Ethelyn's Mistake - Page 121/218

Richard could not get over that epithet. He would have forgiven the

other sin almost as soon as this, and his face was very dark and stern

as he watched Ethelyn reading the little note. She knew in a moment what

it was, and the suddenness of its appearance before her turned her white

and faint. It brought back so vividly the day when she received it--six

or seven years ago, the lazy September day, when the Chicopee hills wore

the purplish light of early autumn, and the air was full of golden

sunshine. It was a few weeks after the childish betrothal among the

huckleberry hills, and Frank had come up to spend a week with a boy

friend of his, who lived across the river. There was to be an exhibition

in the white schoolhouse, in the river district, and Frank had written,

urging her to come, and asking that Aunt Barbara should be left

behind--"the old maid," he sometimes called her to his cousin, thinking

it sounded smart and manlike. Aunt Barbara had stayed at home from

choice, sending her niece in charge of Susie Granger's mother; but the

long walk home, after the exercises were over, the lingering, loitering

walk across the causeway, where the fog was riding so damply, the

stopping on the bridge, and looking down into the deep, dark water,

where the stars were reflected so brightly, the slow climbing of the

depot hill, and the long talk by the gate beneath the elms, whose long

arms began to drop great drops of dew on Ethie's head ere the interview

was ended--all this had been experienced with Frank, whose arm was

around the young girl's waist, and whose hand was clasping hers, as with

boyish pride and a laughable effort to seem manly, he talked of "our

engagement," and even leaped forward in fancy to the time "when we

are married."

All this came back to Ethelyn, and she seemed to feel again the breath

of the September night, and see through the clustering branches the

flashing light waiting for her in the dear old room in Chicopee. She

forgot for a moment the stern, dark face watching her so jealously, and

so hardening toward her as he saw how pale she grew, and heard her

exclamation of surprise when she first recognized the note, and

remembered that in turning over the contents of the ebony box she must

have dropped it upon the floor.

"Do you still deny all knowledge of Frank's presence in town?" Richard

asked, and his voice recalled Ethelyn from the long ago back to the

present time.