Governor Markham would do anything in his power for the young lady, and

he asked some questions concerning her. Had he annoyed her much? Was she

very ill? And what was her name?

"Bigelow," he repeated after Dr. Hayes, thinking of Aunt Barbara in

Chicopee, and thinking of Ethelyn, too, but never dreaming how near she

was to him.

He had come to Clifton at the earnest solicitation of some of his

friends, who had for themselves tested the healing properties of the

water, but he had little faith that anything could cure so long as the

pain was so heavy at his heart. It had not lessened one jot with the

lapse of years. On the contrary, it seemed harder and harder to bear, as

the months went by and brought no news of Ethie. Oh, how he wanted her

back again, even if she came as willful and imperious as she used to be

at times, when the high spirit was roused to its utmost, and even if she

had no love for him, as she had once averred. He could make her love him

now, he said: he knew just where he had erred; and many a time in dreams

he had strained the wayward Ethie to his bosom in the fond caress which

from its very force should impart to her some faint sensation of joy. He

had stroked her beautiful brown hair, and caressed her smooth round

cheek, and pressed her little hands, and made her listen to him till the

dark eyes flashed into his own with something of the tenderness he felt

for her. Then, with a start, he had awakened to find it all a dream, and

only darkness around him. Ethie was not there. The arms which had held

her so lovingly were empty. The pillow where her dear head had lain was

untouched, and he was alone as of old. Even that handsome house he had

built for her had ceased to interest him, for Ethie did not come back to

enjoy it. She would never come now, he said, and he built many fancies

as to what her end had been, and where her grave could be. Here at

Clifton he had thought of her continually, but not that she was alive.

Andy's faith in her return was as strong as ever, but Richard's had all

died out. Ethie was dead, and when asked by Dr. Hayes if he had a wife,

he answered sadly: "I had one, but I lost her."

He had no thought of deception, or how soon the story would circulate

through the house that he was a widower, and so he, as ex-governor of

Iowa, and a man just in his prime, became an object of speculative

interest to every marriageable woman there. He had no thought, no care

for the ladies, though for the Miss Bigelow, whom his boots annoyed, he

did feel a passing interest, and Ethie, whose ears seemed doubly sharp,

heard him in his closet adjusting the thin-soled slippers, which made no

sound upon the carpet. She heard him, too, as he moved his water

pitcher, and knew he was doing it so quietly for her. The idea of being

cared for by him, even if he did not know who she was, was very soothing

and pleasant, and she fell into a quiet sleep, which lasted several

hours, while Richard, on the other side of the wall, scarcely moved, so

fearful was he of worrying the young lady.




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