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timate friend, and still he felt buoyed up with hope, restored to happiness. The reaction had come on, and he was more in love with her than ever.

CHAPTER VIII. :

NINA.

It might have spared Mr. Stanmore a deal of unnecessary discomfort had the owner of those legs which he saw through the open window at Putney thought fit to show the rest of his person to voyagers on the river. Dick would then have recognized an old college friend, would have landed to greet him with the old college heartiness, and in the natural course of events would have satisfied himself that his suspicions of Maud were unfounded and absurd.

Simon Perkins is not a romantic name, nor did the exterior of Simon Perkins, as seen either within or without the Putney cottage, correspond with that which fiction assigns to a hero of romance.

His

frame was small and slight, his complexion pale, his hair weak and thin, his manner diffident, awkward, almost ungainly, but that its thorough courtesy and good-nature were so obvious and unaffected. In general society people passed him. over as a shy, harmless, unmeaning little man; but those who really knew him affirmed that his courage was not to be damped, nor his nerve shaken, by extremity of danger-that he was always ready with succour for the needy, with sympathy for the sorrowful-in short, as they tersely put it, that his heart was in the right place.'

For half a dozen terms at Oxford he and Dick had been inseparable. Their intimacy, none the less close for dissimilarity of tastes and pursuits, since Perkins was a reading man and Dick a 'fast' one, had been still more firmly soldered by a long vacation spent together in Norway, and a thrilling tableau,' as Dick called it, to which their expedition gave rise. Had Simon Perkins's heart been no stouter than his slender person, his companion

must have died a damp death, and this story would never have been told.

The young men were in one of the most picturesque parts of that wild and beautiful country, created, as it would seem, for the express gratification of the fisherman and the landscape painter, Simon Perkins-an artist in his very soul— wholly engrossed by the sketch of a mountain, Dick Stanmore equally absorbed in fishing a pool. Scarce twenty yards apart, neither was conscious, for the moment, of the other's existence, Simon, indeed, being in spirit some seven thousand feet above the level of the sea, putting more ochre into the virgin snow that crested his topmost peak, and Dick deftly dropping a fly, the size of a pen-wiper, over the nose of a fifteen-pounder that had already once risen to the gaudy lure.

Poising himself, like a Mercury, on a rock in mid-stream, the angler had just thrown eighteen yards of line lightly as a silken thread to an inch, when his foot slipped, and a loud splash, bringing the painter, like Icarus, out of the clouds with a run, startled his attention to the place where his companion was not. In another second Simon had his grip on Dick's collar, and both men were struggling for dear life in the pool. Stanmore could swim, of course, but it takes a good swimmer to hold his own in fisherman's boots, encumbered, moreover, with sundry paraphernalia of his art. Simon was a very mild performer in the water, but he had coolness, presence of mind, and inflexible tenacity of purpose. To these qualities the friends owed it that they ever reached the shore alive. It was a very near thing, and when they found their legs and looked into each other's faces, gasping, dripping, spouting water from ears, nose, and mouth, Dick gathered breath to exclaim, 'You trump! I should have been drowned, to a moral!' Whereat the other, choking, coughing, and sputtering, answered faintly, 'You old muff! I believe we were never out of our depth the whole time!'

Perkins did not go up for his degree, and the men lost sight of

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one another in a few years, cherishing, indeed, a kindly remembrance each of his friend, yet taking little pains to refresh that remembrance by renewed intercourse. How many intimacies, how many attachments outlast a twelvemonth's break? There are certain things people go on caring for, but I fear they are more intimately connected with self in daily life than either the romance of friendship or the intermittent fever of love. The enjoyment of luxury, the pursuit of money-making, seem to lose none of their zest with advancing years, and perhaps to these we may add, the taste for art.

Now to Simon Perkins art was as the very air he breathed. The greatest painter was, in his eyes, the greatest man that lived. When he left Oxford, he devoted himself to the profession of painting, with such success as rendered him independent, besides enabling him to contribute largely to the comfort of two maiden aunts with whom he lived.

Not without hard work; far from it. There is no pursuit, perhaps, which demands such constant and unremitting exertion from its votaries. The ideal to which he strains can never be reached, for his very successes keep building it yet higher, and a painter is so far like a baby his whole life through, that he is always learning to see.

Simon was still learning to see on the afternoon Dick Stanmore sculled by his cottage windows-studying the effect of a declining sun on the opposite elms, not entirely averting his looks from that graceful girl, who ran into the house to the oarsman's discomfiture, and missing her more than might have been expected when she vanished up-stairs. Was not the sun still shining bright on that graceful feathery foliage? He did not quite think it was.

Presently there came to the door a rustle of draperies, and an elderly lady, not remarkable for beauty, entered the room. Taking no notice of Simon, she proceeded to arrange small articles of furniture with a restless manner that denoted anxiety of mind. At last, stopping short in the act of dusting a china tea-cup

with a very clean cambric handkerchief, she observed, in a faltering voice, 'Simon, dear, I feel so nervous I know I shall never get through with it. Where's your Aunt Jemima?'

Even while she spoke there ap peared at the door another lady, somewhat more elderly, and even less remarkable for beauty, who seated herself bolt upright in an elbow chair without delay, and, looking austerely round, observed, in an impressive voice, 'Susannah, fetch me my spectacles; Simon, shut the door.'

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Of all governments there must be a head. It was obvious that in this deliberative assembly Miss Jemima Perkins assumed the lead. Both commands being promptly obeyed, she pulled her spectacles from their case and put them on, as symbols of authority, forthwith.

'I want your advice, Simon,' said this strong-minded old lady, in a hard, clear voice. I dare say I shan't act upon it, but I want it all the same. I've no secrets from either of you; but as the head of the family I don't mean to shirk responsibility, and my opinion is, she must go. Susannah, no weakness. My dear, you ought to be ashamed of yourself. Nina, run upstairs again; we don't want you just now.'

This to a pretty head with raven hair, that popped saucily in, and as saucily withdrew.

Simon looked wistfully after the pretty head, and relapsed into a daydream. Was he thinking what a picture it would make, or what a reality it was? His aunt's voice recalled him to facts.

'Simon,' she repeated, 'my opinion is she must go.'

'Go,' said her nephew, vacantly; 'what do you mean, aunt? Go?where?-who?'

Why that girl we're all so fond of,' replied Miss Jemima, growing every moment more severe. 'Mr. Algernon used to come here twice every quarter, usedn't he? Never missed the day, did he? and paid his money as regular as clock-work. Susannah, how long is it since he's been to see us?'

; Susannah sobbed.

That's no answer,' pursued the inflexible speaker. 'Tomorrow

week it will be ten months since we have seen him; and to-morrow week it will be ten months since we've had a scrap of his handwriting. Is that girl to remain here, dependent on the bounty of a struggling artist and two old maids? My opinion is that she ought to go out and gain her own livelihood; my feeling is, that-that-I couldn't bear to think of the poor dear in any home but this!'

Here the old lady, whose assumption of extreme fortitude had been gradually leading to the inevitable catastrophe, broke down altogether, while Susannah, giving rein to her emotions, lifted up her voice and wept.

You knew who she was all along, Jemima,' said the latter, gulping sadly at her syllables: 'you know you did; and it's cruel to harrow up our feelings like this.'

Simon said nothing, but on his homely features gathered an expression of resolve, through which there gleamed the bright radiance of hope.

Miss Perkins wiped her eyes and then her spectacles. Resuming her dignity, she proceeded in a calmer voice

I will not conceal from you, Susannah, nor from you, Simon, that I have had my suspicions for several years. Those suspicions became a certainty some time ago. There can be no doubt now of the relationship existing between our Nina and the Mr. Algernon, as he called himself, who took such an interest in the child's welfare. When I saw Mr. Bruce's death in the paper, I knew that our pet had lost her father. What was I to do? When I consented to take charge of the child twenty years ago-and a sweet pretty babe she was-I perfectly understood there must be a mystery connected with her birth. As head of the family, I imparted my suspicions to neither of you, and I kept my conjectures and my disapproval to myself. This seemed only fair to my correspondent, only fair to the child. When I learned Mr. Bruce's death, it came upon me, like a shot, that he was the Mr.

Algernon who used to visit here, and who furnished such liberal means for the support and education of that girl up-stairs.-Susannah, I cannot make myself understood if you will persist in blowing your nose!--Since Mr. Bruce's death no Mr. Algernon has darkened our doors, no remittances have come to hand with the usual signature. Simon, my impression is that no provision whatever has been made for the poor thing, and that our Nina is-is utterly destitute and friendless.'

Here Miss Susannah gave a little scream, whereat her sister glared austerely, and resumed the spectacles she had taken off to dry.

'Not friendless, aunt,' exclaimed Simon, in a great heat and fuss; 'never friendless so long as we are all above ground. I am perfectly willing to stay, Aunt Jemima, I beg your pardon, what do you think ought to be done?'

The old lady smoothed her dress, looking round with placid dignity.

'I will first hear what you two have to propose. Susannah, leave off crying this minute, and tell us what you think of this-this very embarrassing position.'

It is possible that but for the formidable adjective Susannah might have originated, and, indeed, expressed, some idea of her own; but to confront a position described by her sister as 'embarrassing' was quite beyond her powers, and she could only repeat feebly, 'I'll give her half my money-I'll give her half my money. We can't drive her out into the cold.' This with sobs and tears, and a hand pressed helplessly to her side.

Miss Jemima turned from her with contempt, declaring, in an audible whisper, she had more than half a mind to send the foolish thing to bed;' then looked severely at her nephew.

This girl,' said he, has become a member of our family, just as if she were a born relation. It seems to me there is no question of feeling or sentiment or prejudice in the matter. It is a mere affair of duty. We are bound to treat Nina Algernon exactly as if she were a Perkins.'

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