"What is it?" asked Mr. De Vere, and pointing to the lines Maude

bade him read.

He did read, and as he read his own cheek blanched, and he wound his

arm closely round the maiden's waist as if to keep her there and

thus save her from danger. Dr. Kennedy had the smallpox, so Louis

wrote, and Nellie, who had been home for a few days, had fled in

fear back to the city. Hannah, too, had gone, and there was no one

left to care for the sick man save John and the almost helpless

Louis.

"Father is so sick," he wrote, "and he says, tell Maude, for

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humanity's sake, to come."

If there was one disease more than another of which Maude stood in

mortal fear it was the smallpox, and her first impulse was, "I will

not go." But when she reflected that Louis, too, might take it, and

need her care, her resolution changed, and moving away from her

companion she said firmly, "I must go, for if anything befall my

brother, how can I answer to our mother for having betrayed my

trust? Dr. Kennedy, too, was her husband, and he must not be left to

die alone."

Mr. De Vere was about to expostulate, but she prevented him by

saying, "Do not urge me to stay, but rather help me to go, for I

must leave Hampton to-morrow. You will get someone to take my place,

as I, of course, shall not return, and if I have it--"

Here she paused, while the trembling of her body showed how terrible

to her was the dread of the disease.

"Maude Remington," said Mr. De Vere, struck with admiration by her

noble, self-sacrificing spirit, "I will not bid you stay, for I know

it would be useless; but if that which you so much fear comes upon

you, if the face now so fair to took upon be marred and disfigured

until not a lineament is left of the once beautiful girl, come back

to me. I will love you all the same."

As he spoke he stretched his arms involuntarily toward her, and

scarce knowing what she did, she went forward to the embrace. Very

lovingly he folded her for a moment to his bosom, then turning her

face to the fading sunlight which streamed through the dingy window,

he looked at it wistfully and long, as if he would remember every

feature. Pushing back the silken curls which clustered around her

forehead, he kissed her twice, and then releasing her said: "Forgive

me, Maude, if I have taken more than a cousin's liberty with you, I

could not help it."




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