<h3><SPAN name="ch_12" id="ch_12"></SPAN>CHAPTER XII.</h3>
<h4>THE STORY OF THE OLD HOUSE.</h4>
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<tr><td align="left">"Old house! that time hath deigned to spare,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">'Mid sunny slopes and gardens fair."—<span class="smallcaps">Sigourney.</span></td></tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
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<p>It all seemed like a
dream the next
morning. We
slept much later
than usual, for
we were quite
tired out. I can
never even now think
of that evening—shut
up in the dark in the
big bare room—without
a sort of shudder. It really was dreadful:
we were so cold that when we did fall asleep
it was only to wake again with a start
to find ourselves shivering and aching.
And it was frightening, too: though we
squeezed together as close as we could,
we felt dreadfully alone. And alone we
really were; for, as we understood afterwards,
there was nobody at all in the Old
House. The person who dusted it was the
woman who lived at the lodge, and only
came up in the mornings. Regina had
taken her a little into her confidence. The
day she hurried away when a bell rang,
it was the woman ringing to let her know the
Rectory pony-carriage was coming up the
lane. Auntie knew that Regina came to
the Old House, but she thought it was
just to wander about the garden, and that
day she had promised to call for her at
the lodge. For the Old House belonged
to auntie: it had belonged to the Mowbrays
for a very, very great many years. And
this brings me to the story of the long-ago
troubles which we were told—the
story which explained everything which
had puzzled us.</p>
<p>It was Mrs. Munt who told it us. She
came into our room—Tib's and my room—that
morning before we were up—we
had had our breakfast in bed—and sat
down between our cots.</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/img285a.jpg" height-obs="400" alt="MRS. MUNT TOLD US" />
<p>"My dears," she began, "your dear
grandpapa and—and my dear lady, Mrs.
Mowbray, Miss Queenie as was—they have
asked me to tell you something of the past,
so that you may understand all. It is a
great honour they have done me, and I
will endeavour to show that I feel it such.
But oh," and here she fairly broke down,
"this is a happy, a blessed day—to see them
at one again, and oh, my dears, it was a
happy day that brought you to Rosebuds,
for all the anguish of heart of Mrs. Liddy
and myself last night, we shall never but
be thankful to the over-ruling powers as
directed the finding of the key, and your
innocent minds to the Old House."</p>
<p>At this point Mrs. Munt stopped. It
was a sort of little address which she thought
it her duty to make, and after this, she
went straight on.</p>
<p>"It is a many years ago," she said,
"that it all happened. When I first came
to Rosebuds as a young girl to help in the
cooking, there was living here your grandpapa,
then a little boy of ten, and his
brother Baldwin, and Miss Mary, with their
mother, and their father, who was on the
point of going abroad with his regiment.
Not long after he left, Miss Regina was
born; then came the news of your great-grandpapa's
death, and the shock affected
your great-grandmamma so much that she
never recovered it. She died a year or
two after, Master Baldwin being by that
time preparing for the army, for he was
five years older than Master Gerald, and
Miss Mary older than he. Miss Mary took
charge of things with a lady to help her.
You can fancy that everybody was devoted
to Miss Regina, Master Gerald especially.
Some years later, Ansdell Friars came to
Master Baldwin, by his uncle's death. He
came home from time to time, and we used
to spend a part of the year there, but it never
seemed home to us, like Rosebuds. Your
grandpapa married young—he was about
twenty-four, and Miss Queenie was thirteen.
Poor Miss Mary died the year before his
marriage; you have seen her tomb at
Ansdell, and it seemed well to him to
marry, to have a lady at the head of things,
him having so much charge like, for his
brother. And your papa was born when
Miss Queenie was about fifteen. Your
grandpapa's marriage was a very happy one;
Mrs. Ansdell was a very sweet lady, and
suited him well. She had not half the
spirit nor the cleverness of Miss Queenie,
and she gave in to her husband, and she
joined with him in thinking there never
was so beautiful a creature as Miss Queenie.
How they did spoil her! Poor Master Gerald—your
papa, my dears, seemed nobody
and nothing in the family, compared with
his auntie, though he was a dear little boy.
Well, to explain—next door to Rosebuds,
as you now understand, is the Old House.
It is a far finer and larger place than this,
and it has always belonged to the Mowbrays,
who are cousins of the Ansdells, by a Miss
Regina Mowbray having married an Ansdell—your
grandpapa's grandmother she was,
as well as I can remember. It is her picture
that hangs in the big drawing-room—"</p>
<p>"The old princess!" we exclaimed, at
which Mrs. Munt smiled—"and," she went
on, "it is from her, they always say, that
comes the beauty—the dark hair and blue
eyes, the Ansdells are, so to say, proud of.
Well,"—Mrs. Munt here hurried on a little,
I think she thought it not good for us to
say much about family beauty; it didn't
matter to <i>me</i>, with my shaggy light hair,
and browny-greeny eyes, but Tib is different—"the
families at the two houses were
very intimate—that door in the wall was
made in the Old House conservatory as a
short cut for the young ladies to run in
and out by—they and the rectory family,
this Mr. Lauriston's uncle it was then, but
this one was a great deal there, were all
most friendly. At the Old House there
were some sisters—one is living still, being
Mr. Truro's mother—and two brothers.
The eldest brother <i>was</i> a nice gentleman,
just everything a gentleman should be,
and your grandpapa was delighted when
he spoke to him for Miss Queenie. Miss
Queenie laughed and made fun of it, but in
the end she said 'yes,' and all would have
been well—for he was a gentleman no woman
could have failed to care for as a husband—had
not the younger brother come home on
leave. He had not seen Miss Queenie since
she was grown up, for he was a sailor, and
had been long away. He was handsome,
and had a taking way with him—a sort of
dash about him, and he was selfish and
false. He fell in love with her, and persuaded
her that she had fallen in love with
him, and rather than be open about it, bad
as it was to have lured her away from his
brother, he made it worse by getting her to
run away with him, and not let any one
know where they were, till he wrote to say
they were married. My dears, from that
day till yesterday, your grandpapa and she
never met again."</p>
<p>"Was he so angry?" we asked.</p>
<p>"Anger is no word for it. He was
turned to stone to her. The deceitfulness—that
was always his cry. Poor
Mr. John Mowbray—his great friend, the
one who had really the most to complain
of, was far gentler, though it broke his
heart. He never married, and at his death,
two years ago, all came to your auntie
as his brother's widow, for Mr. Conrad,
the brother, was dead. That is how the
Old House is now your auntie's, but she
has never lived there. She could not bear
it, seeing her brother would not forgive her,
and she had made up her mind to sell it,
and came to stay at the Rectory to get it
all arranged. It was partly hearing it was
going to be sold, made your grandpapa think
of coming here again at last—he thought it
was all quite settled, and no fear of any one
coming about. For he has not even had
any friendliness with the Rectory folk all
these years; the old rector spoke to him
before he died, and begged him to forgive
Miss Queenie, but it only made him harder.
He would never hear her name—he scored
it out wherever he came across it in a
book—"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, we saw that in London," we
interrupted.</p>
<p>"<i>Nothing</i>," continued Mrs. Munt, "but
the sight of her poor, sweet, worn face
would have changed him, and to think that
<i>she</i> should have been the one to tell him the
good news last night—it is indeed wonderful
how it has come about."</p>
<p>"Was auntie very unhappy with that
man—the one she married?" asked Tib in
a low voice. Mrs. Munt looked sad and
grave.</p>
<p>"My dears," she said, solemnly, "no
good comes of ill-doing. The man who
deceived his kind brother, who set himself
to wile a girl away from her truest and best
friends, was not the man to make a good
husband. She must have suffered more
than you—or we, maybe—could understand.
But it is past, and you need never
think of it again, except as a warning.
Your dear auntie may tell you more herself
as you grow older. But for me, I think I
have done my part; and, indeed, I could
almost feel the work of my life is near its
end now I have lived to see my dear master
and his best-loved sister united again,"
and poor Mrs. Munt wiped her eyes as she
kissed us, and said we might get up now—we
were to go to the Rectory to luncheon.</p>
<p>You will be glad to hear that she is living
still, and likely to live for many peaceful
years to come.</p>
<p>We were, of course, very much interested
in all she had told us. It took some time
to get it quite straight and clear in our
heads, especially as we felt that we should
not much like to talk over the saddest parts
of it with any one but ourselves: not even
with Regina, for, of course, the man who
had brought so much misery to them all—Mr.
Conrad Mowbray—was her father (I
am not going to let her read this last
chapter if I can help it); and even about
dear auntie, we felt it would not be kind to
talk about it to Regina—though <i>now</i> I can
scarcely fancy even Regina herself feeling
more tender about anything and everything
to do with her mother than Tib and I, who
are really only her grandnieces, do.</p>
<p>We were at the same time in a hurry to
get dressed, and go down stairs, and yet a
little afraid.</p>
<p>"Last night I wasn't afraid of grandpapa,"
said Tib; "we seemed all worked
up, so that only the <i>realest</i> feelings mattered.
Little top feelings, like being shy and all
that, seemed pushed away."</p>
<p>I didn't answer for a moment. I was
thinking over what she said.</p>
<p>"Do you think our being afraid of grandpapa
and fancying we don't love him is only
a top feeling after all?" I said.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Tib, "I do. Anyway, <i>I'm</i>
going to love him now. Perhaps, if he has
so many to love him now—auntie and
Regina, and you and me—all at once, the
lot of it will make up for his having had so
little all these years. Things come like that
sometimes, I suppose."</p>
<p>While we were talking—we took a good
while to dress, for we wanted to be very
neat to go to the Rectory—there came a
tap at the door, and in walked Gerald, as
cool as a cucumber.</p>
<p>"I'm ready," he said, and indeed one
could see by the scrubby look of his cheeks
that he had had an extra amount of soap.
"I've got my best suit on to go to the
Rectory."</p>
<p>"But, Gerald," said Tib, "don't you want
to hear all about how it's all been. Gussie
and I can tell you," for I forgot to say that
Mrs. Munt had told us we had better explain
a little to him. "Don't you want to
know why the Old House that we called the
palace was shut up, and how it comes
to be auntie's, and how she is our auntie,
and—"</p>
<p>"No," interrupted Gerald. "I don't
want to know anything. It puzzles me.
I'm only seven years old."</p>
<p>We looked at him in astonishment. Then
we fairly burst out laughing.</p>
<p>"I never saw such a boy," said Tib.
"You're so lazy, Gerald, you won't even let
your mind work enough to understand about
your own family."</p>
<p>"I do understand all I need," said
Gerald; "I understand that we've got an
auntie, and that she's very kind, and that
Regina is a cousin, and she's very nice too—so
nice that I'm still going to think she's
a fairy. That's what I've settled, and I
think it's quite enough when I'm only
seven."</p>
<p>And from that day to this I have never
heard him express any curiosity or make
any inquiries as to all that had happened.
I fancy Gerald will get through life
comfortably—though to do him justice he
is working very well at school, and doesn't
seem to be considered lazy at all.</p>
<p>Tib and I had still enough questions to
ask to make up for his not asking any.
We were in a fever to see Regina, and very
glad when Gerald ran up stairs again to say
that she had just driven over in the Lauristons'
pony-carriage to fetch us, and was
waiting downstairs, and we hurried down
as fast as we could.</p>
<p>"But what about grandpapa?" said Tib,
as we got to the first landing. "Should we
not go to say good morning or something
to him?"</p>
<p>I hesitated, but just at that moment we
heard his voice. He was standing in the
porch talking to Regina. You can't think
how funny it seemed. When he heard us
he came into the hall and met us at the
foot of the stairs. Then he kissed us each,
in a way he had never kissed us before. It
was like saying, "You understand all now.
Let us begin a new life together;" though
his <i>said</i> words were only, "Good morning,
my dear children. Are you all quite well
and not tired now?"</p>
<p>"Quite well, thank you, dear grandpapa,"
and I am sure he understood "between the
lines," as people say of a letter meaning
more than it shows.</p>
<p>"I wish you could come with us, Uncle
Gerald," said Regina, as we were driving
off.</p>
<p>"Thank you, my dear, but I am very
busy," he said. There was a look in his
eyes to her that I had never seen before.</p>
<p>"But Charlie will be here this afternoon,
and he does help you, doesn't he?" she
said.</p>
<p>"Very much," grandpapa replied.</p>
<p>We looked back at him, standing there
in the doorway.</p>
<p>"Grandpapa is changed since last night,"
said Tib.</p>
<p>"How?" said Regina, anxiously. "You
don't think he's ill?"</p>
<p>"No," said Tib, "though he does look
very pale. But his face seems older and
<i>yet</i> younger. It has got a sort of softer look,
as if at last he wasn't going to fight against
himself anymore, but that it has tired him."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Regina, "I understand. Then
<i>you</i> understand now—you and Gussie?"</p>
<p>"Yes," we answered. "Mrs. Munt has
told us a great deal. But there are some
things only you can tell us, and we want
dreadfully to ask you."</p>
<p>"Fire away," said Regina, and she did so
laugh when we didn't understand her; for,
of course, though she had never had any
brothers or sisters, she hadn't lived the
shut-up way we had done.</p>
<p>"We want to know," we began, "how
you knew about us going to the—the Old
House, and how you knew our names and
about us altogether."</p>
<p>"It was Charlie Truro that told me about
you," she said. "He is my cousin as
much—no, a good deal more—than he is
yours, and we have always been a great
deal together. He has known what a
terrible sorrow it was to mamma to be
estranged from her only brother, and he
and I have often planned what we could
do. We were very glad when Uncle
Gerald agreed to take him as a sort of
secretary for a while—it seemed a sort of
beginning."</p>
<p>"I wonder grandpapa ever did," I said.
"Wasn't it rather a wonder? For he
knew he was a near cousin of yours, I
suppose?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Regina, "but it came about
naturally enough, through some friends
who had no connection with us. And once
he had seen Charlie, Uncle Gerald seems to
have taken a fancy to him. We came down
here to stay at the Rectory, not knowing
any one was at Rosebuds. Your coming
was kept very quiet. Then Charlie told us
of it, when he wrote, and when he came
down here he managed to come to see us
one day—a Sunday it was—at the Rectory,
and told us all about you. And to me,
though to no one else, he told of your
funny trouble, about having got into the
Old House and wondering if it was naughty,
and then we planned together—he and I—that
I should meet you there. I don't
know exactly what I hoped for—I think
Charlie had a vague idea that some day
Uncle Gerald might see me, and that—with
me being so like mamma—it might
do some good. But we hadn't fixed anything,
we meant to talk it all over the next
time he came—to-day, that is. He little
thought he would find it all done when
he came."</p>
<p>"Won't he be surprised!" I said.</p>
<p>"Mamma sent him a telegram this morning,"
she said. "He deserved it."</p>
<p>But by this time we were at the
Rectory.</p>
<p>We couldn't help feeling rather shy; we
had really never been out anywhere before
except once, in London, when we had gone
to have tea with a niece of nurse's, who
had a shop in one of the big streets, and we
had tea in the parlour behind. So that was
<i>quite</i> different, of course. At the Rectory
it was very nice except for our being shy.
But after luncheon, when we went out into
the garden with auntie, she soon sent away
the shyness. She was just as kind and
understanding as she could be, as she has
been ever since—such a <i>perfect</i> auntie that
our only wonder now is how we ever did
without her all those years.</p>
<p>We had to tell her all <i>our</i> story over
again, all from the beginning of grandpapa's
telling us we were to come to Rosebuds,
and the book with the name scored through;
we <i>had</i> to tell her, though we were afraid
of making her cry, down to our finding the
key and getting into the house, and the old
princess, and the new princess, and all.
She asked us questions, too, about Ansdell
Friars, and in what ways it was changed
since she had seen it.</p>
<p>"I should like to see it again," she said;
"though it would never seem as much
home to me as here," and she sighed a little.</p>
<p>"But you're not going away from here
now, auntie," we said, "You're not going
to sell the Old House?"</p>
<p>Auntie smiled.</p>
<p>"I hope not," she said. "They all think
I am in no way bound to Jackman. Indeed,
it was his haggling so about the price that
brought me down here this summer. But
one thing I have already given orders for:
those horrid pools are to be filled up at
once. I won't have dear Gerald's peace of
mind disturbed by any anxiety <i>I</i> can do
away with."</p>
<p>We stared—it wasn't for a minute or two
that we understood whom she was talking
of. It was so funny to hear grandpapa
spoken of as "Gerald"—and when we found
out whom she meant, we all burst out
laughing. And while we were still laughing
we heard wheels, and there was Mr.
Truro, who had looked in for a moment on
his way from the station. I don't think I
ever saw any one's face look so happy and
pleased as his did!</p>
<p>We all went back together to Rosebuds.
Auntie and Regina said they were going to
have afternoon tea with grandpapa, and you
don't know how nice it looked, all neatly put
out in the pretty old drawing-room, and
poor auntie kept giving little cries of mixed
pleasure and pain as she recognised one old
friend after another among the china and
the silver, and even the <i>cakes</i>, which were a
secret of Mrs. Munt's that no one could make
but herself.</p>
<p>And after tea we had a great treat.
Auntie persuaded grandpapa that the air
would do him good, and so she coaxed him
out into the garden and then down the lane,
and so on into the Old House grounds.
And then she and Regina took us all over
it—"It is best to get over the first seeing
it again at once," I heard auntie whisper to
grandpapa, "and the children's pleasure will
make it seem different."</p>
<p>It <i>is</i> such a beautiful old house. I could
write almost another book about it, and it
was so strange to get into the big drawing-room
by the double doors through which
Regina used to disappear, to see our old
princess smiling down at us in our happiness
just exactly as she had done in our trouble!</p>
<p>Poor old, ever young princess! We shall
always love you, but nothing, <i>nothing</i> like
our own dear bright living fairy who has
brought such new joy and good into our
lives. We have seldom been parted from
her and her mother since that day; we are
almost always together, grandpapa and
auntie and Regina and we children, and
very often Mr. Truro too. Grandpapa says
he is getting very old, but he <i>really</i> doesn't
look so, and even when he <i>does</i> get "very
old," we shall all only love him the better.</p>
<p> </p>
<h4>THE END.</h4>
<p> </p>
<h6>RICHARD CLAY AND SONS, LONDON AND BUNGAY.</h6>
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