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<h2> CHAPTER XX—DOROTHY CALLS MARIE-CELESTE TO ACCOUNT.. </h2>
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<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>arie-Celeste, here
is a letter for you, and it is the third one you have received under cover
of direction to me; and, if I am not mistaken, I recognize the handwriting
on this one; I believe it is from Theodore Harris.”</p>
<p>Marie-Celeste, with a meek little “thank you,” simply took the
letter from Dorothy's extended hand.</p>
<p>“And, Marie-Celeste,” Dorothy continued, “you are not
showing them to your mother. They come enclosed in these envelopes, and
that is so that she shall not know that you receive them, I suppose.”</p>
<p>“Yes, Miss Dorothy,” but with her mind quite intent on the
letter, and therefore rather absent-mindedly.</p>
<p>“Well, then, do you know, I believe I shall tell her.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Miss Dorothy,” with all the absent-mindedness gone in a
minute, and with gravest reproach in the dark brown eyes, “you
wouldn't—you wouldn't do that!”</p>
<p>“Why, my dear child, I almost feel as though I ought to; it is such
an uncommon thing for a little girl of twelve to be in surreptitious
correspondence with at least three different people, for there has been a
different hand on every letter. It seems wrong to me to-be helping on such
a mysterious proceeding, with no idea whatever of what it all means.”</p>
<p>“Miss Dorothy,” said Marie-Celeste, “I am in a great big
secret, that's all, but I do wish—I do wish very much that you
were in it too,” which was indeed the truth, for this not being able
to talk over matters with anybody was almost more than she could longer
endure.</p>
<p>“Well, don't you believe it would do to take me in, then?”
said Dorothy rather entreatingly. “I confess I would like to know
what Theodore Harris is writing to you about; and besides it doesn't
seem fair to put too much upon a little girl like you. You seem to be
thinking so hard so much of the time.”</p>
<p>“They are pretty nice thoughts, though,” Marie-Celeste
replied, “as you'll see when I tell you, because I've
about decided to tell you. I think it's right, too, and I don't
believe they'll mind, and I am going up to the house to bring the
other two letters and read them to you. It will make you happier than
anything you ever heard,” and Marie-Celeste spoke truer than she
knew.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Dorothy sat gazing out over beautiful Lake Coniston, wondering
if she were really doing the right thing in persuading Marie-Celeste to
confide in her, and unable to arrive at any decision. She was sitting on a
little rustic seat down by the water's edge, which Marie-Celeste,
with her passion for exploring new surroundings, had discovered the
evening before, almost immediately upon their arrival at the Waterhead
Hotel. It was here that Dorothy had counted on finding Marie-Celeste, and
it was here that she was left alone with her thoughts while Marie-Celeste
ran off on her self-imposed errand. It was a beautiful little sheet of
water that lay there at her feet, with its densely wooded banks and its
wilderness still uninvaded by civilization; and just across the lake the
setting sun was crimsoning the chimneys and pointed gables of the only
house upon that farther bank. It is this home that lends its own special
interest to the little lake, for it is the home of that grand old
idealist, Ruskin. It is just such a home as you would know that wise
philosopher would choose, far from the haunts of men and all the
devastating improvements of the age. A grand place, too, to work, you
think; and then you recall with a sigh that the light of that glorious
mind has well-nigh gone out, 'neath the weight of physical weariness
and infirmity, and then the solitary home begins to look a little like a
prison in your eyes, as you realize how glad its inmate would be to
exchange it for the Palace of that King whose divine intent for the world
he has so marvellously interpreted for us all in the days when soul was
still master of hand and brain.</p>
<p>But there was no room in Dorothy's mind just then for musings either
on nature or Ruskin, and it is to be feared that the dancing blue of the
water and the purple shadows on the hills and golden glow of the sunset
made little impression on her wholly preoccupied mind. What could Theodore
Harris be writing to Marie-Celeste about, and who could the other two
letters be from? Those were the absorbing questions of the hour; and at
last Marie-Celeste is back again on the little seat beside her, ready to
unlock her precious secrets, and with the three mysterious letters spread,
one upon the other, open in her lap.</p>
<p>“Now, think a moment, Marie-Celeste,” said Dorothy seriously;
“are you sure it is perfectly right to tell me?”</p>
<p>“But you said you'd tell my mother if I didn't,”
laughed Marie-Celeste.</p>
<p>“Oh, no, dear! I didn't put it quite like that. I only
wondered if, perhaps, it was not my duty. But I know from what you have
already told me that everything is all right. You see, I did not quite
like to have a hand in anything so very unusual without being taken just a
little into your confidence. You remember, when the other letters came,
you scampered off in most excited fashion to read them all by yourself
somewhere, and then never opened your lips about them afterward, so that I
could not help feeling that it was a very queer proceeding, and that I
really ought to look into it.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I understand perfectly, Miss Dorothy; and Ted says right here
at the end of his letter: 'Tell Miss Allyn all about things if you
think best.'” And of course that settled matters beautifully,
quieting the last little suggestion of a compunction on Dorothy's
part.</p>
<p>“Now, the best way to tell you,” Marie-Celeste began, “will
be to read the letters. This first one is from Donald. 'London,
August 20th'”—</p>
<p>“London, Marie-Celeste!”</p>
<p>“Wait, Miss Dorothy; it will explain itself,” smiling with
delight at the pleasant surprises contained in those three precious
letters.</p>
<p>“'London, August 20th. My dear friend' (you know, Donald
has to begin that way, because he didn't like to say Marie-Celeste,
and so never called me anything), 'you will be surprised to find I
am in London, and, what is more, that I have come up to London as a valet
for a gentleman, and the gentleman, let me tell you, is your cousin, Mr.
Harris. You know we grew to be good friends all those weeks together down
at the Hartleys', at Nuneham!'”</p>
<p>“Do you mean to say,” interrupted Dorothy—for the letter
was not explaining things quite as fully as might be desired—“that
Donald has actually been staying in the same cottage with Theodore?”</p>
<p>“You knew about Ted's accident, didn't you, Miss
Dorothy? Ted said you did, that your brother had told you.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I knew about that, but I do not know where it happened or
where he has been staying all these weeks.”</p>
<p>“You've heard me talk about Chris, our postman, haven't
you, who came over on the steamer with us?”</p>
<p>“Yes, certainly.”</p>
<p>“Well, then, if you will believe it, it was just by his grandfather's
cottage, just outside of Nuneham, where the accident happened, and they're
the people who've been caring for him; and then when Donald went
down there to work on the farm, of course he discovered him; and then when
I went down the other day from Oxford, I discovered him too, and poor Ted's
had a very hard time to keep his secret.”</p>
<p>“But Harold was with you, Marie-Celeste,” said Dorothy
eagerly; “does he know, too?”</p>
<p>“No, Harold doesn't know; it's all on his account that
there's any secret about it now; you know Ted wants to prove to
Harold that he means to do the right thing before he lets him know the
worst there is about him. He means to tell him everything some day.”
And then Marie-Celeste proceeded to narrate at length her unexpected
encounter with Ted under the apple-tree, so that Dorothy gradually came to
a clear comprehension of how matters stood, and Marie-Celeste was free
once more to let Donald speak for himself.</p>
<p>“'And what we came up to London for,' continued the
letter, 'was to see a gentleman about some business matters; and the
gentleman we wanted to see was Mr. Belden—your rich old bachelor
friend you know—and who did he prove to be but a Mr. Selden, Mr.
Theodore's own uncle? His name was printed Belden by mistake on the
passenger list, and when Mr. Selden made friends with you that first day
out, and found out that you were going to visit his nephews at Windsor, he
didn't tell anyone it was wrong, because he didn't want you or
your father or mother to know who he was.'”</p>
<p>“What did I tell you, Marie-Celeste,” interrupted Dorothy with
a little air of superiority, “that time you told me about him in St.
George's? I knew it must be the same man.”</p>
<p>“But, Miss Dorothy, ever since this letter came I've been
wondering why he didn't want us to know who he was.”</p>
<p>“Because he has chosen forever so long not to have anything to do
with any of his relations, for fear they'd bother him, I suppose.”</p>
<p>“Well, he's gotten over that,” said Marie-Celeste;
“you'll see when I read his letter.” And Dorothy looked
as though she thought wonders would never end, which was exactly the way
Marie-Celeste wanted her to look, and would have been vastly disappointed
if she had not.</p>
<p>“'Land knows,' read Marie-Celeste, resuming the letter,
'why he wanted to be so mum about things; that's his own
affair, of course; but he's been awfully good to us, and he has
fixed up some matters that were bothering your cousin a great deal just
beautifully. All the same, he doesn't look a bit well,
Marie-Celeste, and he's a sad sort of man. It seems as though he had
something on his mind, but he's not going to let anybody know what
it is—that isn't his way. We've been in London now
nearly a week, stopping in lodgings in the same house with Mr. Selden. We've
had to stay because of the business matters, but to-morrow we are going
down to Oxford to see to some things there, and then in a day or two home
to the Little Castle. You see, I've been able to make myself real
useful to Mr. Harris, because, you know, he's not overstrong yet,
and accustomed, besides, to having a valet—which is what I happen to
be at present; but it's not going to be for long, and between us,
Marie-Celeste, I'm not sorry. I half believe that father of mine,
that I don't know anything about, must have been a sea-captain.
There are times when it's all I can do to keep from running away
from everything and putting to sea again as fast as ever I can on any old
tub that'll take me; but, of course, I really wouldn't do
anything so mean; and all told, I have had a beautiful summer. Chris has
decided to go back to the States on the Majestic, sailing the first of
October, and I'm to take my old place on that trip, too. It seems as
though you all ought to be on board with us. Couldn't you get your
father to bring it about somehow? Whew, what a long letter I have written!—the
longest in my life, and I never wrote more than half a dozen, anyway. Don't
stay away too long. It's going to be rather lonely at Windsor
without you all, and there isn't so very much time left now. Won't
Mr. Harold be surprised to find his brother in the Little Castle ready to
receive him! Mr. Theodore's getting to be a brick, I can tell you.
Good-by. As long as your people are not to know what's in this
letter, Mr. Harris tells me to put it in an envelope addressed to Miss
Allyn.</p>
<p>“'Yours truly,</p>
<p>“'Donald.'”</p>
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<p>“So much for Donald;” and Marie-Celeste, pausing to catch her
breath, hesitated to which of the other two letters to give the
preference. “I think I'll read Theodore's next, Miss
Dorothy, because it's the latest, but really Donald's the most
interesting of the three. This letter, is from Windsor, and it was written
only yesterday morning. It is dated 'The Little Castle.' 'Dear
little Coz,' it says, 'here I am, you see, and I assure you I
have kept my promise to the letter, and have come home as soon as ever I
could.'”</p>
<p>“Why were you so anxious to make him promise that?” asked M
iss Dorothy wonderingly.</p>
<p>“Why, because home's the best place for him; don't you
think so? He has not been there half enough these last few years, and,
besides, that's where he belongs—”</p>
<p>“But having the Little Castle all to himself probably does not seem
home-like,” suggested Dorothy sympathetically.</p>
<p>“Yes, that's just what he says,” laughed Marie-Celeste;
so that Dorothy thought her a trifle hard-hearted. “And now I'll
begin over again. 'Dear little Coz, here I am, you see, and I assure
you I have kept my promise to the letter, and have come home as soon as
ever I could; but home doesn't seem a very cheery sort of place when
all your relatives are off on a lark, and on your own brake at that, and
you must fain content yourself with the companionship of your valet. He's
a fine little valet, however, Marie-Celeste, and he tells me that he has
stolen my thunder in a long letter he wrote you from London; so you know
all about my going in search of your friend, Mr. Belden, and finding in
his place my uncle, Mr. Selden. Well, this letter is just to tell you what
I told you once before, you remember, and that is, that you are my good
little angel, no matter how bad you may have been for three whole days
together,” and to ask you not to forget that there is rather a
lonely fellow here at Windsor, who hopes you are having a good time, but
who honestly thinks that the sooner you come home the better. Tell Miss
Dorothy all about things if you think best, but don't paint me any
blacker than you feel you really have to.</p>
<p>“'Yours faithfully,</p>
<p>“'Theodore.'”</p>
<p>“Well, I haven't painted him very black, have I?” said
Marie-Celeste complacently; but Dorothy was far too absorbed in her own
thoughts to make any answer, and Marie-Celeste looked at her a little
curiously, wondering what was going on in her mind.</p>
<p>“Perhaps you'd rather be left to yourself?” she added
half mischievously, after a minute or more of unbroken silence.</p>
<p>'Oh, no; you didn't paint him black at all for Dorothy was able
instantly to bring her thoughts hack and say what was expected of her.</p>
<p>“This other letter,” explained Marie-Celeste, looking askance
at the note in her hand, “is rather spooney; I don't believe I
had better read it.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Selden write a spooney letter! that's impossible!”
exclaimed Dorothy, who thought 'she knew her man,' as the
saying goes; whereupon Marie-Celeste, of course, straightway read the
letter in order to prove her premises.</p>
<p>“'Reform Club, London, August 20.</p>
<p>“'They tell me, dear Marie-Celeste (and they means, of course,
your Cousin Theodore and Donald), that you are taking a driving tour
through the English lakes, and that if I should address a letter to you,
care of Miss Dorothy Allyn, no one would be any the wiser; and that's
just what I've done, you see, as, for reasons of his own, your
Cousin Theodore seems to prefer it. You know already that this same Cousin
Theodore has been up here in London several days with me, and as a result
we have had many a long talk together; but you do not know, perhaps, that
we came to the conclusion that your coming to England this summer had been
just the best thing that could have happened to both of us. Likely as not
you do not exactly understand how that can be, and it is as well, perhaps,
that you should not; only take my word for it, that it is true, and ask no
questions. This much, however, I will tell you. Ted said to me one day, 'I
can tell you one thing, Uncle Everett, it was a talk I had with that dear
child under an apple-tree, down at Nuneham, that made me feel that some
people whom I care a great deal for still had faith in me, and it was she
who gave me courage by what she told me to go home as fast as ever I could
get there and then, Marie-Celeste, what do you suppose I said to him?
Well, I just, told him that that same dear child had preached me two
blessed sermons—one on the deck of the Majestic and the other
exactly where a sermon should be preached, beneath the roof of dear old
St. George's, and that what there was left of my life was going to
be set in a new key.”</p>
<p>“This letter will not make you proud, Marie-Celeste, I know, only
very grateful, and one day I believe you will understand better than it is
possible for you now to understand to-day how even in this world the
prophecy comes true sometimes that “a little child shall lead them.”</p>
<p>“You must write and tell me when you are going home, for somehow or
other I must contrive to see you before you go, and what is more, I mean
to seek out a chance for a good talk with your father and mother.</p>
<p>“'Yours faithfully,</p>
<p>“'Everett Belden.'”</p>
<p>“And you call that a spooney letter! Marie-Celeste, you ought to be
ashamed of yourself,” and Dorothy tried to look the reproach she
felt the occasion called for.</p>
<p>“I only meant, Miss Dorothy, that it said some nice things about me.”</p>
<p>“Oh, is that all? Well, then, I'll forgive you; but that is
not what people usually mean by spooney,” and Dorothy putting her
arm about Marie-Celeste, they strolled up to the house together. “And
you understand—don't you, dear?—that I did not mean to
force your confidence in any way, only it did seem so mysterious?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, I understand perfectly; and you understand too, Miss
Dorothy, how I would have told you about it long ago, if I thought I could
and everything at last being mutually understood, there was happily no
need for further explanations.”</p>
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