Mrs. Nimmo"s manner was one that would have checked confidences in an ordinary child. It made Narcisse more eager to justify himself. "Why does my mother cry every night?" he asked, suddenly.
"How can I tell?" answered Mrs. Nimmo, peevishly.
"I hear a noise in the night, like trees in a storm," said Narcisse, tragically, and, drawing himself up, he fetched a tremendous sigh from the pit of his little stomach; "then I put up my hand so,"--and leaning over, he placed three fingers on Mrs. Nimmo"s eyelids,--"and my mother"s face is quite wet, like leaves in the rain."
Mrs. Nimmo did not reply, and he went on with alarming abruptness. "She cries for the Englishman. I also cried, and one night I got out of bed.
It was very fine; there was the night sun in the sky,--you know, madame, there is a night sun and a day sun--"
"Yes, I know."
"I went creeping, creeping to the wharf like a fly on a tree. I was not afraid, for I carried your son in my hand, and he says only babies cry when they are alone."
"And then,--" said Mrs. Nimmo.
"Oh, the beautiful stone!" cried Narcisse, his volatile fancy attracted by a sparkling ring on Mrs. Nimmo"s finger.
She sighed, and allowed him to handle it for a moment. "I have just put it on again, little boy. I have been in mourning for the last two years.
Tell me about your going to the boat."
"There is nothing to tell," said Narcisse; "it was a very little boat."
"Whose boat was it?"
"The blacksmith"s."
"How did you get it off from the wharf?"
"Like this," and bending over, he began to fumble with the strings of her nightcap, tying and untying until he tickled her throat and made her laugh irresistibly and push him away. "There was no knife," he said, "or I would have cut it."
"But you did wrong to take the blacksmith"s boat."
Narcisse"s face flushed, yet he was too happy to become annoyed with her. "When the Englishman is there, I am good, and my mother does not cry. Let him go back with me."
"And what shall I do?"
Narcisse was plainly embarra.s.sed. At last he said, earnestly, "Remain, madame, with the black man, who will take care of you. When does the Englishman arrive?"
"I do not know; run away now, I want to dress."
"You have here a fine bathroom," said Narcisse, sauntering across the room to an open door. "When am I to have my bath?"
"Does your mother give you one every day?"
"Yes, madame, at night, before I go to bed. Do you not know the screen in our room, and the little tub, and the dish with the soap that smells so nice? I must scour myself hard in order to be clean."
"I am glad to hear that. I will send a tub to your room."
"But I like this, madame."
"Come, come," she said, peremptorily, "run away. No one bathes in my tub but myself."
Narcisse had a pa.s.sion for dabbling in water, and he found this dainty bathroom irresistible. "I hate you, madame," he said, flushing angrily, and stamping his foot at her. "I hate you."
Mrs. Nimmo looked admiringly past the child at his reflection in her cheval gla.s.s. What a beauty he was, as he stood furiously regarding her, his sweet, proud face convulsed, his little body trembling inside his white gown! In his recklessness he had forgotten to be polite to her, and she liked him the better for it.
"You are a naughty boy," she said, indulgently. "I cannot have you in my room if you talk like that."
Without a word Narcisse went to her dressing-table, picked up his precious photograph that he had left propped against a silver-backed brush, and turned to leave her, when she said, curiously, "Why did you tear that picture if you think so much of it?"
Narcisse immediately fell into a state of pitiable confusion, and, hanging his head, remained speechless.
"If you will say you are sorry for being rude, I will give you another one," she said, and in a luxury of delight at playing with this little soul, she raised herself on her arm and held out a hand to him.
Narcisse drew back his lips at her as if he had been a small dog.
"Madame," he faltered, tapping his teeth, "these did it, but I stopped them."
"What do you mean?" said Mrs. Nimmo, and a horrible suspicion entered her mind.
"Narcisse was hungry--in the boat--" stammered the boy. "He nibbled but a little of the picture. He could not bite the Englishman long."
Mrs. Nimmo shuddered. She had never been hungry in her life. "Come here, you poor child. You shall have a bath in my room as soon as I finish.
Give me a kiss."
Narcisse"s sensitive spirit immediately became bathed with light. "Shall I kiss you as your son the Englishman kissed my mother?"
"Yes," said Mrs. Nimmo, bravely, and she held out her arms.
"But you must not do so," said Narcisse, drawing back. "You must now cry, and hide your face like this,"--and his slender, supple fingers guided her head into a distressed position,--"and when I approach, you must wave your hands."
"Did your mother do that?" asked Mrs. Nimmo, eagerly.
"Yes,--and your son lifted her hand like this," and Narcisse bent a graceful knee before her.
"Did she not throw her arms around his neck and cling to him?" inquired the lady, in an excess of jealous curiosity.
"No, she ran from us up the bank."
"Your mother is a wicked woman to cause my son pain," said Mrs. Nimmo, in indignant and rapid French.
"My mother is not wicked," said Narcisse, vehemently. "I wish to see her. I do not like you."
They were on the verge of another disagreement, and Mrs. Nimmo, with a soothing caress, hurried him from the room. What a curious boy he was!
And as she dressed herself she sometimes smiled and sometimes frowned at her reflection in the gla.s.s, but the light in her eyes was always a happy one, and there was an unusual color in her cheeks.
CHAPTER XIX.