Charlotte M. Yonge

The Long Vacation


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sap-green aestheticism, but those curtains have done their own fading in pleasing shades, that good old sofa can be lain upon, and there’s a real comfortable crack on that frame; while as to the chiffonier, is not it the marrow of the one Mrs. Froggatt left us, where Wilmet kept all the things in want of mending?”

      “Ah! didn’t you shudder when she turned the key?” said Lance.

      “Not knowing what was good for me.”

      “But you will send for some of our things and make it nice,” entreated Anna, “or Gerald will never stay here.”

      “Never fear; we’ll have it presentable by the vacation. As for Uncle Clement, he would never see whether he was in a hermit’s cell, if he only had one arm-chair and one print from Raffaelle.”

      There was a certain arch ring in her voice that had long been absent, and Anna looked joyous as she waited on them both.

      “I am glad you brought her,” said Lance, as she set off with Uncle Clement’s tea.

      “Yes, she would not hear of the charms of the season.”

      “So much the better for her. She is a good girl, and will be all the happier down here, as well as better. There’s a whole hive of Merrifields to make merry with her; and, by the bye, Cherry, what should you think of housing a little chap for the school here where Fergus Merrifield is?”

      “Your dear little Felix? Delightful!”

      “Ouf! No, he is booked for our grammar school.”

      “The grammar school was not good for any of you, except the one whom nothing hurt.”

      “It is very different now. I have full confidence in the head, and the tone is improved throughout. Till my boys are ready for a public school I had rather they were among our own people. No, Cherry, I can’t do it, I can’t give up the delight of him yet; no, I can’t, nor lose his little voice out of the choir, and have his music spoilt.”

      “I don’t wonder.”

      “I don’t think I spoil him. I really have flogged him once,” said Lance, half wistfully, half playfully.

      “How proud you are of it.”

      “It was for maltreating little Joan Vanderkist, though if it had only been her brother, I should have said, ‘Go it, boys.’ It was not till afterwards that it turned out that Joan was too loyal not to bear the penalty of having tied our little Audrey into a chair to be pelted with horse-chestnuts.”

      “At Adrian’s bidding?”

      “Of course. I fancy the Harewood boys set him on. And what I thought of was sending Adrian here to be schooled at Mrs. Edgar’s, boarded by you, mothered by Anna, and altogether saved from being made utterly detestable, as he will inevitably be if he remains to tyrannize over Vale Leston.”

      “Would his mother consent?”

      “You know he is entirely in Clement’s power.”

      “It would only be another worry for Clement.”

      “He need not have much of him, and I believe he would prefer to have him under his own eye; and Anna will think it bliss to have him, though what it may prove is another question. She will keep you from being too much bothered.”

      “My dear Lance, will you never understand, that as furze and thistles are to a donkey, so are shabbiness and bother to me—a native element?”

      In the morning Clement, raised on his pillows in bed, showed himself highly grateful for the proposal about his youngest ward.

      “It is very good of you, Cherry,” he said. “That poor boy has been very much on my mind. This is the way to profit by my enforced leisure.”

      “That’s the way to make me dread him. You were to lie fallow.”

      “Not exactly. I have thirteen or fourteen years’ reading and thinking to make up. I have done no more than get up a thing cursorily since I left Vale Leston.”

      “You are welcome to read and think, provided it is nothing more recent than St. Chrysostom.”

      “So here is the letter to Alda,” giving it to her open.

      “Short and to the purpose,” she said.

      “Alda submits to the inevitable,” he said. “Don’t appear as if she had a choice.”

      “Only mention the alleviations. No, you are not to get up yet. There’s no place for you to sit in, and the east wind is not greatly mitigated by the sea air. Shall I send Anna to read to you?”

      “In half-an-hour, if she is ready then; meantime, those two books, if you please.”

      She handed him his Greek Testament and Bishop Andrews, and repaired to the drawing-room, where she found Anna exulting in the decorations brought from home, and the flowers brought in from an itinerant barrow.

      “I have been setting down what they must send us from home—your own chair and table, and the Liberty rugs, and the casts of St. Cecilia and little St. Cyrillus for those bare corners, and I am going out for a terra-cotta vase.”

      “Oh, my dear, the room is charming; but don’t let us get too dependent on pretty things. They demoralize as much or more than ugly ones.”

      “Do you mean that they are a luxury? Is it not right to try to have everything beautiful?”

      “I don’t know, my dear.”

      “Don’t know!” exclaimed Anna.

      “Yes, my dear, I really get confused sometimes as to what is mere lust of the eye, and what is regard to whatever things are lovely. I believe the principle is really in each case to try whether the high object or the gratification of the senses should stand first.”

      “Well,” said Anna, laughing, “I suppose it is a high object not to alienate Gerald, as would certainly be done by the culture of the ugly—”

      “Or rather of that which pretends to be the reverse, and is only fashion,” said her aunt, who meantime was moving about, adding nameless grace by her touch to all Anna’s arrangements.

      “May I send for the things then?” said Anna demurely.

      “Oh yes, certainly; and you had better get the study arm-chair for your uncle. There is nothing so comfortable here. But I have news for you. What do you say to having little Adrian here, to go to school with the Merrifield boy?”

      “What fun! what fun! How delicious!” cried the sister, springing about like a child.

      “I suspected that the person to whom he would give most trouble would feel it most pleasure.”

      “You don’t know what a funny, delightful child he is! You didn’t see him driving all the little girls in a team four-in-hand.”

      It would be much to say that Mrs. Grinstead was enchanted by this proof of his charms; but they were interrupted by Marshall, the polite, patronizing butler, bringing in a card. Miss Mohun would be glad to know how Mr. Underwood was, and whether there was anything that she could do for Mrs. Grinstead.

      Of course she was asked to come in, and thus they met, the quick, slim, active little spinster, whose whole life had been work, and the far younger widow, whose vocation had been chiefly home-making. Their first silent impressions were—

      “I hope she is not going to be pathetic,” and—

      “She is enough to take one’s breath away. But I think she has tact.”

      After a few exchanges of inquiry and answer, Miss Mohun said—

      “My niece Gillian is burning to see you, after all your kindness to her.”

      “I shall be very glad. This