The Rosery Folk - Part 44
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Part 44

"I will meet her with the most matter-of-fact professional politeness,"

he had said as he ascended the stairs, "do the best I can for her as far as my knowledge will let me, and she shall pay me some thumping fees.-- No; she shan't," he added the next moment. "She shall know what pride really is. I won't touch a penny of her wretched money. She shall have my services condescendingly given, or go without."

That is what John Scales, M.D., Edin., as he signed himself sometimes, determined upon before he saw Lady Martlett; but as soon as he was alone with her, and saw the wistful appealing look in her eyes as she turned towards him, away went the icy formality, and he half ran to her. "My dear Lady Martlett!" he exclaimed, catching her hands in his.

For answer, she burst into an hysterical fit of sobbing, sank upon her knees, and hid her face upon his hands. "I cannot bear it," she moaned.

"You are breaking my heart!"

Jenner, Thompson, Robert Barnes--the whole party of the grandees of the profession would have been utterly scandalised had they been witnesses of Doctor Scales's treatment of his patient, though they must have afterwards confessed that it was almost miraculous in its effects. For he bent down, raised her from her knees, said the one word, "Anna!" and held her tightly to his breast. In fact so satisfactory was the treatment, that Lady Martlett's pa.s.sionate sobs grew softer, till they almost ceased, and then she slowly raised her face to look into his eyes, saying softly: "There, I am humble now. Are you content?"

"Content?" he exclaimed pa.s.sionately, as he kissed her again and again.

"But you are ill," he said excitedly, "and I am forgetting everything.

Why did you send for me?"

"Is pride always to keep us apart?" she said in a low tender whisper.

"Have I not humbled myself enough? Yes; I am ill. I have thought lately that I should die. Will you let me die like this?"

"Let you die?" he cried excitedly.

"No, no! But think--what will the world say?"

"You are my world," she said softly, as she nestled to him. "My pride is all gone now. You may say what you will. It has been a struggle, and you have won."

"No," he said softly; "you have won."

He never boasted of the cure that he effected here. Wisely so. But certainly Lady Martlett was in an extremely low state--a state that necessitated change--such a complete change as would be given by a long continental tour, with a physician always at her side.

The world did talk, and said that Lady Martlett had thrown herself away.

"The stupids!" exclaimed Aunt Sophia. "Just as if a woman could throw herself away, when it was into the arms of as good a husband as ever breathed."

James Scarlett had one or two little relapses into his nervous state, and these were when family troubles had come upon him; but they soon pa.s.sed away, and the little riverside home blushes more brightly than ever with flowers; the gla.s.s-houses are fragrant with ripening fruit; and Aunt Sophia sits and bows her head solemnly over her work beneath some shady tree or another in the hot summer afternoons, the only solitary heart there;--and yet not solitary, for it is filled as freshly as ever with the memory of the dead.

Doctor Scales practises still, in his own way; and though he is somewhat at variance with the profession, they all hold him in respect.

"As they must," her Ladyship declares, "for there is not a greater man among them all."

Saxby bought the pretty villa across the river that you can see from Lady Scarlett's drawing-room. You can shoot an arrow from one garden into the other; but Aunt Sophia, who lives at the Scarletts' now, when she does not live with the Saxbys, always goes round by the bridge--five miles--never once venturing in the boat.

Arthur Prayle has been heard of as a Company promoter in Australia, where, as he does not deserve, he is doing well.

"A rascal!" Aunt Sophia says; "and with the four hundred pounds he got out of me for that Society. But never mind; it was on the strength of my money that he tried to delude that foolish girl, and so we found out what a bad fellow he was."

That foolish girl, by the way, has married a farmer, a friend of Brother William; and Aunt Sophia knits a great many little contrivances of wool for the results.

The last trouble that happened at the Rosery was when old John Monnick pa.s.sed away.

"It's quite nat'ral like, Master James," he said, smiling.

"Seventy-seven, you see. There isn't the least o' anything the matter with me, and I aren't in a bit o' pain. There's only one thing as troubles me, and that is 'bout the opening and shutting o' them glarss-houses. I hope you won't be neglecting of 'em when I'm gone."

"Oh, but you'll be stronger soon, John, with the spring--and come and look after things again."

The old man smiled, and shook his head slowly from side to side--"'Tain't in natur', Master James," he said--"'Tain't in natur', my lady. I come up, and I growed up, and I blossomed, and the seed's dead ripe now, ready for being garnered, if the heavenly Master thinks it fit. I'm only a gardener, Master James, and I've been a gardener all my life; and now, as I lie here, it's to think and hope that he will say: 'Well done, good and faithful servant; enter thou into the joy of thy Lord.'"

It was Kate Scarlett's lips that formed in an almost inaudible whisper the word "Amen!" as the old man fell asleep.

THE END.