My Palestine holiday lasted, in some measure, all the way of

our journey home; and left me at the very moment when we

entered our Parisian hotel and met mamma. It left me then. All

the air of the place, much more all the style of mamma's dress

and manner, said at once that we had come into another world.

She was exquisitely dressed; that was usual; it could not have

been only that, nor the dainty appointments around her; - it

was something in her bearing, an indescribable something even

as she greeted us, which said, You have played your play - now

you will play mine. And it said, I cannot tell how, The cards

are in my hands.

Company engaged her that evening. I saw little of her till the

next day. At our late breakfast then we discussed many things.

Not much of Palestine; mamma did not want to hear much of

that. She had had it in our letters, she said. American

affairs were gone into largely; with great eagerness and

bitterness by both mamma and Aunt Gary; with triumphs over the

disasters of the Union army before Richmond, and other lesser

affairs in which the North had gained no advantage; invectives

against the President's July proclamation, his impudence and

his cowardice; and prophecies of ruin to him and his cause.

Papa listened and said little. I heard and was silent; with

throbbing forebodings of trouble.

"Daisy is handsomer than ever," my aunt remarked, when even

politics had exhausted themselves. But I wondered what she was

thinking of when she said it. Mamma lifted her eyes and

glanced me over.

"Daisy has a rival, newly appeared," she said. "She must do

her best."

"There cannot be rivalry, mamma, where there is no

competition," I said.

"Cannot there?" said mamma. "You never told us, Daisy, of your

successes in the North."

I do not think I flushed at all in answer to this remark; the

blood seemed to me to go all to my heart.

"Who has been Daisy's trumpeter?" papa asked.

"There is a friend of hers here," mamma said, slowly sipping

her coffee. I do not know how I sat at the table; things

seemed to swim in a maze before my eyes; then mamma went on, -

"What have you done with your victim, Daisy?"

"Mamma," I said, "I do not at all know of whom you are

speaking."

"Left him for dead, I suppose," she said. "He has met with a

good Samaritan, I understand, who carried oil and wine."

Papa's eye met mine for a moment.

"Felicia," he said, "you are speaking very unintelligibly. I

beg you will use clearer language, for all our sakes."

"Daisy understands," she said.

"Indeed I do not, mamma."

"Not the good Samaritan's part, of course. That has come since

you were away. But you knew once that a Northern Blue-coat had

been pierced by the fire of your eyes?"




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