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medical assistance. I have never been in this neighbourhood, and know nothing about it. Where is the nearest doctor?"

      "I can't tell you; I am almost as much a stranger here as you are."

      "There must be one not very far off. Who was the lad who opened the door for me when I came to-night?"

      "My servant, Tom Barley. What do you want him for? He is asleep by this time. He has work to do the first thing in the morning."

      "Where does he sleep?"

      "Outside; in the stable."

      "I shall find it. You must write a few words on paper for me."

      "I'll do nothing of the sort. You shan't force me to put my name to anything. Do you think I am not up to such tricks?"

      "If you don't do as I say I will bring a lawyer here as well as a doctor."

      This woman possessed a sweet and gentle nature, and nothing but the evidence of an overwhelming wrong could have so stirred it to sternness. Miser Farebrother was terrified at the threat of bringing a lawyer into the house; and as he had given way to his wife earlier in the day, so now was he compelled by his fears to give way to her sister. He wrote as she directed:

      "Mr. Farebrother, of Parksides, urgently requests the doctor to come immediately to his house to see Mrs. Farebrother, who, he fears, is seriously ill."

      He fought against two words—"urgently," because it might cause the doctor to make a heavier charge; and "seriously," because a construction that he had been neglectful might be placed on it. But his sister-in-law was firm, and he wrote as she dictated.

      "I will send the lad with it," said Miser Farebrother.

      "I will send him myself," said his sister-in-law. "There must not be a moment's delay."

      There was no need for her to seek Tom Barley in the stable; he was sitting up in the kitchen below.

      She gave him the letter, and desired him to run as fast as he could to the village and find a doctor, who was to come back with him. If the doctor demurred, and wanted to put it off till the following day, he was to be told that it was a matter of life and death.

      Tom Barley was visibly disturbed when he heard this.

      "Who is it, lady?" he asked. "His honour's wife, or the baby?"

      "His wife. You're a kind-hearted lad, and won't waste a moment, will you?"

      "No, lady; trust me."

      He was not above taking the sixpence she offered him, and he ran out of the house like a shot.

      Within the hour he was back with the doctor, whose looks were grave as he examined his patient.

      "There is hope, doctor?" said Mrs. Farebrother's sister. "Tell me there is hope!"

      He shook his head, and gently told her she must prepare for the worst.

      "She is past prescribing for," he said. "I can do nothing for her. She has been for some time in a decline."

      The sentence being passed, she had no room in her heart for any other feeling than pity for her dying sister. In the sunrise, when the sweet air was infusing strength into fresh young life, the end came. Mrs. Farebrother whispered to her sister that she wished to speak to her husband alone. Thoroughly awed, he sat by her side. She made no reference to the past; she uttered no reproaches. She spoke only of their child, and begged him to be good to her. He promised all that she asked of him.

      "You will get some good woman into the house to take care of her?" she said.

      "Yes; I promise."

      "And my sister must see her whenever she wishes to do so."

      "Yes."

      "And when our dear one is old enough and strong enough you will let her go to my sister, and stop with her a little now and then? It will do her good to mix with children of her own age."

      "Yes; I promise."

      "As you deal by her, so will you be dealt by. May Heaven prosper you in all worthy undertakings! Kiss me. Let there be peace and forgiveness between us."

      He kissed her, and sat a little apart while she and her sister, their cheeks nestling, exchanged their last words.

      "Look after my treasure," whispered the mother.

      "I will, dear, as tenderly and carefully as if she were one of my own."

      "You must come here and see her sometimes; he has promised that you may; and when she grows up you will let her come to you?"

      "She will always be lovingly welcome. My home is hers if she should ever need one."

      "God bless you! May your life be prosperous and ever happy!"

      Before noon she drew her last breath, and Parksides was without a mistress.

      CHAPTER IV.

       PHŒBE AND THE ANGELS.

       Table of Contents

      It did not long remain so. In less than a fort-night after Mrs. Farebrother's death a housekeeper was installed in Parksides. Her name was Mrs. Pamflett, and her age thirty. Being called "Mrs.," the natural inference was that she was either wife or widow; but as no questions were put to her on this point there were none to answer, and it certainly did not appear to be anybody's business but her own. Miser Farebrother, being entirely wrapped up in his money-bags, gave the entire household into the care of Mrs. Pamflett, one of its items being the motherless child Phœbe. A capable housekeeper, thrifty, careful, and willing to work, Miser Farebrother was quite satisfied with her performance of her duties; but she was utterly unfit to rear a child so young as Phœbe, for whom, it must be confessed, she had no particular love, and Phœbe would have fared badly in many ways had it not been for her aunt.

      Mrs. Lethbridge lived in London, in the not very aristocratic neighbourhood of Camden Town. She and Phœbe's mother had been married on the same day—one to a man whose miserly habits were unknown, and had, indeed, not at that time grown into a confirmed disease; the other to a bank clerk, who was expected to keep up the appearance of a gentleman, and fitly rear and educate a family, upon a salary of a hundred and eighty pounds a year. Fortunately for him and his wife, their family was not numerous, consisting of one son and one daughter. With Miser Farebrother they had nothing in common; he so clearly and unmistakably discouraged their attempts to cement an affectionate or even a friendly intimacy that they had gradually and surely dropped away from each other. This was a great grief to the sisters, but the edict issued by Miser Farebrother was not to be disputed.

      "I will not allow your sister or her husband to come to the house," he had said to his wife when, in the early days of their married life, she remonstrated with him; later on she had not the courage or the spirit to expostulate against his harsh decrees, to which she submitted with a breaking heart. "They are a couple of busybodies, and you can tell them so if you please, with my compliments."

      Mrs. Farebrother did not tell her sister what her husband called them, but she wrote and said that for the sake of peace they had better not come to see her. The Lethbridges mournfully acquiesced; indeed, they had no alternative: they could not force themselves into the house of a man who would not receive them.

      "But if we can't go to her," said Mrs. Lethbridge, "Laura"—which was Mrs. Farebrother's Christian name—"can come to us."

      This, also, after a little while, Miser Farebrother would not allow.

      "I will not," he said, "have my affairs talked about by people who are not friendly to me."

      "That is your fancy," said Mrs. Farebrother; "they would be very happy if you would allow them to be friendly."

      "Of course," he sneered, "so that they could poke their heads into my business. I tell you I will not have it."

      She sighed,

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