination to bring one cocoa without leave."
She laughed, and then paid her attentions to the fire again; after which she stood by the hearth to see the cocoa disposed of, till she came to take the cup.
"Are you in pain, much, Mr. Linden?" she asked as she did this.
"Not mental--" he said with a smile; "and the physical can be borne Miss Faith, that cocoa was certainly better than I ever had from the hands of anybody's French wife. You must have improved upon the receipt."
"When Dr. Harrison comes for me this evening, shall he come up and see you again?"
"If he wishes--there is no need else."
"How did it happen, Mr. Linden?" she said with a very serious face.
"On this wise, Miss Faith. I, walking home at a rather quick pace, was suddenly 'brought to' as the sailors say, by this shot in my arm. But as for the moment it affected the mind more than the body, I turned and gave chase,--wis.h.i.+ng to enquire who had thus favoured me, and why. But the mind alone can only carry one a certain distance, and before I had caught my man I found myself in such danger of fainting that I turned about again, and made the best of my way to the house of Mr. Simlins.
The rest you know."
"What did the man run for?"
"There is no thread in my nature that just answers that question," said Mr. Linden. "I _suppose_ he ran because he was frightened."
"But what should have frightened him?"
"The idea of my displeasure probably," said Mr. Linden smiling. "Have you forgotten my character for cruelty, Miss Faith?"
"_But_--" said Faith. "Why should he think he had displeased you? He wasn't near you, was he?"
"Why I am not supposed to be one of those amiable people who like to be shot," said Mr. Linden in the same tone.
"But how near was he, Mr. Linden?"
"Within gunshot range, of course--the precise distance is not easily measured at such a moment."
"But if he was not near," said Faith, "how could he think that his shot had touched you? He couldn't see it--and your running wouldn't seem like a man seriously injured?"
"He might think I disapproved of discharging a gun at random, in the public road."
"You don't suppose it could have been done on purpose, Mr. Linden!" she said in a changed awe-stricken tone.
"I have no right to a.s.sume anything of the kind--there are all sorts of so-called accidents. But Miss Faith! if you look so frightened I shall begin to think you are an accomplice! What do _you_ know about it?" he added smiling.
"Nothing--" she said rather sadly, "except a little look of something, I don't know what, in your face when you said that, Mr. Linden."
"You must not look grave--nor think twice about the matter in any way,"
he said with a sort of kind gravity that met hers. "Is there light enough for you to read that first chapter of Physical Geography, and talk to me about it?--it is your turn to talk now."
"Do you mean, aloud?--or to myself, Mr. Linden?" she asked a little timidly,
"I mean, to me."
Faith did not object, though her colour rose very visibly. She placed herself to catch the fading light, and read on, talking where it was absolutely necessary, but sparing and placing her questions so as to call forth as few words as possible in reply. And becoming engaged in the interest of the matter she almost forgot her timidity;--not quite, for every now and then something made it rise to the surface. The daylight was fading fast, sunlight had already gone, and the wood fire began to throw its red gleams unchecked; flas.h.i.+ng fitfully into the corners of the room and playing hide and seek with the shadows. A little rising of the wind and light flutter of the leaves against the gla.s.s, only made the warm room more cheerful. Faith made the fire burn brightly, and finished the chapter by that, with the glow of the flickering flame dancing all over her and her book in the corner where she sat. But pages of pleasure as well as of prettiness, all those pages were.
"Thank you, Miss Faith," Mr. Linden said as she closed the book. "I only wish I could give you a walk now in this bright evening air; but I must wait for that."
A little tap at the door came at this point to take its place in the conversation. It was Mrs. Derrick.
"Child," said the good lady, "here's Dr. Harrison down stairs." And stepping into the room, Mrs. Derrick walked softly up to the couch, and not only made enquiries but felt of Mr. Linden's hand to see if he had any fever. Faith waited, standing a little behind the couch head.
"I'm not quite sure--" she said,--"your hand's a little warm, sir--but then it's apt to be towards night,--and maybe mine's a little cool. If you could only go to sleep, it would do you so much good!"
And Mr. Linden laughingly promised to try, but would not guarantee the success thereof.
Faith went down stairs, a little afraid that she had been doing harm instead of good, and at the same time not seeing very well how she could have helped it. She found Dr. Harrison in the sitting-room, and gave her quiet reasons for not going out with him. The doctor declared "he should be in despair--but that he had hope!" and having made Faith confess that she would like to see his microscope, gently suggested the claims of the next two evenings; saying that he must be in Quilipeak for a day or two soon himself, and therefore was not impatient without reason. Faith did not know how to get off, and gave the doctor to understand that she might be disengaged the next night. Having which comfort he went up to see Mr. Linden. Then followed Mr. Linden's tea, with cresses and grapes which Dr. Harrison had brought himself.
"Mother," said Faith, when the two ladies were seated at their own tea-table,--"did Dr. Harrison dress Mr. Linden's arm again to-night?"
"Yes child--and I guess it was good he did. I think Mr. Linden was almost asleep when I went up."
"Do you know how to do it, mother? if it was wanted when the doctor is not here?"
"I don't know--" said Mrs. Derrick thoughtfully,--"no, child, I _don't_ know how--at least not so I'd like to try. Do you, Faith?"
"No, mother--but could you learn?"
"Why--I suppose I could, child," said her mother, as if she disliked to admit even so much. "But I'd about as lieve have my own arm shot off--I'm so dreadfully afraid of hurting people, Faith--and I always was afraid of _him_. Why can't the doctor do it? he can come six times a day if he's wanted--I guess he don't do much else."
Faith said no more on the subject, but hurried through her tea and sat down by the lamp in the sitting-room to read her letter. A minute or two she sat thinking, deeply, with her cheek on her hand; then dismissing everything else she opened the precious paper at last.
It was another Italy letter, but took her a very different journey from the last. A little graver perhaps than that, a little more longing in the wish to use eyesight instead of pen and ink; and as if absence was telling more and more upon the writer. Yet all this was rather in the tone than the wording--_that_ was kept in hand. But it was midway in some bright description, that the message to Faith broke forth.
"Tell Miss Faith," she said, "that I would rather have seen her roasting clams down at 'the sh.o.r.e,' than anything I have seen since I heard of it,--which is none the less true, that I should have wanted to stand both sides of the window at once. And tell her if you can (though I don't believe even _you_ can, John Endy) how much I love her for taking such care of one of my precious things. I feel as if all my love was very powerless just now! However--you remember that comforting old ballad--