"Gardin!" cried Aunt Hetty. "Mercy on us, making garden the fore-part

of April. Where does he think he's living? Florida?"

"I don't believe he's exactly making garden," said Elly. "He just sort

of pokes around there, and looks at things. And sometimes he sits down

on the bench and just sits there. He's pretty old, I guess, and he

walks kind of tired, always."

"Does the other one?" asked Aunt Hetty.

This made Elly sit up, and say very loud, "No, indeedy!" She really

hadn't thought before how very untired Mr. Marsh always seemed. She

added, "No, the other one doesn't walk tired, nor he doesn't poke around

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in the garden. He takes long tramps way back of the mountains, over

Burnham way."

"For goodness' sakes, what's he find up there?"

"He likes it. He comes over and borrows our maps and things to study,

and he gets Mother to tell him all about everything. He gets Touclé to

tell him about the back trails, too."

"Well, he's a smart one if he can get a word out of Touclé."

"Yes, he does. Everybody talks to him. You have to if he starts in.

He's very lively."

"Does he get you to talk?" asked Aunt Hetty, laughing at the idea.

"Well, some," stated Elly soberly. She did not say that Mr. Marsh always

seemed to her to be trying to get some secret out of her. She didn't

have any secret that she knew of, but that was the way he made her

feel. She dodged him mostly, when she could.

"What's the news from your father?"

"Oh, he's all right," said Elly. She fell to thinking of Father and

wishing he would come back.

"When's he going to get through his business, up there?"

"Before long, I guess. Mother said maybe he'd be back here next month."

Elly was aware that she was again not being talkative. She tried to

think of something to add. "I'm very much obliged for these cookies,"

she said. "They are awfully good."

"They're the kind your mother always liked, when she was your age," said

Aunt Hetty casually. "I remember how she used to sit right there on

Father's hair-trunk and eat them and watch me just like you now."

At this statement Elly could feel her thoughts getting bigger and longer

and higher, like something being opened out. "And the heaven was removed

as a scroll when it is rolled up." That sentence she'd heard in church

and never understood, and always wondered what was behind, what they had

seen when the scroll was rolled up. . . . Something inside her now seemed

to roll up as though she were going to see what was behind it. How much

longer time was than you thought! Mother had sat there as a little girl

. . . a little girl like her. Mother who was now grown-up and finished,

knowing everything, never changing, never making any mistakes. Why, how

could she have been a little girl! And such a short time ago that Aunt

Hetty remembered her sitting there, right there, maybe come in from

walking across that very meadow, and down those very rocks. What had

she been thinking about, that other little girl who had been Mother?

"Why" . . . Elly stopped eating, stopped breathing for a moment. "Why, she

herself would stop being a little girl, and would grow up and be a

Mother!" She had always known that, of course, but she had never felt

it till that moment. It made her feel very sober; more than sober,

rather holy. Yes, that was the word,--holy,--like the hymn. Perhaps some

day another little girl would sit there, and be just as surprised to

know that her mother had been really and truly a little girl too, and

would feel queer and shy at the idea, and all the time her mother had

been only Elly. But would she be Elly any more, when she was grown

up? What would have happened to Elly? And after that little girl,

another; and one before Mother; and back as far as you could see, and

forwards as far as you could see. It was like a procession, all half in

the dark, marching forward, one after another, little girls, mothers,

mothers and little girls, and then more . . . what for . . . oh, what

for?




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