[Kate Bonnet by Frank R. Stockton]@TWC D-Link book
Kate Bonnet

CHAPTER XXXIX
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It is an abomination an' a wickedness for ye to remember him as your father!" Kate spoke no word, nor did she shed a tear.
"It was my heart's desire ye should know it," said the Scotchman, "an' I came mony a weary league to tell ye so." "Ben," said she, "I think I have known it for a long time, but I would not suffer myself to believe it; but now, having heard your words, I am sure of it." "Uncle," said she an hour afterward, "I have no father, and I never had one." With tears in his eyes he folded her to his breast, and peace began to rise in his soul.

No greater blessing can come to really good people than the absolute disappearance of the wicked.
And the wickedness which had so long shadowed and stained the life of Kate Bonnet was now removed from it.

It was hard to get away from the shadow and to wipe off the stain, but she was a brave girl and she did it.
In this work of her life--a work which if not accomplished would make that life not worth the living--Kate was much helped by Dickory; and he helped her by not saying a word about it or ever allowing himself, when in her presence, to remember that there had been a shadow or a stain.
And if he thought of it at all when by himself, his only feeling was one of thankfulness that what had happened had given her to him.
Even the Governor brightened.

He had striven hard to keep from Kate the news which had come to him from Charles Town, suppressing it in the hopes that it might reach her more gradually and with less terrible effect than if he told it, but now that he knew that she knew it the blessings which are shed abroad by the disappearance of the wicked affected him also, and he brightened.

There were no functions for Kate, but she brightened, striving with all her soul to have this so, for her own sake as well as that of others.


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