A room on the ground floor had been appropriated to Molly’s use, and thither she was carried at once, and gently laid upon a couch. Instantly her cousin Elsie’s arms were about her, her head pillowed upon the gentle breast, while tears of loving sympathy fell fast upon her poor pale face, mingled with tender caresses and whispered words of endearment.
It did the child good; the tears and sobs that came in response, relieved her aching heart of half its load. But it vexed Enna.
“What folly, Elsie!” she said, “don’t you see how you’re making the child cry? And I’ve been doing my best to get her to stop it; for of course it does no good, and only injures her eyes.”
“Forgive me, dear child, if I have hurt you,” Elsie said low and tenderly, as she laid Molly’s head gently back against the pillows.
“You haven’t! you’ve done me good!” cried the girl, flashing an indignant glance at Enna. “Oh, mother, if you treated me so, it wouldn’t be half so hard to bear!”
“I’ve learned not to expect anything but ingratitude from my children,” said Enna, coldly returning Elsie’s kind greeting.
But Dick grasped his cousin’s hand warmly, giving her a look of grateful affection, and accepted with delight her offered kiss.
“Now, I will leave you to rest,” she said to Molly, “and when you feel like seeing your cousins, they will be glad to come in and speak to you. They are anxious to do all they can for your entertainment while you are here.”
“Yes, but I want to see grandpa and Uncle Horace now, please; they just kissed me in the car, and that was all.”
They came in at once, full of tender sympathy for the crippled, suffering child.
“They’re so kind,” sobbed Molly, as they left the room.
“Yes, you can appreciate everybody’s kindness but your mother’s,” remarked Enna in a piqued tone, “and everybody can be sorry for you, but my feelings are lost sight of entirely.”
“Oh, mother, don’t!” sighed Molly. “I’m sure I’ve enough to bear without your reproaches. I’d appreciate you fast enough, if you were such a mother as Cousin Elsie.”
“Or as Aunt Louise, why don’t you say?” said Mrs. Conly, coming in, going up to the couch, and kissing her. “How d’ye do, Enna?”
“Yes, even you are sorrier for me than mother is, I do believe!” returned Molly, bursting into tears; “and if it was Isa or Virgy you’d be ever so good to her, and not scold her as mother does me.”
“Why, I’m just worn out and worried half to death about that girl,” said Enna, in answer to her sister’s query. “She’ll never walk a step again—all the doctors say that.” At these words Molly was almost convulsed with sobs, but Enna went on relentlessly. “And when they asked her how it happened, she up and told them her high-heeled shoes threw her down, and that she didn’t want to wear them, but I made her do it.”
“And so you did, and I only told it because one of the doctors asked if I didn’t know they were dangerous; and when I said yes, he wanted to know how I came to be so foolish as to wear them.”