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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER VII.—“AND NOW GOOD-MORNING,” </h2>
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<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>ever in all this
world was there a happier little host than Harold Harris when he found how
kindly his guests from across the water were taking to the life at
Windsor; but who would not have taken kindly to it, I should like to know?
The Queen herself, in her great castle on the hill, could not have planned
more for the comfort of her guests than did Harold in his little castle
beneath it; and, indeed, this name of Little Castle had somehow attached
itself to the pretty stone house, with its round tower and moat-shaped
terrace.</p>
<p>It had been an idle bachelor's fancy to build after this unique
fashion some ten years before; but when Harold's mother had come
seeking a home in Windsor, he was already tired of it, and she found the
house was “To be let,” provided desirable tenants could be
found; and “desirable” the little widow proved in the eyes of
the discriminating agent. “None more so,” he thought
complacently when he called for the first quarter's rent, and saw
what a gem of a place she had made it. All the contents of the house in
London, which after her husband's death had seemed too sad a place
to live in, had been brought into the ivy-covered little castle, and under
her transforming touch it had soon become as cheery and cosey as possible.
But it was not enough for Harold that he was able to invite his friends
into such an attractive home. A room in the top story, with a fine north
light, was fitted up as a studio for Uncle Fritz, who, though a business
man by circumstance, was an artist through and through. For Aunt Lou an
up-stairs sitting-room was converted into a little study; for although
Aunt Lou herself was rather loath to confess it, it was nevertheless
somewhat generally known that she was very fond of writing stories for
children. For Marie-Celeste there seemed nothing in particular that could
be done, save to make her own little room as inviting as could be. To
accomplish this, Harold conferred with a friend of Ted's, Canon
Allyn's daughter. Miss Allyn, who had been a great favorite of
Harold's mother, was only too glad to have him turn to her, and
entered into all the preparations with an enthusiasm that was very
delightful. She suggested, among other things, a valance and curtains for
the little brass bedstead, already purchased, and then went herself and
selected a soft, white material and superintended their making. At her
suggestion, too, the couch and chairs were upholstered with a pretty
flower-patterned cretonne, and some lovely white-framed etchings were hung
upon the tinted walls. Then, by grace of his own idea of fitness, Harold
had added to the other furnishings a Dresden china toilet-set, and in this
he was perhaps far wiser than he knew, for is there anything so well
calculated to captivate at sight the heart of a dainty little maiden as
the mysterious round-topped boxes that compose the dainty outfit of the
ideal dressing-table? Then, to crown it all, a pair of ponies and a
basket-phaeton had been purchased for the exclusive use of the guests that
were to be. Of course, all this meant money; but with the exception of the
previous summer, when Theodore's guests had cost him such a pretty
penny, Harold had conscientiously lived a good way inside his income, so
that there was a reserve fund to draw on, on demand. As I said, then, who
would not have taken kindly to the life at Windsor under such conditions,
and have lost no time in stowing themselves happily away in the special
niche prepared for them? So Mr. Harris painted as for dear life in all
weathers, indoors or out, as the fancy struck him, and Mrs. Harris turned
her leisure to account for a bit of writing now and then, and in between
times they drove hither and thither in the basket-phaeton, and, one by
one, took in all the sights of old and delightful Windsor. And
Marie-Celeste did likewise, as far as the driving and sight-seeing were
concerned; but having no greater responsibility than the arrangement of
the Dresden boxes on the little dressing-table, wandered about at her own
sweet will, in the hours while Harold was at school and when every one
else was busy. And the place to which she wandered most often was to St.
George's Chapel, which at the time of her talk with Donald she had
not yet had the good fortune to visit. But with Marie-Celeste, as with
some of the rest of us, to know St. George's was to love it, and she
had soon gained a standing permission to go there whenever she liked; and
that was very often—so often, in fact, that any one who saw her one
lovely May morning tripping down the walk from the Little Castle, as
though bent upon some special errand, could easily have guessed her
destination. It was a matter of five minutes to reach the corner of High
Street, and of three minutes more to climb Castle Hill; then a smile to
the guard who happened to be on duty at the gate, and she was within the
castle walls. And once there she stopped to take it all in, for it had
never seemed so beautiful before; and then in a moment she knew what new
touch had been added to the scene. The sun had shone as brilliantly, and
the gray round tower, with its grass-grown terraces, had stood out as
clearly against the blue of the English sky, but never before—for
Marie-Celeste, that is—had those terraces been abloom with great
masses of lilacs. Two days had come and gone since her last visit, and the
showers and sunshine intervening had flashed the myriad tiny buds of every
cluster into full and transcendent bloom. No wonder the child held her
breath, spellbound from sheer delight, and no wonder, too, that the spell
lost its power to hold her the moment she spied a darling, new little
friend of hers standing in the chapel doorway. “And—and now
good-morning,” rang out a cheery little voice as she had hastened up
the path.</p>
<p>“Good-morning, Albert,” answered Marie-Celeste, smiling at the
expected, “and now,” with which, by way of getting the best of
a tendency to stutter, Albert was accustomed to preface many of his
remarks; “I thought I should find you here,” she added;
“and <i>have</i> you seen the lilacs, Albert?”</p>
<p>“Yes; and our bushes are out too,” with an emphatic little nod
of the head, as much as to say, that the Queen's lilacs were not
specially privileged in that direction.</p>
<p>“Is your sister going to play this morning?” asked
Marie-Celeste, with an eagerness on her face that gave place to intense
satisfaction as Albert answered, “Yes; she's comin' in a
little while;” since to have Miss Allyn at the organ during these
visits of hers to the chapel was just the most delightful thing that could
possibly happen for Marie-Celeste. “And now let's have a
little chat,” said Albert, seating himself on the step, and making
room for Marie-Celeste beside him.</p>
<p>“And what shall we talk about?”</p>
<p>“The weather;” for with Albert this topic was always of
paramount importance. “And first, I'll see what kind of a day
we are going to have;” and suiting the action to the word, he
stepped off a little distance to take an observation. He was always the
embodiment of dainty freshness, this little four-year-old Albert, and
thanks to his mother's preference, boyish percale dresses still kept
the Lilliputian trousers of the period at bay. He was a cunning little
object as he strode a few feet down the path, his hat on the back of his
golden curls, a soft, red silk sash knotted soldier-like at his side, and
his hands folded behind him, in evident and precise imitation of some
older observer of the elements. His observations, however, were so
exceedingly cursory and so impartially comprehensive, including the path
at his feet every whit as carefully as the sky above him, that
Marie-Celeste had difficulty in preserving proper decorum.</p>
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<p>“We are going to have a fine day,” Albert asserted, resuming
his seat on the steps, and with the authority of one who knows; and the
matter of the weather being thus satisfactorily disposed of, Marie-Celeste
made so bold as to introduce another subject; and as it chanced to meet
with Albert's approval, they chatted merrily together for ever so
long. Meantime, a party of tourists, with Marshall's familiar pink
guide-hook open in the hands of one of them, had been surveying the chapel
at a distance, and now, after a word or two with the children on the
doorstep, made their way within.</p>
<p>“Is Mr. Brooke in the chapel, Albeit?” asked Marie-Celeste.</p>
<p>“Yes,” sighed Albert; for he knew that his answer meant an end
to their chat; for whenever during these visits of hers a party of
tourists were so fortunate as to secure the services of the verier, Mr.
Brooke, Marie-Celeste invariably followed in their train, listening to
every word as it fell from the good old man's lips. She already knew
many of the monument inscriptions by heart, but that made no difference;
for her the old chapel possessed a never-ending fascination, and she
rarely crossed the threshold of the choir—which was a beautiful
chapel in itself—without an actual thrill of pleasure. So, as Albert
had expected, this morning proved no exception, and he was unceremoniously
left to communion with his own thoughts upon the doorstep; but it did not
prove a long separation. In their tour of the chapel the travellers from
across the water had but reached the wonderful cenotaph of the Princess
Charlotte, when a sweet single chord from the great organ broke upon the
air, as though the player simply wanted to make sure that the instrument
would respond when the time came. But in that single chord lay a summons
for Marie-Celeste and for Albert; at least, they chose so to regard it,
and meeting at the foot of the organ-loft stairway, they climbed it
hand-in-hand.</p>
<p>“So here you are!” said a very sweet-looking young lady,
turning to greet the children from her seat on the organ-bench. “Seems
to me I would have waited for more of an invitation than that, just that
one chord.”</p>
<p>“You needn't mind 'bout inwiting us ever, Dorothy,”
said Albert, climbing on to a cushioned bench at his sister's side,
“'cause we'd tome anyhow, wouldn't we,
Marie-Celeste?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Albert, I think we would; but you really don't mind
having us, do you, Miss Allyn?”</p>
<p>“No, I <i>really</i> don't,” in imitation of
Marie-Celeste's frequent use of the word. “In fact, I rather
like to have two such every-day little specimens near me here in this
chapel, where so many great people lie buried; and now I shall not say
another word, because I want to have a good practice.”</p>
<p>“But you'll—” and then Marie-Celeste thought
perhaps she had better not ask it.</p>
<p>“Stop in time for your favorites,” laughed Miss Allyn,
finishing the sentence. “Yes, of course I will. Perhaps you'd
like them now, you and Albert?”</p>
<p>“No, no, Dorothy,” said Albert firmly; “we want to think
they are tomin', and not dat dey're over.” And as
Marie-Celeste was evidently of the same mind, that settled the matter.
Then for the first time the tone of the organ rang out full and strong;
and the visitors in the chapel below looked up with rapt faces to the
gallery, as though for them, as for Marie-Celeste, the sweet music seemed
to lend the last perfecting touch to the holy enchantment of the place.
For over an hour, with scarce an interruption, Miss Allyn played on and
on, and Marie-Celeste never stirred from the choirmaster's chair, in
which she sat absorbed and entranced. Albert, it must be confessed, had
made more than one mysterious <i>sortie</i> down the gallery stairs, as
though bent on an important errand which had just occurred to him; but in
each case he brought up in rather aimless fashion in some remote corner of
the chapel; so it was easy to comprehend that the only real purpose in
view was to give his restless little four-year-old self the benefit of a
change. He was absent on the third of these little excursions of his, and
was surreptitiously amusing his audacious little self by seeing how it
seemed to sit in the Oueen's own stall, when hark!—yes, that
was going to be “The Roseate Hues,” and with a bound that came
near bringing the royal draperies with him he was out of the stall in a
trice and fairly scrambling up the organ stairs.</p>
<p>“Bedin aden; it isn't fair; bedin aden, Dorothy, <i>please</i>,”
he urged with all the breath hurrying and excitement had left him; and
Dorothy, at sight of his anxious, entreating face, resolved to “begin
again,” first bringing the interrupted measure to a close with a
brief concluding improvisation of her own. Albert understood, and brooked
the momentary delay as best he could, but he confided to Marie-Celeste, in
highly audible whisper, that he didn't see why Dorothy couldn't
stop short off in the middle of a piece if she chose to: he could, anyway—he
knew he could.</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” said Marie-Celeste, far wiser than she knew,
“you couldn't if you were really a great musician.” And
then instantly both children stood still and motionless, for there was the
familiar melody again.</p>
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<p>“De roseate hoos of early dawn,” hummed Albert in a cunning,
to-himself sort of way,</p>
<p><br/></p>
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De biteness of de day,</p>
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De kimson of de sunset sky,</p>
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How fast dey fade away,”</p>
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<p>and then the same verse through again and still again, as Dorothy was good
enough to repeat the brief, sweet strain for his special delectation. It
is doubtful if Albert appreciated the pathos of the lines. It was the rose
hue of the sunrise and the crimson of the sunset, wedded to the lovely
melody of the refrain, that brought such rapture of delight to his
color-loving soul.</p>
<p>And now it was Marie-Celeste's turn, and the martial strain of
“The Son of God goes forth to war” woke the old chapel echoes.
Three times, as for Albert, the air was played effectively through, and
then Miss Allyn slipped down from the organ-bench and into the nearest
chair.</p>
<p>“I wish I had strength just once,” she said, “to play as
long as I should like to.”</p>
<p>“Then you'd never stop, Dorothy, not even at the ends,”
said</p>
<p>Albert, looking comically doleful at the mere prospect of such an
undesirable state of affairs.</p>
<p>“I remember Mr. Belden told me on the steamer,” said
Marie-Celeste, with the air of one who settles down for a good talk with a
familiar friend, “of some musician who heard some one strike two or
three chords and then suddenly stop, and after that he; could not get a
wink of sleep till he jumped out of bed and rushed to his piano and struck
the chord that belonged at the end of the others.”</p>
<p>“Yes; that was Handel, I think,” said Miss Allyn.</p>
<p>“Handel!” repeated Marie-Celeste; “I want to remember
that name and everything else besides, if I can, that Mr. Belden told me.”</p>
<p>“Who was this Mr. Belden, Marie-Celeste?”</p>
<p>“Oh, he was the queerest English gentleman—an English
gentleman that I met on the steamer. I don't think many people liked
him—he said himself they didn't, anyway; but I liked him, and
we grew to be great friends, and we had a long chat together almost every
day.”</p>
<p>“What about?” asked Albert eagerly, since chats were just in
his line.</p>
<p>“Oh, often about books, and a great deal about the castle here, for
he seemed to know all about it. Besides, he was reading a book called
'Royal Windsor,' and that was how I came to know him, because I
knocked it out of his hands accidentally, and then I had to ask him to
excuse me, and that's the way we commenced to be friends. After that
he told me a great deal about what he had been reading. And did you ever
hear, Albert, about a little French girl who was made Queen of England,
and came to live in the castle when she was only eight years old, and who
used to come to this very chapel?”</p>
<p>“No, never,” with eyes as big as saucers.</p>
<p>“Well, some day, Albert, I'll tell you all about her, and some
other things that happened right here in St. George's. You know,
about her, don't you, Miss Allyn?”</p>
<p>“Yes, a little—Madame La Petite Reine, I believe they called
her; but tell me more, Marie-Celeste, about your steamer friend. He must,
as you say, have been a queer sort of a person to tell you people didn't
like him.”</p>
<p>“I guess it was true, though. He seemed kind of a selfish man, and
looked so cross until you came to know him, that I was really very much
frightened the day I knocked the book out of his hand. He isn't ever
very well, and he has to keep travelling about for his health. I think
that's one reason he looks cross; but he's very handsome, and
papa says very aristocratic.”</p>
<p>“I would radcr hear about de little Queen,” remarked Albert
demurely.</p>
<p>“Hush, dear!” said Dorothy; “I want to hear more about
this Mr. ——— did you say his name was Belden,
Marie-Celeste? Are you sure it was Belden?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sure; I have it at home in the printed list of passengers. And
another queer thing about him”—for there was real pleasure in
enlarging on a subject in which her listener took such undisguised
interest—“was that he told me one day that he had too much
money. That was funny, wasn't it? And he said he thought life was
very stupid. He just seemed all out of sorts with everything, and I got
him to read the 'Story of a Short Life;' I thought it would do
him good, and I'm sure it did.”</p>
<p>“I don't know about that story, either,” said Albert
aggressively, and as though such constant allusion to very interesting
things was really more than could be patiently endured; but he found to
his sorrow that his gentle protest seemed to make no impression
whatsoever.</p>
<p>“I fancy it was Mr. Belden, too,” continued Marie-Celeste, as
though wholly unconscious of any interruption, “who asked them to
sing 'The Son of God goes forth to war' at the service in the
saloon Sunday morning. I think anybody who reads the 'Story of a
Short Life' must love that hymn, don't you? That's the
reason I'm fond of it. Whenever I hear it I seem to see the soldiers
in the church at Asholt and the V.C. out on the door-step, singing the
beautiful words loud and clear, so that dear little Leonard would hear;
and then the hand pulling down the curtain at the barrack master's
window, so that the V.C. knew at once that the little fellow had gone to
heaven at last.”</p>
<p>“Yes, it's a beautiful story,” said Miss Allyn
thoughtfully. But meantime, matters had reached a climax in little Albert's
heaving breast. If nothing was to be explained, there was no use staying
any longer, and he summarily took his departure; and but for his childish
reverence for the sacred place would doubtless have stamped his indignant
way down the steps of the spiral stairway. Miss Allyn smiled significantly
and rose to follow.</p>
<p>“From all you have told me, Marie-Celeste, your friend might well be
Theodore's uncle,” said Miss Allyn, as they made their way
down the stairs; “he and Harold have an uncle—their mother's
brother—a Mr. Harold Selden, who was very much the sort of man you
describe.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no; I'm sure that couldn't be, Miss Allyn! Because
I talked about Harold often, so that he would have known and told me, and
he would have told me, too, if his name had not been Bel-den, you know.”</p>
<p>Miss Allyn was not so sure of that; but Albert was mounting the wall of
the terrace, to which he had led the way, in rather dangerous fashion, and
Miss Allyn hurrying to lift the little fellow to a safer level, the
conversation ended abruptly.</p>
<p>“Isn't it beautiful!” she said, as Marie-Celeste joined
her, at the same time lending a hand toward a less ambitious bit of
climbing with which Albert was fain to content himself.</p>
<p>Marie-Celeste looked away over the tops of the fine old trees that just
reach to the terraces from the steep decline of the slopes below, way to
the lovely meadows, and then turned to look up at the castle, leaning
comfortably against the wall at her back.</p>
<p>“Yes,” she said seriously; “I can't find any words
for it all”—her face fairly aglow with enthusiasm as she spoke—“everything
is so perfectly lovely: the views, and the towers, and the castle itself,
and the chapels, and the wonderful Long Walk, so that it seems as though I
was just dreaming it all, even to the little room Harold has fitted up so
beautifully for me.”</p>
<p>“I was sure it would look very prettily when it was finished,”
said Miss Allyn complacently. “Why, did you see it?”</p>
<p>“Why, of course I did! Hasn't Harold told you that I selected
the curtains, and the valance, and the hangings, and went with him to buy
the set for the toilette-table?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, of course he did. I don't know what I was thinking
of. You used to know Aunt Grace very well, didn't you?”</p>
<p>“Yes; and loved her with all my heart; and I used to spend a great
deal of time at the dear Little Castle.”</p>
<p>“Do you know much about Ted, Miss Allyn?”</p>
<p>“No, not much, dear—not nowadays; but why do you ask?”</p>
<p>“Oh, because—well, I suppose I ought not to say it, but we're
awfully disappointed in Ted. He wasn't ever half so nice as Harold,
was he?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, he was—just as nice every bit; though we English
people think that word nice of yours is so very queer. You have heard,
haven't you”—for Miss Aliyn was quite willing to change
the subject—“of the Englishman who said to a young girl whom
he met on the steamer, 'You Americans use <i>nice</i> so much, I
think it's a nasty word;' and of how she turned and archly
said, 'And do you think <i>nasty</i> is a nice word?'”</p>
<p>“Dood for her,” said Albert, thankful that the conversation
had once more grown intelligible.</p>
<p>“But nobody thinks Ted is so nice now, do they?” for
Marie-Celeste preferred to keep to the main point.</p>
<p>“No, I'm afraid not; but they would if he would let them, I'm
sure, for he had the makings of a splendid fellow in him.”</p>
<p>“He used to be Dorothy's best friend, didn't he,
Dorothy?”</p>
<p>“Yes, he did, Albert, and I miss him very much. He and Harry are
great friends still. Harry's my big brother, Marie-Celeste.”</p>
<p>“Why doesn't he tom to see us now, Dorothy?” Albert
questioned.</p>
<p>“He's tired of us, perhaps;” and Marie-Celeste, looking
up at Miss Allyn's sweet face, wondered how that could be, and then
asked very seriously, “Do you know what has changed him, Miss Aliyn?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, it is easy enough to tell: Oxford and popularity and more
money than is good for him, like your friend, Mr. Belden. It takes pretty
strong stuff to withstand that combination.”</p>
<p>“Well, I know one thing,” said Marie-Celeste, “and that
is that he isn't at all nice to Harold, and that he comes home very
seldom, and is very high and mighty when he does come.”</p>
<p>“High and mighty?” queried Albert, with a whimsical little
smile. “That must be a funny way to be;” and then Miss Allyn,
more impressed than ever with the doubtful propriety of discussing Mr.
Theodore Harris's shortcomings under existing conditions, looked at
her watch, and discovering it was time to go home, asked Marie-Celeste to
come with them to luncheon.</p>
<p>“No, not to-day, thank you. Mamma will be sending to look me up if I
don't hurry home myself. So, good-bye; good-bye, Albert (with a
kiss, which the fast-maturing, little fellow was half inclined to resent),
and thank you ever so much for the music. Shall you play on Thursday, Miss
Allyn?”</p>
<p>“Yes; at this same time, probably.”</p>
<p>“Then I shall surely come.”</p>
<p>“So s'all I,” chimed in a little voice with even firmer
determination.</p>
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