"How gently you speak! Are you ever irritable, like papa, I wonder?--he used to be so ill and silent, and then, when we tried to rouse him, he could not bear it. Who is this lady, and why do you say you have no home for me?"
"She means to be our good friend, Polly--there, will that do? But you are such a dignified young lady, I should never have ventured to call you that unasked."
"Why not?" she repeated, darting at him a clear, straightforward glance.
Evidently his reticence ruffled her; but Dr. Heriot skilfully evaded the brief awkwardness.
"This lady is Miss Lambert, and she is the sister of one of my best friends; she is going to take charge of his girls and boys, who have lost their mother, and she has kindly offered to take charge of you too."
"She is very good," returned Polly, coldly; "very, very good, I mean,"
as though she had repented of a slight hauteur. "But I have never had anything to do with children. Papa and I were always alone, and I would much rather live with you; you have no idea what a housekeeper I shall make you. I can dress salad and cook _omelettes_, and Nanette taught me how to make _potage_. I used to take a large basket myself to the market when we lived at Dresden, when Nanette was so bad with rheumatism."
"What an astonishing Polly!"
"Ah! you are laughing at me," drawing herself up proudly, and turning away so that he should not see the tears in her eyes.
"My dear Polly, is that a "crime"?"
"It is when people are in earnest I have said nothing that deserves laughing at--have I, Miss Lambert?" with a sweet, candid glance that won Mildred"s heart.
"No, indeed; I was wishing that my nieces were like you."
"I did not mean that--I was not asking for praise," stammered Polly, turning a vivid scarlet. "I only wanted my guardian to know that I should not be useless to him. I can do much more than that I can mend and darn better than Annette, who was three years older. You are smiling still."
"If I smile, it is only with pleasure to know my poor friend had such a good daughter. Listen to me, Polly--how old are you?"
"Fourteen last February."
"What a youthful Polly!--too young, I fear, to comprehend the position.
And then with such Bohemian surroundings--that half-crazed painter, Fabian," he muttered, "and a purblind fiddler and his wife. My poor child," he continued, laying his hand on her head lightly, and speaking as though moved in spite of himself, "as long as you want a friend, you will never find a truer one than John Heriot. I will be your guardian, adopted father, what you will; but," with a firmness of voice that struck the girl in spite of herself, "I cannot have you to live with me, Polly."
"Why not?" she asked, pleadingly.
"Because it would be placing us both in a false position; because I could not incur such a responsibility; because no one is so fit to take charge of a young girl as a good motherly woman, such as you will find, in Miss Lambert." And as the girl looked at him bewildered and disappointed, he continued kindly, "You must forget this pleasant dream, Polly; perhaps some day, when your guardian is gray-haired, it may come to pa.s.s; but I shall often think how good my adopted daughter meant to be to me."
"Shall I never see you then?" asked Polly mournfully.
If these were English ways, the girl thought, what a cold, heartless place it must be! Had not Mr. Fabian promised to adopt her if the English guardian should not be forthcoming? Even Herr Schreiber had offered to keep her out of his poor salary, when her father"s death had left her dependent on the little community of struggling artists and musicians. Polly was having her first lesson in the troublesome _convenances_ of life, and to the affectionate, ardent girl it was singularly unpalatable.
"I am afraid you will see me every day," replied her guardian, with much gravity. "I shall not be many yards off--just round the corner, and across the market-place. No, no, Miss Polly; you will not get rid of me so easily. I mean to direct your studies, haunt your play-time, and be the cross old Mentor, as Olive calls me."
"Oh, I am so glad!" returned the girl earnestly, and with a sparkle of pleasure in her eyes. "I like you so much already that I could not bear you to do wrong."
It was Heriot"s turn to look puzzled.
"Would it not be wrong," she returned, answering the look, "when papa trusted me to you, and told me on his deathbed that you would be my second father, if you were to send me right away from you, and take no notice of me at all!"
"I should hardly do that in any case," returned her guardian, seriously.
"What a downright, unconventional little soul you are, Polly! You may set your mind at rest; your father"s trust shall be redeemed, his child shall never be neglected by me. But come--you have not made Miss Lambert"s acquaintance. I hope you mean to tell her next you like her."
"She looks good, but sad--are you sad?" touching Mildred"s sleeve timidly.
"A little. I have been in trouble, like you, and have lost my mother,"
replied Milly, simply; but she was not prepared for the suddenness with which the girl threw her arms round her neck and kissed her.
"I might have thought--your black dress and pale face," she murmured remorsefully. "Every one is sad, every one is in trouble--myself, my guardian, and you."
"But you are the youngest--it falls heaviest on you."
"What am I to call you? I don"t like Miss Lambert, it sounds stiff,"
with a little shrug and movement of the hands, rather graceful than otherwise.
"I shall be Aunt Milly to the others, why not to you?" returned Mildred, smiling.
"Ah, that sounds nice. Papa had a sister, only she died; I used to call her Aunt Amy. Aunt Milly! ah, I can say that easily; it makes me feel at home, somehow. Am I to come home with you to-day, Aunt Milly?"
"Yes, my dear." Milly absolutely blushed with pleasure at hearing herself so addressed. "I am not going to my new home for three weeks, but I shall be glad of your company, if you will come and help me."
"Poor Mr. Fabian will be sorry, but he is expecting to lose me. There is one thing more I must ask, Aunt Milly."
"A dozen if you will, dear."
"Oh, but this is a great thing. Oh, please, dear Aunt Milly, may I bring Rag and Tatters?" And as Mildred looked too astonished for reply, she continued, hurriedly: "Tatters never left papa for an instant, he was licking his hand when he died; and Rag is such a dear old thing. I could not be happy anywhere without my pets." And without waiting for an answer she left the room; and the next instant the light, springy tread was heard in company with a joyous scuffling and barking; then a large s.h.a.ggy terrier burst into the room, and Polly followed with a great tortoise-sh.e.l.l cat in her arms.
"Isn"t Rag handsome, except for this?" touching the animal where a sc.r.a.p of fur had been rudely mauled off, and presented a bald appearance; "he has lost the sight of one eye too. Veteran Rag, we used to call him. He is so fond of me, and follows me like a dog; he used to go out with me in Dresden, only the dogs hunted him."
"You may bring your pets, Polly," was Mildred"s indulgent answer; "I think I can answer for my brother"s goodwill."
Dr. Heriot shook his head at her laughingly.
"I am afraid you are no rigid disciplinarian, Miss Lambert; but it is "Love me, love my dog" with Polly, I expect. Now, my child, you must get ready for the flitting, while I go in search of Mr. Fabian. From the cloud of tobacco-smoke that met us on entering, I fancy he is on the next story."
"He is with the Rogers, I expect. His model disappointed him, and he is not working to-day. If you will wait a moment, I will fetch him."
"What an original character!" observed Dr. Heriot as the door closed.
"A loveable one," was Mildred"s rejoinder. She was interested and roused by the new phase of life presented to her to-day. She looked on amused, yet touched, when Polly returned, leading by the hand her pseudo-guardian--a tall old man, with fiery eyes and scanty gray hair falling down his neck, in a patched dressing-gown that had once been a gorgeous Turkey-red. It was the first time that the simple woman had gazed on genius down-at-heel, and faring on the dry crust of unrequited self-respect.
"There is my Cain, sir; a new conception--unfinished, if you will--but you may trace the idea I am feebly striving to carry out. Sometimes I fancy it will be my last bit of work. Look at that dimly-traced figure beside the murderer--that is his good angel, who is to accompany the branded one in his life-long exile. I always believed in Cain"s repentance--see the remorse in his eyes. I caught that expression on a Spanish sailor"s face when he had stabbed his mate in a drunken brawl. I saw my Cain then."
Needy genius could be garrulous, as Mildred found. The old man warmed at Polly"s open-eyed admiration and Mildred"s softly-uttered praise; appreciation was to him what meat and drink would be to more material natures. He looked almost majestic as he stood before them, in his ragged dressing-gown, descanting on the merits of his Tobit, that had sold for an old song. "A Neapolitan fisher-boy had sat for my angel; every one paints angels with yellow hair and womanish faces, but I am not one of those that must follow the beaten track--I formed my angel on the loftiest ideal of Italian beauty, and got sneered at for my pains.
One ought to coin a new proverb nowadays, Dr. Heriot--Originality moves contempt. People said the subject was not a taking one; Tobit was too much like an old clothes man, or a veritable descendant of Moses and Sons. There was no end to the quips and jeers; even our set had a notion it would not do, and I sold it to a dealer at a sum that would hardly cover a month"s rent," finished the old man, with a mixture of pathos and dignity.
"After all, public taste is a sort of lottery," observed Dr. Heriot; "true genius is not always requited in this world, if it offends the tender prejudices of preconceived ideas."
"The worship of the golden image fills up too large a s.p.a.ce in the market-place," replied Mr. Fabian, solemnly, "while the blare of instruments covers the fetish-adoration of its votaries. The world is an eating and drinking and money-getting world, and art, cramped and stifled, goes to the wall."
"Nay, nay; I have not so bad an opinion of my generation as all that,"
interposed Dr. Heriot, smiling. "I have great faith in the underlying goodness of mankind. One has to break through a very stiff outer-crust, I grant you; but there are soft places to be found in most natures."
And, as the other shook his head--"Want of success has made you a little down-hearted on the subject of our human charities, Mr. Fabian; but there is plenty of reverence and art-worship in the world still. I predict a turn of the wheel in your case yet. Cain may still glower down on us from the walls of the Royal Academy."