North and South eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 692 pages of information about North and South.

North and South eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 692 pages of information about North and South.

‘Papa! guess who is here!’

He looked at her; she saw the idea of the truth glimmer into their filmy sadness, and be dismissed thence as a wild imagination.

He threw himself forward, and hid his face once more in his stretched-out arms, resting upon the table as heretofore.  She heard him whisper; she bent tenderly down to listen.  ’I don’t know.  Don’t tell me it is Frederick—­not Frederick.  I cannot bear it,—­I am too weak.  And his mother is dying!’He began to cry and wail like a child.  It was so different to all which Margaret had hoped and expected, that she turned sick with disappointment, and was silent for an instant.  Then she spoke again—­very differently—­not so exultingly, far more tenderly and carefully.

’Papa, it is Frederick!  Think of mamma, how glad she will be!  And oh, for her sake, how glad we ought to be!  For his sake, too,—­our poor, poor boy!’

Her father did not change his attitude, but he seemed to be trying to understand the fact.

‘Where is he?’ asked he at last, his face still hidden in his prostrate arms.

’In your study, quite alone.  I lighted the taper, and ran up to tell you.  He is quite alone, and will be wondering why—­’

‘I will go to him,’ broke in her father; and he lifted himself up and leant on her arm as on that of a guide.

Margaret led him to the study door, but her spirits were so agitated that she felt she could not bear to see the meeting.  She turned away, and ran up-stairs, and cried most heartily.  It was the first time she had dared to allow herself this relief for days.  The strain had been terrible, as she now felt.  But Frederick was come!  He, the one precious brother, was there, safe, amongst them again!  She could hardly believe it.  She stopped her crying, and opened her bedroom door.  She heard no sound of voices, and almost feared she might have dreamt.  She went down-stairs, and listened at the study door.  She heard the buzz of voices; and that was enough.  She went into the kitchen, and stirred up the fire, and lighted the house, and prepared for the wanderer’s refreshment.  How fortunate it was that her mother slept!  She knew that she did, from the candle-lighter thrust through the keyhole of her bedroom door.  The traveller could be refreshed and bright, and the first excitement of the meeting with his father all be over, before her mother became aware of anything unusual.

When all was ready, Margaret opened the study door, and went in like a serving-maiden, with a heavy tray. held in her extended arms.  She was proud of serving Frederick.  But he, when he saw her, sprang up in a minute, and relieved her of her burden.  It was a type, a sign, of all the coming relief which his presence would bring.  The brother and sister arranged the table together, saying little, but their hands touching, and their eyes speaking the natural language of expression, so intelligible to those of the same blood.  The fire had gone out; and Margaret applied herself to light it, for the evenings had begun to be chilly; and yet it was desirable to make all noises as distant as possible from Mrs. Hale’s room.

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North and South from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.