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She smiled innocently and went on,
"All that just fitted me, as you meant it should, to take the good of the evening--and I had a great deal," she said gravely. "I saw almost everything you spoke of--and other things. I saw the chalk sh.e.l.ls, Mr.
Linden!--and the circulation in a frog's foot; and different prepared pieces of skin; and the moth's plumage! and the silver scale-armour of the _Lepisma_, as Dr. Harrison called it; and more."
"And with very great delight--as I knew you would. I am very glad!"
"Yes," said Faith--"I know a little better now how to understand some things you said the other day. I am very glad I went--only for one thing.--"
"What was that?"
"Dr. Harrison asked such a strange thing of me as we were walking home--at least it seems to me strange."
"May my judgment be brought to bear upon it?" Mr. Linden said after a moment's silence.
"Yes indeed," said Faith; "that was what I was going to ask. He wants me to go with him to see a woman, who is dying, he says, and miserable,--and he wants me to talk to her. He says he does not know how." And half modestly, half timidly, she added, "Is not that going out of my way?"
A quick, peculiar smile on Mr. Linden's face, was succeeded by a very deep gravity,--once or twice the lips parted, impulsively--then took their former firm set; and shading his eyes with his hand he looked into the fire in profound silence.
Very soberly, but in as absolute repose of face, Faith now and then looked at him, and meanwhile waited for his thoughts to come to an end.
"Dr. Harrison said," she remarked after a little while, "that you once told him he had but half learned his profession."
"What did you say, Miss Faith? I mean, not to that, but to the question?"
"I didn't know what to say!--I didn't want to go at all--I don't know whether that was wrong or right; but at last I said I would go. Do you think I was right, Mr. Linden?"
"Did you promise to go _with him?_"
"I didn't know any other way to go," said Faith. "I don't know where the woman lives, and he said I couldn't find it; and old Crab has a lame foot. Dr. Harrison asked me to go with him. I don't think I should have minded going alone."
"Neither should I mind having you," said Mr. Linden, with a look more doubtful and anxious than Faith had often seen him wear, though it was not bent upon her.
"Do you think I said wrong then, Mr. Linden? I did not like to go--but I thought perhaps I ought."
"I don't think _you_ did wrong," was the somewhat definite answer. "I wish I had been alongside of you when the request was made."
A wish which he had not been the first to know. Faith was silent.
"You made a fair promise?" he said--"and feel bound by it?"
"I said I would go,"--she said looking at him with her fair, grave face. "If you thought it was wrong, or that I was putting myself out of my way, I would not, Mr. Linden. He asked if he might come for me at two o'clock, and I said yes."
"Miss Faith--you must not make such a promise again!"
She looked at him enquiringly, very soberly, and then her eyes went to the fire and mused there. Mr. Linden was looking at her then, though with eyes still s.h.i.+elded. Once indeed the hand came with a soft touch upon her hair, drawing it back where it had fallen a little; but the motion was quickly checked. She started, looked round with a little frank smile and colour, and instantly went back to her musing.
"I'm afraid I must let you go--" Mr. Linden said presently, smiling a little too, as if it were no use to be grave any longer. "I'm afraid I have no right to hinder you. If I had, I would. Some other time I will tell you part of the wherefore, but the less I say to you before you go, the better. About that,--" he added in his usual manner,--"I think we might write another exercise."
She started up, but paused.
"Mr. Linden,"--she said timidly, "Dr. Harrison said he would not be here this morning. Would you like to have me first--it would be only pleasure to me, if you are not afraid,--do what he does for you?"
He answered at first rather quick, as if he knew what sort of pleasure it was.
"O no!--I can wait,--it cannot signify very much." And then with as quick a recognition of the real pleasure it would be, after all, Mr.
Linden compounded matters.
"I am afraid. Miss Faith!--I am naturally timid."
"What does that mean?" said she coming before him and looking with an inquisitive smile. "I don't know, Mr. Linden!"
"Do you expect me to explain such a humiliating confession?"
"No, certainly.--I thought, perhaps, you wouldn't keep to it, after all."
"I am a little afraid for you. What do you suppose I shall do this afternoon while you are gone?"
"I don't know--" she said, looking a little wistfully.
"I shall lie here and study that wood-box. You see I carry out my principles, Miss Faith--I have not thanked you for it."
"I don't think you'll study it very long," said Faith,--"there isn't much in it."
"Somebody has said," replied Mr. Linden, "that 'in every subject there is inexhaustible meaning,--the eye sees in it what the eye brings means of seeing.' You must not limit my power of eyesight."
"If you wouldn't limit my power of something else?"--she said with gentle persistency.
He looked up at her.
"I will not, Miss Faith--then will you please perform your kind office at once? It will be a great comfort to me, and I shall be the better able to do something for you afterwards." And the manner almost made Faith feel as if the proposition had come from her at first.
She went about it, not this first time without some trembling of heart, but with also a spirit that rose above and quite kept down that. She knew exactly and intelligently what was to be done; it was only the hands that were unwonted, and therefore she feared unskilful. But there are things that some women have by nature, and a skilful hand is one of them; and it was Faith's. Her womanly love and care were enough for all the rest; she made no mistakes, nor delays; and her soft fingers inflicted no pain that it was in the power of fingers to spare. A little longer than the doctor she was perhaps about it; not much, and not more awkward; and that is saying enough.
So soon as that was done, Faith went for her exercise, and sat down as yesterday to write it.
He too went on with the exercise; but watching her, lest relief might be wanted in another quarter. There was nothing of that, though. Quiet and very great satisfaction, was the result of the matter in Faith's mind; at least it was all she permitted to be seen; and now she gave herself happily to the connexion of her nouns and adjectives, and to watching against the 'german' or 'sophisticated' letters in her handwriting. The exercise indeed was fast taking a very compound character; so much so, that Faith might well begin to suspect there had been a two-fold reason for proposing it. But Mr. Linden had a peculiar way of teaching--especially of teaching her; and made her almost forget in the pleasure of learning, the fact that she had need to learn. And as for his memory on the subject, or his perception of how it might touch her,--they were out of sight: she might have been a little child there at his side, for the grave simplicity and frankness of his instructions. And so exercise and reading and philosophy followed on in a quiet train, and the surface of the earth revealed new wonders, and the little French book was closed at the end of a pretty chapter.
"Whenever I get about my duties again, Miss Faith," Mr. Linden said, "I shall make one very stringent rule for our future intercourse."
"What's that, Mr. Linden?" she said, with the face of quick deep pleasure she always wore when about any of her studies with him.
"From the time when I come home to dinner till I go off again, I will neither speak nor be spoken to, Miss Faith, except in French. That is, you may speak--but I shall not answer."
Faith started a little, looked puzzled, and looked terrified,--as much as she ever did; but rather closed with looking as if it was _impossible_.
"I should make the rule at once," said Mr. Linden smiling, "but I foresee that you would absent yourself entirely. Now when I am down stairs you will have to see me--whether you want to or not."
"But I don't know one word!" said Faith breathlessly. "I am afraid I shall not say, or hear, much, Mr. Linden."