The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 351 pages of information about The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come.

The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 351 pages of information about The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come.

“He told you?”

Margaret blushed.  “He left all he had to me,” she said, simply.

“I’m so glad,” said Chad.

“Except a horse which belongs to you.  The old mare is dead.”

“Dear old Major!”

At the stone fence Margaret reached for the flag.

“We’ll leave it here until we come back,” she said, dropping it in a shadow.  Somehow the talk of Major Buford seemed to bring them nearer together—­so near that once Chad started to call her by her first name and stopped when it had half passed his lips.  Margaret smiled.

“The war is over,” she said, and Chad spoke eagerly: 

“And you’ll call me?”

“Yes, Chad.”

The very leaves over Chad’s head danced suddenly, and yet the girl was so simple and frank and kind that the springing hope in his breast was as quickly chilled.

“Did he ever speak of me except about business matters?”

“Never at all at first,” said Margaret, blushing again incomprehensively, “but he forgave you before he died.”

“Thank God for that!”

“And you will see what he did for you—­the last thing of his life.”

They were crossing the field now.

“I have seen Melissa,” said Margaret, suddenly.  Chad was so startled that he stopped in the path.

“She came all the way from the mountains to ask if you were dead, and to tell me about—­about your mother.  She had just learned it, she said, and she did not know that you knew.  And I never let her know that I knew, since I supposed you had some reason for not wanting her to know.”

“I did,” said Chad, sadly, but he did not tell his reason.  Melissa would never have learned the one thing from him as Margaret would not learn the other now.

“She came on foot to ask about you and to defend you against—­against me.  And she went back afoot.  She disappeared one morning before we got up.  She seemed very ill, too, and unhappy.  She was coughing all the time, and I wakened one night and heard her sobbing, but she was so sullen and fierce that I was almost afraid of her.  Next morning she was gone.  I would have taken her part of the way home myself.  Poor thing!” Chad was walking with his head bent.

“I’m going down to see her before I go West.”

“You are going West—­to live?”

“Yes.”

They had reached the yard gate now which creaked on rusty hinges when Chad pulled it open.  The yard was running wild with plantains, the gravelled walk was overgrown, the house was closed, shuttered, and dark, and the spirit of desolation overhung the place, but the ruin looked gentle in the moonlight.  Chad’s throat hurt and his eyes filled.

“I want to show you now the last thing he did,” said Margaret.  Her eyes lighted with tenderness and she led him wondering down through the tangled garden to the old family graveyard.

“Climb over and look, Chad,” she said, leaning over the wall.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.