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The red June sunset fell full on Pitchley's Farm, staining the windows a glowing crimson. Pitchley's Farm lay in a dell, about a mile from d.y.k.e Manor, on the opposite side to Sandstone Torr. It was a pretty little homestead, with jessamine on the porch, and roses creeping up the frames of the parlour-windows. Just a year had gone by since the wedding, and to-morrow would be the anniversary of the wedding-day. Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Radcliffe were intending to keep it, and had bidden their friends to an entertainment. He had carried out his resolution to be steady, and they had prospered fairly well. David Skate, one of Annet's brothers, a thorough, practical farmer, was ever ready to come over, if wanted, and help Francis with work and counsel.
Completely tired with her day's exertions, was Annet, for she had been making good things for the morrow, and now sat down for the first time that day in the parlour--a low room, with its windows open to the cl.u.s.tering roses, and the furniture bright and tasty. Annet was of middle height, light and active, with a delicate colour on her cheeks, soft brown eyes, and small features. She had just changed her cotton gown for one of pink summer muslin, and looked as fresh as a daisy.
"How tired I am!" she exclaimed to herself, with a smile. "Frank would scold me if he knew it."
"Be you ready for supper, ma'am?" asked a servant, putting in her head at the door. The only maid kept: for both Frank and his wife knew that their best help to getting on was economy.
"Not yet, Sally. I shall wait for your master."
"Well, I've put it on the table, ma'am; and I'm just going to step across now to Hester Bitton's, and tell her she'll be wanted here to-morrow."
Annet went into the porch, and stood there looking out for her husband, shading her eyes with her hand from the red glare. Some business connected with stock took him to Worcester that day, and he had started in the early morning; but Annet had expected him home earlier than this.
There he was, riding down the road at a sharpish trot; Annet heard the horse's hoofs before she saw him. He waved his hand to her in the distance, and she fluttered her white handkerchief back again. Thorpe, the indoor man, appeared to take the horse.
Francis Radcliffe had been changing for the better during the past twelvemonth. Regular habits and regular hours, and a mind healthily occupied, had done great things for him. His face was bright, his blue eyes were clear, and his smile and his voice were alike cheering as he got off the horse and greeted his wife.
"You are late, Frank! It is ever so much past eight."
"Our clocks are fast: I've found that out to-day, Annet, But I could not get back before."
He had gone into the parlour, had kissed her, and was disinc.u.mbering his pockets of various parcels: she helping him. Both were laughing, for there seemed to be no end to them. They contained articles wanted for the morrow: macaroons, and potted lampreys, and lots of good things.
"Don't say again that I forget your commissions, Annet."
"Never again, Frank. How good you are! But what is in this one? it feels soft."
"That's for yourself," said Frank. "Open it."
Cutting the string, the paper flew apart, disclosing a baby's cloak of white braided cashmere. Annet laughed and blushed.
"Oh, Frank! How could you?"
"Why, I heard you say you must get one."
"Yes--but--not just yet. It may not be wanted, you know."
"Stuff! The thing was in Mrs. What's-her-name's window in High Street, staring pa.s.sers-by in the face; so I went in, and bought it."
"It's too beautiful," murmured Annet, putting it reverently into the paper, as if she mistook it for a baby. "And how has the day gone, Frank? Could you buy the sheep?"
"Yes; all right. The sheep--Annet, who _do_ you think is coming here to-morrow? Going to honour us as one of the guests?"
At the break in the sentence, Frank had flung himself into a chair, and thrown his head back, laughing. Annet wondered.
"Stephen! It's true. He had gone to Worcester after some sheep himself.
I asked whether we should have the pleasure of seeing them here, and he curtly said that he was coming, but couldn't answer for Mrs. Radcliffe.
Had the Pope of Rome told me he was coming, I should not have been more surprised."
"Stephen's wife took no notice of the invitation."
"Writing is not in her line: or in his either. Something must be in the wind, Annet: neither he nor his wife has been inside our doors yet."
They sat down to supper, full of chat: as genial married folks always are, after a day's separation. And it was only when the house was at rest, and Annet was lighting the bed-candle, that she remembered a letter lying on the mantel-piece.
"Oh, Frank, I ought to have given it to you at once; I quite forgot it.
This letter came for you by this morning's post."
Frank sat down again, drew the candle to him, and read it. It was from one of his former friends, a Mr. Briarly; offering on his own part and on that of another former friend, one Pratt, a visit to Pitchley's Farm.
Instincts arise to all of us: instincts that it might be well to trust to oftener than we do. A powerful instinct, _against_ the offered visit, rushed into the mind of Francis Radcliffe. But the chances are, that, in the obligations of hospitality, it would not have prevailed, even had the chance been afforded him.
"Cool, I must say!" said Frank, with a laugh. "Look here, Annet; these two fellows are going to take us by storm to-morrow. If I don't want them, says Briarly, I must just shut the door in their faces."
"But you'll be glad to see them, won't you, Frank?" she remarked in her innocence.
"Yes. I shall like well enough to see them again. It's our busy time, though: they might have put it off till after harvest."
As many friends went to this entertainment at Pitchley's Farm as liked to go. Mr. Brandon was one of them: he walked over with us--with me, and Tod, and the Squire, and the mater. Stephen Radcliffe and his wife were there, Becca in a black silk with straps of rusty velvet across it.
Stephen mostly sat still and said nothing, but Becca's sly eyes were everywhere. Frank and his wife, well dressed and hospitable, welcomed us all; and the board was well spread with cold meats and dainties.
Old Brandon had a quiet talk with Annet in a corner of the porch. He told her he was glad to find Frank seemed likely to do well at the farm.
"He tries his very best, sir," she said.
"Ay. Somehow I thought he would. People said 'Frank Radcliffe has his three hundred a-year to fall back upon when he gets out of Pitchley's': but I fancied he might stay at Pitchley's instead of getting out of it."
"We are getting on as well as we can be, sir, in a moderate way."
"A moderate way is the only safe way to get on," said Mr. Brandon, putting his white silk handkerchief corner-wise on his head against the sun. "That's a true saying, He who would be rich in twelve months is generally a beggar in six. You are helping Frank well, my dear. _I_ have heard of it: how industrious you are, and keep things together. It's not often a good old head like yours is set upon young shoulders."
Annet laughed. "My shoulders are not so very young, sir. I was twenty-four last birthday."
"That's young to manage a farm, child. But _you've_ had good training; you had an industrious mother"--indicating an old lady on the lawn in a big lace cap and green gown. "I can tell you what--when I let Frank Radcliffe have the lease, I took into consideration that you were coming here as well as he. Why!--who are these?"
Two stylish-looking fellows were dashing up in a dog-cart; pipes in their mouths, and portmanteaus behind them. Shouting and calling indiscriminately about for Frank Radcliffe; for a man to take the horse and vehicle, that they had contrived to charter at the railway terminus; for a gla.s.s of bitter beer apiece, for they were confoundedly dry--there was no end of a commotion.
They were the two visitors from London, Briarly and Pratt. Their tones moderated somewhat when they saw the company. Frank came out; and received a noisy greeting that might have been heard at York. One of them trod on Mr. Brandon's corns as he went in through the porch. Annet looked half frightened.
"Come to stay here!--gentlemen from London!--Frank's former friends!"
repeated old Brandon, listening to her explanation. "Fine friends, I should say! Frank Radcliffe,"--laying hold of him as he was coming back from giving directions to his servant--"how came you to bring those men down into your home?"
"They came of their own accord, Mr. Brandon."
"Friends of yours, I hear?"