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Janice Meredith.
by Paul Leicester Ford.
VOLUME I
A HEROINE OF MANY POSSIBILITIES
"Alonzo now once more found himself upon an element that had twice proved destructive to his happiness, but Neptune was propitious, and with gentle breezes wafted him toward his haven of bliss, toward Amaryllis.
Alas, when but one day from happiness, a Moorish zebec--"
"Janice!" called a voice.
The effect on the reader and her listener, both of whom were sitting on the floor, was instantaneous. Each started and sat rigidly intent for a moment; then, as the sound of approaching footsteps became audible, one girl hastily slipped a little volume under the counterpane of the bed, while the other sprang to her feet, and in a hurried, fl.u.s.tered way pretended to be getting something out of a tall wardrobe.
Before the one who hid the book had time to rise, a woman of fifty entered the room, and after a glance, cried--
"Janice Meredith! How often have I told thee that it is ungenteel for a female to repose on the floor?"
"Very often, mommy," said Janice, rising meekly, meantime casting a quick glance at the bed, to see how far its smoothness had been disturbed.
"And still thee continues such unbecoming and vastly indelicate behaviour."
"Oh, mommy, but it is so nice!" cried the girl. "Did n't you like to sit on the floor when you were fifteen?"
"Janice, thou 't more careless every day in bed-making,"
e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Mrs. Meredith, making a sudden dive toward the bed, as if she desired to escape the question. She smoothed the gay patchwork quilt, seemed to feel something underneath, and the next moment pulled out the hidden volume, which was bound, as the bookseller's advertis.e.m.e.nts phrased it, in "half calf, neat, marbled sides." One stern glance she gave the two red-faced culprits, and, opening the book, read out in a voice that was in itself an impeachment, "The Adventures of Alonzo and Amaryllis!"
There was an instant's silence, full of omen to the culprits, and then Mrs. Meredith's wrath found vent.
"Janice Meredith!" she cried. "On a Sabbath morning, when thee shouldst be setting thy thoughts in a fit order for church! And thou, Tabitha Drinker!"
"It 's all my fault, Mrs. Meredith," hurriedly a.s.serted Tabitha.
"I brought the book with me from Trenton, and 't was I suggested that we go on reading this morning."
"Six hours of spinet practice thou shalt have to-morrow, miss," announced Mrs. Meredith to her daughter, "and this afternoon thou shalt say over the whole catechism. As for thee, Tabitha, I shall feel it my duty to write thy father of his daughter's conduct. Now hurry and make ready for church."
And Mrs. Meredith started to leave the room.
"Oh, mommy," cried Janice, springing forward and laying a detaining hand on her mother's arm in an imploring manner, "punish me as much as you please,--I know 't was very, very wicked,--but don't take the book away! He and Amaryllis were just--"
"Not another sight shalt thou have of it, miss. My daughter reading novels, indeed!" and Mrs. Meredith departed, holding the evil book gingerly between her fingers, much as one might carry something that was liable to soil one's hands.
The two girls looked at each other, Tabitha with a woebegone expression, and Janice with an odd one, which might mean many things. The flushed cheeks were perhaps due to guilt, but the tightly clinched little fists were certainly due to anger, and, noting these two only, one would have safely affirmed that Janice Meredith, meekly as she had taken her mother's scolding, had a quick and hot temper. But the eyes were fairly starry with some emotion, certainly not anger, and though the lips were pressed tightly together, the feeling that had set them so rigidly was but a pa.s.sing one, for suddenly the corners twitched, the straight lines bent into curves, and flinging herself upon the tall four-poster bedstead, Miss Meredith laughed as only fifteen can laugh.
"Oh, Tibbie, Tibbie," she presently managed to articulate, "if you look like that I shall die," and as the G.o.d of Momus once more seized her, she dragged the quilt into a rumpled pile, and buried her face in it, as if indeed attempting to suffocate herself.
"But, Janice, to think that we shall never know how it ended! I could n't sleep last night for hours, because I was so afraid that Amaryllis would n't have the opportunity to vindicate herself to--and 't would have been finished in another day."
"And a proper punishment for naughty Tibbie Drinker it is," declared Miss Meredith, sitting up and a.s.suming a judicially severe manner. "What do you mean, miss, by tempting good little Janice Meredith into reading a wicked romance on Sunday?"
"'Good little Janice!'" cried Tibbie, contemptuously. "I could slap thee for that." But instead she threw her arms about Janice's neck and kissed her with such rapture and energy as to overbalance the judge from an upright position, and the two roiled over upon the bed laughing with anything but discretion, considering the nearness of their mentor. As a result a voice from a distance called sharply--
"Janice!"
"O gemini!" cried the owner of that name, springing off the bed and beginning to unfasten her gown,--an example promptly followed by her room-mate.
"Art thou dressing, child?" called the voice, after a pause.
"Yes, mommy," answered Janice. Then she turned to her friend and asked, "Shall I wear my light chintz and kenton kerchief, or my purple and white striped Persian?"
"Sufficiently smart for a country la.s.s, Jan," cried her friend.
"Don't call me country bred, Tibbie Drinker, just because you are a modish city girl."
"And why not thy blue shalloon?"
"'T is vastly unbecoming."
"Janice Meredith! Can't thee let the men alone?"
"I will when they will," airily laughed the girl.
"Do unto others--" quoted Tabitha.
"Then I will when thee sets me an example," retorted Janice, making a deep curtsey, the absence of drapery and bodice revealing the straightness and suppleness of the slender rounded figure, which still had as much of the child as of the woman in its lines.
"Little thought they get from me," cried Tabitha, with a toss of her head.
"'Tell me where is fancy bred, In the heart or in the head?'"
hummed Janice. "Of course, one does n't think about men, Mistress Tabitha. One feels." Which remark showed perception of a feminine truth far in advance of Miss Meredith's years.
"Unfeeling Janice!"
"'T is a good thing for the oafs and ploughboys of Brunswick.
For there are none better."
"Philemon Hennion?"
"'Your servant, marms,'" mimicked Janice, catching up a hair brush and taking it from her head as if it were a hat, while making a bow with her feet widely spread. "'Having nothing better ter do, I've made bold ter come over ter drink a dish of tea with you.'" The girl put the brush under her arm, still further spread her feet, put her hands behind some pretended coat-tails, let the brush slip from under her arms, so that it fell to the floor with a racket, stooped with an affectation of clumsiness which seemed impossible to the lithe figure, while mumbling something inarticulate in an apparent paroxysm of embarra.s.sment,--which quickly became a genuine inability to speak from laughter.
"Janice, thee should turn actress."
"Oh, Tibbie, lace my bodice quickly, or I shall burst of laughing," breathlessly begged the girl.
"Janice," said her mother, entering, "how often must I tell thee that giggling is missish? Stop, this moment."
"Yes, mommy," gasped Janice. Then she added, after a shriek and a wriggle, "Don't, Tabitha!"