natural dismay and terror.

“No,” cried Nettie, with a long sigh that relieved her breast, “not so bad as that, thank Heaven; but hush, hush! I cannot go and tell Susan just yet⁠—not just yet. Oh, give me a moment to get breath! For he is dead! I tell you, hush!” cried Nettie, seizing the woman’s hand, and wringing it, in the extremity of her terror for alarming Susan. “Don’t you understand me? She is a widow, and she does not know⁠—her husband is dead, and she does not know. Have you no pity for her in your own heart?”

“Lord ha’ mercy! but wait till I call Smith,” cried the alarmed landlady, shrinking, yet eager to know the horribly interesting details of that tragedy. She ran breathless upstairs on that errand, while Nettie went back to the door of the parlour, resolutely locked it, and took away the key. “Nobody shall go gazing and talking over him, and making a wonder of poor Fred,” said Nettie to herself, shaking off from her long eyelashes the tear which came out of the compunction of her heart. “Poor Fred!” She sat down on one of the chairs of the little hall beside that closed door. The children and their mother upstairs still slept unsuspicious; and their young guardian, with a world of thoughts rising in her mind, sat still and pondered. The past was suddenly cut off from the future by this dreadful unthought-of event. She had come to a dead pause in that life, which to every spectator was so strangely out of accordance with her youth, but which was to herself such simple and plain necessity as to permit no questioning. She was brought suddenly to a standstill at this terrible moment, and sat turning her dauntless little face to the new trial before her, pale, but undismayed. Nettie did not deceive herself even in her thoughts. She saw, with the intuitive foresight of a keen observer, her sister’s violent momentary grief, her indolent acceptance of the position after a while, the selfish reserve of repining and discontent which Susan would establish in the memory of poor Fred: she saw how, with fuller certainty than ever, because now more naturally, she herself, her mind, her laborious hands, her little fortune, would belong to the fatherless family. She did not sigh over the prospect, or falter; but she exercised no self-delusion on the subject. There was nobody but she to do it⁠—nobody but she, in her tender maidenhood, to manage all the vulgar tragical business which must, this very day, confirm to the knowledge of the little surrounding world the event which had happened⁠—nobody but herself to tell the tale to the widow, to bear all the burdens of the time. Nettie did not think over these particulars with self-pity, or wonder over her hard lot. She did not imagine herself to have chosen this lot at all. There was nobody else to do it⁠—that was the simple secret of her strength.

But this interval of forlorn repose was a very brief one. Smith came down putting on his coat, and looking scared and bewildered; his wife, eager, curious, and excited, closely following. Nettie rose when they approached her to forestall their questions.

“My brother-in-law is dead,” she said. “He fell into the canal last night and was drowned. I went out to look for him, and⁠—and found him, poor fellow! Oh, don’t cry out or make a noise: remember Susan does not know! Now, dear Mrs. Smith, I know you are kind⁠—I know you will not vex me just at this moment. I have had him laid there till his brother comes. Oh, don’t say it’s dreadful! Do you think I cannot see how dreadful it is? but we must not think about that, only what has to be done. When Dr. Edward comes, I will wake my sister; but just for this moment, oh have patience! I had no place to put him except there.”

“But, Lord bless us, he mightn’t be clean gone: he might be recovered, poor gentleman! Smith can run for Dr. Marjoribanks; he is nearer nor Dr. Rider,” cried the curious excited landlady, with her hand upon the locked door.

Nettie made no answer. She took them into the room in solemn silence, and showed them the stark and ghastly figure, for which all possibilities had been over in the dark midnight waters hours ago. The earliest gleam of sunshine came shining in at that moment through the window which last night Nettie had opened that Fred might see the light in it and be guided home. It seemed to strike like a reproach upon that quick-throbbing impatient heart, which felt as a sin against the dead its own lack of natural grief and affection. She went hurriedly to draw down the blinds and close out the unwelcome light. “Now he is gone, nobody shall slight or scorn him,” said Nettie to herself, with hot tears; and she turned the wondering dismayed couple⁠—already awakening out of their first horror, to think of the injury done to their house and “lodgings,” and all the notoriety of an inquest⁠—out of the room, and locked the door upon the unwilling owners, whom nothing but her resolute face prevented from bursting forth in selfish but natural lamentations over their own secondary share in so disastrous an event. Nettie sat down again, a silent little sentinel by the closed door, without her shawl, and with her tiny chilled feet on the cold tiles. Nettie sat silent, too much occupied even to ascertain the causes of her personal discomfort. She had indeed enough to think of; and while her little girlish figure, so dainty, so light, so unlike her fortunes, remained in that unusual stillness, her mind and heart were palpitating with thoughts⁠—all kinds of thoughts; not only considerations worthy the solemnity and horror of the moment, but every kind of trivial and secondary necessity, passed through that restless soul, all throbbing with life and action,

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