The Woman Who Did - Page 69/103

Not that Herminia had not at times hard struggles and sore

temptations. One of the hardest and sorest came when Dolly was

about six years old. And this was the manner of it.

One day the child who was to reform the world was returning from

some errand on which her mother had sent her, when her attention was

attracted by a very fine carriage, stopping at a door not far from

their lodgings. Now Dolly had always a particular weakness for

everything "grand;" and so grand a turn-out as this one was rare in

their neighborhood. She paused and stared hard at it. "Whose is it,

Mrs. Biggs?" she asked awe-struck of the friendly charwoman, who

happened to pass at the moment,--the charwoman who frequently came

in to do a day's cleaning at her mother's lodging-house. Mrs. Biggs

knew it well; "It's Sir Anthony Merrick's," she answered in that

peculiarly hushed voice with which the English poor always utter the

names of the titled classes. And so in fact it was; for the famous

gout doctor had lately been knighted for his eminent services in

saving a royal duke from the worst effects of his own

self-indulgence. Dolly put one fat finger to her lip, and elevated

her eyebrows, and looked grave at once. Sir Anthony Merrick! What a

very grand gentleman he must be indeed, and how nice it must seem to

be able to drive in so distinguished a vehicle with a liveried

footman.

As she paused and looked, lost in enjoyment of that beatific

vision, Sir Anthony himself emerged from the porch. Dolly took a

good stare at him. He was handsome, austere, close-shaven,

implacable. His profile was clear-cut, like Trajan's on an aureus.

Dolly thought that was just how so grand a gentleman ought to look;

and, so thinking, she glanced up at him, and with a flash of her

white teeth, smiled her childish approval. The austere old

gentleman, unwontedly softened by that cherub face,--for indeed she

was as winsome as a baby angel of Raphael's,--stooped down and

patted the bright curly head that turned up to him so trustfully.

"What's your name, little woman?" he asked, with a sudden wave of

gentleness.

And Dolly, all agog at having arrested so grand an old gentleman's

attention, spoke up in her clear treble, "Dolores Barton."

Sir Anthony started. Was this a trap to entangle him? He was born

suspicious, and he feared that woman. But he looked into Dolly's

blue eyes of wonder, and all doubt fled from him. Was it blood?

was it instinct? was it unconscious nature? At any rate, the

child seemed to melt the grandfather's heart as if by magic. Long

years after, when the due time came, Dolly remembered that melting.

To the profound amazement of the footman, who stood with the

carriage-door ready open in his hand, the old man bent down and

kissed the child's red lips. "God bless you, my dear!" he

murmured, with unwonted tenderness to his son's daughter. Then he

took out his purse, and drew from it a whole gold sovereign.

"That's for you, my child," he said, fondling the pretty golden

curls. "Take it home, and tell your mammy an old man in the street

gave it to you."