"It is sheer ugliness," she said, "which keeps her cooped up there to be

waited on. She is no more sick than the dog; but law, I couldn't make

Richard b'lieve it."

"Mother, you surely did not go to Richard with complaints of his wife,"

and James looked reproachfully across the table at his mother, who

replied: "I told him what I thought, for I wa'n't going to have him

miserable all the time thinking how sick she was, but I might as well

have talked to the wind, for any good it did. He even seemed

putcherky, too."

"I should be more than putcherky if you were to talk to me against my

wife if I had one," James retorted, thinking of Melinda and the way she

sang that solo in the choir the day before.

It was a little strange that James and John and Andy all took Ethelyn's

part against their mother, and even against Richard, who they thought

might have taken her with him.

"It would not have hurt her any more than fretting herself to death at

home. No, nor half so much; and she must feel like a cat in a strange

garret there alone with them."

It was John who said this--quiet John, who talked so little, and annoyed

Ethelyn so much by coming to the table in his blue frock, with his pants

tucked in his boots and his curly hair standing every way. Though very

much afraid of his grand sister-in-law, he admired her beyond

everything, and kept the slippers she brought him safely put away with a

lock of Daisy's hair and a letter written him by the young girl whose

grave was close beside Daisy's in the Olney cemetery. John had had his

romance and buried it with his heroine, since which time he had said but

little to womankind, though never was there a truer heart than that

which beat beneath the homespun frock Ethelyn so despised. Richard had

bidden him to be kind to Ethie, and John had said he would; and after

that promise was given had the farmhouse been on fire the sturdy fellow

would have periled life and limb to save her for Dick. To James, too,

Richard had spoken a word for Ethie, and to Andy also; so that there

were left to her four champions in his absence--for Eunice had had her

charge, with promises of a new dress if faithful to her trust; and thus

there was no one against poor Ethelyn saving the mother-in-law, who made

that first dinner after Richard's absence so uncomfortable that John

left the table without touching the boiled Indian pudding, of which he

was so fond, while James rather curtly asked what there was to be gained

by spitting out so about Ethelyn, and Andy listened in silence, thinking

how, by and by, when all the chores were done, he would take a basket of

kindlings up for Ethie's fire, and if she asked him to sit down, he

would do so and try and come to the root of the matter, and see if he

could not do something to make things a little better.




readonlinefreebook.com Copyright 2016 - 2024