"There is the carriage," said he, as they crossed the station platform.
"And this is Jack, I am sure," said his wife, holding out her hand with a smile which won her step-son on the spot. He was too shy, however, to do more than grasp it warmly as he stood beside her with uncovered head.
"He is a dear," she said to herself, "and just like John. If only the others are as cordial. Somehow I dread Edith."
She was quite as excited as were her step-daughters when she drove up the avenue, and her eyes fell for the first time upon the group on the piazza.
Cynthia walked down the path to meet her, holding Janet and w.i.l.l.y by either hand. Edith remained standing on the step.
"How do you do?" said Cynthia, with a cordial smile.
Mrs. Franklin looked at her. Then she put her arms around her and kissed her.
"This is Cynthia, I am sure," she whispered, tremulously, "and these are "the children.""
She kissed them and pa.s.sed on to her husband"s eldest daughter, while they greeted their father.
Edith was very tall, and her position on the step gave her the advantage of several inches in addition. She fairly towered above the new-comer.
"How do you do, Mrs. Franklin?" she said, holding out a very stiff hand and arm. She had made up her mind that she for one would not be kissed.
"And are you Edith?"
"Yes, Mrs. Franklin. I am Edith. I hope your journey has not tired you?"
"Not at all. I am not easily tired."
Edith kissed her father, then turned again to the stranger.
"Let me show you the way upstairs."
And thus Mrs. Franklin entered her new home.
"I am afraid it is going to be war with Edith at first, but I won"t be disheartened," she thought. "I"ll make her like me. It is natural for her to feel so, I suppose. Ah me, I am in a difficult position."
Edith and Cynthia shared the same room. It was a large one with a bay-window, which commanded a fine view of the winding river and the meadows beyond.
One could tell at a glance upon entering the room which part of it Edith occupied, and which Cynthia. Cynthia"s dressing-table, with its ungainly pin-cushion, its tangle of ribbons and neckties tossed down anywhere that they might happen to fall, its medley of horseshoes, tennis b.a.l.l.s, and other treasures, was a constant source of trial to Edith, whose possessions were always kept in perfect neatness. She scolded and lectured her sister in vain; Cynthia was incorrigible.
"It"s too much bother to keep things in order," she would say. "After you have been around with your duster and your fixings-up I never can find a thing, Edith."
The night of Mrs. Franklin"s arrival they talked over the new state of family affairs.
"I think she is nice," said Cynthia, with decision. "I like her, and so does Jack."
She was perched on the side of the bed, leaning against the tall post, her favorite position when she had anything of especial interest to discuss.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "I DON"T LIKE HER, AND I WON"T!"]
"I don"t," said Edith, who was brushing out her long hair with great vigor. "I don"t like her, and I _won"t_."
"That is just it, Edith. You have made up your mind you won"t like her just because you didn"t want her to come. Now she is here, why don"t you make the best of it? What do you dislike about her?"
"Her coming here. She had no right to."
"Edith, how silly you are! She wouldn"t have come if papa had not asked her, and she wouldn"t have if she had not loved papa. I should think you would like her for that if nothing else. I do. And she is pretty and sweet and dear, and I am going to help her all I can. I think I shall even call her "mamma.""
"Cynthia, I shall never do that. Never, to my dying day!"
"Well, I shall; that is, if she doesn"t mind."
"She will. It will make her seem too old."
"I don"t believe she would mind that, and any one can see she isn"t a bit old. I think we are very fortunate, as long as papa was going to marry again, to have him find such a nice, lovely woman."
Edith did not reply. She finished her braid and tied it up. Then she said:
"Of course, it is a great deal harder for me than for the rest of you. I thought I was always going to help father, and now I can"t."
"Of course it"s hard, Edith, but--but don"t you think you could still help him if--if you were nice to his wife?"
"I don"t want to help him that way," said Edith, honestly, as she blew out the light.
The next day when Cynthia asked somewhat timidly if she might call her step-mother "mamma," she was surprised and touched by the expression that came into Mrs. Franklin"s face.
"Oh, thank you, Cynthia!" she said. "I thought I would not ask you, I would just leave it to you, but I should like it so much."
And so they all called her by her new t.i.tle except Edith.
Preparations for the tennis tournament were in full swing, and Cynthia and Jack, who were to play together in mixed doubles, were practising hard.
The court at Oakleigh was not a good one, so they were in the habit of going to the tennis club at the village when they could get there in the afternoon. It was not always easy, for they were short of horses, and it was too far to walk both ways.
"Why do we not have some more horses?" said Mrs. Franklin one morning when the question was being discussed.
"Why, we can"t afford to," replied Cynthia, in some surprise. "Besides the farm horses we only have two, you know, and they get all used up going to and from the village so much."
Mrs. Franklin glanced at her husband. Then she said, "It seems as if we ought to have more. You know, John, there is all that money of mine. Why not buy a horse and trap for the children to use?"
"My dear Hester, I can never consent. You know I wish you to keep all your money for your own exclusive use. You may have all the horses you want for yourself, but--
"John, don"t be absurd. What can I do with all that money, and no one but Neal to provide for? Your children are mine now, and I wish them to have a horse of their own."
The thing of all others for which Edith had been longing for years. But she determined that she would never use her step-mother"s gift.
"Is Neal your brother?" asked Cynthia.