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Angela made no reply. She was letting go one after another of her rigid beliefs. Again Doris spoke, again she pleaded:
"I will abide by your decision, Sister, but only after you have gone to the chapel--and seen the way. I will wait here."
Angela rose stiffly, holding to her cross as if it were a physical support. With bowed head she pa.s.sed from the room and Doris sat down thinking; demanding justice.
A half hour pa.s.sed before steps were heard in the hall. Doris stood up, her eyes fixed on the door.
Sister Angela entered, and in her arms, wrapped in the same blanket, were two sleeping babies wearing the plain clothing that Ridge House kept in store for emergencies. Doris ran forward; she bent over the small creatures.
"Which?" Nature leaped forth in that one palpitating word--it was the last claim of blood.
"I--forgot--when I brought them to you. We have all--forgot. It _is_ the only way--the chance."
Doris took both children in her arms.
"I shall name them Joan and Nancy," she whispered, "for my mother and grandmother. Joan and Nancy--Thornton!"
Then she kissed them, and it was given to her at that moment to forget her bitter hatred.
CHAPTER IV
"_Just as much of doubt as bade us plant a surer foot upon the sun-road._"
Doris Fletcher had no turning-back in her nature. She never reached a goal but by patient effort to understand, and she was able to close her eyes to by-paths.
Having adopted the children, having foregone her prejudices--good and evil--having set her feet upon the way, she meant to go unfalteringly on, and because doubts would a.s.sail her at times, she held the surer to her task.
She remained a month at Ridge House. She wrote to Thornton and in due time his reply came.
Apparently he had written while bewildered and shocked. The old arrogant tone was gone. He accepted what Doris offered and set aside a generous sum of money for his child's expenses.
It was Sister Angela's suggestion that Mary should become the nurse for the children.
"How much does she know, Sister?"
"Nothing--but what we have permitted her to know. The girl, since knowing of the children, has astonished me by her interest in them.
Nothing before has so brought her out of her native reserve. I never suspected it--but the girl has maternal instincts that should not be starved."
But Sister Angela was mistaken. Mary knew more than she had been permitted to know.
A closed door to Mary meant seeking access through other channels.
Sister Constance had not screened the windows of the west chamber which opened on the roof of the porch and were next to the window of Mary's small chamber. She had forgotten to ward against the startling sound of a baby's cry. But Mary, the night that Becky had left her burden to the care of Sister Angela, had heard that cry and it reached to the hidden depth of the girl's nature. It chilled her, then set her blood racing hotly. She got up and went to the window--it was moonlight in The Gap and the night was full of a rising wind that rattled the vines and set the leaves swirling.
Covering herself with a dark shawl, she crept from her window and, clinging close to the house, reached the west chamber.
Inside, by the light of a candle, Sister Constance sat, hus.h.i.+ng to sleep a little child! The sight was burned upon Mary's consciousness as if Fate pressed every detail there so it might not be forgotten. Mary saw the small, puckered face. It was individual and distinct.
She almost slipped from her place on the roof; her breath came so hard that she feared Sister Constance might hear, and she groped her way back.
All next day Mary worked silently but with such haste that Sister Janice took her sharply to task.
"'Tis the unG.o.dly as leaves the dust under the mats, child," she cautioned.
"Yes, Sister." Mary attacked the mats!
"And a burnt loaf cries for forgiveness."
"Yes, Sister, but the burnt loaf I will myself eat to the last crust."
"Indeed and you shall--for the carelessness that you show."
Somehow Mary lived through the day with her ears strained and a mighty fear in her heart.
It was nearing morning of the following day--that darkest hour--when the girl arose from her sleepless bed and stole forth again.
It was just then that Sister Constance, her face distorted by grief and the play of candlelight upon it, entered the west chamber with a baby in her arms!
Mary gripped the shutters--she felt faint and weak. Suppose she should slip and fall?
And then she saw two children on the bed and Sister Constance--bent in prayer--her cross pressed to her lips.
All this Mary had seen, but when Sister Angela asked her if she would like to go with Miss Fletcher and care for the children, so great was her curiosity that she, mentally, tore her roots from her home hills; let go her clinging to the deserted cabin where she had been born, and almost eagerly replied: "I'd like it powerful."
So Mary took her place.
Doris Fletcher had her plans well laid.
"I must have myself well in hand," she said to Sister Angela, "before I go to New York. There's the little bungalow in California where father took mother before Merry's birth. It happens to be vacant. I will go there and work out my plans."
It seemed a simple solution. The children throve from the start in the suns.h.i.+ne and climate; the peace and detachment acted like charms, and Mary, stifling her soul's homesickness, grew stern as to face, but marvellously tender and capable in her duties. Doris grew accustomed to her silence and reserve after a time, but she never understood Mary, although she grew to depend upon her absolutely. To friends in New York, especially to Doctor David Martin, Doris wrote often. She was never quite sure how the impression was given that Meredith had left twins; certainly she had not said that, but she had spoken of "the children"
without laying stress upon the statement, and while debating just what explanation she would make. After all, it was her own affair. Some day she would confide in David, but there were more important details to claim her attention.
The babies were adorable, but in neither could she trace an expression or suggestion of Meredith. Their childish characteristics gave no clue--they were simply healthy, normal creatures full of the charm that all childhood should have in common. And gradually, as time pa.s.sed, Doris lost herself in their demanding individualities; she became absorbed. Joan was larger, stronger, seemed older. She had brown eyes of that sunny tint which suggest suns.h.i.+ne. Her hair was brown, almost from the first, with gold glints. She was fair, had little colour unless the warm glow that rose and fell so sweetly in her face could be called colour. Excitement brought the flush, disappointment or a chiding word banished it. At other times Joan had the warm, ivory-tinted skin of health, not delicacy. Nancy was, from the first, frankly blonde. She never changed from the lovely, fair promise of her first year. She was the most feminine creature one could imagine; a doll brought the light to her violet eyes.
"She takes that rather than her milk," Mary explained, then gravely: "She'll take her milk if I hold off the doll."
Nature was never quite sure what to do with Joan. She changed with the years in tint, colouring, and character, but Nancy was fair, fine, and delicately poised from her baby days.
Both children wors.h.i.+pped Doris--Auntie Dorrie, they were taught to call her--and it was amusing to watch their relations to her. To please her, to win her approval, were their highest hopes. Mary clearly preferred Nancy and, for that reason, gave more attention to Joan.
When the children were nearly two Doris wrote to David Martin:
"I am coming home. I am glad that I have always kept the house in commission; I feel that I can trust myself there now."