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After All
by [?]

“The land o’ gracious!” said Mrs. Lothrop Wilson, laying down her “drawing-in hook” on the rug stretched between two chairs in the middle of the kitchen, and getting up to look from the window. “If there ain’t Lucindy comin’ out o’ the Pitmans’ without a thing on her head, an’ all them little curls a-flyin’! An’ the old Judge ain’t cold in his grave!”

“I guess the Judge won’t be troubled with cold, any to speak of, arter this,” said her husband from the window, where he sat eating his forenoon lunch of apple-pie and cheese. He was a cooper, and perhaps the pleasantest moment in his day was that when he slipped out of his shop, leaving a bit of paper tacked on the door to say he was “on errands,” and walked soberly home for his bite and sup. “If he ain’t good an’ warm about now, then the Scriptur’s ain’t no more to be depended on than a last year’s almanac.”

“Late Wilson, I’m ashamed of you,” retorted his wife, looking at him with such reproof that, albeit she had no flesh to spare, she made herself a double chin. “An’ he your own uncle, too! Well, he was nigh, I’ll say that for him; an’ if he’d had his way, the sun’d ha’ riz an’ set when he said the word. But Lucindy’s his only darter, an’ if she don’t so much as pretend to be a mourner, I guess there ain’t nobody that will. There! don’t you say no more! She’s comin’ in here!”

A light step sounded on the side piazza, and Lucindy came in, with a little delicate, swaying motion peculiar to her walk. She was a very slender woman, far past middle life, with a thin, smiling face, light blue eyes, shining with an eager brightness, and fine hair, which escaped from its tight twist in little spiral curls about the face.

“How do, Jane?” she said, in an even voice, stirred by a pleasant, reedy thrill. “How do, Lote?”

Lothrop pushed forward a chair, looking at her with an air of great kindliness. There was some slight resemblance between them, but the masculine type seemed entirely lacking in that bright alertness so apparent in her. Mrs. Wilson nodded, and went back to her drawing-in. She was making a very red rose with a pink middle.

“I dunno’s I can say I’m surprised to see you, Lucindy,” she began, with the duteous aspect of one forced to speak her disapproval, “for I ketched you comin’ out o’ the Pitmans’ yard.”

“Yes,” said Lucindy, smiling, and plaiting her skirt between her nervous fingers. “Yes, I went in to see if they’d let me take Old Buckskin a spell to-morrow.”

“What under the sun–” began Mrs. Wilson; but her husband looked at her, and she stopped. He had become so used to constituting himself Lucindy’s champion in the old Judge’s day, now just ended, that he kept an unremitting watch on any one who might threaten her peace. But Lucindy evidently guessed at the unspoken question.

“I should have come here, if I’d expected to drive,” she said. “But I thought maybe your horse wa’n’t much used to women, and I kind o’ dreaded to be the first one to try him with a saddle.”

Mrs. Wilson put down her hook again, and leaned back in her chair. She looked from her husband to Lucindy, without speaking. But Lucindy went on, with the innocent simplicity of a happy child.

“You know I was always possessed to ride horseback,” she said, addressing herself to Lothrop, “and father never would let me. And now he ain’t here, I mean to try it, and see if ’tain’t full as nice as I thought.”

“Lucindy!” burst forth Mrs. Wilson, explosively, “ain’t you goin’ to pay no respect to your father’s memory?”

Lucindy turned to her, smiling still, but with a hint of quizzical shrewdness about her mouth.