"If she can only think so; but she fancies the being a teacher the most horrid thing in the world."
"Oh, Wilmet!" interrupted Angela; "why, you like teaching: and Robin means to be a real governess, and so do I, if I am not a Sister!"
"Me too," called out Stella.
"But you see this unlucky girl can"t understand that teaching may be a real way of doing good; she fancies it a degradation. She says she and her friends at her inst.i.tute hated and despised the teachers, and played all manner of tricks upon them."
"How foolish the teachers must have been!"
"She did say something about their being low and mean. She did me the favour to say not like me, and that she was quite shocked to find I was one of this dreadful race. It was quite amazing to her when I told her how Robina"s dear Miss Lyveson keeps school without necessity, only to be useful. You may imagine what it is to her to be plunged all on a sudden into this unhappy cla.s.s. She began by trying to take her old place as an officer"s daughter, and to consort with the girls; but I think if she and Carry Price were left to one another, she would very soon sink as low as any of the poor hounded teachers she describes."
"She must be very silly and conceited."
"No, I think she is sensible, and loving too, at the bottom," said Wilmet, "only every one is strange here. I think she will understand better soon; and in the meantime she has quite forgiven me for being a teacher. She clung about me, and called me all sorts of pretty names--her only friend, and so forth."
"Perhaps she can forgive you for being a teacher, in consideration of your being a twin," said Cherry.
"There, Cherry, you understand her better already than I do! I"ll bring her to you, I have not time for such a friendship."
"Poor thing! I should like to try to comfort her, if she is strange and dreary; but I think she must be rather a goose. What"s her name?"
"Alice; but in school Miss Pearson is very particular about having her called Miss Knevett. We have exchanged Christian names in private, of course."
"You horrid old prosy thing of four U"s," said Geraldine. "You are sitting up there, you great fair creature, you, for the poor child to worship and adore, and not reciprocating a bit!"
"Of course," said Wilmet, "if she can"t be happy without being petted, I must pet her, and let her be nonsensical about me; but I think it is all great stuff, and that you will suit her much better than I ever shall."
"Do you never mean to have a friend, Mettie?"
"Oh no, I haven"t time; besides, I"ve got Alda."
Geraldine had, however, many dreams about the charms of friendship.
She read of it in the books that Felix selected for her; and Robina had a vehement affection for a schoolfellow whose hair and whose carte she treasured, and to whom she would have written daily during the holidays but for the cost of stamps. The equality and freedom of the letters she received always made Cherry long for the like. Since Edgar had left her, she had never been on those equal terms with any one; Wilmet was more like mother or aunt than sister; and though Felix had a certain air of confidence and ease when with her, and made her his chief playfellow, he could not meet all her tastes or all her needs; and there was a sort of craving within her for intimacy with a creature of her own species.
And though Wilmet"s description of Alice Knevett did not sound particularly wise, Cherry, in her humility, deemed her the more secure of being on her own level, not so sensible and intolerant of little dreams, fancies, and delusions as those two sensible people, the twin sisters. So she watched impatiently for the introduction; and at last Wilmet said, "Well, she is coming to tea to-morrow evening. Little ridiculous chit, she bridled and doubted, but as you were an invalid, she supposed she might, only it was not what she had been used to, and Papa "might object.""
"What? To the shop? Well, I really think she had better not come!
I"ll have n.o.body here that thinks it a favour, and looks down on Felix."
"My dear, if she contrives to look down on Felix after she has seen him, she will deserve anything you please. Just now, I believe the foolishness is in her school, and not in herself."
Nevertheless, Geraldine"s eagerness underwent a great revulsion.
Instead of looking forward to the visit, she expected it with dread, and dislike to the pert, conceited, flippant Londoner, who despised her n.o.ble brother, and aspired to the notice of Carry Price. Her nervous shrinking from strangers--the effect of her secluded life-- increased on her every moment of that dull wet afternoon; her feet grew cold, her cheeks hot, and she could hardly find temper or patience for the many appeals of Bernard and Stella for her attention.
Her foolish little heart was palpitating as if a housebreaker were entering instead of Wilmet, conducting a dainty cloud of fresh lilac muslin, out of which appeared a shining black head, and a smiling sparkling face, with so much life and play about the mouth and eyes that there was no studying their form or colour, and it was only after a certain effort that it could be realised that Alice Knevett was a glowing brunette, with a saucy little nose, retrousse, though very pretty, a tiny mouth full of small pearls, and eyes of black diamond.
In spite of her gracious manner, and evident consciousness of her own condescension, the winsomeness of the dancing eyes fascinated Cherry at once. Indeed, the simplicity and transparency of her little dignities disarmed all displeasure, they were so childish; and they vanished in a moment in a game at play with Bernard and Stella. When Wilmet brought out Geraldine"s portfolio, her admiration was enthusiastic if not critical.
A sketch of Wilmet and Alda enchanted her; she had never seen anything so lovely or so well done.
"No, no," said Cherry, rather shocked, "you must have seen the Royal Academy."
"Oh, but I am sure this ought to be in the Royal Academy; I never saw anything there that I liked half so much. How clever you must be!"
Cherry could not but laugh at the extravagant compliment. "My brother Edgar draws much better than that," she said, producing a capital water-colour of a group of Flemish market-women.
"I shall always like yours best. Oh! and what is this?"
"I did not know it was there," said Cherry, colouring, and trying to take it away.
"Oh, let me look. What! Is it a storm, or a regatta, or fishing boats? What is that odd light? What is written under? "The waves of this troublesome world." Why, that is in the Bible, is not it?"
"Thirteen boats, Cherry," said Wilmet; "is that a device of your own?"
"What, not copied? Oh dear! I wish I was so clever!"
"It is the sea of this life, isn"t it?" said Angela, coming up. "Is it ourselves, Cherry, all making for the golden light of Heaven, and the star of faith guiding them?"
"She reads it like a book," exclaimed Alice. "And those two close together--that means love, I suppose!"
"Love and help, the weak and the strong," said Geraldine, in her earnest dreamy voice.
"Do pray make a picture of my boat on a nice smooth sea of light; I don"t like rocks and breakers, such as you have done there."
"There always must be a last long wave," said Cherry.
"Oh, but don"t let us think about horrid things. I like the summer sea. Aren"t there some verses--
""Youth at the prow, and pleasure at the helm?""
"That would not be a pleasant augury," said Cherry. "Do you know what this is meant for, bad as it is? Longfellow"s verses--"
"The phantom host that beleaguered the walls of Prague? How can you draw such things?"
"So I say," observed Wilmet.
"They come and haunt me, and I feel as if I must."
"Who is this kneeling on the wall? He looks like a knight watching his armour."
"So he is," said Cherry.
"But there is nothing about him in the poem. Did you make him for yourself?"
"Why, he is Ferdinand Travis!" exclaimed Wilmet.