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demanded Amabel, suddenly. Then both Robert and Ellen laughed.
"This is your aunt's little girl, isn't she?" asked Robert.
Amabel answered before Ellen was able. "My mamma is sick, and they carried her away to the asylum," she told Robert. "She--she tried to hurt Amabel; she tried to"--Amabel made that hideous gesture with her tiny forefinger across her throat. "Mamma was sick or she wouldn't," she added, challengingly, to Robert.
"Of course she wouldn't, you poor little soul," said Robert.
Suddenly Amabel burst into tears, and began to wriggle herself free from his arms. "Let me go," she demanded; "let me go. I want Ellen."
When Robert loosened his grasp she fled to Ellen, and was in her lap with a bound.
"I want my mamma--I want my mamma," she moaned.
Ellen leaned her cheek against the poor little flaxen head. "There, there, darling," she whispered, "don't. Mamma will come home as soon as she gets better."
"How long will that be, Ellen?"
"Pretty soon, I hope, darling. Don't."
Poor Eva Tenny had been in the asylum some four months, and the reports as to her condition were no more favorable. Ellen's voice, in spite of herself, had a hopeless tone, which the child was quick to detect.
"I want my mamma," she repeated. "I want her, Ellen. It has been to-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow after that, and the to-morrows are yesterdays, and she hasn't come."
"She will come some time, darling."
Robert sat eying the two with intensest pity. "Do you like chocolates, Amabel?" he asked.
The child repeated that she wanted her mother still, as with a sort of mechanical regularity of grief, but she fastened her eyes on him.
"Because I am going to send you a big box of them to-morrow," said Robert.
Amabel turned to Ellen. "Does he mean it?" she asked.
"I guess so," replied Ellen, laughing.
Amabel, looking from one to the other, also began to laugh unwillingly.
Then the sitting-room door opened, and f.a.n.n.y called sharply and imperatively, "Amabel, Amabel; come!"
Amabel clung more tightly to Ellen, who began to gently loosen her arms.
"Amabel Tenny, come this minute. It is your bed-time," said f.a.n.n.y.
"I guess you had better go, darling," whispered Ellen.
"I don't want to go to bed till you do, Ellen," whispered the child.
Ellen gently but firmly unclasped the clinging arms. "Run along, dear," she whispered.
"I will send those chocolates to-morrow," suggested Robert.
Amabel seemed to do everything by sudden and violent impulses. All at once she ceased resisting. She slid down from Ellen's lap as quickly as she had gotten into it. She clutched her neck with two little wiry arms, kissed her hard on the mouth, darted across the room to Robert, threw her arms around his neck and kissed him, then flew out of the room.
"She is an interesting child," said Robert, who felt, like most people, the delicate flattery of a child's unsolicited caresses.
"I am very fond of her," replied Ellen.
Then the two were silent. Robert suddenly realized that there was little to say unless he ventured on debatable ground. It would be too absurd of him to commence making love at once, and as for asking Ellen about her work, that seemed a subject better let alone.
Ellen herself opened the conversation by inquiring for his aunt.
"Aunt Cynthia is very well," replied Robert. "I was in there last evening. You have not been to see her lately, Miss Brewster."
Robert realized as soon as he had said that that he had made a mistake.
"No," replied Ellen. She obviously paled a little, and looked at him wistfully. The young man could not stand it any longer, so straight into the heart of the matter he lunged.
"Look here, Miss Brewster," he said, "why on earth didn't you tell Aunt Cynthia?"
"Tell her?" repeated Ellen, vaguely.
"Yes; make a clean breast of it to her. Tell her just why you went to work, and gave up college?"
Ellen colored, and looked at him half defiantly, half piteously. "I told her all I ought to," she said.
"But you did not; pardon me," said Robert, "you did not tell her half enough. You let her think that you actually of your own free choice went to work in the factory rather than go to college."
"So I did," replied Ellen, looking at him proudly.
"Of course you did, in one sense, but in another you did not. You deliberately chose to make a sacrifice; but it was a sacrifice. You cannot deny that it was a sacrifice."
Ellen was silent.
"But you gave Aunt Cynthia the impression that it was not a sacrifice," said Robert, almost severely.
Ellen's face quivered a little. "I saw no other way to do," she said, faintly. The authoritative tone which this young man was taking with her stirred her as nothing had ever stirred her in her life before. She felt like a child before him.
"You have no right to give such a false impression of your own character," said Robert.
"It was either that or a false impression of another," returned Ellen, tremulously.
"You mean that she might have blamed your parents, and thought that they were forcing you into this?"
Ellen nodded.
"And I suppose you thought, too, that maybe Aunt Cynthia would suspect, if you told her all the difficulties, that you were hinting for more a.s.sistance."
Ellen nodded, and her lip was quivering. Suddenly all her force of character seemed to have deserted her, and she looked more like a child than Amabel. She actually put both her little fists to her eyes. After all, the girl was very young, a child forced by the stress of circ.u.mstances to premature development, but she could relapse before the insistence of another nature.