As Alison spoke, she pushed open the narrow green door of the little

lodging-house, and there issued a weak, sweet sound of voices: "The

strain upraise of joy and praise." It was the same that had met their

ears at the school-door, but the want of body in the voices was fully

compensated by the heartfelt ring, as if here indeed was praise, not

practice.

"Aunt Ailie! O Aunt Ailie!" cried the child, as the room-door opened and

showed the little choir, consisting of herself, her aunt, and the small

maid of the house, "you should not have come, you were not to hear us

till Trinity Sunday."

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Explanations were given, and Miss Curtis was welcomed, but Alison,

still too much moved for ordinary conversation, slipped into the

bedroom adjoining, followed by her sister's quick and anxious eye, and

half-uttered inquiry.

"I am afraid it is my fault," said Grace; "she has been telling me about

your accident."

"Poor Ailie," said Ermine, "she never will receive kindness without

having that unlucky story out! It is just one of the things that get so

cruelly exaggerated by consequences. It was one moment's petulance that

might have caused a fright and been forgotten ever after, but for those

chemicals. Ah! I see, she said nothing about them, because they were

Edward's. They were some parcels for his experiments, gun cotton and

the like, which were lying in the window till he had time to take them

upstairs. We had all been so long threatened with being blown up by his

experiments that we had grown callous and careless, and it served

us right!" she added, stroking the child's face as it looked at her,

earnest to glean fresh fragments of the terrible half-known tale of the

past. "Yes, Rosie, when you go and keep house for papa on the top of the

Oural Mountains, or wherever it may be, you are to remember that if Aunt

Ermine had not been in a foolish, inattentive mood, and had taken his

dangerous goods out of the way, she might have been trotting to church

now like other people. But poor Ailie has always helped herself to the

whole blame, and if every childish fit of temper were the root of such

qualities, what a world we should have here!"

"Ah! no wonder she is devoted to you."

"The child was not fifteen, had never known cross or care, but from that

moment she never was out of my room if it was possible to be in; and

when nurse after nurse was fairly worn out, because I could not help

being so distressing, there was always that poor child, always handy and

helpful, growing to be the chief dependence, and looking so piteously

imploring whatever was tried, that it really helped me to go through

with it. Poor Ailie," she added with an odd turn of playfulness, "I

always fancied those frowns of anxiety made her eyebrows grow together.

And ever since we came here, we know how she has worked away for her old

cinder and her small Rosebud, don't we?" she added, playfully squeezing

the child's cheeks up into a more budding look, hiding deeper and more

overcoming feelings by the sportive action. And as her sister came back,

she looked up and shook her head at her, saying,-"You gossiping Ailie, to go ripping up old grievances. I am going to ask

Miss Curtis not to let the story go any farther, now you have relieved

your mind of it."




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