There was a step in the hall below. Aunt Barbara was coming to waken

Ethelyn, and, with a spring, the young girl bounded to her feet, swept

her hands twice across her face, and, shedding back from her forehead

her wealth of bright brown hair, laughingly confronted the good woman,

who, in the same breath, expressed her surprise that her niece was once

up without being called, and her wonder at the peculiar odor pervading

the apartment.

"Smells if all the old newspapers in the barrel up garret had been burnt

at once," she said; but the fireplace, which lay in shadow, told no

tales, and Aunt Barbara never suspected the pain tugging at the heart of

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the girl, whose cheeks glowed with an unnatural red as she dashed hot

water over neck, and arms, and face, playfully plashing a few large

drops upon her aunt's white apron, and asking if there was not an old

adage, "Blessed is the bride the sun shines on." "If so, I must be

greatly blessed," she said, pushing open the eastern shutter, and

letting in a flood of yellow sunlight.

"The day bids fair to be a scorcher. I hope it will grow cool this

evening. A crowded party is so terrible when one feels hot and

uncomfortable, and the millers and horn-bugs come in so thickly, and I

always get so red in the face. Please, auntie, you twist up my hair in a

flat knot--no matter how. I don't seem to have any strength in my arms

this morning, and my head is all in a whirl. It must be the weather,"

and, with a long, panting breath, Ethelyn sank, half fainting, into a

chair, while her frightened aunt ran for water, and camphor, and

cologne, hoping Ethelyn was not coming down with fever, or any other

dire complaint, on this her wedding day.

"It is the weather, most likely, and the awful amount of sewing you've

done these last few weeks," said Aunt Barbara; and Ethelyn suffered her

to think so, though she herself had a far different theory with regard

to that almost fainting fit, which served as an excuse for her unusual

pallor, for her listless apathy, and her want of appetite, even for the

flaky rolls, and the delicious strawberries, and thick, yellow cream

which Aunt Barbara put before her.

She was not hungry, she said, as she turned over the berries with her

spoon, and pecked at the snowy rolls. By and by she might want

something, perhaps, and then Betty would make her a slice of toast to

stay her stomach till the late dinner they were to have on Aunt Van

Buren's account--that lady always professing to be greatly shocked at

the early dinners in Chicopee, and generally managing, during her visits

home, to change entirely the ways and customs of Aunt Barbara Bigelow's

well-ordered household.




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