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VII
'MID NEW SURROUNDINGS
WARWICK'S
residence was situated in the outskirts of the town. It was a fine old
plantation house, built in colonial times, with a stately colonnade, wide
verandas, and long windows with Venetian blinds. It was painted white,
and stood back several rods from the street, in a charming setting of
palmettoes, magnolias, and flowering shrubs. Rena had always thought her
mother's house large, but now it seemed cramped and narrow, in comparison
with this roomy mansion. The furniture was old-fashioned and massive.
The great brass andirons on the wide hearth stood like sentinels proclaiming
and guarding the dignity of the family. The spreading antlers on the wall
testified to a mighty hunter in some past generation. The portraits of
Warwick's wife's ancestors -- high featured, proud men and women, dressed
in the fashions of a bygone age -- looked down from tarnished gilt frames.
It was all very novel to her, and very impressive. When she ate off china,
with silver knives and forks that had come down as heirlooms, escaping
somehow the ravages and exigencies of the war time, -- Warwick told
her afterwards how he had buried them out of reach of friend or foe, --
she thought that her brother must be wealthy, and she felt very proud
of him and of her opportunity. The servants, of whom there were several
in the house, treated her with a deference to which her eight months in
school had only partly accustomed her. At school she had been one of many
to be served, and had herself been held to obedience. Here, for the first
time in her life, she was mistress, and tasted the sweets of power.
The
household consisted of her brother and herself, a cook, a coachman, a
nurse, and her brother's little son Albert. The child, with a fine instinct,
had put out his puny arms to Rena at first sight, and she had clasped
the little man to her bosom with a motherly caress. She had always loved
weak creatures. Kittens and puppies had ever found a welcome and a meal
at Rena's hands, only to be chased away by Mis' Molly, who had had a wider
experience. No shiftless poor white, no half-witted or hungry negro, had
ever gone unfed from Mis' Molly's kitchen door if Rena were there to hear
his plaint. Little Albert was pale and sickly when she came, but soon
bloomed again in the sunshine of her care, and was happy only in her presence.
Warwick found pleasure in their growing love for each other, and was glad
to perceive that the child formed a living link to connect her with his
home.
"Dat
chile sutt'nly do lub Miss Rena, an' dat's a fac', sho 's
you bawn," remarked 'Lissa the cook to Mimy the nurse one day. "You'll
get yo' nose put out er j'int, ef you don't min'."
"I
ain't frettin', honey," laughed the nurse good-naturedly. She was not
at all jealous. She had the same wages as before, and her labors were
materially lightened by the aunt's attention to the child. This gave Mimy
much more time to flirt with Tom the coachman.
It
was a source of much gratification to Warwick that his sister seemed to
adapt herself so easily to the new conditions. Her graceful movements,
the quiet elegance with which she wore even the simplest gown, the easy
authoritativeness with which she directed the servants, were to him proofs
of superior quality, and he felt correspondingly proud of her. His feeling
for her was something more than brotherly love, -- he was quite conscious
that there were degrees in brotherly love, and that if she had been homely
or stupid, he would never have disturbed her in the stagnant life of the
house behind the cedars. There had come to him from some source, down
the stream of time, a rill of the Greek sense of proportion, of fitness,
of beauty, which is indeed but proportion embodied, the perfect adaptation
of means to ends. He had perceived, more clearly than she could have appreciated
it at that time, the undeveloped elements of discord between Rena and
her former life. He had imagined her lending grace and charm to his own
household. Still another motive, a purely psychological one,
had more or less consciously influenced him. He had no fear that the family
secret would ever be discovered, -- he had taken his precautions too thoroughly,
he thought, for that; and yet he could not but feel, at times, that if
peradventure -- it was a conceivable hypothesis -- it should become known,
his fine social position would collapse like a house of cards. Because
of this knowledge, which the world around him did not possess, he had
felt now and then a certain sense of loneliness; and there was a measure
of relief in having about him one who knew his past, and yet whose knowledge,
because of their common interest, would not interfere with his present
or jeopardize his future. For he had always been, in a figurative sense,
a naturalized foreigner in the world of wide opportunity, and Rena was
one of his old compatriots, whom he was glad to welcome into the populous
loneliness of his adopted country.
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