It was taken seriously into consideration by Lucy and her aunt what could be done to provide Nelly with a home. Lucy was eager that she should be at once taken into their own household, to be trained for domestic service; but this Mrs. Steele thought impracticable at present, as she knew that their own busy, capable handmaid would strongly object to have her time taken up in teaching a girl who would give her so much additional trouble.
“But there are other people,” she said, “who would be very glad of a child like Nelly, who would cost nothing for wages, to train and make useful. I am going to Mill Bank Farm this afternoon to see about some butter, and I’ll see if Mrs. Ford knows of any one who would take her.”
Lucy assented rather reluctantly. It would have been so nice, she thought, to have her protegee immediately under her own charge, to teach and train into a model servant. She had not yet learned the distrust in her own powers which experience gives, and she saw only the bright side of the plan, not the difficulties in its execution.
Mrs. Ford’s motherly heart was at once roused to pity for the little orphan’s forlorn condition, and to indignation at Mrs. Connor’s heartless conduct.
“After all the work she’s got out of her, too!” she said; “making that poor child drudge away morning, noon, and night. I’m sure she’s been worth a deal more to her than the little bit of meat and drink she’s given her—with a grudge, as I hear from the neighbours. Well, well, it’s a queer world.”
Mrs. Ford promised to try to find out a good place for Nelly, and early next morning she made her appearance, having taken the long walk on one of her busiest days, in order to “talk over Nelly’s business,” as she said. She proposed to take the orphan into her own family, for a time at least, until some more permanent situation should turn up. “We’ll never miss the little she’ll want,” she said; “and if we did, I’ve been often thinking of late that we’ve been too much taken up with doing the most we could for this world, and been caring too little for the poor that our Saviour says are to be always with us. So my mind would be easier if I were doing this much, at any rate, and the poor thing’ll be more likely to get a good steady place if I take her in hand and teach her a bit myself.”
So it was settled, and Nelly, to her surprise and delight, found herself an inmate, for a time at least, of Mill Bank Farm, though she was made to understand that the arrangement was not a permanent one. The present comfort and happiness were enough for her, however, for she was not given to spoiling the enjoyments of to-day by thoughts about the morrow; and she certainly had never, so far as her recollection went, been half so happy as she now was under Mrs. Ford’s motherly care, with Bessie for a half-companion, half-teacher, and removed from the sound of the harsh words and tones which had so long been the constant accompaniments of her life.