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Elizabeth’s Child
by
Behind him was a fine old farmhouse in beautiful grounds. Worth felt almost as much interested in Greenwood as in the Grange. It had been her mother’s home for three years, and Elizabeth Ingelow had loved it and talked much to her daughter of it.
Paul Ingelow did not move or speak, although he probably guessed who his visitor was. Worth held out her hand. “How do you do, Uncle Paul?” she said.
Paul ignored the outstretched hand. “Who are you?” he asked gruffly.
“I am Worth Sheldon, your sister Elizabeth’s daughter,” she answered. “Won’t you shake hands with me, Uncle Paul?”
“I have no sister Elizabeth,” he answered unbendingly.
Worth folded her hands on the gatepost and met his frowning gaze unshrinkingly. “Oh, yes, you have,” she said calmly. “You can’t do away with natural ties by simply ignoring them, Uncle Paul. They go on existing. I never knew until this morning that you were at enmity with my mother. She never told me. But she has talked a great deal of you to me. She has told me often how much you and she loved each other and how good you always were to her. She sent her love to you.”
“Years ago I had a sister Elizabeth,” said Paul Ingelow harshly. “I loved her very tenderly, but she married against my will a shiftless scamp who–“
Worth lifted her hand slightly. “He was my father, Uncle Paul, and he was always kind to me; whatever his faults may have been I cannot listen to a word against him.”
“You shouldn’t have come here, then,” he said, but he said it less harshly. There was even a certain reluctant approval of this composed, independent niece in his eyes. “Didn’t they tell you at the Grange that I didn’t want to see you?”
“Yes, they told me this morning, but I wanted to see you, so I came. Why cannot we be friends, Uncle Paul, not because we are uncle and niece, but simply because you are you and I am I? Let us leave my father and mother out of the question and start fair on our own account.”
For a moment Uncle Paul looked at her. She met his gaze frankly and firmly, with a merry smile lurking in her eyes. Then he threw back his head and laughed a hearty laugh that was good to hear. “Very well,” he said. “It is a bargain.”
He put his hand over the gate and shook hers. Then he opened the gate and invited her into the house. Worth stayed to tea, and Uncle Paul showed her all over Greenwood.
“You are to come here as often as you like,” he told her. “When a young lady and I make a compact of friendship I am going to live up to it. But you are not to talk to me about your mother. Remember, we are friends because I am I and you are you, and there is no question of anybody else.”
The Grange Ingelows were amazed to see Paul bringing Worth home in his buggy that evening. When Worth had gone into the house Charlotte told him that she was glad to see that he had relented towards Elizabeth’s child.
“I have not,” he made stern answer. “I don’t know whom you mean by Elizabeth’s child. That young woman and I have taken a liking for each other which we mean to cultivate on our own account. Don’t call her Elizabeth’s child to me again.”
As the days and weeks went by Worth grew dearer and dearer to the Grange folk. The aunts often wondered to themselves how they had existed before Worth came and, oftener yet, how they could do without her when the time came for her to go home. Meanwhile, the odd friendship between her and Uncle Paul deepened and grew. They read and drove and walked together. Worth spent half her time at Greenwood. Once Uncle Paul said to her, as if speaking half to himself,