"How so?" asked Kate, tersely.

"I guess I betrayed your trust in me," said Adam, heavily. "Of

course I did all my work and attended to things; but in the

evening after work was over, the very first evening on the way

home we stopped to talk to Henry at the gate, and he got in and

came on down. We could see Milly at their gate, and I wanted her,

I wanted her so much, Mother; and it was going to be lonesome, so

all of us went on there, and she came up here and we sat on the

porch, and then I took her home and that left Henry and Polly

together. The next night Henry took us to town for a treat, and

we were all together, and the next night Milly asked us all there,

and so it went. It was all as open and innocent as it could be;

only Henry and Polly were in awful earnest and she was bound she

wouldn't be sent to town to school -- "

"Why didn't she tell me so? She never objected a word, to me,"

said Kate.

"Well, Mother, you are so big, and Polly was so little, and she

was used to minding -- "

"Yes, this looks like it," said Kate. "Well, go on!"

"That's all," said Adam. "It was only that instead of staying at

home and attending to our own affairs we were somewhere every

night, or Milly and Henry were here. That is where I was to

blame. I'm afraid you'll never forgive me, Mother; but I didn't

take good care of Sister. I left her to Henry Peters, while I

tried to see how nice I could be to Milly. I didn't know what

Polly and Henry were planning; honest, I didn't, Mother. I would

have told Uncle Robert and sent for you if I had. I thought when

I went there it was to be our little crowd like it was at York's.

I was furious when I found they were married. I told Mr. and Mrs.

Peters what they were, right before the company, and then I came

straight home and all the family, and York's, and most of the

others, came straight away. Only a few stayed to the supper. I

was so angry with Polly I just pushed her away, and didn't even

say good-night to her. The little silly fool! Mother, if she had

told you, you would have let her stay at home this winter and got

her clothing, and let her be married here, when she was old

enough, wouldn't you?"

"Certainly!" said Kate. "All the world knows that. Bates all

marry; and they all marry young. Don't blame yourself, Adam. If

Polly had it in her system to do this, and she did, or she

wouldn't have done it, the thing would have happened when I was

here, and right under my nose. It was a scheme all planned and

ready before I left. I know that now. Let it go! There's

nothing we can do, until things begin to go WRONG, as they always

do in this kind of wedding; then we shall get our call. In the

meantime, you mustn't push your sister away. She may need you

sooner than you'd think; and will you just please have enough

confidence in my common sense and love for you, to come to me,

FIRST, when you feel that there's a girl who is indispensable to

your future, Adam?"




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