Elizabeth put her face in her hands and almost groaned. She took it up and looked out, but in all bright nature she could find nothing which did not side against her. She got up and walked the room; then she sat down and began to consider what arrangements would be necessary, and what would be possible.
Then confessed to herself that it would not be _all_ bad to have somebody to break her solitude, even anybody; then got over another qualm of repugnance, and drew the table near her and opened her desk.
Shahweetah, Sept. 26, 1817.
"Dear Rose,
"I am all alone, like you. Will you come here and let us do the best we can together? I am at a place you don"t like, but I shall not stay here all the time, and I think you can bear it with me for a while. I shall have things arranged so as to make you as comfortable as you can be in such straitened quarters, and expect you will come as soon as you can get a good opportunity. Whether you come by boat or not, part of the way, you will have to take the stage-coach from Pimpernel here; and you must stop at the little village of Mountain Spring, opposite Wut-a-qut-o. From there you can get here by wagon or boat. I can"t send for you, for I have neither one nor the other.
"Yours truly, dear Rose,
"Elizabeth Haye."
With the letter in her hand, Elizabeth went forth to the kitchen.
"Karen, is there any sort of a cabinet-maker at Mountain Spring?"
"What"s that?" said Karen.
"Is there any sort of a cabinet-maker at the village? -- a cabinet-maker, -- somebody that makes tables and bedsteads, and that sort of thing?"
"A furnitur" shop?" said Karen.
"Yes -- something of that kind. Is there such a thing in Mountain Spring?"
Karen shook her head.
"They don"t make nothin" at Mountain Spring."
"Where do the people get their tables and chairs? where do they go for them?"
"They go "most any place," said Karen; -- "sometimes they goes to Pimpernel, -- and maybe to Starlings, or to Deerford; they don"t go much nowheres."
"Can I get such things at Pimpernel?"
"If you was there, you could, I s"pose," said Karen.
"Could Anderese get a horse and cart at the village, to go for me?"
"I guess he can find a wagon round somewheres," said Karen.
"You couldn"t go in a cart handy."
"I! -- no, but I want to send him, to fetch home a load of things."
"How"ll he know what to get?"
"I will tell him. Couldn"t he do it?"
"If he knowed what was wanted, he could," said Karen. "Me and him "ll go, Miss Lizzie, and we"ll do it."
"You, Karen! I don"t want to send you."
"Guess I"ll do the best," said the old woman. "Anderese mightn"t know what to fetch. What you want, Miss Lizzie?"
Elizabeth thought a moment whether she should ask Winthrop to send up the things for her; but she could not bear to do it.
"I want a bedstead, Karen, in the first place."
"What sort"ll a one?"
"The best you can find."
"That"ll be what"ll spend the most money," said Karen musingly.
"I don"t care about that, but the nicest sort you can meet with. And a bureau --"
"What"s that?" said Karen. "I dun" know what that means."
"To hold clothes -- with drawers -- like that in my room."
"A cupboard?" said Karen; -- "some sort like that?"
"No, no; I"ll shew you what I mean, in my room; it is called a bureau. And a washstand -- a large one, if you can find it. And a rocking-chair -- the handsomest one that can be had."
"I know them two," said Karen. "That"ll be a load, Miss Lizzie. I don"t b"lieve the wagon "ll hold no more."
"The first fine day, Karen, I want you to go."
"The days is all fine, I speck, hereabouts," said Karen.
"We"ll start as quick as Anderese gets a wagon."
"Who"s comin", Miss "Lizabeth?" said Clam as she met her young lady coming out of the kitchen.
"I don"t know -- possibly Mrs. Haye. I wish all things to be in readiness for her."
"Where"ll she sleep, Miss "Lizabeth," said Clam with opening eyes.
"Here."
"Will she have this for her bedroom? -- And what"ll you do, Miss "Lizabeth?"
"If she comes, we will eat in the kitchen." And with the thought the young lady stepped back.
"I forgot -- Karen, do you think the wagon will hold no more?
Anderese must get a large one. I want a few neat chairs -- plain ones -- cane-bottomed, or rush-bottomed will do; I want them for this room; for if this lady comes we shall have to take this for our eating-room. I don"t want a table; we can make this do; -- or we can take the one I use now; but we want the chairs."
"Well, Miss Lizzie, you"ll have to have "em -- we"ll manage to pile "em on someways."