 CHAPTER 19 LONG AMONG THEM WAS SEEN A MAIDEN WHO WAITED AND WONDERED, LOWLY AMEAKEN SPIRIT And patiently suffering all things, fair was she, and young, but alas, before her extended, dreary and vast and silent, the desert of light, evangeline, long-villain. Sister, sister, who is it? Going to be married! Oh, do tell us, cried Ella Warden, as she now was called, capering round her elder sister, who stood beneath a gas burner in a well-furnished bedroom, reading a letter, his enclosure clasped within a very trembling hand. Mary May, dear Mary, answered Abril, still half-absently. And who? Mr. Chebio, said Abril, thoroughly rousing herself, and with a quick movement concealing the enclosure in her bosom. I remember him. He was very good when—and there she paused, while Ella chattered on. Oh, sister, if you were but at home, you would be a bridesmaid now, and perhaps we should. Little Miss Rivers was Mrs. Ernst's bridesmaid. Don't you remember, Mina, how we saw her in her little cashmere cloak? Oh, don't, Ella, escaped from Mina, like a cry of pain, as she leaned back in a rocking chair and recollected who had held her up in his arms to watch Blanche May's wedding procession. Then how soon will she be married, sister, and where will she live? asked the much-excited Ella. She will be married in Whitsun week, and as he is headmaster, they will live in Dr. Hoxton's house. Dear, good Mary, how glad I am that she is so full of happiness. Her letter quite brims over with it. I wonder if I may work anything to send her. I should like to send her some very beautiful thing indeed, cried Ella, with emphasis, and eyes dilating as in visionary magnificence. Ah, I have nothing to send her but my love. And I may send her that still, said Mina, looking up wistfully at Avel, who bit down and kissed her. And Avel, let me send mine to Mr. Tom, though I am sure I do love him the best of them all, said Ella. That wasn't happiness, group Mina, but turn her head away, with a sigh of oppression and look of resignation, sad and so young a child, though indeed the infantile form was fast-shooting into tall, light girlhood. Ella went on. I shall send him the objects for his microscope when I get into the country, for I promised so sister can't prevent me. Oh, the country, when shall we go there, sighed Mina? Your headaches tonight, my dear, said Avel, looking anxiously at her listless attitude, half-opened eyes and the deep hollers above her collarbones. It always does, after the gases lighted, said the child patiently. It is always so hot here. It is just like being always in the conservatory at the Grange, added Ella. I do hate this boarding-house. It is very unkind of Henry to keep us here. Fifteen weeks now. Oh, Ella, remonstrated Mina, you mustn't say that. But I shall say it, retorted Ella. Rosa Willis says what she pleases, and so shall I. I don't see the sense of being made a baby of when everyone else of our age eats all they like and is consulted about arrangements and attends classes, and sister owns she does not know how so much as Cora. This regular declaration of American independence confounded the two sisters and made Avel recall the thoughts that had been wandering. No, Ella, in some things I have not learned so much as Cora, but I believe I know enough to teach you, and it has been a comfort to me to keep my two little sisters with me and not send them to be mixed up among strange girls. Besides, I have constantly hoped that our present way of life would soon be over and that we should have a home of our own again. And why can't we, asked Ella, in a much more humble and subdued voice? Because Henry cannot hear of anything to do. He thought he should soon find an opening in this new country. But there seem to be so many medical men everywhere that no one will employ or take into partnership a man that nothing is known about. And he cannot produce any of his testimonials, because they are all made out in his old name except one letter that Dr. May gave him. It is worse for Henry than for us, Ella, and all we can do for him is not to vex him with our grievances. Before Avril, her dejected, patient voice, sad soft eyes, and gentle persuasive manner were greatly changed from those of the handsome, accomplished girl who had come home to be the family pride and pet, still more, perhaps, from the willful mistress of the house and the wayward sufferer of last summer. And shan't we go to live in the dear, beautiful forest, as Coral Muller wishes? There was a tap at the door, and the children's faces brightened, though a shade passed over Avril's face, as if everything at that moment were oppressive. But she recovered a smile of greeting for the pretty creature who flew up to her with a fervent embrace, a girl a few years her junior, with a fair, delicate face and figure, in a hot-house rose-style of beauty. Father's come, she cried, how glad you must be! And now, whispered the children, we shall know about going to Indiana. He says more daunt is as tall as he is, and that the house is quite fixed for me. But I told him I must have one more turn, and then I will take you with me. Ah, I am glad to see the children in white. If you had only changed that plain black silk, you would receive so much more consideration. I don't want it, Cora, thank you, said Avril, indifferently, and indeed, the simple morning she still wore was a contrast to her friend's delicate, expensive silk. But I want it for you, pleaded Cora. I don't want to hear my Avril censored for English auteur, and offend my country's feelings, so that she keeps herself from seeing the best side. I see a very good, very dear side of one, said Avril, pressing the eager hand that was held out to her. And that is enough for me. I was not a favorite in my own town, and I have not spirits to make friends here. Ah, you have spirits in our woods, she said. You shall show me how you go gypsy in England. The dear, dear woods, oh, we must go, cried the little girls. But it is going to be a town, said Menna, gravely. Cora laughed. Ah, there will be plenty of bush this many a day, Menna. No lack of butternuts and hickories, I promise you, nor of maples to paint the woods gloriously. You have never been there, said Avril anxiously. No, I have been boarding here these two years, since father and brothers located there, but we had such a good time when we lived at my grandfather's farm in Ohio, while father was off in the railway business. A gong resounded through the house, and Avril, suppressing a disappointed sigh, allowed Cora to take possession of her arm, and, followed by the two children, became parts of a cataract of people who descended the great staircase and flowed into a saloon where the dinner was prepared. Henry, with a tall, thin, wiry-looking gentleman, was entering at the same time, and Avril found herself shaking hands with her brother's companion, and hearing him say, Good evening, Miss Warden. I'm glad to meet my daughter's friend. I hope you feel at home in our great country. It was so exactly the ordinary second-rate American style that Avril, who had expected something more in accordance with the refinement of everything about Cora, except a few of her tones, was a little disappointed, and responded with difficulty. Then, while Mr. Muller greeted her sisters, she hastily laid her hand on Henry's arm, and said, under her breath, I have a letter from him. Hush! Henry looked about with a startled eye and repressing gesture. Avril drew back, and, one hand on her bosom, pressing the letter, and almost holding down a saloon, she took her accustomed seat at the meal. Mina, too languid for the rapidity of the movements, hardly made the exertion of tasting food. Ella, alert and brisk, took care of herself as effectually as stood Rosa Willis on the opposite side of the table. Avril, all one throng with agitation, with the unread letter lying at her heart, directed all her efforts to look, eat, and drink as usual, happily talking was the last thing that was needed. Avril had been greatly indebted to Miss Muller, who had taken pity on the helpless strangers, interested partly by her own romance about England, partly by their warning dresses, dark melancholy eyes, and retiring bewildered manner. A beautiful motherless girl, under seventeen, left, to all intents and purposes, alone in New York, attending a great educational establishment, far more independent and irresponsible than a young man at an English university, yet perfectly trustworthy, never subject to the views of the unprotected female, but self-reliant, modest, and graceful, in the heterogeneous society of the boarding house. She was a constant marvel to Avril, and a warm friendship soon sprang up. The advances were, indeed, all on one side, for Avril was too sad and oppressed, with too heavy a secret, to be readily accessible. But there was an attraction to the younger, fresher, freer nature, even in the mystery of her mournful reserve, and the two drew nearer together from gratitude, and many congenial feelings that rendered Cora the one element of comfort in the boarding house life, while Henry, in vain, sought for occupation. Cora had been left under the charge of the Lady of the Boarding House, a distant connection, while her father, who had been engaged in more various professions than Avril could ever conceive of or remember, had been founding a new city in Indiana, at once as farmer and land agent, and he had stolen a little time, in the dead season, to hurry up to New York, partly on business and partly to see his daughter, who had communicated to him her earnest desire that her new friends might be induced to settle near their future boat. American meals were too serious affairs for conversation, but such as there was, was political, in all the fervent heat of the first commencements of disunion and the threatening of civil war, after the ladies had repaired to their saloon, with his grand Ottomans, sofas, rocking chairs, and piano, the discussion continued among them, Cora talking with the utmost eagerness of the tariff and of slavery, and the other topics of the day, intensely interesting, and of terrible moment to her country, but that country Avril had not yet learnt to feel her own, and to her always one dreary world of words, in which she longed to escape to her room, and read her letter. Ella had joined Rosa Willis and the other children, but Mina, as usual, kept under her sister's wing, and Avril could not bear to shake herself free of the gentle child. The ladies of the boarding house, some resident in order to avoid the arduous duties of housekeeping, others temporarily brought hither and an antarachnum of servants, others spending a winter in the city, had grown tired of asking questions that met with the scantiest response, took melancholy for disdain, and were all neglectful, some uncivil to the grave, silent English girl, and she was sitting alone, with Mina's hand in hers as she had sat for many a weary evening, when her brother and Mr. Muller came up together, and, sitting down on either side of her, began to talk of the rising city of Massasaga, admirably situated, excellent water privilege, communicating with Lake Michigan, glorious primeval forest, healthy situation, fertile land, where a colossal fortune might be realized in maize, eighties, sections, speculations. It was all addressed to her, and it was a hard task to give attention so as to return a rational answer, while her soul would faint have been clairvoyant to read the letter in her breast. She did perceive, at last, though not till long after the children had gone to bed, that the project was, that the family should become the purchasers of shares, which would give them a right to a portion of the soil, excellent at present for growing corn, and certain hereafter to be multiplied in value for building, that Henry might, in the meantime, find an opening for practice, but might speedily be independent of it. It sounded promising, and it was escape, escape from forced inaction, from an uncongenial life, from injury to the children, and it would be with Korra, her one friend. What was the demure, and why were they consulting her, who, as Henry knew, was ready to follow him wherever he chose to carry her? At last came a gleam of understanding. Then, doctor, you will talk it over with your sister, and give me your ultimatum, and therewith Mr. Muller walked away to mingle in other conversation, and Henry, coming closer to his sister, she again eagerly said, I have it here, you shall see it tomorrow when I have read it, it, the letter, how can you be so unguarded? You have not let the children know? Take care, then, I will not have the subject revived with them. But Mina, it is this heated stove atmosphere, she will soon forget if you don't keep it up, and she will be herself when we leave this place, and it depends on you when we do that, Abe. On me, she said, would bewildered face, and Henry, marbling at her slowness of comprehension, made her understand that the advance of money for the purchase at Masasaga must come from her means. His own had been heavily drained by the removal, the long period of inaction, and moreover what remained had been embarked in shares and accompanied, absolutely certain to succeed, but where there were not at once available for sale. Aver was now of age, her property was in her own power, and could not, her brother assured her, be better invested, than on ground certain to increase in value. She looked at him, confused and distressed, aware that it was too important a step to be taken without consideration, yet unable to compose her thoughts or recollect objections. Must I answer tonight, she said? No, there is no need for that, but we must close tomorrow with Muller, for it is not a chance that will long go begging. Then let me go, please, Henry, she said, imploringly. I will tell you tomorrow, but I can't now. I don't seem to understand anything. It was late, and he released her, with a kind good night, though still with a sign of caution. Cora, however, hastened to join her, and walk up the stairs with her, eagerly inquiring into the success of the negotiation and detailing what she had gathered from her father as to the improvements he had been making. She would faint have made Aver come into her bedroom to build castles there, but this was more than could be borne, and breaking from her at last, Aver reached her own room not to think of Mr. Muller's project, but to cast an anxious glance at each of the little beds, to judge whether the moment had come when that famishing hunger might be appeased by the crumb which for these mortal hours had lain upon her craving heart, the very first since someone on the arrival at Milbank. Each brown head was shrouded in the coverings. The long dark fringes rested safely on the cheeks, and Aver let length drew out the treasure, and laid it on her hand to dwell on its very sight. Her dress needed to be looked at with lingering earnestness as if it had indeed been a missive from another world. She looked, and was tardy to unfold it. As though, now the moment was come, the sense of being in communication with her brother must be tasted to the utmost, air entering on the utterances that must give pain, and when she did open the envelope, perhaps the first sensation was disappointment. The lines were not near enough together, the writing not small enough to satisfy even the first glance of the yearning eye. It was cheerful, it spoke of good health, and full occupation, with the use of books, daily exercise, the chaplain's visits, schooling, and attendance at chapel, and of the great pleasure of having heard from her. And that good doctor may enclose your letter in what written to me with his own hand, a kindness I never dared to think of as possible, but which he promises to repeat. Her letter and his are the continual food of my thoughts, and are valued beyond all power of words. I only hope you knew that I have not been allowed to write sooner, and have not expected letters, then came a few brief comments on her last inquiries, and in treaties that she would give him full information of all the details of their present life. It will carry me along with you, and I shall live with you, both as I read, and as I dwell on it afterwards. Do not indulge in a moment's uneasiness about me, for I am well and busy. Everyone is as kind to me as duty permits, and doctor may is always ready to do all in his power for me. There were a few affectionate words for Henry, and I long to send a message to the children, but I know it is better for them to let me drop from their minds. Only you must tell me all about them. I want to know that the dear little Mina is bright and happy again. No confidences, only generalities. Not even any reference to the one unbroken bond of union. The one support, except in the three scanty final words, the simplest of blessings. It was not satisfying, but ever recalled, with a start, that no wonder the letter was meager, since it was necessarily subject to inspection. And how could the inner soul be expressed when almost passed under strangers' eyes, who would think such feelings plausible hypocrisy in a convicted felon? Again, she took it up, to suck to the utmost all that might be conveyed in the short, commonplace sentences, and to gaze at them as if intensity of study could reveal whether the cheerfulness were real or only assumed. Be they what they might, the words had only three weeks back been formed by Leonard's hand, and she pressed her lips upon them in a fervent agony of affection. When she roused herself and turned her head, she perceived on Mina's pillow two eyes above the bedclothes, and tentally fixed on her. Should she see, or should she not see? She believed that the loving heart was suffering a cruel wrong, she yearned to share all with the child, but she was chained by the command of one brother, and by that acquiescence of the other which to her was more than a command. She would not see, she turned away, and made her preparations for the night without betraying that she knew that the little one was awake, resuming the tedious guard on the expression of her face. But when her long kneeling had ended, and with it that which was scarcely so much conscious intercession as the resting and intolerable load on one who alone knew its weight, just as she darkened the room for the night, the low voice whispered, ìAve, is it?î and Averill crept up to the little bed. ìYes, Mina, he is well. He hopes you are bright and happy, but he says that as best you should forget him. The brow was cold and clammy, the little frame chill and trembling, the arms clasped her neck convulsively. She lifted the child into her own bed, pressed tight to her own bosom, and though no other word passed between the sisters, that contact seemed to soothe away the worst bitterness, and Averill slept from the stillness enforced on her by the heed of not disturbing Minaís sleep. Little that night had she wrecked of the plan needing so much deliberation. When she woke it was to the consciousness that besides the arrival of Leonardís letter something had happened. There was some perplexity. What was it? And when it came back she was bewildered. Her own fortune had always appeared to her something to fall back on in case of want of success, and to expend it thus was binding the whole family down at a perilous moment to judge by the rumors of battle and resistance. And all she had ever heard at home, much that she daily heard at New York, inclined her to distrust and dislike of American speculations. It was Coriís father. Her heart smote her for including him in English prejudice, and Henry liked and trusted him, and she had disobeyed and struggled against Henry too long. She had promised to be submissive and yielding. But was this the time? And the boarding house life, proverbially the worst for children, was fast Americanizing Ella, while Mina drew like a snowdrop in a hot house, and idleness might be mischievous to Henry. Oh, for someone to consult, for someone to tell her whether the risk was a foolish venture, or if the terms were safe, but not a creature did she know well enough to seek advice from. Even the clergyman whose church she attended was personally unknown to her. Gora Merler was her sole intimate. There was a mutual repulsion between her and the other ladies, and still more with the gentlemen. A boarding house was not the scene in which to find such as would inspire confidence, and they had no introductions. There was no one to turn to, and in the dreary indifference that had grown over her she did not even feel capable of exerting her own judgment to the utmost, even if she had been able to gather certain facts, or to know prudent caution from blind prejudice. Often women's grievous difficulty. What could a helpless girl of one in twenty, in a land of strangers, do, but try to think that by laying aside the use of her own judgment she was trusting all to providence, and that by leaving all to her brother she was proving her repentance for her former conduct. There, too, were her sisters, clamorous with hopes of the forest life, and there was Gora, urging the scheme with all the fervor of girlish friendship, and in herself no small element in its favor, engaging for everything, adducing precedence for every kind of comfort and success, and making Aves consent a test of her love. One question Averill asked of her, whether they should be utterly out of reach of their church? Gora herself had been bred up to liberal religious ways, and was ready to attend whatever denomination of public worship came first to hand, though that which had descended from the Pilgrim Fathers came most naturally. She had been at various Sunday schools and was a good conscientious girl, but had never gone through the process of conversion, so that Rosa Willis had horrified Ella by pronouncing her not a Christian. She had no objection to show her English friends the way to the favorite Episcopal church, especially as it was esteemed fashionable, and her passion for Averill had retained her there, with growing interest drawn on by Averill's greater precision of religious knowledge, and the beauty of the church system displayed to her as the one joy and relief left to one evidently crushed with suffering. The use of Averill's books, conversations with her, and the teachings she heard, disposed her more and more to profess herself a member of the Episcopal church, and she was unable to enter into Averill's groupals that leading her to so decided a step without her father's sanction. Father would be satisfied whatever profession she made. Do people in England try to force their children's consciences? Gora, at Averill's desire, ascertained that Massessaga had as yet no place of worship of its own, but there was a choice of chapels within a circuit of five miles and an Episcopal church seven miles off at the chief town of the county. Moreover, her father declared that the city of Massessaga would soon be considerable enough to invite every variety of minister to please every denomination of an habitant. Averill felt that the seven miles off church was all she could reasonably hope for, and her mind was clear on that score when Henry came to take her out walking for the sake of being able to talk more freely. No longer afraid of being overheard, he gave kind attention to lettered sletter, and though he turned away from the subject sooner than she wished, she was not exacting. Again he laid before her the advantages of their migration and assured her that if there were the slightest risk he would be the last to make the proposal. She asked if it was safe to invest money in a country apparently on the eve of civil war. He laughed the idea to scorn. How could the rebel states make war with a population of Negro should arise against their masters? Where should their forces come from? Faction would soon be put down and the Union be stronger than ever. It was what Averill had been hearing morning, noon, and night. So no wonder she believed it and was ashamed of a feudal girlish fear. And was Henry sure it was a healthy place? Had she not heard of feverish slumps in Indiana? Oh, yes, it knew unsettled places, but there had hardly been an ailment in the Mueller family since they had settled at Massa Saga. And Averill's last murmur was, could he find out anything about other people's opinion of the speculation? Did they know enough about Mr. Mueller to trust themselves entirely in his hands? Henry was almost angry. Could not his sister trust him to take all reasonable precaution? It was the old story of prejudice against whatever he took up. Or Averill was disarmed directly. The combats of will and their consequences rose up before her. And with them Leonard's charges to devote herself to Henry. She could but avowed herself willing to do whatever he pleased. She only hoped he would be careful. Alvin's forth was pleasant anticipation and hope. Averill's property had to be transferred to America and invested in shares of the land at Massa Saga. But this was to cause no delay in arranging for the removal. They were only to wait until winter had broken up and the roads become possible after the melting of the snows. In meantime, Mr. Mueller was to have their house prepared. Coral would remain in accompany then and in the intervening time promised to assist Averill with her judgment in making the necessary purchases for stepping westward. When Averill wrote their plans to her English friends, she felt the difficulty of pleading for them. She was sensible that at Stoneboro, the risking of her property would be regarded as folly on her part and something worse on that of her brother. And she therefore wrote with every effort to make the whole appear her own voluntary act. Though the very effort made her doubly conscious that the sole cause for her passive acquiescence was that her past self-will and trifles had left her no power to contend for her own opinion in greater matters, the common retribution on an opinionative woman of principle. Moreover, it was always with an effort that she wrote to Mary May. A rejected offer from a brother is a rock in correspondence with a sister and Averill had begun to feel greatly ashamed of the manner of her own response. Acceptance would have been impossible, but irritating as had been Tom May's behavior. Insulting as had been his explanation and provoking his pertinacity, she had begun to feel that the impulse had been too generous and disinterested to deserve such treatment and that bitterness and ill temper had made her lose all softness and dignity so that he must think that his pitting affection had been bestowed on an ungrateful vixen and be as much disgusted with the interview as she was herself. She did not wish him to love her, but she regretted the form of the antidote, above all, since he was of the few who appreciated Leonard, and the more she heard of Ella's narrations of his kindness, the more ashamed she grew. Every letter to or from Mary renewed the uncomfortable sense, and she would have dropped the correspondence had it not been her sole medium of communication with her imprisoned brother, since Henry would not permit letters to be posted with a milk bank address. End of Chapter 19, Recording by Nancy Cochran-Gergen, Gilbert, Arizona. Chapter 20 of the Trial. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. Recording by Nancy Cochran-Gergen, Gilbert, Arizona. The Trial by Charlotte Marion, Chapter 20. A little hint till solace woe, a hint, a whisper breathing low, I may not speak of what I know, Tennyson. At the pace at which rapid people walk alone, when they wish to devour both the way and their own sensations, Elphemé was mounting the hill out of the town in the premature heat, assumed by May in compliment to Whitsun Week, when a prolonged shot made her turn. At first she thought it was her father, but her glass showed her that it was the brother, so like him in figure, that the London-made coat and the hair partaking of the sand instead of the salt were often said to be the chief distinction. Moreover, the dainty steps over the puddles were little like the strides of the doctor and left no doubt that it was the one wedding guest who had been disparate of. Oh, Tom, I am glad you're come. What a rate you are running away at. I thought you had done with your hurricane pace. Hurricane because of a desperate hurry. I'm afraid I can't turn back with you. Where is all the world? Lanch is helping Mary arrange the hoxton. I mean her own drawing room. Hector has brought a dog cart to drive Papa about in. Daisy has gone with Harry and Aubrey to the Grange for some chameleus. An Ethel rushing to Coxmore. I can't help it, Tom, she said, humbly. I wish I could. What's this immense pannier you are carrying? It is quite light. It is 12 of the hats for the children tomorrow. Mary was bent on trimming them all as usual and I was deluded enough to believe she would. Till last evening I found just one and a half done. I did as many as I could at night till Papa heard me rustling about and thumped. Those went early this morning and these are the rest which I have just finished. Was there no one to send? My dear Tom, is your experience of wedding so slight as to suppose there is an available being in the family the day before? I'm sure I don't desire such experience. Why could not they be content without ferreting me down? I am very glad you have come. It would have been a great mortification if you had stayed away. I never quite believed you would. I had much rather see the operation I shall miss tomorrow morning. I shall go back by the two o'clock train to study their happiness all the way up to town. Then by the mail I won't torment you to stay but I think Papa will wanna talk with you. The very thing I don't want why can't he dispose of his property like other people and give Richard his rights? You know Richard would only be encumbered. No such thing Richard is a reasonable being. He will marry some of these days get the living after Wilmot and but you know how Papa would be grieved to separate the practice from the house because he and his fathers were content to bury themselves in a hole. He expects me to do the same. Why, what should I do? The place is overdoctored already. Every third person is a pet patient sending for him for a nat bite, gratis taking the bread out of Wright's mouth. No wonder Henry Ward kicked. If I came here I must practice on the lap dogs. Here's my father stronger than any of us with 15 good years working him at the least. He would be wretched at giving up to me a tenth part of his lambs and that tenth would keep us always in hot water. His old world practice would not go down with me and he would think everything murder that was fresher than the year 1830. I thought he was remarkable for having gone on with the world said Ethel repressing some indignation. So he has in a way but always against the grain. He has a tough lot of prejudices and you may depend upon it. They would be more obstinate against me than anyone else and I should be looked on as an undutiful dog for questioning them besides getting the whole credit of every case that went wrong. I think you are unjust said Ethel flushing with displeasure. I wish I were not Ethel but when there is one son in a family who can do nothing that is not taken amiss it is hard that he should be the one picked out to be pinned down and maybe goaded into doing something to be really sorry for. There was truth enough in this to seal Ethel's lips from replying that it was Tom's own fault since his whole nature and constitution were far more the cause than his conduct and she answered, you might get some disappointment for the present till he really wants you. To be ordered home just as I'm making something of it and see as many cases in 10 years as I could in a month in town. Things are altered since his time. If he could only see it, what was the use of giving me a first rate education if he meant to stick me down here? At least I hope you will think long before you inflict the cruel disappointment of knowing that not one of his five sons will succeed to the old practice. The throne you mean Ethel, Pish. The Pish was as injurious to her hereditary love for the old practice and for the old town as to a reverence for her father. One angry Tom burst from her lips and only the experience that scolding made him worse restrained her from desiring him to turn back if this was the best he had to say. Indeed she wondered to find him still by her side, holding the gate of the plantation open for her. He peered under her hat as she went through. How hot you look, he said, laying hold of the handles of the basket. Thank you, but it is more cumbersome than heavy, she said, not letting go. It is not that. An alition which answered better than words to show that his speech rather than hill or loan had made her cheeks flame. But he only drew the great basket more decisively from her hand, put his stick into the handle and threw it over his shoulder. And no doubt it was a much greater act of good nature from him than it would have been from Richard or Harry. This path always reminds me of this very matter, he said. I talked it over with Meta here on the way to lay the foundation stone at Coxmore till Norman overtook us and monopolized her for good poor little thing. She was all in the high romantic strain, making a sort of night hospitalar of my father. I wonder what she was like by this time and how much of that she has left. Of the high romantic strain, I should think it was as much as ever the salt of life to her. Her last letter described her contrivances to make a knapsack for Norman on his visitation tour. Oh, fancy old June, a venerable archdeacon. You don't think a colonial archdeacon is like one of your great poorly swells in a shovel hat. It must be something remarkable that made Norman portly, but as for the shovel hat, Mrs. Meta has insisted on having it set out. I was going to tell you that she says, I do like such a good tough bit of stitchery to fit my night out for the cause. Marriage and distance have not frozen up her effusions. No, when people carry souls in their pens, they are worth a great deal more if they are to go to a distance. Ah, by the by, I suppose Chevio has put a fresh lock on Mary's writing case. I suspect some of Mary's correspondence will devolve on me. Harry has asked me already. I wished you had mentioned more about the letters of late. Leonard wanted to know more than I could tell him. You don't mean that you have seen him. Oh, Tom, how kind of you. Papa has been trying hard to get a day now that these first six months are up, but there are two or three cases that one is so much watching that he has not been able to stir. I know how he lets himself be made a prisoner and that it was a chance whether anyone saw the poor fellow at all. I am so glad, and Ethel turned on him a face still fleshed, but now with gratitude. How was he looking? The costume is not becoming and he has lost color and grown hollow-eyed, but I saw no reason for being uneasy about him. He looked clear and in health and has not got to slouch yet. It is shocking to see such a grand face and head behind the grating. Could he talk? Why the presence of a water is a good conversation and six months of shoemaking in a cell does not give much range of ideas. There was nothing to be done, but to dock on right ahead and judge by his eyes if he liked it. I suppose he could find out nothing about himself? He said he got on very well, but one does not know that means. I asked if he got books and he said there was a very good library and he could get what gave him something to think of. And he says they give interesting lectures in school. You could not gather what is thought of him? No, I saw but a couple of officers of the place and could only get out of them good health and good conduct. I do not expect even his conduct makes much impression as to his innocence. For I saw it stated the other day that the worst prisoners are those that are always getting convicted for petty offenses. Those that have committed one great crime are not so depraved and are much more amenable. However, he has only three months more at Pentonville and then he will go to Portland, Chatham or Gibraltar. Oh, I hope it will not be Gibraltar, but at least that terrible solitude will be over. At any rate, his spirit is not broken. I could see his eye light up after I had talked a little while and he fell into his natural tone again. He would not try to put out his hand to me when he came down, but when I went away, he put it through and we had a good hearty shake. Somehow it made one feel quite small. Ethel could have pledged herself for the soundness of Tom's nature after those words, but all she did was in an unwanted tone to utter the unwanted exclamation, Dear Tom. If my father does not come up, I shall see him once more before he leaves Pentonville at a time. And so you must mind and let me know all about his people in America. I found he had no notion of the road that is beginning there, so I said not a word of it. But what is all this about going to Indiana? They are going at the end of April to settle in a place called Mississauga where Henry is to farm till practice comes to him. It is towards the north of the state in the county of Pulaski. I, in one of the pestilential swamps that run up out of Lake Michigan, all the fertile ground there breeds as many fevers and agues as it does stalks of corn. Indeed, how did you hear that? I looked up the place after Leonard told me of it. It is as unlucky a location as the ill luck of that fellow Henry could have pitched on some friend Leonard spoke of, a Yankee, I suppose, meaning to make a prayer of them. The father of their young lady friend at the boarding house. Oh, a Yankee edition of Mrs. Pugh. And the worst of it is that this is to be done with poor April's fortune. She has written to Mr. Gramshaw to sell out for her and send her the amount. And he is terribly vexed, but she is of age and there are no trustees nor anyone to stop it. All of a peace, muttered Tom, then presently swung the basket round on the ground with a vehement exclamation. If any man on this earth deserved to be among the robbers and murderers, I know who it is. Then he shouldered his load again and walked on in silence by his sister's side to the school door. Richard had been obliged to go to a benefit club entertainment and Ethel, knowing the limited literary resources of the parsonage, was surprised to find Tom still waiting for her when the distribution and fitting of the blue ribbon hats was over and matters arranged for the march of the children to see the wedding and to dine afterwards at the Grammar School Hall. Oh, Tom, I did not expect to find you here. It is not fit for you to be walking by the loan on a wit Monday. I am very glad to have you, but I am past that. Don't talk nonsense, girls or girls, to long past your age, said Tom. It is not so much age as living past things, said Ethel. It was not only that, added Tom, but I've more to say to you while one can be sure of a quiet moment. Have you heard anything about that place and be pointed in the direction of the ventry mill? I heard something of an intention to part with it and have been watching for an advertisement, but I can see none in the current or on the walls. Mind he does not slip off unawares. I don't know what to do now that old Hardee's could offer us. I tried to strut Dr. Spencer to go investigate, but I could not tell him why and he has not the same interest in going questioning about as he used to have. People never will do the one thing one wants particularly. Tom's look and gesture made her ask if he knew of anything wrong with their old friend and in return, she was told that Dr. Spencer's recent visit to London had been to consult Sir Matthew Fleet. The foundations of mortal disease had been laid in India and though it might long remain in abeyance, there were from time to time symptoms of activity and tedious lingering infirmity was likely to commence long before the end. And what do you think the strange old fellow charged me as we walked away from dining at Fleet's? Secrecy, of course, returned the much shocked Ethel. One does keep a secret by telling you it was to have my eye on some lodging with the decent nine lady where, when it comes to that, he can go up to be alone out of the way of troubling Dick and of all of you. Tom, how dreadful! I fancy it as something of the animal instinct of creeping away alone and partly his law to himself not to trouble Dick. An odd idea of what would trouble Dick. So I told him that he said, after seeing what it cost my father to watch did Margaret's long decay, he would never entail the like on him. It is queer and it is beautiful the tender way he has about my father, treating him like a pet to be shielded and guarded, a man that has five times the force and vigor of body and mind that he has now, whatever they may have been. Very beautiful. And I cannot help telling you how beautiful, said Ethel, greatly moved. Only remember, it is not to be mentioned. Ha, did he ever make you an offer? I have sometimes suspected it. No indeed, it was much, much more beautiful than that. Our mother then, I had thought of that too and it accounts for his having always taken to you than most of us. Why, I'm the least like her of us all. So they say, I know, and I can't recollect enough to judge, except that, and Tom's voice was less clear for a moment. There was something in being with her that I've never found again, except now and then with you, Ethel. Well, he never got over it, I suppose. And Ethel briefly told of the rash resolution, the unsettled life, the neglect of the father's wishes, the grievous remorse, the broken health, and restless aimless wanderings ending at last in loving tendons of the bereaved rival. It had been a life never wanting in generosity or benevolence, yet falling far short of what it might have been, a gallant voyage made by a wreck, and yet the injury had been less from the disappointment than from the manner of bearing it. Suddenly it struck her that Tom might suspect her of intending a personal application of the history, and she faltered, but he kept it to it by his warm interest in many questions. And oh, Tom, he must not be allowed to go away in this manner. Nothing would so cut Papa to the heart. I don't believe he ever will, Ethel. He may go on for years as he is, and he said in the midst that he meant to live to carry out the drainage. Besides, if it comes gradually on him, he may feel dependent and lose the energy to move. Oh, what a sorrow for Papa! But I know that not to watch over him would make it all the worse. They walked on gravely till, on the top of the hill, Tom exclaimed. They've mounted the flag on the Minster Steeple already. It went up yesterday for Harvey Anderson and Mrs. Pugh. There was a proposal to join forces and have a double wedding. So interesting, the two school fellows and two young friends, the Chevyo girls much regretted it was not to be. Chevyo girls, heavens at earth, at home? Not sleeping, but we shall have them all day tomorrow, for they cannot get home the same day by setting off after the wedding. There will be no one else, for even our own people are going, for Harry is to go to Maplewood with Blanche and Aubrey has to be at Woolwich, but we shall all be at home tonight. Last time was in the volunteer days, two or three centuries ago. It was strange how with this naturally least congenial of all the family, Ethel had a certain understanding and fellow feeling that gave her a sense of rest and relief in his company, only impaired by the dread of rubs between him and his father. None, however, happened. Dr. May had been too much hurt to press the question of the inheritance and took little notice of Tom being much occupied with a final business about the wedding and engrossed by Hector and Harry, who always absorbed him in their short intervals of his company. Tom went to see Dr. Spencer and brought him in, so cheerful and full of life that what Ethel had been hearing seemed like a dream, accepting when she recognized Tom's unobtrusive gentleness and attention towards him. She was surprised and touched through all the harris and hurry of that evening and morning to find the must-be-duns that had a blade devolved on her alone, now lightened and aided by Tom, who appeared to have come for the sole purpose of being always ready to give a helping hand where she wanted it, with all Richard's manual dexterity and more resource and quickness. The refreshment of spirits was the more valuable as this was a very unexciting wedding. Even Gertrude, not yet 14, had been surfeted with weddings and replied to Harry's old wit of, three times a bridesmaid and never a bride, that she hoped so. Her experience and married life was extremely flat and a glance at Blanche's monotonous dignity and Flora's worn face showed what that experience was. Harry was the only one to whom there was the freshness of novelty and he was the great element of animation. But as the time came near, honest Harry had been seized with the mortal dread of the tears he imagined, an indispensable adjunct of the ceremony and went about privately consulting everyone how much weeping was inevitable. Flora told him she saw no reason for any tears and Ethel that when people felt very much they couldn't cry. But on the other hand, Blanche said she felt extremely nervous and knew she should be overcome. Gertrude assured him that on all former occasions Mary did all the crying herself and Aubrey told him that each bridesmaid carried six handkerchiefs, half for herself and half for the bride. The result was that the last speech made by Harry to his favorite sister in her maiden days was thus. Well, Mary, you do look uncommonly nice and pretty, but now, most persuasively, you'll be a good girl and not cry, will you? And as Mary fluttered, tried to smile and looked out through very moist eyes, he continued, I feel horribly soft-hearted today and if you howl I must, you know, so mind if I see you beginning, I shall come out with my father's old story of the spirit of the flood and the spirit of the fell and that will stop it if anything can. The comicality of Harry's alarm was nearly enough to stop it, coupled with the great desire of Daisy that he should be betrayed into tears. And Mary did behave extremely well and looked all that a bride should look, admirable daughter and sister, she would be still more in her place as wife. Hers was the truly feminine nature that happily for mankind is the most commonplace and that she was a thoroughly generic bride is perhaps a testimony to her perfection in the part as in all others were quiet, unselfish womanhood was the essential. Never had she been so sweet in every tone, word and caress. Never had Ethel so fully felt how much she loved her or how entirely they had been one from a time almost too far back from memory. There had not been intellectual equality, but perhaps it was better, fuller affection than if there had been, for Mary had filled up a part that had been in some measure wanting in Ethel. She had been a sort of wife to her sister and thus was the better prepared for her new life but was all the sorrow lost at home. The bridegroom, how many times that Ethel to remind herself of her esteem and security of Mary's happiness besides frowning down Gertrude's saucy comments and trying to laugh away Tom's low growl that good things always fell to the share of poor hearts and narrow minds. Mr. Shevio did in fact cut a worse figure than George Rivers-Vogue, having a great fund of natural bashfulness and self-consciousness which did not much damage his dignity but made his attempts at gaiety and ease extremely awkward, not to say sheepish. Perhaps the most trying moment was the last when hearing a few words between Ethel and Mary about posting a mere scrap, if only an empty envelope from the first resting place he turned round with his laugh to object to rash promises and remind his dear sister Ethel that post offices were not always there at hand. After that, when Mary and her bright tenderness hung round her sister, it was as if that was the last fond grasp from the substance as if only the shadow would come back and live in Minster Street. Perhaps it was because Ethel had tried to rule it otherwise, Mr. Shevio had insisted that the Coxmore children's share in the festivity should be a dinner in the Witchcoat Hall early in the day after which they had to be sent home since no one chose to have the responsibility of turning them loose to play in the grammar school precincts even in the absence of the boys. Richard was much afraid of their getting into mischief and was off immediately after church to superintend the dinner and marshal them home and the rest of the world lost the resource that entertaining them generally afforded the survivors after a marriage and which was specially needed with the two Shevio sisters to be disposed of. By the time the rivers' were gone home and the urns clasped and hairy off by the train, there were still four mortal hours of daylight and oh, for Mary's power of making everyone happy. Caroline and Annie Shevio were ladylike, nice looking girls, but when they found no croquet mallets in the garden, they seemed to the loss what life had to offer at Stoneborough. Gertrude pronounced that she played at it sometimes at Maplewood where she had nothing better to do and then retreated to her own devices. Ethel's heart sank, both with dread of the afternoon and was self-approach at her spoiled child's discurtersy when she knew there would be no rousing her without an incapacitating discussion and odd she wandered in the garden with the guests receiving instruction where the hoops might be planted and hearing how nice it would be for her sister to have such an object, such a pleasant opportunity of meeting one's friends and interest for every day. No wonder they think I want an object in life, thought Ethel, how awfully tiresome I must be. Poor things, what can I say to make it pleasanter? Do you know this Dai-lai-tra? I think it is the prettiest of modern flowers, but I wish we might call it Japan Fumatory or by some other English name. I used to garden once, but we have no flower beds now. They spoiled the lawn for croquet. And here comes Tom, thought Ethel, or Tom, he will certainly be off to London this evening. Tom, however, joined the listless promenade and the first time croquet was again mentioned, observed that he had seen the Andersons knocking about the balls in the new gardens by the river and proposed to go down and try to get up a match. There was an instant brightening and Tom stepped into the drawing room and told Daisy to come with them. To play a croquet with the Andersons in the tea gardens, she exclaimed, no, I thank you, Thomas. He laid his hand on her shoulder. Gertrude, he said, it is time to have done being a spoiled baby. If you let Ethel fight herself ill, you will ruin all your life. Frightened, but without clear comprehension, she turned two scared eyes on him and replaced the hat that she had thrown on the table, just as Ethel and the others came in. Not you, Ethel, said Tom, you don't know the game. I could learn, said Ethel, desperately bent on her duty. We would teach you, volunteered the cheviots. You would not undertake it if you knew better, said Tom, smiling. Ethel's hands are not her strong point. Ethel would just have to be croquette all through by her partner, said Gertrude. Besides, my father will be coming in and wanting you, added Tom. He is only at the hospital or somewhere about the town. I'll look after this child. And the two sisters delighted that poor little Gertrude should have such a holiday treat as croquet at the public gardens. Away from her governor's elder sister, walked off glorious. While Ethel, breathing forth a heavy sigh, let herself sink into a chair, feeling as if the silence were in itself invaluable and as if Tom could not be enough thanked for having gained it for her. She was first rallaged by the inquiry, shall I take in this letter, ma'am? It is charged four shillings overweight and it is for Mr. Thomas, ma'am, impressively concluded the partner maid as one penetrated by Tom's regard to small economies. Ethel beheld the letter loaded beyond the capacities of the two bewig Washington's that kept guard in its corner and addressed in a cramped hand unknown to her. But while she hesitated, her eye fell on another American letter directed to Miss Mary May in Avery Ward's well-known writing and turning both round, she found they had the same postmark and their pawn paid the extra charge and placed the letter where Tom was most likely to light naturally on it without public comment. The other letter renewed the pang at common property being at an end. No, ma'am, she said, taking the little dog into her lap. We shall none of us hear a bit of it, but at least it is a comfort that this business is over. You needn't creep on your sofas now. There's nobody to tread upon your dainty little paws. What is to be done, ma'am, to get out of a savage humor except thinking how good nature for Tom is? There was not much sign of savage humor in the face that was lifted up as Dr. May came in from the hospital and sitting down by his daughter put his arm around her. So there's another bird flown, he said. We shall soon have the old mess to ourselves, Ethel. The daisy is not going just yet, said Ethel, stroking back the thin flying flakes over his temples. If we may believe her, never. Ah, she will be off before we can look round, said the doctor. When what's the trick of marrying gets among one's girls, there's no end to it, as long as they last out. Nor to one's boys going out into the world, said Ethel. Both of them talking as if she had been his wife, rather than one of these flyaway younglings herself. Ah, well, he said. It's very pretty while it lasts, and one keeps the creatures. But after all, one doesn't rear them for one's own pleasure. That'll encompass by the way of their chance goodwill to one. For shame, doctor, said Ethel, pretending to shake him by the collar. I was thinking, he added, that we must not require too much. People must have their day and in their own fashion. And I wish you would tell Tom, I've no patience to do it myself, that I don't mean to hamper him. As long as it is a right line, he may take whichever he pleases, and I'll do my best to set him forward in it. But it is a pity. Perhaps a few years of traveling or of a professorship might give him time to think differently, said Ethel. Not he, said the doctor. The more man lives in the world, the more he depends on it. Where is the boy? Is he gone out without vouchsafing a goodbye? Oh, no, he has taken pity on Annie and Caroline Cheviot's famine of croquet and gone with them to the gardens. A spice of flirtation never comes amiss to him. There, that's the way, said Ethel, half sassily, half caressingly, that poor fellow never can do right. Isn't it the very thing to keep him away from home that we all may steal a horse and he can't look over the wall? No, not with a telescope? I can't help it, Ethel. It may be very wrong and unkind of me. Heaven forgive me, if it is, and prevent me from doing the boy any harm. But I never candored myself of a feeling of there being something behind when he seems the most straightforward. If he had only not got his grandfather's mouth and nose, and smiling after all, I don't know what I said to be so scolded. All lads flirt and you can't deny that Master Tom divided his attentions pretty freely last year between Mrs. Pugh and poor Abe Ward. This time, I believe, it was out of pure kindness to me, said Ethel, so I am bound to his defense. He dragged off poor Daisy to chaperone them that I might have a little peace. Ah, he came down on us this morning, said the doctor, on Richard and Flora and me, and gave us a lecture on letting you grow old, Ethel, said you were getting overtast and no one heeding it, and looking, let's look, and he took off his spectacles, put his hand on her shoulder, then studied her face. Hold enough to be a respectable lady of the house, I hope, said Ethel. Why are you enough for most things, said the doctor, patting your shoulder, reassured, but we must take care, Ethel. If you don't fatten yourself up, we shall have Flora coming and carrying you off to London for a change and for Tom to practice on. That is a threat. I expected he had been prescribing for me already, never to go near Coxmore, for that's what people always begin by. Nothing worse than pale ale, at which Ethel made one of her faces, and to make a merry of that shit of a Daisy. Well, you may do as you please, only take care, or Flora will be down upon us. Tom has been very helpful and kind to me, said Ethel. And, Papa, he has seen Leonard, and he says he looks so noble that to shake hands with him made him feel quite small. I never heard anything so much to Tom's credit. Well, and what did he say of the dear lad? The next step was to mention Avril's letter to Mary, which could not be sent on till tidings had been permitted by Mr. Cheviot. Let us see it, said the doctor. Do you think Charles Cheviot would like it? Cheviot is a man of sense, said the open-hearted doctor, and there may be something to authorize preventing this unlucky transfer of her fortune. Nothing could be further from it, but it was a long and interesting letter written in evidently exhilarated spirits and with a hopeful description of the new scenes. Ethel read it to her father, and he told everyone about it when they came in. Tom manifested no particular interest, but he did not go by the mail train that night and was not visible all the morning. He caught Ethel alone, however, at noon, and said, Ethel, I owe you this, offering the amount she had paid for the letter. Thank you, she said, wondering if this was to be all she should hear about it. I am going by the afternoon train, he added. I have been over to blew her. It is true, Ethel, the fellow can't stand it. He has sent down a manager and is always in London, most likely to dispose of it by private contract there, they say. And what has become of old Hardy? Horal fellow, he has struck work, looks terribly shaky. He took me for my father at first sight and began to apologize most plaintively, said no one else had ever done him any good. I advised him to come in and see my father, though he is too far gone to do much for him. Horal man, can he afford to come in now? Why, I helped him with the cart hire. He does no use anyway, he knows no more than we do, and his case is confirmed. But he thinks he has offended my father and he'll die more in peace for having had him again. Look here, what a place they have got to. And without further explanation of the they, Tom placed a letter in Ethel's hands. My dear Mr. Thomas, I send you the objects I promised for your microscope. I could not get any before because we were in the city, but if you like these, I can get plenty more at Massa Saga, where we are now. We came here last week and the journey was very nice. Only we went bump bump so often, and once we stuck in a marsh and were splashed all over, we are staying with Mr. Muller and Cora till our own house was quite ready. It was only begun a fortnight ago and we are to get in next week. I thought this would have been a town. It looks so big and so square in the plan, but it is all trees still and there are only 13 houses built yet. Ours is all by itself in River Street and all the trees near it have been killed and stand up all dead and white because nobody has time to cut them down. It looks very dismal, but Eve says it will be very nice by and by and Rufus Muller says it has mammoth privileges. I send you a bit of rattlesnake skin. They found 15 of them asleep under stone, just where our house is built and sometimes they come into the kitchen. I do not know the names of the other things I send and I could not ask Eve for she said you would not want to be bothered with a little girl's letter and I was not asked for an answer. Rosa Willis says no young lady of my age would ask her sister's permission and not even her mother's unless her mama was very intellectual and highly educated and always saw the justice of her arguments. But Mina and I do not mean to be like that. I would tell Eve if you did right to me but you need not read it unless she liked. I am your affectionate little friend, Ella. Well said Tom, holding out his hand for more when she had restored this epistle. You have heard all there was in it except except what I want to see. And Ethel, as she had more or less intended all along let him have April's letter since the exception was merely a few tender words of congratulation to Mary. The words had been done already by her father and it may here be mentioned that though nothing was said in answer to her explanation of the opening of the letter the headmaster never recovered the fact and always attributed it to his dear sister Ethel. For the future said Tom as he gave back the fan sheets. They will all be for the Chevyo's private delegation. I shall begin on my own score said Ethel. You know if you answer this letter you must not mention that visit of yours or you will be prohibited and one would not wish to excite a domestic secession. It would serve the unnatural scoundrel right said Tom. Well I must go and put up my things. You'll keep me up to what goes on at home and if there's anything out there to tell Leonard. Wait a moment Tom. And she told him what the doctor had said about his plans. Highly educated and intellectual was all the answer that Tom Bouch said and whether he were touched or not she could not gather. Yet her spirit felt less weary and burdened and more full of hope than it had been for a long time past. Ethel's letters showed the exhilaration of the change and of increasing confidence and comfort in her friend Cora Muller. Cora's confirmation had brought the girls into contact with the New York clergy. And had procured them in an introduction to the parchment of Winnie and Mack, the nearest church, so that there was much less sense of loneliness. Moreover, the fuller and more systematic doctrine and the development of the beauty and daily guidance of the church had softened the bright American girl so as to render her infinitely dearer to her English friend and they were as much united as they could be where the great leading event of the life of one remained a mystery to the other. Yet perhaps it helped begin a fresh life that the intimate companion of that new course should be entirely disconnected with the past. April threw herself into the present with as resolute a will as she could muster. With much spirit she described the arrival at the Winnie and Mack station and the unconcealed contempt with which the mass of luggage was regarded by the Western world who reckoned it would be finished to make kindling with. Heavy country wagons were to bring the furniture. The party themselves were provided for by a light wagon and a large cart driven by Cora's brother, Mordant, and by the farming man, Phyletus, a gentleman who took every occasion of asserting his equality, if not his superiority to the newcomers, demanded all the Christian names and used them without prefix. And when Henry impressively mentioned his eldest sister as Miss Warden, stared and said, why, doctor, I thought she was not your old woman, the Western epithet of a wife. But as Cora was quite content to leave Miss behind her in civilized society, and as they were sure that the stand-upon ceremony would leave them without domestic assistance, the sisters had employed Henry to wave all preference for a plight address. The loveliness of the way was enchanting, the roads running straight as an arrow through glorious forests, lands of time, beach, maple, and oak, in the full glory of spring, and the perspective before and behind making a long, narrow green bower of meeting branches, the whole of the borders of the road covered with lovely flowers, maywings, a butterfly-like milkwort, pitcher plant, Kenva voulis, new insects danced in the shade, golden Oreos, Bluebirds, the Great American Robin, the field officer with his orange epaules glanced before them. Cora was an ecstasy at the return to forest scenery, the wards at its novelty, and the escape from town. Too happy with it first to care for the shaking and bumping of the road, and the first mud-hole into which they plunged was almost a joke, under Martin Euler's assurances that it was easy-forting, though the splashes flow far and wide. Then there was what the lettuce called a mash with a real handsome bridge over it, i.e. a succession of tree trunks laid side-by-side for about a quarter of a mile. Here the female passengers insisted on walking, even Cora, though her brother Enfiletta's both laughed her to scorn, and more especially for her foot here, delicate kid boots without which no city damsel stirred, April and her sisters in the English boots scorned at New York, had their share in the laugh while picking their way from log to log, hand in hand, and exciting flittises further disdain by the rapture with the glorious flowers of the bog. But where was Massasaca? Several settlements had been passed. The houses looking clean and white in forest openings, with fields where the lovely spring-green of young bays charmed the eye. At last the road grew desolate. There were a few patches of corn, a few squalid-looking log or frame houses, a tract of horrible dreary blackness, and still more horrible, beyond it was a region of specters, trees white and stripped bare, lifting their dead arms like things blasted. April cried out in indignant horror, who has done this? We have answered Mordant. This is McClellan Square, Ms. Warden, and there's River Street, pointing down an avenue of skeletons. If you could go to sleep for a couple of years, you would wake up to find yourself in a city such as I would not fear to compare with any in Europe. Your exhausted civilization is not as energetic as ours, I calculate. The energetic young colonists turned its horses head up a slight rising ground, where something rather more like habitation appeared. A great brick-built hotel and some log houses with windows displaying the wearers needed for daily consumption and a few farm buildings. It was backed by cornfields, and this was the Great McClellan Street, the chief ornament of Massa Saga. Not one house had the semblance of a garden. The wilderness came up to the very door, except where cattle rendered some sort of enclosure necessary. Korra exclaimed, Oh Mordant, I thought you would have had a garden for me. I can fix it any time you like, said he, but you'll be the laughing stock of the place and never keep a flower. The Muller's abode was a sound substantial log house neatly whitened and with green shatters bearing a festival appearance full of welcome as Mr. Muller, his tall-bearded son Rufus, and a thin but motherly-looking elderly woman came forth to meet the travelers. And in the front, full stare, stood a trollopy-looking girl, every bar of her enormous hoop plainly visible through her washed-out flimsy muslin. This was Miss Iainty, who condescended to favor the family with her assistance till she should have made up dollars enough to buy a new dress. The elder woman, who went by the name of Cousin Deborah, would have been a housekeeper in England. Here she was one of the family, welcomed Korra with an exchange of kisses and received the strangers with very substantial hospitality, though with pity at their unfitness for their new home and utter incredulity as to their success. Here the wards had been since their arrival, their framed house near the verdant bank of the river was being finished for them and a great brass plate with Henry's new name and his profession had already adorned the door. The furniture was coming, Cousin Deborah had hunted up of Cleopatra Betsy, who might perhaps stay with them if she were treated on terms of equality. A field was to be brought into cultivation as soon as any labor could be had. Minna was looking infinitely better already and Averill and Korra were full of designs for rival house bribery. Averill taking lessons mean time in ironing, dusting and the arts of the kitchen and trusting that in the two years time the skeletons would have given place if not indeed to houses, to wall-capped fields. Such was her account. How much was reserved for fear of causing anxiety? Who could guess? End of chapter 20, recording by Nessie Cochran-Gergen, Gilbert, Arizona. Chapter 21 of the trial. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. Recording by Nancy Cochran-Gergen, Gilbert, Arizona. The trial by Charlotte Mary Young. Chapter 21. Quanto si fende? La roca per tal dia achiva suso, nandai infino ovun cercea si prende, comio nel quinto giro fui disciuso, vidigente per esso ce piangea, pansendo a terra tutta volta in giuso, adesit pavimento anima mia, sentia dir loro consi alti sospiri, ce la parola appena si intendea, o eletti di deo i cui sofriri, e giustizia e peranza falmenduri. Dande. Purgatorio. Ah, sir, we have learned the way to get your company. We have said Hector Ernstcliff, as he welcomed his father-in-law at Maplewood. We have only to get under sentence. Sick or sorry, Hector, that's the attraction to an old doctor. And, added Hector, with the importance of his youthful magisterial dignity, I hope I have arranged matters for you to see him. I wrote about it, but I'm afraid you will not be able to see him alone. Great was the satisfaction with which Hector took the conduct of the expedition to Portland Island, she was inclined to encumber it with more lionizing than the good doctor's full heart was ready for. Few words could he obtain, as in the bright August sunshine they steamed out from the pier at Weymouth, and beheld the gray sides of the island, scarred with stone quarries, stretching its lengthening breakwater out on one side, and on the other connected with the land by the pale, dim outline of the Chess Hill Bank. The water was dancing in golden light, white-sailed or red-sailed craft plied across it. Up above the line lay under the lee of the island, practicing gunnery, the three bounds of her balls marked by white columns of spray each time of touching the water, pleasure parties crowded the steamer. But to Dr. May the cheerfulness of the scene made a depressing contrast to the purpose of his visit, as he fixed his eyes on the squared outline of the crest of the island, and the precipitous slope from thence to the breakwater, where trains of loaded trucks rushed forth to the end, discharged themselves, and hurried back. Landing at the key in the midst of confusion, Hector smiled at the doctor's innocent proposal of walking, and bestowed him in a little carriage, with a horse whose hard work patience was soon called out, as up and up they went, through the narrow but lively street, past the old-fashioned end, made memorable by a dinner of George III, past the fossil tree, clamped against a house like a vine, past heaps of slabs ready for transport, a church perched up high on the slope, and a parsonage in a place that looked only accessible to goats. Lines of fortification began to reveal themselves, and the doctor thought himself arrived, but he was to wind further on, and be more struck with the dreariness and inhospitality of the rugged rock, almost bare of vegetation, the very trees of stone, and older than our creation, the melancholy late ripening harvest within stone walls, the whole surface furrowed by stern rents and crevices driven by nature, or cut into greater harshness by the quarry soon by man. The grave strangeness of the region almost marked it out for a place of expiation, like the mountain rising desolate from the sea, where Dante places prisoners of hope. The walls of a vast enclosure became visible, and over them might be seen the tops of great cranes, looking like the denuded ribs of umbrellas. Buildings rose beyond, with deep arched gateways, and a small town was to be seen further off. Mr. Ernstcliffe sent in his card at the governor's house, and found that the facilities he had asked for had been granted. They were told that the prisoner they wished to see was at work at some distance, and while he was summoned they were to see the buildings. Dr. May had little heart for making a sight of them, except so far as to judge of Leonard's situation, and he was passively conducted across a gravel court, turfed in the center, and containing a few flower beds, fenced in by Portland's most natural productions, psalmias and ammonites, together with a few stone coffins, which had once enclosed corpses of soldiers of the Roman garrison, large piles of building enclosed a quadrangle, and passing into the first of these, the doctor began to realize something of Leonard's present existence. There lay before him the broad airy passage, and either side the empty cells of this strange hive, as closely packed and as cherry of space as the compartments of the workers of the honeycomb. Just twice as wide as a coffin said Hector, doing the honors of one, where there was exactly width to stand up between the bed and the wall of corrugated iron, though happily there is more liberality of height. There was a ground-glass window opposite to the door, and a shell holding a Bible, prayer, and hymnbook, and two others, one religious and one secular from the library, a rust-colored jacket, with a black patch marked with white numbers, and a tarpaulin hat crossed with two lines of red paint on the crown hung on the wall. The doctor asked for Leonard's cell, but it was in a distant gallery, and he was told that when he had seen one, he had seen all. He asked if these were like those that Leonard had previously inhabited at Millbank and Pentonville, and, hearing that they were on the same model, he almost gasped at the thought of the young, enterprising spirit, thus caged for a night worry-months, and to whom this bear-confined space was still the only resting place. He could not look by any means delighted with the excellence of the arrangements, granted though he might, and he was hurried on to the vast kitchens, the ranges of coppers full of savory steaming contents, and the racks of loaves looking all that was substantial and wholesome. But his eyes were wandering after the figures engaged in cooking, to whom he was told such work was a reward. He was trying to judge how far they could still enjoy life, but he turned from their stolid low stamp of face with a sigh, thinking how low their condition could tell him of that of a cultivated nature. He was shown the chapel, unfortunately serving likewise for a schoolroom, the center-space fitted for the officials in their families, the rest with plain wooden benches. But it was not an hour for schooling, and he went restlessly on to the library, to gather all the consolation that he could, from seeing that the privation did not extend to that of sound and interesting literature. He had yet to see the court, where the prisoners were mustard at half-past five in the morning, thence to be marched off in their various companies to work. He stood on the terrace from which the officials marshalled them, and he was called on to look at the wide and magnificent view of sea and land, but all he would observe to Hector was, that boy's throat has always been tender since the fever. He was next conducted to the great court, the quarry of the stones of the present St. Paul's, and where the depression of the surface since work began there, was marked by the present height of what had become a steep, conical edifice, surmounted by a sword of watchtower. There he grew quite rested, and hearing a proposal of taking him to the vernhill works half a mile off, he declared that Hector was welcome to go, he should wait for his boy. Just then the guy pointed out at some distance a convict approaching under charge of a warder, and in a few seconds more the doctor had stepped back to a small room, where, by special favor, he was allowed to be with a prisoner, instead of seeing him through a grating, but only in the presence of a warder, who was within hearing, though not obtrusively so. Looking to recognize not to examine, he drew the young man into his fatherly embrace. You have hurt your hands, was his first word, at the touch of the bruised fingers and broken skin. They are getting hardened, was the answer, in an alert tone, that gave the doctor courage to look up and meet an unquenched glance. Though there was a hollow look round the eyes that Tom had noticed, the face had grown older, the expression more concentrated, the shoulders had rounded, the coarse blue shirt and heavy boots were dusty with the morning's toil, and the heat and labor of the day had left their tokens, but the brow was just open, the mouth as ingenuous as ever, the complexion had regained a hue of health, and the air of alacrity and exhilaration surprised as much as it gratified the visitor. What is your work? he asked, filling barrels with stones and wheeling them to the trucks for the breakwater, answered Leonard, in a tone like satisfaction, but pray if you are so kind to tell me, he continued, with anxiety that he could not suppress. What is this about war in America? Not near Indiana, no fear of that, I trust. But how did you know, Leonard? I saw, for one moment at a time, in great letters on a placard of the contents of newspapers, at the station as we came down here, the words, Civil War in America, and it has seemed to be in the air here ever since, but April has said nothing in her letters, will it affect them? The doctor gave a brief sketch of what was passing, up to the battle of Burun, and his words were listened to with such exceeding avidity that he was obliged to spend more minutes than he desired on the chances of the war, and the mass of saga tidings, which he wished to make sound more favorable than he could in conscious feel that they were. But when at last he had detailed all he knew from April's letters, and it had been drunk in with glistening eyes, and manner-growing constantly less constrained, he led back to Leonard himself, Ethel will write at once to your sister when I get home, and I think I may tell her the work agrees with you. Yes, and this is a man's work, and it is for the defenses, he added, with a sparkle of his eye. Very hard and rough returned the doctor, looking again at the wounded hands of hard-worked air. Oh, but to put out one strength again, and have room, cried the boy, eagerly. Was it not rather trying change at first? To be sure I was stiff, and didn't know how to move in the morning, but that went all fast enough, and I fell as many barrels a day as anyone in our gang. Then I may tell your sister you rejoiced in the change? Why, its work one does not get deadly sick of, as if there was no making one self-do it, said Leonard eagerly. It is work, and besides, here is sunshine and sea. I can get a sight of that every day, and now and then I can get a look into the bay, and weigh it, looking like the old time. That was his first sorrowful intonation, but the next had the freshness of his age, and there are thistles. I thought you cared for thistles, for Miss May showed me one at Kuhl, but it was not like what they are here, the spikes pointing out and pointing in along the edges of the leaves, and the scales slapping over so wonderfully in the bud. Pitchola, said the doctor to himself, and allowed, then you have time to enjoy them? When we are at work, at a distance, dinner is brought out, and there is an hour and a half of rest, and on Sunday we may walk about the yards. You should have seen one of our gang. When I got him to look at the chauvaux-de-fries, round a bud, how he owned it was a regular patent invention. It just answered to Paley's illustration. What, the watch? said the doctor, seeing that the argument had been far from tribe to his young friend. So you read Paley? I read all such books as I could get up there, he answered. They gave one something to think about. Have you no time for reading here? Oh, no, I am too sleepy to read except on school days and Sundays, he said, as if this were a great achievement. And your acquaintance, is he a reader of Paley, too? I believe the chaplain set him on it. He is a clerk, like me, and not much older. He is a regular Londoner, and can hardly stand the work. But he won't give in if he can help it, or we might not be together. Much the doctor longed to ask what sort of friend this might be, but the warder's presence forbade him, and he could only ask what they saw of each other. We were near one another in school at Pentonville, and knew each other's faces quite well, so that we were right glad to be put into the same gang. We may walk about the yard together on Sunday evening, too. The doctor had other questions on his lips that he had again restrained, and only asked whether the Sundays were comfortable days. Oh, yes, said Leonard eagerly. But then he, too, recollected the official, and merely said something commonplace about excellent sermons, adding, and the singing is admirable, for ever what envy such a choir as we have, we sing so many of the old bankside hymns. To make you resemble us to Dante's Hill of Penitence complete, as Ethel says, returned the doctor. I should like it to be a hill of purification, said Leonard, understanding him better than he had expected. It will, I think, said the doctor, to one, at least. I am comforted to see you so brave. I long to come sooner, but I am glad you did not. How? But he did not pursue the question, catching from look and gesture, that Leonard could hardly have then met him with self-possession. And as the first bulletin of recovery is often the first disclosure of the severity of an illness, so the doctor was more impressed by the presser's evident satisfaction in his change of circumstances than he would have been by mere patient resignation. And he let the conversation be led away to Aubrey's prospects, in which Leonard took full and eager interest. Tell Aubrey I am working at fortifications too, he said, smiling. He could not go to Cambridge without you. I do not like to believe that, said Leonard greatly. It is carrying the damage I have done further, but it can't be. He always was fond of mathematics and of soldiering. How is it at the old mill? He added suddenly. It is sold. Sold? And his eyes were intently fixed on the doctor. Yes, he is said to have been much in debt long before, but it was managed quietly, not advertised in the county papers. He went to London and arranged it all. I saw great renovations going on at the mill, and I went to see old Hardy. Good old Hardy, how is he? Much broken, he never got over the shock, and as long as that fellow stayed at the mill, he would not let me attend him. Ha! exclaimed Leonard, but caught himself up. A message came that Mr. Ernst Cliff feared to miss the boat, and the doctor could only give one tender grasp and murmur blessing, and hurried away, so much agitated that he could hardly join in Hector's civilities to be officials, and all the evening seemed quite struck down and overwhelmed by the sight of the bright, brave boy and his patience in his dreary lot. After this, at all the three months' intervals at which Leonard might be seen, a visit was contrived to him, either by Dr. May or Mr. Wilmot, and Aubrey devoted his first sleep of absence to staying at Maplewood that Hector might take him to his friend, but he came home expatiating so much on the red hair of the infant hope of Maplewood, and the fuss that Blanche made about this new possession that Ethel detected an unavowed shade of disappointment. Light and whitewash, abundant fare, garment sufficient, but eminently unbecoming, were less impressive than dungeons, rags, and bread and water. When, moreover, the prisoner claimed no pity, but rather congratulation on his badge of merit, improved Sunday dinner, and promotion to the carpenter shop, so as absolutely to excite a sense of wasted commiseration and uninteresting prosperity, conversation constrained both by the grating and the presence of the warder, and Aubrey, more tenderly sensitive than his brother, and devoid of his father's experience tacked, was too much embarrassed to take the initiative, was afraid of giving pain by dwelling on his present occupations in future robes, and confused Leonard by his embarrassment. Hector Ernst Cliff discourse about Charleston Harbor and New Orleans, and Aubrey stood with downcast eyes, afraid to seem to be scanning the convict garb, and thus rendering Leonard unusually conscious of wearing it. Then, when imparting, Aubrey, a little less embarrassed, began eagerly and in much emotion to beg Leonard to say if there was anything he could get for him, anything he could do for him, anything he would like to have sent him, and began to promise a photograph of his father, Leonard checked him by answering that it would be any regularity, nothing of personal property was allowed to be retained by a prisoner. Aubrey forgot all but the hardship and began an outburst about the tyranny. It is quite right, said Leonard greatly, there is nothing that might not be used for mischief if one chose. And the warder here interfered and said he was quite right, and it always turned out best in the end for a prisoner to conform himself, and his friends did him no good by any other attempt, as Mr. Ernst Cliff could tell the young gentleman. The man's tone, though neither insolent nor tyrannical, but rather commandatory of his charge, contrasting with his natural deference to the two gentlemen, irritated poor Aubrey beyond measure, so that Hector was really glad to have him safe away, without his having said anything treasonable to the authorities. The meeting, so constrained and uncomfortable, had but made the friends more vividly conscious of the interval between the cadet and the convict, and, moreover, tended to remove the oriole of romance with which the unseen captive had been invested by youthful fancy. To make the best of a prolonged misfortune does absolutely lessen sympathy by diminishing the interest of the situation, and even the good doctor himself was the less concerned at any hindrance to his visits to Portland, as he uniformly found his prisoner cheerful, approved by officials, and always making some small advance in the scale of his own world, and not, as his friends without expected of him, showing that he felt himself injured instead of elated by such rewards as improved diet or increased gratuities to be set to his account against the time when after eight years he might hope for exportation with a ticket of leave to Western Australia. The halo of approaching death no longer lighted him up, and after the effusion of the first meeting his inner self had closed up, he was more ready to talk of American news than of his own feelings, and seemed to look little beyond the petty encouragement devised to suit the animal nature of ordinary prisoners, and his visitors sometimes feared lest his character were not resisting the deadening, heartening influence of the unburied ground of manual labor among such associates. He had been soon advanced from the quarry to the carpenter shop, and was in favor there from his activity and skill, but his very promotions were sad, and it was more sad, as some thought, for him to be gratified by them. But, as Dr. May always ended, what did they know about him? End of chapter twenty-one, recording by Nancy Cochran-Gergen, Gilbert, Arizona. Chapter twenty-two of the trial. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. Recording by Nancy Cochran-Gergen, Gilbert, Arizona. The trial by Charlotte Mary Young. Chapter twenty-two. Oh, Bessie Bell and Mary Gray. They were Twabani Lasses. They bigged a bower on Yonburn's side and thinked it over with rushes. The early glory of autumn was painting the woods of Indiana crimson, orange, purple, as though a rainbow of intense fight-tents had been broken into fragments and then scattered broadcast upon the forest. But though ripe nuts hung on many a bough, the gypsings had not yet taken place, except at home, when Mina, in her desperate attempts at making the best of things, observed, now we have to make the fire ourselves, let us think it is all play and such fun. But such fun was hard when one or other of the inmates of the house was lying on the bed shaking with a yoo and the others creeping weirdly about, even on the intermediate days. They had been diluted into imprudent exposure in the lovely evenings of summer and had never shaken off the results. Kamela said, Mina, one afternoon as she descended the bare recordy stairs, Ava's getting better, and if we can get the fire up and make some coffee and boil some eggs, it will be comfortable for her when she comes down and Henry comes in. Ella, with a book in her hand, was curled up in a corner of a sofa standing awry among various other articles of furniture that seemed to have tumbled together by chance within the barn-like room. Mina began moving first one and then the other, daintily wiping off the dust and restoring it in air of comfort. Oh, dear, said Ella, unfolding herself, I am so tired. Where's Hedda Mary? Oh, don't you know? Hedda Mary went home this morning because Henry asked her where his boots were and she thought he wanted her to clean them. Can't Mrs. Shilabere come in? Mrs. Shilabere said she would never come in again because Ava asked her not to hold the hand by the bone and cut it with her own knife when Henry was there. Come, Ella, it is of no use. We had better do things ourselves, like Cora and Abe, and then we shall not hear people say disagreeable things. The once soft, round, kitten-like Mina, whom Leonard used to roll about on the floor, had become a lank, saddle girl, much too tall for her ten years, and with a care-stricken, thoughtful expression on her face, even more in advance for age than was her height. She moved into the kitchen, a room with an iron stove, a rough table, and a few shelves looking very desolate. The hands of both little girls had become expert in filling the stove with wood, and they had not far to see before both it and the heart in the sitting room were replenished and the flame beginning to glow. Where's the coffee mill, said Mina, presently, looking round at blank despair. Oh, dear, said Ella, I remember now that dirty little Polly Mason came to bar with this morning. I said we wanted it every day, but she guessed we could do without it, for they had got a tea party, and her little brother had put in a stone and spoilt Cora Muller's, and she snatched it up and carried it off. He will serve hours the same, I suppose, said Mina. It is too far off to go for it. Let us make some tea. There's no tea, said Ella. A week ago or more, that great Irene Brown walked in and reckoned we could lend her ma some tea and sugar, because we had plenty and we have used up our own sins. And if we did ask her to return alone, hers is such nasty stuff that nobody could drink it. What shall we do, Mina? And she began to cry. We must take some coffee up to the hotel, said Mina, after a moment's reflection. Black Joe is very good natured and he'll grind it. But I don't like to go out by myself, said Ella, into the kitchen too and hear them say things about Britishers. I'll go, dear, said Mina, jelly, if you will just keep the fire up and boil the eggs and make the toast and listen if it calls. Poor Mina, her sensitive little heart trembled within her at the rough, contemptuous words set the exclusive, refined tone of the family always provoked, and bodily anger and weariness made the walk trying. But she was thinking of Aves' need and resolutely took down her cloak and hat. But at that moment, the latch was raised and the bright graceful figure of Cora stood among them, her feathered hat and delicate muslin looking as fresh as that New York. What, all alone, she said. I know it is poor Aves' sick day. Is she better? Yes, going to get up and come down, but and all the troubles report out. True enough, the little wretch did spoil our meal, but Rufus mended it. And as I thought Polly had been marauding on you, I brought some down. Ah, I thought I smelled it most deliciously as you came in, but I was afraid I only fancied it because I was thinking about it. Dear Cora, how good you are. And have you anything for her to eat? I was going to make some toast. Of that dry stuff? Come, we'll manage something better. And off came the dainty embroidered cambered sleeves. Up went the colored ones. A white apron came out of a pocket, and the pretty hands were busy among the flower. The children assisting, learning, laughing a child like laugh. I want Craig Cora, turning ground and making a comic threatened gesture with her flowery fingers. You ought not to have come till we were fixed. Go and sit in your chair by the fire. Dear Cora, but Cora ran at her and the wand-trimmed creature put on a smile and was very glad to comply, being totally unequal to resist or even to stand long enough to own her own dread of Henry's finding all desolate and nothing to eat. Presently Cora tripped in, all sleeved and smartened, to set cushions behind the tired back and head, and caress the long thin fingers. I've lessen than I like King Alfred to wash the cakes, she said, and Ella is getting the cups, so your fifth girl is gone. The fifth in five months, and we let her sit at table, and poor dear Mina has almost worn out her life in trying to hinder her from getting affronted. I've thought what to do for you, Abe. There's the Irish woman, Catty Blake, her husband has been killed. She is rough enough, but tender in her way, and she must do something for herself and her child. Her husband killed? Yes, at Somerville. I thought you had heard it, or not wrote to me to tell her, and I shall never forget her wailing at his dying away from his country. It was not lamentation for herself, but that he should have died so far away from his own people. She is not long from the old country. I should like to have her if, if we can afford it, for if the dividends don't come soon from that building company, Cora, I don't know where to turn. Oh, they must come. Father has been writing to Rufus about the arrangements. Besides those Irish expect less and understand old country manners better if you can put up with their breakages. I could put up with anything to please Henry and save Menna's little hardwork bones. I will send her tomorrow. Is it not Menna's day of egg you? Yes, poor dear, that is always the day we get into trouble. I never saw a child with such an instinct for preventing variance, or so full of tact and pretty ways. Yet I have seen her tremble under her coaxing smile, that even Miss Shillabere can't resist. See, see, Cridella, hurrying in. Surely our contention is not coming home. No, said Cora, hastening to the door. These must be a reinforcement marching to take the train at Woodyamac. Marching, said Ella, looking of Archley at her. We didn't let our volunteers march in that way. They were sturdy bearded backwispin, rifle on shoulder, and with grave earnest faces, but walking rather than marching, irregularly keeping together, or struggling as they chose. Your volunteers, cried Cora, her eyes flashing, theirs was toy work. These are bound for real patriotic war. And she clapped her hands together, then waved her handkerchief. It is sad, said April, who had moved to the window, to see so many elderly faces, men who must be the prop of their families. It is because ours is a fight of men, not of children, not one of your European wars of paltry ambition, but a war of principle, cried Cora, with that intensity of enthusiasm that has shed so much blood in the breakup of the Great Republic. They do look as Cromwell's iron sights may have done, said April, as full of stern purpose. And verily April noted the difference. Had a number of European soldiers been passing so near in an equally undisciplined manner, young women could not have stood forth as Cora was doing, unprotected, yet perfectly safe from rudeness or remark, making ready answer to the inquiry for the nearest end, nay, only wishing she were in her own house, to events her patriotism by setting refreshment before the defenders of her cause. Her ardor had dragged April up with her a little way, so as to feel personally every vicissitude that befell the North, and to be utterly unaware of any argument in favor of the Confederates. But still April was, in Cora's words, too English she could not for the life of her, feel as she did when equipping her brother against possible French invasion, and when Mordant Muller had been enrolled in the Federal Army, she had almost offended the exultant sister by condolence instead of congratulation. Five months had elapsed since the arrival of April in Massasaga, months of anxiety and disappointment, which had sickened Henry of plans of farming, and lessened his hopes of practice. The same causes that affected him at New York told in Indiana, and even if he had been employed, the fees would have been too small to support the expense of horses. As to farming, labor was scarce, and could only be obtained at the cost of a considerable outlay, and moreover of enduring rude self-assertions that were more intolerable to Henry than even to his sisters. The chief hope of the family lay in the speculation in which April's means had been embarked, which gave them a right to their present domicile, and to a part of the uncured waste around them, and would, when Massasaga should begin to flourish, place them in affluence. The interest of the portions of the two younger girls was all that was secure, since these were fortunately still invested at home. Inhabitants did not come, lots of land were not taken, and the molars evidently profited more by the magnificent harvest produced by their land than by the adventure of city-founding. Still, plenty in comfort reigned in their house, and Cora had imported a good deal of refinement and elegance which she could make respected where April's attempts were only sneered down, nor had sickness tried in her household. Owing partly to situation, considerably above the level of River Street, partly to the freer, more cleared and cultivated surroundings, partly likewise to experience, and Cousin Debra's motherly watchfulness, the summer had passed without a visitation of egg ewe, though it seemed to be regarded as an adjunct of spring, as inevitable as winter frost. April trembled at the thought, but there was no escape. There were absolutely no means of leaving the spot, or of finding maintenance elsewhere. Indeed, Cora's constant kindness and sympathy were too precious to be parted with, even had it been possible to move. After the boarding-house, Las Asagas was a kind of home, and the more spirits and energy failed, the more she clung to it. Mr. Muller had lately left home to arrange for the sale of his corn, and had announced that he might perhaps pay a visit to his son Mordant in the camp at Lexington. Cora was expecting a letter from him, and the hope that Dr. Warden might bring on from the post office at William Mack had been one cause of her visit on this afternoon, for the mammoth privileges of Las Asagas did not include a post office, nor the sight of letters more than once a week. The table had just been covered with preparations for a meal, and the glow of the fire was beginning to brighten the twilight when the sound of a horse's feet came near, and Henry rode past the window, but did not appear for a considerable space, having of late been reduced to become his own groom. But even in the noise of the hoofs, even in the wave of the hand, the girls had detected gratified excitement. Charleston has surrendered. The rebels have submitted, cried Cora. And April's heart throbbed with this one desperate hope. No, that would have brought him in at once. After all, both were in a state to feel it a little flat when he came in presenting a letter to Miss Muller and announcing, I have had a proposal, ladies. What would you say to seeing me a surgeon to the federal forces? Do you bid me go, Miss Muller? I bid everyone go, who can be useful to my country, said Cora. Don't look alarmed, April, said Henry, affectionately, as he met her startled eyes. There is no danger. A surgeon need never expose himself. But how? What has made you think of it? asked April, faintly. A letter from Mr. Muller, a very kind letter. He tells me that medical men are much wanted and that an examination by a board is all that is required. The remuneration is good and it will be an introduction that will avail me after the termination of the war, which will end with the winner at latest. And father has accepted an office in the commissariat department, exclaimed Cora from her letter. Yes, answered Henry. He tells me that, pending more progression here, it is wiser for us both to launch into the current of public events and be floated upwards by the stream. Does he want you to come to him, Cora? Was all that April contrived to say. Oh no, he will be in constant locomotion, said Cora. I shall stay to keep house for Rufus. And here are some directions for him that I must carry home. Don't come, Dr. Warden. I shall never cure you of thinking you can't stir without an escort. You will want to put a little public spirit into this, dear A. That's her one defect. And when you are one of us, she will be forced to give us her heart. And away ran the bright girl, giving her caresses to each sister as she went. The little ones broke out. Oh, Henry, Henry, you must not go away to the wars. And April's pleading eyes spoke the same. Then Henry sat down and he took himself to argument. It would be falling to lose the first opening to employment that had presented itself. He grieved indeed to leave his sisters in this desolate unhealthy place. But they were as essentially safe as at Stoneboro. They're living alone for a few weeks or at most months would be far less remarkable here that they are. And he would be likely to be able to improve or to alter their present situation, whereas they were now sinking deeper and more hopelessly into poverty every day. Then, too, he read aloud piteous accounts of the want of medical attendance, showing that it was absolutely a cruelty to detain such assistance from the sick and wounded. This argument was the one most appreciated by Avel and Mina. The rest were but questions of prudence. This touched their hearts, men lying in closed tents or in crowded holes of ships with festering wounds and fevered lips without a hand to help them. Some, too, whom they had seen at New York and whose exulting departure they had witnessed, sufferers among whom their own core's favorite brother might, at any moment, be numbered, the thought brought a glow of indignation against themselves for having wished to withhold him. Yes, go, Henry. It is right, and you shall hear not another word of objection, said Avel. You can write or telegraph the instant you want me, and it will be for a short time, said Henry, half repenting when the opposition had given way. Oh, we shall get on very well, said Mena cheerfully. Better, perhaps, for you know we don't mind far west manners. And I'll have learnt to do all sorts of things as well as Quora when you come home. And Henry, after a year's famine of practice, was in better spirits than since that fatal summer morning. Avel felt how different a man is in his vocation and deprived of it. Oh, yes, she said to herself, if I had let ourselves be a drag on him when he is so much needed, I could never have had the face to write to our dear sufferer at home in his noble patience. It is better that we should be desolate than that he should be a wreck, or then that mass of sickness should be left untended. And the more desolate, the more sure of one protector. There was true heroism in the spirit in which this young girl braced herself to uncomplaining acceptance of desertion in this unwholesome swamp with her two little ailing sisters beside the sluggish stream amid the skeleton trees. Heroism the greater because there was no enthusiastic patriotism to uphold her. It was only the land of her captivity when she looked towards home like Judah to Jerusalem. End of chapter 22, recording by Nancy Cochran-Gergen, Gilbert, Arizona.