"Why! how did you know about him?" interrupted Cornelia, into Mrs.

Vanderplanck's ever-ready ear-trumpet. "Is he a relation of yours, or

any thing?"

Aunt Margaret stopped short, and pressed her thin, wide lips together.

She had never imagined but that Professor Valeyon had told his daughters

through whose immediate instrumentality it was that Bressant made his

appearance at the Parsonage; but finding, from Cornelia's questions,

that this was not so, she bethought herself that it might be well for

her young guest to remain in ignorance, at least for the present. It was

not too late, and, after a scarcely-perceptible pause, she made answer: "It was in your dear papa's answer to my invitation, my love. Oh! so

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shocked I was dear little Sophie couldn't come--lay awake all that

night with a headache--yes, indeed!--when he wrote to me, you

know--such a dear, noble letter it was, too! Oh! I read it over a

dozen--twenty times at least!--he mentioned this new pupil of

his--seemed interested in him--of course I can't help being interested

in whatever interests any of you dear ones, you know--he mentioned his

strange name and all--it is a strange name, isn't it, love?"

"It isn't his real name," interposed Cornelia; "nobody except papa knows

who he is. It's just like one of those ancient names, you know--the

Christian name and the surname in one."

"Oh, yes, I see--so odd, isn't it?--such a mystery, and all

that--yes--so that's how I came to speak of him, I suppose. One gets

ideas of a person that way sometimes, don't you know, though they may

never have actually seen them at all? Oh! when I was a young thing,

I was just full of those--ideals, I used to call them--oh, you know

all about it, I dare say!"

"He met with a very serious accident just before I came away," said

Cornelia to the ear-trumpet; "he stopped Dolly--our horse--she was

running away with papa in the wagon. He saved papa beautifully, but he

was dreadfully hurt--his collar-bone was broken, and he was kicked, and

almost killed. He's at our house now, and papa's taking care of him."

At this information Aunt Margaret became very white, or rather

bloodless, in the face. She allowed the ear-trumpet to hang by its

silver chain from her neck, and, reaching out her hand to a recess in

the writing-table at which she sat, she drew forth a small ebony box,

set in silver, and carved all over with little figures in bass-relief.

Opening it, she took out a few grains of some dark substance which the

box contained, and slipped them eagerly into her large mouth, Cornelia

watched her out of the corner of her eyes, and, being a physician's

daughter, she drew her own conclusions.

"Ho, ho! that's where your sick-headaches, and yellow complexion, and

nervousness, and weak eyes, come from, is it? You'd better look out!

that's morphine, or opium, or some such thing, I know; and papa says

that old ladies like you, who use such drugs, are liable to get insane

after a while, and I shouldn't be a bit surprised if you were to become

insane, Aunt Margaret!"




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