Arabella 
by Anna T. Sadlier 
1907 
 
CHAPTER I. 
A FIRST JOURNEY. 
Arabella stood thoughtfully there on that ridge of land, where the 
brown earth was studded with daisies and mulleins, the common 
children of the soil. The sky was a clear gold at the horizon, and 
Arabella, gazing thereon, pondered on something she had just heard. 
She had suddenly become an heiress. She looked down on her plain, 
brown frock, at her coarse shoes, and at her hands roughened by work 
about the house. She had been the orphan, the charity-child, and now-- 
Her gaze slowly turned from the golden skies to the house, wherein she 
had spent her childish years. It was large, barn-like, of a dull, cheerless 
brown, altogether bare and uninviting. The glint of the sun shone upon 
the attic window of the room wherein she had been lodged. It was the 
one spot which she regarded with affection. It represented home. Her 
eyes rested there now, wistfully, with something of longing and of 
affection. As she stood thus, she heard a voice calling and went slowly 
towards the house. There was Mrs. Christie waiting for her with a new 
expression upon her rugged face and a look in the dull eyes as if a light 
had been suddenly kindled there. 
"Arabella," she called, "come in and eat your dinner. We'll have to go 
to the city this afternoon." 
Arabella glanced at her quickly. Her breath came fast. She had never
been to the city; she had always longed painfully to go, since to her it 
was a wonderland. Yet she felt a sudden catch in her throat. She 
thought, perhaps, she was going forever, and she remembered vividly, 
painfully, her familiar little room, bare and miserable though it was, her 
one friend, a woolly, brown-haired dog, and the woods and fields, 
whither she went in her few leisure hours. She asked, therefore, with 
something of a gasp in her voice "Not-- not for always?" 
The woman looked at her curiously as she answered curtly "No, not for 
always." 
Arabella without further remark followed her passively into the 
dining-room, where the table was laid as usual, with thick, crockery 
cups, chipped and otherwise unsightly, and where Silas Christie already 
sat, heavy-featured and taciturn, taking no manner of notice of the child. 
Even the recent change in her fortunes had excited no apparent interest 
in him. In the long years of his residence there he had grown in some 
sort to resemble those clods of earth upon which he daily worked 
during the long, summer months. Of late years he scarcely ever read the 
daily papers. He merely existed. The amount which he made yearly 
from his farming sufficed to give him a rude sort of comfort. He asked 
no more. 
With Mrs. Christie it was otherwise. True, she, too, had been dulled by 
the dreary monotone of her cheerless existence. But within her 
smouldered, as sparks amongst ashes, some fire of imagination, some 
gleam of her old, girlish enthusiasm. 
Arabella had suddenly become to her an object of keen interest, as if a 
gold mine with more or less limited possibilities had been suddenly 
discovered upon their premises. She began to dream dreams, realizing 
as Arabella had not yet done, the power of wealth. Long dead visions 
woke within her of a black silk dress, a velvet hat with feathers, and 
other finery wherewith to dazzle the neighbors. She had almost given 
up church, partly for reasons connected with her wardrobe, though, in 
fact, the neighbors mostly frequented every other place of worship than 
the Catholic. Still, the churchward road lay in the direction of many of 
the homesteads and she saw herself mentally proceeding there,
resplendent. This was her one weakness. Otherwise she was a woman 
of unusual and unbending strength of character, which had lent her a 
certain hardness. 
Arabella devoured her share of the boiled beef and potatoes, and the 
coarse bread, washed down with water. Then she helped as usual with 
the dishes, after which she was bidden to go and make ready for the 
journey. Her little room had an oddly unfamiliar aspect that day. She 
looked around at the rough, unpainted washstand and chairs, the deal 
table, and that rudely-contrived recess in the corner for her clothes, 
hidden by a faded curtain. 
She proceeded presently to that receptacle, after the other preliminaries 
of her toilet, and took down her best jacket and skirt. They were of a 
nondescript color, and scarcely less shabby than the brown frock she 
was wearing. She surveyed them with complacency, however, her 
untrained eye failing to note their deficiencies. As she dressed, she 
regarded affectionately her few treasures-- two or three colored prints 
cut out of a Christmas newspaper and stuck upon the wall; a cardboard 
box    
    
		
	
	
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