Backward now with our reader we turn, and take up the broken thread of

our story at the point where we left Adah Hastings.

It was a bitter morning in which to face the fierce north wind, and plow

one's way to the Derby cornfield, where, in a small, dilapidated

building, Aunt Eunice Reynolds, widowed sister of John Stanley, had

lived for many years, first as a pensioner upon her brother's bounty,

and next as Hugh's incumbent. At the time of her brother's death Aunt

Eunice had intended removing to Spring Bank, but when Hugh's mother

wrote, asking for a home, she at once abandoned the plan, and for two

seasons more lived alone, watching from her lonely door the tasseled

corn ripening in the August sun. Of all places in the world Hugh liked

the cottage best, particularly in summer. Few would object to it then

with its garden of gayly colored flowers, its barricades of tasseled

corn and the bubbling music of the brook, gushing from the willow spring

a few rods from the door. But in the winter people from the highway, as

they caught from across the field the gleam of Aunt Eunice's light,

pitied the lonely woman sitting there so solitary beside her wintry

fire. But Aunt Eunice asked no pity. If Hugh came once a week to spend

the night, and once a day to see her, it was all that she desired, for

Hugh was her darling, her idol, the object which kept her old heart warm

and young with human love. For him she would endure any want or

encounter any difficulty, and so it is not strange that in his dilemma

regarding Adah Hastings, he intuitively turned to her, as the one of all

others who would lend a helping hand. He had not been to see her in two

whole days, and when the gray December morning broke, and he looked out

upon the deep, untrodden snow, and then glanced across the fields to

where a wreath of smoke, even at that early hour, was rising slowly from

her chimney, he frowned impatiently, as he thought how bad the path

must be between Spring Bank and the cornfield, whither he intended

going, as he would be the first to tell what had occurred. 'Lina's

fierce opposition to and his mother's apparent shrinking from Adah had

convinced him how hopeless was the idea that she could stay at Spring

Bank with any degree of comfort to herself or quiet to him. Aunt

Eunice's house was the only refuge for Adah, and there she would be

comparatively safe from censorious remarks.

"Inasmuch as ye did it to the least of these ye did it unto Me," kept

ringing in Hugh's ears, as he hastily dressed himself, striking his

benumbed fingers together, and trying hard to keep his teeth from

chattering, for Hugh was beginning his work of economy, and when at

daylight Claib came as usual to build his master's fire, he had sent him

back, saying he did not need one, and bidding him go, instead, to Mrs.

Hastings' chamber.




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