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One evening at the end of July, when the London steamer was due about ten o'clock, Nancy went to watch it in, as usual, Flore attending her.
The port was gay, crowded with promenaders. There had been a concert at the Rooms, and the company was coming home from it. Mrs. Fennel had not made one: latterly she had felt no spirit for amus.e.m.e.nt. Several friends met her; she did not tell them she had come down to meet her husband, if haply he should be on the expected boat; she had grown tired and half ashamed of saying that; she let them think she was only out for a walk that fine evening. There was a yellow glow still in the sky where the sun had set; the north-west was clear and bright with its opal light.
The time went on; the port became deserted, excepting a few pa.s.sing stragglers. Ten o'clock had struck, eleven would soon strike. Flore and her mistress, tired of pacing about, sat down on one of the benches facing the harbour. One of two young men, pa.s.sing swiftly homewards from the pier, found himself called to.
"Charley! Charley Palliser!"
Charles turned, and recognized Mrs. Fennel. Stepping across to her, he shook hands.
"What do you think can have become of the boat?" she asked. "It ought to have been in nearly an hour ago."
"Oh, it will be here shortly," he replied. "The boat often makes a slow pa.s.sage when there's no wind. What little wind we have had to-day has been dead against it."
"As I've just said to madame," put in Flore, always ready to take up the conversation. "Mr. Charles knows there's no fear it has gone down, though it may be a bit late."
"Why, certainly not," laughed Charley. "Are you waiting here for it, Mrs. Fennel?"
"Ye--s," she answered, but with hesitation.
"And as it's not even in sight yet, madame had much better go home and not wait, for the air is getting chilly," again spoke Flore.
"We can't see whether it's in sight or not," said her mistress. "It is dark out at sea."
"Shall I wait here with you, Mrs. Fennel?" asked Charley in his good nature.
"Oh no, no; no, thank you," she answered quickly. "If it does not come in soon, we shall go home."
He wished them good-night, and went onwards.
"She is hoping the boat may bring that mysterious brute, Fennel,"
remarked Charles to his companion.
"Brute, you call him?"
"He is no better than one, to leave his sick wife alone so long,"
responded Charles in hearty tones. "She has picked up an idea, I hear, that the house is haunted, and shakes in her shoes in it from morning till night."
The two watchers sat on, Flore grumbling. Not for herself, but for her mistress. A sea-fog was rising, and Flore thought madame might take cold. Mrs. Fennel wrapped her light fleecy shawl closer about her chest, and protested she was quite hot. The shawl was well enough for a warm summer's night, but not for a cold sea-fog. About half-past eleven there suddenly loomed into view through the mist the lights of the steamer, about to enter the harbour.
"There she is!" exultingly cried Nancy, who had been shivering inwardly for some time past, and doing her best not to shiver outwardly for fear of Flore. "And now, Flore, you go home as quickly as you can and make a fire in the salon to warm us. I'm sure he will need one--at sea in this cold fog."
"If he is come," mentally returned Flore in her derisive heart. She had no faith in the return of Monsieur Fennel by any boat, a day or a night one. But she needed no second prompting to hasten away; was too glad to do it.
Poor Nancy waited on. The steamer came very slowly up the port, or she fancied so; one must be cautious in a fog; and it seemed to her a long time swinging round and settling itself into its place. Then the pa.s.sengers came on sh.o.r.e one by one, Nancy standing close to look at them. There were only about twenty in all, and Captain Fennel was not one of them. With misty eyes and a rising in her throat and spiritless footsteps, Nancy arrived at her home, the Pet.i.te Maison Rouge. Flore had the fire burning in the salon; but Nancy was too thoroughly chilled for any salon fire to warm her.
The cold she caught that night stuck to her chest. For some days afterwards she was very ill indeed. Monsieur Dupuis attended her, and brought his son once or twice, Monsieur Henri. Nancy got up again, and was, so to say, herself once more; but she did not get up her strength.
She would lie on the sofa in the salon those August days, which were very hot ones, too languid to get off it. Friends would call in to see her; Major and Mrs. Smith, the Miss Bosanquets, the Lamberts, and so on.
Madame Carimon was often there. They would ask her why she did not "make an effort" and sit up and occupy herself with a book or a bit of work, or go out a little; and Nancy's answer was nearly always the same--she would do all that when the weather was somewhat cooler. Charley Palliser was quite a constant visitor. An English damsel, who was casting a covetous eye to Charles, though she might have spared herself the pains, took a fit of jealousy and said one might think sick Nancy Fennel was his sweetheart, going there so often. Charley rarely went empty-handed either. Now it would be half-a-dozen nectarines in their red-ripe loveliness, now some choice peaches, then a bunch of hot-house grapes, "purple and gushing," and again an amusing novel just out in England.
"Mary, she is surely dying!"
The sad exclamation came from Stella Featherston. She and Madame Carimon, going in to take tea at the Pet.i.te Maison Rouge, had been sent by its mistress to her chamber above to take off their bonnets. The words had broken from Stella the moment they were alone.
"Sometimes I fear it myself," replied Madame Carimon. "She certainly grows weaker instead of stronger."
"Does any doctor attend her?"
"Monsieur Dupuis; a man of long experience, kind and clever. I was talking to him the other day, and he as good as said his skill and care seemed to avail nothing: were wasted on her."
"Is it consumption?"
"I think not. She caught a dreadful cold about a month ago through being out in a night fog, thinly clad; and there's no doubt it left mischief behind; but it seems to me that she is wasting away with inward fever."
"I should get George to run over to see her, if I were you, Mary,"
remarked Stella. "French doctors are very clever, I believe, especially as surgeons; but for an uncertain case like this they don't come up to the English. And George knows her const.i.tution."
They went down to the salon, Mary Carimon laughing a little at the remark. Stella Featherston had not been long enough in France to part with her native prejudices. The family with whom she lived in Paris had journeyed to Sainteville for a month for what they called "les eaux,"
and Stella accompanied them. They were in lodgings on the port.
Mrs. Fennel seemed more like her old self that evening than she had been for some time past. The unexpected presence of her companion of early days changed the tone of her mind and raised her spirits. Stella exerted all her mirth, talked of their doings in the past, told of b.u.t.termead's doings in the present. Nancy was quite gay.
"Do you ever sing now, Stella?" she suddenly asked.
"Why, no," laughed Stella, "unless I am quite alone. Who would care to hear old ditties sung without music?"
"I should. Oh, Stella, sing me a few!" urged the invalid, her tone quite imploring. "It would bring the dear old days back to me."
Stella Featherston had a most melodious voice, but she did not play.
It was not unusual in those days for girls to sing without any accompaniment, as Stella had for the most part done.
"Have you forgotten your Scotch songs, Stella?" asked Mary Carimon.
"Not I; I like them best of all," replied Miss Featherston. And without more ado she broke into "Ye banks and braes."
It was followed by "The Banks of Allan Water," and others. Flore stole to the parlour-door, and thought she had never heard so sweet a singer.
Last of all, Stella began a quaint song that was more of a chant than anything else, low and subdued:
"Woe's me, for my heart is breakin', I think on my brither sma', And on my sister greetin', When I cam' from home awa'.
And O, how my mither sobbit, As she took from me her hand, When I left the door of our old house To come to this stranger land.
"There's nae place like our ain home, O, I would that I were there!
There's nae home like our ain home To be met wi' onywhere.
And O, that I were back again To our farm and fields sae green, And heard the tongues of our ain folk, And was what I hae been!"
A feeling of despair ran through the whole words; and the tears were running down Ann Fennel's hectic cheeks as the melody died away in a plaintive silence.
"It is what I shall never see again, Stella," she murmured--"the green fields of _our_ home; or hear the tongues of all the dear ones there.