The arrival of the doctor dissipated her sadness in a measure, and

after greeting him with her usual expressions of welcome, she said,

half playfully, half spitefully: "By the way, doctor, who was that old lady, all bent up double in

shawls and things, whom you were taking out for an airing?"

Guy looked up quickly, wondering where Agnes could have seen the

doctor, who, conscious of a sudden pang, answered, naturally: "That old lady, bent double and bundled in shawls, was young Maddy

Clyde, to whom I thought a short ride might do good."

"Oh, yes; that patient about whom Jessie has gone mad. I am glad to

have seen her."

There was unmistakable irony in her voice now, and turning from her to

Guy, the doctor continued: "The old man was telling me to-day of your kindness in saving his

house from being sold. It was like you, Guy; and I wish I, too, had

the means to be generous, for they are so very poor."

"I'll tell you," said Jessie, who had stolen to the doctor's side, and

lain her fat, bare arm upon his shoulder, as if he had been Guy. "You

might give Maddy the doctor's bill. I remember how mamma cried, and

said she never could pay papa's bill when it was sent in."

"Jessie!" said Agnes and Guy, simultaneously, while the doctor

laughingly pulled one of her long, bright curls.

"Yes, I could do that. I'd thought of it, but they might not accept

it, as they are proud as well as poor."

"Mr. Markham has no one to care for but his wife and this Madeline,

has he?" Agnes asked, and the doctor replied: "I did not suppose so until a few days since, when I learned from a

Mr. Green that Mrs. Markham's youngest and now only brother has been

an inmate of a lunatic asylum for years; and that though they cannot

pay his entire expenses, of course they do all they can toward

providing him with comforts."

"What is a lunatic asylum, mother? What does he mean?" Jessie asked,

but it was the doctor, not Agnes, who explained to the child what a

lunatic asylum was.

"Is insanity hereditary in this family?" Guy asked.

Agnes' cheek was very white, though her face was fumed away as the

doctor answered: "I do not know; I did not ask the cause. I only heard

the fact that such a man as Joseph Mortimer exists."




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