“Mebbe you’ll like the room I’m going to give you. It used to belong to your Dad when he was a little boy.” She lifted the latch of a paneled door and stood looking into a large bedroom. The sun slanted across a bare, painted floor, which was covered by a few braided rugs, old and worn; there was a great four-poster about which were draped chintz curtains, yellowed by age, and between the windows stood a mahogany bureau whose brasses were tarnished by years of service; two stiff ladder-back chairs, a three-cornered washstand, and a few faded photographs in pale gilt frames completed the furnishings. 47 47 With swift step Lucy crossed the room and gazed up at one of the pictures. “That’s Dad!” Ellen nodded. “I’d no idea he was ever such a chubby little fellow. Look at his baby hands and his drum!” She paused, looking intently at the picture. Then in a far-away tone she added: “And his eyes were just the same.” For several minutes she lingered, earnest and reminiscent. “And is this you, Aunt Ellen?” she asked, motioning toward another time-dimmed likeness hanging over the bed. “Yes.” A silence fell upon the room. Ellen fidgeted. “I’ve changed a good deal since then,” she observed, after waiting nervously for some comment. “You’ve changed much more than Dad.” “How?” Curiosity impelled her to cross to Lucy’s side and examine the photograph.