Part 12 (1/2)

And she was not. Even Miss Bethia could not bring herself to put aside the words of the boy who lay sobbing in the dark, outside his mother's door.

”He's right,” said she. ”It don't matter the least in the world. There don't anything seem to matter much. She sha'n't be worried. Let it go,” said Miss Bethia, with a break in her sharp voice. ”It'll fit, I dare say, well enough--and if it don't, you can fix it afterwards. Let it go now.”

But David came down, humble and sorry, in a little while.

”I beg your pardon, Miss Bethia,” said he. ”I don't suppose mamma would have cared, and you might have gone in. Only--” His voice failed him.

”Don't worry a mite about it,” said Miss Bethia, with unwonted gentleness. ”It don't matter--and it is to you your mother must look now.”

But this was more than David could bear. Shaking himself free from her detaining hand, he rushed away out of sight--out of the house--to the hay-loft, the only place where he could hope to be alone. And he was not alone there; for the first thing he heard when the sound of his own sobbing would let him hear anything, was the voice of some one crying by his side.

”Is it you, Jem?” asked he, softly.

”Yes, Davie.”

And though they lay there a long time in the darkness, they did not speak another word till they went into the house again.

But there is no use dwelling on all these sorrowful days. The last one came, and they all went to the church together, and then to the grave.

Standing on the withered gra.s.s, from which the spring suns.h.i.+ne was beginning to melt the winter snow, they listened to the saddest sound that can fall on children's ears, the fall of the clods on their father's coffin-lid, and then they went back to the empty house to begin life all over again without their father's care.

CHAPTER SEVEN.

Mr Oswald, Frank's father, came home with them. He had been written to when Mr Inglis died, and had reached Gourlay the day before the funeral, but he had not stayed at their house, and they had hardly seen him till now. They were not likely to see much of him yet, for he was a man with much business and many cares, and almost the first words he said when he came into the house, were, that he must leave for home that night, or at the latest the next morning.

”And that means whatever you want to say to me, must be said at once, and the sooner the better,” said Miss Bethia, as she took Mrs Inglis's heavy c.r.a.pe bonnet and laid it carefully in one of the deep drawers of the bureau in her room. ”I haven't the least doubt but I know what he ought to say, and what she ought to say, better than they know themselves. But that's nothing. It ain't the right one that's put in the right spot, not more than once in ten times--at least it don't look like it,” added she, with an uncomfortable feeling that if any one were to know her thoughts he might accuse her of casting some reflections on the Providential arrangement of affairs. ”They don't realise that I could help them any, and it will suit better if I leave them. So I'll see if I can't help Debby about getting tea.”

There was not much said for a time, however. Mrs Inglis evidently made a great effort to say something, and asked about Frank and the family generally, and then said something about his journey, and then about the sudden breaking-up of the winter roads. Mr Oswald felt it to be cruel to make her speak at all, and turned to the children.

”Which is Davie?” asked he, in a little.

David rose and came forward.

”I thought you had been older. Frank seemed to speak as if you were almost a man,” said he, holding out his hand.

”I am past fourteen,” said David.

”And are you ready for the university, as Frank thought, or is that a mistake of his, too?”

”Yes,” said David. ”I am almost ready.”

”Oh! he was ready long ago,” said Jem, coming to the rescue. ”Frank said he was reading the same books that his brother read in the second year.”

”Indeed!” said Mr Oswald, smiling at his eagerness. ”And you are Jem?

You are neither of you such giants as I gathered from Frank, but perhaps the mistake was mine. But when one hears of horse-shoeing and Homer-- you know one thinks of young men.”

”And this is Violet, only we call her Letty; and this is Ned, and I am Jessie, and this is wee Polly,” said Jessie, a st.u.r.dy little maiden of eight, looking with her honest grey eyes straight into Mr Oswald's face. He acknowledged her introduction by shaking hands with each as she named them.

”I find I have made another mistake,” said he. ”I thought Letty was a little girl who always stood at the head of her cla.s.s, and who could run races with her brothers, and gather nuts, and be as nice as a boy. That was Frank's idea.”

”And so she can,” said Ned.