There had been a succession of rainy days in Davenport--dark, rainy

days, which added to the gloom hanging over that house where they

watched so intently by Ethie's side, trembling lest the life they prayed

for so earnestly might go out at any moment, so high the fever ran, and

so wild and restless the patient grew. The friends were all there

now--James, and John, and Andy, and Aunt Barbara, with Mrs. Markham,

senior, who, at first, felt a little worried, lest her son should be

eaten out of house and home, especially as Melinda manifested no

disposition to stint the table of any of their accustomed luxuries. As

housekeeper, Mrs. Dobson was a little inclined at first to stand in awe

of the governor's mother, and so offered no remonstrance when the tea

grounds from supper were carefully saved to be boiled up for breakfast,

as both Melinda and Aunt Barbara preferred tea to coffee, but when it

came to a mackerel and a half for seven people, and four of them men,

Mrs. Dobson demurred, and Melinda's opinion in requisition, the result

was that three fishes, instead of one and a half smoked upon the

breakfast table next morning, together with toast and mutton-chops.

After that Mrs. Markham gave up the contest with a groan, saying, "they

might go to destruction their own way, for all of her."

Where Ethelyn was concerned, however, she showed no stint. Nothing was

too good for her, no expense too great, and next to Richard and Andy,

she seemed more anxious, more interested than anyone for the sick girl

who lay so insensible of all that was passing around her, save at brief

intervals when she seemed for an instant to realize where she was, for

her eyes would flash about the room with a frightened, startled look,

and then seek Richard's face with a wistful, pleading expression, as if

asking not to cast her off, not to send her back into the dreary world

where she had wandered so long alone. The sight of so many seemed to

worry her, for she often talked of the crowd at the Clifton depot,

saying they took her breath away; and once, drawing Andy's face down to

her, she whispered to him, "Send them back to the Cure, all but his

royal highness"--pointing to Richard--"and Anna, the prophetess, she

can stay."

This was Aunt Barbara, to whom Ethelyn clung as a child to its mother,

missing her the moment she left the room, and growing quiet as soon as

she returned. It was the same with Richard. She seemed to know when he

quitted her side, and her eyes watched the door eagerly till he came

back to her again. At the doctor's suggestion, all were at last banished

from the sick-room except Aunt Barbara, and Richard, and Nick Bottom, as

she persisted in calling poor Andy, who was terribly perplexed to know

whether he was complimented or not, and who eventually took to studying

Shakspere to find out who Bottom was. Those were trying days to Richard,

who rarely left Ethie's bedside, except when it was absolutely

necessary. She was more quiet with him, and would sometimes sleep for

hours upon his arm, with one hand clasped in Aunt Barbara's, and the

other held by Andy. At other times, when the fever was on, no arm

availed to hold her as she tossed from side to side, talking of things

at which a stranger would have marveled, and which made Richard's heart

ache to its very core. At times she was a girl in Chicopee, and all the

past as connected with Frank Van Buren was lived over again; then she

would talk of Richard, and shudder as she recalled the dreary, dreadful

day when the honeysuckles were in blossom, and he came to make her

his wife.




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