[The Chums of Scranton High at Ice Hockey by Donald Ferguson]@TWC D-Link bookThe Chums of Scranton High at Ice Hockey CHAPTER XV 9/12
Sometimes when I see her sitting there, so quiet like, and looking into the wonderfully brilliant sunset skies, I seem to know what she is thinking about, and I feel for her. It's harder on a mother, than anyone else, to lose her child as we did our poor, reckless boy." Hugh felt a queer sensation in the region of his heart when he heard the big man speak so mournfully.
He realized then as never before how the heart of a parent can never fully recover from a cruel shock, such as the loss of one who as a little child had come, it was hoped, as a ray of sunlight in the lives of those who loved him. The home of the smith adjoined his shop.
There was, in fact, a door that connected them, and through this Deacon Winslow now led his thrice welcome guests.
Presently they found themselves in what seemed to be a cozy little sitting-room, where a wood-fire blazed cheerily on the hearth. Seated in one of those invalid wheel-chairs, which can be so easily manipulated by the occupant, after becoming expert at the job, was a most benign-looking and motherly old lady, with snow-white hair, and a face that was one of the sweetest and most patient Hugh had ever gazed upon. He knew instantly that he was going to like Mrs.Winslow just as much as he did her big husband.
All the good things he had heard about her benevolence must then be true, he concluded, as he looked on her smiling face. "Mother, here's my friend, Hugh Morgan, come out to take supper with us, as I told you he'd half-promised to do," said the deacon, in his breezy fashion.
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