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Thankful Blossom
by
“Hush!” said the father, motioning to the parlor.
“Hush,” echoed Thankful indignantly. “I won’t be hushed! Everybody says ‘Hush’ to me. The count says ‘Hush!’ Allan says ‘Hush!’ You say ‘Hush!’ I’m a-weary of this hushing. Ah, if there was a man who didn’t say it to me!” and Mistress Thankful lifted her fine eyes to the ceiling.
“You are unwise, Thankful,–foolish, indiscreet. That is why you require much monition.”
Thankful swung her feet in silence for a few moments, then suddenly leaped from the table, and, seizing the old man by the lapels of his coat, fixed her eyes upon him, and said suspiciously. “Why did you keep me from going in the company-room? Why did you bring me in here?”
Blossom senior was staggered for a moment. “Because, you know, the count–“
“And you were afraid the count should know I had a sweetheart? Well, I’ll go in and tell him now,” she said, marching toward the door.
“Then, why did you not tell him when you slipped out an hour ago? eh, lass?” queried the old man, grasping her hand. “But ’tis all one, Thankful: ’twas not for him I stopped you. There is a young spark with him,–ay, came even as you left, lass,–a likely young gallant; and he and the count are jabbering away in their own lingo, a kind of Italian, belike; eh, Thankful?”
“I know not,” she said thoughtfully. “Which way came the other?” In fact, a fear that this young stranger might have witnessed the captain’s embrace began to creep over her.
“From town, my lass.”
Thankful turned to her father as if she had been waiting a reply to a long-asked question: “Well?”
“Were it not well to put on a few furbelows and a tucker?” queried the old man. “‘Tis a gallant young spark; none of your country folk.”
“No,” said Thankful, with the promptness of a woman who was looking her best, and knew it. And the old man, looking at her, accepted her judgment, and without another word led her to the parlor door, and, opening it, said briefly, “My daughter, Mistress Thankful Blossom.”
With the opening of the door came the sound of earnest voices that instantly ceased upon the appearance of Mistress Thankful. Two gentlemen lolling before the fire arose instantly, and one came forward with an air of familiar yet respectful recognition.
“Nay, this is far too great happiness, Mistress Thankful,” he said, with a strongly marked foreign accent, and a still more strongly marked foreign manner. “I have been in despair, and my friend here, the Baron Pomposo, likewise.”
The slightest trace of a smile, and the swiftest of reproachful glances, lit up the dark face of the baron as he bowed low in the introduction. Thankful dropped the courtesy of the period,–i. e., a duck, with semicircular sweep of the right foot forward. But the right foot was so pretty, and the grace of the little figure so perfect, that the baron raised his eyes from the foot to the face in serious admiration. In the one rapid feminine glance she had given him, she had seen that he was handsome; in the second, which she could not help from his protracted silence, she saw that his beauty centred in his girlish, half fawn-like dark eyes.
“The baron,” explained Mr. Blossom, rubbing his hands together as if through mere friction he was trying to impart a warmth to the reception which his hard face discountenanced,–“the baron visits us under discouragement. He comes from far countries. It is the custom of gentlefolk of–of foreign extraction to wander through strange lands, commenting upon the habits and doings of the peoples. He will find in Jersey,” continued Mr. Blossom, apparently appealing to Thankful, yet really evading her contemptuous glance, “a hard-working yeomanry, ever ready to welcome the stranger, and account to him, penny for penny, for all his necessary expenditure; for which purpose, in these troublous times, he will provide for himself gold or other moneys not affected by these local disturbances.”