"Alteration in the garden!" mechanically repeated Anne. "I have heard nothing about it."
He pa.s.sed into the house to the doctor. We picked on at the currants, and then took them into the kitchen. Anne sat down on a chair to strip them from their stalks. Presently we saw Sir Robert and the doctor at one end of the garden, the latter drawing boundaries round a corner with his walking-stick.
"Oh, I know," exclaimed Anne. "Yesterday Mrs. Podd suggested that a summer-house in that spot would be a delightful improvement. But I never, never could have supposed papa meant to act upon the suggestion."
Just so. Dr. Lewis wished to erect a summer-house of wood and trellis-work, but had not liked to do it without first speaking to his landlord.
As the days went on, Anne grew to feel somewhat rea.s.sured. She was very busy, for all kinds of preparations had to be made in the house, and the wedding was to take place at once.
"I think, perhaps, I took it up in a wrong light, Johnny," she said to me one day, when I went in and found her sewing at some new curtains. "I hope I did. It must have been the suddenness of the news, I suppose, and that I was so very unprepared for it."
"How do you mean? In what wrong light?"
"No one seems to think ill of it, or to foresee cause for apprehension.
I am so glad. I don"t think I can ever much like her: but if she makes papa happy, it is all I ask."
"Who has been talking about it?"
"Herbert Tanerton for one. He saw Mrs. Podd at Worcester last week, and thought her charming. The very woman, he said, to do papa good; lively and full of resource. So it may all be for the best."
I should as soon have expected an invitation to the moon as to the wedding. But I got it. Dr. Lewis, left to himself, was feeling helpless again, and took me with him to Worcester on the eve of the happy day. We put up at the Bell Hotel for the night; but Anne went direct to Lake"s boarding-house. I ran down there in the evening.
Whether an inkling of the coming wedding had got abroad, I can"t say; it was to be kept private, and had been, so far as any one knew; but Lake"s house was full, not a room to be had in it for love or money. Anne was put in a sleeping-closet two yards square.
"It is not our fault," spoke Miss Dinah, openly. "We were keeping a room for Miss Lewis; but on Monday last when a stranger came, wanting to be taken in, Mrs. Podd told us Miss Lewis was going to the hotel with her father."
"My dear love, I thought you were," chimed in Mrs. Podd, as she patted Anne on the shoulder. "I must have mis-read a pa.s.sage in your dear papa"s letter, and so caught up the misapprehension. Never mind; you shall dress in my room if your own is not large enough. And I am sure all young ladies ought to be obliged to me, for the new inmate is a delightful man. My daughters find him charming."
"The room is quite large enough, thank you," replied Anne, meekly.
"Do you approve of the wedding, Miss Dinah?" I asked her later, when we were alone in the dining-room. "Do you like it?"
Miss Dinah, who was counting a lot of gla.s.ses on the sideboard that the maid had just washed and brought in, counted to the end, and then began upon the spoons.
"It is the only way we can keep our girls in check," observed she; "otherwise they"d break and lose all before them. I know how many gla.s.ses have been used at table, consequently how many go out to be washed, and the girl has to bring that same number in, or explain the reason why. As to the spoons, they get thrown away with the dishwater and sometimes into the fire. If they were silver it would be all the same."
"Do you like the match, Miss Dinah?"
"Johnny Ludlow," she said, turning to face me, "we make a point in this house of not expressing our likes and dislikes. Our position is peculiar, you know. When people have come to years of discretion, and are of the age that Mrs. Podd is, not to speak of Dr. Lewis"s, we must suppose them to be capable of judging and acting for themselves. We have not helped on the match by so much as an approving word or look: on the other hand, it has not lain in our duty or in our power to r.e.t.a.r.d it."
Which was, of course, good sense. But for all her caution, I fancied she could have spoken against it, had she chosen.
A trifling incident occurred to me in going back to the Bell. Rushing round the corner into Broad Street, a tall, well-dressed man, sauntering on before me, suddenly turned on his heel, and threw away his cigar. It caught the front of my shirt. I flung it off again; but not before it had burnt a small hole in the linen.
"I beg your pardon," said the smoker, in a courteous voice--and there was no mistaking him for anything but a gentleman. "I am very sorry. It was frightfully careless of me."
"Oh, it is nothing; don"t think about it," I answered, making off at full speed.
St. Michael"s Church stood in a nook under the cathedral walls: it is taken down now. It was there that the wedding took place. Dr. Lewis arrived at it more like a baby than a bridegroom, helpless and nervous to a painful degree. But Mrs. Podd made up for his deficiencies in her grand self-possession; her white bonnet and nodding feather seemed to fill the church. Anne wore grey silk; Julia and f.a.n.n.y Podd some shining pink stuff that their petticoats could be seen through. Poor Anne"s tears were dropping during the service; she kept her head bent down to hide them.
"Look up, Anne," I said from my place close to her. "Take courage."
"I can"t help it, indeed, Johnny," she whispered. "I wish I could. I"m sure I wouldn"t throw a damper on the general joy for the world."
The wedding-party was a very small one indeed; just ourselves and a stern-looking gentleman, who was said to be a lawyer-cousin of the Podds, and to come from Birmingham. All the people staying at Lake"s had flocked into the church to look on.
"Pray take my arm. Allow me to lead you out. I see how deeply you are feeling this."
The ceremony seemed to be over almost as soon as it was begun--perhaps the parson, remembering the parties had both been married before, cut it short. And it was in the slight bustle consequent upon its termination that the above words, in a low, tender, and most considerate tone, broke upon my ear. Where had I heard the voice before?
Turning hastily round, I recognized the stranger of the night before. It was to Anne he had spoken, and he had already taken her upon his arm.
Her head was bent still; the rebellious tears would hardly be kept back; and a sweet compa.s.sion sat on every line of his handsome features as he gazed down at her.
"Who is he?" I asked of f.a.n.n.y Podd, as he walked forward with Anne.
"Mr. Angerstyne--the most fascinating man I ever saw in my life. The Lakes could not have taken him in, but for mamma"s inventing that little fable of Anne"s going with old Lewis to the Bell. Trust mamma for not letting us two girls lose a chance," added free-speaking f.a.n.n.y. "I may take your arm, I suppose, Johnny Ludlow."
And after a plain breakfast in private, which included only the wedding-party, Dr. and Mrs. Lewis departed for Cheltenham.
+Part the Second.+
"Johnny, what can I do? What do you _think_ I can do?"
In the pretty grey silk that she had worn at her father"s wedding, and with a whole world of perplexity in her soft brown eyes, Anne Lewis stood by me, and whispered the question. As soon as the bride and bridegroom had driven off, Anne was to depart for Maythorn Bank, with Julia and f.a.n.n.y Podd; all three of them to remain there for the few days that Dr. and Mrs. Lewis purposed to be away. But now, no sooner had the sound of the bridal wheels died on our ears, and Anne had suggested that they should get ready for their journey home, than the two young ladies burst into a laugh, and said, _Did_ she think they were going off to that dead-alive place! Not if they knew it. And, giving her an emphatic nod to prove they meant what they said, they waltzed to the other end of the room in their shining pink dresses to talk to Mr. Angerstyne.
Consternation sat in every line of Anne"s face. "I cannot go there alone, or stay there alone," she said to me. "These things are not done in France."
No: though Maythorn Bank was her own home, and though she was as thoroughly English as a girl can be, it could not be done. French customs and ideas did not permit it, and she had been brought up in them. It was certainly not nice behaviour of the girls. They should have objected before their mother left.
"_I_ don"t know what you can do, Anne. Better ask Miss Dinah."
"Not go with you, after the arrangements are made--and your servant Sally is expecting you all!" cried Miss Dinah Lake. "Oh, you must be mistaken," she added; and went up to talk to them. Julia only laughed.
"Go to be buried alive at Maythorn Bank as long as mamma chooses to stay away!" she cried. "You won"t get either of us to do anything of the kind, Miss Dinah."
"Mrs. Podd--I mean Mrs. Lewis--will be back to join you there in less than a week," said Miss Dinah.
"Oh, will she, though! You don"t know mamma. She may be off to Paris and fifty other places before she turns her head homewards again. Anne Lewis can go home by herself, if she wants to go: I and f.a.n.n.y mean to stay with you, Miss Dinah."
So Anne had to stay also. She sat down and wrote two letters: one to Sally, saying their coming home was delayed; the other to Dr. Lewis, asking what she was to do.
"And the gain is mine," observed Mr. Angerstyne. "What would the house have been without you?"
He appeared to speak to the girls generally. But his eyes and his smile evidently were directed to Anne. She saw it too, and blushed. Blushed!
when she had not yet known him four-and-twenty hours. But he was just the fellow for a girl to fall in love with--and no disparagement to her to say so.
"Who is he?" I that evening asked Miss Dinah.