Andy was very sorry, and to one who saw him that day, and, ignorant of

the circumstances, asked what was the matter that he looked so solemn,

he answered sadly, "I have just lost my little uncle that I wanted to

stand sponsor for. He only lived a day," and Andy's tears flowed afresh

as he thought of all he had lost with the child whose life numbered

scarcely twenty-four hours in all. But that was enough to warrant its

being now among the spirits of the Redeemed, and heaven seemed fairer,

more desirable to Andy than it had done before. His father was there

with Daisy and his baby uncle, as he persisted in calling Ethelyn's dead

boy until James told him better, and pointed out the ludicrousness of

the mistake. To Ethelyn Andy was tender as a mother, when at last they

let him see her, and his lips left marks upon her forehead and cheek.

She was perfectly conscious now, and when told they had sent for

Richard, manifested a good deal of interest, and asked when he would

probably be there. They were expecting him every train; but ere he came

the fever, which seemed for a time to have abated, returned with double

force and Ethelyn knew nothing of the kisses Richard pressed upon her

lips, or the tears Aunt Barbara shed over her poor darling.

There were anxious hearts and troubled faces in the farmhouse that day,

for Death was brooding there again, and they who watched his shadow

darkening around them spoke only in whispers, as they obeyed the

physician's orders. When Richard first came in Mrs. Markham wound her

arm around his neck, and said, "I am so sorry for you, my poor boy,"

while the three sons, one after another, had grasped their brother's

hand in token of sympathy, and that was all that had passed between them

of greeting. For the rest of the day, Richard had sat constantly by

Ethelyn, watching the changes of her face, and listening to her as she

raved in snatches, now of himself, and the time he saved her from the

maddened cow, and now of Frank and the huckleberries, which she said

were ripening on the Chicopee hills. When she talked of this Richard

held his breath, and once, as he leaned forward so as not to lose a

word, he caught Aunt Barbara regarding him intently, her wrinkled cheek

flushing as she met his eye and guessed what was in his mind. If Richard

had needed any confirmation of his suspicions, that look on transparent

Aunt Barbara's face would have confirmed them. There had been something

between Ethelyn and Frank Van Buren more than a cousinly liking, and

Richard's heart throbbed powerfully as he sat by the tossing, restless

Ethelyn, moaning on about the huckleberry hills, and the ledge of rocks

where the wild laurels grew. This pain he did not try to analyze; he

only said to himself that he felt no bitterness toward Ethelyn. She was

too near to death's dark tide for that. She was Ethie--his darling--the

mother of the child that had been buried from sight before he came.

Perhaps she did not love him, and never would; but he had loved her, oh!

so much, and if he lost her he would be wretched indeed. And so,

forgiving all the past of which he knew, and trying to forgive all he

did not know, he sat by her till the sun went down, and his mother came

for the twentieth time, urging him to eat. He had not tasted food that

day, and faint for the want of it he followed her to where the table had

been set, and supper prepared with a direct reference to his

particular taste.




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