PAGE 16
Marg’et Ann
by
She stopped, looking at him expectantly. The minister turned away, rubbing his hands up and down his polished crutches. There was a soft, troubled light in his eyes.
“Why, Nancy!”
His companion got up and moved a step backward. Her cheeks flushed a pale, faded red.
“Oh, no,” she said, with a quick, impatient movement of her head, “not that, Joseph; that died years ago,–you are the same to me as other men, excepting that you are Marg’et Ann’s father. It’s for her. It’s the only way I can live my life over again, by letting her live hers. I don’t know that it will be any better; but she will know, she will have a certainty in place of a doubt. I don’t know that my life would have been any better; I know yours would not, and anyway it’s all over now. I know I can get on with the children, and I don’t think people will talk. I hope you’re not going to object, Joseph. We’ve always been very good friends.”
He shook his head slowly.
“I don’t see how I can, Nancy. It’s very good of you. Perhaps,” he added, looking at her with a wistful desire for contradiction,–“perhaps I’ve been a little selfish about Marg’et Ann.”
“I don’t think you meant to be, Joseph,” said the old maid soothingly; “when anybody’s so good as Marg’et Ann, she doesn’t call for much grace in the people about her. I think it’s a duty we owe to other people to have some faults.”
Outside the door Marg’et Ann still lingered, with her anxiety about the bread on her lips and the shadow of much serving in her soft eyes. Miss Nancy stopped and drew her favorite into the shelter of her gaunt arms.
“I’m coming over next week to help you get ready for the wedding, Margie,” she said, “and I’m going to stay when you’re gone and look after things. They don’t need me at Samuel’s now, and I’ll be more comfortable here. I’ve got enough to pay a little for my board the rest of my life, and I don’t mean to work very hard, but I can show Nancy Helen and keep the run of things. There, don’t cry. We’ll go and look at the sponge now. I guess you’d better ride over to Yankee Neck this afternoon, and tell them you don’t want the winter school–There, there!”