"No need!" Lady Wolfer looked round the room, listened for a moment to

the strains of the piano mingling with the squeals of the children in

the house, the yells of those playing in the street, and scented the

various odors floating in at the window. "No need! Oh, Nell! isn't it

wicked to be so stubborn and so proud? And we knew nothing! We thought

that you had enough----"

"So we have," said Nell. "They have been very good to Dick at the works,

and he is earning wages, and there--there was some money left--a

little--but enough."

"Only enough to permit you to live here! In this prison! Nell, you must

let me take you away----"

Nell shook her head, smiling still, but with that "stubborn" expression

in her eyes which the other woman remembered.

"And leave Dick!" she said. "No, no! Don't say another word! Call us

proud and stiff-necked, if you like--we're not, really--but neither Dick

nor I could take anything from any one while we have enough of our own.

If we could--if ever we 'run short,' and are in danger of starvation,

then----But that won't happen. You don't know how clever Dick is, and

how much they think of him at the works! He'll be in directly, with his

hands and face all smutty, and famishing for his tea----" She laughed as

she fetched another cup. "And you've come just in time. Sit down and

leave off staring at me so reproachfully, and tell me all the news."

"No," said Lady Wolfer. "You tell me; yes, tell me all about it, Nell."

Nell smiled as she poured out the tea--the smile which bravely checks

the sigh.

"There is not much to tell," she said. "When I got home--to Shorne

Mills"--should she never be able to speak the words without a pang?--"I

found mamma unwell, very unwell. She was quite changed----"

"That is why she sent for you, of course," said Lady Wolfer. "Nell, why

did you go without seeing me, without saying good-by?"

"I had to leave at once," said Nell timidly, and fighting with her

rising color.

"That day! I shall never forget it," said Lady Wolfer softly, and

looking straight before her. "Yes, I have something to tell you, dear.

But go on."

"Mamma was ill; but I was not frightened--not at first. She was always

an invalid, you know, and I thought that she would get better. But she

did not; she got weaker every day, and----" The tears came to her eyes,

and she turned away to the fire for a moment. "Molly and I nursed her.

Molly was our servant, and like a friend indeed, and the parting with

her----She did not suffer much, and she was so patient, so changed. She

was like a child at last; she could not bear me to leave her. I used to

think that she--she was not very fond of me; but--but all that was

changed before she died, and she grew to like me as much as she liked

Dick. He had always been her favorite. To the last she did not think she

was going to die, and--and--the evening before she went we"--she

laughed, the laugh so near akin to tears--"we cut out a paper pattern

for a new dress for her--one of your patterns."




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