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Millicent’s Double
by
“Worth Mowbray,” answered Worth wonderingly.
“I was sure of it,” said Mr. Kirby triumphantly, “when I heard Miss Moore mention your name. Your mother was my half-sister, and you are my niece.”
Everybody exclaimed and for a few moments they all talked and questioned together. Then Mr. Kirby explained fully. “I was born on a farm up-country. My mother was a widow when she married my father, and she had one daughter, Worth Mowbray, five years older than myself. When I was three years old, my mother died. Worth went to live with our mother’s only living relative, an aunt. My father and I removed to another section of the country. He, too, died soon after, and I was brought up with an uncle’s family. My sister came to see me once when she was a girl of seventeen and, as I remember her, very like you are now. I never saw her again and eventually lost trace of her. Many years later I endeavoured to find out her whereabouts. Our aunt was dead, and the people in the village where she had lived informed me that my sister was also dead. She had married a man named Gordon and had gone away, both she and her husband had died, and I was informed that they left no children, so I made no further inquiries. There is no doubt that you are her daughter. Well, well, this is a pleasant surprise, to find a little niece in this fashion!”
It was a pleasant surprise to Worth, too, who had thought herself all alone in the world and had felt her loneliness keenly. They had a wonderful evening, talking and questioning and explaining. Mr. Kirby declared that Worth must come and live with them. “We have no daughter,” he said. “You must come to us in the place of one, Worth.”
Mrs. Kirby seconded this with a cordiality that won Worth’s affection at once. The girl felt almost bewildered by her happiness.
“I feel as if I were in a dream,” she said to Millicent as they walked to their boarding-house. “It’s really all too wonderful to grasp at once. You don’t know, Millie, how lonely I’ve felt often under all my nonsense and fun. Aunt Delia was kind to me, but she was really no relation, she had a large family of her own, and I have always felt that she looked upon me as a rather inconvenient duty. But now I’m so happy!”
“I’m so glad for you, Worth,” said Millicent warmly, “although your gain will certainly be my loss, for I shall miss my roommate terribly when she goes to live at Beechwood. Hasn’t it all turned out strangely? If you had never gone to Beechwood in my place, this would never have happened.”
“Say rather that if we hadn’t gone to confess our fault, it would never have happened,” said Worth gently. “I’m very, very glad that I have found Uncle George and such a loving welcome to his home. But I’m gladder still that I’ve got my self-respect back. I feel that I can look Worth Gordon in the face again.”
“I’ve learned a wholesome lesson, too,” admitted Millicent.