As the fever increased, and Uncle Joseph grew more and more delirious

his cries for Sarah were heartrending, making Jessie weep bitterly as

she said to Maddy: "If I knew where this Sarah was I'd go miles on foot to find her and

bring her to him."

Something like this Jessie said to her mother when she went for a day

to Aikenside, asking her in conclusion if she thought Sarah would go.

"Perhaps," and Agnes brushed abstractedly her long, flowing hair,

winding it around her jeweled fingers, and then letting the soft curls

fall across her snowy arms.

"Where do you suppose she is?" was Jessie's next question, but if

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Agnes knew, she did not answer, except by reminding her little

daughter that it was past her bedtime.

The next morning Agnes' eyes were very red, as if she had been wakeful

the entire night, while her white face fully warranted the headache

she professed to have.

"Jessie," she said, as they sat together at their breakfast, "I am

going to Honedale to-day, going to see Maddy, and shall leave you

here, as I do not care to have us both absent."

Jessie demurred a little at first, but finally yielded, wondering what

had prompted this visit to the cottage. Maddy wondered so, too, as

from the window she saw Agnes instead of Jessie alighting from the

carriage, and was conscious of a thrill of gratification that Agnes

would have come to see her. But Agnes' business concerned the sick

man, poor Uncle Joseph, who was sleeping when she came, and so did not

hear her voice as in the tidy kitchen she talked to Maddy, appearing

extremely agitated, and flashing her eyes rapidly from one part of the

room to another, resting now upon the tinware hung upon the wall and

now upon the gourd swimming in the water pail standing in the old-

fashioned sink, with the wooden spout, directly over the pile of

stones covering the drain. These things were familiar to the proud

woman; she had seen them before, and the sight of them now brought to

her a most remorseful regret for the past, while her heart ached

cruelly as she wished she had never crossed that threshold, or

crossing it had never brought ruin to one of its inmates. Agnes was

not the same woman whom we first knew. All hope of the doctor had long

since been given up, and as Jessie grew older the mother nature was

stronger within her, subduing her selfishness, and making her far more

gentle and considerate for others than she had been before. To Maddy

she was exceedingly kind, and never more so in manner than now, when

they sat talking together in the humble kitchen at the cottage.




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