"That's a grace that Win got up himself," his father explained, beginning

to heap a plate with chicken and mashed potato, which he then handed to

Annie, passing her the biscuit and the butter. "We think it suits the

Almighty about as well as anything."

"I suppose you know Ralph of old, Annie?" said Mrs. Putney. "The only way

he keeps within bounds at all is by letting himself perfectly loose."

Putney laughed out his acquiescence, and they began to talk together about

old times. Mrs. Putney and Annie recalled the childish plays and adventures

they had together, and one dreadful quarrel. Putney told of the first time

he saw Annie, when his father took him one day for a call on the old judge,

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and how the old judge put him through his paces in American history, and

would not admit the theory that the battle of Bunker's Hill could have been

fought on Breed's Hill. Putney said that it was years before it occurred to

him that the judge must have been joking: he had always thought he was

simply ignorant.

"I used to set a good deal by the battle of Bunker's Hill," he continued.

"I thought the whole Revolution and subsequent history revolved round it,

and that it gave us all liberty, equality, and fraternity at a clip. But

the Lord always finds some odd jobs to look after next day, and I guess He

didn't clear 'em all up at Bunker's Hill."

Putney's irony and piety were very much of a piece apparently, and Annie

was not quite sure which this conclusion was. She glanced at his wife, who

seemed satisfied with it in either case. She was waiting patiently for

him to wake up to the fact that he had not yet given her anything to eat;

after helping Annie and the boy, he helped himself, and pending his wife's

pre-occupation with the tea, he forgot her.

"Why didn't you throw something at me," he roared, in grief and

self-reproach. "There wouldn't have been a loose piece of crockery on this

side of the table if I hadn't got my tea in time."

"Oh, I was listening to Annie's share in the conversation," said Mrs.

Putney; and her husband was about to say something in retort of her thrust

when a tap on the front door was heard.

"Come in, come in, Doc!" he shouted. "Mrs. Putney's just been helped, and

the tea is going to begin."

Dr. Morrell's chuckle made answer for him, and after time enough to put

down his hat, he came in, rubbing his hands and smiling, and making short

nods round the table. "How d'ye do, Mrs. Putney? How d'ye do, Miss Kilburn?

Winthrop?" He passed his hand over the boy's smooth hair and slipped into

the chair beside him.




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