The Heart's Kingdom - Page 43/148

"I don't know yet, Mother Spurlock," I answered her candidly. "I ran

away from that world, but it is coming after me on Friday."

"You'll be sent into the vineyard where you are most needed, and there

you'll serve," she said, with a far-away look coming into her eyes as

she let her glances roam out to the dim hills of Paradise Ridge. A flood

of love and reverence rose in my heart for her as I sat quiet and let

her spirit roam. Mother Spurlock had been the gayest young matron in

Goodloets, living in the great old Spurlock home with handsome,

rollicking young George Spurlock for a husband, and three babies around

her knees, and in one short year she had been left with only one large

and three tiny graves out in the placid home of the dead, beyond the

river bend. The babies had been taken by that relentless child foe,

diphtheria, and young George, reckless with grief, had let a half-broken

horse break his neck. The young woman, aged by her grief, had sold the

great house to the next of kin and moved down into an old brick cottage

that sat "beside the road" in a gnarled old apple orchard, and had

become the "friend to man." Through the orchard and past the door of the

Little House ran the path that led from the Settlement to the Town, and

through her heart and hands flowed most of the love and charity that

bound the rich and poor, brother to brother. Mother Spurlock was never

without a bundle in which she carried labor of the poor sold for the

gold of the rich, or gifts from the rich back to the needy. I thought of

all the long years of service in the vineyard into which her tragedy had

thrown her, and I bent and picked up the bundle at our feet and held it

with reverent hands.

"Just a few baby things that Nellie Morgan gave me to fix up a poor

little Mother Only in the village," she came back from her reverie to

say cheerfully, as she saw me with the bundle in my hand. Mother

Spurlock always refers to the children without the sanction of the law

for their birth as the Mother Onlies, and somehow, when she speaks it,

the name carries a world of tenderness into the heart of the hearer.

"Whose now?" I asked her gently, because in a way Mother Spurlock and I

bore one another's burdens of spirit.

"Hattie Garrett's, and it's a week old now. It is one of the saddest

things that ever happened in the village, and we none of us understand.

You remember, she taught the district school down in the Settlement."

"As none of us understood about Martha Ensley. Is that all a mystery

still?" I asked, and I stroked the bundle of tiny garments.