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+**The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Copy-Cat & Other Stories**
+#2 in our series by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
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+The Copy-Cat & Other Stories
+
+by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
+
+April, 1999 [Etext #1716]
+
+
+**The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Copy-Cat & Other Stories**
+*****This file should be named cpyct10.txt or cpyct10.zip******
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+This etext was prepared by Judy Boss, Omaha, NE
+
+
+
+
+
+The COPY-CAT
+& Other Stories
+
+BY
+MARY E. WILKINS FREEMAN
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ PAGE
+
+ I. THE COPY-CAT . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
+
+ II. THE COCK OF THE WALK . . . . . . . . . 33
+
+ III. JOHNNY-IN-THE-WOODS . . . . . . . . . 55
+
+ IV. DANIEL AND LITTLE DAN'L . . . . . . . . 83
+
+ V. BIG SISTER SOLLY . . . . . . . . . . 107
+
+ VI. LITTLE LUCY ROSE . . . . . . . . . . 137
+
+ VII. NOBLESSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . 163
+
+VIII. CORONATION . . . . . . . . . . . . 183
+
+ IX. THE AMETHYST COMB . . . . . . . . . . 211
+
+ X. THE UMBRELLA MAN . . . . . . . . . . 237
+
+ XI. THE BALKING OF CHRISTOPHER . . . . . . . 267
+
+ XII. DEAR ANNIE . . . . . . . . . . . . 293
+
+
+
+
+THE COPY-CAT
+
+
+
+
+THE COPY-CAT
+
+THAT affair of Jim Simmons's cats never became
+known. Two little boys and a little girl can
+keep a secret -- that is, sometimes. The two little
+boys had the advantage of the little girl because they
+could talk over the affair together, and the little
+girl, Lily Jennings, had no intimate girl friend to
+tempt her to confidence. She had only little Amelia
+Wheeler, commonly called by the pupils of Madame's
+school "The Copy-Cat."
+
+Amelia was an odd little girl -- that is, everybody
+called her odd. She was that rather unusual crea-
+ture, a child with a definite ideal; and that ideal was
+Lily Jennings. However, nobody knew that. If
+Amelia's mother, who was a woman of strong charac-
+ter, had suspected, she would have taken strenuous
+measures to prevent such a peculiar state of affairs;
+the more so because she herself did not in the least
+approve of Lily Jennings. Mrs. Diantha Wheeler
+(Amelia's father had died when she was a baby)
+often remarked to her own mother, Mrs. Stark, and
+to her mother-in-law, Mrs. Samuel Wheeler, that she
+did not feel that Mrs. Jennings was bringing up Lily
+exactly as she should. "That child thinks entirely
+too much of her looks," said Mrs. Diantha. "When
+she walks past here she switches those ridiculous
+frilled frocks of hers as if she were entering a ball-
+room, and she tosses her head and looks about to see
+if anybody is watching her. If I were to see Amelia
+doing such things I should be very firm with her."
+
+"Lily Jennings is a very pretty child," said
+Mother-in-law Wheeler, with an under-meaning, and
+Mrs. Diantha flushed. Amelia did not in the least
+resemble the Wheelers, who were a handsome set.
+She looked remarkably like her mother, who was a
+plain woman, only little Amelia did not have a square
+chin. Her chin was pretty and round, with a little
+dimple in it. In fact, Amelia's chin was the pretti-
+est feature she had. Her hair was phenomenally
+straight. It would not even yield to hot curling-
+irons, which her grandmother Wheeler had tried sur-
+reptitiously several times when there was a little
+girls' party. "I never saw such hair as that poor
+child has in all my life," she told the other grand-
+mother, Mrs. Stark. "Have the Starks always had
+such very straight hair?"
+
+Mrs. Stark stiffened her chin. Her own hair was
+very straight. "I don't know," said she, "that the
+Starks have had any straighter hair than other
+people. If Amelia does not have anything worse to
+contend with than straight hair I rather think she
+will get along in the world as well as most people."
+
+"It's thin, too," said Grandmother Wheeler, with
+a sigh, "and it hasn't a mite of color. Oh, well,
+Amelia is a good child, and beauty isn't everything."
+Grandmother Wheeler said that as if beauty were
+a great deal, and Grandmother Stark arose and shook
+out her black silk skirts. She had money, and loved
+to dress in rich black silks and laces.
+
+"It is very little, very little indeed," said she, and
+she eyed Grandmother Wheeler's lovely old face,
+like a wrinkled old rose as to color, faultless as to
+feature, and swept about by the loveliest waves of
+shining silver hair.
+
+Then she went out of the room, and Grandmother
+Wheeler, left alone, smiled. She knew the worth of
+beauty for those who possess it and those who do not.
+She had never been quite reconciled to her son's
+marrying such a plain girl as Diantha Stark, although
+she had money. She considered beauty on the
+whole as a more valuable asset than mere gold.
+She regretted always that poor little Amelia, her
+only grandchild, was so very plain-looking. She
+always knew that Amelia was very plain, and yet
+sometimes the child puzzled her. She seemed to see
+reflections of beauty, if not beauty itself, in the
+little colorless face, in the figure, with its too-large
+joints and utter absence of curves. She sometimes
+even wondered privately if some subtle resemblance
+to the handsome Wheelers might not be in the child
+and yet appear. But she was mistaken. What she
+saw was pure mimicry of a beautiful ideal.
+
+Little Amelia tried to stand like Lily Jennings;
+she tried to walk like her; she tried to smile like
+her; she made endeavors, very often futile, to dress
+like her. Mrs. Wheeler did not in the least approve
+of furbelows for children. Poor little Amelia went
+clad in severe simplicity; durable woolen frocks in
+winter, and washable, unfadable, and non-soil-show-
+ing frocks in summer. She, although her mother had
+perhaps more money wherewith to dress her than had
+any of the other mothers, was the plainest-clad little
+girl in school. Amelia, moreover, never tore a frock,
+and, as she did not grow rapidly, one lasted several
+seasons. Lily Jennings was destructive, although
+dainty. Her pretty clothes were renewed every
+year. Amelia was helpless before that problem.
+For a little girl burning with aspirations to be and
+look like another little girl who was beautiful and
+wore beautiful clothes, to be obliged to set forth for
+Madame's on a lovely spring morning, when thin
+attire was in evidence, dressed in dark-blue-and-
+white-checked gingham, which she had worn for
+three summers, and with sleeves which, even to
+childish eyes, were anachronisms, was a trial. Then
+to see Lily flutter in a frock like a perfectly new white
+flower was torture; not because of jealousy -- Amelia
+was not jealous; but she so admired the other little
+girl, and so loved her, and so wanted to be like her.
+
+As for Lily, she hardly ever noticed Amelia. She
+was not aware that she herself was an object of
+adoration; for she was a little girl who searched for
+admiration in the eyes of little boys rather than
+little girls, although very innocently. She always
+glanced slyly at Johnny Trumbull when she wore a
+pretty new frock, to see if he noticed. He never did,
+and she was sharp enough to know it. She was also
+child enough not to care a bit, but to take a queer
+pleasure in the sensation of scorn which she felt in
+consequence. She would eye Johnny from head to
+foot, his boy's clothing somewhat spotted, his bulging
+pockets, his always dusty shoes, and when he twisted
+uneasily, not understanding why, she had a thrill
+of purely feminine delight. It was on one such occa-
+sion that she first noticed Amelia Wheeler particularly.
+
+It was a lovely warm morning in May, and Lily
+was a darling to behold -- in a big hat with a wreath
+of blue flowers, her hair tied with enormous blue silk
+bows, her short skirts frilled with eyelet embroidery,
+her slender silk legs, her little white sandals. Ma-
+dame's maid had not yet struck the Japanese gong,
+and all the pupils were out on the lawn, Amelia, in
+her clean, ugly gingham and her serviceable brown
+sailor hat, hovering near Lily, as usual, like a common,
+very plain butterfly near a particularly resplendent
+blossom. Lily really noticed her. She spoke to her
+confidentially; she recognized her fully as another of
+her own sex, and presumably of similar opinions.
+
+"Ain't boys ugly, anyway?" inquired Lily of
+Amelia, and a wonderful change came over Amelia.
+Her sallow cheeks bloomed; her eyes showed blue
+glitters; her little skinny figure became instinct with
+nervous life. She smiled charmingly, with such
+eagerness that it smote with pathos and bewitched.
+
+"Oh yes, oh yes," she agreed, in a voice like a quick
+flute obbligato. "Boys are ugly."
+
+"Such clothes!" said Lily.
+
+"Yes, such clothes!" said Amelia.
+
+"Always spotted," said Lily.
+
+"Always covered all over with spots," said Amelia.
+
+"And their pockets always full of horrid things,"
+said Lily.
+
+"Yes," said Amelia.
+
+Amelia glanced openly at Johnny Trumbull; Lily
+with a sidewise effect.
+
+Johnny had heard every word. Suddenly he arose
+to action and knocked down Lee Westminster, and
+sat on him.
+
+"Lemme up!" said Lee.
+
+Johnny had no quarrel whatever with Lee. He
+grinned, but he sat still. Lee, the sat-upon, was a
+sharp little boy. "Showing off before the gals!" he
+said, in a thin whisper.
+
+"Hush up!" returned Johnny.
+
+"Will you give me a writing-pad -- I lost mine, and
+mother said I couldn't have another for a week if I
+did -- if I don't holler?" inquired Lee.
+
+"Yes. Hush up!"
+
+Lee lay still, and Johnny continued to sit upon his
+prostrate form. Both were out of sight of Madame's
+windows, behind a clump of the cedars which graced
+her lawn.
+
+"Always fighting," said Lily, with a fine crescendo
+of scorn. She lifted her chin high, and also her nose.
+
+"Always fighting," said Amelia, and also lifted her
+chin and nose. Amelia was a born mimic. She
+actually looked like Lily, and she spoke like her.
+
+Then Lily did a wonderful thing. She doubled her
+soft little arm into an inviting loop for Amelia's little
+claw of a hand.
+
+"Come along, Amelia Wheeler," said she. "We
+don't want to stay near horrid, fighting boys. We
+will go by ourselves."
+
+And they went. Madame had a headache that
+morning, and the Japanese gong did not ring for
+fifteen minutes longer. During that time Lily and
+Amelia sat together on a little rustic bench under a
+twinkling poplar, and they talked, and a sort of
+miniature sun-and-satellite relation was established
+between them, although neither was aware of it.
+Lily, being on the whole a very normal little girl, and
+not disposed to even a full estimate of herself as
+compared with others of her own sex, did not dream
+of Amelia's adoration, and Amelia, being rarely
+destitute of self-consciousness, did not understand the
+whole scope of her own sentiments. It was quite
+sufficient that she was seated close to this wonderful
+Lily, and agreeing with her to the verge of immo-
+lation.
+
+"Of course," said Lily, "girls are pretty, and boys
+are just as ugly as they can be."
+
+"Oh yes," said Amelia, fervently.
+
+"But," said Lily, thoughtfully, "it is queer how
+Johnny Trumbull always comes out ahead in a fight,
+and he is not so very large, either."
+
+"Yes," said Amelia, but she realized a pang of
+jealousy. "Girls could fight, I suppose," said she.
+
+"Oh yes, and get their clothes all torn and messy,"
+said Lily.
+
+"I shouldn't care," said Amelia. Then she added,
+with a little toss, "I almost know I could fight."
+The thought even floated through her wicked little
+mind that fighting might be a method of wearing out
+obnoxious and durable clothes.
+
+"You!" said Lily, and the scorn in her voice wilted
+Amelia.
+
+"Maybe I couldn't," said she.
+
+"Of course you couldn't, and if you could, what a
+sight you'd be. Of course it wouldn't hurt your
+clothes as much as some, because your mother dresses
+you in strong things, but you'd be sure to get black
+and blue, and what would be the use, anyway?
+You couldn't be a boy, if you did fight."
+
+"No. I know I couldn't."
+
+"Then what is the use? We are a good deal
+prettier than boys, and cleaner, and have nicer
+manners, and we must be satisfied."
+
+"You are prettier," said Amelia, with a look of
+worshipful admiration at Lily's sweet little face.
+
+"You are prettier," said Lily. Then she added,
+equivocally, "Even the very homeliest girl is prettier
+than a boy."
+
+Poor Amelia, it was a good deal for her to be called
+prettier than a very dusty boy in a fight. She fairly
+dimpled with delight, and again she smiled charm-
+ingly. Lily eyed her critically.
+
+"You aren't so very homely, after all, Amelia,"
+she said. "You needn't think you are."
+
+Amelia smiled again.
+
+"When you look like you do now you are real
+pretty," said Lily, not knowing or even suspecting
+the truth, that she was regarding in the face of this
+little ardent soul her own, as in a mirror.
+
+However, it was after that episode that Amelia
+Wheeler was called "Copy-Cat." The two little
+girls entered Madame's select school arm in arm,
+when the musical gong sounded, and behind them
+came Lee Westminster and Johnny Trumbull, sur-
+reptitiously dusting their garments, and ever after
+the fact of Amelia's adoration and imitation of Lily
+Jennings was evident to all. Even Madame became
+aware of it, and held conferences with two of the
+under teachers.
+
+"It is not at all healthy for one child to model
+herself so entirely upon the pattern of another," said
+Miss Parmalee.
+
+"Most certainly it is not," agreed Miss Acton, the
+music-teacher.
+
+"Why, that poor little Amelia Wheeler had the
+rudiments of a fairly good contralto. I had begun
+to wonder if the poor child might not be able at
+least to sing a little, and so make up for -- other
+things; and now she tries to sing high like Lily Jen-
+nings, and I simply cannot prevent it. She has
+heard Lily play, too, and has lost her own touch, and
+now it is neither one thing nor the other."
+
+"I might speak to her mother," said Madame,
+thoughtfully. Madame was American born, but she
+married a French gentleman, long since deceased,
+and his name sounded well on her circulars. She
+and her two under teachers were drinking tea in her
+library.
+
+Miss Parmalee, who was a true lover of her pupils,
+gasped at Madame's proposition. "Whatever you
+do, please do not tell that poor child's mother," said
+she.
+
+"I do not think it would be quite wise, if I may
+venture to express an opinion," said Miss Acton,
+who was a timid soul, and always inclined to shy at
+her own ideas.
+
+"But why?" asked Madame.
+
+"Her mother," said Miss Parmalee, "is a quite
+remarkable woman, with great strength of character,
+but she would utterly fail to grasp the situation."
+
+"I must confess," said Madame, sipping her tea,
+"that I fail to understand it. Why any child not an
+absolute idiot should so lose her own identity in an-
+other's absolutely bewilders me. I never heard of
+such a case."
+
+Miss Parmalee, who had a sense of humor, laughed
+a little. "It is bewildering," she admitted. "And
+now the other children see how it is, and call her
+'Copy-Cat' to her face, but she does not mind. I
+doubt if she understands, and neither does Lily, for
+that matter. Lily Jennings is full of mischief, but
+she moves in straight lines; she is not conceited or
+self-conscious, and she really likes Amelia, without
+knowing why."
+
+"I fear Lily will lead Amelia into mischief," said
+Madame, "and Amelia has always been such a good
+child."
+
+"Lily will never MEAN to lead Amelia into mis-
+chief," said loyal Miss Parmalee.
+
+"But she will," said Madame.
+
+"If Lily goes, I cannot answer for Amelia's not
+following," admitted Miss Parmalee.
+
+"I regret it all very much indeed," sighed Ma-
+dame, "but it does seem to me still that Amelia's
+mother --"
+
+"Amelia's mother would not even believe it, in
+the first place," said Miss Parmalee.
+
+"Well, there is something in that," admitted Ma-
+dame. "I myself could not even imagine such a
+situation. I would not know of it now, if you and
+Miss Acton had not told me."
+
+"There is not the slightest use in telling Amelia
+not to imitate Lily, because she does not know that
+she is imitating her," said Miss Parmalee. "If she
+were to be punished for it, she could never compre-
+hend the reason."
+
+"That is true," said Miss Acton. "I realize that
+when the poor child squeaks instead of singing. All
+I could think of this morning was a little mouse
+caught in a trap which she could not see. She does
+actually squeak! -- and some of her low notes, al-
+though, of course, she is only a child, and has never
+attempted much, promised to be very good."
+
+"She will have to squeak, for all I can see," said
+Miss Parmalee. "It looks to me like one of those
+situations that no human being can change for better
+or worse."
+
+"I suppose you are right," said Madame, "but
+it is most unfortunate, and Mrs. Wheeler is such a
+superior woman, and Amelia is her only child, and
+this is such a very subtle and regrettable affair.
+Well, we have to leave a great deal to Providence."
+
+"If," said Miss Parmalee, "she could only get
+angry when she is called 'Copy-Cat.'" Miss Parma-
+lee laughed, and so did Miss Acton. Then all the
+ladies had their cups refilled, and left Providence to
+look out for poor little Amelia Wheeler, in her mad
+pursuit of her ideal in the shape of another little
+girl possessed of the exterior graces which she had
+not.
+
+Meantime the little "Copy-Cat" had never been
+so happy. She began to improve in her looks also.
+Her grandmother Wheeler noticed it first, and spoke
+of it to Grandmother Stark. "That child may not
+be so plain, after all," said she. "I looked at her
+this morning when she started for school, and I
+thought for the first time that there was a little re-
+semblance to the Wheelers."
+
+Grandmother Stark sniffed, but she looked grati-
+fied. "I have been noticing it for some time," said
+she, "but as for looking like the Wheelers, I thought
+this morning for a minute that I actually saw my
+poor dear husband looking at me out of that blessed
+child's eyes."
+
+Grandmother Wheeler smiled her little, aggra-
+vating, curved, pink smile.
+
+But even Mrs. Diantha began to notice the change
+for the better in Amelia. She, however, attributed
+it to an increase of appetite and a system of deep
+breathing which she had herself taken up and en-
+joined Amelia to follow. Amelia was following Lily
+Jennings instead, but that her mother did not know.
+Still, she was gratified to see Amelia's little sallow
+cheeks taking on pretty curves and a soft bloom,
+and she was more inclined to listen when Grand-
+mother Wheeler ventured to approach the subject
+of Amelia's attire.
+
+"Amelia would not be so bad-looking if she were
+better dressed, Diantha," said she.
+
+Diantha lifted her chin, but she paid heed. "Why,
+does not Amelia dress perfectly well, mother?" she
+inquired.
+
+"She dresses well enough, but she needs more
+ribbons and ruffles."
+
+"I do not approve of so many ribbons and ruffles,"
+said Mrs. Diantha. "Amelia has perfectly neat,
+fresh black or brown ribbons for her hair, and ruffles
+are not sanitary."
+
+"Ruffles are pretty," said Grandmother Wheeler,
+"and blue and pink are pretty colors. Now, that
+Jennings girl looks like a little picture."
+
+But that last speech of Grandmother Wheeler's
+undid all the previous good. Mrs. Diantha had an
+unacknowledged -- even to herself -- disapproval of
+Mrs. Jennings which dated far back in the past, for
+a reason which was quite unworthy of her and of her
+strong mind. When she and Lily's mother had been
+girls, she had seen Mrs. Jennings look like a picture,
+and had been perfectly well aware that she herself
+fell far short of an artist's ideal. Perhaps if Mrs.
+Stark had believed in ruffles and ribbons, her daugh-
+ter might have had a different mind when Grand-
+mother Wheeler had finished her little speech.
+
+As it was, Mrs. Diantha surveyed her small, pretty
+mother-in-law with dignified serenity, which savored
+only delicately of a snub. "I do not myself approve
+of the way in which Mrs. Jennings dresses her daugh-
+ter," said she, "and I do not consider that the child
+presents to a practical observer as good an appear-
+ance as my Amelia."
+
+Grandmother Wheeler had a temper. It was a
+childish temper and soon over -- still, a temper.
+"Lord," said she, "if you mean to say that you
+think your poor little snipe of a daughter, dressed
+like a little maid-of-all-work, can compare with that
+lovely little Lily Jennings, who is dressed like a
+doll! --"
+
+"I do not wish that my daughter should be dressed
+like a doll," said Mrs. Diantha, coolly.
+
+"Well, she certainly isn't," said Grandmother
+Wheeler. "Nobody would ever take her for a doll
+as far as looks or dress are concerned. She may be
+GOOD enough. I don't deny that Amelia is a good
+little girl, but her looks could be improved on."
+
+"Looks matter very little," said Mrs. Diantha.
+
+"They matter very much," said Grandmother
+Wheeler, pugnaciously, her blue eyes taking on a
+peculiar opaque glint, as always when she lost her
+temper, "very much indeed. But looks can't be
+helped. If poor little Amelia wasn't born with pretty
+looks, she wasn't. But she wasn't born with such
+ugly clothes. She might be better dressed."
+
+"I dress my daughter as I consider best," said
+Mrs. Diantha. Then she left the room.
+
+Grandmother Wheeler sat for a few minutes, her
+blue eyes opaque, her little pink lips a straight line;
+then suddenly her eyes lit, and she smiled. "Poor
+Diantha," said she, "I remember how Henry used
+to like Lily Jennings's mother before he married
+Diantha. Sour grapes hang high." But Grand-
+mother Wheeler's beautiful old face was quite soft
+and gentle. From her heart she pitied the reacher
+after those high-hanging sour grapes, for Mrs. Dian-
+tha had been very good to her.
+
+Then Grandmother Wheeler, who had a mild
+persistency not evident to a casual observer, began
+to make plans and lay plots. She was resolved,
+Diantha or not, that her granddaughter, her son's
+child, should have some fine feathers. The little
+conference had taken place in her own room, a large,
+sunny one, with a little storeroom opening from it.
+Presently Grandmother Wheeler rose, entered the
+storeroom, and began rummaging in some old trunks.
+Then followed days of secret work. Grandmother
+Wheeler had been noted as a fine needlewoman,
+and her hand had not yet lost its cunning. She had
+one of Amelia's ugly little ginghams, purloined from
+a closet, for size, and she worked two or three dainty
+wonders. She took Grandmother Stark into her
+confidence. Sometimes the two ladies, by reason
+of their age, found it possible to combine with good
+results.
+
+"Your daughter Diantha is one woman in a thou-
+sand," said Grandmother Wheeler, diplomatically,
+one day, "but she never did care much for clothes."
+
+"Diantha," returned Grandmother Stark, with a
+suspicious glance, "always realized that clothes were
+not the things that mattered."
+
+"And, of course, she is right," said Grandmother
+Wheeler, piously. "Your Diantha is one woman in
+a thousand. If she cared as much for fine clothes as
+some women, I don't know where we should all be.
+It would spoil poor little Amelia."
+
+"Yes, it would," assented Grandmother Stark.
+"Nothing spoils a little girl more than always to be
+thinking about her clothes."
+
+"Yes, I was looking at Amelia the other day, and
+thinking how much more sensible she appeared in
+her plain gingham than Lily Jennings in all her
+ruffles and ribbons. Even if people were all notic-
+ing Lily, and praising her, thinks I to myself, 'How
+little difference such things really make. Even if
+our dear Amelia does stand to one side, and nobody
+notices her, what real matter is it?'" Grandmother
+Wheeler was inwardly chuckling as she spoke.
+
+Grandmother Stark was at once alert. "Do you
+mean to say that Amelia is really not taken so much
+notice of because she dresses plainly?" said she.
+
+"You don't mean that you don't know it, as ob-
+servant as you are?" replied Grandmother Wheeler.
+
+"Diantha ought not to let it go as far as that," said
+Grandmother Stark. Grandmother Wheeler looked
+at her queerly. "Why do you look at me like that?"
+
+"Well, I did something I feared I ought not to
+have done. And I didn't know what to do, but your
+speaking so makes me wonder --"
+
+"Wonder what?"
+
+Then Grandmother Wheeler went to her little
+storeroom and emerged bearing a box. She dis-
+played the contents -- three charming little white
+frocks fluffy with lace and embroidery.
+
+"Did you make them?"
+
+"Yes, I did. I couldn't help it. I thought if the
+dear child never wore them, it would be some com-
+fort to know they were in the house."
+
+"That one needs a broad blue sash," said Grand-
+mother Stark.
+
+Grandmother Wheeler laughed. She took her impe-
+cuniosity easily. "I had to use what I had," said she.
+
+"I will get a blue sash for that one," said Grand-
+mother Stark, "and a pink sash for that, and a flow-
+ered one for that."
+
+"Of course they will make all the difference,"
+said Grandmother Wheeler. "Those beautiful sashes
+will really make the dresses."
+
+"I will get them," said Grandmother Stark, with
+decision. "I will go right down to Mann Brothers'
+store now and get them."
+
+"Then I will make the bows, and sew them on,"
+replied Grandmother Wheeler, happily.
+
+It thus happened that little Amelia Wheeler was
+possessed of three beautiful dresses, although she
+did not know it.
+
+For a long time neither of the two conspiring
+grandmothers dared divulge the secret. Mrs. Dian-
+tha was a very determined woman, and even her
+own mother stood somewhat in awe of her. There-
+fore, little Amelia went to school during the spring
+term soberly clad as ever, and even on the festive
+last day wore nothing better than a new blue ging-
+ham, made too long, to allow for shrinkage, and new
+blue hair-ribbons. The two grandmothers almost
+wept in secret conclave over the lovely frocks which
+were not worn.
+
+"I respect Diantha," said Grandmother Wheeler.
+"You know that. She is one woman in a thousand,
+but I do hate to have that poor child go to school
+to-day with so many to look at her, and she dressed
+so unlike all the other little girls."
+
+"Diantha has got so much sense, it makes her
+blind and deaf," declared Grandmother Stark. "I
+call it a shame, if she is my daughter."
+
+"Then you don't venture --"
+
+Grandmother Stark reddened. She did not like
+to own to awe of her daughter. "I VENTURE, if that is
+all," said she, tartly. "You don't suppose I am
+afraid of Diantha? -- but she would not let Amelia
+wear one of the dresses, anyway, and I don't want
+the child made any unhappier than she is."
+
+"Well, I will admit," replied Grandmother Wheel-
+er, "if poor Amelia knew she had these beautiful
+dresses and could not wear them she might feel
+worse about wearing that homely gingham."
+
+"Gingham!" fairly snorted Grandmother Stark.
+"I cannot see why Diantha thinks so much of ging-
+ham. It shrinks, anyway."
+
+Poor little Amelia did undoubtedly suffer on that
+last day, when she sat among the others gaily clad,
+and looked down at her own common little skirts.
+She was very glad, however, that she had not been
+chosen to do any of the special things which would
+have necessitated her appearance upon the little
+flower-decorated platform. She did not know of the
+conversation between Madame and her two as-
+sistants.
+
+"I would have Amelia recite a little verse or two,"
+said Madame, "but how can I?" Madame adored
+dress, and had a lovely new one of sheer dull-blue
+stuff, with touches of silver, for the last day.
+
+"Yes," agreed Miss Parmalee, "that poor child is
+sensitive, and for her to stand on the platform in
+one of those plain ginghams would be too cruel."
+
+"Then, too," said Miss Acton, "she would re-
+cite her verses exactly like Lily Jennings. She can
+make her voice exactly like Lily's now. Then every-
+body would laugh, and Amelia would not know why.
+She would think they were laughing at her dress, and
+that would be dreadful."
+
+If Amelia's mother could have heard that conver-
+sation everything would have been different, al-
+though it is puzzling to decide in what way.
+
+It was the last of the summer vacation in
+early September, just before school began, that a
+climax came to Amelia's idolatry and imitation of
+Lily. The Jenningses had not gone away that sum-
+mer, so the two little girls had been thrown together
+a good deal. Mrs. Diantha never went away during
+a summer. She considered it her duty to remain at
+home, and she was quite pitiless to herself when it
+came to a matter of duty.
+
+However, as a result she was quite ill during the
+last of August and the first of September. The sea-
+son had been unusually hot, and Mrs. Diantha had
+not spared herself from her duty on account of the
+heat. She would have scorned herself if she had done
+so. But she could not, strong-minded as she was,
+avert something like a heat prostration after a long
+walk under a burning sun, nor weeks of confinement
+and idleness in her room afterward.
+
+When September came, and a night or two of com-
+parative coolness, she felt stronger; still she was
+compelled by most unusual weakness to refrain from
+her energetic trot in her duty-path; and then it was
+that something happened.
+
+One afternoon Lily fluttered over to Amelia's,
+and Amelia, ever on the watch, spied her.
+
+"May I go out and see Lily?" she asked Grand-
+mother Stark.
+
+"Yes, but don't talk under the windows; your
+mother is asleep."
+
+Amelia ran out.
+
+"I declare," said Grandmother Stark to Grand-
+mother Wheeler, "I was half a mind to tell that
+child to wait a minute and slip on one of those
+pretty dresses. I hate to have her go on the street
+in that old gingham, with that Jennings girl dressed
+up like a wax doll."
+
+"I know it."
+
+"And now poor Diantha is so weak -- and asleep
+ -- it would not have annoyed her."
+
+"I know it."
+
+Grandmother Stark looked at Grandmother
+Wheeler. Of the two she possessed a greater share
+of original sin compared with the size of her soul.
+Moreover, she felt herself at liberty to circumvent
+her own daughter. Whispering, she unfolded a dar-
+ing scheme to the other grandmother, who stared
+at her aghast a second out of her lovely blue eyes,
+then laughed softly.
+
+"Very well," said she, "if you dare."
+
+"I rather think I dare!" said Grandmother Stark.
+"Isn't Diantha Wheeler my own daughter?" Grand-
+mother Stark had grown much bolder since Mrs.
+Diantha had been ill.
+
+Meantime Lily and Amelia walked down the
+street until they came to a certain vacant lot inter-
+sected by a foot-path between tall, feathery grasses
+and goldenrod and asters and milkweed. They en-
+tered the foot-path, and swarms of little butterflies
+rose around them, and once in a while a protesting
+bumblebee.
+
+"I am afraid we will be stung by the bees," said
+Amelia.
+
+"Bumblebees never sting," said Lily; and Amelia
+believed her.
+
+When the foot-path ended, there was the river-
+bank. The two little girls sat down under a clump
+of brook willows and talked, while the river, full of
+green and blue and golden lights, slipped past them
+and never stopped.
+
+Then Lily proceeded to unfold a plan, which was
+not philosophical, but naughtily ingenious. By this
+time Lily knew very well that Amelia admired her,
+and imitated her as successfully as possible, consid-
+ering the drawback of dress and looks.
+
+When she had finished Amelia was quite pale. "I
+am afraid, I am afraid, Lily," said she.
+
+"What of?"
+
+"My mother will find out; besides, I am afraid
+it isn't right."
+
+"Who ever told you it was wrong?"
+
+"Nobody ever did," admitted Amelia.
+
+"Well, then you haven't any reason to think it is,"
+said Lily, triumphantly. "And how is your mother
+ever going to find it out?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"Isn't she ill in her room? And does she ever
+come to kiss you good night, the way my mother
+does, when she is well?"
+
+"No," admitted Amelia.
+
+"And neither of your grandmothers?"
+
+"Grandmother Stark would think it was silly,
+like mother, and Grandmother Wheeler can't go up
+and down stairs very well."
+
+"I can't see but you are perfectly safe. I am the
+only one that runs any risk at all. I run a great deal
+of risk, but I am willing to take it," said Lily with
+a virtuous air. Lily had a small but rather involved
+scheme simply for her own ends, which did not seem
+to call for much virtue, but rather the contrary.
+
+Lily had overheard Arnold Carruth and Johnny
+Trumbull and Lee Westminster and another boy,
+Jim Patterson, planning a most delightful affair,
+which even in the cases of the boys was fraught with
+danger, secrecy, and doubtful rectitude. Not one
+of the four boys had had a vacation from the village
+that summer, and their young minds had become
+charged, as it were, with the seeds of revolution and
+rebellion. Jim Patterson, the son of the rector, and
+of them all the most venturesome, had planned to
+take -- he called it "take"; he meant to pay for it,
+anyway, he said, as soon as he could shake enough
+money out of his nickel savings-bank -- one of his
+father's Plymouth Rock chickens and have a chicken-
+roast in the woods back of Dr. Trumbull's. He
+had planned for Johnny to take some ears of corn
+suitable for roasting from his father's garden; for
+Lee to take some cookies out of a stone jar in his
+mother's pantry; and for Arnold to take some pota-
+toes. Then they four would steal forth under cover
+of night, build a camp-fire, roast their spoils, and
+feast.
+
+Lily had resolved to be of the party. She resorted
+to no open methods; the stones of the fighting suf-
+fragettes were not for her, little honey-sweet, curled,
+and ruffled darling; rather the time-worn, if not
+time-sanctified, weapons of her sex, little instruments
+of wiles, and tiny dodges, and tiny subterfuges, which
+would serve her best.
+
+"You know," she said to Amelia, "you don't look
+like me. Of course you know that, and that can't
+be helped; but you do walk like me, and talk like
+me, you know that, because they call you 'Copy-
+Cat.'"
+
+"Yes, I know," said poor Amelia.
+
+"I don't mind if they do call you 'Copy-Cat,'"
+said Lily, magnanimously. "I don't mind a bit.
+But, you see, my mother always comes up-stairs to
+kiss me good night after I have gone to bed, and to-
+morrow night she has a dinner-party, and she will
+surely be a little late, and I can't manage unless you
+help me. I will get one of my white dresses for you,
+and all you have to do is to climb out of your window
+into that cedar-tree -- you know you can climb down
+that, because you are so afraid of burglars climbing
+up -- and you can slip on my dress; you had better
+throw it out of the window and not try to climb in
+it, because my dresses tear awful easy, and we might
+get caught that way. Then you just sneak down to
+our house, and I shall be outdoors; and when you
+go up-stairs, if the doors should be open, and any-
+body should call, you can answer just like me; and I
+have found that light curly wig Aunt Laura wore
+when she had her head shaved after she had a fever,
+and you just put that on and go to bed, and mother
+will never know when she kisses you good night.
+Then after the roast I will go to your house, and
+climb up that tree, and go to bed in your room. And
+I will have one of your gingham dresses to wear, and
+very early in the morning I will get up, and you get
+up, and we both of us can get down the back stairs
+without being seen, and run home."
+
+Amelia was almost weeping. It was her worshiped
+Lily's plan, but she was horribly scared. "I don't
+know," she faltered.
+
+"Don't know! You've got to! You don't love
+me one single bit or you wouldn't stop to think about
+whether you didn't know." It was the world-old
+argument which floors love. Amelia succumbed.
+
+The next evening a frightened little girl clad in
+one of Lily Jennings's white embroidered frocks was
+racing to the Jenningses' house, and another little
+girl, not at all frightened, but enjoying the stimulus
+of mischief and unwontedness, was racing to the wood
+behind Dr. Trumbull's house, and that little girl was
+clad in one of Amelia Wheeler's ginghams. But the
+plan went all awry.
+
+Lily waited, snuggled up behind an alder-bush,
+and the boys came, one by one, and she heard this
+whispered, although there was no necessity for whis-
+pering, "Jim Patterson, where's that hen?"
+
+"Couldn't get her. Grabbed her, and all her tail-
+feathers came out in a bunch right in my hand, and
+she squawked so, father heard. He was in his study
+writing his sermon, and he came out, and if I hadn't
+hid behind the chicken-coop and then run I couldn't
+have got here. But I can't see as you've got any
+corn, Johnny Trumbull."
+
+"Couldn't. Every single ear was cooked for din-
+ner."
+
+"I couldn't bring any cookies, either," said Lee
+Westminster; "there weren't any cookies in the jar."
+
+"And I couldn't bring the potatoes, because the
+outside cellar door was locked," said Arnold Car-
+ruth. "I had to go down the back stairs and out
+the south door, and the inside cellar door opens out
+of our dining-room, and I daren't go in there."
+
+"Then we might as well go home," said Johnny
+Trumbull. "If I had been you, Jim Patterson, I
+would have brought that old hen if her tail-feathers
+had come out. Seems to me you scare awful easy."
+
+"Guess if you had heard her squawk!" said Jim,
+resentfully. "If you want to try to lick me, come on,
+Johnny Trumbull. Guess you don't darse call me
+scared again."
+
+Johnny eyed him standing there in the gloom.
+Jim was not large, but very wiry, and the ground was
+not suited for combat. Johnny, although a victor,
+would probably go home considerably the worse in
+appearance; and he could anticipate the conse-
+quences were his father to encounter him.
+
+"Shucks!" said Johnny Trumbull, of the fine old
+Trumbull family and Madame's exclusive school.
+"Shucks! who wants your old hen? We had chicken
+for dinner, anyway."
+
+"So did we," said Arnold Carruth.
+
+"We did, and corn," said Lee.
+
+"We did," said Jim.
+
+Lily stepped forth from the alder-bush. "If,"
+said she, "I were a boy, and had started to have a
+chicken-roast, I would have HAD a chicken-roast."
+
+But every boy, even the valiant Johnny Trum-
+bull, was gone in a mad scutter. This sudden appari-
+tion of a girl was too much for their nerves. They
+never even knew who the girl was, although little
+Arnold Carruth said she had looked to him like
+"Copy-Cat," but the others scouted the idea.
+
+Lily Jennings made the best of her way out of the
+wood across lots to the road. She was not in a par-
+ticularly enviable case. Amelia Wheeler was pre-
+sumably in her bed, and she saw nothing for it but
+to take the difficult way to Amelia's.
+
+Lily tore a great rent in the gingham going up the
+cedar-tree, but that was nothing to what followed.
+She entered through Amelia's window, her prim
+little room, to find herself confronted by Amelia's
+mother in a wrapper, and her two grandmothers.
+Grandmother Stark had over her arm a beautiful
+white embroidered dress. The two old ladies had
+entered the room in order to lay the white dress on
+a chair and take away Amelia's gingham, and there
+was no Amelia. Mrs. Diantha had heard the com-
+motion, and had risen, thrown on her wrapper, and
+come. Her mother had turned upon her.
+
+"It is all your fault, Diantha," she had declared.
+
+"My fault?" echoed Mrs. Diantha, bewildered.
+"Where is Amelia?"
+
+"We don't know," said Grandmother Stark, "but
+you have probably driven her away from home by
+your cruelty."
+
+"Cruelty?"
+
+"Yes, cruelty. What right had you to make that
+poor child look like a fright, so people laughed at
+her? We have made her some dresses that look
+decent, and had come here to leave them, and to
+take away those old gingham things that look as if
+she lived in the almshouse, and leave these, so she
+would either have to wear them or go without, when
+we found she had gone."
+
+It was at that crucial moment that Lily entered
+by way of the window.
+
+"Here she is now," shrieked Grandmother Stark.
+"Amelia, where --" Then she stopped short.
+
+Everybody stared at Lily's beautiful face suddenly
+gone white. For once Lily was frightened. She lost
+all self-control. She began to sob. She could scarce-
+ly tell the absurd story for sobs, but she told, every
+word.
+
+Then, with a sudden boldness, she too turned on
+Mrs. Diantha. "They call poor Amelia 'Copy-
+Cat,'" said she, "and I don't believe she would ever
+have tried so hard to look like me only my mother
+dresses me so I look nice, and you send Amelia
+to school looking awfully." Then Lily sobbed
+again.
+
+"My Amelia is at your house, as I understand?"
+said Mrs. Diantha, in an awful voice.
+
+"Ye-es, ma-am."
+
+"Let me go," said Mrs. Diantha, violently, to
+Grandmother Stark, who tried to restrain her. Mrs.
+Diantha dressed herself and marched down the
+street, dragging Lily after her. The little girl had
+to trot to keep up with the tall woman's strides, and
+all the way she wept.
+
+It was to Lily's mother's everlasting discredit, in
+Mrs. Diantha's opinion, but to Lily's wonderful re-
+lief, that when she heard the story, standing in the
+hall in her lovely dinner dress, with the strains of
+music floating from the drawing-room, and cigar
+smoke floating from the dining-room, she laughed.
+When Lily said, "And there wasn't even any chicken-
+roast, mother," she nearly had hysterics.
+
+"If you think this is a laughing matter, Mrs. Jen-
+nings, I do not," said Mrs. Diantha, and again her
+dislike and sorrow at the sight of that sweet, mirth-
+ful face was over her. It was a face to be loved, and
+hers was not.
+
+"Why, I went up-stairs and kissed the child good
+night, and never suspected," laughed Lily's mother.
+
+"I got Aunt Laura's curly, light wig for her," ex-
+plained Lily, and Mrs. Jennings laughed again.
+
+It was not long before Amelia, in her gingham,
+went home, led by her mother -- her mother, who
+was trembling with weakness now. Mrs. Diantha
+did not scold. She did not speak, but Amelia felt
+with wonder her little hand held very tenderly by
+her mother's long fingers.
+
+When at last she was undressed and in bed, Mrs.
+Diantha, looking very pale, kissed her, and so did
+both grandmothers.
+
+Amelia, being very young and very tired, went to
+sleep. She did not know that that night was to mark
+a sharp turn in her whole life. Thereafter she went
+to school "dressed like the best," and her mother
+petted her as nobody had ever known her mother
+could pet.
+
+It was not so very long afterward that Amelia,
+out of her own improvement in appearance, devel-
+oped a little stamp of individuality.
+
+One day Lily wore a white frock with blue rib-
+bons, and Amelia wore one with coral pink. It was
+a particular day in school; there was company, and
+tea was served.
+
+"I told you I was going to wear blue ribbons,"
+Lily whispered to Amelia. Amelia smiled lovingly
+back at her.
+
+"Yes, I know, but I thought I would wear pink."
+
+
+
+
+THE COCK OF THE WALK
+
+
+
+
+THE COCK OF THE WALK
+
+DOWN the road, kicking up the dust until he
+marched, soldier-wise, in a cloud of it, that
+rose and grimed his moist face and added to the
+heavy, brown powder upon the wayside weeds and
+flowers, whistling a queer, tuneless thing, which yet
+contained definite sequences -- the whistle of a bird
+rather than a boy -- approached Johnny Trumbull,
+aged ten, small of his age, but accounted by his
+mates mighty.
+
+Johnny came of the best and oldest family in the
+village, but it was in some respects an undesirable
+family for a boy. In it survived, as fossils survive
+in ancient nooks and crannies of the earth, old traits
+of race, unchanged by time and environment. Liv-
+ing in a house lighted by electricity, the mental con-
+ception of it was to the Trumbulls as the conception
+of candles; with telephones at hand, they uncon-
+sciously still conceived of messages delivered with
+the old saying, "Ride, ride," etc., and relays of
+post-horses. They locked their doors, but still had
+latch-strings in mind. Johnny's father was a phy-
+sician, adopting modern methods of surgery and pre-
+scription, yet his mind harked back to cupping and
+calomel, and now and then he swerved aside from
+his path across the field of the present into the future
+and plunged headlong, as if for fresh air, into the
+traditional past, and often with brilliant results.
+
+Johnny's mother was a college graduate. She was
+the president of the woman's club. She read papers
+savoring of such feminine leaps ahead that they
+were like gymnastics, but she walked homeward
+with the gait of her great-grandmother, and inwardly
+regarded her husband as her lord and master. She
+minced genteelly, lifting her quite fashionable skirts
+high above very slender ankles, which were heredi-
+tary. Not a woman of her race had ever gone home
+on thick ankles, and they had all gone home. They
+had all been at home, even if abroad -- at home in
+the truest sense. At the club, reading her inflam-
+matory paper, Cora Trumbull's real self remained
+at home intent upon her mending, her dusting, her
+house economics. It was something remarkably
+like her astral body which presided at the club.
+
+As for her unmarried sister Janet, who was older
+and had graduated from a young ladies' seminary
+instead of a college, whose early fancy had been
+guided into the lady-like ways of antimacassars and
+pincushions and wax flowers under glass shades,
+she was a straighter proposition. No astral pre-
+tensions had Janet. She stayed, body and soul to-
+gether, in the old ways, and did not even project
+her shadow out of them. There is seldom room
+enough for one's shadow in one's earliest way of
+life, but there was plenty for Janet's. There had
+been a Janet unmarried in every Trumbull family
+for generations. That in some subtle fashion ac-
+counted for her remaining single. There had also
+been an unmarried Jonathan Trumbull, and that
+accounted for Johnny's old bachelor uncle Jonathan.
+Jonathan was a retired clergyman. He had retired
+before he had preached long, because of doctrinal
+doubts, which were hereditary. He had a little,
+dark study in Johnny's father's house, which was
+the old Trumbull homestead, and he passed much
+of his time there, debating within himself that mat-
+ter of doctrines.
+
+Presently Johnny, assiduously kicking up dust,
+met his uncle Jonathan, who passed without the
+slightest notice. Johnny did not mind at all. He
+was used to it. Presently his own father appeared,
+driving along in his buggy the bay mare at a steady
+jog, with the next professional call quite clearly
+upon her equine mind. And Johnny's father did
+not see him. Johnny did not mind that, either.
+He expected nothing different.
+
+Then Johnny saw his mother approaching. She
+was coming from the club meeting. She held up her
+silk skirts high, as usual, and carried a nice little
+parcel of papers tied with ribbon. She also did not
+notice Johnny, who, however, out of sweet respect
+for his mother's nice silk dress, stopped kicking up
+dust. Mrs. Trumbull on the village street was really
+at home preparing a shortcake for supper.
+
+Johnny eyed his mother's faded but rather beau-
+tiful face under the rose-trimmed bonnet with ad-
+miration and entire absence of resentment. Then he
+walked on and kicked up the dust again. He loved
+to kick up the dust in summer, the fallen leaves in
+autumn, and the snow in winter. Johnny was not
+a typical Trumbull. None of them had ever cared
+for simple amusements like that. Looking back for
+generations on his father's and mother's side (both
+had been Trumbulls, but very distantly related),
+none could be discovered who in the least resembled
+Johnny. No dim blue eye of retrospection and re-
+flection had Johnny; no tendency to tall slender-
+ness which would later bow beneath the greater
+weight of the soul. Johnny was small, but wiry of
+build, and looked able to bear any amount of men-
+tal development without a lasting bend of his physi-
+cal shoulders. Johnny had, at the early age of ten,
+whopped nearly every boy in school, but that was a
+secret of honor. It was well known in the school
+that, once the Trumbulls heard of it, Johnny could
+never whop again. "You fellows know," Johnny
+had declared once, standing over his prostrate and
+whimpering foe, "that I don't mind getting whopped
+at home, but they might send me away to another
+school, and then I could never whop any of you
+fellows."
+
+Johnny Trumbull kicking up the dust, himself
+dust-covered, his shoes, his little queerly fitting dun
+suit, his cropped head, all thickly powdered, loved
+it. He sniffed in that dust like a grateful incense.
+He did not stop dust-kicking when he saw his aunt
+Janet coming, for, as he considered, her old black
+gown was not worth the sacrifice. It was true that
+she might see him. She sometimes did, if she were
+not reading a book as she walked. It had always
+been a habit with the Janet Trumbulls to read im-
+proving books when they walked abroad. To-day
+Johnny saw, with a quick glance of those sharp,
+black eyes, so unlike the Trumbulls', that his aunt
+Janet was reading. He therefore expected her to
+pass him without recognition, and marched on kick-
+ing up the dust. But suddenly, as he grew nearer
+the spry little figure, he was aware of a pair of gray
+eyes, before which waved protectingly a hand clad
+in a black silk glove with dangling finger-tips, be-
+cause it was too long, and it dawned swiftly upon
+him that Aunt Janet was trying to shield her face
+from the moving column of brown motes. He
+stopped kicking, but it was too late. Aunt Janet
+had him by the collar and was vigorously shaking
+him with nervous strength.
+
+"You are a very naughty little boy," declared
+Aunt Janet. "You should know better than to walk
+along the street raising so much dust. No well-
+brought-up child ever does such things. Who are
+your parents, little boy?"
+
+Johnny perceived that Aunt Janet did not recog-
+nize him, which was easily explained. She wore
+her reading-spectacles and not her far-seeing ones;
+besides, her reading spectacles were obscured by
+dust and her nephew's face was nearly obliterated.
+Also as she shook him his face was not much in evi-
+dence. Johnny disliked, naturally, to tell his aunt
+Janet that her own sister and brother-in-law were
+the parents of such a wicked little boy. He there-
+fore kept quiet and submitted to the shaking, mak-
+ing himself as limp as a rag. This, however, exas-
+perated Aunt Janet, who found herself encumbered
+by a dead weight of a little boy to be shaken, and
+suddenly Johnny Trumbull, the fighting champion
+of the town, the cock of the walk of the school,
+found himself being ignominiously spanked. That
+was too much. Johnny's fighting blood was up.
+He lost all consideration for circumstances, he for-
+got that Aunt Janet was not a boy, that she was quite
+near being an old lady. She had overstepped the
+bounds of privilege of age and sex, and an alarming
+state of equality ensued. Quickly the tables were
+turned. The boy became far from limp. He stiff-
+ened, then bounded and rebounded like wire. He
+butted, he parried, he observed all his famous tac-
+tics of battle, and poor Aunt Janet sat down in the
+dust, black dress, bonnet, glasses (but the glasses
+were off and lost), little improving book, black silk
+gloves, and all; and Johnny, hopeless, awful, irrev-
+erent, sat upon his Aunt Janet's plunging knees,
+which seemed the most lively part of her. He kept
+his face twisted away from her, but it was not from
+cowardice. Johnny was afraid lest Aunt Janet
+should be too much overcome by the discovery of
+his identity. He felt that it was his duty to spare
+her that. So he sat still, triumphant but inwardly
+aghast.
+
+It was fast dawning upon him that his aunt was
+not a little boy. He was not afraid of any punish-
+ment which might be meted out to him, but he was
+simply horrified. He himself had violated all the
+honorable conditions of warfare. He felt a little
+dizzy and ill, and he felt worse when he ventured
+a hurried glance at Aunt Janet's face. She was very
+pale through the dust, and her eyes were closed.
+Johnny thought then that he had killed her.
+
+He got up -- the nervous knees were no longer
+plunging; then he heard a voice, a little-girl voice,
+always shrill, but now high pitched to a squeak with
+terror. It was the voice of Lily Jennings. She
+stood near and yet aloof, a lovely little flower of a
+girl, all white-scalloped frills and ribbons, with a
+big white-frilled hat shading a pale little face and.
+covering the top of a head decorated with wonder-
+ful yellow curls. She stood behind a big baby-car-
+riage with a pink-lined muslin canopy and con-
+taining a nest of pink and white, but an empty nest.
+Lily's little brother's carriage had a spring broken,
+and she had been to borrow her aunt's baby-carriage,
+so that nurse could wheel little brother up and down
+the veranda. Nurse had a headache, and the maids
+were busy, and Lily, who was a kind little soul and,
+moreover, imaginative, and who liked the idea of
+pushing an empty baby-carriage, had volunteered
+to go for it. All the way she had been dreaming of
+what was not in the carriage. She had come directly
+out of a dream of doll twins when she chanced upon
+the tragedy in the road.
+
+"What have you been doing now, Johnny Trum-
+bull?" said she. She was tremulous, white with
+horror, but she stood her ground. It was curious,
+but Johnny Trumbull, with all his bravery, was
+always cowed before Lily. Once she had turned and
+stared at him when he had emerged triumphant
+but with bleeding nose from a fight; then she had
+sniffed delicately and gone her way. It had only
+taken a second, but in that second the victor had
+met moral defeat.
+
+He looked now at her pale, really scared face, and
+his own was as pale. He stood and kicked the dust
+until the swirling column of it reached his head.
+
+"That's right," said Lily; "stand and kick up
+dust all over me. WHAT have you been doing?"
+
+Johnny was trembling so he could hardly stand.
+He stopped kicking dust.
+
+"Have you killed your aunt?" demanded Lily.
+It was monstrous, but she had a very dramatic im-
+agination, and there was a faint hint of enjoyment
+in her tragic voice.
+
+"Guess she's just choked by dust," volunteered
+Johnny, hoarsely. He kicked the dust again.
+
+"That's right," said Lily. "If she's choked to
+death by dust, stand there and choke her some more.
+You are a murderer, Johnny Trumbull, and my
+mamma will never allow me to speak to you again,
+and Madame will not allow you to come to school.
+AND -- I see your papa driving up the street, and there
+is the chief policeman's buggy just behind." Lily
+acquiesced entirely in the extraordinary coincidence
+of the father and the chief of police appearing upon
+the scene. The unlikely seemed to her the likely.
+"NOW," said she, cheerfully, "you will be put in
+state prison and locked up, and then you will be put
+to death by a very strong telephone."
+
+Johnny's father was leaning out of his buggy, look-
+ing back at the chief of police in his, and the mare
+was jogging very slowly in a perfect reek of dust.
+Lily, who was, in spite of her terrific imagination,
+human and a girl, rose suddenly to heights of pity
+and succor. "They shall never take you, Johnny
+Trumbull," said she. "I will save you."
+
+Johnny by this time was utterly forgetful of his
+high status as champion (behind her back) of Ma-
+dame's very select school for select children of a
+somewhat select village. He was forgetful of the
+fact that a champion never cries. He cried; he
+blubbered; tears rolled over his dusty cheeks, mak-
+ing furrows like plowshares of grief. He feared lest
+he might have killed his aunt Janet. Women, and
+not very young women, might presumably be un-
+able to survive such rough usage as very tough
+and at the same time very limber little boys, and
+he loved his poor aunt Janet. He grieved because
+of his aunt, his parents, his uncle, and rather more
+particularly because of himself. He was quite sure
+that the policeman was coming for him. Logic had
+no place in his frenzied conclusions. He did not
+consider how the tragedy had taken place entirely
+out of sight of a house, that Lily Jennings was the
+only person who had any knowledge of it. He looked
+at the masterful, fair-haired little girl like a baby.
+"How?" sniffed he.
+
+For answer, Lily pointed to the empty baby-car-
+riage. "Get right in," she ordered.
+
+Even in this dire extremity Johnny hesitated.
+"Can't."
+
+"Yes, you can. It is extra large. Aunt Laura's
+baby was a twin when he first came; now he's just
+an ordinary baby, but his carriage is big enough for
+two. There's plenty of room. Besides, you're a
+very small boy, very small of your age, even if you
+do knock all the other boys down and have mur-
+dered your aunt. Get in. In a minute they will
+see you."
+
+There was in reality no time to lose. Johnny
+did get in. In spite of the provisions for twins,
+there was none too much room.
+
+Lily covered him up with the fluffy pink-and-lace
+things, and scowled. "You hump up awfully,"
+she muttered. Then she reached beneath him and
+snatched out the pillow on which he lay, the baby's
+little bed. She gave it a swift toss over the fringe
+of wayside bushes into a field. "Aunt Laura's nice
+embroidered pillow," said she. "Make yourself just
+as flat as you can, Johnny Trumbull."
+
+Johnny obeyed, but he was obliged to double him-
+self up like a jack-knife. However, there was no
+sign of him visible when the two buggies drew up.
+There stood a pale and frightened little girl, with
+a baby-carriage canopied with rose and lace and
+heaped up with rosy and lacy coverlets, presumably
+sheltering a sleeping infant. Lily was a very keen
+little girl. She had sense enough not to run. The
+two men, at the sight of Aunt Janet prostrate in the
+road, leaped out of their buggies. The doctor's
+horse stood still; the policeman's trotted away, to
+Lily's great relief. She could not imagine Johnny's
+own father haling him away to state prison and
+the stern Arm of Justice. She stood the fire of
+bewildered questions in the best and safest fashion.
+She wept bitterly, and her tears were not assumed.
+Poor little Lily was all of a sudden crushed under
+the weight of facts. There was Aunt Janet, she had
+no doubt, killed by her own nephew, and she was
+hiding the guilty murderer. She had visions of
+state prison for herself. She watched fearfully while
+the two men bent over the prostrate woman, who
+very soon began to sputter and gasp and try to sit
+up.
+
+"What on earth is the matter, Janet?" inquired
+Dr. Trumbull, who was paler than his sister-in-
+law. In fact, she was unable to look very pale on
+account of dust.
+
+"Ow!" sputtered Aunt Janet, coughing violently,
+"get me up out of this dust, John. Ow!"
+
+"What was the matter?"
+
+"Yes, what has happened, madam?" demanded
+the chief of police, sternly.
+
+"Nothing," replied Aunt Janet, to Lily's and
+Johnny's amazement. "What do you think has
+happened? I fell down in all this nasty dust. Ow!"
+
+"What did you eat for luncheon, Janet?" in-
+quired Dr. Trumbull, as he assisted his sister-in-
+law to her feet.
+
+"What I was a fool to eat," replied Janet Trum-
+bull, promptly. "Cucumber salad and lemon jelly
+with whipped cream."
+
+"Enough to make anybody have indigestion,"
+said Dr. Trumbull. "You have had one of these
+attacks before, too, Janet. You remember the time
+you ate strawberry shortcake and ice-cream?"
+
+Janet nodded meekly. Then she coughed again.
+"Ow, this dust!" gasped she. "For goodness' sake,
+John, get me home where I can get some water and
+take off these dusty clothes or I shall choke to
+death."
+
+"How does your stomach feel?" inquired Dr.
+Trumbull.
+
+"Stomach is all right now, but I am just choking
+to death with the dust." Janet turned sharply tow-
+ard the policeman. "You have sense enough to
+keep still, I hope," said she. "I don't want the
+whole town ringing with my being such an idiot as
+to eat cucumbers and cream together and being
+found this way." Janet looked like an animated
+creation of dust as she faced the chief of police.
+
+"Yes, ma'am," he replied, bowing and scraping
+one foot and raising more dust.
+
+He and Dr. Trumbull assisted Aunt Janet into
+the buggy, and they drove off. Then the chief of
+police discovered that his own horse had gone.
+"Did you see which way he went, sis?" he inquired
+of Lily, and she pointed down the road, and sobbed
+as she did so.
+
+The policeman said something bad under his
+breath, then advised Lily to run home to her rna,
+and started down the road.
+
+When he was out of sight, Lily drew back the
+pink-and-white things from Johnny's face. "Well,
+you didn't kill her this time," said she.
+
+"Why do you s'pose she didn't tell all about it?"
+said Johnny, gaping at her.
+
+"How do I know? I suppose she was ashamed
+to tell how she had been fighting, maybe."
+
+"No, that was not why," said Johnny in a deep
+voice.
+
+"Why was it, then?"
+
+"SHE KNEW."
+
+Johnny began to climb out of the baby-carriage.
+
+"What will she do next, then?" asked Lily.
+
+"I don't know," Johnny replied, gloomily.
+
+He was out of the carriage then, and Lily was
+readjusting the pillows and things. "Get that nice
+embroidered pillow I threw over the bushes," she
+ordered, crossly. Johnny obeyed. When she had
+finished putting the baby-carriage to rights she
+turned upon poor little Johnny Trumbull, and her
+face wore the expression of a queen of tragedy.
+"Well," said Lily Jennings, "I suppose I shall have
+to marry you when I am grown up, after all this."
+
+Johnny gasped. He thought Lily the most beau-
+tiful girl he knew, but to be confronted with murder
+and marriage within a few minutes was almost too
+much. He flushed a burning red. He laughed fool-
+ishly. He said nothing.
+
+"It will be very hard on me," stated Lily, "to
+marry a boy who tried to murder his nice aunt."
+
+Johnny revived a bit under this feminine disdain.
+"I didn't try to murder her," he said in a weak
+voice.
+
+"You might have, throwing her down in all that
+awful dust, a nice, clean lady. Ladies are not like
+boys. It might kill them very quickly to be knocked
+down on a dusty road."
+
+"I didn't mean to kill her."
+
+"You might have."
+
+"Well, I didn't, and -- she --"
+
+"What?"
+
+"She spanked me."
+
+"Pooh! That doesn't amount to anything,"
+sniffed Lily.
+
+"It does if you are a boy."
+
+"I don't see why."
+
+"Well, I can't help it if you don't. It does."
+
+"Why shouldn't a boy be spanked when he's
+naughty, just as well as a girl, I would like to know?"
+
+"Because he's a boy."
+
+Lily looked at Johnny Trumbull. The great fact
+did remain. He had been spanked, he had thrown
+his own aunt down in the dust. He had taken ad-
+vantage of her little-girl protection, but he was a
+boy. Lily did not understand his why at all, but
+she bowed before it. However, that she would not
+admit. She made a rapid change of base. "What,"
+said she, "are you going to do next?"
+
+Johnny stared at her. It was a puzzle.
+
+"If," said Lily, distinctly, "you are afraid to go
+home, if you think your aunt will tell, I will let you
+get into Aunt Laura's baby-carriage again, and I
+will wheel you a little way."
+
+Johnny would have liked at that moment to knock
+Lily down, as he had his aunt Janet. Lily looked
+at him shrewdly. "Oh yes," said she, "you can
+knock me down in the dust there if you want to,
+and spoil my nice clean dress. You will be a boy,
+just the same."
+
+"I will never marry you, anyway," declared
+Johnny.
+
+"Aren't you afraid I'll tell on you and get you
+another spanking if you don't?"
+
+"Tell if you want to. I'd enough sight rather be
+spanked than marry you."
+
+A gleam of respect came into the little girl's
+wisely regarding blue eyes. She, with the swiftness
+of her sex, recognized in forlorn little Johnny the
+making of a man. "Oh, well," said she, loftily,
+"I never was a telltale, and, anyway, we are not
+grown up, and there will be my trousseau to get,
+and a lot of other things to do first. I shall go to
+Europe before I am married, too, and I might meet
+a boy much nicer than you on the steamer."
+
+"Meet him if you want to."
+
+Lily looked at Johnny Trumbull with more than
+respect -- with admiration -- but she kept guard over
+her little tongue. "Well, you can leave that for
+the future," said she with a grown-up air.
+
+"I ain't going to leave it. It's settled for good
+and all now," growled Johnny.
+
+To his immense surprise, Lily curved her white
+embroidered sleeve over her face and began to weep.
+
+"What's the matter now?" asked Johnny, sulkily,
+after a minute.
+
+"I think you are a real horrid boy," sobbed Lily.
+
+Lily looked like nothing but a very frilly, sweet,
+white flower. Johnny could not see her face. There
+was nothing to be seen except that delicate fluff of
+white, supported on dainty white-socked, white-
+slippered limbs.
+
+"Say," said Johnny.
+
+"You are real cruel, when I -- I saved your -- li-fe,"
+wailed Lily.
+
+"Say," said Johnny, "maybe if I don't see any
+other girl I like better I will marry you when I am
+grown up, but I won't if you don't stop that howl-
+ing."
+
+Lily stopped immediately. She peeped at him,
+a blue peep from under the flopping, embroidered
+brim of her hat. "Are you in earnest?" She smiled
+faintly. Her blue eyes, wet with tears, were lovely;
+so was her hesitating smile.
+
+"Yes, if you don't act silly," said Johnny. "Now
+you had better run home, or your mother will won-
+der where that baby-carriage is."
+
+Lily walked away, smiling over her shoulder, the
+smile of the happily subjugated. "I won't tell any-
+body, Johnny," she called back in her flute-like
+voice.
+
+"Don't care if you do," returned Johnny, looking
+at her with chin in the air and shoulders square,
+and Lily wondered at his bravery.
+
+But Johnny was not so brave and he did care. He
+knew that his best course was an immediate return
+home, but he did not know what he might have to
+face. He could not in the least understand why his
+aunt Janet had not told at once. He was sure that
+she knew. Then he thought of a possible reason for
+her silence; she might have feared his arrest at the
+hands of the chief of police. Johnny quailed. He
+knew his aunt Janet to be rather a brave sort of
+woman. If she had fears, she must have had reason
+for them. He might even now be arrested. Suppose
+Lily did tell. He had a theory that girls usually
+told. He began to speculate concerning the horrors
+of prison. Of course he would not be executed,
+since his aunt was obviously very far from being
+killed, but he might be imprisoned for a long term.
+
+Johnny went home. He did not kick the dust
+any more. He walked very steadily and staidly.
+When he came in sight of the old Colonial mansion,
+with its massive veranda pillars, he felt chilly. How-
+ever, he went on. He passed around to the south
+door and entered and smelled shortcake. It would
+have smelled delicious had he not had so much on
+his mind. He looked through the hall, and had a
+glimpse of his uncle Jonathan in the study, writing.
+At the right of the door was his father's office. The
+door of that was open, and Johnny saw his father
+pouring things from bottles. He did not look at
+Johnny. His mother crossed the hall. She had
+on a long white apron, which she wore when making
+her famous cream shortcakes. She saw Johnny,
+but merely observed, "Go and wash your face and
+hands, Johnny; it is nearly supper-time."
+
+Johnny went up-stairs. At the upper landing he
+found his aunt Janet waiting for him. "Come
+here," she whispered, and Johnny followed her,
+trembling, into her own room. It was a large room,
+rather crowded with heavy, old-fashioned furni-
+ture. Aunt Janet had freed herself from dust and
+was arrayed in a purple silk gown. Her hair was
+looped loosely on either side of her long face. She
+was a handsome woman, after a certain type.
+
+"Stand here, Johnny," said she. She had closed
+the door, and Johnny was stationed before her.
+She did not seem in the least injured nor the worse
+for her experience. On the contrary, there was a
+bright-red flush on her cheeks, and her eyes shone
+as Johnny had never seen them. She looked eagerly
+at Johnny.
+
+"Why did you do that?" she said, but there was
+no anger in her voice.
+
+"I forgot," began Johnny.
+
+"Forgot what?" Her voice was strained with
+eagerness.
+
+"That you were not another boy," said Johnny.
+
+"Tell me," said Aunt Janet. "No, you need not
+tell me, because if you did it might be my duty to
+inform your parents. I know there is no need of
+your telling. You MUST be in the habit of fighting
+with the other boys."
+
+"Except the little ones," admitted Johnny.
+
+To Johnny's wild astonishment, Aunt Janet seized
+him by the shoulders and looked him in the eyes
+with a look of adoration and immense approval.
+"Thank goodness," said she, "at last there is going
+to be a fighter in the Trumbull family. Your uncle
+would never fight, and your father would not. Your
+grandfather would. Your uncle and your father are
+good men, though; you must try to be like them,
+Johnny."
+
+"Yes, ma'am," replied Johnny, bewildered.
+
+"I think they would be called better men than
+your grandfather and my father," said Aunt Janet.
+
+"Yes, ma'am."
+
+"I think it is time for you to have your grand-
+father's watch," said Aunt Janet. "I think you are
+man enough to take care of it." Aunt Janet had
+all the time been holding a black leather case. Now
+she opened it, and Johnny saw the great gold watch
+which he had seen many times before and had always
+understood was to be his some day, when he was a
+man. "Here," said Aunt Janet. "Take good care
+of it. You must try to be as good as your uncle and
+father, but you must remember one thing -- you
+will wear a watch which belonged to a man who
+never allowed other men to crowd him out of the
+way he elected to go."
+
+"Yes, ma'am," said Johnny. He took the
+watch.
+
+"What do you say?" inquired his aunt, sharply.
+
+"Thank you."
+
+"That's right. I thought you had forgotten your
+manners. Your grandfather never did."
+
+"I am sorry. Aunt Janet," muttered Johnny,
+"that I --"
+
+"You need never say anything about that," his
+aunt returned, quickly. "I did not see who you
+were at first. You are too old to be spanked by a
+woman, but you ought to be whipped by a man,
+and I wish your grandfather were alive to do it."
+
+"Yes, ma'am," said Johnny. He looked at her
+bravely. "He could if he wanted to," said he.
+
+Aunt Janet smiled at him proudly. "Of course,"
+said she, "a boy like you never gets the worst of it
+fighting with other boys."
+
+"No, ma'am," said Johnny.
+
+Aunt Janet smiled again. "Now run and wash
+your face and hands," said she; "you must not keep
+supper waiting. Your mother has a paper to write
+for her club, and I have promised to help her."
+
+"Yes, ma'am," said Johnny. He walked out,
+carrying the great gold timepiece, bewildered, em-
+barrassed, modest beneath his honors, but little
+cock of the walk, whether he would or no, for reasons
+entirely and forever beyond his ken.
+
+
+
+
+JOHNNY-IN-THE-WOODS
+
+
+
+
+JOHNNY-IN-THE-WOODS
+
+JOHNNY TRUMBULL, he who had demon-
+strated his claim to be Cock of the Walk by a
+most impious hand-to-hand fight with his own aunt,
+Miss Janet Trumbull, in which he had been deci-
+sively victorious, and won his spurs, consisting of his
+late grandfather's immense, solemnly ticking watch,
+was to take a new path of action. Johnny suddenly
+developed the prominent Trumbull trait, but in his
+case it was inverted. Johnny, as became a boy of
+his race, took an excursion into the past, but instead
+of applying the present to the past, as was the
+tendency of the other Trumbulls, he forcibly applied
+the past to the present. He fairly plastered the
+past over the exigencies of his day and generation
+like a penetrating poultice of mustard, and the
+results were peculiar.
+
+Johnny, being bidden of a rainy day during the
+midsummer vacation to remain in the house, to
+keep quiet, read a book, and be a good boy, obeyed,
+but his obedience was of a doubtful measure of
+wisdom.
+
+Johnny got a book out of his uncle Jonathan Trum-
+bull's dark little library while Jonathan was walking
+sedately to the post-office, holding his dripping
+umbrella at a wonderful slant of exactness, without
+regard to the wind, thereby getting the soft drive
+of the rain full in his face, which became, as it
+were, bedewed with tears, entirely outside any
+cause of his own emotions.
+
+Johnny probably got the only book of an anti-
+orthodox trend in his uncle's library. He found
+tucked away in a snug corner an ancient collection
+of Border Ballads, and he read therein of many
+unmoral romances and pretty fancies, which, since
+he was a small boy, held little meaning for him, or
+charm, beyond a delight in the swing of the rhythm,
+for Johnny had a feeling for music. It was when he
+read of Robin Hood, the bold Robin Hood, with his
+dubious ethics but his certain and unquenchable
+interest, that Johnny Trumbull became intent. He
+had the volume in his own room, being somewhat
+doubtful as to whether it might be of the sort
+included in the good-boy role. He sat beside a rain-
+washed window, which commanded a view of the
+wide field between the Trumbull mansion and Jim
+Simmons's house, and he read about Robin Hood
+and his Greenwood adventures, his forcible setting
+the wrong right; and for the first time his imagina-
+tion awoke, and his ambition. Johnny Trumbull,
+hitherto hero of nothing except little material fist-
+fights, wished now to become a hero of true romance.
+
+In fact, Johnny considered seriously the possi-
+bility of reincarnating, in his own person, Robin
+Hood. He eyed the wide green field dreamily
+through his rain-blurred window. It was a pretty
+field, waving with feathery grasses and starred with
+daisies and buttercups, and it was very fortunate
+that it happened to be so wide. Jim Simmons's
+house was not a desirable feature of the landscape,
+and looked much better several acres away. It was
+a neglected, squalid structure, and considered a dis-
+grace to the whole village. Jim was also a disgrace,
+and an unsolved problem. He owned that house,
+and somehow contrived to pay the taxes thereon.
+He also lived and throve in bodily health in spite of
+evil ways, and his children were many. There
+seemed no way to dispose finally of Jim Simmons
+and his house except by murder and arson, and the
+village was a peaceful one, and such measures were
+entirely too strenuous.
+
+Presently Johnny, staring dreamily out of his
+window, saw approaching a rusty-black umbrella
+held at precisely the wrong angle in respect of the
+storm, but held with the unvarying stiffness with
+which a soldier might hold a bayonet, and knew it
+for his uncle Jonathan's umbrella. Soon he beheld
+also his uncle's serious, rain-drenched face and his
+long ambling body and legs. Jonathan was coming
+home from the post-office, whither he repaired every
+morning. He never got a letter, never anything
+except religious newspapers, but the visit to the
+post-office was part of his daily routine. Rain or
+shine, Jonathan Trumbull went for the morning
+mail, and gained thereby a queer negative enjoy-
+ment of a perfectly useless duty performed. Johnny
+watched his uncle draw near to the house, and cruelly
+reflected how unlike Robin Hood he must be. He
+even wondered if his uncle could possibly have read
+Robin Hood and still show absolutely no result in his
+own personal appearance. He knew that he, Johnny,
+could not walk to the post-office and back, even with
+the drawback of a dripping old umbrella instead of
+a bow and arrow, without looking a bit like Robin
+Hood, especially when fresh from reading about him.
+
+Then suddenly something distracted his thoughts
+from Uncle Jonathan. The long, feathery grass in
+the field moved with a motion distinct from that
+caused by the wind and rain. Johnny saw a tiger-
+striped back emerge, covering long leaps of terror.
+Johnny knew the creature for a cat afraid of Uncle
+Jonathan. Then he saw the grass move behind the
+first leaping, striped back, and he knew there were
+more cats afraid of Uncle Jonathan. There were
+even motions caused by unseen things, and he
+reasoned, "Kittens afraid of Uncle Jonathan."
+Then Johnny reflected with a great glow of indigna-
+tion that the Simmonses kept an outrageous num-
+ber of half-starved cats and kittens, besides a quota
+of children popularly supposed to be none too well
+nourished, let alone properly clothed. Then it was
+that Johnny Trumbull's active, firm imagination
+slapped the past of old romance like a most thorough
+mustard poultice over the present. There could be
+no Lincoln Green, no following of brave outlaws
+(that is, in the strictest sense), no bows and arrows,
+no sojourning under greenwood trees and the rest,
+but something he could, and would, do and be.
+That rainy day when Johnny Trumbull was a good
+boy, and stayed in the house, and read a book,
+marked an epoch.
+
+That night when Johnny went into his aunt
+Janet's room she looked curiously at his face, which
+seemed a little strange to her. Johnny, since he had
+come into possession of his grandfather's watch,
+went every night, on his way to bed, to his aunt's
+room for the purpose of winding up that ancient
+timepiece, Janet having a firm impression that it
+might not be done properly unless under her super-
+vision. Johnny stood before his aunt and wound up
+the watch with its ponderous key, and she watched
+him.
+
+"What have you been doing all day, John?" said
+she.
+
+"Stayed in the house and -- read."
+
+"What did you read, John?"
+
+"A book."
+
+"Do you mean to be impertinent, John?"
+
+"No, ma'am," replied Johnny, and with perfect
+truth. He had not the slightest idea of the title of
+the book.
+
+"What was the book?"
+
+"A poetry book."
+
+"Where did you find it?"
+
+"In Uncle Jonathan's library."
+
+"Poetry In Uncle Jonathan's library?" said Janet,
+in a mystified way. She had a general impression
+of Jonathan's library as of century-old preserves,
+altogether dried up and quite indistinguishable one
+from the other except by labels. Poetry she could
+not imagine as being there at all. Finally she
+thought of the early Victorians, and Spenser and
+Chaucer. The library might include them, but she
+had an idea that Spenser and Chaucer were not fit
+reading for a little boy. However, as she remem-
+bered Spenser and Chaucer, she doubted if Johnny
+could understand much of them. Probably he had
+gotten hold of an early Victorian, and she looked
+rather contemptuous.
+
+"I don't think much of a boy like you reading
+poetry," said Janet. "Couldn't you find anything
+else to read?"
+
+"No, ma'am." That also was truth. Johnny,
+before exploring his uncle's theological library, had
+peered at his father's old medical books and his
+mother's bookcases, which contained quite terrify-
+ing uniform editions of standard things written by
+women.
+
+"I don't suppose there ARE many books written for
+boys," said Aunt Janet, reflectively.
+
+"No, ma'am," said Johnny. He finished winding
+the watch, and gave, as was the custom, the key to
+Aunt Janet, lest he lose it.
+
+"I will see if I cannot find some books of travels
+for you, John," said Janet. "I think travels would
+be good reading for a boy. Good night, John."
+
+"Good night. Aunt Janet," replied Johnny. His
+aunt never kissed him good night, which was one
+reason why he liked her.
+
+On his way to bed he had to pass his mother's room,
+whose door stood open. She was busy writing at her
+desk. She glanced at Johnny.
+
+"Are you going to bed?" said she.
+
+"Yes, ma'am."
+
+Johnny entered the room and let his mother kiss his
+forehead, parting his curly hair to do so. He loved
+his mother, but did not care at all to have her kiss
+him. He did not object, because he thought she
+liked to do it, and she was a woman, and it was a
+very little thing in which he could oblige her.
+
+"Were you a good boy, and did you find a good
+book to read?" asked she.
+
+"Yes, ma'am."
+
+"What was the book?" Cora Trumbull inquired,
+absently, writing as she spoke.
+
+"Poetry."
+
+Cora laughed. " Poetry is odd for a boy," said she.
+"You should have read a book of travels or history.
+Good night, Johnny."
+
+"Good night, mother."
+
+Then Johnny met his father, smelling strongly of
+medicines, coming up from his study. But his father
+did not see him. And Johnny went to bed, having
+imbibed from that old tale of Robin Hood more of
+history and more knowledge of excursions into realms
+of old romance than his elders had ever known during
+much longer lives than his.
+
+Johnny confided in nobody at first. His feeling
+nearly led him astray in the matter of Lily Jennings;
+he thought of her, for one sentimental minute, as
+Robin Hood's Maid Marion. Then he dismissed
+the idea peremptorily. Lily Jennings would simply
+laugh. He knew her. Moreover, she was a girl,
+and not to be trusted. Johnny felt the need of
+another boy who would be a kindred spirit; he
+wished for more than one boy. He wished for a
+following of heroic and lawless souls, even as Robin
+Hood's. But he could think of nobody, after con-
+siderable study, except one boy, younger than him-
+self. He was a beautiful little boy, whose mother
+had never allowed him to have his golden curls
+cut, although he had been in trousers for quite a
+while. However, the trousers were foolish, being
+knickerbockers, and accompanied by low socks,
+which revealed pretty, dimpled, babyish legs. The
+boy's name was Arnold Carruth, and that was against
+him, as being long, and his mother firm about al-
+lowing no nickname. Nicknames in any case were
+not allowed in the very exclusive private school
+which Johnny attended.
+
+Arnold Carruth, in spite of his being such a beau-
+tiful little boy, would have had no standing at all
+in the school as far as popularity was concerned
+had it not been for a strain of mischief which tri-
+umphed over curls, socks, and pink cheeks and a
+much-kissed rosebud of a mouth. Arnold Carruth,
+as one of the teachers permitted herself to state
+when relaxed in the bosom of her own family, was
+"as choke-full of mischief as a pod of peas. And the
+worst of it all is," quoth the teacher, Miss Agnes
+Rector, who was a pretty young girl, with a hidden
+sympathy for mischief herself -- "the worst of it is,
+that child looks so like a cherub on a rosy cloud that
+even if he should be caught nobody would believe
+it. They would be much more likely to accuse poor
+little Andrew Jackson Green, because he has a snub
+nose and is a bit cross-eyed, and I never knew that
+poor child to do anything except obey rules and learn
+his lessons. He is almost too good. And another
+worst of it is, nobody can help loving that little imp
+of a Carruth boy, mischief and all. I believe the
+scamp knows it and takes advantage of it."
+
+It is quite possible that Arnold Carruth did
+profit unworthily by his beauty and engagingness,
+albeit without calculation. He was so young, it
+was monstrous to believe him capable of calculation,
+of deliberate trading upon his assets of birth and
+beauty and fascination. However, Johnny Trum-
+bull, who was wide awake and a year older, was alive
+to the situation. He told Arnold Carruth, and
+Arnold Carruth only, about Robin Hood and his
+great scheme.
+
+"You can help," said this wise Johnny; "you can
+be in it, because nobody thinks you can be in any-
+thing, on account of your wearing curls."
+
+Arnold Carruth flushed and gave an angry tug
+at one golden curl which the wind blew over a
+shoulder. The two boys were in a secluded corner
+of Madame's lawn, behind a clump of Japanese
+cedars, during an intermission.
+
+"I can't help it because I wear curls," declared
+Arnold with angry shame.
+
+"Who said you could? No need of getting mad."
+
+"Mamma and Aunt Flora and grandmamma
+won't let me have these old curls cut off," said
+Arnold. "You needn't think I want to have curls
+like a girl, Johnny Trumbull."
+
+"Who said you did? And I know you don't like
+to wear those short stockings, either."
+
+"Like to!" Arnold gave a spiteful kick, first of
+one half-bared, dimpled leg, then of the other.
+
+"First thing you know I'll steal mamma's or Aunt
+Flora's stockings and throw these in the furnace --
+I will. Do you s'pose a feller wants to wear these
+baby things? I guess not. Women are awful queer,
+Johnny Trumbull. My mamma and my aunt Flora
+are awful nice, but they are queer about some
+things."
+
+"Most women are queer," agreed Johnny, "but
+my aunt Janet isn't as queer as some. Rather guess
+if she saw me with curls like a little girl she'd cut
+'em off herself."
+
+"Wish she was my aunt," said Arnold Carruth
+with a sigh. "A feller needs a woman like that till
+he's grown up. Do you s'pose she'd cut off my curls
+if I was to go to your house, Johnny?"
+
+"I'm afraid she wouldn't think it was right unless
+your mother said she might. She has to be real
+careful about doing right, because my uncle Jonathan
+used to preach, you know."
+
+Arnold Carruth grinned savagely, as if he endured
+pain. "Well, I s'pose I'll have to stand the curls and
+little baby stockings awhile longer," said he. "What
+was it you were going to tell me, Johnny?"
+
+"I am going to tell you because I know you aren't
+too good, if you do wear curls and little stockings."
+
+"No, I ain't too good," declared Arnold Carruth,
+proudly; "I ain't -- HONEST, Johnny."
+
+"That's why I'm going to tell you. But if you
+tell any of the other boys -- or girls --"
+
+"Tell girls!" sniffed Arnold.
+
+"If you tell anybody, I'll lick you."
+
+"Guess I ain't afraid."
+
+"Guess you'd be afraid to go home after you'd
+been licked."
+
+"Guess my mamma would give it to you."
+
+"Run home and tell mamma you'd been whopped,
+would you, then?"
+
+Little Arnold, beautiful baby boy, straightened
+himself with a quick remembrance that he was
+born a man. "You know I wouldn't tell, Johnny
+Trumbull."
+
+"Guess you wouldn't. Well, here it is --" Johnny
+spoke in emphatic whispers, Arnold's curly head close
+to his mouth: "There are a good many things in
+this town have got to be set right," said Johnny.
+
+Little Arnold stared at him. Then fire shone in
+his lovely blue eyes under the golden shadow of his
+curls, a fire which had shone in the eyes of some
+ancestors of his, for there was good fighting blood
+in the Carruth family, as well as in the Trumbull,
+although this small descendant did go about curled
+and kissed and barelegged.
+
+"How'll we begin?" said Arnold, in a strenuous
+whisper.
+
+"We've got to begin right away with Jim Sim-
+mons's cats and kittens."
+
+"With Jim Simmons's cats and kittens?" repeated
+Arnold.
+
+"That was what I said, exactly. We've got to
+begin right there. It is an awful little beginning,
+but I can't think of anything else. If you can, I'm
+willing to listen."
+
+"I guess I can't," admitted Arnold, helplessly.
+
+"Of course we can't go around taking away money
+from rich people and giving it to poor folks. One
+reason is, most of the poor folks in this town are
+lazy, and don't get money because they don't want
+to work for it. And when they are not lazy, they
+drink. If we gave rich people's money to poor
+folks like that, we shouldn't do a mite of good.
+The rich folks would be poor, and the poor folks
+wouldn't stay rich; they would be lazier, and get
+more drink. I don't see any sense in doing things
+like that in this town. There are a few poor folks
+I have been thinking we might take some money
+for and do good, but not many."
+
+"Who?" inquired Arnold Carruth, in awed tones.
+
+"Well, there is poor old Mrs. Sam Little. She's
+awful poor. Folks help her, I know, but she can't
+be real pleased being helped. She'd rather have the
+money herself. I have been wondering if we couldn't
+get some of your father's money away and give it
+to her, for one."
+
+"Get away papa's money!"
+
+"You don't mean to tell me you are as stingy as
+that, Arnold Carruth?"
+
+"I guess papa wouldn't like it."
+
+"Of course he wouldn't. But that is not the point.
+It is not what your father would like; it is what that
+poor old lady would like."
+
+It was too much for Arnold. He gaped at
+Johnny.
+
+"If you are going to be mean and stingy, we may
+as well stop before we begin," said Johnny.
+
+Then Arnold Carruth recovered himself. "Old
+Mr. Webster Payne is awful poor," said he. "We
+might take some of your father's money and give
+it to him."
+
+Johnny snorted, fairly snorted. "If," said he,
+"you think my father keeps his money where we
+can get it, you are mistaken, Arnold Carruth. My
+father's money is all in papers that are not worth
+much now and that he has to keep in the bank
+till they are."
+
+Arnold smiled hopefully. "Guess that's the way
+my papa keeps HIS money."
+
+"It's the way most rich people are mean enough
+to," said Johnny, severely. "I don't care if it's
+your father or mine, it's mean. And that's why
+we've got to begin with Jim Simmons's cats and
+kittens."
+
+"Are you going to give old Mrs. Sam Little cats?"
+inquired Arnold.
+
+Johnny sniffed. "Don't be silly," said he.
+"Though I do think a nice cat with a few kittens
+might cheer her up a little, and we could steal enough
+milk, by getting up early and tagging after the milk-
+man, to feed them. But I wasn't thinking of giving
+her or old Mr. Payne cats and kittens. I wasn't
+thinking of folks; I was thinking of all those poor
+cats and kittens that Mr. Jim Simmons has and
+doesn't half feed, and that have to go hunting
+around folks' back doors in the rain, when cats hate
+water, too, and pick things up that must be bad
+for their stomachs, when they ought to have their
+milk regularly in nice, clean saucers. No, Arnold
+Carruth, what we have got to do is to steal Mr.
+Jim Simmons's cats and get them in nice homes
+where they can earn their living catching mice and
+be well cared for."
+
+"Steal cats?" said Arnold.
+
+"Yes, steal cats, in order to do right," said Johnny
+Trumbull, and his expression was heroic, even
+exalted.
+
+It was then that a sweet treble, faltering yet
+exultant, rang in their ears.
+
+"If," said the treble voice, "you are going to
+steal dear little kitty cats and get nice homes for
+them, I'm going to help."
+
+The voice belonged to Lily Jennings, who had
+stood on the other side of the Japanese cedars and
+heard every word.
+
+Both boys started in righteous wrath, but Arnold
+Carruth was the angrier of the two. "Mean little
+cat yourself, listening," said he. His curls seemed
+to rise like a crest of rage.
+
+Johnny, remembering some things, was not so
+outspoken. "You hadn't any right to listen, Lily
+Jennings," he said, with masculine severity.
+
+"I didn't start to listen," said Lily. "I was look-
+ing for cones on these trees. Miss Parmalee wanted
+us to bring some object of nature into the class, and
+I wondered whether I could find a queer Japanese
+cone on one of these trees, and then I heard you
+boys talking, and I couldn't help listening. You
+spoke very loud, and I couldn't give up looking for
+that cone. I couldn't find any, and I heard all
+about the Simmonses' cats, and I know lots of other
+cats that haven't got good homes, and -- I am going
+to be in it."
+
+"You AIN'T," declared Arnold Carruth.
+
+"We can't have girls in it," said Johnny the mind-
+ful, more politely.
+
+"You've got to have me. You had better have
+me, Johnny Trumbull," she added with meaning.
+
+Johnny flinched. It was a species of blackmail,
+but what could he do? Suppose Lily told how she
+had hidden him -- him, Johnny Trumbull, the cham-
+pion of the school -- in that empty baby-carriage!
+He would have more to contend against than Arnold
+Carruth with socks and curls. He did not think Lily
+would tell. Somehow Lily, although a little, be-
+frilled girl, gave an impression of having a knowledge
+of a square deal almost as much as a boy would;
+but what boy could tell with a certainty what such
+an uncertain creature as a girl might or might not
+do? Moreover, Johnny had a weakness, a hidden,
+Spartanly hidden, weakness for Lily. He rather
+wished to have her act as partner in his great enter-
+prise. He therefore gruffly assented.
+
+"All right," he said, "you can be in it. But just
+you look out. You'll see what happens if you tell."
+
+"She can't be in it; she's nothing but a girl,"
+said Arnold Carruth, fiercely.
+
+Lily Jennings lifted her chin and surveyed him
+with queenly scorn. "And what are you?" said she.
+"A little boy with curls and baby socks."
+
+Arnold colored with shame and fury, and subsided.
+"Mind you don't tell," he said, taking Johnny's cue.
+
+"I sha'n't tell," replied Lily, with majesty. "But
+you'll tell yourselves if you talk one side of trees
+without looking on the other."
+
+There was then only a few moments before
+Madame's musical Japanese gong which announced
+the close of intermission should sound, but three
+determined souls in conspiracy can accomplish much
+in a few moments. The first move was planned in
+detail before that gong sounded, and the two boys
+raced to the house, and Lily followed, carrying a toad-
+stool, which she had hurriedly caught up from the
+lawn for her object of nature to be taken into class.
+
+It was a poisonous toadstool, and Lily was quite
+a heroine in the class. That fact doubtless gave her
+a more dauntless air when, after school, the two
+boys caught up with her walking gracefully down
+the road, flirting her skirts and now and then giving
+her head a toss, which made her fluff of hair fly into
+a golden foam under her daisy-trimmed straw hat.
+
+"To-night," Johnny whispered, as he sped past.
+
+"At half past nine, between your house and the
+Simmonses'," replied Lily, without even looking at
+him. She was a past-mistress of dissimulation.
+
+Lily's mother had guests at dinner that night,
+and the guests remarked sometimes, within the little
+girl's hearing, what a darling she was.
+
+"She never gives me a second's anxiety," Lily's
+mother whispered to a lady beside her. "You can-
+not imagine what a perfectly good, dependable child
+she is."
+
+"Now my Christina is a good child in the grain,"
+said the lady, "but she is full of mischief. I never
+can tell what Christina will do next."
+
+"I can always tell," said Lily's mother, in a voice
+of maternal triumph.
+
+"Now only the other night, when I thought
+Christina was in bed, that absurd child got up and
+dressed and ran over to see her aunt Bella. Tom
+came home with her, and of course there was nothing
+very bad about it. Christina was very bright; she
+said, 'Mother, you never told me I must not get up
+and go to see Aunt Bella,' which was, of course,
+true. I could not gainsay that."
+
+"I cannot," said Lily's mother, "imagine my
+Lily's doing such a thing."
+
+If Lily had heard that last speech of her mother's,
+whom she dearly loved, she might have wavered.
+That pathetic trust in herself might have caused her
+to justify it. But she had finished her dinner and
+had been excused, and was undressing for bed, with
+the firm determination to rise betimes and dress
+and join Johnny Trumbull and Arnold Carruth.
+Johnny had the easiest time of them all. He simply
+had to bid his aunt Janet good night and have the
+watch wound, and take a fleeting glimpse of his
+mother at her desk and his father in his office, and
+go whistling to his room, and sit in the summer
+darkness and wait until the time came.
+
+Arnold Carruth had the hardest struggle. His
+mother had an old school friend visiting her, and
+Arnold, very much dressed up, with his curls falling
+in a shining fleece upon a real lace collar, had to be
+shown off and show off. He had to play one little
+piece which he had learned upon the piano. He had
+to recite a little poem. He had to be asked how old
+he was, and if he liked to go to school, and how
+many teachers he had, and if he loved them, and
+if he loved his little mates, and which of them he
+loved best; and he had to be asked if he loved his
+aunt Dorothy, who was the school friend and not his
+aunt at all, and would he not like to come and live
+with her, because she had not any dear little boy;
+and he was obliged to submit to having his curls
+twisted around feminine fingers, and to being kissed
+and hugged, and a whole chapter of ordeals, before
+he was finally in bed, with his mother's kiss moist
+upon his lips, and free to assert himself.
+
+That night Arnold Carruth realized himself as
+having an actual horror of his helpless state of pam-
+pered childhood. The man stirred in the soul of the
+boy, and it was a little rebel with sulky pout of lips
+and frown of childish brows who stole out of bed,
+got into some queer clothes, and crept down the
+back stairs. He heard his aunt Dorothy, who was
+not his aunt, singing an Italian song in the parlor,
+he heard the clink of silver and china from the
+butler's pantry, where the maids were washing the
+dinner dishes. He smelt his father's cigar, and he
+gave a little leap of joy on the grass of the lawn.
+At last he was out at night alone, and -- he wore long
+stockings! That noon he had secreted a pair of
+his mother's toward that end. When he came home
+to luncheon he pulled them out of the darning-bag,
+which he had spied through a closet door that had
+been left ajar. One of the stockings was green silk,
+and the other was black, and both had holes in
+them, but all that mattered was the length. Arnold
+wore also his father's riding-breeches, which came
+over his shoes and which were enormously large,
+and one of his father's silk shirts. He had resolved
+to dress consistently for such a great occasion. His
+clothes hampered him, but he felt happy as he sped
+clumsily down the road.
+
+However, both Johnny Trumbull and Lily Jen-
+nings, who were waiting for him at the rendezvous,
+were startled by his appearance. Both began to
+run, Johnny pulling Lily after him by the hand,
+but Arnold's cautious hallo arrested them. Johnny
+and Lily returned slowly, peering through the dark-
+ness.
+
+"It's me," said Arnold, with gay disregard of
+grammar.
+
+"You looked," said Lily, "like a real fat old man.
+What HAVE you got on, Arnold Carruth?"
+
+Arnold slouched before his companions, ridiculous
+but triumphant. He hitched up a leg of the riding-
+breeches and displayed a long, green silk stocking.
+Both Johnny and Lily doubled up with laughter.
+
+"What you laughing at?" inquired Arnold, crossly.
+
+"Oh, nothing at all," said Lily. "Only you do
+look like a scarecrow broken loose. Doesn't he,
+Johnny?"
+
+"I am going home," stated Arnold with dignity.
+He turned, but Johnny caught him in his little iron
+grip.
+
+"Oh, shucks, Arnold Carruth!" said he. "Don't
+be a baby. Come on." And Arnold Carruth with
+difficulty came on.
+
+People in the village, as a rule, retired early. Many
+lights were out when the affair began, many went
+out while it was in progress. All three of the band
+steered as clear of lighted houses as possible, and
+dodged behind trees and hedges when shadowy
+figures appeared on the road or carriage-wheels were
+heard in the distance. At their special destination
+they were sure to be entirely safe. Old Mr. Peter
+Van Ness always retired very early. To be sure,
+he did not go to sleep until late, and read in bed,
+but his room was in the rear of the house on the
+second floor, and all the windows, besides, were
+dark. Mr. Peter Van Ness was a very wealthy
+elderly gentleman, very benevolent. He had given
+the village a beautiful stone church with memorial
+windows, a soldiers' monument, a park, and a home
+for aged couples, called "The Van Ness Home."
+Mr. Van Ness lived alone with the exception of a
+housekeeper and a number of old, very well-disci-
+plined servants. The servants always retired early,
+and Mr. Van Ness required the house to be quiet for
+his late reading. He was a very studious old gentle-
+man.
+
+To the Van Ness house, set back from the street
+in the midst of a well-kept lawn, the three repaired,
+but not as noiselessly as they could have wished. In
+fact, a light flared in an up-stairs window, which
+was wide open, and one woman's voice was heard
+in conclave with another.
+
+"I should think," said the first, "that the lawn
+was full of cats. Did you ever hear such a mewing,
+Jane?"
+
+That was the housekeeper's voice. The three,
+each of whom carried a squirming burlap potato-bag
+from the Trumbull cellar, stood close to a clump
+of stately pines full of windy songs, and trem-
+bled.
+
+"It do sound like cats, ma'am," said another voice,
+which was Jane's, the maid, who had brought Mrs.
+Meeks, the housekeeper, a cup of hot water and
+peppermint, because her dinner had disagreed with
+her.
+
+"Just listen," said Mrs. Meeks.
+
+"Yes, ma'am, I should think there was hundreds
+of cats and little kittens."
+
+"I am so afraid Mr. Van Ness will be disturbed."
+
+"Yes, ma'am."
+
+"You might go out and look, Jane."
+
+"Oh, ma'am, they might be burglars!"
+
+"How can they be burglars when they are cats?"
+demanded Mrs. Meeks, testily.
+
+Arnold Carruth snickered, and Johnny on one side,
+and Lily on the other, prodded him with an elbow.
+They were close under the window.
+
+"Burglars is up to all sorts of queer tricks, ma'am,"
+said Jane. "They may mew like cats to tell one
+another what door to go in."
+
+"Jane, you talk like an idiot," said Mrs. Meeks.
+"Burglars talking like cats! Who ever heard of such
+a thing? It sounds right under that window. Open
+my closet door and get those heavy old shoes and
+throw them out."
+
+It was an awful moment. The three dared not
+move. The cats and kittens in the bags -- not so
+many, after all -- seemed to have turned into multi-
+plication-tables. They were positively alarming in
+their determination to get out, their wrath with one
+another, and their vociferous discontent with the
+whole situation.
+
+"I can't hold my bag much longer," said poor little
+Arnold Carruth.
+
+"Hush up, cry-baby!" whispered Lily, fiercely,
+in spite of a clawing paw emerging from her own
+bag and threatening her bare arm.
+
+Then came the shoes. One struck Arnold squarely
+on the shoulder, nearly knocking him down and
+making him lose hold of his bag. The other struck
+Lily's bag, and conditions became worse; but she
+held on despite a scratch. Lily had pluck.
+
+Then Jane's voice sounded very near, as she leaned
+out of the window. "I guess they have went,
+ma'am," said she. "I seen something run."
+
+"I can hear them," said Mrs. Meeks, queru-
+lously.
+
+"I seen them run," persisted Jane, who was tired
+and wished to be gone.
+
+"Well, close that window, anyway, for I know I
+hear them, even if they have gone," said Mrs. Meeks.
+The three heard with relief the window slammed
+down.
+
+The light flashed out, and simultaneously Lily
+Jennings and Johnny Trumbull turned indignantly
+upon Arnold Carruth.
+
+"There, you have gone and let all those poor cats
+go," said Johnny.
+
+"And spoilt everything," said Lily.
+
+Arnold rubbed his shoulder. "You would have
+let go if you had been hit right on the shoulder
+by a great shoe," said he, rather loudly.
+
+"Hush up!" said Lily. "I wouldn't have let my
+cats go if I had been killed by a shoe; so there."
+
+"Serves us right for taking a boy with curls," said
+Johnny Trumbull.
+
+But he spoke unadvisedly. Arnold Carruth was
+no match whatever for Johnny Trumbull, and had
+never been allowed the honor of a combat with him;
+but surprise takes even a great champion at a dis-
+advantage. Arnold turned upon Johnny like a flash,
+out shot a little white fist, up struck a dimpled leg
+clad in cloth and leather, and down sat Johnny
+Trumbull; and, worse, open flew his bag, and there
+was a yowling exodus.
+
+"There go your cats, too, Johnny Trumbull,"
+said Lily, in a perfectly calm whisper. At that mo-
+ment both boys, victor and vanquished, felt a simul-
+taneous throb of masculine wrath at Lily. Who was
+she to gloat over the misfortunes of men? But retri-
+bution came swiftly to Lily. That viciously claw-
+ing little paw shot out farther, and there was a limit
+to Spartanism in a little girl born so far from that
+heroic land. Lily let go of her bag and with diffi-
+culty stifled a shriek of pain.
+
+"Whose cats are gone now?" demanded Johnny,
+rising.
+
+"Yes, whose cats are gone now?" said Arnold.
+
+Then Johnny promptly turned upon him and
+knocked him down and sat on him.
+
+Lily looked at them, standing, a stately little
+figure in the darkness. "I am going home," said
+she. "My mother does not allow me to go with
+fighting boys."
+
+Johnny rose, and so did Arnold, whimpering
+slightly. His shoulder ached considerably.
+
+"He knocked me down," said Johnny.
+
+Even as he whimpered and as he suffered, Arnold
+felt a thrill of triumph. "Always knew I could if I
+had a chance," said he.
+
+"You couldn't if I had been expecting it," said
+Johnny.
+
+"Folks get knocked down when they ain't ex-
+pecting it most of the time," declared Arnold, with
+more philosophy than he realized.
+
+"I don't think it makes much difference about the
+knocking down," said Lily. "All those poor cats
+and kittens that we were going to give a good home,
+where they wouldn't be starved, have got away,
+and they will run straight back to Mr. Jim Sim-
+mons's."
+
+"If they haven't any more sense than to run back
+to a place where they don't get enough to eat and
+are kicked about by a lot of children, let them run,"
+said Johnny.
+
+"That's so," said Arnold. "I never did see what
+we were doing such a thing for, anyway -- stealing
+Mr. Simmons's cats and giving them to Mr. Van
+Ness."
+
+It was the girl alone who stood by her guns of
+righteousness. "I saw and I see," she declared, with
+dangerously loud emphasis. "It was only our duty
+to try to rescue poor helpless animals who don't
+know any better than to stay where they are badly
+treated. And Mr. Van Ness has so much money he
+doesn't know what to do with it; he would have been
+real pleased to give those cats a home and buy milk
+and liver for them. But it's all spoiled now. I will
+never undertake to do good again, with a lot of boys
+in the way, as long as I live; so there!" Lily turned
+about.
+
+"Going to tell your mother!" said Johnny, with
+scorn which veiled anxiety.
+
+"No, I'm NOT. I don't tell tales."
+
+Lily marched off, and in her wake went Johnny
+and Arnold, two poor little disillusioned would-be
+knights of old romance in a wretchedly common-
+place future, not far enough from their horizons for
+any glamour.
+
+They went home, and of the three Johnny Trum-
+bull was the only one who was discovered. For him
+his aunt Janet lay in wait and forced a confession.
+She listened grimly, but her eyes twinkled.
+
+"You have learned to fight, John Trumbull," said
+she, when he had finished. "Now the very next
+thing you have to learn, and make yourself worthy
+of your grandfather Trumbull, is not to be a fool."
+
+"Yes, Aunt Janet," said Johnny.
+
+The next noon, when he came home from school,
+old Maria, who had been with the family ever since
+he could remember and long before, called him into
+the kitchen. There, greedily lapping milk from a
+saucer, were two very lean, tall kittens.
+
+"See those nice little tommy-cats," said Maria,
+beaming upon Johnny, whom she loved and whom
+she sometimes fancied deprived of boyish joys.
+"Your aunt Janet sent me over to the Simmonses'
+for them this morning. They are overrun with cats
+-- such poor, shiftless folks always be -- and you can
+have them. We shall have to watch for a little while
+till they get wonted, so they won't run home."
+
+Johnny gazed at the kittens, fast distending with
+the new milk, and felt presumably much as dear
+Robin Hood may have felt after one of his successful
+raids in the fair, poetic past.
+
+"Pretty, ain't they?" said Maria. "They have
+drank up a whole saucer of milk. 'Most starved. I
+s'pose."
+
+Johnny gathered up the two forlorn kittens and
+sat down in a kitchen chair, with one on each shoul-
+der, hard, boyish cheeks pressed against furry, pur-
+ring sides, and the little fighting Cock of the Walk
+felt his heart glad and tender with the love of the
+strong for the weak.
+
+
+
+
+
+DANIEL AND LITTLE DAN'L
+
+
+
+
+
+DANIEL AND LITTLE DAN'L
+
+THE Wise homestead dated back more than a
+century, yet it had nothing imposing about it
+except its site. It was a simple, glaringly white cot-
+tage. There was a center front door with two win-
+dows on each side; there was a low slant of roof,
+pierced by unpicturesque dormers. On the left of
+the house was an ell, which had formerly been used
+as a shoemaker's shop, but now served as a kitchen.
+In the low attic of the ell was stored the shoemaker's
+bench, whereon David Wise's grandfather had sat
+for nearly eighty years of working days; after him
+his eldest son, Daniel's father, had occupied the same
+hollow seat of patient toil. Daniel had sat there for
+twenty-odd years, then had suddenly realized both
+the lack of necessity and the lack of customers, since
+the great shoe-plant had been built down in the vil-
+lage. Then Daniel had retired -- although he did
+not use that expression. Daniel said to his friends
+and his niece Dora that he had "quit work." But
+he told himself, without the least bitterness, that
+work had quit him.
+
+After Daniel had retired, his one physiological
+peculiarity assumed enormous proportions. It had
+always been with him, but steady work had held it,
+to a great extent, at bay. Daniel was a moral
+coward before physical conditions. He was as one
+who suffers, not so much from agony of the flesh as
+from agony of the mind induced thereby. Daniel
+was a coward before one of the simplest, most in-
+evitable happenings of earthly life. He was a coward
+before summer heat. All winter he dreaded summer.
+Summer poisoned the spring for him. Only during
+the autumn did he experience anything of peace.
+Summer was then over, and between him and another
+summer stretched the blessed perspective of winter.
+Then Daniel Wise drew a long breath and looked
+about him, and spelled out the beauty of the earth
+in his simple primer of understanding. Daniel had
+in his garden behind the house a prolific grape-vine.
+He ate the grapes, full of the savor of the dead sum-
+mer, with the gusto of a poet who can at last enjoy
+triumph over his enemy.
+
+Possibly it was the vein of poetry in Daniel which
+made him a coward -- which made him so vulnerable.
+During the autumn he reveled in the tints of the
+landscape which his sitting-room windows com-
+manded. There were many maples and oaks. Day
+by day the roofs of the houses in the village be-
+came more evident, as the maples shed their crimson
+and gold and purple rags of summer. The oaks re-
+mained, great shaggy masses of dark gold and burn-
+ing russet; later they took on soft hues, making
+clearer the blue firmament between the boughs.
+Daniel watched the autumn trees with pure delight.
+"He will go to-day," he said of a flaming maple
+after a night of frost which had crisped the white
+arches of the grass in his dooryard. All day he
+sat and watched the maple cast its glory, and did
+not bother much with his simple meals. The Wise
+house was erected on three terraces. Always through
+the dry summer the grass was burned to an ugly
+negation of color. Later, when rain came, the grass
+was a brilliant green, patched with rosy sorrel and
+golden stars of arnica. Then later still came the
+diamond brilliance of the frost. So dry were the
+terraces in summer-time that no flowers would
+flourish. When Daniel's mother had come to the
+house as a bride she had planted under a window a
+blush-rose bush, but always the blush-roses were
+few and covered with insects. It was not until the
+autumn, when it was time for the flowers to die, that
+the sorrel blessing of waste lands flushed rosily and
+the arnica showed its stars of slender threads of
+gold, and there might even be a slight glimpse of
+purple aster and a dusty spray or two of goldenrod.
+Then Daniel did not shrink from the sight of the
+terraces. In summer-time the awful negative glare
+of them under the afternoon sun maddened him.
+
+In winter he often visited his brother John in
+the village. He was very fond of John, and John's
+wife, and their only daughter, Dora. When John
+died, and later his wife, he would have gone to live
+with Dora, but she married. Then her husband also
+died, and Dora took up dressmaking, supporting
+herself and her delicate little girl-baby. Daniel
+adored this child. She had been named for him,
+although her mother had been aghast before the propo-
+sition. "Name a girl Daniel, uncle!" she had cried.
+
+"She is going to have what I own after I have
+done with it, anyway," declared Daniel, gazing with
+awe and rapture at the tiny flannel bundle in his
+niece's arms. "That won't make any difference, but
+I do wish you could make up your mind to call her
+after me, Dora."
+
+Dora Lee was soft-hearted. She named her girl-
+baby Daniel, and called her Danny, which was not,
+after all, so bad, and her old uncle loved the child
+as if she had been his own. Little Daniel -- he always
+called her Daniel, or, rather, "Dan'l" -- was the only
+reason for his descending into the village on summer
+days when the weather was hot. Daniel, when he
+visited the village in summer-time, wore always a
+green leaf inside his hat and carried an umbrella
+and a palm-leaf fan. This caused the village boys to
+shout, "Hullo, grandma!" after him. Daniel, being
+a little hard of hearing, was oblivious, but he would
+have been in any case. His whole mind was con-
+centrated in getting along that dusty glare of street,
+stopping at the store for a paper bag of candy, and
+finally ending in Dora's little dark parlor, holding his
+beloved namesake on his knee, watching her bliss-
+fully suck a barley stick while he waved his palm-
+leaf fan. Dora would be fitting gowns in the next
+room. He would hear the hum of feminine chatter
+over strictly feminine topics. He felt very much
+aloof, even while holding the little girl on his knee.
+Daniel had never married -- had never even h ad a sweet-
+heart. The marriageable women he had seen had not
+been of the type to attract a dreamer like Daniel Wise.
+Many of those women thought him "a little off."
+
+Dora Lee, his niece, privately wondered if her
+uncle had his full allotment of understanding. He
+seemed much more at home with her little daughter
+than with herself, and Dora considered herself a
+very good business woman, with possibly an unusual
+endowment of common sense. She was such a good
+business woman that when she died suddenly she
+left her child with quite a sum in the bank, besides
+the house. Daniel did not hesitate for a moment.
+He engaged Miss Sarah Dean for a housekeeper,
+and took the little girl (hardly more than a baby)
+to his own home. Dora had left a will, in which
+she appointed Daniel guardian in spite of her doubt
+concerning his measure of understanding. There was
+much comment in the village when Daniel took
+his little namesake to live in his lonely house on
+the terrace. "A man and an old maid to bring up
+that poor child!" they said. But Daniel called
+Dr. Trumbull to his support. "It is much better for
+that delicate child to be out of this village, which
+drains the south hill," Dr. Trumbull declared.
+"That child needs pure air. It is hot enough in
+summer all around here, and hot enough at Daniel's,
+but the air is pure there."
+
+There was no gossip about Daniel and Miss
+Sarah Dean. Gossip would have seemed about as
+foolish concerning him and a dry blade of field-grass.
+Sarah Dean looked like that. She wore rusty black
+gowns, and her gray-blond hair was swept curtain-
+wise over her ears on either side of her very thin,
+mildly severe wedge of a face. Sarah was a notable
+housekeeper and a good cook. She could make an
+endless variety of cakes and puddings and pies, and
+her biscuits were marvels. Daniel had long catered
+for himself, and a rasher of bacon, with an egg,
+suited him much better for supper than hot biscuits,
+preserves, and five kinds of cake. Still, he did not
+complain, and did not understand that Sarah's fare
+was not suitable for the child, until Dr. Trumbull
+told him so.
+
+"Don't you let that child live on that kind of food
+if you want her to live at all," said Dr. Trumbull.
+"Lord! what are the women made of, and the men
+they feed, for that matter? Why, Daniel, there are
+many people in this place, and hard-working people,
+too, who eat a quantity of food, yet don't get enough
+nourishment for a litter of kittens."
+
+"What shall I do?" asked Daniel in a puzzled way.
+
+"Do? You can cook a beefsteak yourself, can't
+you? Sarah Dean would fry one as hard as sole-
+leather."
+
+"Yes, I can cook a beefsteak real nice," said
+Daniel.
+
+"Do it, then; and cook some chops, too, and
+plenty of eggs."
+
+"I don't exactly hanker after quite so much sweet
+stuff," said Daniel. "I wonder if Sarah's feelings
+will be hurt."
+
+"It is much better for feelings to be hurt than
+stomachs," declared Dr. Trumbull, "but Sarah's
+feelings will not be hurt. I know her. She is a wiry
+woman. Give her a knock and she springs back
+into place. Don't worry about her, Daniel."
+
+When Daniel went home that night he carried a
+juicy steak, and he cooked it, and he and little Dan'1
+had a square meal. Sarah refused the steak with a
+slight air of hauteur, but she behaved very well.
+When she set away her untasted layer-cakes and
+pies and cookies, she eyed them somewhat anxiously.
+Her standard of values seemed toppling before her
+mental vision. "They will starve to death if they
+live on such victuals as beefsteak, instead of good
+nourishing hot biscuits and cake," she thought.
+After the supper dishes were cleared away she went
+into the sitting-room where Daniel Wise sat beside
+a window, waiting in a sort of stern patience for a
+whiff of air. It was a very close evening. The sun
+was red in the low west, but a heaving sea of mist was
+rising over the lowlands.
+
+Sarah sat down opposite Daniel. "Close, ain't
+it?" said she. She began knitting her lace edging.
+
+"Pretty close," replied Daniel. He spoke with
+an effect of forced politeness. Although he had such
+a horror of extreme heat, he was always chary of
+boldly expressing his mind concerning it, for he had
+a feeling that he might be guilty of blasphemy, since
+he regarded the weather as being due to an Almighty
+mandate. Therefore, although he suffered, he was
+extremely polite.
+
+"It is awful up-stairs in little Dan'l's room," said
+Sarah. "I have got all the windows open except the
+one that's right on the bed, and I told her she needn't
+keep more than the sheet and one comfortable over
+her."
+
+Daniel looked anxious. "Children ain't ever over-
+come when they are in bed, in the house, are they?"
+
+"Land, no! I never heard of such a thing. And,
+anyway, little Dan'l's so thin it ain't likely she feels
+the heat as much as some."
+
+"I hope she don't."
+
+Daniel continued to sit hunched up on himself,
+gazing with a sort of mournful irritation out of the
+window upon the landscape over which the misty
+shadows vaguely wavered.
+
+Sarah knitted. She could knit in the dark. After
+a while she rose and said she guessed she would go
+to bed, as to-morrow was her sweeping-day.
+
+Sarah went, and Daniel sat alone.
+
+Presently a little pale figure stole to him through
+the dusk -- the child, in her straight white night-
+gown, padding softly on tiny naked feet.
+
+"Is that you, Dan'l?"
+
+"Yes, Uncle Dan'l."
+
+"Is it too hot to sleep up in your room?"
+
+"I didn't feel so very hot, Uncle Dan'l, but skeet-
+ers were biting me, and a great big black thing just
+flew in my window!"
+
+"A bat, most likely."
+
+"A bat!" Little Dan'l shuddered. She began a
+little stifled wail. "I'm afeard of bats," she la-
+mented.
+
+Daniel gathered the tiny creature up. "You can
+jest set here with Uncle Dan'l," said he. "It is jest
+a little cooler here, I guess. Once in a while there
+comes a little whiff of wind."
+
+"Won't any bats come?"
+
+"Lord, no! Your Uncle Dan'l won't let any bats
+come within a gun-shot."
+
+The little creature settled down contentedly in the
+old man's lap. Her fair, thin locks fell over his
+shirt-sleeved arm, her upturned profile was sweetly
+pure and clear even in the dusk. She was so deli-
+cately small that he might have been holding a fairy,
+from the slight roundness of the childish limbs and
+figure. Poor little girl! -- Dan'1 was much too small
+and thin. Old man Daniel gazed down at her
+anxiously.
+
+"Jest as soon as the nice fall weather comes,"
+said he, "uncle is going to take you down to the
+village real often, and you can get acquainted with
+some other nice little girls and play with them, and
+that will do uncle's little Dan'l good."
+
+"I saw little Lucy Rose," piped the child, "and
+she looked at me real pleasant, and Lily Jennings
+wore a pretty dress. Would they play with me,
+uncle?"
+
+"Of course they would. You don't feel quite so
+hot, here, do you?"
+
+"I wasn't so hot, anyway; I was afeard of bats."
+
+"There ain't any bats here."
+
+"And skeeters."
+
+"Uncle don't believe there's any skeeters, neither."
+
+"I don't hear any sing," agreed little Dan'l in a
+weak voice. Very soon she was fast asleep. The
+old man sat holding her, and loving her with a simple
+crystalline intensity which was fairly heavenly. He
+himself almost disregarded the heat, being raised
+above it by sheer exaltation of spirit. All the love
+which had lain latent in his heart leaped to life be-
+fore the helplessness of this little child in his arms.
+He realized himself as much greater and of more
+importance upon the face of the earth than he had
+ever been before. He became paternity incarnate
+and superblessed. It was a long time before he car-
+ried the little child back to her room and laid her,
+still as inert with sleep as a lily, upon her bed. He
+bent over her with a curious waving motion of his
+old shoulders as if they bore wings of love and pro-
+tection; then he crept back down-stairs.
+
+On nights like that he did not go to bed. All the
+bedrooms were under the slant of the roof and were
+hot. He preferred to sit until dawn beside his open
+window, and doze when he could, and wait with
+despairing patience for the infrequent puffs of cool
+air breathing blessedly of wet swamp places, which,
+even when the burning sun arose, would only show
+dewy eyes of cool reflection. Daniel Wise, as he sat
+there through the sultry night, even prayed for
+courage, as a devout sentinel might have prayed
+at his post. The imagination of the deserter was
+not in the man. He never even dreamed of appro-
+priating to his own needs any portion of his savings,
+and going for a brief respite to the deep shadows of
+mountainous places, or to a cool coast, where the
+great waves broke in foam upon the sand, breathing
+out the mighty saving breath of the sea. It never
+occurred to him that he could do anything but re-
+main at his post and suffer in body and soul and
+mind, and not complain.
+
+The next morning was terrible. The summer had
+been one of unusually fervid heat, but that one day
+was its climax. David went panting up-stairs to
+his room at dawn. He did not wish Sarah Dean to
+know that he had sat up all night. He opened his
+bed, tidily, as was his wont. Through living alone
+he had acquired many of the habits of an orderly
+housewife. He went down-stairs, and Sarah was in
+the kitchen.
+
+"It is a dreadful hot day," said she as Daniel
+approached the sink to wash his face and hands.
+
+"It does seem a little warm," admitted Daniel,
+with his studied air of politeness with respect to the
+weather as an ordinance of God.
+
+"Warm!" echoed Sarah Dean. Her thin face
+blazed a scarlet wedge between the sleek curtains
+of her dank hair; perspiration stood on her triangle
+of forehead. "It is the hottest day I ever knew!"
+she said, defiantly, and there was open rebellion in
+her tone.
+
+"It IS sort of warmish, I rather guess," said
+Daniel.
+
+After breakfast, old Daniel announced his in-
+tention of taking little Dan'l out for a walk.
+
+At that Sarah Dean fairly exploded. "Be you
+gone clean daft, Dan'l?" said she. "Don't you know
+that it actually ain't safe to take out such a delicate
+little thing as that on such a day?"
+
+"Dr. Trumbull said to take her outdoors for a
+walk every day, rain or shine," returned Daniel,
+obstinately.
+
+"But Dr. Trumbull didn't say to take her out if
+it rained fire and brimstone, I suppose," said Sarah
+Dean, viciously.
+
+Daniel looked at her with mild astonishment.
+
+"It is as much as that child's life is worth to take
+her out such a day as this," declared Sarah, viciously.
+
+"Dr. Trumbull said to take no account of the
+weather," said Daniel with stubborn patience, "and
+we will walk on the shady side of the road, and
+go to Bradley's Brook. It's always a little cool
+there."
+
+"If she faints away before you get there, you
+bring her right home," said Sarah. She was almost
+ferocious. "Just because YOU don't feel the heat,
+to take out that little pindlin' girl such a day!" she
+exclaimed.
+
+"Dr. Trumbull said to," persisted Daniel, al-
+though he looked a little troubled. Sarah Dean
+did not dream that, for himself, Daniel Wise would
+have preferred facing an army with banners to going
+out under that terrible fusillade of sun-rays. She
+did not dream of the actual heroism which actuated
+him when he set out with little Dan'l, holding his
+big umbrella over her little sunbonneted head and
+waving in his other hand a palm-leaf fan.
+
+Little Dan'l danced with glee as she went out of
+the yard. The small, anemic creature did not feel
+the heat except as a stimulant. Daniel had to keep
+charging her to walk slowly. "Don't go so fast,
+little Dan'l, or you'll get overhet, and then what
+will Mis' Dean say?" he continually repeated.
+
+Little Dan'l's thin, pretty face peeped up at him
+from between the sides of her green sunbonnet. She
+pointed one dainty finger at a cloud of pale yellow
+butterflies in the field beside which they were walk-
+ing. "Want to chase flutterbies," she chirped.
+Little Dan'l had a fascinating way of misplacing
+her consonants in long words.
+
+"No; you'll get overhet. You just walk along
+slow with Uncle Dan'l, and pretty soon we'll come
+to the pretty brook," said Daniel.
+
+"Where the lagon-dries live?" asked little Dan'l,
+meaning dragon-flies.
+
+"Yes," said Daniel. He was conscious, as he
+spoke, of increasing waves of thready black floating
+before his eyes. They had floated since dawn, but
+now they were increasing. Some of the time he
+could hardly see the narrow sidewalk path between
+the dusty meadowsweet and hardhack bushes, since
+those floating black threads wove together into a
+veritable veil before him. At such times he walked
+unsteadily, and little Dan'l eyed him curiously.
+
+"Why don't you walk the way you always do?"
+she queried.
+
+"Uncle Dan'l can't see jest straight, somehow,"
+replied the old man; "guess it's because it's rather
+warm."
+
+It was in truth a day of terror because of the heat.
+It was one of those days which break records, which
+live in men's memories as great catastrophes, which
+furnish head-lines for newspapers, and are alluded
+to with shudders at past sufferings. It was one of
+those days which seem to forecast the Dreadful
+Day of Revelation wherein no shelter may be found
+from the judgment of the fiery firmament. On that
+day men fell in their tracks and died, or were rushed
+to hospitals to be succored as by a miracle. And on
+that day the poor old man who had all his life feared
+and dreaded the heat as the most loathly happening
+of earth, walked afield for love of the little child.
+As Daniel went on the heat seemed to become pal-
+pable -- something which could actually be seen.
+There was now a thin, gaseous horror over the blaz-
+ing sky, which did not temper the heat, but in-
+creased it, giving it the added torment of steam.
+The clogging moisture seemed to brood over the
+accursed earth, like some foul bird with deadly
+menace in wings and beak.
+
+Daniel walked more and more unsteadily. Once
+he might have fallen had not the child thrown one
+little arm around a bending knee. "You 'most
+tumbled down. Uncle Dan'l," said she. Her little
+voice had a surprised and frightened note in it.
+
+"Don't you be scared," gasped Daniel; "we
+have got 'most to the brook; then we'll be all right.
+Don't you be scared, and -- you walk real slow and
+not get overhet."
+
+The brook was near, and it was time. Daniel
+staggered under the trees beside which the little
+stream trickled over its bed of stones. It was not
+much of a brook at best, and the drought had caused
+it to lose much of its life. However, it was still
+there, and there were delicious little hollows of cool-
+ness between the stones over which it flowed, and
+large trees stood about with their feet rooted in the
+blessed damp. Then Daniel sank down. He tried to
+reach a hand to the water, but could not. The
+black veil had woven a compact mass before his
+eyes. There was a terrible throbbing in his head,
+but his arms were numb.
+
+Little Dan'l stood looking at him, and her lip
+quivered. With a mighty effort Daniel cleared
+away the veil and saw the piteous baby face. "Take
+-- Uncle Dan'l's hat and -- fetch him -- some water,"
+he gasped. "Don't go too -- close and -- tumble in."
+
+The child obeyed. Daniel tried to take the drip-
+ping hat, but failed. Little Dan'l was wise enough
+to pour the water over the old man's head, but she
+commenced to weep, the pitiful, despairing wail of
+a child who sees failing that upon which she has
+leaned for support.
+
+Daniel rallied again. The water on his head gave
+him momentary relief, but more than anything else
+his love for the child nerved him to effort.
+
+"Listen, little Dan'l," he said, and his voice
+sounded in his own ears like a small voice of a soul
+thousands of miles away. "You take the -- um-
+brella, and -- you take the fan, and you go real slow,
+so you don't get overhet, and you tell Mis' Dean,
+and --"
+
+Then old Daniel's tremendous nerve, that he had
+summoned for the sake of love, failed him, and he
+sank back. He was quite unconscious -- his face,
+staring blindly up at the terrible sky between the
+trees, was to little Dan'l like the face of a stranger.
+She gave one cry, more like the yelp of a trodden
+animal than a child's voice. Then she took the open
+umbrella and sped away. The umbrella bobbed
+wildly -- nothing could be seen of poor little Dan'l
+but her small, speeding feet. She wailed loudly all
+the way.
+
+She was half-way home when, plodding along in
+a cloud of brown dust, a horse appeared in the road.
+The horse wore a straw bonnet and advanced very
+slowly. He drew a buggy, and in the buggy were
+Dr. Trumbull and Johnny, his son. He had called
+at Daniel's to see the little girl, and, on being told
+that they had gone to walk, had said something
+under his breath and turned his horse's head down
+the road.
+
+"When we meet them, you must get out, Johnny,"
+he said, "and I will take in that poor old man and
+that baby. I wish I could put common sense in
+every bottle of medicine. A day like this!"
+
+Dr. Trumbull exclaimed when he saw the great
+bobbing black umbrella and heard the wails. The
+straw-bonneted horse stopped abruptly. Dr. Trum-
+bull leaned out of the buggy. "Who are you?" he
+demanded.
+
+"Uncle Dan'l is gone," shrieked the child.
+
+"Gone where? What do you mean?"
+
+"He -- tumbled right down, and then he was --
+somebody else. He ain't there."
+
+"Where is 'there'? Speak up quick!"
+
+"The brook -- Uncle Dan'l went away at the
+brook."
+
+Dr. Trumbull acted swiftly. He gave Johnny a
+push. "Get out," he said. "Take that baby into
+Jim Mann's house there, and tell Mrs. Mann to
+keep her in the shade and look out for her, and you
+tell Jim, if he hasn't got his horse in his farm-wagon,
+to look lively and harness her in and put all the ice
+they've got in the house in the wagon. Hurry!"
+
+Johnny was over the wheel before his father had
+finished speaking, and Jim Mann just then drew up
+alongside in his farm-wagon.
+
+"What's to pay?" he inquired, breathless. He
+was a thin, sinewy man, scantily clad in cotton
+trousers and a shirt wide open at the breast. Green
+leaves protruded from under the brim of his tilted
+straw hat.
+
+"Old Daniel Wise is overcome by the heat," an-
+swered Dr. Trumbull. "Put all the ice you have
+in the house in your wagon, and come along. I'll
+leave my horse and buggy here. Your horse is faster."
+
+Presently the farm-wagon clattered down the road,
+dust-hidden behind a galloping horse. Mrs. Jim
+Mann, who was a loving mother of children, was
+soothing little Dan'l. Johnny Trumbull watched
+at the gate. When the wagon returned he ran out
+and hung on behind, while the strong, ungainly
+farm-horse galloped to the house set high on the
+sun-baked terraces.
+
+When old Daniel revived he found himself in the
+best parlor, with ice all about him. Thunder was
+rolling overhead and hail clattered on the windows.
+A sudden storm, the heat-breaker, had come up and
+the dreadful day was vanquished. Daniel looked
+up and smiled a vague smile of astonishment at Dr.
+Trumbull and Sarah Dean; then his eyes wandered
+anxiously about.
+
+"The child is all right," said Dr. Trumbull;
+"don't you worry, Daniel. Mrs. Jim Mann is tak-
+ing care of her. Don't you try to talk. You didn't
+exactly have a sunstroke, but the heat was too much
+for you."
+
+But Daniel spoke, in spite of the doctor's man-
+date. "The heat," said he, in a curiously clear
+voice," ain't never goin' to be too much for me again."
+
+"Don't you talk, Daniel," repeated Dr. Trum-
+bull. "You've always been nervous about the heat.
+Maybe you won't be again, but keep still. When I
+told you to take that child out every day I didn't
+mean when the world was like Sodom and Gomor-
+rah. Thank God, it will be cooler now."
+
+Sarah Dean stood beside the doctor. She looked
+pale and severe, but adequate. She did not even
+state that she had urged old Daniel not to go out.
+There was true character in Sarah Dean.
+
+The weather that summer was an unexpected
+quantity. Instead of the day after the storm being
+cool, it was hot. However, old Daniel, after his re-
+covery, insisted on going out of doors with little
+Dan'l after breakfast. The only concession which
+he would make to Sarah Dean, who was fairly fran-
+tic with anxiety, was that he would merely go down
+the road as far as the big elm-tree, that he would sit
+down there, and let the child play about within sight.
+
+"You'll be brought home agin, sure as preachin',"
+said Sarah Dean, "and if you're brought home ag'in,
+you won't get up ag'in."
+
+Old Daniel laughed. "Now don't you worry,
+Sarah," said he. "I'll set down under that big ellum
+and keep cool."
+
+Old Daniel, at Sarah's earnest entreaties, took a
+palm-leaf fan. But he did not use it. He sat peace-
+fully under the cool trail of the great elm all the
+forenoon, while little Dan'l played with her doll.
+The child was rather languid after her shock of the
+day before, and not disposed to run about. Also,
+she had a great sense of responsibility about the old
+man. Sarah Dean had privately charged her not
+to let Uncle Daniel get "overhet." She continually
+glanced up at him with loving, anxious, baby eyes.
+
+"Be you overhet. Uncle Dan'l?" she would ask.
+
+"No, little Dan'l, uncle ain't a mite overhet,"
+the old man would assure her. Now and then little
+Dan'l left her doll, climbed into the old man's lap,
+and waved the palm-leaf fan before his face.
+
+Old Daniel Wise loved her so that he seemed, to
+himself, fairly alight with happiness. He made up his
+mind that he would find some little girl in the village
+to come now and then and play with little Dan'l.
+In the cool of that evening he stole out of the back
+door, covertly, lest Sarah Dean discover him, and
+walked slowly to the rector's house in the village.
+The rector's wife was sitting on her cool, vine-shaded
+veranda. She was alone, and Daniel was glad. He
+asked her if the little girl who had come to live with
+her, Content Adams, could not come the next after-
+noon and see little Dan'l. "Little Dan'l had ought
+to see other children once in a while, and Sarah Dean
+makes real nice cookies," he stated, pleadingly.
+
+Sally Patterson laughed good-naturedly. "Of
+course she can, Mr. Wise," she said.
+
+The next afternoon Sally herself drove the rec-
+tor's horse, and brought Content to pay a call on
+little Dan'l. Sally and Sarah Dean visited in the
+sitting-room, and left the little girls alone in the
+parlor with a plate of cookies, to get acquainted.
+They sat in solemn silence and stared at each other.
+Neither spoke. Neither ate a cooky. When Sally
+took her leave, she asked little Dan'l if she had had
+a nice time with Content, and little Dan'l said,
+"Yes, ma'am."
+
+Sarah insisted upon Content's carrying the cookies
+home in the dish with a napkin over it.
+
+"When can I go again to see that other little girl?"
+asked Content as she and Sally were jogging home.
+
+"Oh, almost any time. I will drive you over --
+because it is rather a lonesome walk for you. Did
+you like the little girl? She is younger than you."
+
+"Yes'm."
+
+Also little Dan'l inquired of old Daniel when the
+other little girl was coming again, and nodded em-
+phatically when asked if she had had a nice time.
+Evidently both had enjoyed, after the inscrutable
+fashion of childhood, their silent session with each
+other. Content came generally once a week, and
+old Daniel was invited to take little Dan'l to the
+rector's. On that occasion Lucy Rose was present,
+and Lily Jennings. The four little girls had tea to-
+gether at a little table set on the porch, and only
+Lily Jennings talked. The rector drove old Daniel
+and the child home, and after they had arrived the
+child's tongue was loosened and she chattered. She
+had seen everything there was to be seen at the rec-
+tor's. She told of it in her little silver pipe of a voice.
+She had to be checked and put to bed, lest she be
+tired out.
+
+"I never knew that child could talk so much," Sarah
+said to Daniel, after the little girl had gone up-stairs.
+
+"She talks quite some when she's alone with me."
+
+"And she seems to see everything."
+
+"Ain't much that child don't see," said Daniel,
+proudly.
+
+The summer continued unusually hot, but Daniel
+never again succumbed. When autumn came, for
+the first time in his old life old Daniel Wise was
+sorrowful. He dreaded the effect of the frost and
+the winter upon his precious little Dan'l, whom he
+put before himself as fondly as any father could
+have done, and as the season progressed his dread
+seemed justified. Poor little Dan'l had cold after
+cold. Content Adams and Lucy Rose came to see
+her. The rector's wife and the doctor's sent dainties.
+But the child coughed and pined, and old Daniel
+began to look forward to spring and summer -- the
+seasons which had been his bugaboos through life
+-- as if they were angels. When the February thaw
+came, he told little Dan'l, "Jest look at the snow
+meltin' and the drops hangin' on the trees; that is
+a sign of summer."
+
+Old Daniel watched for the first green light along
+the fences and the meadow hollows. When the trees
+began to cast slightly blurred shadows, because of
+budding leaves, and the robins hopped over the
+terraces, and now and then the air was cleft with
+blue wings, he became jubilant. "Spring is jest
+about here, and then uncle's little Dan'l will stop
+coughin', and run out of doors and pick flowers," he
+told the child beside the window.
+
+Spring came that year with a riotous rush. Blos-
+soms, leaves, birds, and flowers -- all arrived pell-
+mell, fairly smothering the world with sweetness
+and music. In May, about the first of the month,
+there was an intensely hot day. It was as hot as
+midsummer. Old Daniel with little Dan'l went
+afield. It was, to both, as if they fairly saw the car-
+nival-arrival of flowers, of green garlands upon tree-
+branches, of birds and butterflies. "Spring is right
+here!" said old Daniel. "Summer is right here!
+Pick them vilets in that holler, little Dan'l." The
+old man sat on a stone in the meadowland, and
+watched the child in the blue-gleaming hollow gather
+up violets in her little hands as if they were jewels.
+The sun beat upon his head, the air was heavy with
+fragrance, laden with moisture. Old Daniel wiped
+his forehead. He was heated, but so happy that he
+was not aware of it. He saw wonderful new lights
+over everything. He had wielded love, the one in-
+vincible weapon of the whole earth, and had con-
+quered his intangible and dreadful enemy. When,
+for the sake of that little beloved life, his own life
+had become as nothing, old Daniel found himself
+superior to it. He sat there in the tumultuous heat
+of the May day, watching the child picking violets
+and gathering strength with every breath of the
+young air of the year, and he realized that the fear
+of his whole life was overcome for ever. He realized
+that never again, though they might bring suffering,
+even death, would he dread the summers with their
+torrid winds and their burning lights, since, through
+love, he had become under-lord of all the conditions
+of his life upon earth.
+
+
+
+
+BIG SISTER SOLLY
+
+
+
+
+
+BIG SISTER SOLLY
+
+IT did seem strange that Sally Patterson, who,
+according to her own self-estimation, was the
+least adapted of any woman in the village, should
+have been the one chosen by a theoretically selective
+providence to deal with a psychological problem.
+
+It was conceded that little Content Adams was a
+psychological problem. She was the orphan child of
+very distant relatives of the rector. When her par-
+ents died she had been cared for by a widowed aunt
+on her mother's side, and this aunt had also borne
+the reputation of being a creature apart. When the
+aunt died, in a small village in the indefinite "Out
+West," the presiding clergyman had notified Edward
+Patterson of little Content's lonely and helpless
+estate. The aunt had subsisted upon an annuity
+which had died with her. The child had inherited
+nothing except personal property. The aunt's house
+had been bequeathed to the church over which the
+clergyman presided, and after her aunt's death he
+took her to his own home until she could be sent to
+her relatives, and he and his wife were exceedingly
+punctilious about every jot and tittle of the aunt's
+personal belongings. They even purchased two
+extra trunks for them, which they charged to the
+rector.
+
+Little Content, traveling in the care of a lady who
+had known her aunt and happened to be coming
+East, had six large trunks, besides a hat-box and two
+suit-cases and a nailed-up wooden box containing
+odds and ends. Content made quite a sensation
+when she arrived and her baggage was piled on the
+station platform.
+
+Poor Sally Patterson unpacked little Content's
+trunks. She had sent the little girl to school within
+a few days after her arrival. Lily Jennings and
+Amelia Wheeler called for her, and aided her down
+the street between them, arms interlocked. Content,
+although Sally had done her best with a pretty
+ready-made dress and a new hat, was undeniably a
+peculiar-looking child. In the first place, she had
+an expression so old that it was fairly uncanny.
+
+"That child has downward curves beside her
+mouth already, and lines between her eyes, and what
+she will look like a few years hence is beyond me,"
+Sally told her husband after she had seen the little
+girl go out of sight between Lily's curls and ruffles
+and ribbons and Amelia's smooth skirts.
+
+"She doesn't look like a happy child," agreed the
+rector. "Poor little thing! Her aunt Eudora must
+have been a queer woman to train a child."
+
+"She is certainly trained," said Sally, ruefully;
+"too much so. Content acts as if she were afraid to
+move or speak or even breathe unless somebody
+signals permission. I pity her."
+
+She was in the storeroom, in the midst of Con-
+tent's baggage. The rector sat on an old chair,
+smoking. He had a conviction that it behooved him
+as a man to stand by his wife during what might
+prove an ordeal. He had known Content's deceased
+aunt years before. He had also known the clergyman
+who had taken charge of her personal property and
+sent it on with Content.
+
+"Be prepared for finding almost anything. Sally,"
+he observed. "Mr. Zenock Shanksbury, as I re-
+member him, was so conscientious that it amounted
+to mania. I am sure he has sent simply unspeakable
+things rather than incur the reproach of that con-
+science of his with regard to defrauding Content of
+one jot or tittle of that personal property."
+
+Sally shook out a long, black silk dress, with jet
+dangling here and there. "Now here is this dress,"
+said she. "I suppose I really must keep this, but
+when that child is grown up the silk will probably
+be cracked and entirely worthless."
+
+"You had better take the two trunks and pack
+them with such things, and take your chances."
+
+"Oh, I suppose so. I suppose I must take chances
+with everything except furs and wools, which will
+collect moths. Oh, goodness!" Sally held up an
+old-fashioned fitch fur tippet. Little vague winged
+things came from it like dust. "Moths!" said she,
+tragically. "Moths now. It is full of them. Ed-
+ward, you need not tell me that clergyman's wife
+was conscientious. No conscientious woman would
+have sent an old fur tippet all eaten with moths into
+another woman's house. She could not."
+
+Sally took flying leaps across the storeroom. She
+flung open the window and tossed out the mangy
+tippet. "This is simply awful!" she declared, as she
+returned. "Edward, don't you think we are justi-
+fied in having Thomas take all these things out in
+the back yard and making a bonfire of the whole
+lot?"
+
+"No, my dear."
+
+"But, Edward, nobody can tell what will come
+next. If Content's aunt had died of a contagious
+disease, nothing could induce me to touch another
+thing."
+
+"Well, dear, you know that she died from the
+shock of a carriage accident, because she had a weak
+heart."
+
+"I know it, and of course there is nothing con-
+tagious about that." Sally took up an ancient
+bandbox and opened it. She displayed its contents:
+a very frivolous bonnet dating back in style a half-
+century, gay with roses and lace and green strings,
+and another with a heavy crape veil dependent.
+
+"You certainly do not advise me to keep these?"
+asked Sally, despondently.
+
+Edward Patterson looked puzzled. "Use your
+own judgment," he said, finally.
+
+Sally summarily marched across the room and
+flung the gay bonnet and the mournful one out of the
+window. Then she took out a bundle of very old
+underwear which had turned a saffron yellow with
+age. "People are always coming to me for old linen
+in case of burns," she said, succinctly. "After these
+are washed I can supply an auto da fe."
+
+Poor Sally worked all that day and several days
+afterward. The rector deserted her, and she relied
+upon her own good sense in the disposition of little
+Content's legacy. When all was over she told her
+husband.
+
+"Well, Edward," said she, "there is exactly one
+trunk half full of things which the child may live to
+use, but it is highly improbable. We have had six
+bonfires, and I have given away three suits of old
+clothes to Thomas's father. The clothes were very
+large."
+
+"Must have belonged to Eudora's first husband.
+He was a stout man," said Edward.
+
+"And I have given two small suits of men's clothes
+to the Aid Society for the next out-West barrel."
+
+"Eudora's second husband's."
+
+"And I gave the washerwoman enough old baking-
+dishes to last her lifetime, and some cracked dishes.
+Most of the dishes were broken, but a few were only
+cracked; and I have given Silas Thomas's wife ten
+old wool dresses and a shawl and three old cloaks.
+All the other things which did not go into the bon-
+fires went to the Aid Society. They will go back out
+West." Sally laughed, a girlish peal, and her hus-
+band joined. But suddenly her smooth forehead
+contracted. "Edward," said she.
+
+"Well, dear?"
+
+"I am terribly puzzled about one thing." The
+two were sitting in the study. Content had gone to
+bed. Nobody could hear easily, but Sally Patterson
+lowered her voice, and her honest, clear blue eyes had
+a frightened expression.
+
+"What is it, dear?"
+
+"You will think me very silly and cowardly, and
+I think I have never been cowardly, but this is really
+very strange. Come with me. I am such a goose,
+I don't dare go alone to that storeroom."
+
+The rector rose. Sally switched on the lights as
+they went up-stairs to the storeroom.
+
+"Tread very softly," she whispered. "Content is
+probably asleep."
+
+The two tiptoed up the stairs and entered the
+storeroom. Sally approached one of the two new
+trunks which had come with Content from out West.
+She opened it. She took out a parcel nicely folded
+in a large towel.
+
+"See here, Edward Patterson."
+
+The rector stared as Sally shook out a dress --
+a gay, up-to-date dress, a young girl's dress, a very
+tall young girl's, for the skirts trailed on the floor as
+Sally held it as high as she could. It was made of
+a fine white muslin. There was white lace on the
+bodice, and there were knots of blue ribbon scattered
+over the whole, knots of blue ribbon confining tiny
+bunches of rosebuds and daisies. These knots of
+blue ribbon and the little flowers made it undeniably
+a young girl's costume. Even in the days of all ages
+wearing the costumes of all ages, an older woman
+would have been abashed before those exceedingly
+youthful knots of blue ribbons and flowers.
+
+The rector looked approvingly at it. "That is
+very pretty, it seems to me," he said. "That must
+be worth keeping, Sally."
+
+"Worth keeping! Well, Edward Patterson, just
+wait. You are a man, and of course you cannot un-
+derstand how very strange it is about the dress."
+The rector looked inquiringly.
+
+"I want to know," said Sally, "if Content's aunt
+Eudora had any young relative besides Content. I
+mean had she a grown-up young girl relative who
+would wear a dress like this?"
+
+"I don't know of anybody. There might have
+been some relative of Eudora's first husband. No,
+he was an only child. I don't think it possible that
+Eudora had any young girl relative."
+
+"If she had," said Sally, firmly, "she would have
+kept this dress. You are sure there was nobody
+else living with Content's aunt at the time she died?"
+
+"Nobody except the servants, and they were an
+old man and his wife."
+
+"Then whose dress was this?"
+
+"I don't know, Sally."
+
+"You don't know, and I don't. It is very strange."
+
+"I suppose," said Edward Patterson, helpless be-
+fore the feminine problem, "that -- Eudora got it in
+some way."
+
+"In some way," repeated Sally. "That is always
+a man's way out of a mystery when there is a mys-
+tery. There is a mystery. There is a mystery which
+worries me. I have not told you all yet, Edward."
+
+"What more is there, dear?"
+
+"I -- asked Content whose dress this was, and
+she said -- Oh, Edward, I do so despise mysteries."
+
+"What did she say, Sally?"
+
+"She said it was her big sister Solly's dress."
+
+"Her what?"
+
+"Her big sister Solly's dress. Edward, has Con-
+tent ever had a sister? Has she a sister now?"
+
+"No, she never had a sister, and she has none
+now," declared the rector, emphatically. "I knew
+all her family. What in the world ails the child?"
+
+"She said her big sister Solly, Edward, and the
+very name is so inane. If she hasn't any big sister
+Solly, what are we going to do?"
+
+"Why, the child must simply lie," said the rector.
+
+"But, Edward, I don't think she knows she lies.
+You may laugh, but I think she is quite sure that
+she has a big sister Solly, and that this is her dress.
+I have not told you the whole. After she came home
+from school to-day she went up to her room, and
+she left the door open, and pretty soon I heard her
+talking. At first I thought perhaps Lily or Amelia
+was up there, although I had not seen either of
+them come in with Content. Then after a while,
+when I had occasion to go up-stairs, I looked in her
+room, and she was quite alone, although I had heard
+her talking as I went up-stairs. Then I said: 'Con-
+tent, I thought somebody was in your room. I
+heard you talking.'
+
+"And she said, looking right into my eyes: 'Yes,
+ma'am, I was talking.'
+
+"'But there is nobody here,' I said.
+
+"'Yes, ma'am,' she said. 'There isn't anybody
+here now, but my big sister Solly was here, and she
+is gone. You heard me talking to my big sister
+Solly.' I felt faint, Edward, and you know it takes
+a good deal to overcome me. I just sat down in
+Content's wicker rocking-chair. I looked at her and
+she looked at me. Her eyes were just as clear and
+blue, and her forehead looked like truth itself. She
+is not exactly a pretty child, and she has a peculiar
+appearance, but she does certainly look truthful and
+good, and she looked so then. She had tried to
+fluff her hair over her forehead a little as I had
+told her, and not pull it back so tight, and she wore
+her new dress, and her face and hands were as clean,
+and she stood straight. You know she is a little
+inclined to stoop, and I have talked to her about
+it. She stood straight, and looked at me with those
+blue eyes, and I did feel fairly dizzy."
+
+"What did you say?"
+
+"Well, after a bit I pulled myself together and
+I said: 'My dear little girl, what is this? What do
+you mean about your big sister Sarah?' Edward,
+I could not bring myself to say that idiotic Solly.
+In fact, I did think I must be mistaken and had not
+heard correctly. But Content just looked at me
+as if she thought me very stupid. 'Solly,' said she.
+'My sister's name is Solly.'
+
+"'But, my dear,' I said, 'I understand that you
+had no sister.'
+
+"'Yes,' said she, 'I have my big sister Solly.'
+
+"'But where has she been all the time?' said I.
+
+"Then Content looked at me and smiled, and it
+was quite a wonderful smile, Edward. She smiled
+as if she knew so much more than I could ever
+know, and quite pitied me."
+
+"She did not answer your question?"
+
+"No, only by that smile which seemed to tell
+whole volumes about that awful Solly's whereabouts,
+only I was too ignorant to read them.
+
+"'Where is she now, dear?' I said, after a little.
+
+"'She is gone now,' said Content.
+
+"'Gone where?' said I.
+
+"And then the child smiled at me again. Edward,
+what are we going to do? Is she untruthful, or has
+she too much imagination? I have heard of such a
+thing as too much imagination, and children telling
+lies which were not really lies."
+
+"So have I," agreed the rector, dryly, "but I
+never believed in it." The rector started to leave
+the room.
+
+"What are you going to do?" inquired Sally.
+
+"I am going to endeavor to discriminate between
+lies and imagination," replied the rector.
+
+Sally plucked at his coat-sleeve as they went
+down-stairs. "My dear," she whispered, "I think
+she is asleep."
+
+"She will have to wake up."
+
+"But, my dear, she may be nervous. Would
+it not be better to wait until to-morrow?"
+
+"I think not," said Edward Patterson. Usually
+an easy-going man, when he was aroused he was
+determined to extremes. Into Content's room he
+marched, Sally following. Neither of them saw
+their small son Jim peeking around his door. He
+had heard -- he could not help it -- the conversation
+earlier in the day between Content and his mother.
+He had also heard other things. He now felt entirely
+justified in listening, although he had a good code
+of honor. He considered himself in a way respon-
+sible, knowing what he knew, for the peace of
+mind of his parents. Therefore he listened, peeking
+around the doorway of his dark room.
+
+The electric light flashed out from Content's
+room, and the little interior was revealed. It was
+charmingly pretty. Sally had done her best to make
+this not altogether welcome little stranger's room
+attractive. There were garlands of rosebuds swung
+from the top of the white satin-papered walls.
+There were dainty toilet things, a little dressing-
+table decked with ivory, a case of books, chairs
+cushioned with rosebud chintz, windows curtained
+with the same.
+
+In the little white bed, with a rose-sprinkled cover-
+lid over her, lay Content. She was not asleep.
+Directly, when the light flashed out, she looked at
+the rector and his wife with her clear blue eyes. Her
+fair hair, braided neatly and tied with pink ribbons,
+lay in two tails on either side of her small, certainly
+very good face. Her forehead was beautiful, very
+white and full, giving her an expression of candor
+which was even noble. Content, little lonely girl
+among strangers in a strange place, mutely beseech-
+ing love and pity, from her whole attitude toward
+life and the world, looked up at Edward Patterson
+and Sally, and the rector realized that his determina-
+tion was giving way. He began to believe in imagi-
+nation, even to the extent of a sister Solly. He had
+never had a daughter, and sometimes the thought
+of one had made his heart tender. His voice was
+very kind when he spoke.
+
+"Well, little girl," he said, "what is this I hear?"
+
+Sally stared at her husband and stifled a chuckle.
+
+As for Content, she looked at the rector and said
+nothing. It was obvious that she did not know
+what he had heard. The rector explained.
+
+"My dear little girl," he said, "your aunt Sally"
+-- they had agreed upon the relationship of uncle and
+aunt to Content -- "tells me that you have been
+telling her about your -- big sister Solly." The rector
+half gasped as he said Solly. He seemed to himself
+to be on the driveling verge of idiocy before the pro-
+nunciation of that absurdly inane name.
+
+Content's responding voice came from the pink-
+and-white nest in which she was snuggled, like the
+fluting pipe of a canary.
+
+"Yes, sir," said she.
+
+"My dear child," said the rector, "you know
+perfectly well that you have no big sister -- Solly."
+Every time the rector said Solly he swallowed hard.
+
+Content smiled as Sally had described her smiling.
+She said nothing. The rector felt reproved and
+looked down upon from enormous heights of inno-
+cence and childhood and the wisdom thereof. How-
+ever, he persisted.
+
+"Content," he said, "what did you mean by
+telling your aunt Sally what you did?"
+
+"I was talking with my big sister Solly," replied
+Content, with the calmness of one stating a funda-
+mental truth of nature.
+
+The rector's face grew stern. "Content," he said,
+"look at me."
+
+Content looked. Looking seemed to be the in-
+stinctive action which distinguished her as an indi-
+vidual.
+
+"Have you a big sister -- Solly?" asked the rector.
+His face was stern, but his voice faltered.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Then -- tell me so."
+
+"I have a big sister Solly," said Content. Now
+she spoke rather wearily, although still sweetly, as
+if puzzled why she had been disturbed in sleep to
+be asked such an obvious question.
+
+"Where has she been all the time, that we have
+known nothing about her?" demanded the rector.
+
+Content smiled. However, she spoke. "Home,"
+said she.
+
+"When did she come here?"
+
+"This morning."
+
+"Where is she now?"
+
+Content smiled and was silent. The rector cast
+a helpless look at his wife. He now did not care
+if she did see that he was completely at a loss.
+How could a great, robust man and a clergyman
+be harsh to a tender little girl child in a pink-and-
+white nest of innocent dreams?
+
+Sally pitied him. She spoke more harshly than
+her husband. "Content Adams," said she, "you
+know perfectly well that you have no big sister
+Solly. Now tell me the truth. Tell me you have
+no big sister Solly."
+
+"I have a big sister Solly," said Content.
+
+"Come, Edward," said Sally. "There is no use
+in staying and talking to this obstinate little girl
+any longer." Then she spoke to Content. "Before
+you go to sleep," said she, "you must say your
+prayers, if you have not already done so."
+
+"I have said my prayers," replied Content, and
+her blue eyes were full of horrified astonishment at
+the suspicion.
+
+"Then," said Sally, "you had better say them
+over and add something. Pray that you may always
+tell the truth."
+
+"Yes, ma'am," said Content, in her little canary
+pipe.
+
+The rector and his wife went out. Sally switched
+off the light with a snap as she passed. Out in the
+hall she stopped and held her husband's arms hard.
+"Hush!" she whispered. They both listened. They
+heard this, in the faintest plaint of a voice:
+
+"They don't believe you are here, Sister Solly,
+but I do."
+
+Sally dashed back into the rosebud room and
+switched on the light. She stared around. She
+opened a closet door. Then she turned off the light
+and joined her husband.
+
+"There was nobody there?" he whispered.
+
+"Of course not."
+
+When they were back in the study the rector
+and his wife looked at each other.
+
+"We will do the best we can," said Sally. "Don't
+worry, Edward, for you have to write your sermon
+to-morrow. We will manage some way. I will admit
+that I rather wish Content had had some other
+distant relative besides you who could have taken
+charge of her."
+
+"You poor child!" said the rector. "It is hard
+on you, Sally, for she is no kith nor kin of yours."
+
+"Indeed I don't mind," said Sally Patterson, "if
+only I can succeed in bringing her up."
+
+Meantime Jim Patterson, up-stairs, sitting over
+his next day's algebra lesson, was even more per-
+plexed than were his parents in the study. He paid
+little attention to his book. "I can manage little
+Lucy," he reflected, "but if the others have got hold
+of it, I don't know."
+
+Presently he rose and stole very softly through
+the hall to Content's door. She was timid, and
+always left it open so she could see the hall light
+until she fell asleep. "Content," whispered Jim.
+
+There came the faintest "What?" in response.
+
+"Don't you," said Jim, in a theatrical whisper,
+"say another word at school to anybody about your
+big sister Solly. If you do, I'll whop you, if you
+are a girl."
+
+"Don't care!" was sighed forth from the room.
+
+"And I'll whop your old big sister Solly, too."
+
+There was a tiny sob.
+
+"I will," declared Jim. "Now you mind!"
+
+The next day Jim cornered little Lucy Rose under
+a cedar-tree before school began. He paid no atten-
+tion to Bubby Harvey and Tom Simmons, who were
+openly sniggering at him. Little Lucy gazed up
+at Jim, and the blue-green shade of the cedar seemed
+to bring out only more clearly the white-rose softness
+of her dear little face. Jim bent over her.
+
+"Want you to do something for me," he whis-
+pered.
+
+Little Lucy nodded gravely.
+
+"If my new cousin Content ever says anything
+to you again -- I heard her yesterday -- about her
+big sister Solly, don't you ever say a word about it
+to anybody else. You will promise me, won't you,
+little Lucy?"
+
+A troubled expression came into little Lucy's kind
+eyes. "But she told Lily, and Lily told Amelia, and
+Amelia told her grandmother Wheeler, and her
+grandmother Wheeler told Miss Parmalee when she
+met her on the street after school, and Miss Parma-
+lee called on my aunt Martha and told her," said
+little Lucy.
+
+"Oh, shucks!" said Jim.
+
+"And my aunt Martha told my father that she
+thought perhaps she ought to ask for her when she
+called on your mother. She said Arnold Carruth's
+aunt Flora was going to call, and his aunt Dorothy.
+I heard Miss Acton tell Miss Parmalee that she
+thought they ought to ask for her when they called
+on your mother, too."
+
+"Little Lucy," he said, and lowered his voice,
+"you must promise me never, as long as you live,
+to tell what I am going to tell you."
+
+Little Lucy looked frightened.
+
+"Promise!" insisted Jim.
+
+"I promise," said little Lucy, in a weak voice.
+
+"Never, as long as you live, to tell anybody.
+Promise!"
+
+"I promise."
+
+"Now, you know if you break your promise and
+tell, you will be guilty of a dreadful lie and be very
+wicked."
+
+Little Lucy shivered. "I never will."
+
+"Well, my new cousin Content Adams -- tells lies."
+
+Little Lucy gasped.
+
+"Yes, she does. She says she has a big sister
+Solly, and she hasn't got any big sister Solly. She
+never did have, and she never will have. She makes
+believe."
+
+"Makes believe?" said little Lucy, in a hopeful
+voice.
+
+"Making believe is just a real mean way of lying.
+Now I made Content promise last night never to
+say one word in school about her big sister Solly, and
+I am going to tell you this, so you can tell Lily and
+the others and not lie. Of course, I don't want to
+lie myself, because my father is rector, and, besides,
+mother doesn't approve of it; but if anybody is
+going to lie, I am the one. Now, you mind, little
+Lucy. Content's big sister Solly has gone away,
+and she is never coming back. If you tell Lily and
+the others I said so, I can't see how you will be lying."
+
+Little Lucy gazed at the boy. She looked like
+truth incarnate. "But," said she, in her adorable
+stupidity of innocence, "I don't see how she could
+go away if she was never here, Jim."
+
+"Oh, of course she couldn't. But all you have to
+do is to say that you heard me say she had gone.
+Don't you understand?"
+
+"I don't understand how Content's big sister Solly
+could possibly go away if she was never here."
+
+"Little Lucy, I wouldn't ask you to tell a lie for
+the world, but if you were just to say that you heard
+me say --"
+
+"I think it would be a lie," said little Lucy, "be-
+cause how can I help knowing if she was never here
+she couldn't --"
+
+"Oh, well, little Lucy," cried Jim, in despair, still
+with tenderness -- how could he be anything but
+tender with little Lucy? -- "all I ask is never to say
+anything about it."
+
+"If they ask me?"
+
+"Anyway, you can hold your tongue. You know
+it isn't wicked to hold your tongue."
+
+Little Lucy absurdly stuck out the pointed tip of
+her little red tongue. Then she shook her head
+slowly.
+
+"Well," she said, "I will hold my tongue."
+
+This encounter with innocence and logic had left
+him worsted. Jim could see no way out of the fact
+that his father, the rector, his mother, the rector's
+wife, and he, the rector's son, were disgraced by
+their relationship to such an unsanctified little soul
+as this queer Content Adams.
+
+And yet he looked at the poor lonely little girl, who
+was trying very hard to learn her lessons, who sug-
+gested in her very pose and movement a little, scared
+rabbit ready to leap the road for some bush of hiding,
+and while he was angry with her he pitied her. He
+had no doubts concerning Content's keeping her
+promise. He was quite sure that he would now say
+nothing whatever about that big sister Solly to the
+others, but he was not prepared for what happened
+that very afternoon.
+
+When he went home from school his heart stood
+still to see Miss Martha Rose, and Arnold Carruth's
+aunt Flora, and his aunt who was not his aunt, Miss
+Dorothy Vernon, who was visiting her, all walking
+along in state with their lace-trimmed parasols,
+their white gloves, and their nice card-cases. Jim
+jumped a fence and raced across lots home, and
+gained on them. He burst in on his mother, sitting
+on the porch, which was inclosed by wire netting
+overgrown with a budding vine. It was the first
+warm day of the season.
+
+"Mother," cried Jim Patterson -- "mother, they
+are coming!"
+
+"Who, for goodness' sake, Jim?"
+
+"Why, Arnold's aunt Flora and his aunt Dorothy
+and little Lucy's aunt Martha. They are coming to
+call."
+
+Involuntarily Sally's hand went up to smooth her
+pretty hair. "Well, what of it, Jim?" said she.
+
+"Mother, they will ask for -- big sister Solly!"
+
+Sally Patterson turned pale. "How do you
+know?"
+
+"Mother, Content has been talking at school. A
+lot know. You will see they will ask for --"
+
+"Run right in and tell Content to stay in her
+room," whispered Sally, hastily, for the callers,
+their white-kidded hands holding their card-cases
+genteelly, were coming up the walk.
+
+Sally advanced, smiling. She put a brave face
+on the matter, but she realized that she, Sally
+Patterson, who had never been a coward, was
+positively afraid before this absurdity. The callers
+sat with her on the pleasant porch, with the young
+vine-shadows making networks over their best gowns.
+Tea was served presently by the maid, and, much to
+Sally's relief, before the maid appeared came the
+inquiry. Miss Martha Rose made it.
+
+"We would be pleased to see Miss Solly Adams
+also," said Miss Martha.
+
+Flora Carruth echoed her. "I was so glad to hear
+another nice girl had come to the village," said she
+with enthusiasm. Miss Dorothy Vernon said some-
+thing indefinite to the same effect.
+
+"I am sorry," replied Sally, with an effort, "but
+there is no Miss Solly Adams here now." She spoke
+the truth as nearly as she could manage without
+unraveling the whole ridiculous affair. The callers
+sighed with regret, tea was served with little cakes,
+and they fluttered down the walk, holding their card-
+cases, and that ordeal was over.
+
+But Sally sought the rector in his study, and she
+was trembling. "Edward," she cried out, regardless
+of her husband's sermon, "something must be done
+now."
+
+"Why, what is the matter, Sally?"
+
+"People are -- calling on her."
+
+"Calling on whom?"
+
+"Big sister -- Solly!" Sally explained.
+
+"Well, don't worry, dear," said the rector. "Of
+course we will do something, but we must think it
+over. Where is the child now?"
+
+"She and Jim are out in the garden. I saw them
+pass the window just now. Jim is such a dear boy,
+he tries hard to be nice to her. Edward Patterson,
+we ought not to wait."
+
+"My dear, we must."
+
+Meantime Jim and Content Adams were out in
+the garden. Jim had gone to Content's door and
+tapped and called out, rather rudely: "Content, I
+say, put on your hat and come along out in the
+garden. I've got something to tell you."
+
+"Don't want to," protested Content's little voice,
+faintly.
+
+"You come right along."
+
+And Content came along. She was an obedient
+child, and she liked Jim, although she stood much
+in awe of him. She followed him into the garden
+back of the rectory, and they sat down on the bench
+beneath the weeping willow. The minute they were
+seated Jim began to talk.
+
+"Now," said he, "I want to know."
+
+Content glanced up at him, then looked down
+and turned pale.
+
+"I want to know, honest Injun," said Jim, "what
+you are telling such awful whoppers about your old
+big sister Solly for?"
+
+Content was silent. This time she did not smile,
+a tear trickled out of her right eye and ran over the
+pale cheek.
+
+"Because you know," said Jim, observant of the
+tear, but ruthless, "that you haven't any big sister
+Solly, and never did have. You are getting us all
+in an awful mess over it, and father is rector
+here, and mother is his wife, and I am his
+son, and you are his niece, and it is downright
+mean. Why do you tell such whoppers? Out
+with it!"
+
+Content was trembling violently. "I lived with
+Aunt Eudora," she whispered.
+
+"Well, what of that? Other folks have lived
+with their aunts and not told whoppers."
+
+"They haven't lived with Aunt Eudora."
+
+"You ought to be ashamed of yourself, Content
+Adams, and you the rector's niece, talking that way
+about dead folks."
+
+"I don't mean to talk about poor Aunt Eudora,"
+fairly sobbed Content. "Aunt Eudora was a real
+good aunt, but she was grown up. She was a good
+deal more grown up than your mother; she really
+was, and when I first went to live with her I was
+'most a little baby; I couldn't speak -- plain, and
+I had to go to bed real early, and slept 'way off from
+everybody, and I used to be afraid -- all alone, and
+so --"
+
+"Well, go on," said Jim, but his voice was softer.
+It WAS hard lines for a little kid, especially if she
+was a girl.
+
+"And so," went on the little, plaintive voice, "I
+got to thinking how nice it would be if I only had
+a big sister, and I used to cry and say to myself -- I
+couldn't speak plain, you know, I was so little --
+'Big sister would be real solly.' And then first
+thing I knew -- she came."
+
+"Who came?"
+
+"Big sister Solly."
+
+"What rot! She didn't come. Content Adams,
+you know she didn't come."
+
+"She must have come," persisted the little girl,
+in a frightened whisper. "She must have. Oh, Jim,
+you don't know. Big sister Solly must have come,
+or I would have died like my father and mother."
+
+Jim's arm, which was near her, twitched convul-
+sively, but he did not put it around her.
+
+"She did -- co-me," sobbed Content. "Big sister
+Solly did come."
+
+"Well, have it so," said Jim, suddenly. "No use
+going over that any longer. Have it she came, but
+she ain't here now, anyway. Content Adams, you
+can't look me in the face and tell me that."
+
+Content looked at Jim, and her little face was
+almost terrible, so full of bewilderment and fear
+it was. "Jim," whispered Content, "I can't have
+big sister Solly not be here. I can't send her away.
+What would she think?"
+
+Jim stared. "Think? Why, she isn't alive to
+think, anyhow!"
+
+"I can't make her -- dead," sobbed Content. "She
+came when I wanted her, and now when I don't so
+much, when I've got Uncle Edward and Aunt Sally
+and you, and don't feel so dreadful lonesome, I
+can't be so bad as to make her dead."
+
+Jim whistled. Then his face brightened up. He
+looked at Content with a shrewd and cheerful grin.
+"See here, kid, you say your sister Solly is big,
+grown up, don't you?" he inquired.
+
+Content nodded pitifully.
+
+"Then why, if she is grown up and pretty, don't
+she have a beau?"
+
+Content stopped sobbing and gave him a quick
+glance.
+
+"Then -- why doesn't she get married, and go out
+West to live?"
+
+Jim chuckled. Instead of a sob, a faint echo of his
+chuckle came from Content.
+
+Jim laughed merrily. "I say, Content," he cried,
+"let's have it she's married now, and gone?"
+
+"Well," said Content.
+
+Jim put his arm around her very nicely and pro-
+tectingly. "It's all right, then," said he, "as all
+right as it can be for a girl. Say, Content, ain't it
+a shame you aren't a boy?"
+
+"I can't help it," said Content, meekly.
+
+"You see," said Jim, thoughtfully, "I don't, as
+a rule, care much about girls, but if you could coast
+down-hill and skate, and do a few things like that,
+you would be almost as good as a boy."
+
+Content surveyed him, and her pessimistic little
+face assumed upward curves. "I will," said she.
+"I will do anything, Jim. I will fight if you want
+me to, just like a boy."
+
+"I don't believe you could lick any of us fellers
+unless you get a good deal harder in the muscles,"
+said Jim, eying her thoughtfully; "but we'll play
+ball, and maybe by and by you can begin with
+Arnold Carruth."
+
+"Could lick him now," said Content.
+
+But Jim's face sobered before her readiness. "Oh
+no, you mustn't go to fighting right away," said he.
+"It wouldn't do. You really are a girl, you know,
+and father is rector."
+
+"Then I won't," said Content; "but I COULD knock
+down that little boy with curls; I know I could."
+
+"Well, you needn't. I'll like you just as well.
+You see, Content" -- Jim's voice faltered, for he was
+a boy, and on the verge of sentiment before which
+he was shamed -- "you see, Content, now your big
+sister Solly is married and gone out West, why, you
+can have me for your brother, and of course a
+brother is a good deal better than a sister."
+
+"Yes," said Content, eagerly.
+
+"I am going," said Jim, "to marry Lucy Rose
+when I grow up, but I haven't got any sister, and
+I'd like you first rate for one. So I'll be your big
+brother instead of your cousin."
+
+"Big brother Solly?"
+
+"Say, Content, that is an awful name, but I don't
+care. You're only a girl. You can call me any-
+thing you want to, but you mustn't call me Solly
+when there is anybody within hearing."
+
+"I won't."
+
+"Because it wouldn't do," said Jim with weight.
+
+"I never will, honest," said Content.
+
+Presently they went into the house. Dr. Trum-
+bull was there; he had been talking seriously to the
+rector and his wife. He had come over on purpose.
+
+"It is a perfect absurdity," he said, "but I made
+ten calls this morning, and everywhere I was asked
+about that little Adams girl's big sister -- why you
+keep her hidden. They have a theory that she is
+either an idiot or dreadfully disfigured. I had to
+tell them I know nothing about it."
+
+"There isn't any girl," said the rector, wearily.
+"Sally, do explain."
+
+Dr. Trumbull listened. "I have known such
+cases," he said when Sally had finished.
+
+"What did you do for them?" Sally asked, anx-
+iously.
+
+"Nothing. Such cases have to be cured by time.
+Children get over these fancies when they grow up."
+
+"Do you mean to say that we have to put up with
+big sister Solly until Content is grown up?" asked
+Sally, in a desperate tone. And then Jim came in.
+Content had run up-stairs.
+
+"It is all right, mother," said Jim.
+
+Sally caught him by the shoulders. "Oh, Jim,
+has she told you?"
+
+Jim gave briefly, and with many omissions, an
+account of his conversation with Content.
+
+"Did she say anything about that dress, Jim?"
+asked his mother.
+
+"She said her aunt had meant it for that out-
+West rector's daughter Alice to graduate in, but
+Content wanted it for her big sister Solly, and told
+the rector's wife it was hers. Content says she knows
+she was a naughty girl, but after she had said it she
+was afraid to say it wasn't so. Mother, I think that
+poor little thing is scared 'most to death."
+
+"Nobody is going to hurt her," said Sally.
+"Goodness! that rector's wife was so conscientious
+that she even let that dress go. Well, I can send it
+right back, and the girl will have it in time for her
+graduation, after all. Jim dear, call the poor child
+down. Tell her nobody is going to scold her."
+Sally's voice was very tender.
+
+Jim returned with Content. She had on a little
+ruffled pink gown which seemed to reflect color on
+her cheeks. She wore an inscrutable expression, at
+once child-like and charming. She looked shy, fur-
+tively amused, yet happy. Sally realized that the
+pessimistic downward lines had disappeared, that
+Content was really a pretty little girl.
+
+Sally put an arm around the small, pink figure.
+"So you and Jim have been talking, dear?" she said.
+
+"Yes, ma'am," replied little Content. "Jim is
+my big brother --" She just caught herself before
+she said Solly.
+
+"And your sister Solly is married and living out
+West?"
+
+"Yes," said Content, with a long breath. "My
+sister Solly is married." Smiles broke all over her
+little face. She hid it in Sally's skirts, and a little
+peal of laughter like a bird-trill came from the soft
+muslin folds.
+
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE LUCY ROSE
+
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE LUCY ROSE
+
+BACK of the rectory there was a splendid, long
+hill. The ground receded until the rectory
+garden was reached, and the hill was guarded on
+either flank by a thick growth of pines and cedars,
+and, being a part of the land appertaining to the
+rectory, was never invaded by the village children.
+This was considered very fortunate by Mrs. Patterson,
+Jim's mother, and for an odd reason. The rector's
+wife was very fond of coasting, as she was of most
+out-of-door sports, but her dignified position pre-
+vented her from enjoying them to the utmost. In
+many localities the clergyman's wife might have
+played golf and tennis, have rode and swum and
+coasted and skated, and nobody thought the worse
+of her; but in The Village it was different.
+
+Sally had therefore rejoiced at the discovery of
+that splendid, isolated hill behind the house. It
+could not have been improved upon for a long, per-
+fectly glorious coast, winding up on the pool of ice
+in the garden and bumping thrillingly between dry
+vegetables. Mrs. Patterson steered and Jim made the
+running pushes, and slid flat on his chest behind
+his mother. Jim was very proud of his mother. He
+often wished that he felt at liberty to tell of her
+feats. He had never been told not to tell, but real-
+ized, being rather a sharp boy, that silence was
+wiser. Jim's mother confided in him, and he re-
+spected her confidence. "Oh, Jim dear," she would
+often say, "there is a mothers' meeting this after-
+noon, and I would so much rather go coasting with
+you." Or, "There's a Guild meeting about a fair,
+and the ice in the garden is really quite smooth."
+
+It was perhaps unbecoming a rector's wife, but
+Jim loved his mother better because she expressed a
+preference for the sports he loved, and considered that
+no other boy had a mother who was quite equal to
+his. Sally Patterson was small and wiry, with a bright
+face, and very thick, brown hair, which had a boyish
+crest over her forehead, and she could run as fast
+as Jim. Jim's father was much older than his mother,
+and very dignified, although he had a keen sense of
+humor. He used to laugh when his wife and son
+came in after their coasting expeditions.
+
+"Well, boys," he would say, "had a good time?"
+
+Jim was perfectly satisfied and convinced that his
+mother was the very best and most beautiful per-
+son in the village, even in the whole world, until
+Mr. Cyril Rose came to fill a vacancy of cashier in
+the bank, and his daughter, little Lucy Rose, as
+a matter of course, came with him. Little Lucy
+had no mother. Mr. Cyril's cousin, Martha Rose,
+kept his house, and there was a colored maid with a
+bad temper, who was said, however, to be inval-
+uable "help."
+
+Little Lucy attended Madame's school. She
+came the next Monday after Jim and his friends had
+planned to have a chicken roast and failed. After
+Jim saw little Lucy he thought no more of the
+chicken roast. It seemed to him that he thought
+no more of anything. He could not by any possi-
+bility have learned his lessons had it not been for
+the desire to appear a good scholar before little Lucy.
+Jim had never been a self-conscious boy, but that
+day he was so keenly worried about her opinion of
+him that his usual easy swing broke into a strut
+when he crossed the room. He need not have been
+so troubled, because little Lucy was not looking at
+him. She was not looking at any boy or girl. She
+was only trying to learn her lesson. Little Lucy was
+that rather rare creature, a very gentle, obedient
+child, with a single eye for her duty. She was so
+charming that it was sad to think how much her
+mother had missed, as far as this world was con-
+cerned.
+
+The minute Madame saw her a singular light
+came into her eyes -- the light of love of a childless
+woman for a child. Similar lights were in the eyes
+of Miss Parmalee and Miss Acton. They looked
+at one another with a sort of sweet confidence when
+they were drinking tea together after school in Ma-
+dame's study.
+
+"Did you ever see such a darling?" said Madame.
+Miss Parmalee said she never had, and Miss Acton
+echoed her.
+
+"She is a little angel," said Madame.
+
+"She worked so hard over her geography lesson,"
+said Miss Parmalee, "and she got the Amazon River
+in New England and the Connecticut in South
+America, after all; but she was so sweet about it,
+she made me want to change the map of the world.
+Dear little soul, it did seem as if she ought to have
+rivers and everything else just where she chose."
+
+"And she tried so hard to reach an octave, and her
+little finger is too short," said Miss Acton; "and she
+hasn't a bit of an ear for music, but her little voice
+is so sweet it does not matter."
+
+"I have seen prettier children," said Madame,
+"but never one quite such a darling."
+
+Miss Parmalee and Miss Acton agreed with Ma-
+dame, and so did everybody else. Lily Jennings's
+beauty was quite eclipsed by little Lucy, but Lily
+did not care; she was herself one of little Lucy's
+most fervent admirers. She was really Jim Patter-
+son's most formidable rival in the school. "You
+don't care about great, horrid boys, do you, dear?"
+Lily said to Lucy, entirely within hearing of Jim
+and Lee Westminster and Johnny Trumbull and
+Arnold Carruth and Bubby Harvey and Frank Ellis,
+and a number of others who glowered at her.
+
+Dear little Lucy hesitated. She did not wish to
+hurt the feelings of boys, and the question had been
+loudly put. Finally she said she didn't know. Lack
+of definite knowledge was little Lucy's rock of refuge
+in time of need. She would look adorable, and say
+in her timid little fluty voice, "I don't -- know."
+The last word came always with a sort of gasp which
+was alluring. All the listening boys were convinced
+that little Lucy loved them all individually and gen-
+erally, because of her "I don't -- know."
+
+Everybody was convinced of little Lucy's affec-
+tion for everybody, which was one reason for her
+charm. She flattered without knowing that she did
+so. It was impossible for her to look at any living
+thing except with soft eyes of love. It was impos-
+sible for her to speak without every tone conveying
+the sweetest deference and admiration. The whole
+atmosphere of Madame's school changed with the
+advent of the little girl. Everybody tried to live
+up to little Lucy's supposed ideal, but in reality
+she had no ideal. Lucy was the simplest of little
+girls, only intent upon being good, doing as she was
+told, and winning her father's approval, also her
+cousin Martha's.
+
+Martha Rose was quite elderly, although still
+good-looking. She was not popular, because she
+was very silent. She dressed becomingly, received
+calls and returned them, but hardly spoke a word.
+People rather dreaded her coming. Miss Martha
+Rose would sit composedly in a proffered chair, her
+gloved hands crossed over her nice, gold-bound card-
+case, her chin tilted at an angle which never varied,
+her mouth in a set smile which never wavered, her
+slender feet in their best shoes toeing out precisely
+under the smooth sweep of her gray silk skirt. Miss
+Martha Rose dressed always in gray, a fashion
+which the village people grudgingly admired. It
+was undoubtedly becoming and distinguished, but
+savored ever so slightly of ostentation, as did her
+custom of always dressing little Lucy in blue. There
+were different shades and fabrics, but blue it always
+was. It was the best color for the child, as it re-
+vealed the fact that her big, dark eyes were blue.
+Shaded as they were by heavy, curly lashes, they
+would have been called black or brown, but the blue
+in them leaped to vision above the blue of blue
+frocks. Little Lucy had the finest, most delicate
+features, a mist of soft, dark hair, which curled
+slightly, as mist curls, over sweet, round temples.
+She was a small, daintily clad child, and she spoke
+and moved daintily and softly; and when her blue
+eyes were fixed upon anybody's face, that person
+straightway saw love and obedience and trust in
+them, and love met love half-way. Even Miss
+Martha Rose looked another woman when little
+Lucy's innocent blue eyes were fixed upon her rather
+handsome but colorless face between the folds of
+her silvery hair; Miss Martha's hair had turned
+prematurely gray. Light would come into Martha
+Rose's face, light and animation, although she never
+talked much even to Lucy. She never talked much
+to her cousin Cyril, but he was rather glad of it.
+He had a keen mind, but it was easily diverted, and
+he was engrossed in his business, and concerned lest
+he be disturbed by such things as feminine chatter,
+of which he certainly had none in his own home, if
+he kept aloof from Jenny, the colored maid. Hers
+was the only female voice ever heard to the point
+of annoyance in the Rose house.
+
+It was rather wonderful how a child like little
+Lucy and Miss Martha lived with so little conversa-
+tion. Martha talked no more at home than abroad;
+moreover, at home she had not the attitude of wait-
+ing for some one to talk to her, which people outside
+considered trying. Martha did not expect her cousin
+to talk to her. She seldom asked a question. She
+almost never volunteered a perfectly useless obser-
+vation. She made no remarks upon self-evident
+topics. If the sun shone, she never mentioned it.
+If there was a heavy rain, she never mentioned that.
+Miss Martha suited her cousin exactly, and for that
+reason, aside from the fact that he had been devoted
+to little Lucy's mother, it never occurred to him to
+marry again. Little Lucy talked no more than Miss
+Martha, and nobody dreamed that she sometimes
+wanted somebody to talk to her. Nobody dreamed
+that the dear little girl, studying her lessons, learn-
+ing needlework, trying very futilely to play the
+piano, was lonely; but she was without knowing
+it herself. Martha was so kind and so still; and her
+father was so kind and so still, engrossed in his papers
+or books, often sitting by himself in his own study.
+Little Lucy in this peace and stillness was not hav-
+ing her share of childhood. When other little girls
+came to play with her. Miss Martha enjoined quiet,
+and even Lily Jennings's bird-like chattering be-
+came subdued. It was only at school that Lucy
+got her chance for the irresponsible delight which
+was the simple right of her childhood, and there her
+zeal for her lessons prevented. She was happy at
+school, however, for there she lived in an atmos-
+phere of demonstrative affection. The teachers
+were given to seizing her in fond arms and caress-
+ing her, and so were her girl companions; while
+the boys, especially Jim Patterson, looked wistful-
+ly on.
+
+Jim Patterson was in love, a charming little poetical
+boy-love; but it was love. Everything which he
+did in those days was with the thought of little
+Lucy for incentive. He stood better in school than
+he had ever done before, but it was all for the sake
+of little Lucy. Jim Patterson had one talent, rather
+rudimentary, still a talent. He could play by ear.
+His father owned an old violin. He had been in-
+clined to music in early youth, and Jim got per-
+mission to practise on it, and he went by himself
+in the hot attic and practised. Jim's mother did
+not care for music, and her son's preliminary scra-
+ping tortured her. Jim tucked the old fiddle under
+one round boy-cheek and played in the hot attic,
+with wasps buzzing around him; and he spent his
+pennies for catgut, and he learned to mend fiddle-
+strings; and finally came a proud Wednesday after-
+noon when there were visitors in Madame's school,
+and he stood on the platform, with Miss Acton
+playing an accompaniment on the baby grand piano,
+and he managed a feeble but true tune on his violin.
+It was all for little Lucy, but little Lucy cared no
+more for music than his mother; and while Jim was
+playing she was rehearsing in the depths of her mind
+the little poem which later she was to recite; for
+this adorable little Lucy was, as a matter of course,
+to figure in the entertainment. It therefore happened
+that she heard not one note of Jim Patterson's pain-
+fully executed piece, for she was saying to herself
+in mental singsong a foolish little poem, beginning:
+
+ There was one little flower that bloomed
+ Beside a cottage door.
+
+When she went forward, little darling blue-clad
+figure, there was a murmur of admiration; and when
+she made mistakes straight through the poem, saying,
+
+ There was a little flower that fell
+ On my aunt Martha's floor,
+
+for beginning, there was a roar of tender laughter
+and a clapping of tender, maternal hands, and every-
+body wanted to catch hold of little Lucy and kiss her.
+It was one of the irresistible charms of this child
+that people loved her the more for her mistakes,
+and she made many, although she tried so very
+hard to avoid them. Little Lucy was not in the
+least brilliant, but she held love like a precious vase,
+and it gave out perfume better than mere knowledge.
+
+Jim Patterson was so deeply in love with her when
+he went home that night that he confessed to his
+mother. Mrs. Patterson had led up to the subject
+by alluding to little Lucy while at the dinner-table.
+
+"Edward," she said to her husband -- both she
+and the rector had been present at Madame's school
+entertainment and the tea-drinking afterward -- "did
+you ever see in all your life such a darling little girl
+as the new cashier's daughter? She quite makes up
+for Miss Martha, who sat here one solid hour, hold-
+ing her card-case, waiting for me to talk to her.
+That child is simply delicious, and I was so glad
+she made mistakes."
+
+"Yes, she is a charming child," assented the rector,
+"despite the fact that she is not a beauty, hardly
+even pretty."
+
+"I know it," said Mrs. Patterson, "but she has the
+worth of beauty."
+
+Jim was quite pale while his father and mother
+were talking. He swallowed the hot soup so fast
+that it burnt his tongue. Then he turned very
+red, but nobody noticed him. When his mother
+came up-stairs to kiss him good night he told her.
+
+"Mother," said he, "I have something to tell
+you."
+
+"All right, Jim," replied Sally Patterson, with her
+boyish air.
+
+"It is very important," said Jim.
+
+Mrs. Patterson did not laugh; she did not even
+smile. She sat down beside Jim's bed and looked
+seriously at his eager, rapt, shamed little boy-face
+on the pillow. "Well?" said she, after a minute
+which seemed difficult to him.
+
+Jim coughed. Then he spoke with a blurt.
+"Mother," said Jim, "by and by, of course not quite
+yet, but by and by, will you have any objection to
+Miss Lucy Rose as a daughter?"
+
+Even then Sally Patterson did not laugh or even
+smile. "Are you thinking of marrying her, Jim?"
+asked she, quite as if her son had been a man.
+
+"Yes, mother," replied Jim. Then he flung up
+his little arms in pink pajama sleeves, and Sally
+Patterson took his face between her two hands and
+kissed him warmly.
+
+"She is a darling, and your choice does you credit,
+Jim," said she. "Of course you have said nothing
+to her yet?"
+
+"I thought it was rather too soon."
+
+"I really think you are very wise, Jim," said his
+mother. "It is too soon to put such ideas into
+the poor child's head. She is younger than you,
+isn't she, Jim?"
+
+"She is just six months and three days younger,"
+replied Jim, with majesty.
+
+"I thought so. Well, you know, Jim, it would
+just wear her all out, as young as that, to be obliged
+to think about her trousseau and housekeeping and
+going to school, too."
+
+"I know it," said Jim, with a pleased air. "I
+thought I was right, mother."
+
+"Entirely right; and you, too, really ought to
+finish school, and take up a profession or a busi-
+ness, before you say anything definite. You would
+want a nice home for the dear little thing, you
+know that, Jim."
+
+Jim stared at his mother out of his white pillow.
+"I thought I would stay with you, and she would
+stay with her father until we were both very much
+older," said he. "She has a nice home now, you
+know, mother."
+
+Sally Patterson's mouth twitched a little, but she
+spoke quite gravely and reasonably. "Yes, that is
+very true," said she; "still, I do think you are wise
+to wait, Jim."
+
+When Sally Patterson had left Jim, she looked in
+on the rector in his study. "Our son is thinking
+seriously of marrying, Edward," said she.
+
+The rector stared at her. She had shut the door,
+and she laughed.
+
+"He is very discreet. He has consulted me as to
+my approval of her as daughter and announced his
+intention to wait a little while."
+
+The rector laughed; then he wrinkled his forehead
+uneasily. "I don't like the little chap getting such
+ideas," said he.
+
+"Don't worry, Edward; he hasn't got them,"
+said Sally Patterson.
+
+"I hope not."
+
+"He has made a very wise choice. She is that
+perfect darling of a Rose girl who couldn't speak
+her piece, and thought we all loved her when we
+laughed."
+
+"Well, don't let him get foolish ideas; that is all,
+my dear," said the rector.
+
+"Don't worry, Edward. I can manage him,"
+said Sally.
+
+But she was mistaken. The very next day Jim
+proposed in due form to little Lucy. He could not
+help it. It was during the morning intermission,
+and he came upon her seated all alone under a haw-
+thorn hedge, studying her arithmetic anxiously.
+She was in blue, as usual, and a very perky blue bow
+sat on her soft, dark hair, like a bluebird. She
+glanced up at Jim from under her long lashes.
+
+"Do two and seven make eight or ten? If you
+please, will you tell me?" said she.
+
+"Say, Lucy," said Jim, "will you marry me by
+and by?"
+
+Lucy stared at him uncomprehendingly.
+
+"Will you?"
+
+"Will I what?"
+
+"Marry me by and by?"
+
+Lucy took refuge in her little harbor of ignorance.
+"I don't know," said she.
+
+"But you like me, don't you, Lucy?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"Don't you like me better than you like Johnny
+Trumbull?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"You like me better than you like Arnold Carruth,
+don't you? He has curls and wears socks."
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"When do you think you can be sure?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+Jim stared helplessly at little Lucy. She stared
+back sweetly.
+
+"Please tell me whether two and seven make
+six or eleven, Jim," said she.
+
+"They make nine," said Jim.
+
+"I have been counting my fingers and I got it
+eleven, but I suppose I must have counted one finger
+twice," said little Lucy. She gazed reflectively at
+her little baby-hands. A tiny ring with a blue stone
+shone on one finger.
+
+"I will give you a ring, you know," Jim said,
+coaxingly.
+
+"I have got a ring my father gave me. Did you
+say it was ten, please, Jim?"
+
+"Nine," gasped Jim.
+
+"All the way I can remember," said little Lucy,
+"is for you to pick just so many leaves off the hedge,
+and I will tie them in my handkerchief, and just be-
+fore I have to say my lesson I will count those
+leaves."
+
+Jim obediently picked nine leaves from the haw-
+thorn hedge, and little Lucy tied them into her
+handkerchief, and then the Japanese gong sounded
+and they went back to school.
+
+That night after dinner, just before Lucy went to
+bed, she spoke of her own accord to her father and
+Miss Martha, a thing which she seldom did. "Jim
+Patterson asked me to marry him when I asked him
+what seven and two made in my arithmetic lesson,"
+said she. She looked with the loveliest round eyes
+of innocence first at her father, then at Miss Martha.
+Cyril Rose gasped and laid down his newspaper.
+
+"What did you say, little Lucy?" he asked.
+
+"Jim Patterson asked me to marry him when I
+asked him to tell me how much seven and two made
+in my arithmetic lesson."
+
+Cyril Rose and his cousin Martha looked at each
+other.
+
+"Arnold Carruth asked me, too, when a great
+big wasp flew on my arm and frightened me."
+
+Cyril and Martha continued to look. The little,
+sweet, uncertain voice went on.
+
+"And Johnny Trumbull asked me when I 'most
+fell down on the sidewalk; and Lee Westminster
+asked me when I wasn't doing anything, and so did
+Bubby Harvey."
+
+"What did you tell them?" asked Miss Martha,
+in a faint voice.
+
+"I told them I didn't know."
+
+"You had better have the child go to bed now,"
+said Cyril. "Good night, little Lucy. Always tell
+father everything."
+
+"Yes, father," said little Lucy, and was kissed,
+and went away with Martha.
+
+When Martha returned, her cousin looked at her
+severely. He was a fair, gentle-looking man, and
+severity was impressive when he assumed it.
+
+"Really, Martha," said he, "don't you think you
+had better have a little closer outlook over that
+baby?"
+
+"Oh, Cyril, I never dreamed of such a thing,"
+cried Miss Martha.
+
+"You really must speak to Madame," said Cyril.
+"I cannot have such things put into the child's
+head."
+
+"Oh, Cyril, how can I?"
+
+"I think it is your duty."
+
+"Cyril, could not -- you?"
+
+Cyril grinned. "Do you think," said he, "that
+I am going to that elegant widow schoolma'am and
+say, 'Madame, my young daughter has had four
+proposals of marriage in one day, and I must beg
+you to put a stop to such proceedings'? No, Martha;
+it is a woman's place to do such a thing as that.
+The whole thing is too absurd, indignant as I am
+about it. Poor little soul!"
+
+So it happened that Miss Martha Rose, the next
+day being Saturday, called on Madame, but, not
+being asked any leading question, found herself abso-
+lutely unable to deliver herself of her errand, and
+went away with it unfulfilled.
+
+"Well, I must say," said Madame to Miss Par-
+malee, as Miss Martha tripped wearily down the
+front walk -- "I must say, of all the educated women
+who have really been in the world, she is the strang-
+est. You and I have done nothing but ask inane
+questions, and she has sat waiting for them, and
+chirped back like a canary. I am simply worn out."
+
+"So am I," sighed Miss Parmalee.
+
+But neither of them was so worn out as poor
+Miss Martha, anticipating her cousin's reproaches.
+However, her wonted silence and reticence stood
+her in good stead, for he merely asked, after little
+Lucy had gone to bed:
+
+"Well, what did Madame say about Lucy's pro-
+posals?"
+
+"She did not say anything," replied Martha.
+
+"Did she promise it would not occur again?"
+
+"She did not promise, but I don't think it will."
+
+The financial page was unusually thrilling that
+night, and Cyril Rose, who had come to think rather
+lightly of the affair, remarked, absent-mindedly;
+"Well, I hope it does not occur again. I cannot have
+such ridiculous ideas put into the child's head. If
+it does, we get a governess for her and take her away
+from Madame's." Then he resumed his reading,
+and Martha, guilty but relieved, went on with her
+knitting.
+
+It was late spring then, and little Lucy had at-
+tended Madame's school several months, and her
+popularity had never waned. A picnic was planned
+to Dover's Grove, and the romantic little girls had
+insisted upon a May queen, and Lucy was unani-
+mously elected. The pupils of Madame's school went
+to the picnic in the manner known as a "straw-
+ride." Miss Parmalee sat with them, her feet
+uncomfortably tucked under her. She was the
+youngest of the teachers, and could not evade the
+duty. Madame and Miss Acton headed the pro-
+cession, sitting comfortably in a victoria driven by
+the colored man Sam, who was employed about the
+school. Dover's Grove was six miles from the vil-
+lage, and a favorite spot for picnics. The victoria
+rolled on ahead; Madame carried a black parasol,
+for the sun was on her side and the day very warm.
+Both ladies wore thin, dark gowns, and both felt
+the languor of spring.
+
+The straw-wagon, laden with children seated upon
+the golden trusses of straw, looked like a wagon-
+load of blossoms. Fair and dark heads, rosy faces
+looked forth in charming clusters. They sang, they
+chattered. It made no difference to them that it
+was not the season for a straw-ride, that the trusses
+were musty. They inhaled the fragrance of blooming
+boughs under which they rode, and were quite ob-
+livious to all discomfort and unpleasantness. Poor
+Miss Parmalee, with her feet going to sleep, sneezing
+from time to time from the odor of the old straw,
+did not obtain the full beauty of the spring day.
+She had protested against the straw-ride.
+
+"The children really ought to wait until the season
+for such things," she had told Madame, quite boldly;
+and Madame had replied that she was well aware
+of it, but the children wanted something of the sort,
+and the hay was not cut, and straw, as it happened,
+was more easily procured.
+
+"It may not be so very musty," said Madame;
+"and you know, my dear, straw is clean, and I
+am sorry, but you do seem to be the one to ride
+with the children on the straw, because" -- Madame
+dropped her voice -- "you are really younger, you
+know, than either Miss Acton or I."
+
+Poor Miss Parmalee could almost have dispensed
+with her few years of superior youth to have gotten
+rid of that straw-ride. She had no parasol, and the
+sun beat upon her head, and the noise of the children
+got horribly on her nerves. Little Lucy was her one
+alleviation. Little Lucy sat in the midst of the
+boisterous throng, perfectly still, crowned with her
+garland of leaves and flowers, her sweet, pale little
+face calmly observant. She was the high light of
+Madame's school, the effect which made the
+whole. All the others looked at little Lucy, they
+talked to her, they talked at her; but she remained
+herself unmoved, as a high light should be. "Dear
+little soul," Miss Parmalee thought. She also
+thought that it was a pity that little Lucy could
+not have worn a white frock in her character as
+Queen of the May, but there she was mistaken. The
+blue was of a peculiar shade, of a very soft material,
+and nothing could have been prettier. Jim Patterson
+did not often look away from little Lucy; neither
+did Arnold Carruth; neither did Bubby Harvey;
+neither did Johnny Trumbull; neither did Lily
+Jennings; neither did many others.
+
+Amelia Wheeler, however, felt a little jealous as
+she watched Lily. She thought Lily ought to have
+been queen; and she, while she did not dream of
+competing with incomparable little Lucy, wished
+Lily would not always look at Lucy with such wor-
+shipful admiration. Amelia was inconsistent. She
+knew that she herself could not aspire to being an
+object of worship, but the state of being a nonentity
+for Lily was depressing. "Wonder if I jumped out
+of this old wagon and got killed if she would mind
+one bit?" she thought, tragically. But Amelia did
+not jump. She had tragic impulses, or rather im-
+aginations of tragic impulses, but she never carried
+them out. It was left for little Lucy, flower-crowned
+and calmly sweet and gentle under honors, to be
+guilty of a tragedy of which she never dreamed.
+For that was the day when little Lucy was lost.
+
+When the picnic was over, when the children were
+climbing into the straw-wagon and Madame and
+Miss Acton were genteelly disposed in the victoria,
+a lamentable cry arose. Sam drew his reins tight
+and rolled his inquiring eyes around; Madame and
+Miss Acton leaned far out on either side of the vic-
+toria.
+
+"Oh, what is it?" said Madame. "My dear Miss
+Acton, do pray get out and see what the trouble is.
+I begin to feel a little faint."
+
+In fact, Madame got her cut-glass smelling-bottle
+out of her bag and began to sniff vigorously. Sam
+gazed backward and paid no attention to her. Ma-
+dame always felt faint when anything unexpected
+occurred, and smelled at the pretty bottle, but she
+never fainted.
+
+Miss Acton got out, lifting her nice skirts clear
+of the dusty wheel, and she scuttled back to the up-
+roarious straw-wagon, showing her slender ankles
+and trimly shod feet. Miss Acton was a very wiry,
+dainty woman, full of nervous energy. When she
+reached the straw-wagon Miss Parmalee was climb-
+ing out, assisted by the driver. Miss Parmalee
+was very pale and visibly tremulous. The children
+were all shrieking in dissonance, so it was quite
+impossible to tell what the burden of their tale of
+woe was; but obviously something of a tragic na-
+ture had happened.
+
+"What is the matter?" asked Miss Acton, tee-
+tering like a humming-bird with excitement.
+
+"Little Lucy --" gasped Miss Parmalee.
+
+"What about her?"
+
+"She isn't here."
+
+"Where is she?"
+
+"We don't know. We just missed her."
+
+Then the cry of the children for little Lucy Rose,
+although sadly wrangled, became intelligible. Ma-
+dame came, holding up her silk skirt and sniffing at
+her smelling-bottle, and everybody asked ques-
+tions of everybody else, and nobody knew any satis-
+factory answers. Johnny Trumbull was confident
+that he was the last one to see little Lucy, and so
+were Lily Jennings and Amelia Wheeler, and so
+were Jim Patterson and Bubby Harvey and Arnold
+Carruth and Lee Westminster and many others;
+but when pinned down to the actual moment
+everybody disagreed, and only one thing was cer-
+tain -- little Lucy Rose was missing.
+
+"What shall I say to her father?" moaned Ma-
+dame.
+
+"Of course, we shall find her before we say any-
+thing," returned Miss Parmalee, who was sure to
+rise to an emergency. Madame sank helpless be-
+fore one. "You had better go and sit under that
+tree (Sam, take a cushion out of the carriage for
+Madame) and keep quiet; then Sam must drive
+to the village and give the alarm, and the straw-
+wagon had better go, too; and the rest of us will
+hunt by threes, three always keeping together. Re-
+member, children, three of you keep together, and,
+whatever you do, be sure and do not separate. We
+cannot have another lost."
+
+It seemed very sound advice. Madame, pale and
+frightened, sat on the cushion under the tree and
+sniffed at her smelling-bottle, and the rest scattered
+and searched the grove and surrounding underbrush
+thoroughly. But it was sunset when the groups
+returned to Madame under her tree, and the straw-
+wagon with excited people was back, and the victoria
+with Lucy's father and the rector and his wife, and
+Dr. Trumbull in his buggy, and other carriages fast
+arriving. Poor Miss Martha Rose had been out
+calling when she heard the news, and she was walk-
+ing to the scene of action. The victoria in which
+her cousin was seated left her in a cloud of dust.
+Cyril Rose had not noticed the mincing figure with
+the card-case and the parasol.
+
+The village searched for little Lucy Rose, but it
+was Jim Patterson who found her, and in the most
+unlikely of places. A forlorn pair with a multi-
+plicity of forlorn children lived in a tumble-down
+house about half a mile from the grove. The man's
+name was Silas Thomas, and his wife's was Sarah.
+Poor Sarah had lost a large part of the small wit she
+had originally owned several years before, when her
+youngest daughter, aged four, died. All the babies
+that had arrived since had not consoled her for the
+death of that little lamb, by name Viola May, nor
+restored her full measure of under-wit. Poor Sarah
+Thomas had spied adorable little Lucy separated
+from her mates by chance for a few minutes, pick-
+ing wild flowers, and had seized her in forcible but
+loving arms and carried her home. Had Lucy not
+been such a silent, docile child, it could never have
+happened; but she was a mere little limp thing in
+the grasp of the over-loving, deprived mother who
+thought she had gotten back her own beloved Viola
+May.
+
+When Jim Patterson, big-eyed and pale, looked
+in at the Thomas door, there sat Sarah Thomas, a
+large, unkempt, wild-visaged, but gentle creature,
+holding little Lucy and cuddling her, while Lucy,
+shrinking away as far as she was able, kept her big,
+dark eyes of wonder and fear upon the woman's
+face. And all around were clustered the Thomas
+children, unkempt as their mother, a gentle but
+degenerate brood, all of them believing what their
+mother said. Viola May had come home again.
+Silas Thomas was not there; he was trudging slowly
+homeward from a job of wood-cutting. Jim saw
+only the mother, little Lucy, and that poor little
+flock of children gazing in wonder and awe. Jim
+rushed in and faced Sarah Thomas. "Give me
+little Lucy!" said he, as fiercely as any man. But
+he reckoned without the unreasoning love of a
+mother. Sarah only held little Lucy faster, and the
+poor little girl rolled appealing eyes at him over that
+brawny, grasping arm of affection.
+
+Jim raced for help, and it was not long before it
+came. Little Lucy rode home in the victoria, seated
+in Sally Patterson's lap. "Mother, you take her,"
+Jim had pleaded; and Sally, in the face and eyes of
+Madame, had gathered the little trembling crea-
+ture into her arms. In her heart she had not much
+of an opinion of any woman who had allowed such
+a darling little girl out of her sight for a moment.
+Madame accepted a seat in another carriage and rode
+home, explaining and sniffing and inwardly resolving
+never again to have a straw-ride.
+
+Jim stood on the step of the victoria all the way
+home. They passed poor Miss Martha Rose, still
+faring toward the grove, and nobody noticed her,
+for the second time. She did not turn back until
+the straw-wagon, which formed the tail of the little
+procession, reached her. That she halted with mad
+waves of her parasol, and, when told that little Lucy
+was found, refused a seat on the straw because she
+did not wish to rumple her best gown and turned
+about and fared home again.
+
+The rectory was reached before Cyril Rose's
+house, and Cyril yielded gratefully to Sally Patter-
+son's proposition that she take the little girl with
+her, give her dinner, see that she was washed and
+brushed and freed from possible contamination from
+the Thomases, who were not a cleanly lot, and later
+brought home in the rector's carriage. However,
+little Lucy stayed all night at the rectory. She had
+a bath; her lovely, misty hair was brushed; she
+was fed and petted; and finally Sally Patterson
+telephoned for permission to keep her overnight.
+By that time poor Martha had reached home and
+was busily brushing her best dress.
+
+After dinner, little Lucy, very happy and quite
+restored, sat in Sally Patterson's lap on the veranda,
+while Jim hovered near. His innocent boy-love
+made him feel as if he had wings. But his wings
+only bore him to failure, before an earlier and
+mightier force of love than his young heart could
+yet compass for even such a darling as little Lucy.
+He sat on the veranda step and gazed eagerly and
+rapturously at little Lucy on his mother's lap, and
+the desire to have her away from other loves came
+over him. He saw the fireflies dancing in swarms
+on the lawn, and a favorite sport of the children of
+the village occurred to him.
+
+"Say, little Lucy," said Jim.
+
+Little Lucy looked up with big, dark eyes under
+her mist of hair, as she nestled against Sally Patter-
+son's shoulder.
+
+"Say, let's chase fireflies, little Lucy."
+
+"Do you want to chase fireflies with Jim, darling?"
+asked Sally.
+
+Little Lucy nestled closer. "I would rather stay
+with you," said she in her meek flute of a voice,
+and she gazed up at Sally with the look which she
+might have given the mother she had lost.
+
+Sally kissed her and laughed. Then she reached
+down a fond hand and patted her boy's head.
+"Never mind, Jim," said Sally. "Mothers have to
+come first."
+
+
+
+
+NOBLESSE
+
+
+
+
+
+NOBLESSE
+
+MARGARET LEE encountered in her late middle
+age the rather singular strait of being entirely
+alone in the world. She was unmarried, and as
+far as relatives were concerned, she had none except
+those connected with her by ties not of blood, but by
+marriage.
+
+Margaret had not married when her flesh had been
+comparative; later, when it had become superlative,
+she had no opportunities to marry. Life would have
+been hard enough for Margaret under any circum-
+stances, but it was especially hard, living, as she did,
+with her father's stepdaughter and that daughter's
+husband.
+
+Margaret's stepmother had been a child in spite of
+her two marriages, and a very silly, although pretty
+child. The daughter, Camille, was like her, although
+not so pretty, and the man whom Camille had mar-
+ried was what Margaret had been taught to regard
+as "common." His business pursuits were irregular
+and partook of mystery. He always smoked ciga-
+rettes and chewed gum. He wore loud shirts and a
+diamond scarf-pin which had upon him the appear-
+ance of stolen goods. The gem had belonged to
+Margaret's own mother, but when Camille expressed
+a desire to present it to Jack Desmond, Margaret
+had yielded with no outward hesitation, but after-
+ward she wept miserably over its loss when alone in
+her room. The spirit had gone out of Margaret,
+the little which she had possessed. She had always
+been a gentle, sensitive creature, and was almost
+helpless before the wishes of others.
+
+After all, it had been a long time since Margaret
+had been able to force the ring even upon her little
+finger, but she had derived a small pleasure from
+the reflection that she owned it in its faded velvet
+box, hidden under laces in her top bureau drawer.
+She did not like to see it blazing forth from the tie
+of this very ordinary young man who had married
+Camille. Margaret had a gentle, high-bred contempt
+for Jack Desmond, but at the same time a vague
+fear of him. Jack had a measure of unscrupulous
+business shrewdness, which spared nothing and no-
+body, and that in spite of the fact that he had not
+succeeded.
+
+Margaret owned the old Lee place, which had been
+magnificent, but of late years the expenditures had
+been reduced and it had deteriorated. The conserva-
+tories had been closed. There was only one horse
+in the stable. Jack had bought him. He was a worn-
+out trotter with legs carefully bandaged. Jack drove
+him at reckless speed, not considering those slender,
+braceleted legs. Jack had a racing-gig, and when
+in it, with striped coat, cap on one side, cigarette in
+mouth, lines held taut, skimming along the roads in
+clouds of dust, he thought himself the man and true
+sportsman which he was not. Some of the old Lee
+silver had paid for that waning trotter.
+
+Camille adored Jack, and cared for no associations,
+no society, for which he was not suited. Before the
+trotter was bought she told Margaret that the kind
+of dinners which she was able to give in Fairhill were
+awfully slow. "If we could afford to have some
+men out from the city, some nice fellers that Jack
+knows, it would be worth while," said she, "but
+we have grown so hard up we can't do a thing to
+make it worth their while. Those men haven't got
+any use for a back-number old place like this. We
+can't take them round in autos, nor give them a
+chance at cards, for Jack couldn't pay if he lost,
+and Jack is awful honorable. We can't have the
+right kind of folks here for any fun. I don't propose
+to ask the rector and his wife, and old Mr. Harvey,
+or people like the Leaches."
+
+"The Leaches are a very good old family," said
+Margaret, feebly.
+
+"I don't care for good old families when they are
+so slow," retorted Camille. "The fellers we could
+have here, if we were rich enough, come from fine
+families, but they are up-to-date. It's no use hang-
+ing on to old silver dishes we never use and that I
+don't intend to spoil my hands shining. Poor Jack
+don't have much fun, anyway. If he wants that
+trotter -- he says it's going dirt cheap -- I think it's
+mean he can't have it, instead of your hanging on to
+a lot of out-of-style old silver; so there."
+
+Two generations ago there had been French blood
+in Camille's family. She put on her clothes beauti-
+fully; she had a dark, rather fine-featured, alert lit-
+tle face, which gave a wrong impression, for she was
+essentially vulgar. Sometimes poor Margaret Lee
+wished that Camille had been definitely vicious, if
+only she might be possessed of more of the charac-
+teristics of breeding. Camille so irritated Margaret
+in those somewhat abstruse traits called sensibilities
+that she felt as if she were living with a sort of
+spiritual nutmeg-grater. Seldom did Camille speak
+that she did not jar Margaret, although uncon-
+sciously. Camille meant to be kind to the stout
+woman, whom she pitied as far as she was capable
+of pitying without understanding. She realized that
+it must be horrible to be no longer young, and so
+stout that one was fairly monstrous, but how horrible
+she could not with her mentality conceive. Jack also
+meant to be kind. He was not of the brutal -- that is,
+intentionally brutal -- type, but he had a shrewd
+eye to the betterment of himself, and no realization
+of the torture he inflicted upon those who opposed
+that betterment.
+
+For a long time matters had been worse than usual
+financially in the Lee house. The sisters had been
+left in charge of the sadly dwindled estate, and had
+depended upon the judgment, or lack of judgment,
+of Jack. He approved of taking your chances and
+striking for larger income. The few good old grand-
+father securities had been sold, and wild ones from
+the very jungle of commerce had been substituted.
+Jack, like most of his type, while shrewd, was as
+credulous as a child. He lied himself, and expected
+all men to tell him the truth. Camille at his bidding
+mortgaged the old place, and Margaret dared not
+oppose. Taxes were not paid; interest was not paid;
+credit was exhausted. Then the house was put up
+at public auction, and brought little more than suffi-
+cient to pay the creditors. Jack took the balance
+and staked it in a few games of chance, and of course
+lost. The weary trotter stumbled one day and had
+to be shot. Jack became desperate. He frightened
+Camille. He was suddenly morose. He bade Ca-
+mille pack, and Margaret also, and they obeyed.
+Camille stowed away her crumpled finery in the
+bulging old trunks, and Margaret folded daintily her
+few remnants of past treasures. She had an old silk
+gown or two, which resisted with their rich honesty
+the inroads of time, and a few pieces of old lace,
+which Camille understood no better than she under-
+stood their owner.
+
+Then Margaret and the Desmonds went to the
+city and lived in a horrible, tawdry little flat in
+a tawdry locality. Jack roared with bitter mirth
+when he saw poor Margaret forced to enter her tiny
+room sidewise; Camille laughed also, although she
+chided Jack gently. "Mean of you to make fun of
+poor Margaret, Jacky dear," she said.
+
+For a few weeks Margaret's life in that flat was
+horrible; then it became still worse. Margaret near-
+ly filled with her weary, ridiculous bulk her little
+room, and she remained there most of the time,
+although it was sunny and noisy, its one window
+giving on a courtyard strung with clothes-lines and
+teeming with boisterous life. Camille and Jack went
+trolley-riding, and made shift to entertain a little,
+merry but questionable people, who gave them
+passes to vaudeville and entertained in their turn
+until the small hours. Unquestionably these peo-
+ple suggested to Jack Desmond the scheme which
+spelled tragedy to Margaret.
+
+She always remembered one little dark man with
+keen eyes who had seen her disappearing through
+her door of a Sunday night when all these gay, be-
+draggled birds were at liberty and the fun ran high.
+"Great Scott!" the man had said, and Margaret had
+heard him demand of Jack that she be recalled.
+She obeyed, and the man was introduced, also the
+other members of the party. Margaret Lee stood
+in the midst of this throng and heard their repressed
+titters of mirth at her appearance. Everybody
+there was in good humor with the exception of Jack,
+who was still nursing his bad luck, and the little
+dark man, whom Jack owed. The eyes of Jack and
+the little dark man made Margaret cold with a ter-
+ror of something, she knew not what. Before that
+terror the shame and mortification of her exhibition
+to that merry company was of no import.
+
+She stood among them, silent, immense, clad in
+her dark purple silk gown spread over a great hoop-
+skirt. A real lace collar lay softly over her enormous,
+billowing shoulders; real lace ruffles lay over her
+great, shapeless hands. Her face, the delicacy of
+whose features was veiled with flesh, flushed and
+paled. Not even flesh could subdue the sad brill-
+iancy of her dark-blue eyes, fixed inward upon her
+own sad state, unregardful of the company. She
+made an indefinite murmur of response to the saluta-
+tions given her, and then retreated. She heard the
+roar of laughter after she had squeezed through the
+door of her room. Then she heard eager conversa-
+tion, of which she did not catch the real import, but
+which terrified her with chance expressions. She
+was quite sure that she was the subject of that eager
+discussion. She was quite sure that it boded her
+no good.
+
+In a few days she knew the worst; and the worst
+was beyond her utmost imaginings. This was be-
+fore the days of moving-picture shows; it was the
+day of humiliating spectacles of deformities, when
+inventions of amusements for the people had not
+progressed. It was the day of exhibitions of sad
+freaks of nature, calculated to provoke tears rather
+than laughter in the healthy-minded, and poor Mar-
+garet Lee was a chosen victim. Camille informed
+her in a few words of her fate. Camille was sorry
+for her, although not in the least understanding why
+she was sorry. She realized dimly that Margaret
+would be distressed, but she was unable from her
+narrow point of view to comprehend fully the whole
+tragedy.
+
+"Jack has gone broke," stated Camille. "He
+owes Bill Stark a pile, and he can't pay a cent of it;
+and Jack's sense of honor about a poker debt is
+about the biggest thing in his character. Jack has
+got to pay. And Bill has a little circus, going to
+travel all summer, and he's offered big money for
+you. Jack can pay Bill what he owes him, and we'll
+have enough to live on, and have lots of fun going
+around. You hadn't ought to make a fuss about it."
+
+Margaret, pale as death, stared at the girl, pertly
+slim, and common and pretty, who stared back
+laughingly, although still with the glimmer of un-
+comprehending pity in her black eyes.
+
+"What does -- he -- want -- me -- for?" gasped
+Margaret.
+
+"For a show, because you are so big," replied
+Camille. "You will make us all rich, Margaret.
+Ain't it nice?"
+
+Then Camille screamed, the shrill raucous scream
+of the women of her type, for Margaret had fallen
+back in a dead faint, her immense bulk inert in her
+chair. Jack came running in alarm. Margaret had
+suddenly gained value in his shrewd eyes. He was
+as pale as she.
+
+Finally Margaret raised her head, opened her
+miserable eyes, and regained her consciousness of
+herself and what lay before her. There was no course
+open but submission. She knew that from the first.
+All three faced destitution; she was the one financial
+asset, she and her poor flesh. She had to face it,
+and with what dignity she could muster.
+
+Margaret had great piety. She kept constantly
+before her mental vision the fact in which she be-
+lieved, that the world which she found so hard, and
+which put her to unspeakable torture, was not all.
+
+A week elapsed before the wretched little show
+of which she was to be a member went on the road,
+and night after night she prayed. She besieged her
+God for strength. She never prayed for respite.
+Her realization of the situation and her lofty reso-
+lution prevented that. The awful, ridiculous com-
+bat was before her; there was no evasion; she prayed
+only for the strength which leads to victory.
+
+However, when the time came, it was all worse
+than she had imagined. How could a woman gently
+born and bred conceive of the horrible ignominy of
+such a life? She was dragged hither and yon, to this
+and that little town. She traveled through swelter-
+ing heat on jolting trains; she slept in tents; she
+lived -- she, Margaret Lee -- on terms of equality
+with the common and the vulgar. Daily her absurd
+unwieldiness was exhibited to crowds screaming with
+laughter. Even her faith wavered. It seemed to her
+that there was nothing for evermore beyond those
+staring, jeering faces of silly mirth and delight at
+sight of her, seated in two chairs, clad in a pink
+spangled dress, her vast shoulders bare and
+sparkling with a tawdry necklace, her great, bare
+arms covered with brass bracelets, her hands in-
+cased in short, white kid gloves, over the fingers
+of which she wore a number of rings -- stage prop-
+erties.
+
+Margaret became a horror to herself. At times
+it seemed to her that she was in the way of fairly
+losing her own identity. It mattered little that
+Camille and Jack were very kind to her, that they
+showed her the nice things which her terrible earn-
+ings had enabled them to have. She sat in her two
+chairs -- the two chairs proved a most successful
+advertisement -- with her two kid-cushiony hands
+clenched in her pink spangled lap, and she suffered
+agony of soul, which made her inner self stern and
+terrible, behind that great pink mask of face. And
+nobody realized until one sultry day when the show
+opened at a village in a pocket of green hills -- indeed,
+its name was Greenhill -- and Sydney Lord went to
+see it.
+
+Margaret, who had schooled herself to look upon
+her audience as if they were not, suddenly compre-
+hended among them another soul who understood
+her own. She met the eyes of the man, and a won-
+derful comfort, as of a cool breeze blowing over the
+face of clear water, came to her. She knew that the
+man understood. She knew that she had his fullest
+sympathy. She saw also a comrade in the toils of
+comic tragedy, for Sydney Lord was in the same case.
+He was a mountain of flesh. As a matter of fact,
+had he not been known in Greenhill and respected
+as a man of weight of character as well as of body,
+and of an old family, he would have rivaled Mar-
+garet. Beside him sat an elderly woman, sweet-
+faced, slightly bent as to her slender shoulders, as if
+with a chronic attitude of submission. She was
+Sydney's widowed sister, Ellen Waters. She lived
+with her brother and kept his house, and had no
+will other than his.
+
+Sydney Lord and his sister remained when the rest
+of the audience had drifted out, after the privileged
+hand-shakes with the queen of the show. Every
+time a coarse, rustic hand reached familiarly after
+Margaret's, Sydney shrank.
+
+He motioned his sister to remain seated when
+he approached the stage. Jack Desmond, who
+had been exploiting Margaret, gazed at him with
+admiring curiosity. Sydney waved him away
+with a commanding gesture. "I wish to speak to
+her a moment. Pray leave the tent," he said,
+and Jack obeyed. People always obeyed Sydney
+Lord.
+
+Sydney stood before Margaret, and he saw the
+clear crystal, which was herself, within all the flesh,
+clad in tawdry raiment, and she knew that he saw it.
+
+"Good God!" said Sydney, "you are a lady!"
+
+He continued to gaze at her, and his eyes, large
+and brown, became blurred; at the same time his
+mouth tightened.
+
+"How came you to be in such a place as this?"
+demanded Sydney. He spoke almost as if he were
+angry with her.
+
+Margaret explained briefly.
+
+"It is an outrage," declared Sydney. He said
+it, however, rather absently. He was reflecting.
+"Where do you live?" he asked.
+
+"Here."
+
+"You mean --?"
+
+"They make up a bed for me here, after the people
+have gone."
+
+"And I suppose you had -- before this -- a com-
+fortable house."
+
+"The house which my grandfather Lee owned,
+the old Lee mansion-house, before we went to the
+city. It was a very fine old Colonial house," ex-
+plained Margaret, in her finely modulated voice.
+
+"And you had a good room?"
+
+"The southeast chamber had always been mine.
+It was very large, and the furniture was old Spanish
+mahogany."
+
+"And now --" said Sydney.
+
+"Yes," said Margaret. She looked at him, and
+her serious blue eyes seemed to see past him. "It
+will not last," she said.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I try to learn a lesson. I am a child in the school
+of God. My lesson is one that always ends in peace."
+
+"Good God!" said Sydney.
+
+He motioned to his sister, and Ellen approached
+in a frightened fashion. Her brother could do no
+wrong, but this was the unusual, and alarmed her.
+
+"This lady --" began Sydney.
+
+"Miss Lee," said Margaret. "I was never mar-
+ried. I am Miss Margaret Lee."
+
+"This," said Sydney, "is my sister Ellen, Mrs.
+Waters. Ellen, I wish you to meet Miss Lee."
+
+Ellen took into her own Margaret's hand, and said
+feebly that it was a beautiful day and she hoped
+Miss Lee found Greenhill a pleasant place to -- visit.
+
+Sydney moved slowly out of the tent and found
+Jack Desmond. He was standing near with Camille,
+who looked her best in a pale-blue summer silk and
+a black hat trimmed with roses. Jack and Camille
+never really knew how the great man had managed,
+but presently Margaret had gone away with him
+and his sister.
+
+Jack and Camille looked at each other.
+
+"Oh, Jack, ought you to have let her go?" said
+Camille.
+
+"What made you let her go?" asked Jack.
+
+"I -- don't know. I couldn't say anything. That
+man has a tremendous way with him. Goodness!"
+
+"He is all right here in the place, anyhow," said
+Jack. "They look up to him. He is a big-bug here.
+Comes of a family like Margaret's, though he hasn't
+got much money. Some chaps were braggin' that
+they had a bigger show than her right here, and I
+found out."
+
+"Suppose," said Camille, "Margaret does not
+come back?"
+
+"He could not keep her without bein' arrested,"
+declared Jack, but he looked uneasy. He had, how-
+ever, looked uneasy for some time. The fact was,
+Margaret had been very gradually losing weight.
+Moreover, she was not well. That very night, after
+the show was over, Bill Stark, the little dark man,
+had a talk with the Desmonds about it.
+
+"Truth is, before long, if you don't look out, you'll
+have to pad her," said Bill; "and giants don't
+amount to a row of pins after that begins."
+
+Camille looked worried and sulky. "She ain't
+very well, anyhow," said she. "I ain't going to
+kill Margaret."
+
+"It's a good thing she's got a chance to have a
+night's rest in a house," said Bill Stark.
+
+"The fat man has asked her to stay with him and
+his sister while the show is here," said Jack.
+
+"The sister invited her," said Camille, with a
+little stiffness. She was common, but she had lived
+with Lees, and her mother had married a Lee. She
+knew what was due Margaret, and also due herself.
+
+"The truth is," said Camille, "this is an awful sort
+of life for a woman like Margaret. She and her
+folks were never used to anything like it."
+
+"Why didn't you make your beauty husband
+hustle and take care of her and you, then?" de-
+manded Bill, who admired Camille, and disliked her
+because she had no eyes for him.
+
+"My husband has been unfortunate. He has
+done the best he could," responded Camille. "Come,
+Jack; no use talking about it any longer. Guess
+Margaret will pick up. Come along. I'm tired out."
+
+That night Margaret Lee slept in a sweet chamber
+with muslin curtains at the windows, in a massive
+old mahogany bed, much like hers which had been
+sacrificed at an auction sale. The bed-linen was
+linen, and smelled of lavender. Margaret was too
+happy to sleep. She lay in the cool, fragrant sheets
+and was happy, and convinced of the presence of
+the God to whom she had prayed. All night Sydney
+Lord sat down-stairs in his book-walled sanctum
+and studied over the situation. It was a crucial one.
+The great psychological moment of Sydney Lord's
+life for knight-errantry had arrived. He studied
+the thing from every point of view. There was no
+romance about it. These were hard, sordid, tragic,
+ludicrous facts with which he had to deal. He knew
+to a nicety the agonies which Margaret suffered.
+He knew, because of his own capacity for sufferings
+of like stress. "And she is a woman and a lady,"
+he said, aloud.
+
+If Sydney had been rich enough, the matter would
+have been simple. He could have paid Jack and
+Camille enough to quiet them, and Margaret could
+have lived with him and his sister and their two old
+servants. But he was not rich; he was even poor.
+The price to be paid for Margaret's liberty was a
+bitter one, but it was that or nothing. Sydney faced
+it. He looked about the room. To him the walls
+lined with the dull gleams of old books were lovely.
+There was an oil portrait of his mother over the
+mantel-shelf. The weather was warm now, and
+there was no need for a hearth fire, but how ex-
+quisitely home-like and dear that room could be
+when the snow drove outside and there was the leap
+of flame on the hearth! Sydney was a scholar and
+a gentleman. He had led a gentle and sequestered
+life. Here in his native village there were none to
+gibe and sneer. The contrast of the traveling show
+would be as great for him as it had been for Margaret,
+but he was the male of the species, and she the
+female. Chivalry, racial, harking back to the begin-
+ning of nobility in the human, to its earliest dawn,
+fired Sydney. The pale daylight invaded the study.
+Sydney, as truly as any knight of old, had girded
+himself, and with no hope, no thought of reward,
+for the battle in the eternal service of the strong
+for the weak, which makes the true worth of the
+strong.
+
+There was only one way. Sydney Lord took it.
+His sister was spared the knowledge of the truth
+for a long while. When she knew, she did not lament;
+since Sydney had taken the course, it must be right.
+As for Margaret, not knowing the truth, she yielded.
+She was really on the verge of illness. Her spirit
+was of too fine a strain to enable her body to endure
+long. When she was told that she was to remain
+with Sydney's sister while Sydney went away on
+business, she made no objection. A wonderful sense
+of relief, as of wings of healing being spread under
+her despair, was upon her. Camille came to bid
+her good-by.
+
+"I hope you have a nice visit in this lovely house,"
+said Camille, and kissed her. Camille was astute,
+and to be trusted. She did not betray Sydney's
+confidence. Sydney used a disguise -- a dark wig
+over his partially bald head and a little make-up --
+and he traveled about with the show and sat on
+three chairs, and shook hands with the gaping crowd,
+and was curiously happy. It was discomfort; it
+was ignominy; it was maddening to support by the
+exhibition of his physical deformity a perfectly
+worthless young couple like Jack and Camille Des-
+mond, but it was all superbly ennobling for the man
+himself.
+
+Always as he sat on his three chairs, immense,
+grotesque -- the more grotesque for his splendid dig-
+nity of bearing -- there was in his soul of a gallant
+gentleman the consciousness of that other, whom
+he was shielding from a similar ordeal. Compassion
+and generosity, so great that they comprehended
+love itself and excelled its highest type, irradiated
+the whole being of the fat man exposed to the gaze
+of his inferiors. Chivalry, which rendered him almost
+god-like, strengthened him for his task. Sydney
+thought always of Margaret as distinct from her
+physical self, a sort of crystalline, angelic soul, with
+no encumbrance of earth. He achieved a purely
+spiritual conception of her. And Margaret, living
+again her gentle lady life, was likewise ennobled
+by a gratitude which transformed her. Always a
+clear and beautiful soul, she gave out new lights of
+character like a jewel in the sun. And she also
+thought of Sydney as distinct from his physical self.
+The consciousness of the two human beings, one of
+the other, was a consciousness as of two wonderful
+lines of good and beauty, moving for ever parallel,
+separate, and inseparable in an eternal harmony of
+spirit.
+
+
+
+
+
+CORONATION
+
+
+
+
+
+CORONATION
+
+JIM BENNET had never married. He had
+passed middle life, and possessed considerable
+property. Susan Adkins kept house for him. She
+was a widow and a very distant relative. Jim had
+two nieces, his brother's daughters. One, Alma
+Beecher, was married; the other, Amanda, was not.
+The nieces had naively grasping views concerning
+their uncle and his property. They stated freely
+that they considered him unable to care for it; that
+a guardian should be appointed and the property
+be theirs at once. They consulted Lawyer Thomas
+Hopkinson with regard to it; they discoursed at
+length upon what they claimed to be an idiosyn-
+crasy of Jim's, denoting failing mental powers.
+
+"He keeps a perfect slew of cats, and has a coal
+fire for them in the woodshed all winter," said Amanda.
+
+"Why in thunder shouldn't he keep a fire in the
+woodshed if he wants to?" demanded Hopkinson.
+"I know of no law against it. And there isn't a
+law in the country regulating the number of cats a
+man can keep." Thomas Hopkinson, who was an
+old friend of Jim's, gave his prominent chin an up-
+ward jerk as he sat in his office arm-chair before
+his clients.
+
+"There is something besides cats," said Alma
+
+"What?"
+
+"He talks to himself."
+
+"What in creation do you expect the poor man to
+do? He can't talk to Susan Adkins about a blessed
+thing except tidies and pincushions. That woman
+hasn't a thought in her mind outside her soul's
+salvation and fancy-work. Jim has to talk once in
+a while to keep himself a man. What if he does
+talk to himself? I talk to myself. Next thing you will
+want to be appointed guardian over me, Amanda."
+
+Hopkinson was a bachelor, and Amanda flushed
+angrily.
+
+"He wasn't what I call even gentlemanly," she
+told Alma, when the two were on their way home.
+
+"I suppose Tom Hopkinson thought you were
+setting your cap at him," retorted Alma. She rel-
+ished the dignity of her married state, and enjoyed
+giving her spinster sister little claws when occasion
+called. However, Amanda had a temper of her own,
+and she could claw back.
+
+"YOU needn't talk," said she. "You only took
+Joe Beecher when you had given up getting anybody
+better. You wanted Tom Hopkinson yourself. I
+haven't forgotten that blue silk dress you got and
+wore to meeting. You needn't talk. You know
+you got that dress just to make Tom look at you,
+and he didn't. You needn't talk."
+
+"I wouldn't have married Tom Hopkinson if he
+had been the only man on the face of the earth,"
+declared Alma with dignity; but she colored hotly.
+
+Amanda sniffed. "Well, as near as I can find out
+Uncle Jim can go on talking to himself and keeping
+cats, and we can't do anything," said she.
+
+When the two women were home, they told Alma's
+husband, Joe Beecher, about their lack of success.
+They were quite heated with their walk and excite-
+ment. "I call it a shame," said Alma. "Anybody
+knows that poor Uncle Jim would be better off with
+a guardian."
+
+"Of course," said Amanda. "What man that
+had a grain of horse sense would do such a crazy
+thing as to keep a coal fire in a woodshed?"
+
+"For such a slew of cats, too," said Alma, nodding
+fiercely.
+
+Alma's husband, Joe Beecher, spoke timidly and
+undecidedly in the defense. "You know," he said,
+"that Mrs. Adkins wouldn't have those cats in the
+house, and cats mostly like to sit round where it's
+warm."
+
+His wife regarded him. Her nose wrinkled. "I
+suppose next thing YOU'LL be wanting to have a cat
+round where it's warm, right under my feet, with
+all I have to do," said she. Her voice had an actual
+acidity of sound.
+
+Joe gasped. He was a large man with a constant
+expression of wondering inquiry. It was the expres-
+sion of his babyhood; he had never lost it, and it
+was an expression which revealed truly the state of
+his mind. Always had Joe Beecher wondered, first
+of all at finding himself in the world at all, then at
+the various happenings of existence. He probably
+wondered more about the fact of his marriage with
+Alma Bennet than anything else, although he never
+betrayed his wonder. He was always painfully
+anxious to please his wife, of whom he stood in
+awe. Now he hastened to reply: "Why, no, Alma;
+of course I won't."
+
+"Because," said Alma, "I haven't come to my
+time of life, through all the trials I've had, to be
+taking any chances of breaking my bones over any
+miserable, furry, four-footed animal that wouldn't
+catch a mouse if one run right under her nose."
+
+"I don't want any cat," repeated Joe, miserably.
+His fear and awe of the two women increased.
+When his sister-in-law turned upon him he fairly
+cringed.
+
+"Cats!" said Amanda. Then she sniffed. The
+sniff was worse than speech.
+
+Joe repeated in a mumble that he didn't want
+any cats, and went out, closing the door softly after
+him, as he had been taught. However, he was en-
+tirely sure, in the depths of his subjugated masculine
+mind, that his wife and her sister had no legal au-
+thority whatever to interfere with their uncle's right
+to keep a hundred coal fires in his woodshed, for a
+thousand cats. He always had an inner sense of
+glee when he heard the two women talk over the
+matter. Once Amanda had declared that she did
+not believe that Tom Hopkinson knew much about
+law, anyway.
+
+"He seems to stand pretty high," Joe ventured
+with the utmost mildness.
+
+"Yes, he does," admitted Alma, grudgingly.
+
+"It does not follow he knows law," persisted
+Amanda, "and it MAY follow that he likes cats.
+There was that great Maltese tommy brushing round
+all the time we were in his office, but I didn't dare
+shoo him off for fear it might be against the law."
+Amanda laughed, a very disagreeable little laugh.
+Joe said nothing, but inwardly he chuckled. It was
+the cause of man with man. He realized a great,
+even affectionate, understanding of Jim.
+
+The day after his nieces had visited the lawyer's
+office, Jim was preparing to call on his friend Edward
+Hayward, the minister. Before leaving he looked
+carefully after the fire in the woodshed. The stove
+was large. Jim piled on the coal, regardless out-
+wardly that the housekeeper, Susan Adkins, had
+slammed the kitchen door to indicate her contempt.
+Inwardly Jim felt hurt, but he had felt hurt so long
+from the same cause that the sensation had become
+chronic, and was borne with a gentle patience.
+Moreover, there was something which troubled him
+more and was the reason for his contemplated call
+on his friend. He evened the coals on the fire with
+great care, and replenished from the pail in the ice-
+box the cats' saucers. There was a circle of clean
+white saucers around the stove. Jim owned many
+cats; counting the kittens, there were probably over
+twenty. Mrs. Adkins counted them in the sixties.
+"Those sixty-seven cats," she said.
+
+Jim often gave away cats when he was confident
+of securing good homes, but supply exceeded the
+demand. Now and then tragedies took place in
+that woodshed. Susan Adkins came bravely to the
+front upon these occasions. Quite convinced was
+Susan Adkins that she had a good home, and it
+behooved her to keep it, and she did not in the least
+object to drowning, now and then, a few very young
+kittens. She did this with neatness and despatch
+while Jim walked to the store on an errand and was
+supposed to know nothing about it. There was
+simply not enough room in his woodshed for the
+accumulation of cats, although his heart could have
+held all.
+
+That day, as he poured out the milk, cats of all
+ages and sizes and colors purred in a softly padding
+multitude around his feet, and he regarded them
+with love. There were tiger cats, Maltese cats, black-
+and-white cats, black cats and white cats, tommies
+and females, and his heart leaped to meet the plead-
+ing mews of all. The saucers were surrounded.
+Little pink tongues lapped. "Pretty pussy! pretty
+pussy!" cooed Jim, addressing them in general. He
+put on his overcoat and hat, which he kept on a peg
+behind the door. Jim had an arm-chair in the wood-
+shed. He always sat there when he smoked; Susan
+Adkins demurred at his smoking in the house, which
+she kept so nice, and Jim did not dream of rebellion.
+He never questioned the right of a woman to bar
+tobacco smoke from a house. Before leaving he
+refilled some of the saucers. He was not sure that
+all of the cats were there; some might be afield,
+hunting, and he wished them to find refreshment
+when they returned. He stroked the splendid striped
+back of a great tiger tommy which filled his arm-
+chair. This cat was his special pet. He fastened the
+outer shed door with a bit of rope in order that it
+might not blow entirely open, and yet allow his
+feline friends to pass, should they choose. Then he
+went out.
+
+The day was clear, with a sharp breath of frost.
+The fields gleamed with frost, offering to the eye a
+fine shimmer as of diamond-dust under the brilliant
+blue sky, overspread in places with a dapple of little
+white clouds.
+
+"White frost and mackerel sky; going to be falling
+weather," Jim said, aloud, as he went out of the
+yard, crunching the crisp grass under heel.
+
+Susan Adkins at a window saw his lips moving.
+His talking to himself made her nervous, although it
+did not render her distrustful of his sanity. It was
+fortunate that Susan had not told Jim that she
+disliked his habit. In that case he would have
+deprived himself of that slight solace; he would not
+have dreamed of opposing Susan's wishes. Jim had
+a great pity for the nervous whims, as he regarded
+them, of women -- a pity so intense and tender that
+it verged on respect and veneration. He passed his
+nieces' house on the way to the minister's, and both
+were looking out of windows and saw his lips moving.
+
+"There he goes, talking to himself like a crazy
+loon," said Amanda.
+
+Alma nodded.
+
+Jim went on, blissfully unconscious. He talked
+in a quiet monotone; only now and then his voice
+rose; only now and then there were accompanying
+gestures. Jim had a straight mile down the broad
+village street to walk before he reached the church
+and the parsonage beside it.
+
+Jim and the minister had been friends since boy-
+hood. They were graduates and classmates of the
+same college. Jim had had unusual educational ad-
+vantages for a man coming from a simple family.
+The front door of the parsonage flew open when Jim
+entered the gate, and the minister stood there
+smiling. He was a tall, thin man with a wide mouth,
+which either smiled charmingly or was set with
+severity. He was as brown and dry as a wayside
+weed which winter had subdued as to bloom but
+could not entirely prostrate with all its icy storms
+and compelling blasts. Jim, advancing eagerly tow-
+ard the warm welcome in the door, was a small
+man, and bent at that, but he had a handsome old
+face, with the rose of youth on the cheeks and the
+light of youth in the blue eyes, and the quick changes
+of youth, before emotions, about the mouth.
+
+"Hullo, Jim!" cried Dr. Edward Hayward. Hay-
+ward, for a doctor of divinity, was considered some-
+what lacking in dignity at times; still, he was Dr.
+Hayward, and the failing was condoned. More-
+over, he was a Hayward, and the Haywards had
+been, from the memory of the oldest inhabitant, the
+great people of the village. Dr. Hayward's house
+was presided over by his widowed cousin, a lady
+of enough dignity to make up for any lack of it in
+the minister. There were three servants, besides
+the old butler who had been Hayward's attendant
+when he had been a young man in college. Village
+people were proud of their minister, with his degree
+and what they considered an imposing household
+retinue.
+
+Hayward led, and Jim followed, to the least pre-
+tentious room in the house -- not the study proper,
+which was lofty, book-lined, and leather-furnished,
+curtained with broad sweeps of crimson damask, but
+a little shabby place back of it, accessible by a nar-
+row door. The little room was lined with shelves;
+they held few books, but a collection of queer and
+dusty things -- strange weapons, minerals, odds and
+ends -- which the minister loved and with which his
+lady cousin never interfered.
+
+"Louisa," Hayward had told his cousin when she
+entered upon her post, "do as you like with the
+whole house, but let my little study alone. Let it
+look as if it had been stirred up with a garden-rake
+-- that little room is my territory, and no disgrace
+to you, my dear, if the dust rises in clouds at every
+step."
+
+Jim was as fond of the little room as his friend.
+He entered, and sighed a great sigh of satisfaction
+as he sank into the shabby, dusty hollow of a large
+chair before the hearth fire. Immediately a black
+cat leaped into his lap, gazed at him with green-
+jewel eyes, worked her paws, purred, settled into a
+coil, and slept. Jim lit his pipe and threw the match
+blissfully on the floor. Dr. Hayward set an electric
+coffee-urn at its work, for the little room was a
+curious mixture of the comfortable old and the
+comfortable modern.
+
+"Sam shall serve our luncheon in here," he said,
+with a staid glee.
+
+Jim nodded happily.
+
+"Louisa will not mind," said Hayward. "She is
+precise, but she has a fine regard for the rights of the
+individual, which is most commendable." He seated
+himself in a companion chair to Jim's, lit his own
+pipe, and threw the match on the floor. Occasion-
+ally, when the minister was out, Sam, without orders
+so to do, cleared the floor of matches.
+
+Hayward smoked and regarded his friend, who
+looked troubled despite his comfort. "What is it,
+Jim?" asked the minister at last.
+
+"I don't know how to do what is right for me to
+do," replied the little man, and his face, turned
+toward his friend, had the puzzled earnestness of a
+child.
+
+Hayward laughed. It was easily seen that his
+was the keener mind. In natural endowments
+there had never been equality, although there was
+great similarity of tastes. Jim, despite his education,
+often lapsed into the homely vernacular of which he
+heard so much. An involuntarily imitative man in
+externals was Jim, but essentially an original. Jim
+proceeded.
+
+"You know, Edward, I have never been one to
+complain," he said, with an almost boyish note
+of apology.
+
+"Never complained half enough; that's the trou-
+ble," returned the other.
+
+"Well, I overheard something Mis' Adkins said
+to Mis' Amos Trimmer the other afternoon. Mis'
+Trimmer was calling on Mis' Adkins. I couldn't
+help overhearing unless I went outdoors, and it
+was snowing and I had a cold. I wasn't listening."
+
+"Had a right to listen if you wanted to," declared
+Hayward, irascibly.
+
+"Well, I couldn't help it unless I went outdoors.
+Mis' Adkins she was in the kitchen making light-
+bread for supper, and Mis' Trimmer had sat right
+down there with her. Mis' Adkins's kitchen is as
+clean as a parlor, anyway. Mis' Adkins said to Mis'
+Trimmer, speaking of me -- because Mis' Trimmer
+had just asked where I was and Mis' Adkins had
+said I was out in the woodshed sitting with the cats
+and smoking -- Mis' Adkins said, 'He's just a door-
+mat, that's what he is.' Then Mis' Trimmer says,
+'The way he lets folks ride over him beats me.'
+Then Mis' Adkins says again: 'He's nothing but a
+door-mat. He lets everybody that wants to just
+trample on him and grind their dust into him, and
+he acts real pleased and grateful.'"
+
+Hayward's face flushed. "Did Mrs. Adkins men-
+tion that she was one of the people who used you
+for a door-mat?" he demanded.
+
+Jim threw back his head and laughed like a child,
+with the sweetest sense of unresentful humor. "Lord
+bless my soul, Edward," replied Jim, "I don't be-
+lieve she ever thought of that."
+
+"And at that very minute you, with a hard cold,
+were sitting out in that draughty shed smoking
+because she wouldn't allow you to smoke in your
+own house!"
+
+"I don't mind that, Edward," said Jim, and
+laughed again.
+
+"Could you see to read your paper out there,
+with only that little shed window? And don't you
+like to read your paper while you smoke?"
+
+"Oh yes," admitted Jim; "but my! I don't mind
+little things like that! Mis' Adkins is only a poor
+widow woman, and keeping my house nice and not
+having it smell of tobacco is all she's got. They can
+talk about women's rights -- I feel as if they ought
+to have them fast enough, if they want them, poor
+things; a woman has a hard row to hoe, and will
+have, if she gets all the rights in creation. But I
+guess the rights they'd find it hardest to give up
+would be the rights to have men look after them
+just a little more than they look after other men,
+just because they are women. When I think of
+Annie Berry -- the girl I was going to marry, you
+know, if she hadn't died -- I feel as if I couldn't do
+enough for another woman. Lord! I'm glad to sit
+out in the woodshed and smoke. Mis' Adkins is
+pretty good-natured to stand all the cats."
+
+Then the coffee boiled, and Hayward poured out
+some for Jim and himself. He had a little silver ser-
+vice at hand, and willow-ware cups and saucers.
+Presently Sam appeared, and Hayward gave orders
+concerning luncheon.
+
+"Tell Miss Louisa we are to have it served here,"
+said he, "and mind, Sam, the chops are to be thick
+and cooked the way we like them; and don't forget
+the East India chutney, Sam."
+
+"It does seem rather a pity that you cannot have
+chutney at home with your chops, when you are so
+fond of it," remarked Hayward when Sam had gone.
+
+"Mis' Adkins says it will give me liver trouble,
+and she isn't strong enough to nurse."
+
+"So you have to eat her ketchup?"
+
+"Well, she doesn't put seasoning in it," admitted
+Jim. "But Mis' Adkins doesn't like seasoning her-
+self, and I don't mind."
+
+"And I know the chops are never cut thick, the
+way we like them."
+
+"Mis' Adkins likes her meat well done, and she
+can't get such thick chops well done. I suppose our
+chops are rather thin, but I don't mind."
+
+"Beefsteak and chops, both cut thin, and fried
+up like sole-leather. I know!" said Dr. Hayward,
+and he stamped his foot with unregenerate force.
+
+"I don't mind a bit, Edward."
+
+"You ought to mind, when it is your own house,
+and you buy the food and pay your housekeeper.
+It is an outrage!"
+
+"I don't mind, really, Edward."
+
+Dr. Hayward regarded Jim with a curious ex-
+pression compounded of love, anger, and contempt.
+"Any more talk of legal proceedings?" he asked,
+brusquely.
+
+Jim flushed. "Tom ought not to tell of that."
+
+"Yes, he ought; he ought to tell it all over town.
+He doesn't, but he ought. It is an outrage! Here
+you have been all these years supporting your
+nieces, and they are working away like field-mice,
+burrowing under your generosity, trying to get a
+chance to take action and appropriate your property
+and have you put under a guardian."
+
+"I don't mind a bit," said Jim; "but --"
+
+The other man looked inquiringly at him, and,
+seeing a pitiful working of his friend's face, he
+jumped up and got a little jar from a shelf. "We
+will drop the whole thing until we have had our
+chops and chutney," said he. "You are right; it is
+not worth minding. Here is a new brand of tobacco
+I want you to try. I don't half like it, myself, but
+you may."
+
+Jim, with a pleased smile, reached out for the
+tobacco, and the two men smoked until Sam brought
+the luncheon. It was well cooked and well served
+on an antique table. Jim was thoroughly happy.
+It was not until the luncheon was over and another
+pipe smoked that the troubled, perplexed expression
+returned to his face.
+
+"Now," said Hayward, "out with it!"
+
+"It is only the old affair about Alma and Amanda,
+but now it has taken on a sort of new aspect."
+
+"What do you mean by a new aspect?"
+
+"It seems," said Jim, slowly, "as if they were
+making it so I couldn't do for them."
+
+Hayward stamped his foot. "That does sound
+new," he said, dryly. "I never thought Alma
+Beecher or Amanda Bennet ever objected to have
+you do for them."
+
+"Well," said Jim, "perhaps they don't now, but
+they want me to do it in their own way. They
+don't want to feel as if I was giving and they taking;
+they want it to seem the other way round. You
+see, if I were to deed over my property to them, and
+then they allowance me, they would feel as if they
+were doing the giving."
+
+"Jim, you wouldn't be such a fool as that?"
+
+"No, I wouldn't," replied Jim, simply. "They
+wouldn't know how to take care of it, and Mis'
+Adkins would be left to shift for herself. Joe Beecher
+is real good-hearted, but he always lost every dollar
+he touched. No, there wouldn't be any sense in
+that. I don't mean to give in, but I do feel pretty
+well worked up over it."
+
+"What have they said to you?"
+
+Jim hesitated.
+
+"Out with it, now. One thing you may be sure
+of: nothing that you can tell me will alter my opinion
+of your two nieces for the worse. As for poor Joe
+Beecher, there is no opinion, one way or the other.
+What did they say?"
+
+Jim regarded his friend with a curiously sweet,
+far-off expression. "Edward," he said, "sometimes
+I believe that the greatest thing a man's friends can
+do for him is to drive him into a corner with God;
+to be so unjust to him that they make him under-
+stand that God is all that mortal man is meant to
+have, and that is why he finds out that most people,
+especially the ones he does for, don't care for
+him."
+
+Hayward looked solemnly and tenderly at the
+other's almost rapt face. "You are right, I suppose,
+old man," said he; "but what did they do?"
+
+"They called me in there about a week ago and
+gave me an awful talking to."
+
+"About what?"
+
+Jim looked at his friend with dignity. "They
+were two women talking, and they went into little
+matters not worth repeating," said he. "All is --
+they seemed to blame me for everything I had ever
+done for them, and for everything I had ever done,
+anyway. They seemed to blame me for being born
+and living, and, most of all, for doing anything for
+them."
+
+"It is an outrage!" declared Hayward. "Can't
+you see it?"
+
+"I can't seem to see anything plain about it,"
+returned Jim, in a bewildered way. "I always sup-
+posed a man had to do something bad to be given
+a talking to; but it isn't so much that, and I don't
+bear any malice against them. They are only two
+women, and they are nervous. What worries me is,
+they do need things, and they can't get on and be
+comfortable unless I do for them; but if they are
+going to feel that way about it, it seems to cut me
+off from doing, and that does worry me, Edward."
+
+The other man stamped. "Jim Bennet," he said,
+"they have talked, and now I am going to."
+
+"You, Edward?"
+
+"Yes, I am. It is entirely true what those two
+women, Susan Adkins and Mrs. Trimmer, said about
+you. You ARE a door-mat, and you ought to be
+ashamed of yourself for it. A man should be a man,
+and not a door-mat. It is the worst thing in the
+world for people to walk over him and trample him.
+It does them much more harm than it does him. In
+the end the trampler is much worse off than the
+trampled upon. Jim Bennet, your being a door-
+mat may cost other people their souls' salvation.
+You are selfish in the grain to be a door-mat."
+
+Jim turned pale. His child-like face looked sud-
+denly old with his mental effort to grasp the other's
+meaning. In fact, he was a child -- one of the little
+ones of the world -- although he had lived the span
+of a man's life. Now one of the hardest problems of
+the elders of the world was presented to him. "You
+mean --" he said, faintly.
+
+"I mean, Jim, that for the sake of other people,
+if not for your own sake, you ought to stop being
+a door-mat and be a man in this world of men."
+
+"What do you want me to do?"
+
+"I want you to go straight to those nieces of yours
+and tell them the truth. You know what your
+wrongs are as well as I do. You know what those
+two women are as well as I do. They keep the letter
+of the Ten Commandments -- that is right. They
+attend my church -- that is right. They scour the
+outside of the platter until it is bright enough to
+blind those people who don't understand them; but
+inwardly they are petty, ravening wolves of greed and
+ingratitude. Go and tell them; they don't know
+themselves. Show them what they are. It is your
+Christian duty."
+
+"You don't mean for me to stop doing for them?"
+
+"I certainly do mean just that -- for a while,
+anyway."
+
+"They can't possibly get along, Edward; they
+will suffer."
+
+"They have a little money, haven't they?"
+
+"Only a little in savings-bank. The interest pays
+their taxes."
+
+"And you gave them that?"
+
+Jim colored.
+
+"Very well, their taxes are paid for this year;
+let them use that money. They will not suffer, ex-
+cept in their feelings, and that is where they ought
+to suffer. Man, you would spoil all the work of the
+Lord by your selfish tenderness toward sinners!"
+
+"They aren't sinners."
+
+"Yes, they are -- spiritual sinners, the worst kind
+in the world. Now --"
+
+"You don't mean for me to go now?"
+
+"Yes, I do -- now. If you don't go now you never
+will. Then, afterward, I want you to go home and
+sit in your best parlor and smoke, and have all your
+cats in there, too."
+
+Jim gasped. "But, Edward! Mis' Adkins --"
+
+"I don't care about Mrs. Adkins. She isn't as
+bad as the rest, but she needs her little lesson,
+too."
+
+"Edward, the way that poor woman works to
+keep the house nice -- and she don't like the smell
+of tobacco smoke."
+
+"Never mind whether she likes it or not. You
+smoke."
+
+"And she don't like cats."
+
+"Never mind. Now you go."
+
+Jim stood up. There was a curious change in his
+rosy, child-like face. There was a species of quicken-
+ing. He looked at once older and more alert. His
+friend's words had charged him as with electricity.
+When he went down the street he looked taller.
+
+Amanda Bennet and Alma Beecher, sitting sewing
+at their street windows, made this mistake.
+
+"That isn't Uncle Jim," said Amanda. "That
+man is a head taller, but he looks a little like him."
+
+"It can't be Uncle Jim," agreed Alma. Then
+both started.
+
+"It is Uncle Jim, and he is coming here," said
+Amanda.
+
+Jim entered. Nobody except himself, his nieces,
+and Joe Beecher ever knew exactly what happened,
+what was the aspect of the door-mat erected to
+human life, of the worm turned to menace. It must
+have savored of horror, as do all meek and down-
+trodden things when they gain, driven to bay, the
+strength to do battle. It must have savored of the
+god-like, when the man who had borne with patience,
+dignity, and sorrow for them the stings of lesser
+things because they were lesser things, at last arose
+and revealed himself superior, with a great height of
+the spirit, with the power to crush.
+
+When Jim stopped talking and went home, two
+pale, shocked faces of women gazed after him from
+the windows. Joe Beecher was sobbing like a child.
+Finally his wife turned her frightened face upon him,
+glad to have still some one to intimidate.
+
+"For goodness' sake, Joe Beecher, stop crying
+like a baby," said she, but she spoke in a queer whis-
+per, for her lips were stiff.
+
+Joe stood up and made for the door.
+
+"Where are you going?" asked his wife.
+
+"Going to get a job somewhere," replied Joe, and
+went. Soon the women saw him driving a neighbor's
+cart up the street.
+
+"He's going to cart gravel for John Leach's new
+sidewalk!" gasped Alma.
+
+"Why don't you stop him?" cried her sister.
+"You can't have your husband driving a tip-cart
+for John Leach. Stop him, Alma!"
+
+"I can't stop him," moaned Alma. "I don't
+feel as if I could stop anything."
+
+Her sister gazed at her, and the same expression
+was on both faces, making them more than sisters
+of the flesh. Both saw before them a stern boundary
+wall against which they might press in vain for the
+rest of their lives, and both saw the same sins of
+their hearts.
+
+Meantime Jim Bennet was seated in his best
+parlor and Susan Adkins was whispering to Mrs.
+Trimmer out in the kitchen.
+
+"I don't know whether he's gone stark, staring
+mad or not," whispered Susan, "but he's in the
+parlor smoking his worst old pipe, and that big
+tiger tommy is sitting in his lap, and he's let in all
+the other cats, and they're nosing round, and I
+don't dare drive 'em out. I took up the broom, then
+I put it away again. I never knew Mr. Bennet
+to act so. I can't think what's got into him."
+
+"Did he say anything?"
+
+"No, he didn't say much of anything, but he said
+it in a way that made my flesh fairly creep. Says he,
+'As long as this is my house and my furniture and
+my cats, Mis' Adkins, I think I'll sit down in the
+parlor, where I can see to read my paper and smoke
+at the same time.' Then he holds the kitchen door
+open, and he calls, 'Kitty, kitty, kitty!' and that
+great tiger tommy comes in with his tail up, rubbing
+round his legs, and all the other cats followed after.
+I shut the door before these last ones got into the
+parlor." Susan Adkins regarded malevolently the
+three tortoise-shell cats of three generations and vari-
+ous stages of growth, one Maltese settled in a purring
+round of comfort with four kittens, and one perfectly
+black cat, which sat glaring at her with beryl-colored
+eyes.
+
+"That black cat looks evil," said Mrs. Trimmer.
+
+"Yes, he does. I don't know why I didn't drown
+him when he was a kitten."
+
+"Why didn't you drown all those Malty kittens?"
+
+"The old cat hid them away until they were too
+big. Then he wouldn't let me. What do you sup-
+pose has come to him? Just smell that awful pipe!"
+
+"Men do take queer streaks every now and then,"
+said Mrs. Trimmer. "My husband used to, and he
+was as good as they make 'em, poor man. He
+would eat sugar on his beefsteak, for one thing.
+The first time I saw him do it I was scared. I
+thought he was plum crazy, but afterward I found
+out it was just because he was a man, and his ma
+hadn't wanted him to eat sugar when he was a boy.
+Mr. Bennet will get over it."
+
+"He don't act as if he would."
+
+"Oh yes, he will. Jim Bennet never stuck to
+anything but being Jim Bennet for very long in
+his life, and this ain't being Jim Bennet."
+
+"He is a very good man," said Susan with a
+somewhat apologetic tone.
+
+"He's too good."
+
+"He's too good to cats."
+
+"Seems to me he's too good to 'most everybody.
+Think what he has done for Amanda and Alma, and
+how they act!"
+
+"Yes, they are ungrateful and real mean to him;
+and I feel sometimes as if I would like to tell them
+just what I think of them," said Susan Adkins.
+"Poor man, there he is, studying all the time what
+he can do for people, and he don't get very much
+himself."
+
+Mrs. Trimmer arose to take leave. She had a
+long, sallow face, capable of a sarcastic smile.
+"Then," said she, "if I were you I wouldn't begrudge
+him a chair in the parlor and a chance to read and
+smoke and hold a pussy-cat."
+
+"Who said I was begrudging it? I can air out the
+parlor when he's got over the notion."
+
+"Well, he will, so you needn't worry," said Mrs.
+Trimmer. As she went down the street she could
+see Jim's profile beside the parlor window, and she
+smiled her sarcastic smile, which was not altogether
+unpleasant. "He's stopped smoking, and he ain't
+reading," she told herself. "It won't be very long
+before he's Jim Bennet again."
+
+But it was longer than she anticipated, for Jim's
+will was propped by Edward Hayward's. Edward
+kept Jim to his standpoint for weeks, until a few
+days before Christmas. Then came self-assertion,
+that self-assertion of negation which was all that
+Jim possessed in such a crisis. He called upon Dr.
+Hayward; the two were together in the little study
+for nearly an hour, and talk ran high, then Jim
+prevailed.
+
+"It's no use, Edward," he said; "a man can't
+be made over when he's cut and dried in one fashion,
+the way I am. Maybe I'm doing wrong, but to me
+it looks like doing right, and there's something in
+the Bible about every man having his own right
+and wrong. If what you say is true, and I am hin-
+dering the Lord Almighty in His work, then it is
+for Him to stop me. He can do it. But meantime
+I've got to go on doing the way I always have. Joe
+has been trying to drive that tip-cart, and the horse
+ran away with him twice. Then he let the cart fall
+on his foot and mash one of his toes, and he can
+hardly get round, and Amanda and Alma don't dare
+touch that money in the bank for fear of not having
+enough to pay the taxes next year in case I don't
+help them. They only had a little money on hand
+when I gave them that talking to, and Christmas
+is 'most here, and they haven't got things they really
+need. Amanda's coat that she wore to meeting last
+Sunday didn't look very warm to me, and poor
+Alma had her furs chewed up by the Leach dog, and
+she's going without any. They need lots of things.
+And poor Mis' Adkins is 'most sick with tobacco
+smoke. I can see it, though she doesn't say anything,
+and the nice parlor curtains are full of it, and cat
+hairs are all over things. I can't hold out any longer,
+Edward. Maybe I am a door-mat; and if I am, and
+it is wicked, may the Lord forgive me, for I've got
+to keep right on being a door-mat."
+
+Hayward sighed and lighted his pipe. However,
+he had given up and connived with Jim.
+
+On Christmas eve the two men were in hiding
+behind a clump of cedars in the front yard of Jim's
+nieces' house. They watched the expressman deliver
+a great load of boxes and packages. Jim drew a
+breath of joyous relief.
+
+"They are taking them in," he whispered -- "they
+are taking them in, Edward!"
+
+Hayward looked down at the dim face of the man
+beside him, and something akin to fear entered his
+heart. He saw the face of a lifelong friend, but he
+saw something in it which he had never recog-
+nized before. He saw the face of one of the children
+of heaven, giving only for the sake of the need of
+others, and glorifying the gifts with the love and
+pity of an angel.
+
+"I was afraid they wouldn't take them!" whis-
+pered Jim, and his watching face was beautiful,
+although it was only the face of a little, old man of
+a little village, with no great gift of intellect. There
+was a full moon riding high; the ground was covered
+with a glistening snow-level, over which wavered
+wonderful shadows, as of wings. One great star pre-
+vailed despite the silver might of the moon. To
+Hayward Jim's face seemed to prevail, as that star,
+among all the faces of humanity.
+
+Jim crept noiselessly toward a window, Hayward
+at his heels. The two could see the lighted interior
+plainly.
+
+"See poor Alma trying on her furs," whispered
+Jim, in a rapture. "See Amanda with her coat.
+They have found the money. See Joe heft the tur-
+key." Suddenly he caught Hayward's arm, and
+the two crept away. Out on the road, Jim fairly
+sobbed with pure delight. "Oh, Edward," he said,"I
+am so thankful they took the things! I was so afraid
+they wouldn't, and they needed them! Oh, Edward,
+I am so thankful!" Edward pressed his friend's arm.
+
+When they reached Jim's house a great tiger-cat
+leaped to Jim's shoulder with the silence and swift-
+ness of a shadow. "He's always watching for me,"
+said Jim, proudly. "Pussy! Pussy!" The cat be-
+gan to purr loudly, and rubbed his splendid head
+against the man's cheek.
+
+"I suppose," said Hayward, with something of
+awe in his tone, "that you won't smoke in the parlor
+to-night?"
+
+"Edward, I really can't. Poor woman, she's got
+it all aired and beautifully cleaned, and she's so
+happy over it. There's a good fire in the shed, and
+I will sit there with the pussy-cats until I go to bed.
+Oh, Edward, I am so thankful that they took the
+things!"
+
+"Good night, Jim."
+
+"Good night. You don't blame me, Edward?"
+
+"Who am I to blame you, Jim? Good night."
+
+Hayward watched the little man pass along the
+path to the shed door. Jim's back was slightly
+bent, but to his friend it seemed bent beneath a
+holy burden of love and pity for all humanity, and
+the inheritance of the meek seemed to crown that
+drooping old head. The door-mat, again spread
+freely for the trampling feet of all who got comfort
+thereby, became a blessed thing. The humble
+creature, despised and held in contempt like One
+greater than he, giving for the sake of the needs
+of others, went along the narrow foot-path through
+the snow. The minister took off his hat and stood
+watching until the door was opened and closed and
+the little window gleamed with golden light.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE AMETHYST COMB
+
+
+
+
+
+THE AMETHYST COMB
+
+MISS JANE CAREW was at the railroad station
+waiting for the New York train. She was
+about to visit her friend, Mrs. Viola Longstreet.
+With Miss Carew was her maid, Margaret, a middle-
+aged New England woman, attired in the stiffest
+and most correct of maid-uniforms. She carried an
+old, large sole-leather bag, and also a rather large
+sole-leather jewel-case. The jewel-case, carried
+openly, was rather an unusual sight at a New Eng-
+land railroad station, but few knew what it was.
+They concluded it to be Margaret's special hand-
+bag. Margaret was a very tall, thin woman, un-
+bending as to carriage and expression. The one
+thing out of absolute plumb about Margaret was
+her little black bonnet. That was askew. Time
+had bereft the woman of so much hair that she could
+fasten no head-gear with security, especially when
+the wind blew, and that morning there was a stiff
+gale. Margaret's bonnet was cocked over one eye.
+Miss Carew noticed it.
+
+"Margaret, your bonnet is crooked," she said.
+
+Margaret straightened her bonnet, but immedi-
+ately the bonnet veered again to the side, weighted
+by a stiff jet aigrette. Miss Carew observed the
+careen of the bonnet, realized that it was inevitable,
+and did not mention it again. Inwardly she resolved
+upon the removal of the jet aigrette later on. Miss
+Carew was slightly older than Margaret, and dressed
+in a style somewhat beyond her age. Jane Carew
+had been alert upon the situation of departing youth.
+She had eschewed gay colors and extreme cuts, and
+had her bonnets made to order, because there were
+no longer anything but hats in the millinery shop.
+The milliner in Wheaton, where Miss Carew lived,
+had objected, for Jane Carew inspired reverence.
+
+"A bonnet is too old for you. Miss Carew," she
+said. "Women much older than you wear hats."
+
+"I trust that I know what is becoming to a woman
+of my years, thank you. Miss Waters," Jane had
+replied, and the milliner had meekly taken her order.
+
+After Miss Carew had left, the milliner told her
+girls that she had never seen a woman so perfectly
+crazy to look her age as Miss Carew. "And she a
+pretty woman, too," said the milliner; "as straight
+as an arrer, and slim, and with all that hair, scarcely
+turned at all."
+
+Miss Carew, with all her haste to assume years,
+remained a pretty woman, softly slim, with an abun-
+dance of dark hair, showing little gray. Sometimes
+Jane reflected, uneasily, that it ought at her time
+of life to be entirely gray. She hoped nobody would
+suspect her of dyeing it. She wore it parted in the
+middle, folded back smoothly, and braided in a
+compact mass on the top of her head. The style
+of her clothes was slightly behind the fashion, just
+enough to suggest conservatism and age. She car-
+ried a little silver-bound bag in one nicely gloved
+hand; with the other she held daintily out of the
+dust of the platform her dress-skirt. A glimpse of
+a silk frilled petticoat, of slender feet, and ankles
+delicately slim, was visible before the onslaught of
+the wind. Jane Carew made no futile effort to keep
+her skirts down before the wind-gusts. She was so
+much of the gentlewoman that she could be gravely
+oblivious to the exposure of her ankles. She looked
+as if she had never heard of ankles when her black
+silk skirts lashed about them. She rose superbly
+above the situation. For some abstruse reason Mar-
+garet's skirts were not affected by the wind. They
+might have been weighted with buckram, although
+it was no longer in general use. She stood, except
+for her veering bonnet, as stiffly immovable as a
+wooden doll.
+
+Miss Carew seldom left Wheaton. This visit to
+New York was an innovation. Quite a crowd gath-
+ered about Jane's sole-leather trunk when it was
+dumped on the platform by the local expressman.
+"Miss Carew is going to New York," one said to
+another, with much the same tone as if he had said,
+"The great elm on the common is going to move
+into Dr. Jones's front yard."
+
+When the train arrived, Miss Carew, followed by
+Margaret, stepped aboard with a majestic disregard
+of ankles. She sat beside a window, and Margaret
+placed the bag on the floor and held the jewel-case
+in her lap. The case contained the Carew jewels.
+They were not especially valuable, although they
+were rather numerous. There were cameos in
+brooches and heavy gold bracelets; corals which
+Miss Carew had not worn since her young girlhood.
+There were a set of garnets, some badly cut diamonds
+in ear-rings and rings, some seed-pearl ornaments,
+and a really beautiful set of amethysts. There were
+a necklace, two brooches -- a bar and a circle -- ear-
+rings, a ring, and a comb. Each piece was charm-
+ing, set in filigree gold with seed-pearls, but perhaps
+of them all the comb was the best. It was a very
+large comb. There was one great amethyst in the
+center of the top; on either side was an intricate
+pattern of plums in small amethysts, and seed-pearl
+grapes, with leaves and stems of gold. Margaret
+in charge of the jewel-case was imposing. When
+they arrived in New York she confronted every-
+body whom she met with a stony stare, which was
+almost accusative and convictive of guilt, in spite
+of entire innocence on the part of the person stared
+at. It was inconceivable that any mortal would
+have dared lay violent hands upon that jewel-case
+under that stare. It would have seemed to partake
+of the nature of grand larceny from Providence.
+
+When the two reached the up-town residence of
+Viola Longstreet, Viola gave a little scream at the
+sight of the case.
+
+"My dear Jane Carew, here you are with Mar-
+garet carrying that jewel-case out in plain sight.
+How dare you do such a thing? I really wonder
+you have not been held up a dozen times."
+
+Miss Carew smiled her gentle but almost stern
+smile -- the Carew smile, which consisted in a widen-
+ing and slightly upward curving of tightly closed lips.
+
+"I do not think," said she, "that anybody would
+be apt to interfere with Margaret."
+
+Viola Longstreet laughed, the ringing peal of a
+child, although she was as old as Miss Carew. "I
+think you are right, Jane," said she. "I don't be-
+lieve a crook in New York would dare face that
+maid of yours. He would as soon encounter Ply-
+mouth Rock. I am glad you have brought your de-
+lightful old jewels, although you never wear any-
+thing except those lovely old pearl sprays and dull
+diamonds."
+
+"Now," stated Jane, with a little toss of pride,
+"I have Aunt Felicia's amethysts."
+
+"Oh, sure enough! I remember you did write
+me last summer that she had died and you had the
+amethysts at last. She must have been very old."
+
+"Ninety-one."
+
+"She might have given you the amethysts before.
+You, of course, will wear them; and I -- am going
+to borrow the corals!"
+
+Jane Carew gasped.
+
+"You do not object, do you, dear? I have a new
+dinner-gown which clamors for corals, and my bank-
+account is strained, and I could buy none equal to
+those of yours, anyway."
+
+"Oh, I do not object," said Jane Carew; still she
+looked aghast.
+
+Viola Longstreet shrieked with laughter. "Oh,
+I know. You think the corals too young for me.
+You have not worn them since you left off dotted
+muslin. My dear, you insisted upon growing old
+-- I insisted upon remaining young. I had two
+new dotted muslins last summer. As for corals, I
+would wear them in the face of an opposing army!
+Do not judge me by yourself, dear. You laid hold
+of Age and held him, although you had your com-
+plexion and your shape and hair. As for me, I had
+my complexion and kept it. I also had my hair
+and kept it. My shape has been a struggle, but it
+was worth while. I, my dear, have held Youth so
+tight that he has almost choked to death, but held
+him I have. You cannot deny it. Look at me,
+Jane Carew, and tell me if, judging by my looks,
+you can reasonably state that I have no longer the
+right to wear corals."
+
+Jane Carew looked. She smiled the Carew smile.
+"You DO look very young, Viola," said Jane, "but
+you are not."
+
+"Jane Carew," said Viola, "I am young. May
+I wear your corals at my dinner to-morrow night?"
+
+"Why, of course, if you think --"
+
+"If I think them suitable. My dear, if there
+were on this earth ornaments more suitable to ex-
+treme youth than corals, I would borrow them if you
+owned them, but, failing that, the corals will answer.
+Wait until you see me in that taupe dinner-gown
+and the corals!"
+
+Jane waited. She visited with Viola, whom she
+loved, although they had little in common, partly
+because of leading widely different lives, partly be-
+cause of constitutional variations. She was dressed
+for dinner fully an hour before it was necessary,
+and she sat in the library reading when Viola
+swept in.
+
+Viola was really entrancing. It was a pity that
+Jane Carew had such an unswerving eye for the
+essential truth that it could not be appeased by
+actual effect. Viola had doubtless, as she had said,
+struggled to keep her slim shape, but she had kept
+it, and, what was more, kept it without evidence
+of struggle. If she was in the least hampered by
+tight lacing and length of undergarment, she gave
+no evidence of it as she curled herself up in a big
+chair and (Jane wondered how she could bring her-
+self to do it) crossed her legs, revealing one delicate
+foot and ankle, silk-stockinged with taupe, and shod
+with a coral satin slipper with a silver heel and a
+great silver buckle. On Viola's fair round neck the
+Carew corals lay bloomingly; her beautiful arms
+were clasped with them; a great coral brooch with
+wonderful carving confined a graceful fold of the
+taupe over one hip, a coral comb surmounted the
+shining waves of Viola's hair. Viola was an ash-
+blonde, her complexion was as roses, and the corals
+were ideal for her. As Jane regarded her friend's
+beauty, however, the fact that Viola was not young,
+that she was as old as herself, hid it and overshad-
+owed it.
+
+"Well, Jane, don't you think I look well in the
+corals, after all?" asked Viola, and there was some-
+thing pitiful in her voice.
+
+When a man or a woman holds fast to youth, even
+if successfully, there is something of the pitiful and
+the tragic involved. It is the everlasting struggle
+of the soul to retain the joy of earth, whose fleeting
+distinguishes it from heaven, and whose retention
+is not accomplished without an inner knowledge of
+its futility.
+
+"I suppose you do, Viola," replied Jane Carew,
+with the inflexibility of fate, "but I really think
+that only very young girls ought to wear corals."
+
+Viola laughed, but the laugh had a minor cadence.
+"But I AM a young girl, Jane," she said. "I MUST
+be a young girl. I never had any girlhood when I
+should have had. You know that."
+
+Viola had married, when very young, a man old
+enough to be her father, and her wedded life had been
+a sad affair, to which, however, she seldom alluded.
+Viola had much pride with regard to the inevitable
+past.
+
+"Yes," agreed Jane. Then she added, feeling
+that more might be expected, "Of course I suppose
+that marrying so very young does make a difference."
+
+"Yes," said Viola, "it does. In fact, it makes of
+one's girlhood an anti-climax, of which many dis-
+pute the wisdom, as you do. But have it I will. Jane,
+your amethysts are beautiful."
+
+Jane regarded the clear purple gleam of a stone
+on her arm. "Yes," she agreed, "Aunt Felicia's ame-
+thysts have always been considered very beautiful."
+
+"And such a full set," said Viola.
+
+"Yes," said Jane. She colored a little, but Viola
+did not know why. At the last moment Jane had
+decided not to wear the amethyst comb, because it
+seemed to her altogether too decorative for a woman
+of her age, and she was afraid to mention it to Viola.
+She was sure that Viola would laugh at her and in-
+sist upon her wearing it.
+
+"The ear-rings are lovely," said Viola. "My dear,
+I don't see how you ever consented to have your
+ears pierced."
+
+"I was very young, and my mother wished me
+to," replied Jane, blushing.
+
+The door-bell rang. Viola had been covertly lis-
+tening for it all the time. Soon a very beautiful
+young man came with a curious dancing step into
+the room. Harold Lind always gave the effect of
+dancing when he walked. He always, moreover,
+gave the effect of extreme youth and of the utmost
+joy and mirth in life itself. He regarded everything
+and everybody with a smile as of humorous appre-
+ciation, and yet the appreciation was so good-
+natured that it offended nobody.
+
+"Look at me -- I am absurd and happy; look at
+yourself, also absurd and happy; look at every-
+body else likewise; look at life -- a jest so delicious
+that it is quite worth one's while dying to be made
+acquainted with it." That is what Harold Lind
+seemed to say. Viola Longstreet became even more
+youthful under his gaze; even Jane Carew regretted
+that she had not worn her amethyst comb and be-
+gan to doubt its unsuitability. Viola very soon
+called the young man's attention to Jane's ame-
+thysts, and Jane always wondered why she did not
+then mention the comb. She removed a brooch and
+a bracelet for him to inspect.
+
+"They are really wonderful," he declared. "I
+have never seen greater depth of color in amethysts."
+
+"Mr. Lind is an authority on jewels," declared
+Viola. The young man shot a curious glance at her,
+which Jane remembered long afterward. It was one
+of those glances which are as keystones to situations.
+
+Harold looked at the purple stones with the ex-
+pression of a child with a toy. There was much of
+the child in the young man's whole appearance,
+but of a mischievous and beautiful child, of whom
+his mother might observe, with adoration and ill-
+concealed boastfulness, "I can never tell what that
+child will do next!"
+
+Harold returned the bracelet and brooch to Jane,
+and smiled at her as if amethysts were a lovely
+purple joke between her and himself, uniting them
+by a peculiar bond of fine understanding. "Exqui-
+site, Miss Carew," he said. Then he looked at Viola.
+"Those corals suit you wonderfully, Mrs. Long-
+street," he observed, "but amethysts would also
+suit you."
+
+"Not with this gown," replied Viola, rather piti-
+fully. There was something in the young man's
+gaze and tone which she did not understand, but
+which she vaguely quivered before.
+
+Harold certainly thought the corals were too young
+for Viola. Jane understood, and felt an unworthy
+triumph. Harold, who was young enough in actual
+years to be Viola's son, and was younger still by
+reason of his disposition, was amused by the sight
+of her in corals, although he did not intend to be-
+tray his amusement. He considered Viola in corals
+as too rude a jest to share with her. Had poor Viola
+once grasped Harold Lind's estimation of her she
+would have as soon gazed upon herself in her cof-
+fin. Harold's comprehension of the essentials was
+beyond Jane Carew's. It was fairly ghastly, par-
+taking of the nature of X-rays, but it never disturbed
+Harold Lind. He went along his dance-track undis-
+turbed, his blue eyes never losing their high lights
+of glee, his lips never losing their inscrutable smile
+at some happy understanding between life and him-
+self. Harold had fair hair, which was very smooth
+and glossy. His skin was like a girl's. He was so
+beautiful that he showed cleverness in an affecta-
+tion of carelessness in dress. He did not like to wear
+evening clothes, because they had necessarily to
+be immaculate. That evening Jane regarded him
+with an inward criticism that he was too handsome
+for a man. She told Viola so when the dinner was
+over and he and the other guests had gone.
+
+"He is very handsome," she said, "but I never
+like to see a man quite so handsome."
+
+"You will change your mind when you see him
+in tweeds," returned Viola. "He loathes evening
+clothes."
+
+Jane regarded her anxiously. There was some-
+thing in Viola's tone which disturbed and shocked
+her. It was inconceivable that Viola should be in
+love with that youth, and yet -- "He looks very
+young," said Jane in a prim voice.
+
+"He IS young," admitted Viola; "still, not quite
+so young as he looks. Sometimes I tell him he will
+look like a boy if he lives to be eighty."
+
+"Well, he must be very young," persisted Jane.
+
+"Yes," said Viola, but she did not say how young.
+Viola herself, now that the excitement was over,
+did not look so young as at the beginning of the
+evening. She removed the corals, and Jane con-
+sidered that she looked much better without
+them.
+
+"Thank you for your corals, dear," said Viola.
+"Where Is Margaret?"
+
+Margaret answered for herself by a tap on the
+door. She and Viola's maid, Louisa, had been sit-
+ting on an upper landing, out of sight, watching the
+guests down-stairs. Margaret took the corals and
+placed them in their nest in the jewel-case, also the
+amethysts, after Viola had gone. The jewel-case
+was a curious old affair with many compartments.
+The amethysts required two. The comb was so
+large that it had one for itself. That was the reason
+why Margaret did not discover that evening that it
+was gone. Nobody discovered it for three days,
+when Viola had a little card-party. There was a
+whist-table for Jane, who had never given up the
+reserved and stately game. There were six tables
+in Viola's pretty living-room, with a little conserva-
+tory at one end and a leaping hearth fire at the other.
+Jane's partner was a stout old gentleman whose wife
+was shrieking with merriment at an auction-bridge
+table. The other whist-players were a stupid, very
+small young man who was aimlessly willing to play
+anything, and an amiable young woman who be-
+lieved in self-denial. Jane played conscientiously.
+She returned trump leads, and played second hand
+low, and third high, and it was not until the third
+rubber was over that she saw. It had been in full
+evidence from the first. Jane would have seen it
+before the guests arrived, but Viola had not put it
+in her hair until the last moment. Viola was wild
+with delight, yet shamefaced and a trifle uneasy.
+In a soft, white gown, with violets at her waist, she
+was playing with Harold Lind, and in her ash-blond
+hair was Jane Carew's amethyst comb. Jane gasped
+and paled. The amiable young woman who was her
+opponent stared at her. Finally she spoke in a low
+voice.
+
+"Aren't you well. Miss Carew?" she asked.
+
+The men, in their turn, stared. The stout one
+rose fussily. "Let me get a glass of water," he said.
+The stupid small man stood up and waved his hands
+with nervousness.
+
+"Aren't you well?" asked the amiable young lady
+again.
+
+Then Jane Carew recovered her poise. It was
+seldom that she lost it. "I am quite well, thank you,
+Miss Murdock," she replied. "I believe diamonds
+are trumps."
+
+They all settled again to the play, but the young
+lady and the two men continued glancing at Miss
+Carew. She had recovered her dignity of manner,
+but not her color. Moreover, she had a bewildered
+expression. Resolutely she abstained from glancing
+again at her amethyst comb in Viola Longstreet's
+ash-blond hair, and gradually, by a course of sub-
+conscious reasoning as she carefully played her cards,
+she arrived at a conclusion which caused her color
+to return and the bewildered expression to disappear.
+When refreshments were served, the amiable young
+lady said, kindly:
+
+"You look quite yourself, now, dear Miss Carew,
+but at one time while we were playing I was really
+alarmed. You were very pale."
+
+"I did not feel in the least ill," replied Jane
+Carew. She smiled her Carew smile at the young
+lady. Jane had settled it with herself that of course
+Viola had borrowed that amethyst comb, appealing
+to Margaret. Viola ought not to have done that;
+she should have asked her, Miss Carew; and Jane
+wondered, because Viola was very well bred; but
+of course that was what had happened. Jane had
+come down before Viola, leaving Margaret in her
+room, and Viola had asked her. Jane did not then
+remember that Viola had not even been told that
+there was an amethyst comb in existence. She
+remembered when Margaret, whose face was as
+pale and bewildered as her own, mentioned it, when
+she was brushing her hair.
+
+"I saw it, first thing. Miss Jane," said Margaret.
+"Louisa and I were on the landing, and I looked
+down and saw your amethyst comb in Mrs. Long-
+street's hair."
+
+"She had asked you for it, because I had gone
+down-stairs?" asked Jane, feebly.
+
+"No, Miss Jane. I had not seen her. I went
+out right after you did. Louisa had finished Mrs.
+Longstreet, and she and I went down to the mail-
+box to post a letter, and then we sat on the landing,
+and -- I saw your comb."
+
+"Have you," asked Jane, "looked in the jewel-
+case?"
+
+"Yes, Miss Jane."
+
+"And it is not there?"
+
+"It is not there. Miss Jane." Margaret spoke with
+a sort of solemn intoning. She recognized what the
+situation implied, and she, who fitted squarely and
+entirely into her humble state, was aghast before
+a hitherto unimagined occurrence. She could not,
+even with the evidence of her senses against a lady
+and her mistress's old friend, believe in them. Had
+Jane told her firmly that she had not seen that
+comb in that ash-blond hair she might have been
+hypnotized into agreement. But Jane simply stared
+at her, and the Carew dignity was more shaken than
+she had ever seen it.
+
+"Bring the jewel-case here, Margaret," ordered
+Jane in a gasp.
+
+Margaret brought the jewel-case, and everything
+was taken out; all the compartments were opened,
+but the amethyst comb was not there. Jane could
+not sleep that night. At dawn she herself doubted
+the evidence of her senses. The jewel-case was thor-
+oughly overlooked again, and still Jane was incredu-
+lous that she would ever see her comb in Viola's
+hair again. But that evening, although there were
+no guests except Harold Lind, who dined at the
+house, Viola appeared in a pink-tinted gown, with a
+knot of violets at her waist, and -- she wore the ame-
+thyst comb. She said not one word concerning it;
+nobody did. Harold Lind was in wild spirits. The
+conviction grew upon Jane that the irresponsible,
+beautiful youth was covertly amusing himself at her,
+at Viola's, at everybody's expense. Perhaps he
+included himself. He talked incessantly, not in
+reality brilliantly, but with an effect of sparkling
+effervescence which was fairly dazzling. Viola's
+servants restrained with difficulty their laughter at
+his sallies. Viola regarded Harold with ill-concealed
+tenderness and admiration. She herself looked even
+younger than usual, as if the innate youth in her
+leaped to meet this charming comrade.
+
+Jane felt sickened by it all. She could not under-
+stand her friend. Not for one minute did she dream
+that there could be any serious outcome of the
+situation; that Viola, would marry this mad youth,
+who, she knew, was making such covert fun at her
+expense; but she was bewildered and indignant.
+She wished that she had not come. That evening
+when she went to her room she directed Margaret
+to pack, as she intended to return home the next
+day. Margaret began folding gowns with alacrity.
+She was as conservative as her mistress and she
+severely disapproved of many things. However, the
+matter of the amethyst comb was uppermost in her
+mind. She was wild with curiosity. She hardly
+dared inquire, but finally she did.
+
+"About the amethyst comb, ma'am?" she said,
+with a delicate cough.
+
+"What about it, Margaret?" returned Jane,
+severely.
+
+"I thought perhaps Mrs. Longstreet had told you
+how she happened to have it."
+
+Poor Jane Carew had nobody in whom to confide.
+For once she spoke her mind to her maid. "She
+has not said one word. And, oh, Margaret, I don't
+know what to think of it."
+
+Margaret pursed her lips.
+
+"What do YOU think, Margaret?"
+
+"I don't know. Miss Jane."
+
+"I don't."
+
+"I did not mention it to Louisa," said Margaret.
+
+"Oh, I hope not!" cried Jane.
+
+"But she did to me," said Margaret. "She asked
+had I seen Miss Viola's new comb, and then she
+laughed, and I thought from the way she acted
+that --" Margaret hesitated.
+
+"That what?"
+
+"That she meant Mr. Lind had given Miss Viola
+the comb."
+
+Jane started violently. "Absolutely impossible!"
+she cried. "That, of course, is nonsense. There
+must be some explanation. Probably Mrs. Long-
+street will explain before we go."
+
+Mrs. Longstreet did not explain. She wondered
+and expostulated when Jane announced her firm
+determination to leave, but she seemed utterly at
+a loss for the reason. She did not mention the comb.
+
+When Jane Carew took leave of her old friend she
+was entirely sure in her own mind that she would
+never visit her again -- might never even see her
+again.
+
+Jane was unutterably thankful to be back in her
+own peaceful home, over which no shadow of absurd
+mystery brooded; only a calm afternoon light of
+life, which disclosed gently but did not conceal or
+betray. Jane settled back into her pleasant life,
+and the days passed, and the weeks, and the months,
+and the years. She heard nothing whatever from
+or about Viola Longstreet for three years. Then, one
+day, Margaret returned from the city, and she had
+met Viola's old maid Louisa in a department store,
+and she had news. Jane wished for strength to
+refuse to listen, but she could not muster it. She
+listened while Margaret brushed her hair.
+
+"Louisa has not been with Miss Viola for a long
+time," said Margaret. "She is living with some-
+body else. Miss Viola lost her money, and had to
+give up her house and her servants, and Louisa said
+she cried when she said good-by."
+
+Jane made an effort. "What became of --" she
+began.
+
+Margaret answered the unfinished sentence. She
+was excited by gossip as by a stimulant. Her thin
+cheeks burned, her eyes blazed. "Mr. Lind," said
+Margaret, "Louisa told me, had turned out to be
+real bad. He got into some money trouble, and
+then" -- Margaret lowered her voice -- "he was ar-
+rested for taking a lot of money which didn't belong
+to him. Louisa said he had been in some business
+where he handled a lot of other folks' money, and
+he cheated the men who were in the business with
+him, and he was tried, and Miss Viola, Louisa thinks,
+hid away somewhere so they wouldn't call her to
+testify, and then he had to go to prison; but --"
+Margaret hesitated.
+
+"What is it?" asked Jane.
+
+"Louisa thinks he died about a year and a half
+ago. She heard the lady where she lives now talking
+about it. The lady used to know Miss Viola, and
+she heard the lady say Mr. Lind had died in prison,
+that he couldn't stand the hard life, and that Miss
+Viola had lost all her money through him, and then"
+-- Margaret hesitated again, and her mistress prodded
+sharply -- "Louisa said that she heard the lady say
+that she had thought Miss Viola would marry him,
+but she hadn't, and she had more sense than she
+had thought."
+
+"Mrs. Longstreet would never for one moment
+have entertained the thought of marrying Mr. Lind;
+he was young enough to be her grandson," said
+Jane, severely.
+
+"Yes, ma'am," said Margaret.
+
+It so happened that Jane went to New York
+that day week, and at a jewelry counter in one of
+the shops she discovered the amethyst comb. There
+were on sale a number of bits of antique jewelry,
+the precious flotsam and jetsam of old and wealthy
+families which had drifted, nobody knew before
+what currents of adversity, into that harbor of
+sale for all the world to see. Jane made no inquiries;
+the saleswoman volunteered simply the information
+that the comb was a real antique, and the stones
+were real amethysts and pearls, and the setting was
+solid gold, and the price was thirty dollars; and
+Jane bought it. She carried her old amethyst comb
+home, but she did not show it to anybody. She
+replaced it in its old compartment in her jewel-
+case and thought of it with wonder, with a hint of
+joy at regaining it, and with much sadness. She
+was still fond of Viola Longstreet. Jane did not
+easily part with her loves. She did not know where
+Viola was. Margaret had inquired of Louisa, who
+did not know. Poor Viola had probably drifted
+into some obscure harbor of life wherein she was
+hiding until life was over.
+
+And then Jane met Viola one spring day on Fifth
+Avenue.
+
+"It is a very long time since I have seen you,"
+said Jane with a reproachful accent, but her eyes
+were tenderly inquiring.
+
+"Yes," agreed Viola. Then she added, "I have
+seen nobody. Do you know what a change has come
+in my life?" she asked.
+
+"Yes, dear," replied Jane, gently. "My Margaret
+met Louisa once and she told her."
+
+"Oh yes -- Louisa," said Viola. "I had to dis-
+charge her. My money is about gone. I have only
+just enough to keep the wolf from entering the door
+of a hall bedroom in a respectable boarding-house.
+However, I often hear him howl, but I do not mind
+at all. In fact, the howling has become company
+for me. I rather like it. It is queer what things one
+can learn to like. There are a few left yet, like the
+awful heat in summer, and the food, which I do not
+fancy, but that is simply a matter of time."
+
+Viola's laugh was like a bird's song -- a part of her
+-- and nothing except death could silence it for long.
+
+"Then," said Jane, "you stay in New York all
+summer?"
+
+Viola laughed again. "My dear," she replied,
+"of course. It is all very simple. If I left New
+York, and paid board anywhere, I would never have
+enough money to buy my return fare, and certainly
+not to keep that wolf from my hall-bedroom door."
+
+"Then," said Jane, "you are going home with me."
+
+"I cannot consent to accept charity, Jane," said
+Viola. "Don't ask me."
+
+Then, for the first time in her life, Viola Longstreet
+saw Jane Carew's eyes blaze with anger. "You
+dare to call it charity coming from me to you?"
+she said, and Viola gave in.
+
+When Jane saw the little room where Viola lived,
+she marveled, with the exceedingly great marveling
+of a woman to whom love of a man has never come,
+at a woman who could give so much and with no
+return.
+
+Little enough to pack had Viola. Jane under-
+stood with a shudder of horror that it was almost
+destitution, not poverty, to which her old friend was
+reduced.
+
+"You shall have that northeast room which you
+always liked," she told Viola when they were on
+the train.
+
+"The one with the old-fashioned peacock paper,
+and the pine-tree growing close to one window?"
+said Viola, happily.
+
+Jane and Viola settled down to life together,
+and Viola, despite the tragedy which she had known,
+realized a peace and happiness beyond her imagina-
+tion. In reality, although she still looked so youth-
+ful, she was old enough to enjoy the pleasures of later
+life. Enjoy them she did to the utmost. She and
+Jane made calls together, entertained friends at
+small and stately dinners, and gave little teas. They
+drove about in the old Carew carriage. Viola had
+some new clothes. She played very well on Jane's
+old piano. She embroidered, she gardened. She
+lived the sweet, placid life of an older lady in a little
+village, and loved it. She never mentioned Harold
+Lind.
+
+Not among the vicious of the earth was poor Har-
+old Lind; rather among those of such beauty and
+charm that the earth spoils them, making them, in
+their own estimation, free guests at all its tables
+of bounty. Moreover, the young man had, deeply
+rooted in his character, the traits of a mischievous
+child, rejoicing in his mischief more from a sense of
+humor so keen that it verged on cruelty than from
+any intention to harm others. Over that affair of
+the amethyst comb, for instance, his irresponsible,
+selfish, childish soul had fairly reveled in glee. He
+had not been fond of Viola, but he liked her fondness
+for himself. He had made sport of her, but only
+for his own entertainment -- never for the entertain-
+ment of others. He was a beautiful creature, seeking
+out paths of pleasure and folly for himself alone,
+which ended as do all paths of earthly pleasure and
+folly. Harold had admired Viola, but from the same
+point of view as Jane Carew's. Viola had, when she
+looked her youngest and best, always seemed so
+old as to be venerable to him. He had at times
+compunctions, as if he were making a jest of his
+grandmother. Viola never knew the truth about the
+amethyst comb. He had considered that one of the
+best frolics of his life. He had simply purloined it
+and presented it to Viola, and merrily left matters
+to settle themselves.
+
+Viola and Jane had lived together a month before
+the comb was mentioned. Then one day Viola was
+in Jane's room and the jewel-case was out, and she
+began examining its contents. When she found the
+amethyst comb she gave a little cry. Jane, who had
+been seated at her desk and had not seen what was
+going on, turned around.
+
+Viola stood holding the comb, and her cheeks
+were burning. She fondled the trinket as if it had
+been a baby. Jane watched her. She began to
+understand the bare facts of the mystery of the dis-
+appearance of her amethyst comb, but the subtlety
+of it was forever beyond her. Had the other woman
+explained what was in her mind, in her heart -- how
+that reckless young man whom she had loved had
+given her the treasure because he had heard her
+admire Jane's amethysts, and she, all unconscious
+of any wrong-doing, had ever regarded it as the one
+evidence of his thoughtful tenderness, it being the
+one gift she had ever received from him; how she
+parted with it, as she had parted with her other
+jewels, in order to obtain money to purchase com-
+forts for him while he was in prison -- Jane could
+not have understood. The fact of an older woman
+being fond of a young man, almost a boy, was be-
+yond her mental grasp. She had no imagination
+with which to comprehend that innocent, pathetic,
+almost terrible love of one who has trodden the
+earth long for one who has just set dancing feet
+upon it. It was noble of Jane Carew that, lacking
+all such imagination, she acted as she did: that, al-
+though she did not, could not, formulate it to herself,
+she would no more have deprived the other woman
+and the dead man of that one little unscathed bond
+of tender goodness than she would have robbed
+his grave of flowers.
+
+Viola looked at her. "I cannot tell you all about
+it; you would laugh at me," she whispered; "but
+this was mine once."
+
+"It is yours now, dear," said Jane.
+
+
+
+
+THE UMBRELLA MAN
+
+
+
+
+
+THE UMBRELLA MAN
+
+IT was an insolent day. There are days which,
+to imaginative minds, at least, possess strangely
+human qualities. Their atmospheres predispose peo-
+ple to crime or virtue, to the calm of good will, to
+sneaking vice, or fierce, unprovoked aggression. The
+day was of the last description. A beast, or a human
+being in whose veins coursed undisciplined blood,
+might, as involuntarily as the boughs of trees lash
+before storms, perform wild and wicked deeds after
+inhaling that hot air, evil with the sweat of sin-
+evoked toil, with nitrogen stored from festering sores
+of nature and the loathsome emanations of suffering
+life.
+
+It had not rained for weeks, but the humidity was
+great. The clouds of dust which arose beneath the
+man's feet had a horrible damp stickiness. His face
+and hands were grimy, as were his shoes, his cheap,
+ready-made suit, and his straw hat. However, the
+man felt a pride in his clothes, for they were at least
+the garb of freedom. He had come out of prison the
+day before, and had scorned the suit proffered him
+by the officials. He had given it away, and bought
+a new one with a goodly part of his small stock of
+money. This suit was of a small-checked pattern.
+Nobody could tell from it that the wearer had just
+left jail. He had been there for several years for
+one of the minor offenses against the law. His term
+would probably have been shorter, but the judge
+had been careless, and he had no friends. Stebbins
+had never been the sort to make many friends,
+although he had never cherished animosity toward
+any human being. Even some injustice in his sen-
+tence had not caused him to feel any rancor.
+
+During his stay in the prison he had not been
+really unhappy. He had accepted the inevitable --
+the yoke of the strong for the weak -- with a patience
+which brought almost a sense of enjoyment. But,
+now that he was free, he had suddenly become alert,
+watchful of chances for his betterment. From being
+a mere kenneled creature he had become as a
+hound on the scent, the keenest on earth -- that of
+self-interest. He was changed, while yet living, from
+a being outside the world to one with the world
+before him. He felt young, although he was a
+middle-aged, almost elderly man. He had in his
+pocket only a few dollars. He might have had more
+had he not purchased the checked suit and had he
+not given much away. There was another man whose
+term would be up in a week, and he had a sickly
+wife and several children. Stebbins, partly from
+native kindness and generosity, partly from a senti-
+ment which almost amounted to superstition, had
+given him of his slender store. He had been de-
+prived of his freedom because of money; he said to
+himself that his return to it should be heralded by the
+music of it scattered abroad for the good of another.
+
+Now and then as he walked Stebbins removed his
+new straw hat, wiped his forehead with a stiff new
+handkerchief, looked with some concern at the grime
+left upon it, then felt anxiously of his short crop
+of grizzled hair. He would be glad when it grew
+only a little, for it was at present a telltale to obser-
+vant eyes. Also now and then he took from another
+pocket a small mirror which he had just purchased,
+and scrutinized his face. Every time he did so he
+rubbed his cheeks violently, then viewed with satis-
+faction the hard glow which replaced the yellow
+prison pallor. Every now and then, too, he remem-
+bered to throw his shoulders back, hold his chin
+high, and swing out his right leg more freely. At
+such times he almost swaggered, he became fairly
+insolent with his new sense of freedom. He felt
+himself the equal if not the peer of all creation.
+Whenever a carriage or a motor-car passed him on the
+country road he assumed, with the skill of an actor,
+the air of a business man hastening to an important
+engagement. However, always his mind was work-
+ing over a hard problem. He knew that his store of
+money was scanty, that it would not last long even
+with the strictest economy; he had no friends; a
+prison record is sure to leak out when a man seeks
+a job. He was facing the problem of bare existence.
+
+Although the day was so hot, it was late summer;
+soon would come the frost and the winter. He wished
+to live to enjoy his freedom, and all he had for assets
+was that freedom; which was paradoxical, for it
+did not signify the ability to obtain work, which
+was the power of life. Outside the stone wall of the
+prison he was now inclosed by a subtle, intangible,
+yet infinitely more unyielding one -- the prejudice
+of his kind against the released prisoner. He was
+to all intents and purposes a prisoner still, for all his
+spurts of swagger and the youthful leap of his pulses,
+and while he did not admit that to himself, yet
+always, since he had the hard sense of the land of
+his birth -- New England -- he pondered that problem
+of existence. He felt instinctively that it would be
+a useless proceeding for him to approach any human
+being for employment. He knew that even the
+freedom, which he realized through all his senses
+like an essential perfume, could not yet overpower
+the reek of the prison. As he walked through the
+clogging dust he thought of one after another whom
+he had known before he had gone out of the world
+of free men and had bent his back under the hand of
+the law. There were, of course, people in his little
+native village, people who had been friends and
+neighbors, but there were none who had ever loved
+him sufficiently for him to conquer his resolve to
+never ask aid of them. He had no relatives except
+cousins more or less removed, and they would have
+nothing to do with him.
+
+There had been a woman whom he had meant to
+marry, and he had been sure that she would marry
+him; but after he had been a year in prison the
+news had come to him in a roundabout fashion that
+she had married another suitor. Even had she re-
+mained single he could not have approached her,
+least of all for aid. Then, too, through all his term
+she had made no sign, there had been no letter, no
+message; and he had received at first letters and
+flowers and messages from sentimental women.
+There had been nothing from her. He had accepted
+nothing, with the curious patience, carrying an odd
+pleasure with it, which had come to him when the
+prison door first closed upon him. He had not for-
+gotten her, but he had not consciously mourned
+her. His loss, his ruin, had been so tremendous that
+she had been swallowed up in it. When one's
+whole system needs to be steeled to trouble and pain,
+single pricks lose importance. He thought of her
+that day without any sense of sadness. He imagined
+her in a pretty, well-ordered home with her husband
+and children. Perhaps she had grown stout. She
+had been a slender woman. He tried idly to imagine
+how she would look stout, then by the sequence of
+self-preservation the imagination of stoutness in an-
+other led to the problem of keeping the covering
+of flesh and fatness upon his own bones. The ques-
+tion now was not of the woman; she had passed
+out of his life. The question was of the keeping that
+life itself, the life which involved everything else,
+in a hard world, which would remorselessly as a steel
+trap grudge him life and snap upon him, now he was
+become its prey.
+
+He walked and walked, and it was high noon, and
+he was hungry. He had in his pocket a small loaf
+of bread and two frankfurters, and he heard the
+splashing ripple of a brook. At that juncture the
+road was bordered by thick woodland. He followed,
+pushing his way through the trees and undergrowth,
+the sound of the brook, and sat down in a cool,
+green solitude with a sigh of relief. He bent over
+the clear run, made a cup of his hand, and drank,
+then he fell to eating. Close beside him grew some
+wintergreen, and when he had finished his bread and
+frankfurters he began plucking the glossy, aromatic
+leaves and chewing them automatically. The savor
+reached his palate, and his memory awakened before
+it as before a pleasant tingling of a spur. As a boy
+how he had loved this little green low-growing plant!
+It had been one of the luxuries of his youth. Now,
+as he tasted it, joy and pathos stirred in his very
+soul. What a wonder youth had been, what a
+splendor, what an immensity to be rejoiced over
+and regretted! The man lounging beside the brook,
+chewing wintergreen leaves, seemed to realize anti-
+podes. He lived for the moment in the past, and
+the immutable future, which might contain the past
+in the revolution of time. He smiled, and his face
+fell into boyish, almost childish, contours. He
+plucked another glossy leaf with his hard, veinous
+old hands. His hands would not change to suit his
+mood, but his limbs relaxed like those of a boy. He
+stared at the brook gurgling past in brown ripples,
+shot with dim prismatic lights, showing here clear
+green water lines, here inky depths, and he thought
+of the possibility of trout. He wished for fishing-
+tackle.
+
+Then suddenly out of a mass of green looked two
+girls, with wide, startled eyes, and rounded mouths
+of terror which gave vent to screams. There was a
+scuttling, then silence. The man wondered why
+the girls were so silly, why they ran. He did not
+dream of the possibility of their terror of him. He
+ate another wintergreen leaf, and thought of the
+woman he had expected to marry when he was ar-
+rested and imprisoned. She did not go back to his
+childish memories. He had met her when first youth
+had passed, and yet, somehow, the savor of the
+wintergreen leaves brought her face before him. It
+is strange how the excitement of one sense will some-
+times act as stimulant for the awakening of another.
+Now the sense of taste brought into full activity
+that of sight. He saw the woman just as she had
+looked when he had last seen her. She had not been
+pretty, but she was exceedingly dainty, and pos-
+sessed of a certain elegance of carriage which at-
+tracted. He saw quite distinctly her small, irregu-
+lar face and the satin-smooth coils of dark hair
+around her head; he saw her slender, dusky hands
+with the well-cared-for nails and the too prominent
+veins; he saw the gleam of the diamond which he
+had given her. She had sent it to him just after his
+arrest, and he had returned it. He wondered idly
+whether she still owned it and wore it, and what her
+husband thought of it. He speculated childishly --
+somehow imprisonment had encouraged the return
+of childish speculations -- as to whether the woman's
+husband had given her a larger and costlier diamond
+than his, and he felt a pang of jealousy. He re-
+fused to see another diamond than his own upon
+that slender, dark hand. He saw her in a black silk
+gown which had been her best. There had been
+some red about it, and a glitter of jet. He had
+thought it a magnificent gown, and the woman in it
+like a princess. He could see her leaning back, in
+her long slim grace, in a corner of a sofa, and the
+soft dark folds starry with jet sweeping over her
+knees and just allowing a glimpse of one little foot.
+Her feet had been charming, very small and highly
+arched. Then he remembered that that evening
+they had been to a concert in the town hall, and
+that afterward they had partaken of an oyster stew
+in a little restaurant. Then back his mind traveled
+to the problem of his own existence, his food and
+shelter and clothes. He dismissed the woman from
+his thought. He was concerned now with the primal
+conditions of life itself. How was he to eat when
+his little stock of money was gone? He sat staring
+at the brook; he chewed wintergreen leaves no
+longer. Instead he drew from his pocket an old
+pipe and a paper of tobacco. He filled his pipe
+with care -- tobacco was precious; then he began to
+smoke, but his face now looked old and brooding
+through the rank blue vapor. Winter was coming,
+and he had not a shelter. He had not money enough
+to keep him long from starvation. He knew not
+how to obtain employment. He thought vaguely of
+wood-piles, of cutting winter fuel for people. His
+mind traveled in a trite strain of reasoning. Some-
+how wood-piles seemed the only available tasks for
+men of his sort.
+
+Presently he finished his filled pipe, and arose
+with an air of decision. He went at a brisk pace
+out of the wood and was upon the road again. He
+progressed like a man with definite business in view
+until he reached a house. It was a large white
+farm-house with many outbuildings. It looked most
+promising. He approached the side door, and a
+dog sprang from around a corner and barked, but
+he spoke, and the dog's tail became eloquent. He
+was patting the dog, when the door opened and a
+man stood looking at him. Immediately the taint
+of the prison became evident. He had not cringed
+before the dog, but he did cringe before the man
+who lived in that fine white house, and who had
+never known what it was to be deprived of liberty.
+He hung his head, he mumbled. The house-owner,
+who was older than he, was slightly deaf. He
+looked him over curtly. The end of it was he was
+ordered off the premises, and went; but the dog
+trailed, wagging at his heels, and had to be roughly
+called back. The thought of the dog comforted
+Stebbins as he went on his way. He had always
+liked animals. It was something, now he was past
+a hand-shake, to have the friendly wag of a dog's
+tail.
+
+The next house was an ornate little cottage with
+bay-windows, through which could be seen the flower
+patterns of lace draperies; the Virginia creeper
+which grew over the house walls was turning crim-
+son in places. Stebbins went around to the back
+door and knocked, but nobody came. He waited
+a long time, for he had spied a great pile of uncut
+wood. Finally he slunk around to the front door.
+As he went he suddenly reflected upon his state of
+mind in days gone by; if he could have known that
+the time would come when he, Joseph Stebbins,
+would feel culpable at approaching any front door!
+He touched the electric bell and stood close to the
+door, so that he might not be discovered from the
+windows. Presently the door opened the length
+of a chain, and a fair girlish head appeared. She
+was one of the girls who had been terrified by him
+in the woods, but that he did not know. Now again
+her eyes dilated and her pretty mouth rounded!
+She gave a little cry and slammed the door in his
+face, and he heard excited voices. Then he saw two
+pale, pretty faces, the faces of the two girls who had
+come upon him in the wood, peering at him around
+a corner of the lace in the bay-window, and he under-
+stood what it meant -- that he was an object of ter-
+ror to them. Directly he experienced such a sense
+of mortal insult as he had never known, not even
+when the law had taken hold of him. He held his
+head high and went away, his very soul boiling with
+a sort of shamed rage. "Those two girls are afraid
+of me," he kept saying to himself. His knees shook
+with the horror of it. This terror of him seemed the
+hardest thing to bear in a hard life. He returned
+to his green nook beside the brook and sat down
+again. He thought for the moment no more of wood-
+piles, of his life. He thought about those two young
+girls who had been afraid of him. He had never had
+an impulse to harm any living thing. A curious
+hatred toward these living things who had accused
+him of such an impulse came over him. He laughed
+sardonically. He wished that they would again
+come and peer at him through the bushes; he would
+make a threatening motion for the pleasure of seeing
+the silly things scuttle away.
+
+After a while he put it all out of mind, and again
+returned to his problem. He lay beside the brook
+and pondered, and finally fell asleep in the hot air,
+which increased in venom, until the rattle of thun-
+der awoke him. It was very dark -- a strange, livid
+darkness. "A thunder-storm," he muttered, and
+then he thought of his new clothes -- what a mis-
+fortune it would be to have them soaked. He arose
+and pushed through the thicket around him into a
+cart path, and it was then that he saw the thing
+which proved to be the stepping-stone toward his
+humble fortunes. It was only a small silk umbrella
+with a handle tipped with pearl. He seized upon it
+with joy, for it meant the salvation of his precious
+clothes. He opened it and held it over his head,
+although the rain had not yet begun. One rib of
+the umbrella was broken, but it was still serviceable.
+He hastened along the cart path; he did not know
+why, only the need for motion, to reach protection
+from the storm, was upon him; and yet what pro-
+tection could be ahead of him in that woodland
+path? Afterward he grew to think of it as a blind
+instinct which led him on.
+
+He had not gone far, not more than half a mile,
+when he saw something unexpected -- a small un-
+tenanted house. He gave vent to a little cry of joy,
+which had in it something child-like and pathetic,
+and pushed open the door and entered. It was
+nothing but a tiny, unfinished shack, with one room
+and a small one opening from it. There was no
+ceiling; overhead was the tent-like slant of the
+roof, but it was tight. The dusty floor was quite
+dry. There was one rickety chair. Stebbins, after
+looking into the other room to make sure that the
+place was empty, sat down, and a wonderful wave
+of content and self-respect came over him. The
+poor human snail had found his shell; he had a
+habitation, a roof of shelter. The little dim place
+immediately assumed an aspect of home. The rain
+came down in torrents, the thunder crashed, the
+place was filled with blinding blue lights. Stebbins
+filled his pipe more lavishly this time, tilted his
+chair against the wall, smoked, and gazed about
+him with pitiful content. It was really so little,
+but to him it was so much. He nodded with satis-
+faction at the discovery of a fireplace and a rusty
+cooking-stove.
+
+He sat and smoked until the storm passed over.
+The rainfall had been very heavy, there had been
+hail, but the poor little house had not failed of per-
+fect shelter. A fairly cold wind from the northwest
+blew through the door. The hail had brought about
+a change of atmosphere. The burning heat was
+gone. The night would be cool, even chilly.
+
+Stebbins got up and examined the stove and the
+pipe. They were rusty, but appeared trustworthy.
+He went out and presently returned with some fuel
+which he had found unwet in a thick growth of
+wood. He laid a fire handily and lit it. The little
+stove burned well, with no smoke. Stebbins looked
+at it, and was perfectly happy. He had found other
+treasures outside -- a small vegetable-garden in which
+were potatoes and some corn. A man had squatted
+in this little shack for years, and had raised his own
+garden-truck. He had died only a few weeks ago,
+and his furniture had been pre-empted with the ex-
+ception of the stove, the chair, a tilting lounge in
+the small room, and a few old iron pots and frying-
+pans. Stebbins gathered corn, dug potatoes, and
+put them on the stove to cook, then he hurried out
+to the village store and bought a few slices of bacon,
+half a dozen eggs, a quarter of a pound of cheap tea,
+and some salt. When he re-entered the house he
+looked as he had not for years. He was beaming.
+"Come, this is a palace," he said to himself, and
+chuckled with pure joy. He had come out of the
+awful empty spaces of homeless life into home. He
+was a man who had naturally strong domestic in-
+stincts. If he had spent the best years of his life
+in a home instead of a prison, the finest in him would
+have been developed. As it was, this was not even
+now too late. When he had cooked his bacon and
+eggs and brewed his tea, when the vegetables were
+done and he was seated upon the rickety chair, with
+his supper spread before him on an old board propped
+on sticks, he was supremely happy. He ate with a
+relish which seemed to reach his soul. He was at
+home, and eating, literally, at his own board. As
+he ate he glanced from time to time at the two win-
+dows, with broken panes of glass and curtainless.
+He was not afraid -- that was nonsense; he had
+never been a cowardly man, but he felt the need of
+curtains or something before his windows to shut
+out the broad vast face of nature, or perhaps prying
+human eyes. Somebody might espy the light in the
+house and wonder. He had a candle stuck in an old
+bottle by way of illumination. Still, although he
+would have preferred to have curtains before those
+windows full of the blank stare of night, he WAS
+supremely happy.
+
+After he had finished his supper he looked long-
+ingly at his pipe. He hesitated for a second, for he
+realized the necessity of saving his precious tobacco;
+then he became reckless: such enormous good for-
+tune as a home must mean more to follow; it must
+be the first of a series of happy things. He filled
+his pipe and smoked. Then he went to bed on the
+old couch in the other room, and slept like a child
+until the sun shone through the trees in flickering
+lines. Then he rose, went out to the brook which
+ran near the house, splashed himself with water,
+returned to the house, cooked the remnant of the
+eggs and bacon, and ate his breakfast with the same
+exultant peace with which he had eaten his supper
+the night before. Then he sat down in the doorway
+upon the sunken sill and fell again to considering
+his main problem. He did not smoke. His tobacco
+was nearly exhausted and he was no longer reckless.
+His head was not turned now by the feeling that
+he was at home. He considered soberly as to the
+probable owner of the house and whether he would
+be allowed to remain its tenant. Very soon, how-
+ever, his doubt concerning that was set at rest. He
+saw a disturbance of the shadows cast by the thick
+boughs over the cart path by a long outreach of
+darker shadow which he knew at once for that of a
+man. He sat upright, and his face at first assumed
+a defiant, then a pleading expression, like that of a
+child who desires to retain possession of some dear
+thing. His heart beat hard as he watched the ad-
+vance of the shadow. It was slow, as if cast by an
+old man. The man was old and very stout, sup-
+porting one lopping side by a stick, who presently
+followed the herald of his shadow. He looked like
+a farmer. Stebbins rose as he approached; the two
+men stood staring at each other.
+
+"Who be you, neighbor?" inquired the new-
+comer.
+
+The voice essayed a roughness, but only achieved
+a tentative friendliness. Stebbins hesitated for a
+second; a suspicious look came into the farmer's
+misty blue eyes. Then Stebbins, mindful of his
+prison record and fiercely covetous of his new home,
+gave another name. The name of his maternal
+grandfather seemed suddenly to loom up in printed
+characters before his eyes, and he gave it glibly.
+"David Anderson," he said, and he did not realize
+a lie. Suddenly the name seemed his own. Surely
+old David Anderson, who had been a good man,
+would not grudge the gift of his unstained name to
+replace the stained one of his grandson. "David
+Anderson," he replied, and looked the other man
+in the face unflinchingly.
+
+"Where do ye hail from?" inquired the farmer;
+and the new David Anderson gave unhesitatingly
+the name of the old David Anderson's birth and
+life and death place -- that of a little village in New
+Hampshire.
+
+"What do you do for your living?" was the next
+question, and the new David Anderson had an in-
+spiration. His eyes had lit upon the umbrella which
+he had found the night before.
+
+"Umbrellas," he replied, laconically, and the
+other man nodded. Men with sheaves of umbrellas,
+mended or in need of mending, had always been
+familiar features for him.
+
+Then David assumed the initiative; possessed
+of an honorable business as well as home, he grew
+bold. "Any objection to my staying here?" he
+asked.
+
+The other man eyed him sharply. "Smoke
+much?" he inquired.
+
+"Smoke a pipe sometimes."
+
+"Careful with your matches?"
+
+David nodded.
+
+"That's all I think about," said the farmer.
+"These woods is apt to catch fire jest when I'm
+about ready to cut. The man that squatted here
+before -- he died about a month ago -- didn't smoke.
+He was careful, he was."
+
+"I'll be real careful," said David, humbly and
+anxiously.
+
+"I dun'no' as I have any objections to your stay-
+ing, then," said the farmer. "Somebody has always
+squat here. A man built this shack about twenty
+year ago, and he lived here till he died. Then
+t'other feller he came along. Reckon he must have
+had a little money; didn't work at nothin'! Raised
+some garden-truck and kept a few chickens. I took
+them home after he died. You can have them now
+if you want to take care of them. He rigged up
+that little chicken-coop back there."
+
+"I'll take care of them," answered David, fer-
+vently.
+
+"Well, you can come over by and by and get 'em.
+There's nine hens and a rooster. They lay pretty
+well. I ain't no use for 'em. I've got all the hens
+of my own I want to bother with."
+
+"All right," said David. He looked blissful.
+
+The farmer stared past him into the house. He
+spied the solitary umbrella. He grew facetious.
+"Guess the umbrellas was all mended up where
+you come from if you've got down to one," said he.
+
+David nodded. It was tragically true, that guess.
+
+"Well, our umbrella got turned last week," said
+the farmer. "I'll give you a job to start on. You
+can stay here as long as you want if you're careful
+about your matches." Again he looked into the
+house. "Guess some boys have been helpin' them-
+selves to the furniture, most of it," he observed.
+"Guess my wife can spare ye another chair, and
+there's an old table out in the corn-house better
+than that one you've rigged up, and I guess she'll
+give ye some old bedding so you can be comfortable.
+
+Got any money?"
+
+"A little."
+
+"I don't want any pay for things, and my wife
+won't; didn't mean that; was wonderin' whether
+ye had anything to buy vittles with."
+
+"Reckon I can manage till I get some work,"
+replied David, a trifle stiffly. He was a man who
+had never lived at another than the state's expense.
+
+"Don't want ye to be too short, that's all," said
+the other, a little apologetically.
+
+"I shall be all right. There are corn and potatoes
+in the garden, anyway."
+
+"So there be, and one of them hens had better
+be eat. She don't lay. She'll need a good deal of
+b'ilin'. You can have all the wood you want to
+pick up, but I don't want any cut. You mind that
+or there'll be trouble."
+
+"I won't cut a stick."
+
+"Mind ye don't. Folks call me an easy mark,
+and I guess myself I am easy up to a certain point,
+and cuttin' my wood is one of them points. Roof
+didn't leak in that shower last night, did it?"
+
+"Not a bit."
+
+"Didn't s'pose it would. The other feller was
+handy, and he kept tinkerin' all the time. Well,
+I'll be goin'; you can stay here and welcome if
+you're careful about matches and don't cut my wood.
+Come over for them hens any time you want to.
+I'll let my hired man drive you back in the wagon."
+
+"Much obliged," said David, with an inflection
+that was almost tearful.
+
+"You're welcome," said the other, and ambled
+away.
+
+The new David Anderson, the good old grand-
+father revived in his unfortunate, perhaps graceless
+grandson, reseated himself on the door-step and
+watched the bulky, receding figure of his visitor
+through a pleasant blur of tears, which made the
+broad, rounded shoulders and the halting columns of
+legs dance. This David Anderson had almost for-
+gotten that there was unpaid kindness in the whole
+world, and it seemed to him as if he had seen angels
+walking up and down. He sat for a while doing
+nothing except realizing happiness of the present
+and of the future. He gazed at the green spread
+of forest boughs, and saw in pleased anticipation
+their red and gold tints of autumn; also in pleased
+anticipation their snowy and icy mail of winter,
+and himself, the unmailed, defenseless human crea-
+ture, housed and sheltered, sitting before his
+own fire. This last happy outlook aroused him.
+If all this was to be, he must be up and doing.
+He got up, entered the house, and examined the
+broken umbrella which was his sole stock in trade.
+David was a handy man. He at once knew that
+he was capable of putting it in perfect repair.
+Strangely enough, for his sense of right and wrong
+was not blunted, he had no compunction whatever
+in keeping this umbrella, although he was reasonably
+certain that it belonged to one of the two young
+girls who had been so terrified by him. He had a con-
+viction that this monstrous terror of theirs, which
+had hurt him more than many apparently crueler
+things, made them quits.
+
+After he had washed his dishes in the brook, and
+left them in the sun to dry, he went to the village
+store and purchased a few simple things necessary
+for umbrella-mending. Both on his way to the store
+and back he kept his eyes open. He realized that
+his capital depended largely upon chance and good
+luck. He considered that he had extraordinary
+good luck when he returned with three more umbrel-
+las. He had discovered one propped against the
+counter of the store, turned inside out. He had in-
+quired to whom it belonged, and had been answered
+to anybody who wanted it. David had seized upon
+it with secret glee. Then, unheard-of good fortune,
+he had found two more umbrellas on his way home;
+one was in an ash-can, the other blowing along like
+a belated bat beside the trolley track. It began to
+seem to David as if the earth might be strewn with
+abandoned umbrellas. Before he began his work
+he went to the farmer's and returned in triumph,
+driven in the farm-wagon, with his cackling hens
+and quite a load of household furniture, besides
+some bread and pies. The farmer's wife was one of
+those who are able to give, and make receiving
+greater than giving. She had looked at David,
+who was older than she, with the eyes of a mother,
+and his pride had melted away, and he had held out
+his hands for her benefits, like a child who has no
+compunctions about receiving gifts because he knows
+that they are his right of childhood.
+
+Henceforth David prospered -- in a humble way,
+it is true, still he prospered. He journeyed about
+the country, umbrellas over his shoulder, little bag
+of tools in hand, and reaped an income more than
+sufficient for his simple wants. His hair had grown,
+and also his beard. Nobody suspected his history.
+He met the young girls whom he had terrified on
+the road often, and they did not know him. He
+did not, during the winter, travel very far afield.
+Night always found him at home, warm, well fed,
+content, and at peace. Sometimes the old farmer
+on whose land he lived dropped in of an evening
+and they had a game of checkers. The old man was
+a checker expert. He played with unusual skill,
+but David made for himself a little code of honor.
+He would never beat the old man, even if he were
+able, oftener than once out of three evenings. He
+made coffee on these convivial occasions. He made
+very good coffee, and they sipped as they moved
+the men and kings, and the old man chuckled, and
+David beamed with peaceful happiness.
+
+But the next spring, when he began to realize that
+he had mended for a while all the umbrellas in the
+vicinity and that his trade was flagging, he set his
+precious little home in order, barricaded door and
+windows, and set forth for farther fields. He was
+lucky, as he had been from the start. He found
+plenty of employment, and slept comfortably enough
+in barns, and now and then in the open. He had
+traveled by slow stages for several weeks before he
+entered a village whose familiar look gave him a
+shock. It was not his native village, but near it.
+In his younger life he had often journeyed there.
+It was a little shopping emporium, almost a city.
+He recognized building after building. Now and
+then he thought he saw a face which he had once
+known, and he was thankful that there was hardly
+any possibility of any one recognizing him. He had
+grown gaunt and thin since those far-off days; he
+wore a beard, grizzled, as was his hair. In those
+days he had not been an umbrella man. Sometimes
+the humor of the situation struck him. What would
+he have said, he the spruce, plump, head-in-the-air
+young man, if anybody had told him that it would
+come to pass that he would be an umbrella man lurk-
+ing humbly in search of a job around the back doors
+of houses? He would laugh softly to himself as he
+trudged along, and the laugh would be without the
+slightest bitterness. His lot had been so infinitely
+worse, and he had such a happy nature, yielding
+sweetly to the inevitable, that he saw now only
+cause for amusement.
+
+He had been in that vicinity about three weeks
+when one day he met the woman. He knew her
+at once, although she was greatly changed. She
+had grown stout, although, poor soul! it seemed as
+if there had been no reason for it. She was not
+unwieldy, but she was stout, and all the contours of
+earlier life had disappeared beneath layers of flesh.
+Her hair was not gray, but the bright brown had
+faded, and she wore it tightly strained back from
+her seamed forehead, although it was thin. One had
+only to look at her hair to realize that she was a
+woman who had given up, who no longer cared.
+She was humbly clad in a blue-cotton wrapper, she
+wore a dingy black hat, and she carried a tin pail
+half full of raspberries. When the man and woman
+met they stopped with a sort of shock, and each
+changed face grew like the other in its pallor. She
+recognized him and he her, but along with that
+recognition was awakened a fierce desire to keep it
+secret. His prison record loomed up before the
+man, the woman's past loomed up before her. She
+had possibly not been guilty of much, but her life
+was nothing to waken pride in her. She felt shamed
+before this man whom she had loved, and who felt
+shamed before her. However, after a second the
+silence was broken. The man recovered his self-
+possession first.
+
+He spoke casually.
+
+"Nice day," said he.
+
+The woman nodded.
+
+"Been berrying?" inquired David. The woman
+nodded again.
+
+David looked scrutinizingly at her pail. "I saw
+better berries real thick a piece back," said he.
+
+The woman murmured something. In spite of
+herself, a tear trickled over her fat, weather-beaten
+cheek. David saw the tear, and something warm
+and glorious like sunlight seemed to waken within
+him. He felt such tenderness and pity for this
+poor feminine thing who had not the strength
+to keep the tears back, and was so pitiably shorn
+of youth and grace, that he himself expanded. He
+had heard in the town something of her history.
+She had made a dreadful marriage, tragedy and
+suspicion had entered her life, and the direst poverty.
+However, he had not known that she was in the vi-
+cinity. Somebody had told him she was out West.
+
+"Living here?" he inquired.
+
+"Working for my board at a house back there,"
+she muttered. She did not tell him that she had
+come as a female "hobo" in a freight-car from the
+Western town where she had been finally stranded.
+"Mrs. White sent me out for berries," she added.
+"She keeps boarders, and there were no berries in
+the market this morning."
+
+"Come back with me and I will show you where
+I saw the berries real thick," said David.
+
+He turned himself about, and she followed a little
+behind, the female failure in the dust cast by the
+male. Neither spoke until David stopped and
+pointed to some bushes where the fruit hung thick
+on bending, slender branches.
+
+"Here," said David. Both fell to work. David
+picked handfuls of berries and cast them gaily into
+the pail. "What is your name?" he asked, in an
+undertone.
+
+"Jane Waters," she replied, readily. Her hus-
+band's name had been Waters, or the man who had
+called himself her husband, and her own middle
+name was Jane. The first was Sara. David remem-
+bered at once. "She is taking her own middle name
+and the name of the man she married," he thought.
+Then he asked, plucking berries, with his eyes averted:
+
+"Married?"
+
+"No," said the woman, flushing deeply.
+
+David's next question betrayed him. "Husband
+dead?"
+
+"I haven't any husband," she replied, like the
+Samaritan woman.
+
+She had married a man already provided with
+another wife, although she had not known it. The
+man was not dead, but she spoke the entire miser-
+able truth when she replied as she did. David as-
+sumed that he was dead. He felt a throb of relief,
+of which he was ashamed, but he could not down it.
+He did not know what it was that was so alive and
+triumphant within him: love, or pity, or the natural
+instinct of the decent male to shelter and protect.
+Whatever it was, it was dominant.
+
+"Do you have to work hard?" he asked.
+
+"Pretty hard, I guess. I expect to."
+
+"And you don't get any pay?"
+
+"That's all right; I don't expect to get any,"
+said she, and there was bitterness in her voice.
+
+In spite of her stoutness she was not as strong as
+the man. She was not at all strong, and, moreover,
+the constant presence of a sense of injury at the
+hands of life filled her very soul with a subtle poison,
+to her weakening vitality. She was a child hurt and
+worried and bewildered, although she was to the
+average eye a stout, able-bodied, middle-aged wom-
+an; but David had not the average eye, and he
+saw her as she really was, not as she seemed. There
+had always been about her a little weakness and
+dependency which had appealed to him. Now they
+seemed fairly to cry out to him like the despairing
+voices of the children whom he had never had, and
+he knew he loved her as he had never loved her be-
+fore, with a love which had budded and flowered
+and fruited and survived absence and starvation.
+He spoke abruptly.
+
+"I've about got my business done in these parts,"
+said he. "I've got quite a little money, and I've
+got a little house, not much, but mighty snug, back
+where I come from. There's a garden. It's in the
+woods. Not much passing nor going on."
+
+The woman was looking at him with incredulous,
+pitiful eyes like a dog's. "I hate much goin' on,"
+she whispered.
+
+"Suppose," said David, "you take those berries
+home and pack up your things. Got much?"
+
+"All I've got will go in my bag."
+
+"Well, pack up; tell the madam where you live
+that you're sorry, but you're worn out --"
+
+"God knows I am," cried the woman, with sudden
+force, "worn out!"
+
+"Well, you tell her that, and say you've got an-
+other chance, and --"
+
+"What do you mean?" cried the woman, and she
+hung upon his words like a drowning thing.
+
+"Mean? Why, what I mean is this. You pack
+your bag and come to the parson's back there, that
+white house."
+
+"I know --"
+
+"In the mean time I'll see about getting a license,
+and --"
+
+Suddenly the woman set her pail down and
+clutched him by both hands. "Say you are not
+married," she demanded; "say it, swear it!"
+
+"Yes, I do swear it," said David. "You are the
+only woman I ever asked to marry me. I can sup-
+port you. We sha'n't be rolling in riches, but we
+can be comfortable, and -- I rather guess I can make
+you happy."
+
+"You didn't say what your name was," said the
+woman.
+
+"David Anderson."
+
+The woman looked at him with a strange ex-
+pression, the expression of one who loves and re-
+spects, even reveres, the isolation and secrecy of
+another soul. She understood, down to the depths
+of her being she understood. She had lived a hard
+life, she had her faults, but she was fine enough to
+comprehend and hold sacred another personality.
+She was very pale, but she smiled. Then she turned
+to go.
+
+"How long will it take you?" asked David.
+
+"About an hour."
+
+"All right. I will meet you in front of the par-
+son's house in an hour. We will go back by train.
+I have money enough."
+
+"I'd just as soon walk." The woman spoke with
+the utmost humility of love and trust. She had
+not even asked where the man lived. All her life
+she had followed him with her soul, and it would
+go hard if her poor feet could not keep pace with
+her soul.
+
+"No, it is too far; we will take the train. One
+goes at half past four."
+
+At half past four the couple, made man and wife,
+were on the train speeding toward the little home
+in the woods. The woman had frizzled her thin
+hair pathetically and ridiculously over her temples;
+on her left hand gleamed a white diamond. She had
+kept it hidden; she had almost starved rather than
+part with it. She gazed out of the window at the
+flying landscape, and her thin lips were curved in a
+charming smile. The man sat beside her, staring
+straight ahead as if at happy visions.
+
+They lived together afterward in the little house
+in the woods, and were happy with a strange crys-
+tallized happiness at which they would have mocked
+in their youth, but which they now recognized as the
+essential of all happiness upon earth. And always
+the woman knew what she knew about her husband,
+and the man knew about his wife, and each recog-
+nized the other as old lover and sweetheart come
+together at last, but always each kept the knowledge
+from the other with an infinite tenderness of deli-
+cacy which was as a perfumed garment veiling the
+innermost sacredness of love.
+
+
+
+
+THE BALKING OF CHRISTOPHER
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BALKING OF
+CHRISTOPHER
+
+THE spring was early that year. It was only
+the last of March, but the trees were filmed
+with green and paling with promise of bloom; the
+front yards were showing new grass pricking through
+the old. It was high time to plow the south field
+and the garden, but Christopher sat in his rocking-
+chair beside the kitchen window and gazed out, and
+did absolutely nothing about it.
+
+Myrtle Dodd, Christopher's wife, washed the
+breakfast dishes, and later kneaded the bread, all
+the time glancing furtively at her husband. She
+had a most old-fashioned deference with regard to
+Christopher. She was always a little afraid of him.
+Sometimes Christopher's mother, Mrs. Cyrus Dodd,
+and his sister Abby, who had never married, re-
+proached her for this attitude of mind. "You are
+entirely too much cowed down by Christopher,"
+Mrs. Dodd said.
+
+"I would never be under the thumb of any man,"
+Abby said.
+
+"Have you ever seen Christopher in one of his
+spells?" Myrtle would ask.
+
+Then Mrs. Cyrus Dodd and Abby would look
+at each other. "It is all your fault, mother," Abby
+would say. "You really ought not to have allowed
+your son to have his own head so much."
+
+"You know perfectly well, Abby, what I had to
+contend against," replied Mrs. Dodd, and Abby
+became speechless. Cyrus Dodd, now deceased
+some twenty years, had never during his whole life
+yielded to anything but birth and death. Before
+those two primary facts even his terrible will was
+powerless. He had come into the world without
+his consent being obtained; he had passed in like
+manner from it. But during his life he had ruled,
+a petty monarch, but a most thorough one. He had
+spoiled Christopher, and his wife, although a woman
+of high spirit, knew of no appealing.
+
+"I could never go against your father, you know
+that," said Mrs. Dodd, following up her advantage.
+
+"Then," said Abby, "you ought to have warned
+poor Myrtle. It was a shame to let her marry a
+man as spoiled as Christopher."
+
+"I would have married him, anyway," declared
+Myrtle with sudden defiance; and her mother-in-
+law regarded her approvingly.
+
+"There are worse men than Christopher, and
+Myrtle knows it," said she.
+
+"Yes, I do, mother," agreed Myrtle. "Christo-
+pher hasn't one bad habit."
+
+"I don't know what you call a bad habit," re-
+torted Abby. "I call having your own way in spite
+of the world, the flesh, and the devil rather a bad
+habit. Christopher tramples on everything in his
+path, and he always has. He tramples on poor Myrtle."
+
+At that Myrtle laughed. "I don't think I look
+trampled on," said she; and she certainly did not.
+Pink and white and plump was Myrtle, although she
+had, to a discerning eye, an expression which denoted
+extreme nervousness.
+
+This morning of spring, when her husband sat
+doing nothing, she wore this nervous expression. Her
+blue eyes looked dark and keen; her forehead was
+wrinkled; her rosy mouth was set. Myrtle and
+Christopher were not young people; they were a
+little past middle age, still far from old in look or
+ability.
+
+Myrtle had kneaded the bread to rise for the
+last time before it was put into the oven, and had
+put on the meat to boil for dinner, before she dared
+address that silent figure which had about it some-
+thing tragic. Then she spoke in a small voice.
+"Christopher," said she.
+
+Christopher made no reply.
+
+"It is a good morning to plow, ain't it?" said
+Myrtle.
+
+Christopher was silent.
+
+"Jim Mason got over real early; I suppose he
+thought you'd want to get at the south field. He's
+been sitting there at the barn door for 'most two
+hours."
+
+Then Christopher rose. Myrtle's anxious face
+lightened. But to her wonder her husband went
+into the front entry and got his best hat. "He
+ain't going to wear his best hat to plow," thought
+Myrtle. For an awful moment it occurred to her
+that something had suddenly gone wrong with her
+husband's mind. Christopher brushed the hat care-
+fully, adjusted it at the little looking-glass in the
+kitchen, and went out.
+
+"Be you going to plow the south field?" Myrtle
+said, faintly.
+
+"No, I ain't."
+
+"Will you be back to dinner?"
+
+"I don't know -- you needn't worry if I'm not."
+Suddenly Christopher did an unusual thing for him.
+He and Myrtle had lived together for years, and out-
+ward manifestations of affection were rare between
+them. He put his arm around her and kissed her.
+
+After he had gone, Myrtle watched him out of
+sight down the road; then she sat down and wept.
+Jim Mason came slouching around from his station
+at the barn door. He surveyed Myrtle uneasily.
+
+"Mr. Dodd sick?" said he at length.
+
+"Not that I know of," said Myrtle, in a weak
+quaver. She rose and, keeping her tear-stained face
+aloof, lifted the lid off the kettle on the stove.
+
+"D'ye know am he going to plow to-day?"
+
+"He said he wasn't."
+
+Jim grunted, shifted his quid, and slouched out of
+the yard.
+
+Meantime Christopher Dodd went straight down
+the road to the minister's, the Rev. Stephen Wheaton.
+When he came to the south field, which he was
+neglecting, he glanced at it turning emerald upon
+the gentle slopes. He set his face harder. Christo-
+pher Dodd's face was in any case hard-set. Now
+it was tragic, to be pitied, but warily, lest it turn
+fiercely upon the one who pitied. Christopher was
+a handsome man, and his face had an almost classic
+turn of feature. His forehead was noble; his eyes
+full of keen light. He was only a farmer, but in
+spite of his rude clothing he had the face of a man
+who followed one of the professions. He was in
+sore trouble of spirit, and he was going to consult
+the minister and ask him for advice. Christopher
+had never done this before. He had a sort of in-
+credulity now that he was about to do it. He had
+always associated that sort of thing with womankind,
+and not with men like himself. And, moreover,
+Stephen Wheaton was a younger man than himself.
+He was unmarried, and had only been settled in the
+village for about a year. "He can't think I'm com-
+ing to set my cap at him, anyway," Christopher
+reflected, with a sort of grim humor, as he drew
+near the parsonage. The minister was haunted by
+marriageable ladies of the village.
+
+"Guess you are glad to see a man coming, instead
+of a woman who has doubts about some doctrine,"
+was the first thing Christopher said to the minister
+when he had been admitted to his study. The
+study was a small room, lined with books, and only
+one picture hung over the fireplace, the portrait of
+the minister's mother -- Stephen was so like her that
+a question concerning it was futile.
+
+Stephen colored a little angrily at Christopher's
+remark -- he was a hot-tempered man, although a
+clergyman; then he asked him to be seated.
+
+Christopher sat down opposite the minister. "I
+oughtn't to have spoken so," he apologized, "but
+what I am doing ain't like me."
+
+"That's all right," said Stephen. He was a short,
+athletic man, with an extraordinary width of shoul-
+ders and a strong-featured and ugly face, still indica-
+tive of goodness and a strange power of sympathy.
+Three little mongrel dogs were sprawled about the
+study. One, small and alert, came and rested his
+head on Christopher's knee. Animals all liked him.
+Christopher mechanically patted him. Patting an
+appealing animal was as unconscious with the man
+as drawing his breath. But he did not even look at
+the little dog while he stroked it after the fashion
+which pleased it best. He kept his large, keen,
+melancholy eyes fixed upon the minister; at length
+he spoke. He did not speak with as much eagerness
+as he did with force, bringing the whole power of
+his soul into his words, which were the words of a
+man in rebellion against the greatest odds on earth
+and in all creation -- the odds of fate itself.
+
+"I have come to say a good deal, Mr. Wheaton,"
+he began.
+
+"Then say it, Mr. Dodd," replied Stephen, without
+a smile.
+
+Christopher spoke. "I am going back to the very
+beginning of things," said he, "and maybe you will
+think it blasphemy, but I don't mean it for that.
+I mean it for the truth, and the truth which is too
+much for my comprehension."
+
+"I have heard men swear when it did not seem
+blasphemy to me," said Stephen.
+
+"Thank the Lord, you ain't so deep in your rut
+you can't see the stars!" said Christopher. "But
+I guess you see them in a pretty black sky sometimes.
+In the beginning, why did I have to come into the
+world without any choice?"
+
+"You must not ask a question of me which can
+only be answered by the Lord," said Stephen.
+
+"I am asking the Lord," said Christopher, with
+his sad, forceful voice. "I am asking the Lord, and
+I ask why?"
+
+"You have no right to expect your question to be
+answered in your time," said Stephen.
+
+"But here am I," said Christopher, "and I was
+a question to the Lord from the first, and fifty years
+and more I have been on the earth."
+
+"Fifty years and more are nothing for the answer
+to such a question," said Stephen.
+
+Christopher looked at him with mournful dissent;
+there was no anger about him. "There was time
+before time," said he, "before the fifty years and
+more began. I don't mean to blaspheme, Mr.
+Wheaton, but it is the truth. I came into the world
+whether I would or not; I was forced, and then I was
+told I was a free agent. I am no free agent. For
+fifty years and more I have thought about it, and
+I have found out that, at least. I am a slave -- a
+slave of life."
+
+"For that matter," said Stephen, looking curi-
+ously at him, "so am I. So are we all."
+
+"That makes it worse," agreed Christopher -- "a
+whole world of slaves. I know I ain't talking in
+exactly what you might call an orthodox strain. I
+have got to a point when it seems to me I shall go
+mad if I don't talk to somebody. I know there is that
+awful why, and you can't answer it; and no man
+living can. I'm willing to admit that sometime, in
+another world, that why will get an answer, but
+meantime it's an awful thing to live in this world
+without it if a man has had the kind of life I have.
+My life has been harder for me than a harder life
+might be for another man who was different. That
+much I know. There is one thing I've got to be
+thankful for. I haven't been the means of sending
+any more slaves into this world. I am glad my wife
+and I haven't any children to ask 'why?'
+
+"Now, I've begun at the beginning; I'm going on.
+I have never had what men call luck. My folks
+were poor; father and mother were good, hard-
+working people, but they had nothing but trouble,
+sickness, and death, and losses by fire and flood.
+We lived near the river, and one spring our house
+went, and every stick we owned, and much as ever
+we all got out alive. Then lightning struck father's
+new house, and the insurance company had failed,
+and we never got a dollar of insurance. Then my
+oldest brother died, just when he was getting started
+in business, and his widow and two little children
+came on father to support. Then father got rheu-
+matism, and was all twisted, and wasn't good for
+much afterward; and my sister Sarah, who had been
+expecting to get married, had to give it up and take
+in sewing and stay at home and take care of the
+rest. There was father and George's widow -- she
+was never good for much at work -- and mother and
+Abby. She was my youngest sister. As for me, I
+had a liking for books and wanted to get an educa-
+tion; might just as well have wanted to get a seat
+on a throne. I went to work in the grist-mill of the
+place where we used to live when I was only a boy.
+Then, before I was twenty, I saw that Sarah wasn't
+going to hold out. She had grieved a good deal,
+poor thing, and worked too hard, so we sold out
+and came here and bought my farm, with the mort-
+gage hitching it, and I went to work for dear life.
+Then Sarah died, and then father. Along about then
+there was a girl I wanted to marry, but, Lord, how
+could I even ask her? My farm started in as a
+failure, and it has kept it up ever since. When there
+wasn't a drought there was so much rain everything
+mildewed; there was a hail-storm that cut every-
+thing to pieces, and there was the caterpillar year.
+I just managed to pay the interest on the mortgage;
+as for paying the principal, I might as well have tried
+to pay the national debt.
+
+"Well, to go back to that girl. She is married
+and don't live here, and you ain't like ever to see
+her, but she was a beauty and something more. I
+don't suppose she ever looked twice at me, but
+losing what you've never had sometimes is worse
+than losing everything you've got. When she got
+married I guess I knew a little about what the
+martyrs went through.
+
+"Just after that George's widow got married again
+and went away to live. It took a burden off the
+rest of us, but I had got attached to the children.
+The little girl, Ellen, seemed 'most like my own.
+Then poor Myrtle came here to live. She did
+dressmaking and boarded with our folks, and I
+begun to see that she was one of the nervous sort of
+women who are pretty bad off alone in the world,
+and I told her about the other girl, and she said she
+didn't mind, and we got married. By that time
+mother's brother John -- he had never got married --
+died and left her a little money, so she and my sister
+Abby could screw along. They bought the little
+house they live in and left the farm, for Abby was
+always hard to get along with, though she is a
+good woman. Mother, though she is a smart woman,
+is one of the sort who don't feel called upon to inter-
+fere much with men-folks. I guess she didn't inter-
+fere any too much for my good, or father's, either.
+Father was a set man. I guess if mother had been a
+little harsh with me I might not have asked that
+awful 'why?' I guess I might have taken my bitter
+pills and held my tongue, but I won't blame myself
+on poor mother.
+
+"Myrtle and I get on well enough. She seems
+contented -- she has never said a word to make me
+think she wasn't. She isn't one of the kind of
+women who want much besides decent treatment
+and a home. Myrtle is a good woman. I am sorry
+for her that she got married to me, for she deserved
+somebody who could make her a better husband.
+All the time, every waking minute, I've been growing
+more and more rebellious.
+
+"You see, Mr. Wheaton, never in this world have
+I had what I wanted, and more than wanted --
+needed, and needed far more than happiness. I
+have never been able to think of work as anything
+but a way to get money, and it wasn't right, not
+for a man like me, with the feelings I was born with.
+And everything has gone wrong even about the
+work for the money. I have been hampered and
+hindered, I don't know whether by Providence or
+the Evil One. I have saved just six hundred and
+forty dollars, and I have only paid the interest on
+the mortgage. I knew I ought to have a little ahead
+in case Myrtle or I got sick, so I haven't tried to
+pay the mortgage, but put a few dollars at a time
+in the savings-bank, which will come in handy now."
+
+The minister regarded him uneasily. "What," he
+asked, "do you mean to do?"
+
+"I mean," replied Christopher, "to stop trying to
+do what I am hindered in doing, and do just once in
+my life what I want to do. Myrtle asked me this
+morning if I wasn't going to plow the south field.
+Well, I ain't going to plow the south field. I ain't
+going to make a garden. I ain't going to try for
+hay in the ten-acre lot. I have stopped. I have
+worked for nothing except just enough to keep soul
+and body together. I have had bad luck. But that
+isn't the real reason why I have stopped. Look at
+here, Mr. Wheaton, spring is coming. I have never
+in my life had a chance at the spring nor the summer.
+This year I'm going to have the spring and the sum-
+mer, and the fall, too, if I want it. My apples may
+fall and rot if they want to. I am going to get as
+much good of the season as they do."
+
+"What are you going to do?" asked Stephen.
+
+"Well, I will tell you. I ain't a man to make
+mystery if I am doing right, and I think I am. You
+know, I've got a little shack up on Silver Mountain
+in the little sugar-orchard I own there; never got
+enough sugar to say so, but I put up the shack one
+year when I was fool enough to think I might get
+something. Well, I'm going up there, and I'm going
+to live there awhile, and I'm going to sense the
+things I have had to hustle by for the sake of a
+few dollars and cents."
+
+"But what will your wife do?"
+
+"She can have the money I've saved, all except
+enough to buy me a few provisions. I sha'n't need
+much. I want a little corn meal, and I will have a
+few chickens, and there is a barrel of winter apples
+left over that she can't use, and a few potatoes.
+There is a spring right near the shack, and there are
+trout-pools, and by and by there will be berries,
+and there's plenty of fire-wood, and there's an old
+bed and a stove and a few things in the shack.
+Now, I'm going to the store and buy what I want,
+and I'm going to fix it so Myrtle can draw the money
+when she wants it, and then I am going to the
+shack, and" -- Christopher's voice took on a solemn
+tone -- "I will tell you in just a few words the gist
+of what I am going for. I have never in my life
+had enough of the bread of life to keep my soul
+nourished. I have tried to do my duties, but I believe
+sometimes duties act on the soul like weeds on a
+flower. They crowd it out. I am going up on Silver
+Mountain to get once, on this earth, my fill of the
+bread of life."
+
+Stephen Wheaton gasped. "But your wife, she
+will be alone, she will worry."
+
+"I want you to go and tell her," said Christopher,
+"and I've got my bank-book here; I'm going to
+write some checks that she can get cashed when she
+needs money. I want you to tell her. Myrtle won't
+make a fuss. She ain't the kind. Maybe she will
+be a little lonely, but if she is, she can go and visit
+somewhere." Christopher rose. "Can you let me
+have a pen and ink?" said he, "and I will write
+those checks. You can tell Myrtle how to use
+them. She won't know how."
+
+Stephen Wheaton, an hour later, sat in his study,
+the checks in his hand, striving to rally his courage.
+Christopher had gone; he had seen him from his
+window, laden with parcels, starting upon the ascent
+of Silver Mountain. Christopher had made out
+many checks for small amounts, and Stephen held
+the sheaf in his hand, and gradually his courage
+to arise and go and tell Christopher's wife gained
+strength. At last he went.
+
+Myrtle was looking out of the window, and she
+came quickly to the door. She looked at him, her
+round, pretty face gone pale, her plump hands
+twitching at her apron.
+
+"What is it?" said she.
+
+"Nothing to be alarmed about," replied Stephen.
+
+Then the two entered the house. Stephen found
+his task unexpectedly easy. Myrtle Dodd was an
+unusual woman in a usual place.
+
+"It is all right for my husband to do as he pleases,"
+she said with an odd dignity, as if she were defending
+him.
+
+"Mr. Dodd is a strange man. He ought to have
+been educated and led a different life," Stephen said,
+lamely, for he reflected that the words might be
+hard for the woman to hear, since she seemed obvi-
+ously quite fitted to her life, and her life to her.
+
+But Myrtle did not take it hardly, seemingly rather
+with pride. "Yes," said she, "Christopher ought
+to have gone to college. He had the head for it.
+Instead of that he has just stayed round here and
+dogged round the farm, and everything has gone
+wrong lately. He hasn't had any luck even with
+that." Then poor Myrtle Dodd said an unexpectedly
+wise thing. "But maybe," said Myrtle, "his bad
+luck may turn out the best thing for him in the end."
+
+Stephen was silent. Then he began explaining
+about the checks.
+
+"I sha'n't use any more of his savings than I can
+help," said Myrtle, and for the first time her voice
+quavered. "He must have some clothes up there,"
+said she. "There ain't bed-coverings, and it is
+cold nights, late as it is in the spring. I wonder
+how I can get the bedclothes and other things to
+him. I can't drive, myself, and I don't like to hire
+anybody; aside from its being an expense, it would
+make talk. Mother Dodd and Abby won't make
+talk outside the family, but I suppose it will have
+to be known."
+
+"Mr. Dodd didn't want any mystery made over
+it," Stephen Wheaton said.
+
+"There ain't going to be any mystery. Christo-
+pher has got a right to live awhile on Silver Mountain
+if he wants to," returned Myrtle with her odd,
+defiant air.
+
+"But I will take the things up there to him, if you
+will let me have a horse and wagon," said Stephen.
+
+"I will, and be glad. When will you go?"
+
+"To-morrow."
+
+"I'll have them ready," said Myrtle.
+
+After the minister had gone she went into her
+own bedroom and cried a little and made the moan
+of a loving woman sadly bewildered by the ways
+of man, but loyal as a soldier. Then she dried
+her tears and began to pack a load for the
+wagon.
+
+The next morning early, before the dew was off
+the young grass, Stephen Wheaton started with the
+wagon-load, driving the great gray farm-horse up
+the side of Silver Mountain. The road was fairly
+good, making many winds in order to avoid steep
+ascents, and Stephen drove slowly. The gray farm-
+horse was sagacious. He knew that an unaccustomed
+hand held the lines; he knew that of a right he should
+be treading the plowshares instead of climbing a
+mountain on a beautiful spring morning.
+
+But as for the man driving, his face was radiant,
+his eyes of young manhood lit with the light of the
+morning. He had not owned it, but he himself had
+sometimes chafed under the dull necessity of his life,
+but here was excitement, here was exhilaration. He
+drew the sweet air into his lungs, and the deeper
+meaning of the spring morning into his soul. Christo-
+pher Dodd interested him to the point of enthusiasm.
+Not even the uneasy consideration of the lonely,
+mystified woman in Dodd's deserted home could
+deprive him of admiration for the man's flight into
+the spiritual open. He felt that these rights of the
+man were of the highest, and that other rights, even
+human and pitiful ones, should give them the right
+of way.
+
+It was not a long drive. When he reached the
+shack -- merely a one-roomed hut, with a stove-
+pipe chimney, two windows, and a door -- Christo-
+pher stood at the entrance and seemed to illuminate
+it. Stephen for a minute doubted his identity.
+Christopher had lost middle age in a day's time.
+He had the look of a triumphant youth. Blue smoke
+was curling from the chimney. Stephen smelled
+bacon frying, and coffee.
+
+Christopher greeted him with the joyousness of
+a child. "Lord!" said he, "did Myrtle send you up
+with all those things? Well, she is a good woman.
+Guess I would have been cold last night if I hadn't
+been so happy. How is Myrtle?"
+
+"She seemed to take it very sensibly when I told
+her."
+
+Christopher nodded happily and lovingly. "She
+would. She can understand not understanding, and
+that is more than most women can. It was mighty
+good of you to bring the things. You are in time
+for breakfast. Lord! Mr. Wheaton, smell the trees,
+and there are blooms hidden somewhere that smell
+sweet. Think of having the common food of man
+sweetened this way! First time I fully sensed I was
+something more than just a man. Lord, I am paid
+already. It won't be so very long before I get my
+fill, at this rate, and then I can go back. To think
+I needn't plow to-day! To think all I have to do
+is to have the spring! See the light under those
+trees!"
+
+Christopher spoke like a man in ecstasy. He tied
+the gray horse to a tree and brought a pail of water
+for him from the spring near by.
+
+Then he said to Stephen: "Come right in. The
+bacon's done, and the coffee and the corn-cake and
+the eggs won't take a minute."
+
+The two men entered the shack. There was noth-
+ing there except the little cooking-stove, a few
+kitchen utensils hung on pegs on the walls, an old
+table with a few dishes, two chairs, and a lounge
+over which was spread an ancient buffalo-skin.
+
+Stephen sat down, and Christopher fried the eggs.
+Then he bade the minister draw up, and the two
+men breakfasted.
+
+"Ain't it great, Mr. Wheaton?" said Christopher.
+
+"You are a famous cook, Mr. Dodd," laughed
+Stephen. He was thoroughly enjoying himself, and
+the breakfast was excellent.
+
+"It ain't that," declared Christopher in his ex-
+alted voice. "It ain't that, young man. It's be-
+cause the food is blessed."
+
+Stephen stayed all day on Silver Mountain. He
+and Christopher went fishing, and had fried trout for
+dinner. He took some of the trout home to Myrtle.
+
+Myrtle received them with a sort of state which
+defied the imputation of sadness. "Did he seem
+comfortable?" she asked.
+
+"Comfortable, Mrs. Dodd? I believe it will mean
+a new lease of life to your husband. He is an un-
+common man."
+
+"Yes, Christopher is uncommon; he always was,"
+assented Myrtle.
+
+"You have everything you want? You were not
+timid last night alone?" asked the minister.
+
+"Yes, I was timid. I heard queer noises," said
+Myrtle, "but I sha'n't be alone any more. Chris-
+topher's niece wrote me she was coming to make
+a visit. She has been teaching school, and she lost
+her school. I rather guess Ellen is as uncommon for
+a girl as Christopher is for a man. Anyway, she's
+lost her school, and her brother's married, and she
+don't want to go there. Besides, they live in Boston,
+and Ellen, she says she can't bear the city in spring
+and summer. She wrote she'd saved a little, and
+she'd pay her board, but I sha'n't touch a dollar of
+her little savings, and neither would Christopher
+want me to. He's always thought a sight of Ellen,
+though he's never seen much of her. As for me, I
+was so glad when her letter came I didn't know
+what to do. Christopher will be glad. I suppose
+you'll be going up there to see him off and
+on." Myrtle spoke a bit wistfully, and Ste-
+phen did not tell her he had been urged to come
+often.
+
+"Yes, off and on," he replied.
+
+"If you will just let me know when you are going,
+I will see that you have something to take to him
+-- some bread and pies."
+
+"He has some chickens there," said Stephen.
+
+"Has he got a coop for them?"
+
+"Yes, he had one rigged up. He will have plenty
+of eggs, and he carried up bacon and corn meal and
+tea and coffee."
+
+"I am glad of that," said Myrtle. She spoke with
+a quiet dignity, but her face never lost its expression
+of bewilderment and resignation.
+
+The next week Stephen Wheaton carried Myrtle's
+bread and pies to Christopher on his mountainside.
+He drove Christopher's gray horse harnessed in his
+old buggy, and realized that he himself was getting
+much pleasure out of the other man's idiosyncrasy.
+The morning was beautiful, and Stephen carried in
+his mind a peculiar new beauty, besides. Ellen,
+Christopher's niece, had arrived the night before,
+and, early as it was, she had been astir when he
+reached the Dodd house. She had opened the door
+for him, and she was a goodly sight: a tall girl,
+shaped like a boy, with a fearless face of great beauty
+crowned with compact gold braids and lit by un-
+swerving blue eyes. Ellen had a square, determined
+chin and a brow of high resolve.
+
+"Good morning," said she, and as she spoke she
+evidently rated Stephen and approved, for she smiled
+genially. "I am Mr. Dodd's niece," said she. "You
+are the minister?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And you have come for the things aunt is to
+send him?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Aunt said you were to drive uncle's horse and
+take the buggy," said Ellen. "It is very kind of you.
+While you are harnessing, aunt and I will pack the
+basket."
+
+Stephen, harnessing the gray horse, had a sense
+of shock; whether pleasant or otherwise, he could
+not determine. He had never seen a girl in the least
+like Ellen. Girls had never impressed him. She
+did.
+
+When he drove around to the kitchen door she
+and Myrtle were both there, and he drank a cup of
+coffee before starting, and Myrtle introduced him.
+"Only think, Mr. Wheaton," said she, "Ellen says
+she knows a great deal about farming, and we are
+going to hire Jim Mason and go right ahead."
+Myrtle looked adoringly at Ellen.
+
+Stephen spoke eagerly. "Don't hire anybody,"
+he said. "I used to work on a farm to pay my way
+through college. I need the exercise. Let me help."
+
+"You may do that," said Ellen, "on shares.
+Neither aunt nor I can think of letting you work
+without any recompense."
+
+"Well, we will settle that," Stephen replied.
+When he drove away, his usually calm mind was in
+a tumult.
+
+"Your niece has come," he told Christopher,
+when the two men were breakfasting together on
+Silver Mountain.
+
+"I am glad of that," said Christopher. "All that
+troubled me about being here was that Myrtle might
+wake up in the night and hear noises."
+
+Christopher had grown even more radiant. He
+was effulgent with pure happiness.
+
+"You aren't going to tap your sugar-maples?"
+said Stephen, looking up at the great symmetrical
+efflorescence of rose and green which towered about
+them.
+
+Christopher laughed. "No, bless 'em," said he,
+"the trees shall keep their sugar this season. This
+week is the first time I've had a chance to get ac-
+quainted with them and sort of enter into their feel-
+ings. Good Lord! I've seen how I can love those
+trees, Mr. Wheaton! See the pink on their young
+leaves! They know more than you and I. They
+know how to grow young every spring."
+
+Stephen did not tell Christopher how Ellen and
+Myrtle were to work the farm with his aid. The two
+women had bade him not. Christopher seemed to
+have no care whatever about it. He was simply
+happy. When Stephen left, he looked at him and
+said, with the smile of a child, "Do you think I am
+crazy?"
+
+"Crazy? No," replied Stephen.
+
+"Well, I ain't. I'm just getting fed. I was starv-
+ing to death. Glad you don't think I'm crazy, be-
+cause I couldn't help matters by saying I wasn't.
+Myrtle don't think I am, I know. As for Ellen, I
+haven't seen her since she was a little girl. I don't
+believe she can be much like Myrtle; but I guess if
+she is what she promised to turn out she wouldn't
+think anybody ought to go just her way to have it
+the right way."
+
+"I rather think she is like that, although I saw
+her for the first time this morning," said Stephen.
+
+"I begin to feel that I may not need to stay here
+much longer," Christopher called after him. "I
+begin to feel that I am getting what I came for so
+fast that I can go back pretty soon."
+
+But it was the last day of July before he came.
+He chose the cool of the evening after a burning day,
+and descended the mountain in the full light of the
+moon. He had gone up the mountain like an old
+man; he came down like a young one.
+
+When he came at last in sight of his own home,
+he paused and stared. Across the grass-land a
+heavily laden wagon was moving toward his barn.
+Upon this wagon heaped with hay, full of silver
+lights from the moon, sat a tall figure all in white,
+which seemed to shine above all things. Christopher
+did not see the man on the other side of the wagon
+leading the horses; he saw only this wonderful
+white figure. He hurried forward and Myrtle came
+down the road to meet him. She had been watch-
+ing for him, as she had watched every night.
+
+"Who is it on the load of hay?" asked Christopher.
+
+"Ellen," replied Myrtle.
+
+"Oh!" said Christopher. "She looked like an
+angel of the Lord, come to take up the burden I had
+dropped while I went to learn of Him."
+
+"Be you feeling pretty well, Christopher?" asked
+Myrtle. She thought that what her husband had
+said was odd, but he looked well, and he might have
+said it simply because he was a man.
+
+Christopher put his arm around Myrtle. "I am
+better than I ever was in my whole life, Myrtle,
+and I've got more courage to work now than I had
+when I was young. I had to go away and get rested,
+but I've got rested for all my life. We shall get
+along all right as long as we live."
+
+"Ellen and the minister are going to get married
+come Christmas," said Myrtle.
+
+"She is lucky. He is a man that can see with the
+eyes of other people," said Christopher.
+
+It was after the hay had been unloaded and Chris-
+topher had been shown the garden full of lusty
+vegetables, and told of the great crop with no draw-
+back, that he and the minister had a few minutes
+alone together at the gate.
+
+"I want to tell you, Mr. Wheaton, that I am
+settled in my mind now. I shall never complain
+again, no matter what happens. I have found that
+all the good things and all the bad things that come
+to a man who tries to do right are just to prove to
+him that he is on the right path. They are just the
+flowers and sunbeams, and the rocks and snakes,
+too, that mark the way. And -- I have found out
+more than that. I have found out the answer to my
+'why?'"
+
+"What is it?" asked Stephen, gazing at him curi-
+ously from the wonder-height of his own special
+happiness.
+
+"I have found out that the only way to heaven
+for the children of men is through the earth," said
+Christopher.
+
+
+
+
+
+DEAR ANNIE
+
+
+
+
+DEAR ANNIE
+
+ANNIE HEMPSTEAD lived on a large family
+canvas, being the eldest of six children. There
+was only one boy. The mother was long since dead.
+If one can imagine the Hempstead family, the head of
+which was the Reverend Silas, pastor of the Orthodox
+Church in Lynn Corners, as being the subject of a
+mild study in village history, the high light would
+probably fall upon Imogen, the youngest daughter.
+As for Annie, she would apparently supply only a
+part of the background.
+
+This afternoon in late July, Annie was out in the
+front yard of the parsonage, assisting her brother
+Benny to rake hay. Benny had not cut it. Annie
+had hired a man, although the Hempsteads could
+not afford to hire a man, but she had said to Benny,
+"Benny, you can rake the hay and get it into the
+barn if Jim Mullins cuts it, can't you?" And Benny
+had smiled and nodded acquiescence. Benny Hemp-
+stead always smiled and nodded acquiescence, but
+there was in him the strange persistency of a willow
+bough, the persistency of pliability, which is the
+most unconquerable of all. Benny swayed gracefully
+in response to all the wishes of others, but always he
+remained in his own inadequate attitude toward life.
+
+Now he was raking to as little purpose as he could
+and rake at all. The clover-tops, the timothy grass,
+and the buttercups moved before his rake in a faint
+foam of gold and green and rose, but his sister Annie
+raised whirlwinds with hers. The Hempstead yard
+was large and deep, and had two great squares given
+over to wild growths on either side of the gravel walk,
+which was bordered with shrubs, flowering in their
+turn, like a class of children at school saying their
+lessons. The spring shrubs had all spelled out their
+floral recitations, of course, but great clumps of
+peonies were spreading wide skirts of gigantic bloom,
+like dancers courtesying low on the stage of summer,
+and shafts of green-white Yucca lilies and Japan
+lilies and clove-pinks still remained in their school
+of bloom.
+
+Benny often stood still, wiped his forehead, leaned
+on his rake, and inhaled the bouquet of sweet scents,
+but Annie raked with never-ceasing energy. Annie
+was small and slender and wiry, and moved with
+angular grace, her thin, peaked elbows showing be-
+neath the sleeves of her pink gingham dress, her thin
+knees outlining beneath the scanty folds of the skirt.
+Her neck was long, her shoulder-blades troubled the
+back of her blouse at every movement. She was a
+creature full of ostentatious joints, but the joints
+were delicate and rhythmical and charming. Annie
+had a charming face, too. It was thin and sun-
+burnt, but still charming, with a sweet, eager, intent-
+to-please outlook upon life. This last was the real
+attitude of Annie's mind; it was, in fact, Annie. She
+was intent to please from her toes to the crown of
+her brown head. She radiated good will and loving-
+kindness as fervently as a lily in the border radiated
+perfume.
+
+It was very warm, and the northwest sky had a
+threatening mountain of clouds. Occasionally An-
+nie glanced at it and raked the faster, and thought
+complacently of the water-proof covers in the little
+barn. This hay was valuable for the Reverend Silas's
+horse.
+
+Two of the front windows of the house were filled
+with girls' heads, and the regular swaying movement
+of white-clad arms sewing. The girls sat in the
+house because it was so sunny on the piazza in the
+afternoon. There were four girls in the sitting-
+room, all making finery for themselves. On the
+other side of the front door one of the two windows
+was blank; in the other was visible a nodding gray
+head, that of Annie's father taking his afternoon nap.
+
+Everything was still except the girls' tongues, an
+occasional burst of laughter, and the crackling shrill
+of locusts. Nothing had passed on the dusty road
+since Benny and Annie had begun their work. Lynn
+Corners was nothing more than a hamlet. It was
+even seldom that an automobile got astray there,
+being diverted from the little city of Anderson, six
+miles away, by turning to the left instead of the right.
+
+Benny stopped again and wiped his forehead, all
+pink and beaded with sweat. He was a pretty
+young man -- as pretty as a girl, although large. He
+glanced furtively at Annie, then he went with a soft,
+padding glide, like a big cat, to the piazza and settled
+down. He leaned his head against a post, closed his
+eyes, and inhaled the sweetness of flowers alive and
+dying, of new-mown hay. Annie glanced at him
+and an angelic look came over her face. At that
+moment the sweetness of her nature seemed actually
+visible.
+
+"He is tired, poor boy!" she thought. She also
+thought that probably Benny felt the heat more be-
+cause he was stout. Then she raked faster and
+faster. She fairly flew over the yard, raking the
+severed grass and flowers into heaps. The air grew
+more sultry. The sun was not yet clouded, but the
+northwest was darker and rumbled ominously.
+
+The girls in the sitting-room continued to chatter
+and sew. One of them might have come out to help
+this little sister toiling alone, but Annie did not think
+of that. She raked with the uncomplaining sweet-
+ness of an angel until the storm burst. The rain
+came down in solid drops, and the sky was a sheet
+of clamoring flame. Annie made one motion toward
+the barn, but there was no use. The hay was not
+half cocked. There was no sense in running for
+covers. Benny was up and lumbering into the house,
+and her sisters were shutting windows and crying
+out to her. Annie deserted her post and fled before
+the wind, her pink skirts lashing her heels, her hair
+dripping.
+
+When she entered the sitting-room her sisters,
+Imogen, Eliza, Jane, and Susan, were all there; also
+her father, Silas, tall and gaunt and gray. To the
+Hempsteads a thunder-storm partook of the nature
+of a religious ceremony. The family gathered to-
+gether, and it was understood that they were all
+offering prayer and recognizing God as present on
+the wings of the tempest. In reality they were all
+very nervous in thunder-storms, with the exception
+of Annie. She always sent up a little silent petition
+that her sisters and brother and father, and the horse
+and dog and cat, might escape danger, although she
+had never been quite sure that she was not wicked
+in including the dog and cat. She was surer about
+the horse because he was the means by which her
+father made pastoral calls upon his distant sheep.
+Then afterward she just sat with the others and
+waited until the storm was over and it was time to
+open windows and see if the roof had leaked. To-
+day, however, she was intent upon the hay. In a
+lull of the tempest she spoke.
+
+"It is a pity," she said, "that I was not able to
+get the hay cocked and the covers on."
+
+Then Imogen turned large, sarcastic blue eyes
+upon her. Imogen was considered a beauty, pink
+and white, golden-haired, and dimpled, with a curi-
+ous calculating hardness of character and a sharp
+tongue, so at variance with her appearance that
+people doubted the evidence of their senses.
+
+"If," said Imogen, "you had only made Benny
+work instead of encouraging him to dawdle and
+finally to stop altogether, and if you had gone out
+directly after dinner, the hay would have been all
+raked up and covered."
+
+Nothing could have exceeded the calm and in-
+structive superiority of Imogen's tone. A mass of
+soft white fabric lay upon her lap, although she had
+removed scissors and needle and thimble to a safe
+distance. She tilted her chin with a royal air. When
+the storm lulled she had stopped praying.
+
+Imogen's sisters echoed her and joined in the at-
+tack upon Annie.
+
+"Yes," said Jane, "if you had only started earlier,
+Annie. I told Eliza when you went out in the yard
+that it looked like a shower."
+
+Eliza nodded energetically.
+
+"It was foolish to start so late," said Susan, with
+a calm air of wisdom only a shade less exasperating
+than Imogen's.
+
+"And you always encourage Benny so in being
+lazy," said Eliza.
+
+Then the Reverend Silas joined in. "You should
+have more sense of responsibility toward your broth-
+er, your only brother, Annie," he said, in his deep
+pulpit voice.
+
+"It was after two o'clock when you went out,"
+said Imogen.
+
+"And all you had to do was the dinner-dishes, and
+there were very few to-day," said Jane.
+
+Then Annie turned with a quick, cat-like motion.
+Her eyes blazed under her brown toss of hair. She
+gesticulated with her little, nervous hands. Her
+voice was as sweet and intense as a reed, and withal
+piercing with anger.
+
+"It was not half past one when I went out," said
+she, "and there was a whole sinkful of dishes."
+
+"It was after two. I looked at the clock," said
+Imogen.
+
+"It was not."
+
+"And there were very few dishes," said Jane.
+
+"A whole sinkful," said Annie, tense with wrath.
+
+"You always are rather late about starting," said
+Susan.
+
+"I am not! I was not! I washed the dishes, and
+swept the kitchen, and blacked the stove, and cleaned
+the silver."
+
+"I swept the kitchen," said Imogen, severely.
+"Annie, I am surprised at you."
+
+"And you know I cleaned the silver yesterday,"
+said Jane.
+
+Annie gave a gasp and looked from one to the
+other.
+
+"You know you did not sweep the kitchen," said
+Imogen.
+
+Annie's father gazed at her severely. "My dear,"
+he said, "how long must I try to correct you of this
+habit of making false statements?"
+
+"Dear Annie does not realize that they are false
+statements, father," said Jane. Jane was not pretty,
+but she gave the effect of a long, sweet stanza of
+some fine poetess. She was very tall and slender and
+large-eyed, and wore always a serious smile. She
+was attired in a purple muslin gown, cut V-shaped
+at the throat, and, as always, a black velvet ribbon
+with a little gold locket attached. The locket con-
+tained a coil of hair. Jane had been engaged to a
+young minister, now dead three years, and he had
+given her the locket.
+
+Jane no doubt had mourned for her lover, but she
+had a covert pleasure in the romance of her situation.
+She was a year younger than Annie, and she had
+loved and lost, and so had achieved a sentimental
+distinction. Imogen always had admirers. Eliza
+had been courted at intervals half-heartedly by a
+widower, and Susan had had a few fleeting chances.
+But Jane was the only one who had been really defi-
+nite in her heart affairs. As for Annie, nobody ever
+thought of her in such a connection. It was supposed
+that Annie had no thought of marriage, that she was
+foreordained to remain unwed and keep house for
+her father and Benny.
+
+When Jane said that dear Annie did not realize
+that she made false statements, she voiced an opinion
+of the family before which Annie was always abso-
+lutely helpless. Defense meant counter-accusation.
+Annie could not accuse her family. She glanced
+from one to the other. In her blue eyes were still
+sparks of wrath, but she said nothing. She felt, as
+always, speechless, when affairs reached such a junc-
+ture. She began, in spite of her good sense, to feel
+guiltily responsible for everything -- for the spoiling
+of the hay, even for the thunder-storm. What was
+more, she even wished to feel guiltily responsible.
+Anything was better than to be sure her sisters were
+not speaking the truth, that her father was blaming
+her unjustly.
+
+Benny, who sat hunched upon himself with the
+effect of one set of bones and muscles leaning upon
+others for support, was the only one who spoke for
+her, and even he spoke to little purpose.
+
+"One of you other girls," said he, in a thick, sweet
+voice, "might have come out and helped Annie;
+then she could have got the hay in."
+
+They all turned on him.
+
+"It is all very well for you to talk," said Imogen.
+"I saw you myself quit raking hay and sit down on
+the piazza."
+
+"Yes," assented Jane, nodding violently, "I saw
+you, too."
+
+"You have no sense of your responsibility, Ben-
+jamin, and your sister Annie abets you in evading
+it," said Silas Hempstead with dignity.
+
+"Benny feels the heat," said Annie.
+
+"Father is entirely right," said Eliza. "Benja-
+min has no sense of responsibility, and it is mainly
+owing to Annie."
+
+"But dear Annie does not realize it," said
+Jane.
+
+Benny got up lumberingly and left the room. He
+loved his sister Annie, but he hated the mild simmer
+of feminine rancor to which even his father's pres-
+ence failed to add a masculine flavor. Benny was
+always leaving the room and allowing his sisters
+"to fight it out."
+
+Just after he left there was a tremendous peal
+of thunder and a blue flash, and they all prayed
+again, except Annie; who was occupied with her own
+perplexities of life, and not at all afraid. She won-
+dered, as she had wondered many times before, if
+she could possibly be in the wrong, if she were spoil-
+ing Benny, if she said and did things without know-
+ing that she did so, or the contrary. Then suddenly
+she tightened her mouth. She knew. This sweet-
+tempered, anxious-to-please Annie was entirely sane,
+she had unusual self-poise. She KNEW that she knew
+what she did and said, and what she did not do or
+say, and a strange comprehension of her family over-
+whelmed her. Her sisters were truthful; she would
+not admit anything else, even to herself; but they
+confused desires and impulses with accomplishment.
+They had done so all their lives, some of them from
+intense egotism, some possibly from slight twists in
+their mental organisms. As for her father, he had
+simply rather a weak character, and was swayed by
+the majority. Annie, as she sat there among the
+praying group, made the same excuse for her sisters
+that they made for her. "They don't realize it,"
+she said to herself.
+
+When the storm finally ceased she hurried up-
+stairs and opened the windows, letting in the rain-
+fresh air. Then she got supper, while her sisters
+resumed their needlework. A curious conviction
+seized her, as she was hurrying about the kitchen,
+that in all probability some, if not all, of her sisters
+considered that they were getting the supper. Pos-
+sibly Jane had reflected that she ought to get supper,
+then she had taken another stitch in her work and
+had not known fairly that her impulse of duty had
+not been carried out. Imogen, presumably, was sew-
+ing with the serene consciousness that, since she was
+herself, it followed as a matter of course that she was
+performing all the tasks of the house.
+
+While Annie was making an omelet Benny came
+out into the kitchen and stood regarding her, hands
+in pockets, making, as usual, one set of muscles rest
+upon another. His face was full of the utmost good
+nature, but it also convicted him of too much sloth
+to obey its commands.
+
+"Say, Annie, what on earth makes them all pick
+on you so?" he observed.
+
+"Hush, Benny! They don't mean to. They don't
+know it."
+
+"But say, Annie, you must know that they tell
+whoppers. You DID sweep the kitchen."
+
+"Hush, Benny! Imogen really thinks she swept
+it."
+
+"Imogen always thinks she has done everything
+she ought to do, whether she has done it or not,"
+said Benny, with unusual astuteness. "Why don't
+you up and tell her she lies, Annie?"
+
+"She doesn't really lie," said Annie.
+
+"She does lie, even if she doesn't know it," said
+Benny; "and what is more, she ought to be made to
+know it. Say, Annie, it strikes me that you are
+doing the same by the girls that they accuse you of
+doing by me. Aren't you encouraging them in evil
+ways?"
+
+Annie started, and turned and stared at him.
+
+Benny nodded. "I can't see any difference," he
+said. "There isn't a day but one of the girls thinks
+she has done something you have done, or hasn't
+done something you ought to have done, and they
+blame you all the time, when you don't deserve it,
+and you let them, and they don't know it, and I
+don't think myself that they know they tell whop-
+pers; but they ought to know. Strikes me you are
+just spoiling the whole lot, father thrown in, Annie.
+You are a dear, just as they say, but you are too
+much of a dear to be good for them."
+
+Annie stared.
+
+"You are letting that omelet burn," said Benny.
+"Say, Annie, I will go out and turn that hay in
+the morning. I know I don't amount to much, but
+I ain't a girl, anyhow, and I haven't got a cross-eyed
+soul. That's what ails a lot of girls. They mean all
+right, but their souls have been cross-eyed ever
+since they came into the world, and it's just such
+girls as you who ought to get them straightened
+out. You know what has happened to-day. Well,
+here's what happened yesterday. I don't tell tales,
+but you ought to know this, for I believe Tom Reed
+has his eye on you, in spite of Imogen's being such
+a beauty, and Susan's having manners like silk,
+and Eliza's giving everybody the impression that
+she is too good for this earth, and Jane's trying to
+make everybody think she is a sweet martyr, with-
+out a thought for mortal man, when that is only
+her way of trying to catch one. You know Tom
+Reed was here last evening?"
+
+Annie nodded. Her face turned scarlet, then
+pathetically pale. She bent over her omelet, care-
+fully lifting it around the edges.
+
+"Well," Benny went on, "I know he came to see
+you, and Imogen went to the door and ushered him
+into the parlor, and I was out on the piazza, and
+she didn't know it, but I heard her tell him that she
+thought you had gone out. She hinted, too, that
+George Wells had taken you to the concert in the
+town hall. He did ask you, didn't he?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, Imogen spoke in this way." Benny
+lowered his voice and imitated Imogen to the life.
+"'Yes, we are all well, thank you. Father is busy,
+of course; Jane has run over to Mrs. Jacobs's for
+a pattern; Eliza is writing letters; and Susan is
+somewhere about the house. Annie -- well, Annie --
+George Wells asked her to go to the concert -- I
+rather --' Then," said Benny, in his natural voice,
+"Imogen stopped, and she could say truthfully
+that she didn't lie, but anybody would have thought
+from what she said that you had gone to the concert
+with George Wells."
+
+"Did Tom inquire for me?" asked Annie, in a
+low voice.
+
+"Didn't have a chance. Imogen got ahead of
+him."
+
+"Oh, well, then it doesn't matter. I dare say he
+did come to see Imogen."
+
+"He didn't," said Benny, stoutly. "And that
+isn't all. Say, Annie --"
+
+"What?"
+
+"Are you going to marry George Wells? It is
+none of my business, but are you?"
+
+Annie laughed a little, although her face was still
+pale. She had folded the omelet and was carefully
+watching it.
+
+"You need not worry about that, Benny dear,"
+she said.
+
+"Then what right have the girls to tell so many
+people the nice things they hear you say about him?"
+
+Annie removed the omelet skilfully from the pan
+to a hot plate, which she set on the range shelf, and
+turned to her brother.
+
+"What nice things do they hear me say?"
+
+"That he is so handsome; that he has such a
+good position; that he is the very best young man
+in the place; that you should think every girl
+would be head over heels in love with him; that
+every word he speaks is so bright and clever."
+
+Annie looked at her brother.
+
+"I don't believe you ever said one of those things,"
+remarked Benny.
+
+Annie continued to look at him.
+
+"Did you?"
+
+"Benny dear, I am not going to tell you."
+
+"You won't say you never did, because that
+would be putting your sisters in the wrong and
+admitting that they tell lies. Annie, you are a dear,
+but I do think you are doing wrong and spoiling
+them as much as they say you are spoiling me."
+
+"Perhaps I am," said Annie. There was a strange,
+tragic expression on her keen, pretty little face.
+She looked as if her mind was contemplating strenu-
+ous action which was changing her very features.
+She had covered the finished omelet and was now
+cooking another.
+
+"I wish you would see if everybody is in the
+house and ready, Benny," said she. "When this
+omelet is done they must come right away, or nothing
+will be fit to eat. And, Benny dear, if you don't
+mind, please get the butter and the cream-pitcher
+out of the ice-chest. I have everything else on the
+table."
+
+"There is another thing," said Benny. "I don't
+go about telling tales, but I do think it is time you
+knew. The girls tell everybody that you like to do
+the housework so much that they don't dare inter-
+fere. And it isn't so. They may have taught them-
+selves to think it is so, but it isn't. You would like
+a little time for fancy-work and reading as well as
+they do."
+
+"Please get the cream and butter, and see if
+they are all in the house," said Annie. She spoke
+as usual, but the strange expression remained in her
+face. It was still there when the family were all
+gathered at the table and she was serving the puffy
+omelet. Jane noticed it first.
+
+"What makes you look so odd, Annie?" said she.
+
+"I don't know how I look odd," replied Annie.
+
+They all gazed at her then, her father with some
+anxiety. "You don't look yourself," he said. "You
+are feeling well, aren't you, Annie?"
+
+"Quite well, thank you, father."
+
+But after the omelet was served and the tea
+poured Annie rose.
+
+"Where are you going, Annie?" asked Imogen,
+in her sarcastic voice.
+
+"To my room, or perhaps out in the orchard."
+
+"It will be sopping wet out there after the shower,"
+said Eliza. "Are you crazy, Annie?"
+
+"I have on my black skirt, and I will wear rub-
+bers," said Annie, quietly. "I want some fresh air."
+
+"I should think you had enough fresh air. You
+were outdoors all the afternoon, while we were
+cooped up in the house," said Jane.
+
+"Don't you feel well, Annie?" her father asked
+again, a golden bit of omelet poised on his fork, as
+she was leaving the room.
+
+"Quite well, father dear."
+
+"But you are eating no supper."
+
+"I have always heard that people who cook don't
+need so much to eat," said Imogen. "They say
+the essence of the food soaks in through the pores."
+
+"I am quite well," Annie repeated, and the door
+closed behind her.
+
+"Dear Annie! She is always doing odd things
+like this," remarked Jane.
+
+"Yes, she is, things that one cannot account for,
+but Annie is a dear," said Susan.
+
+"I hope she is well," said Annie's father.
+
+"Oh, she is well enough. Don't worry, father,"
+said Imogen. "Dear Annie is always doing the
+unexpected. She looks very well."
+
+"Yes, dear Annie is quite stout, for her," said Jane.
+
+"I think she is thinner than I have ever seen her,
+and the rest of you look like stuffed geese," said
+Benny, rudely.
+
+Imogen turned upon him in dignified wrath.
+"Benny, you insult your sisters," said she. "Father,
+you should really tell Benny that he should bridle
+his tongue a little."
+
+"You ought to bridle yours, every one of you,"
+retorted Benny. "You girls nag poor Annie every
+single minute. You let her do all the work, then
+you pick at her for it."
+
+There was a chorus of treble voices. "We nag
+dear Annie! We pick at dear Annie! We make
+her do everything! Father, you should remonstrate
+with Benjamin. You know how we all love dear
+Annie!"
+
+"Benjamin," began Silas Hempstead, but Benny,
+with a smothered exclamation, was up and out of
+the room.
+
+Benny quite frankly disliked his sisters, with the
+exception of Annie. For his father he had a sort of
+respectful tolerance. He could not see why he should
+have anything else. His father had never done
+anything for him except to admonish him. His
+scanty revenue for his support and college expenses
+came from his maternal grandmother, who had been
+a woman of parts and who had openly scorned her
+son-in-law.
+
+Grandmother Loomis had left a will which occa-
+sioned much comment. By its terms she had pro-
+vided sparsely but adequately for Benjamin's edu-
+cation and living until he should graduate; and her
+house, with all her personal property, and the bulk of
+the sum from which she had derived her own income,
+fell to her granddaughter Annie. Annie had always
+been her grandmother's favorite. There had been
+covert dismay when the contents of the will were
+made known, then one and all had congratulated
+the beneficiary, and said abroad that they were glad
+dear Annie was so well provided for. It was inti-
+mated by Imogen and Eliza that probably dear
+Annie would not marry, and in that case Grand-
+mother Loomis's bequest was so fortunate. She had
+probably taken that into consideration. Grand-
+mother Loomis had now been dead four years, and
+her deserted home had been for rent, furnished, but
+it had remained vacant.
+
+Annie soon came back from the orchard, and after
+she had cleared away the supper-table and washed
+the dishes she went up to her room, carefully re-
+arranged her hair, and changed her dress. Then she
+sat down beside a window and waited and watched,
+her pointed chin in a cup of one little thin hand, her
+soft muslin skirts circling around her, and the scent
+of queer old sachet emanating from a flowered ribbon
+of her grandmother's which she had tied around her
+waist. The ancient scent always clung to the rib-
+bon, suggesting faintly as a dream the musk and
+roses and violets of some old summer-time.
+
+Annie sat there and gazed out on the front yard,
+which was silvered over with moonlight. Annie's
+four sisters all sat out there. They had spread a
+rug over the damp grass and brought out chairs.
+There were five chairs, although there were only
+four girls. Annie gazed over the yard and down the
+street. She heard the chatter of the girls, which
+was inconsequent and absent, as if their minds were
+on other things than their conversation. Then sud-
+denly she saw a small red gleam far down the street,
+evidently that of a cigar, and also a dark, moving
+figure. Then there ensued a subdued wrangle in
+the yard. Imogen insisted that her sisters should
+go into the house. They all resisted, Eliza the most
+vehemently. Imogen was arrogant and compelling.
+Finally she drove them all into the house except
+Eliza, who wavered upon the threshold of yielding.
+Imogen was obliged to speak very softly lest the ap-
+proaching man hear, but Annie, in the window above
+her, heard every word.
+
+"You know he is coming to see me," said Imogen,
+passionately. "You know -- you know, Eliza, and
+yet every single time he comes, here are you girls,
+spying and listening."
+
+"He comes to see Annie, I believe," said Eliza,
+in her stubborn voice, which yet had indecision in it.
+
+"He never asks for her."
+
+"He never has a chance. We all tell him, the
+minute he comes in, that she is out. But now I am
+going to stay, anyway."
+
+"Stay if you want to. You are all a jealous lot.
+If you girls can't have a beau yourselves, you be-
+grudge one to me. I never saw such a house as this
+for a man to come courting in."
+
+"I will stay," said Eliza, and this time her voice
+was wholly firm. "There is no use in my going,
+anyway, for the others are coming back."
+
+It was true. Back flitted Jane and Susan, and by
+that time Tom Reed had reached the gate, and his cigar
+was going out in a shower of sparks on the gravel
+walk, and all four sisters were greeting him and
+urging upon his acceptance the fifth chair. Annie,
+watching, saw that the young man seemed to hesi-
+tate. Then her heart leaped and she heard him
+speak quite plainly, with a note of defiance and irri-
+tation, albeit with embarrassment.
+
+"Is Miss Annie in?" asked Tom Reed.
+
+Imogen answered first, and her harsh voice was
+honey-sweet.
+
+"I fear dear Annie is out," she said. "She will
+be so sorry to miss you."
+
+Annie, at her window, made a sudden passionate
+motion, then she sat still and listened. She argued
+fiercely that she was right in so doing. She felt that
+the time had come when she must know, for the sake
+of her own individuality, just what she had to deal
+with in the natures of her own kith and kin. Dear
+Annie had turned in her groove of sweetness and
+gentle yielding, as all must turn who have any
+strength of character underneath the sweetness and
+gentleness. Therefore Annie, at her window above,
+listened.
+
+At first she heard little that bore upon herself,
+for the conversation was desultory, about the weather
+and general village topics. Then Annie heard her
+own name. She was "dear Annie," as usual. She
+listened, fairly faint with amazement. What she
+heard from that quartette of treble voices down there
+in the moonlight seemed almost like a fairy-tale.
+The sisters did not violently incriminate her. They
+were too astute for that. They told half-truths.
+They told truths which were as shadows of the real
+facts, and yet not to be contradicted. They built
+up between them a story marvelously consist-
+ent, unless prearranged, and that Annie did not
+think possible. George Wells figured in the tale,
+and there were various hints and pauses concerning
+herself and her own character in daily life, and not
+one item could be flatly denied, even if the girl could
+have gone down there and, standing in the midst
+of that moonlit group, given her sisters the lie.
+
+Everything which they told, the whole structure
+of falsehood, had beams and rafters of truth. Annie
+felt helpless before it all. To her fancy, her sisters
+and Tom Reed seemed actually sitting in a fairy
+building whose substance was utter falsehood, and
+yet which could not be utterly denied. An awful
+sense of isolation possessed her. So these were her
+own sisters, the sisters whom she had loved as a
+matter of the simplest nature, whom she had ad-
+mired, whom she had served.
+
+She made no allowance, since she herself was per-
+fectly normal, for the motive which underlay it all.
+She could not comprehend the strife of the women
+over the one man. Tom Reed was in reality the one
+desirable match in the village. Annie knew, or
+thought she knew, that Tom Reed had it in mind
+to love her, and she innocently had it in mind to
+love him. She thought of a home of her own and
+his with delight. She thought of it as she thought
+of the roses coming into bloom in June, and she
+thought of it as she thought of the every-day hap-
+penings of life -- cooking, setting rooms in order,
+washing dishes. However, there was something
+else to reckon with, and that Annie instinctively
+knew. She had been long-suffering, and her long-
+suffering was now regarded as endless. She had
+cast her pearls, and they had been trampled. She
+had turned her other cheek, and it had been promptly
+slapped. It was entirely true that Annie's sisters
+were not quite worthy of her, that they had taken
+advantage of her kindness and gentleness, and had
+mistaken them for weakness, to be despised. She
+did not understand them, nor they her. They
+were, on the whole, better than she thought, but
+with her there was a stern limit of endurance. Some-
+thing whiter and hotter than mere wrath was in the
+girl's soul as she sat there and listened to the build-
+ing of that structure of essential falsehood about
+herself.
+
+She waited until Tom Reed had gone. He did
+not stay long. Then she went down-stairs with
+flying feet, and stood among them in the moonlight.
+Her father had come out of the study, and Benny
+had just been entering the gate as Tom Reed left.
+Then dear Annie spoke. She really spoke for the
+first time in her life, and there was something dread-
+ful about it all. A sweet nature is always rather
+dreadful when it turns and strikes, and Annie struck
+with the whole force of a nature with a foundation
+of steel. She left nothing unsaid. She defended
+herself and she accused her sisters as if before a
+judge. Then came her ultimatum.
+
+"To-morrow morning I am going over to Grand-
+mother Loomis's house, and I am going to live there
+a whole year," she declared, in a slow, steady voice.
+"As you know, I have enough to live on, and -- in
+order that no word of mine can be garbled and twisted
+as it has been to-night, I speak not at all. Every-
+thing which I have to communicate shall be written
+in black and white, and signed with my own name,
+and black and white cannot lie."
+
+It was Jane who spoke first. "What will people
+say?" she whimpered, feebly.
+
+"From what I have heard you all say to-night,
+whatever you make them," retorted Annie -- the
+Annie who had turned.
+
+Jane gasped. Silas Hempstead stood staring,
+quite dumb before the sudden problem. Imogen
+alone seemed to have any command whatever of
+the situation.
+
+"May I inquire what the butcher and grocer are
+going to think, no matter what your own sisters
+think and say, when you give your orders in writ-
+ing?" she inquired, achieving a jolt from tragedy
+to the commonplace.
+
+"That is my concern," replied Annie, yet she
+recognized the difficulty of that phase of the situa-
+tion. It is just such trifling matters which detract
+from the dignity of extreme attitudes toward ex-
+istence. Annie had taken an extreme attitude,
+yet here were the butcher and the grocer to reckon
+with. How could she communicate with them in
+writing without appearing absurd to the verge of
+insanity? Yet even that difficulty had a solution.
+
+Annie thought it out after she had gone to bed
+that night. She had been imperturbable with her
+sisters, who had finally come in a body to make
+entreaties, although not apologies or retractions.
+There was a stiff-necked strain in the Hempstead
+family, and apologies and retractions were bitterer
+cuds for them to chew than for most. She had been
+imperturbable with her father, who had quoted
+Scripture and prayed at her during family worship.
+She had been imperturbable even with Benny, who
+had whispered to her: "Say, Annie, I don't blame
+you, but it will be a hell of a time without you.
+Can't you stick it out?"
+
+But she had had a struggle before her own vision
+of the butcher and the grocer, and their amazement
+when she ceased to speak to them. Then she settled
+that with a sudden leap of inspiration. It sounded
+too apropos to be life, but there was a little deaf-and-
+dumb girl, a far-away relative of the Hempsteads,
+who lived with her aunt Felicia in Anderson. She
+was a great trial to her aunt Felicia, who was a
+widow and well-to-do, and liked the elegancies and
+normalities of life. This unfortunate little Effie
+Hempstead could not be placed in a charitable insti-
+tution on account of the name she bore. Aunt
+Felicia considered it her worldly duty to care for
+her, but it was a trial.
+
+Annie would take Effie off Aunt Felicia's hands,
+and no comment would be excited by a deaf-and-
+dumb girl carrying written messages to the trades-
+men, since she obviously could not give them orally.
+The only comment would be on Annie's conduct
+in holding herself aloof from her family and the
+village people generally.
+
+The next morning, when Annie went away, there
+was an excited conclave among the sisters.
+
+"She means to do it," said Susan, and she wept.
+
+Imogen's handsome face looked hard and set.
+"Let her, if she wants to," said she.
+
+"Only think what people will say!" wailed Jane.
+
+Imogen tossed her head. "I shall have some-
+thing to say myself," she returned. "I shall say how
+much we all regret that dear Annie has such a
+difficult disposition that she felt she could not live
+with her own family and must be alone."
+
+"But," said Jane, blunt in her distress, "will they
+believe it?"
+
+"Why will they not believe it, pray?"
+
+"Why, I am afraid people have the impression
+that dear Annie has --" Jane hesitated.
+
+"What?" asked Imogen, coldly. She looked very
+handsome that morning. Not a waved golden hair
+was out of place on her carefully brushed head.
+She wore the neatest of blue linen skirts and blouses,
+with a linen collar and white tie. There was some-
+thing hard but compelling about her blond beauty.
+
+"I am afraid," said Jane, "that people have a
+sort of general impression that dear Annie has per-
+haps as sweet a disposition as any of us, perhaps
+sweeter."
+
+"Nobody says that dear Annie has not a sweet
+disposition," said Imogen, taking a careful stitch in
+her embroidery. "But a sweet disposition is very
+often extremely difficult for other people. It con-
+stantly puts them in the wrong. I am well aware of
+the fact that dear Annie does a great deal for all
+of us, but it is sometimes irritating. Of course
+it is quite certain that she must have a feeling
+of superiority because of it, and she should not
+have it."
+
+Sometimes Eliza made illuminating speeches. "I
+suppose it follows, then," said she, with slight irony,
+"that only an angel can have a very sweet disposi-
+tion without offending others."
+
+But Imogen was not in the least nonplussed.
+She finished her line of thought. "And with all her
+sweet disposition," said she, "nobody can deny
+that dear Annie is peculiar, and peculiarity always
+makes people difficult for other people. Of course
+it is horribly peculiar what she is proposing to do
+now. That in itself will be enough to convince
+people that dear Annie must be difficult. Only a
+difficult person could do such a strange thing."
+
+"Who is going to get up and get breakfast in the
+morning, and wash the dishes?" inquired Jane,
+irrelevantly.
+
+"All I ever want for breakfast is a bit of fruit, a
+roll, and an egg, besides my coffee," said Imogen,
+with her imperious air.
+
+"Somebody has to prepare it."
+
+"That is a mere nothing," said Imogen, and she
+took another stitch.
+
+After a little, Jane and Eliza went by themselves
+and discussed the problem.
+
+"It is quite evident that Imogen means to do
+nothing," said Jane.
+
+"And also that she will justify herself by the
+theory that there is nothing to be done," said Eliza.
+
+"Oh, well," said Jane, "I will get up and get
+breakfast, of course. I once contemplated the pros-
+pect of doing it the rest of my life."
+
+Eliza assented. "I can understand that it will
+not be so hard for you," she said, "and although I
+myself always aspired to higher things than preparing
+breakfasts, still, you did not, and it is true that you
+would probably have had it to do if poor Henry
+had lived, for he was not one to ever have a very
+large salary."
+
+"There are better things than large salaries,"
+said Jane, and her face looked sadly reminiscent.
+After all, the distinction of being the only one who
+had been on the brink of preparing matrimonial
+breakfasts was much. She felt that it would make
+early rising and early work endurable to her, although
+she was not an active young woman.
+
+"I will get a dish-mop and wash the dishes," said
+Eliza. "I can manage to have an instructive book
+propped open on the kitchen table, and keep my
+mind upon higher things as I do such menial tasks."
+
+Then Susan stood in the doorway, a tall figure
+gracefully swaying sidewise, long-throated and promi-
+nent-eyed. She was the least attractive-looking of
+any of the sisters, but her manners were so charming,
+and she was so perfectly the lady, that it made up
+for any lack of beauty.
+
+"I will dust," said Susan, in a lovely voice, and
+as she spoke she involuntarily bent and swirled her
+limp muslins in such a way that she fairly suggested
+a moral duster. There was the making of an actress
+in Susan. Nobody had ever been able to decide what
+her true individual self was. Quite unconsciously,
+like a chameleon, she took upon herself the charac-
+teristics of even inanimate things. Just now she
+was a duster, and a wonderfully creditable duster.
+
+"Who," said Jane, "is going to sweep? Dear
+Annie has always done that."
+
+"I am not strong enough to sweep. I am very
+sorry," said Susan, who remained a duster, and did
+not become a broom.
+
+"If we have system," said Eliza, vaguely, "the
+work ought not to be so very hard."
+
+"Of course not," said Imogen. She had come in
+and seated herself. Her three sisters eyed her, but
+she embroidered imperturbably. The same thought
+was in the minds of all. Obviously Imogen was the
+very one to take the task of sweeping upon herself.
+That hard, compact, young body of hers suggested
+strenuous household work. Embroidery did not
+seem to be her role at all.
+
+But Imogen had no intention of sweeping. Indeed,
+the very imagining of such tasks in connection with
+herself was beyond her. She did not even dream
+that her sisters expected it of her.
+
+"I suppose," said Jane, "that we might be able
+to engage Mrs. Moss to come in once a week and
+do the sweeping."
+
+"It would cost considerable," said Susan.
+
+"But it has to be done."
+
+"I should think it might be managed, with sys-
+tem, if you did not hire anybody," said Imogen,
+calmly.
+
+"You talk of system as if it were a suction cleaner,"
+said Eliza, with a dash of asperity. Sometimes she
+reflected how she would have hated Imogen had
+she not been her sister.
+
+"System is invaluable," said Imogen. She looked
+away from her embroidery to the white stretch of
+country road, arched over with elms, and her beau-
+tiful eyes had an expression as if they sighted sys-
+tem, the justified settler of all problems.
+
+Meantime, Annie Hempstead was traveling to
+Anderson in the jolting trolley-car, and trying to
+settle her emotions and her outlook upon life, which
+jolted worse than the car upon a strange new track.
+She had not the slightest intention of giving up her
+plan, but she realized within herself the sensations
+of a revolutionist. Who in her family, for generations
+and generations, had ever taken the course which
+she was taking? She was not exactly frightened
+-- Annie had splendid courage when once her blood
+was up -- but she was conscious of a tumult and grind
+of adjustment to a new level which made her nervous.
+
+She reached the end of the car line, then walked
+about half a mile to her Aunt Felicia Hempstead's
+house. It was a handsome house, after the standard
+of nearly half a century ago. It had an opulent air,
+with its swelling breasts of bay windows, through
+which showed fine lace curtains; its dormer-windows,
+each with its carefully draped curtains; its black-
+walnut front door, whose side-lights were screened
+with medallioned lace. The house sat high on three
+terraces of velvet-like grass, and was surmounted by
+stone steps in three instalments, each of which was
+flanked by stone lions.
+
+Annie mounted the three tiers of steps between the
+stone lions and rang the front-door bell, which was
+polished so brightly that it winked at her like a
+brazen eye. Almost directly the door was opened
+by an immaculate, white-capped and white-aproned
+maid, and Annie was ushered into the parlor. When
+Annie had been a little thing she had been enamoured
+of and impressed by the splendor of this parlor. Now
+she had doubts of it, in spite of the long, magnificent
+sweep of lace curtains, the sheen of carefully kept
+upholstery, the gleam of alabaster statuettes, and
+the even piles of gilt-edged books upon the polished
+tables.
+
+Soon Mrs. Felicia Hempstead entered, a tall, well-
+set-up woman, with a handsome face and keen eyes.
+She wore her usual morning costume -- a breakfast
+sacque of black silk profusely trimmed with lace,
+and a black silk skirt. She kissed Annie, with a
+slight peck of closely set lips, for she liked her. Then
+she sat down opposite her and regarded her with
+as much of a smile as her sternly set mouth could
+manage, and inquired politely regarding her health
+and that of the family. When Annie broached the
+subject of her call, the set calm of her face relaxed,
+and she nodded.
+
+"I know what your sisters are. You need not
+explain to me," she said.
+
+"But," returned Annie, "I do not think they
+realize. It is only because I --"
+
+"Of course," said Felicia Hempstead. "It is be-
+cause they need a dose of bitter medicine, and you
+hope they will be the better for it. I understand you,
+my dear. You have spirit enough, but you don't
+get it up often. That is where they make their mis-
+take. Often the meek are meek from choice, and
+they are the ones to beware of. I don't blame you
+for trying it. And you can have Effie and welcome.
+I warn you that she is a little wearing. Of course
+she can't help her affliction, poor child, but it is
+dreadful. I have had her taught. She can read
+and write very well now, poor child, and she is not
+lacking, and I have kept her well dressed. I take
+her out to drive with me every day, and am not
+ashamed to have her seen with me. If she had all
+her faculties she would not be a bad-looking little
+girl. Now, of course, she has something of a vacant
+expression. That comes, I suppose, from her not
+being able to hear. She has learned to speak a few
+words, but I don't encourage her doing that before
+people. It is too evident that there is something
+wrong. She never gets off one tone. But I will let
+her speak to you. She will be glad to go with you.
+She likes you, and I dare say you can put up with
+her. A woman when she is alone will make a com-
+panion of a brazen image. You can manage all right
+for everything except her clothes and lessons. I
+will pay for them."
+
+"Can't I give her lessons?"
+
+"Well, you can try, but I am afraid you will need
+to have Mr. Freer come over once a week. It seems
+to me to be quite a knack to teach the deaf and
+dumb. You can see. I will have Effie come in and
+tell her about the plan. I wanted to go to Europe
+this summer, and did not know how to manage
+about Effie. It will be a godsend to me, this ar-
+rangement, and of course after the year is up she
+can come back."
+
+With that Felicia touched a bell, the maid ap-
+peared with automatic readiness, and presently a
+tall little girl entered. She was very well dressed.
+Her linen frock was hand-embroidered, and her shoes
+were ultra. Her pretty shock of fair hair was tied
+with French ribbon in a fetching bow, and she made
+a courtesy which would have befitted a little prin-
+cess. Poor Effie's courtesy was the one feature in
+which Felicia Hempstead took pride. After making
+it the child always glanced at her for approval, and
+her face lighted up with pleasure at the faint smile
+which her little performance evoked. Effie would
+have been a pretty little girl had it not been for that
+vacant, bewildered expression of which Felicia had
+spoken. It was the expression of one shut up with
+the darkest silence of life, that of her own self, and
+beauty was incompatible with it.
+
+Felicia placed her stiff forefinger upon her own
+lips and nodded, and the child's face became trans-
+figured. She spoke in a level, awful voice, utterly
+devoid of inflection, and full of fright. Her voice
+was as the first attempt of a skater upon ice. How-
+ever, it was intelligible.
+
+"Good morning," said she. "I hope you are well."
+Then she courtesied again. That little speech and
+one other, "Thank you, I am very well," were all
+she had mastered. Effie's instruction had begun
+rather late, and her teacher was not remarkably
+skilful.
+
+When Annie's lips moved in response, Effie's face
+fairly glowed with delight and affection. The little
+girl loved Annie. Then her questioning eyes sought
+Felicia, who beckoned, and drew from the pocket
+of her rustling silk skirt a tiny pad and pencil. Effie
+crossed the room and stood at attention while Felicia
+wrote. When she had read the words on the pad she
+gave one look at Annie, then another at Felicia, who
+nodded.
+
+Effie courtesied before Annie like a fairy dancer.
+"Good morning. I hope you are well," she said.
+Then she courtesied again and said, "Thank you,
+I am very well." Her pretty little face was quite
+eager with love and pleasure, and yet there was an
+effect as of a veil before the happy emotion in it.
+The contrast between the awful, level voice and the
+grace of motion and evident delight at once shocked
+and compelled pity. Annie put her arms around
+Effie and kissed her.
+
+"You dear little thing," she said, quite forgetting
+that Effie could not hear.
+
+Felicia Hempstead got speedily to work, and soon
+Effie's effects were packed and ready for transporta-
+tion upon the first express to Lynn Corners, and
+Annie and the little girl had boarded the trolley
+thither.
+
+Annie Hempstead had the sensation of one who
+takes a cold plunge -- half pain and fright, half exhil-
+aration and triumph -- when she had fairly taken pos-
+session of her grandmother's house. There was gen-
+uine girlish pleasure in looking over the stock of
+old china and linen and ancient mahoganies, in
+starting a fire in the kitchen stove, and preparing
+a meal, the written order for which Effie had taken
+to the grocer and butcher. There was genuine de-
+light in sitting down with Effie at her very own table,
+spread with her grandmother's old damask and
+pretty dishes, and eating, without hearing a word of
+unfavorable comment upon the cookery. But there
+was a certain pain and terror in trampling upon that
+which it was difficult to define, either her conscience
+or sense of the divine right of the conventional.
+
+But that night after Effie had gone to bed, and
+the house was set to rights, and she in her cool muslin
+was sitting on the front-door step, under the hooded
+trellis covered with wistaria, she was conscious of
+entire emancipation. She fairly gloated over her
+new estate.
+
+"To-night one of the others will really have to
+get the supper, and wash the dishes, and not be able
+to say she did it and I didn't, when I did," Annie
+thought with unholy joy. She knew perfectly well
+that her viewpoint was not sanctified, but she felt
+that she must allow her soul to have its little witch-
+caper or she could not answer for the consequences.
+There might result spiritual atrophy, which would
+be much more disastrous than sin and repentance.
+It was either the continuance of her old life in her
+father's house, which was the ignominious and harm-
+ful one of the scapegoat, or this. She at last reveled
+in this. Here she was mistress. Here what she did,
+she did, and what she did not do remained undone.
+Here her silence was her invincible weapon. Here
+she was free.
+
+The soft summer night enveloped her. The air
+was sweet with flowers and the grass which lay still
+unraked in her father's yard. A momentary feeling
+of impatience seized her; then she dismissed it, and
+peace came. What had she to do with that hay?
+Her father would be obliged to buy hay if it were not
+raked over and dried, but what of that? She had
+nothing to do with it.
+
+She heard voices and soft laughter. A dark
+shadow passed along the street. Her heart quick-
+ened its beat. The shadow turned in at her father's
+gate. There was a babel of welcoming voices, of
+which Annie could not distinguish one articulate
+word. She sat leaning forward, her eyes intent upon
+the road. Then she heard the click of her father's gate
+and the dark, shadowy figure reappeared in the road.
+Annie knew who it was; she knew that Tom Reed
+was coming to see her. For a second, rapture seized
+her, then dismay. How well she knew her sisters --
+how very well! Not one of them would have given
+him the slightest inkling of the true situation. They
+would have told him, by the sweetest of insinuations,
+rather than by straight statements, that she had left
+her father's roof and come over here, but not one
+word would have been told him concerning her vow
+of silence. They would leave that for him to dis-
+cover, to his amazement and anger.
+
+Annie rose and fled. She closed the door, turned
+the key softly, and ran up-stairs in the dark. Kneel-
+ing before a window on the farther side from her old
+home, she watched with eager eyes the young man
+open the gate and come up the path between the
+old-fashioned shrubs. The clove-like fragrance of
+the pinks in the border came in her face. Annie
+watched Tom Reed disappear beneath the trellised
+hood of the door; then the bell tinkled through the
+house. It seemed to Annie that she heard it as she
+had never heard anything before. Every nerve in her
+body seemed urging her to rise and go down-stairs
+and admit this young man whom she loved. But
+her will, turned upon itself, kept her back. She
+could not rise and go down; something stronger
+than her own wish restrained her. She suffered
+horribly, but she remained. The bell tinkled again.
+There was a pause, then it sounded for the third
+time.
+
+Annie leaned against the window, faint and trem-
+bling. It was rather horrible to continue such a fight
+between will and inclination, but she held out. She
+would not have been herself had she not done so.
+Then she saw Tom Reed's figure emerge from under
+the shadow of the door, pass down the path between
+the sweet-flowering shrubs, seeming to stir up the
+odor of the pinks as he did so. He started to go
+down the road; then Annie heard a loud, silvery call,
+with a harsh inflection, from her father's house.
+"Imogen is calling him back," she thought.
+
+Annie was out of the room, and, slipping softly
+down-stairs and out into the yard, crouched close
+to the fence overgrown with sweetbrier, its founda-
+tion hidden in the mallow, and there she listened.
+She wanted to know what Imogen and her other
+sisters were about to say to Tom Reed, and she
+meant to know. She heard every word. The dis-
+tance was not great, and her sisters' voices carried
+far, in spite of their honeyed tones and efforts tow-
+ard secrecy. By the time Tom had reached the
+gate of the parsonage they had all crowded down
+there, a fluttering assembly in their snowy summer
+muslins, like white doves. Annie heard Imogen first.
+Imogen was always the ringleader.
+
+"Couldn't you find her?" asked Imogen.
+
+"No. Rang three times," replied Tom. He had
+a boyish voice, and his chagrin showed plainly in it.
+Annie knew just how he looked, how dear and big
+and foolish, with his handsome, bewildered face,
+blurting out to her sisters his disappointment, with
+innocent faith in their sympathy.
+
+Then Annie heard Eliza speak in a small, sweet
+voice, which yet, to one who understood her, carried in
+it a sting of malice. "How very strange!" said Eliza.
+
+Jane spoke next. She echoed Eliza, but her voice
+was more emphatic and seemed multiple, as echoes
+do. "Yes, very strange indeed," said Jane.
+
+"Dear Annie is really very singular lately. It
+has distressed us all, especially father," said Susan,
+but deprecatingly.
+
+Then Imogen spoke, and to the point. "Annie
+must be in that house," said she. "She went in
+there, and she could not have gone out without our
+seeing her."
+
+Annie could fairly see the toss of Imogen's head
+as she spoke.
+
+"What in thunder do you all mean?" asked Tom
+Reed, and there was a bluntness, almost a brutality,
+in his voice which was refreshing.
+
+"I do not think such forcible language is becoming,
+especially at the parsonage," said Jane.
+
+Annie distinctly heard Tom Reed snort. "Hang
+it if I care whether it is becoming or not," said he.
+
+"You seem to forget that you are addressing
+ladies, sir," said Jane.
+
+"Don't forget it for a blessed minute," returned
+Tom Reed. "Wish I could. You make it too evi-
+dent that you are -- ladies, with every word you
+speak, and all your beating about the bush. A man
+would blurt it out, and then I would know where
+I am at. Hang it if I know now. You all say that
+your sister is singular and that she distresses your
+father, and you" -- addressing Imogen -- "say that
+she must be in that house. You are the only one
+who does make a dab at speaking out; I will say
+that much for you. Now, if she is in that house,
+what in thunder is the matter?"
+
+"I really cannot stay here and listen to such pro-
+fane language," said Jane, and she flitted up the path
+to the house like an enraged white moth. She had
+a fleecy white shawl over her head, and her pale
+outline was triangular.
+
+"If she calls that profane, I pity her," said Tom
+Reed. He had known the girls since they were
+children, and had never liked Jane. He continued,
+still addressing Imogen. "For Heaven's sake, if she
+is in that house, what is the matter?" said he.
+"Doesn't the bell ring? Yes, it does ring, though
+it is as cracked as the devil. I heard it. Has Annie
+gone deaf? Is she sick? Is she asleep? It is only
+eight o'clock. I don't believe she is asleep. Doesn't
+she want to see me? Is that the trouble? What
+have I done? Is she angry with me?"
+
+Eliza spoke, smoothly and sweetly. "Dear Annie
+is singular," said she.
+
+"What the dickens do you mean by singular?
+I have known Annie ever since she was that high.
+It never struck me that she was any more singular
+than other girls, except she stood an awful lot of
+nagging without making a kick. Here you all say
+she is singular, as if you meant she was" -- Tom
+hesitated a second -- "crazy," said he. "Now, I
+know that Annie is saner than any girl around here,
+and that simply does not go down. What do you
+all mean by singular?"
+
+"Dear Annie may not be singular, but her actions
+are sometimes singular," said Susan. "We all feel
+badly about this."
+
+"You mean her going over to her grandmother's
+house to live? I don't know whether I think that
+is anything but horse-sense. I have eyes in my
+head, and I have used them. Annie has worked
+like a dog here; I suppose she needed a rest."
+
+"We all do our share of the work," said Eliza,
+calmly, "but we do it in a different way from dear
+Annie. She makes very hard work of work. She
+has not as much system as we could wish. She tires
+herself unnecessarily."
+
+"Yes, that is quite true," assented Imogen.
+"Dear Annie gets very tired over the slightest tasks,
+whereas if she went a little more slowly and used
+more system the work would be accomplished well
+and with no fatigue. There are five of us to do the
+work here, and the house is very convenient."
+
+There was a silence. Tom Reed was bewildered.
+"But -- doesn't she want to see me?" he asked,
+finally.
+
+"Dear Annie takes very singular notions some-
+times," said Eliza, softly.
+
+"If she took a notion not to go to the door when
+she heard the bell ring, she simply wouldn't," said
+Imogen, whose bluntness of speech was, after all,
+a relief.
+
+"Then you mean that you think she took a notion
+not to go to the door?" asked Tom, in a desperate
+tone.
+
+"Dear Annie is very singular," said Eliza, with
+such softness and deliberation that it was like a
+minor chord of music.
+
+"Do you know of anything she has against me?"
+asked Tom of Imogen; but Eliza answered for her.
+
+"Dear Annie is not in the habit of making confi-
+dantes of her sisters," said she, "but we do know
+that she sometimes takes unwarranted dislikes."
+
+"Which time generally cures," said Susan.
+
+"Oh yes," assented Eliza, "which time generally
+cures. She can have no reason whatever for avoid-
+ing you. You have always treated her well."
+
+"I have always meant to," said Tom, so miserably
+and helplessly that Annie, listening, felt her heart
+go out to this young man, badgered by females,
+and she formed a sudden resolution.
+
+"You have not seen very much of her, anyway,"
+said Imogen.
+
+"I have always asked for her, but I understood
+she was busy," said Tom, "and that was the reason
+why I saw her so seldom."
+
+"Oh," said Eliza, "busy!" She said it with an
+indescribable tone.
+
+"If," supplemented Imogen, "there was system,
+there would be no need of any one of us being too
+busy to see our friends."
+
+"Then she has not been busy? She has not wanted
+to see me?" said Tom. "I think I understand at
+last. I have been a fool not to before. You girls
+have broken it to me as well as you could. Much
+obliged, I am sure. Good night."
+
+"Won't you come in?" asked Imogen.
+
+"We might have some music," said Eliza.
+
+"And there is an orange cake, and I will make
+coffee," said Susan.
+
+Annie reflected rapidly how she herself had made
+that orange cake, and what queer coffee Susan
+would be apt to concoct.
+
+"No, thank you," said Tom Reed, briskly. "I
+will drop in another evening. Think I must go
+home now. I have some important letters. Good
+night, all."
+
+Annie made a soft rush to the gate, crouching
+low that her sisters might not see her. They flocked
+into the house with irascible murmurings, like scold-
+ing birds, while Annie stole across the grass, which
+had begun to glisten with silver wheels of dew. She
+held her skirts closely wrapped around her, and
+stepped through a gap in the shrubs beside the walk,
+then sped swiftly to the gate. She reached it just
+as Tom Reed was passing with a quick stride.
+
+"Tom," said Annie, and the young man stopped
+short.
+
+He looked in her direction, but she stood close
+to a great snowball-bush, and her dress was green
+muslin, and he did not see her. Thinking that he
+had been mistaken, he started on, when she called
+again, and this time she stepped apart from the bush
+and her voice sounded clear as a flute.
+
+"Tom," she said. "Stop a minute, please."
+
+Tom stopped and came close to her. In the dim
+light she could see that his face was all aglow, like
+a child's, with delight and surprise.
+
+"Is that you, Annie?" he said.
+
+"Yes. I want to speak to you, please."
+
+"I have been here before, and I rang the bell three
+times. Then you were out, although your sisters
+thought not."
+
+"No, I was in the house."
+
+"You did not hear the bell?"
+
+"Yes, I heard it every time."
+
+"Then why --?"
+
+"Come into the house with me and I will tell you;
+at least I will tell you all I can."
+
+Annie led the way and the young man followed.
+He stood in the dark entry while Annie lit the parlor
+lamp. The room was on the farther side of the
+house from the parsonage.
+
+"Come in and sit down," said Annie. Then the
+young man stepped into a room which was pretty in
+spite of itself. There was an old Brussels carpet
+with an enormous rose pattern. The haircloth fur-
+niture gave out gleams like black diamonds under
+the light of the lamp. In a corner stood a what-not
+piled with branches of white coral and shells. Annie's
+grandfather had been a sea-captain, and many of
+his spoils were in the house. Possibly Annie's own
+occupation of it was due to an adventurous strain
+inherited from him. Perhaps the same impulse
+which led him to voyage to foreign shores had led
+her to voyage across a green yard to the next house.
+
+Tom Reed sat down on the sofa. Annie sat in a
+rocking-chair near by. At her side was a Chinese
+teapoy, a nest of lacquer tables, and on it stood a
+small, squat idol. Annie's grandmother had been
+taken to task by her son-in-law, the Reverend Silas,
+for harboring a heathen idol, but she had only laughed,
+
+"Guess as long as I don't keep heathen to bow
+down before him, he can't do much harm," she had
+said.
+
+Now the grotesque face of the thing seemed to
+stare at the two Occidental lovers with the strange,
+calm sarcasm of the Orient, but they had no eyes
+or thought for it.
+
+"Why didn't you come to the door if you heard
+the bell ring?" asked Tom Reed, gazing at Annie,
+slender as a blade of grass in her clinging green
+gown.
+
+"Because I was not able to break my will then.
+I had to break it to go out in the yard and ask you
+to come in, but when the bell rang I hadn't got to
+the point where I could break it."
+
+"What on earth do you mean, Annie?"
+
+Annie laughed. "I don't wonder you ask," she
+said, "and the worst of it is I can't half answer you.
+I wonder how much, or rather how little explanation
+will content you?"
+
+Tom Reed gazed at her with the eyes of a man
+who might love a woman and have infinite patience
+with her, relegating his lack of understanding of
+her woman's nature to the background, as a thing
+of no consequence.
+
+"Mighty little will do for me," he said, "mighty
+little, Annie dear, if you will only tell a fellow you
+love him."
+
+Annie looked at him, and her thin, sweet face
+seemed to have a luminous quality, like a crescent
+moon. Her look was enough.
+
+"Then you do?" said Tom Reed.
+
+"You have never needed to ask," said Annie.
+"You knew."
+
+"I haven't been so sure as you think," said Tom.
+"Suppose you come over here and sit beside me.
+You look miles away."
+
+Annie laughed and blushed, but she obeyed. She
+sat beside Tom and let him put his arm around her.
+She sat up straight, by force of her instinctive
+maidenliness, but she kissed him back when he
+kissed her.
+
+"I haven't been so sure," repeated Tom. "Annie
+darling, why have I been unable to see more of you?
+I have fairly haunted your house, and seen the whole
+lot of your sisters, especially Imogen, but somehow
+or other you have been as slippery as an eel. I have
+always asked for you, but you were always out or
+busy."
+
+"I have been very busy," said Annie, evasively.
+She loved this young man with all her heart, but she
+had an enduring loyalty to her own flesh and blood.
+
+Tom was very literal. "Say, Annie," he blurted
+out, "I begin to think you have had to do most of
+the work over there. Now, haven't you? Own up."
+
+Annie laughed sweetly. She was so happy that
+no sense of injury could possibly rankle within her.
+"Oh, well," she said, lightly. "Perhaps. I don't
+know. I guess housekeeping comes rather easier
+to me than to the others. I like it, you know, and
+work is always easier when one likes it. The other
+girls don't take to it so naturally, and they get very
+tired, and it has seemed often that I was the one
+who could hurry the work through and not mind."
+
+"I wonder if you will stick up for me the way you
+do for your sisters when you are my wife?" said
+Tom, with a burst of love and admiration. Then
+he added: "Of course you are going to be my wife,
+Annie? You know what this means?"
+
+"If you think I will make you as good a wife as
+you can find," said Annie.
+
+"As good a wife! Annie, do you really know
+what you are?"
+
+"Just an ordinary girl, with no special talent for
+anything."
+
+"You are the most wonderful girl that ever walked
+the earth," exclaimed Tom. "And as for talent,
+you have the best talent in the whole world; you
+can love people who are not worthy to tie your shoe-
+strings, and think you are looking up when in
+reality you are looking down. That is what I call
+the best talent in the whole world for a woman."
+Tom Reed was becoming almost subtle.
+
+Annie only laughed happily again. "Well, you
+will have to wait and find out," said she.
+
+"I suppose," said Tom, "that you came over
+here because you were tired out, this hot weather.
+I think you were sensible, but I don't think you
+ought to be here alone."
+
+"I am not alone," replied Annie. "I have poor
+little Effie Hempstead with me."
+
+"That deaf-and-dumb child? I should think this
+heathen god would be about as much company."
+
+"Why, Tom, she is human, if she is deaf and
+dumb."
+
+Tom eyed her shrewdly. "What did you mean
+when you said you had broken your will?" he in-
+quired.
+
+"My will not to speak for a while," said Annie,
+faintly.
+
+"Not to speak -- to any one?"
+
+Annie nodded.
+
+"Then you have broken your resolution by speak-
+ing to me?"
+
+Annie nodded again.
+
+"But why shouldn't you speak? I don't under-
+stand."
+
+"I wondered how little I could say, and have
+you satisfied," Annie replied, sadly.
+
+Tom tightened his arm around her. "You pre-
+cious little soul," he said. "I am satisfied. I know
+you have some good reason for not wanting to speak,
+but I am plaguey glad you spoke to me, for I should
+have been pretty well cast down if you hadn't, and
+to-morrow I have to go away."
+
+Annie leaned toward him. "Go away!"
+
+"Yes; I have to go to California about that con-
+founded Ames will case. And I don't know exactly
+where, on the Pacific coast, the parties I have to
+interview may be, and I may have to be away weeks,
+possibly months. Annie darling, it did seem to me
+a cruel state of things to have to go so far, and leave
+you here, living in such a queer fashion, and not
+know how you felt. Lord! but I'm glad you had
+sense enough to call me, Annie."
+
+"I couldn't let you go by, when it came to it,
+and Tom --"
+
+"What, dear?"
+
+"I did an awful mean thing: something I never
+was guilty of before. I -- listened."
+
+"Well, I don't see what harm it did. You didn't
+hear much to your or your sisters' disadvantage,
+that I can remember. They kept calling you 'dear.'"
+
+"Yes," said Annie, quickly. Again, such was her
+love and thankfulness that a great wave of love and
+forgiveness for her sisters swept over her. Annie had
+a nature compounded of depths of sweetness; nobody
+could be mistaken with regard to that. What they
+did mistake was the possibility of even sweetness be-
+ing at bay at times, and remaining there.
+
+"You don't mean to speak to anybody else?"
+asked Tom.
+
+"Not for a year, if I can avoid it without making
+comment which might hurt father."
+
+"Why, dear?"
+
+"That is what I cannot tell you," replied Annie,
+looking into his face with a troubled smile.
+
+Tom looked at her in a puzzled way, then he
+kissed her.
+
+"Oh, well, dear," he said, "it is all right. I know
+perfectly well you would do nothing in which you
+were not justified, and you have spoken to me,
+anyway, and that is the main thing. I think if I
+had been obliged to start to-morrow without a word
+from you I shouldn't have cared a hang whether
+I ever came back or not. You are the only soul to
+hold me here; you know that, darling."
+
+"Yes," replied Annie.
+
+"You are the only one," repeated Tom, "but it
+seems to me this minute as if you were a whole host,
+you dear little soul. But I don't quite like to leave
+you here living alone, except for Effie."
+
+"Oh, I am within a stone's-throw of father's,"
+said Annie, lightly.
+
+"I admit that. Still, you are alone. Annie, when
+are you going to marry me?"
+
+Annie regarded him with a clear, innocent look.
+She had lived such a busy life that her mind was
+unfilmed by dreams. "Whenever you like, after you
+come home," said she.
+
+"It can't be too soon for me. I want my wife and
+I want my home. What will you do while I am
+gone, dear?"
+
+Annie laughed. "Oh, I shall do what I have seen
+other girls do -- get ready to be married."
+
+"That means sewing, lots of hemming and tucking
+and stitching, doesn't it?"
+
+"Of course."
+
+"Girls are so funny," said Tom. "Now imagine a
+man sitting right down and sewing like mad on his
+collars and neckties and shirts the minute a girl
+said she'd marry him!"
+
+"Girls like it."
+
+"Well, I suppose they do," said Tom, and he
+looked down at Annie from a tender height of mascu-
+linity, and at the same time seemed to look up from
+the valley of one who cannot understand the subtle
+and poetical details in a woman's soul.
+
+He did not stay long after that, for it was late.
+As he passed through the gate, after a tender fare-
+well, Annie watched him with shining eyes. She
+was now to be all alone, but two things she
+had, her freedom and her love, and they would
+suffice.
+
+The next morning Silas Hempstead, urged by his
+daughters, walked solemnly over to the next house,
+but he derived little satisfaction. Annie did not
+absolutely refuse to speak. She had begun to realize
+that carrying out her resolution to the extreme letter
+was impossible. But she said as little as she could.
+
+"I have come over here to live for the present.
+I am of age, and have a right to consult my own
+wishes. My decision is unalterable." Having said
+this much, Annie closed her mouth and said no
+more. Silas argued and pleaded. Annie sat placidly
+sewing beside one front window of the sunny sitting-
+room. Effie, with a bit of fancy-work, sat at another.
+Finally Silas went home defeated, with a last word,
+half condemnatory, half placative. Silas was not the
+sort to stand firm against such feminine strength as
+his daughter Annie's. However, he secretly held
+her dearer than all his other children.
+
+After her father had gone, Annie sat taking even
+stitch after even stitch, but a few tears ran over her
+cheeks and fell upon the soft mass of muslin. Effie
+watched with shrewd, speculative silence, like a pet
+cat. Then suddenly she rose and went close to Annie,
+with her little arms around her neck, and the poor
+dumb mouth repeating her little speeches: "Thank
+you, I am very well, thank you, I am very well,"
+over and over.
+
+Annie kissed her fondly, and was aware of a sense
+of comfort and of love for this poor little Effie.
+Still, after being nearly two months with the child,
+she was relieved when Felicia Hempstead came, the
+first of September, and wished to take Effie home
+with her. She had not gone to Europe, after all, but
+to the mountains, and upon her return had missed
+the little girl.
+
+Effie went willingly enough, but Annie discovered
+that she too missed her. Now loneliness had her
+fairly in its grip. She had a telephone installed,
+and gave her orders over that. Sometimes the sound
+of a human voice made her emotional to tears.
+Besides the voices over the telephone, Annie had
+nobody, for Benny returned to college soon after
+Effie left. Benny had been in the habit of coming in
+to see Annie, and she had not had the heart to
+check him. She talked to him very little, and knew
+that he was no telltale as far as she was concerned,
+although he waxed most communicative with regard
+to the others. A few days before he left he came
+over and begged her to return.
+
+"I know the girls have nagged you till you are
+fairly worn out," he said. "I know they don't tell
+things straight, but I don't believe they know it,
+and I don't see why you can't come home, and insist
+upon your rights, and not work so hard."
+
+"If I come home now it will be as it was before,"
+said Annie.
+
+"Can't you stand up for yourself and not have
+it the same?"
+
+Annie shook her head.
+
+"Seems as if you could," said Benny. "I always
+thought a girl knew how to manage other girls. It
+is rather awful the way things go now over there.
+Father must be uncomfortable enough trying to
+eat the stuff they set before him and living in such
+a dirty house."
+
+Annie winced. "Is it so very dirty?"
+
+Benny whistled.
+
+"Is the food so bad?"
+
+Benny whistled again.
+
+"You advised me -- or it amounted to the same
+thing -- to take this stand," said Annie.
+
+"I know I did, but I didn't know how bad it
+would be. Guess I didn't half appreciate you myself,
+Annie. Well, you must do as you think best, but
+if you could look in over there your heart would
+ache."
+
+"My heart aches as it is," said Annie, sadly.
+
+Benny put an arm around her. "Poor girl!" he
+said. "It is a shame, but you are going to marry
+Tom. You ought not to have the heartache."
+
+"Marriage isn't everything," said Annie, "and
+my heart does ache, but -- I can't go back there,
+unless -- I can't make it clear to you, Benny, but it
+seems to me as if I couldn't go back there until the
+year is up, or I shouldn't be myself, and it seems, too,
+as if I should not be doing right by the girls. There
+are things more important even than doing work for
+others. I have got it through my head that I can
+be dreadfully selfish being unselfish."
+
+"Well, I suppose you are right," admitted Benny
+with a sigh.
+
+Then he kissed Annie and went away, and the
+blackness of loneliness settled down upon her. She
+had wondered at first that none of the village people
+came to see her, although she did not wish to talk to
+them; then she no longer wondered. She heard, with-
+out hearing, just what her sisters had said about her.
+
+That was a long winter for Annie Hempstead.
+Letters did not come very regularly from Tom Reed,
+for it was a season of heavy snowfalls and the mails
+were often delayed. The letters were all that she
+had for comfort and company. She had bought a
+canary-bird, adopted a stray kitten, and filled her
+sunny windows with plants. She sat beside them
+and sewed, and tried to be happy and content, but
+all the time there was a frightful uncertainty deep
+down within her heart as to whether or not she was
+doing right. She knew that her sisters were un-
+worthy, and yet her love and longing for them
+waxed greater and greater. As for her father, she
+loved him as she had never loved him before. The
+struggle grew terrible. Many a time she dressed
+herself in outdoor array and started to go home,
+but something always held her back. It was a
+strange conflict that endured through the winter
+months, the conflict of a loving, self-effacing heart
+with its own instincts.
+
+Toward the last of February her father came over
+at dusk. Annie ran to the door, and he entered.
+He looked unkempt and dejected. He did not say
+much, but sat down and looked about him with a
+half-angry, half-discouraged air. Annie went out
+into the kitchen and broiled some beefsteak, and
+creamed some potatoes, and made tea and toast.
+Then she called him into the sitting-room, and he
+ate like one famished.
+
+"Your sister Susan does the best she can," he said,
+when he had finished, "and lately Jane has been try-
+ing, but they don't seem to have the knack. I
+don't want to urge you, Annie, but --"
+
+"You know when I am married you will have to
+get on without me," Annie said, in a low voice.
+
+"Yes, but in the mean time you might, if you
+were home, show Susan and Jane."
+
+"Father," said Annie, "you know if I came home
+now it would be just the same as it was before.
+You know if I give in and break my word with my-
+self to stay away a year what they will think
+and do."
+
+"I suppose they might take advantage," admitted
+Silas, heavily. "I fear you have always given in
+to them too much for their own good."
+
+"Then I shall not give in now," said Annie, and
+she shut her mouth tightly.
+
+There came a peal of the cracked door-bell, and
+Silas started with a curious, guilty look. Annie
+regarded him sharply. "Who is it, father?"
+
+"Well, I heard Imogen say to Eliza that she
+thought it was very foolish for them all to stay over
+there and have the extra care and expense, when
+you were here."
+
+"You mean that the girls --?"
+
+"I think they did have a little idea that they
+might come here and make you a little visit --"
+
+Annie was at the front door with a bound. The
+key turned in the lock and a bolt shot into place.
+Then she returned to her father, and her face was
+very white.
+
+"You did not lock your door against your own
+sisters?" he gasped.
+
+"God forgive me, I did."
+
+The bell pealed again. Annie stood still, her
+mouth quivering in a strange, rigid fashion. The
+curtains in the dining-room windows were not drawn.
+Suddenly one window showed full of her sisters'
+faces. It was Susan who spoke.
+
+"Annie, you can't mean to lock us out?" Susan's
+face looked strange and wild, peering in out of the
+dark. Imogen's handsome face towered over her
+shoulder.
+
+"We think it advisable to close our house and
+make you a visit," she said, quite distinctly through
+the glass.
+
+Then Jane said, with an inaudible sob, "Dear
+Annie, you can't mean to keep us out!"
+
+Annie looked at them and said not a word. Their
+half-commanding, half-imploring voices continued
+a while. Then the faces disappeared.
+
+Annie turned to her father. "God knows if I
+have done right," she said, "but I am doing what
+you have taken me to account for not doing."
+
+"Yes, I know," said Silas. He sat for a while
+silent. Then he rose, kissed Annie -- something he
+had seldom done -- and went home. After he had
+gone Annie sat down and cried. She did not go to
+bed that night. The cat jumped up in her lap, and
+she was glad of that soft, purring comfort. It
+seemed to her as if she had committed a great crime,
+and as if she had suffered martyrdom. She loved
+her father and her sisters with such intensity that
+her heart groaned with the weight of pure love. For
+the time it seemed to her that she loved them more
+than the man whom she was to marry. She sat there
+and held herself, as with chains of agony, from rush-
+ing out into the night, home to them all, and break-
+ing her vow.
+
+It was never quite so bad after that night, for
+Annie compromised. She baked bread and cake
+and pies, and carried them over after nightfall and
+left them at her father's door. She even, later on,
+made a pot of coffee, and hurried over with it in the
+dawn-light, always watching behind a corner of a
+curtain until she saw an arm reached out for it. All
+this comforted Annie, and, moreover, the time was
+drawing near when she could go home.
+
+Tom Reed had been delayed much longer than
+he expected. He would not be home before early
+fall. They would not be married until November,
+and she would have several months at home first.
+
+At last the day came. Out in Silas Hempstead's
+front yard the grass waved tall, dotted with disks
+of clover. Benny was home, and he had been over
+to see Annie every day since his return. That morn-
+ing when Annie looked out of her window the first
+thing she saw was Benny waving a scythe in awkward
+sweep among the grass and clover. An immense
+pity seized her at the sight. She realized that he
+was doing this for her, conquering his indolence.
+She almost sobbed.
+
+"Dear, dear boy, he will cut himself," she thought.
+Then she conquered her own love and pity, even as
+her brother was conquering his sloth. She under-
+stood clearly that it was better for Benny to go on
+with his task even if he did cut himself.
+
+The grass was laid low when she went home, and
+Benny stood, a conqueror in a battle-field of summer,
+leaning on his scythe.
+
+"Only look, Annie," he cried out, like a child.
+"I have cut all the grass."
+
+Annie wanted to hug him. Instead she laughed.
+"It was time to cut it," she said. Her tone was cool,
+but her eyes were adoring.
+
+Benny laid down his scythe, took her by the arm,
+and led her into the house. Silas and his other daugh-
+ters were in the sitting-room, and the room was so
+orderly it was painful. The ornaments on the man-
+tel-shelf stood as regularly as soldiers on parade,
+and it was the same with the chairs. Even the cush-
+ions on the sofa were arranged with one corner over-
+lapping another. The curtains were drawn at ex-
+actly the same height from the sill. The carpet
+looked as if swept threadbare.
+
+Annie's first feeling was of worried astonishment;
+then her eye caught a glimpse of Susan's kitchen
+apron tucked under a sofa pillow, and of layers of
+dust on the table, and she felt relieved. After all,
+what she had done had not completely changed the
+sisters, whom she loved, faults and all. Annie
+realized how horrible it would have been to find her
+loved ones completely changed, even for the better.
+They would have seemed like strange, aloof angels
+to her.
+
+They all welcomed her with a slight stiffness, yet
+with cordiality. Then Silas made a little speech.
+
+"Your father and your sisters are glad to welcome
+you home, dear Annie," he said, "and your sisters
+wish me to say for them that they realize that pos-
+sibly they may have underestimated your tasks and
+overestimated their own. In short, they may not
+have been --"
+
+Silas hesitated, and Benny finished. "What the
+girls want you to know, Annie, is that they have
+found out they have been a parcel of pigs."
+
+"We fear we have been selfish without realizing
+it," said Jane, and she kissed Annie, as did Susan
+and Eliza. Imogen, looking very handsome in her
+blue linen, with her embroidery in her hands, did
+not kiss her sister. She was not given to demon-
+strations, but she smiled complacently at her.
+
+"We are all very glad to have dear Annie back,
+I am sure," said she, "and now that it is all over,
+we all feel that it has been for the best, although it
+has seemed very singular, and made, I fear, con-
+siderable talk. But, of course, when one person in
+a family insists upon taking everything upon her-
+self, it must result in making the others selfish."
+
+Annie did not hear one word that Imogen said.
+She was crying on Susan's shoulder.
+
+"Oh, I am so glad to be home," she sobbed.
+
+And they all stood gathered about her, rejoicing
+and fond of her, but she was the one lover among
+them all who had been capable of hurting them and
+hurting herself for love's sake.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Copy-Cat & Other Stories
+