Missing eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 367 pages of information about Missing.

Missing eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 367 pages of information about Missing.

She laughed joyously, not attempting to contradict him.  It was on this very path, just two months before the war, that they had first seen each other.  She with her father and Bridget were staying at Mrs. Weston’s lodgings, because she, Nelly, had had influenza, and the doctor had sent her away for a change.  They knew the Lakes well already, as is the way of Manchester folk.  Their father, a hard-worked, and often melancholy man, had delighted in them, summer and winter, and his two girls had trudged about the fells with him year after year, and wanted nothing different or better.  At least, Nelly had always been content.  Bridget had grumbled often, and proposed Blackpool, or Llandudno, or Eastbourne for a change.  But their father did not like ‘crowds.’  They came to the Lakes always before or after the regular season.  Mr. Cookson hated the concourse of motorists in August, and never would use one himself.  Not even when they went from Ambleside to Keswick.  They must always walk, or go by the horse-coach.

Nelly presently looked up, and gave a little pull to the corner of her husband’s moustache.

’Of course you know you behaved abominably that next day at Wythburn!  You kept that whole party waiting while you ran after us.  And I hadn’t dropped that bag.  You knew very well I hadn’t dropped it!’

He chuckled.

‘It did as well as anything else.  I got five minutes’ talk with you.  I found out where you lodged.’

’Poor papa!’—­said Nelly reflectively—­’he was so puzzled.  “There’s that fellow we saw at Wythburn again!  Why on earth does he come here to fish?  I never saw anybody catch a thing in this bit of the river.”  Poor papa!’

They were both silent a little.  Mr. Cookson had not lived long enough to see Nelly and George Sarratt engaged.  The war had killed him.  Financial embarrassment was already closing on him when it broke out, and he could not stand the shock and the general dislocation of the first weeks, as sounder men could.  The terror of ruin broke him down—­and he was dead before Christmas, nominally of bronchitis and heart failure.  Nelly had worn mourning for him up to her wedding day.  She had been very sorry for ’poor papa’—­and very fond of him; whereas Bridget had been rather hard on him always.  For really he had done his best.  After all he had left them just enough to live upon.  Nelly’s conscience, grown tenderer than of old under the touch of joy, pricked her as she thought of her father.  She knew he had loved her best of his two daughters.  She would always remember his last lingering hand-clasp, always be thankful for his last few words—­’God bless you, dear.’  But had she cared for him enough in return?—­had she really tried to understand him?  Some vague sense of the pathos of age—­of its isolation—­its dumb renouncements—­gripped her.  If he had only lived longer!  He would have been so proud of George.

She roused herself.

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Missing from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.