When Pierre returned home he had much to tell his mother and Marie, you may be sure, of his visit to Pont-de-Saint-Michel, and of the new friend he had made at the Gaspard mills. Now that the rush of handling the cocoons was over the days were not so crowded, and although there was still plenty to keep the Bretton family busy, Pierre and Marie resumed their normal routine of life, having daily lessons with Monsieur le CurÉ, and aiding their mother in the regular round of household tasks. There was a thorough cleaning of the silk-house that it might be in readiness As she now had more leisure Madame Bretton went each day to the village church to work with the other women at stripping and rolling bandages; and when at home her deft fingers were never idle but flew to and fro at her knitting. Marie, too, had learned to knit and although she complained that her needles refused to click as did her mother's, she nevertheless was already able to make a sock and fashion its toe and heel without help. As for Pierre, he split the wood, cared for the cow and the goats, toiled in the field, brought hay from the hillsides, and assumed much of the heavy work which his father and uncle had been accustomed to do. A new manliness had crept into his bearing, causing his mother to regard him with puzzled surprise, and not a little satisfaction. "You are a great comfort to me, Pierre," she would exclaim a score of times a day. Once the lad had flushed with pleasure at overhearing her say to Monsieur le CurÉ: "What should I do without my good son, my brave Pierre, to lean upon?" Thus nearly two months sped past, and the moths within the cocoons that had been laid aside for breeding began to hatch out and force themselves through the small apertures they rent in their silken houses. Marie viewed the first arrivals in consternation. "They will fly all about the house and we shall lose them!" she cried. "What can we do with them?" But Pierre only laughed. "Have no fear, little sister," he answered reassuringly. "Josef says they will but flutter far enough to find their mates, and when their eggs are laid they will die." "Alas," sighed the girl, "what a wee time they have to enjoy the glory of their new wings! Is it not sad, Mother?" Madame Bretton regarded the child gravely for a moment; then she shook her head and smiled into her little daughter's troubled eyes. "It is not so sad as it seems," she answered gently. "The silkworm has completed its work, and there is no need for it to live longer. It is so with all of us. Each is put into the world with a task to finish, and there can be no greater happiness than to know that that work—whatever it was—has been faithfully accomplished. To me the lesson of these tiny creatures' lives is an inspiration." Marie smiled faintly, but was still unconvinced. "But to have it all end just when they have got their wings, Mother!" "But it does not end, chÉrie," was the quiet reply. "The moths leave behind them their eggs, which hatch into another family of silkworms. The work goes on, don't you see; it does not stop." The girl's face brightened. "It is so with children," continued her mother. "They live after their parents are gone, and carry A light of exaltation glowed in the woman's eyes. Pierre, who had stolen unnoticed into the room, thought he had never seen his mother so beautiful. There was something in her face that brought to his mind the Jeanne d'Arc statue in the village square. Softly he bent and kissed her cheek. With the gesture Madame Bretton seemed to rouse herself, and her grave mood instantly shifted into playfulness. "Dear, dear!" she cried. "How serious we all are getting! It was your moths, Pierre, that set me moralizing this way. Our work with them is not yet done, either, for we must spread out the sheets of paper on which they are to lay their eggs. Then we can move the pairs of moths onto them." She rose briskly. "But how can we, Mother?" queried Marie. "When we touch them they will surely fly away, won't they?" "No, dear. After the moths have found their mates they can be moved very easily. I have often seen your father take them gently by the wings and put as many couples as he could on large sheets of white paper. There they remained, and after their eggs were laid we removed the moths and folding the papers of eggs put them away for next season's hatching. The eggs were fastened so firmly to the paper that there was no danger of losing any of them. Now where shall we spread the papers for our own moths? They must be put well out of the sun and the strong Rising, she crossed the floor and threw open the door of a vacant bedroom. Pierre noticed a shade of sadness flit across her face. "Uncle Jacques would be glad to think we are using his room, Mother," said the boy quickly. "He has always been so interested in the silkworms. Perhaps by the time the mulberry trees leaf again we shall have peace, and he and Father will be once more at home helping us hatch out these very eggs. Who knows?" "Who knows indeed, dear? Only the good God who is watching over their lives! It may be as you say. The spring may see them back again. We must do our part to be ready for their coming." From a drawer she brought out some large flat sheets of white paper and spread them upon table, "Now see how careful you can be in bringing in the moths. Go on tiptoe and move gently." Slowly the pairs of greenish white butterflies were transferred to the papers. Scarcely one did more than flutter feebly. "How long will it take before the eggs are laid, Mother?" inquired Pierre. "From twenty-four to thirty-six hours—usually not longer than that. Each female moth will lay three or four hundred eggs." "Shall we have room for so many?" "Oh, yes," nodded Madame Bretton. "You recall how small they are—only about the size of the head of a pin." "In the meantime what are we going to give the moths to eat?" asked Marie. "Nothing. They are not hungry like silkworms. After they leave the cocoon they eat no food, and they will live but a few days after their eggs are laid. We must then gather up the sheets of eggs as quickly as we can, for if they are "The entire crop would be lost!" gasped Pierre. "Yes. Your father had a friend to whom that misfortune happened. He was careless and left the newly laid eggs too long in the light, and when he came back from the hills where he had gone on a few days' journey to cut hay the tiny silkworms were hatched and he had nothing on which to feed them. At that season the young mulberry leaves had gone by and, in fact, the trees were nearly bare. It was a good lesson to him; but it was a sad one, for the next spring he had to buy silkworm eggs, and they cost him many francs." "We will be more careful than that, won't we, Mother?" Marie said. "I certainly hope so, for we can ill afford to waste our money." And the Bretton family were more careful. Within a day or two the great sheets of eggs were folded and put away in a dry, dark place where they would be safe until the spring when, |