<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>WARNING.</h3>
<p>"I think, if you will let me, I will send down
Emma for a little fresh air and to make your
acquaintance, grandmother. She is rather of the
butterfly order of girls, but there is no harm in her.
And as it is likely that I shall have a good deal to
do with the Vernons——"</p>
<p>"What do you want with the Vernons? Why
should you have a good deal to do with them?"
asked Captain Morgan, hastily, and it must be added
rather testily, for the old man's usually placid humour
had been disturbed of late.</p>
<p>"In the most legitimate way," said Ashton. "You
can't wish me, now that I am just launched in business,
to shut my eyes to my own advantage. It will
be for their advantage too. They are going to be
customers of mine. When you have a man's money
to invest you have a good deal to do with him. I
shall have to come and go in all likelihood often."</p>
<p>"Your customers—and their money to invest—what<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</SPAN></span>
do mean by that? I hope you haven't taken
advantage of my relationship with Catherine Vernon
to draw in those boys of hers——"</p>
<p>"Grandfather," said Roland, with an <i>air digne</i>
which it was impossible not to respect, "if you think
a little you will see how injurious your words are.
I cannot for a moment suppose you mean them.
Catherine Vernon's boys, as you call them, are nearly
as old, and I suppose as capable of judging what is
for their advantage, as I am. If they choose to
entrust me with their business, is there any reason
why I should refuse it? I am glad to get everything
I can."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir, there is a reason," said Captain Morgan.
"I know what speculation is. I know what happens
when a hot-headed young fellow gets a little bit of
success, and the gambling fever gets into his veins.
Edward Vernon is just the sort of fellow to fall
a victim. He is a morose, ill-tempered, bilious
being——"</p>
<p>"Stop," said Roland; "have a little consideration,
sir. There is no question of any victim."</p>
<p>"You are just a monomaniac, Rowley, my old
man," said Mrs. Morgan.</p>
<p>"I know everything you can say," said the old
captain. "All that jargon about watching the
market, and keeping a cool head, and running no
unnecessary risks—I know it all. You think you
can turn over your money, as you call it, always to
your advantage, and keep risk at arm's length."</p>
<p>"I do not say so much as that; but risk may be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</SPAN></span>
reduced to a minimum, and profit be the rule, when one
gives one's mind to it—which it is my business to do."</p>
<p>"Oh, I know everything you can say," said the
old man. "Give your mind to it! Give your mind
to an honest trade, that's my advice to you. What
is it at the best but making money out of the follies
of your fellow-creatures? They take a panic and
you buy from them, to their certain loss, and then
they take a freak of enthusiasm and you sell to them,
to their certain loss. Somebody must always lose in
order that you should gain. It is a devilish trade—I
said so when I heard you had gone into it; but for
God's sake, Roland Ashton, keep that for the outside
world, and don't bring ruin and misery here."</p>
<p>"What can I say?" said the young man. He rose
up from the table where he had been taking his
last meal with the old people. He kept his temper
beautifully, Mrs. Morgan thought, with great pride
in him. He grew pale and a little excited, as was
natural, but never forgot his respect for his grandfather,
who, besides that venerable relationship, was
an old man. "What can I say? To tell you that I
consider my profession an honourable one would be
superfluous, for you can't imagine I should have
taken it up had I thought otherwise."</p>
<p>"Rowley, my old man," said Mrs. Morgan, "you
are just as hot-headed as when you were a boy.
But, Roland, you must remember that we have
suffered from it; and everybody says when you begin
to gamble in business, it is worse than any other
kind of gambling."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"When you begin; but there is no need ever to
begin, that I can see."</p>
<p>"And then, my dear—I am not taking up your
grandfather's view, but just telling you what he
means—then, my dear, Catherine Vernon has been
very kind to him and me. She is fond of us, I really
believe. She trusts us, which to her great hurt,
poor thing, she does to few——"</p>
<p>"Catherine Vernon is a noble character. She
has a fine nature. She has a scorn of meanness and
everything that is little——"</p>
<p>The old lady shook her head, "That is true," she
said; "but it is her misfortune, poor thing, that she
gets her amusement out of all that, and she believes
in few. You must not, Roland," she said, laying her
hand upon his arm, "you must not, my dear lad—Oh,
listen to what my old man says! You must not
be the means of leading into imprudence or danger
any one she is fond of—she that has been so kind to
him and to me!"</p>
<p>The old hand was heavy on his arm, bending him
down towards her with an imperative clasp, and this
sudden appeal was so unexpected from the placid
old woman, who seemed to have outgrown all impassioned
feeling and lived only to soothe and reconcile
opposing influences, that both the young man and
the old were impressed by it. Roland Ashton stooped,
and kissed his grandmother's forehead. He had a
great power in him of response to every call of
emotion.</p>
<p>"Dear old mother," he said, "if I were a villain<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</SPAN></span>
and meant harm, I don't see how I could carry on
with it after that. But I want you to believe that
I am not a villain," he said, with a half-laugh of
feeling.</p>
<p>Old Captain Morgan was so touched by the scene
that in the weakness of old age and the unexpectedness
of this interposition the tears stood in his eyes.</p>
<p>"When you do put your shoulder to the wheel,
Mary," he said, with a half-laugh too, and holding
out a hand to Roland, with whom for the first time
he found himself in perfect sympathy, "you do it
like a hero. I'll add nothing to what she has said,
my boy. Even at the risk of losing a profit, or
failing in a stroke of business, respect the house that
has sheltered your family. That's what we both say."</p>
<p>"And I have answered, sir," said Roland, "that
even if I were bent on mischief I could not persist
after such an appeal—and I am not bent on mischief,"
he added, this time with a smile; and so fell
into easy conversation about his sister, and the good
it would do her to pay the old people a visit. "I am
out all day, and she is left to herself. It is dull for
her in a little house at Kilburn, all alone—though
she says she likes it," he went on, glad, as indeed
they all were, to get down to a milder level of
conversation.</p>
<p>The old captain had not taken kindly to the idea
of having Emma; but after the moment of sympathetic
emotion which they had all passed through,
there was no rejecting so very reasonable a petition.
And on the whole, looking back upon it, now that the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</SPAN></span>
young man's portmanteau stood packed in the hall,
and he himself was on the eve of departure, even
the captain could not deny that there had been on
the whole more pleasure in Roland's visit than he
had at all expected. However he might modify the
account of his own sensations, it had certainly been
agreeable to meet a young fellow of his own blood,
his descendant, a man among the many women with
whom he was surrounded, and one who, even when
they disagreed, could support his opinions, and was
at least intelligent, whatever else. He had received
him with unfeigned reluctance, almost forgetting who
his mother was in bitter and strong realisation that
he was his father's son and bore his father's name.
But personal encounter had so softened everything,
that though Roland actually resembled his objectionable
father, the captain parted from him with regret.
And, after all, why should not Emma come? She
was a girl, which in itself softened everything (notwithstanding
that the captain had recognised as a
distinct element in Roland's favour that he was a
man, and so a most desirable interruption to the
flood of womankind—but nobody is bound to be consistent
in these matters). It was good of her brother,
as soon as he was afloat in the world, to take upon
himself the responsibility of providing for Emma,
and on the whole the captain, always ready to be
kind, saw no reason for refusing to be kind to this
lonely girl because she was of his own flesh and
blood. He drew much closer to his grandson during
these last few hours than he had done yet. He went<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</SPAN></span>
out with him to make his adieux to Mrs. John and
her daughter. And Hester came forward to give
them her hand with that little enlargement about
the eyes, which was a sure sign of some emotion in
her mind. She had seen a great deal of Roland, and
his going away gave her a pang which she scarcely
explained to herself. It was so much life subtracted
from the scanty circle. She too, like Edward, felt
that she wanted air, and the departure of one who
had brought so much that was new into her restricted
existence was a loss—that was all. She had assured
herself so half-a-dozen times this morning—therefore
no doubt it was true. As for Roland, it was not in
him to part from such a girl without an attempt at
least to intensify this effect. He drew her towards
the window, apart from the others, to watch, as he
said, for the coming of the slow old fly from
Redborough which was to convey him away.</p>
<p>"My sister is coming," he said, "and I hope you
will be friends. I will instruct her to bring in my
name on every possible occasion, that you may not
altogether forget me."</p>
<p>"There is no likelihood that we shall forget you;
we see so few people here."</p>
<p>"And you call that a consolatory reason! I shall
see thousands of people, but I shall not forget <i>you</i>."
It was Roland's way to use no name. He said <i>you</i>
as if there was nobody but yourself who owned that
pronoun, with an inference that in thinking of the
woman before him, whoever she might be, he, in his
heart, identified her from all women.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Hester was embarrassed by his eyes and his tone,
but not displeased. He had pleased her from the
first. There is a soft and genial interest excited in
the breasts of women by such a man, at which
everybody smiles and which few acknowledge, yet
which is not the less dangerous for that. It rouses
a prepossession in his favour, whatever may come of
it afterwards; and he had done his best to fill up all
his spare moments, when he was not doing something
else, in Hester's company. It would be vain
to say that this homage had not been sweet, and it
had been entertaining, which is so great a matter. It
had opened out a new world to her, and expanded
all her horizon. With his going all these new
outlets into life would be closed again. She felt a
certain terror of the place without Roland. He had
imported into the air an excitement, an expectation.
The prospect of seeing him was a prospect full of
novelty and interest, and even when he did not
come, there had always been that expectation to
brighten the dimness. Now there could be no expectation,
not even a disappointment; and Hester's
eyes were large, and had a clearness of emotion in
them. She might have cried—indeed, it seemed
very likely that she had cried at the thought of his
going away, and would cry again.</p>
<p>"Though I don't know," he added, leaning against
the recess of the window, and so shutting her in
where she stood looking out, "why I should leave so
many thoughts here, for I don't suppose they will do
me any good. They tell me that your mind will be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</SPAN></span>
too fully, and, alas, too pleasantly occupied. Yes, I
say alas! and alas again! I am not glad you will
be so pleasantly occupied. I had rather you were
dull a little, that you might have time now and then
to remember me."</p>
<p>"You are talking a great deal of nonsense, Mr.
Ashton—but that is your way. And how am I to
be so pleasantly occupied? I am glad to hear it,
but I certainly did not know. What is going to
happen?"</p>
<p>"Is this hypocrisy, or is it kindness to spare me?
Or is it——? They tell me that I ought to—congratulate
you," said Roland with a sigh.</p>
<p>"Congratulate me? On what? I suppose," said
Hester, growing red, "there is only one thing upon
which girls are congratulated: and that does not
exist in my case."</p>
<p>"May I believe you?" he said, putting his hands
together with a supplicating gesture, "may I put
faith in you? But it seemed on such good authority.
Your cousin Edward——"</p>
<p>"Did Edward tell you so?" Hester grew so red
that the flush scorched her. She was angry and
mortified and excited. Her interest changed, in a
moment, from the faint interest which she had felt
in the handsome young deceiver before her, to a
feeling more strong and deeply rooted, half made
out of repulsion, half bitter, half injured, yet more
powerful in attraction than any other sentiment of
her mind. Roland was ill-pleased that he was
superseded by this other feeling. It was a sensation<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</SPAN></span>
quite unusual to him, and he did not like it. "He
had no right to say so," said Hester; "he knew
it was not true."</p>
<p>"All is fair in love and war," said Roland;
"perhaps he wished it to be—not true."</p>
<p>"I do not know what he wishes, and I do not
care!" Hester cried, after a pause, with a passion
which did not carry out her words. "He has never
been a friend to me," she said hastily. "He might
have helped me, he might have been kind—not that
I want his help or any one's," cried the girl, her
passion growing as she went on. Then she came to
a dead stop, and gave Roland a rapid look, to see
how much he had divined of her real feelings.
"But he need not have said what was not true,"
she added in a subdued tone.</p>
<p>"I forgive him," said Roland, "because it is not
true. If it had been true it would not have been
so easy to forgive. I am coming back again, and I
should have seen you—changed. It was too much.
Now I can look forward with unmingled pleasure.
It is one's first duty, don't you think, to minister to
the pleasure of one's grandparents? they are old;
one ought to come often, as often as duty will
permit."</p>
<p>Hester looked up to him with a little surprise, the
transition was so sudden; and, to tell the truth, the
tumult in her own mind was not so entirely subdued
that she could bestow her full attention upon
Roland's <i>double entendre</i>.</p>
<p>He laughed. "One would think, by your look,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</SPAN></span>
that you did not share my fine sense of duty," he
said; "but you must not frown upon it. I am
coming soon, very soon, again. A fortnight ago the
place was only a name to me; but now it is a name
that I shall remember for ever," he added with
fervour.</p>
<p>Hester looked at him this time with a smile upon
her mouth. She had recovered herself and come
back to the diversion of his presence, the amusement
and novelty he had brought. A half sense of
the exaggeration and sentimental nonsense of his
speech was in her smile; and he was more or less
conscious of it too. When their eyes met they
both laughed; and yet she was not displeased,
nor he untouched by some reality of feeling. The
exaggeration was humorous, and the sentiment not
altogether untrue.</p>
<p>"Do you say that always when you leave a
place?" Hester said.</p>
<p>"Very often," he acknowledged; and they both
laughed again, which, to her at least, was very
welcome, as she had been doubly on the verge of
tears—for anger and for regret. "But seldom as I
do now," he added, "you may believe me. The old
people are better and kinder than I had dreamt of;
it does one good to be near them; and then I have
helped myself on in the world by this visit, but that
you will not care for. And then——"</p>
<p>Here Roland broke off abruptly, and gazed, as his
fashion was, as feeling the impotence of words to
convey all that the heart would say.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It was very shortly after this that the white horse
which drew the old fly from Redborough—the horse
which was supposed to have been chosen for this
quality, that it could be seen a long way off to
console the souls of those who felt it could never
arrive in time—was seen upon the road, and the last
moment had visibly come. Not the less for the
commotion and tumult or other feelings through
which her heart had gone, did Hester acknowledge
the emotions which belonged to this leave-taking.
The depth and sadness of Roland's eyes—those
expressive eyes which said so many things, the
pathos of his mouth, the lingering clasp in which
he held her hand, all affected her. There was a
magic about him which the girl did not resist,
though she was conscious of the other side of it,
the faint mixture of the fictitious which did not
impair its charm. She stood and watched him
from the low window of the parlour which looked
that way, while the fly was being laden, with a
blank countenance. She felt the corners of her
mouth droop, her eyes widen, her face grow longer.
It was as if all the novelty, the variety, the pleasure
of life were going away. It was a dull afternoon,
which was at once congenial as suiting the circumstances
and oppressive as enhancing the gloom.
She watched the portmanteau put in as if she had
been watching a funeral. When Roland stepped in
after his grandfather, who in the softness of the
moment had offered, to the great surprise of everybody,
to accompany him to the station, Hester still<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</SPAN></span>
looked on with melancholy gravity. She was almost
on a level with them where she stood looking out;
her mother all smiles, kissing her hand beside her.
"I wish you would show a little interest, Hester,"
Mrs. John said. "You might at least wave your
hand. If it were only for the old captain's sake
whom you always profess to be so fond of." Roland
at this moment leant out of the window of the fly
and took off his hat to her for the last time. Mrs.
John thought it was barbarous to take no notice.
She redoubled her own friendly salutations; but
Hester stood like a statue, forcing a faint ghost of a
smile, but not moving a finger. She stood thus
watching them long after they had driven away, till
they had almost disappeared in the smoke of Redborough.
She saw the fly stop at the Grange and
Miss Catherine come out to the door to take leave of
him: and then the slow vehicle disappeared altogether.
The sky seemed to lean down almost
touching the ground; the stagnant afternoon air
had not a breath to move it. Hester said to herself
that nothing more would happen now. She knew
the afternoon atmosphere, the approach of tea, the
scent of it in the air, the less ethereal bread-and-butter,
and then the long dull evening. It seemed
endless to look forward, as if it never would be
night. And Mrs. John, as soon as the fly was out of
sight, had drawn her chair towards the fire and
begun to talk. "I am sure I am very sorry he has
gone," Mrs. John said. "I did not think I should
have liked him at first, but I declare I like him very<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</SPAN></span>
much now. How long is it since he came, Hester?
Only a fortnight! I should have said three weeks
at least. I think it was quite unnatural of the
captain to talk of him as he did, for I am sure he
is a very nice young man. Where are you going?
not I hope for one of your long walks: for the night
closes in very early now, and it will soon be time
for tea."</p>
<p>"Don't you think, mamma," said Hester, somewhat
hypocritically, "that it would be kind to go
in and keep Mrs. Morgan company a little, as she
will be quite alone?"</p>
<p>"That is always your way as soon as I show any
inclination for a little talk," said her mother provoked,
not without reason. Then she softened, being
at heart the most good-natured of women. "Perhaps
you are right," she said, "the old lady will be lonely.
Give her my love, and say I should have come to see
her myself, but that—" Mrs. John paused for a
reason, "but that I am afraid for my neuralgia," she
added triumphantly. "You know how bad it was
the other day."</p>
<p>Thus sanctioned Hester threw her grey "cloud"
round her, and ran round to console Mrs. Morgan,
while her mother arranged herself comfortably with
a footstool, a book upon the table beside her, and
her knitting, but with a furtive inclination towards
an afternoon nap, which the greyness of the day,
the early failing light in the dark wainscoted parlour,
and the absence of all movement about her, naturally
inclined her to. Mrs. John was at the age<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</SPAN></span>
when we are very much ashamed of the afternoon
nap, and she was well provided with semblances of
occupation in case any one should come. But Mrs.
Morgan was far beyond any such simple deceit.
Eighty has vast advantages in this way. When she
felt disposed to doze a little she was quite pleased,
almost proud of the achievement. She had indeed
a book on the table with her spectacles carefully
folded into it, but she did not require any occupation.</p>
<p>"I had a kind of feeling that you would come,
my pet," she said as Hester appeared. "When I
want you very much I think some kind little angel
must go and tap you on the shoulder, for you always
come."</p>
<p>"The captain would say it is a brain-wave," said
Hester.</p>
<p>"The captain says a great deal of nonsense, my
dear," said the old lady with a smile, "but think of
him going with Roland to the station! He has been
vanquished, quite vanquished—which is a great
pleasure to me. And Emma is coming. I hope she
will not wear out the good impression——"</p>
<p>"Is she not so—nice?" Hester asked.</p>
<p>The old lady looked her favourite intently in the
face. She saw the too great clearness of Hester's
eyes, and that her mouth was not smiling, but drawn
downward; and a vague dread filled her mind. She
was full of love and charity, but she was full of
insight too; and though she loved Roland, she did
not think it would be to the advantage of Hester
to love him.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Roland is very nice," she said. "Poor boy, perhaps
that is his temptation. It is his nature to
please whomsoever he comes across. It is a beautiful
kind of nature; but I am not sure that it is not
very dangerous both for himself—and others."</p>
<p>It was fortunate that Hester did not divine what
her friend meant.</p>
<p>"Dangerous—to please?" she said, with a little
curiosity. She liked Roland so much, that even
from the lips of those who had more right to him
than she had, she did not like to hear blame.</p>
<p>"To wish to please—everybody," said the old
lady. "My poor lad! that is his temptation. Your
grandfather, if he were here—my dear, I beg your
pardon. I have got into the way of saying it: as
if my old man was your grandfather too."</p>
<p>"I like it," Hester said, with the only gleam of
her usual frank and radiant smile which Mrs.
Morgan had yet seen. But this made the old lady
only more afraid.</p>
<p>"There is nobody he could be more fatherly to,"
she said. "What I meant was that if he were here,
he would have something ready out of a book, as you
and he are always going on with your poetries; but
I never was a poetry woman, as you know. Life is
all my learning. And I have seen people that have
had plenty of heart, Hester, if they had given it
fair play—but frittered it away on one and another,
trying to give a piece to each, making each believe
that she (for it is mostly upon women that the spell
works) was the one above all others. But you are<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</SPAN></span>
so young, my darling; you will not know what I
mean."</p>
<p>A faint, uneasy colour, came on Hester's face.</p>
<p>"I think I know what you mean," she said. "I
understand how you should think so of Mr. Ashton.
You don't see so well as you did, dear Mrs. Morgan,
when you have not got your spectacles on. If you
did, you would see that when he talks like <i>that</i>, he
is ready to laugh all the time."</p>
<p>"Is that so, my love? Then I am very glad to
hear you say so," cried the old lady. But she knew
very well that her supposed want of sight was a
delusion, and that Hester knew it was only for
reading that she ever used her spectacles. She
felt, however, all the more that her warning had
been taken, and that it was unnecessary to proceed
further. "You are young and sweet," she said, "my
dear: but the best thing still is that you have
sense. Oh, what it is to have sense! it is the best
blessing in life."</p>
<p>Hester made no reply to this praise. Her heart
was beating more quickly than usual. What she
had said was quite true: but all the time, though
he had been ready to laugh, and though she had
been ready to laugh, she was aware that there was
something more. The tone of banter had not been
all. The sense of something humorous, under those
high-flown phrases, had not exhausted them. She
was intended to laugh, indeed, if they did not secure
another sentiment; but the first aim, and perhaps
the last aim, of the insidious Roland, had been to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</SPAN></span>
secure this other sentiment. Hester did not enter
into these distinctions, but she felt them; and when
she thus put forward Mrs. Morgan's failing sight, it
was with a natural casuistry which she knew would
be partially seen through, and yet would have its
effect. This made her feel that there was no reply
to be made to the praise of her "sense," which the
old lady had given. Was it her cunning that the
old lady meant to praise? There was a little
silence, and the subject of Roland was put aside,
not perhaps quite to the satisfaction of either; but
there was nothing more that could be said.</p>
<p>And presently the old captain came back, groaning
a little over his long walk.</p>
<p>"Why do you never remind me," he said, "what
an old fool I am? To drive in that jingling affair,
and to walk back—two miles if it is a yard—well,
then, a mile and a half. My dear, what was half a
mile when you and I were young is two miles now,
and not an inch less; but I have seen him off the
premises. And now, Hester, we shall have our
talks again, and our walks again, without any
interruption——"</p>
<p>"Do not speak so fast, Rowley. There is Emma
coming; and Hester will like a girl to talk with,
and to walk with, better than an old fellow like
you."</p>
<p>"That old woman insults me," said the captain.
"She thinks I am as old as she is—but Hester, you
and I know better. You are looking anxious, my
child. Do you think we are a frivolous old pair<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</SPAN></span>
talking as we ought not—two old fools upon the
brink of the grave?"</p>
<p>"Captain Morgan! I, to have such a thought!
And what should I do without you?" cried Hester,
in quick alarm. This brought the big tears to
her eyes, and perhaps she was glad, for various
causes, to have a perfectly honest and comprehensible
cause in the midst of her agitation, for those
tears.</p>
<p>"This was brought to my mind very clearly to-day,"
said the old captain. "When I saw that young
fellow go off, a man in full career of his life, and
thought of his parents swept away, the mother whom
you know I loved, Mary, as dearly as a man ever
loves his child, and the father whom I hated, both
so much younger than we are, and both gone for
years; and here are we still living, as if we had
been forgotten somehow. We just go on in our
usual, from day to day, and it seems quite natural;
but when you think of all of them—gone—and we
two still here——"</p>
<p>"We are not forgotten," said the old lady, in her
easy chair, smiling upon him, folding those old
hands which were now laid up from labour, hands
that had worked hard in their day. "We have
some purpose to serve yet, or we would not be
here."</p>
<p>"I suppose so—I suppose so," said the old man,
with a sigh; and then he struck his stick upon the
floor, and cried out, "but not, God forbid it, as the
instruments of evil to the house that has sheltered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</SPAN></span>
us, Mary! My heart misgives me. I would like
at least, before anything comes of it, that we should
be out of the way, you and I."</p>
<p>"You were always a man of little faith," his wife
said. "Why should you go out of your way to
meet the evil, that by God's good grace will never
come? It will never come; we have not been
preserved for that. You would as soon teach me
Job's lesson as to believe that, my old man."</p>
<p>"What was Job's lesson? It was, 'Though
He slay me, yet will I trust in Him,'" Captain
Morgan said.</p>
<p>"Oh, my Rowley!" cried the old lady, "I was
wrong to say you were of little faith! It is you that
are the faithful one, and not me. I am just nothing
beside you, as I have always been."</p>
<p>The old captain took his wife's old hands in his,
and gave her a kiss upon her faded cheek, and they
smiled upon each other, the two who had been one
for nearly sixty years. Meanwhile, Hester sitting by,
looked on with large eyes of wonder and almost
affright. She did not know what it meant. She
could not divine what it could be that made them
differ, yet made them agree. What harm could they
do to the house that sheltered them, two old, good,
peaceful people, who were kind to everybody? She
gazed at them with her wondering young eyes, and
did what she could to fathom the mystery: then
retired from it, thinking it perhaps some little fad of
the old people, which she had no knowledge of, nor<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</SPAN></span>
means of understanding. The best people, Hester
thought, when they grew old take strange notions
into their heads, and trouble themselves about
nothing; and of course they missed Roland. She
broke in upon them in that moment of feeling, as
soon as she dared speak for wonder, making an effort
to amuse them, and bring them back to their usual
ways; and that effort was not in vain.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />