



Produced by David Edwards, Monicas wicked stepmother and
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A LIST OF THE ELSIE BOOKS
 AND OTHER POPULAR BOOKS

           BY

      MARTHA FINLEY


 ELSIE DINSMORE.
 ELSIE'S HOLIDAYS AT ROSELANDS.
 ELSIE'S GIRLHOOD.
 ELSIE'S WOMANHOOD.
 ELSIE'S MOTHERHOOD.
 ELSIE'S CHILDREN.

 ELSIE'S WIDOWHOOD.
 GRANDMOTHER ELSIE.
 ELSIE'S NEW RELATIONS.
 ELSIE AT NANTUCKET.
 THE TWO ELSIES.
 ELSIE'S KITH AND KIN.

 ELSIE'S FRIENDS AT WOODBURN.
 CHRISTMAS WITH GRANDMA ELSIE.
 ELSIE AND THE RAYMONDS.
 ELSIE YACHTING WITH THE RAYMONDS.
 ELSIE'S VACATION.
 ELSIE AT VIAMEDE.

 ELSIE AT ION.
 ELSIE AT THE WORLD'S FAIR.
 ELSIE'S JOURNEY ON INLAND WATERS.
 ELSIE AT HOME.
 ELSIE ON THE HUDSON.
 ELSIE IN THE SOUTH.
 ELSIE'S YOUNG FOLKS.

 MILDRED KEITH.
 MILDRED AT ROSELANDS.
 MILDRED'S MARRIED LIFE.
 MILDRED AND ELSIE.
 MILDRED AT HOME.
 MILDRED'S BOYS AND GIRLS.
 MILDRED'S NEW DAUGHTER.

 CASELLA.
 SIGNING THE CONTRACT AND WHAT IT COST.
 THE TRAGEDY OF WILD RIVER VALLEY.
 OUR FRED.
 AN OLD-FASHIONED BOY.
 WANTED, A PEDIGREE.
 THE THORN IN THE NEST.


 [Illustration]




 MILDRED AND ELSIE.


         BY

   MARTHA FINLEY,
  (Martha Farquharson,)

 AUTHOR OF THE "ELSIE BOOKS," "MILDRED KEITH,"
 "MILDRED AT ROSELANDS," "SIGNING THE
 CONTRACT," ETC., ETC.


    "_Through suffering and sorrow thou hast pass'd,
    To show us what a woman true may be._"--
                                          J. R. Lowell.

    "_A lovely being scarcely form'd or moulded,
    A rose with all its sweetest leaves yet folded._"--
                                                 Byron.


     NEW YORK:
DODD, MEAD & COMPANY,
    PUBLISHERS.


Copyright, 1881, by Dodd, Mead & Company.




MILDRED AND ELSIE.




CHAPTER I.

    "'Tis beautiful when first the dewy light
      Breaks on the earth! while yet the scented air
    Is breathing the cool freshness of the night,
      And the bright clouds a tint of crimson bear."
                             Elizabeth M. Chandler.

    "A long, long kiss, a kiss of youth and love."
                                             Byron.


Morning was breaking over the landscape; a cool, refreshing breeze,
laden with woodland sweets and wild birds' songs, softly kissed
Mildred's cheek and awoke her.

She started up with a low exclamation of delight, sprang to the open
window, and kneeling there with her elbow on the sill and her cheek
in her hand, feasted her eyes upon the beauty of the scene--a grand
panorama of wooded hills, falling waters, wild glens and forests and
craggy mountains, above whose lofty summits the east was glowing with
crimson and gold.

Another moment and the sun burst through the golden gate and began
anew his daily round, "rejoicing as a strong man to run a race."

The brightness of his face was too dazzling for Mildred's eyes, and her
gaze fell lower down, where wreaths of gray mist hung over the valleys
or crept slowly up the mountain sides. Presently it rested on one of
the nearer hill-tops, and a sudden, vivid blush suffused her cheek,
while a sweet and tender smile shone in her eyes and hovered about her
lips.

But a sigh quickly followed, smile and blush faded away, and she
dropped her face into her hands with a low-breathed exclamation, "Oh
what shall I do? What ought I to do?"

There was a question of grave importance awaiting her decision--a
decision which would in all probability affect the happiness of her
whole future life on earth; yea, who should say its influence would not
reach even into eternity?

She longed to take counsel of her mother, but that mother was far
distant, and the question one the girl shrank from putting upon paper
and trusting to the mails.

But a dearer, wiser, even more loving friend was close at hand, and to
Him and His Word she turned for guidance.

Subdued sounds of life came to Mildred's ear ere she closed the
Book; servants were astir setting the house to rights and preparing
breakfast for the numerous guests, most of whom still lingered in the
land of dreams.

Mildred made a rapid but neat toilet, then stole softly from the room,
promising herself a stroll through the grounds while yet the quiet and
dewy freshness of early morning lingered there.

In one of the wide cool porches of the hotel a young man paced to and
fro with hasty, agitated step, glancing up again and again with longing
impatience at the windows of a certain room on the second floor.
Pausing in his walk, he drew out his watch.

"Only a brief half-hour!" he sighed. "Am I not to see her at all?"

But at that instant there stepped from the open doorway a slight,
graceful, girlish figure in a dainty white muslin, a bunch of
wildflowers in her belt, a broad-brimmed straw hat in her hand; and
with a low exclamation, "Ah, at last!" he hurried to meet her.

She started slightly at sight of him and sent a hurried glance this way
and that, as if meditating flight.

"O Mildred, don't run away! why should you avoid me?" he said
entreatingly, holding out his hand.

There was a scarcely perceptible hesitation in her manner as she gave
him hers.

"Good-morning," she said softly. "Is anything wrong? I think you look
troubled."

"Yes, I am called away suddenly; must leave within the hour; a dear,
only sister lies at the point of death."

His tones grew husky and her eyes filled with tears.

"Oh what sad news! I am so sorry for you!" she murmured.

He drew her hand within his arm and led her down a shaded alley.

"It is in your power to give me unspeakable comfort," he said, bending
over her. "You wear my flowers; O dearest! is not that a whisper of
hope to me? You have decided in my favor? is it not so?"

"O Charlie, don't ask me! I--I have not been able yet to see that--that
I may--that I ought--"

"To follow the dictates of your heart? Is that what you would say?"
he asked, as she broke off abruptly, leaving the sentence unfinished.
"O Mildred! you cannot have the heart to refuse me this one crumb of
comfort? We must part in a few moments--when to meet again neither of
us knows. You have refused to pledge yourself to me, and I will not
ask it now--though I solemnly promise you--"

"No, don't," she interrupted, struggling with her tears; "I would have
you free--free as air; since I--I can promise nothing."

"I will never marry any one but you," he said with vehemence. "If I
cannot win you, I will live single all my days. But you do care for me?
You do love me? O Mildred! one word, only a word or a look, that I may
not go away on my sorrowful errand in utter despair. Only assure me
that I have won your heart, and I shall never abandon hope that this
barrier may some day be removed."

She could not refuse him: she had not power to hide either her love or
her grief that they must part; both had their way for a short space.

He had led her into an arbor whose sheltering vines would screen
them from prying eyes; and there clasped in each other's arms, heart
beating against heart, his bearded lip softly touching again and again
her cheek, her brow, her quivering lips, they passed the few precious
moments that yet remained to them.

He was gone; and as the last echo of his departing footsteps died away
upon her ear there came over Mildred such a sense of utter desolation
as she had never known before. Sinking down upon a rustic bench she hid
her face in her hands, and for a few moments allowed her full heart to
ease itself in a burst of weeping.

But this would not do; the breakfast hour drew near, and though it had
been of late her aunt's custom to take that meal in bed, her uncle
would expect to see her in her usual place at the table, and his keen
eye would be quick to detect the traces of tears. The cousins, too,
would notice them and not scruple to inquire the cause.

She hastily dried her eyes, rose, and leaving the arbor, strolled about
the grounds, resolutely striving to recover her wonted cheerfulness.

She had made the circuit once, and again neared the arbor, when she
heard her name called in sweet, childish treble, "Cousin Milly, Cousin
Milly!" and as she turned in the direction of the sound, little Elsie,
closely followed by her faithful mammy, came bounding toward her with a
letter in her hand.

"Grandpa said I might bring it to you. Ain't you so glad, cousin?" she
asked; and the missive was put into Mildred's hand, the sweet baby face
held up for a kiss.

Mildred bestowed it very heartily, taking the little one in her arms
and repeating the caress again and again, "Very glad, darling," she
said, "and very much obliged to my pet for bringing it. Is it time to
go in to breakfast, Aunt Chloe?"

"Massa Dinsmore say you will hab time to read de lettah first, Miss
Milly," replied the nurse, dropping a courtesy.

"Then I will do so," Mildred said, re-entering the arbor.

"May mammy and Elsie stay wis you?" asked the baby girl coaxingly.

"Yes indeed, darling," Mildred said, making room for the child to sit
by her side.

"Dere now, honey, keep quiet and don't 'sturb yo' cousin while she
reads de lettah," cautioned Aunt Chloe, lifting her nursling and
settling her comfortably on the bench.

Mildred had broken the seal, and was already too much absorbed in the
news from home to hear or heed what her companions might be saying.

Elsie watched her, as she read, with loving, wistful eyes. "Did your
mamma write it, cousin?" she asked, as Mildred paused to turn the page.

"Yes, dear; and she sends love and kisses to you, and wishes I could
take you home with me when I go. Oh, if I only could!" And Mildred
bent down to press another kiss on the sweet baby lips.

"Maybe my papa will let me go, if grandpa will write and ask him,"
returned the child, with an eager, joyous look up into Mildred's face.
"But I couldn't go wisout mammy."

"Oh no! if you should go, mammy would go too; you can't be separated
from her, and we would all be glad to have her there," Mildred said,
softly caressing the shining curls of the little one, glancing kindly
up into the dusky face of the nurse, then turning to her letter again.

It was with mingled feelings that she perused it, for though all was
well with the dear ones beneath her father's roof, and the thought of
soon again looking upon their loved faces made most welcome the summons
home which it brought, there was sorrow and pain in the prospect of
soon bidding a long farewell to the darling now seated by her side--the
little motherless one over whom her heart yearned so tenderly because
of the lack of parental love and care that made the young life seem so
sad and forlorn, spite of all the beauty and wealth with which she--the
little fair one--was so abundantly dowered.

As she read the last line, then slowly refolded the letter, tears
gathered in her eyes. Elsie saw them, and stealing an arm round her
neck, said in her sweet baby tones, "Don't cry, Cousin Milly. What
makes you sorry? I loves you ever so much."

"And I you, you precious, lovely darling!" cried Mildred, clasping the
little form close and kissing the pure brow again and again. "That is
just what almost breaks my heart at the thought of--oh why, why don't
you belong to us!" she broke off with a half-stifled sob.

A firm, quick step came up the gravel walk, and Mr. Dinsmore stood
looking down upon them.

"Why, what is wrong? not bad news from home, I hope, Milly?"

"No, uncle; they are all well, and everything going smoothly so far
as I can learn from my letter," she said, brushing away her tears and
forcing a smile.

"What then?" he asked, "Elsie has not been troubling you, I hope?"

"Oh no, no, she never does that!"

"Breakfast has been announced; shall we go and partake of it?"

"If you please, sir. I am quite ready," Mildred answered, as she rose
and took his offered arm.

"Bring the child," he said to Chloe; then walking on. "What is wrong,
Milly? there must have been a cause for the tears you have certainly
been shedding."

"I am summoned home, uncle, and glad as I shall be to see it and all
the dear ones there, again, I can't help feeling sorry to leave you
all."

"I hope not. Dear me, I wish we could keep you always!" he exclaimed.
"But when and how are you to go?"

"Mother wrote that a gentleman friend--our minister, Mr. Lord--will be
in Philadelphia in the course of three or four weeks, spend a few days
there, then go back to Pleasant Plains, and that he has kindly offered
to take charge of me. Mother and father think I should embrace the
opportunity by all means, as it may be a long time before another as
good will offer."

"And doubtless they are right, though I wish it had not come so soon."

"So soon, uncle?" Mildred returned brightly. "Do you forget that I have
been with you for nearly a year?"

"A year is a very short time at my age," he answered with a smile.

But they were at the door of the breakfast-room, and the topic was
dropped for the present, as by mutual consent.




CHAPTER II.

    "O my good lord, the world is but a word;
    Were it all yours, to give it in a breath,
    How quickly were it gone."
                                 Shakespeare.


The end of the week found the Dinsmores and Mildred in Philadelphia,
very busy with sight-seeing and shopping. Each one of the party was to
be furnished with a suitable outfit for fall and the coming winter, and
Mildred had a long list of commissions from her mother.

Mrs. Dinsmore showed herself keenly interested in the purchase of
her own and her children's finery, languidly so in Mildred's; these
procured, she immediately declared herself completely worn out and
unfit for further exertion.

No one regretted it; Mildred had learned to rely to a great extent upon
her own taste and judgment, and with Mr. Dinsmore's efficient help
succeeded quite to her satisfaction in filling out the remainder of her
list.

To him fell the task of buying for his little granddaughter, and
Mildred was not a little gratified by being taken into his counsels
and invited to assist his choice of materials and the fashion in which
they should be made up.

Spite of some drawbacks to her pleasure, principally caused by Mrs.
Dinsmore's infirmities of temper, Mildred thoroughly enjoyed her stay
in the City of Brotherly Love.

It was drawing to a close, when, on coming down from her room one
morning and entering the private parlor of their party, she was met by
a joyous greeting from little Elsie.

"O Cousin Milly, I'm so glad! Grandpa has got a letter from my papa,
and my papa says Elsie must go and buy some pretty presents for all the
folks at your home. Isn't that ever so nice?"

"Thank you, darling, you and your papa," Mildred said, stooping to
caress the child. "He is very kind, and I know your generous little
heart can find no greater pleasure than in giving to others."

"She's a Dinsmore in that," her grandfather said with a proud smile;
"they have always esteemed it the greatest luxury wealth can purchase.
And Elsie is fortunately abundantly able to gratify herself in that
way, and her father has given her carte blanche (subject to my
approval, of course); so, my dear, you are not to object to anything
we may take it into our heads to do."

He patted Elsie's curly pate as he spoke, and looked smilingly into
Mildred's eyes.

"You are very kind now and always, uncle," the young girl responded,
returning his smile and blushing slightly; "and I don't know that I
have a right to object to anything that is not done for myself."

The entrance of Mrs. Dinsmore and her children simultaneously with the
bringing in of breakfast, put a stop to the conversation.

"Well, Mildred, if it suits your convenience, we will set out at once
upon this final shopping expedition," her uncle said as they left the
table; and her consent being given, he directed Chloe to make Elsie
ready to accompany them.

The child was in her element as they went from one store to another,
and she chose, with the assistance of her grandfather and cousin, her
gifts to Mildred's parents, brothers, and sisters.

At length they entered the largest jewelry establishment in the city,
and Mr. Dinsmore asked to be shown some of their best gold watches for
ladies.

"I am commissioned to select one for a lady friend," he said to
Mildred in a grave, half-preoccupied tone as the jeweller promptly
complied with his request, "and I want your assistance in making a
choice."

"But I am no judge of a watch, uncle," she returned; "Elsie here could
select about as well as I."

"Elsie shall have her say about it, too," Mr. Dinsmore said, looking
smilingly from one to the other. "All I want from either of you is an
opinion in regard to the outside appearance, while this gentleman and I
will judge of the quality of the works."

They presently made a selection of both watch and chain satisfactory
to all parties. Elsie chose a plain gold ring for Mildred, and one for
each of her sisters, and they left the store.

Elsie whispered something to her grandfather as he took his seat beside
her in the carriage.

He shook his head. "Wait till we get home," he said rather curtly; "we
are going now to choose the new piano."

It was for the drawing-room at Roselands, and he took Mildred with him
to try the instruments and tell him which she thought the best and
finest toned.

Mildred was equally charmed with several--two in particular--and they
had some little difficulty in fixing upon the one that should be
ordered to Roselands.

"I will leave it undecided for to-day," Mr. Dinsmore said at length,
"and will call again to-morrow."

On the way to their hotel, and when arrived there, little Elsie seemed
all eagerness, yet kept it in check in obedience to an occasional
warning look from her grandfather.

Mildred went directly to her room to remove her bonnet and shawl, then
sat down in a low chair by the window to rest and think while awaiting
the summons to dinner.

She had scarcely done so when there was a gentle tap, as of baby
fingers, at her door, and Elsie's sweet voice was heard asking in
eager, excited tones for admittance.

"Yes, darling, come in," Mildred answered; and the door flew open and
the child ran in, closely followed by her mammy.

The small hands held a jewel-case, and the large, soft brown eyes were
full of love and delight as she hastened to place it in Mildred's lap,
saying, "It's for you, cousin; my papa said in his letter that Elsie
might buy it for you."

She raised the lid. "See, Cousin Milly, see! Aren't you so glad?"

There lay the watch and chain they had helped Mr. Dinsmore select that
morning.

A watch was a far greater luxury in those days than it is now, and this
a costly and beautiful one. Mildred could scarcely believe the evidence
of her senses; surely it must be all a dream. She gazed at the child in
dumb surprise.

Elsie lifted her pretty present with dainty care, threw the chain round
Mildred's neck, and slid the watch into the bosom of her dress; then
stepping back a little to take a better view, "See, mammy, see!" she
cried, clapping her hands and dancing up and down in delight, "doesn't
it look pretty on cousin?"

"Jus' lubly, honey. Don't Miss Milly like it?"

Aunt Chloe's look into Mildred's face was half reproachful, half
entreating. Could it be possible that her darling's beautiful, costly
gift was not appreciated?

"Like it?" cried Mildred, catching the child in her arms and covering
the little face with kisses, a tear or two mingling with them to the
great wonderment of the little one; "like it? Oh it is only too lovely
and expensive to be bestowed upon me! Sweet pet, you should keep it
for yourself. Cousin Milly ought not to take it from you."

"Yes, papa did say so in his letter. Grandpa read the words to Elsie.
And when I's big enough I is to have my mamma's watch."

"But it cost so much," murmured Mildred half to herself, as she drew
out the watch and gazed at it with admiring eyes.

"My chile hab plenty ob money," responded Aunt Chloe, "and houses
and land and eberyting ob dis world's riches; and she lubs you, Miss
Milly, and ef you don' take dat watch and chain she will most break her
bressed little heart. Won't you, honey?"

The child nodded, and the soft eyes gazing into Mildred's filled with
tears. It was impossible to resist their eloquent pleading.

"Then cousin will accept it with her heartiest thanks, and value it
more for the sake of the dear little giver than for its usefulness, its
beauty, or its cost," Mildred said, taking Elsie on her lap and holding
her in a close, loving embrace. "Dear little girlie," she murmured
tenderly, "cousin will never intentionally rob you of the smallest
pleasure or plant the least thorn in your path."

Another light tap at the door, and Mr. Dinsmore joined them. "Ah! that
is right," he said with a smiling glance at the chain about Mildred's
neck.

"Uncle, it is too much. You should not have allowed it. How could you?"
Mildred asked half reproachfully.

"I only obeyed orders," was his laughing rejoinder. "Horace feels, as I
do also, that we owe a debt of gratitude to your mother--to say nothing
of the affection we have for you all; and he knows from the reports
I have given him of his child that he could not afford her a greater
gratification than the permission to do this. Beside, you have been
extremely kind to her, and ought not to object to her making you some
small return in the only way she can."

"O uncle! her love and sweet caresses have more than recompensed the
little I have been able to do for her, the darling!" cried Mildred,
heaping fresh caresses upon the little fair one.

Mr. Lord called that afternoon to report himself as arrived in
the city, and to inquire if it were Mildred's intention to accept
his escort on the homeward journey. His stay would necessarily be
short--not more than two or three days.

Mildred met him with outstretched hand and eyes shining with pleasure.
She had been so long away from home, was so hungry for a sight of
anything connected with Pleasant Plains, that had she unexpectedly
encountered Damaris Drybread she would very probably have greeted her
with something like affection.

She perceived no change in Mr. Lord, except that he had a new set
of teeth; he seemed to her in all other respects precisely what he
was when she bade him good-by a year ago; but he was astonished,
bewildered, delighted at the change in her. He had always admired her
fresh young beauty, but it was as though the sweet bud had blossomed
into the half-blown, lovely rose, with just a few of its petals still
softly folded.

He blushed and stammered, answered her eager queries about old friends,
and all that had been going on in Pleasant Plains since she left, in
the most absent-minded way, and scarcely took his eyes from her face.
In short, so conducted himself as to make his feelings toward her
evident to the most careless observer.

"Mildred," said Mrs. Dinsmore, when at last he had taken his departure
for that day, "if I were your mother you should stay from home another
year before I would trust you to travel with that man!"

"Why, aunt, you cannot think him anything but a good man!" exclaimed
the girl in astonishment.

"Humph! that's a question I don't pretend to decide. But don't, I beg
of you, let him persuade you on the way that it is your duty to marry
him. If he can only make you believe it's your duty, you'll do it
whether you want to or not."

Mildred's cheek flushed hotly. "O Aunt Dinsmore!" she cried, "he could
never be so foolish! why, he is old enough to be my father, and so wise
and good; and I but a silly young thing, as unfit as possible for the
duties and responsibilities of a--"

"Minister's wife," suggested Mrs. Dinsmore, as the young girl broke off
in confusion. "Well, I don't know about that; you are pious enough in
all conscience. But, Mildred, you positively must reject him; it would
be a terribly hard life, and--"

"Aunt, he has not offered, and I believe, I hope, never will. So I am
not called upon to consider the question of acceptance or rejection."

"That was very rude, Miss Keith--your interrupting me in that way,"
Mrs. Dinsmore said, half in displeasure, half in sport. "Well, if you
will allow me, I shall finish what I had to say. I've set my heart on
seeing you and Charlie Landreth make a match. There! why do you color
so, and turn your head away? Charlie likes you--is in fact deeply in
love, I feel perfectly certain, and doubtless will follow you before
long. You may take my word for it that he would have proposed before we
left the springs if it hadn't been for that sudden summons to his dying
sister."

Mildred made no reply; she had kept her face studiously averted, and
was glad that the entrance, at that moment, of a servant with a letter
for Mrs. Dinsmore gave her an opportunity to escape from the room.




CHAPTER III.

    "And 't shall go hard,
    But I will delve one yard, below their mines,
    And blow them at the moon."
                                Shakespeare.


The sun was just peeping over the tops of the tall city houses as
Mildred entered the carriage which was to convey her to the depot. Mr.
Dinsmore and little Elsie--the two whom it was a grief of heart to
her to leave--were with her; Mrs. Dinsmore and the others had bidden
good-by before retiring the previous night, and were still in bed.

"Elsie, darling, won't you sit in cousin's lap?" Mildred said, holding
out her arms to receive the child as her grandfather handed her in at
the carriage door.

"No, no! she is much too heavy, and there is abundance of room," he
said hastily.

"But I want to hold her, uncle," returned Mildred, drawing the little
one to her knee. "I love dearly to have her in my arms, and this is my
last chance."

"As you will, then; a wilful woman will have her way," he said
lightly, as he settled himself on the opposite seat and the door closed
upon them with a bang.

The rattling of the wheels over the cobblestones, as they drove rapidly
onward, made conversation next to impossible; but Mildred was not
sorry: her heart was almost too full for speech. She clasped little
Elsie close, the child nestling lovingly in her arms, while they
mingled their caresses and tears.

At the depot, too, where there was a half hour of waiting, they clung
together as those who knew not how to part. Elsie's low sobs were
pitiful to hear, but she stood in too great awe of her grandfather to
indulge in any loud lament.

He, however, did not reprove her, but seemed to quite compassionate her
grief, and tried to assuage it with promises of gifts and indulgences;
for Mildred had succeeded to some extent in softening his heart toward
the motherless little one--which she now perceived with joy and
thankfulness.

His kindness to herself had been uniform from the first, and continued
to the last moment. Not till he had seen her on board the train, and
made as comfortable as possible, did he resign her to the care of Mr.
Lord; then, with a fatherly kiss and an affectionate message to her
mother, he left her.

As the train moved slowly on, she caught a last glimpse of him, and of
Aunt Chloe standing by his side with the weeping Elsie in her arms.

Mr. Lord essayed the office of comforter.

"That is a sweet child, Miss Mildred, a very sweet child. And Mr.
Dinsmore seems a noble man. These partings are sad--especially so when
we are young; but let the thought of the dear ones to whom you are
going, and of the better land where partings are unknown, console and
cheer you now."

Mildred could hardly have commanded her voice to reply, and was glad
the increasing noise of the train relieved her of the necessity for
doing so, but she dried her eyes and resolutely forced her tears
back to their fountain, calling to mind the lessons on the duty of
cheerfulness taught her by her mother, by both precept and example.

And oh, it was joy to know that each mile passed over was bearing her
nearer to that loved monitor! What a cheering thought was that! and
scarcely less so the prospect of seeing Aunt Wealthy, with whom she and
Mr. Lord were to spend a few days; Lansdale being not far out of their
route in crossing Ohio.

At that day there was no continuous line of railroad from Philadelphia
to Pittsburg. They traveled sometimes by canal, sometimes by stage,
passing over the mountains in the latter. This proved the most exciting
and perilous part of the journey, the roads being almost all the way
very steep, and often lying along the edge of a precipice, to plunge
over which would be certain, horrible death.

Much of the scenery was grand and beautiful, but the enjoyment of it
greatly interfered with by the sense of danger. Many a time Mildred's
heart seemed to leap into her mouth, and she sent up a silent but
strong cry to God that he would keep the horses from stumbling, their
feet from treading too near the verge.

There was one afternoon so full of terror of this kind, and importunate
prayer for preservation, that she felt she could never forget it to the
day of her death should she live to the age of Methuselah.

The stage was full: the back seat was occupied by our heroine and a
young mother with a babe in her arms and another little one by her
side; the remaining seats were filled with gentlemen.

"That fellow is drunk and in a terribly bad humor," remarked one of the
latter, as the driver slammed the door to upon them and mounted to his
perch.

"In no fit condition to guide those horses over the steep and narrow
passes that lie between this and our next halting-place," added another
uneasily. "You had an altercation with him, hadn't you, Blake?"
addressing the first speaker.

"Yes, Mr. Grey, I had; what business had he to hurry us off in this
style? Why, we were scarcely seated at the dinner-table when he blew
his horn, and we all had to run to avoid being left."

"Quite true."

"That's so," assented several voices.

"And the same thing is repeated again and again, until it has become
quite unbearable," Blake went on, his eyes sparkling with anger; "we
pay for our food and have no chance to eat it."

"There seems to be some collusion between the innkeepers and drivers
for the purpose of defrauding travelers," remarked Mr. Lord.

"Are we not going very fast?" asked the young mother, turning a pale,
anxious face toward the last speaker.

"Yes, dangerously so." And, putting his head out of the window, he
called to the driver, mildly requesting him to slacken his speed.

The reply was a volley of oaths and curses, while the whip was applied
to the horses in a way that made them rear and plunge frightfully.

They had been toiling up a steep ascent, and now were skirting the
mountain side, a high wall of rock on the one hand, a sheer descent of
many hundred feet on the other.

Blake glanced from the window with a shudder, and turning a ghastly
face upon the others, "We shall be hurled into eternity in another
minute," he said, in a hoarse whisper.

Then voice after voice was raised, calling to the driver in
expostulation, warning, entreaty.

"You are risking your own life as well as ours," cried one.

"I tell you I don't care!" he shouted back, with a fearful oath; "we're
behind time, and I'll lose my place if I don't make it up. I'll get you
to C---- by half-past five, or land you in h--ll, I don't care which."

"O my children, my poor little children!" cried the mother, clasping
her babe closer to her breast and bursting into tears. Then, in a sort
of desperation, she thrust her head out of the window and shrieked to
the man, "For the love of Heaven, driver, have mercy on my poor babes!"

The man was probably a father, for that appeal reached his heart,
hardened as it was: there was instantly a very sensible diminution
of their fearful velocity, though the stage still rolled on at a
dangerously rapid rate; keeping them all in terror until at length it
drew up before the door of a tavern; where they were to halt for their
supper.

The gentlemen made haste to alight. Mr. Lord handed out Mildred, then
the mother and her children.

"You must be very tired, ladies," he said, following them into the
parlor of the inn, which was very plainly furnished with rag carpet,
wooden chairs and settee, and green paper window-blinds, nothing
tasteful, nothing inviting, except an appearance of order and
cleanliness.

"Yes, sir, I am dreadfully tired," the strange lady answered, dropping
into a chair and setting her babe on her knee, while she drew the older
child to her side and wiped the tears from its cheeks, for it was
sobbing pitifully; "that was a fearful ride, the jolting and shaking
were bad enough, but the fright was ten times worse. And we're almost
starved," she added. "My little Mary is crying with hunger. I hope
they'll give us time to eat here. Do you know, sir, how soon the stage
starts on again?"

"I will step out and inquire; also how soon the supper will be ready,"
Mr. Lord said, moving toward the door.

"Can I do anything for you, Miss Mildred?" he asked, pausing upon the
threshold. "You are looking wretchedly pale and fatigued," he added, in
a tone of concern.

The other gentlemen had gone to the bar-room; but at this moment Blake
came to a window of the parlor, looking out upon a porch which ran
along the whole front of the house. He looked red and angry.

"It seems the same game is to be repeated here," he said, addressing
Mr. Lord; "the supper is not ready and the stage will leave in half
an hour. There is every appearance of rain too; the night will be
cloudy and dark, making travel over these mountains doubly dangerous.
I propose that we all decide to remain where we are over night and let
the stage go empty. If the whole party will agree in doing so, 'twill
serve the rascal right, and perhaps teach him a useful and much needed
lesson. What do you say, sir? you and your--daughter?"

"My lady friend," stammered Mr. Lord, coloring violently. "What do you
think of the plan, Miss Mildred?"

Her cheek, too, flushed a rosy red as she answered eagerly: "Oh, let
us stay, by all means! I'm sure it would be better a great deal, than
risking our lives on such roads at night."

"Just what I think," said the other lady, "and my little ones are too
tired to travel any farther to-night. I shall stay whether the rest do
or not. I intend that the children and I shall have a chance to eat one
full meal at any rate," she added to Mildred, as the gentlemen walked
away together.

The call to supper followed almost immediately upon the announcement
that no one would leave in the stage that night.

With the keen appetites they brought to it, our travellers found
the fare excellent--good bread and butter, baked potatoes, ham and
fresh-laid eggs.

Mr. Lord, seated between the two ladies, was very kind and attentive to
both, but as usual did some absurdly absent-minded things.

"Do you really prefer salt to sugar in your coffee, Mr. Lord?" asked
Mildred demurely, but with a mischievous twinkle in her eye, as she saw
him draw the salt-cellar toward him and dip his teaspoon into it.

She had stayed his hand just in time. "Oh no, certainly not," he said,
laughing to cover his confusion as he hastily emptied the spoon into
his saucer. "It is a very pleasant evening," he remarked, sugaring his
potato.

"Do you think so?" said Mildred, listening to the dash of the rain
against the window, for the threatened storm had come. "Then I suppose,
like the Shepherd of Salisbury Plains, you are pleased with whatever
kind of weather is sent?"

"Certainly we all should be," he said. "But I was not aware till this
moment that it was raining."

Mildred presently becoming interested in some talk going on between
her opposite neighbors, had for the moment almost forgotten Mr. Lord's
existence. She was recalled to it by a hasty movement on his part. He
suddenly pushed back his chair, rose, and walked out of the room.

A glance at his saucer, half full of coffee, then at the laughing eyes
of the other lady, enlightened our heroine as to the cause of his
sudden exit.

"Salted coffee is not, I find, particularly palatable," he remarked,
coming back and resuming his seat. "I am a sadly absent-minded person,
Miss Mildred; you should watch over me and prevent such mistakes, as my
mother does at home."

"I really do not feel equal to so arduous an undertaking," was her
sprightly rejoinder.

"This is a lonely spot, not another house in sight, they say," remarked
the mother of the children to Mildred, as they returned to the parlor.
"I am timid about sleeping alone in a strange place, and should like to
have a room adjoining yours, if you do not object, are not afraid of
being so near a lioness and her cubs," she added, with a slight laugh.
"I am Mrs. Lyon."

Mildred gave her name in return, and expressed entire acquiescence in
the proposed arrangement, and being much fatigued with their journey
they presently retired.

They were up and dressed betimes to make sure of their breakfast before
the early hour at which the stage was to leave. But they were treated
to a repetition of former experiences. The meal was delayed, and they
had been scarcely ten minutes at the table when they heard the roll and
rumble of the wheels and the loud "Toot, toot!" of the driver's horn,
as the stage swept round from the stables and drew up before the tavern
door.

There was a hasty swallowing down of another mouthful or two, a hurried
scramble for hats, bonnets, and parcels, a crowding into the vehicle,
and in a moment more it was toiling up the mountain side.

The appetite of no one of the party had been fully satisfied, and there
was a good deal of grumbling and complaining from this one and that.

"I tell you, friends," said Blake, "it is high time there was a stop
put to this thing. I have an idea in my head, and at the next stopping
place, if we are hurried off in the usual style, I want you all to
follow my example. If you will, these rascally fellows will find
themselves outwitted."

"What is it?"

"What's your plan?" queried one and another, but the only answer was,
"Wait and you will see, gentlemen."

"There is one thing I have thought of," Mrs. Lyon said to Mildred,
"I'll have my own and the children's bonnets on always before we are
called to the meals. If there should be some soiling of ribbons, it
will be better than going hungry."

This driver was sober and quiet; the ride, in consequence, less trying
than that of the previous afternoon. Between twelve and one they halted
for dinner at another country inn.

There was, as usual, a little waiting time, then they sat down to an
abundant and very inviting meal, but had not half satisfied their
appetites when roll of wheels and toot of horn again summoned them to
resume their journey.

Every eye in the party turned upon Blake. He sprang up instantly,
seized a roast chicken by the leg with one hand, his hat in the other,
and ran for the stage.

"All right!" cried Grey, picking up a pie. "I'll send the plate home
by the driver, landlord," he shouted back, as he, too, darted from the
door.

Looking on in dumb astonishment, the landlord saw bread, rolls, butter,
pickles, cheese, and hard-boiled eggs disappear in like manner, and
before he could utter a remonstrance the stage was whirling away down
the mountain, not a passenger left behind, nor nearly so much food as
would have remained had they been permitted to finish their meal at the
table.

"Outwitted this time, sure as I'm born!" he muttered at length, turning
back into the deserted dining-room and ruefully eying his despoiled
board.

His wife came hurrying in from the kitchen.

"So they're off, and we'll have our dinner now. But," and she stared
aghast at an empty platter. "I say, Jones, where is that chicken?
Didn't I tell you that was for ourselves, and you wasn't to put a knife
into it?"

"Neither I did," he answered half savagely, "and it's all the worse
for us, seein' they've carried it off whole, and if I'd a cut it there
might a ben part left on the plate."

"Carried it off!" she cried. "Well, I never! and it was the nicest,
fattest, tenderest bit of a spring chicken ever you see!"--and with a
groan she began gathering up the empty dishes.

"Take that newspaper out of my coat pocket and spread it over my knees,
won't you, Grey?" said Blake, the moment they were fairly seated in
the stage. "Now your jack-knife, please, and I'll carve this fowl. I
fear it'll not be very scientifically dismembered," he went on, when
his requests had been complied with, "but sufficiently so to enable me
to make a tolerably equal distribution. What is your choice, ma'am?"
addressing Mrs. Lyon.

The result of their _coup d'etat_ was a very comfortable, enjoyable
meal seasoned with many a merry jest over the discomfiture of the foe,
and the makeshifts they themselves were put to for lack of the usual
table appliances.




CHAPTER IV.

    "Alas! my lord, if talking would prevail,
    I could suggest much better arguments
    Than those regards you throw away on me,
    Your valor, honor, wisdom, prais'd by all.
    But bid physicians talk our veins to temper
    And with an argument new-set a pulse,
    Then think, my lord, of reasoning into love."
                                          Young.


By the time they reached Lansdale, Mildred was weary enough to be very
glad of a few days' rest; rest whose delights were doubled and trebled
by being taken in the society of her dear old aunt.

The travellers were received with the warmest of welcomes, Mildred
embraced over and over again, and Mr. Lord repeatedly and heartily
thanked for bringing her.

"Dear child, how you are improved!" Aunt Wealthy said the first moment
they found themselves alone together.

"Have I grown, auntie?" Mildred asked with an arch smile, laying two
shapely, soft white hands on the old lady's shoulders and gazing
lovingly into her eyes, as they stood facing each other on the
hearth-rug in front of the open fire-place in Miss Stanhope's cosey
sitting-room; for it was a cool rainy evening, and the warmth of a
small wood fire blazing and crackling there was by no means unpleasant.

"Not in height, Milly," Miss Stanhope answered, giving the young girl
a critical survey, "nor stouter either; but your form has developed,
your carriage is more assured and graceful, your dress has a certain
style it lacked before, and--But I must not make you vain," she added,
breaking off with her low musical laugh. "Come tell me all about your
uncle Dinsmore and his family."

"And little Elsie, the sweet darling!" sighed Mildred. "Aunt Wealthy,
she is a perfect little fairy: the sweetest, most beautiful creature
you ever laid eyes on."

"Ah! I only wish I could lay eyes on her," the old lady rejoined. "Does
she resemble her father in looks?"

"Not in the least: she is said to be the image of her mother;" and from
that Mildred went on to dwell with minuteness and enthusiasm on all
the charms of the little one, arousing in her companion a very strong
desire to see and know Elsie for herself.

That subject pretty well exhausted, Mildred could talk of something
else, and found a great deal to tell about the other Dinsmores, her
own experiences in the South, and the incidents of her late journey.

They had seated themselves on a sofa. Mr. Lord, suffering from an
attack of sick headache, had retired to his own apartment directly
after tea, leaving them to the full enjoyment of each other.

"And have you come back heart whole, Milly, my dear?" asked the old
lady, smiling into the eyes of her young relative and softly stroking
the hand she held.

The question brought a vivid blush to the fair young face.

"Excuse me, dear child; I do not wish to pry into your secrets," Aunt
Wealthy hastened to say.

"No, no, auntie dear, I do not consider it prying, or wish to keep
my affairs from your knowledge. You and mother are the two I wish to
confide in and consult."

And with many blushes, sighs, and now and then a few quiet tears,
Mildred poured out the whole story of Charlie Landreth's and her
own love for each other, and the barrier between them: Aunt Wealthy
listening with deep interest and heartfelt sympathy.

"Don't despair, dear child," she said, caressing the narrator in
tender, motherly fashion, "and don't give him up. We will join our
prayers in his behalf, and the Lord will, in his own good time, fulfil
to us his gracious promise to those who agree together to ask a boon of
him."

"Yes, auntie, I do believe he will," Mildred responded, smiling through
her tears, "if we pray in faith; for in asking for the conversion of a
soul we shall certainly be asking that which is agreeable to his will.
And yet--O auntie! it may be long years before our prayers receive the
answer, and I--I may never see him again!"

"'Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life,'"
repeated Miss Stanhope in low, soft tones. "Milly dear, try to leave
the future in the hands of Him who has said, 'I have loved thee with an
everlasting love; I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee.'"

Both mused in silence for a little; then Miss Stanhope said, turning
with a slight smile toward her young relative, "Milly, child, you are
very attractive to the other sex."

Mildred  and looked down. "Aunt Wealthy," she said, "I hope you
do not think me a coquette?"

"No, child, no! I'm quite sure you are too kind-hearted to enjoy giving
pain to any living creature."

"That is true, auntie; and for that reason I wish none would care for
me in that way but the one I can care for in return."

"Yes, and therefore I wish"--Miss Stanhope paused, then in answer to
Mildred's inquiring look concluded her sentence--"that some other
escort had been found for you."

Mildred's cheek crimsoned. "Aunt Wealthy!" she exclaimed, "do you--do
you really think he cares for me in that way? Oh I hope not. Aunt
Dinsmore said something of the sort, but I hoped she was mistaken."

Miss Stanhope's only answer was a meaning smile and a slight shake of
the head.

"Then, Aunt Wealthy, you must help me to avoid being left alone with
him!" cried Mildred in a tone of apprehension and annoyance; "and I do
hope there will always be other passengers in the boats and stages, so
that he will have no chance to say a word."

"I'll do what I can, child; cling as close to me as you will, but you
may rest assured he is bound to speak and have it out with you, sooner
or later."

"He shall not if I can prevent him. How can he be so extremely silly!
But indeed, Aunt Wealthy, I think you must be mistaken. He surely has
too much sense to fancy me."

"You won't be rude, Milly? you won't forget the respect due to him as
your minister?"

"Not if I can help it. Aunt Wealthy, you must help me by not leaving us
alone together for a single moment."

"But, my dear, how are my household affairs to be attended to?"

"When we are all together and you want to leave the room, just clear
your throat and give me a look, and I'll go first. Then you can readily
excuse yourself on the plea of domestic matters calling for your
attention; and he may amuse himself with a newspaper or a book until we
rejoin him."

Miss Stanhope laughingly agreed to the proposed programme, and they
carried it out during the whole visit.

Mr. Lord was very desirous to see Mildred alone, but found every effort
to that end frustrated. Miss Stanhope seemed always in the way, and
Mildred would accept no invitation to walk or drive unless her aunt was
included in it. He had formerly considered the aunt quite a charming
old lady, but changed his opinion somewhat at this particular time.
Though undoubtedly a most excellent woman, and without a superior as a
hostess, it was a decided bore to have to listen to and answer her talk
when he was longing for a private chat with Mildred.

He bore the trial with what patience he might, comforting himself with
the hope of a favorable opportunity for his wooing somewhere on the
journey from Lansdale to Pleasant Plains.

Mildred was dreading the same thing, and fully resolved to prevent
it if possible. Therefore, when the stage drew up for them at Miss
Stanhope's gate, it was with very different feelings they perceived
that it already contained several passengers.

"Safe for the present, auntie," whispered the young girl, as they
folded each other in a last, lingering embrace.

"You can't expect to be so fortunate always," returned the old lady in
the same low key, and with a humorous look. "Be sure to let me have the
whole story in your next letter."

It was staging all the way now. Sometimes they travelled day and night;
sometimes stopped for a few hours' rest and sleep at a wayside inn.
It was on Monday morning they left Lansdale, and the journey was not
completed until Saturday noon.

Through all the earlier part of the route they had plenty of company,
the stage being always pretty well filled, if not crowded. Most of
their fellow-travellers proved intelligent and agreeable, some, both
ladies and gentlemen remarkably so; and the tedium of the way was
beguiled by talk, now grave, now gay, and embracing a wide range of
topics.

On one occasion a discussion arose on the propriety and lawfulness
of intermarriage between Christians and worldlings. Some took the
ground that it was a mere matter of choice; others that it was both
dangerous and sinful for a follower of Christ to marry any other than a
fellow-disciple, or one who was esteemed such.

Of these latter Mr. Lord was one of the strongest and most decided in
the expressions of his sentiments and convictions, quoting a number of
passages of Scripture to sustain his views.

During the whole of the conversation Mildred was a silent but deeply
interested listener, her heart sinking more and more with each word
uttered by Mr. Lord; for as her pastor and spiritual instructor, his
expressed convictions of truth carried great weight with her, and
seemed to widen the gulf between herself and him who was the choice of
her heart.

Her only comfort was the hope that some day the barrier might be
removed; but ah! many long years might intervene, and who should say
that in the mean time Charlie would not grow disheartened and weary of
waiting; or, incredulous of the love that could keep him waiting, allow
some other to usurp her place in his affections?

These were depressing thoughts, and throughout the remainder of the
journey they filled Mildred's mind almost constantly. It was only by
a determined effort that she could shake them off and talk of other
things.

In the course of that day and the next, which was Friday, the other
passengers dropped off one by one, until, to her dismay, she found
herself alone with Mr. Lord for the first time since they had left
Lansdale.

The last to leave them was an elderly lady who had been occupying the
back seat along with Mildred since the stage had started that morning.
When it drew up before her door, Mr. Lord alighted and politely handed
her out. On getting in again, instead of resuming his former seat, he
took the one she had just vacated.

Mildred's heart gave a throb and the color rushed over her face, for
she foresaw what would follow. Still she would foil him if possible,
and perhaps their numbers might be presently again augmented as they
rolled onward.

With that last thought in his mind also, the gentleman was disposed to
seize his opportunity instantly. He cleared his throat, turned to his
companion, and opened his lips; but with her back toward him she was
gazing eagerly from the window.

"Look, look at those maples!" she cried; "was there ever more gorgeous
coloring? How perfectly lovely the woods are! And the weather is
delightful to-day. October is the pleasantest month of the year for
travelling, I think."

"Any month and any weather would be pleasant to me with you for my
companion," he said, "and nothing, my dearest girl, could make me so
supremely happy as to secure you as such for the whole journey of life."

She feigned not to have heard or fully understood. "I for one have
travelled quite far enough," she responded, still keeping her face
toward the window. "I'm tired of it, and of being so long away from
the dear home-circle. Oh, I am so glad that I shall be with them
to-morrow, if all goes well!"

"God grant it, dear Mildred; I shall rejoice in your happiness and
theirs, but--"

"Oh see!" she interrupted, pointing to a group of trees near the
roadside, "what brilliant reds and yellows! And there! what a beautiful
contrast those evergreens make!"

"Yes; God's works are wonderful and his ways past finding out," he
answered devoutly, then kept silence; while for some minutes Mildred
rattled on, hardly knowing or caring what she was saying so she might
but avoid the necessity of listening to and answering the proposal he
was evidently so desirous to make.

But his silence disconcerted her, he did not seem to hear her remarks,
and at length she found herself too much embarrassed to continue them.
For five minutes neither spoke, then he made her a formal offer of his
heart and hand, which she gently but decidedly declined, saying she
felt totally unfit for the position he would place her in.

He said that in that he could not agree with her; he had never met
any one who seemed to him so eminently fitted for the duties and
responsibilities he had asked her to assume. "And he loved her as
he never had loved and never could love another. Would she not
reconsider? Would she not be persuaded?"

She told him she highly esteemed him as a man and a minister, that she
felt greatly honored by his preference, but could not love him in the
way he wished.

"Ah," he said, "what a sad blunderer I am! I see have spoken too soon.
Yet give me a little hope, dear girl, and I will wait patiently and do
my best to win the place in your heart I so ardently covet."

She could not bring herself to acknowledge that that place was already
filled, and he would not resign the hope of finally winning her.

During the rest of that day and the morning of the next he treated her
to frequent, lengthened discourses on the duty of every one to live
the most useful life possible, on the rare opportunities of so doing
afforded by the position of minister's wife, and on the permanence
and sure increase of connubial love when founded upon mutual respect
and esteem, till at length a vague fear crept over her that he might
finally succeed in proving to her that it was her duty to resign the
hope that at some future day the barrier to her union with the man of
her choice would be swept away, and to marry him on account of the
sphere of usefulness such a match would open to her.

She heard him for the most part in silence, now and then varied by a
slight nod of acquiescence in the sentiments he expressed, yet even
from these scant tokens of favor he ventured to take courage and to
hope that her rejection of his suit would not prove final.

It was a great relief to her that they were not alone for the last ten
miles that lay between them and Pleasant Plains.




CHAPTER V.

    "Nor need we power or splendor,
      Wide hall or lordly dome;
    The good, the true, the tender--
      These form the wealth of home."
                          Mrs. Hale.


Could that be home--that pretty, tasteful dwelling, embosomed in trees,
shrubs, and vines? Mildred was half in doubt, for the house itself
seemed to have grown as well as the vegetation that environed it. But
yes, the stage was stopping: and there were father and Rupert at the
gate, mother and the rest on the porch; every face beaming a joyous
welcome.

How Mr. Lord envied them as the stage whirled him rapidly away, out of
sight and hearing of the glad greetings!

We will not attempt to describe these: there were close embraces, tears
of joy, low-breathed words of tenderness and love, of gratitude to Him
who had preserved a beloved child in all her journeyings, and brought
her to her home again in safety and health; and there were shouts of
delight from the little ones, to whom it seemed half a lifetime since
sister Milly went away.

"How we have missed you! and, oh, how glad we are to have you back
again!" her mother said, looking smilingly at her, but with glistening
eyes.

"She's changed," said Rupert, regarding her critically; "she's prettier
than ever, and--and something else."

Zillah supplied the word--"More stylish."

"And you! why, you are a young lady!" exclaimed Mildred, gazing at her
in astonishment.

"I'm fifteen, and taller than you, I do believe," returned Zillah,
laughing and blushing.

"And how you're all grown!" Mildred went on, glancing round the circle.

"Except father and mother," laughed Rupert. "Haven't I nearly caught up
to father in height?"

"So you have, and I shall be very proud of my big brother."

"Well, I declare, if you hain't come at last--thought you never was a
comin'!" exclaimed a voice in Mildred's rear; and as she turned quickly
about, a toil-hardened hand seized hers in a grasp that almost forced
from her a little cry of pain.

"Yes," she said, "I have, and am very glad to find you here, Celestia
Ann. You kept your promise."

"A heap better'n you did yours. Why you stayed more'n as long agin as
you said you was agoin' to when you went off. Had a good time?"

"Yes; but I'm very glad to get home."

"So you'd ought to be. You look right down tired; and I reckon you are
all that, and hungry, too. Well, I'll have dinner on table in about ten
minutes;" and with the last word she vanished in the direction of the
kitchen.

A look of expectant delight was on every face of the group about
Mildred as the mother, saying, "Come, dear child, you will want to get
rid of some of the dust of travel," led the way from the room, the
others all following.

"Why, the house has grown too," was the young girl's delighted
exclamation, as she was ushered into an apartment she had never seen
before--large, airy, neatly and tastefully though inexpensively
furnished; white muslin curtains at the windows, a snowy counterpane
on the bed; everything new and fresh except the books in the hanging
shelves on the wall, and some little ornaments which she recognized as
her own peculiar property.

"Yes," her father answered, smiling fondly upon her, "so much so that
we shall now have abundance of room, even with our eldest girl at
home, and we hope it will be a very long while before she will want to
run away again."

"Yes, indeed, father dear," she said, putting her arms around his neck;
"oh, if you only knew how glad I am to get back!"

"This is your room, Milly; do you like it?" the children were asking in
eager tones.

"Yes, yes, indeed! it is perfectly lovely! But, mother, it ought to be
yours; it is larger and cheerier than yours."

"Ah! you are assuming to know more than you do, my child," laughed Mrs.
Keith. "I, too, have one of the new rooms--there are six in all--and
it is in every respect quite equal to this. But make haste with your
toilet, for the dinner bell will soon ring."

They lingered at the table, eating slowly, because there was so much
talking to be done--such pleasant, cheerful chat.

Then came the opening of Mildred's trunk, and the distribution of the
purchases she had been commissioned to make, and of her own modest
gifts to father, mother, brothers, and sisters, and the more expensive
ones from Aunt Wealthy and the Dinsmore relatives. Of these last,
little Elsie's were by far the most costly and valuable.

The children were wild with delight, the parents quietly happy in
their pleasure, and gratified with the remembrances to themselves.

Mildred exhibited her watch and chain, calling forth exclamations of
intense admiration and hearty congratulations.

"O sister Milly, how lovely!" cried Zillah; "I never saw anything so
beautiful, and I'm so glad you have it! I don't believe there's another
lady in town who has a gold watch."

"No, I presume not," returned Mildred, gazing down upon it with a
pleased, but rather absent look, "and it is extremely pretty; yet not
half so beautiful as the dear little giver." And then she launched out
into the warmest of eulogies upon little Elsie--her loveliness of both
person and disposition.

"She must have loads of money to buy you that splendid watch, and all
these things for the rest of us," remarked Cyril.

"Yes, indeed! I'd like to be in her place," said Ada.

"I wouldn't," said Mildred; "and I don't believe you would, Ada, if you
quite understood her position."

"Why?" the children asked, clustering close about their sister, with
looks of surprise and eager interest; "tell us why. It must be nice to
be so rich; to own houses and lands, and all sorts of things."

"Do not be too sure of that," said their father; "though poverty has
its trials, wealth brings cares, and cannot of itself give happiness;
in fact, it has sometimes proved a curse to its possessors. Remember
our Saviour said, 'How hardly shall they that have riches enter into
the kingdom of God.'"

"Yes," added Mrs. Keith; "and in another place he says, 'Take heed
and beware of covetousness; for a man's life consisteth not in the
abundance of the things which he possesseth.'"

"But some rich people are good, aren't they?" queried Cyril. "I'm sure
Milly said Elsie was."

"But she's just a baby girl," put in Don, "and maybe she'll get bad by
the time she grows up."

"Now, boys, keep quiet, can't you? and let's hear what Milly's going to
tell," said Ada.

Mildred glanced at the nearly emptied trunk, the piles of clothing on
the bed and chairs, and shook her head. "Another time, children; I
ought to be putting these things in place in the wardrobe and bureau."

"Oh! you're too tired. Sit down in the rocking-chair and rest while
you talk, and I'll help you afterward to arrange your things," Zillah
said; and with a word of thanks Mildred yielded.

Taking Annis on her lap, and glancing with a half smile from one eager,
expectant face to another, "What would any one of you sell all the rest
for?" she asked.

Several pairs of young eyes opened wide with astonishment. "Why, Milly,
what a question!" "Not for anything!" "Not for all the world! You know
we wouldn't!" were the answering exclamations; and then there were
loving looks exchanged, and Don gave Fan a hug, while Cyril squeezed
her hand and patted Annis on her curly head.

"It would be dreadfully lonesome not to have any brothers or sisters!"
he said, with a long-drawn sigh of satisfaction.

"Little Elsie has none," said Mildred. "But what if we had no mother,
children?"

"Milly, don't! what makes you say such things!" cried Fan, hastily
releasing herself from Don, and running to her mother to hide her face
in her lap with a half sob.

"No; what's the use?" Zillah asked huskily, while Ada's eyes filled
and the boys looked distressed, as though the idea was too painful to
contemplate.

"Just to convince you that little Elsie is not so much to be envied by
us. She has no mother, has never seen her father, and does not know
whether he loves her or not."

"Does she show any desire to see him?" asked Mrs. Keith, stroking Fan's
hair.

"Oh yes, mother! yes, indeed! She talks a great deal about him, often
wishes he would come home, and is never more interested than when he is
the theme of conversation."

"I hope her grandfather and his wife love and fondle her?"

"Not at all; they treat her with almost unvarying coldness and
neglect!" Mildred said, her eyes sparkling with indignant anger.

Then she went on to tell of various acts of injustice and oppression to
which the little girl had been subjected since her coming to Roselands,
and to give a pathetic description of her loneliness and unsatisfied
yearning for the love of her kindred. In conclusion, Mildred asked,
"Now would any of you change places with her?"

"No, no, indeed we wouldn't! Poor dear little thing! we're very sorry
for her," the children cried in chorus.

"Mother, mayn't Elsie come here and be your little girl 'long with us?"
asked Annis.

"I should gladly take her, darling, if I could," Mrs. Keith answered;
"but she belongs to her father, and it is he who directs where she
shall live."

"Tell us some more, Milly; tell about that beautiful Viamede,"
entreated Ada, putting an arm coaxingly round her sister's neck.

"Some other time; but now I must really go to work and finish my
unpacking."

"No, you must go into another room and lie down for an hour or two,"
said her mother. "You need rest and sleep; and your sisters and I will
set things to rights here."

Mildred objected. "Mother, dear, I have come home to ease your burdens,
not to add to them."

"And which will you do by wearing yourself out and getting sick?" asked
the mother, with a merry look and smile. "Set these younger ones a good
example by prompt obedience to my direction. We want you bright for a
good long talk after tea."

"But, mother, you always have so much to tax your time and strength,
and--"

"Run away now, without another word," was the playful reply. "I'm
neither busy nor tired this afternoon."

So Mildred went, slept soundly for a couple of hours, and toward
tea-time came down to the sitting-room, looking quite rested and
refreshed; very sweet and pretty, too, they all thought, in new and
tasteful attire, and with her glossy brown hair becomingly arranged.

She found her mother and the older girls sewing.

"How nice you look!" Zillah said, surveying her admiringly. "That's a
lovely dress, and made so prettily! Will you let me have mine made like
it?"

"Yes, indeed, and help you make it, too. Mother, how have you managed
with the sewing while I've been gone?"

"Pretty well, Milly. Zillah has become quite a needle-woman, and Ada
does remarkably well, too, considering her imperfect sight. Housework
suits her best on that account. They are dear, helpful girls--both of
them."

"Milly, Milly," cried Cyril, rushing in from the grounds, "come and
look at our gardens, and our hens and chickens, before it grows too
dark."

"The gardens aren't much to look at now," laughed Zillah.

"But she can see pretty well what they have been, and we'll tell her
the rest," returned Cyril, leading the way.

"Come, girls, we'll all go," Mrs. Keith said, folding up her work; "the
rest of the afternoon and evening shall be a holiday, in honor of our
wanderer's return."

There was, in truth, little to exhibit in the gardens now, save a few
late-blooming fall flowers; but Mildred admired them, and listened with
interest to the accounts given of what had been raised by each little
worker during the past spring and summer.

And there was really a large flock of fowls, all in fine condition,
promising plenty of eggs and poultry even through the cold winter
months; for Rupert had built a snug hen-house to protect these
feathered friends from the inclemency of the weather.

"Now this way, Mildred; I want to show you the vines I've trained over
the front porch," Rupert said.

As they stood looking at the vines, the front gate opened and shut, and
a firm, elastic step came quickly up the walk. Mildred turned and found
an old acquaintance at her side.

"Wallace--Mr. Ormsby!" she exclaimed, offering her hand in cordial
greeting, though the rich color surged over her face with the sudden
recollection of his parting words, spoken a year ago.

"No; keep to the first name, please," he said in an undertone, as he
grasped her offered hand. "Excuse so early a call, but I did not know
how to wait. It seems an age since you went away."

"We are always glad to see you, Wallace," said Mrs. Keith. "You must
stay and take tea with us; it is nearly ready. Come, we will all go in
now, for the air is growing chilly."

Ormsby was by no means loath to accept the invitation. Mildred seemed
to him lovelier than ever, and his eyes were constantly seeking her
face, when politeness did not require him to look elsewhere. Enchanted
anew by her charms of person, manner, and conversation, he lingered
for an hour or more after tea, watching, hoping for an opportunity to
breathe some words into her ear which should reach no other.

But parents, brothers, and sisters clustered about her, and soon other
neighbors began to drop in to bid her welcome home--Dr. Grange and his
daughter, Claudina Chetwood and her brother Will, and one or two others
of those who were most intimate with the family. Then a look from Mr.
Keith reminding Wallace of an important paper which should be drawn up
that evening, he took a reluctant leave.

He paused an instant at the gate to glance back regretfully at the
brightly lighted parlor windows and the comfortable-looking group
within, of which Mildred was the centre.

A tall, muscular figure was approaching from the opposite direction as
Ormsby, turning away with a sigh, hurried down the street toward Mr.
Keith's office. There was an exchange of greetings as the two passed
each other. "Good-evening, Mr. Ormsby." "How d'ye do, Sheriff?"--and
each hastened on his way.

The next moment the tall man was standing where Wallace had been
but now, gazing intently in at the same group; though, in truth, he
scarcely saw any but that central figure--the graceful, girlish form
so tastefully attired; the bright, sweet face, full of animation and
intellect. He could not take his eyes from her--great, dark eyes,
hungry and wistful--as for many minutes he stood resting his left hand
on the top of the gate, the right arm hanging at his side.

At last, with a sigh that was almost a groan, he, too, turned and went
on his way.

"She's prettier than ever--the sweetest thing alive," he murmured half
aloud, "and I'll never forgit how good she was to me in that awful time
when even my mother couldn't stand by me. But, for all that, 'tain't
no ways likely she cares enough for Gote Lightcap to so much as ask if
he's alive or no."




CHAPTER VI.

    "Ah me! for aught that I could ever read,
    Could ever hear by tale or history,
    The course of true love never did run smooth."
                                     Shakespeare.


The callers departed to their own homes. Mr. Keith called the household
together, and, as usual, closed the day with prayer and praise and the
reading of the word of God.

The good-nights were exchanged, and presently Mildred sat alone in
her own room, slowly taking down her wealth of rich brown hair, while
thought, half troubled, half pleasurable, was busy in her brain.

A gentle tap on the door, then it was softly opened, and her mother
stood by her side.

Instantly the dreamy look left Mildred's eyes, and they were lustrous
with love and joy as she lifted them to the sweet face bending over her.

"Darling mother!" she cried, hastening to rise and bring forward the
easiest chair in the room, "I'm so glad you have come. I am longing so
for one of our old quiet talks."

"Ah! I knew it," Mrs Keith said, taking the chair; "I saw it in your
eyes, dear child, and am as anxious for it as yourself. Oh, it is nice
to have you at home again!"

"And so nice to be here. Mother dear, there have been times when I felt
in sore need of your wise, loving counsels."

Shaking out her abundant tresses, she seated herself on a cushion at
her mother's feet and laid her head in her lap, as she had been wont to
do in childhood's days.

"Then I trust you carried your perplexities to a wiser Friend, whose
love is even greater than that of the tenderest mother," Mrs. Keith
said, gently caressing the silken hair and the blooming cheek.

"Yes, mother. Ah! what could I have done without that Friend?"

Then, with blushes and tears, she poured out the story of her love, and
her refusal to engage herself, because the chosen of her heart was not
a Christian man.

Mrs. Keith was a little surprised, a trifle disappointed. "I had almost
set my heart on having Wallace for my future son-in-law," she remarked
in a playful tone, "and no such objection could be brought against him."

"No," said Mildred, half averting her blushing face; "he is good and
noble and true--a sincere Christian, I do believe, and I heartily
respect and like him; but, O mother! why is it that the course of true
love never will run smooth?"

"I think it does sometimes; at least often enough to prove the rule."

"I was in hopes it might have been out of sight out of mind with
Wallace," Mildred said presently.

"No; Cupid's arrow had gone too deep for that. But perhaps it may prove
so with the other, and you may yet learn to care for poor Wallace."

"No, mother; I am sure, quite sure, that I can never give him anything
but the sisterly affection that is already his. Mother, I know girls
who think it must be a delightful thing to have a number of lovers, but
I don't find it so, there is so much that is painful and perplexing
connected with it."

"Perplexing, my child!"

"Yes, mother. Do you--do you think it can ever be the duty of one
who cannot marry the man of her choice to become the wife of another
because it will open to her a wider sphere of usefulness?"

"Why that question, Mildred?" asked Mrs. Keith, in grave surprise.

"Because Mr.--Mr. Lord thinks I ought--that it is my duty to--to marry
him; and though he did not convince me, he--he made me afraid it might
be."

A very mirthful look had come into Mrs. Keith's eyes.

"My dear, silly little girl," she said, bending down to get a better
view of the blushing face, "why did you not tell him you are quite
unfit for the position he offered you?"

"I did, mother," Mildred answered, with sincere humility, "but
he--still insisted. He has somehow formed a very mistaken opinion of
me."

"That is a pity; but we will not let him sacrifice himself. I shall
utterly refuse consent, and so will your father."

"But don't you think him a good man?" Mildred asked, lifting her head
and gazing into her mother's eyes with a look of mingled relief and
perplexity.

"Very good, but very unsuitable in disposition and in years for a
husband for you, or a son-in-law for me. His absent-mindedness would
put a great deal of care on your young shoulders. But, my dear child,
leaving the question of his character and suitableness in other
respects entirely out of sight, the fact that you prefer another is
quite sufficient of itself to make your acceptance of his suit both
foolish and wrong. Nothing can make it right for man or woman to marry
one while his or her heart turns more strongly to another. As to his
argument that thus a wider sphere of usefulness would be opened to you,
all I have to say is, that it is not, cannot ever be right to do evil
that good may come."

Mildred drew a long sigh of relief. "O mother, I am so thankful that
you take that view of it! and I am sure it is the right one. You have
lifted half my load, but--"

"Can you not cast the other half on the Lord?"

"I do try to. But, mother, what do you think? would it be wrong for me
to--"

"Follow the dictates of your heart?" Mrs. Keith asked, as Mildred
paused, leaving the sentence unfinished. "My child, that is a question
for you to settle with your own conscience. You have God's holy word to
guide you, and in answer to prayer he will give you the guidance of the
Spirit also. I will only say that it cannot be other than a dangerous
experiment for a Christian to enter into the closest of earthly
relations with one who is living for this world alone."

"Especially one so weak and ready to wander out of the way as I,"
sighed the young girl.

"Well, darling, you are young enough to wait; and let us hope all will
come right at length. Ah! we may be sure of it, for 'we know that all
things work together for good to them that love God; to them who are
the called according to his purpose.' But it is growing late, and
you ought to be resting after your long journey." And with a tender
good-night they parted.

Mr. Lord filled his own pulpit the next day, both morning and evening,
preaching with acceptance to his flock.

Mildred attended both services, but carefully avoided meeting the
speaker's eye during the sermon, and slipped out of the church as
quickly as possible after the benediction was pronounced. Each time
she was delayed a little in her exit by the necessity of stopping for
a shaking of hands and the exchange of a few words with friends and
neighbors who stepped forward to greet and welcome her home; but others
were crowding about the minister with the same kindly intent, and thus
unconsciously assisted in her desired avoidance of him.

She was little less anxious to escape Wallace Ormsby, but in that was
not so successful: he walked by her side in the morning, as far as
their roads lay in the same direction; yet as Don held fast to one of
Mildred's hands and Fan to the other, his talk was only on topics of
general interest, the sermon, the Sunday-school, etc.

In the evening, as she stepped into the vestibule, she saw Wallace
waiting near the outer door, and read his purpose in his eyes. She
turned to Zillah, who was close beside her, seized her hand, and,
holding it fast, whispered in her ear, "We'll walk home together. Be
sure to keep close to me."

Zillah nodded with a roguish smile, and, to Wallace's no small
annoyance, did as requested. Offering one arm to Mildred, he could do
no less than ask Zillah to take the other, which she did with alacrity.
And all the way home she kept up a constant stream of talk, Mildred
listening with inward amusement, Wallace wondering whether it was with
a purpose, and wishing she was somewhere out of earshot of what he
wanted to say to her sister.

The Keiths neither paid nor received visits on the Sabbath: so he bade
the girls good evening at their father's door, and quietly wended
his way to his lonely bachelor quarters over the office; while the
girls, listening to his departing footsteps, exchanged a few words of
congratulation on the one side and thanks on the other, mingled with a
little girlish laughter at his expense.

"Mother," said Mildred, as they were about separating for the night,
"I will be up in good season to-morrow morning and get breakfast, as
Celestia Ann will of course be busy with her washing."

"Indeed you'll do no such thing," cried Zillah. "Ada and I will get
breakfast and dinner to-morrow, and you're not to so much as put your
nose into the kitchen. You're to play lady for a week at least, while
you look on and see how nicely we can manage without you."

"I've played lady long enough, and--"

"Mother, isn't it to be as I've said?" demanded Zillah, not giving
Mildred time to conclude her sentence.

"Yes, Milly, you and I can find enough to do out of the kitchen for the
present, and we will let these young cooks have a chance to show what
they can do," Mrs. Keith said, looking from one to the other with a
proud, fond, motherly smile.

"I like to cook," put in Ada. "Milly, I can make nice cakes and
desserts; they all say so. And Zillah and I made pickles and preserves
this fall, mother only overseeing and telling us how. Celestia Ann
wanted to turn us out of the kitchen and do it all herself, but mother
said no--we must learn how."

Monday morning found the Keith household like a hive of cheerful, busy
bees. Mrs. Keith and Mildred, busied together in the dining-room,
washing and putting away the breakfast china and silver, which were
never allowed to go into the kitchen, laid plans for the fall and
winter sewing.

"I have been learning to cut and fit, mother," Mildred said; "taking
lessons of one of Aunt Dinsmore's servants who is excellent at it; so
now, if you like, I shall fit all the dresses of the family, beginning
to-day with Ada's and Zillah's calicoes."

"I'm very glad, my dear," Mrs. Keith replied, "for really there is not
a competent dressmaker in town. But I see I shall have to take care
that you do not overwork yourself," she added, with an affectionate
smile.

"Mother," said Zillah, putting her head in at the door, "we're nearly
out of salt and sugar both. Who shall go for them?"

"Cyril and Don; it is a lovely day, and they will enjoy the walk.
Mildred, there will be some little articles wanted about our
dressmaking; suppose you go also and select them. The walk will be
good for you, and you will like to see how the town has grown in your
absence."

Fan and Annis put in an eager plea to be permitted to be of the party.

Mildred demurred. "I'm afraid, Annis, darling, you can't walk fast
enough. Sister Milly wants to come back quickly because of the sewing."

"Never mind that; we will not deprive the darling of so great a
pleasure merely to save a few minutes," the mother said, with a loving
smile at the little, disappointed face, which instantly grew bright
again. "Linger a little on the way, Mildred, and enjoy the sweet air
and the beauty of the woods. These things were given for our enjoyment."

"Dearest mother! always so kind and thoughtful for each one of us,"
Mildred whispered, bending over her mother's chair to kiss the still
fresh and blooming cheek.

Mildred had returned to her home entirely restored to health, and
full of the old energy, and with a desire to accomplish a great deal
in the way of relieving her mother's cares and burdens and promoting
the material interests of each member of the family of loved ones.
She had planned to do a certain amount of sewing that day, and was
eager to begin; but she was learning the difficult lesson of readiness
to cheerfully yield her own plans and wishes to those of others,
remembering that "even Christ pleased not himself."

With a face bright and sweet as the lovely October morning she made
herself ready and set out on her errand; Fan clinging to one hand,
Annis to the other, while the two little brothers now brought up the
rear, now hastened on in front, or trotted alongside, as inclination
dictated.

"Yonder comes the sheriff; we'll meet him in a minute," said Cyril
presently.

"Who is sheriff now?" asked Mildred.

"Gotobed Lightcap. He's learned to write with his left hand, and they
'lected him sheriff last week. Everybody voted for him because they
were so sorry for him. Wasn't it nice? Mother says the folks in this
town are the kindest people in the world, she thinks."

"Yes, it was nice and kind," Mildred responded, looking a little
curiously at the tall, broad-shouldered, masculine figure approaching
from the opposite direction. In dress, in gait, in the intelligence of
his countenance, he was an improvement upon the Gotobed of two years
ago.

In another moment they had met. He lifted his hat with his left hand
and bowed a little awkwardly, while a deep-red flush suffused his
swarthy face.

Mildred  slightly too, but greeted him cordially and without any
other show of embarrassment, inquiring after his health and that of his
family.

"We're all as well as common, thank ye, Miss Keith," he said, devouring
her face with his eyes, "and I hope you're the same, and as glad to git
back as all your friends is to see ye."

"Thank you, I do find it nice to be at home again," she responded,
bowing and passing on.

Their way lay past her father's office. Ormsby, looking up from the
deed he was drawing and catching a glimpse of her graceful figure as it
hurried by, sprang up and stepped to the door just in time to see her
go into Chetwood & Mocker's.

He was on the watch for her as she came out again, and waylaid her with
an invitation to drive out with him that afternoon.

"Thank you," she said, with a winsome smile; "I fully appreciate your
kindness, but--don't you think, after my long vacation, I ought now
to stay at home and work? I had planned to do a good deal of sewing
to-day."

"But the weather is so fine, and we ought to take advantage of these
lovely days, which will so soon be gone," he said persuasively. "Let
the sewing wait; 'twill be just the thing for the stormy days that will
soon be upon us. I may come for you?"

"Yes," she answered, laughing and nodding good-by.

Zillah met her at the door, her eyes dancing with fun. "Mr. Lord's in
the parlor with mother, and you're wanted there too."

"Oh, dear!" sighed Mildred; but, throwing off her hat in the hall, she
went at once to meet the dreaded ordeal.

The gentleman rose on her entrance, and with beaming eyes and
outstretched hand came eagerly forward to greet her. "My dear Miss
Mildred, I have been telling your mother of my plans and wishes, and
asking her consent and approval of my--the proposal I made to you the
other day; and--"

"And she has declined to give them?" Mildred said, allowing him to take
her hand for an instant, then hastily withdrawing it, her eyes seeking
her mother's face, while her own flushed crimson.

"Yes, I have been trying for the last half hour to convince Mr. Lord
how entirely unsuitable you are for the place and position he offers
you," Mrs. Keith answered in a grave, quiet tone. "Come and sit down
here by me," making room for her on the sofa by her side, "and we will
try together to convince him."

"That will be no easy task," remarked the middle-aged lover, as Mildred
hastened to accept her mother's invitation; then, standing before them
and fixing his eyes admiringly upon the blushing, downcast face of the
maiden, he went on to plead his cause with all the force and eloquence
of which he was master.

He spoke very rapidly, as if fearful of interruption, and determined to
forestall all objections, Mildred listening in some embarrassment and
with much inward disgust and impatience.

These changed directly to almost overpowering mirthfulness, as the
man, perhaps finding his false teeth, to which he was yet not fully
accustomed, impeding his speech to some extent, in his intense
interest in his subject, hardly conscious of the act, jerked them out,
twirled them about in his fingers for an instant, then with a sudden
recollection thrust them in again, his face turning scarlet with
mortification and the last word faltering on his tongue.

Controlling her inclination to laugh, Mildred seized her opportunity.
"Mr. Lord," she said, with gentle firmness, "please do not waste any
more words on this subject, for I have no other answer to give you
to-day than that which I gave before. Nor shall I ever have any other.
I highly respect and esteem you, feel myself greatly honored by your
preference, but--it is utterly out of my power to feel toward you as a
woman should toward the man with whom she links her destiny for life."

With the last word she rose and would have left the room, but he
intercepted her. "Not now, I suppose. Ah, my foolish impatience, which
has a second time betrayed me! But I will wait--wait years, if--"

"It is useless, quite useless, I assure you," she interrupted, in some
impatience. "To convince you of that, I will acknowledge that--that my
heart has already been given to another."

Hiding her blushing face in her hands, she hurried from the room,
leaving to her mother the task of consoling the rejected suitor.

Mrs. Keith afterward reported that he stood for a moment as if struck
dumb with surprise and dismay; then muttering, "Wallace Ormsby--it must
be he," was rushing bare-headed from the house, when she called him
back and gave him his hat, with a consolatory word or two, which he
did not seem to hear, as he merely turned about without replying, and
walked rapidly away with the hat in his hand.

Mildred, hurrying to the privacy of her own room with cheeks aflame
and an indignant light in her brown eyes, found herself intercepted by
Zillah.

"Good girl not to say yes," cried the latter gayly, putting her arm
round Mildred's neck and kissing her.

"What do you mean, Zillah? You don't know anything about it," Mildred
said, repulsing her slightly and averting her face.

"Yes, I do. Mr. Lord's been asking you to marry him--I knew by his
looks that that was what he came for--and I'm glad you won't have him.
He's nice enough as a minister, but too old and ugly and awkward for a
husband for my pretty sister Milly. Wallace Ormsby would be far more
suitable, in my humble opinion," she added, with a merry twinkle in her
deep blue eyes.

Mildred looked at her and took a sudden resolution. "Come in here," she
said, pushing open her room door. "Zillah, can you keep a secret?"

"Suppose you try me," was the laughing rejoinder.

"I will. I am sure I may trust you."

So Zillah presently knew how matters stood between her sister and
Charlie Landreth, and Mildred felt that she had another hearty
sympathizer, and was safe from any more teasing about Wallace Ormsby
from that quarter.

As for the latter, he of course improved his chance as they drove
together that afternoon over the prairies and through the beautiful
autumn woods; and Mildred had the painful task of crushing his hopes as
she had already crushed those of her older admirer.




CHAPTER VII.

    "A mighty pain to love it is,
    And 'tis a pain that pain to miss;
    But of all pains, the greatest pain
    It is to love, but love in vain."
                             Cowley.


"O Wallace, forgive me! Not for worlds would I have hurt you so if--if
I could have helped it." Mildred's voice was full of tears, and she
ended with a sigh that was half a sob.

His head was turned away so that she could not catch so much as a
glimpse of his face.

"It is just what I expected when you went away," he answered huskily;
"but I don't blame you. I've always known I wasn't half good enough for
such a girl as you."

"No, don't say that!" she cried, almost eagerly; "you are good enough
for anybody, Wallace; you are noble and true and brave; and father says
that with your talent and industry you are sure to make your mark in
the world."

"What do I care for that now?" he returned bitterly. "You have been my
inspiration, Mildred; it was for you--to win you and to make you rich
and happy--that I have studied and toiled and planned, and now you are
lost to me!" he groaned.

"O Wallace!" she murmured softly, "I had hoped yours was a higher
ambition--that you had consecrated your time, talents, everything, to
Him who gave them, and whose love is better beyond comparison than any
or all earthly loves."

"You are right," he said, after a moment's silence, and his voice was
low and humble, "it ought to be so; it shall be so henceforward. But--O
Mildred, Mildred, what happiness can there be in life without you!"

"I will be your sister, Wallace; I have a real sisterly affection for
you."

"I ought to be thankful for even that--I shall be some day; but O
Mildred! now it seems like giving me a crumb when I am starving--so
famished that nothing less than a whole loaf will relieve the dreadful
pain. And this other fellow that has won you away from me--will
he--will he be taking you away from us soon?"

"No, Wallace, not soon, perhaps never," she answered in low, quivering
tones.

He turned and faced her with an inquiring look. "I have misunderstood.
I thought you said the--the affection was mutual."

"I will tell you all about it," she said after a moment's embarrassed
silence. "I think I owe you the confidence as some slight amends for
the pain I have unwillingly caused you."

Then in a few words she told him just how matters stood between Charlie
Landreth and herself, withholding only the name of her favored suitor.

When she had finished, silence fell between them for many minutes.
Mildred's eyes were cast down, Wallace's gazing straight before him or
taking note of the inequalities of the road. They were nearing the town
when at last he spoke again.

"I thank you for your confidence, dear Mildred, (you will let me call
you that this once?) You know I shall never abuse it. I am sorry for
your sake that he is not all you could wish. But don't let it make you
unhappy. I couldn't bear that. And I hope and believe it will all come
right in the end."

"Wallace, how good and noble you are!" she cried, looking at him with
eyes brimming with tears. "We will always be friends--good, true
friends, shall we not?" she asked, almost beseechingly, holding out her
hand to him.

He caught it in his and pressed it to his lips with a low, passionate
cry, "O Mildred! and can I never be more than that to you!"

An hour later Mrs. Keith found her eldest daughter in her own room,
crying bitterly.

"My dear child! what is the matter?" she asked in concern.

"O mother, mother, I seem to have been born to make others unhappy!"
sobbed Mildred.

"I have often thought you were born to be the great comfort and
blessing of your mother's life, and have thanked God with my whole
heart for this his good gift to me," the mother responded, with a
loving caress; and a glad smile broke like sunlight through the rain of
tears.

"Mother, what a blessed comforter you are!" sighed Mildred, resting her
wet cheek on her mother's shoulder. "Mother, Wallace loves me and seems
almost heart-broken because I--I cannot return it. And he is such a
dear, noble fellow, too--worthy of a far better wife than I would make!"

"We must try to convince him of that, and make him glad of his
fortunate escape," Mrs. Keith said in her playful tone.

Mildred laughed in spite of herself, but a little hysterically; then
growing grave again: "But, mother, he does really seem heart-broken,
and it is dreadful to me to have caused such suffering to one so
deserving of happiness."

"I do not doubt it, my dear, and I feel for you both; but trouble does
not spring from the ground; all our trials are sent us, for some good
purpose, by that best and dearest of all friends, who knows just what
each one of us needs, and never makes a mistake. I am sorry for you
both, but I do not think either is to blame, and I believe you will
come out of the trial better and happier Christians than you would ever
have been without it.

"Now, dear child, I shall leave you, that you may be able to spend a
few minutes with that best Friend before joining us downstairs. Try to
cast all your care on Him, because he bids you do so, and because it is
for your happiness."

Mildred followed the kind, wise advice; then, having done what she
could to remove the traces of her tears, hastened to join the family at
the tea-table in answer to the bell.

Her mother adroitly contrived to take the attention of the others from
her, and no one noticed that she had been weeping.

The faces and the chat were cheerful and bright, as was almost
invariably the case in that family circle, and the joy of being among
them again after so long an absence soon restored Mildred to her wonted
serenity.

They discussed their plans for study and work for the coming fall and
winter months. The town was still destitute of a competent teacher;
efforts had been made to procure one from the Eastern States, but as
yet without success; therefore Mildred proposed to resume her duties as
governess to her younger brothers and sisters: she could assist Rupert,
too, in some branches, and wished to perfect herself in some, and to
improve her mind by a course of reading.

Then, as always, there was the family sewing, beside various
housekeeping cares of which she desired to relieve her mother.

Zillah listened with a mirthful look to Mildred's long list, and at its
conclusion asked, with a merry laugh, "Is that all, Milly?"

Mildred echoed the laugh, and blushingly acknowledged that it was very
much easier to plan than to execute, and she feared she should fall
very far short of accomplishing all she desired.

"Yes," said her father, "but it is best to aim high, for we are pretty
sure never to do more than we lay out for ourselves, or even so much."

"But if Milly undertakes all the work, father, what are Ada and I to
do?" queried Zillah, in a sprightly tone.

"She'll be glad enough before long to let us help with it," remarked
Ada quietly. "If she'd had breakfast and dinner to get to-day she
couldn't have walked out this morning; and I don't think she could have
taken time to drive out this afternoon if she had been the only one to
help mother with the sewing."

"No, that is quite true," said Mildred, smiling at Ada's serious face,
"and I'm delighted to find what helpful girls you two have become, for
there is abundance of work for us all."

"Enough to leave us no excuse for idleness," added the mother, "but not
so much that any one of us need feel overburdened; for 'many hands make
light work.'"

"Especially when the head manager knows how to bring system to her
aid," concluded Mr. Keith, with an affectionate, appreciative glance at
his wife.

"Yes," she rejoined brightly, "very little can be accomplished without
that, but with it I think we shall do nicely."

The little ones were asking when lessons were to begin.

"To-morrow, if mother approves," answered Mildred.

Her father smiled approval, remarking, "Promptness is one of Mildred's
virtues; one we may all cultivate with profit."

"I quite agree with you, Stuart," Mrs. Keith said, "and yet it is
sometimes best to make haste slowly. Mildred, my child, you have had a
long, wearisome journey, and may lawfully rest for at least this one
week."

"And we all need our new clothes made up," remarked Ada. "Mother, have
Milly make your black silk dress first."

Mildred and Zillah chimed in at once, "Oh yes! certainly mother's dress
must be the very first thing to be attended to."

"I can fit it to-night," said Mildred.

"And I cut off the skirt and run the breadths together," added Zillah.

"Come, come, you are entirely too fast," laughed Mrs. Keith. "I will
not have any one of you trying her eyes with sewing on black at night.
We will all work this evening on the calicoes begun to-day, and Milly
shall fit a calico for me before she tries her hand on the silk. But we
will give this week to sewing and reading. Cyril can read nicely now,
and he and Rupert shall take turns reading aloud to us. Lessons shall
begin next Monday."

Aside from her desire to be as helpful as possible to her dear ones,
Mildred felt that constant employment for head and hands was the best
earthly antidote for her present griefs and anxieties. So she plunged
into study and work, and gave herself little time for thought about
anything else, and her mother, understanding her motive, not only did
not oppose, but encouraged her in that course.

Some new books she had brought in her trunk proved a rare treat to the
entire family, and work, enlivened now by the reading of these and now
by cheerful chat, was decidedly enjoyable.

There were many calls, too, from old friends and acquaintances, and so
the week slipped away very quickly and pleasantly.

Saturday's mail brought Mildred a letter from Charlie Landreth, which
gave her both pain and pleasure.

The ardent love to her that breathed in every line sent a thrill of joy
to her heart; yet it bled for him in his deep grief for the loss of his
sister; grief unassuaged by the consolations of God.

Her prayers for him went up with increased fervor. Earnestly,
importunately, she besought the Lord to comfort him in this great
sorrow, and to make it the means of leading him to a saving knowledge
of Christ Jesus.

Then she sat down and answered his letter with one that through all its
maidenly modesty and reserve breathed a tender sympathy that was as
balm to his wounds, a cordial to his fainting spirit, when at length it
reached him.

Mildred desired to have no secrets from her wise and dearly-loved
mother; both Charlie's letter and her own were carried to her, and
the latter submitted to her approval ere it went on its mission of
consolation.

This communication from him whose love found a response in her own
heart did good service in banishing from her mind, in great measure,
disturbing thought about the other two.

For some weeks they absented themselves from the house, then gradually
resumed their former intimacy with the family, Mildred meeting them,
when compelled by circumstance, without embarrassment, but avoiding a
meeting when she could without seeming to do so purposely.




CHAPTER VIII.

A DELIGHTFUL SURPRISE.


"There is a letter, my dear, which concerns you quite as much as
myself," Mr. Keith said, putting it into his wife's hand. "It gives
information which perhaps, for several reasons, it may be as well for
us to keep to ourselves for the present," he added, with a smile. "That
is why I kept it back until now that we are alone."

They had retired to their own room for the night, and the little ones
who shared it with them were fast asleep.

"From Uncle Dinsmore!" Mrs. Keith exclaimed, recognizing the
hand-writing at a glance.

Her husband watched her face with interest and some curiosity as she
read, a slight smile on his lips and in his eyes.

She looked up presently with hers shining. "How good, how wonderfully
good and kind they always are!"

"Almost too kind," he responded, his face clouding a little. "At least
I wish there was no occasion for receiving such favors. I should have
been tempted to decline, had I been consulted beforehand. But it would
hardly do now that the goods are almost here. We could not well send
them back."

"No; certainly that is not to be thought of for a moment," she said,
lifting to his, eyes smiling through tears. "We must follow the Golden
Rule, Stuart, and accept their kind assistance in educating our
children just as we would wish them to accept ours were our situations
reversed."

"Yes," he said, heaving a sigh, "doubtless you take the right view
of it; but--ah! Marcia, wife, 'it is more blessed to give than to
receive.'"

"It is indeed, my dear husband, and we will not refuse them that
blessedness now, but receive their kindnesses in the spirit in which
they are offered, hoping that we may have our turn some of these days.
Shall we not?"

He gave a silent assent. "Do you not agree with me that it will be well
to keep the matter a secret from the children until the boxes arrive?"
he asked.

"Oh, yes, indeed! we will not let even Mildred know. It will be such a
delightful surprise to her, dear child! for though she has uttered no
word of complaint, I am sure it must have been a great disappointment
to her that you could not furnish her with a piano this fall to enable
her to keep up her music. Now she can do that and teach her sisters
too."

"And her playing will be a great treat to us all," added Mr. Keith,
with a smile that spoke volumes of fatherly affection and pride in his
first-born.

"And then the books! what delightful times we shall have over them!"
she added, her eyes sparkling; "what a help they will be in cultivating
our children's minds! I think our dear girl must have completely won
her way into the hearts of my uncle and cousin Horace."

"As her mother did before her," he responded, with a light happy laugh.

When preparing to leave Ohio for the wilds of Indiana, Mr. Keith had
sold most of their heavy articles of furniture, among them the piano.
Its loss had been greatly lamented in the family, especially by the
older girls and Rupert. The purchase of another had become a darling
project with him, and to that end he had worked and saved till he
had now quite a little hoard, earned mostly by the sale of fruits,
vegetables, and fowls of his own raising; his mother paying him for
these at the market price, and whatever surplus he had finding ready
sale at the stores.

The lad was very industrious and painstaking, generally very successful
in what he undertook--as such people are apt to be--and while generous
to others spent little on himself.

Since Mildred's return, the desire for a piano was stronger than ever:
there was not one in the town, nor an organ, or any kind of keyed
instrument; so that there was no chance for them to hear her play and
judge of her improvement; and worse still, she would be in danger, from
want of practice, of losing all she had gained. But pianos cost a great
deal in those days, and Mr. Keith could not just now spare the money to
make the purchase and pay the heavy cost of transportation.

Money was scarce in that region then, business carried on very largely
by barter. This made it easier for him to be at the expense of
enlarging his house than to pay for something that must come from a
distance.

There was little or no fretting or complaint over this state of things,
but the children often talked longingly of the good time coming, when
father would be able, with the help of what they could earn and save,
to send for a piano.

That time seemed to be brought a little nearer by an act of thoughtful
kindness on the part of their dear Aunt Wealthy. She had set apart from
her income a certain sum which she engaged to send to their mother, at
regular intervals, to be divided among them as pocket-money. The dear
old lady could hardly have devised anything that would have given more
pleasure. The news, as announced by Mildred on the day of her arrival,
was received with demonstrations of wild delight, and evidently the
little ones now considered themselves moneyed individuals, taking great
pride and pleasure in consulting together, or with father and mother,
as to the disposal of their incomes.

This opened up to the careful Christian parents a new opportunity for
the study of the natural character of each of their children, and
the curbing of wrong inclinations, whether toward extravagance or
penuriousness.

One day, several weeks after Mildred's return, Rupert came in near
the dinner hour, and drawing his mother aside, whispered something in
her ear. There was a look of covert delight in his face, and his eyes
sparkled as he added, "One's long, low and broad, mother; can only be
one thing, I think--just the thing we're all wanting so much. But where
could it come from?"

"Where do you suppose?" she answered merrily. "Well, the instant you
are done your dinner you may go down and see them brought up."

"But father said it was your wish and his to make it a complete
surprise to the children."

"Mildred included?" laughed his mother; "you are so much older than
she. I will manage it. They shall all be out of the way while we
unpack."

Mr. Keith came in presently, and with his arrival the call to dinner.

Mildred looked curiously at Rupert several times during the meal,
wondering at his unaccustomed air of importance, the half-exultant,
meaning glance he now and then sent across the table to one or the
other of their parents, and the haste with which he swallowed his food
and hurried from the table and the house, having asked to be excused,
as he had business of importance to attend to.

"Dear me, what airs!" laughed Zillah, as he whisked out of the room.
"One would think he was a man, sure enough."

"Girls," said Mrs. Keith, "I want you to take the little ones out for
a walk this afternoon. It is a bright day and the walking good, and if
you are all well wrapped up, you will not feel the cold."

"Not if they go at once," put in Mr. Keith.

"Run away and make yourselves ready, all of you."

"The party will be large enough without me, won't it, mother?" queried
Mildred. "You know I have a piece of sewing on hand that I am very
desirous to finish before night."

"Let it go, child; you need air and exercise far more than I do the
dress," was the kind and smiling rejoinder.

Then came a chorus of entreaties from all the children that mother
would go too.

But she would not hear of it, had a matter of importance to attend to
at home; perhaps, if to-morrow should prove pleasant, she would go with
them then.

And so with smiles and merry, loving words she helped to make them
ready and sent them on their way.

Barely in time, for hardly were they out of sight when a wagon drove up
with two large, weighty looking boxes. Rupert and two men, beside the
driver, were in the vehicle also, and it took all their strength, with
Mr. Keith's added, to lift and carry the boxes into the house.

"Oh, it is a piano! I know it is!" cried Rupert, as they set down in
the hall the box he had described to his mother.

"A pianer did ye say?" queried one of the men, as for a moment they all
stood panting from their exertions and gazing down upon the burden they
had just deposited upon the floor. "Let's get it open quick then, for I
never see one in my life."

Rupert ran for the hatchet, and in another five minutes the lid was off
the box, and all remaining doubt vanished.

"It is, it is!" cried the lad, fairly capering about the room in his
delight. "Oh, what a joyful surprise for the girls and all of us! But
where on earth did it come from? Father--"

"I had nothing to do with it, my son," Mr. Keith asserted with a grave
earnestness that precluded the idea that he might be jesting.

The boy looked bewildered, then disappointed. "There's been some
mistake, I'm afraid. Perhaps there's another family of our name
somewhere in this region, and--"

But his mother whispered a word in his ear and his face grew radiant.
"Is that it? O mother, how good they are!"

"Let's git the thing out and see what it's like," said the man who had
spoken before.

The others eagerly assented, and set to work at once, Mr. Keith giving
assistance and directions, Mrs. Keith pointing out the place in the
parlor where she wished it to stand.

"You kin play, I 'spose, Mrs. Keith. Won't you give us a tune?" was the
eager request when their task was ended.

Smilingly she seated herself and played "Yankee Doodle" with variations.

They were delighted. "First-rate!" commented the one who seemed to act
as chief spokesman of the party. "Now, ma'am, if you please, won't you
strike up 'Hail Columby.'"

She good-naturedly complied, added "Star Spangled Banner," then rose
from the instrument.

They thanked her warmly, saying they felt well paid for bringing "the
thing" in.

"You must come in again some day, if you enjoy hearing it," she said
with gracious sweetness. "I think you will find my daughter a better
performer than I am."

"Yours is plenty good enough for us," they answered, bowing themselves
out.

"It is a very sweet-toned instrument," she remarked, running her
fingers over the keys; "a most magnificent present. How delighted
Mildred and the rest will be!"

"I am eager to witness it," her husband said with a smile. "It
is indeed a most valuable gift, and nothing could have been more
acceptable."

"They're the kindest, most generous relations anybody ever had," added
Rupert emphatically. "What's in that other box? shan't we open it now?"

"Books," answered his mother. "Yes, we may as well open it and spread
them out ready for Mildred's inspection. Most of them belong to her."

This done Mrs. Keith again seated herself at the piano.

The young people had taken a pretty long walk, moving briskly to
keep themselves warm, for the November air was frosty, and were now
returning in gay spirits, eyes sparkling and cheeks glowing with health
and happiness, while the tongues of the little ones ran fast, and a
joyous shout or a silvery laugh rang out now and then; for the greater
part of their way lay not through the streets of the town, but on its
outskirts--along the river bank, through the groves of saplings, and
over still unoccupied prairie land. When they came where there were
houses and people to be disturbed by their noise, their mirth subsided
a little, and they spoke to each other in subdued tones.

As they drew near home, unaccustomed, surprising sounds greeted their
astonished ears.

"Oh, what's that music?" cried the little ones, "such pretty music!"

"Why, it sounds like a piano!" exclaimed the older ones; "but where
could it come from?" and they rushed tumultuously into the house, even
Mildred forgetting the staid propriety of her years.

The parlor door stood open, and--yes, there it was--a beautiful piano,
mother's skilful fingers bringing out its sweetest tones, father and
Rupert standing enraptured close beside her, and Celestia Ann, sleeves
rolled up, dish-towel in hand, eyes dancing, and mouth stretched in a
broad grin, stationed at the farther end.

"Well, I never! where on airth did the critter come from?" she
exclaimed just as the others came upon the scene. "I never see the
like, I never did!" she went on. "I just ran down town of an arrant,
and I'd come home again and in the back door and begun to wash up them
dishes, when I heered this agoin', and come in to find out what under
the sun was agoin' on."

But no one seemed to hear a word she said; the children were jumping
and careering about the room in frantic delight, clapping their hands,
pouring out questions and exclamations. "Oh, aren't you glad? aren't
you glad?" "Isn't it a beauty?" "It's just too nice for anything!" "Who
did send it?"

Mildred stood silently gazing at it, her eyes full of glad tears.
Father and Rupert were watching her, taking no notice of the others.

"Well, dear?" her mother said, whirling about on the piano stool and
looking up into her face with tender, loving eyes.

"O mother, it is too much!" she cried, the tears beginning to fall.
"Uncle Dinsmore sent it, I know; and I do believe it's one of the very
two I liked the best of all we saw. He bought the other for themselves
and this for us."

"For you, dear; but indeed it is, he says, not his own gift, but Cousin
Horace's. The books are from him--our kind, generous uncle." And she
pointed to them where they lay piled high upon the table.

"Books too!" Mildred exclaimed in increased astonishment and delight.

"Yes, he has marked out a course of reading for you--subject to your
father's and my approval--and sent the necessary books and some others
beside."

While his wife was speaking Mr. Keith had drawn near and put an arm
about Mildred's waist; and now she fairly broke down, and hiding her
face on her father's shoulder, sobbed aloud.

The children were immediately awed into silence. They gathered around
her, asking in half-frightened tones, "Milly, Milly, what's the matter?
are you sorry the piano's come? We thought you'd be so glad."

"And so I am," she said, lifting her head and smiling through her tears.

Her mother vacated the stool, her father seated her thereon, and
hastily wiping away her tears, she sent her fingers flying over the
keys in a lively merry tune that set the children to jumping and
dancing more wildly than before.




CHAPTER IX.

    "Labor in the path of duty,
    Gleam'd up like a thing of beauty."
                                   Cranch.


"My dear child, you have improved wonderfully," Mrs. Keith said, as
Mildred concluded a much longer and more difficult piece of music than
the one with which she had begun.

"She has indeed! I'm quite proud of her performance," echoed Mr. Keith.

"She does make terrible fine music," put in Celestia Ann; "but I wisht
she'd stop a bit, or them dishes o' mine 'll never git washed."

"And I must go to the office," said Mr. Keith, looking at his watch,
and glancing about in search of his hat.

"And I to my sewing," added Mildred, rising.

The children entreated somewhat clamorously for more, but yielded their
wish at once on mother's decision that they must wait till after tea.

"Oh, the books!" cried Mildred, springing toward them with an eager
gesture. "But no," turning away with a half sigh, "I must not take
time to even look at them now."

"Yes, you may," her mother said smilingly; "glance at the titles, and
dip in here and there, just to whet your appetite; read this note
from your uncle, too, and then we can talk over your plans for mental
culture, while busy with our needles."

"Always the same kind, indulgent mother," Mildred said, with a look
of grateful love. "I will do so, then, and try to work fast enough
afterwards to make up for lost time."

Half an hour later she joined her mother and sisters, who were all
sewing industriously.

"Such a nice note, mother. Shall I read it to you?"

"Yes, if you like. I always enjoy uncle's letters."

"It sounds just like his talk," Mildred said when she had done reading,
"saying the kindest things half jestingly, half earnestly. But the idea
of his thinking I must have wondered that he gave me no special parting
gift!--when he was all the time heaping favors upon me."

"But it was Cousin Horace who gave the piano," said Ada.

"Yes; uncle the books. And now I must strive to show my appreciation of
their kindness by making the best possible use of both presents."

"For your own improvement and that of others," added her mother. "I
want you to lend them, one at a time, to Effie Prescott and poor
Gotobed Lightcap."

"What about him, mother?" Mildred asked, taking up her sewing. "The
children told me he had been elected sheriff."

"Yes; I was very glad. He deserves every encouragement, for he is
trying hard to educate himself, and I really hope some day may be able
to enter one of the learned professions."

"Poor fellow!" Mildred exclaimed feelingly, tears starting to her eyes
as memory brought vividly before her the sad scenes connected with the
loss of his right hand, "he is welcome to the use of any or all of my
books. I will gladly do anything in my power to help him."

"Now, suppose we talk about ourselves and our own affairs," Zillah
suggested in her sprightly way. "I'm extremely anxious to learn to play
on that lovely piano, but don't see how either you, mother, or Milly is
to find time to give me lessons, for you are both busy as bees now from
morning to night."

"And I want to learn too," put in Ada imploringly.

"So you shall, dears, both of you, if you continue to be the good,
industrious, helpful girls you have been for the past year," the mother
said, with her cheery smile. "Milly and I will manage it between us.
Almost all our winter clothes are made now, so that we will not need to
give so much time to sewing as we have for the past month or more."

Mildred seemed to be thinking. "I believe we can manage it," she said
presently. "I hear the recitations from nine to eleven now, you know;
we must begin at eight after this, and then from ten to twelve can be
spared for the two music lessons."

"And the afternoons and evenings you must reserve for yourself--your
exercise, study, reading and recreation," added Mrs. Keith, "while I
oversee the practicing and the preparation of lessons for the next day.
Two music lessons a week to each will be all sufficient. Yes, I am sure
that with system and rigid economy of time--making good use of each
golden minute as it flies--we can accomplish all that is necessary, if
not all that is desirable."

Again a few moments of thoughtful silence on Mildred's part, then,
"Mother," she said, "do you think I ought to take that Sunday-school
class? I don't feel fit, and--and besides, it will take a good deal of
my time to attend right to it--prepare the lessons, and occasionally
visit the children through the week."

"I would have you consider the question carefully and prayerfully, and
in the light of God's holy word, which is our only rule of faith and
practice, daughter. 'As we have therefore opportunity, let us do good
unto all men.' 'He that winneth souls is wise.'"

"But, mother, I am not wise."

Mildred's tone was low and humble.

"'If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men
liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.' Ask for it
and search the Scriptures for it, for we are told, 'The entrance of thy
word giveth light; it giveth understanding to the simple.' And while
you study it for the benefit of others, you will be cultivating your
own soul--a matter of even greater importance than the culture of your
intellect."

"And I could not do the first without at the same time doing the last."

"No; that is very true. Also I trust, daughter, that your great motive
for improving your mental powers is that you may thus be prepared to
do better service to the Master?"

"I hope so, mother; it is, if I know my own heart," Mildred said,
looking up with shining eyes. "I know it is said that duties never
conflict, yet it does seem sometimes as though they did."

"As, for example?" and her mother's eyes smiled encouragingly and
sympathizingly into hers.

"Why, there is the weekly church prayer-meeting to take one whole
evening out of the six."

"Only from an hour to an hour and a half," corrected Mrs. Keith.

"But it breaks into the evening so that one can hardly do much with the
leavings," Mildred said with a slight laugh. "And then the young girls'
prayer-meeting breaks up one afternoon of every week, and besides--O
mother! it is a real trial to me to lead in prayer, and I am sure to be
called on."

"I hope you will never refuse," Mrs. Keith said gently, and with a
tender, loving look. "We should never fear to attempt any duty, looking
to God for help, for it shall be given, and a blessing with it."

"It is a great cross to me."

"Greater than that the Master bore for you?"

"Oh no, no! nothing to compare to it, or even to what many a martyr and
many a missionary has done and borne for him."

"And is it not a blessed privilege to be permitted to do and bear
something for his dear sake?" Mrs. Keith asked with glistening eyes,
and in tones trembling with emotion.

"O mother, yes!" And Mildred's head bowed low, a tear fell on her work.

"O my darling, be a whole-hearted Christian!" the mother went
on, speaking with intense earnestness, "consecrate yourself and
all you have to the Master's service--time, talents, influence,
money--everything you possess. He gave himself for us; shall we hold
back anything from him?"

"Oh no! But mother--"

"Well, dear?"

"Shall I not do better service by and by, perhaps, by now giving my
whole time, energy, and thought to preparation for it?"

"Do you find that you can always do a given amount of mental work in a
given space of time?"

"No, mother; sometimes my brain is so active that I can do more in an
hour than at some other times I can accomplish in a day."

"And cannot He who made you, and gave you all your mental powers, cause
them at any time to be thus active? My child, he never lets us lose
by working for him; in some way he will more than make it good to us.
'He that watereth shall be watered also himself.' 'Seek ye first the
kingdom of God, and His righteousness; and all these things shall be
added unto you.'"

Mildred looked up brightly. "I think--I am sure you are right, mother;
and I will take up all those duties, trusting to the dear Master to
help me with them and with my studies. My time is his as well as all
else that I have."

"'Yes, ye are not your own, for ye are bought with a price; therefore
glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God's.'"

"Who, mother?" asked little Fan, playing with her doll near by.

"All God's children, my child."

"I want to be one, mother. But who bought them? and what with? what
price?"

"Christ bought them, dear, with his own precious blood."

"Mother," said Ada softly, "how good he was! I wish I could do
something for him; but I'm not old enough to teach in Sunday-school, or
pray in the prayer-meeting."

"No, darling; but you can pray at home, kneeling alone in your own
room, and join with your heart in the prayers at family worship and at
church; you can pray in your heart at any time and in any place; for
yourself and for others. In his great kindness and condescension God
listens to our prayers at all times, if they come from the heart, and
just as readily to those of a little child as to those of the wisest
and mightiest of men."

"O mother, I'm glad of that! but if I could do some work for him I'd
love to do it."

"Do you remember, dear, that once when Jesus was on earth the people
asked him 'What shall we do that we might work the works of God?' and
Jesus answered and said unto them, 'This is the work of God, that ye
believe on him whom he hath sent.'"

"That was Jesus himself," the child said thoughtfully, staying her
needle in mid air, while her eyes sought the floor. "Mother, could you
tell me _just_ what is meant by believing on him so as to be saved?
It can't mean only believing all the Bible says about him is true,
because it tells us 'the devils also believe, and tremble.' I heard
father read it from the Bible at worship this morning."

"Yes, my dear child, it does mean much more than that," the
mother said, and silently asked help of God to make it clear to
the apprehension of all present, even to little Annis, who leant
confidingly against her knee, the blue eyes gazing earnestly into her
face.

"The devils know the truth, but they don't love it," she said; "God's
children do: they are glad that he reigns and rules in all the
universe; but the devils gnash their teeth with rage that it is so, and
would tear him from his throne if they could."

The two little boys were in the room, Cyril whittling, Don poring over
a new book that Mildred had brought him from Philadelphia. The one shut
his jack-knife, the other his book, and both drew near to listen.

"Jesus didn't die for them, did he, mother?" asked Cyril.

"No, my son, there is no salvation offered them, and God might justly
have left us in the same awful condition; but of his great love and
mercy he has provided a wonderful way by which we can be saved. 'For
God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that
whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting
life.'

"Faith is another word that means the same as believing. The Bible
tells us that without faith it is impossible to please God; also,
that the faith which availeth anything worketh by love. 'Unto you,
therefore, which believe, he (that is, Jesus) is precious.' The faith
that pleases God and will save from sin and eternal death, loves the
Lord Jesus Christ, and trusts for salvation only in what he has done
and suffered for us."

"We can't do anything to save ourselves, mother?"

"We can not do anything to earn our salvation; we can have it only as
God's free, undeserved gift. We have all broken God's holy law, but
Jesus kept it perfectly in our stead. Our sins deserve God's wrath and
curse, both in this life and that which is to come, for it is written,
'Cursed is every one who continueth not in all things which are written
in the book of the law to do them;' but Jesus has borne that curse for
all his people. 'Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law,
being made a curse for us.'"

"I should like to have that right kind of faith if I knew just how to
get it, mother," said Ada.

"'By grace are ye saved, through faith; and that not of yourselves: it
is the gift of God,'" quoted Mrs. Keith. "Ask for it, my child. Jesus
said, 'Every one that asketh, receiveth;' and again, 'If ye shall ask
anything in my name I will do it.'"

"You know, my child, that though we cannot see him, he is always
near. Go to him in prayer, confess your sins, tell him that you are
altogether sinful by nature and by practice, and can do nothing at
all to deserve his favor; but that you come in his name, and pleading
what he has done and suffered for you, because he has invited you so
to come. Ask him to take away your wicked heart and give you a new
one full of love to him; accept his offered salvation from sin and
hell; give yourself to him and he will take you for his own; for he
says, 'Him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out.' He will
give you true faith and true repentance--sorrow for sin because it is
displeasing to God; a sorrow that will lead you to hate and forsake it,
and to be a follower of God as a dear child, doing him service from the
heart, striving to please, honor, and glorify him in all things; not
that you may be saved, but because you are saved."

"But what can a little girl like me _do_ for him, mother?"

"Or a boy like me or Cyril?" added Don.

"Christ is our example, and one thing the Bible tells us of him is that
when he was a child on earth he was subject to his parents; that is, he
obeyed and honored them. You must do the same by yours, if you would be
his disciples. There are few, comparatively, whom God calls to do what
men consider great things for him, but if we do faithfully each little
every-day duty--it may be only to learn a lesson, to sweep or dust a
room, to make a bed, go on an errand, or something else quite as simple
and easy--because we want to please and honor him; he will accept it as
work done for him. Men can judge only from appearances--God sees the
heart, the motives; and according as they are good or bad is he pleased
or displeased with our acts."

"Mother," cried Ada, looking up with a glad smile, "how nice that is!
Any work must be sweet when we think of God watching and being pleased
with us for doing it just as well as we can because we love him."

"Yes, daughter, love is a great sweetener of labor of whatever kind it
may be."




CHAPTER X.

    "True faith and reason are the soul's two eyes,
     Faith evermore looks upward and descries
     Objects remote."
                                     Quarles.


Mr. Keith and Wallace Ormsby were busy, each at his own desk; unbroken
silence had reigned in the office for the last half hour, when suddenly
dropping his pen and wheeling about in his chair, the elder gentleman
addressed the younger:

"Why, how's this, Wallace? I haven't seen you in my house or heard of
your being there for weeks; what's wrong?"

Wallace, taken by surprise, could only stammer out rather incoherently
something about having had a good deal to do--"correspondence and other
writing, studying up that case, you know, sir."

"Come, come, now, you're not so hard pushed with work that you can't
take a little recreation now and then," returned his interrogator
kindly; "and really I don't think you can find a much better place for
that than my house; especially since Mildred's at home again."

"That is very true, sir," said Wallace, "but--I'd be extremely sorry
to wear out my welcome," he added, with a laugh that seemed a trifle
forced.

"No fear of that, Wallace; not the slightest," Mr. Keith answered
heartily: "why, we consider you quite one of the family; we can never
forget how kindly you nursed us in that sickly season. And we've a new
attraction."

"Yes, sir, so I heard. A very fine instrument, isn't it?"

"Yes; if we are judges. Come up this evening and hear Mildred play.
I think she has really a genius for music; but that may be a fond
father's partiality."

The invitation was too tempting to be declined: it had taken a very
strong effort of will to enable the love-sick swain to stay so long
away from his heart's idol, and now under her father's hospitable
urgency his resolution gave way.

"Thank you, sir; I shall be delighted to come: and I have no doubt Miss
Mildred is quite as fine a performer as you think her," he said; and
each resumed his pen.

Mrs. Keith, with strong faith in the wisdom of the old adage, "All
work and no play makes Jack a dull boy," always insisted upon each
member of her household taking a due amount of recreation. The older
girls would sometimes, in their eagerness to finish a piece of work
or learn a lesson for the morrow, be ready to take up book or sewing
immediately on leaving the tea-table; but their mother put a veto upon
that, and by precept and example encouraged a half hour of social chat,
romping with the little ones, or gathering about the piano to listen
to Mildred's playing: and often a little time before tea was given
to music both vocal and instrumental, every one, even down to little
Annis, frequently taking part in the latter.

This season of mirth and jollity was over for the evening, Mrs. Keith
had taken the younger children away to put them to bed, Zillah and Ada
were at their tasks in the sitting-room; but Mildred still lingered at
the piano, feeling that she had need of practice to recover lost ground.

Mr. Keith listened a little longer, then remarking that he must see
Squire Chetwood about a business matter, donned hat and overcoat and
went out.

Rupert stood beside his sister, turning the pages of her music and
praising her execution. "I'd like all the town to hear you," he said.
"I should prefer a much smaller audience," she returned, laughingly.
"Ru, did you remember to mail that letter?"

"No, I didn't!" he cried, in some consternation.

She drew out her pretty watch.

"There's time yet," he said, glancing at its face; "so I'm off."

Hurrying out of the front door, he encountered Ormsby in the porch.

"Hollo! is that you, Wallace?" he cried. "A little more and there'd
have been a collision. Haven't seen you here for an age! been wondering
what had become of you. Well, walk right in. You'll find Milly in the
parlor. But you must excuse me for awhile as I've a letter to mail."

He held the door open as he spoke, and having seen the caller inside,
hastily shut it without waiting for a reply to his remarks, and rushed
away.

The parlor door stood ajar. Wallace tapped lightly; but Mildred, intent
upon her music, did not hear, and he stole quietly in. He stood for a
moment almost entranced by the low sweet tones of voice and instrument.

Mildred was thinking of Charlie, and her voice was full of pathos as
she sang--

    "'When we two parted
      In silence and tears,
    Half broken-hearted,
      To sever for years.'"

A deep sigh startled her and she turned hastily to find--not Charlie,
but Wallace regarding her with eyes full of despairing love mingled
with tender compassion.

He saw that her eyes were full of tears, and coming quickly to her side
took her hand in his.

"Dear Mildred, I can't bear to see you unhappy," he said, in low,
tremulous tones. "Don't grieve, it will all come right some day. Ah, if
only I could have won your heart!" and again he sighed deeply.

"It's the old story, 'the course of true love never will run smooth,'
and we can only be sorry for each other," she returned with forced
gayety, and hastily wiping away her tears. "Take a seat, won't you,
and I'll give you something more cheerful than that sickly sentimental
stuff you caught me singing. That is, of course, if you wish to hear
it;" and she looked up into his face with an arch smile.

A tete-a-tete with him at that time was not desirable--would be rather
embarrassing; she wanted to avoid it, and heartily wished some one
of the family would come in immediately; therefore was not seriously
displeased at the sudden and unexpected entrance of Celestia Ann.

This very independent maid-of-all-work came bustling in, dressed in her
"Sunday best" and with a bit of sewing in her hand.

"Good-evenin', Mr. Ormsby," she said, nodding to him; then turning to
Mildred: "I declare, Miss Mildred, your playin' is so powerful fine
I couldn't noways stand it to set out there in the kitchen while the
pianner was a goin' in here and nobody to listen to it. You see I
thought you were alone; but I reckon Mr. Ormsby won't mind me."

Wallace was too well aware of the value of the woman's services and the
difficulty of retaining them to make any objection. He merely nodded
and smiled in reply to her salutation; then turning to Mildred answered
her with, "Indeed I should be delighted. In fact your father invited
me to call this evening for the express purpose of listening to your
music, and," he added in a whisper, "though I feared my visit might not
be altogether welcome to you, I had not the courage to deny myself so
great a pleasure."

"There was no occasion," Mildred said, in the same low tone: "we
all want you to feel yourself quite at home here. You'll excuse the
intrusion of--"

"Oh, certainly: I understand it."

Celestia Ann had seated herself beside a lamp burning on a distant
table, and was industriously plying her needle.

"Come, give us a lively toon, Miss Milly, won't ye?" she said. "'Yankee
Doodle,' or 'Hail Colomby,' or some o' them toons folks dances to."

"Which or what will you have, Mr. Ormsby?" asked Mildred.

"I?" he said, with a smile; "oh, I own to sharing Miss Hunsinger's
partiality for our national airs, and am well satisfied with the
selections already made."

Mildred gave them in succession.

A tall man with a book under his arm stood in a listening attitude at
the gate. Mrs. Keith, seeing him from an upper window, came down and
opened the front door.

"Good evening, Mr. Lightcap," she said in her pleasant voice, "won't
you come in out of the cold?"

"I come to fetch back your book, Mrs. Keith," he said, moving toward
her with long strides, "and I thought I'd not disturb the folks in
your parlor by knockin' whilst that music was agoin'. I'm a thousand
times obleeged fer the loan o' the book, ma'am;" and he handed it to
her, then lifted his cap as if in adieu.

"No, no; don't go yet," she said. "I have another book for you, and
you must have some more of the music, if you care to hear it, without
standing in the cold to listen."

Her pleasant cordiality put him at his ease, and he followed her into
the parlor.

Mildred was playing and singing "Star Spangled Banner," Wallace
accompanying her with his voice, both so taken up with the business in
hand that they did not perceive the entrance of Mrs. Keith and Gotobed
until they joined in on the chorus; when Mildred looked up in surprise
and nodded a smiling welcome to the latter.

"Tell you, that's grand!" he exclaimed at the close, his face lighting
up with patriotic enthusiasm; "there's somethin' mighty inspirin' about
them national airs o' ourn. Don't ye think so, Mrs. Keith?"

"Yes," she said, "they always stir my blood with love for my dear
native land, and awaken emotions of gratitude to God and those gallant
forefathers who fought and bled to secure her liberties."

"Ah!" he sighed with a downward glance at his mutilated arm, "I can
never lift sword or gun for her if occasion should come again!"

"But you may do as much, or even more, in other ways," she responded
cheerily.

"I can't see how, ma'am," he returned, with a rueful shake of the head.

"'Knowledge is power'; intellect can often accomplish more than brute
force: go on cultivating your mind and storing up information, and
opportunities for usefulness will be given you in due time," she
answered with her bright, sweet smile; then turned with a cordial
greeting to Lu Grange and Claudina and Will Chetwood, ushered in
at that moment by Celestia Ann, who now took her departure to the
kitchen--probably thinking Miss Mildred had listeners enough to be able
to spare her.

The piano was a new and powerful attraction to the good people of
Pleasant Plains, and all the friends and acquaintance of the Keiths, as
well as some whose title to either appellation was doubtful, flocked to
hear it in such numbers that for two or three weeks after its arrival
Mildred seemed to be holding a levee almost every evening.

"How my time is being wasted!" she sighed one evening as the door
closed upon the last departing guest.

"No, dear, I think not," responded her mother, with an affectionate
look and a kindly reassuring smile; "you are recovering lost
ground--perfecting yourself in facility of execution, and giving a
great deal of pleasure; and it is no small privilege to be permitted to
do that last--to cheer heavy hearts, to lift burdens, to make life even
a little brighter to some of our fellow creatures. Is not that so?"

"Yes, mother, it is, and yet I find it very trying to have my plans so
often interfered with."

"Ah! my child, we must not allow ourselves to become too much attached
to our plans," returned Mrs. Keith, with a slightly humorous look and
tone, and passing her hand caressingly over Mildred's hair; "for all
through life we shall be very frequently compelled by circumstances to
set them aside."

"Is there any use in making plans, then?" the girl asked half
impatiently.

"Surely there is. If we would accomplish anything worth while, we must
lay our plans carefully, thoughtfully, wisely; then carry them out with
all energy and perseverance: yet not allow ourselves to be impatient
and unhappy when providentially called upon to set them aside. 'It is
not in man that walketh to direct his steps;' and we ought to be not
only willing to bend to God's providence, but glad to have him choose
for us."

"Ah, yes, mother--yes indeed!" Mildred murmured, a dewy light coming
into her eyes; "if one could only always realize that he sends or
permits these little trials they wouldn't be hard to bear; for it is
sweet to have him choose for us."

It so happened that this was the last of that trial of Mildred's
patience. A storm set in that night which lasted for several days,
keeping almost everybody at home; then came weeks of ice and snow,
making fine sleighing, skating, and sliding; thus furnishing other and
more exciting amusement to the residents of the town, both old and
young.

The Keiths took their share in these winter pastimes--Mildred as well
as the rest: often doing so to please her mother rather than herself,
yet always finding enjoyment in them.

'Twas a busy life she led that winter, and by no means an unhappy one,
spite of the obstinate refusal of the course of true love to run smooth.

It came to a rougher place, to deeper, swifter rapids, in the ensuing
spring.

Through all these months of separation she and Charlie had kept up a
correspondence, though at somewhat irregular and infrequent intervals.
A much longer time than usual had now passed, and yet her last letter
to him remained unanswered. She was secretly very much disturbed in
mind, sorely troubled lest some evil had befallen him, though not
permitting herself to doubt for a moment that his love for her remained
as strong and fervent as ever.

At last a letter came. Rupert brought it from the office at noon, and
handed it to her with a meaning smile, a twinkle of fun in his eyes.

"Something to brighten this dull, rainy day for you, sis," he said
gayly.

"Thank you," she returned, flushing rosy red, and her heart giving a
joyous bound as she slipped the missive into her pocket.

"What! not going to read it after the long journey it has taken to
reach you?" he asked, lifting his eyebrows in mock astonishment.

"Not now, it will keep; and I must get mother's toast and tea ready for
her--there'll be barely time before father comes in to dinner."

"How is she?"

"Better, but not able to be up yet. These bad headaches always leave
her weak, and I shall try to persuade her to lie still all the
afternoon."

With the last word Mildred hurried away to the kitchen.

The morning had been a very trying one: it was Monday, the day of
the week on which Celestia Ann always insisted upon doing the family
washing without regard to the state of the weather. She prided
herself on getting her clothes out early and having them white as the
driven snow, and her temper was never proof against the trial of a
Monday-morning storm.

There had been a steady pour of rain since before daybreak, and the
queen of the kitchen consequently in anything but an amiable mood. A
severe headache had kept Mrs. Keith in bed, and to Mildred had fallen
the task of guiding and controlling the domestic machinery and seeing
that its wheels ran smoothly.

She had had several disputes to settle between Ada and Zillah on the
one side, and the irate maid-of-all-work on the other; also much ado
to induce the younger children to attend to their lessons, and then
to keep them amused and quiet that her mother might not be disturbed
by their noise, and through it all her heart was heavy with its own
peculiar burden; besides, atmospheric influences had their depressing
effect upon her spirits, as upon those of the others, and more than
once a sharp or impatient word, repented of as soon as uttered, had
escaped her lips.

"An undeserved blessing," was her remorseful thought at sight of the
letter. "It may be ill news to be sure--oh if it should!--yet anything
is better than this terrible suspense."

But that must be borne until she could snatch a moment of solitude in
which to end it.

Zillah, stooping over the kitchen fire, looked up hastily as her sister
entered. "You've come to get mother's dinner, Milly? Well, here it is
all ready," pointing to the teapot steaming on the hearth, beside it a
plate of nicely browned and buttered toast.

"O you dear good girls!" was Mildred's response as she glanced from the
stove to the table, upon which Ada was in the act of placing a neatly
arranged tea tray.

"As if it wasn't the greatest pleasure in the world to do a little for
mother!" exclaimed the latter half indignantly. "You needn't think,
Milly, that the rest of us don't love her just as well as you do."

"I meant no such insinuation," Mildred said, half laughing. "I'm sure
our mother deserves the greatest possible amount of love and devotion
from all her children. But may I claim the privilege of carrying up the
dinner you two have prepared?"

"Yes: I suppose it's no more than fair to let you do that much; but
you needn't expect me to think it's any great goodness," Ada answered,
putting the finishing touches to her work, and stepping aside to let
Mildred take possession of the tray.

"Certainly nothing is farther from my thoughts than claiming credit for
any service done to mother," Mildred answered good-humoredly as she
took up the tray and walked away with it.

With quick light step she passed up the stairs, and entering her
mother's room with almost noiseless tread, was greeted with a smile.

"I am not asleep, dear; and the pain is nearly gone," Mrs. Keith said,
speaking from the bed in low, quiet tones.

"I am so glad, mother, and I hope a cup of tea will complete the cure,"
Mildred answered softly, setting down her burden on a little stand by
the bedside and gently assisting her mother to a sitting posture.

"A dainty little meal! My dear child, you are the greatest possible
comfort to me!" Mrs. Keith remarked presently, as she handed back the
empty cup.

"But it was Zillah and Ada who prepared it to-day, mother," Mildred
returned, ever careful to give others their just due, though her eyes
shone.

"Yes, they are dear girls too," the mother said; "I am greatly blessed
in my children: but I was thinking more of the freedom from care given
me by having you here to take the head of affairs. The others, though
doubtless equally willing, are still too young for that. So I could
never give myself up to the full enjoyment of a headache while you were
away," she added in her own peculiarly pleasant, sportive tone and
manner.

"I cannot half fill your place, mother dear; I have not half your
wisdom or patience," Mildred said with a blush and sigh.

"You exaggerate my virtues, Milly; I can imagine from past experience
how your patience may have been tried to-day. Well, dear, if there has
been a partial failure, do not let that rob you of your peace. 'Like as
a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear him;'
and though he cannot look upon sin with any degree of allowance, yet
when we turn from it with true repentance and desire after holiness,
pleading the merits of his dear Son as our only ground of acceptance,
we find him ever ready to forgive. What a blessing, what a glorious
privilege it is that we have, in that we may turn in heart to him for
pardon and cleansing the moment we are conscious of sin in thought,
word, or deed!"

"Yes, mother; I do feel it so. And how strangely kind he often is in
sending joys and comforts when we feel that we deserve punishments
rather," Mildred said with tears springing to her eyes, as she drew out
her letter and held it up.

"From Charlie!" Mrs. Keith exclaimed, with a pleased smile. "My
darling, I am very glad for you. I hope it brings good news."

Mildred turned it in a way to show that the seal was not yet broken,
answering in low, tremulous tones, and between a smile and a sigh,
"I have not found out yet. It must wait for a quiet after-dinner
half-hour."

"My brave, patient girl!" Mrs. Keith said tenderly, passing a hand
caressingly over Mildred's hair and cheek. "Let mother share the joy or
sorrow, whichever it brings."

Mildred brought but scant appetite to the meal, which seemed to her
an unusually long and tedious one; but she was able to control her
impatience and give due attention to the comfort of father, brothers
and sisters, until at length she found herself at liberty to retire for
a season to the privacy of her own room.

Her hand trembled and her heart beat fast between hope and fear as she
drew the letter from her pocket and broke the seal. What if it brought
ill news--that Charlie was in trouble, or that his love had grown cold!
Had she strength to bear it?

Oh, not of herself! But there was One who had said, "In me is thine
help." "Fear thou not, for I am with thee; be not dismayed; for I am
thy God: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee."

One moment's silent pleading of His gracious promises, and she had
grown calm and strong to endure whatever His providence had sent. Tears
dropped upon the paper as she read, for Charlie was indeed in sore
trouble. The first few sentences read as though the writer were half
frenzied with distress.

"He had lost everything," so he wrote; "both his own and his uncle's
property had been suddenly and completely swept away, and the shock
had killed the old gentleman--his only near relative--leaving him
friendless and alone in the world; utterly alone, utterly friendless;
for he could not hope that she who had refused him in prosperity would
be willing to share his poverty. Nor could he ask it. But never, never
could he forget her, never love another."

Then under a later date, and in apparently calmer mood, he continued:

"I am about to leave the home of my childhood and youth; it passes
to-day into the hands of strangers, and I go out into the wide world
to seek some way of retrieving my broken fortunes. With youth, health
and strength, and a liberal education, surely I need not despair of
finally attaining that end, though it will doubtless take years of toil
and struggle; but when it is accomplished you shall hear from me again:
nay, you shall find me at your feet, suing for the priceless boon I
have hitherto sought in vain. I will not despair, for my heart tells me
you will be true to me even through many long years of separation--if
such fate has decreed us--and that in answer to your prayers the
barrier between us will one day be swept away."

"Share his poverty! Ah, would I not if I might!" Mildred cried half
aloud and with a burst of tears. "What greater boon could I ask than
the privilege of comforting him in his sorrows! O Charlie, Charlie, you
have given no address, and so put it out of my power to offer even the
poor consolation of written words of sympathy, of hope and cheer!"

No one came to disturb Mildred in her solitude; she had time for
thought and for the casting of her care upon Him who was her strong
refuge, whereunto she might continually resort.

Mrs. Keith had not left her own room, and downstairs the two elder
girls were busied with their needles, while Rupert kept the younger
children quiet with kite-making and a story, moved thereto partly by
a good-natured desire for their amusement, but principally through
affectionate concern for mother and elder sister.

Mrs. Keith lay on her couch, thinking, a little anxiously, of Mildred,
when the door opened and the young girl stole softly to her side.

"Is it ill news, my darling?" the mother asked in tender, pitying
accents, glancing up compassionately at the dewy eyes and tear stained
cheeks.

"I will read you his letter, mother. You know I have no secrets
from you, my loved and only confidante," Mildred answered a little
tremulously, and stooping to press a kiss on her mother's lips.

Then seating herself, she unfolded the sheet and read in low tones,
which she vainly tried to make calm and even.

"Ah, mother, if only he were a Christian!" she exclaimed with a burst
of uncontrollable weeping.

"Do not despair of seeing him such one day," her mother returned,
laying a gentle, quieting hand on that of the weeper. "God is the
hearer and answerer of prayer; the answer may be long delayed, for the
trial of your faith, but it will come at last."

"What is Charlie waiting for?" sighed Mildred. "How strange that he
cannot see that God's time for the sinner to come and be reconciled to
him is always now! Ah, I do so want him to know the comfort of casting
all his care on the Lord--the blessedness of the man who trusts in him!"

"Yes, it is a strange delusion! It is one of Satan's devices to
persuade men to put off this most important of all transactions to
a more convenient season, which he knows will never come. But, dear
child, we will unite our prayers on Charlie's behalf to Him who has
all power in heaven and in earth, and who has graciously promised, 'If
two of you shall agree on earth as touching anything that they shall
ask, it shall be done for them of my Father which is in heaven.'"




CHAPTER XI.

                  "Ah! what is human life?
    How, like the dial's tardy moving shade,
    Day after day slides from us unperceiv'd!
    The cunning fugitive is swift by stealth;
    Too subtle is the movement to be seen;
    Yet soon the hour is up--and we are gone."
                                           Young.


"Mother, he seems to imply that I am not likely to hear from him again
for years," Mildred remarked, half in assertion, half as asking her
mother's understanding of the drift of young Landreth's communication.

"Yes, I think so," Mrs. Keith responded in gentle, pitying tones. Then
more brightly and cheerily, "But perhaps, dear, that certainty is
better--will be less trying--than a constantly disappointed looking for
of letters."

Mildred gave a silent assent, while a tear rolled quickly down her
cheek. She dashed it hastily aside. "Mother, dearest mother, you must
help me to be brave and cheerful, not letting this disappointment and
anxiety spoil my life and make me a burden to myself and others," she
whispered tremulously, laying her head on her mother's pillow and
gazing lovingly, but through gathering tears, into those dear eyes.

"I will, my poor darling," returned Mrs. Keith in moved tones, putting
an arm about her daughter's neck and drawing her closer till cheek
rested against cheek; "and there is One who, with all power at his
command, and loving you even more tenderly than your mother does, will
give you such help and consolation in this sore trial as she cannot
give."

"I know it; I am sure of it," murmured Mildred. "I can trust him for
myself--though the way looks dark and dreary--but--O mother, it is not
so easy to trust for Charlie!"

"Perhaps, dear, that is one reason why this trial is sent you: trust
for our dear ones as well as for ourselves is a lesson we all need to
learn."

"And to teach me patience, which is another lesson I greatly need and
am very slow to learn," sighed Mildred. "'The trying of your faith
worketh patience. But let patience have her perfect work.' Oh, shall I
ever be able to do that!"

"Yes, at last; I am assured of it: 'being confident of this very thing,
that he who hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the
day of Jesus Christ.' 'In all these things we are more than conquerors
through him that loved us.' And trusting in him, living near to him, in
the light of his countenance, we _may_ have, we _shall_ have great joy
and peace in spite of tribulations."

"And those I know all must have in one way or another," said Mildred
a little sadly, "because we are told in Acts, 'we must through much
tribulation enter into the kingdom of God;' and Jesus told his
disciples, 'In the world ye shall have tribulation.'"

"But, he added, 'Be of good cheer: I have overcome the world,'" Mrs.
Keith said with emotion, a joyous light shining in her eyes.

"Mother," said Mildred, "I once heard the assertion that God's people
were peculiarly marked out for trouble and trial in this world; that
they must expect to have more than was allotted to worldlings. Do you
think that is true?"

"No, I find no such teaching in Scripture, nor has experience of
life taught it to me. 'Many sorrows shall be to the wicked, but he
that trusteth in the Lord, mercy shall compass him about.' 'Many are
the afflictions of the righteous, but the Lord delivereth him out of
them all.' 'O fear the Lord, ye his saints, for there is no want to
them that fear him!' 'Godliness is profitable unto all things, having
promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to come.' The
Bible is full of the blessedness of those who fear and trust the Lord."

"'Whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom he
receiveth,'" quoted Mildred doubtfully.

"Ah, yes; the afflictions of the righteous are the loving discipline
of a tender Father, while upon the incorrigibly wicked he pours out
his fury in judgments that bring no healing to their souls--only
retribution for the sins unrepented of and unforgiven. 'Upon the wicked
he shall rain snares, fire and brimstone, and an horrible tempest: this
shall be the portion of their cup.'"

The door opened softly and Ada looked cautiously in.

"That is right, dear," Mrs. Keith said, greeting the child with a
loving smile; "come in and give mother a kiss. The pain is quite gone,
and I am going to get up now and dress for tea."

"Don't, mother, unless you feel quite, _quite_ strong and well," the
little girl entreated, receiving and returning a tender caress. "I'm so
glad you are better (oh, it isn't nice to have to do without mother!
though I'm sure Milly has tried her very best to fill your place). I
wouldn't have come here--because I was afraid of disturbing you--but
there's a boy down stairs asking if Milly will go and watch to-night
with a sick woman--Mrs. Martin. Claudina Chetwood's to watch, but there
ought to be two, he says, and they don't know of anybody else for
to-night. She's been sick so long that 'most everybody is worn out."

Professional nurses were unknown in the town, and in time of sickness
the only dependence for needed attention, outside of the sufferer's own
family, was upon the kindness of neighbors, and as a rule they were
exceeding kind.

Mrs. Martin's health had been declining for many months; for weeks she
had been confined to bed and in a condition to need constant watching
and waiting upon.

The Keiths had scarcely a speaking acquaintance with her, but that made
no difference when help was needed.

"Do you feel equal to the task, Mildred?" asked her mother. "I shall
be sorry to have you lose your night's rest; but you can make it up
to-morrow. I am not likely to have a return of the headache, and when I
am 'to the fore' you can be spared, you know," she added sportively,
and with a world of motherly pride and affection in the look she bent
upon her first-born.

"Yes, mother; it will not hurt me, and I can't hesitate when duty seems
so plain," Mildred answered cheerfully. "How soon do they want me, Ada?"

"He says about nine o'clock. Mrs. Prior's going to stay till then. I'll
go down and tell him they may expect you;" and with the last word Ada
left the room.

Mrs. Keith had left the bed for a low seat before her toilet table, and
Mildred was softly brushing out and arranging her still beautiful and
abundant hair, very tenderly careful lest too rude a touch should cause
a return of the torturing pain.

"Poor, poor woman!" sighed Mrs. Keith, thinking of Mrs. Martin.

"Is she considered very dangerously ill, mother?" asked Mildred.

"Mrs. Prior was telling me about her yesterday," Mrs. Keith answered.
"Dr. Grange says she has not long to live; but worst of all, Milly, she
is dying without hope."

"O mother, how terrible! And has no one tried to lead her to Jesus? has
no one told her of his great love and his power and willingness to
save?'"

"Yes, months ago, while she was still up and about her house, Mrs.
Prior and others tried to talk to her about her soul's salvation, but
she refused to listen, angrily telling them she was too weak to trouble
herself with trying to think on that subject now, and must wait until
she grew stronger; and all the time growing weaker and weaker. My
child, I'm glad you are to be with her to-night, for who knows but you
may find a fitting moment in which you may speak a word that God may
bless to the saving of her soul."

"How glad I should be to do it," Mildred answered with emotion, "but I
am so young and foolish and ignorant! Mother, how can I hope to succeed
where older and wiser people have failed?"

"'Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord of
hosts.' He often works by the feeblest instrumentalities, and may see
fit to use even you, my dear girl. Ask his help and his blessing upon
your effort, remembering his promise, 'If any of you lack wisdom, let
him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally and upbraideth not;
and it shall be given him.'"

"I will watch for an opportunity, and you will help me with your
prayers, mother?"

"You may be sure of that, dear child."

"But, O mother! how very much better you could speak to her than I."

"I doubt it, Milly; for the work must be of God, or it will come to
naught; and he can as readily make use of your mind and tongue as
of mine. Don't rely on yourself; don't forget that you are only an
instrument."

In spite of a very honest and earnest determination to be cheerful
under this new trial of her faith and patience, and to bear her own
burden according to the scriptural command, Mildred seemed to her
father a little sad-eyed and paler than her wont, as he looked at her
across the tea table.

"My child," he said, "I hear you are expecting to watch with the sick
to-night, but really I'm afraid you are not able to do so; you do not
look well."

"Appearances are sometimes deceitful, you know, father," she returned,
with an effort to be bright and lively. "I am quite well, and if
fatigued to-night can rest and sleep to-morrow."

"Well," he said, only half convinced, "lie down until it is time for
you to go."

"Yes, Mildred, if you can get an hour or two of sleep before your watch
begins, it will be a great help," said her mother. "We will call you at
nine."

"Half-past eight, if you please, mother. I want to be there in time to
ask directions of Mrs. Prior before she leaves."

Mildred was not sorry to seek the quiet and solitude of her own room,
but she scarcely slept. She seemed to have but just fallen into a doze
when Rupert knocked at her door to say that it wanted but ten minutes
of the time she had set for starting, and he was ready to see her to
her destination.

"I'm glad you came early," was Mrs. Prior's greeting, "for indeed I
ought to be at home seeing to things there. They're pretty sure to go
at sixes and sevens when I'm away; and even if my boarders don't growl
about it, 'tain't treatin' 'em exactly fair. But I'll not leave you
alone with her. Claudina'll be here directly, and I'll stay till she
comes."

"Oh, thank you!" Mildred said. "I shouldn't like to be left alone with
any one who is so ill, and I shall need to be told just what I'm to do.
How is she now?"

"Can't last much longer, poor thing," Mrs. Prior returned with a sad
shake of the head; "she's dreadful weak and short o' breath, and awful
afraid to go. Dear, dear, to think of anybody putting off preparation
to the last minute when they _know_ they've got to die, and after that
the judgment! And she won't allow a minister to come into the house,
or let anybody say a word to her about her soul. Several has tried; I
have myself, but it's no use. Perhaps if she'd been approached in the
right way at first, it might have been different. Damaris Drybread was
the first, I believe, to say anything to her; and between you and me,
though Damaris means well, she's not always over wise in her way of
doing what she considers her duty. But there! I must run back to her.
She oughtn't to be left alone a minute. Come into the sitting-room and
take off your things."

The door into the next room, where the invalid lay, was open, and
Mildred could hear her moaning and complaining in hollow, despairing
tones, Mrs. Prior answering in cheerful, soothing accents.

Presently Mrs. Prior stepped back to the door and beckoned Mildred in.

"This is Miss Keith, Mrs. Martin," she said. "She and Miss Chetwood
will watch with you to-night and do all they can to make you
comfortable."

"Yes, you're all very kind. I know you'd help me if you could; but
nobody can give me a minute's ease, and nobody knows what I have to
suffer," moaned the sick woman, gazing piteously into the fresh young
face bending over her.

Mildred's eyes filled with tears, and she opened her lips to speak, but
was stopped by a hasty exclamation: "Hush! don't say a word! don't talk
to me! don't ask me any questions! I won't hear it! I can't bear it!
I'm too weak."

"I can only pray for her," was Mildred's thought as she turned
sorrowfully away and hastened to the outer door, where some one had
rapped lightly.

It was Claudina, and after giving them the necessary instructions Mrs.
Prior left them to their melancholy duty.

As there was not more to be done than one could easily attend to, she
had advised them to take turns in watching and sleeping. There was a
lounge in the sitting-room, where one might rest very comfortably;
Claudina stretched herself on it and almost immediately fell asleep,
Mildred having chosen the first watch.

The latter established herself in the sickroom in an arm-chair by
the bedside. She had brought a book, but the night lamp did not give
sufficient light for reading.

The invalid slept fitfully, tossing, moaning, and sighing in her sleep,
and still more during her moments of wakefulness.

Mildred had never felt wider awake, so strangely, fearfully solemn it
seemed to sit there alone, waiting the coming of the angel of death to
one who shuddered and shrank at his approach. Again and again while
the dying woman slept her watcher knelt by the bedside and poured out
fervent though silent petitions on her behalf. And for Charlie too; for
her thoughts were full of him as well, and oh! at that moment it seemed
a small matter that they might never meet on earth, could she only have
the blessed assurance that eternity would unite them in another and
better world.

"What's that you're doing?" asked the patient, waking suddenly. "Oh,
I'm in awful distress! Rub me with some of that liniment, won't you?"

Mildred complied, doing her best to give relief to the physical
suffering, and crying mightily in her heart to the Great Physician for
the healing of the sin-sick soul.

Oh, the distress and anguish in those hollow, sunken eyes, and
expressed in every lineament of the wasted features!

The bony hand clutched wildly at Mildred's dress and drew her down
close, while the pale lips gasped, "I'm dying, and I'm not prepared!
But I can't think--I'm too weak. I must wait till I get stronger."

"Oh no, no! come now to Jesus! He waits with open arms to receive you,"
cried Mildred, the tears coursing fast down her cheeks. "He died to
save you, and he is able and willing to save to the uttermost all who
come to him. Come now."

"Too late, too late! I'm too weak! I can't think! Don't talk to me any
more."

Mildred's ear barely caught the faintly breathed words, and with the
last the hollow eyes closed, whether in sleep she could not tell.

She found herself growing very weary, and the hands of the clock
pointed to a half hour past the set time for her vigil. She stole
softly into the next room, roused Claudina, and took her place.

Her last thought as she fell into a dreamless slumber was a prayer for
the two for whom she had been so importunately pleading.

She had not slept more than a moment when a hand was laid on her
shoulder, and Claudina's voice, trembling with fright, said, "Mildred,
Mildred, O Mildred, she's gone!"

"Who?" she asked, starting up only half awake.

"Mrs. Martin. I was rubbing her, and she moaned out, 'I'm too weak. I
can't think. I must wait till I'm stronger,' and with the last word
turned her head, gasped once, and was gone."

Claudina shuddered and hid her face. "O Mildred," she whispered, "those
words of our Saviour are ringing in my ears, 'What shall it profit
a man if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul?' As a
girl her head was full of dress and beaux and having a good time; as a
married woman--keeping the best table, the neatest house, and helping
her husband to get on in the world. She had no time to think about her
soul until sickness came, and then she said she was too weak, she must
wait to grow stronger."

They clasped each other's hands and wept silently.

Presently there was a sound of some one moving about the kitchen. "The
girl's up," said Claudina, rising from her kneeling posture beside the
lounge. "I'll go and tell her, and she'll let Mr. Martin know. O, the
poor, motherless baby!"

She left the room, and Mildred, starting up, saw through the crack at
the side of the window-blind that the sun had risen and Mrs. Prior was
at the door, come to inquire how the sick woman was.

Through the sweet morning air, pure and bracing after yesterday's
showers, Mildred walked home, full of solemn, anxious thoughts: Charlie
was a wanderer, she knew not whither, his absorbing desire and anxiety
to retrieve his broken fortunes. "Oh that he would seek first the
kingdom of God and his righteousness!" Henceforward that should be the
burden of her prayer for him, for herself, for all her dear ones.

Then her heart was filled with a great thankfulness for the spared
lives of all these. Some of them had already made preparation for that
last, long journey which, sooner or later, every son and daughter of
Adam must take, and to the others time was still given.




CHAPTER XII.

    "Awake in me a truer life,
      A soul to labor and aspire!
    Touch thou my mortal lips, O God!
      With thine own truth's immortal fire."
                                Sara J. Clarke.


Yes, it was joy and gladness just to be alive this sweet spring
morning. The swift-flowing river gleamed and sparkled in the sunlight;
the forest trees on the farther side were touched with a tender yellow
green; the grass along the wayside and in the dooryards was of a
deeper, richer hue, and spangled thickly with violets and dandelions,
and the peach and cherry trees in the gardens were in full bloom; the
air was filled with fragrance, and with the twittering of birds, the
ripple of the water, and other pleasant rural sounds.

The music of glad young voices came pleasantly to Mildred's ear as she
reached her father's gate, and Fan and Annis, who had been stooping
over the flower-beds, came bounding to meet her with a joyous greeting.

"How is mother?" was her first question.

"Well; she's downstairs in the sitting-room cutting out sewing work."

"Yes; she's sure to be busy," Mildred said, hurrying into the house,
bidding good-morning, as she passed, to Ada, who was sweeping the front
porch.

Every one was busy with a cheerful, energetic activity; Zillah
preparing breakfast, while Celestia Ann put out her clothes to dry;
Rupert milked the cow, and the younger boys fed the chickens.

"Mother! so early at work after your sickness yesterday," Mildred said
in a tone of affectionate remonstrance as she entered the sitting-room.

"Yes, daughter dear, there is need, and I am quite able for it," Mrs.
Keith answered, looking up with a cheery smile. "And you are not
looking so worn and jaded as I feared to see you. Did you get some
sleep? and how is the poor sick woman?"

"Yes, ma'am, I slept several hours, and am feeling pretty well. Mrs.
Martin died about half an hour ago--very suddenly at the last. Claudina
was with her. I was asleep."

Mildred's eyes filled and her voice was husky with emotion as she told
of the solemn event.

A silent shake of the head was the only answer she could give to her
mother's next question, whether the dying woman had given any evidence
that she was putting her trust in Christ.

A look of sadness and pain came over the face of the Christian mother
also, while her heart sent up a silent, fervent prayer on behalf of her
dear ones, that each of them might be found at last hidden in the Rock
of Ages.

"My dear child," she said to Mildred, "let us look upon this sad event
as a solemn warning to us to be more faithful and constant in the work
of striving to win souls to Christ; remembering that 'the night cometh,
when no man can work.' Ah! can I be sure that I am utterly guiltless of
the blood of this woman, to whom I never spoke one word of warning or
entreaty?"

"Mother, don't blame yourself!" cried Mildred in almost indignant
surprise. "You had not even a speaking acquaintance with her."

"But, my dear, I might have had. I could easily have found some excuse
for calling upon her in her sickness, had I not allowed myself to be
too much taken up with other cares and duties."

"But you can't do everything and take care of everybody," said Mildred
with affectionate warmth; "and you are always at some good and useful
work. It is I who ought to take the lesson to heart. And, God helping
me, I will," she added, in low, earnest, trembling tones. "O mother, I
feel this morning that the things of this world are as nothing compared
with those of the next, and I want to show by my life that I do feel
so! I want to spend it wholly in the Master's service, particularly in
winning souls; for, oh! the awful thought of one being lost."

That these were no idle, lightly spoken words, was proven as days,
weeks, and months rolled on, by the ever-growing consistency of
Mildred's daily walk and conversation; her constant effort to bring her
daily life into conformity to the divine precept, "Whether therefore
ye eat or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God;" and
that other, "As we have therefore opportunity, let us do good unto all
men, especially unto them who are of the household of faith."

The members of the home-circle were the first to feel the change in
Mildred. She could hardly have made herself more helpful than she had
long been, but her cheerfulness was more uniform, and the younger
ones found her more patient with their shortcomings, more ready with
sympathy and help in their little trials and perplexities. They soon
learned to carry them to her as readily as to their best and kindest
of mothers. They thought their eldest sister very wise, and liked to
consult her about their plans. This gave her many an opportunity to
influence them for good, and very rarely was it neglected.

Spring was a very busy season with them all; within doors
house-cleaning and a vast amount of sewing--so many new garments
to be made, so many old ones to be renovated and altered to suit
the increased stature of the growing lads and lasses; outside the
gardening, the making everything neat and trim, and the care of the
poultry.

Lessons were intermitted for two or three weeks, to give the older
members of the family time for their unusual labors, while the children
revelled in the delights of digging, planting, and sowing, looking
after their sitting hens and tending their broods of little chicks.
There was a great deal of healthful pleasure gotten out of the little
plots of ground appropriated in severalty to Cyril, Don, Fan, and
Annis, and hardly less from their fowls; besides, the young owners were
learning habits of industry and thrift; also the enjoyment of being
able to give to the Lord's cause of that which had cost them something.

A beggar was a thing almost unknown in the town, and there were very
few people poor enough to be objects of charity; but it was nice, the
children thought, to have something of their very own to put into the
church or Sabbath-school collection, especially when it was to go to
buy Bibles and pay for sending missionaries to the poor benighted
heathen.

The cause of missions was dear to the hearts of the parents, and they
were training their children to love and work for it.

Rupert was the principal gardener and manager of outdoor matters. He
had full charge of the fruit and vegetable garden on his father's
ground, and it flourished under his care. But not content with that,
he had his own lot and Mildred's--which he undertook to cultivate upon
shares--ploughed up, then sowed them with corn, potatoes and melons.

He had his mother's talent for system; and, making the best use of
every spare moment, an early riser, industrious, energetic, and
painstaking, he managed to do all this without neglecting the studies,
in preparation for college, which he was still pursuing with Mr. Lord.

He even found time for setting out trees and shrubs, and digging up the
flower-beds in the front and side yards; doing all the hard work needed
there, then giving them into the care of his mother and the older
girls, who contrived to spare to the pleasing task an occasional half
hour morning and evening, finding it a rest from almost constant toil
with the needle.

Cheerfully busy as Mildred was from morning to night, Charlie was
seldom absent from her thoughts: she followed him in imagination
through all his wanderings, the unbidden tears often springing to her
eyes as she dwelt upon the loneliness and hardships he was doubtless
called to endure; her only comfort that she might constantly plead for
him with that almighty Friend who knew it all, and was ever near to
both herself and her loved one.

She hoped, she prayed, that Charlie might be restored to her, with
the barrier to their union removed; but most of all, that whether she
should ever see him again on earth or not, he might inherit eternal
life.

Her father and mother, Rupert, and Zillah were the only members of the
family who knew anything of the matter; the others never so much as
suspected that their bright, kind, helpful, sympathizing sister Milly
was burdened with a secret sorrow or care.

Nor did she make a confidante of Claudina Chetwood, Lu Grange or Effie
Prescott, though on intimate terms with all three.

Effie's health had improved since the Keiths first made her
acquaintance, but she was still feeble and often ailing. She was a girl
of fine mind, very fond of reading, and very thankful to these good
neighbors for their kindness in lending her books and periodicals. And
she greatly enjoyed a chat with Mrs. Keith or Mildred, for which the
borrowing and returning afforded frequent occasion.

She came in one morning while they were hard at work over the pile of
spring sewing.

"Good-morning, ladies. Don't let me disturb you," she said, as Zillah
dropped her work and rose hastily to hand a chair. "I see you are
very busy, and I came to ask if you would let me help. I should enjoy
spending the morning chatting with you all, and might just as well work
while I talk; and I have brought my thimble," taking it from her pocket
as she spoke.

"That is a very kind offer, Miss Effie, and we will be glad to have
you. Take yon easy-chair and chat with us as long as you will," Mrs.
Keith said, with her pleasant smile; "but that, I think, will be quite
sufficient exertion after your walk."

"Yes, indeed; you must get quite enough of sewing at home," said
Zillah; "it takes so many, many stitches to make even one garment, and
such lots of garments to clothe a family at all respectably."

"Yes," answered Effie in a sprightly tone, "but I am fond of my needle
and can use it a good deal without injury. Mildred, I see you are
working buttonholes--my especial pride and delight. Won't you hand that
waist to me, and find something else to occupy your fingers?"

"Do you like to make them?" asked Mildred in a tone of genuine
surprise. "It is my perfect detestation. Therefore I find myself sorely
tempted to accept your generous offer."

Before Mildred's sentence was completed the work had exchanged hands,
Effie taking playfully forcible possession.

"My dear girl, you have a real genius for the business!" Mildred
exclaimed presently. "How rapidly and nicely you work them! two done in
less time than I should take for one, without doing it half so well."

Effie's eyes sparkled. "Generous praise, Mildred," she said; "but you
can well afford to allow me the credit of doing one little thing better
than you do it."

"I dare say there may be many others in which you excel me."

"No, I don't believe there's any other; and oh, when I hear you play
the piano I feel as if I'd give anything in the world if I could play
even half as well."

"Would you like to take lessons?"

"Shouldn't I!" cried Effie, with emphasis. "But, dear me, there's no
use thinking of it, as I'm not likely ever to have the chance."

"I'd rather give a music lesson any day than work buttonholes,"
remarked Mildred laughingly; "and oh, the quantities of them to be made
in this family! Effie, why shouldn't we exchange work occasionally?--an
hour of instruction on the piano for an hour's sewing? Don't you think
it would do, mother?"

"Capitally, if you are mutually satisfied."

Effie's face was sparkling with delight. "Oh, do you really mean it?"
she cried. "Why, I'd gladly give two hours' sewing for one of music
lesson, and am sure it would be worth it."

"No," said Mildred, "I think not, considering what a swift and neat
needlewoman you are."

"Not much worldly wisdom in either of you, I think, my dear girls,"
remarked Mrs. Keith with an amused smile.

"But there's a difficulty I had not thought of," said Effie. "I have no
piano to practise on."

"You shall have the use of mine."

"Thank you. I gladly accept your kind offer if I may pay for that also
with my needle."

Effie spent the day with her friends, and before leaving had come to an
arrangement with Mildred perfectly satisfactory to both, and taken her
first lesson.

Just at its close, before the two had left the piano, Claudina and Lu
came in, and, hearing what Mildred had undertaken, earnestly begged
that she would add them to her class.

"Father is very anxious for me to learn," said Claudina, "and was
wondering, the other day, if it would do to ask you to take me as a
scholar. He said you could set your own price; he'd willingly pay it;
but as you have no need to make money for yourself he was afraid to
propose it. Now, Milly dear, would you be offended? Of course we should
feel that you were doing us a favor, even though you let us pay for it."

"No; I don't feel at all offended," Mildred said, laughing and
blushing, "and I'd be glad to do anything in my power to gratify you,
girls, or your fathers; but I really haven't time."

"Then I suppose we'll have to give it up," remarked Lu with a sigh;
"but I do wish this town could afford a music teacher, for I've set my
heart on learning to play."

"When spring house-cleaning and sewing are done you won't be so very
busy, Milly," suggested Claudina.

"Yes, very nearly if not quite as busy as now, for then I take up my
governessing again."

"You're the best sister and daughter I ever heard of," was Claudina's
comment.

Tea was just over, and Mrs. Keith stepped out to the kitchen for a
consultation with Celestia Ann on the all-important subject of the
morrow's breakfast and dinner. Returning to the sitting-room, she found
her three girls again plying their needles.

"Come, come, my dears, no more work to-night," she said. "You, Zillah
and Ada, may help me set everything to rights here, so that we can go
on promptly in the morning; and Mildred, child, if you are not too
tired, let your father have some music. It is restful and cheering to
him after his day's work and worry at the office."

"I'm never too tired to play for father or mother," Mildred said with a
smile as she rose to do her mother's bidding.

"There! don't wait to fold that; I'll do it," Zillah said, taking the
work from her hand. "And, mother, please go into the parlor and rest
yourself in the big rocking-chair, and leave this clearing up to Ada
and me."

"Yes, mother, please do," chimed in the younger girl; "we'd a great
deal rather, and you know we can just as well as not."

"Thank you, dears; then I will. What comforts and blessings you are to
me! all three of you."

"Me too, mother?--me and Fan?" asked little Annis, following and
standing beside her mother's chair with eager, upturned face and
pleading eyes.

"Yes, indeed, darling! Mother wouldn't know how to do without her baby
girl or her dear little Fan," Mrs. Keith answered, lifting the one into
her lap and drawing the other close to her side; for Fan, too, had
followed her in from the sitting-room.

"I'm not of much use yet, mother, 'cept to love you," she said,
nestling closer; "but I'm going to be some day, if I live. See! I've
hemmed one side o' this handkerchief; and didn't I make nice bits of
stitches?" she asked, holding it up for inspection.

"Yes, indeed, darling, I can see that you have taken great pains. Why,
I think after a while I shall have no need to sew at all, with so many
other fingers to do the work. Go and show it to father."

Fan obeyed, was praised, caressed and taken upon her father's knee,
where she sat in quiet content listening to Mildred's music.

Presently Squire Chetwood was ushered in by Celestia Ann.

"Go on, Miss Mildred," he said as he took the seat Mr. Keith hastened
to offer; "there's no greater treat for me than your music; and my
errand will keep for a bit."

It proved, when told, one that rejoiced them all. It was to show to
Mr. Keith a letter of acceptance from a gentleman teacher with whom
they had been corresponding with a view to securing his services as
principal of a school which they were trying to establish in the town.
It was to be for both sexes, and the gentleman's wife would take charge
of the girls' department.

"I send four pupils--Zillah, Ada, Cyril, and Don," said Mr. Keith,
"thereby considerably lightening your labors, wife, and Mildred's, I
trust."

The squire cleared his throat. "And then, Miss Mildred--Ah! I hardly
dare go on lest you should think me presuming."

"But after exciting my curiosity you can hardly refuse to gratify it,"
Mildred returned playfully, though she knew very well what was coming.

Before the squire went away she had consented to take another music
scholar, and the terms he offered were very liberal, she having
declined to name a price for her services.

"Having accepted Claudina, you can hardly refuse Lu," her mother
remarked when the squire had gone.

"No, mother; and how little time I shall have left for helping you!"
sighed Mildred.

"Now, Milly, don't try to make yourself of so much importance!" cried
Zillah in a gayly bantering tone. "Didn't mother do without you
entirely last year? One would suppose Ada and I were of no consequence
where work is concerned."

"But you will be in school, child!"

"Not for the first four hours after we leave our beds in the morning,
or the last four or five before we return to them at night."

"Beside an hour or more at noon," added Ada; "and if we can't do
something to help mother in all that time we'll deserve to be called
lazy girls."

"We shall do nicely, I am sure," the mother said, with a pleased,
loving glance at each of the three faces in turn. "I think we can
manage so that everything will be attended to, and no one of us
overworked. I can easily hear Fan's and Annis's little lessons every
day while sewing. Your five music scholars, Mildred, will occupy only
ten hours a week of your time, while one of them will do an hour's
sewing for you every day and the other two outsiders bring you in a
nice little sum of pocket money."

"Why, it doesn't look so very laborious after all!" Mildred said,
brightening.

"No," laughed Zillah, "you could take half a dozen more music scholars
and not be hurt."




CHAPTER XIII.

    "Wouldst thou from sorrow find a sweet relief,
      Or is thy heart oppress'd with woes untold?
    Balm wouldst thou gather for corroding grief,
      Pour blessings round thee like a shower of gold!"
                                            Carlos Wilcox.


Mildred's charity, beginning at home, did not end there: very earnestly
and persistently she strove to scatter blessings as "a shower of gold"
wherever she went; to make every life that came in contact with hers,
at ever so small a point, the better and brighter for that contact,
though it were by but a cheery word or smile.

Do you say these are small matters, scarcely worthy of attention? Ah!
to each of us comes the divine command, "Be pitiful, be courteous;" and
the Master said of the tithing of mint, anise, and cummin, while the
weightier matters of the law were neglected, "These ought ye to have
done, and not to leave the other undone." "He that is faithful in that
which is least, is faithful also in much."

It was so with Mildred; never considering herself off duty as a
Christian soldier, she was as ready to feed the hungry, clothe the
naked, teach the ignorant, and nurse the sick, as to bestow the kind
word and pleasant smile that cost her nothing. Nothing? Ah! there were
times of weariness and depression when even these trifles cost a heroic
effort--a determined setting aside of selfish inclination to moodiness
or irritability, or indulgence in a pleasing melancholy, because one
great earthly blessing was denied her.

In this her bright, cheerful mother, always ready with a word of
counsel and encouragement, was a wonderful help. Indeed, by frequent
precept and constant example Mrs. Keith succeeded in making all her
children, to a greater or less degree, sunny tempered and benevolent,
kind and courteous.

The Dorcas society connected with their church had no more active,
efficient, or liberal members than this good lady and her eldest
daughter; in proportion to their ability, they gave freely of time,
labor, and money. They were, indeed, always found ready to every good
work, though they trusted not in their works for acceptance in the
sight of God, but only in the atoning blood and imputed righteousness
of Christ. "Followers of God as dear children," theirs was a service of
love and joy, rendered not that they might be saved, but because they
were saved.

Questions of doctrine and duty were freely discussed in the family
circle, the children bringing them in all confidence to their parents
for decision, the parents always appealing to the Scriptures as the one
infallible rule of faith and practice--as they are in very truth.

"To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not according to this
word, it is because there is no light in them." "For the commandment is
a lamp, and the law is light."

One Sabbath a returned missionary preached in the morning to Mr. Lord's
congregation, in the afternoon addressed the assembled Sunday-schools
of the town.

The Keiths came home from the latter service very full of what they had
heard of the sad condition of the heathen world, the need of money to
carry on the work of evangelizing them, and the self-denying efforts
some of God's children, both old and young, were making to earn and
save that they might be able to give to this good cause.

Cyril had been especially interested in the story of a little boy who
had raised a pig, sold it, and given to missions the whole of what he
received for it.

"I mean to have a missionary pig," Cyril said to Don as they walked
home together. "I'll take good care of it and feed it well, so it will
be very fat, so that I can get ten dollars for it; and every cent of it
shall go to the missionaries. And I'll make more besides for them out
of my garden and my chickens."

"So will I," said Don; "but I shan't let 'em have all the money."

"How much, then?"

"I don't know yet."

"I'm afraid it won't do for all of us to have pigs," said Ada,
overhearing the talk of her little brothers.

"No," laughed Zillah; "we'd overstock the market and bring down the
price."

"I don't see what I can do then, except give some of my pocket-money;
unless mother will pay me for doing without butter and tea and sugar,
as some of the children do that the missionary told about."

"That's too hard a way," said Cyril; "you won't catch me trying that:
I'll work for the heathen, but I won't starve for 'em."

"It would be hard; but we ought to deny ourselves," Ada returned half
regretfully.

"Yes, in some things," Zillah said: "I don't feel sure about this.
We'll ask father and mother."

They did so immediately on entering the house.

"Your mother and I have just been discussing that question," Mr. Keith
said, "and we think that as good, nourishing food is necessary to your
health and growth, it is not a duty for you to deny yourselves such
common comforts as butter and sugar. There are other and better ways in
which to practise self-denial."

"How, father?" asked Ada.

"It might be by denying our love of ease--working and earning for the
good of others, when we would rather be at play; the Bible speaks of
laboring, working with our hands that we may have to give to him that
needeth."

"And who more needy than the poor, benighted heathen!" sighed Mrs.
Keith.

"It won't hurt us to deny ourselves in the matter of finery," remarked
Mildred.

"Or eating more than enough to satisfy our appetites, just because it
tastes good," added Rupert.

"No, that is sinful in itself, because injurious to health," said his
father.

"But haven't we a right to eat what we please, and just as much as we
choose, if we would rather be sick than do without the good things,
father?" asked Cyril.

"No, my son; health is one of God's good gifts, which we have no right
to throw away. We can't serve him with a sick and suffering body so
well as with a strong, healthy one. And we are told in Proverbs, 'The
drunkard and the glutton shall come to poverty.'"

"Father, does God want us to give all our money away to other folks?"
asked Don.

"No, son, not all; our heavenly Father intends us to use some of it to
supply our own needs."

"What proportion ought we to give, father?" asked Rupert.

"I think that depends upon how large our means are."

"Is not a tenth the Bible rule?" asked Mrs. Keith.

"Yes; God claims a tenth as his. It seems plain that every one should
give that, or more properly pay it to the Lord; and those who are able
to do more, add offerings in proportion to their ability. So I gather
from this text in Malachi, third chapter and eighth verse;" and opening
a Bible, Mr. Keith read aloud: "'Will a man rob God? Yet ye have robbed
me. But ye say, Wherein have we robbed thee? In tithes and offerings.'"

"I thought that was the rule under the Levitical law, and that the New
Testament rule was, 'Give as God has prospered you,'" said Rupert.

"Yes, we are to give as God has prospered us--one dollar out of every
ten, one hundred out of every thousand, and so on. The beginning of
tithe-paying was not in the time of Moses, but hundreds of years
before; for we read that Abraham paid tithes, and that Jacob promised
to the Lord the tenth of all that he should give him. We nowhere read
that Jesus abrogated this law; indeed he said, 'Think not that I am
come to destroy the law or the prophets; I am not come to destroy, but
to fulfil;' of the tithing of 'mint and rue and all manner of herbs,'
that it ought not to be left undone. And God promises blessings, both
temporal and spiritual, to those who faithfully obey this law of the
tithes. 'Bring ye all the tithes into the storehouse, that there may
be meat in mine house; and prove me now herewith, saith the Lord of
hosts, if I will not open you the windows of heaven, and pour you out
a blessing, that there shall not be room enough to receive it. And I
will rebuke the devourer for your sakes, and he shall not destroy the
fruits of your ground; neither shall your vine cast her fruit before
the time in the field, saith the Lord of hosts.'

"'Honor the Lord with thy substance and with the first-fruits of all
thine increase: so shall thy barns be filled with plenty, and thy
presses shall burst out with new wine.'

"'Trust in the Lord, and do good; so shalt thou dwell in the land, and
verily thou shalt be fed.'

"'There is that scattereth, and yet increaseth; and there is that
withholdeth more than is meet, but it tendeth to poverty.'

"'He that hath pity upon the poor, lendeth unto the Lord; and that
which he hath given will he pay him again.'

"These are not all the texts bearing on the subject, but will suffice
for the present."

"Father," said Don, "God doesn't need our money, does he? Why does he
tell us to give it to him?"

"For our own good, my son. Don't you remember Jesus said, 'It is more
blessed to give than to receive'? He cannot be happy who indulges a
mean, sordid disposition; the less selfish we are, the more ready to
help others and share our good things with them, the happier and the
more like our heavenly Father we shall be. Try it, my boy, and you will
find it is so. And the more constantly we practise giving, the more we
shall be in love with it."

"And then shall our gifts be pleasing to God," added the mother.
"'Every man according as he purposeth in his heart, so let him live;
not grudgingly, or of necessity: for God loveth a cheerful giver. And
God is able to make all grace abound toward you; that ye, always having
all sufficiency in all things, may abound to every good work.'"

"Well, it seems, if we obey the Bible rule, we will give a tenth of our
pocket-money, and of all we can make beside," remarked Rupert.

"And I am very glad I can earn something by teaching music," said
Mildred.

"I think you can each find some way of earning something for this good
purpose," the mother said, glancing smilingly around the little group.

Cyril told eagerly of his plan. Don adding that he meant to have a
missionary pig too, but not to give all that he made on it.

"You must decide for yourself whether to give more than a tenth of its
price," his father said; "but I think 'missionary pig' will hardly be
an appropriate name unless it is entirely devoted to the cause."

"Mother," said Fan, "wouldn't it be nice for me to call one of my hens
a missionary hen, and give all the money I get for her and her eggs to
the heathen?"

"Yes, dear, I think it would be very nice," Mrs. Keith answered, with a
loving glance into the earnest little face.

"Then I'll do it, and I hope she'll lay an egg every day."

"And I'll have a missionary hen!" cried little Annis, clapping her
hands with delight at the idea of contributing her mite to the good
cause.

"Ada and I haven't matured our plans yet," said Zillah, "but we'll be
sure to find some way to make money, as well as the rest of you."

"Mother will help us to contrive it; won't you, mother?" Ada said, with
a look of confiding affection.

The answer was a prompt, emphatic "Yes, indeed, my dear."

But Mr. Keith seemed to have something further to say, and all turned
to listen.

"We want to give the missionary some money to-day or to-morrow to carry
away with him. Who has any ready now?"

Cyril's countenance fell. He was a great spendthrift, and money slipped
through his fingers almost as soon as it came into his possession.

"My pocket-money's all gone," he sighed, half aloud, half to himself;
then nudging his younger brother, "Don, you always have some: won't you
lend me a little?"

"No," said Mr. Keith, "you are not to go into debt, even from a good
motive. After this, set aside the Lord's tenth of all your money as
soon as it comes into your hands, and use that portion scrupulously
for him in giving to the church and the poor. And, my son, I want you
to form the habit of laying by a little for your own future needs. You
will be a poor man if you spend all your money as fast as you get it."

"I don't," remarked Don complacently; "I save 'most all I get."

"Ah, yes, my boy, I know that, and often feel troubled about my
youngest son lest he should become a hard, grasping, miserly man,
loving and hoarding money for its own sake. Do you know that that is as
truly idolatry as the bowing down of the heathen to images of wood and
stone?"

"Is it, father?" murmured the little lad, his face crimsoning, and the
tears starting to his eyes.

"It is indeed, Don; and so a worse fault than Cyril's foolish spending,
bad as that is. The Bible bids us mortify 'covetousness, which is
idolatry.'"

"Try, both of you, to save in order 'to have to give to him that
needeth,' and to 'provide things honest in the sight of all men.' We
must first pay to the Lord his tenth, then to our fellow-men what we
honestly owe them; after that give to the needy what we feel able to
spare from our store. Not pull down our barns and build greater, there
to bestow our surplus goods, while we take our ease, eat, drink, and be
merry, and neglect to relieve the distress and suffering of the poor
and needy."

"Like the rich man in the Bible," said Fan. "Father, was he a very bad
man?"

"Probably not what the world calls bad; we are not told that he was
dishonest, drunken, or profane; but he was selfish and covetous--caring
for the good things of this world and neglectful of eternal things; and
selfishness is sin as well as covetousness. They seem to go together
and shut the soul out of heaven. The Bible says, 'Nor thieves, nor
covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners shall inherit
the kingdom of God."

"I thought coveting was wanting other people's things," remarked Ada.

"That is coveting," replied her father, "and so is that inordinate
love of gain, which leads men to drive hard bargains, and to heap up
riches at the expense of leaving those to suffer whom they are fully
able to relieve. When the Lord gives us large means, it is that, as his
stewards, we may distribute to others. Well, Rupert, what is it?"

"I have the money I had saved toward buying a piano. I will give a
tenth of it now."

"That is well. Who else has anything for the missionary?"

"I have a little of the pocket-money Aunt Wealthy supplies," Mildred
said. "I wish I could give more now. I hope to when the money comes in
from my music scholars; but that will not be for some time, you know."

"I haven't much money," said Fan, "but maybe I can sell my eggs. I have
a whole dozen."

"I'll give some of my money," said Don.

"And I," "And I," said Zillah and Ada.

Mrs. Keith also promised something, and Mr. Keith added that he, too,
would give, and they would collect it all and hand it to the missionary
before his departure, which was to be the next afternoon.

"Father, is it right to pray for earthly prosperity?" asked Rupert.

"That depends very much upon the motive. The apostle James says, 'Ye
have not, because ye ask not. Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask
amiss, that ye may consume it upon your lusts.' It is not the asking he
condemns (he seems, indeed, to reprove them for not asking), but the
wrong motive for so doing. Let us compare Scripture with Scripture. The
Psalmist tells us, 'Except the Lord build the house, they labor in vain
that build it: except the Lord keep the city, the watchman waketh but
in vain. It is vain for you to rise up early, to sit up late, to eat
the bread of sorrows; for so he giveth his beloved sleep.'

"In Deuteronomy we are told, 'Thou shalt remember the Lord thy God, for
it is he that giveth thee power to get wealth.' Evidently we cannot
attain to worldly prosperity except by God's help--his blessing on
our efforts. We may work for prosperity, and we may pray for it, from
either a right or a wrong motive, and certainly in either case we are
approved or the contrary according to the motive that actuates us. 'Man
looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart.'"

"What would be a right motive, father?" asked Ada in her grave, earnest
way.

"The desire to have the ability to 'provide things honest in the sight
of all men,' to help on the Lord's cause--the work of the church--and
to give to the poor and needy. Many desire wealth for their own ease
and indulgence, for the consequence it gives them in the eyes of their
fellow-men, or as a means of gaining power over them. It cannot be
right to pray for it from such motives--that is the sort of asking the
apostle condemns."

Mrs. Keith was turning over the leaves of the Bible. "Let the Lord be
magnified, who hath pleasure in the prosperity of his servants," she
read aloud. "What the Lord takes pleasure in, and what he promises
upon conditions, it cannot be wrong to ask for, unless from a wrong
motive," she remarked. "And it is clear to my mind that if it be wrong
to pray for prosperity, it is also wrong to work for it; certainly a
Christian should never engage in anything upon which he cannot ask
God's blessing. But we are commanded to be 'diligent in business,' and
told that 'the hand of the diligent maketh rich.'"

"Yes," said her husband, "'Not slothful in business, fervent in spirit,
serving the Lord.' If we are careful not to divorce these two which
God hath joined together, we need not fear to ask his blessing on our
labors."




CHAPTER XV.

    "The whining schoolboy with his satchel
    And shining morning face, creeping like a snail
    Unwillingly to school."
                                Shakespeare.


The new school had opened the previous week, and was now in successful
operation. Zillah and Ada were pursuing their studies with redoubled
zeal and interest, finding a constant spur in the desire to keep pace
with, if not outstrip, the other members of their classes.

Mildred was often applied to for help in the home preparation of their
lessons, and her assistance, always cheerfully and kindly given,
received with due appreciation.

"With such good help at home," they would say, "we ought to do better
than any of the other girls; for there isn't one of them who has a
sister so capable of explaining whatever in their lessons they find
difficult to understand, or so willing to do it."

"I am only returning to you what mother has done for me in past days,"
Mildred answered more than once; "and if I did not do it she would."

"Yes," was the rejoinder, "there isn't such another mother in the town,
or anywhere else, for that matter."

The little boys, accustomed to passing most of the day in the open air,
after conning their tasks on the porch or in the shade of the trees,
found the confinement of the schoolroom very irksome.

Mother and Mildred were frequently appealed to for sympathy in their
trial; and the demand was always sure to be met with bright, hopeful,
cheery words of encouragement to patience and diligence. "They must
be willing to bear with a little discomfort in the pursuit of the
knowledge which was so important to their future success in life--must
try to learn all they could, that they might grow up to be wise, useful
men, capable of doing God service, and of helping themselves and
others."

Hitherto the little fellows had been kept out of the streets and
carefully shielded from the snares and temptations of association with
the evil-disposed and wicked. The time for a trial of the strength of
their principles had now come, and parents and elder sister looked on
with deep anxiety for the result.

The perfect openness engendered in them by never-failing sympathy in
all their little childish joys and sorrows, plans and purposes, now
proved a wonderful safeguard. Why should they want to hide anything
from those whose interest in and love for them was made so apparent?
They did not; and so many a wrong step was avoided or speedily
retrieved.

In that first week of school Cyril had got himself into disgrace with
his teacher by a liberal distribution among his mates of gingerbread
and candy, for which he had spent his whole store of pocket-money.

The good things were carried into the schoolroom, the master's
attention drawn to them by the constant munching and crunching among
the boys.

A search was promptly instituted, the remainder of the feast
confiscated, and an explanation called for.

"Who brought these things here?" was the stern demand.

"I, sir; I brought them and gave them to the fellows, and so am more to
blame than anybody else," Cyril said, rising in his seat and speaking
out with manly courage and honesty, though his cheeks were in a blaze
and his heart beat fast.

"Then, sir, you shall be punished with the loss of your recess and
being kept in for an hour after school," was the stern rejoinder. "I
will have no such doings here."

There was not a word of commendation of the boy's moral courage and
readiness to confess his fault; and he had to endure not only the loss
of his play-time, but also was severely lectured and threatened with a
flogging if ever the offence should be repeated.

He went home very angry and indignant, and his mother being out,
carried his grievance to Mildred. He poured out the whole story without
reserve, finishing with "Wasn't it the greatest shame for him to punish
me twice for the same thing? I'm sure the loss of my recess was quite
enough, 'specially considering that I owned up the minute he asked
about it. And then the idea of threatening to flog me! Why, I haven't
had a whipping since I was a little bit of a fellow, and I'd think it
an awful disgrace to get one now I'm so big; 'specially at school; and
I say nobody but father or mother has a right to touch me. And nobody
shall; I'll just knock old Peacock down if he dares to try it; that I
will!"

"O Cyril, Cyril, you should not be so disrespectful toward the teacher
father has set over you!" Mildred said, striving to speak quietly
though between indignation at the severity and injustice of the
treatment the child had received, and the mirth-provoking idea of his
imagining himself able to cope with a man, she found it no easy matter.
"I'm really sorry you have wasted your money and broken the rules."

"No, I didn't!" the boy burst out hotly; "he'd never made any rule
about it; though he has now, and says I ought to have known and must
have known that such things couldn't be allowed."

"Well, that seems rather unreasonable; but I suppose you might if you
had stopped to think. You know, Cyril dear, how often father and mother
have urged you to try to be more thoughtful."

"Yes, but it seems as if I can't, Milly. How's a fellow to help being
thoughtless and careless when it comes so natural?"

"Our wicked natures are what we have to strive against, you know; and
God will help us if we ask him," she answered, speaking that holy name
in low, reverent tones.

Don, who had waited about the school-house door for Cyril, and walked
home by his side, was standing by listening to the talk. "O Milly! we
don't like that school!" he said, with a look of weariness and disgust;
"It's so hard to have to be shut up there, and obliged to sit still
most all day long. Won't you ask father to let us stay at home and say
lessons to you again?"

"Oh yes, Milly, do!" Cyril joined in. "Fan's ever so lonesome without
us, and we'll be as good as we know how; study hard, and not give you a
bit of trouble."

Mildred explained that the arrangements had been made for the summer,
and could not now be altered.

"And surely," she concluded, with an encouraging smile, "my two little
brothers are not such cowards as to be conquered by little difficulties
and discomforts. Don't you know we have to meet such things all the way
through life? and the best way is to meet them with a cheerful courage
and determination to press on notwithstanding. 'The slothful man saith
there is a lion in the way.' 'The way of the slothful man is as an
hedge of thorns.' Don't be like him."

"Does that mean that folks are lazy when they give up because things
are hard?"

"Yes, Don; and if we are so ready to do that, we are not likely to get
to heaven; because that is no easy matter--with our sinful hearts, a
wicked world, and Satan and all his hosts to fight against. We have
to 'fight the good fight of faith'--to 'lay hold on eternal life'--to
'press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in
Christ Jesus'--to 'run with patience the race that is set before us.'
Jesus said 'The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and the violent
take it by force.'"

"Milly, what does that mean?"

"That to get to heaven it is necessary to strive very, very earnestly
and determinately."

"Milly, how can Don and I fight that fight?" asked Cyril. "Do tell us."

"Just as grown people must--by loving and trusting Jesus, and striving
earnestly every day and hour to serve God in doing faithfully the duty
that comes nearest to hand. And don't you see that the principal part
of yours at present is to be good, faithful workers at school, and
obedient to your teacher, because father has given him authority over
you when you are at school?"

"Yes, I 'spose so," sighed Don. "But O Milly, I did want to run away
this afternoon and take a nice walk, 'stead of going to school. It's
so nice down by the river and in the woods '<DW41> the birds and flowers."

"Yes, I know it is, Don; but it would have been very wrong to go
without leave; and I can't tell you how glad I am that you resisted the
temptation."

Now that money was wanted for the missionary, Cyril was sorry for
having spent his so foolishly.

"I was very bad to waste it in that way," he said regretfully; "it was
all because I didn't think; but I mean to think after this, and try to
make the best use of all the money I get."

The new school was nearly as great an affliction to Fan as to the
little boys; she was so lonely without Cyril and Don--hitherto her
inseparable companions and playmates; and now it depended upon her to
run errands for her mother and sister when they were in too great haste
to wait the boys' leisure; and Fan, being extremely timid and bashful,
found this no small trial.

It was Monday morning; the scholars were trooping into the
schoolhouse--the Keiths among the rest.

At home Mildred was in the parlor giving a music lesson; Fan in the
sitting room waiting for mother to come and hear her read and spell.

Mrs. Keith came in and sat down at her writing desk.

"Fan, darling, mother wants you to do an errand for her," she said,
taking up her pen.

"What, mother?" the child asked half plaintively.

"To carry a note for me to Mrs. Clark. I want you to take it there
immediately, and tell her you will wait for an answer. And then, as you
come back, call at Chetwood & Mocker's and ask for a yard of calico
like the piece I shall give you, and also how they are selling eggs
to-day by the dozen. Then I will buy your dozen of you, and you will
have the money for the missionary."

"Oh mother," sighed the little girl, "I don't like to go to the store
all alone, or to Mrs. Clark's either. I don't know her."

"I am sorry my dear little girl is so bashful, but that is something
that must be overcome, and cannot be except by refusing to indulge it.
You may take Annis with you, though, if you choose."

"Thank you, mother; but Annis is so little that I'll have to do all the
talking just the same."

"Well, dear, you can talk quite prettily, if you only forget to think
about yourself. Try to forget little Fan Keith, and think of the
messages she has to deliver, the questions she must ask, and you will
find there is no trouble at all."

"O mother! please let somebody else go."

Fan had put down her book, gone to her mother's side, and was standing
there looking pleadingly into her face.

Mrs. Keith bent down as she folded her note and pressed a loving kiss
on the white forehead.

"My little girl will go to please mother and the dear Lord Jesus. There
is no one else to go now, and the errands cannot wait for the boys to
come home from school."

"Will it please Jesus, mother?"

"Yes, dear, because he bids you honor and obey your mother, and also to
deny yourself when duty calls. You know one part of the errand at the
store is to help you to the money for the poor heathen."

"Mother, I'd rather do 'most anything else for them; but I'll go to
please you and the Lord Jesus. And I want Annis to go too. Will you,
Annis?"

"I guess I _will_! I'd like to," the little one answered joyously.

It was a busy morning with Mrs. Keith, and getting Annis ready for the
walk involved some small loss of time; but she considered the pleasure
she would thus give her little ones well worth the sacrifice.

"Now, Fan," she said, when the children were about to start, and she
had put the note and sample of calico into the little girl's hands,
with a repetition of her commissions, "remember that you are the errand
girl and have all the responsibility, because Annis is too little; but
you are mother's big, useful girl. I know you are glad to be a help and
comfort to mother."

The tender, loving words infused courage into the timid little heart
for the moment, and the two set off with bright faces; but Fan's
clouded again, and her heart beat fast as she neared Mrs. Clark's door.

Had it not been open her timid little rap would hardly have been heard;
and her message, delivered with the note, was given in tones so low
that the lady had to ask her to repeat it, while she bent her ear to
catch the words.

At the store it was even worse. Not yet recovered from the
embarrassment of her call upon Mrs. Clark, Fan stumbled and stammered,
said she wanted a dozen calicoes for her mother, and to know how they
sold eggs by the yard.

Then catching the mirthful gleam in Will Chetwood's eyes and seeing the
corners of his lips twitching, she hastily drew back as far as possible
into the shelter of her sun-bonnet, quite overwhelmed with confusion by
the sudden consciousness of having made a terrible blunder, her cheeks
aflame and her eyes filling with tears.

"I think it is a yard of calico like that in your hand, that you want,
and the price of eggs by the dozen, isn't it?" he asked pleasantly.

"Yes, sir; that's what mother said," Annis spoke up briskly.

Fan was quite beyond speaking, and kept her face hidden in her
sun-bonnet, and hurried away the moment her little parcel was handed
her.

Mildred was alone in the sitting-room as they came in.

"Where's mother?" asked Annis.

"In the parlor, talking to Mr. Lord. You got the calico, Fan? Here,
give it to me." Then catching sight of the child's face as she drew
near, "Why, what's the matter? what have you been crying about?" she
asked in a tone of kindly concern.

"O Milly, I couldn't help it! I don't like to go errands!" cried Fan,
bursting into tears again.

Mildred drew the little weeper to her side, wiped away the tears,
kissed the wet cheek, and with kindly questioning drew the whole story
from her.

"And Mr. Chetwood was laughing at me, I know he was! and I don't want
ever to go there any more!" concluded the child, hiding her burning
cheeks on Mildred's shoulder.

"Oh! you needn't mind that," Mildred said; "just join in the laugh.
That's the way Aunt Wealthy does; and your mistake is very much like
some of hers."

"Then I don't care so much, for nobody's nicer than Aunt
Wealthy--unless it's mother and father and you."

"You needn't except me. I'm by no means equal to Aunt Wealthy," Mildred
said, smiling, and stroking Fan's hair.

Annis had run into the parlor, and they were quite alone.

"Milly," said Fan, after a moment's silence, "I thought God heard our
prayers?"

"So he does, Fan."

"Yes, but I mean I thought he would do what we asked."

"Not always, because we often ask for something that he sees would not
be good for us. But what are you thinking about? have you prayed for
something that you didn't get? Perhaps you expected the answer too
soon. We often have to wait and pray again and again many times, and at
last the answer comes. And sometimes it comes in a better way than we
had thought of."

"I'll tell you, Milly," Fan said slowly and hesitatingly, "I prayed
that Mrs. Clark mightn't be at home; but there she was."

Mildred could scarcely keep from smiling. "That wasn't a good or right
prayer, little sister," she said, "because--don't you see?--it was
selfish, and almost the same as disobeying mother; since if the prayer
had been granted you would have been prevented from doing her errand."

"Milly, I didn't think of that," Fan answered penitently. "I won't pray
that way any more."

"No, dear; a better prayer would be for help to overcome your foolish
timidity. We will both ask our kind heavenly Father for that."




CHAPTER XVI.

    "Whither my heart is gone, there follows my hand and not
    elsewhere."
                                                Longfellow.


We will pass briefly over the events of the next five years, during
which there were few changes in the Keith family but such as time must
bring to all.

The lines had deepened somewhat on Mr. Keith's brow and the hair on his
temples was growing gray. The anxieties and burdens of life pressed
more heavily upon him than upon his lighter-hearted, more trustful
wife; she having learned more fully than he to "lean hard" upon the
Lord, casting all her care upon him, in the full assurance that he
cared for her and "that all things work together for good to them
that love God;" she looked scarcely a day older than at the time of
Mildred's return from her visit to Roselands.

These had been years of toil and struggle to feed, clothe, and educate
their large family of children. They had thus far been successful, but
only by dint of good management, close economy, and hard work.

Rupert had completed his college course and gone into the drug business
in connection with Dr. Grange.

It was a great joy to Mildred that her earnings as music teacher had
assisted largely in paying the expense of her brother's education.
Rupert found it hard to consent to this, but finally did so with the
distinct understanding that he was to repay the money with interest.
"The sisterly kindness," he said, "I can never repay."

"Yes," Mildred returned, with an arch look and smile, "you can; by
showing, in like manner, brotherly kindness to Cyril and Don."

"As I certainly hope to do," Rupert responded with hearty good-will.

And now he and Mildred were pleasing themselves with the thought that
the worst of the struggle was over. Zillah and Ada were done with
school, though still pursuing some studies with Mildred at home; it had
been decided that Fan and Annis could and should be entirely educated
by the older sisters; and so Cyril and Don were the only ones whose
tuition would still be an item of expense to the parents--an expense of
which the good daughter and son each hoped to bear a part.

Rupert would be able to do so after awhile--"by the time the lads were
ready for college"--and Mildred could assist now; as she was still
teaching, and finding it more profitable than ever.

It sometimes seemed weary work, but she would not give it up; indeed,
the joy of helping to bear the burdens of the dear father and mother
far more than repaid her for her self-denying toil.

The town had grown very much, and one of the new-comers was a music
teacher; but Mildred had established a good reputation, and had always
as many pupils as she cared to take.

In all these years she had heard not a word from Charlie Landreth; yet
her heart remained true to him.

She did not seclude herself from society, but generally took part in
the innocent pastimes of the young people of her own station, and was
always cheerful and pleasant, not seldom even gay and lively; now
and then she accepted the escort of one or another of her gentlemen
friends, but she would not receive particular attentions from any.
Still one or two had determinately sought her hand in marriage, but
only to meet with a gentle yet firm rejection.

Wallace Ormsby still continued on the most friendly terms of intimacy
in the family, and after two years had passed without news of his
favored rival, ventured to renew his suit. The result of this effort
convinced him of the utter hopelessness of ever winning the coveted
prize. He grieved over this second disappointment for a time, but of
late had begun to turn his longing eyes in a new direction, and Mildred
perceived it with pleasure.

Wallace had been taken into partnership with Mr. Keith, and she would
gladly welcome him into the family, for she had, as she had said, a
truly sisterly affection for him.

Zillah and Ada were budding into very lovely womanhood. Of the two,
Zillah was the more strikingly handsome and the more sprightly; full
of innocent mirth and gayety, witty and quick at repartee, she was the
life of every company of which she formed a part.

Ada's manner was more quiet and reserved, but suited well with her
intellectual countenance and the noble contour of her features. They
were inseparable, and whenever opportunity offered Wallace Ormsby was
sure to be with them.

Speculation was rife among the gossips of the town as to which "he
was courting," or whether it might be that he was in love with both.
Mildred, with her better opportunities for observation, and vision
sharpened by keen sisterly affection, presently settled that question
in her own mind, and satisfied herself that in this instance the course
of true love was likely to run smooth.

The little coterie of which Mildred and Wallace had formed a part was
broken up--the other four having paired off for life; it was known now
that Claudina Chetwood was engaged to Yorke Mocker, and Lucilla Grange
to Will Chetwood.

It was the afternoon for the meeting of the ladies' sewing society.
They were preparing a box of clothing for a Western home missionary.
The whole Keith family took a deep interest in the good work; each one
had contributed toward it; the three older girls were at the meeting,
busily plying their needles, while at home the mother was finishing a
garment, the two little girls sitting beside her hemming towels: all
for the box.

Indeed, the interest was very general in the church, and there was a
goodly gathering of ladies in Mrs. Prior's parlor, where the society
held its meeting this week. The room was large and the busy workers had
grouped themselves together here and there as inclination dictated:
Mildred, Claudina, and Lu forming one group; Zillah, Ada, and several
of their young companions another; while a third was composed of older
ladies.

The three heads in the first group were very close together, the three
voices conversing earnestly in tones too subdued to give any of the
others an inkling of the subject of their talk. But there were wise
surmises.

"I reckon they're planning for the weddings," whispered one elderly
lady to her next neighbor, indicating by a motion of the head whom she
meant.

"Likely," was the rejoinder. "Do you know when they're to come off?"

"No; but before long, I guess. I don't see that there's anything to
wait for."

"Unless for Mildred and Wallace Ormsby to make it up together, so that
the whole six can pair off at once and so make a triple wedding. It
would be a novel and pretty idea, now wouldn't it?"

"Yes; and I used to think that would be a match, but I've changed my
mind. It's plain to be seen now that it's one of the younger sisters
he's after."

"Mildred's young enough; doesn't look a day over twenty, though I
suppose she's really twenty-three or four."

"About that, I suppose; but she could easily pass for eighteen. I
wonder if she's made up her mind to be an old maid. If I can read the
signs Wallace was deeply in love with her at one time; and it's said
she's had other offers."

"I don't doubt it; she's too charming to have escaped that, if the
young men have any taste. Yet she's not so handsome, after all, as
Zillah. I wonder why she wouldn't have Wallace; he's fine-looking, and
an excellent match every way."

"Perhaps she left her heart in the South. I've thought I could see a
change in her ever since her visit there. Well, I don't believe her
mother's in any hurry to have her marry and leave, for there never was
a better daughter or sister. I've heard Mrs. Keith say more than once
that she didn't know how she could ever do without Mildred."

"And she may well say so," joined in Mrs. Prior; "the other two are
uncommon nice girls, but Mildred bears off the palm to my thinking. I
hear folks wondering now and then how it is that Mr. Lord has lived
single all these years. I don't profess to know anything for certain
about it, but I've strong suspicions that he's tried for Mildred Keith
and couldn't get her, and can't be content to take anybody else."

"She seems cut out for a minister's wife," remarked one of the others.

"Yes; she'd make a good one, I don't doubt," assented Mrs. Prior; "but
I don't blame her for refusing him (if she has done it); it's a kind of
a hard life, and he's too old for her and too absented-minded and odd."

The girls--Mildred and her mates--were talking over the arrangements
for the approaching nuptials. The young men wanted a double wedding and
the girls were not averse to the idea, but the parents of each wanted
to see their own daughter married beneath their own roof.

"My father says the ceremony ought to be performed in his house,
since one of the contracting parties in each case is his child," said
Claudina; "but Dr. Grange can't see the force of the argument."

"No," said Lu, "both he and mother say that it is always at the house
of the bride's parents the ceremony should be performed."

"Can't you compromise by having it in the church?" asked Mildred.

"That is what we'll have to do, I presume," said Claudina, "if we are
to have a double wedding. And O Mildred! if you and Wallace would only
make up a match and let us have a triple one, I think it would be just
splendid."

"And so do I," chimed in Lu. "Now what's to hinder?"

"A good deal," replied Mildred with a smile and a blush. "I doubt if it
wouldn't make three or four people unhappy for life."

"What can you mean! I've been perfectly sure for years past that
Wallace adored you," was Claudina's surprised exclamation.

Mildred's only reply was a quiet smile.

"And I dare say he must have popped the question before this," Claudina
went on teasingly; "so now do be good and obliging enough to fall in
with my plan, for it's a capital one. Isn't it, Lu?"

"Oh! just lovely," was the eager rejoinder. "Mildred, do; that's a
dear!"

"Indeed, girls," Mildred said, her eyes dancing with merriment, "I
do like to oblige, but in this instance it is beyond the bounds of
possibility. Whatever you may think, Wallace does not want me, nor I
him."

"Well, then, all I have to say is that neither of you has good taste.
And I'd set my heart on the match," Claudina said in pretended
indignation.

Meantime the younger girls were chatting gayly among themselves,
flitting lightly from one theme to another--school affairs, pleasure
parties, dress, and beaux; teasing each other about the latter, as
young girls will.

Zillah and Ada came in for their share. "Which of them was Wallace
Ormsby courting?" they were asked.

"Probably both," Ada answered in a tone of irony. "He is a man of
original ideas, and doesn't always do things by rule."

"And he knows we can't live apart," added Zillah, blushing and smiling.

"Nonsense! he can't marry you both. Now which of you is it?"

"Suppose you ask him," returned Zillah, the color deepening still more
on her cheek.

"I declare I've a great mind to! I believe I'll do it to-night, if I
get a chance," returned her tormentor laughingly.

It was the custom for the ladies to come to the society as early in the
afternoon as practicable, stay to a plain tea and until nine or ten
o'clock in the evening, the gentlemen joining them for the last hour or
two--an arrangement which served the double purpose of interesting the
latter in the good work in a way to draw forth their contributions, and
to provide escorts for the ladies on their homeward walk.

There was a full attendance that evening. Among the early arrivals
came Nicholas Ransquattle, bowing low, right and left, as he entered
the room. "Good-evening, ladies. I'm happy to see you all." Then
straightening himself and throwing back his head (now grown very bald)
upon his shoulders in the old, awkward fashion, he sent his dull gray
eyes searchingly about the room.

"He's looking for you," Zillah's next neighbor whispered in her ear. "I
heard the other day that he said down town, talking with some of the
fellows, that he was going to cut Wallace Ormsby out. And there, just
see! he's making straight for this corner. You ought to feel proud of
your conquest, Zil."

"Not till I'm sure I've made it, Sallie; no, not even then," Zillah
returned somewhat scornfully; "since I should be but one among the
multitude of his adorable angels."

Sallie laughed and nodded assent, as Nicholas drew up a chair and
seated himself between them.

It was the common report that he had courted every girl of marriageable
age in the town, offering heart and hand to each in succession as they
moved into the place or grew to young maidenhood. No one had accepted
him yet; he had never been attractive to the softer sex, and did not
become more so with advancing years. Behind his back the girls were
unsparing in their ridicule of his awkward carriage, homely features,
and unbounded vanity and self-conceit. They had dubbed him "Old Nick"
and "The Bald Eagle."

"Permit your humble servant to be a thorn between two roses, ladies,"
he said with another low bow as he seated himself.

"Provided you are a useful one, Mr. Ransquattle," replied Sallie,
giving him a needle to thread. "They are of use sometimes, I suppose."

"Yes, Miss Rush, to protect the roses, which I shall be most happy to
do."

"Protect them from what?" asked Zillah dryly.

"From rude and careless hands that would fain pluck them from the
parent stem; perchance only to cast them neglectfully aside and let
them die." And Nicholas glanced significantly toward Ormsby, who had
entered the room at that moment, and was bidding "Good-evening" to
their hostess.

Wallace caught the glance, noted by whom Ransquattle was seated, and
flushed angrily.

"Roses must die whether plucked or not," remarked Sallie, "and the
fingers that pluck them save them from wasting their sweetness on the
desert air."

"You'll never be left to so sad a fate, Miss Rush," was the gallant
rejoinder.

"I don't know," she replied, laughing and shaking her head, "there may
be some danger if the thorns are too close when the gatherer of roses
comes."

Wallace had found a seat near Mildred, and she noticed that as he
talked with her he stole many a furtive and ill-pleased glance in
Zillah's direction.

Mildred was folding up her work.

"You are not going yet," he said. "It wants a full half hour of the
usual time for dispersing."

"I know, but Mrs. Smith is very sick, and I have promised to watch with
her to-night."

"Milly, I'm going home," Ada said, coming up at that instant. "Mother
will be lonely, perhaps, and I can work just as well there as here."

"But I must go now, and we must not leave Zillah to go home alone."

"No, but Ru will be here directly I--"

"Let me have the pleasure of escorting you both, and I'll come back for
Zillah," said Wallace, speaking hastily in an undertone.

His offer was accepted, and the three slipped quietly away. Mrs.
Smith's house was the nearer, and not much out of the way in going to
Mr. Keith's; so Mildred was seen to her destination first, then Wallace
and Ada walked on to hers.

Wallace expected to leave her at the door, and returning in good
season, ask the privilege of seeing Zillah safely home also; but Mr.
Keith called him in, saying he had an important matter to consult him
about, and in spite of the young man's ill-concealed impatience to be
gone, kept him there for more than an hour.

In the mean time Ransquattle made good use of his opportunity; managing
so that, to Zillah's extreme vexation, she could not reject his offered
escort without great rudeness.

"Forewarned, forearmed," she said to herself, thinking of Sallie's
gossip as they set out: "'twill go hard with me, but I'll prevent his
getting his opportunity to-night;" and she rattled on in the liveliest
strain without an instant's intermission, talking the most absurd
nonsense just to prevent her companion from opening his lips.

They had reached her father's gate before he succeeded in doing so. She
had no notion of asking him in.

"Good-night, Mr. Ransquattle," she said gayly, letting go his arm and
stepping hastily inside as he held the gate open for her. "I'm much
obliged for your trouble."

"Excuse me, Miss Zillah, for detaining you a moment, but I have
something very particular to tell you," he said, hardly waiting for the
end of her sentence. "You are a very lovely and charming young lady."

"Oh, that's no news! I've heard it dozens of times," she interrupted,
laughing and taking a backward step as if on the point of running away.

"No doubt; but never, I am sure, from so devoted an admirer as your
humble servant. Miss Zillah, I lay my heart, hand, and fortune at your
feet."

"Oh don't Mr. Ransquattle," she interrupted again, half-recoiling as
she spoke; "it's a dangerous place to lay articles so valuable, lest
perchance they should be accidentally trodden on."

"Can you have misunderstood me?" he asked, as it would seem in some
surprise at her obtuseness. "I meant to ask you to marry me. Will you?
But don't answer now. Take time to consider, and I will call to-morrow
to learn my fate from the sweetest lips in the world."

He was bowing an adieu; but now she detained him. Drawing herself up
with dignity, and speaking in a calm, cold tone of firm determination,
"No, do not call, Mr. Ransquattle," she said: "I need no time to
consider the question you have asked, and will give you your answer
now. I can never bestow my heart upon you, and therefore never my hand.
Good-night, sir;" and turning, she hastened with a quick, light step
toward the house.

In the hall she met Wallace, who had just left her father in the
sitting-room busy over some law papers.

"Zillah!" he exclaimed, "what is it? what has happened?"

"Why do you ask? why do you think anything has happened?" she returned,
half averting her face.

"Because you look so flushed and indignant. If anybody has been
insulting you--"

"O Wallace, what nonsense!" she cried, with a little nervous laugh.

"Well, I'm glad if it is not so," he said. "I hope no one would dare. I
meant to go back to the society directly, hoping to have the pleasure
of seeing you home, but was unavoidably detained. It's early yet
though, and such a lovely moonlight evening. Won't you take a little
stroll with me?"

"If you'll wait a moment till I tell mother we're going."

Mildred, finding she was not needed at Mrs. Smith's, had returned home
and was just ready for bed; had blown out her candle and was standing
by the window gazing out and thinking how lovely everything looked
in the moonlight, when her door opened softly and the next instant
Zillah's arms were about her neck, her face half hidden on her shoulder.

"How you tremble!" Mildred said, putting an arm around the slender
waist; "has anything gone wrong?"

"O Milly, such a funny time as I've had in the last hour or two!" and
the eyes that looked up into Mildred's face were fairly dancing with
merriment. "I seem destined to play second fiddle to you, so far as
the admiration of the other sex is concerned; having actually received
proposals of marriage from two of your old beaux in this one evening."

"Indeed! Well, I hope you did not accept both," Mildred said
laughingly.

"Not both, but one," she whispered with a low, joyous laugh, and a
blush that was visible even in the moonlight. "O Milly, I'm so happy!
I don't care if I am taking what you refused. Wallace is far beyond my
deserts, and I wouldn't exchange him for a king."

"Wallace! O Zillah, how glad I am! I need no longer feel remorseful for
having wrecked his happiness, and shall rejoice to call him brother: he
will be one to be proud of."

"Yes; I am obliged to you for rejecting him; and I dare say so is he
now," she added saucily, her eyes again dancing with fun.

"I don't doubt it. And now perhaps there'll be a triple wedding after
all."

"What are you talking about?" returned Zillah in astonishment; "'tisn't
time to be thinking of weddings yet."

"It would be too soon," Mildred said, and went on to explain the
occasion of her remark; then said, "But you haven't told me whose was
the other offer."

"Oh, can't you guess?" laughed Zillah; "don't you know that the Bald
Eagle is still in quest of a mate?"

"Old Nick was it? Now then you must just tell the whole story," Mildred
said in a tone of amusement.

"'Twas quite a variation from his offer to you," Zillah answered
mirthfully, and went on to give a detailed and amusing account of the
walk home and the short colloquy at the gate.

Then bidding good-night she hastened to her own room, shared with Ada,
and repeated the story to her, winding up with, "Your turn will come,
you may depend upon that; so try to be prepared."

"Small need of preparation," was the cool rejoinder. "But you've had a
walk with Wallace since. Won't you tell me what he said."

"I couldn't begin to remember it all, but--Ada, darling, can you spare
me to him?"

The last words were spoken in a tremulous half-whisper, her arm about
her sister's neck, her lips close to her ear.

"I knew 'twould come to that before long!" sighed Ada, with a hug and
a kiss, while tears sprang to her eyes. "O Zillah, dear, I believe my
happiest days are over and gone!"

"No! No! no, darling! the very, very sweetest are yet to come! Love
will be yours some day as it is mine to-night; and

    'There's nothing half so sweet in life
     As love's young dream.'"




CHAPTER XVII.

    "But happy they! the happiest of their kind!
    Whom gentler stars unite, and in one fate
    Their hearts, their fortunes, and their beings blend."


Wallace Ormsby sought and obtained a second interview with Mr. Keith
that evening, in which he asked his senior partner to take him into
still closer relations, and bestow upon him a priceless gift.

Mr. Keith was both surprised and moved. "I can't realize that she's
really grown up," he said, "and--I--don't know how to spare her even to
you, Wallace."

"But you know, my dear sir, it isn't as if I wanted to carry her away."

"No, that's quite true. But her mother's right in her is fully equal to
mine. Wait a moment till I call her in."

So the request and the arguments in its favor had to be repeated.

The mother's eyes filled, and for a moment she was silent. Then,
holding out her hand to the young man, "I have long had a motherly
affection for you, Wallace," she said, "and there is no one else to
whom I could so willingly entrust the happiness of my dear child, and
yet it is very hard to give her up."

"Don't think of it in that way, dear Mrs. Keith," he made answer in
tones of the deepest respect, taking the hand and lifting it gallantly
to his lips. "Think of it rather as taking another member, another son,
into the family. It would be joy to me to have the right to call you
mother."

"And I should be proud to own you as my son," she returned with her own
sweet, motherly smile. "But Zillah herself must decide this question."

"Then I have nothing to fear, nothing more to ask," he said joyously.

In truth, no one had any objection to bring against the match, and all
went smoothly and happily with the newly affianced pair.

The next day Wallace came hurrying in with beaming countenance and
eager air. "Ah! it was you I wanted," he said, finding his betrothed
alone in the parlor, whither she had betaken herself for her daily hour
of practice on the piano. "Won't you put on a shawl and bonnet and come
with me?"

"Where?" she asked with a merry twinkle in her eye.

"Just across the street to look at that house of Miller's. It's nearly
finished, and he's willing to sell."

"But who wants to buy?" she asked in her pretty, saucy way, as she
stepped into the hall and tied on a bonnet which she took from the
hat-rack there, while Wallace threw a shawl about her shoulders.

"Perhaps we can better answer that question after we've been over it,"
he said with a smile.

So it proved; the snug, pretty, conveniently arranged cottage--so close
to the old home too--seemed just the thing for them. "Father, mother,"
and all the family were presently brought over to look at and pronounce
an opinion upon it, and without a dissenting voice the purchase was
decided upon.

"And now there's another and still more important matter to be
settled," whispered Wallace in Zillah's ear.

"There is no hurry," she answered, blushing.

"There is to be a double or a triple wedding in our church in about a
month from now," he went on lightly and in coaxing tones. "I want it
to be the latter; so do four other people; but it all depends on you.
Come, darling, why should we wait longer than that?"

"Ah! it fairly frightens me to think of such haste," she said, half
averting her blushing face.

"I don't know why it should," he responded, his tone speaking both
disappointment and chagrin, "unless you fear to trust your happiness to
my keeping."

"That's because men are so different from women; but to save a
quarrel--we'll leave it to father's and mother's decision; shan't we?"

And she turned to him again with a smile so arch and sweet that he
consented at once, and sealed the promise with a kiss.

Father and mother said, "Wait at least until next spring; you are both
young enough, and we cannot part so suddenly with our dear child."

"Hardly a parting--just to let her cross the street," Wallace made
answer with a sigh that was not altogether of resignation; then added a
hint that he would be willing to leave her in her father's house until
spring if only they would let him join her there.

But that proposal was smilingly rejected, and the wedding day
indefinitely postponed until "some time in the spring."

Intimate friends were not kept in ignorance of the engagement, and the
two expectant brides and bridegrooms were, until convinced of its
uselessness, very urgent for the triple wedding.

The double one took place at the appointed time and place, was quite a
brilliant affair, and followed by a round of festivities such as the
quiet little town had never witnessed before. Evening entertainments
were given by the Chetwoods, the Granges, the Keiths, and one or two
others. Then life settled back into the ordinary grooves, and the rest
of the fall and winter passed without any unusual excitement.

The Keiths were quietly, cheerfully busy, as at other times. Wallace
came and went as before, but was oftener left to Zillah's sole
entertainment, yet treated more entirely than ever as one of the family.

Brighter days were dawning for our friends. Through all these years
they had been very diligent in business and very faithful in paying
tithes of all they possessed, and the truth of Scripture declarations
and promises--"the hand of the diligent maketh rich," and "so shall
thy barns be filled with plenty and thy presses burst out with new
wine"--was being verified in their experience. This fall Messrs. Keith
& Ormsby found themselves successful in several very important cases,
which brought them both fame and money; the town was now growing
rapidly, business looking up, and land, which they had bought for a
trifle on first coming to the place, had already doubled and trebled in
value.

Rupert, too, was succeeding well in his chosen vocation, and both he
and his father urged Mildred to cease her toil as a music teacher,
saying there was now not the slightest necessity for such exertion on
her part.

The mother's views coincided with theirs, but Mildred begged to be
permitted to go on in the old way, saying constant employment was good
for her; she was used to it and liked it.

"And besides," she added playfully, "I enjoy the thought that I am
laying a little something by against old age or a rainy day. I am not
likely ever to marry, so will do well to be self-helpful; and why
should I not have a business the same as if I were a man? I shall be
all the happier, the more useful, and the more independent."

So they let her have her way. She was not keeping employment from those
who needed it, for there were plenty of pupils for all the teachers
in the place. Effie Prescott was now one of these--most faithful and
successful, and full of joy and thankfulness that thus she was able to
win her bread; for she had not strength to do so in any more laborious
way, and her father was poor enough to feel it a relief to have Effie
supporting herself.

"And I have you to thank for it," she had said again and again to
Mildred; "it is one of your good works, and I shall never cease to be
grateful to you for it."

"Indeed, Effie, you owe me nothing," Mildred would reply; "not even
gratitude, for you have paid well for all I have done for you. You owe
it all, under God, to your own industry, energy, and perseverance in
the use and improvement of the talents he has given you."

To the whole household at Mr. Keith's the all-absorbing interest was
the fitting up and furnishing of the snug cottage across the street,
and the preparation of Zillah's trousseau, in the expense or labor of
which each one was determined to have a share.

All these matters were freely discussed in the family, even the little
boys and girls being deemed worthy to be trusted not to speak of them
to outsiders. Not that any one felt that there was any special cause
for concealment of their plans or doings, but they did not wish to have
them canvassed and commented upon by the busybodies and gossips of
the town, who, like those of other places, always knew so much more of
their neighbors' affairs than did those neighbors themselves.

No one rejoiced more sincerely than Mildred in the evident happiness of
the affianced pair; no one entered more heartily into their plans, was
oftener consulted in regard to them, or was more generous with money
and labor in carrying them out. Her sisterly pride in Zillah's beauty
was without a touch of envy or jealousy, though she was fully aware of
the fact that it far exceeded her own.

"What a lovely bride she will make!" Mildred often whispered to
herself. "Wallace may well feel consoled for my rejection of his suit."

She tried hard for perfect unselfishness, and to entirely fill her
mind and heart with the interests of the hour, especially as affecting
these two; but thoughts of the love that now seemed lost to her, of
the dreams of happiness which had been for years gradually fading till
there was scarcely a vestige of them left, would at times intrude
themselves, filling her with a sadness she could scarce conceal
from the watchful eyes of the tender mother who knew and so fully
sympathized in the sorrows and anxieties of this her first-born and
dearly beloved child.

She knew that even yet there was a constant longing, a half-unconscious
daily looking for of news of the wanderer as the mail came in, followed
each time by renewed disappointment, and that often the poor, weary
heart grew sick indeed with hope deferred.

As spring opened, the day for the wedding drew near, and the
preparations for it were almost completed. Mildred's sadness of heart
increased, until it cost her a constant and often heroic struggle to
maintain her cheerfulness before others; while at times she could not
refrain from shedding many tears in the privacy of her own room. One
evening her mother, entering softly, found her weeping.

"My dear, dear child!" she whispered, taking her in her arms and
caressing her tenderly, "my dear, brave, unselfish girl! you do not
know how your mother loves you!"

"Precious mother!" responded the weeping girl, hastily wiping away her
tears and returning the caress; "what could I ever do without your dear
love! I am ashamed of my depression; ashamed that I should yield to it
in this way. Ah, I little deserve to be called brave!"

"It has been a long, hard trial, dear daughter," Mrs. Keith said,
softly stroking Mildred's hair, "and you have borne it wonderfully
well; as you could not in your own strength, I well know."

"No, never! The joy of the Lord has been my strength, else my heart
would have broken long ago; for oh, this terrible suspense! so much
worse than any certainty could be!"

"I know it, darling," her mother responded in moved tones; "then would
it not be your wisest course to endeavor to convince yourself that
either utter indifference or death has ended this for you?"

"Mother, that is not in the power of my will. That Charlie could prove
untrue I cannot believe, and something tells me that he still lives."

"Then, dearest, cheer up. Why this increased sadness of late?"

"I hardly know myself, mother dear; I am sure my whole heart rejoices
in the happiness of my sister and Wallace; yet somehow the sight of it
seems to deepen my own sorrow by contrast. I fear it is because I am
selfish."

"I cannot think so," her mother said; "so do not harbor that thought,
thus adding to your distress. Try to cast your care on the Lord, fully
believing the inspired declaration that 'all things work together for
good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his
purpose.' He is never for a moment unmindful of one of his children; he
has a plan for each one, and suffers no real evil to befall them. 'Rest
in the Lord, and wait patiently for him.'"

"Ah, mother!" Mildred said, smiling through her tears, "I am more and
more convinced that all I need to make me perfectly happy is strong,
unwavering faith in the wisdom and love of my heavenly Father; then I
should rejoice to do and suffer all his holy will, never doubting that
what he sends is the very best for me."

There was an additional cause for Mildred's depression just at this
time--one felt in greater or less degree by all the Keiths--in the
thought that this was the beginning of the inevitable breaking up of
the dear family circle--the forming by one of their number of new
ties, which must in some measure supplant the old--the tender loves of
parents and children, brothers and sisters. Zillah was not going far
away, and they did not fear to trust her to Wallace; but their home
would no longer be hers, and another, in whose veins ran no drop of
their blood, would henceforth be nearer and dearer to her than they.

Except the parents, perhaps no other felt this quite so keenly
as Ada--the nearest in age and hitherto the room-mate and almost
inseparable companion of the sister who was leaving them.

It was the morning of the wedding day; the ceremony was to take place
in the evening, in the parlor of Mr. Keith's house, which the sisters
were busily decorating for the occasion with spring flowers from the
garden and the woods.

The supply was not sufficient, and the little boys were sent in search
of more; the mother and Celestia Ann--who still lived with them, going
home occasionally for a few weeks, but always returning and taking up
her duties there with renewed satisfaction--were deep in the mysteries
of cake-making and kindred arts; so when the door-bell rang Ada
answered it.

Standing before the open door was a very pleasant-faced young man,
whose dress and general appearance seemed to bespeak him a clergyman.
He lifted his hat with a low bow, his face lighting up with a smile of
recognition.

"Miss Mildred?" he said half inquiringly, as he held out his hand in
cordial greeting.

"No, sir," returned Ada, giving him her hand, but with a slightly
puzzled look; "I am Ada Keith."

"Ah! one of the little ones when I knew you--not old enough to remember
me, I fear. I am from Lansdale, your old Ohio home."

He handed her a card, on which she read at a glance, "Rev. Francis
Osborne."

"Ah, I know now who you are! I have a slight remembrance of a big boy
of that name who has had time enough to grow into a man," she said with
an arch smile that he thought very bewitching. "Come in, Mr. Osborne;
they will all be glad to see you."

He was warmly welcomed and hospitably entertained, as an old-time
friend, as one coming from the early home still held in tender
remembrance, and as a messenger from Aunt Wealthy, who sent by him
a handsome bridal gift--a beautiful gold brooch. Quite unexpected;
for the dear old lady had already given generously toward the
house-furnishing.

Zillah was greatly pleased. There was already upon a side-table in
the sitting-room quite an array of handsome presents from her near
relatives and friends--the Dinsmore cousins and others--and Aunt
Wealthy's gift was now assigned a conspicuous place among them.

Mrs. Keith's wedding dress of rich, white silk, her bridal veil and
orange blossoms, had been carefully preserved, and finding that the
dress exactly fitted her, Zillah had chosen to be married in it, in
decided preference to having a new one.

It was, of course, made in very old-fashioned style, but she insisted
that she liked it all the better for that, and no one who saw her in it
could deny that it was extremely becoming.

All the sisters were to be bridesmaids--in the order of their ages--and
all to wear white tarlatan. Rupert would be first groomsman; Robert
Grange, a brother of Lu, second; Cyril and Don, third and fourth.

A large number of guests were invited and a handsome entertainment was
provided. Their pastor, Mr. Lord, had received due notice of the coming
event, and promised to officiate.

Seeing him leaving the parsonage early in the afternoon, his mother
called to him, asking where he was going.

"For a walk and to make a pastoral call or two," he answered, pausing
and turning toward her with an air of affectionate respect.

"Well, Joel, don't forget to come home early enough to dress for the
wedding. I shall be ready in good season, and hope you will too."

"Oh, certainly, mother! I'm glad you reminded me, though, for I really
had forgotten it."

"And will again, I'm very much afraid," she murmured, between a smile
and a sigh, as she watched him down the street.

He walked on and on in meditative mood, till nearing a farm-house,
several miles from town, he was waked from his revery by the voice of
its owner bidding him good-day and asking if he would go with him to
the river for an afternoon's fishing. "I was just setting off for it,"
he said. "I've an extra pole and line here, and shall be glad of your
company."

"Thank you, Mr. Vail, I will: it's a pastime I'm somewhat partial to,"
the minister made answer.

"Will, Will!" the farmer called to his son, "bring me that other
fishing tackle, and tell your mother we'll be back--Mr. Lord and I--for
tea about sundown."

Seven was the hour set for the wedding ceremony. At half-past five Mrs.
Lord's tea-table was ready and waiting for the return of her son. But
six o'clock came, and there was no sign of his approach.

"I'll go and dress; perhaps he'll be here by that time," she said to
herself, turning from the window from which she had been gazing with
constantly increasing anxiety and impatience.

She made a hasty toilet, hoping every moment to hear his step and
voice. But he came not. She ate her supper, watched the clock until the
hands pointed to five minutes of seven; then, filled with vexation and
chagrin, donned bonnet and shawl and set off in haste for Mr. Keith's.

That gentleman met her at the gate. "Ah, my dear madam, I am glad to
see you!" he said, shaking hands with her. "Walk in. But where is
Mr. Lord? The guests are all assembled--now that you are here--and
everything is in readiness for the ceremony."

"Indeed, Mr. Keith, I'm terribly mortified!" the old lady burst out,
flushing like a girl; "it's just Joel's absent-mindedness. He meant
to be here in season, I know; but he walked out some hours since, and
where he is now, or when he will remember to come back, I _don't_ know.
Please don't wait for him another minute, if you can get anybody to
take his place."

"Fortunately we can," said Mr. Keith; "so please, my dear madam, do not
feel disturbed about that."

He led her into the house, and called Rupert and Wallace from the
bridal chamber, where the wedding party were assembled. Then Frank
Osborne was summoned from the parlor, where, with the other guests,
he sat waiting to witness the coming ceremony. There was a whispered
consultation; then Wallace hastened to his bride again, and whispered a
word to her, to which she gave a pleased, blushing assent, as she rose
and suffered him to draw her hand within his arm.

In another minute or two bridegroom and bride, with the whole train of
attendants, had taken their places in presence of the assembled guests,
and the ceremony began, Frank Osborne officiating.

He did not seem at all embarrassed or at a loss for words; his manner
was solemn and tender, and when the ceremony was over every one said,
"How beautiful it was!"

While the bride and groom were receiving the congratulations of
relatives and friends, Mr. Lord, having leisurely finished his tea, sat
in the farm-house porch, quietly conversing with his host. But a sudden
thought seemed to strike him, and he started up in evident perturbation.

"What is it?" asked Mr. Vail; "anything gone wrong?"

"Rather," groaned the minister, glancing at the face of his watch,
which he had just drawn from its fob. "I was to have married Wallace
Ormsby and one of Mr. Keith's daughters about fifteen minutes ago."

"Better get back to town, then, as fast as you can," returned the
farmer, laughing. "I'll harness up and take you."

"Alas, man, it's already too late!" sighed the minister.

"'Better late than never,' though, and they may be waiting for you
still."

"Why, yes; that's possible, to be sure!"

"Where shall I take you?" Mr. Vail asked, half an hour later, as they
drove into the town.

"Drive right to Mr. Keith's, if you please."

"I thought maybe you'd want to fix up a bit, seeing it's a wedding
you're going to."

"Oh, to be sure! yes, certainly! I'm glad you reminded me. I'll go home
and dress first."

"And while you're at that I'll go round and tell 'em you're
coming--just to keep 'em from getting quite out of heart, you know."

He went, and by the time Mr. Lord's toilet was completed, returned
with the information, delivered in tones of amusement and with eyes
twinkling with fun: "You've lost the job, sir; somebody else has tied
the knot; but they've sent word for you to hurry along and you'll be
in time for the refreshments. So cheer up, for that's the main thing,
after all, ain't it."

"Really I--I'm ashamed to go now," stammered the minister, looking much
mortified and embarrassed.

"Tut, tut, man! better treat it as a good joke," returned the farmer
gayly.

"I believe you're right," said Mr. Lord, and proceeded to take the
advice.

His apologies and excuses were received with good-humored raillery,
mingled with laughing assurances that he need not disturb himself;
as things had turned out 'twas all very well; it seemed a pleasant
accident that had left the performing of the ceremony to an old and
valued friend of the bride and her family.




CHAPTER XVIII.

    "A lovely being, scarcely formed or moulded,
    A rose with all its sweetest leaves yet folded."
                                                Byron.


The next morning Mr. and Mrs. Ormsby started on their bridal trip--a
visit to his relatives, to Aunt Wealthy and the old Ohio home.

Their departure left the house strangely empty and desolate, to the
consciousness of mother and sisters especially, and Frank Osborne's
advent seemed quite a boon. An old friend who could tell them much
of others left behind in Ohio, a thorough gentleman, well educated,
refined and polished in manner, and an earnest, devoted Christian, he
proved a most agreeable companion.

All these years he had fancied himself in love with Mildred, and it was
that, more than anything else, which had drawn him thither; yet the
first sight of Ada had wholly changed the direction of his inclination.

He had thought Mildred charming in younger days, and could not see that
she had lost in attractiveness--the years seemed rather to have added
to her loveliness; her form was more finely developed, her countenance
sweeter and more intellectual, while she had lost none of the freshness
and bloom of youth: yet he found a superior fascination about Ada, and
being of an ardent temperament, open and frank in disposition, his
manner toward her soon made this apparent to the older members of the
family.

Mildred was perhaps the first to perceive it, and that without the
slightest feeling of envy or jealousy: she would be glad if Frank
proved to be one who could fill Ada's heart; and if an objection to
the possibility that presented itself arose in any one's mind, it was
merely on the score of unwillingness to part with another member of the
newly broken family circle.

They had urged Frank to make a lengthened visit, and he had promised to
remain for some days or a week or two.

He had been but recently licensed to preach, and was yet without
charge. The first Sunday after his arrival he filled Mr. Lord's pulpit,
by invitation, greatly to the delight and edification of his hearers.
The next week he preached for a vacant church a few miles distant from
Pleasant Plains, and shortly after consented to take charge of it for
the next six months.

A worldly-minded man, seeking wealth and fame, would have deemed it
a most uninviting field of labor; but Frank Osborne was one of those
who are willing to bear hardness as good soldiers of Jesus Christ, and
whose aspiration is to win souls rather than earthly riches or fame.
Yet the thought of being near enough to his old friends for frequent
intercourse may have had its influence also.

The return of the bride and groom after an absence of some six weeks
was a joyful occasion. They were received in their own cottage home,
which loving hands had set in perfect order, and rendered beautiful
and delightful with the bloom and perfume of flowers. When the tender,
loving greetings had been exchanged they made the tour of the house
attended by every member of the family, each one anxious to witness and
have a share in their pleasure.

The workers had anticipated, as the reward of their labors, great
demonstrations of delight from Zillah, and were not disappointed; she
seemed to lack words to properly express her admiration of the effects
produced or her appreciation of this evidence of their kindness and
love.

Nor was Wallace far behind in bestowing a like meed of praise and
thanks.

The welcoming feast had been prepared and was partaken of in the house
of the parents. After that Zillah began her housekeeping, enjoying it
exceedingly; for she was no novice at the business, was defthanded and
quick in her motions, had her mother and older sister near enough to be
consulted at any time; and utensils, furniture, and the snug cottage
itself were all so new, so fresh and clean.

Then Wallace was pleased with everything she did, and the work of a
family of two seemed scarce more than play to one used to the numerous
household on the other side of the street.

There was a great deal of running back and forth, a constant
interchange of good offices. During the hours that business kept
Wallace at the office, Zillah and Ada were almost sure to be together
in one home or the other.

It was not long before the former discovered that Frank Osborne was a
frequent visitor at her father's, and began to suspect what was the
particular attraction that drew him thither.

"I was not at all displeased at the time, as things turned out, that
Mr. Lord went fishing on my wedding day and forgot to marry me, but now
I begin to feel quite grateful to him," she said teasingly to Ada one
day as they sat alone together, with their sewing, in her own pretty
parlor.

"Why so?" Ada asked, blushing consciously in spite of herself.

"Because in after years it will seem very fitting that my
brother-in-law had the tying of the knot between Wallace and me."

"That strikes me as very much like counting your chickens before they
are hatched," returned Ada demurely. "If you are hinting at me, please
understand that I've always meant to be the old-maid daughter to stay
at home and take care of the dear father and mother."

"Oh, yes, but folks often miss their vocation. However, I trust you
will not; and I think you were cut out for a minister's wife. And O Ada
dear," she went on, dropping her work to put her arms about her sister,
"I want you to know the bliss of wedded love. I never was so happy in
my life as now. And I do believe Frank is almost as nice as Wallace,
or at least nicer than anybody else except Wallace," she corrected
herself hastily, and with a merry laugh; "so don't reject him, there's
a dear."

"Not until he asks," Ada said a trifle disdainfully. "My promises can
go no further than that at present. I have an idea that he was formerly
one of Mildred's admirers. So let him try for her; she is far better
fitted than I for the duties and responsibilities of the position."

"Now don't be naughty and proud," Zillah said gayly; "you may as well
take Mildred's leavings as I, and I can assure you they may be very
nice indeed. What may have been in the past," she added more gravely,
"I do not know, but very sure I am that now there is no fancy on either
side."

"A letter for you, Ada!" cried Fan, coming running in at the open door.

Ada took it quietly and broke the seal.

"Now here's an offer worth having," she remarked with biting sarcasm,
as she turned the page and glanced at the signature, then held it so
that Zillah could see what it was. "The bald eagle is still in search
of a mate."

"I told you so," was Zillah's laughing rejoinder.

"Lend me an envelope, will you?" Ada said, rising with the letter in
her hand, a look of quiet, half-scornful determination in her face;
"and he shall not be kept long waiting for his answer."

"What shall you say?" Zillah asked as she brought the envelope, pen,
and ink.

"Nothing. Silence cannot be construed to mean consent in this instance.
There, Fan, please return it to the office," as she sealed the envelope
and handed it to the child; the letter inside, Nicholas Ransquattle's
address on the outside.

The needles were plied in silence for a few moments; then Zillah said,
with a little amused laugh, "You made short work with him."

"It seems to be the way of the family," returned Ada, joining in the
laugh.

"Well, only treat Frank as differently as possible--that is, with the
greatest favor--and I'll forgive you for this."

Frank was too wise to speak hastily, therefore the more likely to win
at the last.

One day in the ensuing autumn Mrs. Keith received a letter from her
cousin Horace Dinsmore, saying that he was travelling with his little
daughter in the region of the Great Lakes, and could not persuade
himself to pass so near Pleasant Plains without paying her a visit:
they might be expected in a day or two after the receipt of this
communication.

This news was received with great delight by the entire family.
Mildred's heart bounded at the thought of again clasping little Elsie
in her arms; for through all these years of separation the little fair
one had been cherished in her very heart of hearts.

Every preparation was at once set on foot for entertaining the coming
guests in the most hospitable manner.

There had been an occasional interchange of letters which had kept
each of the two families informed of any event of unusual importance
occurring in the other. Horace had written his cousin Marcia on his
return from Europe two years and a half before this, again upon his
recovery from serious illness a year later, and several times since.
In one of his late letters he had spoken very feelingly of his child's
recovery from an illness that had nearly cost her life, expressing his
gratitude to God for her restoration to health, and that the trial had
been blessed to himself in leading him to Christ.

Mrs. Keith had loved him from his early childhood with a sisterly
affection, and now there was a new tie between them; for they were
disciples of the same Master, servants of the same Lord. And it was in
answer to long continued, fervent supplication on her part that this
priceless blessing had come to him. What wonder that her heart bounded
at the thought of soon seeing him and little Elsie, whom she was ready
to love almost as she loved her own offspring, because she was Horace's
child, and because of all that Mildred had said of her loveliness of
character and person.

The letter telling of his conversion had brought a double delight to
both Mildred and her mother, in the joy a Christian must ever feel in
the salvation of a soul, the consecration of another heart and life to
the service of Christ, and in the assurance that the darling Elsie was
no longer left to an unsatisfied hunger for parental love; this the
tone of his letter made very evident; his heart seemed overflowing with
the tenderest fatherly affection; and indeed he said plainly that her
death would have been worse to him than the loss of everything else he
possessed.

But he did not go into particulars in regard to the nature or exciting
cause of her illness.

On the deck of a steamer rapidly ploughing her way down Lake Michigan,
sat a gentleman with a little girl on his knee. His arm encircled her
waist, hers was about his neck. He was a very handsome man, apparently
considerably under thirty years of age; hardly old enough, a stranger
would judge, to be the father of the bewitchingly beautiful child he
held, though there seemed a world of fatherly affection in the clasp of
his arm and the tenderness of his gaze into the sweet face now resting
on his shoulder, while the soft brown eyes looked out dreamily over the
water, now lifted to his with an expression of confiding filial love
and reverence.

"Papa, I am having a delightful time," she said, softly stroking his
face and beard with her small white hand.

"I am very glad, my darling, that you enjoy it so much, and I trust it
is doing you good," he answered.

"Yes, papa, but I don't need it; I'm as well as can be now."

"Free from disease, but not yet quite so strong as papa would like to
see you," he said, with a smile and a tender caress.

"Shall we be long on this boat, papa?"

"Until some time to-morrow morning, when, if all goes well, we expect
to land at Michigan City, where we will take the stage for Pleasant
Plains, the home of our cousins the Keiths. Do you remember your Cousin
Mildred?"

"A very little, papa; I don't remember her looks, except that they were
pleasant to me when she used to take me on her lap and hug and kiss me."

"Your grandpa wrote me that she was very kind to you. She is the only
one of the family you have ever met."

"Please tell me about the rest, papa. Are Cousin Milly's father and
mother my uncle and aunt?"

"You may say Uncle Stuart and Aunt Marcia to them, though they are
really your cousins. Well, what is it?" seeing a doubtful, troubled
look in the eyes lifted to his.

"Please papa, don't be vexed with me," she murmured, dropping her eyes
and blushing deeply, "but would it--be quite--quite true and right to
call them so when they are not really?"

He drew her closer and softly kissing the glowing cheek, "I should
prefer to have you call them aunt and uncle," he said, "and I cannot
see anything wrong or untrue in doing so; but if it is a question of
conscience with you, my darling, I shall not insist."

"Thank you, dear papa," she said, looking up gratefully and drawing a
long sigh of relief; "but I want to do as you wish; please tell me why
you do not think it wrong."

"They may adopt you as their niece, you them as your uncle and aunt,"
he answered, smiling down at the grave, earnest little face.

"What a nice idea, papa!" she exclaimed with a low, musical laugh, her
face growing bright and glad; "that makes it all right, I think. I knew
about adopted children and adopted parents, but I didn't think of any
other adopted relations."

"But do you not see that that must follow as a matter of course?"

A middle-aged <DW52> woman had drawn near carrying a light shawl.
"De air gettin' little bit cool, I tink, massa," she remarked, in a
respectful tone. "I'se 'fraid my chile cotch cold."

"Quite right, Aunt Chloe," he returned, taking the shawl from her and
wrapping it carefully about the little girl.

But he had scarcely done so when a sudden storm of wind came sweeping
down upon the lake, from the northwest, and drove them into the cabin.

There were other passengers, but the saloon was not crowded, and for a
time proved a pleasant enough retreat. Supper was served presently and
partaken of in tolerable comfort, though the lake was growing rough,
and the vessel rolling and pitching in a way that made it a little
difficult to keep the dishes on the table and eat and drink without
accident. But, as they were not supposed to be in danger, the little
mishaps merely gave occasion for mirth and pleasantry.

But ere long the storm increased in violence, the wind blowing a gale,
accompanied with thunder, lightning, and torrents of rain. The faces of
men and women grew pale and anxious, conversation had almost ceased,
and scarce a sound was heard but the war of the elements mingled with
the heavy tread of the sailors and the hoarse commands of the captain
and mate.

The little girl, seated on a sofa by her father's side, crept closer to
him, with a whispered, "Papa, is there any danger?"

"I'm afraid there is, my darling," he said, putting his arm about her
and drawing her closer still; "but we will trust in Him who holds
the winds and the waters in the hollow of his hand. I do not need to
remind my little Elsie that no real evil can befall us if we are his
children."

"No, papa; and oh, how sweet it is to know that."

"It is your bedtime," he said, glancing at his watch.

"But you will not send me away from you to-night, dear papa?" and she
looked pleadingly into his face.

"No, my precious child! no, indeed! not for all I am worth would I
let you out of my sight in this storm, but I will go with you to your
state-room."

He half led, half carried her, for the vessel was now plunging so madly
through the water, with such rolls and lurches, that it was no easy
matter for a landsman to keep his feet.

They found Aunt Chloe in the state-room waiting to disrobe her nursling
and prepare her for her night's rest; but Mr. Dinsmore dismissed her,
saying Elsie should not be undressed, as there was no knowing what
might occur before morning.

"Don't you undress, either, Aunt Chloe," he added, as she kissed the
child good-night and turned to go. "Lie down in your berth and sleep if
you can; but so that you will be ready to leave it the instant you are
called. Give John the same direction from me, and tell him to keep near
the door of my state-room."

Left alone with his little girl, he knelt with her by his side, his arm
supporting her while he commended both her and himself, as well as the
others on the vessel, and dear ones far away, to the protecting care of
Him who neither slumbers nor sleeps. Then lifting the child in his arms
he held her to his heart for a moment, caressing her with exceeding
tenderness.

"My darling, you shall lie in your father's arms to-night," he said, as
he laid her in the lower berth and stretched himself by her side.

"That will be so nice," she said, creeping close and laying her cheek
to his; "it would make me glad of the storm, if I were quite, quite
sure that the boat will get safe into port. But O papa! if it shouldn't
I am so glad that you are not here without me."

"Why, my pet?"

"Because if you--if anything happens to you, I want to be with you and
share it. Papa, papa, don't try to save me if you cannot be saved too,
for I couldn't bear to live without you!" she concluded with a low cry
of mingled grief, terror, and entreaty, as she clung about his neck,
dropping tears on his face.

"God grant we may not be parted," he returned, holding her close. "We
will cling together through whatever comes. But now dearest, try to
go to sleep, fearing nothing, for you are not only in the arms of your
earthly father, but the Everlasting Arms are underneath and around both
you and me. We have asked our heavenly Father to take care of us, and
we know that he is the hearer and answerer of prayer."

"And I'm sure Miss Rose prays for us too, papa," she whispered, "she
loves us so dearly; and I do believe God will spare us to her. But if
he does not see best to do that, he will take us to himself, and O
dear, dear papa! I think it would be very sweet for you and me to go to
heaven together!"

"Very sweet indeed, my precious one! very bitter for either to be left
here bereft of the other. But let us not anticipate evil. Still," he
added after a moment's thought, "it is right and wise to be prepared
for any event; so, dear one, should I be lost and you saved, tell Mr.
Travilla I gave you to him; that I want him to adopt you as his own. I
know he will esteem it the greatest kindness I could possibly have done
him, and will be to you a father tender, loving, and true; a better one
than I have been." His tones grew husky and tremulous.

"Papa, papa, don't!" she cried, bursting into sobs and tears, and
clinging to him with an almost deathlike grasp. "I can't bear it! I
don't want to live without you! I won't! I will drown too, if you do!"

"Hush, hush, darling! do not talk so; that would not be right; we must
never throw away our lives unless in trying to save others," he said,
soothing her with the tenderest caresses. "But there, I didn't mean to
distress you so; and something seems to tell me we shall both be saved.
Let me wipe away your tears. There, do not cry any more; give papa
another kiss, then lay your head down upon his breast and go to sleep."

She obeyed; he clasped her close with one arm, while the other hand was
passed caressingly again and again over her hair and cheek. Presently
her quietude and regular breathing told him that she slept.

He lay very still that her slumbers might not be disturbed, but thought
was busy in his brain, thought of the past, the present, the future; of
the fair young girl away in a distant city, expecting soon to become
his bride; of the beloved child sleeping on his breast; of the father
who regarded him with such pride and affection as his first-born, "his
might and the beginning of his strength;" how would his death affect
them in case he were lost this night? Ah, Rose might console herself
with another lover; his father had other sons; but Elsie? ah, he was
sure his place in her heart could never be filled; Travilla would be
kind and tender, but--as she herself had once said--he was not her own
father and could never be, even if he gave her to him. What a precious,
loving child she was! how deep and strong her filial affection! she
seemed to have no memory for past severity on his part (ah, what
would he not give to be able to blot it from his own remembrance, or
rather that it had never been!), but to dwell with delight upon every
act, word, and look of love he had ever bestowed upon her. Ah, the
bitterness of death, should it come, would be the parting from her;
the leaving her behind to meet life's dangers and trials bereft of his
protecting love and care.

But insensibly waking thought merged into dreams; then his senses were
wrapped in profounder slumber, and at length he awoke to find that the
storm had passed, the sun arisen, and the vessel was nearing port.




CHAPTER XIX.

    "The angels sang in heaven when she was born."
                                        Longfellow.


"Thank God, the danger is past!" came in a low-breathed exclamation
from Mr. Dinsmore's lips. "Ah, my darling, did I wake you?" as he
perceived the soft brown eyes of his little daughter gazing lovingly
into his.

"No, papa dear, I have been awake a good while, but have not dared to
move for fear of disturbing you," she said, lifting her head from his
breast to put her arms about his neck, and kissing him again and again.

"Did you sleep well, daughter?" he asked, fondly stroking her hair and
returning her loving caresses.

"Yes, papa, I don't believe I moved once after we stopped talking last
night. I hope you too have had a good sleep?"

"Yes, and feel greatly refreshed. Our heavenly Father has been very
good to us. Let us kneel down and thank him for the light of this new
day and for our spared lives."

They landed in safety, breakfasted at a hotel, and took the stage for
Pleasant Plains; glad to find they had it to themselves--they and their
two servants.

It was a lovely October day; the roads were good, the woods gay with
autumn tints, the sun shone brightly after the rain, and the air was
sweet, pure, and invigorating.

Elsie sat by her father's side gay and happy as a bird--chatting,
singing, laughing; plying him with intelligent questions about
everything she saw that was new and strange, and about the cousins whom
they were going to visit; he answering her with a patient kindness that
never wearied.

He had neglected her in her babyhood, and once--only a year ago--his
tyrannical severity had brought her to the borders of the grave: he
could not forget it; he felt that he could never fully atone to her for
it by any amount of the tenderest love and care; but she should have
all he could lavish upon her.

A joyous welcome awaited them on their arrival. Mrs. Keith embraced her
cousin with sisterly, his child with motherly affection, and Mildred
wept for joy as she folded Elsie to her heart.

Indeed Elsie's beauty, her sweet, loving looks and smiles as she
accepted and returned their greetings, won all hearts; while all
presently esteemed "Cousin Horace" far more agreeable and lovable than
he had been on his former visits; there was less of pride and hauteur
about him, more of gentleness and thought for the comfort and happiness
of others.

Mildred and her mother were especially delighted with the ardent
affection evidently subsisting between him and his little girl; neither
seemed willing to lose sight of the other for a single hour; she
hovered about him, being almost always close at his side or on his
knee, he caressing her now and then, half unconsciously, as he talked,
or his hand toying with her curls.

Mrs. Keith remarked upon it to him as they sat alone together the day
after his arrival, expressing her heartfelt joy in beholding it.

Elsie had just left the room with Annis, her father's eyes following
her as she went, with the wonted expression of parental pride and
tenderness.

"Yes," he said with a sigh, "she is the very light of my eyes. Ah,
Marcia, I shall never cease to regret not having followed your advice
on my last visit, by taking immediate possession of my child! I have
lost by that mistake eight years of the joy of fatherhood to the
sweetest child ever parent had. And yet it has, perhaps, been better
for her, for I should have made her very worldly-minded instead of the
sweet little Christian I found her."

"You have at all events escaped the loss I feared for you," Mrs. Keith
said, with a sympathizing smile.

"Of her filial love and obedience? Yes, she could not be more dutiful
or affectionate than she is. And yet there was at one time a terrible
struggle between us; but for which, I now see, that I alone was to
blame. It was my severity, my determination to enforce obedience
to commands that conflicted with the dictates of her enlightened
conscience, that caused the almost mortal illness of which I wrote
you. Yes, a year ago I had nearly been written childless. At one time
I thought she was gone, and never, never can I forget the unutterable
anguish of that hour." His voice had grown husky, his features worked
with emotion, and tears filled his eyes.

But recovering himself he went on to give her a somewhat detailed
account of the whole affair, as it is to be found in the Elsie books;
she listening to the recital with intense, often tearful interest.

The little girls were in Mildred's room dressing dolls and chatting
together the while, Mildred, busied with some sewing, overhearing
the most of their talk with both interest and amusement. Elsie was
describing the Oaks and her home-life there, in reply to inquiries from
Annis.

"What a lovely place it must be! and how delightful to have a pony of
your own and ride it every day!" exclaimed the latter.

"Yes, it's very nice; but the best of all, I think, is living in papa's
house with him. You know we used to live at Roselands, with Grandpa
Dinsmore and the rest."

"But I should think you'd often feel lonesome in that big house with
nobody but Cousin Horace and the servants. Don't you wish you had a
mother like ours and brothers and sisters?"

A bright, eager, joyous look came into Elsie's face at that question;
she opened her lips as if to speak, then closed them again. "Oh, wait a
minute till I ask papa something!" she said, laying down the doll she
had in her hands, and running from the room.

Mr. Dinsmore was just finishing his sad story of her illness as the
little girl came in. She heard his last, self-reproachful sentence,
and coming softly to his side, put her arm about his neck and her lips
to his cheek. "Dear, dear papa, I love you so much!" she whispered.
"Aunt Marcia," turning to Mrs. Keith, "I think I have the best, kindest
father in the world. He was so, so good to me when I was sick, and he
always is. To be sure, he punishes me when I'm naughty; but that's
being good to me, isn't it?"

"I think so," Mrs. Keith answered with a smile; then excused herself
and left the room for a moment.

"Papa," said Elsie, taking possession of his knee, "may I tell my
cousins about Miss Rose?"

"I never forbade you to speak of her, did I?" he returned, in a playful
tone, smiling on her and stroking her hair with caressing hand.

"No, sir; but I would like to tell them that--that she is going to be
my mamma soon; if I may--if you would like me to?"

"You may tell them; I do not object; but it was quite right to ask
permission first," he answered; and with a joyful "Thank you, sir," she
skipped away.

When Mrs. Keith rejoined him he had another story for her ear--a
brighter, cheerier one than the last; the same that Elsie was gleefully
rehearsing to her cousins up-stairs.

"Miss Rose was so nice, so good, so kind," she had been saying.

"Is she pretty too?" asked Annis.

"Yes, but not nearly so beautiful as my own mamma," Elsie said, drawing
from the bosom of her dress a lovely miniature set in gold and precious
stones.

Annis exclaimed at the extreme beauty of both the face and its setting,
while Mildred gazed upon the former with eyes full of a mournful
tenderness.

"It's almost prettier than your gold watch," Annis said, "though I
thought that was as beautiful as anything could be. Your rings too."

"They were presents from papa and Mr. Travilla," said Elsie, glancing
down at them, "and the watch was mamma's. Papa had it done up for me
this summer, and gave me the chain with it."

"Such a beauty as it is, too! Did you ever go to school, Elsie?"

"No, we had a governess at Roselands; now papa teaches me himself."

"Do you like that?"

"Yes, indeed! He explains everything so nicely and makes my lessons so
interesting. He often tells me a nice story to illustrate, and is never
satisfied till I understand every word of my tasks."

"There!" cried Annis looking out of the window, "Zillah is motioning
for me to come over. Will you come with me, Elsie?"

"If papa gives permission. I'll run and ask him."

"Why, can't you go across the street without asking leave?" exclaimed
Annis in surprise.

"No, I'm not allowed to go anywhere without leave."

"Now, that's queer! Your papa pets you so that I really supposed you
could do exactly as you pleased."

"How Enna would laugh to hear you say that," returned Elsie, laughing
herself. "She thinks papa is the strictest person she ever saw, and
says she wouldn't be ruled as I am for any money."

"How do you mean? He seems so fond of you, and you of him too."

"Yes, indeed, we're ever so fond of each other; but papa will always
be obeyed the instant he speaks, and without any teasing, fretting,
crying, or sour looks, and he is sure to punish the slightest act of
disobedience, never taking forgetfulness of his orders as any excuse."

"Then he is strict," remarked Annis, shrugging her shoulders.

The two went down-stairs together, Elsie asked and received the desired
permission, and they hastened to inquire what Zillah wanted.

"I've been baking some jumbles," she said. "I know Annis is very fond
of them hot from the oven, and I hope you are too, Elsie. And here is
a paper of candy Wallace bought last night. There, sit down and help
yourselves."

Elsie looked a little wishfully at the offered dainties, but politely
declined them. Both Zillah and Annis urged her to partake, the latter
adding, "I'm sure you can't help liking them, for nobody makes better
jumbles than Zillah."

"They look very tempting," Elsie answered, "and I have no doubt are
very nice, but I think they are richer than papa would approve; and
besides he does not allow me to eat between meals, unless it is some
very simple thing that I will eat only if quite hungry."

"But the candy; you can eat some of that, can't you?"

"No, Cousin Zillah, I must never eat that unless papa gives it to me
himself. Once in a long while he gives me a very little."

"Dear me! I begin to almost think Enna's right," Annis said laughingly.

"Oh, no, no!" cried Elsie, reddening and the tears starting to her
eyes; "papa is very, very kind to me; he forbids only what he thinks
injurious to my health."

"Certainly," said Zillah, "and it shows that he is a good father; and
you are a good daughter to be so ready to stand up for him and so
obedient."

She went out of the room, leaving the little girls alone for a short
time.

"Annis, here is a note I want Wallace to have at once," she said,
coming back. "Will you take it to the office for me?"

"Yes, if Elsie will go with me?"

"I will go and ask papa if I may," Elsie said, tying on her hat. "Ah,
there he is now coming out of the gate with Aunt Marcia."

She ran to him and preferred her request, Annis following close behind.

"Yes," he said; "Aunt Marcia and I are going to walk down the street,
and you may run on before with Annis. I shall keep you in sight."

"Are you to wait for an answer, Annis?" asked her mother.

"No, ma'am."

"Then you and Elsie can join us as soon as you have handed Wallace the
note. I am going to show Cousin Horace a part of the town he hasn't
seen yet. Run on ahead, and we will meet you at the office door as you
come out."

Eager for the walk with their parents, the little girls made haste to
obey.

"There! my shoe-string is untied," cried Annis, suddenly stopping short
within a few yards of their destination. "Here, Elsie, won't you run in
with the note while I'm tying it?"

Elsie obligingly complied.

The door stood open, and stepping in, she caught sight of a strangely
uncouth figure: that of a man, coatless and hatless, wearing green
goggles, a red flannel shirt with a white bosom tied on over it, and
sitting sidewise in Mr. Keith's office chair, with his legs over the
arm, dangling in air; a full set of false teeth twirling about in his
fingers, while he gave vent to the most dismal sighs and groans.

One sweeping glance showed the child that this was the only occupant
of the room, and springing back in terror, she turned and fled, flying
with swift feet to the shelter of her father's arms.

He was not far away, and in a moment she was clinging to him, pale and
almost speechless with fright.

"My darling, what is it?" he asked, stooping to take her in his arms.
"You are trembling like a leaf. What has alarmed you so?"

"Papa, papa," she gasped, "there's a crazy man in Uncle Stuart's
office."

"Never mind, he shall not hurt you, daughter," Mr. Dinsmore answered in
soothing tones.

Mrs. Keith and Annis were looking on and listening in surprise and
bewilderment; then the former, seeing a tall form issuing from the
office door, a coat over one arm, a hat in that hand, while the other
seemed to be employed in settling his teeth, burst into a laugh, not
loud but very mirthful, saying, "Not a lunatic, dear, but our very odd
and absent-minded minister."

He was walking away in the direction to take him farther from them.
They saw Wallace meet him and stop to shake hands and exchange a few
sentences. Then the two parted, Mr. Lord walked on, and Wallace hurried
to meet them.

The thing was soon explained. Mr. Lord had come in heated by a long
walk, and finding no one in the office, had pulled off his coat and
settled himself to rest and grow cool while waiting for the return of
Mr. Keith or Wallace.

But Elsie, with nerves still weak from her severe illness, could not
recover immediately from the effects of her sudden fright; she still
trembled and was very pale. So a carriage was sent for and a drive
substituted for the intended walk; much to the delight of Annis, to
whom it was an unusual treat.




CHAPTER XX.

                  "She was the pride
    Of her familiar sphere--the daily joy
    Of all who on her gracefulness might gaze,
    And in the light and music of her way
    Have a companion's portion."--Willis.


Wallace Ormsby was not behind his wife in admiration and liking for
Frank Osborne; he enjoyed his sermons, too, and was desirous that Mr.
Dinsmore should hear the young preacher, and make his acquaintance;
therefore had persuaded him and Mr. Lord to an exchange of pulpits on
the morrow, which was Sunday, and invited Frank to be his and Zillah's
guest. Wallace was hospitably inclined, and not a little proud of his
young wife's housekeeping.

The invitation was accepted, and the visit extended a day or two by
urgent request. Of course the time was not all spent on the one side of
the street, and Mr. Dinsmore, who was not lacking in observation, soon
perceived how matters were tending between Ada and the young clergyman.

He spoke to his cousin about it, saying that "he was pleased with Mr.
Osborne, finding him agreeable, well-informed, and an able sermonizer
for his years; but surely his lack of means was an objection to the
match, or would be if Ada were his daughter."

"Yes," she said, "but 'the blessing of the Lord, it maketh rich, and
he addeth no sorrow with it.' If there is mutual love we will raise no
barrier to their union. But I should greatly prefer to keep my dear
daughter with me for some years yet."

"Yes; I do not doubt that. I am glad indeed that it must be many years
before I am called to part with mine to some other man. But, Marcia,
how is it that Mildred is still single? So sweet and attractive as she
is in every way, it must certainly be her own fault."

In reply Mrs. Keith told him how it had been between Mildred and
Charlie Landreth, and how six long years had now passed with no word
from or of the wanderer.

He was deeply touched. "It would be well if she could forget him and
bestow her affections upon another," he said, "for surely if still
living, he is unworthy of her. I knew and liked him as a boy, but it
is long since I have seen or heard of him. He and his uncle made a
disastrous failure in business, though I understood that no blame
attached to either; then the uncle died, and Charlie disappeared from
our neighborhood, where nothing has been heard of him since, so far
as I have learned. But I will make inquiries on my return, and may
possibly be able to trace him. However, rest assured that I will do
nothing to compromise Mildred," he added, noticing a doubtful look on
his cousin's face.

"Thank you," she said, her voice trembling slightly. "I can trust you,
I know, Horace; and I cannot tell you how glad I should be to have my
dear, patient child relieved of this torturing suspense."

This visit of their cousins was a grand holiday for all the younger
Keiths, Fan and Annis more especially; they were excused from lessons,
and had delightful daily walks and drives.

Every morning Elsie would take her Bible into her papa's room and spend
a little while there with him, before they were called to breakfast. He
sent her to bed regularly at half past eight, so that she was ready to
rise betimes.

One evening when she came to bid him good-night, he kissed her several
times, saying, "I shall probably not see you in the morning; very
likely not until to-morrow evening, as I am going hunting with your
uncle, and we expect to start very early."

"Oh, I wish little girls could go too!" Elsie exclaimed, clinging to
him. "But mayn't I get up in time to see you before you go, papa?"

"I don't think you will be awake, daughter. We start before sunrise."

"But if I am, papa, mayn't I run into your room and kiss you good-by?"

"Yes; but try not to feel disappointed if you should miss the
opportunity. And don't shed any tears over papa's absence," he added
half jestingly.

"No, sir; but it will be a long day without you," she sighed, with her
arm about his neck, her cheek to his.

"I think you will find the time pass much more rapidly than you
expect," he said cheerily; "but whether or no, you must try to be
bright and pleasant for the sake of those around you. Don't indulge
selfishness, even in little things, darling."

"I will try not to, papa," she answered, giving and receiving a final
hug and kiss.

No one was near enough at the moment to observe or overhear what passed
between them, and no one knew anything about the few quiet tears Elsie
shed as she went up the stairs to her Cousin Mildred's room where
she was to sleep that night. Ada, Fan, and Annis had all had their
turn--because all wanted the sweet little cousin for a bed-fellow--and
now it was Mildred's. But she found her mammy waiting to prepare her
for bed, and her little trouble was soon forgotten in sound, sweet
sleep.

Mildred came up an hour later, and stepping softly to the bedside,
stood for a minute or two gazing tenderly down upon the sweet little
sleeping face. Its expression brought to her mind the lines--read she
could not remember where--

    "I want to be marked for thine own--
    Thy seal on my forehead to wear."

"Dear little girlie," she whispered, bending over the child, "you wear
it if ever mortal did! No wonder you are the very idol of your father's
heart!"

Half an hour before sunrise Mildred was again moving quietly about,
careful not to disturb her little room-mate while making a neat, though
rapid toilet.

Going out, she left the door slightly ajar. Her cousin was just
issuing from his, seemingly in full readiness for his expedition. They
exchanged a pleasant, low-toned good morning.

"I did not know you were so early a riser," he said.

"I claimed the privilege of pouring out the coffee for you and father,"
she returned with a smile. Then pointing to the door, "Go in, if you
like. I know you want to kiss your baby before you start; she's there
asleep."

"Thank you."

He stole softly in and bent over the loved sleeper for a moment,
his eyes devouring the sweet, fair face; he stooped lower, and his
moustache brushed the round, rosy cheek.

"Papa," she murmured in her sleep; but a second kiss, upon her lips,
awoke her.

Instantly her arm was round his neck. "O papa, I'm so glad you came!
Please, may I get up and see you start?"

"No; lie still and take another nap, my pet. We'll be off before you
could dress. There, good-by, darling. Don't expose yourself to the sun
in the heat of the day, or to the evening air. Though I expect to be
back in time to see to that last."

"I hope so, indeed, papa; but you know I will obey you just the same if
you are not here to see."

"I don't doubt it in the least," he said.

Then the door closed on him, and the little girl, accustomed to
implicit obedience, turned over and went to sleep again.

When Mildred came up a little before the usual breakfast hour, she
found her dressed and reading her Bible.

"You love that book, Elsie dear?" she said.

"Yes, indeed, cousin. And I do love to have my papa read it with me.
This is the first morning he has missed doing so since--since I was so
very sick." The voice sounded as if tears were not far off.

"How nice to have such a good, kind father," Mildred remarked in a
cheery tone.

"Oh it is so, cousin!" Elsie answered, her whole face lighting up.
"I used to be continually longing for papa while he was away in
Europe. I'd never seen him, you know, and have no mother or brother or
sister--and now I just want to hold fast to him all the time:--my dear,
dear papa!"

"And you are missing him now? Well, dear, take comfort in the thought
that he is probably enjoying himself, and will soon return to his
little pet daughter. I think he never forgets you--he asked what we
could do with you to-day in his absence, and I told him my plan for the
morning. He approved, and now shall I tell it to you?"

"Oh, yes, cousin! if you please," returned the child with a very
interested look.

"Our sewing society meets this afternoon, and as we--mother, my
sisters, and I--have some work to finish before we go, we will have to
be busy with our needles. One generally reads aloud while the others
sew, and we would like to have you join us; taking your turn at both
sewing and reading, if you choose."

"Very much, cousin, if--if the book is one that papa approves; he never
allows me to read anything without being sure of that."

"Ah, that was why he said 'Tell Elsie I say she may read or listen to
anything her Aunt Marcia pronounces suitable for her.' We have some
very nice books that may be new to you."

"Oh, then I think it will be ever so nice!"

"Well then," said Mildred, "we will take a short walk soon after
breakfast, then spend the rest of the morning as I have proposed. Your
papa says you can read aloud very nicely, and use your needle well,
too."

"I don't know whether you will think so, cousin," Elsie returned
modestly, "but I am willing to try, and shall do my very best."

They carried out their plans with only a short interruption from a
caller. After dinner Annis was left to entertain Elsie for a few hours
while the others attended the meeting of the society.

It was an almost sultry afternoon, and Annis proposed taking the dolls
to a grotto her brothers had made for her and Fan, near the spring that
bubbled up at the foot of the high river bank, and was reached by a
flight of steps that led down from the garden behind the house.

The grotto was tastefully adorned with moss, pebbles, and shells, and
had a comfortable rustic seat, artistically formed of twigs and the
smaller branches of trees with the bark still on them.

It was a pleasant place to sit and dream on a summer afternoon, with
the clear bright water of the river lapping the pebbly shore almost
at your feet, the leafy branches of a grape-vine overhead nearly
concealing you from the view of any one on the further bank or in a
passing boat. A pleasant place, too, for children to play, and not at
all a dangerous one; the little Keith girls went there whenever they
chose.

Elsie and Annis were congenial spirits, enjoyed each other's society,
and had spent an hour or more very agreeably together in this cool
retreat, when the sound of dipping oars near at hand drew their
attention, and peering out from behind the leafy screen of the
grape-vine, they saw a canoe approaching propelled by the strong young
arms of Cyril and Don, now grown to be lads of sixteen and fourteen.

"Hello! we thought we'd find you here, girls," Cyril called to them.
"Don't you want to take a row?"

"Oh yes, yes indeed!" cried Annis, jumping up and clapping her hands
with delight. "Come, Elsie, there couldn't be anything nicer, I'm sure!"

Elsie rose as if to comply, her face full of eager delight also, but
its expression changed suddenly.

"I'm afraid I ought not, Annis," she said; "papa might not be willing,
and I can't ask him, you know, because he is away."

The boys had now brought the canoe close up, and Cyril reached out his
hand to help her in.

"Come, little coz," he said in his most persuasive tones, "I'm sure
your father would not object; there isn't a particle of danger. I'm
used to rowing on this river, as well as to fishing and swimming in
it--and it's not deep or swift, except in mid-current, and I promise to
keep near the shore."

"But papa is very strict and particular," Elsie said, hanging back,
though with a longing look in her lovely brown eyes.

"But he likes to have you enjoy yourself, surely?" put in Don.

"Indeed, he does, when it's quite safe and right," Elsie returned with
warmth; "he loves me dearly."

"Then he wouldn't like you to miss this pleasure," said Cyril. "The
canoe is a borrowed one, and it isn't every day I can get it."

"And if you don't go I can't," remarked Annis.

"Oh, yes, you can," Elsie said; "don't stay for me. I'll go up to the
house and amuse myself with a book till you come back."

"No, no, I couldn't think of leaving my company; it wouldn't be at all
polite; and I couldn't enjoy it without you; yet I want to go ever so
much. O Elsie, do come!"

"I want to, I'm sure; both to oblige you, Annis, and for my own
pleasure," Elsie answered. "Oh I wish I were quite sure papa would be
willing!"

"Take it for granted," said Cyril, "it's the best you can do, under the
circumstances; so he surely can't be much displeased."

Still Elsie hesitated.

"Ah," said Cyril, mischievously, "is Cousin Horace so very severe! Are
you afraid he will whip you?"

"No," Elsie said, reddening; "do you think so meanly of me as to
suppose I obey my father only from fear of punishment?"

"No; and I beg your pardon. I know you're fond of him, too, and that
you want to do right. But I have noticed that he is very polite and
considerate of others, and don't you think he wishes you to be the
same?"

"I know he does."

"Then surely he would tell you to go with us; because your refusal will
spoil all our pleasure."

"Yes, Elsie; it was all for your sake we borrowed the canoe," said Don;
"and if you refuse to go it will be a great disappointment. We wouldn't
urge you if it would be disobedience; but did your father ever say you
mustn't row with us on the river?"

"No, Don; but perhaps that was only because he never thought of your
asking me."

"O Elsie, Elsie, do go!" entreated Annis. "I won't go without you, and
I can't bear to lose the row."

"Didn't Cousin Horace leave you in mother's care!" asked Cyril.

"Yes."

"Well, then, what need of hesitation? Mother lets Annis go, and of
course she would let you."

Elsie stood for a moment, silently weighing the question in her mind.
Certainly her papa had great confidence in "Aunt Marcia's" opinion, for
had he not said she might read whatever Aunt Marcia recommended? and he
had left her in her care; also, he did teach her to be considerate of
the wishes of others; he had told her only last night not to be selfish
in little things. Surely he would not have her spoil the afternoon's
pleasure of these three cousins.

Ah, but he was never willing to have her exposed to unnecessary danger!
But Cyril said there was really no danger, and--she did so want to go!
it looked so pleasant on the water!

The scales were almost evenly balanced, and finally she allowed
inclination to decide her, gave Cyril her hand, and was quickly seated
in the canoe with the delighted Annis by her side.




CHAPTER XXI.

    "Mutual love, the crown of all our bliss."
                                         Milton.


The boys took up their oars again, pushed out a little from the shore,
and rowed up stream for a short distance, then turned and went down for
a mile or more, keeping out of the main current all the time, according
to promise.

Elsie felt a trifle timid at first, and a little troubled lest she
had not done quite right in yielding to her cousins' persuasions; but
gradually these disquieting thoughts and feelings passed away, and she
gave herself up to thorough enjoyment of the present pastime.

They chatted, laughed, and sang; dipped their hands in the clear water;
gazed through it at the pebbly bottom, and the fish darting hither and
thither; landed in several places to gather bright autumn leaves; then
re-entered the canoe for another row.

The air was delightful, and most of the way they were pretty well
shaded from the sun by the high bank and its trees and bushes.

The boys did not soon tire with their work, for their load was light;
going down stream required but little use of their oars, and even
rowing up was not very laborious. So the afternoon slipped away before
they knew it.

"I believe the sun is getting low," Cyril said at length, "and we are a
good mile from home. We must turn, Don. What time is it, Elsie?"

Taking out her pretty watch, "Half-past five," she said in some dismay,
"and the air begins to feel a little chilly. Don't you think so?"

"Yes; and it's supper-time. Come, Don, my lad, we must pull lustily."

"Yes, a long pull, a strong pull, and a pull both together," responded
Don gayly, as he bent to his oar.

"We ought to have brought shawls along for you girls," Cyril remarked,
with an anxious glance at his little cousin.

"I'm not cold," said Annis.

"But Elsie is. Here, little coz, let me put this round you," he said,
pulling off his coat; "nobody will see, and I wouldn't have you take a
chill from this expedition for anything in the world."

"But you will be cold," Elsie said, shrinking back, as he would have
put it about her shoulders.

"Not a bit; rowing keeps a fellow warm as toast this time of year," he
returned, with a light laugh: and she made no further resistance.

Nearing the grotto, they saw Aunt Chloe standing at the water's edge,
with a shawl on her arm, looking out anxiously for her nursling.

"O mammy! has papa come?" Elsie called to her.

"No, darlin'; 'spect massa'll be 'long dreckly. But what for my chile
go off in de boat widout a shawl, when de ebenins gits so cool? Ise
'fraid massa be mighty vexed 'bout it. And s'pose you'd got drownded,
honey, what den?"

"Come now, Aunt Chloe, it's all my fault, and if there's to be any
scolding, I'm the one to take it," Cyril said good-humoredly, as he
helped Elsie ashore.

"O mammy! was it naughty in me to go? Do you think papa will be
displeased with me?" the little girl asked in an anxious whisper, while
the nurse was busied in carefully wrapping the shawl about her; Cyril's
coat having been returned with thanks.

"Maybe not. Dere, honey, don't you fret."

"Where was the harm in her going? But you won't tell of her, Aunt
Chloe?" Annis said, as they climbed the steps that led up the bank.

"No, chile, s'pect not; ain't no 'casion no how; massa neber in de
house bery long fo' Miss Elsie tell him all she's been adoin'."

"Shall you tell him, Elsie?" Annis asked, turning to her cousin as they
gained the top of the flight of steps.

"Yes; I can't feel easy till papa knows all about it. I'm afraid I
oughtn't to have gone."

There was a tone of distress in Elsie's voice, and, indeed, she began
to be sorely troubled in prospect of her father's displeasure; for her
mammy's words had caused her to see her conduct in going on the river
in a new light, and she had now scarce a hope that it would meet his
approval. Besides, they were certainly late for supper, and he was
particular in regard to promptness at meals.

They hurried into the house, expecting to find their elders seated
about the table. But there was no one in the dining-room, and though
the table was set, the meal was not spread. The ladies had returned,
but were waiting for the gentlemen, who had not yet come in.

Elsie was not sorry. She hastened up-stairs to be made neat for tea,
and was down again in a few minutes.

Still nothing was to be seen or heard of the huntsmen, and she began to
grow uneasy. Perhaps some accident had happened to her dear papa; maybe
she was to be punished in that way for what she began to look upon as
an act of disobedience or something very near it.

"Aunt Marcia," she said, drawing near to Mrs. Keith, "what do you think
makes them stay so long?"

"I don't know, dear; but nothing serious, I trust. They probably went
farther than they had intended. But don't be anxious; I do not see any
cause for alarm," was the cheerful, kindly answer.

Supper had been delayed a full hour already, and Mrs. Keith decided
that it should wait no longer. "It is not worth while," she said, "for
very likely our gentlemen have supped somewhere on the road."

Elsie was unusually silent, and seemed to have lost her appetite. Her
eyes turned every moment toward the door; her ear was strained to catch
every sound from the street. Oh, what could be keeping her papa?

They left the table, and she stationed herself at a front window to
wait and watch for his coming.

Mildred drew near, passed an arm about the child's waist, and with a
gentle kiss asked, "Why are you so troubled and anxious, dear little
girlie? It is nothing strange that our fathers should be a little late
in getting home to-night."

Then Elsie, laying her head on her cousin's shoulder, whispered in her
sympathizing ear a tearful story of how the afternoon had been spent,
and her fear that she had done wrong in going out in the canoe, and
that perhaps she might be punished by something dreadful happening to
her "dear, dear papa."

"I hardly think it was wrong, dear," Mildred said; "not a very serious
fault, at any rate. And I cannot believe our Heavenly Father would
visit you with such a punishment. He never treats us according to our
deserts. He is 'a God ready to pardon, gracious and merciful, slow to
anger, and of great kindness.'"

"Yes, I know; the Bible tells us that," Elsie returned, wiping away her
tears. "How good he is to me, and to all his creatures; it makes me
ashamed and sorry for all the sin in my heart and life."

Mildred presently began talking of the old days at Viamede and
Roselands, trying thus to help the little girl to forgetfulness of her
anxiety. Elsie grew cheerful and apparently interested in her cousin's
reminiscences of her babyhood; but still her eyes turned every now and
then to the window, and her ears seemed attentive to every sound from
without.

The clock struck eight, and with a sigh she drew out her watch and
compared the two.

"Oh," she said, "why don't they come? I must go to bed in half an hour,
and I do so want to see papa first."

"Do you think he wouldn't let you stay up to wait for him?" asked
Mildred.

"No, cousin, he always insists on my going to bed at the regular hour,
unless he has given me permission to stay up longer."

The half hour was almost gone--only five minutes left--when at last
Elsie's ear caught the sound of a well-known step and voice.

She ran to the door, "Papa, papa! I'm so glad, so _glad_ you've come! I
was so afraid something had happened to you."

"Ah, I knew my little girl would be anxious," he said, bending down to
give her a tender caress. "Well, there was nothing wrong, except that
we went a little farther than we intended; and here we are safe and
sound."

"And both tired and hungry, I dare say," said Mrs. Keith.

"The first, but not the last," returned her husband. "We took our
supper an hour ago, at Ward's."

Mr. Dinsmore sat down and drew Elsie to his side. "Ah, is it so late?"
he said, glancing at the clock. "Just your bed-time, daughter."

"Yes, papa, but--" and with her arm about his neck, her lips to his
ear, she whispered the rest--"I want so much to tell you something.
Mayn't I?"

"Yes; go up now and let Aunt Chloe make you ready for bed; then put on
your dressing-gown and slippers and come to my room. I shall be there
by that time, and we'll have our little talk. I should hardly like to
go to bed without it myself."

Elsie obeyed, and he presently excusing himself, on the plea of
fatigue, for so early a retirement, went to his room, where she found
him waiting for her as he had promised.

"Well, my pet, have you anything particular for papa's ear to-night?"
he asked, lifting her to his knee.

"Yes, papa. But aren't you too tired to hold me?"

"No; it rests me to have my darling in my arms," he answered, caressing
her with his wonted tender fondness.

"Papa, I'm afraid I don't deserve it to-night," she murmured, hanging
her head, while a deep blush suffused her cheek.

"I'm sorry indeed, if that is so," he said gently; "but very glad that
my little daughter never tries to conceal any wrong-doing of her own
from me."

Then he waited for her to speak; he knew there was no need to question
her.

"Papa," she said, so low that he barely caught the words, "I went out
on the river in a canoe, with Annis, this afternoon. Cyril and Don
rowed it."

"And my little girl went without her father's permission?" His tone was
one of grieved surprise.

"But you were not here to give it, papa," she said, bursting into tears.

"A very good and sufficient reason why my daughter should have refused
to go."

"But, papa, I did not know you would object, and I thought you would
not want me to spoil the pleasure of my cousins; and they said I would
if I refused to go."

"I think you certainly knew me well enough to be quite sure, if you had
taken time to consider the question fully, that I would be far from
willing to let you run into danger for the pleasure of others."

"But, papa, Aunt Marcia let's Annis go: and Cyril said there was no
danger."

"Nonsense! Cyril is only a boy; not capable of judging. The current
of the river is very swift and strong. I should not have trusted you
upon it in a canoe with those boys for any consideration, and am truly
thankful that you escaped without accident. But I am not pleased with
you."

"Papa, I am very sorry. Please don't be angry with me," she sobbed,
hiding her face on his shoulder.

He was silent for a moment, then lifting her face, wiped away her
tears with his handkerchief, and kissing her lips, said, "I suppose
the temptation was strong, and as it was not an act of positive
disobedience to orders, I forgive you. But, my little daughter, you
must never do anything of the kind again."

"No, dear papa, I will not," she said, with a sigh of relief. "You are
very kind not to punish me."

"Not kinder to you than to myself; it hurts me, I think, quite as much
as it does you when I have to punish you," he said, with another loving
caress. "Now, darling, bid me good-night and go to your bed."




CHAPTER XXII.

    "All flesh is grass, and all its glory fades
    Like the fair flower dishevell'd in the wind."
                                      Cowper's Task.


Annis was in Mildred's room waiting to say good-night to her cousin,
rather uneasy, too, lest she had got her into trouble, by coaxing her
into the canoe.

"O Elsie!" she said, as the latter came in, "was your papa displeased?
did he punish you? You look as if you had been crying."

"He said he was not pleased with me," Elsie answered, brushing away a
tear; "that was punishment enough, I'm sure; but he forgave me the next
minute and kissed me good-night."

"Oh, I'm glad that was all!" Annis exclaimed, giving Elsie a hug. "I
began to be almost afraid he had whipped you."

"No, indeed! he never did that, and I don't believe he ever will,"
Elsie said, a quick, vivid blush dyeing her fair face and neck.

The next day the little girls were taking a walk on the river bank,
Aunt Chloe plodding along a little in the rear, that she might watch
over her nursling.

A boy coming from the opposite direction startled them by a loud
"Hello, Tim! where are you going?"

Two boys were just passing them, and the younger, who looked to be
about ten years old, made answer in a surly tone, and in words so
profane that the little girls shuddered with horror.

"Well, I wouldn't want to go 'long with you; not to that place,"
remarked the first jeeringly; "but what's the use o' bein' so all-fired
cross--swearin' at a feller just for askin' a civil question?"

"Come, Bill, just you let him alone," said Tim's companion; "he's
worked up and mad, 'cause his mother told him not to go to the river,
and that's where we're going this minute."

"Well, then, George, if he gits drowned, I guess he'll go where he said
he was a-goin'," remarked Bill, passing on.

The little girls stood still, watching the other two as they hurried on
down the bank, entered a canoe that lay on the water, made fast by a
rope to a tree, loosed it, and pushed out into the stream.

They were not careful as Cyril had been to keep near the shore, and
presently the current was carrying them down stream very rapidly.

A few hundred yards below the spot where they had embarked, a wooden
bridge had formerly spanned the river; it had been torn down shortly
before this, but the posts were left standing in the water. Against one
of these the canoe struck and instantly overset, throwing the boys into
the water where it was deepest and most dangerous.

The little girls and their attendant saw the mishap, and ran screaming
toward some men who were at work at no great distance. The instant the
men comprehended what had occurred, they made all haste to the scene of
the disaster, and used every effort to rescue the lads.

They succeeded in bringing George out alive, but Tim had sunk to rise
no more. They could not even find the body.

When this announcement was made, the two little girls, who had
stood looking on in intense excitement and full of distress for the
imperilled boys, burst into bitter weeping.

They hurried home, crying as they went, to tell the sad story.

Mrs. Keith was in the sitting-room, busied with some sewing, as usual,
Mr. Dinsmore with her, when the children came rushing in, crying as if
their hearts would break.

"Why, my child, what is the matter?" Mr. Dinsmore asked, in extreme
surprise and alarm, as Elsie threw herself into his arms and clung to
him, sobbing convulsively.

"O mother, mother! we've just seen a boy drowned!" cried Annis, burying
her face in her mother's lap. "It was Tim Jones, and his mother had
told him not to go to the river. And we heard him say such wicked words
as he was going."

"And O papa! he's dead," sobbed Elsie, "and I can't even pray for him!
O papa! he has lost his soul!"

"We do not know that certainly, dear daughter," he said, trying to
comfort her; "we may have a little hope, for possibly he may have cried
to Jesus for pardon and salvation, even after he was in the water."

"And Jesus is so kind, so ready to forgive and save us," she said,
growing calmer. "But, O papa! it's such a _little_ hope we can have
that he did find the way, and get a new heart in that one minute!"

"Yes, that is too sadly true," he sighed. "Yet the thought uppermost
in my mind just now is, What if this had happened to my child
yesterday! O! my darling, how could I have borne such a loss? My heart
aches for the parents of that boy."

"Dear papa, God was very good to us," she whispered, laying her cheek
to his, as he held her close to his heart. "Oh, I am glad he did not
let me fall into the river and drown, though I was so naughty as to go
without your leave."

"But I had not forbidden you," he said tenderly; "and I know that my
little girl loves Jesus, and tries to serve him; so I should have been
spared the terrible pain of fearing that you were lost to me forever.
Yet I cannot be thankful enough that I have you still, my precious,
precious child!"

His tones were so low that Mrs. Keith could hardly have caught the
words, even had she not been occupied, as she was, in soothing and
comforting Annis.




CHAPTER XXIII.

                    "Oft what seems
    A trifle, a mere nothing, by itself,
    In some nice situation, turns the scale
    Of fate, and rules the most important actions."
                                             Thomson.


Because of the near approach of his appointed wedding-day Mr. Dinsmore
could not linger long in Pleasant Plains. All felt the parting keenly,
for even in the few days they had spent together a strong attachment
had sprung up between Elsie and her cousins, while the renewal of
former congenial intercourse had strengthened the tie of affection that
had long existed between Mrs. Keith and her Cousin Horace.

Fan and Annis wept so bitterly as the stage whirled away out of sight,
that their mother and Mildred found it necessary to deny themselves the
indulgence of their own grief in order to comfort them.

At the same time Mr. Dinsmore was wiping the tears from Elsie's eyes,
and soothing her with tender caresses and the hope that she and
Mildred and Annis would meet again before a great while.

"Who knows," he said in cheery tones, "but we may be able to persuade
their father and mother to let them spend the winter at the Oaks next
year!"

"O papa, how nice that would be!" exclaimed the child, smiling through
her tears; "will you ask them?"

"Yes; if you will stop crying now. Perhaps if you keep on I may be
tempted to join you," he added jestingly, "and how ashamed we would
both feel."

That made Elsie laugh. Then he interested her in plans for purchasing
gifts for the cousins they had just left, and for her "new mamma," when
they should reach New York, and soon she was quite her usual sunny self.

Fortunately up to this time their little party had been the only
occupants of the stage.

We have not space to speak further of their journey, which brought
them finally to Philadelphia, Miss Rose Allison's home, and where the
wedding was to take place.

On arriving in that city Mr. Dinsmore sent Elsie and her nurse to Mr.
Allison's, while he, with his servant John, went to a hotel. He was to
be married the next morning, and it was already late in the afternoon,
so the separation would not be for long.

While taking his supper at the hotel table Mr. Dinsmore became the
unconscious object of close scrutiny by a gentleman seated nearly
opposite; a rather fine-looking man, tall, well-proportioned, with good
features, an open, intelligent countenance, benevolent expression,
clear blue eyes, light brown hair and beard.

"I can hardly be mistaken; it is no common face; but I will make
certain," the stranger said to himself, as he rose and left the room at
the conclusion of his meal.

He went to the hotel register and found Mr. Dinsmore's name among those
entered that day. He saw it with a thrill of pleasure; and yet--"well,
he could not know till he had tried to renew the acquaintance, whether
to do so would be agreeable to the friend of his boyhood."

Mr. Dinsmore retired to his own apartment on leaving the table, and had
scarcely done so when a servant handed in a card.

"Charles Landreth, M.D.," was the inscription it bore. Mr. Dinsmore
read it at a glance. His first emotion was surprise, the next a mixture
of feelings.

"Show the gentleman up here; tell him I shall be happy to see him," he
said to the waiter. Then, as the man closed the door and departed, he
turned and paced the floor with slow, meditative step.

"It may be a good Providence that brings us together so unexpectedly
just at this time," he said to himself. "I should never have expected
dishonorable conduct from my old chum Charlie Landreth, and I'll give
him the benefit of the doubt as long as I can. Ah, God grant I may be
able to set this matter right for poor Mildred!"

Steps approached, the door opened, and the two stood face to face.

"Horace! you have not forgotten me?" The voice, the grasp of the hand,
the beaming countenance, all spoke such sincere pleasure, such warmth
of friendship, that Mr. Dinsmore's doubts vanished; that was not the
face of a false, cold-hearted villain. He returned the greeting as
cordially as it was given.

"Forgotten you, Charlie? No, indeed! and I'm particularly glad that you
have made yourself known to-night; for to-morrow I shall be on my way
south again."

"Ah, going back to the old neighborhood where we were boys together,"
and Charlie heaved a sigh to the memory of the days of auld lang syne,
as he accepted a mute invitation to be seated. "Have you been long
absent?" he asked.

"For several months. I am lately returned from Indiana, where I have
been visiting my cousins the Keiths."

As he pronounced the name Mr. Dinsmore looked keenly at his companion.

Landreth flushed hotly and his look was both eager and pained as he
responded, with a little hesitation in his speech. "Ah! and were
they--all well?"

"Yes, thank you, and prospering. One of the girls--there are five in
all--is married."

"Mildred?" asked his listener in a hoarse whisper, and with
half-averted face.

"No; she is still single, and it struck me as strange, for she is a
most lovely and attractive girl in both person and character."

    "A perfect woman, nobly planned,
    To warn, to comfort, and command;
    And yet a spirit still and bright,
    With something of an angel light."

"I think I never saw one to whom Wordsworth's description was more
truly applicable."

Landreth turned and grasped Mr. Dinsmore's hand, his face all aglow
with hope and joy. "You have lifted me from the depths of despair!" he
said in tremulous tones.

"You have cared for her?"

"Loved her as never man loved woman before!"

Mr. Dinsmore smiled at that, thinking of Rose, and his early love, the
mother of his child, but did not care to combat the assertion. "She is
worthy of it," was all he said.

"I heard she was married, and it nearly killed me," Landreth went on.
"But I could not blame her, for she had steadily refused to pledge
herself to me."

"But where have you been all these years, and how is it that I find you
here now, Charlie? I should be glad to hear your story."

"I went first to the mines of South America," Landreth said, "saw very
hard times for the first two years, then met with a wonderful turn of
fortune--coming quite unexpectedly upon a very large nugget of gold.
I didn't stay long after that. I had written to Mildred a good many
times, but never received a line from her, and almost the first news
I heard on returning to my native land was that of her marriage. As I
have said, it nearly killed me; but, Dinsmore, my bitter sorrow and
disappointment did for me what perhaps nothing else could. I sought
and found Him, of whom Moses in the law and the prophets did write,
Jesus of Nazareth, the sinner's Saviour and Friend."

"Thank God for that, Charlie!" Mr. Dinsmore returned with emotion; and
again their hands met in a warm brotherly clasp.

"Having found him," continued Landreth, "of course his service became
my first object in life. I looked about for a sphere of usefulness,
and decided upon the medical profession, because I had discovered that
I had a liking for it, the necessities of the men in my employ having
led me to dip into it a little. So I came here to pursue my studies,
received my diploma a year ago, have been practicing in the hospitals
since, and am now looking about for the best place in which to begin my
career as a private physician and surgeon."

"Plenty of room in the West," observed Mr. Dinsmore sententiously and
with a sparkle of fun in his eye.

Landreth sprang up. "And my darling is there, and you have given me
hope that I may yet win her! Dinsmore, I shall make the necessary
arrangements immediately, and set off for Pleasant Plains at the
earliest possible moment."

"Right, Charlie; and you have my best wishes for your success both
with her and in your chosen profession. But I hope you will not leave
Philadelphia before to-morrow noon. I want you at my wedding. Mildred
and the rest will be glad to hear an account of it from an eye-witness."

"Your wedding?"

"Yes, it is to take place at nine to-morrow morning. And I want the
pleasure of introducing my intended cousin to my bride; to say nothing
of showing you one whose charms of person and character are not
eclipsed by even those of sweet and lovely Mildred Keith."

"She must be worth seeing, if that be the case," Landreth answered with
a smile. "And I am keeping you from her now, I daresay; for which she
certainly will not thank me."

"She is too kind-hearted not to be more than content for Mildred's and
your sake."

"Mildred's do you say?" and Landreth's face was one glow of delight.

"Yes, Charlie, for Mildred's; since you have so frankly told me how
it is with you, I shall not conceal from you that it is for your sake
the sweet girl has remained single in spite of several good offers.
I learned it from my Cousin Marcia, her mother. And while I think
of it," he added laughingly, "let me assure you that Marcia will
make--does make--a model mother-in-law."

"I should be glad indeed to try her in that capacity," returned
Landreth lightly. "I think it will hardly be possible for me to leave
before to-morrow noon; so accept your invitation with thanks, Dinsmore.
I have a curiosity to see your bride, and a very strong desire to renew
my acquaintance with your little daughter, whom I used to see quite
frequently in the first two years of her stay at Roselands. I have
always thought her the sweetest little creature I ever beheld. She is
with you of course?"

"In the city? Yes; you will see her to-morrow," Mr. Dinsmore answered,
looking highly gratified by the encomium upon his darling child.

After a little more chat, principally of mutual friends and the changes
that had taken place in their old neighborhood since Landreth left it,
they separated with another cordial hand-shaking, both extremely glad
of the casual meeting, and expecting to meet again on the morrow.




CHAPTER XXIV.

                              "Within her heart was his image,
    Cloth'd in the beauty of love and youth, as last she beheld him,
    Only more beautiful made by his deathlike silence and absence."
                                                         Longfellow.


It was evening. Mildred was alone in the parlor, all the rest of the
family having gone to a concert. They had urged her to go too, but she
had declined, saying she greatly preferred a quiet evening at home.
Truth to tell she was oppressed with sadness, and wanted to be alone
that she might indulge it for a little without restraint.

All day she had maintained a cheerfulness in the presence of others
which she did not feel, for there had been scarce a moment when her
lost love was absent from her thoughts. Why was it that her heart went
out toward him to-night with such yearning tenderness--such unutterable
longing to look into his eyes, to hear the sound of his voice, to feel
the touch of his hand?

She tried in vain to read; the image of the lost one constantly
obtruded itself between her mental vision and the printed page.

She rose and paced the floor, not weeping, but pressing her hand to her
heart with heavy sighing.

The curtains were not closely drawn, or the shutters closed; a lamp
burned brightly on the centre-table, and the room was full of warmth
and cheer.

She did not hear the opening or shutting of the gate, or a quick,
manly step that came up the gravel walk and into the porch; did
not see the stranger pause before the bright window and gaze in,
half-unconsciously, as if spell-bound by the sight of her graceful
figure and fair though sad face. She turned to the open piano, struck
a few chords, then seated herself and sang in clear, sweet tones, but
with touching pathos:

    "When true hearts lie withered
      And fond ones are flown,
    Oh! who would inhabit
      This bleak world alone?"

Then with a sudden change of feeling, she touched the chords anew and
burst into a song of praise, her voice swelling out full and high like
the glad song of a bird:

    "Oh, the height of Jesus' love!
    Higher than the heavens above,
    Deeper than the depths of sea,
    Lasting as eternity;
    Love that found me--wondrous thought!
    Found me when I sought him not."

"A gentleman to see you, Miss Mildred," said the voice of Celestia Ann
at the parlor door.

Mildred rose and turned to greet him, in some surprise, for she had not
heard the ringing of the door-bell or the sound of the girl's footsteps
as she passed through the hall to answer it.

The latter retreated as she ushered the stranger in, but lingered a
moment, peering curiously through the crack behind the door. She saw
him step forward with outstretched hand, Mildred moving toward him with
an earnest, inquiring look up into his face; then an ashy paleness
suddenly overspread hers, she staggered and would have fallen, but he
caught her in his arms, saying in low, tremulous tones as he held her
close to his heart, "Mildred, darling, it is I! Oh, tell me, dear one,
that you have not forgotten me!"

"I know'd it! I know'd there was somebody somewheres she cared fer! and
I'm mighty glad he's come at last, fer her sake," chuckled Celestia
Ann, nodding and smiling to herself as she retreated to her kitchen;
"though I'll be dreadful sorry, too, if he carries her oft to some
fer-away place."

To those two in the parlor the next hour was probably the most blissful
they had ever known. Dr. Landreth's story was briefly told--to be dwelt
upon more in detail in future talks, and then--but we will not intrude
upon their privacy.

Mr. and Mrs. Keith, returning from the concert, found their daughter
seated by the side of one who was an entire stranger to them; yet there
was small need of introduction, for by the look of restful happiness in
her face they knew instantly who he was, and that all was right between
them. From the first all were favorably impressed by Landreth's open,
intelligent countenance, polished manners, manly yet modest mien; and a
few days of intimate association made him almost as great a favorite in
the family as Wallace Ormsby; while the latter was not far behind the
others in his liking for the new-comer.

Mildred was very happy, and all her dear ones rejoiced with her;
especially when it became known among them that it was not Dr.
Landreth's intention or wish to carry her away from them.

"No," he said; "I know too well how sad a thing it is to be fatherless,
motherless, and without any other near relative, to desire to separate
the dear girl from hers. What I want is the privilege of sharing them
with her."

"Which we will all be glad to have you do," returned Mrs. Keith, to
whom the remark was addressed, tears of sympathy for his past forlorn
condition glistening in her eyes; "we will rejoice to make you one of
us, not for Mildred's sake alone, but for your own also."

"Accept my heartiest thanks, my dear madam," the young man said with
emotion; "you may perhaps have some idea what it will be to me to
have a mother, when I tell you that mine died before my earliest
recollection."

Not even to his betrothed had Charlie disclosed the fact that he was
again a man of wealth; he merely assured Mr. Keith that he felt himself
able to support a wife comfortably, having a good profession, and means
enough to live upon until he should become well established in it.

Pleasant Plains was now growing so rapidly, the surrounding country
filling up so fast, that hardly a better location for a young
physician could be desired, and he decided to settle in the town at
once.

And now what was to hinder an immediate marriage? This was the question
he urged upon Mildred and her parents, but without obtaining a prompt
and decided answer. The parents had given full consent to the match,
yet seemed very loath to resign their daughter.

Cyril sided with Landreth; because, as he said, he wanted to be present
at the wedding, and as he was to leave for college in a few days, and
felt certain they would not wait till he came back, his only chance
was to have it take place before he went; so he coaxed and persuaded,
overruled all objections, and finally gained his point.

"It won't be parting with her," he said to his father and mother;
"they'll board at home at least till spring. I asked the doctor,
and he's delighted with the idea." To Mildred herself: "What's the
use waiting to make up a lot of finery? You can do that afterwards.
You have two new dresses just made up for fall any way, and there's
mother's wedding-dress that Zillah was married in fits you just as
well, and makes you look lovely. We can't get up as big a wedding as
Zil's all in a hurry to be sure, but I don't believe you care for that."

"No," she said; "I should much prefer having only relatives and a few
very near friends."

"It would save expense to father and a great deal of fuss and trouble
to mother," was the next and most effectual consideration he urged.
"Then too," he added a little mischievously, "Mr. Lord's away just now,
and that will give you a chance to have the knot tied by your future
brother-in-law--same as Zillah had."

This last was a stronger inducement than he knew or suspected; she had
an earnest desire to have the ceremony performed by her old friend
Frank Osborne, and was a little apprehensive of some blunder on the
part of absent-minded Mr. Lord, should he officiate.

"Frank's to preach for us next Sunday," Cyril went on. "He'll stay over
Monday if we ask him, and if you'll let me arrange matters I'll appoint
Monday evening for the wedding."

"How very kind in you," she returned laughing.

"Come now, Milly, say yes," he continued, not deigning to notice the
interruption. "I'm to leave on Wednesday you know."

"Monday, Cyril! Why that's wash-day, and Celestia Ann won't--"

"I'll settle that," he interrupted, making a hasty exit from the room.

After a brief absence he returned in great glee. "I thought I could
manage it," he said, "and I have. She's delighted with the idea of a
wedding that shall take everybody in town by surprise. She won't give
up the washing, but says she'll be up early enough to have it out of
the way by nine o'clock; and then she'll 'turn in and bake cake.'
She'll bake some to-morrow, too, so there 'won't be no trouble 'bout
the 'freshments, not a mite.' Now, Milly, haven't I taken the last
stone out of the way?"

"Yes, you dear old fellow," she said, with a look of sisterly love
and pride into his bright, eager young face; "and it shall be as you
wish. Mother and I have been talking over your plan, and think it
practicable. Also that it would be too bad to disappoint you, to say
nothing of some one else even more nearly concerned," she added, with a
charming blush and smile.

"That's a good girl! I knew you would! I'll run and tell the doctor."
And he was off before Mildred could stop him.

Of course Dr. Landreth was delighted. No one else raised any objection,
and hasty preparations were at once set on foot.

Mildred thought she ought to be the busiest of them all, but mother and
sisters would not hear of it. "You have been working for everybody else
for years past," they said; "now it is your turn to rest and have a
good time. So just devote yourself to the entertainment of the doctor,
or to being entertained by him." Finding them determined to dispense
with her assistance, Mildred submitted with a good grace; the more so
as Charlie managed to engross her time and attention almost constantly.

He had arrived on Monday, and it was on Friday that her consent to
Cyril's plan was given.

Mr. Dinsmore's visit had created quite a sensation in the town. It was
reported that he had come for Mildred; but the advent of this stranger
who, though lodging at the principal hotel, spent his days at Mr.
Keith's, modified the rumors, and people were on the _qui vive_ to
learn which, if either, was the favored suitor.

The wedding passed off very nicely, just at the time and in the way
that Cyril had planned, and the next morning the gossips of the town
were electrified by the news.

The bride had a great surprise that day in her turn. It came in the
shape of a mysterious box directed to her, which on opening was
found to contain a beautiful bridal bonnet, three dress-patterns of
rich silk--a delicate rose color, a silver gray, and a rich dark
brown--gloves, laces, ribbons, and flowers.

The whole family had gathered round to watch the opening and
unpacking of the box, and each article was examined in turn with many
exclamations of admiration and delight. At the very bottom they came
upon a note.

 "Dear Milly:

 "A little bird has whispered to me that you are soon to be a bride,
 and Elsie and I are very glad of the excuse to send a few trifling
 gifts, which we hope you will do us the kindness to accept as tokens
 of the sincere affection we both feel for you.

             "Cousin Horace."

There had been no time for parents and friends to prepare bridal gifts,
and excepting a beautiful set of pearls Dr. Landreth had purchased
for her before leaving Philadelphia, these were the first Mildred had
received.

"How very kind and thoughtful!" she said, her eyes glistening with
mingled emotions; "but how did they manage it? What time was there for
shopping after Cousin Horace saw you, Charlie?"

"I should say by no means enough for the purchase of all these," Dr.
Landreth answered, evidently as much puzzled as herself.

A letter from Adelaide Dinsmore, received by the next mail, explained
it. She had been present at Horace's wedding, acting as bridesmaid,
had remained behind when he left with wife and daughter for their home
in the South, and had executed these commissions for him and Elsie,
adding some gifts from herself and parents. She wrote in a cordial,
affectionate way, and begged for a speedy reply telling all about the
marriage. "Because she could get nothing out of Horace except that
there was to be one."

"Mildred, you must come out in bridal attire next Sunday," Zillah said
with energy. "You're to wear the new bonnet and that grey silk. We'll
have it made in time."

It was made in time, and very lovely Mildred looked in it. She was the
cynosure of all eyes; yet another bride shared the attention of the
curious.

Years ago Gotobed Lightcap had gone to a distant city to pursue his
studies. To-day, a licensed preacher of the Gospel, he filled Mr.
Lord's pulpit, and gave the congregation an earnest, able, well-written
discourse.

After the service he brought his wife--a pretty, ladylike little
body--and with a proud and happy look introduced her to Mildred.

The two ladies shook hands cordially, Mildred furtively examining the
other with curiosity, Gotobed regarding Dr. Landreth in like manner.
Then Mildred introduced them, and they exchanged congratulations and
good wishes.

The Rev. Mr. Lightcap was in many ways a vast improvement upon the
young blacksmith of Mildred's early acquaintance, especially as
regarded education, intelligence, and refinement of speech and manner.

Dr. Landreth was greatly interested in him and his story as told by
Mildred on the homeward walk. And she was very happy in the assurance
that she had not, even innocently, wrecked his happiness; yet more in
the love that now made life's pathway look so bright before her.

THE END.

       *       *       *       *       *

 TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES

 Obvious punctuation errors repaired.

 p17 "with the asisstance of her grandfather" replaced with
     "with the assistance of her grandfather"

 p43 "deep interest and heartfelt sympthy" replaced with
     "deep interest and heartfelt sympathy"

 p65 "Clandina Chetwood and her brother Will," replaced with
     "Claudina Chetwood and her brother Will,"

 p138 "for I am wtih thee;" replaced with
      "for I am with thee;"

 p190 Quotation at start of Chapter XV. "Shakspeare" changed to
      "Shakespeare"





End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Mildred and Elsie, by Martha Finley

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