Daisy In The Field - Page 3/231

I could not help laughing, and laughing made me cry. Miss

Cardigan promptly put me back on the cushions and bade me lie

still; and she sat in front of me there like a good shaggy

human watch dog. I should not say shaggy, for she was entirely

neat and trim; but there was something of sturdy and

uncompromising about her which suggested the idea. I lay

still, and by and by went off into a sleep. That restored me.

I woke up a couple of hours later all right and quite myself

again. I was able to rush through the bit of study I had

wanted; and went over to Mme. Ricard's just a minute before

school opened.

I had expected some uncomfortable questioning about my staying

out all night; but things do not happen as one expects. I got

no questioning, except from one or two of the girls. Mme.

Ricard was ill, that was the news in school; the other

teachers had their hands full, and did not give themselves any

extra trouble about the doings of so regular and trusted an

inmate as myself. The business of the day rolled on and rolled

off, as if last night had never been; only that I walked in a

dream; and when night came I was free to go to bed early and

open my budget of thoughts and look at them. From without, all

was safe.

All day my thoughts had been rushing off, away from the

schoolroom and from studies and masters, to look at a receding

railway train, and follow a grey coat in among the crowd of

its fellows, where its wearer mingled in all the business and

avocations of his interrupted course of life. Interrupted!

yes, what a change had come to his and to mine; and yet all

was exactly the same outwardly. But the difference was, that I

was thinking of Thorold, and Thorold was thinking of me. How

strange it was! and what a great treasure of joy it was. I

felt rich; with the most abounding, satisfying, inexhaustible

treasure of riches. All day I had known I was rich; now I took

out my gold and counted it, and could not count it, and gave

full-hearted thanks over it.

If the brightness wanted a foil, it was there; the gold

glittered upon a cloudy background. My treasure was not

exactly in my hand to enjoy. There might be many days before

Thorold and I saw each other's faces again. Dangers lay

threatening him, that I could not bear to think of; although I

knew they were there. And even were this cloud all cleared

away, I saw the edges of another rising up along the horizon.

My father and my mother. My mother especially; what would she

say to Daisy loving an officer in the Northern army? That

cloud was as yet afar off; but I knew it was likely to rise

thick and black; it might shut out the sun. Even so I my

treasure was my treasure still, through all this. Thorold

loved me and belonged to me; nothing could change that.

Dangers, and even death, would not touch it. My mother's

command could not alter it. She might forbid his marrying me;

I must obey her; but the fact that we loved each other was a

fact beyond her reach and out of her, power, as out of mine.

Thorold belonged to me, in this higher and indestructible

sense, and also I belonged to him. And in this joy I rejoiced,

and counted my treasure with an inexpressible triumph of joy

that it was uncountable.