"I was pretty hard on her, I s'pose, and it would not be strange if she

laid it up against me," she said to Melinda; but Ethie had nothing

against her now.

The deep waters through which she had passed had obliterated all traces

of bitterness toward anyone, and when her mother-in-law came in she

feebly extended her hand and whispered: "I'm too tired, mother, to talk

much, but kiss me once for the sake of what we are going to be to

each other."

Mrs. Markham was not naturally a bad or a hard woman, either. She was

only unfortunate that her ideas had run in one rut so long without any

jolt to throw them out. Circumstances had greatly softened her, and

Ethie's words touched her deeply.

"I was mighty mean to you sometimes, Ethelyn, and I've been sorry for

it," she said, as she stooped to kiss her daughter-in-law, and then

hurried from the room, "Only to think, she called me mother," she said

to Melinda, to whom she reported the particulars of her interview with

Ethelyn--"me, who had been meaner than dirt to her--called me mother,

when I used to mistrust her she didn't think any more of me than if I'd

been an old squaw. I shan't forget it right away."

Perhaps the sweetest, most joyful tears Ethelyn shed that day were those

which came to her eyes when they brought her Ethelyn, her namesake, the

little three-year-old, who pushed her brown curls back from her baby

face with such a womanly air, and said: "I'se glad to see Aunt Ethie. I prays for her ever' night. Uncle Andy

told me so. I loves you, Aunt Ethie."

She was a beautiful little creature, and her innocent prattle and

engaging manners did much toward bringing the color back to Ethie's

cheeks and the brightness to her eyes. Those days of convalescence were

blissful ones, for now there was no shadow of a cloud resting on the

domestic horizon. Between husband and wife there was perfect love, and

in his newly born happiness, Richard forgot the ailments which had sent

him an invalid to Clifton, while Ethie, surrounded by every luxury which

love could devise or money procure, and made each hour to feel how dear

she was to those from whom she had been so long estranged, grew fresh,

and young, and pretty again; so that when, early in December, Mrs. Dr.

Van Buren came to Davenport to see her niece, she found her more

beautiful far than she had been in her early girlhood, when the boyish

Frank had paid his court to her. Poor little Nettie was dead. Her life

had literally been worried out of her; and during those September days,

when Ethelyn was watched and tended so carefully, she had turned herself

wearily upon her pillow, and just as the clock was striking the hour of

midnight, asked of the attendant: "Has Frank come yet?"




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