"Do you hear that, Roger?" whispered Gladys, nudging her brother; "they"re asking how she is. That means Mrs. Nest, I"m sure. She must be ill."
Roger said nothing, but listened solemnly.
"Her was quite well when us went out," he observed, after a considerable pause.
"Yes, but sometimes people get ill all of a sudden," said Gladys. Then, after a moment, "Roger," she said, "I think I"ll go and ask. I shall be _so_ unhappy if poor Mrs. Nest is ill."
"So will I," said Roger.
They got up from the floor, and hand in hand crept timidly towards the door. Francoise was still standing there, listening to Adolphe, who was talking to the two or three still standing there. Francoise turned at the sound of the children"s footsteps, and raised a warning finger. But Gladys put her aside, with what "Walter" would have called her imperious air.
"Let us pa.s.s," she said. "I want to speak to Mr. "Dolph."
The young man heard the sound of his own name.
"What is it?" he said quickly, in French.
"I want to know what"s the matter. Is Mrs. Nest ill?" asked Gladys. But she had to repeat her question two or three times before Adolphe understood it He was flurried and distressed--indeed, his eyes looked as if he had been crying--and that made it more difficult for him to catch the meaning of the child"s words. But at last he did so.
"Ah!" he exclaimed. "Yes, there is much the matter. My poor mother--she has fallen downstairs and broken her leg."
Gladys clasped her two hands together.
"Broken her leg," she repeated. "Oh, poor Mrs. Nest! Oh, it must hurt her dreadfully."
At this Roger burst out crying. Adolphe turned round, and picked him up in his arms.
"Poor little fellow," he said, "yes, he, too, is very sorry. What we are to do I know not. Anna away, too. I hope you will be very good and quiet children. Francoise, too, will be so busy--you will do all you can to give no trouble, will you not? I wish we had news of the Papa!" he added, as he turned away.
He did not speak at all unkindly, but he seemed very much troubled, and with his broken English it was very difficult for Gladys to follow all he said.
"May I go and see poor Mrs. Nest?" she said timidly.
"No, no; you cannot see her for a long time," replied Adolphe hastily, as he left the room.
"I must send a telegram to Mademoiselle Anna," he added to Francoise, and unfortunately for her peace of mind, Gladys understood him. She turned away, her lips quivering.
"Come upstairs, dear," she said to her little brother. "Come to our room and I will take off your things."
Roger followed her obediently. Francoise had disappeared into the kitchen, where more than ever she was needed, as there was no one else to see about the dinner--so the two little things climbed upstairs by themselves. It was already growing dusk--the dull little room looked cheerless, and felt chilly. Roger looked up into Gladys"s eyes as she was unfastening his coat.
"Are you crying, Gladdie?" he said, in his little soft sad tone.
Gladys turned away a moment to wipe her eyes. If she had not done so she would probably have burst into a terrible fit of tears, for never had she felt so miserable and desolate. Her pride, too, was aroused, for she saw most plainly that she and Roger were more than ever a sad burden and trouble. But what could she do? What could any little girl of seven years old have done in such a case?
The sight of Roger"s meek sad face gave her a kind of strength. For his sake she must keep up anyway the appearance of cheerfulness. So she kissed him, and answered quietly:
"I am very sorry for poor Mrs. Nest. She has been so kind to us."
"Yes," said Roger. Then a bright idea struck him. "I"ll say my prayers for her to be made better to-night. Will you, Gladdie?"
"Yes," said Gladys, and there was comfort in the thought to her, for it brought with it another. "I"ll ask G.o.d to help _us_," she thought to herself, "and when I go to bed I"ll think and think, and perhaps He"ll put something in my head. _Perhaps_ I must try to write to Miss Susan."
The loss of Madame Nestor"s constant kindness was quickly felt. No one came near the children, and when Gladys crept downstairs there was no light in the little sitting-room--no gla.s.ses of milk and plate of rolls waiting for them on the table, as had become a habit. And Roger was cold and hungry! He had asked Gladys to go down and look if there was any "gouter," as they had learnt to call this afternoon luncheon, and when she came up again and told him "no," the poor little fellow, frightened, and cold, and hungry, burst into loud sobbing. Gladys was so afraid it would be heard, and that they would be scolded for disturbing Madame Nestor, that she persuaded Roger to get into bed, where she covered him up warmly, and promised to tell him a story if he would leave off crying.
It was not easy to keep her promise--she felt so on the point of bursting into tears herself that she had to stop every now and then to clear her throat, and she was not sorry when, on one of these occasions, instead of Roger"s shrill little voice urging her to "go on. What do you stop for, Gladdie?" she heard by his regular breathing that he had fallen asleep. She had no light, but she felt about to be sure he was well covered, and then, leaning her head on the side of his bed, she tried to "think."
"I would not mind anything so much if Anna was not coming back," she said to herself. "But if she is here, and poor Mrs. Nest shut up in her room, she can do anything she likes to us, for Mr. "Dolph wouldn"t know; and if I told him he"d think I was very naughty to bother him when his mother was ill. I think I must write to Miss Susan--at least, if Anna is _very_ unkind, I will--unless--unless--oh, if it _would_ but happen for Papa to come to-morrow, or a letter! I"ll wait till to-morrow and see--and _perhaps_ Anna won"t come back, not--not if Papa"s in the train--she"d run away if she saw him, if he had Mrs. Nest"s cap on, she"d"--and that was all, for before Gladys had settled what she would do, she too, as you see, had fallen asleep.
She slept some time--an hour or two--and she awoke, feeling cold and stiff, though what had awakened her she did not at first know, till again, bringing with it the remembrance of having heard it before, the sound of a voice calling her reached her ears.
"Mademoiselle--Mademoiselle Gladees," it said, "why do you not come? The dinner is all ready, and I have called you so many times." It was Francoise, tumbling up the narrow stair in the dark. Gladys heard her fumbling at the door, and called out "Francoise!" Then Roger woke and started up, trembling. "What is it--what is the matter, Gladdie?" he cried, and Gladys had to soothe and pet him, and say it was only Francoise; and Francoise in the meantime had got into the room, exclaiming at their having no light, and pulling a box of matches from her pocket, struck one, and hunted about till she found a bit of candle.
It was a rather melancholy scene that the end of candle lighted up.
"So--you have been asleep!" exclaimed the servant; "well, perhaps it was the best thing. Well, come down now, Monsieur Adolphe is asking for you," and she would scarcely let them wait to dip their hands in water and smooth their tumbled hair.
"What will become of them when _she_ comes back and poor Madame ill in bed, who can say?" the peasant girl muttered to herself as she led them downstairs. "I wish their friends would come to fetch them--I do. It"s certainly very strange for rich people to leave their children like that," and Francoise shook her head.
Monsieur Adolphe received the children kindly. He had been a little alarmed when Francoise had told him she could not find them in the sitting-room, for he knew it would trouble his poor mother greatly if she found her little favourites were neglected, for the thought of them was one of the things most troubling the poor woman in the middle of her suffering.
"If but the Papa would come for them," she had already said to her son.
"I know not what to do. I think we must ask some advice. Anna dislikes them so; and if she comes back to-morrow----"
"She may not come till the day after," said Adolphe. "Do not trouble yourself about anything just now. The children are all right for the moment."
"And you will be kind to them at dinner, and give them nice pieces. They do not eat much, but they are used to more delicate cooking than ours."
"Rea.s.sure yourself. I will do all as you would yourself. And if you keep quiet, my good Mamma, perhaps in a day or two you can see them for yourself. The great thing is to keep quiet, and that will keep down the fever, the doctor says," repeated poor Adolphe, who was really a good and affectionate son.
"Ah, yes," thought poor Madame Nestor, "that is all very well, but at my age," for she was really old--old to be the mother of Adolphe, having married late in life, "at my age one does not break one"s leg for nothing. But the good G.o.d knows best. If my time has come, so be it. I have no great anxiety to leave behind me, like some poor women, thank Heaven! Only these poor children!"
And thanks to what Madame Nestor had said, and thanks in part, too, to his kind feelings, Adolphe was very friendly to the children at dinner; and in reply to their timid inquiries about his mother, told them that the doctor thought she was going on well, and in a day or two they might see her, if they were very good and quiet. So the meal pa.s.sed off peacefully.
"After all," thought Adolphe, "they do not cost one much. They eat like sparrows. Still it is a great responsibility--poor little things!"
He took Roger in his arms and kissed him when he said good-night, and Gladys would have gone to bed feeling rather less unhappy, for Francoise put in her head to say she would come in half an hour to help to undress "Monsieur Roger," but for some words she overheard among some of the young workwomen, which she understood only too well--that Mademoiselle Anna was returning the next morning!
"I _must_ write to Miss Susan," thought the little girl, as she at last fell asleep.
CHAPTER IX.
FROM BAD TO WORSE.
"Their hearts were laden With sorrow, surprise, and fear."