Wych Hazel faced round upon her with eyes wide open at first in displeased astonishment. But in a moment another look came, startled, wondering, as when one finds a sudden unlooked-for clue.
Was _that_ it? Wych Hazel said to herself. Had it been left to Mrs.
Coles to tell her? "A good marching uniform?"?Wych Hazel thought she knew better now than ever before "what to do about dress."
The ladies were going out, and the subject dropped. The morning was filled with out-of-door business. At luncheon Mrs. Coles declared herself fatigued and disposed to rest at home. She fondly hoped the afternoon would be made lively by visiters; and to her wish, so it was.
Among others came Miss Annabella Powder. This young lady had not been wont to seem so fond of Hazel"s society as the other members of her family; indeed she rarely made her appearance at Chickaree more frequently than civility demanded. To-day, however, she made a long visit. It was not that she seemed to be enjoying herself; she went languidly through a prolonged conversation with Mrs. Coles, who had an endless number of questions to ask about the winter, and especially about her pretty sister Mrs. Charteris; with a latent view to supplemental information also about Rollo and his wife, if such were to be had.
Annabella answered at random, made Mrs. Coles desperate, was bored; and yet did not go away. At last she seized a chance and moved to a seat beside Hazel. It was at a time when several other people were present and just then engaged more or less with each other and a common subject. Annabella had never been intimate with Hazel. Therefore it was the more noticeable when with depressed voice and somewhat hurried emphasis she said,
"I want to speak to you?I want to say a word.?How can I?"
"In this window?" said Wych Hazel leading the way. "They are miles deep in Miss Burr"s engagement."
In the window was a most beautiful hyacinth. The two ladies stood, one on this side and one on the other side, and spoke,?not about floriculture.
"I have no time here," Annabella began breathlessly, bending down to put her nose to the beautiful buff bells, which were sweet enough at a greater distance. "I want to see you alone, Mrs. Rollo.
You were always so kind?When can I? I have a great deal to say.
Could you go and drive with me by and by? I don"t know what other way?"
"It must be to-morrow, then," said Hazel, straightening the stick which supported the heavy head of flowers. "To-day I am promised to Mrs. Coles."
"To-morrow, then? You are so kind, Mrs. Rollo!?and you are the only person?At three o"clock, then? and I will come in mamma"s carriage. You wont speak of it?"
"I never give such promises," said Wych Hazel.
"But"?Annabella"s eye went anxiously to Mrs. Coles.
"Discretion is stronger than bonds."
"And you are very discreet?" said the girl trying to laugh. "Well, I must trust you. But don"t let any one know you are going out with me!"
The next day Mrs. Coles was engaged to luncheon with a friend and took Primrose with her. They had not returned when Miss Powder came for Hazel, and the two ladies drove off in security. It was not a day for a pleasure drive. Clouds hung low and grey; the air had been keen and raw, with snow in its course somewhere.
Now it had become suspiciously milder. But neither lady was thinking of pleasure.
"You are very good, Mrs. Rollo!" said Annabella, who evidently had some difficulty in commanding herself, and was very unlike her usual statuesque manner. For she was a handsome girl, of the Madonna type, and either by temperament or for policy had long adopted a calm style to match. To-day it was broken up.?"I am very much obliged to you!" she went on. "I did not know whom to speak to, and I _must_ get somebody to help me. And Josephine used to think so much of you; I thought she would mind you if anybody.
I couldn"t ask mamma?mamma don"t know. O what shall I do?"?
And with this most honest cry of despair, poor Annabella broke down.
Hazel asked what was the matter? under the wild idea for a moment that Miss Powder had found her heart and then rashly broken it.
"n.o.body knows?" the girl began again, trying to get the better of her agitation; "it has not come out yet; n.o.body suspects; and I thought?if you could hinder it! If you cannot, there is no one that can. Mamma has no idea. And it would just kill her to know. She thinks it is all right. Poor mamma!?"
"But what am I to hinder?" said Wych Hazel.
"Have you seen Josephine lately?"
"Yes."
"Didn"t she seem like herself?"
"Extremely like herself."
"So she did when I saw her. And her house,?did you see her house??it was so nicely arranged and so pretty; and I thought she was so happy?"
"I never thought that," said Wych Hazel.
"I did. I thought she had got what she wanted; we all thought so.
n.o.body married this year had a better establishment than Josephine; not one."
"She got what she married for," said Hazel; "but Josephine"s "wants"
were larger than that."
"Were they?" said Annabella drearily. "I didn"t know it. I don"t see how they could be."
Ironical words rose to Wych Hazel"s lips; but she sent them back.
Somehow her own height of happiness made her strangely tender and humble even towards such fallacy as this.
"Then you are not troubled about her?" she said enquiringly.
"Troubled!" Annabella echoed. "Why she has left it all."
"Left it!"?Wych Hazel sat up straight in her place, facing round.
"n.o.body knows yet; but she has left it. Mamma don"t know. If I can only keep it from mamma!?"
"Keep it from Mrs. Powder?" Hazel repeated. "Keep what? Where has she gone? What can you be talking of, Miss Powder?"
"She has not gone far yet, but she means never to come back. I know where she is; she is hiding. You see, Mr. Charteris is at Albany; he has some business about some bill he wants to get through the Legislature, and it will keep him there a while; and Josey took the opportunity. She ran away; and I should never have known where to, only that the person she went to came and told me. It is a woman who used to be housekeeper for mamma; a very respectable woman; and Josey went to her. Think of it! And she won"t come back. Not for me. And then I thought, if anybody living could have any influence over her, it might be you. She always thought all the world of you. Is it very bold in me to ask you? But Mrs. Rollo, I was desperate!"
Poor Annabella"s looks and tones did not belie her. Wych Hazel sat back again, thinking.
"Marry a _man_," she said slowly, "and you may be able to live along without an "establishment." But if you marry an establishment, the small appendage that goes along with it? But she must come back, of course! at once," Hazel exclaimed, retaking her impetuous tones. "Won"t come??she _must_."
"If you can only make her?" said Annabella. "n.o.body knows anything yet?and Charteris will not be home for days. But I have not told you quite the whole. There is another person concerned. I am afraid,"?Annabella spoke with bated breath?"she means to go to Europe."
"Stuart Nightingale?"
"Oh do you know that?" Annabella burst forth with a cry that was almost pitiful. "Do you know that? Is there no hope? Can we do nothing?"
Usually so calm and impa.s.sive, Miss Powder"s manner to-day was in a sort of shattered condition. Hazel"s mention of Stuart"s name had startled her into an access of fear. And the difficulty of managing a volcano from the outside came strongly into Wych Hazel"s mind. She answered slowly,
"I do not know. We will try."
"And may I take you to her now? There is no time to lose."
Hazel a.s.sented, thinking busily. "This is _her_ resource," she said to herself. "The pocket pistol would have been mine."
The carriage rolled on now for a time without any more words pa.s.sing between its inmates. Both ladies were meditating, ways and means and hindrances. The grey sky under which they had begun their drive, seemed to be letting itself down closer and closer upon the earth; and this low grey canopy was becoming suspiciously smooth and uniform. The air was quite still, and had as I said, suddenly grown mild. But neither of the two busy thinkers noticed the signs abroad.
"Mrs. Rollo," Annabella began after a long pause,?"I am afraid you can do nothing with Phinny. She always has had her own way, and she is obstinate. Suppose you cannot make her listen to you; do you think you could have any power with Mr. Nightingale?"