Bessie's Fortune eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 633 pages of information about Bessie's Fortune.

Bessie's Fortune eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 633 pages of information about Bessie's Fortune.

“The birds have stopped singing, but I hear other music; the songs of the redeemed, and my mother is there by the gate waiting for me, just as I shall wait one day for you, my child.  Give me your hand, Bessie, I want to feel that you are with me to the last.”

She put her hand in his, and Grey noticed with a pang how small and thin it was and brown, too, with toil.  Some such thought must have been in Archie’s mind, for, pressing the fingers to his lips, he continued: 

“Poor little tired hands, which have done so much for me.  May they have rest by and by.  Oh, Bessie, darling, God bless you, the dearest, sweetest daughter a man ever had.  Be kind to her, young man.  I leave her in your charge; there is no one else to care for her.  Good-by; God bless you both.”

He did not speak after that, though he lingered for some hours, his breath growing fainter, and fainter until, just as the summer morning was stealing into the room, old Anthony, who, with his wife, had been watching by him, said, in a whisper: 

“God help us; the master is dead!”

Bessie uttered no sound, but over her face there crept such a pallor and look of woe that Grey involuntarily passed his arm around her and said: 

“Let me take you into the air.”

She did not resist him, but suffered him to lead her into the garden, which was sweet with the perfume of roses and cool with the fresh morning dew, and where the birds were singing in the old yew trees as blithely and merrily as if no young heart were breaking in their midst.  In a large rustic-chair, where Archie had often sat, Grey made Bessie sit down, and when he saw her shiver as if with cold, he left her a moment while he went to the house for a shawl and a glass of wine, and some eau-de-cologne, which he brought to her himself.  Wrapping the shawl around her as deftly as a woman could have done, he made her taste the wine, and dipping her handkerchief in the cologne bathed her forehead with it and pushed back a few locks of her wavy hair, which had fallen over her face.  And all the time he did not speak until Bessie said to him: 

“Thank you, Mr. Jerrold.  You are so kind.  I am glad you are here.  What should I do without you, and what shall I do anyway?  What must I do?”

“Leave it all to me,” he answered her.  “Don’t give the matter a thought, but try and rest; and when you feel that you can, I will take you back to the house.”

“No, no,” she said quickly.  “Let me stay here in the sunshine with the birds who used to sing to him.  It seems as if he were here with me.”

So he brought her a pillow for her head, and a hassock for her feet, and wrapped her shawl more closely around her, and made her taste the wine again.  Then he went back to the house and consulted Anthony and Dorothy with regard to what was to be done.  The funeral was fixed for the fourth day, and Grey telegraphed to London, with instructions, that if the family were not in town the message should be forwarded to them immediately.  Then he cabled to Daisy, ship Celtic, New York, and lest by any chance she should miss the news at the wharf he asked that a dispatch be sent to her at Allington, Mass., care of Mrs. Rossiter-Browne, who, he knew, would in all probability go at once to her country home.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Bessie's Fortune from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.