Part 25 (1/2)

”Apparently, then,” she said, ”you're going to let things remain largely in the _status quo_. But one difficulty comes to my mind. When all is said, my Elsie was wholly at fault in all this. She's sorry now, but for all that, I'm afraid she hasn't taken it so hard as this Elsie here, and what's more--this is what I'm getting at: Elsie Moss can drop the name she a.s.sumed falsely and, going elsewhere, resume her own as a matter of course. But this Elsie, who has become well acquainted here and entered into the life of the place, cannot suddenly change from Moss to Marley without a great deal of pain to herself.”

Quite true. No one had thought of that. It seemed appalling!

”Of course,” Mrs. Moss went on rather doubtfully, ”she could keep on with the name. It's perfectly possible to have two Elsie Mosses in one family. People would only take them for cousins.”

”It's possible,” the minister acknowledged, ”but it wouldn't be right.

It wouldn't be honorable for Elsie to continue to use the name now.”

”Ah, but Jack, it would be cruelly hard for her to change back to Marley!” cried his wife; and he sadly agreed.

”Do you think you could go through it, dear?” he asked, turning to Elsie.

”I ought to bear something a great deal harder,” cried Elsie suddenly.

”No, you ought not, my dear,” rejoined Mrs. Middleton. ”No, Jack, it would be too hard on Elsie--on any young girl; and, besides, it would hurt her influence at the library and with the schoolgirls. If people could understand everything clearly, it would be another matter, but they couldn't. Elsie's best friends know it. For my part, I don't believe she deserves any punishment for doing wrong unconsciously--especially since she's been such an angel of mercy to this house. But even if she had, she's suffered enough already to atone--with plenary grace.”

”She's got to go by some name,” Miss Pritchard remarked palpably, but that gave Mrs. Middleton a suggestion.

”I know,” she cried. ”Oh, Jack! Oh, Elsie!” and her face was quite irradiated with love and good-will. ”I know exactly what we'll do!

Elsie is just seventeen. We'll adopt her, Jack, for our own daughter, and she shall wear our name henceforth. She shall be Elsie Middleton, and Elsie Moss shall remain Elsie Moss, and they'll really be cousins.”

She held out her arms, and Elsie nestled into them.