Ethelyn's Mistake - Page 88/218

Ethelyn was very sick with a nervous headache, and so Andy did not go in

with his kindlings that night, but put the basket near the door, where

Eunice would find it in the morning. It was a part of Richard's bargain

with Eunice that Ethie should always have a bright, warm fire to dress

by, and the first thing Ethelyn heard as she unclosed her eyes was the

sound of Eunice blowing the coals and kindlings into a blaze as she

knelt upon the hearth, with her cheeks and eyes extended to their utmost

capacity. It was a very dreary awakening, and Ethelyn sighed as she

looked from her window out upon the far-stretching prairie, where the

first snows of the season were falling. There were but few objects to

break up the monotonous level, and the mottled November sky frowned

gloomily and coldly down upon her. Down in the back-yard James and John

were feeding the cattle; the bleating of the sheep and the lowing of the

cows came to her ear as she turned with a shiver from the window. How

could she stay there all that long, dreary winter--there where there

was not an individual who had a thought or taste in common with her own?

She could not stay, she decided, and then as the question arose, "Where

will you go?" the utter hopelessness and helplessness of her position

rushed over her with so much force that she sank down upon the lounge

which Eunice had drawn to the fire, and when the latter came up with

breakfast she found her young mistress crying in a heart-broken,

despairing kind of way, which touched her heart at once.

Eunice knew but little of the trouble with regard to Washington. Mrs.

Markham had been discreet enough to keep that from her; and so she

naturally ascribed Ethie's tears to grief at parting with her husband,

and tried in her homely way to comfort her. Three months were not very

long; and they would pass 'most before you thought, she said, adding

that she heard Jim say the night before that as soon as he got his gray

colts broken he was going to take his sister all over the country and

cheer her up a little.

Ethie's heart was too full to permit her to reply, and Eunice soon left

her alone, reporting downstairs how white and sick she was looking. To

Mrs. Markham's credit we record that with a view to please her

daughter-in-law, a fire was that afternoon made in the parlor, and

Ethelyn solicited to come down, Mrs. Markham, who carried the

invitation, urging that a change would do her good, as it was not always

good to stay in one place. But Ethelyn preferred the solitude of her own

chamber, and though she thanked her mother-in-law for her

thoughtfulness, she declined going down, and Mrs. Markham had made her

fire for nothing. Not even Melinda came to enjoy it, for she was in

Camden, visiting a schoolmate; and so the day passed drearily enough

with all, and the autumnal night shut down again darker, gloomier than

ever, as it seemed to Ethelyn. She had seen no one but Mrs. Markham and

Eunice since Richard went away, and she was wondering what had become of

Andy, when she heard his shuffling tread upon the stairs, and a moment

after, his round shining face appeared, asking if he might come in.

Andy wore his best clothes on this occasion, for an idea had somehow

been lodged in his brain that Ethelyn liked a person well dressed, and

he was much pleased with himself in his short coat and shorter pants,

and the buff and white cotton cravat tied in a hard knot around his

sharp, standing collar, which almost cut the bottom of his ears.