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"It is unfortunate, when Miss Weston is so good-hearted in the main. But then she always talks about the trouble she has taken, the hard work she has done, and really dims the grace of her kind deeds."
"I came very near doing it myself," admitted Kathie, quite soberly.
"I do not believe Kathie desired any extra indulgence to-night because she gave up hers last evening," exclaimed Uncle Robert, with that namelessly appreciative light in his eyes.
"O no, do not think that of me, mamma, only I should like to go to-night. All the girls are to be there."
"Three nights' dissipation in succession is rather too much for a little girl, unless there was an urgent necessity. You will enjoy Wednesday evening all the better for having had a rest."
Kathie entreated no further, but it was a great disappointment, the more so because it had come so unexpectedly. And it seemed to her that she felt rested and bright enough to keep awake until midnight. She had studied all her lessons too.
However, she kissed her mother cheerfully. Aunt Ruth was tired, and did not mean to go either.
"You might put me to bed," exclaimed Freddy, lingering in the sitting-room.
Kathie somehow could not feel generous all at once. The idea of nursing her disappointment awhile looked rather tempting.
"Why, I never do it now," she answered.
"No, you don't,"--considerably aggrieved. "Nor ever tell me stories, either! And it's so lonesome since Rob went to school."
Kathie had a faint consciousness that _not_ to think of herself would be the best thing she could do.
"And you never told me about the Fair, either!"
"Well, run up to bed, and I will come presently," she said, in her bright, pleasant way.
Freddy kissed Aunt Ruth and went off in high feather. It was quite like old times to sit beside him and talk, and Kathie was not a little amused by his questions, some of which were very wise for a little head, and others utterly absurd. Then came some very slow, wandering sentences, and Kathie knew then that dusky-robed Sleep was hovering about the wondering brain until it could wonder no more.
"Good night,"--with a soft kiss.
Aunt Ruth was lying on the lounge, so she ran down to the drawing-room and had half an hour's study over some "accidentals," that had tried her patience sorely in the afternoon. Delightful and all as music was, how much hard labor and persistence it required!
But by and by she could play the troublesome part with her eyes shut, counting the time to every note.
"Mr. Lawrence cannot find any fault with that!" she commented inwardly.
So she went back to Aunt Ruth in a very sweet humor, and, drawing an ottoman to the side of the lounge, sat down with Aunt Ruth's arm around her neck.
The room looked so lovely in its soft light. The shadowy flowers and baskets of trailing vines in the great bay-window, the dusky pictures on the wall, and the crimson tint given by the furniture. It was so sweet and restful that Kathie felt like having a good talk, so she drew a long breath by way of inspiration.
"Aunt Ruth," she said, in a little perplexity, "why is it that a person is not always willing to try to do right first of all? One wishes to and does not in the same breath."
"I suppose that is the result of our imperfect natures; but it is good to have the desire even."
"Yet when one means to try--is trying--will it never come easy?"
"Do you not find it easier than you did two years ago?"
"But I am older, and have more judgment."
"And a stronger will on the wrong side as well as on the right, beside many more temptations."
"You conquer some of them, though."
"Yet with every new state of life others spring up. Life is a continual warfare."
"And you never get perfect!"
"Never in this life."
"It is discouraging,--isn't it, Aunt Ruth?"
"Is it discouraging to eat when you are hungry?"
"Why, no!"--with a little laugh.
"It seems to me the conditions of spiritual life are not so very unlike the conditions of physical life. It is step by step in both. The food and the grace are sufficient for the day, but they will not last to-morrow, or for a month to come."
"Yet the grace was to be sufficient always," Kathie said, with some hesitation.
"And have you proved it otherwise?" The voice was very sweet, and Aunt Ruth's tone almost insensibly lured to confidence.
"But what troubles me is--that little things--" and Kathie's voice seemed to get tangled up with emotion, "should be such a trial sometimes. Now I can understand how any great sacrifice may call for a great effort; but after we have been used to doing these little things over and over again--"
"One becomes rather tired of making the effort; and it is just here where so many people who mean to be good go astray. They leave the small matters to take care of themselves, and aspire to something greater; so, without being really aware of it, they are impatient, selfish, thoughtless for others, and fall into many careless ways. Would one really grand action make amends for all?"
"No, it would not," Kathie answered, reflectively.
"So we have to keep a watch every moment, be fed every day and hour, or we shall hunger."
Kathie sighed a little. Why had it not been as easy to be good and pleasant to-night as some other times when mamma did not think a coveted indulgence necessary? Yet her perplexity appeared so trivial that she hardly had the courage to confess it even to this kind listener.
"You took the right step to-night, Kathie," said Aunt Ruth, presently.
"I was glad to see you do it. Brooding over any real or fancied burden never lightens it. And though it seems a rather sharp remedy in the midst of one's pain to think of or help some other person, it works the speediest cure."
She saw that. So little a thing as entertaining Freddy had soothed her own disappointment.
"But I ought not--" and Kathie's voice trembled.
"Stoicism is not the highest courage, little one. And G.o.d doesn't take away our natural feelings when he forgives sin. There is a good deal of sifting and winnowing left for us to do. And I believe G.o.d is better pleased with us when we have seen the danger, and struggled against it, than if it had not touched us at all. The rustle of the leaves seems to give promise of fruit."
"I think I see," Kathie answered, slowly. "There is some marching as well as all battle."
"Yes"; and Aunt Ruth kissed the tremulous scarlet lips.
Kathie was so soundly asleep that she did not hear mamma and Uncle Robert come home. But she was bright and winsome as a bird the next morning.