Aunt Barbara's prayers were always to the point. She said what she had

to say in the fewest possible words, wasting no time in repetition, and

on this occasion she was briefer than usual, for the good woman had many

things upon her mind this morning. First, there was Betty to rouse and

get into a state of locomotion, a good half hour's work, as Aunt Barbara

knew from a three years' experience. There was the "sponge" put to rise

the previous night. She must see if that had risen, and with her own

hands mold the snowy breakfast rolls which Ethelyn liked so much. There

were the chambers to be inspected a second time, to ascertain if

everything was in its place, and dinner to be prepared for the "Van

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Buren set" expected up from Boston, while last, though far from least,

there was Ethelyn herself to waken when the clock should chime the hour

of six, and this was a pleasure which good Aunt Barbara would not for

the world have foregone. Every morning for the last sixteen years, when

Ethelyn was at home, she had gone to the pleasant, airy chamber where

her darling slept, and bending over her had kissed her fair, glowing

cheek, and so called her back from the dreamless slumber which otherwise

might have been prolonged to an indefinite time, for Ethelyn did not

believe in the maxim, "Early to bed and early to rise," and always

begged for a little more indulgence, even after the brown eyes unclosed

and flashed forth a responsive greeting to the motherly face bending

above them.

This morning, however, it was not needful that Aunt Barbara should waken

her, for long before the robin sang, or the white-fringed curtain had

been pushed aside from Aunt Barbara's window, she was awake, and the

brown eyes, which had in them a strange expression for a bride's eyes to

wear, had scanned the eastern horizon wistfully, aye, drearily it may

be, to see if it were morning, and when the clock in the kitchen struck

four, the quivering lip had whispered, oh, so sadly, "Sixteen hours

more, only sixteen," and with a little shiver the bed-clothes had been

drawn more closely around the plump shoulders, and the troubled face had

nestled down among the pillows to smother the sigh which never ought to

have come from a maiden's lips upon her wedding day. The chamber of the

bride-elect was a pleasant one, large and airy and high, with windows

looking out upon the Chicopee hills, and from which Ethelyn had many a

time watched the fading of the purplish twilight as, girl-like, she

speculated upon the future and wondered what it might have in store for

her. One leaf of the great book had been turned and lay open to her

view, but she shrank away from what was written there, and wished so

much that the record were otherwise. Upon the walls of Ethelyn's chamber

many pictures were hung, some in water colors, which she had done

herself in the happy schooldays which now seemed so far away, and some

in oil, mementos also of those days. Pictures, too, there were of

people, one of dear Aunt Barbara, whose kindly face was the first to

smile on Ethelyn when she woke, and whose patient, watchful eyes seemed

to keep guard over her while she slept. Besides Aunt Barbara's picture

there was another one, a fair, boyish face, with a look not wholly

unlike Ethelyn, herself, save that it lacked the firmness and decision

which were so apparent in the proud curve of her lip and the flash of

her brown eyes. Fair-haired and blue-eyed, with something feminine in

every feature, it seemed preposterous that the original could ever make

a young girl's heart ache as Ethelyn Grant's was aching that June

morning, when, taking the small oval frame from the wall, she kissed it

passionately, and then thrust it away into the bureau drawer, which held

other relics than the oval frame. It was, in fact, the grave of

Ethelyn's buried hopes--the tomb she had sworn never to unlock again;

but now, as her fingers lingered a moment amid the mementos of the years

when, in her girlish ignorance, she had been so happy, she felt her

resolution giving way, and sitting down upon the floor, with her long

hair unfastened and falling loosely about her, she bowed her head over

buried treasures, and dropped into their grave the bitterest tears she

had ever shed. Then, as there swept over her some better impulse,

whispering of the wrong she was doing to her promised husband, she said: "I will not leave them here to madden me again some other day. I will

burn them, every one."




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