PAGE 9
After All
by
Lucindy’s heart sank.
“You could come over to see her,” she pleaded, “and I’d come too. We’d all go plummin’ together. I should admire to! And we’d have parties, and ask ’em all over. What say?”
The child sat straight and serious, one warm hand clinging to Lucindy’s slender palm. But her eyes still sought the face of her older friend. Molly McNeil rose to a sitting posture. She took the straw from her mouth, and spoke with the happy frankness of those who have no fear because they demand nothing save earth and sky room.
“I know who you are,” she said to Lucindy. “You’re left well off, and I guess you could bring up a child, give you your way. We’re as poor as poverty! You take her, if she’ll go. Ellen, she’s a nice lady; you better say ‘yes.'”
Lucindy was trembling all over.
“You come, dear,” she urged, piteously. “You come and live with me.”
Ellen thought a moment more. Then she nodded.
“I’ll come,” said she.
Lucindy could not wait.
“I’ll send a wagon over after her to-night.” She had put Ellen down, and was rising tremblingly. “I won’t stop to talk no more now, but you come and see me, won’t you? Now, if you’ll help me mount up–there! My! it’s higher ‘n ’twas before! Well, I’ll see you again.” She turned Old Buckskin’s head away from the fence; then she pulled him fiercely round again. “Here!” she called, “what if she should jump up behind me and come now!”
Mrs. McNeil, being the thrall only of the earth, saw no reason, why a thing should not be done as one wanted it. She lifted; the child and set her on the horse behind Lucindy. And so, in this strange fashion, the two entered the high street of Tiverton.
A few weeks after this, Mrs. Wilson and Lucindy went together to the little millinery shop. Ellen trotted between them, taking excursions into the street, now and again, in pursuit of butterflies or thistledown. When they entered, Miss West, who had seen their approach from her position at the ironing-board, came forward with a gay little hat in her hand. It was trimmed with pink, and a wreath of tiny white flowers clung about the crown. She set it on Ellen’s curls; and Ellen, her face quite radiant, looked up at Miss Lucindy for approval. But that lady was gazing anxiously at Mrs. Wilson.
“Now, there ain’t anything unsuitable about that, is there?” she asked. “I know, it’s gay, and I want it to be gay. I can tell about that! But is it all right? Is it such as you’d be willin’ to have Claribel wear?”
“It’s a real beauty!” Mrs. Wilson answered, cordially; but she could not refrain from adding, while Miss West was doing up the hat, and Ellen surreptitiously tried on a black poke bonnet, “Now, don’t you spile her, Lucindy! She’s a nice little girl as ever was, but you ain’t no more fit to bring up a child than the cat!”
Lucindy did not hear. She was smiling at Ellen, and Ellen smiled back at her. They thought they knew.