<SPAN name="chap05"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER V </h3>
<h3> Prince </h3>
<p>The children were all at breakfast the next morning in the
old-fashioned kitchen. Nurse and her brother were having an animated
talk over some reminiscences of the past, when there was a knock at the
back door, and Mrs. Giles went out. Coming back, she appeared with a
small hamper under her arm, which she placed on the floor.</p>
<p>''Tis the queerest thing I know of,' she said; 'look at the label now,
Jack; whoever is it for?'</p>
<p>Every one crowded round at once.</p>
<p>'For the little odd one at Brook Farm.'</p>
<p>''Tis for one of the children,' said Jack, rubbing his head; 'they be
the only little 'uns that I know of.'</p>
<p>'It's for Betty!' shouted Douglas and Molly excitedly; 'she's the odd
one! Open it quick, Betty; perhaps it's a big cake.'</p>
<p>'It's alive!' exclaimed nurse, as on her knees she tried to undo the
fastenings. 'Come along, Miss Betty, you shall open it for yourself.'</p>
<p>Betty came near, and with trembling fingers cut the string.</p>
<p>A minute after, and out of the hamper jumped a beautiful little black
and white spaniel.</p>
<p>There were screams of delight from all the children, and great surmises
as to who could have sent it. Betty guessed, but said nothing when she
found a piece of paper tied to a brass collar round his neck, with
these words: 'From a friend, hoping he may prove a true companion.'</p>
<p>She clasped her arms round the dog's neck in ecstasy. 'He is my very,
very own,' she said, looking up at nurse with shining eyes; 'and I'll
have him for ever and ever.'</p>
<p>The little creature sniffed at her face, and then put out his tongue,
and gave her a lick of satisfaction and approval. From that time the
two were all in all to each other.</p>
<p>There was a great deal of discussion about him that morning, and Betty
had to tell of the strange, stern lady who had spoken to her in the
wood.</p>
<p>'I'm sure she sent him,' Betty kept repeating; 'I'm sure she did.'</p>
<p>'It was awfully mean to keep your adventure so secret, said Douglas,
looking at the dog very wistfully; 'she must be a fairy godmother
living in the wood. I wish she would send me something.'</p>
<p>'Perhaps she is a wicked fairy or witch,' suggested Molly, 'who has
turned a prince into a little dog, and we must find a kind of spell to
bring him back to a prince again.'</p>
<p>'That's what I'll call him,' said Betty, looking up; 'I'll call him
Prince.'</p>
<p>Nurse at first demurred at having such an addition to her family, but
Mrs. Giles comforted her with the assurance—'There, let the little
miss enjoy him; she'll soon get tired of him—children always do—and
when you go back to London you can leave him behind with us. He's a
good breed, that we can see; and Jack will be able to sell him if we
don't care about keeping him.'</p>
<p>It was fortunate Betty did not hear this suggestion. Prince was
rapidly filling a void in her little heart of which only she perhaps
had been dimly conscious. She was a child with strong affections and
intense feelings, and a yearning to have some one to love, and to be
loved in return. None of the little Stuarts were demonstrative, and
few guessed how deeply and passionately the bright and mischievous
Betty longed for the sympathy and love that was so rarely shown towards
her.</p>
<p>So engrossing was the possession of Prince that the day went by, and
tea-time came, before Betty thought of her new friend in the church.</p>
<p>But when tea was over she took Molly into her confidence. 'Molly, do
you think I might take Prince for a walk? would he follow me?'</p>
<p>'Where are you going?'</p>
<p>'I'm going to see a lady that I think is the governess Mr. Roper told
me about; Nesta, her name is, only I think he called her Mother Nesta.
I told you about it one night, don't you remember? she's really very
old, but she looks very young, and this one must be her.'</p>
<p>'Where did you find her?'</p>
<p>'In a church.'</p>
<p>'Oh!' and Molly's tone was indifferent; 'I don't like people in church.
Nurse says she is going to take us to church to-morrow. I hoped she
would forget; last Sunday it was too far, she said. And Douglas and I
were going to have a beautiful church in the orchard. There's an apple
tree just like a pulpit.'</p>
<p>'Molly,' called out Douglas, 'Sam is going down to the river to fish;
he says he'll show us where we can fish too; do come on!'</p>
<p>Away ran Molly. The twins were playing in the garden porch, and nurse
chatting in the kitchen with her sister-in-law. Betty called Prince,
who had been busy with a saucer of scraps, and putting on her straw hat
set off along the road to church. Prince was certainly a great charge;
he was a dog of an inquiring mind, and his continual rushes into the
hedge sides, and long searches after young frogs in the grass,
considerably delayed his young mistress's progress.</p>
<p>But at length the church was reached; the evening shadows threw long,
weird shapes across the darkened path that led to the porch, the rooks
were noisier than usual, and Betty looked anxiously down at Prince.</p>
<p>'You won't bark, dear, will you?' she said stooping and lifting him
into her arms; 'because church is a very quiet place, and music is the
only noise allowed. I'll take you in to see the prettiest little girl
you've ever seen, and she's lying so still. I've brought her some
forget-me-nots.'</p>
<p>Prince struggled a little at first, but Betty soothed him and then
crept inside.</p>
<p>'I'm afraid I've come too late,' she murmured, as she looked round the
silent church and saw no signs of the lady; 'but I'll come another day
soon and see her.'</p>
<p>Softly she made her way round to the stained-glass window she loved,
but started in astonishment when she saw leaning against the monument a
tall, strange gentleman.</p>
<p>He did not see Betty; his brows were knitted and his lips twitching
strangely under his heavy dark moustache; with folded arms he stood
leaning against the pillar, and looking down upon the fair figure of
the recumbent child in front of him. Then he stooped, and taking up
one of the fading lilies across the child's hands looked at it
wonderingly.</p>
<p>'The picture more lasting than the thing itself,' he muttered; 'it is
all that is left us; the fragile productions of nature cannot exist
long in this hard, rough world, and yet how I tried to shield her from
every blast!'</p>
<p>A slight whine from Prince startled him, and looking round he pulled
himself together sternly.</p>
<p>'What are you doing here, little girl?'</p>
<p>Almost the same words that had been said to her in the wood the other
day; and Betty began to wonder if she were again on forbidden ground.</p>
<p>'Does the church belong to you?' she asked, standing her ground, and
looking up through her long dark lashes rather shyly; 'am I where I
oughtn't to be? I came to see that little girl.'</p>
<p>He looked at her.</p>
<p>'What do you know about her?'</p>
<p>'I don't know anything, but I want to know. I love her, and I've
brought her some more flowers.'</p>
<p>'Did you put these lilies here?'</p>
<p>'Yes; they're quite dead now, aren't they?'</p>
<p>'Of course they are; this is the place of death.'</p>
<p>Betty did not understand the bitter tone; but she said simply, pointing
to the child's figure, 'She isn't really dead, is she? She has gone to
sleep. I was thinking, when I was here before, if Jesus would only
just walk out of that window and touch her hands with His, she would
open her eyes and get up. I should like to see her, wouldn't you? I
watched her the other day till I almost thought I saw her move. But
she will wake up one day, won't she?'</p>
<p>There was no answer.</p>
<p>Betty slipped her little hand in his. 'Would you give her these
forget-me-nots, or lift me up so that I can do it?' She had dropped
Prince, who was sniffing suspiciously round the gentleman's heels, and
waited anxiously for his reply. He took her in his arms, and held her
there whilst she placed the flowers in the position she wished; and
then, before she was lifted down, she said softly, 'I think she is
really singing up in heaven. I like to believe she is there, but I'm
not quite sure. Do you know if she came out of tribulation?'</p>
<p>'Why should she?'</p>
<p>'Because it says, about those in white robes with crowns, "These are
they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes,
and made them white in the blood of the Lamb." It makes me feel very
unhappy sometimes, because I haven't been through tribulation yet, and
I shan't be ready to die till I have.'</p>
<p>She was set quickly down upon her feet, and without a word the
gentleman left her, striding down the aisle and shutting the church
door with a slam that echoed and re-echoed through the silent church.</p>
<p>Betty was startled at his sudden departure; she took up her dog in her
arms again, and stood gazing silently up at the window above, through
which the setting sun was sending coloured rays in all directions.
Then with a little sigh she turned and left the church. Outside the
porch was a grey-headed old man, the sexton, who was taking his evening
walk amongst the graves.</p>
<p>'Hulloo!' he said, 'be you the one that banged this 'ere door just now?
'Twas enough to scare the owls and bats and all the other beasties from
their holes for evermore.'</p>
<p>'No, it wasn't me; it was a gentleman.'</p>
<p>'Ah, was it now? Shouldn't be surprised if I knew who it was! 'Twas
Mr. Russell, surely! There's no other gent that favours this 'ere
building like him.'</p>
<p>'Is he Violet Russell's father?' questioned Betty eagerly.</p>
<p>The old man nodded. 'Yes, he be that little maid's parent, and he'll
never get over her loss. She were the apple of his eye, and when she
were took, he were like a man demented. Ah, 'tis the young as well as
the old I have to dig for!'</p>
<p>'Does that gentleman live here?' asked Betty.</p>
<p>'Ay, surely, for he be the owner of the whole property hereabout. But
'tis not money will give comfort; he have had a deal o' trouble. I
mind when his father turned him out o' doors for his painting and
sich-like persoots. And he went to Italy, and there he taught hisself
to be a hartist, and painted and carved a lot o' stone figures, and
folks say he made a name for hisself in Lunnon. He were taken back by
his father after a bit, and came a-coorting Miss Violet Granger, that
lived over at Deemster Hall. But his brother, Mr. Rudolph, cut him
out, when he went off to Germany for a spell, and he and Miss Violet
runned away together, and when he come back he found his bride stolen.
He were terrible cut up, and off he goes to foreign parts again, and
never a sight of he did us get till the old squire were dead, and Mr.
Rudolph had killed hisself out hunting. Then Mr. Frank comes home agen
with a bran-new wife, and we thought as how his life were a mending,
and things were looking up. He seemed brighter, too; but lack-a-day,
'twere not ten months afore I had to dig a grave for her, and she left
him a two-day-old babe to bring up—and little Miss Violet were the joy
of his heart—she were a purty, bright little maid, and were out on her
little pony every day wi' her father. She just doated on him, and he
were as lovin' as a woman wi' her. Then there come the day when the
little maid got a ugly fall from her pony, and all the Lunnon doctors
were sent for, but could do no good, and she were in bed a wasting away
for nigh a twelve-month, and then she died. 'Twere a mercy, for she'd
have been a hunchbacked cripple had she lived; and Mary Foster, what
were her maid, said as 'ow she suffered terrible at times. The Lord
were marciful in takin' of her. But 'tis not to be wondered at Mr.
Frank takin' it sorely. And then he shut hisself up in his painting
room, and never comed out of it till he had cut the little maid's
figure out in stone, like as you see it in the church. Many's the
visitor that I've a taken in to see it; and the ladies, they comes away
sheddin' tears at the little dear. He put up the coloured window too,
and comes to church reg'lar; but he's hard and cold, like the stones he
cut, and 'tis his troubles have spoilt him. I mind he were a
bright-faced, bonny lad once, that I used to show birds' nests to in
the hedges; but now he passes me wi'out a civil word or look. Ay, it's
trouble and toil and tribbylation that is man's lot here below!'</p>
<p>Betty listened to this long harangue breathlessly. Much of it she
could not follow, but the old man's closing sentence made her look at
him eagerly.</p>
<p>'Do you know about tribulation?' she asked.</p>
<p>'Me know of it! Ay, surely, when I've buried six sons and daughters,
and last of all my woife, and dug all their graves mysel', save two,
which were Jack in Mericky, which died of yellow fever, and only a
packet of letters sent back to us belonging to him, and in them there
were a bit o' his mother's grey hair which he had cut off that playful
afore he went away; and then there were Rob, that were killed down a
coal mine, and we could never get at his body, and he left a widder and
three childer, and she were married to one o' his chums afore a
twelvemonth past—the unfeeling hussy; but I've washed my hands of the
lot. Ay, I've been through troubles and tribbylation, which is our lot
in this world, but I've had a many more than most folks.'</p>
<p>'Then you must be quite ready to die?' said Betty, looking at him
thoughtfully.</p>
<p>The old man looked at her; then rubbed his head in a puzzled way.</p>
<p>'I'm no so sure about that, little lassie; I've seen scores brought
into this churchyard and placed in my graves, but there are toimes when
I think o' seeing mysel' let down into a strange grave, and one not cut
half so foine as mine, for I'm up to my trade, and none could do it
better, and I'm thinkin' if that day will wait till I'm ready for it;
well—'twill be a good way off yet!'</p>
<p>Betty knitted her brows in perplexity.</p>
<p>'If you've been through tribulation, you must be very nearly ready for
heaven—the Bible says so.'</p>
<p>'Ay, do it? Let's hear, missy; for sure I've had my lot o' woe, and
the Lord do be marciful!'</p>
<p>For a second time that afternoon Betty repeated the text that was so
occupying her mind and thoughts. The old man listened attentively.</p>
<p>'You see,' said Betty, leaning against an old yew tree and hugging
Prince close to her, 'it's the first part that's so difficult to me,
but it must be quite easy for you. The end of it fits us all, but the
tribulation doesn't fit me.'</p>
<p>'And what be the end of it?' asked the sexton.</p>
<p>'It says, they washed their robes and made them white in the blood of
the Lamb.'</p>
<p>'Ay,' said the old man, after a minute's silence, 'and 'tis the end of
it don't fit me.'</p>
<p>The child looked up, astonishment coming into her blue eyes.</p>
<p>'But that's very easy,' she said, 'that is coming to Jesus and asking
Him to wash our sins away in His blood. I thought everybody did that.
I do it every night, because I'm an awful wicked girl. I'm always
forgetting to be good.'</p>
<p>Again there was silence; the old man looked away over the hills in the
distance. It was just the quietest time in the evening; the birds were
already in their nests for the night,—even the rooks had subsided; and
the stillness and peace around drew his heart and mind upwards. Betty
thought he was looking at the sunset, which was shedding its last
golden rays over the misty blue outlines of the hills across the
horizon. Presently he drew the cuff of his sleeve across his eyes.
'And who be they that the Book says that of?' he asked.</p>
<p>'Why, it's the people in heaven—every one who dies, I s'pose. I like
to think of them there, but I do want dreadfully to join them one day;
and I'm afraid sometimes I shall be left out.'</p>
<p>Tears were filling the earnest little eyes, and the curly head bent
over Prince to hide them.</p>
<p>'I mind,' said the sexton slowly, 'that my missus, before she died,
told me to pray, "Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow." I expect
she knew all about the washing, but I've never done much harm to any
one, and I've attended church reg'lar.'</p>
<p>'I wish I was as good as you.' And Betty looked up with emphatic
utterance. 'I'm always doing some one harm, and nurse will scold me
when I get in for being out so late—I know she will. Good-bye, old
man.'</p>
<p>She put Prince down on the ground, and trotted off, and the old sexton
looked after her with a shake of his head.</p>
<p>'She be a queer little lass! Ay, I would be glad to have her chance of
getting to the Kingdom. But I'll have a look at the old Book, and see
what it says about this 'ere washing.'</p>
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