The Gold of Chickaree Part 17
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Dane looked at her with a smile.
'I told you I wanted your help,' he said. '_That_ is something I have not thought of.'
'I am glad!'?She could not say another word, for sheer pleasure, and those were as quiet as three mice.
'I am but making a beginning as yet, Hazel,' Dane went on. 'The first obvious things it is easy to get hold of. This for one: every child shall go half the day to school. I will not have them on any other understanding. There are few adult scholars at present; their number will grow. What shall I do with the hall on the north side of the school-room?'
'The people work from morning to night, every day?'
'From seven to seven. But come, you must not stand here any longer looking at carpenters. Come on to Gyda's. I want you to see one or two cottages on the way.'
Empty dwellings. One was a little frame house; the other was quite a pretty, low, gray stone cottage. Neatly finished, provided with snug little kitchens and small sheds adjoining for wood; the paling fence, unpainted yet, enclosing a bare s.p.a.ce that might one day be a garden.
'Here will be work for you, Hazel, you see. All these garden plots must have something in them; and as soon as may be I want to see roses and vines creeping over these walls. But we must go slowly.
You and I cannot do it. The only way for permanent results, is to rouse the desire, excite the ambition, and then supply the means.
Outside the gardens I mean to plant trees, of hardy shade kinds; but I have not got so far as that yet.'
'I think you have done a great deal,' said Hazel. 'No wonder you were too busy?How do you expect to rouse the desire, Mr. Rollo?
By a specimen cottage??or by tea-drinkings at Chickaree?'
He smiled and said 'they were far from that yet.' 'But desires grow,'
he added, 'and one thing leads to another. Now come away.'
CHAPTER X.
ROLLO'S COMPANY.
Gyda was expecting them, and certainly looked glad enough in her quiet way. She took Wych Hazel off into an inner room, a little bit of a clean, coa.r.s.e furnished place, to remove her hat and refresh herself. When she came out, Rollo was busy making one of the great settle chairs into a resting place for her, with cus.h.i.+ons and shawl as once before. He put her in it and sat down beside her.
'You have helped me to-day, Hazel. True help. But you know what was said of some of the early Christians?"they first gave their own selves to the Lord"?so I want you to do. You will not be the less, but the more, mine.'
She did not answer a word, only by the drooping head and the curious pale alternations of colour?sure tokens with her of excited feeling. That thought had so run through the morning!?
had so half spoiled it for her at times.
'Not a word?' said he softly.
'If one word would do it?But it would take many.'
'Many words? to do what?' he asked in the soft musical tone that in itself was a caress.
'To tell why I cannot answer,?why I cannot promise?to be all you wish.'
'Lay your head down and rest,' said he; 'and don't promise, but _do_ it. Are you tired?'
He left her and went to help Gyda in serving her luncheon. This was rather a more enjoyable meal than the last one, when n.o.body could eat. There was happiness in every line of Gyda's shoulders, and in every movement she made between the fire and the table; and Dane was at home and at play. He was changed since a year before. The always bright, gay, masterful face was full now of a deeper purpose and a more centred energy; but the eye was as quick and as flas.h.i.+ng as ever. And Wych Hazel, not as mistress in her own house but as guest in another's, was waited upon?how shall I say??as such men can do it. And that is rather a rare kind of petting.
A week? was it only a week ago? Hazel wondered. Those three days of prostration had seemed to put whole continents of time between her and the wild walk across the hill-top; though the traces of that day, and of the weeks that went before, were still visible enough. Not strong yet, to withstand and manage the incoming tide of new thoughts and prospects and responsibilities, she took all the petting and pleasure and care with the most gravely girlish face imaginable. Watching her two companions, listening to them, and giving them now and then a bright blush or smile out of the midst of her thoughts, yet all the time conscious of the thoughts as well.
No, she has not quite all he could wish; not all that he ought to have. She knew that; she had known it ever since last winter; and whatever love and devotion could do, let the supply be never so unlimited, they could not do all. There would be ground he would occupy, where she could not stand by his side; there would be work he would do, which she was not fit to share. Would be? there was now. This coming in among his labours and plans had brought it home to her keenly. All the same, she could take no new stand just to please him; it would not be true, she could not keep up to it, could not act it out. Was she ready, for other reasons, to take such a stand? The old tangle of perplexed questions seemed closing her in again; and now and then, between whiles, when Rollo was looking away, the brown eyes studied him; as if studying his face would magnetize her out of her difficulties,?the one person in all the world who belonged to her, and to whom she belonged. But it was intensely like Wych Hazel, that the more she realized this, the more she hung back from following in the steps of his Christian life merely because they were his. They should be true _for her_, or she would not take them at all.
The talk at the table ran a good deal upon matters and things in the Hollow. Gyda knew the ins and outs of many a house there; she could ill.u.s.trate and prove the truth of some of Rollo's statements, and she could suggest wants, even if she did not know to contrive the remedy.
'There's something you haven't thought of yet, Olaf,' she observed.
'They are just heathens and savages down there.'
'What makes you think I have not thought of it?'
'Well, you haven't begun to plan for it.'
'How can you venture to say that?'
'I haven't heard you say a word.'
'Do you think, Hazel, that proves anything?'
'It would not with me,' she said. 'But Mrs. Boerresen should know you.'
'She should,' said Rollo. 'It appears she don't.'
'You talk of a great many other things,' said the old woman smiling. 'I've been waiting to hear when _that_ would come up. What are you going to do, lad?'
'Gyda is quite right,' said Dane turning again to Wych Hazel. 'They are little better than heathen, and do not know much more. You remember our first visit here? A party of the children had made a plan to throw stones at our horses as we pa.s.sed through the Hollow on our return. There is no danger of that now. But what would you do with such a community?'
'_I_ could not do much,' said the girl gravely. 'I suppose, if I were you?You should ask people who know what they are talking about, Mr. Rollo. Not me.'
'But I ask you. What occurs to you, as a good first step?'
'It did not "occur" to me,' said Hazel,?'you made me think of it. I suppose, then?if I knew what you know, Mr. Rollo; if I felt as you feel; I should want to tell them _that_, first of all. I should set them the lesson you set me,' she added, her voice changing a little.
'And?very much as you set it for me.' A swift deprecating glance begged him not to think that she was either criticising his work, or a.s.suming that she knew what it was; or in general, that she knew anything about anything!
'And when and where would you do this?' said Dane, his manner quite grave and quiet, his powerful eyes nevertheless absorbing every indication of the changes in hers.
'I should think they would come any time when you wanted them,'
she said, making revelations in her unconscious way.?'Sundays, I suppose they would have most time. And Sundays, too, they would be a little more dressed up and ready for the best things you could tell them.'?The words came simply, but very soberly, as if she remembered all the while that in such plans she had nothing to do.
'Well,' said Dane, 'our thoughts lie sufficiently near together. That is just what I have proposed to do, Wych.'
'Yes. I knew you would.'
'Do you think,' said he slowly, as he was helping her to something, 'do you think one ought to wait for anything _but_ an opportunity?
before telling good news to people whom it concerns?'
'But I did not think you had waited.'
'No,' said Rollo gravely. 'I started a general proposition.'
The Gold of Chickaree Part 17
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The Gold of Chickaree Part 17 summary
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