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    Chapter II - Page 2

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    motionless--not asleep, but strangely, pleasantly conscious of all the small chamber and household sounds; the fall of a cinder on the hearth, the fitful singing of the half- empty kettle, the cattle tramping out to field again after they had been milked, the aged step on the creaking stair--old Peggy's, as she knew. It came to her door; it stopped; the person outside listened for a moment, and then lifted the wooden latch, and looked in. The watcher by the bedside arose, and went to her. Susan would have been glad to see Peggy's face once more, but was far too weak to turn, so she lay and listened.

    "How is she?" whispered one trembling, aged voice.

    "Better," replied the other. "She's been awake, and had a cup of tea. She'll do now."

    "Has she asked after him?"

    "Hush! No; she has not spoken a word."

    "Poor lass! poor lass!"

    The door was shut. A weak feeling of sorrow and self-pity came over Susan. What was wrong? Whom had she loved? And dawning, dawning, slowly rose the sun of her former life, and all particulars were made distinct to her. She felt that some sorrow was coming to her, and cried over it before she knew what it was, or had strength enough to ask. In the dead of night,--and she had never slept again,--she softly called to the watcher, and asked -

    "Who?"

    "Who what?" replied the woman, with a conscious affright, ill-veiled by a poor assumption of ease. "Lie still, there's a darling, and go to sleep. Sleep's better for you than all the doctor's stuff."

    "Who?" repeated Susan. "Something is wrong. Who?"

    "Oh, dear!" said the woman. "There's nothing wrong. Willie has taken the turn, and is doing nicely."

    "Father?"

    "Well! he's all right now," she answered, looking another way, as if seeking for something.

    "Then it's Michael! Oh, me! oh, me!" She set up a succession of weak, plaintive, hysterical cries before the nurse could pacify her, by declaring that Michael had been at the house not three hours before to ask after her, and looked as well and as hearty as ever man did.


    "And you heard of no harm to him since?" inquired Susan.

    "Bless the lass, no, for sure! I've ne'er heard his name named since I saw him go out of the yard as stout a man as ever trod shoe- leather."

    It was well, as the nurse said afterwards to Peggy, that Susan had been so easily pacified by the equivocating answer in respect to her father. If she had pressed the questions home in his case as she did in Michael's, she would have learnt that he was dead and buried more than a month before. It was well, too, that in her weak state of convalescence (which lasted long after this first day of consciousness) her perceptions were not
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