Miss Octavia bassett.
Slowbridge had been shaken to its foundations.
It may as well be explained, however,
at the outset, that it would not take much of a sensation
to give Slowbridge a great shock. In the first
place, Slowbridge was not used to sensations, and was
used to going on the even and respectable tenor of
its way, regarding the outside world with private
distrust, if not with open disfavor. The new mills
had been a trial to Slowbridge,—a sore
trial. On being told of the owners’ plan
of building them, old Lady Theobald, who was the corner-stone
of the social edifice of Slowbridge, was said, by
a spectator, to have turned deathly pale with rage;
and, on the first day of their being opened in working
order, she had taken to her bed, and remained shut
up in her darkened room for a week, refusing to see
anybody, and even going so far as to send a scathing
message to the curate of St. James, who called in
fear and trembling, because he was afraid to stay away.
“With mills and mill-hands,”
her ladyship announced to Mr. Laurence, the mill-owner,
when chance first threw them together, “with
mills and mill-hands come murder, massacre, and mob
law.” And she said it so loud, and with
so stern an air of conviction, that the two Misses
Briarton, who were of a timorous and fearful nature,
dropped their buttered muffins (it was at one of the
tea-parties which were Slowbridge’s only dissipation),
and shuddered hysterically, feeling that their fate
was sealed, and that they might, any night, find three
masculine mill-hands secreted under their beds, with
bludgeons. But as no massacres took place, and
the mill-hands were pretty regular in their habits,
and even went so far as to send their children to
Lady Theobald’s free school, and accepted the
tracts left weekly at their doors, whether they could
read or not, Slowbridge gradually recovered from the
shock of finding itself forced to exist in close proximity
to mills, and was just settling itself to sleep—the
sleep of the just—again, when, as I have
said, it was shaken to its foundations.
It was Miss Belinda Bassett who received
the first shock. Miss Belinda Bassett was a decorous
little maiden lady, who lived in a decorous little
house on High Street (which was considered a very genteel
street in Slowbridge). She had lived in the same
house all her life, her father had lived in it, and
so also had her grandfather. She had gone out,
to take tea, from its doors two or three times a week,
ever since she had been twenty; and she had had her
little tea-parties in its front parlor as often as
any other genteel Slowbridge entertainer. She
had risen at seven, breakfasted at eight, dined at
two, taken tea at five, and gone to bed at ten, with
such regularity for fifty years, that to rise at eight,
breakfast at nine, dine at three, and take tea at six,
and go to bed at eleven, would, she was firmly convinced,
be but “to fly in the face of Providence,”
as she put it, and sign her own death-warrant.
Consequently, it is easy to imagine what a tremor
and excitement seized her when, one afternoon, as
she sat waiting for her tea, a coach from the Blue
Lion dashed—or, at least, almost
dashed—up to the front door, a young lady
got out, and the next minute the handmaiden, Mary Anne,
threw open the door of the parlor, announcing, without
the least preface,—
“Your niece, mum, from ’Meriker.”
Miss Belinda got up, feeling that her knees really
trembled beneath her.
In Slowbridge, America was not approved
of—in fact, was almost entirely ignored,
as a country where, to quote Lady Theobald, “the
laws were loose, and the prevailing sentiments revolutionary.”
It was not considered good taste to know Americans,—which
was not unfortunate, as there were none to know; and
Miss Belinda Bassett had always felt a delicacy in
mentioning her only brother, who had emigrated to the
United States in his youth, having first disgraced
himself by the utterance of the blasphemous remark
that “he wanted to get to a place where a fellow
could stretch himself, and not be bullied by a lot
of old tabbies.” From the day of his departure,
when he had left Miss Belinda bathed in tears of anguish,
she had heard nothing of him; and here upon the threshold
stood Mary Anne, with delighted eagerness in her countenance,
repeating,—
“Your niece, mum, from ’Meriker!”
And, with the words, her niece entered.
Miss Belinda put her hand to her heart.
The young lady thus announced was
the prettiest, and at the same time the most extraordinary-looking,
young lady she had ever seen in her life. Slowbridge
contained nothing approaching this niece. Her
dress was so very stylish that it was quite startling
in its effect; her forehead was covered down to her
large, pretty eyes themselves, with curls of yellow-brown
hair; and her slender throat was swathed round and
round with a grand scarf of black lace.
She made a step forward, and then
stopped, looking at Miss Belinda. Her eyes suddenly,
to Miss Belinda’s amazement, filled with tears.
“Didn’t you,” she said,—“oh,
dear! Didn’t you get the letter?”
“The—the letter!” faltered
Miss Belinda. “What letter, my—my
dear?”
“Pa’s,” was the answer. “Oh!
I see you didn’t.”
And she sank into the nearest chair,
putting her hands up to her face, and beginning to
cry outright.
“I—am Octavia B-bassett,”
she said. “We were coming to surp-prise
you, and travel in Europe; but the mines went wrong,
and p-pa was obliged to go back to Nevada.”
“The mines?” gasped Miss Belinda.
“S-silver-mines,” wept
Octavia. “And we had scarcely landed when
Piper cabled, and pa had to turn back. It was
something about shares, and he may have lost his last
dollar.”
Miss Belinda sank into a chair herself.
“Mary Anne,” she said faintly, “bring
me a glass of water.”
Her tone was such that Octavia removed
her handkerchief from her eyes, and sat up to examine
her.
“Are you frightened?” she asked, in some
alarm.
Miss Belinda took a sip of the water
brought by her handmaiden, replaced the glass upon
the salver, and shook her head deprecatingly.
“Not exactly frightened, my
dear,” she said, “but so amazed that I
find it difficult to—to collect myself.”
Octavia put up her handkerchief again
to wipe away a sudden new gush of tears.
“If shares intended to go down,”
she said, “I don’t see why they couldn’t
go down before we started, instead of waiting until
we got over here, and then spoiling every thing.”
“Providence, my dear”—began
Miss Belinda.
But she was interrupted by the re-entrance of Mary
Anne.
“The man from the Lion, mum,
wants to know what’s to be done with the trunks.
There’s six of ’em, an’ they’re
all that ’eavy as he says he wouldn’t
lift one alone for ten shilling.”
“Six!” exclaimed Miss Belinda. “Whose
are they?”
“Mine,” replied Octavia. “Wait
a minute. I’ll go out to him.”
Miss Belinda was astounded afresh
by the alacrity with which her niece seemed to forget
her troubles, and rise to the occasion. The girl
ran to the front door as if she was quite used to
directing her own affairs, and began to issue her
orders.
“You will have to get another
man,” she said. “You might have known
that. Go and get one somewhere.”
And when the man went off, grumbling
a little, and evidently rather at a loss before such
peremptory coolness, she turned to Miss Belinda.
“Where must he put them?” she asked.
It did not seem to have occurred to
her once that her identity might be doubted, and some
slight obstacles arise before her.
“I am afraid,” faltered
Miss Belinda, “that five of them will have to
be put in the attic.”
And in fifteen minutes five of them
were put into the attic, and the sixth—the
biggest of all—stood in the trim little
spare chamber, and pretty Miss Octavia had sunk into
a puffy little chintz-covered easy-chair, while her
newly found relative stood before her, making the
most laudable efforts to recover her equilibrium, and
not to feel as if her head were spinning round and
round.