<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI" />CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
<h3>REBELLION.</h3>
<p>The next morning Violet began her housekeeping; a not very arduous
undertaking, as competent servants had been brought from Ion for her
establishment as well as for that next door.</p>
<p>It was pleasant to her and the captain to sit down to a well-appointed
table of their own.</p>
<p>Max and Lulu too, coming in fresh and rosy from a stroll along the beach,
thought it extremely nice that at last they had a home of their own with
their father and so sweet and pretty a new mamma to take the head of the
table.</p>
<p>The oysters and fish, just out of the ocean that morning, and Aunt
Phillis's corn-bread and muffins were very delicious to the keen young
appetites, and as Gracie was reported much better, every one was in good
spirits.</p>
<p>The captain and Violet had both been in to see her and ask how she had
passed the night, before coming down to the breakfast-room.</p>
<p>Immediately after the meal the captain conducted family worship. That
over, Max and Lulu seized their hats, and were rushing out in the
direction of the beach, but their father called them back.</p>
<p>"Where are you going?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Down by the waves," said Lulu.</p>
<p>"To the beach, sir," said Max.</p>
<p>"Without a word to any one!" he remarked a little severely. "How do you
know that you are not wanted by your mamma or myself? We are going
directly for a drive on the beach and I had intended to take you both
along. Now I am inclined to leave you behind."</p>
<p>The children hung their heads, looking crestfallen and disappointed.</p>
<p>"O Levis, please let them go!" pleaded Violet, laying her hand
persuasively on her husband's arm. "I am sure they did not mean to do
wrong."</p>
<p>"Well, my love," he answered, "I will overlook it for this time for your
sake. But, Max and Lulu, you must understand that you are under authority
and are not to leave the house without first reporting yourselves to your
mother or me and asking permission, stating where you desire to go and
about how long you expect or wish to stay."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," said Max; "but if you and Mamma Vi should both happen to be
out?"</p>
<p>"Then you may go to Grandpa Dinsmore or Grandma Elsie."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," Max answered in a pleasant tone; adding, "I'm sorry to have
displeased you, papa, and will be careful in future to obey the orders
you've just given."</p>
<p>But Lulu remained silent, and her countenance was sullen. She had been so
long in the habit of defying Mrs. Scrimp's authority that now she was
disposed to resist even her father's control in small matters, and think
she ought to be permitted to go and come at her own sweet will, and the
thought of being subjected to the sway of her new mother and her relatives
seemed to the proud, passionate child almost beyond endurance.</p>
<p>The expression of her face did not escape her father's observation, but he
thought it best to take no notice of it, hoping her angry and rebellious
feelings would soon pass away and leave her again the pleasant, lovable
child she had been a few moments since.</p>
<p>The carriage was already at the door.</p>
<p>"I think the air would do Gracie good," he remarked to Vi, "and the drive
not prove too fatiguing if I support her in my arms. We have room for one
more than our party. Will not your mother go with us?"</p>
<p>"Thank you; I'll run in and ask her," Vi said, tripping away.</p>
<p>Elsie accepted the invitation, remarking gayly, "I have no housekeeping
cares to prevent me. I'm just a daughter at home in her father's house,"
giving him a loving look and smile, "as I used to be in the glad, free
days of my girlhood."</p>
<p>The captain came down with Gracie in his arms, hers about his neck, her
little pale face on his shoulder. She looked thin and weak, but very
happy.</p>
<p>Grandma Elsie and Mamma Vi greeted her with loving inquiries and tender
kisses.</p>
<p>"Do you feel strong enough for the drive, dear?" asked the former.</p>
<p>"Yes, ma'am; with papa to hold me in his strong arms."</p>
<p>"Papa's dear baby girl!" murmured the captain low and tenderly, imprinting
a gentle kiss on the pale forehead.</p>
<p>Mr. Dinsmore came over, handed the ladies and Lulu into the carriage, then
held Gracie till her father was seated in it and ready to take her again.</p>
<p>It was a bright, fair morning with a delicious breeze from the sea, and
all enjoyed the drive greatly, unless perhaps Lulu, who had not yet
recovered her good humor. She sat by her father's side, scarcely speaking,
but no one seemed to notice it.</p>
<p>Gracie was asleep when they returned, and her father carried her up to her
room and laid her down so gently that she did not wake.</p>
<p>The others had paused in the veranda below. Zoe and Rosie came running
over to say the bathing hour was near at hand, and to ask if they were
going in.</p>
<p>"I am not," Elsie said.</p>
<p>"Nor I," said Violet, "I'm a little tired and should prefer to sit here
and chat with mamma."</p>
<p>"I'd like to go in," said Max. "When papa comes down I'll ask if I may."</p>
<p>"Mamma," said Rosie, "I don't care to go in to-day, but may I go down on
the beach and watch the bathers?"</p>
<p>"Yes, daughter. Take a servant with you to carry some camp-chairs and to
watch over Walter, if he wants to go with you."</p>
<p>"You'll come too, won't you?" Rosie said to Lulu; "it's good fun to watch
the people in the water."</p>
<p>"I'll have to ask leave first," replied Lulu in a sullen tone. "Can you
wait till papa comes down?"</p>
<p>"That is not necessary since your father has invested me with authority to
give you permission," remarked Violet pleasantly. "You may go if you will
keep with Rosie and the others. But, Lulu, my dear, I wish you would first
go up to your room, take off those coral ornaments and put them away
carefully. They do not correspond well with the dress you have on, and
are not suitable for you to wear down on the beach at this time of day."</p>
<p>She had noticed, on first seeing the child that morning, that she had them
on, but said nothing about it till now.</p>
<p>"You said you gave them to me to keep!" cried Lulu, turning a flushed and
angry face toward her young step-mother; "and if they are my own, I have a
right to wear them when and where I please, and I shall do so."</p>
<p>"Lucilla Raymond, to whom were you speaking?" asked her father sternly,
stepping into their midst from the open door-way.</p>
<p>The child hung her head in sullen silence, while Vi's face was full of
distress; Elsie's but little less so.</p>
<p>"Answer me!" commanded the captain in a tone that frightened even insolent
Lulu. "I overheard you speaking in an extremely impertinent manner to some
one. Who was it?"</p>
<p>"Your new wife," muttered the angry child.</p>
<p>The captain was silent for a moment, trying to gain control over himself.
Then he said calmly, but not less sternly than he had spoken before, "Come
here."</p>
<p>Lulu obeyed, looking pale and frightened.</p>
<p>He leaned down over her, unclasped the coral ornaments from her neck and
arms, and handing them to Violet, said, "My dear, I must ask you to take
these back. I cannot allow her to keep or wear them."</p>
<p>"O Levis!" began Vi in a tone of entreaty; but a look and a gentle "Hush,
love!" silenced her.</p>
<p>"Now, Lucilla," he said, resuming his stern tone of command, "ask your
mamma's pardon for your impertinence, and tell her you will never be
guilty of the like again."</p>
<p>"I won't!" exclaimed Lulu passionately.</p>
<p>At that, her father, with a look of utter astonishment at her presumption,
took her by the hand and led her into the house, upstairs and to her own
room.</p>
<p>"My daughter," he said, "I must be obeyed. I could not have believed you
would be so naughty and disobedient so soon after my return to you, for I
thought you loved me."</p>
<p>He paused for a reply, and Lulu burst out with passionate vehemence, "You
don't love me, papa! I knew you wouldn't when you got a new wife. I knew
she'd steal all your love away from your own children!"</p>
<p>In that moment of fierce, ungovernable anger all Vi's sweet kindness was
forgotten and old prejudices returned in full force.</p>
<p>The captain was too much shocked and astonished to speak for a moment. He
had not dreamed that his child possessed so terrible a temper.</p>
<p>"You were never more mistaken, Lulu," he said at length in a moved tone;
"I never loved my children better than I love them now. Are you not sorry
for your rebellious reply to me a moment since? will you not tell me so,
and do at once what I have bidden you?"</p>
<p>"No; I'll never ask her pardon!"</p>
<p>"You will stay in this room in solitary confinement until you do, though
it should be all summer," he said firmly, went out, locked the door on the
outside, and put the key into his pocket.</p>
<p>Zoe and Rosie had hastened away the moment the captain appeared upon the
scene in the veranda, and as he led Lulu into the house Violet burst into
tears.</p>
<p>"O mamma!" she sobbed, "what shall I do? I wish I had not said a word
about the ornaments, but just let her wear them! I never meant to make
trouble between my husband and his children! I never should have done so
intentionally."</p>
<p>"My dear child, you have no cause to blame yourself," Elsie said
soothingly.</p>
<p>"No, not a bit of it, Mamma Vi," cried Max, coming to her side. "I love Lu
dearly, but I know she has a very bad temper, and I think it's for her own
good that papa has found it out already, so that he can take means to help
her conquer it. Dear me! I should never dare to say 'I won't' to him. Nor
I shouldn't want to, because he's such a good father to us, and I love him
dearly."</p>
<p>"Dear Max," Violet said, smiling through her tears as she took his hand
and pressed it affectionately in hers. "I am sure he is a good, kind,
loving father; his children could never doubt it if they had heard all he
has said to me about them, and I trust you will never do anything to give
him pain."</p>
<p>The captain rejoined them presently, asking the ladies with an assumed
cheerfulness if they intended bathing.</p>
<p>They answered in the negative, and turning to Max he said kindly, "My son,
if you wish to do so, I will take you with me. The surf is fine this
morning and I feel inclined to go in."</p>
<p>"Oh, thank you, papa!" cried Max, "it will be splendid to go in with you!"</p>
<p>The captain re-entered the house and Violet followed. He turned at the
sound of her quick, light step, saw the distress in her face, the tears in
her eyes, and was much moved thereby.</p>
<p>"My love, my darling!" he said, taking her in his arms, "do not let this
thing trouble you. Ah, it pains me deeply that a child of mine should have
already brought tears to those sweet eyes."</p>
<p>"O Levis!" she sobbed, hiding her face on his breast, "forgive her for my
sake. Don't insist on her asking my pardon. I would not have her so
humiliated."</p>
<p>"There are few things you would ask, love, that I would not grant," he
said tenderly, softly smoothing the golden hair; "but for my daughter's
own sake I must compel her obedience. What would become of her if left to
the unrestrained indulgence of such a temper and spirit of insubordination
as she has shown this morning?"</p>
<p>"I know you are right," she sighed, "but I cannot help feeling sorry for
her, and oh it almost breaks my heart to think that I was the cause of the
trouble."</p>
<p>"Ah, but in that you are mistaken, sweet wife," he said, repeating his
caresses; "Lulu's own evil temper was the exciting cause. I could see that
she was in a sullen, rebellious mood from the time that I called her in
before our drive. That I must begin already to discipline one of my
children gives me a sad heart, but I must try to do my duty by her at what
ever cost of pain to her or myself."</p>
<p>As her father turned the key in the lock, Lulu stamped with passion, and
clenched her fists until the nails were buried in the flesh. "I'll never
do it!" she hissed between her tightly-shut teeth, "no, never! if he
keeps me here till I die. I just wish I could die and make him sorry for
treating me so!"</p>
<p>Then throwing herself on the bed she sobbed herself to sleep.</p>
<p>She must have slept several hours, for she was waked by the opening of her
door, and starting up found her father standing beside her with a small
salver in his hand. On it were a plate of graham bread, a china bowl
containing milk, and a silver spoon.</p>
<p>"Here is your dinner, Lucilla," he said, speaking in a quiet, grave tone,
as he set the salver on a little stand in a corner between the windows;
"unless you are ready to obey me. In that case, I shall take you down to
your mamma, and when you have begged her pardon and told me you are sorry
for your rebellious words and conduct toward me, you can eat your dinner
with us."</p>
<p>"I don't want to go downstairs, papa," she said, turning her face away
from him. "I'd rather stay here. But I should think you'd feel mean to eat
all sorts of good things and give me nothing but skim-milk and that black
bread."</p>
<p>"I give you that bread because it contains more nutriment than the white,"
he said. "As to the good things the rest of us may have to eat, you shall
share them as soon as you are ready to submit to my authority, but not
till then."</p>
<p>He waited a moment for a reply, but receiving none, went out and locked
the door.</p>
<p>When he came again at tea-time, bringing a fresh supply of the same sort
of fare, he found the first still untouched.</p>
<p>Lulu was very hungry, and really for the last hour had quite longed to eat
the bread and milk, but from sheer obstinacy would not touch it. She
thought if she held out long enough in her refusal to eat it, something
better would be furnished her.</p>
<p>But now she fairly quailed before the glance of her father's eye as he set
the second salver down and seating himself said, "Come here to me!"</p>
<p>She obeyed, looking pale and frightened.</p>
<p>He drew her in between his knees, put one arm round her, and taking the
bowl he had just brought in the other hand, held it to her lips, with the
command, "Drink this! every drop of it!"</p>
<p>When that was done, he commanded, "Now break this bread into that other
bowl of milk, take your spoon and eat it."</p>
<p>Now thoroughly frightened, she did not dare disobey.</p>
<p>He sat and watched her till the meal was finished, she feeling that his
stern eye was upon her, but never once venturing to look at him.</p>
<p>"Have you anything to say to me, Lucilla?" he asked as he rose to go.</p>
<p>"No, sir," she answered, with her eyes upon the carpet.</p>
<p>"My child, you are grieving me very much," he said, took up the salver and
went out.</p>
<p>Lulu did love her father—though not nearly so well as her own
self-will—and his parting words brought a gush of tears from her eyes.
She was half inclined to call to him to come back, and say she would obey.</p>
<p>But no! her heart rose up in fierce rebellion at the thought of asking
pardon of his "new wife." "I'll never do it!" she repeated half aloud,
"and when I get sick and die from being kept shut up here papa will wish
he hadn't tried to make me."</p>
<p>So she hardened her heart day after day and refused to yield.</p>
<p>Her fare continued the same, her father bringing it to her three times
daily, now in silence, now asking if she were ready to obey.</p>
<p>She saw no one else but the maid who came each morning to put her room in
order; except as she caught sight of one or another from the window. She
liked to look at the sea and watch the vessels sailing by, but was often
seized with a great longing to get down close to the waves.</p>
<p>After the second day she grew very, very weary of her imprisonment and
indulged in frequent fits of crying as she heard the gay voices of Max and
the young Travillas at sport on the veranda, in the yards below, or knew
from the sound of wheels, followed by an hour or more of quiet, that
drives were being taken.</p>
<p>She knew she was missing a great deal of enjoyment. Being of an active
temperament, extremely fond of out-door exercise, made this close
confinement even more irksome to her than it would have been to many
another.</p>
<p>She had nothing to do. She had turned over the contents of her trunk
several times, had found her doll, and tried to amuse herself with it, but
there was little fun in that without a playmate. She had no book but her
Bible, and that she did not care to read; there was too much in it to
condemn her.</p>
<p>"Papa," she said, when he came with her breakfast on the fourth day,
"mayn't I go and run on the beach for ten minutes and then come back?"</p>
<p>"What did I tell you about leaving this room?" he asked.</p>
<p>"I know you said I shouldn't do it till I asked her pardon," she replied,
bursting into a fit of passionate weeping, "but I'll never do that, and if
I get sick and die you'll be sorry for keeping me shut up so."</p>
<p>"You must not talk to your father in that impertinent manner," he said
sternly. "It is not I who keep you here, it is your own self-will; and
just so long as that lasts you will remain here."</p>
<p>"I haven't a friend in the world," she sobbed; "my own father is cruel to
me since he——"</p>
<p>"Hush!" he said in stern indignation. "I will have no more of that
impertinence! Will you force me to try the virtue of a rod with you,
Lucilla?"</p>
<p>She started and looked up at him with frightened eyes.</p>
<p>"I should be very loath to do so, but advise you to be very careful how
you tempt me to it any farther," he said, and left her.</p>
<p>He went down with a heavy heart to the breakfast-room where his wife, Max
and Gracie awaited his coming.</p>
<p>All three greeted his entrance with loving smiles. Vi was looking very
lovely, and he noticed with gratitude that Gracie's eyes were bright and
her cheeks faintly tinged with pink. She was improving rapidly in the
bracing sea-air and winning all hearts by her pretty ways.</p>
<p>She ran to meet him, crying, "Good-morning, my dear papa!"</p>
<p>He took her in his arms and kissed her tenderly two or three times,
longing to be able to do the same by the other one upstairs, put her in
her place at the table and took his own.</p>
<p>A tempting meal was spread upon it, but he felt that he could scarcely
enjoy it because it must not be shared with Lulu.</p>
<p>Vi read it all in his face, and her heart bled for him. She had seen
through all these days of conflict with his stubborn, rebellious child,
that his heart was sore over it, though he made great efforts to appear as
usual, and never spoke of Lulu except when it was quite necessary.</p>
<p>He had had to explain to Gracie why her sister was not to be seen, and to
entreat Vi not to grieve over her unintentional share in occasioning the
struggle, or let it hinder her enjoyment.</p>
<p>Elsie had made a generous settlement upon each of her married children; so
Vi had abundant means of her own. She longed to spend some of her money on
her husband's children, especially in pretty, tasteful dress for the two
little girls. She asked his consent, deeming it mot right to act without
it.</p>
<p>He seemed pleased that she had it in her heart to care for them in that
way, but said nothing could be done for Lulu at present, she might do what
she would for Gracie, but the expense must be his; nor could she move him
from that decision.</p>
<p>She had begun to carry out her plans for Gracie, delighting herself in
making her look as pretty as possible, and each day hoping that Lulu's
submission would make it possible to do the same by her.</p>
<p>She knew this morning, by her husband's countenance and his coming in
alone, that that hope had again failed, and her heart sank; but for his
sake she assumed an air of cheerfulness and chatted of other things with a
sprightliness and gayety that won him from sad thoughts in spite of
himself.</p>
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