"Are you Mrs. Brady?" asked the girl. She was searching the forbidding

face before her for some sign of likeness to her mother, but found none.

The cares of Elizabeth Brady's daughter had outweighed those of the

mother, or else they sat upon a nature more sensitive.

"I am," said Mrs. Brady, imposingly.

"Grandmother, I am the baby you talked about in that letter," she

announced, handing Mrs. Brady the letter she had written nearly eighteen

years before.

The woman took the envelope gingerly in the wet thumb and finger that

still grasped a bit of the gingham apron. She held it at arm's length, and

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squinted up her eyes, trying to read it without her glasses. It was some

new kind of beggar, of course. She hated to touch these dirty envelopes,

and this one looked old and worn. She stepped back to the parlor table

where her glasses were lying, and, adjusting them, began to read the

letter.

"For the land sakes! Where'd you find this?" she said, looking up

suspiciously. "It's against the law to open letters that ain't your own.

Didn't me daughter ever get it? I wrote it to her meself. How come you by

it?"

"Mother read it to me long ago when I was little," answered the girl, the

slow hope fading from her lips as she spoke. Was every one, was even her

grandmother, going to be cold and harsh with her? "Our Father, hide me!"

her heart murmured, because it had become a habit; and her listening

thought caught the answer, "Let not your heart be troubled."

"Well, who are you?" said the uncordial grandmother, still puzzled. "You

ain't Bessie, me Bessie. Fer one thing, you're 'bout as young as she was

when she went off 'n' got married, against me 'dvice, to that drunken,

lazy dude." Her brow was lowering, and she proceeded to finish her letter.

"I am Elizabeth," said the girl with a trembling voice, "the baby you

talked about in that letter. But please don't call father that. He wasn't

ever bad to us. He was always good to mother, even when he was drunk. If

you talk like that about him, I shall have to go away."

"Fer the land sakes! You don't say," said Mrs. Brady, sitting down hard in

astonishment on the biscuit upholstery of her best parlor chair. "Now you

ain't Bessie's child! Well, I am clear beat. And growed up so big! You

look strong, but you're kind of thin. What makes your skin so black? Your

ma never was dark, ner your pa, neither."

"I've been riding a long way in the wind and sun and rain."

"Fer the land sakes!" as she looked through the window to the street. "Not

on a horse?"




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