It was arranged that Flora should for the present at least remain at

the cottage, and Maddy accepted the kindness gratefully. She had

become so much accustomed to being cared for by Guy that she almost

looked upon it as a matter of course, and did not think of what others

might possibly say, but when, in as delicate a manner as possible Guy

suggested furnishing the cottage in better style, even proposing to

modernize it entirely in the spring, Maddy objected at once. "They

were already indebted to him for more than they could ever pay," she

said, and she would not suffer it. So Guy submitted, though it grated

upon his sense of the beautiful and refined terribly, to see Maddy

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amid so humble surroundings. Twice a week, and sometimes oftener, he

rode down to Honedale, and Maddy felt that without these visits life

would hardly have been endurable.

During the vacation Jessie spent a part of the time with her, but

Agnes resolutely resisted all Guy's entreaties that she would at least

call once on Maddy, who had expressed a wish to see her, and who, on

account of her grandfather's health, and the childishness with which

Uncle Joseph clung to her, could not well come up to Aikenside. Agnes

would not go down, neither would she give other reason for her

obstinacy than the apparently foolish one that she did not wish to see

the crazy man. Still she did not object to Jessie's going as often as

she liked, and she sent by her many little delicacies from the larder

at Aikenside, some for grandpa, but most for Uncle Joseph, who prized

highly everything coming from "the madam," and sent back to her more

than one strangely worded message which made the proud woman's eyes

overflow when sure that no one could see her. But this kind of

intercourse came to an end at last. The vacation was over, Jessie had

gone back to school, and Maddy began in sober earnest the new life

before her. Flora, it is true, relieved her of all household drudgery,

but no one could share the burden of care and anxiety pressing so

heavily upon her, anxiety for her grandfather, whose health seemed

failing so fast, and who always looked so disturbed if a shadow were

resting on her bright face, or her voice were less cheerful in its

tone, and care for the imbecile Joseph, who clung to her as a puny

child clings to its mother, refusing to be cared for by any one else,

and often requiring of her more than her strength could endure for a

great length of time. She it was who gave him his breakfast in the

morning, amused him through the day, and then, after he was in bed at

night, often sat by his side till a late hour, singing to him old

songs, or telling Bible stories until he fell away to sleep. Then if

he awoke, as he frequently did, there was a cry for Maddy, and the

soothing process had to be repeated, until the tired, pale watcher

ceased to wonder that her grandmother had died so suddenly, wondering

rather that she had lived so long and borne so much.




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