Polly: A New-Fashioned Girl by L. T. Meade (rooftoppers .TXT) đź“–
- Author: L. T. Meade
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All the long day that Flower had spent in solitude her[Pg 128] thoughts grew more and more bitter, and only hunger made her now forsake her room. She went into the dining-room; it was a long, low room, almost entirely lined with oak. There was a white cloth on the long center table, in the middle of which a lamp burnt dimly; the French windows were open; the blinds were not drawn down. As Flower opened the door, a strong cold breeze caused the lamp to flare up and smoke, the curtains to shake, and a child to move in a restless, fretful fashion on her chair. The child was Firefly; her eyes were so swollen with crying that they were almost invisible under their heavy red lids; her hair was tossed; the rest of her little thin face was ghastly pale.
“Is that you, Flower?” she exclaimed. “Are you going to stay here? If you are, I’ll go away.”
“What do you mean?” said Flower. “You go away? You can go or stay, just as you please. I have come here because I want some food, and because I’ve been shamefully neglected and starved all day. Ring the bell, please, Fly. I really must order up something to eat.”
Fly rose from her chair. She had long, lanky legs and very short petticoats, and as she stood half leaning against the wall, she looked so forlorn, pathetic, and yet comical, that Flower, notwithstanding her own anger and distress, could not help bursting out laughing.
“What is the matter?” she said. “What an extraordinary little being you are! You look at me as if you were quite afraid of me. For pity’s sake, child, don’t stare at me in that grewsome fashion. Ring the bell, as I tell you, and then if you please you can leave the room.”
There was a very deep leather arm-chair near the fireplace. Into this now Flower sank. She leant her head comfortably against its cushions, and gazed at Firefly with a slightly sarcastic expression.
“Then you don’t know!” said Fly, suddenly. “You sit there and look at me, and you talk of eating, as if any one could eat. You don’t know. You wouldn’t sit there like that if you really knew.”
“I think you are the stupidest little creature I ever met!” responded Flower. “I’m to know something, and it’s wonderful that I care to eat. I tell you, child, I haven’t touched food all day, and I’m starving. What’s the matter? Speak! I’ll slap you if you don’t.”
“There’s bread on the sideboard,” said Fly. “I’m sorry you’re starving. It’s only that father is ill; that—that he’s very ill. I don’t suppose it is anything to you, or you wouldn’t have done it.”
“Give me that bread,” said Flower. She turned very white, snatched a piece out of Fly’s hand, and put it to her lips. She did not swallow it, however. A lump seemed to rise in her throat.
“I’m faint for want of food,” she said in a minute. “I’d like some wine. If David was here, he’d give it to me.[Pg 129] What’s that about your father? Ill? He was quite well this morning; he spoke to me.”
She shivered.
“I’m awfully faint,” she said in a moment. “Please, Fly, be merciful. Give me half a glass of sherry.”
Fly started, rushed to the sideboard, poured a little wine into a glass, and brought it to Flower.
“There!” she said in a cold though broken-hearted voice. “But you needn’t faint; he’s not your father; you wouldn’t have done it if he was your father.”
Flower tossed off the wine.
“I’m better now,” she said.
Then she rose from the deep arm-chair, stood up, and put her two hands on Fly’s shoulder.
“What have I done? What do you accuse me of?”
“Don’t! You hurt me, Flower; your hands are so hard.”
“I’ll take them off. What have I done?”
“We are awfully sorry you came here. We all are; we all are.”
“Yes? you can be sorry or glad, just as you please! What have I done?”
“You have made father, our own father—you have made him ill. The doctor thinks perhaps he’ll die, and in any case he will be blind.”
“What horrid things you say, child! I haven’t done this.”
“Yes. Father was out all last night. You took baby away, and he went to look for her, and he wasn’t well before, and he got a chill. It was a bad chill, and he has been ill all day. You did it, but he wasn’t your father. We are all so dreadfully sorry that you came here.”
Flower’s hands dropped to her sides. Her eyes curiously dilated, looked past Fly, gazing so intently at something which her imagination conjured up that the child glanced in a frightened way over her shoulder.
“What’s the matter, Flower? What are you looking at?”
“Myself.”
“But you can’t see yourself.”
“I can. Never mind. Is this true what you have been telling me?”
“Yes, it’s quite true. I wish it was a dream, and I might wake up out of it.”
“And you all put this thing at my door?”
“Yes, of course. Dr. Strong said—Dr. Strong has been here twice this evening—he said it was because of last night.”
“Sometimes we can never give back what we take away.” These few words came back to Flower now.
“And you all hate me?” she said, after a pause.
“We don’t love you, Flower; how could we?”
“You hate me?”
“I don’t know. Father wouldn’t like us to hate anybody.”
“Where’s Helen?”
“She’s in father’s room.”[Pg 130]
“And Polly?”
“Polly is in bed. She’s ill, too, but not in danger, like father. The doctor says that Polly is not to know about father for at any rate a day, so please be careful not to mention this to her, Flower.”
“No fear!”
“Polly is suffering a good deal, but she’s not unhappy, for she doesn’t know about father.”
“Is baby very ill, too?”
“No. Nurse says that baby has escaped quite wonderfully. She was laughing when I saw her last. She has only a little cold.”
“I am glad that I gave her to your father myself,” said Flower, in a queer, still voice. “I’m glad of that. Is David anywhere about?”
“No. He’s at the farm. He’s to sleep there to-night with Bob and Bunny, for there mustn’t be a stir of noise in the house.”
“Well, well, I’d have liked to say good-by to David. You’re quite sure, Fly, that you all think it was I made your father ill?”
“Why, of course. You know it was.”
“Yes, I know. Good-by, Fly.”
“Good-night, you mean. Don’t you want something to eat?”
“No. I’m not hungry now. It isn’t good-night; it’s good-by.”
Flower walked slowly down the long, low, dark room, opened the door, shut it after her, and disappeared.
Fly stood for a moment in an indifferent attitude at the table. She was relieved that Flower had at last left her, and took no notice of her words.
Flower went back to her room. Again she shut and locked her door. The queer mood which had been on her all day, half repentance, half petulance, had completely changed. It takes a great deal to make some people repent, but Flower Dalrymple was now indeed and in truth facing the consequences of her own actions. The words she had said to Fly were quite true. She had looked at herself. Sometimes that sight is very terrible. Her fingers trembled, her whole body shook, but she did not take a moment to make up her mind. They all hated her, but not more than she hated herself. They were quite right to hate her, quite right to feel horror at her presence. Her mother had often spoken to her of the consequences of unbridled passion, but no words that her mother could ever have used came up to the grim reality. Of course, she must go away, and at once. She sat down on the side of her bed, pressed her hand to her forehead, and reflected. In the starved state she was in, the little drop of wine she had taken had brought on a violent headache. For a time she found it difficult to collect her thoughts.
Flower quite made up her mind to go away again. Her mood, however, had completely changed. She was no longer in a passion; on the contrary, she felt stricken and wounded. She would go away now to hide herself, because her face, her form, the sound of her step, the echo of her voice, must be painful to those whom she had injured. She shuddered as she recalled Firefly’s sad words:
“Father says it is wrong to hate any one, but, of course, we cannot love you.”
She felt that she could never look Polly in the face again, that Helen’s gentle smile would be torture to her. Oh, of course she must go away; she must go to-night.
She was very tired, for she had really scarcely rested since her fit of mad passion, and the previous night she had never gone to bed. Still all this mattered nothing. There was a beating in her heart, there was a burning sting of remorse awakened within her, which made even the thought of rest impossible.
Flower was a very wild and untaught creature; her ideas of right and wrong were of the crudest. It seemed to her now that the only right thing was to run away.
When the house was quiet, she once more opened her little cabinet, and took from thence the last great treasure which it contained. It was one solitary splendid unset diamond. She had not the least idea of its value, but she knew that it would probably fetch a pound or two. She had not the least notion of the value of money or of the preciousness of the gem which she held in her hand, but she thought it likely that it would supply her immediate needs.
The house was quite still now. She took off her green cloth dress, put on a very plain one of black cashmere, slipped a little velvet cap on her head, wrapped a long white shawl round her, and thus equipped opened her door, and went downstairs.
She was startled at the foot of the stairs to encounter Maggie. Maggie was coming slowly upwards as Flower descended, and the two girls paused to look at one another. The lamps in the passages were turned low, and Maggie held a candle above her head; its light fell full on Flower.
“You mustn’t go to Miss Polly on no account, Miss Flower,” said Maggie, adopting the somewhat peremptory manner she had already used to Flower in the hermit’s hut. “Miss Polly is not to be frightened or put out in any way, leastways not to-night.”
“You mean that you think I would tell her about Dr. Maybright?”
“Perhaps you would, Miss; you’re none too sensible.”[Pg 132]
Flower was too crushed even to reply to this uncomplimentary speech. After a pause, she said:
“I’m not going to Polly. I’m going away. Maggie, is it true that the—that Dr. Maybright is very ill?”
“Yes, Miss, the Doctor’s despert bad.”
Maggie’s face worked; her candle shook; she put up her other hand to wipe away the fast-flowing tears.
“Oh, don’t cry!” said Flower, stamping her foot impatiently. “Tears do no good, and it wasn’t you who did it.”
“No, Miss, no, Miss; that’s a bit of a comfort. I wouldn’t be you, Miss Flower, for all the wide world. Well, I must go now; I’m a-sleeping in Miss Polly’s room to-night, Miss.”
“Why, is Polly ill, too?”
“Only her foot’s bad. I mustn’t stay, really, Miss Flower.”
“Look here,” said Flower, struck by a sudden thought, “before you go tell me something. Your mother lives in the village, does she not?”
“Why, yes, Miss, just in the main street, down round by the corner. There’s the baker’s shop and the butcher’s, and you turn round a sharp corner, and mother’s cottage is by your side.”
“I’ve a fancy to go and see her. Good-night.”
“But not at this hour, surely, Miss?”
“Why not? I was out later last night.”
“That’s true. Well, I must go to Miss Polly now. Don’t you make any noise when you’re coming in, Miss! Oh, my word!” continued Maggie to herself, “what can Miss Flower want with mother?
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