By that time Huldah, the little waif, who had earned for herself the name of “the Brownie,” had made for herself so many friends, that when her wedding took place, so many wished to attend it, they had to borrow the field opposite for the wedding-feast. And where she had once sat and worked and dreamed of the future, there she sat now flushed, smiling and happy, cutting the wedding cake which old Dinah, with great pride, had made in the vicarage kitchen.
There she sat, with Dick close beside her, his old heart somewhat sad with fear of another parting, Aunt Martha opposite, divided between smiles and tears, and beside her her husband, who was not going to divide them, but bind them more securely together; and last, but not least, on Huldah’s other hand sat Miss Rose,—no longer “Miss,” but always “Miss Rose” to everyone in Woodend,—who, if Huldah had been the “brownie,” had proved herself the fairy godmother, the best of guides and friends to those two who had strayed into her life that hot summer’s morning years ago—those two poor loving, hungry, friendless waifs,—Dick and the Brownie.
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