[Under the Lilacs by Louisa May Alcott]@TWC D-Link bookUnder the Lilacs CHAPTER XXII 12/12
"I shall not be gone long, or be a bit changed when I come back, to live among you years I hope, for I am fond of the old place now, and mean it shall be home," she added, caressing the yellow heads as if they were dear to her. "Oh, goody!" cried Bab, while Betty whispered with both arms round Miss Celia,-- "I don't think we could bear to have anybody else come here to live." "It is very pleasant to hear you say that, and I mean to make others feel so, if I can.
I have been trying a little this summer, but when I come back I shall go to work in earnest to be a good minister's wife, and you must help me." "We will," promised both children, ready for any thing except preaching in the high pulpit. Then Miss Celia turned to Ben, saying, in the respectful way that always made him feel at least twenty-five,-- "We shall be off to-morrow, and I leave you in charge.
Go on just as if we were here, and be sure nothing will be changed as far as you are concerned when we come back." Ben's face beamed at that; but the only way he could express his relief was by making such a blaze in honor of the occasion that he nearly roasted the company. Next morning, the brother and sister slipped quietly away, and the children hurried to school, eager to tell the great news that "Miss Celia and Thorny had gone to be married, and were coming back to live here for ever and ever.".
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