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<h2> CHAPTER XVII.—INTO TED'S CONFIDENCE. </h2>
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<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>arie-Celeste!”
gasped Ted, letting his book fall from his hands.</p>
<p>“Cousin Ted!” gasped Marie-Celeste; and flop went the
cup-custard over on one side, and then rolled off of the tray altogether.
Perhaps you think gasped is a pretty strong word; but when you are fairly
taken off your feet with surprise, you can't for the very first
moment do much better with words than gasp them.</p>
<p>“Where did you come from, Marie-Celeste?” Ted demanded almost
roughly, and as though she had no right in the world to come from any
place whatsoever.</p>
<p>“How do you come to be here, Cousin Theodore?” parrying
question with question, and drawing her little figure to its full height,
in resentment of the tone in which Ted had spoken.</p>
<p>“Oh, you need not make any pretence,” Ted said sarcastically.
“Donald has been mean enough to go back on me, and you know all
there is to tell. I can see through the whole thing, cup-custard,
sponge-cake and all, and Harold 'll be down here in a moment to help
lord it over the prodigal.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean. Ted?” for she really did not understand all
he said. “Donald hasn't told me anything, nor Harold, nor
anybody. They've all gone off to see some cows somewhere, and Mrs.
Hartley asked me if I would not take this little tray down to Mr. Morris,
the gentleman who had met with the accident,” and Marie-Celeste gave
a comprehensive glance through the little orchard, as though still
expecting to discover the real object of her search under some neighboring
tree.</p>
<p>“I am the gentleman who met with the accident,” said Ted,
smiling in spite of himself, “and my name is supposed to be Morris.”</p>
<p>The smile relieved matters somewhat, and Marie-Celeste, setting the little
tray on the ground, picked up the cup-custard, which had suffered nothing
by its fall, and putting it back in its place on the tray, took a seat in
the corner of the rug, to which Ted motioned her, and then clasping her
two hands round her knees, asked in a tone of most earnest inquiry,
“Now tell me, Cousin Theodore, why do you do things like this?”</p>
<p>“You mean, why do I let myself be thrown out of my trap in a runaway
accident, and then be foolish enough to let myself be almost killed into
the bargain?”</p>
<p>“Have you really had an accident, Ted?” with a solicitude that
went straight to Ted's heart.</p>
<p>“Yes, considerable of an accident. I fancy it would have done for
me, Marie-Celeste, if I had not fallen into the hands of these good people
here.”</p>
<p>“But oh, Ted,” why didn't you send us word? Mamma and I
would have come down and taken care of you every moment and she spoke as
though they would have just loved to do it.</p>
<p>“Marie-Celeste, you are a dear child;” and Ted, who was
hungering at last for the love of kith and kin, could not keep his eyes
from growing a little misty. He realized, too, how he had done absolutely
nothing; to warrant this little affectionate outburst, and felt sorely
humiliated—a sensation which had been very common to poor Ted of
late.</p>
<p>“How did the accident happen?” asked Marie-Celeste; and
touched by his grave face, she moved a little farther up on the rug.</p>
<p>“Oh, by being a fool, as usual! We were off on a lark, four of us,
and I got into a fix so than I couldn't manage the horses, and—”</p>
<p>“Ted, do you mean”—and then Marie-Celeste hesitated—“do
you mean that you really took so much wine that you did not know what you
were about?” for she wanted to understand the whole matter clearly,
no matter how shocking it might prove.</p>
<p>“Yes, that was it, Marie-Celeste;” but the child little
guessed how the high-strung fellow winced under the confession, and how
his self-disgust never reached quite such high-water mark as at that
moment.</p>
<p>“Well, go on,” said Marie-Celeste in a tone of utter
hopelessness; and then she added, with the air of a little grandmother,
“don't keep anything back, Ted; I would rather know all there
is.”</p>
<p>“Well, that's about all there is, Marie-Celeste, and it's
enough, isn't it? I was caught under the trap as it went over, and
they picked me up as good as dead and carried me into the Hartleys.”</p>
<p>“But you told us all at Windsor you were going on a driving trip
with Mr. Allyn.”</p>
<p>“So I was before the accident.”</p>
<p>Marie-Celeste paused a moment to straighten things out in her mind; then
she asked, “But why, Ted, did you tell them your name was Morris?”</p>
<p>“Harry Allyn did that. He knew I would feel awfully mortified, and
he wanted Harold never to know.”</p>
<p>“He never shall,” Marie-Celeste said slowly, giving her full
endorsement to that part of the proceeding, and Ted inwardly pronounced
her a dearer child than ever.</p>
<p>“Where is Harry Allyn now?”</p>
<p>“He stops up at the hotel at Nuneham, and comes down to look after
me ever day.”</p>
<p>“Do his people know?”</p>
<p>“They know about the accident, but not where we are staying.”</p>
<p>“Oh, well, that makes me understand why Miss Allyn said she hardly
believed we would meet you on this driving trip. All the rest of us were
hoping we would. Miss Allyn would have hoped so, too, if she had not
known, I suppose.”</p>
<p>“Well, I don't suppose anything of the kind,” said Ted,
“but what's this about your driving trip, Marie-Celeste?”</p>
<p>“Oh, we're on your break, Ted—Harold couldn't
write to ask for it, you know, because we didn't know where you
were, and we're stopping at Oxford now; but we left papa and mamma
and Miss Dorothy and Mr. Farwell for to-day, because Harold and I
preferred coming down here to surprise Chris and Donald to seeing all the
colleges in the world.”</p>
<p>“Who is Mr. Farwell?”</p>
<p>“Oh, he's a very nice young artist, a friend of papa's.”</p>
<p>“And he is taking a driving trip on my break, is he?” said Ted
demurely, and not appearing exactly to fancy the idea.</p>
<p>“Why, of course, as he's in our party, Ted.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I understand; and now, Marie-Celeste, you are going to help me
keep my secret, are you? But you know you're not to tell anybody for
a while, not even your father and mother; do you think you can do it?”</p>
<p>“I will surely do it, Cousin Theodore, if you will do something for
me; will you promise me you will?”</p>
<p>“If I can, little cousin;” for who could withstand the
entreaty in the earnest childish voice?</p>
<p>“Will you come home, Cousin Theodore, as soon as ever you can?”</p>
<p>“What's the use, Marie-Celeste? Nobody cares for me there any
more, I've been such a selfish, ungracious fellow this long while.”</p>
<p>“We all care for you, Ted, really, very much—papa and mamma
and Harold and I.”</p>
<p>“Well, that's very kind indeed of you; but then I suppose, as
you're my relations, it's only Christian for you to care a
little.”</p>
<p>“But people care who are not your relations—Miss Dorothy Allyn
cares, and Albert.”</p>
<p>“How do you happen to know that.”</p>
<p>“Oh, because one day after Miss Allyn had been playing the organ in
St. George's—and oh! doesn't she play beautifully!—we
talked a little while on the Castle terrace, and we talked about you, and
I asked her if you were ever so nice as Harold, because we couldn't
help being a little disappointed in you, Cousin Ted, and she said yes,
that you used to be every bit as nice, and if you had not been spoiled up
at Oxford you would have turned out all right. She didn't say just
those words, you know, but that was the meaning.” Ted was silent for
a few moments, and when at last he spoke he said slowly, “Yes, I
will come home, Marie-Celeste, as soon as I can; I promise.”</p>
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<p>“Thank you, very much,” as though Ted had done her the
greatest personal favor; and then, seeming to feel that their talk had
come to a natural end, she asked quite casually, “Will you have the
custard now?” and Ted remarking quite as casually, “Yes, thank
you, I will,” she lifted the tray carefully into his lap. “Don't
take very long to eat it, please,” she urged, “for fear Mrs.
Hartley should wonder why I do not come hack and Ted obeyed orders with an
alacrity rather menacing to his digestive powers.</p>
<p>“What shall I say to Mrs. Hartley?” Marie-Celeste asked with a
puzzled frown.</p>
<p>“Say everything, Marie-Celeste; tell her all about me. Explain to
Donald first, and get him to take Harold off' somewhere, and then
tell all the others—Mr. and Mrs. Hartley and Chris and Martha. It is
not that I lack the courage to tell them myself, it's only that it
will be easier for them to learn it from you, you have such an innocent
way of going straight to the heart of a matter. Besides, how could they
hear it better than from my good little angel?”</p>
<p>“Your good little angel! Oh, you don't know me, Cousin Ted! I'm
anything but an angel. I was bad as I could be for three whole days
together a few weeks ago—you ask Donald! Listen! they are calling me
up at the cottage. Take that last spoonful of custard quickly, please; it's
good for you. Good-by, now,” printing a hearty little kiss on his
grateful face, “and remember your promise;” and then,
carefully lifting the tray, she sped back to the cottage, cheerily
calling, “Yes, I'm coming,” to Donald, who was on his
way to meet her.</p>
<p>“Marie-Celeste, what have you done?” and Donald's face
looked the picture of despair as he came toward her; nevertheless, he was
gallant enough to relieve her of the tray, with its empty dishes.</p>
<p>“You mean about my finding out about Cousin Ted?”</p>
<p>Donald simply nodded yes; he had no heart for words.</p>
<p>“Well, I couldn't help it, Donald; Mrs. Hartley asked me to
carry some custard and sponge-cake to the gentleman under the apple-tree—was
it my fault that the gentleman happened to be Ted, I'd like to know?”
for never were there more accusing eyes than Donald's.</p>
<p>“Oh, no; not your fault, but it's a pity to have the whole
thing spoiled. We've kept the secret so carefully.”</p>
<p>“And do you think it can't be a secret any longer because I
happen to be in it?”</p>
<p>That was exactly what Donald felt sure of, but he contrived to say,
“I didn't suppose you'd see the need of its being kept—I'm
glad if you do;” but there was no real gladness evident, for Donald's
tone was hopeless in the extreme.</p>
<p>“All the same, you don't think I'll keep it, Donald,”
her little face really grieved. “You think because I'm a girl
that I'll tell mamma, and then before I know it somebody else,”
and therein Marie-Celeste proved herself a veritable little mind-reader.
“Well, now, Donald, you'll see! and perhaps you'll come
to understand girls better this summer, and have more respect for them in
the future.”</p>
<p>Donald took his lecture very meekly, knowing well that he deserved it, but
still doubtful of Marie-Celeste's boasted ability in the
secret-keeping line.</p>
<p>“Cousin Ted has more confidence in me than you, Donald,” still
exercising her mind-reading proclivities. “He's asked me to
tell the Hartleys all about him this very day. He doesn't want any
unnecessary secrets kept any longer, and you're to take Harold off
somewhere while I tell them.”</p>
<p>“It seems to me Ted ought to tell them himself,” said Donald,
shaking his head in disapproval; for you see he really feared that Ted
lacked the necessary courage, although he could understand how much it
must mean to him to have the Hartleys realize that he had such a good
friend as Marie-Celeste at court. But Donald afterward exonerated Ted from
any lack of courage, and was of course delighted when he found that she
had pleaded his cause so eloquently as to convince even the old keeper
that Ted was fully justified in the course he had thought best to pursue.</p>
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<p>Never was fairy tale listened to with more rapt attention than
Marie-Celeste's narration of the ups and downs of Ted's life
as she knew them, and never was heart more gladly grateful than hers when
she realized that these good friends were more than willing, for the sake
of the end in view, to condone the deception practised upon them. It is
such a fine thing when people show themselves fair-minded and reasonable
under circumstances that put their fair-mindedness to so much of a test.</p>
<p>“Well, well, well, it's a queer world,” said old Mr.
Hartley, resting his elbows on his knees, and drawing circles and squares
with his cane on the gravel beneath the old settle—“it's
so remarkable that Mr. Morris (for he could not drop the name at once)
should have fallen right into our hands here. Seems to me as though God
never changed any of the real laws of things, but as though He ordered the
working of them together for good in a very wonderful way, just as the
Scripture says He do;” and a good many other people, who have not
lived in this world more than half as long as old Mr. Hartley, are willing
to go the whole length of this statement, and to defend it, if need be,
with page after page from their own experience.</p>
<p>It was just at this point in the conversation that Donald and Harold came
upon the scene, and hearing all of Mr. Hartley's last remark, Donald
felt sure that the old keeper, of whom he, as well as Ted and Harry Allyn,
stood in not a little awe, was not going to take offence at the new turn
affairs had taken; while Harold, to whom it sounded as though they had
been having a somewhat prosy sermon, rather congratulated himself that
Donald had carried him off to see a neighbor's kennels down the
river. But now there was time for little more than good-bys, and Chris,
who had slipped away to harness Jennie, was at the door; and with
farewells as hearty as though they had been friends for a lifetime, Harold
and Marie-Celeste climbed into the Saxon wagon, and amid much
demonstration on every side were off for the Nuneham station; but Harold
wondered that Donald did not drive into Nuneham with them, and said so.</p>
<p>“I suppose,” said Marie-Celeste, addressing Chris with a
knowing look in her eyes, “he has things to attend to about the farm
this time in the afternoon?”</p>
<p>“Yes, he has,” answered Chris, with a look just as knowing,
for both were well aware that as soon as their backs were turned Donald
would fly to Ted's rescue from his overlong quarantine down under
the apple-tree, and all the significant glances went on right under Harold's
eyes, with never a suspicion on his part. Indeed, Chris and Marie-Celeste,
just for the fun of it, indulged in some decidedly pointed remarks,
relying (and in Harold's case with considerable risk ) upon the
literalness of the average boy of sixteen to let their real meaning escape
him.</p>
<p>“Custard and sponge-cake is not very staying,” said Ted, after
Donald had told him the good news of how kindly the Hartleys had received
Marie-Celeste's surprising revelations, and they were on their way
to the cottage.</p>
<p>“Why, you haven't had any dinner, Mr. Harris?” a
paralyzing recollection coming over him.</p>
<p>“Who promised to bring it to me, Donald?”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mr. Harris, it's all my fault! Martha gave it to me just
before our own dinner was ready, and I set it on the feed-box a moment,
while I shook down some hay for Jennie in the barn, and Chris called me,
and that was the last I thought of it, and it must be there now.”</p>
<p>But Donald was mistaken; one of a litter of rather young setter puppies,
but with the sense of scent well developed, had scaled the sides of the
low feed-box, and now lay on its side by the empty plate, feeling somewhat
the worse for its foraging expedition.</p>
<p>“But dinners are not so reviving as good news, Donald,” said
Ted excusingly; and indeed, notwithstanding diminished rations, he felt
wonderfully toned up both in mind and body, now that the good friends in
the cottage knew just who he was and there was no longer need for any sort
of duplicity.</p>
<p>With all Ted's faults he was as open as the day, and the part which
Harry and discretion and the Doctor had mapped out for him to play had
been harder than you can imagine.</p>
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