He did not cough, but he seemed to be a restless spirit, for Ethie heard

him pacing up and down his room long after the gas was turned off and

her own candle was extinguished. Once, too, she heard a long-drawn sigh,

or groan, which made her start suddenly, for something in the tone

carried her to Olney and the house on the prairie. It was late that

night ere she slept, and when next morning she awoke, the nervous

headache, which had threatened her the previous night, was upon her in

full force, and kept her for nearly the entire day confined to her bed.

Mrs. Pry was spending the day in Phelps, and with this source of

information cut off, Ethelyn heard nothing of No. 102, further than the

chambermaid's casual remark that "the gentleman was quite an invalid,

and for the present was to take his meals and baths in his room to avoid

so much going up and down stairs."

Who he was Ethelyn did not know or care, though twice she awoke from a

feverish sleep with the impression that she had heard Richard speaking

to her; but it was only Jim, the bath man, talking in the next room, and

she laid her throbbing head again upon her pillow, while her new

neighbor dreamed in turn of her and woke with the strange fancy that she

was near him. Ethie's head was better that night; so much better that

she dressed herself and went down to the parlor in time to hear the

calling of the letters as the Western mail was distributed. Usually she

felt but little interest in the affair further than watching the eager,

anxious faces bending near the boy, and the looks of joy or

disappointment which followed failure and success. To-night, however, it

was different. She was not expecting a letter herself. Nobody wrote to

her but Aunt Barbara, whose letters came in the morning, but she was

conscious of a strange feeling of expectancy, and taking a step toward

the table around which the excited group were congregated, she stood

leaning against the column while name after name was called. First the

letters, a score or two, and then the papers, matters of less account,

but still snatched eagerly by those who could get nothing better. There

was a paper for Mrs. More-house, and Mrs. Stone, and Mrs. Wilson, and

Mrs. Turner, while Mr. Danforth had half a dozen or less, and then Perry

paused a moment over a new name--one which had never before been called

in the parlor at Clifton: "Richard Markham, Esq."

The name rang out loud and clear, and Ethie grasped the pillar tightly

to keep herself from falling. She did not hear Mr. Danforth explaining

that it was "Governor Markham from Iowa, who came the night before." She

did not know, either, how she left the parlor, for the next thing of

which she was perfectly conscious was the fact that she was hurrying up

the stairs and through the unfinished halls toward her own room, casting

frightened glances around, and almost shrieking with excitement when

through the open door of No. 102 she heard Dr. Hayes speaking to

someone, and in the voice which answered recognized her husband.




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