The ladies waited, with an exchange of glances, for her reply, as if they

had talked the matter over beforehand, and had agreed to find out just how

Annie Kilburn felt about it.

"Oh, I guess he paid his board," said Mrs. Wilmington, jocosely rejecting

the implication that he had been the guest of the Boltons.

"I don't see what he expects to do with that little girl of his, without

any mother, that way," said Mrs. Gerrish. "He ought to get married."

"Perhaps he will, when he's waited a proper time," suggested Mrs. Putney

demurely.

"Well, his wife's been the same as dead ever since the child was born. I

don't know what you call a proper time, Ellen," argued Mrs. Gerrish.

"I presume a minister feels differently about such things," Mrs. Wilmington

remarked indolently.

"I don't see why a minister should feel any different from anybody else,"

said Mrs. Gerrish. "It's his duty to do it on his child's account. I don't

see why he don't have the remains brought to Hatboro', anyway."

They debated this point at some length, and they seemed to forget Annie.

She listened with more interest than her concern in the last resting-place

of the minister's dead wife really inspired. These old friends of hers

seemed to have lost the sensitiveness of their girlhood without having

gained tenderness in its place. They treated the affair with a nakedness

that shocked her. In the country and in small towns people come face

to face with life, especially women. It means marrying, child-bearing,

household cares and burdens, neighbourhood gossip, sickness, death, burial,

and whether the corpse appeared natural. But ever so much kindness goes

with their disillusion; they are blunted, but not embittered.

They ended by recalling Annie to mind, and Mrs. Putney said: "I suppose you

haven't been to the cemetery yet? I They've got it all fixed up since you

went away--drives laid out, and paths cut through, and everything. A good

many have put up family tombs, and they've taken away the old iron fences

round the lots, and put granite curbing. They mow the grass all the time.

It's a perfect garden." Mrs. Putney was a small woman, already beginning

to wrinkle. She had married a man whom Annie remembered as a mischievous

little boy, with a sharp tongue and a nervous temperament; her father had

always liked him when he came about the house, but Annie had lost sight of

him in the years that make small boys and girls large ones, and he was at

college when she went abroad. She had an impression of something unhappy in

her friend's marriage.




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