Daisy In The Field - Page 116/231

"Which you have entirely disarranged, Daisy," she said as she

moved herself.

"Daisy will acknowledge I had liberty," Mr. De Saussure

repeated.

"Mamma," I said, "don't you think it is growing chill?"

"Row us home, Charles," said my mother. "And, Daisy, don't be

a fool. Mr. De Saussure had liberty, as he says."

"I do not acknowledge it, ma'am."

"You must give her line, Charles," mamma said, half laughing

but vexed. "She is a woman."

"I hope she will grant me forgiveness," he said. "She must

remember, I thought I had liberty."

"I shall not forget," I answered. "I understand, that respect

for me failed before respect for my mother."

"But! -" he began.

"Be quiet, Charles," my mother interrupted him. "Pull us to

shore; and let fits of perverseness alone till they go off.

That is my counsel to you."

And the remainder of our little voyage was finished in

profound silence. I knew mamma was terribly vexed, but at the

same time I was secretly overjoyed; for I saw that she yielded

to me, and I knew that I should have no more trouble with Mr.

De Saussure.

I did not. He lingered about for a few days longer, in moody

style, and then went away and I saw him no more. During those

days I had nothing to do with him. But my mother had almost as

little to do with me. She was greatly offended; and also, I

saw, very much surprised. The woman Daisy could not be quite

the ductile thing the child Daisy had been. I took refuge with

papa whenever I could.

"What is all this about De Saussure and Marshall?" he asked

one day.

"They have both gone home."

"I know they have; but what sent them home?"

"Mamma has been trying to make them go, this long while, you

know, papa. She wanted them to go and join Beauregard."

"And will they? Is that what they are gone for?"

"I do not know if they will, papa. I suppose Mr. De Saussure

will."

"And not Marshall?"

"I do not know about him."

"What did you do, Daisy?"

"Papa - you know I do not like the war."

"How about liking the gentlemen?"

"I am glad they are gone."

"Well, so am I," papa answered; "but what had you to do with

sending them home?"

"Nothing, papa, - only that I unfortunately did not want them

to stay."

"And you could not offer them any reward for going?"

"Papa, a man who would do such a thing for reward, would not

be a man."

"I think so too, Daisy. Your mother somehow takes a different

view."

"She cares only for the soldier, papa; not for the man."

Papa was silent and thoughtful.

There were no other intimate friends about us in Geneva; and

our life became, I must confess, less varied and pleasant

after the young men had gone. At first I felt only the relief;

then the dulness began to creep in. Papa led the life of an

invalid, or of one who had been an invalid; not an active life

in any way; I thought, not active enough for his good. Some

hours I got of reading with him; reading to him, and talking

of what we read; they did my father good, and me too; but they

were few, and often cut short. As soon as mamma joined us, our

books had to be laid aside. They bored her, she said, or

hindered her own reading; and she and papa played draughts and

chess and piquet. Mamma was not in a bored state at other

times; for she was busy with letters and plans and

arrangements, always in a leisurely way, but yet busy. It was

a sort of business with which I had no sympathy, and which

therefore left me out. The cause of the South was not my

cause; and the discussion of toilettes, fashions, costumes and

society matters, was entirely out of my line. In all these,

mamma found her element. Ransom was no resource to anybody;

and of course not to me, with whom, now as ever, he had little

in common. Mamma held me aloof, ever since Mr. De Saussure's

departure; and I only knew indirectly, as it were, that she

was planning a social campaign for me and meditating over

adornments and advantages which should help to make it

triumphant. Life in this way was not altogether enjoyable. The

only conversation which could be said to be general among us,

was on the subject of home affairs in America. That rung in my

ears every day.