It was very quiet and lonely in the Bigelow house that day, Aunt Barbara

walking softly and speaking slowly, as if the form of someone dead had

been borne from her side, while on the bed, which the housemaid Betty

had made so plump and round there was a cavity made by Aunt Barbara's

head, which hid itself there many times as the good woman went

repeatedly to God with the pain gnawing so at her heart. But in the

evening, when a cheerful wood fire was kindled on the hearth of her

pleasant sitting room, while Mrs. Captain Markham came in with her

knitting work, to sit until the Captain called for her on his return

from the meeting where he was to oppose with all his might the building

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of a new schoolhouse, to pay for which he would be heavily taxed, she

felt better, and could talk composedly of the travelers, who by that

time were nearing Rochester, where they would spend the night.

Although very anxious to reach home, Richard had promised that Ethelyn

should only travel through the day, as she was not as strong as before

her illness. And to this promise he adhered, so that it was near the

middle of the afternoon of the fifth day that the last change was made,

and they took the train that would in two hours' time deposit them at

Olney. At Camden, the county seat, they waited for a few moments. There

was always a crowd of people here going out to different parts of the

country, and as one after another came into the car Richard seemed to

know them all, while the cordial and rather noisy greeting which they

gave "the Judge" struck Ethelyn a little oddly--it was so different from

the quiet, undemonstrative manner to which she had been accustomed. With

at least a dozen men in shaggy overcoats and slouched hats she shook

hands with a tolerably good grace, but when there appeared a tall, lank,

bearded young giant of a fellow, with a dare-devil expression in his

black eyes and a stain of tobacco about his mouth, she drew back, and to

his hearty "How are ye, Miss Markham? Considerable tuckered out, I

reckon?" she merely responded with a cool bow and a haughty stare,

intended to put down the young man, whom Richard introduced as "Tim

Jones," and who, taking a seat directly in front of her, poured forth a

volley of conversation, calling Richard sometimes "Dick," sometimes

"Markham," but oftener "Squire," as he had learned to do when Richard

was justice of the peace in Olney. Melinda, too, or "Melind," was

mentioned as having been over to the "Squire's house helping the old

lady to fix up a little," and then Ethelyn knew that the "savage" was

no other than brother to Abigail Jones, deceased. The discovery was not

a pleasant one, and did not tend to smooth her ruffled spirits or lessen

the feeling of contempt for Western people in general, and Richard's

friends in particular, which had been growing in her heart ever since

the Eastern world was left behind and she had been fairly launched upon

the great prairies of the Mississippi Valley. Richard was a prince

compared with the specimens she had seen, though she did wonder that he

should be so familiar with them, calling them by their first names, and

even bandying jokes with the terrible Tim Jones spitting his tobacco

juice all over the car floor and laughing so loudly at all the "Squire"

said. It was almost too dreadful to endure, and Ethelyn's head was

beginning to ache frightfully when the long train came to a pause, and

the conductor, who also knew Judge Markham, and called him "Dick,"

screamed through the open door "O-l-ney!"




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