But the summer-time came to an end.
It was a November morning, and Fleda had been doing some of the last jobs in her flower-beds. She was coming in with spirits as bright as her cheeks, when her aunt"s att.i.tude and look, more than usually spiritless, suddenly checked them.
Fleda gave her a hopeful kiss, and asked for the explanation.
"How bright you look, darling!" said her aunt, stroking her cheek.
"Yes, but you don"t, aunt Lucy. What has happened?"
"Mary and Jane are going away."
"Going away! ? What for?"
"They are tired of the place ? don"t like it, I suppose."
"Very foolish of them! Well, aunt Lucy, what matter? we can get plenty more in their room."
"Not from the city ? not possible; they would not come at this time of year."
"Sure? ? Well, then, here we can, at any rate."
"Here! But what sort of persons shall we get here? And your uncle ? just think!" ?
"Oh, but I think we can manage," said Fleda. "When do Mary and Jane want to go?"
"Immediately! ? to-morrow; they are not willing to wait till we can get somebody. Think of it!"
"Well, let them go," said Fleda; "the sooner the better."
"Yes: and I am sure I don"t want to keep them; but" ? and Mrs.
Rossitur wrung her hands ? "I haven"t money enough to pay them quite ? and they wont go without it."
Fleda felt shocked; so much that she could not help looking it.
"But can"t uncle Rolf give it you?"
Mrs. Rossitur shook her head. "I have asked him."
"How much is wanting?"
"Twenty-five. Think of his not being able to give me that!" ?
Mrs. Rossitur burst into tears.
"Now don"t, aunt Lucy!" said Fleda, guarding well her own composure; "you know he has had a great deal to spend upon the farm, and paying men, and all, and it is no wonder that he should be a little short just now ? now, cheer up! ? we can get along with this, anyhow."
"I asked him," said Mrs. Rossitur, through her tears, "when he would be able to give it to me; and he told me he didn"t know!"
Fleda ventured no reply, but some of the tenderest caresses that lips and arms could give; and then sprang away, and in three minutes was at her aunt"s side again.
"Look here, aunt Lucy," said she, gently, "here is twenty dollars, if you can manage the five."
"Where did you get this?" Mrs. Rossitur exclaimed.
"I got it honestly. It is mine, aunt Lucy," said Fleda, smiling. "Uncle Orrin gave me some money, just before we came away, to do what I liked with; and I haven"t wanted to do anything with it till now."
But this seemed to hurt Mrs. Rossitur more than all the rest.
Leaning her head forward upon Fleda"s breast, and clasping her arms about her, she cried worse tears than Fleda had seen her shed. If it had not been for the emergency, Fleda would have broken down utterly too.
"That it should have come to this! ? I can"t take it, dear Fleda! ?"
"Yes, you must, aunt Lucy," said Fleda, soothingly. "I couldn"t do anything else with it that would give me so much pleasure. I don"t want it; it would lie in my drawer till I don"t know when. We"ll let these people be off as soon as they please. Don"t take it so; uncle Rolf will have money again ?
only just now he is out, I suppose ? and we"ll get somebody else in the kitchen that will do nicely; you see if we don"t."
Mrs. Rossitur"s embrace said what words were powerless to say.
"But I don"t know how we"re to find any one here in the country ? I don"t know who"ll go to look ? I am sure your uncle wont want to; and Hugh wouldn"t know ?"
"I"ll go," said Fleda, cheerfully ? "Hugh and I. We can do famously, if you"ll trust me. I wont promise to bring home a French cook."
"No, indeed; we must take what we can get. But you can get no one to-day, and they will be off by the morning"s coach; what shall we do to-morrow ? for dinner? ? your uncle ?"
"I"ll get dinner," said Fleda, caressing her; "I"ll take all that on myself. It sha"n"t be a bad dinner either. Uncle Rolf will like what I do for him, I dare say. Now, cheer up, aunt Lucy; do; that"s all I ask of you. Wont you ? for me?"
She longed to speak a word of that quiet hope with which in every trouble she secretly comforted herself ? she wanted to whisper the words that were that moment in her own mind, "Truly, I know that it shall be well with them that fear G.o.d;"
but her natural reserve and timidity kept her lips shut to her grief.
The women were paid off and dismissed, and departed in the next day"s coach from Montepoole. Fleda stood at the front door to see them go, with a curious sense that there was an empty house at her back, and indeed upon her back. And in spite of all the cheeriness of her tone to her aunt, she was not without some shadowy feeling that soberer times might be coming upon them.
"What is to be done now?" said Hugh, close beside her.
"Oh, we are going to get somebody else," said Fleda.
"Where?"
"I don"t know! You and I are going to find out."
"You and I!"
"Yes. We are going out after dinner, Hugh, dear," said she, turning her bright merry face towards him ? "to pick up somebody."
Linking her arm within his, she went back to the deserted kitchen premises, to see how her promise about talking Mary"s place was to be fulfilled.
"Do you know where to look?" said Hugh.
"I"ve a notion; but the first thing is dinner, that uncle Rolf mayn"t think the world is turning topsy-turvy. There is nothing at all here, Hugh ? nothing in the world but bread ?
it"s a blessing there is that. Uncle Rolf will have to be satisfied with a coffee dinner to-day, and I"ll make him the most superb omelette that my skill is equal to! Hugh, dear, you shall set the table. ? You don"t know how? ? then you shall make the toast, and I will set it the first thing of all. You perceive it is well to know how to do everything, Mr.
Hugh Rossitur."
"Where did you learn to make omelettes?" said Hugh, with laughing admiration, as Fleda bared two pretty arms, and ran about, the very impersonation of good-humoured activity. The table was set ? the coffee was making ? and she had him established at the fire with two great plates, a pile of slices of bread, and the toasting-iron.