It was still months before she could hope to go to Edinburgh to see her sister; but she wrote, urging her to give up her employment, and to take as much open-air exercise as possible, and also to take medical advice on the subject; but Elsie did not agree to this. The family plans were all laid for a visit to Derbyshire, and Mr. Brandon, who seemed always to be on the move, when his old neighbours were leaving London, seeing Jane’s distress about her sister, ventured on a good-natured suggestion in her behalf.
“I think you might go up now and see Peggy before you go to Derbyshire; you know she is anxious to see Emily and the other children. I could go with you. I wish so much to see the meeting between them.”
“We cannot go to Scotland so early in the season. Autumn is the time when it is pleasant to travel in the north.”
“But then I cannot be a witness to Peggy’s delight, for if you delay so long I will have to be off to Melbourne before that time. I thought if you went now you might leave Miss Melville with her sister while you pay your visit. You do not mean to take her there, and the servants here will, I suppose, be put on board wages during your absence, so that she need not remain in London.”
“We hope and expect that Miss Melville will accompany us to Derbyshire, that the children may go on with their lessons, and not get into as much mischief as they did on their last visit,” said Mr. Phillips.
“I am sure their aunts made great complaints of them,” said Mrs. Phillips, “and I do not wish to give room for so much complaint again. I hope Miss Melville will come with us.”
“I would have escorted Miss Melville to Edinburgh before I went to Ashfield, for I must see that worthy Peggy again before I leave England, and visit my Edinburgh relatives again, too, and my time is getting short,” said Mr. Brandon; “but if you cannot spare her, I cannot do anything but go to see her sister, and report myself on her appearance; perhaps your letters are duller than the reality.”
“Did you not tell me your sister was a milliner, Miss Melville? What a sad thing. I am sure you are such a treasure to us that I wish some other family would take your sister,” said Mrs. Phillips.
“She thinks millinery preferable to idleness; but the long hours, and the cold rooms, and the solitary life are too hard upon her.”
“It must be dull for her to have no other society but that of our good Peggy and her bairns after a long day’s work. Don’t you think, Lily, that it would be a pleasant change for her to come and spend a few weeks with us after we return to London, as her sister cannot yet go to her?” said Mr. Phillips.