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old rooms, she emerged at last in the sunny bay-window where her grandfather dozed daily, surrounded by pots of fragrant roses and geraniums.

      But with the breathless words of complaint just parting her coral lips, Golden saw that the old arm-chair was vacant.

      She was surprised and a little dismayed; she had been so sure of finding him there.

      She turned round and ran out to the sunny kitchen in the back yard, where old Dinah stood at a table ironing some simple white garments for her young mistress, and crooning to herself a fragment of a negro revival tune.

      The only nurse and the best friend that Golden had ever known after her grandfather, was homely, warm-hearted, black Dinah.

      Golden loved the old negress dearly. Ever since she had first lisped her name, the girl had familiarly called her "black mammy," after the fashion of most southern children with their nurses.

      Now she called out quickly before she had reached the kitchen door.

      "Oh, black mammy, where is grandpa?"

      Black mammy turned with such a start that she dropped the flat-iron she was wielding with such consummate skill.

      "Oh! honey, chile, how you skeered me," she cried, "an' I've dropped de flat-iron, and e'enamost burnt my black toes off! What for did ye come callin' me so suddent?"

      "Where is grandpa?" repeated the child.

      She came up to the door and looked at Dinah, and the old woman saw how pale she was, and what a strange light gleamed in the violet eyes under their long, curling lashes of golden-brown.

      "Come, dearie, don't be afeard because de old man ain't a-nid-noddin' in his arm-cheer as usual. He's out a-walkin' wif his son."

      "Uncle John?" asked little Golden, with a wondering look.

      "Who else, honey?" said Dinah, as she vigorously rubbed a fresh iron with salt and beeswax.

      "It is so strange," said Golden, momentarily diverted from her immediate grievance by Dinah's news. "Uncle John comes so seldom. What did he want, black mammy?"

      "Want? De debbil, his best friend, knows better dan your poor ole black mammy," said Dinah, shaking her head. "All I know is dat he come looking black as a thunder-cloud, and ax ole massa to take a walk with him."

      "And he went?" said Golden.

      "Oh! yes, he went, pore ole soul, a-hobblin' off as sweet as a lamb with that snake in the grass!"

      "Oh! black mammy, grandpa would not like you to speak that way of his son," cried Golden.

      "I axes your pardon, honey. I spoke my mind afore I thought," answered Dinah.

      "There is no offense as far as I am concerned," replied her young mistress, readily. "There is no love lost between my uncle and me."

      Then she added, with a shade of anxiety in her voice:

      "Will they be long gone, do you think?"

      "I hasn't the leastest idea," said busy Dinah, "but ole massa is too feeble to walk very fur."

      Golden turned away silently, and went to her grandfather's nook in the bay-window to await his return. She was burning with impatience to tell him the cruel and unkind things her cousins had said to her, and to ask if they were true.

      She sat down in the old arm-chair, among the blossoming flowers, herself the fairest flower of all, and leaning her dimpled cheek on her hand, relapsed into troubled thought.

      The strange relations sustained by her grandfather and herself toward his son's family puzzled her as it had often done before. Living in the same house, and nearly related as they were, there was little or no intercourse between the two families and they were barely friendly.

      Ever since Golden could remember, it had been so. She had questioned her grandfather and she had questioned Dinah, but they gave her no satisfaction on the subject.

      It remained a pregnant mystery to the lonely child, living her thoughtless, girlish life in the ruined rooms of the western wing, and in the tangled gardens, and the wild, green wood.

      A brief time of impatient waiting, then Golden heard the murmur of voices beneath the window.

      She leaned her curly head out, and heard one sentence spoken in the clear, curt voice of John Glenalvan:

      "You understand now, father, how important it is to us that you should keep Golden's daughter more carefully secluded?"

      "The child will fret—she has been so used to an outdoor life, it will injure her health," feebly objected the old man.

      "Her health is the poorest objection you could urge with me," said John Glenalvan, cruelly. "If she had died long ago it would have been the very best thing that could have happened for us all."

      The father's reply was lost in the distance as they passed on. They came in at the front door, passed down the long corridor, and separated to their divided abodes.

      Golden's grandfather came heavily into the quiet sitting-room, leaning on his oaken cane, and sought his favorite chair at the sunny window where the flowers bloomed and the bright-winged butterflies hovered.

      He was not prepared to see Golden start up from the chair with a white face, and wild, frightened, blue eyes.

      She clutched his arms and leaned against him. He felt her frightened heart-beats plainly.

      "Oh, grandpa, grandpa," she wailed, "what is the matter with everyone? What have I done that some wish me dead and others are sorry that ever I was born?"

      She felt the tremulous lips of the old man pressed fondly on her drooping head, she heard a sorrowful murmur:

      "Poor little Golden's daughter," then he said aloud:

      "My darling, who has been saying such cruel things to you?"

      "It is Clare and Elinor, and Uncle John," she sobbed. "They—the girls, I mean, now—said the worst thing I could have done was to be born; and that my mother was the first to disgrace the name of Glenalvan. And, grandpa, I heard what Uncle John said when he passed under the window. He said if I had died long ago it must have been better for all."

      Old Hugh Glenalvan's kindly blue eyes were flashing fire. He held the quivering little form against his breast with loving arms, and his outraged old heart beat fast against the girl's.

      But he could not answer her. Indignant pain and grief kept him dumb.

      "Grandpa, tell me what I have done to be hated by my kind," she sobbed. "Am I deformed? Am I repulsive to look at?"

      "My darling, you are as perfect and as beautiful as an angel," he answered, fondly kissing the fair, innocent brow.

      "Why do they hate me, then?" she wailed. "I would love them all if they would let me."

      "They are cruel and heartless. If they were not, they could not help but love you, my Golden," said the old man, bitterly. Then he sat down and drew her to a seat upon his knee.

      "Think no more of them, my darling," he said, brushing away the shining pearls of grief that hung trembling on her thick lashes. "They are cruel and unjust to you. Keep away from their presence and forget that the same strain of blood flows in your veins. Look upon them as aliens and strangers. Give all your love to me."

      She hid her sweet face against his shoulder, her breast heaving with the sobs that she could not repress.

      "I have a heart full of love," she sighed, "and it is all your own, dear grandpa. But tell me, oh, tell me of my mother! Can it be true? She did not, oh, she could not disgrace our proud old name."

      "Hush, Golden, you torture me," the old man said, hoarsely. "There is a mystery surrounding you, my little one. Your history is a sad one. But you shall never know it if I can keep the blighting secret from your knowledge. Ask me no more, my darling. Dismiss it from your thoughts. You have always been happy heretofore. Be happy still. You are innocent, pure and beautiful. There is no reason why you should not have a quiet, happy life if you will keep away from those who wound you with their cruel words, and cling closely to your simple, peaceful home."

      Her

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