Kate Danton | Page 2

May Agnes Fleming
soon as you receive this. We will be down by the
7th, for certain. Ogden says that Rose is absent. Write to her to return.
"Yours sincerely, Henry Danton."
"P. S.--Did Ogden tell you we were to have a visitor--an invalid
gentleman--a Mr. Richards? Have the suite of rooms on the west side
prepared for him. H. D."
The young lady refolded her note thoughtfully, and walking to the fire,
stood looking with grave eyes into the glowing coals.

"So soon," she thought; "so soon; everything to be changed. What is
Captain Danton's eldest daughter like, I wonder? What is the Captain
like himself, and who can this invalid, Mr. Richards, be? I don't like
change."
Babette came in with the coal, and Miss Grace roused herself from her
reverie.
"Babette, tell Ledru to have dinner at seven. I think your master and his
daughter will be here to-night."
"Mon Dieu, Mademoiselle! The young lady from England?"
"Yes; and see that there are fires in all the rooms upstairs."
"Yes, Miss Grace."
"Is Miss Eeny still in the parlour?"
"Yes, Miss Grace."
Miss Grace walked out of the dining-room, along a carved and pictured
corridor, up a broad flight of shining oaken stairs, and tapped at the
first door.
"Come in, Grace," called a pleasant voice, and Grace went in.
It was a much more elegant apartment than the dining-room, with
flowers, and books, and birds, and pictures, and an open piano with
music scattered about.
Half buried in a great carved and gilded chair, lay the only occupant of
the room--a youthful angel of fifteen, fragile in form, fair and delicate
of face, with light hair and blue eyes. A novel lying open in her lap
showed what her occupation had been.
"I thought you were practising your music, Eeny," said Grace.
"So I was, until I got tired. But what's that you've got? A letter?"

Grace put it in her hand.
"From papa!" cried the girl, vividly interested at once. "Oh, Grace!
Kate has come!"
"Yes."
The young lady laid down the letter and looked at her.
"How oddly you said that! Are you sorry?"
"Sorry! Oh, no."
"You looked as if you were. How strange it seems to think that this
sister of mine, of whom I have heard so much and have never seen,
should be coming here for good! And papa--he is almost a stranger, too,
Grace. I suppose everything will be very different now."
"Very, very different," Grace said, with her quiet eyes fixed on the fire.
"The old life will soon be a thing of the past. And we have been very
happy here; have we not, Eeny?"
"Very happy," answered Eeny; "and will be still, I hope. Papa and Kate,
and Mr. Richards--I wonder who Mr. Richards is?--shall not make us
miserable."
"I suppose, Eeny," said Grace, "I shall be quite forgotten when this
handsome Sister Kate comes. She ought to be very handsome."
She looked up at an oval picture about the marble mantel, in a rich
frame--the photograph of a lovely girl about Eeny's age. The bright
young face looked at you with a radiant smile, the exuberant golden
hair fell in sunlight ripples over the plump white shoulders, and the
blue eyes and rosebud lips smiled on you together. A lovely face, full
of the serene promise of yet greater loveliness to come. Eeny's eyes
followed those of Grace.
"You know better than that, Cousin Grace. Miss Kate Danton may be
an angel incarnate, but she can never drive you quite out of my heart.

Grace, how old is Kate?"
"Twenty years old."
"And Harry was three years older?"
"Yes."
"Grace, I wonder who Mr. Richards is?"
"So do I."
"Did Ogden say nothing about him?"
"Not a word."
"Will you write to Rose?"
"I shall not have time. I wish you would write, Eeny. That is what I
came here to ask you to do."
"Certainly, with pleasure," said Eeny. "Rose will wait for no second
invitation when she hears who have come. Will they arrive this
evening?"
"Probably. They may come at any moment. And here I am lingering.
Write the note at once, Eeny, and send Sam back to the village with it."
She left the parlour and went down stairs, looking into the dining-room
as she passed. Babette was setting the table already, and silver and
cut-glass sparkled in the light of the ruby flame. Grace went on, up
another staircase, hurrying from room to room, seeing that all things
were in perfect order. Fires burned in each apartment, lamps stood on
the tables ready to be lit, for neither furnace nor gas was to be found
here. The west suite of rooms spoken of in the letter were the last
visited. A long corridor, lit by an
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