"Oh well, I"m going in. Come! we"ll just go in for a minute. It"s no harm. Come just for a minute."
Matilda, however, stopped at the gate, and stood there waiting for her sister; while Maria stepped in cautiously and made her way as far as the front of the house. Here she turned and beckoned to Matilda to join her; but the little one stood fast.
"What does she want of you?" a voice asked at her elbow. Matilda started. Two ladies were there.
"She beckoned for me to go in where she is," said Matilda.
"Well, why don"t you go in?"
The voice was kindly; the face of the lady was bending towards her graciously; but who it was Matilda did not know.
"We have no leave to go in," she said. "I do not like to be there."
"I dare say the people would let you come in, if they knew you wished it."
"They do not know," said Matilda.
"What a charming child!" said the lady apart to her companion. "My dear," she went on to Matilda, "will you come in on my invitation? This is my house, and you are welcome. I shall be as glad to see you as you to see the place. Come!"
And she took Matilda"s hand and led her in.
Just at the crown of the bank the house stood, and from here the view was very lovely, even now in winter. Over the wide river, which lay full in view with its ice covering, to the opposite sh.o.r.es and the magnificent range of mountains, which, from Matilda"s window at home, she could just see in a little bit. The full range lay here before the eye, white with snow, coloured and brightened by the sinking sun, which threw wonderful lights across them, and revealed beautiful depths and shadows. Still, cold, high, far-off; their calm majesty held Matilda"s eye.
"Are you looking at the mountains?" said the lady. "Yes, now come in and you shall look at my flowers. Your sister may come too," she added, nodding kindly to Maria; but she kept Matilda"s hand, and so led her first upon the piazza, which was a single step above the ground, then into the hall. An octagon hall, paved with marble, and with large white statues holding post around its walls, and a vase of flowers on the bal.u.s.trade at the foot of the staircase. But those were not the flowers the lady had meant; she pa.s.sed on to one of the inner rooms, and from that to another, and finally into a pretty greenhouse, with gla.s.s windows looking out to the mountains and the river, filled on this side of the windows with tropical bloom. While the girls gazed in wonder, the lady stepped back into the room they had left, and threw off her wrappings. When she came again to the girls in the greenhouse, they hardly knew which to look at, her or the flowers; her dress and whole appearance were so unlike anything they had ever seen.
"Which do you like best?" she said. "The roses, you know, of course; these are camellias,--and these--and these red ones too; all camellias.
These are myrtle; these are heath; these are geraniums--all those are geraniums. This is Eupatorium--those, yes, those are azaleas, and those,--and all those. Yes, all azaleas. You like them? This is bigonia. What do you like best?"
It was a long while before Matilda could divide and define her admiration enough to tell what she liked best. Carnations and heath were found at last to have her best favour. The lady cut a bouquet for her with plenty of carnations and heath, but a variety of other beauty too; then led the girls into the other room and offered them some rich cake and a gla.s.s of what Matilda supposed to be wine. She took the cake and refused the cordial.
"It is very sweet," said the lady. "You will not dislike it; and it will warm you, this cold afternoon."
"I may not drink wine, ma"am, thank you," Matilda answered.
"It is not wine. Does it make you sick, my dear? Are you afraid to try it? Your sister is not afraid. I think it will do you good."
Being thus rea.s.sured, Matilda put the gla.s.s to her lips, but immediately set it down again.
"You do not like it?" said the lady.
"I like it; but--it is strong?" said Matilda, inquiringly.
"Why, yes, it would not be good for anything if it were not strong.
Never mind that--if you like it. The gla.s.s does not hold but a thimbleful, and a thimbleful will not hurt you. Why, why not, my dear?"
Matilda looked up, and coloured and hesitated.
"I have promised not," she said.
"So solemnly?" said the lady, laughing. "Is it your mother you have promised?"
"No, ma"am."
"Not your mother? You have a mother?"
"Oh yes, ma"am."
"Would she have any objection?"
"No, ma"am--I believe not."
"Then whom have you made your promise to? Is it a religious scruple that some one has taught you?"
"I have promised to do all I could for helping temperance work,"
Matilda said at last.
She was answered with a little ringing laugh, not unkindly but amused; and then her friend said gravely--
"Your taking a gla.s.s of cordial in this house would not affect anything or anybody, little one. It would do _me_ no harm. I drink a gla.s.s of wine every day with my dinner. I shall go on doing it just the same. It will not make a bit of difference to me, whether you take your cordial or not."
But Matilda looked at the lady, and did not look at her gla.s.s.
"Do you think it will?" said the lady, laughing.
"No, ma"am."
"Then your promise to help temperance work does not touch the cordial."
"No ma"am, but----"
"But?--what "but"?"
"It touches me."
"Does it?" said the lady. "That is odd. You think a promise is a promise. Here is your sister taking her cordial; she has not made the same promise, I suppose?"
Maria and Matilda glanced at each other.
"She has?" cried the lady. "Yet you see she does not think as you do about it."
The sisters did not look into each other"s eyes again. Their friend watched them both.
"I should like to know whom you have made such a promise to," she said coaxingly to Matilda. "Somebody that you love well enough to make you keep it. Won"t you tell me? It is not your mother, you said. To whom did you make that promise, dear?"
Matilda hesitated and looked up into the lady"s face again.
"I promised--the Lord Jesus," she said.