mona did try to be good, she tried hard, but she was very, very unhappy. she missed her home, she missed lucy, and her father, and her freedom. she longed, too, with an intolerable longing, for the sight and the sound of the sea. she had never, till now that she had lost them, realised how dearly she loved the quaint little steep and rambling village, with the sea at its foot, and the hills behind it. she was always homesick.
perhaps if she had been sent to hillside, and it had been her plain duty to live there, and nowhere else, she might have felt more happy and settled. or, if granny had been the same indulgent, sympathetic granny as of old, but she had placed herself where she was by her own foolish, unkind act, which she now bitterly repented; and she was there with a cloud resting on her character and motives. she had shown herself ungrateful and unkind; she had played a coward's part, and had bitterly pained her father and lucy.
they did not reproach her—she would have felt better had they done so— but she knew. and, after all, granny did not want her, or so it seemed!
mona did not realise that her grandmother was really seriously unwell, and that her irritability she could not help. mrs. barnes did not know it herself. mona only realised that she was almost always cross, that nothing pleased her, that she never ran and fetched and carried, as she used to do, while mona sat by the fire and read. it was granny who sat by the fire now. she did not read, though. she said her eyes pained her, and her head ached too much. she did not sew, either. she just sat idly by the fire and moped and dozed, or roused herself to grumble at something or other.
the day after she came to hillside, mona had written to her mother. she told her where she was, and why, and tried to say that she was sorry, but no reply had come, and this troubled her greatly.
"were they too angry with her to have anything more to say to her? was lucy ill?"
every day she went to meet the postman, her heart throbbing with eager anxiety, and day after day she went back disappointed. if it had not been for very shame, she would have run away again and gone home, and have asked to be forgiven, but she could not make up her mind to do that. probably they would not want her at home again, after all the trouble and expense she had been to them. perhaps her father might even send her back to hillside again. the shame of that would be unbearable!
she was uncomfortable, too, as well as unhappy. she wanted her clothes, her brush and comb, her books, and all her other belongings. she had, after a fashion, settled into her old room again, but it seemed bare and unhomelike after her pretty one at cliff cottage.
then one day, after long waiting and longing, and hope and disappointment, her father came. for a moment her heart had leaped with the glad wild hope that he had come to take her back with him. then the sight of the box and parcel he carried had dashed it down again. he had brought her all her possessions.
"well, mona," he said quietly, as she stood facing him, shy and embarrassed. "so you prefer hillside to seacombe! well, it's always best to be where you're happiest, if you feel free to make your choice. for my own part, i couldn't live away from the sea, but tastes differ."
"but—mine—don't differ," stammered mona. "i am not happier." she was so overcome she could hardly speak above a whisper, and her father had already turned to mrs. barnes.
"well, mother," he cried, and poor mona could not help noticing how much more kindly his voice sounded when he spoke to granny. "how are you? you don't look first rate. don't 'ee feel up to the mark?" he spoke lightly, but his eyes, as they studied the old woman's face, were full of surprise and concern. granny shook her head. "no, i ain't well," she said, dully. "i'm very, very far from well. i don't know what's the matter. p'raps 'tis the weather."
"the weather's grand. it's bootiful enough to set everybody dancing," said her son-in-law cheerfully, but still eyeing her with that same look of concern.
"p'raps 'tis old age, then. i'm getting on, of course. it's only what i ought to expect; but i seem to feel old all of a sudden; everything's a burden to me. i can't do my work as i used, and i can't walk, and i can't get used to doing nothing i'm ashamed for you to see the place as it is, peter if i'd known you was coming i'd have made an effort——"
"that's just why i didn't tell 'ee, mother. i came unexpected on purpose, 'cause i didn't want 'ee to be scrubbing the place from the chimney pots down to the rain-water barrel. i know what you are, you see."
poor old granny barnes smiled, but mona felt hurt. she did her best to keep the house clean and tidy, and she thought it was looking as nice as nice could be. "what i was, you mean," said granny. "i don't seem to have the strength to scrub anything now-a-days."
"oh, well, there's no need for 'ee to. you've got mona to do that kind of thing for 'ee."
mona's heart sank even lower. "then he really had no thought of having her home again!"
"i've brought your clothes, mona," he said, turning again to her. "lucy was troubled that they hadn't been sent before. she thought you must be wanting them."
"thank you," said mona, dully, and could think of nothing more to say, though she knew her father waited for an answer.
"i've brought 'ee some fish, mother," picking up the basket. "it come in last night. i thought you might fancy a bit, and lucy sent a bit of bacon, her own curing, and a jelly, or something of that sort." granny's face brightened. though she had not approved of mona's being given a stepmother, she appreciated lucy's kindness, and when they presently sat down to dinner and she had some of the jelly, she appreciated it still more. her appetite had needed coaxing, but there had been nothing to coax it with. "it tempts anyone to eat," she remarked, graciously. "when one is out of sorts, one fancies something out of the common."
"lucy'll be rare and pleased to think you could take a bit," said peter, delighted for lucy's sake.
"yes, thank you. she's made it very nice. a trifle sour, perhaps, but i like things rather sharpish."
"mother," said peter suddenly, "i wish you'd come to seacombe to live. it'd be nice to have you near." his eyes had been constantly wandering to his mother-in-law's face, and always with the same anxious look. the change in her since last he had seen her troubled him greatly. her round cheeks had fallen in, her old rosiness had given place to a grey pallor. she stooped very much and looked shrunken too.
"oh, granny, do!" cried mona, eagerly. it was almost the first time she had spoken, but the mere suggestion filled her with overwhelming joy and relief.
"then i could look in pretty often to see how you was, and bring you in a bit of fresh fish as often as you would care to have it. lucy would take a delight, too, in making 'ee that sort of thing," nodding towards the jelly, "or anything else you fancied. we'd be at hand, too, to help 'ee if you wasn't very well."
granny barnes was touched, and when she looked up there were tears in her eyes. the prospect was tempting. she had felt very forlorn and old, and helpless lately. she had often felt too that she would like:
"a little petting
at life's setting."
"it's good of you to think of it, peter," she said, hesitatingly. then, fearing that he might have spoken on the impulse of the moment, and that she was showing herself too anxious for his help and lucy's, she drew herself up. "but—well, this is home, and i don't fancy i could settle down in a strange place, and amongst strangers, at my time of life."
"you'd be with those that are all you've got belonging to you in this world," said peter. but granny's mood had changed. she would not listen to any more coaxing, and her son-in-law, seeming to understand her, changed the subject.
poor mona, who did not understand so well, felt only vexed and impatient with the poor perverse old woman, for not falling in at once with a plan so delightful to herself. mona learned to understand as time went on, but she was too young yet.
"but, granny, it would be ever so much nicer than this dull old place, and—and you'd have mother as well as me to look after you. i like seacombe ever so much better than hillside. why won't you go, granny?"
peter carne groaned. mona, by her tactlessness, was setting her grandmother dead against such a plan, and undoing all the good he had done. granny barnes would never be driven into taking a step, but she would see things in her own time and in her own way, if she felt that no one was trying to force her. he held up his hand for silence.
"your grandmother knows best what'll suit her. it isn't what you like, it's what's best for her that we've all got to think about."
but granny's anger had been roused. "it may be a dull old place, but it's home," she said sharply. "you can't understand what that means. you don't seem to have any particular feeling or you wouldn't be so ready to leave first one and then the other, without even a heartache. i wonder sometimes, mona, if you've got any heart. perhaps it's best that you shouldn't have; you're saved a lot of pain." granny began to whimper a little, to her son-in-law's great distress. "anyway, you were ready enough to run to the 'dull old place' when you were in trouble," she added, reproachfully, and mona had no answer.
she got up from the table, and, collecting the dishes together, carried them to the scullery. "oh, dear!" she sighed, irritably, "i seem to be always hurting somebody—and somebody's always hurting me. i'd better go about with my mouth fastened up—even then i s'pose i'd be always doing something wrong. people are easily offended, it's something dreadful."
she felt very much aggrieved. so much aggrieved that she gave only sullen words and looks, and never once enquired for lucy, or sent her a message, or even hinted at being sorry for what she had done.
"she didn't send any message to me," she muttered to herself, excusingly. "she never sent her love, or—or anything, so why should i send a message to her?" she worked herself up into such a fine state of righteous anger that she almost persuaded herself that her behaviour had been all that it should be, and that she was the most misunderstood and ill-treated person in the whole wide world.
in spite, though, of her being so perfect, she felt miserably unhappy, as she lay awake in the darkness, and thought over the day's happenings. she saw again her father's look of distress as she snapped at her grandmother, and answered him so sulkily. she pictured him, too, walking away down the road towards home, without even a smile from her, and only a curt, sullen, good-bye! oh, how she wished now that she had run after him and kissed him, and begged him to forgive her.
a big sob broke from her as she pictured him tramping those long lonely miles, his kind face so grave and pained, his heart so full of disappointment in her.
"oh how hateful he will think me—and i am, i am, and i can't tell him i don't really mean to be," and then her tears burst forth, and she cried, and cried until all the bitterness and selfishness were washed from her heart, and only gentler feelings were left.
as she lay tired out, thinking over the past, and the future, a curious, long cry broke the stillness of the night.
"the owl," she said to herself. "i do wish he'd go away from here. he always frightens me with his miserable noise." she snuggled more closely into her pillow, and drew the bedclothes up over her ear. "i'll try to go to sleep, then i shan't hear him."
but, in spite of her efforts, the cry reached her again and again. "it can't be the owl," she said at last, sitting up in bed, the better to listen. "it sounds more like a person! who can it be?"
again the cry came, "mo—na! mo—o—na!"
"why, it's somebody calling me. it must be granny! oh, dear! whatever can be the matter, to make her call like that."
shaking all over with fear, she scrambled out of bed, and groped her way to the door. as she opened it the cry reached her again.
"mo—na!" this time there could be no doubt about it. it came from her grandmother's room.
"i'm coming!" she called loudly. "all right, granny, i'm coming." she ran across the landing, guided by the lights shining through the chinks in her grandmother's door.
"what's the matter?—are you feeling bad, granny? do you want something?"
"yes, i'm feeling very bad. i'm ill, i'm very ill—oh, dear, oh dear, what shall i do? oh, i've no one to come and do anything for me. oh, dear, oh what can i do?" granny's groans were dreadful. mona felt frightened and helpless. she had not the least idea what to do or say. what did grown-ups do at times like this? she wondered. she did not know where, or how, her grandmother suffered, and if she had she would not have known how to act.
"do you want me to fetch the doctor? i'll go and put on my clothes. i won't be more than a minute or two, then i'll come back again——"
"no—no, i can't be left alone all the time, i might die—here, alone; oh dear, oh dear, what a plight to be left in! not a living creature to come to me—but a child! oh, how bad i do feel!"
"but i must do something, or call somebody," cried mona desperately. she had never seen serious illness before, and she was frightened. poor old mrs. barnes had always been a bad patient, and difficult to manage, even when her ailments were only trifling; now that she really felt ill, she had lost all control.
"granny," said mona, growing desperate. "i must get someone to come and help us, you must have the doctor, and i can't leave you alone, i am going to ask mrs. lane to come, i can't help it—i can't do anything else. i'll slip on my shoes and stockings, i won't be more than a minute."
granny barnes stopped moaning, and raised herself on her elbow. "you'll do no such thing," she gasped.
"but granny, i must—you must have help, and you must have somebody to go for the doctor, and—and, oh, granny, i'm afraid to be here alone, i don't know what to do, and you're looking so bad."
"am i?" nervously. "well—if i've got to die alone and helpless, i will, but i won't ask mrs. lane to come to me. do you think i'd—ask a favour of her, after all her unneighbourliness—not speaking to me for weeks and weeks——"
mona burst into tears, confession had to come. "granny," she said, dropping on her knees beside the bed. "i—i've got to tell you something—mrs. lane was right——"
"what!" granny's face grew whiter, but she said no more. if she had done so, if she had but spoken kindly and helped her ever so little, it would have made things much easier for poor mona.
"i—i—it was me that pulled the faggots down that night, and not mrs. lane's cats, and she won't look, or speak to me because i didn't tell, and i let her cats bear the blame. i—i didn't mean to do any harm, i was in such a hurry to light up the fire, and the old things all rolled down, and i forgot to go out and pick them up again. i didn't think you'd be going out there that night, but you went out, and—and fell over them. if you hadn't gone out it would have been all right, i'd have seen them in the morning and have picked them up."
but granny barnes was not prepared to listen to excuses, she was very, very angry. "and fine and foolish you've made me look all this time, mona carne, and risked my life too. for bad as i was a little while back, i wouldn't bring myself to ask mrs. lane to come to me, nor cap'en lane to go and fetch the doctor, and—and if i'd died, well, you know who would have been to blame!"
granny's cheeks were crimson now, and she was panting with exhaustion. "now what you've got to do is—to go in—and tell her the truth yourself."
"i'm going," said mona, the tears streaming down her face. but as she hurried to the door, the sight of her, looking so childlike and forlorn in her nightgown, with her tumbled hair and tear-stained face, touched her grandmother's heart, and softened her anger.
"mona," she cried, "come back—never mind about it now, child——" but mona was already in her own room tugging on her shoes and stockings. granny heard her come out and make her way stumbling down the stairs; she tried to call again, but reaction had set in, and she lay panting, exhausted, unable to do anything but listen. she heard mona pulling back the heavy wooden bolt of the front door, then she heard her footsteps hurrying through the garden, growing more distant, then nearer as she went up mrs. lane's path. then came the noise of her knocking at mrs. lane's door, first gently, then louder, and louder still—and then the exhausted, over-excited old woman fainted, and knew no more.
mona, standing in the dark at mrs. lane's door, was trembling all over. even her voice trembled. when mrs. lane at last opened her window and called out "who's there?" it shook so, she could not make herself heard until she had spoken three times.
"it's me—mona carne. oh, mrs. lane, i'm so frightened! granny's very ill, please will you—come in?—i—i don't know what to do for her."
"mona carne! oh!" mona heard the surprise in mrs. lane's voice, and feared she was going to refuse her. then "wait a minute," she said, "i'll come down."
mona's tears stopped, but she still trembled. help was coming to granny— but she still had her confession to make, and it seemed such an awful ordeal to face. all the time she stood waiting there under the stars, with the scent of the flowers about her, she was wondering desperately how she could begin, what she could say, and how excuse herself.
she was still absorbed, and still had not come to any decision, when the door behind her opened, and a voice said kindly, "come inside, mona, and tell me what is the matter," and mona stepped from the starlit night into the warm, dimly lighted kitchen, and found herself face to face with her old kind friend.
"now, tell me all about it," said mrs. lane again catching sight of mona's frightened, disfigured face. "why, how you are trembling, child, have you had a shock? were you in bed?"
mona nodded. "yes, i'd been in bed a good while when i heard a cry, such a funny kind of cry! at first i thought it must be the owl, but when i heard it again and again i thought it must be granny, and i got up and went to her. and, oh, i was frightened, she was lying all crumpled up in the bed, and she was groaning something dreadful. she was very ill, she said, and she must have the doctor—but she wouldn't let me go to fetch him, 'cause she was afraid to be left alone. i was frightened to be there by myself, and i didn't know what to do for her and i said i'd run in and ask you to come—but she said she'd rather die—she said i mustn't because—because—oh you know," gasped mona, breathless after her outpouring of words, "and—and then—i—told her—about—about that—that 'twas me pulled down the faggots, and you were right, and she looked—oh she looked dreadful, she was so angry! and then i came in to tell you; and, oh mrs. lane, i am so sorry i behaved so, i—i never meant to, i never meant tom and daisy to have the blame. and, please mrs. lane, will you forgive me, and speak to me again? i've been so—so mis'rubble, and i didn't know how to set things right again." but here mona's voice failed her altogether, and, worn out with the day's events, and the night's alarm, and all the agitation and trouble both had brought, she broke down completely. mrs. lane was quite distressed by the violence of her sobs.
"there, there, don't cry so, child, and don't worry any more," she said gently, putting her arm affectionately round mona's shaking shoulders, "it's all over now! and we are all going to be as happy and friendly again as ever we used to be. mona, dear, i am so glad, so thankful that you have spoken. it hurt me to think that i had been deceived in you, but i know now that you were my own little mona all the time. there, dear, don't cry any more; we must think about poor granny. come along, we will see what we can do to help her."
they stepped out into the starlit night, hand in hand, and though her grandmother's illness filled mona with anxiety, she felt as though a heavy care had been lifted from her heart, a meanness from her soul; and, as she hurried through the scented gardens, she lifted up her face to the starry sky, and her heart to the god who looked down on her through heaven's eyes.
in the house, when they reached it, all was as she had left it, except that now a deep, deep silence reigned; a silence that, somehow, struck a chill to both hearts.
"how quiet it is! she was making such a noise before," mona whispered, hesitating nervously at the foot of the stairs.
"i expect she has fallen asleep, i'll go up first and see; you light the lamp in the kitchen, and bring me up a glass of cold water. or would you rather come with me?"
"i—i will come with you." she could not rid herself of the feeling that her granny was dead—had died angry with her, at the last. she felt sure of it, too, when she saw her lying so still and white on her pillow.
mrs. lane placed her hand over the tired, faintly-beating heart. "she is only faint," she said assuringly, a note of intense relief in her voice. "she is coming round. run and fetch me some water, dear, and open that window as you pass."
so granny, when she presently opened her eyes and looked about her, found mona on one side of her and her old friend on the other; and both were looking at her with tender anxious eyes, and faces full of gladness at her recovery.
the old feud was as dead as though it had never existed.
"it's like going to sleep in a world of worries and waking up in a new one." the poor old soul sighed contentedly, as she lay with the stars looking in on her, and the scent of the flowers wafting up to her through the open window. "it was too bad, though, to be calling you up in the night—out of your bed. i'm very much obliged to you, mrs. lane, i—i'm very glad to see you."
"not as glad as i am to come, i reckon," her neighbour smiled back at her, "we are all going to start afresh again from to-day, ain't we? so it's as well to begin the day early, and make it as long as we can!"