“God watches over him,” said she instinctively; for
Frank’s looks excited her fears, and she needed to remind herself of the Protector
of the helpless.
“God
has not watched over me,” he said, in despair; his thoughts apparently
recoiling on his own desolate, deserted state. But Norah had no time for pity.
Tomorrow she would be as compassionate as her heart prompted. At length she
guided him downstairs and shut the outer door and bolted it—as if by bolts to
keep out facts.
Then
she went back into the dining room and effaced all traces of his presence as
far as she could. She went upstairs to the nursery and sat there, her head on
her hand, thinking what was to come of all this misery. It seemed to her very
long before they did return; yet it was hardly eleven o’clock. She so heard the
loud, hearty Lancashire voices on the stairs; and, for the first time, she
understood the contrast of the desolation of the poor man who had so lately
gone forth in lonely despair.
It
almost put her out of patience to see Mrs. Openshaw come in, calmly smiling,
handsomely dressed, happy, easy, to inquire after her children.
“Did
Ailsie go to sleep comfortably?” she whispered to Norah.
“Yes.”
Her
mother bent over her, looking at her slumbers with the soft eyes of love. How
little she dreamed who had looked on her last! Then she went to Edwin, with
perhaps less wistful anxiety in her countenance, but more of pride. She took
off her things, to go down to supper. Norah saw her no more that night.
Beside
the door into the passage, the sleeping nursery opened out of Mr. and Mrs.
Openshaw’s room, in order that they might have the children more immediately
under their own eyes. Early the next summer morning Mrs. Openshaw was awakened
by Ailsie’s startled call of “Mother! mother!” She sprang up, put on her
dressing gown, and went to her child. Ailsie was only half awake, and in a not
uncommon state of terror.
“Who
was he, mother? Tell me!”
“Who,
my darling? No one is here. You have been dreaming love. Waken up quite. See,
it is broad daylight.”
“Yes,”
said Ailsie, looking round her; then clinging to her mother, said, “but a man
was here in the night, mother.”
“Nonsense,
little goose. No man has ever come near you!”
“Yes,
he did. He stood there. Just by Norah. A man with hair and a beard. And he
knelt down and said his prayers. Norah knows he was here, mother” (half
angrily, as Mrs. Openshaw shook her head in smiling incredulity).
“Well!
we will ask Norah when she comes,” said Mrs. Openshaw, soothingly. “But we
won’t talk any more about him now. It is not five o’clock; it is too early for
you to get up. Shall I fetch you a book and read to you?”
“Don’t
leave me, mother,” said the child, clinging to her. So Mrs. Openshaw sate on
the bedside talking to Ailsie, and telling her of what they had done at
Richmond the evening before, until the little girl’s eyes slowly closed and she
once more fell asleep.
“What
was the matter?” asked Mr.
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