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The Way Of Peace
by
Lucy Ann glanced at him with her quick, grateful smile.
“I’m goin’ to, now,” she said gently, and they knew she meant it.
But, looking about among them, Lucy Ann was conscious of a little hurt unhealed; she had thrown their kindness back.
“I guess I can’t tell exactly how it is,” she began hesitatingly; “but you see my home’s my own, jest as yours is. You couldn’t any of you go round cousinin’, without feelin’ you was tore up by the roots. You’ve all been real good to me, wantin’ me to come, an’ I s’pose I should make an awful towse if I never was asked; but now I’ve got all my visitin’ done up, cousins an’ all, an’ I’m goin’ to be to home a spell. An’ I do admire to have company,” added Lucy Ann, a bright smile breaking over her face. “Mother did, you know, an’ I guess I take arter her. Now you lay off your things, an’ I’ll put the kettle on. I’ve got more pies ‘n you could shake a stick at, an’ there’s a whole loaf o’ fruit-cake, a year old.”
Mary, taking off her shawl, wiped her eyes surreptitiously on a corner of it, and Abby whispered to her husband, “Dear creatur’!” John and Ezra turned, by one consent, to put the horses in the barn; and the children, conscious that some mysterious affair had been settled, threw themselves into the occasion with an irresponsible delight. The room became at once vocal with talk and laughter, and Lucy Ann felt, with a swelling heart, what a happy universe it is where so many bridges lie between this world and that unknown state we call the next. But no moment of that evening was half so sweet to her as the one when little John, the youngest child of all, crept up to her and pulled at her poplin skirt, until she bent down to hear.
“Grandma,” said he, “when’d you get well?”