"Where were you in service last?"
"I have never had a position of the kind before," said Jessie, hesitatingly, "but if you would try me, madame, I would do my very best to suit you."
"Speak a little louder," said the old lady, sharply. "I am a trifle hard of hearing. Mind, just a trifle, I can not quite hear you."
Jessie repeated in a louder tone what she had said.
"Your appearance suits me exactly," returned Mrs. Ba.s.sett; "but I could not take a person into my household who is an entire stranger, and who has no references to offer to a.s.sure me of her respectability."
Jessie"s eyes filled with tears.
"I am so sorry," she faltered; "but as I am a stranger in Albany, there is no one here to whom I could apply for a reference."
"I like your face very much indeed," repeated Mrs. Ba.s.sett, more to herself than to the girl; then, turning to her suddenly, she asked: "Where are you from--where"s your home?"
"A little village on the St. Lawrence River called Fisher"s Landing,"
returned Jessie. "My uncle, Captain Carr, died a week ago, and I was forced to leave my old home, and go out into the world and earn my own living."
"Did you say you lived at Fisher"s Landing?" exclaimed the old lady, "and that Captain Carr of that place was your uncle?"
"Yes, madame," returned Jessie.
CHAPTER XXIII.
JESSIE BAIN ENTERS THE HOUSE OF SECRETS.
The old lady stared at Jessie through her spectacles.
"You need no other recommendation. I once met Captain Carr under thrilling circ.u.mstances, my child. I was out in a row-boat one day--some ten years ago--when a steamer almost ran down our little skiff. I would have been capsized, and perhaps drowned, had it not been for the bravery of Captain Carr, of Fisher"s Landing. I made him a handsome little present, and from that day to this I have never heard from him. Captain Carr dead, and his niece out in the world looking for a situation! You shall come to me, if you like, reference or no reference, my dear."
"Oh, madam, you are so very, very kind!" sobbed Jessie.
The little old lady touched a silver bell close at hand, and a tidy, elderly maid appeared.
"Harriet, I have engaged this young woman as companion," she said. "She came in answer to yesterday"s advertis.e.m.e.nt in the _Argus_. You will take her to her room at once. She is to occupy the little room directly off mine."
The room into which she ushered Jessie was a small, dingy apartment, with draperies so sombre that they seemed almost black. The curtains were closely drawn, and an unmistakable atmosphere of mustiness pervaded the apartment.
"Have you had breakfast, miss?" asked Harriet, looking sharply into the girl"s pale face, and adding before she had time to reply: "Even though you have breakfasted, a cup of hot tea will do you good this cold, crisp morning. My lady will be pleased to have you come down to the table. The bell will ring in about ten minutes. You can easily make your way there.
Step down the corridor, and turn into the pa.s.sage-way at the right; the second door."
Jessie bowed her thanks, and murmured that she would be very grateful for a cup of tea. It was not long before she heard the breakfast-bell.
Hastily quitting the room, she made her way down the corridor. In her confusion, the girl made the mistake of turning to the left, instead of the right, as she had been directed.
"The second door," she muttered to herself.
As she reached it she paused abruptly. It was slightly ajar. Glancing in hesitatingly, she saw that it looked more like a young lady"s _boudoir_ than an ordinary breakfast-room. Before a mirror at the further end of the apartment sat a young girl in the sun-light. A maid was brushing out the wavy ma.s.ses of her warm-tinted auburn hair.
While Jessie was hesitating as to whether she should tap on the door and make her presence known or walk on further through the corridor, a conversation which she could not help overhearing, held her spell-bound, fairly rooted to the spot.
"I a.s.sure you it is quite true, Janet," the lovely young girl was saying in a very fretful, angry voice. "The old lady has got a companion in the house at last. But she shall not stay long beneath this roof depend upon that, Janet. She is young and very beautiful.
"I would not care so much, if it were not that the handsome grandson is expected to arrive every day."
"Surely, Miss Rosamond, you, with all your beauty, do not fear a rival in the little humble companion."
"Companions have been known to do a great deal of mischief before now, and, as I have said, the girl is remarkably pretty. I saw her from the library window as she was coming up the front steps, and then, when old Mrs. Ba.s.sett came down to the library, I was safely ensconced behind the silken draperies of the bay-window, and I heard all that was said. You may be sure that I was angry enough. She shall not stay here long, if I can help it. I will make it so unpleasant for her that she will be glad to go. I detest the girl already, on general principles."
Jessie Bain cowered back, dazed and bewildered, almost doubting her own senses as to what she had just heard.
Smarting with bitter pain, Jessie turned away and hurried swiftly down the corridor in the opposite direction.
She was quickly retracing her steps back to her own room, when she met Harriet again in the corridor.
"I was just coming for you, miss," she said, "thinking that you might not be able to find your way, after all, there are so many twists and turns hereabouts," and without further ado she quickly retraced her steps, nodding to Jessie to follow.
The breakfast-room into which she was ushered was by far the most commodious room in the house.
A great, square apartment with ceilings and panelings of solid oak, ma.s.sive side-boards, which contained the family silver for fully a century or more, great, high-backed chairs with heavy carvings, done up in leather, and a polished, inlaid floor, with here and there a velvet rug or tiger"s skin.
The old lady was seated at the table as Harriet ushered in the young girl. She smiled, and nodded a welcome. Opposite her sat a little old man with large ears, who peered at her sharply from over a pair of double-barreled, gold-rimmed eyegla.s.ses.
"This is the young person whom I have just engaged as my companion,"
said Mrs. Ba.s.sett, shrilly, turning toward her husband.
"H"m!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the old gentleman. "What did you say this young woman"s name was?"
"Bain," she replied.
"Hey?" he exclaimed, holding his right hand trumpet fashion, to his ear.
"Give me the name a little louder."
"Miss Bain-- Jessie Bain!" shouted his wife, in an ear-splitting voice that made every nerve in Jessie"s body throb and quiver.
"Ah--h"m-- Miss Bain," he repeated; adding, as he cleared out his throat: "I am very anxious to have the papers read while we breakfast.
You may as well begin by reading this morning"s reports," he said, handing her a paper which lay folded beside his plate. "You may turn to the stock reports first, Miss Bain. Third column on the first page, Miss Bain."
She had scarcely finished the first paragraph ere the old gentleman commanded her to stop.
"Can you understand one word that this young woman is reading?" he inquired, turning sharply to his wife.
"No. Miss Bain must read louder," she said. "I do not quite catch it."
The perspiration stood out in great b.a.l.l.s on Jessie"s pale face. She had raised her voice to almost a shout already, and her throat was beginning to ache terribly, for the strain upon it was very great. How she ever struggled down to the bottom of that column, she never knew. The appearance of the breakfast tray was a welcome relief to her.