Some very plain talks Melinda had with Richard with regard to Ethelyn;

and Richard, when he saw how anxious James was to please his wife, even

in little things which he had once thought of no consequence, regretted

so much that his own course had not been different with Ethelyn. "Poor,

dear Ethie," he called her to himself, as he sat alone at night in the

room where she used to be. At first he had freely talked of her with his

family. That was when, like Aunt Barbara, they were expecting her back,

or rather expecting constantly to hear from her through Aunt Barbara.

She would go to Chicopee first, they felt assured, and then Aunt Barbara

would write, and Richard would start at once. How many castles he built

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to that second bringing her home, where Melinda made everything so

pleasant, and where she could be happy for a little time, when they

would go where she liked--it did not matter where. Richard was willing

for anything, only he did want her to stay a little time at the

farmhouse, just to see how they had improved, and to learn that his

mother could be kind if she tried. She meant to be so if Ethelyn ever

came back, for she had said as much to him on the receipt of Ethie's

message, sent in Andy's letter, and her tears had fallen fast as she

confessed to not always having felt or acted right toward the young

girl. With Melinda the ruling spirit they would have made it very

pleasant for Ethelyn, and they waited for her so anxiously all through

the autumnal days till early winter snow covered the prairies, and the

frost was on the window panes, and the wind howled dismally past the

door, just as it did one year ago, when Ethelyn went away. But, alas no

Ethie came, or tidings of her either, and Richard ceased to speak of her

at last, and his face wore so sad a look whenever she was mentioned that

the family stopped talking of her; or, if they spoke her name, it was as

they spoke of Daisy, or of one that was dead.

For a time Richard kept up a correspondence with Aunt Barbara; but that,

too, gradually ceased, and as his uncle, the old colonel, died in the

spring, and the widow went to her friends in Philadelphia, he seemed to

be cut off from any connections with Chicopee, and but for the sad,

harassing memory of what had been, he was to all intents and purposes

the same grave, silent bachelor as of yore, following the bent of his

own inclinations, coming and going as he liked, sought after by those

who wished for an honest man to transact their business, and growing

gradually more and more popular with the people of his own and the

adjoining counties.




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