THE SUSPICIOUS JACKDAW.
THERE
never was a more suspicious mortal in
this world than old Madam Mortimer, unless it
was Madam Mortimer's Jackdaw. To see him peep
about, and turn his head on one side as if to listen,
and go and stand on the edge of her desk with his
bright eye fixed on her letters, and then flutter to her
wardrobe, and peer behind her cabinets, as if he
suspected that in cracks and crevices, under tables and
behind screens, there must be other daws hidden, who
would interfere with his particular interests, or listen
to the remarks made to him when he and his
mistress were alone, or find the bits of crust that he had
stowed away for his own eating; to see all this, I say,
was quite as good amusement as to see old Madam
Mortimer occupying herself in the same way, indeed
quite in the same way, considering the different
natures of women and jackdaws.
Sometimes Madam Mortimer would steal up softly
to her door, and turn the handle very softly in her
hand; then she would open it just by a little crack
and listen till she must have had the ear-ache; but
generally after this exercise, she would return to her
seat, saying aloud, as she took up her knitting, "Well,
I declare, I thought that was the butcher's boy talking
to cook; an idle young fellow, that he is; brings
all the gossip of the village here, I'm certain.
However, this once I'm wrong; it's only gardener sitting
outside the scullery, helping her to shell peas. He
had better be doing that than doing nothing which
is what most of his time is passed in, I suspect."
Here the jackdaw would give a little croak, to
express his approval of the sentiment; whenever his
mistress finished a speech, he made a point of either
croaking or coughing, just like a human being. The
foot-boy had taught him this accomplishment, and his
mistress could never help laughing when she heard
him cough. No more could little Patience Grey, who
was Madam Mortimer's maid. She was very young,
only fourteen, but then Madam Mortimer suspected
that if she had an older maid she should have more
trouble in keeping her in order; so she took Patience
from school to wait on her, and Patience was very
happy in the great old silent house, with its long
oaken galleries; and as there really seemed to be
nothing about her for either Madam Mortimer's or
the jackdaw's suspicion to rest upon, she was very
seldom scolded, though sometimes when she came
into the parlor, looking rather hot and breathing
quickly, her mistress would alarm her by saying,
"Patience, you've been skipping in the yard. You
need not deny it, for I know you have."
Here Patience would answer, blushing, "I just
skipped for a few minutes, ma'am, after I had done
plaiting your frills." "Ah, you'll never be a woman,"
Mrs. Mortimer would answer, "never! if you live to
be a hundred." And it did not enter into the head of
little Patience that her mistress could see everything
that was done in the yard, and how she sometimes ran
and played with the house dog under the walnut-trees,
the two old walnut-trees that grew there; and how
she played at ball in the coach-house, when she had
finished all her needlework, while the little dog, and
the big dog, and the big dog's two puppies, sat watching
at the open door, ready to rush in and seize the
ball if she let it drop. It never entered into her giddy
head that her mistress could see all this, for her
mistress sat in a large upper parlor, and through one of
its windows overlooked the yard; the blind was
always drawn down, and how could Patience suppose
that her mistress could peep through a tiny hole in it,
and that she did this continually, so that not a postman
could politely offer an orange to the housemaid, nor
she in return reward him with a mug of beer, without
being seen by the keen eyes of Madame Mortimer!
Patience, on the whole, however, fared none the
worse for being watched quite the contrary; the
more the jackdaw and his mistress watched her, the
fonder they grew. She was such a guileless little maid,
that they liked to have her in the large old parlor with
them, helping Madam Mortimer with her needlework,
and letting the jackdaw peep into her work-box. One
day, when Patience was sent for to attend her mistress,
she found her with the contents of an old cabinet spread
open before her; there were corals with silver bells,
there were old silver brooches, and there were many
rings and necklaces, and old-fashioned ornaments that
Patience thought extremely handsome; in particular,
there was a cornelian necklace, made of cut cornelians,
which she considered to be particularly beautiful; so
did the jackdaw, for when Madam Mortimer allowed
Patience to wash this necklace in some warm water,
he stood on the edge of the basin pecking at it
playfully, as if he wanted to get it from her. Patience
would not let him have it, and when she had
carefully dried it she laid it on some clean cotton wool,
and said to the jackdaw, "You are not going to have
it, Jack. It's the most beautiful thing that mistress
has got, so I reckon she'll never let you touch it."
When Madam Mortimer heard this, she smiled
covertly at the ignorance of Patience, and presently
said to her, "Child, you may go down and ask for a
piece of leather and some rouge powder, and I will
show you how to clean this set of emeralds."
So Patience ran down to the
foot-boy, and got what
she required, and very happy she was under her
mistress's directions in polishing and cleaning the jewels
quite as happy as she could have felt if they had
been her own; yet, when Madam Mortimer said to
her, "Which do you think the handsomest now,
Patience; the green stones or the red ones?" she
replied, "O, the red ones are the handsomest, ma'am, by
a deal."
Just at this moment visitors were announced, and
Madam Mortimer retired to her own room previous to
seeing them, taking Patience with her to attend on
her, and see to the set of her lace shawl, and of a new
cap that she donned for the occasion. She turned the
key of the parlor where all her jewelry lay about,
and the jackdaw, as he hopped with her out of the
room, coughed approvingly of the deed, in a manner
as expressive as if he had said, "Who knows whether
all the people about us are honest?"
The old lady put the key into her basket, but, strange
to say, she forgot her basket, and left that in her
bedroom with Patience, while she went down to receive
her visitors; and all that evening, suspicious as she
generally was, she never once remembered that any
one could unlock the parlor-door by means of this
basket; on the contrary, she was in very good spirits,
and she and her elder visitor talked nearly all the
evening about their servants, and about what a trouble
servants were, while the younger ladies walked in the
garden, gathered a few flowers, and partook of some
strawberries.
Now Madam Mortimer, suspicious though she was,
had an exceedingly kind heart, and she very often
allowed the housemaid to attend on her at night, that
Patience might go to bed early, as befitted her age.
The visitors staid late, but at nine the drawing-room
bell was rung, and orders were sent out that Patience
was to go to bed; so as it was the full of the midsummer
moon, she stole upstairs without a candle, and
when alone in her little garret it was quite light
enough for her to examine various little treasures that
she kept in her box. She was busy so doing, when
Jack flew in at the open window, and lighted on her
feet as she knelt, then fluttered on to her shoulder, and
peeped down at her treasures, and began to make a
great croaking and chattering. Patience thought he
was more than usually inquisitive that night, and I
am afraid he somewhat interfered with her attention
while she was reading her chapter, for he would not
let her pincushion alone, but would persist in pulling
out the pins, and dropping them on to the floor, listening
with his head on one side to the slight noise they
made when they fell. At last he flew out at the
window. And what did he do next?
Why, he did not go to roost, as he would have done
if he had not been for so many years accustomed to
civilized society, but he flew once or twice round the
house to see that other birds were asleep, and not
likely to watch his movements, and then he peeped
down the chimneys, where the swallows, now rearing
their second broods, sat fast asleep on the nest; he
next alighted on the roof, and walked cautiously to a
certain crevice, where he kept a few dozens of nails,
that he had picked with his beak out of the carpet,
and a good many odds and ends of ribbon, bits of
worsted, farthings, and broken morsels of crockery,
that he valued highly; these he pulled out of the crevice,
and then he poked his property with his beak,
chattered to it in a very senseless way, walked over it,
and finally deposited it again in the crevice, flew down
to the side of the house, and entered the parlor where
his mistress's jewelry lay.
Here lay the necklace it looked very pretty the
jackdaw alighted on the table, pecked it as thinking
that it might be good to eat, then lifted it up and
shook it. At last he flew with it out of the window.
It was still quite light out of doors, and as the
necklace dangled from his beak, he admired it very much.
"But what did he want with it?" you will naturally ask.
Nobody knows, but this is ascertained that, finding
it heavy, he took it, not to the roof, but to the edge of
a deep well in the garden, wherein he had deposited
the cook's brass thimble, and several of her skewers;
having reached this well, and lighted on the stone
brink, he peered down into it, and saw his own image,
and the red necklace in his beak; he also saw four or
five little stars reflected there, and as it was his
bedtime, he dozed a little on the edge of the well, while
the evening air waved slightly the long leaves of the
ferns that hung over it, and grew in the joints of the
stone many feet down.
At last, it is supposed that some such thought as this
crossed his brain: "These berries are heavy, and not
good to eat; I had better lay them on the water till
to-morrow morning."
So he let them drop, and down they fell to the
bottom. He had dropped a good many articles before
this into the well; some, such as nuts, feathers, and
bits of stick and straw, floated; others, like this
necklace, had sunk. It was all chance which happened,
but he liked to hear the splash of the red necklace,
and he stood awhile chattering to himself, with great
serenity of mind, on the occasion of its disappearing;
then he went and pecked at the kitchen window,
demanding his supper.
This is what the jackdaw did; and now what did
the mistress do, when she walked to the parlor door
the next morning, unlocked it, and found that the red
necklace was gone?
She was quite amazed nobody but Patience could
have taken it little Patience, her good little maid,
who had seemed so guileless, so conscientious, and so
honest. O, what a sad thing it was that there was
nobody in the world that she could trust! Patience
must have taken the key, and after using it for this bad
purpose, must have placed it again in the basket.
But Madam Mortimer was so sorry to think of this,
that she decided to let Patience have a little time to
reflect upon her great fault and confess it. So she
said nothing to her all the morning, and in the afternoon,
peeping through her little hole in the blind, she
saw Patience chasing the ducks into the pond, and
laughing heartily to see them plunge. "Hardened
child," said her mistress, "how can she laugh? I'll
give her warning;" and thereupon she sat down in her
easy chair and began to cry. Now, she felt, almost
for the first time, what a sad thing it is to suspect a
person whom one really loves. She had not supposed
how much she cared for this little village girl till she
was obliged to suspect her. She had not perceived
how sad her constant habit of suspicion was, and how
it had now obtained such a dominion over her, till
everything done by a suspected person appeared to
her mind in a distorted light. Now the childish
simplicity of Patience seemed to her to be hardened
guilt. Now, when she saw her at play, she made up
her mind that the little girl knew she was overlooked,
and was playing about in order to make her mistress
think she was at ease, and had nothing weighing on
her spirits; and when she came into the parlor, if she
was awkward, her mistress attributed it to guilty fears;
and if she made any mistake about a message, it was
because her thoughts were pre-occupied with her
ill-gotten trinket.
This unhappy state of things went on for several
days. At last, one evening, Madam Mortimer
happening to look out at her hole in the blind, saw
Patience slowly walking across the yard, and
cautiously looking down into her apron, which she had
gathered up into her hands. Madam Mortimer felt
convinced that the poor child had got the necklace
concealed there. One of the housemaids came up,
but Patience ran away, and would not let her see what
she had got, and seemed so anxious to conceal it, that
her mistress drew up the blind, opened the window,
and said, in an awful voice, "Patience, come here!"
The little girl approached there was a veranda
outside the window, and some wooden steps led up to
it. "Come up to me," said her mistress. The little
girl said, "Yes, ma'am;" and still holding her apron,
turned to enter the door. "No," exclaimed her
mistress; come up these steps; I do not want to lose
sight of you." Patience obeyed. Her mistress sat
down, and the little maid stood opposite to her.
"Patience," said her mistress, "I have lost my red
necklace." The little girl glanced under the table, as
if she thought the necklace might have dropped there.
"Do you know where it is, Patience?" was the next
question, asked with great solemnity. Patience tightened
the folds of her apron, looked earnestly at her
mistress, and said, "No, ma'am."
"Poor child," replied Madam Mortimer shaking her
head; and Patience, not appearing to know what she
meant, colored exceedingly, and looked as if she was
going to cry. But at last, as her mistress sat in her
chair, and did not say another word, she began to
steal away till she was arrested by her mistress's
voice.
"Come back again, you poor misguided child
come back, and show me what you have got in your
apron." As Madame Mortimer spoke she started, for
the evening was growing dusk, and when Patience
turned, a light, a decided light, gleamed through her
white apron.
"Please, ma'am," she said, now holding it open, "it's
some glow-worms that old gardener gave me three
glow-worms, and some leaves that I got for them."
"Bless me!" exclaimed Madam Mortimer, when she
saw the shining insects slowly moving about on her
little maid's apron; but she looked so much less angry
than before, that Patience, by way of peace-offering,
took up one of her treasures, and placed it, with some
leaves, upon the open page of her mistress's great
Bible, which lay on a little table by her side.
"You may go, now, Patience," said her mistress,
quite calmly, and the little girl left the room, while
her mistress sat so long, lost in thought, that it grew
quite dusk. " After all," she thought, "that poor child
must have been the thief; nobody else could have
stolen the necklace; but I will still give her time to
confess and restore it." As she said this she turned
towards the Bible, and the glow-worm on the page
was slowly moving along it; the darkness hid every
other word, but she read by the light of her little
maid's gift, as it went on, this verse: "We do
all fade as doth a leaf."
"Too true," said the poor old lady, sighing, "I feel
the coming on of old age very fast, and I could have
wished to have somebody about me, however young,
that I could trust. Ah, we are frail creatures we
come up and die down like the summer grass; and we
are as sinful as we are frail. My poor little Patience!
I will try her a little longer." So saying, the mistress
began to doze, and the jackdaw hopped down from
the perch where he had been watching her, and when
he saw that she was fast asleep, and that the yellow
moonlight was soft upon her aged features, he alighted
on the page of the Bible which the shining glow-worm
was then illuminating, and pounced upon him
and ate him up.
Little Patience carried her glow-worms upstairs,
and amused herself with them a long time; for she
had nothing to do but to enjoy herself when her daily
task of needlework was done; and as her mistress
never set her more to accomplish than she could finish
before dusk, she often had a good game at play with a
clear conscience. That night, however, she was not
in such good spirits as usual, because her mistress had
been angry with her, and if it had not been for the
glow-worms she would have felt very dull indeed.
However, she hung them up in a gauze bag that she
had made for them, and long after she was in bed she
lay looking at them, but thought they grew brighter
and brighter. She fell fast asleep at last, and fast
asleep she was when her mistress came into the room
with a candle in her hand, and softly stole up to her
bedside.
Patience looked very happy and peaceful in her
sleep, and the suspicious old lady could find nothing
lying about to excite her doubts. The child
had left her box open, and Madam Mortimer, though
she did not choose to touch or move anything in it,
used her eyes very sharply, and scrutinized its
contents with astonishing deliberation. At length
Patience moved, and Madam Mortimer, shading her
candle, stole away again, feeling that she had done
something to be ashamed of.
The next morning she sent for Patience, and said to
her, "Patience, I told you that I had lost my red necklace;
I must have you to help me to search for it; but
first tell me whether you know where it is?"
"I know where I think it is, ma'am," Patience
answered quite simply.
"Where?" asked her mistress; but she spoke and
looked so severely that Patience hung her head and
faltered, and at last said, "She didn't know, she only
thought it might be;" and when pressed for an answer,
she said, "She thought it might be in the empty side
of the tea-caddy, for Jack often took things and put
them into it." While the little girl spoke she looked
so bashful and confused, that her mistress was
confirmed in her bad opinion of her; but she allowed her
to help all the morning in searching for the lost
necklace; "for, after all," she thought, "I may be mistaken."
However, the necklace was not to be found; and
though the jackdaw chattered and bustled about a
great deal, and told over and over again, in the
jackdaw's language, what he had done with it, nobody
took the slightest notice of him; and the longer she
searched, the more unhappy Madam Mortimer
became. "It is not the value of the necklace," she often
said to herself; but it is the being obliged to suspect
this child, that I am so sorry for; for she was the only
person in the wide world that I felt I could trust,
excepting my own children."
But if people trust only one person, and can make
up their minds to be distrustful of every one else, their
suspicions are almost sure at last to reach the one
remaining; and so Madam Mortimer had now found.
She sent for the little maid's mother, and without
finding fault with the child, said to her that she did
not require her services any longer; and when the
mother said, "I hope it is for no fault that you part
with her, ma'am?" she replied, evasively, "Patience
has her faults like other people;" and with that
answer the mother was obliged to be satisfied.
When Patience was gone her mistress felt very
unhappy. She had felt a pleasure in her company,
because she was such a child, and so guileless. She
had meant to keep her with her, and teach her so long
as she lived, and trust her; but now all this was over,
and she had nobody whom she chose to trust. The
jackdaw, too, appeared to feel dull; there was
nobody to play with him and carry him on her shoulder.
He was dull, too, because he had lost that pretty
necklace, for he often thought he should like to have
it again to put among his treasures on the roof; therefore,
he was fond of flying to the edge of the well, and
gabbling there with great volubility; but I need not
say that his chatter and his regret did not make the
necklace float.
After a time, however, he found something else to
amuse him, for one of Madam Mortimer's sons and
his little boy came to visit her, and the jackdaw
delighted in teasing the little fellow, and pecking his
heels, and stealing his bits of string, and hiding his
pencils; while the boy, on the other hand, was
constantly teasing the bird, stroking his feathers the
wrong way, snatching away his crusts, and otherwise
plaguing him.
"I wish Patience was here to play with that child,
and keep him from teasing my Jack," said the old lady,
fretfully. "I get so infirm that children are a trouble
to me."
"Who is Patience?" asked her son.
So then Madam Mortimer told him the whole
story; the boy and the jackdaw having previously
gone out of the room together the boy tantalizing
him, and the bird gabbling and pecking at his ankles.
When she had finished, her son said, "Mother, I
believe this will end in your suspecting me next! Why
did you not ascertain whether the girl was innocent or
guilty before you parted with her?"
"I feel certain she is guilty," answered the mother,
"and I never mean to trust any servant again."
"But if you could be certain she was innocent?"
asked the son.
"Why, then I would never suspect a servant again,
I think," she replied. "Certainly I should never
suspect her she seemed as open as the day and you
do not know, son, what a painful thing it is to have
nobody about me that I can trust."
"Excuse me, mother," replied the son, "you mean
nobody that you do trust; for all your servants have
been with you for years, and deserve to be trusted, as
far as we can see."
"Well, well," said the mother, it makes me
unhappy enough, I assure you, to be obliged to suspect
everybody; and if I could have that child back I
should be truly glad; but I cannot harbor a thief."
At this point of the discourse the boy and the jackdaw
were heard in the yard making such a noise, and
quarrelling, that the son went down, at his mother's
request, to see what was the matter. "He is a thief,"
said the boy; "I saw him fly to the roof with a long
bit of blue ribbon that belongs to cook."
The jackdaw gabbled angrily in reply, and it is
highly probable that he understood part of the accusation,
for he ruffled his feathers, and hopped about in a
very excited way; and as the boy kept pointing at
him, jeering him, the bird at last flew at him angrily,
and gave him a very severe peck with a loud croak,
that might have been meant to express, "Take that."
Having it on his hands to make up this quarrel, the
little boy's father could not go on with the discourse
he had begun with his mother at that time; but when
he found another opportunity he said a great deal to
her; and if it had not been that the jackdaw's suspicions
being aroused, that troublesome bird would insist
on listening to all he said, with his head on one side,
and his twinkling eye fixed on his face, and if he
would have been quiet, instead of incessantly
changing his place, as if he thought he could hear better on
the right arm of the chair than the left, it is possible
that the gentleman's discourse might have had a great
effect on the old lady's mind; as it was, he interrupted
his mistress's attention so much, that it is doubtful
whether she remembered what her son had been talking
of. And there was no sooner a pause in what the
jackdaw probably regarded as a disagreeable subject,
than he hopped to a private little cupboard that he
kept under the turned-up edge of the carpet, and
bringing out five or six mouldy bits of bread, laid
them in a row on the rug before his mistress and her
son, and walking about before them with an air of
reflection, seemed as if he would have said, "I must
attend to my business, whether people talk or not."
"I never saw such a queer fellow in my life as that
bird is!" exclaimed the son.
"Why, Jack, you miser!" said his mistress; "one
would think you were starved."
The jackdaw gabbled something which was no
doubt meant for impertinence, till hearing footsteps
outside the door, he hastily snatched up some of his
mouldy property and flew with it to the top of the
cabinet; then he stood staring at the remainder,
fluttering his wings, and making a great outcry, for he
did not dare to fly down for it, because his little
tormentor had just rushed into the room.
"Papa, papa!" exclaimed the boy.
"Hold your tongue, Jack," cried the grandmother;
"one at a time is enough."
"Come, I will take you on my knee," said his father,
"and then the daw will fly down for his bread."
The daw no sooner saw his little enemy in a place
of safety than he descended, snatched up his bread,
and having secured it all, came again to give the boy
a malicious little peck.
"Now what do you want to say?" asked his father.
"Papa," repeated the boy, "do currants ever grow
under water?"
"No," said his father.
"But," replied the boy, "there is something growing
in the well, just under water, that looks like currants;
and, papa, will you get it for me, please, for I should
like to have it if it is good to eat."
"Pooh!" said his grandmother; "the boy is dreaming."
But the boy made such a fuss about the bunch of
currants, and was so positive as to their growing down
in the well, that though it was now autumn, and the
leaves were falling, and all the currants were either
eaten up or stowed away in jam pots long before, his
father and grandmother allowed him to take them to
the well; but first the latter put on her black silk
bonnet and her cloak, and fetched her stick from its
place, lamenting all the while that Patience was not
there to do all her little errands for her.
Now the weather all that summer and autumn had
been remarkably dry, and the consequence was, that
this old well, which had long been disused because it
contained so little water, had now less than ever; but
that little was clear; though when the old lady and
her son looked over the edge they could not at first
see down into it, because a few drops of rain had
fallen, and had wetted the fern leaves which were still
dripping a little and covering its surface with dimples.
"There are no red currants here, nor plums either,
my child," said the grandmother; and as she spoke
she put down her gold-headed stick and shook the tuft
of ferns that had been dripping, till she had shaken
down all the water they contained.
The surface was now covered with little eddies and
dimples. But when the water grew smooth again,
"There they are!" exclaimed the boy; there are the
currants. Look, grandmother, they lie just under
the shadow of those long leaves."
"I see something," replied his grandmother, shading
her eyes; "but it is six times as long as a bunch of
currants, and the berries are three times as large. I
shouldn't wonder, son, if that was my cornelian necklace."
"I will see if we can ascertain," said her son;
"there are several ladders about the premises, and
the well is not at all deep." So off he went, leaving
the old lady and her grandson to look at the necklace;
but the jackdaw, having by this time missed his
mistress from her accustomed haunts, and being suspicious
lest she might be inspecting some of his hoards,
had set a search on foot for her, and now flew up
screaming and making a great outcry, as if he thought
he was going to be robbed. However, having lighted
on the edge of the well, and observed that the necklace
was there all safe, he felt more at his ease; and,
if his mistress could have understood the tongue of a
daw, she would have now heard him relate how he
threw it there; as it was, she only heard him gabble,
and saw him now and then peck at the boy's pinafore.
When the jackdaw saw a ladder brought, however,
his mind misgave him that his mistress meant to get
the necklace out again; and his thievish spirit sank
very low. However, being a politic bird, he was
quite silent while the ladder was lowered, and while
the gardener's boy descended to the bottom of the
well and groped about with his hands, for there was
not a foot of water. "There is my necklace, sure
enough," exclaimed the old lady as the boy lifted up
the long row of shining beads; "bring it out, James."
"Please, ma'am, here's the great silver skewer that
was lost a year ago," exclaimed the boy; "and, dear
me, here's the nozzle of a candlestick."
The old lady held up her hands; she had parted
with a good cook, in consequence of the loss of this
skewer. But the sight of the necklace dangling from
the youth's hand as he prepared to mount the ladder
was too much for the jackdaw he suddenly flew
down, gave the hand a tremendous peck with his hard
bill, and while the boy cried out and dropped the
necklace, the bird made a sudden dart at it, snatched
it before it touched the water, and flew up with it
into a tree. There he rested a few minutes playing
with the wet necklace, and shaking it in the sunlight;
but not all his mistress's entreaties and coaxing could
bring him down, and in a few minutes he flew off
again and settled on the roof of the house.
There, in less than ten minutes, he was found by
his mistress and her son, with all his ill-gotten gains
spread out before him; everything was taken from
him, and when his mistress saw the articles whose
loss had caused her to suspect almost every one about
her of theft, she was so vexed that she actually shed
tears. "Mother," said her son, "it appears to me that
you have trusted the only creature about you that was
utterly unworthy of trust!"
The old lady was so much disheartened that she
could not say a word; but such is the audacity of a
jackdaw's nature, that not half an hour after this,
when the foot-boy brought in the tea things, Jack
walked in after him with a grave expression of
countenance and hopped on to the tea table as if nothing
had happened.
"Patience shall come back again," thought the old
lady; "I'll send for her and her mother, and I'll never
suspect her any more. It is plain enough now that
Jack must have thrown my property down there."
So the mother of Patience was sent for; but, alas,
what disappointments people are doomed to! The
mother expressed herself much obliged to Madam
Mortimer, but said, that her cousin, in London, hearing
that she was out of place, had sent for her to serve
in her shop. "And that I look on as a great rise in life
for her," said the mother, with an air of satisfaction:
"and I am going to send a box of clothes to her next
week," she continued, "and I shall tell her, ma'am,
that you have not forgotten her."
Madam Mortimer was very much vexed; but the
necklace was in her hand, and a sudden thought
struck her that she would give it to Patience. So
she said, with a sigh, "Well, Mrs. Grey, when you
send the box, you may put this in it."
Her mother at first looked pleased, but she
presently drew back, and said, "Thank you, kindly,
ma'am, but that necklace is by far too fine for my
Patience, and it might do her harm to have it, and I
never encourage her to wish for fine clothes."
"Good evening, then," said Madam Mortimer; and
as the woman went away, she walked softly to the
hole in the blind, and watched her talking and laughing
with the cook, rather, as it seemed, in a triumphant
way, as if she was exulting in the good fortune of her
child, and the evident discomfiture of her former
mistress. "It is entirely the fault of that thieving jackdaw,"
said the old lady, as she returned to her chair;
and as she spoke she saw the suspicious bird, sitting
listening to her with his head on one side. "It is
enough to make anybody suspicious to lose things as I
have lost them," she thought. "However, I shall soon
leave off the habit, as I find it a bad one. I wonder
whether that woman is gone yet; I'll just take a peep,
and see what they are about, gossiping, down there.
Ah, there she is! I wish I hadn't sent Patience away;
but, perhaps, if I had been kinder to her than I was,
she would have given me cause to suspect her before
long."
Madam Mortimer then settled herself in her chair
and began to doze. When she awoke, the necklace
was gone again; and perhaps it is a proof that she
really was somewhat improved, that though she said,
"I suspect, Jack, you know where that necklace is,"
she never took any steps in the matter, but left her
glittering stones in the bird's greedy keeping; and
after taking a little time for consideration, put a patch
upon the hole in the blind, so that she could never
look through it any more. Whether she was cured
of her suspicious turn of mind is more than I can tell,
but it is certain that she henceforth looked on
suspicions as undesirable, and seldom thought of little
Patience without a sigh.