Wives and Daughters: An Every-Day Story - Page 482/572

Mr. Gibson came back two steps at a time; he was carrying the

half-awakened child in his arms. He did not scruple to rouse him into

yet further wakefulness--did not grieve to hear him begin to wail and

cry. His eyes were on the figure upon the bed, which at that sound

quivered all through; and when her child was laid at her back, and

began caressingly to scramble yet closer, Aimée turned round, and

took him in her arms, and lulled him and soothed him with the soft

wont of mother's love.

Before she lost this faint consciousness, which was habit or instinct

rather than thought, Mr. Gibson spoke to her in French. The child's

one word of "maman" had given him this clue. It was the language

sure to be most intelligible to her dulled brain; and as it

happened,--only Mr. Gibson did not think of that--it was the language

in which she had been commanded, and had learnt to obey.

Mr. Gibson's tongue was a little stiff at first, but by-and-by he

spoke it with all his old readiness. He extorted from her short

answers at first, then longer ones, and from time to time he plied

her with little drops of wine, until some further nourishment should

be at hand. Molly was struck by her father's low tones of comfort and

sympathy, although she could not follow what was said quickly enough

to catch the meaning of what passed.

By-and-by, however, when her father had done all that he could, and

they were once more downstairs, he told them more about her journey

than they yet knew. The hurry, the sense of acting in defiance of

a prohibition, the over-mastering anxiety, the broken night, and

fatigue of the journey, had ill prepared her for the shock at last,

and Mr. Gibson was seriously alarmed for the consequences. She had

wandered strangely in her replies to him; he had perceived that she

was wandering, and had made great efforts to recall her senses;

but Mr. Gibson foresaw that some bodily illness was coming on,

and stopped late that night, arranging many things with Molly and

the Squire. One--the only--comfort arising from her state was the

probability that she would be entirely unconscious by the morrow--the

day of the funeral. Worn out by the contending emotions of the day,

the Squire seemed now unable to look beyond the wrench and trial of

the next twelve hours. He sate with his head in his hands, declining

to go to bed, refusing to dwell on the thought of his grandchild--not

three hours ago such a darling in his eyes. Mr. Gibson gave some

instructions to one of the maid-servants as to the watch she was to

keep by Mrs. Osborne Hamley, and insisted on Molly's going to bed.

When she pleaded the apparent necessity of her staying up, he said,--