The Spell
Mrs. Endorfieldâs advice was duly followed.
âI be proper sorry that your daughter isnât so well as she might be,â said a Mellstock man to Geoffrey one morning.
âBut is there anything in it?â said Geoffrey uneasily, as he shifted his hat to the right. âI canât understand the report. She didnât complain to me a bit when I saw her.â
âNo appetite at all, they say.â
Geoffrey crossed to Mellstock and called at the school that afternoon. Fancy welcomed him as usual, and asked him to stay and take tea with her.
âI beânât much for tea, this time oâ day,â he said, but stayed.
During the meal he watched her narrowly. And to his great consternation discovered the following unprecedented change in the healthy girlâthat she cut herself only a diaphanous slice of bread-and-butter, and, laying it on her plate, passed the meal-time in breaking it into pieces, but eating no more than about one-tenth of the slice. Geoffrey hoped she would say something about Dick, and finish up by weeping, as she had done after the decision against him a few days subsequent to the interview in the garden. But nothing was said, and in due time Geoffrey departed again for Yalbury Wood.
ââTis to be hoped poor Miss Fancy will be able to keep on her school,â said Geoffreyâs man Enoch to Geoffrey the following week, as they were shovelling up ant-hills in the wood.
Geoffrey stuck in the shovel, swept seven or eight ants from his sleeve, and killed another that was prowling round his ear, then looked perpendicularly into the earth as usual, waiting for Enoch to say more. âWell, why shouldnât she?â said the keeper at last.
âThe baker told me yesterday,â continued Enoch, shaking out another emmet that had run merrily up his thigh, âthat the bread heâve left at that there school-house this last month would starve any mouse in the three creations; that âtwould so! And afterwards I had a pint oâ small down at Morrsâs, and there I heard more.â
âWhat might that haâ been?â
âThat she used to have a pound oâ the best rolled butter a week, regular as clockwork, from Dairyman Vineyâs for herself, as well as just so much salted for the helping girl, and the âooman she calls in; but now the same quantity dâlast her three weeks, and then âtis thoughted she throws it away sour.â
âFinish doing the emmets, and carry the bag home-along.â The keeper resumed his gun, tucked it under his arm, and went on without whistling to the dogs, who however followed, with a bearing meant to imply that they did not expect any such attentions when their master was reflecting.
On Saturday morning a note came from Fancy. He was not to trouble about sending her the couple of rabbits, as was intended, because she feared she should not want them. Later in the day Geoffrey went to Casterbridge and called upon the butcher who served Fancy with fresh meat, which was put down to her fatherâs account.
âIâve called to pay up our little bill, Neighbour Haylock, and you can gie me the chielâs account at the same time.â
Mr. Haylock turned round three quarters of a circle in the midst of a heap of joints, altered the expression of his face from meat to money, went into a little office consisting only of a door and a window, looked very vigorously into a book which possessed length but no breadth; and then, seizing a piece of paper and scribbling thereupon, handed the bill.
Probably it was the first time in the history of commercial transactions that the quality of shortness in a butcherâs bill was a cause of tribulation to the debtor. âWhy, this isnât all sheâve had in a whole month!â said Geoffrey.
âEvery mossel,â said the butcherââ(now, Dan, take that leg and shoulder to Mrs. Whiteâs, and this eleven pound here to Mr. Martinâs)âyouâve been treating her to smaller joints lately, to my thinking, Mr. Day?â
âOnly two or three little scram rabbits this last week, as I am aliveâI wish I had!â
âWell, my wife said to meâ(Dan! not too much, not too much on that tray at a time; better go twice)âmy wife said to me as she posted up the books: she says, âMiss Day must have been affronted this summer during that hot muggy weather that spolit so much for us; for depend uponât,â she says, âsheâve been trying John Grimmett unknown to us: see her account else.â âTis little, of course, at the best of times, being only for one, but now âtis next kin to nothing.â
âIâll inquire,â said Geoffrey despondingly.
He returned by way of Mellstock, and called upon Fancy, in fulfilment of a promise. It being Saturday, the children were enjoying a holiday, and on entering the residence Fancy was nowhere to be seen. Nan, the charwoman, was sweeping the kitchen.
âWhereâs my daâter?â said the keeper.
âWell, you see she was tired with the weekâs teaching, and this morning she said, âNan, I shaânât get up till the evening.â You see, Mr. Day, if people donât eat, they canât work; and as sheâve gieâd up eating, she must gie up working.â
âHave ye carried up any dinner to her?â
âNo; she donât want any. There, we all know that such things donât come without good reasonânot that I wish to say anything about a broken heart, or anything of the kind.â
Geoffreyâs own heart felt inconveniently large just then. He went to the staircase and ascended to his daughterâs door.
âFancy!â
âCome in, father.â
To see a person in bed from any cause whatever, on a fine afternoon, is depressing enough; and here was his only child Fancy, not only in bed, but looking very pale. Geoffrey was visibly disturbed.
âFancy, I didnât expect to see thee here, chiel,â he said. âWhatâs the matter?â
âIâm not well, father.â
âHowâs that?â
âBecause I think of things.â
âWhat things can you have to think oâ so mortal much?â
âYou know, father.â
âYou think Iâve been cruel to thee in saying that that penniless Dick oâ thine shaânât marry thee, I suppose?â
No answer.
âWell, you know, Fancy, I do it for the best, and he isnât good enough for thee. You know that well enough.â Here he again looked at her as she lay. âWell, Fancy, I canât let my only chiel die; and if you canât live without en, you must haâ en, I suppose.â
âO, I donât want him like that; all against your will, and everything so disobedient!â sighed the invalid.
âNo, no, âtisnât against my will. My wish is, now I dâsee how âtis hurten thee to live without en, that he shall marry thee as soon as weâve considered a little. Thatâs my wish flat and plain, Fancy. There, never cry, my little maid! You ought to haâ cried afore; no need oâ crying now âtis all over. Well, howsoever, try to step over and see me and mother-law to-morrow, and haâ a bit of dinner wiâ us.â
âAndâDick too?â
âAy, Dick too, âfarâs I know.â
âAnd when do you think youâll have considered, father, and he may marry me?â she coaxed.
âWell, there, say next Midsummer; thatâs not a day too long to wait.â
On leaving the school Geoffrey went to the tranterâs. Old William opened the door.
âIs your grandson Dick in âithin, William?â
âNo, not just now, Mr. Day. Though heâve been at home a good deal lately.â
âO, howâs that?â
âWhat wiâ one thing, and what wiâ tâother, heâs all in a mope, as might be said. Donât seem the feller he used to. Ay, âa will sit studding and thinking as if âa were going to turn chapel-member, and then do nothing but traypse and wamble about. Used to be such a chatty boy, too, Dick did; and now âa donât speak at all. But wonât ye step inside? Reuben will be home soon, âa bâlieve.â
âNo, thank you, I canât stay now. Will ye just ask Dick if heâll do me the kindness to step over to Yalbury to-morrow with my daâter Fancy, if sheâs well enough? I donât like her to come by herself, now sheâs not so terrible topping in health.â
âSo Iâve heard. Ay, sure, Iâll tell him without fail.â