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PAGE 15

The Running Away Of Chester
by [?]

“We’ve got it all now. There’s nothing more behind, Salome. It would have been better for you to have told as straight a story at first, young man.”

Chester knew that, but, having no reply to make, made none. Miss Salome looked at him wistfully.

“But, with it all, you didn’t do right to run away, Chester,” she said firmly. “I dare say your aunt was severe with you–but two wrongs never make a right, you know.”

“No’m,” said Chester.

“You must go back to your aunt,” continued Miss Salome sadly.

Chester nodded. He knew this, but he could not trust himself to speak. Then did Clemantiny arise in her righteous indignation.

“Well, I never heard of such nonsense, Salome Whitney! What on earth do you want to send him back for? I knew Harriet Elwell years ago, and if she’s still what she was then, it ain’t much wonder Chester ran away from her. I’d say ‘run,’ too. Go back, indeed! You keep him right here, as you should, and let Harriet Elwell look somewhere else for somebody to scold!”

“Clemantiny!” expostulated Miss Salome.

“Oh, I must and will speak my mind, Salome. There’s no one else to take Chester’s part, it seems. You have as much claim on him as Harriet Elwell has. She ain’t any real relation to him any more than you are.”

Miss Salome looked troubled. Perhaps there was something in Clemantiny’s argument. And she hated to think of seeing Chester go. He looked more like Johnny than ever, as he stood there with his flushed face and wistful eyes.

“Chester,” she said gravely, “I leave it to you to decide. If you think you ought to go back to your aunt, well and good. If not, you shall stay here.”

This was the hardest yet. Chester wished she had not left the decision to him. It was like cutting off his own hand. But he spoke up manfully.

“I–I think I ought to go back, Miss Salome, and I want to pay back the money, too.”

“I think so, too, Chester, although I’m sorry as sorry can be. I’ll go back to Upton with you. We’ll start tomorrow. If, when we get there, your aunt is willing to let you stay with me, you can come back.”

“There’s a big chance of that!” said Clemantiny sourly. “A woman’s likely to give up a boy like Chester–a good, steady worker and as respectful and obliging as there is between this and sunset–very likely, isn’t she! Well, this taffy is all burnt to the saucepan and clean ruined–but what’s the odds! All I hope, Salome Whitney, is that the next time you adopt a boy and let him twine himself ’round a person’s heart, you’ll make sure first that you are going to stick to it. I don’t like having my affections torn up by the roots.”

Clemantiny seized the saucepan and disappeared with it into the pantry amid a whirl of pungent smoke.

Mount Hope Farm was a strangely dismal place that night. Miss Salome sighed heavily and often as she made her preparations for the morrow’s journey.

Clemantiny stalked about with her grim face grimmer than ever. As for Chester, when he went to bed that night in the little porch chamber, he cried heartily into his pillows. He didn’t care for pride any longer; he just cried and didn’t even pretend he wasn’t crying when Miss Salome came in to sit by him a little while and talk to him. That talk comforted Chester. He realized that, come what might, he would always have a good friend in Miss Salome–aye, and in Clemantiny, too.

Chester never knew it, but after he had fallen asleep, with the tears still glistening on his brown cheeks, Clemantiny tiptoed silently in with a candle in her hand and bent over him with an expression of almost maternal tenderness on her face. It was late and an aroma of boiling sugar hung about her. She had sat up long after Miss Salome was abed, to boil another saucepan of taffy for Chester to eat on his journey.