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- ROUND THE CORNER IN GAY STREET
-
-
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost
-no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-
-Title: Round the Corner in Gay Street
-Author: Grace S. Richmond
-Release Date: March 18, 2013 [EBook #42370]
-Language: English
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROUND THE CORNER IN GAY STREET
-***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Cover]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: "'HERE YOU ARE--YOU DON'T HALF LET ME HELP YOU'"]
-
-
-
-
- _ROUND THE CORNER
- IN GAY STREET_
-
-
- _By_ GRACE S. RICHMOND
-
-
-
- AUTHOR OF
- "With Juliet in England,"
- "The Indifference of Juliet," etc.
-
-
-
- ILLUSTRATED BY
- MAUD THURSTON AND CHARLES M. RELYEA
-
- _A. L. BURT COMPANY_
- _Publishers -- New York_
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1907, 1908, BY
- PERRY MASON COMPANY
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1908, BY
- DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
- PUBLISHED, AUGUST, 1908
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF TRANSLATION
- INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES, INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN
-
-
-
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES
- AT
- THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N.Y.
-
-
-
-
- TO
- MARJORIE, GUERNSEY AND JEAN
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- BOOK I. GAY STREET
-
-CHAPTER
-
- I. An Introduction by Telephone
- II. Gay Street Settles Down
- III. Peter Sees a Light
- IV. Forrest Plays a Trick
- V. Without Gloves
- VI. Weeds and Flowers
- VII. Jane Puts a Question
- VIII. Murray Gives an Answer
- IX. Snap Shots
- X. Hide and Seek
- XI. In the Garden
-
-
- BOOK II. WORTHINGTON SQUARE
-
- I. Jane Wears Pearls
- II. Shirley Has Grown Up
- III. Luncheon for Twelve
- IV. Pot-hooks
- V. Black Care
- VI. A Breakdown
- VII. Christmas Greens
- VIII. Peter Reads Rhymes
- IX. A Red Glare
- X. Peter Prefers the Porch
-
-
-
-
- BOOK I. GAY STREET
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- AN INTRODUCTION BY TELEPHONE
-
-
-The hour for breakfast at the home of Mr. Harrison Townsend, in
-Worthington Square, was supposed to be eight o'clock. In point of fact,
-however, breakfast was usually served from that hour on, until the last
-laggard had appeared.
-
-The head of the house himself was always promptly on hand at eight. On
-the morning of April second he had, as usual, nearly finished his
-breakfast before the door opened to admit a second member of the family.
-Mr. Townsend raised his eyes as a tall and slender figure limped slowly
-across the floor.
-
-"Morning, Murray!" he said, and dropped his eyes again to his paper.
-
-"Good morning, sir!" responded his son, and glanced indifferently over
-the table as he sat down. "Bring me grapefruit and a cup of coffee," he
-said to the maid. "No, nothing else. Be sure the grapefruit is fixed
-as I like it."
-
-Mr. Townsend finished his newspaper and his coffee at the same moment,
-and rose from the table. Although five minutes had elapsed since the
-elder of his two sons came into the room, no conversation had passed
-between them. Mr. Townsend's glance dropped upon the young man, who,
-with his look of ill health, would have appeared to a stranger to have
-lived several more than the twenty-three years which were really his.
-
-"You're not feeling well this morning, Murray?"
-
-"About as usual."
-
-"It's not strange that you have no strength, when you take nothing
-substantial with your morning meal."
-
-"How can I, when I can't bear the sight of anything but fruit?"
-
-"You don't get out enough."
-
-"I suppose I don't. There's nothing to take me out."
-
-Mr. Townsend turned away. As he passed through the door, he met his
-daughter Olive, and greeted her.
-
-This very pretty, dark-skinned, dark-eyed girl of eighteen evidently had
-been keeping late hours on the previous evening. Her long lashes
-drooped sleepily over her eyes as she nodded to her brother.
-
-"Grapefruit any good?" she asked.
-
-"Fair, if it wasn't sweetened like a bonbon."
-
-"I like mine sweet. Annie, tell Gretchen to put half a dozen maraschino
-cherries in my grapefruit and some crushed ice."
-
-"You must like the mess that will be," Murray observed.
-
-"I do--very much," replied his sister, decidedly.
-
-The two continued their breakfast in silence, which was presently
-interrupted by the advent of a fourth member of the family. Forrest
-Townsend, flinging into the room with a rush, dressed in riding clothes,
-and casting hat and crop upon a chair as he passed it, offered a
-picturesque contrast to the two dark-eyed young persons. Of a little
-more than medium height, strongly built, fair-haired and blue-eyed, he
-looked the young athlete that he was.
-
-"Hello!" was his morning greeting, as he dropped into a chair. He
-proceeded instantly to give his directions to the maid. No invalid
-order was his.
-
-"No--no grapefruit. I want my chop, and some bacon and eggs; tell
-Gretchen to brown the eggs better than she did yesterday. Muffins this
-morning? What? Oh bother! You know I hate toast, Annie! Oh,
-waffles--that's better! Coffee, of course."
-
-"Sounds like an order you 'd give at a hotel," observed his sister, with
-scorn. "I wonder Gretchen does n't make a fuss at having to cook a
-whole breakfast like that just for you. Nobody else wants such a heavy
-meal at this hour."
-
-"The bigger geese you all are then. If I picked at my breakfast the way
-the rest of you do, I 'd soon lose this good muscle and wind of mine."
-
-"I never heard that hot waffles and syrup were good for muscle and
-wind." Murray looked cynical under his dark eyebrows. "They would n't
-be allowed at any training-table."
-
-Forrest leaned back in his chair and surveyed his brother. "A lot you
-know about training tables--a fellow who spent his two college years
-cramming for honours," he said, pointedly. "No wonder you look like a
-pale ghost on such rations. Here comes mother at last."
-
-Mrs. Harrison Townsend, in a trailing pale blue gown, her fair hair
-piled high upon her head, came in with an air of abstraction.
-
-"Out late last night?" Forrest asked her, attacking his chop with
-relish. "A dissipated lot you all look but me. Even Murray would be
-taken for a chap that got in toward morning. That comes of reading in
-bed. Now look at me. I was in after the last of you, and I 'm as fresh
-as a daisy."
-
-"For a boy not out of his teens your hours strike me as peculiar."
-Murray rose slowly as he spoke. He glanced at his mother. She was busy
-with letters she had found at her plate.
-
-Murray limped slowly over to the end of the room, where a great
-semi-circular alcove, filled with windows, a cushioned seat running
-round its whole extent, looked out upon the shrubbery and the street
-beyond. He sank down upon this seat, and gazed indifferently out of the
-window.
-
-Across the narrow side street which led away from stately Worthington
-Square into a much less pretentious neighborhood stood a big furniture
-van, unloading its contents before a small brown house. Although upon
-the left side of the Townsend place lay a fine stretch of lawn, at the
-right the house stood not more than ten yards away from the side street.
-Its present owner had attempted to remedy this misfortune of site by
-planting a thick hedge and much shrubbery, but a narrow vista remained
-through which, from the dining-room windows, the little brown house
-opposite could be seen with the effect of being viewed through a
-field-glass and brought into close range.
-
-"What's that over there in Gay Street?" Olive had caught a glimpse of
-the furniture-van. "New people moving in? Goodness! How many tenants
-has that house had? They 're always moving out and moving in--nobody
-can keep track of them."
-
-Mrs. Townsend, looking up from her letter, glanced out in her turn.
-"There is certainly no need to keep track of them," she observed. "What
-your Grandfather Townsend could have been thinking of when he built this
-house on the very edge of such a fine lot----"
-
-"Grandfather Townsend was a shrewd old man, and had an eye to the sale
-of lots on the farther side of the house when land got high here," was
-Forrest's explanation.
-
-Five minutes later he was out of the house and crossing the lawn to the
-stables--a gay and gallant young figure in his riding clothes. From the
-window of his own room upstairs Murray watched his brother go, feeling
-bitterly, as he often did, the contrast between Forrest's superb young
-health and his own crippled condition, the result of an accident two
-years before, and the illness which had followed it.
-
-"Don't get outdoors enough!" he said to himself. "I fancy if I could go
-tearing out of the house like that every morning, jump on Bluebottle,
-and gallop off down Frankfort Boulevard I could get outdoor air enough
-to keep me healthy."
-
-An hour afterward there was a knock at his door, and a child's voice
-called: "O Murray, may I come in?"
-
-His thirteen-year-old sister Shirley somehow seemed nearer to Murray
-than any other member of his family. "Come in!" he responded.
-
-"O Murray," the little sister began instantly, "some new people are
-moving into the little brown house, and there 's a girl just my age! She
-looks so nice! I 've been watching her. She 's helping wash windows.
-Oh, please come into the den and let me show you!"
-
-From the 'den' it could all be seen. There were two girls on the small
-porch, each washing a window. The elder girl looked as if she were
-about eighteen, her abundant curly hair, of a decided reddish brown,
-being worn low at her neck after the fashion of girls of that age. Even
-across the street the observers could see that she had a merry face,
-full of life and colour.
-
-The younger girl, was about Shirley's size, round-faced and sturdy, and
-apparently of an amiable frame of mind, for having accidentally tipped
-over her pail, she took the mishap in the jolliest spirit, and throwing
-back her thick brown braids of hair, mopped up the swimming porch with
-lively flourishes.
-
-"I wish we could see 'em closer," suggested Shirley. "They look so
-nice--don't you think they do?--not a bit like the other people that
-have lived in that house. I saw their mother, I 'm sure I did, a little
-while ago--she had the dearest face! Murray, don't you think you 'd
-like to take a little walk? It would be such fun to go past the house
-while they 're out there, and they 'd be sure to turn and look, so we
-could see their faces. Please, Murray! We may not have so good a
-chance after they get the windows washed."
-
-It was something to do, certainly. Motives of interest for the daily
-walk upon which the doctors insisted were few, and the older brother
-gladly followed his anxious young leader out into the spring sunshine.
-Slowly, Murray's cane tapping their advance, they turned the corner from
-Worthington Square into Gay Street.
-
-Coming rapidly toward them from the opposite direction was a young
-fellow of about Murray's age. This youth, looking toward the brown
-house, gave a low whistle. The girls upon the porch turned and waved
-their cloths, and the newcomer, making three leaps of the short path to
-the house, and one jump of the low porch, was with them.
-
-They did not shout, those three, and the elder girl's voice, Murray
-noted, was delightfully modulated; but he and Shirley were close now,
-and they could not help hearing the greeting.
-
-"Hard at it already? Everything come? I got off for an hour, and
-thought I 'd rush up and do what I could."
-
-"That was lovely of you, Pete," said the elder girl. A surreptitious
-glance from Murray, and a frank stare from Shirley, proved her to
-possess a very attractive face, indeed, as she smiled at the stoutly
-built young man before her. "Yes, everything has come, and mother can
-keep you busy every minute. Window-washing would n't _seem_ to come
-first, but we thought we 'd get at least this little front room in order
-by night, so that when you all came home----"
-
-Her voice was growing indistinct as the passers-by moved reluctantly on.
-But the younger girl at this point broke in, and her voice, high and
-eager like Shirley's own, carried farther:
-
-"O Petey, Jane and I are to have the dearest, littlest room you ever
-saw, right under the eaves. Jane can't stand up all over, but I
-can--except close to the wall. It's so little, Jane thinks we can paper
-it ourselves. If we can only----"
-
-Here the deeper voice of the youth interrupted, and nothing more was
-distinguishable. Murray and Shirley walked on, both, it must be
-confessed, wishing they had eyes in the backs of their heads.
-
-"Oh, do let's turn and go back!" begged Shirley, with one quick glance
-behind. But Murray made her keep on to the corner, and then insisted on
-crossing the street.
-
-"Even now they may guess that we 're watching them," he said. "Don't
-stare so at them, child."
-
-"But they're going in. Oh, look,"--she clutched his arm--"there's the
-mother! I'm sure she is. Look! Isn't she dear?"
-
-She did look "dear." She was enveloped in an apron, and her sleeves
-were rolled up to the elbows revealing a pair of round, white, capable
-arms. Her abundant gray hair rolled and puffed about her face in a most
-girlish fashion, her bright, dark eyes were set under arching eyebrows,
-and her face, almost as fresh in colouring as her daughter's, was full
-of charm.
-
-The young man, laughing, put an arm about her shoulders, and drew her
-back with him into the house. The two girls, gathering up their pails
-and cloths, and exchanging low, gay talk, followed, and the door was
-closed.
-
-The April sunshine suddenly faded out of the narrow side street and left
-it as commonplace as ever. Yet not quite. Murray and Shirley, gazing
-across at the dull little brown house. were longing to enter it. It was
-quite evident that life of a sort they hardly knew was about to be lived
-within.
-
-With this new interest to stimulate him, it was perhaps not strange that
-Murray should have found it rather easier than usual to get out for his
-afternoon walk, or that it should have ended by a slow progress through
-Gay Street. There were somehow so few young people he cared for, and
-the faces of the three he had seen had struck him as so interesting,
-that he wondered, as he tapped along with his cane, by what means he
-could learn to know them.
-
-Just as Murray came along the street, the younger of the two girls he
-had seen opened the door, and holding it ajar, addressed somebody inside
-in her childishly penetrating voice:
-
-"I 'm going to find a telephone somewhere, Janey, if I have to ring at
-every door. No--I 'll _tell_ them we are n't the sort of people who
-borrow molasses and telephones and things all the time, but---- Why, I
-'ll say it's _very_ important--_anybody_ would understand about
-wall-paper not coming and the man waiting. No, I don't suppose they
-have in such a little house, but it won't do any harm to ask. Of
-course, across the street they'd have--but I don't quite---- No, of
-course I won't, but----"
-
-She ended an interview which evidently was not proceeding according to
-her satisfaction by closing the door and running down the steps into the
-street. Murray wanted very much to speak to her and offer the use of
-his telephone, but she whisked away so fast he had no time. He walked
-more slowly than ever, saw her turn away from two Gay Street doors, and
-then retraced his steps, and met her as she was preparing to ascend the
-third small porch.
-
-"I beg your pardon," he said, "but I thought I heard you say something
-about needing to use a telephone. Won't you please come over and use
-ours--the house on the corner?"
-
-"Oh, thank you!" She looked relieved. "That's good of you. We hate to
-bother anybody like this, and Jane--my sister--did n't want me to, but
-the paper man is waiting, and he 's getting very cross, and we do want
-to get the dining-room done before night. I 'll go and tell Jane. She
-'ll have to telephone. I can't--I don't know how!"
-
-She ran into the house, and a moment later the elder sister emerged, and
-came down to Murray to accept his courtesy.
-
-"It's very kind of you," she said, as he accompanied her across the
-street and in at the hedge gate. "To-morrow happens to be a legal
-holiday, you know, and the paperer says if he does n't have the right
-paper this afternoon it will be three days before he can finish."
-
-"That would be an awful bother," Murray declared, "just as you 're
-getting settled. I 'm glad we 're so near. Come in. This way, please.
-Take this chair here by the desk. I 'll just wait in the hall and show
-you the way out."
-
-As he waited, Murray could not help hearing. The business did not seem
-to be easily accomplished. When his visitor had succeeded in getting
-the paper house on the telephone she had a very bad time making the man
-at the other end of the line understand about the mistake in the paper,
-and when it became plain that he did understand, Jane's surprised little
-sentences showed that he was a most unaccommodating person, and would
-not do what she requested.
-
-"You can't do it?" she asked, and Murray observed that with all the
-trouble she was having her voice did not lose its courteous intonations.
-
-"Not this afternoon _at all_? We are very anxious to get the room
-settled and the paperer says---- Yes, I know, but it surely was n't our
-mistake. I beg your pardon--it 's only three o'clock, I think, not
-four. He says there 's plenty of time if---- No, I 've nobody to
-send."
-
-"Look here!" Murray's disgusted voice was at her ear. He was gently
-attempting to take the receiver away from her. "Let me tackle that
-person, please."
-
-The next moment Jane was standing beside the desk, her cheeks rosy with
-a quite reasonable indignation at the treatment she had been receiving
-from the surly unknown. At the telephone sat her new acquaintance,
-sending rapid requests over the wire in a tone which plainly was making
-somebody attend.
-
-"Not fix up your own mistake to-night--with to-morrow a holiday? Why
-not? There's plenty of time. Send by a special messenger, of course,
-and tell him to be quick. Who's talking to you? That does n't make any
-special difference, does it? It may be a small order--I don't see what
-that has to do with it. Mrs. Bell needs that paper up within half an
-hour. Yes--well, this is Harrison Townsend's house--Worthington Square,
-and I 'm telephoning for our friends. What? Oh, you will! Well, thank
-you! I 'm glad you see your way clear. Yes--half an hour--I say, make
-it twenty minutes, can't you, please? Very well." And Murray broke
-off, and hung up the receiver with an impatient click which expressed
-his contempt for a clerk who would hurry up an order for Worthington
-Square when he would n't do it for Gay Street.
-
-"Idiot!" he remarked.
-
-The girl beside him moved toward the door, smiling. "It was ever so
-kind of you," she said. "The paper is for the dining-room, and you can
-guess how it upsets things to have the dining-room in confusion."
-
-"I hope you didn't mind my telling that fellow you were our friends,"
-said Murray, as he accompanied his guest to the door. "Such near
-neighbours----"
-
-"Oh, I understood! That was what made it so easy for him to get a
-messenger! Only--please don't think we----"
-
-"Yes?" Murray was smiling encouragingly at her.
-
-"It sounds absurd, but--it's so dreadfully soon to be borrowing
-telephones----"
-
-"Or molasses?"
-
-They both laughed. Murray's hand lingered upon the door knob, which at
-this moment it became timely for him to turn for her. "I could n't help
-hearing your sister assuring you that she would tell people you never
-borrowed molasses. I don't see why not. We might need to borrow it of
-you some time, but of course if you feel there's something especially
-prohibitive about molasses----"
-
-He knew he was not saying anything brilliant, but it made her laugh
-again, and laughing is an excellent way of getting over a trying
-situation.
-
-But he was obliged to open the door for her without delay, for she
-plainly was not going to be tempted into lingering. She ran down the
-steps, and he saw her bronze-red hair catch the sunshine as she went.
-As she reached the bottom he called after her: "I hope you'll like that
-paper mighty well when it's on!"
-
-"Thank you!" he heard her answer, over her shoulder, and he was sure
-that she was still smiling. It seemed to him reasonably certain that
-the Bells were pleasant people to know.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- GAY STREET SETTLES DOWN
-
-
-Tramp, tramp, upon the little porch. Peter flung the door wide, and in
-marched the four male members of the house of Bell. The door opened
-hospitably at once into the living-room, so that the four were able at a
-glance to see what had been accomplished, and they immediately gave
-voice to their surprise. "Hi!" This was fifteen-year-old Rufus's
-exclamation. "Hi! hi! Hip, hip, hurray-ay!"
-
-"Well, well, they must have worked!" said Peter. "I was up here an hour
-this morning, and they had n't got further than washing the windows."
-
-"When it comes to hustling work, Mother Bell and corps can't be beaten,"
-declared Ross McAndrew, the cousin of the Bells, a pleasant-faced lad of
-eighteen.
-
-There was a rush from the rear of the house, and Nancy was upon
-them--Nancy, the twelve-year-old, with the thick brown braids and the
-round, bright face. Ross caught her and swung her up to his shoulder,
-where she struggled frantically.
-
-"I 'm too old, Ross!" she pleaded, rumpling his curly fair hair in
-revenge until it stood on end. "Put me down! Put me down at once!
-O-oh, you 're bumping my head against the ceiling!"
-
-He looked up and laughing swung her gently down. "It is n't a very
-lofty apartment, is it, Nan? Did it hurt?"
-
-"Only my feelings. Does n't it look nice here? Mother worked at the
-kitchen, and Jane and I did all this. We wanted it to look like home
-when you came."
-
-"It does, indeed. But I must admit I 'm glad mother kept at the
-kitchen," laughed her father, with a tweak of one fat braid. "It seems
-too much to expect that we should have a meal to-night in all the
-disorder, but Peter brought back word this morning that we were to
-come."
-
-"Indeed you are," said a voice from an inner doorway, and everybody
-turned. A fresh white apron tied about her trim waist--where did she
-find it in the confusion?--her beautiful hair in careful order, Mrs.
-Bell beamed at her big family. "We've nothing but an Irish stew for
-you, but we had it on this morning as soon as the fire was built, and
-it's tender and fine."
-
-"Good for you! We like nothing better. Where's Janey?"
-
-"In the kitchen, trying to make places for you all at the kitchen table.
-We could n't do anything with the dining-room. The paperer has only
-just gone."
-
-"Come on, you people!" called a blithe voice from the next room, and
-Jane's face looked over her mother's shoulder. "Turn to the right as
-you come through the door, and follow the wall round. I 've made a
-passage that way, but you 're likely to get into perilous places if you
-try to steer for yourselves."
-
-In single file they followed directions, all but young Rufus, who
-preferred leaping from box to barrel, and from table to trunk, and so
-reached the haven of the kitchen first.
-
-"_Whoo-p!_" he ejaculated. "Say, but this is jolly! _Mm-m_! Smell
-that stew? Hope you 've lots of it?"
-
-"All you can eat," responded Jane, confidently. "Now if you 'll let me
-seat you all, I 'll make a place for every one. Mother to go first, at
-the other end, in the chair--our only one available as yet. Next, Ross,
-on the cracker-box, and Nan on the wood-box. Daddy's to have this
-soap-box all to himself, with a cushion on it. Peter can sit on that
-coal-hod, turned upside down."
-
-There was a roar at this, and a protest from Peter. "'Can't I have a
-newspaper to pad the top of it, sis?"
-
-"If you will find one," Jane responded, unmoved. "Rufe will have to
-take the top of that flour-barrel, and we 'll hand up his things."
-
-Mrs. Bell was a famous cook, and understood well the quantity of food
-necessary to appease the keen appetites of her big family, so the bowls
-were replenished again and again, until all were satisfied, and still
-the kettle was not quite empty.
-
-"You're not much like a girl I saw to-day, Janey," remarked Peter,
-balancing himself in the attempt to sit comfortably back upon his
-coal-hod, while his sister removed the plates and set forth a dish of
-baked apples and cream. Peter laughed at the recollection. "She was
-too stately and languid to lift her eyes to look at me, after the first
-frosty glance. We rode up town on the same street car yesterday, when I
-was coming here to make sure the house was ready for us. It was the
-rush hour, of course, and I gave her my seat. I think--yes, I really
-think"--Peter paused to reflect--"she said, 'Thank you,' though since of
-course I was n't looking at her as I took off my hat I did n't see her
-lips move. She and I got off the car together, and came up Gay Street
-together----"
-
-[Illustration: "'YOU 'RE NOT MUCH LIKE A GIRL I SAW TODAY, JANEY'"]
-
-"Together!" from Jane.
-
-"On opposite sides of the street. She was a little ahead, for the car
-stopped on her side. I looked across at her with interest as I came
-along--wanted to find out what our neighbors were like, you know. She
-was carrying a big muff, and had some things in it--been shopping, of
-course. Oh, I don't mean parcels--she would n't be caught carrying a
-parcel--but letters and a purse and a card-case and a
-pocket-handkerchief, and so forth. Well, as we came along I noticed she
-had dropped something--handkerchief, by the way it fluttered down. Of
-course I bolted across the street, through six inches of spring mud,
-grasped the article, and rushed after her. I said, 'Pardon me, but you
-dropped your handkerchief,' and held it out. She took it, murmured
-'Thank you!'--I saw her lips move this time--"and sailed on like a
-queen. I took off my hat, waded back through the mud, and was
-continuing on my thankless way----"
-
-"Thankless!--I thought you just admitted she thanked you," objected
-Ross, with a twinkle.
-
-"It was one of those thankless thank-yous, just the same," explained
-Peter, with gravity. "Well, as I say, I went on--like this
-story--meditating upon her cordial manner, when I saw something else
-fall from the capacious muff."
-
-"You didn't!" Jane looked incredulous.
-
-"Pardon me, I did. This time I did not bolt across the street; indeed,
-I stopped to consider whether I should not shout, 'Hi, hi, there, you
-'ve dropped your purse, lady!' like a street gamin. But reflecting on
-the embarrassment this might cause me at some future date, when she and
-I should really meet, I picked my way across again, seized the
-pocketbook, and was about to pursue her, when she looked round and
-caught me in the act of scrutinizing it, as one naturally does upon
-picking up a gold-mounted, aristocratic affair like that, the like of
-which he expects never----"
-
-"Oh, go on!" Rufus could no longer endure his brother's tantalising
-eloquence.
-
-"I hastened to her side," continued Peter, who was gifted in the art of
-putting things elaborately when he chose, "and remarked, 'I believe this
-is yours?' She--now what, friends, would you naturally expect a girl to
-do on receiving the third favour from a stranger within fifteen
-minutes?"
-
-"What did you expect? Did you suppose she would fly into your----"
-
-"Did you want her to open the pocketbook and hand you a quarter, saying,
-'Here, my honest lad----'"
-
-"Think she 'd say, 'You must call and see father. He will give you a
-position in his----'"
-
-"Your suggestions are far-fetched and improbable. I expected none of
-these things to happen. But consider the situation. Here was I,
-crossing the street for the third time in the mud----"
-
-"Go on!"
-
-"Would n't you have thought, considering the absurdity of the
-affair--her strewing things along the street like that--the least she
-could have done would have been to----"
-
-"Smile!" supplied Jane. "_Did n't_ she, Peter?"
-
-"She did not," avowed Peter. "She just looked at me as if she thought I
-had been about to steal her purse, took it, and went on, this time
-without saying thank you!"
-
-"Good gracious!" This from Ross. "She must be a nice girl to know.
-And you look pretty well, too, Pete, in that blue suit."
-
-"Where does she live?" Nancy inquired, her round face sympathetic with
-Peter's mock humiliation.
-
-"In the big house across the street. If you get out of milk or eggs,
-Janey, don't hesitate to run across and borrow some," counselled Peter.
-
-"Now if you 'll just make use of us all this evening," proposed Mr.
-Bell, rising, "we can accomplish a good deal--eh, boys? Shall I open
-the boxes and barrels, Martha?"
-
-At this suggestion three more pairs of strong arms were put at Mrs.
-Bell's service. She set every one at work at once.
-
-"Yes, Joe, dear," she agreed, "if you will open the boxes, I 'll take
-out the things and put them in place as far as I can. That's right,
-Nancy, you help Jane with the dishes, and when they are done you can go
-up stairs and make up the beds. Ross and Peter----"
-
-"Yes, we 'll set up the beds," said Peter, with alacrity, anticipating
-the division of work, "and uncrate the chests of drawers and the bedroom
-furniture generally. Come on, Ross. You 're as much one of the family
-as any of us now, since you helped us move, and a little family labour
-like this will complete the job. Whoever lives with us has to learn to
-be handy man about the house."
-
-"I 'm ready." Ross looked it. There was an air of alertness about him,
-for he was slimmer and lighter than Peter, and his fair curly hair made
-him appear much younger, although only two years separated the ages of
-the cousins.
-
-"You will find the furniture mostly in the rooms where it belongs," Mrs.
-Bell called after them. "Jane will be up soon and straighten you out,
-if you get mixed. Rufus, suppose you go round after the others and
-bring away all the litter they leave after the uncrating, and make a
-neat pile of it in the wood-shed."
-
-The steep and narrow little staircase ascended abruptly between walls
-from the dining-room and led to low-ceiled regions above, which, to the
-eyes of Murray and Shirley Townsend, from the big house across the
-street, facing Worthington Square, would have seemed too cramped and
-small of dimensions to be habitable, to say nothing of the possibility
-of their ever being made comfortable. But the Bells were of the sort
-who make the best of everything, and so far none of them had suggested
-that the little house was not an abode fit for the finest.
-
-"Jane and Nan in one room, Rufe and I in another, and Mr. Ross McAndrew
-alone in state in this little one in the corner. I judge by the signs
-that's the stowing of the crowd intended," speculated Peter, surveying
-each room in turn.
-
-"That corner room's as big as any. I don't think I ought to have it all
-to myself," objected Ross.
-
-"What, not that spacious eight-by-nine apartment, with one whole side
-under the eaves?" laughed Peter. "Well, since we can't split ourselves
-into halves, and like the family of the famous poem 'we are seven,' I
-don't see but you 'll have to make the best of your loneliness. The beds
-are only three-quarters size, and Rufe takes up less room than you do,
-so he and I naturally chum it."
-
-"All right. Let's make a start. Catch hold of that bureau, and heave
-it around into place."
-
-They fell to work with a will. Ross, the more lightly built, showed the
-greater energy of the two, though Peter worked away quite as steadily.
-But after an hour of hard labour Peter called a halt.
-
-"Oh, let's put it through," and Ross bent over a box with undiminished
-ardour.
-
-His attitude appealed to Peter, spoiling for fun after a long day at the
-factory, and in a twinkling he had tipped his cousin head first into the
-nearly empty box. Shouts, laughter and a lively scuffle ensued--so
-lively a scuffle, indeed, that Mr. Bell, Jane and Nancy, in the
-dining-room below, energetically sweeping up the litter made by the
-paperer, smiled at one another in mock dismay as the floor above
-resounded with the pounding and scraping of boot-heels, and the very
-walls of the small house trembled with the fray.
-
-"Goodness, I should think it was elephants up there!" cried Nancy, and
-ran half-way up the stairs to see what was going on.
-
-Mr. Bell opened his mouth to say, "Tell them it's an old house, Nan, and
-the ceiling 's cracked"--when the thing happened.
-
-The ceiling was old, the house was not too solidly built, and the battle
-above had reached its height when, quite without warning, down upon the
-freshly cleaned floor fell a great mass of plaster. The powdery lime
-rose in a suffocating cloud and covered Jane and her father with dust
-and debris.
-
-It was a minute more before the combatants, wrestling furiously over the
-bare floors above, could be made to understand by a horrified young
-person, who shrieked the news at them from the top of the staircase, the
-havoc they had wrought.
-
-But when they comprehended what had happened they hurried downstairs.
-
-"Well, of all the----" Ross was too shocked to finish.
-
-"I say, but we've done it now, have n't we?" exclaimed Peter, in
-disgust. "Janey--dad--it did n't hurt you, did it?"
-
-"Only my pride--and my hair," answered Jane, as she vainly tried to
-brush her curly locks free from plaster.
-
-"It's a shame! Why didn't you stop us? Clumsy louts! Pulling the place
-down about our ears the very first night!"
-
-"And how we hurried that paper man, to get him through to-night!"
-lamented Nancy, brushing off her father with anxious fingers. "We were
-going to have the dining-room all settled to-morrow----"
-
-"And to-morrow 's a holiday," murmured Jane, from under her hair.
-
-She was bending forward, with her head at her knees, while Mrs. Bell
-shook out the clinging lumps from the tangle of hair in which they were
-caught.
-
-"It's a quarter of ten," announced Rufus, cheerfully. "Do we have to
-clear this up to-night?"
-
-"I should say so!" Ross caught up a broom.
-
-"It's the least we can do. Get a box, will you, Rufe, and let's have
-the worst over. Pete and I will do the job, and the rest of you can go
-upstairs and dance a hornpipe over our heads. If you will throw things
-at us from time to time down the stairs it may relieve your feelings."
-
-"Don't feel too badly. I had a notion all the time that that ceiling
-ought to have been pulled down before we papered the room; it looked old
-and shaky to me. Now we 'll have a new one that will stand
-pillow-fights as long as we live here," said Mrs. Bell, smiling at the
-rueful countenance of her nephew.
-
-"Right you are, and I'll have a man here to put that plaster on in the
-morning, holiday or no holiday," promised Peter.
-
-In ten minutes the plaster had been swept up, Jane's hair had received a
-thorough brushing, Mr. Bell had been relieved of several lumps which had
-worked their way down his back, and the family went to bed in as good
-spirits as if nothing had happened.
-
-The next morning Peter started early in quest of a plasterer to restore
-the ceiling, and finding it by no means easy to discover one who cared
-to work when he might play, came home after two hours' search baffled
-but still determined. A passing acquaintance gave him a clue, and he was
-presently hurrying across the street in search of the Townsends'
-coachman, whose brother, the acquaintance had said, might be persuaded
-to do the job.
-
-In the stables, much to his astonishment, he came fairly upon the girl
-whose propensity for losing things he had described with so much gusto
-the evening before.
-
-"I beg your pardon," he said, quickly--he seemed to be always begging
-her pardon--"but I was looking for your coachman. I--he--I hoped he
-could tell me the name--that is, of course he knows the name--I mean, I
-wanted his brother's address."
-
-Peter was no stammerer, and it irritated him very much to be saying all
-this so awkwardly, but there was something about the cool dark eyes of
-this girl, as she stood looking at him, which rather disconcerted him.
-She had evidently just dismounted from her horse, and now Peter observed
-two things--first that she was rather oddly pale, and second, that her
-side-saddle had slipped, and rested at an altogether improper angle upon
-the horse's back. As he saw this he came forward.
-
-"What is the matter?" he asked quickly. "You haven't had a fall? You
-didn't ride this way, of course?"
-
-"Yes, I did," she answered, lifting her head rather high, and then
-suddenly drooping it again.
-
-"How far? When did it slip? Were you alone?" Peter examined the
-side-saddle.
-
-"It began to slip--back--at--the boulevard," said the girl, rather
-slowly. "I--I don't know just how I kept on, but I did. Lewis is n't
-here. He ought to be. I can't put up Blackthorn myself."
-
-"Let me do it for you." Peter took the bridle from her. He soon had
-the horse in the stall and had put away the saddle and bridle.
-
-"That was a plucky thing to do," declared Peter, coming back to the
-stable door, where the girl had dropped into the coachman's chair, "to
-ride home with a slipping saddle. But you ought not to have done it,
-you know. It might have slipped a lot more with a jerk, and thrown you.
-See here, you 're not feeling just right, are you? Shall I call
-somebody?"
-
-"No, no!" She started up. "If mother knew the least thing went wrong
-she would n't let me ride at all. If you--if you just would n't mind
-staying here a little, till I feel like myself again----"
-
-"Why, of course I will"--and Peter stayed.
-
-It was only for a few minutes, and meanwhile Lewis, the coachman, had
-returned, and the matter of the loose saddle-girth had been fully
-discussed by all three. Then Peter took his way home.
-
-Jane met him at the door. "Did you find where the plasterer lives?" she
-asked, eagerly.
-
-Peter stared at her, turned about, and gazed across the street, as if he
-expected to see a plasterer following in his path, trowel and float in
-hand. Then he burst into a laugh. He mumbled something which sounded
-like a very peculiar name, if it was a name, and rapidly retraced his
-footsteps across the street, to make his inquiry of Lewis, the coachman.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- PETER SEES A LIGHT
-
-
-The Bells had been at home for a fortnight in Gay Street.
-
-The little house was in order from cellar to roof, and its occupants had
-settled down to the routine of their daily living, well content with the
-new abode. In a way they missed the larger house and freer environments
-of the remote suburban place they had left, but the early hour at which
-Mr. Bell and the boys were now able to reach home, and the later one at
-which they could leave in the morning, amply compensated for the more
-cramped quarters made necessary by the higher rates of rental in the
-city.
-
-"It's not a very friendly neighborhood, though, is it, Janey?" commented
-Peter one evening, as he and Jane stood on the porch, enjoying the mild
-mid-April evening. "How many calls have you had? Two?"
-
-"Three," corrected Jane, cheerfully. "The two old ladies on the right,
-the mother of six the left, and one odd person from Westlake Street.
-The rest are still looking us over."
-
-"Nobody from Worthington Square?" Peter's tone was quizzical.
-
-"Absolutely nobody," Jane laughed. "But we have one acquaintance in
-Worthington Square, Peter--the little Townsend girl with the sweet, pale
-face. She wants to know us dreadfully, and she's such a dear,
-democratic little person the smiles positively tremble on her mouth when
-I meet her--which I do almost every day. So does Nancy. It 's the
-oddest thing! Nan says she almost never stirs out that the Townsend
-child does n't appear."
-
-"She wants to get acquainted. I don't blame her. They 're the dullest
-lot over there. There seems to be one stirabout--the good-looking chap
-who 's off on horseback every day. But the other son 's a paleface, and
-the daughter--hum--well----" Peter's pause was eloquent. "I think
-she's---- Hello! What's that?"
-
-He had looked over at the big house as he spoke of its inmates, and his
-eye had been caught by an appearance which struck him as unusual. The
-house was dimly lighted everywhere, but in one room, the upper one with
-the semicircular window, there was an effect of brilliancy of a ruddier
-color than is ordinarily produced by electric lights. As Peter and Jane
-now stared at it, it seemed to grow in intensity, and there showed a
-wavering and flashing of this singular light which looked suspiciously
-like fire.
-
-"Do you suppose there can be anything wrong?" speculated Peter,
-anxiously. "Of course a fire of coke or cannel in a fireplace might
-give that effect, through those thin curtains, but we--haven't
-seen--anything like it--before--and--By George!" as the light flared
-more ruddily than ever for an instant and then grew dull again, "I
-believe there _is_ trouble there! Anyhow, I 'll run over and find out!
-They can't blame me for that."
-
-He was starting off at a run when Jane darted after him. "I 'm sure I
-saw flames jump up, Pete!" she called, excitedly. "The window's open,
-and the curtain blew to one side. Oh, hurry! Most of them are away; I
-saw them drive off an hour ago."
-
-She was running at Peter's side, fleet of foot as he. Her mind had
-leaped to the youngest member of the unknown household, the one who did
-not drive away after nightfall to dinners and parties, like the others.
-Only that day she had met Shirley and exchanged with her the few bright
-words the little girl seemed to welcome so eagerly. They ran up the
-steps of the great portico, with its stately columns, and hurrying
-across it, came to a partly opened door. Peter rang the bell, peering
-impatiently through the vestibule into the large, square, half-lighted
-interior. "I 'll wait just one minute for an answer," he said with his
-foot on the threshold, "and then I 'll be up that gorgeous staircase
-back there."
-
-Jane put her head in at the door. "I smell smoke!" she breathed, and
-Peter pushed past her. Delaying no longer, he ran across the hall and
-up the staircase, closely followed by Jane.
-
-As he reached the top, a little white-clad figure ran screaming toward
-him. He rushed by, but Jane, at his heels, caught the little girl up in
-her arms.
-
-"There, there, darling," she soothed the frightened, sobbing child, "you
-'re all safe! Peter will take care of the fire. Are they all away?
-There, don't be frightened, dear!"
-
-Over Shirley's head Jane saw Peter vanish through a doorway--beyond
-which she could see a mass of smoke and flame--slam down a window, and
-dash out again, closing the door behind him. Then he was off down the
-stairs, shouting for help as he went, and getting no response from any
-quarter of the strangely deserted house.
-
-"Take her away!" he called back to Jane, as he ran, and Jane attempted
-to obey.
-
-"Where are your clothes, dear?" she asked the child in her arms, but
-could get no coherent answer.
-
-She looked about her, and carrying Shirley, who was slender and as light
-of weight as a much younger child, soon discovered the little girl's
-room. She caught up the pile of clothes on a chair, and attempted to
-dress her charge. But Shirley only cried and clung. Jane pulled a
-silken blanket from the little brass bed, and wrapping the child in it,
-and rolling her clothes into a bundle, which she tucked under one arm,
-carried her downstairs and into a small reception-room near the front
-entrance.
-
-Peter, dashing through the silent house toward the rear, hoping to come
-upon a man-servant somewhere, was met at last by a startled maid.
-
-"A room upstairs is on fire," he said. "Any men here to help me put it
-out? If there are n't I must send in an alarm. Any fire-extinguishers
-about?"
-
-The girl's wits scattered at the news, but she managed to recall the
-fact that the coachman must be at the stable again by this time, and
-flew to call him. Peter ran back to keep track of events. He saw that
-the walls were heavy, that the fire was thus far confined to the one
-room, and that if help came speedily it would not be necessary to call
-out the fire department, an expedient to be avoided, he felt sure,
-unless the danger to the house was greater than he thought.
-
-But the frightened maid forestalled him in this plan. She ran to the
-telephone and sent in the alarm herself, although in the confusion of
-her fright she lost some minutes in getting the message properly
-reported. Meanwhile, the coachman having arrived to aid Peter, bringing
-with him the apparatus kept in the stables for the purpose of
-extinguishing fire, the two were soon successfully fighting the flames
-without further aid.
-
-Shirley, downstairs, was still trembling in Jane's arms, and
-incoherently crying for her brother Murray, who, she insisted, had not
-gone out with the others that evening, but had been reading in the room
-which was now on fire. At that moment Murray himself came limping in at
-the open door. The maid met him at the threshold.
-
-"O Mr. Murray," she began--and Jane, in the reception-room, heard
-her--"the house is on fire, and----"
-
-"What? Where? Where's Shirley? Who's----"
-
-Jane, with the child in her arms, appeared at the door of the
-reception-room. "She 's here--quite safe," she said; and with an
-exclamation, Murray came anxiously toward the two. Then he paused and
-looked up the staircase, for through the distant closed door upstairs
-could be heard the sounds of voices, shouting directions. The maid was
-beginning an excited explanation when Jane interrupted her:
-
-"My brother is here, and he and your coachman are putting it out, I 'm
-sure."
-
-"Has anybody sent in an alarm?"
-
-"I did," said the maid. "The young man told me not to, but how did he
-know he could put it out? And the master 'd be blamin' me----"
-
-"We don't want the firemen here if we don't need them," Murray was
-beginning, when the distant and familiar clang of a gong stopped the
-words upon his lips. In a moment more it became evident that a
-fire-engine and its train were upon them. Murray turned away, and
-started hurriedly up the stairs.
-
-At the approaching noises, which to the delicate child had always been
-peculiarly terrifying, little Shirley began to cry afresh. Jane
-gathered her up with an air of determination.
-
-"I'm going to take her to our house across the street," she said to the
-maid. "There's no need of her staying here to be so frightened."
-
-The girl made no remonstrance. She was too excited to do more than
-bewail the absence of the other servants, and the misfortune of her
-having been left alone in charge. "I 'd just stepped out of the door a
-minute, miss," she explained, "to speak to a friend of mine that was
-passing. 'T was a mercy I left the door open, or the young gentleman
-couldn't have----. There's the gong!--There 's the fire-engine!--Oh,
-my--but look at the crowd comin' after 'em!"
-
-"Show me a side door where I can slip out, please," requested Jane
-hurriedly, and the maid obeyed.
-
-As the firemen ran in at the front door, Jane, with Shirley in her arms,
-hurried out at a low side entrance, from which a path through the
-shrubbery led to a gateway in the high hedge next the street.
-
-As she reached her own porch, the rest of her family came rushing out,
-having heard the commotion in the street. She almost ran into Nancy who
-stopped abruptly to stare at Jane's burden.
-
-"Come back into the house with me, Nan," said Jane, quickly. "Here 's
-our frightened little neighbour. The fire will soon be out, but I
-thought she'd be happier over here, for the family are all away."
-
-In the house she put Shirley down upon the couch in the front room, and
-the child, staring up, her big eyes full of tears and fright, beheld the
-face of the girl she had so longed to know smiling down at her.
-
-"This is splendid!" said Nancy Bell. "I've wanted to know you like
-everything, and now I 've got you right here in my own house. Won't you
-let me help you get dressed? I 'd love to."
-
-Seeing that Nancy would be better for the shy little visitor than any
-number of older persons, Jane left the two together, and went out to see
-what was happening.
-
-It was very little. The fire-engine was already turning to leave, the
-driver grumbling at a needless alarm. "All out!" a voice was shouting,
-and the crowd was reluctantly pausing upon the edge of the lawn,
-disappointed that no further excitement was to be had. Upstairs the
-firemen had found the fire subdued to a mere dying smother of smoke, the
-efficient chemical having made quick work of the blaze, which had not
-had time to attack the walls of the room, but had been confined to its
-furnishings.
-
-Peter, his hands and clothes grimy, made light of the affair to Murray,
-who was looking in at the ruin of the room.
-
-"I took a few liberties with your front door," Peter said, "finding it
-open and no one about. Oh, no, it hadn't much headway; I saw that when I
-decided not to call out the department. It was quite a blaze, but mostly
-the light stuff about. It must have caught from the curtains blowing
-into that student-lamp."
-
-"That's my fault," Murray owned. "I hate electric lights to read by, so
-I lighted that lamp here. I was reading, but the room began to feel
-stuffy, and I opened the window. It looked so pleasant outside I
-thought I 'd take a turn round the square. I 'm not a fast walker"--he
-glanced at his lame leg--"and I was probably at the other side of the
-square when you came in. Look here, you must have been mighty quick to
-take in the situation, for I couldn't have been away over five minutes
-when you saw the blaze."
-
-"My sister and I happened to be standing out on our porch--you see, we
-live just round the corner in Gay Street--about opposite these windows
-here----"
-
-"I know," Murray nodded. "I 've seen you."
-
-"We thought at first it was a cannel-coal fire--you know how they flash
-with a red light. But when we suspected, we just ran across. I hope
-your little sister wasn't too badly frightened?"
-
-"Her room's next to this. Poor child, she _was_ frightened. I deserve
-a thrashing, you know, for my carelessness. Every one of the family is
-out, and all the servants except my mother's maid. It was very kind of
-your sister to take Shirley in charge. She's downstairs with her now."
-
-"Will your people be getting news of the fire-alarm and be frightened?"
-Peter asked, putting on his coat.
-
-"I don't think so. Father and mother are out of town at a dinner, and
-my sister's at a party in a country house. They won't be likely to
-hear. I don't know where my brother is. Don't go. Must you? I--you
-know I'm awfully obliged to you for this----"
-
-"It's nothing. Glad I happened to be on hand," and Peter would have
-said good night and run down the stairs, but he saw that his host meant
-to go down with him. So he descended slowly, keeping pace with the
-other's halting steps, and talking with him as he went.
-
-"Your sister was here when I came in," said Murray, glancing into the
-small reception-room. The maid, who had been watching the departure of
-the crowd from the window of this room, turned to him.
-
-"The young lady took Miss Shirley home with her," she explained. "I was
-that flustered I let her go without so much as asking you, Mr. Murray,
-but----"
-
-"It's all right," Murray put in, hastily. "It was just the thing to do,
-the child was so scared. If they 're at your house, I 'll just step over
-there with you, if you don't mind."
-
-"Glad to have you," said Peter, wondering what Jane would say to this
-second unexpected introduction.
-
-Murray, as he walked slowly toward the house in Gay Street, felt
-distinctly glad of the chance. Since his illness he had led a lonely
-life, and he longed for comrades near at hand. From behind the curtains
-he had done not a little watching of the coming and going in Gay Street,
-and had been strongly attracted toward each one of the household across
-the way. He liked the faces of those people. He had wished that he
-could make their acquaintance.
-
-"Walk in!" invited Peter, throwing the door hospitably open; and Murray,
-his quick, curious eyes taking in everything at a glance, entered the
-small front room, which was just then unoccupied. He heard voices and
-laughter near at hand, but for the moment, while Peter went to summon
-his mother, he had time to look about him.
-
-There was not very much in the room, and there was nothing of value, as
-that word was used in the Townsend house, yet the visitor could not help
-finding the place warmly attractive. There was a homelike look about it,
-and there was an indefinable air of refinement. The furniture was old
-and very nearly shabby, but it was not the cheap and tawdry furniture
-one might have expected to find in such a house. The pictures on the
-walls were all good copies of great pictures, or photographs set under
-glass. Piles of music lay on the old-fashioned square piano, and a few
-papers and magazines, all of good selection, were upon the table, in the
-centre of which burned a brilliant lamp. But most of all, the character
-of the household was shown by the books--as it inevitably is.
-
-Of these there were a surprising number. Murray felt his respect for the
-Bell family rising immensely as he noted the contents of the rows of
-home-made book-shelves. They were in plain, worn bindings, most of
-them, quite unlike the stately rows in the great library at home; but
-they were the same old friends, in common clothes, and Murray rejoiced
-at the sight.
-
-Peter was quickly back, bringing with him the lady whom Murray
-recognised as the mother of the family. She _was_ a lady--no doubt of
-that. He had been sure of it before. Now, as he listened to her
-voice--the test incontrovertible--he knew beyond question.
-
-She greeted him cordially. He was charmed with her face, with her
-manner, with everything about her. Then Peter brought all the others
-in, and Murray shook hands with them all. Shirley appeared, clinging to
-Nancy's hands, and Shirley was so happy, and begged so hard in his ear
-to stay a few minutes longer, that he willingly delayed their departure.
-
-Fine fellows, Peter and Ross and Rufus proved to be on acquaintance.
-Not in the least overawed by the presence of the rich man's son from
-Worthington Square, they talked business and football and politics and
-various other things in those few minutes, in a hearty, half-boyish,
-decidedly manly fashion that he thoroughly enjoyed.
-
-It happened that Murray said less to Jane than to any of the others, but
-he noticed her not a little. He thought he had never seen a girl who
-looked so spirited and sweet and gay and gentle all in one. He felt
-that his sister Olive must learn to know her at once, that she might
-learn what it is to be pretty without seeming aware of the fact, and how
-it is possible to make a stranger feel wholly at his ease without
-appearing to exercise any arts.
-
-"I suppose I ought to be taking my sister home," Murray said at last,
-getting to his feet. "The truth is, she has wanted to know Miss Nancy
-since she first saw her, and so----"
-
-"Murray wanted to know you, too," said Shirley, in Nancy's ear; but as
-her brother paused, the words were audible to everybody.
-
-"To know _me_?" queried Nancy, in surprise, and everybody smiled.
-
-"I'm sure my mother and sister will call--soon," said Murray, trying to
-feel sure of that rather doubtful proposition as he made it.
-
-The moment would have been an awkward one in some small houses, for it
-was impossible not to remember that the Worthington Squares do not make
-many calls in the Gay Streets, but young Rufus, studying Shirley with
-interest, broke in, without intention, upon his mother's reply. Rufus
-was quite untroubled by the social inequalities existing between
-localities divided only by a stone's throw.
-
-"That 's a dandy tennis-court you will have there when you put it out,"
-he remarked.
-
-"It's pretty fair--and we shall have it in shape early this year,"
-replied Murray, smiling. There was a beauty about Murray's rare smile
-which quite transformed his pale face. His eyes met Jane's as he spoke.
-
-"It 's too bad to grow up past the point of breaking the ice so easily,
-is n't it?" she said, merrily, as he shook hands.
-
-"We 'll have to follow their wise example," he replied.
-
-"I hope that you 'll find your way over to Gay Street often in the
-future," declared Peter, shaking hands.
-
-"I mean to, thank you, if you'll let me?" Murray looked into Mrs.
-Bell's eyes, and a shade of wistfulness crept into his own, which she
-saw, and recognising, was sure she understood.
-
-"Please come, if you care to," she said, cordially, and he felt her
-warm, firm hand give his a friendly pressure, which quite completed the
-capturing of his heart.
-
-A ringing step on the porch outside, a knock at the door--it boasted no
-bell--and everybody looked up surprised, for it was nearly ten o'clock.
-Ross opened the door.
-
-"I beg your pardon," said a gay and careless voice outside, "but I came
-to look for my brother and sister. They seem to be lost, and I 'm told
-they 're here."
-
-"Come in!" said Ross, and the owner of the voice appeared upon the
-threshold. Standing there, surveying the company with his
-characteristically assured expression, his handsome face taking on a
-saucy smile as his eyes fell on his brother, Forrest Townsend was
-carefully and formally presented by Murray to each one of the household
-in turn.
-
-He looked a fine figure in his evening clothes, his long outer coat
-falling open, his hat in his hand. His audacious young eyes fell on Jane
-before he was presented to her, and his manner acquired a sort of
-laughing gallantry rather effective. "It was a very lucky fire for us,"
-he said, gaily, as he bowed. "I only wish I had been at home."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- FORREST PLAYS A TRICK
-
-
-"It's no more than civil, mother, that you and Olive should go over and
-call!" insisted Murray Townsend, with heat.
-
-"I can't see that it is necessary at all," replied Mrs. Townsend, with
-offsetting coolness. "The young man has been properly thanked for his
-services; indeed, I should say that between you and Forrest and Shirley
-the entire family have had quite fuss enough made over them."
-
-"I didn't make much of the fuss," Forrest said. "I was only there five
-minutes at the end of the show. Time enough to see, though, that those
-people are n't off the same piece as the usual tenants of that house.
-They 've seen better days, or I miss my guess."
-
-"Not at all. They 've never had much money, but they 're educated
-people, just the same--self-educated, a mighty good sort. You 've only
-to look at the books that fairly line that little room to see for
-yourself. Is n't there any rule for sizing up men but by the dollars
-they 've made--or women but by the clothes they wear?"
-
-The vehemence of Murray's speech was so unusual, and his ordinarily
-quiet and indifferent expression had given place to one so eager, that
-the family all turned with one accord to look at him. They were at
-dinner, one late April evening, a week after the fire. The dining-room
-was the one place in the house where all the family were accustomed to
-meet; therefore any question of the sort which Murray had proposed was
-brought up there as a matter of course.
-
-Mr. Townsend himself answered his son's pointed observation,
-forestalling the rejoinder about to fall from his wife's lips:
-
-"It's the way of the world, Murray, and an unjust one in many cases.
-Still, one can't help feeling that a man who has lived to the age of
-Joseph Bell without reaching a position higher than the one he holds
-with the Armstrong Company can't be possessed of a very unusual
-endowment of brains."
-
-"I should say that depends on whether making money has been his
-ambition, or something else."
-
-"He certainly hasn't achieved the something else," was Olive's comment.
-"Not even a decent home."
-
-"Decent!" Murray turned on her. "It's a home worthy the name--I can
-tell you that! And if you refuse to call on these people that live in
-it, after Peter Bell saved ours over our heads, I say you 're acting
-like snobs!"
-
-"Murray!" His mother spoke very sharply. Forrest laughed. He enjoyed
-the scene, being inclined, by his remembrance of Jane, to take his
-brother's side. Mr. Townsend came to the rescue.
-
-"You are rather rough in your language, Murray, but I think you are
-right in your notions about the call. It's only a courtesy, surely,
-Eloise, to go over and make one call. You don't need to continue the
-acquaintance unless you wish, but I should be glad myself if you would
-go. It is several days now since----"
-
-"It's a week," said Murray.
-
-"He knows--no doubt of that!" laughed Forrest. "He's cultivated the
-acquaintance, anyhow. I saw him walking up the street yesterday with
-the pretty girl of the family."
-
-"You walked up with her yourself the day before!" cried Shirley.
-
-Forrest threw back his head and laughed. "You 're a little spy. Well, I
-don't mind owning that I did. She's a trim-looking girl on the street,
-too, if she does n't wear the furbelows Olive does. She----"
-
-"We may as well go over and call, mother," said Olive, with emphasis.
-"If both the boys are running after the family, we ought to find out
-what they are."
-
-"You won't be so condescending as you think," Murray said to her, as he
-left the room at her side. "Mrs. Bell is n't the sort to be impressed
-with the honour you do her."
-
-Mrs. Townsend and Olive, realising that the wishes of the three male
-members of the family were not to be lightly disregarded, made the call
-without further delay. Dressed as carefully as if they had been calling
-in Worthington Square, they knocked upon the door of the little house in
-Gay Street, and were admitted by Nancy.
-
-It chanced that this was a Saturday afternoon. And Saturday was a
-half-holiday for nearly all workers in the city. Thus it came about
-that in the middle of the stiff little call--stiff in spite of Mrs. Bell
-and Jane, who had received their visitors with all simplicity and
-naturalness--Peter arrived at home. Being burdened with small parcels,
-he hurried round to the kitchen door, and depositing his parcels on the
-table there, started in search of his sisters.
-
-"Jane--Nan--where are you?" he shouted through the little house, and
-before Nancy, springing down the stairs, could stop him, he had bolted
-into the front room.
-
-Olive Townsend, turning quickly, recognised the big, fresh-coloured
-youth, with the good-humoured, clever-looking face, who had several
-times been of assistance to her. Peter was presented to the visitors by
-his mother, who seemed quite undisturbed by the interruption. Jane only
-laughed, and Peter himself recovered his balance with but a momentary
-show of confusion.
-
-"It was important business, you see," he said, smiling, and explaining
-to Jane. "I brought home the flower-seeds you wanted, and I had an idea
-they must get into the ground within the next fifteen minutes, or it
-would be too late."
-
-"I don't wonder he thought so," Jane said to Olive, glancing from her
-brother to her guest. "I impressed upon him this morning the fact that
-if the sweet peas were n't planted to-day we should n't have any growing
-before August. Don't go, Peter. Perhaps Miss Townsend can tell us what
-else we ought to have in our garden."
-
-Peter obediently drew up a chair and sat down.
-
-Olive, responding that she knew nothing whatever about gardens, because
-the gardener always attended to whatever flower-beds there were about
-the grounds, was conscious of a keen and steady scrutiny from Peter's
-cool gray eyes, quite as if he were not in the least abashed by her
-distinguished presence.
-
-She was, moreover, forced to acknowledge, as the moments went by, that
-Peter could talk, and talk well. He came to the assistance of Jane, who
-had begun to feel the difficulties of entertaining the visitor, and told
-an amusing incident of the morning's experience. Before she knew it,
-Olive was laughing, for Peter's clever mimicry was quite irresistible.
-
-As she rose to go Olive made an immense condescension: "I believe it
-must have been you, Mr. Bell," she said, "who picked up my handkerchief
-for me one day."
-
-Peter laid his hand on his heart with a droll gesture and a formal
-bow--an interesting combination.--"I think I had the honour," he
-admitted, with a twinkle.
-
-And now something unforeseen happened. Exactly as the visitors rose to
-go, the April skies, which five minutes before had been smiling,
-suddenly opened, and poured out one of those astonishing spring
-downfalls which arrest street traffic on the instant.
-
-Mrs. Townsend and Olive, with the door opening to let them out, stood
-still upon the threshold in dismay, glancing down at their delicate
-spring attire.
-
-"You can't go in this," said Mrs. Bell, cordially. "It will be over
-soon. Please come back and sit down."
-
-The fates must surely have intended from the first to mix up things
-between these two families of Townsend and Bell. With that end in view
-nothing could have been more opportune than this shower, for it lasted a
-good half-hour without showing signs of slackening, and it contributed
-also lightning and thunder, which made Olive shrink and shudder. Also
-Ross, McAndrew and young Rufus Bell, coming home in the late afternoon,
-and being caught at the corner in the downpour, dashed for the little
-front porch for shelter, and then into the living-room.
-
-Ross, making apologies on account of his moist condition, and getting
-through the room and out with Rufus as fast as possible, was yet able to
-take in the surprising fact that Peter was sitting in the corner with
-the girl from the aristocratic square, chatting cheerfully with her, and
-eliciting not altogether unwilling smiles in response.
-
-Out in the kitchen, with the door closed, Ross and Rufus interviewed
-Nancy.
-
-"How on earth did old Peter get into it like this?" Ross inquired, as he
-hung his coat to dry by the stove. "I could hardly believe my eyes to
-see him confabulating with Miss Worthington Square. She seems quite
-human, does n't she--when you get her indoors?"
-
-"I don't know," said Nancy. "I only let them in. She looks awfully
-pretty, don't you think? And maybe she's nice when you get to know her."
-
-"If you ever do," qualified Ross. "Pretty? Well, all I saw was a
-gorgeous hat and a pair of big eyes; I felt as if somebody was looking
-at me with a spy-glass. She is n't in it with our Janey, if you're
-talking about prettiness."
-
-"No, of course not!" cried loyal Nancy.
-
-By the time the storm had ceased, a good deal of the stiffness in the
-little front room had melted away. It may be possible for some people
-to be formal and frigid for the space of a ten-minute call, but to keep
-it up for full three-quarters of an hour longer, while rain pours, and
-lightning flashes, and unconventional young persons dash in and out, and
-a youth like Peter tells jolly stories--that becomes much more
-difficult. Mrs. Townsend maintained a peculiar dignity to the end, but
-Olive--well, in spite of her prejudices, Olive was young, and liked
-young associates, and as she looked and listened, it became more and
-more difficult for her to refuse to recognise that the people in this
-little house were not ordinary, not commonplace, not uneducated, as she
-had fancied them, but bright, and gay, and interesting.
-
-When she gave Jane her hand, as she took her leave--the April storm
-having at last given place again to brilliant April sunshine--she found
-herself wishing she might know this prepossessing maid. There was a
-straightforward sweetness in the glance of Jane's rich hazel eyes, a
-captivating charm in her free smile, which the other girl had never
-encountered in quite so beguiling a form. Olive Townsend, of all the
-girls whom Jane had ever met least likely to succumb to the fascinations
-of another girl not in her own "set," fell, nevertheless, considerably
-under Jane's influence on that very first encounter. In taking leave she
-said to Jane that which she had not dreamed of saying, commonplace an
-expression of friendliness as it was: "I shall hope to see you often,
-since we live so near."
-
-"Gone--gone--all gone?" queried Ross, putting in his head cautiously at
-the living-room door, as the visitors turned the corner.
-
-"All gone," replied Peter. "Gone forever--silks and velvets and new
-spring hats."
-
-"Ribbons and laces, and sweet, pretty faces," chanted Ross, reminded of
-the old child-rhyme. "'Sugar and spice, and everything nice.' Not much
-sugar about Miss Worthington Square, eh, Pete?"
-
-"Oh, I don't know," mused Peter, gazing absently out of the window
-toward the square, where Olive's spring finery was just fluttering out
-of sight. "She 's not so bad at close range. I should n't wonder if an
-earthquake shock might stir her up into quite an interesting girl.
-Lacking that, some lesser convulsion of nature might possibly----"
-
-"The Bell family certainly did their best to shock her. If daddy and
-Nan could have just burst in from somewhere, I think the effect would
-have been complete," declared Jane, merrily.
-
-The subject of these comments, upon reaching home, found herself called
-upon for an opinion of the Bells.
-
-Forrest Townsend, encountering his sister upon the stairs, followed her
-to her room.
-
-"Own up that they 're not as odd as you thought," he demanded.
-
-"They 're very well--of their sort," was Olive's reply, observing
-herself in her mirror, and congratulating herself on the fact that the
-new spring hat was undoubtedly becoming.
-
-"See here, why not send Jane and Peter an invitation to your party?"
-
-"'_Jane and Peter!_' You seem to be pretty intimate with them already."
-
-"I don't call them that to their faces. But you 've seen for yourselves
-they 're all right. Ask them over; it won't hurt you."
-
-"Why, Forrest Townsend--people who don't know a soul in our set! What
-an idea!"
-
-"A mighty good idea. Nobody 'll know they live in Gay Street--and you
-won't be ashamed of them either."
-
-"I shall not do anything of the sort." Olive took off the hat and laid
-it in its box. "I don't know what in the world has got into you and
-Murray; you 're both perfectly mad over the Bells. If you 're so
-charmed with that girl you can go and call on her, I suppose."
-
-She recalled with some surprise her own liking for Jane, wondering, now
-that her brother showed his prepossessions so strongly, how she could
-have fancied her. It seemed sometimes to be a matter of principle with
-Olive never to like the people whom Forrest or Murray liked.
-
-"See here," said Forrest, frowning, "I think it's pretty ill-natured of
-you not to invite one or two persons I ask you to, whether you happen to
-want them or not. This party may be your birthday affair, but there 's
-no reason why somebody else should n't have a hand in the inviting.
-Let's see your list, will you?"
-
-Olive unwillingly handed him a sheet of paper, upon which the names of
-her prospective guests were written. He scanned it sharply.
-
-"Same old crowd," he observed, his handsome brows knit into a scowl. "I
-should think you 'd want a little fresh blood, to liven things up."
-
-"For you to sit in a corner with, you mean."
-
-"Will you do it to please me?"
-
-"No!" Olive snatched the list out of his hand and returned it to a box,
-which she laid in a drawer of her desk.
-
-Forrest stood looking at her for a moment, then, without a further word,
-shrugged his shoulders and walked out of the room.
-
-Two hours later he came quietly back. Olive had gone out, as he knew.
-He crossed the room to the desk, searched and found the box into which
-he had seen the list put, and discovered, as he had expected, the
-invitations to the birthday party folded and partially addressed. He
-knew that they were to go out upon the morrow, and that Olive doubtless
-would finish the task of addressing them that evening. He had heard her
-bewailing the fact that this labour consumed so much time, but he had
-not cared to offer to assist her.
-
-Forrest looked the invitations over, smiling to himself, took out two
-unaddressed envelopes and put them into his pocket, closed the door and
-strolled away. In his own room he took them out again, and wrote upon
-them in his best hand, "Peter Bell, Esq.," and "Miss Jane Bell," adding
-the street and number, and stamping and sealing them, still with the
-laugh in the corners of his mischievous mouth.
-
-The next day, when Olive's invitations went into the letter-box on the
-corner, they were shortly followed by two of which the giver of the
-party had no knowledge.
-
-It happened that the early morning mail in Gay Street always arrived
-just before the departure of the family workers for their place of
-business. So when Nancy, after answering the postman's ring, came back
-to the table with the mail, both Peter and Jane, just finishing
-breakfast, were on hand to receive it.
-
-"Whose handwriting can this be, I wonder?" speculated Jane, intently
-studying the dashing address.
-
-Peter glanced over her shoulder. "Same as mine," he observed, ripping
-his envelope open. "Looks like a wedding invitation; but since none of
-our friends, Janey, are so much as thinking of getting married--
-Hello, what's this?"
-
-"Oh, why--" Jane was stammering, eagerly. "O Petey--how lovely--why--
-There, I knew she was n't as cold and proud as you thought her!"
-
-"Who--what?" demanded Nancy, with excitement.
-
-"Miss Olive Townsend," explained Jane, flushing with pleasure.
-
-"What! Miss Worthington Square invited you two every-day folks to her
-party?" Ross inquired, getting up from the table and reaching for his
-hat. "Pete, you 'll lose your car if you stand mooning over that
-thing."
-
-"How did you know she was to have a party?"
-
-"Little Miss Shirley confided it to me."
-
-"Me, too!" cried Nancy, proudly. "But she did n't tell me her sister
-would ask you."
-
-"Miss Olive probably didn't intend to," hazarded Peter, folding up his
-note and putting it carefully in his pocket, "until she came to call and
-saw our charms. She came--she saw--we conquered--eh, Janey?--with our
-sweet smiles and our stories. How about it, sister? Do we go?"
-
-"If," began Jane slowly, the smile fading a little on her bright face,
-"if----"
-
-"If we've anything to wear!" supplied Ross, and began to whistle gaily.
-"_Oh, ye shall walk in silk attire_," breaking off to glance at the
-clock and start hastily for the door, with Peter and Rufus after him.
-Jane turned to Mrs. Bell, who, sitting quietly in her place at the head
-of the table, was regarding her young daughter as if she understood all
-the doubts which had instantly risen in the girl's mind.
-
-"I think we can manage it, dear," she said, "if the party dress does n't
-have to match the invitation."
-
-Jane's face grew flushed again. "I can wear anything, mother, if I have
-some fresh ribbons. But Peter----"
-
-"Yes--Peter--" agreed Mrs. Bell. She rose and came round to Jane.
-"Peter shall have a new cravat," said she, and smiled into Jane's eyes.
-
-Jane smiled back. Each knew that the other was thinking of Peter's best
-black suit--in which he went to church on Sundays. Each knew that the
-Townsend sons would wear evening clothes.
-
-"Yes, with a new cravat Petey will be all right," said Jane. "Dear boy,
-he was pleased, was n't he? And it _is_ nice of her to ask us!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- WITHOUT GLOVES
-
-
-"O Jane, the big porch is all shut in with white stuff, and there's a
-striped awning where the carriages stop, just as if it was a great
-grown-up party or a wedding. And I saw them carrying in loads of palms
-and things. Oh, are n't you excited to be going?"
-
-This was Nancy Bell, flying into the front room upstairs, where Mrs.
-Bell and Jane were putting the finishing touches to Jane's frock, to be
-worn that evening.
-
-"Awfully excited, darling," admitted Jane, smiling at the eager little
-sister.
-
-"Oh, how pretty that is!" Nancy clasped her hands in ecstasy over the
-dainty ruffled skirt, with its tiny yellow flowers scattered over a
-white ground. Then she caught up the long sash belt of primrose-yellow
-ribbon, its graceful rosettes and flowing ends promising an effective
-finish to the simple toilet. "You 'll be the prettiest girl at the
-party!" she declared, joyously.
-
-Mrs. Bell and Jane laughed across at each other. "In a ten-cent
-dimity," their eyes said, with congratulations, "reduced from eighteen!"
-
-"My ribbon is what rejoices my soul," said Jane, touching the soft silk.
-"That was a bargain we just happened on--the price cut in two because of
-a few soiled places. We simply did n't use those at all, and there were
-enough long lengths to make the streamers. It's such a beautiful
-quality it makes the whole dress look finer than it is."
-
-"How can you ever wait till evening?" sighed Nancy. "O Jane, Shirley
-wants me to hide in the shrubbery over there by the hedge, and she's
-going to slip out with some ice-cream and cake for me!"
-
-Mrs. Bell's eyes and Jane's met again with a smile. Jane's eyebrows
-went up in interrogation. Mrs. Bell nodded. "I think Nancy may have
-that much of the party," she said.
-
-Evening came at last, although Nancy had moments of feeling sure that it
-never would. Jane, her curly auburn locks tied up in charming fashion,
-with various rebellious tendrils waving about her face, slipped into the
-pretty frock, and Mrs. Bell arranged the primrose girdle, which set off
-the whole effect. Peter, in his best black suit and wearing the new
-cravat, looked at his sister approvingly.
-
-"My, but I 'm proud of my girl!" he said.
-
-"Not prouder than I am of my big brother," responded Jane.
-
-The family saw them off, rejoicing in their youthful good looks, and
-sure they would hold their own in appearance with anybody in Worthington
-Square. Peter and Jane, not feeling quite so confident, yet
-experiencing a pleasant stir of anticipation, walked slowly round the
-corner.
-
-Nearly all the guests were arriving in carriages, and the brother and
-sister, as they crossed the porch, encountered a number of these,
-entering from the _porte-cochère_. As Jane's eyes fell upon the gaily
-dressed young people, the first thing she observed about them gave her
-an unpleasant shock. They all, youths and girls, were wearing gloves.
-Jane glanced from her own round white arms, bare from the elbows, to
-Peter's uncovered hands.
-
-"Peter, we never once thought of gloves," she murmured in his ear, as
-they lingered to let the party from the carriages go in at the door
-ahead of them.
-
-Peter stared from her to the other guests. Then his gay twinkle replaced
-the look of dismay. "Gloves--on youngsters like us! Don't you care a
-bit," he whispered back in her ear.
-
-It was a little difficult not to care, especially for Jane, as in the
-dressing-room upstairs she met many curious glances. The maid in charge
-even offered to help her put on her gloves, and Jane could not help
-feeling a bit unhappy as she replied that she was not wearing gloves.
-
-But the sight of Peter, smiling serenely at her from the head of the
-staircase, where he awaited her, strengthened her resolution not to
-mind. A glance at the mirror had assured her that the inexpensive little
-dimity with its primrose ribbons was irreproachable in its dainty
-distinction of style--thanks to Mrs. Bell's clever fingers--and this
-knowledge was very comforting. Her face was as bright as ever when she
-joined Peter, whose hearty whisper: "You 're all right!" put her quite
-on her feet again.
-
-Downstairs, where Olive Townsend stood receiving with her mother, with
-Forrest and Murray close at hand, a brief but interesting colloquy took
-place just before Jane and Peter came into the reception room. Forrest
-had been keeping sharp watch on the hall entrance, and the moment that
-he saw the two Bells arrive and make their way toward the staircase, he
-watched for a chance to get a word in the ears of his family. A lull in
-the arrivals gave him his opportunity.
-
-"Olive," he said coolly to his sister in an undertone, "I took the
-liberty of sending Jane and Peter Bell an invitation--and they 're here.
-I want you to brace up and give them just as nice a welcome as you 're
-giving the rest. Hold on! If you 're angry at anybody, it's at me, and
-you 've no right to take it out of them for that. One thing I can tell
-you; if you are frosty to them you 'll settle with me afterward."
-
-He had his sister in a corner--so to speak. Olive cared very much for
-appearances. There were many eyes upon her; she could make no angry
-response or show chagrin in any way without attracting notice and
-comment. All she could do--which she promptly did--was to whisper back,
-with lips which smiled for the sake of those who looked at her:
-
-"You wretch, I 'll pay you off--never fear!"
-
-"Do; I don't mind," and Forrest approached his mother. He was her
-favourite son, and she was a thorough woman of the world. He had
-reckoned on her making the best of the situation; and when he had told
-her, with a gay glance and a furtive squeeze of her hand, he received no
-more severe threat of punishment than he had expected in her light: "You
-naughty boy! You 'll have to take care of them; nobody else knows them,
-or will care to."
-
-"I'll see to them," was her son's careless reply, and he crossed over to
-Murray, who was indifferently playing his part of young host. To him, as
-Jane and Peter appeared at the doorway, Forrest made a hasty
-explanation.
-
-Murray's face instantly brightened, and he answered promptly: "It was a
-risky thing to do, but I 'm glad they 're here. Between us we 'll make
-sure they have a good time."
-
-There was nothing in the greeting of Mrs. Townsend or of Olive to give
-Peter and Jane a hint of their position. The Bells had expected only a
-formal reception on an occasion like this, and when they received it,
-felt no special lack. And whatever was wanting in the greeting of the
-hostesses was made up by the masculine half of the receiving party.
-
-"This is jolly," said Forrest, giving each a hearty grasp of the hand.
-"'I 'm immensely glad you could come," and as others pressed toward him,
-he passed them on to Murray.
-
-"Do you know," said Murray, "having you two come to-night makes up to me
-for the whole thing. I detest parties, as a rule, never go to them, and
-would n't come downstairs at our own affairs if I could get out of it.
-But I 'm glad I could n't--this time--. See here, you don't know many
-of these people, do you?"
-
-"Nobody at all."
-
-"Of course not--having only just moved into the neighbourhood. I can't
-do much myself except sit about and look on, and I 'm going to be so
-bold as to beg your company, Miss Bell, for so much of the evening as
-you 'll give me. There are a lot of pleasant nooks about the rooms and
-halls, and I 'd like to try them all with you. That's a selfish plan,
-is n't it?" and he smiled at her.
-
-"It's lovely of you, of course, and you know it," she answered.
-
-"It's a risk for me, lest I lose you, but I 'll present a few of these
-chaps to you, first, so if you care to dance----"
-
-"I don't--truly."
-
-"I 'm glad. But I 'll do it, for the sake of my conscience," and Murray
-began the task on the spot.
-
-Half a dozen youths accordingly bowed ceremoniously to Jane, gazed with
-interest at her charming face, said something or other in the way of an
-attempt at conversation, and got away again. Not one asked Jane to
-dance.
-
-"She needs Olive's guardianship, not mine," thought Murray, resentfully.
-"If Olive backed her up, the rest would accept her in a jiffy. But
-Olive won't do it--I know that well enough,--so I 'll do my best in my
-way, and thank my stars for the chance. There is n't a girl in the
-house to match her, that's sure."
-
-The moment that his duties in the reception-room were over Murray
-convoyed Jane away to one of the attractive retreats he had mentioned, a
-beflowered nook on the staircase landing, from which they could view the
-hall below, and see the greater part of the long drawing-room, where the
-dancing had begun. Strains of gay music from the orchestra floated
-pleasantly up to them.
-
-"Now this is something like!" said Murray, sinking back upon the soft
-divan behind the palms. He pulled off his gloves as he spoke, rolled
-them into a ball and crammed them into his pocket. He did not put them
-on again that evening--a bit of kindliness which two guests understood
-and appreciated.
-
-"If I 'm not monopolising the host when he ought to be looking after his
-other guests," replied Jane, as her eyes followed the distant dancers.
-
-"If there is any monopoly, I 'm the guilty one--and enjoying my guilt.
-Honestly, Miss Bell, it's a fine chance for me to get acquainted with my
-neighbour, if she 'll let me. And as for my being missed--" A shake of
-the head told Jane more than its owner meant of his loneliness, at which
-she had hitherto only guessed.
-
-Meanwhile, Peter had also fallen into friendly hands, if youthful ones.
-Shirley, allowed to play a modest part in the affairs of the evening,
-but finding nobody willing to give her more than a smile and nod, fell
-upon Peter as a possible ally. He had been standing at one side of the
-crush, in the doorway of the drawing-room, looking on with interested
-eyes, but feeling a trifle deserted, nevertheless, when he felt a warm
-little hand slide into his own. Looking down, surprised, he met
-Shirley's friendly smile.
-
-"You don't know many people, do you?" asked that frank young person.
-
-"I don't know anybody," returned Peter. "No, I ought not to say that,
-for your brother Forrest presented me to a number of girls. But I don't
-know how to dance, and they soon left me for livelier company."
-
-"'Nobody asks me to dance, either," said Shirley, "because Olive would
-n't invite any boys of my age, and the big ones want the big girls."
-
-"I don't," Peter assured her. "I want one about thirteen years old,
-dressed in a jolly white lacy frock, with pink ribbons and pink
-slippers. I feel more at home with a girl like that than with any of
-those I was introduced to. You see, their hair was so--done up!"
-
-"Done up! Was n't your sister's hair done up?" queried Shirley. "Oh
-no, I remember! Those lovely thick curls of hers were tied in a bunch
-at her neck--such a lovely way; none of the others do theirs like that.
-She 's awfully pretty, is n't she? Prettier than Olive, I think."
-
-"I admire my sister very much," agreed Peter, "but it would be hard for
-anybody to be prettier than your sister."
-
-His eyes turned to Olive as he spoke. She stood near by, exchanging gay
-talk with a tall youth in the interval between dances. More beautifully
-dressed than any young girl he had ever seen, her dark face lighted into
-brilliancy by excitement, the rare colour in her cheeks set off by the
-big bunch of red roses she carried, she was a picturesque figure indeed.
-
-"Yes, Olive does look pretty," admitted Olive's little sister. "Excuse
-me a minute, please," she added, and slipped over to Olive's side. If
-Peter could have heard the brief whispered conversation exchanged, he
-would hardly have dared to stand watching it, as he did.
-
-"Olive," begged Shirley, when with difficulty she had secured her
-sister's reluctant attention, "if I take care of Peter Bell for a while,
-won't you be nice to him? He does n't dance, and he does n't know
-anybody----"
-
-"It's enough that he 's here!" retorted Olive, with a frown. "I didn't
-ask him or his sister, so I----"
-
-"You did n't ask him?"
-
-"No, no--run along!
-
-"But who----"
-
-"Forrest--without saying a word to me."
-
-"Oh!" Shirley gasped, and was silent for a minute. Then she pulled at
-Olive's arm again.
-
-"Olive, but they 're our guests just the same, and----"
-
-"Shirley, don't bother me now!"
-
-"Listen, Olive, just a minute. Peter says nobody could be prettier than
-you."
-
-It was a shot which told. Olive's grudging attention was arrested. She
-glanced over her sister's head, in the direction of Peter. Her eyes met
-his, and she turned away again, but not before the momentary vision of
-the strong, intent face had impressed itself upon her as rather better
-worth consideration than many of the others.
-
-The thought of such a compliment as Shirley had reported coming from
-those firm-set lips of Peter Bell gave the recipient rather a novel
-sensation.
-
-Olive had been out of patience with Peter from the moment that she
-caught sight of his unconventional attire, but she felt all at once more
-tolerant of his presence. "He did n't tell you to tell me that, I
-suppose?" she whispered to Shirley.
-
-"Oh, no, I only----"
-
-"Go back, and tell him to save some time for me after this dance. I 'll
-keep the next one for him."
-
-"But, Olive, you know he does n't dance----"
-
-"I'll sit it out with him, since he doesn't know enough to come and ask
-me for himself."
-
-Half an hour later Jane, passing through the hall with Murray, on the
-way to the library, where he was to show her certain books of which they
-had been talking, caught sight of her brother just mounting the
-staircase to the retreat on the landing. To her surprise and
-relief--for she had anxiously looked for him from time to time, and had
-seen him with nobody but little Shirley--she noted that he was now in
-the company of his girlish hostess, and that that young person was
-turning upon him a gracious face.
-
-To Jane the remainder of the evening passed in full pleasure. She spent
-an interesting hour in the library with Murray, who made himself a
-delightful companion, expanding in the sympathetic atmosphere of her
-good comradeship into a more genial warmth and sincerity of manner than
-she had imagined him capable of showing. Then Forrest came in search of
-her, and bore her away to join a company of young people who were going
-to supper together.
-
-Under Forrest's wing she found her position secure, for he was a
-much-admired youth, and whatsoever girl he chose to favour must--as he
-had known--be treated with friendliness by all his companions. Jane's
-own charms came to her aid also, and brought several unattached young
-gentlemen to her side, so that before the evening was over she had made
-what Forrest inwardly congratulated himself upon as "a respectable
-success."
-
-Upon the landing Peter established Olive and himself on the divan among
-the palms. He studied his companion's face a moment, then said
-abruptly, "I want to tell you, Miss Townsend, that I 'm more than sorry
-to be here by an accident."
-
-She looked up at him, startled, but met only a quiet smile. "How did
-you--I didn't mean you----"
-
-"I know you did n't--and you were very kind not to show how you must
-have felt. Perhaps it would be in better taste for me not to mention it
-at all. But I wanted you to know that I appreciated your courtesy in
-accepting the situation."
-
-"But how----"
-
-"I found out--from a little slip of Miss Shirley's. I wanted to go
-home, of course, but--I could n't make up my mind to spoil my sister's
-evening, and besides--I thought your brother's invitation made it right
-for us to be here."
-
-Olive's dark face was colouring warmly. She looked down at her roses,
-wondering what to say. Somehow she found herself unwilling to let Peter
-Bell think she did n't want him at her party, for it was becoming clear
-to her that she did.
-
-"I'm so sorry," she murmured. "But I'm very glad you did n't go home.
-If I had known you longer I 'm sure I should have invited----"
-
-"Don't bother to explain," urged Peter's low voice. "'I did n't tell
-you to make you uncomfortable. Perhaps you won't mind my saying that
-looking on at this sort of thing is very interesting to me. I 've never
-seen it before."
-
-"How do you like it?" asked Olive, glancing up at him curiously.
-
-Peter laughed, looking off for a moment toward the drawing-room. "I 'm
-an outdoor sort of chap, I think," he said. "Yet it's very pretty, all
-that down there, and I like to look at it. Miss Townsend, do you ride
-horseback much?"
-
-"Sometimes--not often. I don't care for it."
-
-"Neither should I, down the boulevard or in the park, but out on a
-country road. I 'm a country boy, and I like a good gallop down the old
-Northboro Road--miles of it as smooth as a floor. As for
-cross-country--ah, there's sport!"
-
-"I 've never seen you ride."
-
-Peter's face changed. "No, I don't ride now," he said.
-
-"But you have Saturday afternoons free?"
-
-"Oh, yes."
-
-"There are three saddle-horses in the stable," said Olive, making a
-sudden resolve, "and only one of them gets much use. Would you--care to
-take me for a gallop down the Northboro Road some day?"
-
-That she should make such a proposition as this would have seemed to
-Olive Townsend but an hour before preposterous. But now, looking up at
-the sturdy figure before her, noting the wistful smile with which Peter
-had spoken of past experiences, it had come to her all at once that a
-new pleasure might be hers. She saw plainly that she should not be
-ashamed of Peter as an escort anywhere.
-
-Peter stared at his hostess for a moment as if he could hardly believe
-that he had heard aright. "Do you really mean that, Miss Townsend?" he
-asked.
-
-"Indeed I do. I 'm not in the habit of saying things I don't mean."
-
-"Then, thank you, I should like it immensely," he said, with a smile and
-bow, more attractive, Olive admitted to herself, than any she had
-received that evening.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- WEEDS AND FLOWERS
-
-
-"Good morning, Miss Jane Bell! May I come in?"
-
-Jane lifted her head quickly from over the phlox-bed she was weeding in
-the little garden back of the house, to see Forrest Townsend looking
-over the wooden gate which shut away the garden from the surrounding
-neighborhood.
-
-"Good morning! Yes, indeed, come in," she responded blithely, waving a
-discarded white ruffled sunbonnet at her guest. He vaulted over the low
-barrier and came swinging down the narrow path to the end of the
-enclosure, where the phlox-bed lay. Here he stood still, regarding with
-favour the girl in the blue dress, whose bronze-tinted hair glinted in
-the early June sunlight.
-
-"Always busy at something, are n't you?" he said, tipping over a
-bushel-basket half-filled with weeds, and seating himself upon it.
-"Yes, I know I 've spilled out the weeds, but I 'll pick 'em up again
-when I 'm through. I came over to have a serious talk with you, and I
-'ve got to be down here near you, where I can look you in the eye. The
-grass is too damp yet to sit on in white trousers."
-
-Jane laughed. "It can't be a very serious matter that's troubling you,
-or you would n't think of your clothes."
-
-"It is serious, though. I 'm full of it, and can't stop to talk about
-the weather, so here goes.--I 've quarrelled with my father."
-
-Jane, who had thus far not ceased her weeding, stopped work and sat
-still to look at her neighbour. He met her gaze defiantly.
-
-"Yes, I know. You think this is another case of schoolboy heroics, like
-the last fuss I told you I had with him--"
-
-"I wish you would n't tell me."
-
-"I 've got to tell somebody. Come, Jane--you 've grown to seem like the
-best friend I have--don't turn the cold shoulder on me just when I need
-you. You know what my mother and sister are like----"
-
-With a gesture of disapproval Jane turned away to her work.
-
-Forrest watched her for a moment in silence; then he began again:
-
-"All right, I won't complain if you 'll just let me tell you about this
-last scrape. There 's nobody else I can talk to--you know enough about
-us to know that."
-
-"There ought to be. Your brother----"
-
-"Oh, Murray! With all respect to him--since you insist on respect--he
-'s not off the same piece of cloth with me, and can't understand me any
-more than I can him. His blood is n't good red blood at all; it's
-white, I think, and I----"
-
-Jane rose up from her knees and stood above her visitor, determination
-on her frank face.
-
-"Forrest Townsend," said she, "if you can talk to me without running
-down your family, I 'll listen, but not otherwise. I don't think you
-ought to tell me your affairs at all, but if you 're sure I can be of
-use I 'll hear them, on that one condition."
-
-Forrest studied her a moment without replying, while her clear hazel
-eyes returned his gaze. Then he laughed rather awkwardly.
-
-"You 're the soul of honour, are n't you?" he said. "And that's just why
-I need your advice. I don't want to do anything dishonourable, but I 'm
-in a corner, and don't see any way out except a jump over the wall. Let
-me tell you--please!"
-
-Jane dropped upon her knees again and gave her attention to her work.
-Taking this as permission, Forrest began, picking up a long, pink-headed
-weed and pulling it through his fingers as he talked.
-
-"I 've known all the while father wanted me in the house with him, and
-wanted me to go to college with that end in view. We 've had a few
-brushes on the subject from time to time, and I 've told him over and
-over I never meant to go to college, or to go into the business, either,
-but he 's thought it boy talk, I suppose. Anyhow, it turns out he's
-never taken me seriously when I 've told him I meant to live my own life
-in my own way. He had me tutored all last winter, to get me ready for
-my entrance examinations, and he expects me to go down and take them
-next week. That 's where I balked. He tackled me last night, and I had
-it out with him. The result was"--Forrest tried to keep up the
-nonchalant manner he had assumed when he began this explanation, but his
-voice showed his strong feeling as he ended the sentence--"the result
-was--he gave it to me hot and heavy, and I--talked back at him. In
-short, I----"
-
-Jane, her pretty lips set close together, her troubled eyes on the
-ground, listened anxiously for the words.
-
-"You don't mean----" she began, slowly.
-
-Forrest nodded, and she caught the gesture. It brought her head round
-and her eyes to search his. "You didn't--say you wouldn't do what he
-wants?"
-
-"I did--and meant it."
-
-Jane drew a long breath. She forgot her weeding and sat back upon the
-walk, pulling off her gloves. Forrest waited silently for her first
-comment.
-
-"Imagine my brother Peter doing that," she murmured.
-
-"I can't imagine it--though Peter's no soft-head. But your father's
-human, Jane. Mine--isn't."
-
-"Oh, he is--he is! Don't say that! He may seem stern and hard, but
-that 's only on the surface, I 'm sure."
-
-"Much you know about it!" muttered Forrest. "But, anyhow, hard or not, I
-'m not going to be put into a business life I hate."
-
-"What would you like to do?"
-
-"Go into the army."
-
-Jane stared at him, astonished. This idle youth live that sort of life?
-Her lips curved slowly into a smile, at which Forrest promptly took
-umbrage.
-
-"See here," he said, sitting up straight, "you 're not to judge me, you
-know, from what you 've seen of me in the two months you 've lived in
-Gay Street. I 've been on vacation, I admit, ever since my tutor left
-in March. Besides, it 's not enlisting as a private I 'm thinking
-of--no, no! I want to enter the army by the way of West Point, and get
-my lieutenant's commission at graduation. That 's a very different
-thing."
-
-"Yes, that's true. It means, I believe, four years of the severest
-training in the world. I know a boy who went--he could n't stand it."
-
-Forrest flushed hotly under his fair skin. "And you think I could n't.
-That settles it. I 'll go, if only to prove you 're mistaken."
-
-The girl looked up quickly, startled by his tone. "Ah, please," she
-began, "don't talk that way. Tell me--will your brother go into the
-business?"
-
-"Not much! His health settles that for him. Besides, he 's too bookish,
-and father 'll let him do what he pleases, anyway--he does n't mind
-having one son of that stripe. But the other son--he must go into the
-mill, whether he wants to or not!"
-
-"Could you get to West Point without your father's permission? Don't
-you have to be sent by somebody--your Congressman, is n't it?"
-
-"Oh, there 's a lot of red tape, and father could block the whole game,
-I suppose. If he does--well, I 'd enlist and get into the ranks and
-work my way up, rather than go into that dingy old office and tie myself
-to a desk and a telephone."
-
-Forrest got upon his feet as he spoke, brushed a clinging weed leaf or
-two from his clothes, and stood looking gloomily down at Jane, who had
-risen also. "It 's evident I get no sympathy from you," he said. "I
-thought you were a girl who could understand a fellow's ambitions--not
-wet-blanket them."
-
-Jane looked up at him, smiling, although her eyes were still troubled.
-"I can, I think," she said. "Yet--somehow--I'm imagining the
-disappointment it must be to a father who has built up a great business
-like Townsend & Company's to have his son take no interest in it. I
-can't help thinking--"
-
-"What?"--as Jane paused abruptly.
-
-"Never mind."
-
-"But I want to know what you can't help thinking."
-
-"Well, I 'm wondering if it would be any harder for you to go into your
-father's office than it is for Peter to work with my father in the
-note-paper factory. Do you know what Peter wants to be?"
-
-"No. I know he has a good position for his age, with the Armstrongs."
-
-"Yes, but Peter wants--has wanted for six years--to be a chemist--an
-expert, you know. Oh, I 'm not sure I ought to tell you--please never
-speak of it. Even father does n't know it's any more than a boy's
-fancy. Peter could n't afford the years of training, of course--and
-father can't spare him. There are"--as Forrest looked surprised--"more
-people dependent on father and the boys than you know of--and I must n't
-tell you. All I want you to know is that"--Jane smiled
-wistfully--"there are other people who can't have their own way--and who
-are making the best of it, and pretty bravely, too."
-
-Mrs. Bell came to the door of the house, and with a pleasant nod and
-smile to Forrest, told Jane that a certain bowl of bread-dough had
-reached a critical condition of lightness. The girl picked up her
-basket, and Forrest bent to toss into it the weeds he had thrown out.
-
-"Please don't feel I 'm an unsympathetic listener," begged Jane, as her
-visitor took his leave.
-
-"I won't. I know you mean it all right. I just think you don't
-understand all the facts in the case. Much obliged to you for hearing
-me out. If I turn up missing some day, you 'll know you did your part,
-and gave me the proper grandmotherly advice." And Forrest swung away
-through the gate with a reckless air, which Jane thought rather
-melodramatic, and quite in keeping with a certain staginess sometimes
-apparent in the youth's bearing.
-
-
-Jane's acquaintance with Olive Townsend had progressed very slowly.
-Olive was not a girl who possessed the gift of making many warm
-friendships. She was not well liked even by the young people of her own
-chosen circle. Girl visitors were not frequent at the Townsend house,
-and Olive was seldom seen coming or going with one or another of such
-friends. Yet there was something about her personality which held a
-strong attraction for Jane, and made her want to know Olive well.
-
-When Peter returned from his first horseback ride in Olive's company,
-Jane had waited with interest for his description of the event. Peter
-always told Jane his experiences--for the reason, perhaps, that she
-never demanded them from him, never betrayed his confidences, and
-invariably showed her appreciation of his comradeship.
-
-"She 's an odd girl," said Peter to Jane. "She seemed principally
-occupied, for the first two miles, in noticing how I rode, whether I
-kept elbows in, head up, back stiff, like herself, and whether I held my
-whip in the proper position. We jogged along at a fussy little pace,
-talking about nothing in particular, and minding our p's and q's as if
-we were at Professor Miller's riding academy, with the eye of the master
-on us."
-
-"I hope she was satisfied with your correct style," Jane said. "I saw
-you start, and I thought you looked more at home in the saddle than
-she."
-
-"I probably am. After riding everything on grandfather's farm ever
-since I was a little shaver, and breaking every colt he had for the
-three years we lived there, I ought to feel fairly comfortable on a
-model saddle-horse like the one she gave me. She's been trained in the
-school, which leaves a lot of things to be desired, to my way of
-thinking. She broke loose all right, though, when I got my chance to
-show her what my idea of the sport is."
-
-Peter's face took on a comical expression, and Jane hurried him on with
-an eager "Well?"
-
-"We got out on the Northboro Road. You know that long stretch where
-there are so few houses--just a sort of lane between big trees, shady
-and cool, and the road like a training-track at this time of year?"
-
-Jane nodded.
-
-"I proposed that we let out a reef or two. She agreed, and we broke
-into a baby canter. I kept hitting up the pace a little. Her horse
-caught the idea, and began to quicken. She bumped about a bit, but I
-saw she would know how to stay on, even if she moved faster than she
-ever had before. Just as we got up a fairly decent speed, one of those
-little _crack-a-cracks_ of motor-cycles came bursting out of a driveway,
-and both our horses shied and threatened to bolt.
-
-"It was nothing, you know; they were over it in a jiffy, and she kept
-her seat all right, and showed she was game. But it stirred both horses
-to take the rest of that stretch at as pretty a gallop as you 'd care to
-see; and when I saw the girl was all right, I shouted, 'Come on!' and
-let them have it. I tell you, she forgot the riding academy and
-Professor Miller, and rode for fair. It was jolly good fun, and she
-enjoyed it, too."
-
-Peter laughed reminiscently. Jane remarked that she had noticed Olive's
-masses of black hair were not in quite such trim shape when she came
-home from that ride as upon setting forth; and Peter admitted that upon
-that joyous gallop she had dropped not only her whip, but most of her
-hairpins, of which latter articles he had been able to recover for her
-only a few.
-
-"That's all the girl needs," he observed, sagely. "Just shake out a few
-of her hairpins each time you 're with her, and she 'll learn how to be
-good friends with you."
-
-"I don't have much chance to shake out her hairpins," Jane objected.
-
-"You will. You're to go next time--some day when her brother Forrest is
-away, and I can ride his horse and you the one I had. I told her a
-pitiful tale of how you loved to ride, how well you could do it,
-and----"
-
-"Peter!"
-
-"Oh, I didn't whine--just let her know I was n't the only horseman in
-the family. She 'll ask you--see if she doesn't; if she doesn't I won't
-go my self."
-
-Olive did not ask Jane, however, and after one more ride with her, Peter
-suddenly became too busy to accept her invitations. Olive went off by
-herself one day, suffered a fall and a sprained shoulder, and was
-thereby initiated at last into Jane's friendship.
-
-"My sister sent me over," said Murray Townsend, one June evening, to
-Jane, who, hemming a tiny ruffle, sat in the western sunlight upon the
-little back porch, where the family now spent their evenings, enjoying
-the first blossomings of the small garden. "She's been fretting all day
-with that shoulder of hers she hurt last week, and vows she can't get
-through the evening with me. The others are all away--as usual. Won't
-you do us the favour of coming over?"
-
-"Was it really her suggestion--or yours?" Jane challenged him, for it
-was not the first time he had made the attempt, upon one excuse or or
-another, to get her across the street.
-
-"Hers, on my honour, though I 'll admit I seconded the motion. She
-really wants you. She's lying on a couch round on the side porch. It's a
-jolly place, or would be if it--had you in it," he nearly said, but
-discreetly substituted--"had such a nice crowd in it as this."
-
-He glanced from one to another of the group upon the little porch. Ross
-was softly breathing notes from a flute. Mr. and Mrs. Bell sat side by
-side, in happy comradeship. Peter, his long legs extending well out
-upon the grass before the porch, whittled at a bit of wood; and Nancy,
-close beside her cousin Ross, was holding for him a page of music, which
-he evidently was trying for the first time.
-
-"Stay with them, if you 'd like to," suggested Jane, softly, as she put
-away her work and prepared to accept his invitation. "You know they
-always like to have you--every one of them--and I can slip across by
-myself. I 'll take her some of my mignonette and June roses."
-
-"Thank you for your kind permission," answered Murray, following Jane's
-white-clad figure slowly down to the mignonette-bed at the farther end
-of the garden, "but I 'd rather accept it some evening when Miss Jane
-Bell is to be at home. 'Hamlet' with Ophelia left out would n't be much
-more of a play than it would be minus the melancholy gentleman himself."
-
-Armed with a great bunch of the fragrant blossoms from the garden, Jane
-accompanied Murray across Gay Street, through the gate in the high
-hedge, and over the lawn and round the house to the great sheltered
-porch on the other side, its tall columns making it as great a contrast
-to the miniature place she had just left as could be imagined. Rugs
-carpeted the floor, big bamboo and rush chairs invited repose, and
-screens hung ready to be dropped, and to shut it quite away from
-invading breezes.
-
-On a wide, richly cushioned settee lay Olive, listless and unhappy. She
-scanned Jane closely, noted that her visitor was not less attractively,
-if far less expensively, dressed than herself, and lifted to her face
-eyes into which had suddenly come a look of relief and interest.
-
-"For me?" she asked, as Jane put the flowers into her outstretched
-hands. "Oh, how sweet! Why don't we have such mignonette as that in our
-gardens?"
-
-"There are a lot of flowers," thought Murray, as he watched Jane take
-her seat by his sister and begin to entertain her, "that they grow in
-Gay Street which we don't know the smell of over here. If we could just
-transplant the one I brought over to-night, what a beginning of a garden
-we should have!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- JANE PUTS A QUESTION
-
-
-On her way home from a trip to a not far-distant fruit-shop, Nancy Bell
-caught sight of her friend, Shirley Townsend, waving an eagerly
-summoning hand from the gateway in the hedge.
-
-It was a hot morning in early July, and Nancy, after running into the
-house to report her return to her mother, joined Shirley in a shady
-corner under the shrubbery, which had become a favourite trysting-place
-of the two children.
-
-Half an hour afterward Nancy, her eyes wide with excitement, sought out
-her mother and Jane upon the small back porch, where each was busy with
-the morning's work--at this moment the looking-over of raspberries and
-the shelling of peas.
-
-"O mother--O Jane!" the child began, "the dreadfullest thing has
-happened over at the big house! Forrest Townsend 's run away, and they
-don't know where he is!"
-
-"Why, Nan!" Jane's busy fingers, red with raspberry stains, stopped
-their work, as she stared at her sister in dismay. "That can't be so!"
-
-"Yes, it can--it is! Shirley told me. He's been gone three days, but
-they thought he must be off on a visit till they got a letter this
-morning. And they don't even know where the letter was mailed from.
-Mrs. Townsend 's sick in bed about it, and Shirley says her father won't
-say a word--just looks white and angry and queer."
-
-"The poor father and mother!" murmured Mrs. Bell, her eyes full of
-sympathy.
-
-"But he can't have gone away to stay," said Jane, staring at Nancy,
-still incredulous. "He's an impulsive fellow--quick tempered,
-hot-headed--and he and his father don't get on well together. But to run
-away----"
-
-"But he has," persisted Nancy. "The letter said it was no use looking
-for him; he'd come back some time when he 'd shown he could look after
-his own--oh, I don't remember just what he said--Shirley was n't sure
-what it meant. But she said her mother just cried and cried, and told
-her father she'd always known his harsh ways----"
-
-"Don't, dear--don't tell us!" Mrs. Bell interrupted, quickly. "Shirley
-should n't have told you anything that was said; we have no right to
-know. When people are hurt and sad, they say bitter things they are
-very sorry for afterward. The only thing for us to know is that this
-trouble has come to our neighbours. We must think how we can help them.
-I would go over at once if I thought I could be of use to poor Mrs.
-Townsend--and were sure she was willing I should know."
-
-They discussed the situation, Mrs. Bell and Jane, as they went on with
-their work; and Jane told her mother all she knew of Forrest's
-differences with his father. "It bothers me so," she ended,
-sorrowfully, "that I did n't realise he was in earnest about taking
-things into his own hands, and do something to let the others know. Do
-you suppose that foolish threat about enlisting in the army could really
-have been what he meant to do? Do you suppose he has done it?"
-
-"It is a possible clue. I think they ought to know it, if they have
-nothing else to guide them. When your father comes home I will talk with
-him about it, and he may think it best to go to Mr. Townsend himself,
-tell him what we know, and offer to help."
-
-But it proved not necessary to wait until the evening to consult about
-offering sympathy and counsel to the troubled family in Worthington
-Square. Early in the afternoon, while Mrs. Bell lay resting in her room,
-and Nancy and Jane sat in the shadow of one of the big maples at the end
-of the garden--their special retreat on hot days--the tap of Murray's
-cane was heard on the walk outside.
-
-"Run into the house, dear, please!" Jane whispered, quickly. "It 's
-Murray, and I believe he's come to talk with me about Forrest."
-
-Her surmise proved correct, as she knew from her first glance at the
-pale face and grave eyes of her friend. He was her friend--that she had
-come to know very clearly in the last few weeks--her friend in quite a
-different way from that in which Forrest had shown her friendship. There
-had developed a genuine congeniality of interests between the quiet,
-book-loving youth and the girl who had not gone to college, but who was
-persistently giving herself the higher education she longed for. Books
-he was lending her, lessons in French and German he had been lately
-begging to be allowed to give her, and many inspiring talks he had with
-her on the subjects both loved, whenever a chance offered or he could
-make one.
-
-So now, as Murray came toward her, his eyes fixed upon her as if he were
-sure that here he would find something he sorely needed, Jane felt an
-added longing to show her power to be of use in time of trouble; and
-dropping her book--one that belonged to Murray--she came forward to meet
-him with outstretched hand, and a look which showed him that she already
-understood.
-
-"You 've heard?" he asked, in surprise. "I don't know how, but I 'm
-glad, for I dreaded to tell it."
-
-"Shirley told Nancy--just the bare facts--and of course my little sister
-told my mother and me. We 've been thinking of you all ever since,
-wishing we could help you."
-
-"You can; we need you. Even mother feels it. Olive says when she asked
-her if she wanted a nurse, she refused to have one except her maid, but
-said, 'I wish I dared to ask that kind-faced Mrs. Bell. I feel as if
-she could tell me what to do.'"
-
-"Mother will be so glad. She will go over by and by. She loves to help
-people, and always knows how better than anybody else in the world."
-
-"I can believe it. She makes a fellow feel as if he belonged to her,
-somehow, and she was interested in him."
-
-"She is--that's why she makes you feel so.--Come over here in the shade,
-please, and tell me what I can do."
-
-Murray dropped upon the grass beside Jane's low chair with a sigh of
-weariness, and ran his hand through the thick locks of his hair, pushing
-them away from his forehead with an impatient gesture, as if he would
-like thus easily to clear away the clouds which bothered him.
-
-"You see," he began slowly, "I feel more or less responsible myself for
-this outbreak. I can't help thinking that if things had been between us
-as they ought to be between brothers Forrest would have brought his
-notions and troubles to me."
-
-"But you--but he----" Jane paused, surprised at the tone he took. "You
-have n't been able to be with Forrest much, because--because he has been
-so active and lived such a different life----"
-
-"You are kind to excuse me, but I don't see how that makes it any
-better. I could have shown interest and sympathy enough with his tastes
-and plans to have made him come naturally to me. I 'm the elder
-brother, and I have n't been a brother, only a querulous, fault-finding,
-elderly relative, as if he were fourteen and I forty. He did come to
-you with his grievances against father, did n't he?"
-
-Jane coloured a little as his eyes keenly questioned her.
-
-"Yes, though I did n't want him to tell me, and would n't listen to very
-much of it. I felt guilty to let him talk at all, but he was so----"
-
-"I 'm glad you did. If anybody could have given him advice that he
-would take it would have been you. I was pretty sure he had been to
-you, by the way I saw him fling over here just after he 'd had a bout
-with father."
-
-"He said something that day I feel as if your father ought to know, and
-I 've been wondering how I could let him know," and with this
-introduction, Jane told Murray all she had learned of Forrest's
-inclination toward the army and its varied experiences, ending as gently
-as she could with the boyish threat of enlisting if he could not bring
-about his own appointment to West Point. Murray listened to her very
-soberly.
-
-"Father would veto the West Point proposition from the first word," he
-said, "merely because he has no notion of the sort of fascination the
-idea would have for a restless chap like my brother. So if Forrest asked
-him to let him go, I 've no doubt he refused him, and then--well, I can
-easily imagine Forrest carrying out his threat out of pure bravado. It
-gives us something to go by, anyhow. We can soon find out if he 's had
-the folly to enlist. He may have the dash and bravery to do a gallant
-deed, to fight stoutly enough at a time of need, but the patience and
-endurance for the every-day army life----" He shook his head. "He's
-only a boy, you know. You could n't expect it of him."
-
-Just here Peter opened the little garden gate and came swinging in.
-"Hello!" he called, at sight of the pair under the maple-tree. "You two
-look cool and restful out there. May I join the picnic party when I 've
-freshened up a bit? A breakdown in the power at the factory sent fifty
-or sixty of us in our department home for a quarter-holiday."
-
-"That 's luck for us, too!" called back Murray, cordially.
-
-Jane bent forward eagerly. "Do you mind Peter's knowing?" she asked.
-"Pete's so big and strong and--ingenious; he 's like mother at knowing
-what to do."
-
-"I want Peter to know," Murray replied, without hesitation. "We 're
-going to try to keep this thing out of the papers, of course, and away
-from our acquaintances as long as we can, but your family must all know.
-I feel, somehow, as if having the Bell family stand by us would be worth
-a lot."
-
-When Peter came out, in fresh clothes, his brown hair damp from the
-splashing shower he had just taken, and joined the two others under the
-maple, he was told the whole story. He listened in clear-eyed gravity,
-with once or twice a short exclamation of regret. As Murray ended with
-Jane's suggestion about the runaway's possible enlistment in the army,
-Peter drew a long breath.
-
-"I believe I can understand how he felt about it," he said, throwing his
-head back and staring up at the sky for a moment. Then, coming back to
-earth with a squaring of his broad shoulders, he added, with a rueful
-smile at Jane, "And that's not because my home is n't the happiest one
-on earth. It 's just the feeling a fellow gets once in a while that he
-'d like to jump over something and make a dash for the horizon line--to
-see what's beyond it! And I can see how he----" Then he broke off
-suddenly, looking at Murray. "That does n't mean I don't appreciate
-what this is to all his family. And if there's anything I can do to
-help, I 'm your man."
-
-"You 'd be a good one to send after him," Murray answered, with a slight
-smile. "You 'd know better than to pounce on him like an officer of the
-law. You 'd treat him like a brother--a better brother than I 've
-been,"--and the smile faded.
-
-"Look here, don't take it that way. There are few brothers I know who
-stand shoulder to shoulder as they ought to do. It's odd, but it's so,
-and a pity it is, too. I think our family is different from most--for
-the reason----" Here Peter stopped abruptly once more, meeting Jane's
-eyes. He could not say that early training, given by wise parents, had
-made all the difference in the world with their family life.
-
-"Yes, I fancy I know the reason," said Murray, wistfully, "and I
-congratulate you on it."
-
-"I 'm a stupid sort of Job's comforter," Peter went on. "But one thing
-is sure; if you 'd like an extra brother, to stand by in this
-difficulty, here he is."
-
-He laid his hand on Murray's arm as he spoke, and Murray flushed with
-pleasure. He turned and held out his own hand, and Peter's closed on it
-with a grip. Then both began to talk with a will about other things.
-
-When Murray went home he took Mrs. Bell with him. He watched her vanish
-through the doorway of his mother's room, where that poor lady had been
-all day in a state of nervous prostration, and felt that he had brought
-her a friend worth while.
-
-The moment that his father came home Murray went to him with the news he
-had obtained in Gay Street. The two had a long conference, during which
-Murray discovered his father to be watching him with a peculiar
-expression, as if surprised to find this reserved son so ready with
-suggestions.
-
-Mr. Townsend shook his head over the notion that Forrest could have
-carried his revolt against authority so far as to have taken the step of
-enlisting in the army; but when Murray urged that the clue should be
-followed up, the elder man said slowly:
-
-"I don't know whether it would do any good to hunt him up and bring him
-home. He's taken things into his own hands. I feel like letting him
-manage his own affairs for a while. He has n't the force of character to
-deprive himself of the comforts of life very long. If he has enlisted,
-he 'd better take the consequences. I 'm not so sure but a term of
-service in the army would do him good, take the conceit out of him, and
-show him that he cannot escape discipline anywhere;--life itself means
-discipline of one sort or another."
-
-"If we should find he had enlisted, then, you wouldn't take the steps to
-get him off? You could, you know, sir, since he 's under age. Peter
-says so."
-
-"Peter? Peter who?"
-
-"Peter Bell--in Gay Street."
-
-"Oh, yes. You see a good deal of the Bells, Murray?"
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-"I don't think I should apply to have him released from service," said
-Mr. Townsend, slowly, grim lines settling about his mouth.
-
-A week went by. At its close a second briefly letter arrived from
-Forrest, addressed to his mother. It stated that Forrest had enlisted
-in the army, and had, at his own application, been allowed to join a
-regiment just leaving for San Francisco, to be sent for a term of three
-years' service in the Philippines. By the time the letter reached home,
-Forrest would have sailed.
-
-The letter was written in a spirit of boyish bravado, like the first,
-but although it upset Mrs. Townsend again and sent her back to her bed,
-it relieved the tension of the family. It furnished definite news of
-the young fellow's whereabouts, and made it possible to communicate with
-him when he should have reached his destination.
-
-Mrs. Townsend spent many days thereafter in urging her husband to apply
-at headquarters to have her son returned. It could be done, she was
-sure, because the boy was but nineteen, and having enlisted without his
-father's permission, must have misrepresented his age at the
-recruiting-station. But Mr. Townsend remained firm. He said that
-Forrest, having chosen this course, must abide by it, at least for the
-term of service for which he had enlisted. He would not have a turncoat
-for a son, he said sternly, although with a suspicious lowering of the
-voice; and he was more and more impressed with the conviction that the
-hard realities of life would make a man out of Forrest if the stuff of
-which men are made was in him.
-
-"Meanwhile," he said to Murray, with a sadness which the other detected,
-"it is the father, rather than the son, after all, who has the bitterest
-dose of medicine to take."
-
-"I 'm sorry, sir," was all Murray could say, wondering if his father
-meant the fact that his plan for taking Forrest into the business would
-have to be given up.
-
-He suggested this to Jane Bell, in the little garden one evening, down
-by the phlox-bed, where she had gone to pick a bunch of flowers for
-Olive, who sat upon the porch with Ross and Peter. Olive had at last
-learned the way over to Gay Street, and having found it, had discovered
-that the knowledge lent interest to a life she had felt to be very dull.
-
-"I suppose he feels badly about it," said Murray, holding the phlox Jane
-gave him while she picked a cluster of lilies to go with it.
-
-"Indeed, he must."
-
-"It is the thing he has looked forward to for years--ever since he
-realised he could n't make a business man out of me."
-
-"Yes, and I suppose, even if your brother came back after two or three
-years, less head-strong than now, he might not be any more willing to
-settle down to that life."
-
-"No, I doubt if he would. It's all up for father, and it's a tremendous
-disappointment."
-
-"I am very, very sorry for him," said Jane, gravely, musing over her
-lilies. There was silence for a moment; then she looked up. "You don't
-think," she ventured, her hazel eyes scanning his, "that anybody could
-possibly make it up to him?"
-
-"Anybody? Who?"
-
-"Who, indeed?" Jane was breathing a little quickly.
-
-Murray stared at her in mingled astonishment, questioning and dismay.
-Then he spoke, abruptly and roughly: "In the name of all absurdity, you
-can't mean _me_?"
-
-Jane dropped her eyes, flushing deeply. She bit her lips. "It would be
-very, very hard, would n't it?"
-
-Murray drew a deep, impatient breath. "_Hard!_" he exploded, and turned
-away. Then he wheeled back. "You're not serious?" he said, hurriedly.
-"You can't be serious in even suggesting such a thing. I--bookworm,
-cripple, weakling----"
-
-Jane raised her eyes once more. In the deepening twilight Murray felt
-as if they were searching his soul.
-
-"And yet," she said, slowly, and almost wistfully, "it would be such a
-magnificent thing to do. It would take hero stuff, I know--yet," she
-smiled, "I think--you--could----" Then she stopped short. "Oh, forgive
-me!" she cried, softly, under her breath. "What am I that I should
-suggest hero deeds to you? A girl who cries nearly every night of her
-life because she can't go to college!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- MURRAY GIVES AN ANSWER
-
-
-"I wish I knew," observed Olive Townsend to Jane Bell, "what in the
-world is the matter with Murray. He acts as if he had lost his head
-completely. I went into his room this morning, and almost fell over a
-pile of Indian clubs and dumb-bells; and I saw a set of chest weights
-hanging against the wall. It's the queerest thing! He's never gone in
-for that sort of thing at all--and I shouldn't think he was strong
-enough for it, either."
-
-The two girls were driving along the park roadway in a high-hung phaeton
-of Olive's, behind a very smartly harnessed horse. This was the third
-time Olive had asked Jane to drive with her, and although Jane would
-have enjoyed excursions into the country much more than these drives
-about the fashionable city streets, she appreciated the honour Olive
-meant to do her in thus exhibiting their friendship to all beholders.
-Olive had grown to be rather proud of Jane's company upon these drives,
-for she was conscious that they attracted considerable admiring
-attention, and she fancied that Jane's quiet daintiness of attire set
-off her own rather more striking style.
-
-Jane laughed at the notion that Murray was not strong enough to put
-himself in the way of being stronger. She knew it was Peter who had
-suggested this course of proceedings in response to an envious comment
-from Murray, when he had seen Peter scantily garbed for some severe
-physical labor about the house.
-
-"Biceps?" Peter had laughed, as Murray grasped the sinewy arm and
-expressed his admiration for the fine development thereof. "And
-deltoid?--Oh yes, that's easy. If your particular form of daily toil
-does n't give you muscle where you want it, get it for yourself with
-exercise. You can build up anything you like in a gymnasium--or in your
-own room, if you have the persistence."
-
-"You could, with your splendid health to begin on, of course," Murray
-replied, with a sigh, for he had begun to suspect that Peter's unusual
-level-headedness and efficiency came in considerable degree from his
-well-developed body.
-
-"So could you. A year of solid work with a good instructor would make
-another chap of you. Two years, an athlete."
-
-"Oh, no--not with my constitution."
-
-"Your constitution, man!" Peter had almost shouted. "What's
-constitution? Something to be made just about what you will of.
-Fellows with a direct tendency toward consumption have made themselves
-giants by living outdoors and sawing wood."
-
-This had been the beginning, the first result of which serious talk had
-been the dumb-bells and chest-weights which had called forth Olive's
-suspicion of her brother's sanity.
-
-"But he's never cared for anything but books--and to be let alone,"
-objected Olive, when Jane replied that she thought nothing better could
-happen to Murray than to become interested in building up his physical
-being. "It's just since Forrest has been gone--only think, that's six
-weeks now--that Murray has been at this."
-
-"It's telling on him already, too," said Jane, feeling a sense of
-elation over the fact which she could not quite account for. "He has a
-better colour. I noticed it yesterday."
-
-"That was sunburn," declared Olive, skeptically. "He spent the afternoon
-lying on the ground with a book down by the hedge, right squarely in the
-hot August sun. I think it was ridiculous."
-
-"He's lived in the house ever so much more than was good for him," Jane
-insisted, gently. "So does everybody in cities. My idea of
-happiness--one sort--is a day on my grandfather's farm. It's only about
-ten miles out, and we 've a plan. Should you, Murray, and Shirley, care
-to spend a day with us out there? A sort of picnic, you know. Down by
-the river there are the loveliest places you can imagine, and Peter says
-he 'll take you fishing if you care for it."
-
-"Indeed I should, I 'm sure," agreed Olive, with real pleasure. She
-loved new sensations, and the notion of going fishing with Peter Bell
-appealed to her strongly. She was growing more and more to respect and
-admire Peter; in a way, it was true, in which she quite failed to
-appreciate his best qualities, but in which she responded, nevertheless,
-to those which his family would have rated as his second best.
-
-"Don't forget the picnic," was Olive's last word, as she set Jane down
-at her own door. "I shall begin to get an outing hat ready now."
-
-"If I should forget, Peter would remind me. It's his plan," Jane
-reassured her--a fact which of itself pleased Olive, for she was
-confident that it meant his regard for her entertainment.
-
-If she had known, however, the whole plan was a plot of Peter's for
-Murray's diversion.
-
-"The fellow 's worrying about something," Peter had said. "He's
-pitching into the exercises I showed him, but his mind 's counting
-against him. I know what he wants to build himself up for. He told me
-that if he had to be the family's sole representative in the matter of
-sons for the next three years, he wanted to put up a better showing, and
-I 'm decidedly glad he takes it that way. I 'd hate myself to be five
-feet ten and weigh only one hundred and thirty. Let 's take him--and the
-girls if you like--out for a day on Grandfather Bell's farm. What do
-you say? Do you suppose we could make the thing acceptable to Miss
-Worthington Square?" After due consideration of the matter, and some
-consultation with her mother, Jane had enthusiastically agreed. Now,
-upon returning from the drive, she was able to tell Peter that Olive had
-accepted the invitation with alacrity.
-
-"What--fishing and all?" he laughed. "Really, I think better of her
-ladyship than ever for coming down to earth like that. The question is
-now, how to get them there without resorting to hay-wagons--a form of
-conveyance I judge Miss Olive would n't deign to accept."
-
-"Imagine one rolling up to the _porte-cochère_ on the Worthington Square
-front!" and Jane broke into such a merry laugh that everybody joined
-in--for Jane had told Peter her news at the dinner-table.
-
-"Let Miss Olive and Murray and Shirley drive in their own trap, and have
-Pete bring out grandfather's new surrey for us. I 'm sure it's as trim
-a looking vehicle as any, if his horses don't have quite the smartest
-harness going," suggested Ross McAndrew. "The horses themselves are
-crack-a-jacks."
-
-"That will have to do, I think," Jane agreed, "though it seems too bad
-to ask our guests to take themselves."
-
-"No matter in what order we go, you 'll find we 'll come home
-democratically mixed up," prophesied Ross. "I defy Miss Worthington
-Square to withstand the leveling influences of a day on Grandfather
-Bell's farm. I 've no doubt Peter will drive the trap home, with Rufe
-hanging on the back seat, and Murray will learn what it means to coax a
-pair of shy farm horses past the electric cars. As for me, I may come
-home as jockey on young Major's back, the city youth having proved not
-up to the situation."
-
-With such merry comments the preparation for the picnic was made. And
-if the Bells had known it, their guests looked forward to the affair
-with quite as pleasant anticipations as themselves. When the day
-came--a sultry August morning, with signs of thunder-showers in the
-west--Olive and Murray and Shirley found themselves as willing to risk a
-possible wetting as the Bells themselves, who never minded such small
-things as thunder-showers in the least.
-
-The farm horses--Grandfather Bell's pride, and with reason, for they
-were a fine pair of blacks--led the way, the new surrey carrying such a
-jolly company that the guests, following close behind in the smart trap,
-tried in vain to rival their hilarity. The three Townsends were all
-arrayed in white linen from head to foot, and presented a cool and
-attractive spectacle; but Murray's eyes watched with envy the
-parti-coloured group in the conveyance ahead, and Olive reluctantly
-owned to herself that Jane's fresh little blue cotton frock, while
-better suited to a farm picnic than one of white linen, was also a
-charming spot of colour upon the landscape.
-
-"Now, who's going fishing?" called back Peter, as he drove his steeds
-briskly in through Grandfather Bell's gateway, followed by the trap at
-its best pace. "It's clouding over now, so that we ought to have some
-good sport--if the rain holds off, and I think it will, judging by the
-wind. Grandfather Bell can tell us that," he added, as a tall old man
-of a hale and vigorous aspect came out of the house to greet his guests.
-
-"The rain won't bother you before afternoon, I guess," prophesied
-Grandfather Bell, shaking hands cordially with his guests. "When it
-does, you 'd better put for the house. You can have your picnic
-indoors, where you won't get your clothes wet," and his glance fell on
-the three white-clad young people from the city.
-
-"Never mind our clothes," said Murray. "We were thinking of the hot day
-coming when we put them on. It would have been more sensible to dress
-like you fellows," and he glanced from Ross's worn gray corduroys to
-Peter's faded blue flannels, in which costumes both young men looked
-ruggedly--and not unattractively--ready for roughing it.
-
-"Picnics appeal to people from different points of view," suggested
-Ross. "Now, Miss Olive can certainly sit on a rock and watch Peter,
-Rufe, Nan and myself fish, giving us practical suggestions from time to
-time--in a whisper. Perhaps she 'll photograph us with that camera she
-has there. But I would advise that Mr. Murray Townsend, Miss Shirley
-Townsend, and Miss Jane Bell, sit apart on some mossy bank and read some
-pleasant tale _about_ fishing."
-
-"Nonsense. You talk like a stage manager," jeered Peter. "Miss Olive
-'s going to do some real fishing if Grandmother Bell has to lend her a
-dress to go home in--and so are the rest. Fishing is the first thing on
-this programme and fishing is to be done. You saw to the rods and
-lines, Rufe--where are they?"
-
-Rufe raced away to the barns, and came back with a full fishing
-equipment for everybody. After greeting Grandmother Bell, a pleasant
-little old lady, with a warm welcome for every one, the party proceeded
-through the orchard and down a long, maple-Leaded lane to the river--a
-picturesque spot, which had been the paradise of the Bell family from
-its earliest recollections.
-
-Here sport reigned for an hour, although few fish were caught. The
-spirit of hilarity ruled the holiday too thoroughly to admit of much
-wooing of the frightened prey; but nobody minded except Rufus, who
-finally left the others and wandered away up-stream, whence he returned
-after a time, triumphant, with a respectable showing of fish.
-
-"The clouds don't look as threatening as they did. Could n't we climb
-that small hill on the other side of the river? I 've been looking at
-that winding path for an hour, wishing I could see where it leads," said
-Murray to Jane, propping his fishing-rod against a tree.
-
-"It leads to a little hemlock grove, and a field of corn beyond,"
-answered Jane, fanning her flushed and laughing face with her
-wide-brimmed hat.
-
-"Oh, don't tell me! Come and explore it with me, will you?" Murray
-gave her such a pleading look that she could not refuse him, although
-she and Peter had agreed that this picnic was not to be a "pairing off"
-affair, because that would leave Ross in the lurch, and Ross had been
-working hard of late, and needed an outing, his cousins thought, more
-than anybody.
-
-"We'll just go over and back, if you like--to satisfy your curiosity,"
-and Jane let him walk away with her.
-
-They slowly climbed the hill path, Murray stopping to cut himself a
-stout staff in lieu of the cane he no longer used. "I shall always be
-lame," he said to Jane, "but I 'm not going to depend on canes any
-longer except for such special occasions as this. Do you know, I think
-I 'm growing a shade brawnier--thanks to Peter's training."
-
-"I 'm sure you are; you look it," responded Jane, warmly, "and I 'm so
-glad."
-
-"There has been wonderful work done in the world by people in ill
-health. But I 'm afraid I could never be a Carlyle or a Stevenson, no
-matter how bright the fires of genius burned. They worked for the love
-of it, but when the task a fellow sees before him is one he dislikes, he
-certainly needs the backing of a sound body."
-
-As they attained the top of the hill, panting a little for breath,
-Murray stared ahead into the hemlock grove.
-
-"That 's a cool-looking spot. Can't we sit down there a few minutes? I
-'ll have to rest a bit before I do more," he urged. "It's three years
-since I climbed a hill like that--just the day before I had my accident.
-I seem to have got started on the uninteresting subject of myself, so I
-may as well go on a little further and tell you my plans about the same
-chap, if you don't mind listening."
-
-"I 'd love to hear them. Here's a fine mossy spot, and two trees to
-lean against," and Jane dropped at the foot of one of the trees she had
-pointed out. Murray, casting aside his stick, threw himself down at
-full length near by, his arms clasped under his head.
-
-"Ah, this is great!" he murmured. "Smell those balsams? It makes one
-want to live outdoors. And that's what I'm thinking of doing."
-
-"Really? How? Will you pitch a tent on the lawn? That would be fine
-for you, and we should all envy you."
-
-"No, I want a more radical change to outdoor life than that--or at least
-I want the results. I 've made up my mind that to live my life out as a
-bookish invalid, if I might do better, is 'too poor a way of playing the
-game of life,' as one author I like immensely puts it. I shall stick to
-the books all I can, but--I want some good red blood in my veins
-besides."
-
-Forrest's words spoken weeks ago, charging Murray with the very lack of
-"red blood," came to Jane's mind, and she smiled and sighed, thinking
-what a change those weeks had made in the relations of the two brothers.
-And here was Murray wishing for the very thing the want of which his
-vigorous brother had deplored.
-
-"I 'm sure you can have it, and all the good things that go with it."
-
-"Which are many, as you people have already taught me. Honestly, it's
-seeing your family so alive and hearty and happy that's brought me to be
-dissatisfied with myself. I 'm going to have need of all I can put into
-Murray Townsend, and so--I 've about made up my mind----"
-
-He hesitated, pulling a hemlock branch through his slim fingers with
-nervous energy. Then he began again: "I 've been reading a lot lately
-about life on one of those Western ranches--real ranch life, I mean; not
-Eastern play at it. I 've a cousin who went to Montana six years ago. I
-get a letter from him once in a while. He's a Westerner now,
-full-fledged. I doubt if he ever comes East again to stay. I 've
-written him to ask if he has any room for a tenderfoot on his ranch, and
-if he says he 'll take me in, I think I 'll go."
-
-"Right away?"
-
-"Right away, if father agrees--and I think he will. He 'll be only too
-glad to have me take the chance of making a man out of myself, instead
-of a bloodless bookworm." Murray turned over with a short laugh, and
-propping his chin on his elbows, lay looking at Jane.
-
-"How long shall you stay?"
-
-"Long enough to do the business. A year, if necessary. When I come
-back, I 'll probably be wearing leather leggings with fringes, a
-handkerchief round my neck, and a sombrero. I 've no doubt the cowboys
-will have played tricks enough on me to prove satisfactorily to all
-concerned whether I 'm a man or a mushroom."
-
-Jane looked steadily down at the face below her, and realised that it
-was a face of strength as well as of fineness. The eyes which met hers
-were enlivened by a determination she had never seen in them before, and
-her answer brought into them a light which surprised and pleased her.
-
-"I think it's the best plan in the world," she said, heartily, "and I
-know it will succeed. Nobody ever set himself to accomplishing anything
-without accomplishing either that thing or something better."
-
-"What could the 'something better' be in my case?"
-
-"I don't know. Do you?"
-
-The question was a challenge. Murray sat up. A tinge of red crept into
-his cheek. "Yes, I know," he answered. "So do you, I think. You put it
-into my head. Am I a coward, that I can't decide to give myself over to
-my father and the business?"
-
-"No. But you are planning to put your shoulder to his wheel somehow--I
-know you are, or you would n't be trying so hard to strengthen that
-shoulder."
-
-"You're a wizard--or a witch." Murray spoke soberly; then he laughed,
-as the two pairs of eyes met, and he caught the fire in Jane's. "Are you
-always so sure of your friends?"
-
-"Always. If I have a friend, I believe in--her--whether she wants me to
-or not. She always proves me right."
-
-"Suppose it 'him'?
-
-"I don't know so much about the 'hims,'" said Jane, "except my brothers.
-The rule works with them."
-
-"You must be an inspiring sister. You 've brothers enough already, I
-suppose, but I wish you 'd adopt another. My sister--she can't be far
-from your age, but she seems years younger. She has n't thought about
-things the way you have. Look here! If I go to Montana for a year, I
-shall be pretty lonesome sometimes, I expect. Will you let me write to
-you?"
-
-"It would be great fun," answered Jane, simply, "to have letters from a
-real cowboy with six-shooters in his belt."
-
-"I 'll take them out when I write to you. Must we go back? Well, if you
-think we ought--though I 'd like to lie here all day and dream dreams
-about the great things I 'm going to do. But a fellow can't dream much
-in the society of the Bells--he has to be up and doing."
-
-"With a heart for any fate," quoted Jane, blithely, as she led the way.
-"I 'll tell you a better motto than that, though, fine as it is."
-
-"What is it? Give it to me, will you?"
-
-"I 'll write it out for you."
-
-"When?"
-
-"To-morrow, perhaps."
-
-"To-day, please. I 'm an impatient chap."
-
-"Very well. You shall have it when we get home. It's one I can't talk
-about, somehow--it gives me a choke in my throat--I don't know why."
-
-Hours later Murray found out why. By the time he and Jane had rejoined
-the rest of the party the threatening storm-clouds had brought the
-promised rain. The lunch had to be eaten in Grandmother Bell's pleasant
-kitchen, but the guests enjoyed it almost as much as they could have
-done in the sylvan spot that Peter had picked out. By three o'clock in
-the afternoon the storm had passed. It had cooled the air a little, so
-that it was possible for the party to spend three long and delightful
-hours upon the river before going home.
-
-"We three in what was once white," said Murray, as he stood by the trap,
-"are a pretty sorry-looking crowd to go back all together. Why may I not
-change places with Peter, and drive the Bell family home?"
-
-Ross chuckled as he winked at Jane, and she recalled his prophecy of
-some days earlier. But it was he and Nancy who took the back seat of
-the trap, leaving Rufus and Shirley in the surrey, to carry on an
-acquaintance which had developed to great friendliness in the Townsend
-tennis-court, where the children had played every evening throughout the
-summer.
-
-Up in his own room Murray took from his pocket a slip of paper Jane had
-given him as she said good night, and unfolding it as if it were a
-message from a royal hand, he read it slowly through. The expectation
-of this message had been warm all through the pleasant drive home in the
-twilight.
-
-The words of Jane's quotation were these:--and as it happened that he
-had never seen them before, they came to him at this crisis of his life
-with peculiar force.
-
- "Life is an arrow--therefore you must know
- What mark to aim at, how to use the bow--
- Then draw it to the head, and let it go!"
-
-
-There was a little constriction in Murray's own throat as he studied the
-brave words. He saw at a flash their deeper meaning. "Make myself fit
-to live my life," he thought "and then--whether it's the life I want to
-live or not--let it go! Jane, you know how to fit the arrow to my
-hand--bless you! I will _draw_ it to the head--_and let it go_!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- SNAP SHOTS
-
-
-"A letter from Montana for Miss Jane Bell," observed Peter, distributing
-the mail at the breakfast-table one May morning, nine months after the
-picnic at Grandfather Bell's farm. "It strikes me these Montana letters
-are beginning to arrive with astonishing regularity."
-
-"They began," declared Ross, enjoying the sight of the sudden colour in
-Jane's face, as she tucked the letter into her belt and tried vainly to
-look unconscious as she went on serving the family from a big dish of
-oatmeal porridge, "by coming modestly once in about three or four weeks.
-Then they got to once a fortnight--that was in midwinter. Along about
-April----"
-
-"If I were a big, grown man," murmured Jane, "I 'd never condescend to
-keep track of----"
-
-"Along in April," pursued Ross, unmoved, "once in ten days was the
-schedule. But this last, coming as it does just one short week after
-its predecessor, and carrying, as it does, two large red
-postage-stamps--which, I am confident, is underpayment----"
-
-"Stop teasing!" cried Nancy, always loyal to her sister. "Every one of
-you is envying Jane, wishing you could have letters from a real cowboy."
-
-"A real cowboy!" laughed Ross. "I think I see Murray Townsend getting
-himself up in that rig. With his pale face and thin shoulders he 'd
-look like the tenderest kind of a tenderfoot."
-
-Jane pulled the letter out of her belt. The previous letter had
-promised that this one should bring some snap-shot pictures of the
-writer and his surroundings. She hoped, as she broke the seal, that she
-should find them, feeling sure that the extra thick letter indicated
-that it carried the promised enclosures.
-
-As she pulled out the sheets a little packet of blue-prints dropped into
-her lap. She picked them up and fell to looking at them. Peter,
-sitting next to her, laughed to himself, as he reached for his dish of
-oatmeal, Jane having forgotten to serve him. But everybody forgot
-breakfast, as the blue-prints went round the table. All but one were
-scenes of ranch and camp life, bringing into view horses and cowboys of
-all sorts and conditions, each carefully labelled with its descriptive
-title. But the one at the bottom of the pack was called "the
-tenderfoot"--the only one of the set in which Jane's correspondent was
-in evidence.
-
-"Can it be possible this is Murray?" exclaimed Mrs. Bell, studying
-incredulously the erect figure on horseback, life and energy in every
-outline, from the tilt of the wide hat to the set of the leg in the
-saddle. "Why, he looks as if he weighed thirty pounds more than when he
-went away."
-
-"By George, the fellow has n't roughed it nearly a year for nothing, has
-he?" admitted Ross. "He doesn't look the stage cowboy, either--I 'll
-say that for him. Those clothes have seen wear and rain, and that hat
-has had the true Western shape knocked into it. It makes you envy him,
-does n't it?"
-
-Peter said nothing, but his eyes dwelt upon the figure in the saddle
-with a look of longing so intense that if anyone had been observing him
-it must have told his story plainly. One person was observing him, and
-as Peter looked up at last, with an involuntary glance at his father,
-who had just made some observation on the advantage it had been to the
-rich man's son to get out among the ranchmen and gain a new view of
-life, he met his father's eyes. Joseph Bell understood just what it
-meant to Peter to stay at home and work as foreman in a note-paper
-factory when there were such places as Montana in the world waiting for
-young men to come and explore them. And there was that in his father's
-look which told Peter that his sacrifice was appreciated.
-
-Up in her own room, when a dozen duties had been done, Jane read her
-letter. It was to her a deeply interesting letter, as had been all
-those which came before it, for Murray wielded a graphic pen, and his
-pictures of the sort of life he had been living were vivid as
-colour-sketches. He was rejoicing in the coming of spring and summer,
-after the long, cold winter, and his delight seemed to Jane so unlike
-any pleasure in outdoor life she had seen him show at home that it
-filled her with joy. The letter said, as it neared the close and fell
-into the personal vein, as letters do:
-
-
-I never knew before what it was to breathe way down to the bottom of my
-lungs. My existence--after my accident, and up to the time I came
-here--seems now to me like that of some pale monk in his cell, feeding
-on other men's thoughts, but never living them himself. I've learned to
-live! You, who have long known that secret, will be glad with me, won't
-you?
-
-All through the winter I was wrapped to the eyes whenever I put my head
-out of the cabin door. Men dress warmly here in the
-winter--flannel-lined canvas overcoats--"blanket coats" they call
-them--felt boots, and all that. But they don't make grannies of
-themselves as I did--at first. As the winter advanced, though, I began
-to get hardened to it, and before spring I could stand a pretty low
-temperature without feeling my blood congeal. But when spring
-came--spring in this Western country! I wish I could describe it. The
-air like wine, the sunshine like--nothing I can think of. When spring
-came I began to expand mentally and physically--and in still another
-way, I think. Anyhow, I 'm not the same fellow who went to the doctor
-for an outfit of drugs before he dared start West.
-
-I 've learned a lot from these men I 've been associated with. A rough
-set they would seem to you, most of them--they did to me at first. But
-when I got to know them, underneath the roughness I found--men. It's no
-use trying to put it into a letter. I must talk with you, face to
-face--and just what that means to me when I think of it I won't venture
-to say. I 'll be home in the fall, and then--I 'm going into my
-father's business. I have n't said that before, have I? You 'll please
-not mention it to anyone, except Peter, if you like; I want to surprise
-father. That's going to be my reward for doing my duty. It is my
-duty--I see it plainly at last, and every ounce of determination I can
-grow from now till fall is going to be just so much more to offer him.
-But I won't brag about that. Do the best I can, it won't be a wonderful
-gift, for I 'm afraid my talents don't lie in that direction. But if
-honest effort can make up--Jane, I have n't watched some of these heroic
-chaps for nothing. I 'm simply shamed into taking my medicine, and
-shutting my mouth tight after it. And that's the last word about it's
-being medicine. I 'm going to get interested in the business if
-pitching in all over will do it.
-
-This is a long letter, and I 'm done--except to tell you that the West
-does n't deserve all the credit for my altered views of life. A certain
-girl I know, who wanted to go to college, but gave up all thought of it
-because, besides the family, her father and brothers had half a dozen
-helpless elderly relatives to support, isn't the poorest sort of
-inspiration to her friend, when he happens to be a fellow who never gave
-up anything for anybody in his life. He values her friendship far more
-than he dares to tell her now. Somebody--Ruskin?--said a knight's armour
-never fitted him quite so well as when the lady's hand had braced
-it--and I 'm beginning to understand what that rather picturesque
-metaphor may mean. Do I sound sentimental, and are you laughing at me?
-Don't do it! I 've not a "gun" in my belt, but I'm rather a rough
-looking customer nevertheless. I came in an hour ago, wet to the
-skin--caught out in a cloudburst without my slicker--and while my
-clothes dry am attired in my cousin's (seven sizes too big!) being
-averse to putting on any of the clothes in my trunk, the foolish clothes
-of civilisation.
-
-I weigh one hundred and sixty-five. What do you think of that? And
-it's not flesh, but worked-on muscle and sinew. Did I say I was done? I
-am. But I am also
-
-Faithfully your friend,
- MURRAY TOWNSEND.
-
-
-"You look it," agreed Jane, studying the photograph. "You certainly
-look it." She gave the little print one more careful examination,
-noting the steady gaze the pictured face gave back, a spirited
-expression very different from the half-moody look she had first known;
-then she put the photographs away and went about her work. And as she
-went, a little song sang itself over and over in her heart--the song of
-trust in a ripening friendship of the sort that makes life worth living.
-
-Spring and summer passed slowly by, marking a growing interchange of
-amenities between the little house in Gay Street and the big one in
-Worthington Square. Things had happened during the winter, things kept
-on happening as the year advanced, to draw the two families together. In
-January Shirley had had a long and severe illness, during which Mrs.
-Bell and Jane made their way into the inmost heart of every member of
-the household. There were nights during that illness when Joseph Bell,
-feeling that difference of social position counted for nothing when a
-father was in trouble, went over to shake Harrison Townsend's hand,
-bidding him be of courage--and found himself detained as a friend in
-need.
-
-By and by, when the anxiety was over and the Bells ceased coming often
-in and out, the Townsends began to summon them. Mr. Townsend discovered
-the shrewd wisdom and genial philosophy of Joseph Bell to be of value,
-and often went to sit with him in the little front room, where his eyes
-noted with approval the rows of books. He discovered that Armstrongs's
-head man knew more that lay between the covers of those books than did
-Harrison Townsend himself.
-
-As for Mrs. Townsend and Mrs. Bell, while they were too different in
-temperament and taste to get far into each other's lives, they found
-enough in common to bring them together rather oftener than could
-naturally have been expected. There was a quiet poise about Mrs. Bell
-which the other woman, accomplished woman of the world though she was,
-could only study in despair of ever being able to attain. But she found
-a rest and refreshment in her neighbour's society which none of her more
-fashionable friends could give her, and she sent often for Mrs. Bell to
-keep her company.
-
-"Olive's taken one big step in advance," Peter said to his mother, one
-day in early summer. "She has begun to write regularly to Forrest."
-
-"I'm very glad," said Mrs. Bell. "Does he answer her letters?"
-
-"He does--only too glad to, I should say. She's shown me some of his
-letters. There 's a homesick grunt to them, that's sure. Life in the
-army, and particularly life in the Philippines, is n't unmitigated
-bliss, and he's finding it out. He does n't exactly squeal, but you can
-see how it is with him."
-
-"It will do Olive good to take up such a sisterly duty. Was it your
-suggestion?" asked Mrs. Bell.
-
-"How did you guess that? I did give her a talk one day, when she
-happened to say that Shirley was the only one of the family who wrote to
-Forrest with any regularity. She was pretty angry with me for a day or
-two, but she came round, and now she writes once a fortnight. There 's
-really more to that girl than you would think."
-
-"She is improving very much, I am sure," agreed his mother, warmly.
-"With a different early training, Olive would have been by now a much
-more lovable girl than she has seemed. But, happily, it 's not too late
-to give her new ideals, and I think you have helped in that direction."
-
-"Ideals?" mused Peter. "I don't think I have any of those--at least, I
-don't call them by that name. Rules of the game--how will that do,
-instead? The foreman of Room 8 in a note-paper factory is n't supposed
-to have ideals, is he?"
-
-"I don't know about that. Suppose you ask the men and women under you.
-I fancy they would protest your ideals were pretty hard for them to live
-up to?"
-
-Peter laughed to himself. "Maybe they would. But they would n't put it
-that way. 'The boss is a tough one to suit,' they 'd say."
-
-"Call it what you will--rules of the game, if you like. But, as the
-children used to say, 'Peter Bell plays fair!'"
-
-"I hope he does. If he does n't, it is n't the fault of his trainer."
-And the gray eyes met the brown ones for an instant in a glance which
-said many things Peter could not have spoken.
-
-The days went on; June gave place to July; August heat melted into
-September mildness; and October, with its falling leaves, marked the end
-of the days of outdoor life lived from April to November in the little
-garden.
-
-"The twenty-fifth is Jane's birthday," observed Nancy to Shirley,
-several days before that event. "We 're wondering what to do in
-celebration."
-
-"Why, it's mine, too!" cried Shirley. "How funny that we did n't know
-it! We ought to celebrate it together."
-
-This remark was duly reported to Mrs. Bell, who said at once that they
-must invite Shirley over to have her birthday cake with Jane's. But
-before this plan could be carried into effect, an invitation arrived
-from the big house, asking every member of the Bell household to be
-present at a small dinner of Shirley's own planning.
-
-"This is the first time we 've all been asked over there together--it's
-quite an occasion," declared Peter, on the evening of the twenty-fifth,
-as he stood waiting in the doorway for everybody to be ready. "I say,"
-he exclaimed, "but we're gorgeous!"
-
-And he fastened admiring eyes on his mother, who was dressed in a pale
-gray gown of her own making, and therefore of faultless effect. The
-quality was fine also, for Peter had looked after that.
-
-"Gorgeous does n't seem exactly the word," Ross commented. "Demure but
-coquettish, I should call that gown."
-
-The party proceeded in a body to the corner of Worthington Square, where
-Jane, under escort of Peter, came to a sudden halt. "Oh, I 've
-forgotten something to go with my present to Shirley," she said to him.
-"Give me the key, please. I 'll run back and get it. Don't wait. I
-want to slip into the dining-room over there, anyway, before I see
-anybody, and I 'll come in by the side door."
-
-So Jane ran back alone, and let herself into the dark house, the lamps
-having, for safety, been all extinguished before the family went out.
-She hurriedly lighted the lamp in the front room, for she meant to fill
-out a card with a certain appropriate quotation, to put with Shirley's
-gift, and the book she needed was in this room.
-
-The quotation was not as easily found as she had thought it would be,
-and hurriedly searching for it, Jane consumed considerable time, but did
-not want to give it up, for the words fitted Shirley delightfully, and
-would give point to the gift.
-
-So bending over the book, still unsuccessful, she heard with regret the
-sound of a quick step upon the porch, followed by a ring at the bell.
-She sprang up, book in hand, wishing she had taken her affairs, with her
-light, into the dining-room. Hoping that her appearance, in her evening
-frock, would warn the chance visitor that the time was inopportune, she
-opened the door.
-
-"Jane!" exclaimed a joyful voice. "Ah, but this is good luck!" And
-Jane looked up into a face so brown and rugged and strong that for an
-instant she did not know it. But the eyes gazing eagerly into her own
-told her in the next breath who stood before her. She put out both
-hands, speechless with surprise. They were grasped and held, as Murray
-Townsend closed the door behind him with a sturdy shoulder.
-
-"I--you--why, I thought you were n't coming for a month yet," she said,
-half shyly, for in spite of the smile and the warm handclasp, it seemed
-as if this must be a stranger who stood before her, radiating health and
-happiness, and looking so different from the pale young man who had gone
-away a year before.
-
-"I was hit by a sudden wave of homesickness that swept me off my feet,"
-Murray explained, releasing the hands which were gently drawing
-themselves away, but continuing to stare down at the engaging young
-figure in its modest evening attire, as if he had seen nothing so
-attractive in all Montana, in spite of his fine tales of its glories.
-"I began to think about it, and that was fatal. Once the notion of
-coming home a bit ahead of the date I 'd set took hold of me, I was no
-more use to anybody. They told me to pack up and start, for I was n't
-fit to brand a calf, and could n't earn my salt." He laughed. "Tell me
-you 're not sorry."
-
-"Indeed, I'm not. This happens to be my birthday, and it's the nicest
-surprise I've had yet."
-
-"Thank you--that's the welcome I wanted. But"--he glanced at her dress
-again, and his face fell--"you were going out?"
-
-"Only to Worthington Square," laughed Jane. "It's Shirley's birthday,
-too, and we're all to be there at dinner. Why, you must know! You 've
-just come from there."
-
-"That is a joke on me. I rang--no latch-key, you know--and a new maid I
-'ve never seen let me in. I saw everything lighted up and flowers all
-about, and asked if they were entertaining. She said they were, and
-everybody was dressing. So I just turned and ran, thinking I 'd slip
-over here and see you first, since I could n't see much of my family
-till the affair was over. Well, well--so I may spend the evening in your
-company. Talk about luck!"
-
-They stood there, exchanging questions and replies in the laughing,
-disconnected way in which people are wont to address each other in the
-first excitement of an unexpected and welcome meeting, neither of them
-knowing quite what they were saying, but each feeling that something of
-great importance had happened. Then Jane gathered up her wraps and
-Shirley's gift, and said, with a startled glance at the clock, "It is
-later than I thought! We must go this minute."
-
-"Shall I put out the light?" and Murray strode across the floor. Jane
-noted with gladness that his walk was the walk of a strong man.
-
-They crossed the street to the hedge gate, and came to the side
-entrance. As he put his thumb to the bell, Murray said, half under his
-breath, "I've imagined all sorts of home-comings, but never one quite so
-nice as this. To make my entrance with you----"
-
-"Oh, you 're not going to make it with me!" said Jane, gaily. "I shall
-stay in the dining-room, arranging Shirley's plate, until you are safe
-in the midst of them."
-
-And plead as he would, Murray found there was no way to make her change
-this decision. So, at last, hearing the voices of the others in the big
-hall, where they were gathered about the fireplace, in which roared a
-royal October fire, he went to the door and opened it a crack. From
-this position, he looked back at Jane, where she stood by Shirley's
-chair watching him across the gala decorations of roses which crowned
-the handsome table.
-
-"I 'm at home again!" he called to her softly, and she nodded, smiling.
-
-Then, hat in hand, he threw the door wide and marched through, shoulders
-back, head up, eyes intent upon the faces which, at the opening of the
-door, had turned that way.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- HIDE AND SEEK
-
-
-There was a moment's astonished hush as the group about the fire stared
-at the erect young figure. Then Murray's father was the first across
-the floor to meet him; and in an instant more the whole family was upon
-him, while the Bells rose, smiling, to do him honour.
-
-"My dear boy!" There was a great gladness in Harrison Townsend's voice
-and he wrung his son's hand as if he would wring it off. Murray's
-mother, too--he had not known she was capable of so much tenderness, and
-he kissed her with a feeling that in his thoughts he had n't done her
-love for him justice.
-
-As for Olive and Shirley, there was nothing lacking in the way they
-showed their joy in having him at home again. Murray himself, during
-this long year of absence, was not the only one who had learned a few
-enlightening truths about the great business of living.
-
-To the full, also, Murray enjoyed the surprising fact that the Bells
-were grouped about the fire in a way which indicated that they were
-entirely at home. He rejoiced in the heartiness with which the male
-members of that family gripped his hand--they seemed like brothers. And
-when the sweet-faced, bright-eyed lady in gray pressed his hand in both
-her own and looked at him as if her pleasure in his return was very
-great, Murray, quite unable to help it, stooped and kissed her also.
-Surely, homecoming was a happier thing than he had dared to picture it.
-
-He was off upstairs to his room presently, while word was sent to an
-exasperated cook to delay the dinner yet a little longer. In less time
-than could have been expected, however, Murray was down again, and in
-his evening clothes showed even more plainly than before the astonishing
-increase in his weight.
-
-"These shoulders," cried Peter, inspecting them, "can they be the
-shoulders of the delicate young gentleman who went away last year
-looking so long and lean and lank? I wonder you could get them into
-your coat."
-
-"I could n't," Murray answered, laughing. "I had to borrow father's
-dinner-jacket and one of his waistcoats."
-
-"It was fortunate for you that the old coat was n't given away when the
-new one came home," his father observed, regarding the shoulders in
-evidence with great satisfaction.
-
-They went out to dinner in the gayest spirits, and if everybody
-remembered with regret the one absent, everybody still rejoiced that
-this promising son of the house was once more at its board. For there
-could be no question that the eldest son looked now a fit representative
-of the family of Townsend.
-
-The dinner which followed was an elaborate one, for it was not within
-the range of the hostess's notions to entertain in any simple fashion,
-even when the occasion was the birthday of a fourteen-year-old. But the
-young people at the board succeeded in infusing so much of their own
-joyousness into the affair that the time passed swiftly. There were
-birthday gifts at Jane's plate as well as at Shirley's, and it would
-have been hard to tell, at the close of the feast, which pair of cheeks
-was the pinker, or which pair of eyes the brighter. It is safe to guess
-however, that there were elements in the pleasure of one recipient which
-must have been lacking in that of the other, and that the presence of
-one birthday guest counted for more to her than all the gifts put
-together. The fact that she could hardly look up without encountering
-the interested glance of the newly arrived traveller was just a trifle
-disconcerting, and it must be admitted that when Jane and Shirley
-gathered up their gifts at the close of the dinner, the little girl knew
-better than the older one just what she had received.
-
-Dinner over, a short and not especially dramatic little scene took place
-behind closed library doors. Scenes which mean the most are often
-quietest of all.
-
-"I just wanted to tell you, sir," said Murray to his father, "something
-I thought you might like to know right away. I--went West to make
-myself strong enough to--to go into the business, if you care to have
-me. I mean," he went on quickly, as his father looked at him as if he
-could not quite believe the purport of these words, "I mean in whatever
-capacity you can use me. Shipping-clerk, if you think I 'd better begin
-at the bottom"--and his smile was not a smile which supplied "but of
-course you won't."
-
-Mr. Townsend stood looking at Murray, studying the straightforward gaze
-which met his; noting the tints of health, the signs of vigour in the
-fine face. "Murray, do you mean it?" he asked.
-
-"I do, sir."
-
-"And yet you don't like the prospect of a business life any more than
-you ever did, do you?"
-
-"Not much, sir."
-
-"You make this offer knowing fully what it entails? I have little
-expectation that your brother will ever agree to my wishes."
-
-"That's what decided me."
-
-"You are willing to give up your books? You could complete your college
-course now, with your renewed health."
-
-If Murray winced at this he did not let it show.
-
-"I think you need me now, sir. And as for the college course--and the
-books--I shall have my evenings."
-
-Mr. Townsend studied his son's face a full minute in silence. Then he
-held out his hand. Murray seized it with a grasp which banished the
-elder man's doubts and showed him that his boy's heart was in this offer
-of himself. The two shook hands without speaking. There seemed no need
-of further words just then.
-
-It being Shirley's birthday, that young person's wishes ruled the hour.
-Prompted by Rufus, who thirsted for something lively, she decreed a game
-of hide-and-seek over the whole house, and succeeded in enticing the
-elder people into the frolic. Mr. Townsend and Murray, coming from the
-library, found things in full swing.
-
-Mr. Bell was just emerging from a small closet under the staircase, his
-hair much rumpled. Mrs. Bell, laughing blithely, had run round a corner
-of the reception-room and touched "goal" before her son Rufus could
-swing himself down the stairs and get in ahead of her. Mrs.
-Townsend--and her husband could not quite credit his eyes as he saw
-her--was, with trailing skirts held close, squeezing out of a very small
-corner behind the grand piano in the drawing-room.
-
-"Well, well!" cried the newcomers, enthusiastically. "Let us into the
-game."
-
-"Come on!" shouted Rufus. "Father 's 'it'! Let's play it in another
-way, and hide for keeps. Everybody stay hid till found, and each man
-found join the hunt. Makes it nice and exciting for the last fellow."
-
-"You 'll have to tell us our bounds pretty carefully," said Mr. Bell,
-smiling at his hostess. "In our excitement we may open the wrong doors."
-
-"Open any door," responded Mrs. Townsend promptly, feeling more like a
-girl again than she had felt in many years of formal entertaining, and
-preparing, as she spoke, to hurry up the staircase to a retreat that she
-felt would be secure. It proved great fun, and a full half-hour went by
-before the last one was found. Murray had been the first to be
-discovered, his head so full of the late talk in the library that he had
-somewhat dazedly secreted himself in a position easily come upon by Mr.
-Bell. So when the second round began, it was Murray who stood counting
-the tale of numbers in the hall below, while his quarry scurried away
-over the house.
-
-"He knows every nook and corner of it, of course," whispered Ross to
-Jane, as they ran lightly up the second flight of stairs, "so we 'll
-have to hide pretty close to escape him. I 'm for a closet I know of
-where there's a pile of blankets as big as a barn. Will you come?"
-
-"No--I know a better place," and Jane slipped away by herself. She
-meant to be the last found, and to elude Murray as long as she could, a
-very girlish feeling having taken possession of her that the time to run
-away is the time when you see somebody looking uncommonly as if he would
-like to be with you. Although she longed to hear the outcome of the
-conference in the library, she was somehow just a little afraid of the
-new Murray, and it was with a delightful sense of exhilaration that she
-made her quick and quiet way up a third flight of stairs to one of
-Shirley's haunts in an unused portion of the regions under the eaves.
-
-It was a long time before she heard the sounds of the hunt, in which at
-last the whole party had come to join, approaching her hiding place. But
-suddenly a lower door was thrown open, and Murray's voice sounded far
-down in a determined challenge:
-
-"We'll have you now, Jane--it's no use. Shirley 's kept us away so
-far--the rascal--but your time 's up!"
-
-She _could not_ be caught! There was a tiny door low down in the side
-of the closet where she was hiding, and dark though she knew it must be
-in the unknown region beyond this door, she opened it, slipped through,
-closed it, and crept along the bare beams beyond.
-
-Murray was carrying a little electric searchlight, which he was flashing
-into every nook and crevice. Its sharp beam had penetrated the hole in
-the blankets Ross had kept for a breathing space. It had likewise sought
-out the hems of skirts, the soles of shoes, fingers clutching concealing
-draperies, and elbows sticking unwarily out from sly nooks. Jane saw
-its rays outline the edges of the small door beyond which she crouched;
-then she heard Murray's triumphant cry, "O-ho, she's dropped her
-handkerchief! Now we 're hot on the trail. She's gone through this
-door, the crafty lady!"
-
-There was a shout of mingled laughter and expostulation. "She wouldn't
-go through that rat-hole! It's too dark in there for a girl. There 's
-no floor, either."
-
-But Murray was attempting to open the door. It was a sliding door, not a
-hinged one, and for a moment it delayed him, for he was not familiar
-with these regions, so dear to Shirley.
-
-During that moment, Jane, with the breathless unreadiness to be
-discovered which takes hold of the hiding one, even in a game, had
-desperately retreated over the rafters, in the hope of coming upon some
-sheltering corner. The next instant, with a smothered cry, she had
-fallen over the edge of something, _splash_ into three feet of water!
-
-Nobody had heard her, and somehow, in the intensity of the game, Jane's
-second emotion, after the startling sensation of her sudden immersion,
-was one of absurd relief at finding herself, after all, safe from
-discovery. For, as the little door at last flew open, and Murray's
-brilliant light leaped into the space under the eaves, it disclosed to
-Jane that she had dropped into a cistern, the top of which lay level
-with the floor beams, and at the bottom thereof, where, having scrambled
-to her feet, she stood stooping, was out of sight of the faces peering
-in at the small door.
-
-"Not here," was Murray's disappointed observation, after one wave of his
-light round the small space, "unless she's in mother's special
-rain-water tank, white frock and all. Come on. I thought we had her
-then, sure. Where can she be? She's been here--witness that
-handkerchief. And if there's a cranny we have n't explored, I 'll----"
-
-The little door closed with a slam; the light faded away from its edges.
-The voices of the party were heard retreating down the stairs, and Jane
-was left alone to realise the humour of the situation.
-
-It was undoubtedly humorous. It could hardly be dangerous, for October
-had been a mild month, and Jane was well used to cold plunges. The
-wetting of the pretty frock was of no consequence, for it was quite
-washable. It was fairly easy to scramble back to the rafters--Jane had
-done that the moment the searching party was out of hearing, and was
-carefully wringing out her drenched skirts. Her impromptu bath had wet
-her to the shoulders, besides bruising her arm rather badly. But the
-trying thing was to get downstairs and away without being
-discovered--and the whole company in full cry over the house!
-
-Jane laughed rather hysterically, shivering a little, more from
-excitement and chagrin than from chill. She crept carefully to the
-small door, meaning to push it open and listen, when suddenly it began
-to slide quietly aside of itself. The next instant she saw a sunburned
-hand upon its fastening, and heard a cool voice, close by, say quietly:
-
-"It's all right. Nobody knows but me. They 've given it up, and sat
-down to await your own sweet will in showing up. Here 's a big steamer
-rug. Will you have it to wrap up in? I 'll get you home without a soul
-knowing, and we 'll play it off as a joke, somehow."
-
-"Thank you," answered Jane, in a very meek voice, which shook with
-mingled irritation and merriment, as the rug came through the opening.
-"Perhaps I could put it on better if I were not balancing myself on
-these rafters."
-
-"I beg your pardon. I 'll get out of this closet, and you can get in.
-I just thought you would n't leave so--so damp a trail behind you if you
-were wrapped up in something. Here are a--er--a pair of Olive's rubbers
-for your feet, so you won't show any tracks."
-
-Murray's voice was shaking also, and in a minute more the two were
-laughing together. Jane, shrouded in her rug, emerged from the closet
-into the attic, and Murray regarded her by the light of his electric
-searcher.
-
-"You don't look much the worse for having taken such desperate measures
-to escape me," he remarked, noting with keen enjoyment the rich colour
-on the cheek near which he was rather mercilessly holding his torch.
-"Rather meet a cold ducking than a warm friend any time, wouldn't you?"
-
-"Not at all. I--you know how one hates to be caught."
-
-"Does one? Now I can't conceive jumping into a tank of water to escape
-you, if you had been after me!"
-
-"Please stop laughing at me and help me to get home."
-
-"I'm not laughing at you. I'm--I may pretend to be laughing, but
-inside, I assure you, I 'm tremendously worried lest this running away
-indicates a state of mind--"
-
-"Please take me home!"
-
-"Come, then." He led the way, by back staircases, to a quiet side
-entrance, and so quickly across the street, and into her own house.
-Then he went back to the others, to evade their questioning so cleverly
-that nobody but Jane's mother suspected that anything out of the
-ordinary had happened. In a very short time indeed Jane drifted
-inconspicuously in upon the company again, and when inquiries from the
-younger members of the party as to the change in her costume fell thick
-and fast upon her, Murray protected her with the nonchalant explanation:
-
-"Don't bother her. She's very kindly trying to shield me for being the
-cause of a little accident that happened to the other dress. It was
-confoundedly awkward of me, but she cheers me by declaring that she can
-easily repair damages!"
-
-It was Murray who took Jane home again by and by, and who lingered on
-the porch, after the others had gone in, to tell her how his father had
-received the good news.
-
-"I 'm so glad!" Jane's hands were clasped tight together. "I knew it
-would be just as you tell me. Are n't you wonderfully happy?"
-
-"Wonderfully. Happier than ever in my life--except for just one thing."
-
-"Nothing serious?"
-
-"Well--I certainly hope not. What bothers me is that--you seem,
-somehow--not exactly afraid of me, but--different. I don't know how to
-express it--but I----" He stopped, his tone growing anxious. "You
-know, I could n't bear that," he added. "Unless I thought it meant----
-See here, Jane--are we just as good friends as ever?"
-
-"Why, of course we are!" She said it shyly. She was very glad it was so
-dark on the little porch.
-
-"Friends for always?"
-
-"I don't change, I think," she answered, with a proud little lift of the
-head.
-
-"Don't you? Well, as I don't either, that ought to satisfy me. Yet it
-does n't quite, after all. It's odd, but I believe just being good
-friends who don't change is n't enough. Oh, don't go! You're not
-angry? Yes, I know it's late, but I 've hardly seen you yet. You will
-go?--But you 'll let me come over early to-morrow--after more than a
-year away? Well, then, to-morrow I 'll have to teach you not to be
-afraid of me. On my honour I 'm not carrying a 'gun!' Wait a
-minute--just a minute! ... _How did I ever stay away from you so long?_
-... --Good night, little Jane--good night!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- IN THE GARDEN
-
-
-Winter--long and cold; spring--late and slow; then, all at once, in
-June, radiant summer and the little garden round the corner in Gay
-Street was a place of richly bursting bloom--a riot of colours against
-the leafy green background of its vine-hung walls.
-
-Toward the end of June a week of almost tropical heat had made the
-evenings outdoors, on the little porch, and in the garden itself, events
-to be looked forward to throughout the day, Joseph Bell, Peter, Ross,
-and Rufus, thought of them many times during the hottest day of
-all--midsummer, the twenty-first of the month--and came home at night to
-find the table laid for a cool-looking supper out under the shadow of
-the maple, and Mrs. Bell, Jane, and Nancy, in thin summer frocks,
-putting the finishing touches to the attractive meal about to be served
-there.
-
-Up in a window of the house next door, behind closed blinds, an elderly
-neighbour had watched Jane wreathing a big glass bowl full of
-strawberries with a crisp little green vine spray.
-
-"The Bells certainly are the queerest people anybody ever lived
-neighbour to," she said over her shoulder to her sister, a withered
-little spinster, who, in this hot, small upstairs room, was sewing at
-another window, which did not look out upon the garden, and therefore
-could have its blinds open. "Anybody 'd think life was just one picnic
-to them. Think of lugging all those dishes outdoors this hot night, and
-then lugging 'em all in again--and they all dressed out in flowered
-muslins!"
-
-The sister came to the window and peered somewhat wistfully out through
-the closed blinds. "It does look sort of pleasant out there," she said.
-"And we certainly can't say they 're not good neighbours. Mrs. Bell
-sent over a whole tin of those light rolls of hers this morning. They
-'ll come in handy for supper."
-
-"There come the men." Mrs. Hunter brought her gaze to bear upon the
-four who had stolen up to the gate, and who, as she spoke, burst out
-suddenly with a crisp clapping of hands which brought the three in the
-"flowered-muslins" to the right-about. If Mrs. Hunter and Miss Maria,
-watching those four advance, could have heard what they were saying as
-they caught sight of the flower-decked table, they might have had a new
-light shed upon the question whether the trouble of bringing forth all
-those dishes from the house had been worth while.
-
-The neighbours saw the merry little meal eaten, and saw all hands clear
-it away at the end, making short work of the many dishes. But afterward
-twilight fell, and little could be discerned except the gleam of the
-light dresses and the presence near of dark forms lying on the grass.
-
-It was after the midsummer moon was lighting the garden into a small
-fairy-land that Peter, springing up, exclaimed, "There's Olive and
-Murray!" and ran to greet them.
-
-There was a third person with them, and a moment later the others heard
-Peter exclaim, in a tone of surprise:
-
-"Well, well, well! You don't mean to say this is----Why, how are you?
-How are you? I 'm tremendously glad to see you!"
-
-"Thank you! I 'm a good deal gladder to be home than anybody possibly
-can be to have me." And Jane, recognising first the peculiar quality of
-the voice, cried out:
-
-"Why, it's Forrest!" and led the others, as a general uprising took
-place.
-
-"Yes, it's Forrest," said the voice, and in the bright moonlight Jane
-looked up into the face whose outlines in these two years of absence had
-grown dim in her memory. It was the same face, but she thought it
-looked older and thinner, and she realised then and there that Forrest
-was not the same careless boy who had gone so lightly away to lead a
-soldier's life.
-
-When the greetings were over and the company had settled down again on
-the turf under the maple, Jane found Forrest next to herself, and had
-her first little insight into his thoughts.
-
-"I feel like a stranger from a foreign country, I assure you," he was
-saying to her, presently, as the talk and laughter of the others made a
-bit of confidence possible. "And the strangest thing of all to me is
-the sight of my brother grinding away down there in the office, looking
-like the healthiest fellow in town. I can't understand it; it took me
-off my feet!"
-
-"We have grown so used to the change," said Jane, smiling to herself, in
-the dim light, "that we don't think about it any more."
-
-"You see," Forrest pursued, "I came home on the quiet--just wanting to
-see, you know, how they would take it. I thought if they really still
-cared, I should know it by the look on their faces----"
-
-"Oh, how could you think----" Jane began, eagerly.
-
-But he interrupted. "A fellow thinks a good many things when he 's on
-the other side of the world, and I--well, I got to wanting to know some
-things so badly, I was n't sorry when I had my fever. Yes--you did n't
-know that, did you? Oh, I had it all right! And I wasn't sorry when
-they sent me home with a lot of other convalescents. So I made for the
-office the minute I had seen my mother and the girls, for they told me
-that Murray was down there for good--a thing I had n't known. Maybe
-they thought I 'd be jealous--and maybe I was--in a way, though I don't
-want the job any more than I ever did.
-
-"Father gave me a good warm greeting--I 'll say that. And Murray--well,
-when he got up and came toward me with his hand out, looking like the
-strongest kind of a young business man, I felt as if--But I can't tell
-you about that now."
-
-There was a general movement of the younger people of the party, in
-response to a request from Ross, who was entertaining them with some new
-tricks, at which he was an adept. During the confusion Murray came and
-flung himself upon the grass beside Jane.
-
-"Take me into the conference, will you?" he said. "I'm envious of
-anybody my brother talks to, I 'm so glad to get him back."
-
-Under cover of the subdued light, Jane found her hand, which had been
-resting on the cool grass where she sat, taken into a warm, significant
-grasp, as familiar now as it was dear. She gave back a little answering
-pressure, without turning her head toward Murray, at whose close
-presence she had grown instantly happier.
-
-"Take you in?" Forrest answered slowly. "Well, if you--and all the
-others--will only take me in, and never turn me out--or let me turn
-myself out again--I 'll be--satisfied."
-
-With one hand holding tight the small one buried in the grass, Murray's
-other hand went out toward the fist clenched on Forrest's knee. "Old
-fellow," he said, warmly, "if you 'll just stay where you can get over
-often into this garden in Gay Street, you 'll find it will do as much
-toward making life worth living as it has done for every other one of
-the Townsend family."
-
-"I believe you," answered Forrest, and gave the brotherly hand an
-answering grip.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK II
- WORTHINGTON SQUARE
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- JANE WEARS PEARLS
-
-
-A tap upon her door sent Mrs. Murray Townsend flying across the room to
-answer it. She expected to find her husband there, awaiting her
-permission to come in and see her in the cloud-like white gown which she
-had worn but once before--two months ago. He had vowed since that he
-had never seen that wedding-gown, being occupied wholly upon the
-occasion on which it was worn in keeping his head, in order to play his
-own part with dignity and self-command.
-
-But to Jane's disappointment, she opened the door only to a maid with a
-florist's box. The box, upon being examined, yielded up among a mass of
-roses Murray's card, which bore this message:
-
-
-Sorry to be delayed, dear, but father wanted to go over everything that
-has happened at the office during my absence. Will be up in time for the
-pow-wow. Wear one of these for
-
-MURRAY.
-
-
-Jane smiled regretfully. It had seemed a long day. Only that morning
-she and Murray had returned, belated, from their wedding journey across
-the continent, to find cards out for a reception in their honour to take
-place that very evening.
-
-"You knew the date," Mrs. Harrison Townsend had said to her elder son,
-when, upon being told that his delay had caused much anxiety to the
-givers of the affair, he turned to his bride with a soft whistle of
-recollection and chagrin.
-
-"I certainly did," he had owned. "I forgot, I 'm afraid, that there
-were such things as after-wedding festivities due to society, and that
-this was the date for the first of the series. I don't think Jane even
-knew."
-
-"I didn't," said Jane, looking regretfully at her mother-in-law's
-handsome face, which betrayed a slight annoyance. It certainly had been
-trying to receive daily telegrams from the travellers throughout the
-past week, announcing delays at this place and that on the homeward way.
-
-"Of course it's of no consequence now that you are safely here. I 'm
-only sorry Jane will have no chance to rest and visit. The florist's
-men will arrive within an hour, and the house will be generally upset."
-
-"I 'll run away over to Gay Street, then," said Jane. "Murray 's going
-down to the office, and mother and Nan will be looking for me."
-
-"My dear, I 'm sorry, but Olive has asked a few friends informally for
-luncheon, people from out of town who are coming for to-night. It would
-hardly do for you not to meet them--since two are cousins."
-
-So Jane had had to be content with one brief hour in the little home
-round the corner in Gay Street, and then she had come back to the big
-house in Worthington Square, there to begin to act the part expected of
-her. Murray had been more than sorry to leave her on this first day,
-but his father's affairs were pressing, the office work had suffered in
-his absence, and he felt it a necessity to get back into the harness
-without an hour's delay. He had expected to be early at home, but his
-message showed Jane that even for her he did not mean to cut short the
-work of taking up again the routine of business at the point where he
-had left it two months ago.
-
-Selecting half a dozen of the finest of her roses, Jane, with a long,
-light coat slipped on over her finery, opened the door and peeped
-cautiously out into the large, square gallery of the upper hall. Nobody
-was in sight. The doors of Mrs. Townsend's and Olive's rooms were
-closed, the ladies dressing for the affair of the evening. The door of a
-guest-room, occupied by the two cousins from out of town, was slightly
-ajar, and a maid was to be seen inside, offering a cup of tea on a tray.
-One of the cousins had a headache, and was fortifying herself for a
-fatiguing evening.
-
-Jane slipped quietly by this door and round the gallery to the point
-where a staircase led to the lower landing, a place just now embowered
-in palms, which were to serve as a screen for the string orchestra. She
-paused an instant on this landing, to look down upon the brilliant
-picture presented by the entrance-hall and its opening rooms below. The
-look of it reminded her of an evening long ago, the first upon which she
-had set foot as a guest in the great unknown house in Worthington
-Square, when Murray had taken charge of her and brought her up here on
-the landing, to look down upon the scene in which neither of them had
-much cared to take part.
-
-"Can this really be my home?" thought Jane, feeling as if it could not
-all be true, even yet. She ran quickly on downstairs and round the foot
-of the staircase to a door beneath, which furnished an inconspicuous
-exit from the big hall, and which opened upon a short passage and a side
-entrance not much used by the family. This had long been a favourite
-entrance for Murray himself, for it shortened the way to Gay Street.
-
-A very short cut Jane made of it, for a flood of light from the long row
-of windows in the dining-room fell across the path, and turned it into
-one less obscure than she wished it to be just now. Holding her
-delicate skirts well away from the dust of the road, she hurried across,
-through the warm air of the May evening.
-
-There was nobody to be seen downstairs in the old house, although lamps
-were lighted and the small rooms wore their usual air of home-likeness
-and order. Jane ran up the steep little staircase which led to the
-sleeping-rooms above. She understood that, as at the big house, the
-family were engaged in arraying themselves for the Townsend reception.
-She paused at the top of the stairs to listen and observe, for the
-various doors were all more or less ajar, and the usual atmosphere of
-friendly family comradeship gave her a little pang of homesickness.
-
-The first thing distinguishable was the fact that Peter seemed to be
-having a bad time with his neck-gear, and that his cousin, Ross
-McAndrew, was enjoying his perturbation of mind.
-
-"Either my neck is bigger than it was, or this neckband has shrunk."
-Peter's growl rolled out into the tiny hall, and brought a dimple into
-Jane's cheek as she listened.
-
-"Probably both catastrophes have happened." This was Ross's voice in
-reply. "Anybody who has seen you stow away buckwheat cakes and
-maple-syrup all winter could n't be surprised if your neck should take a
-seventeen collar this spring."
-
-"Seventeen nothing! Sixteen's my size, and when I wear a bigger it 'll
-be because---- O jiminy, I 've burst that buttonhole! What on earth am
-I to do now? I don't own but one dress shirt that 'll fit the barn-door
-opening in my white waistcoat."
-
-"Your mother 'll sew that up on your back. I 'll do it myself if you
-won't howl at a prick or two."
-
-"Much obliged, but I know the general style of your repairs in a case
-like this. Nan 'll do it, if she's dressed," and Peter's door swung
-open. Intent on reaching his younger sister, whose door was next beyond
-his own, he did not observe the figure at the head of the stairs in the
-shadow. He proceeded to perform a double tattoo upon Nancy's door.
-
-"What's the matter, Petey?" sounded an amiable voice from within.
-
-"Neckband of my shirt's a wreck. Want you to come and splice the main
-brace."
-
-"All right--if you 'll button me up the back. I can't reach below the
-fourth button, and mother's busy dressing, too. It's so inconvenient
-having Janey married."
-
-"Give and take's fair play," agreed Peter, as a charming young figure in
-pink-flowered muslin backed out of the door, both bare arms strenuously
-demonstrating that they could not reach below the fourth button. "Stand
-still now--no fidgeting. What on earth a girl wants her rigging
-fastened behind for is beyond me! If it must be, why not use buttons
-big enough to get hold of?"
-
-"Look out, don't treat my buttonholes as you did your own, or I 'll have
-to be sewed up, too."
-
-"All right--you're done. Turn round and let's see how you look in
-front. Good work! You 're a stunner, and tremendously grown up, too,
-with your hair that way. Put it up the day you were eighteen, did n't
-you?"
-
-"Of course," admitted Nancy, with her comely head held high. Then, as
-Jane's white skirts in the shadow caught her eye, "Why, there 's Janey!
-You dear! Oh, how good it looks to see you standing there!"
-
-At the cry three doors flew wide open, and Mr. Bell, Ross, and Rufus
-appeared simultaneously upon their respective thresholds, while a voice
-from within called, "Is Jane there? Come here, dear!"
-
-"O mother, let me do your hair, will you?" offered Jane, eagerly, when
-she had succeeded in making her way past the embraces of her delighted
-family.
-
-"Not in that dress, child! Mercy, remember it's your wedding-gown, and
-don't whisk round so! Sit down there and let me look at you while I put
-my hair up; it won't take but a minute, and then you shall help me into
-my dress."
-
-"If you won't let me do your hair, I 'll go sew up Pete's buttonhole. I
-must do something for somebody. It seems so funny to have got dressed
-over in the big house. I just had to come over here and see the rest of
-you getting ready and consulting each other on details as usual. Where's
-your work-basket, mother dear? Nan," running to the door--"don't you
-_dare_ to mend Peter's shirt! I want to do it myself."
-
-"All right, Mrs. Townsend, nothing will suit me better," declared Peter,
-with satisfaction, kneeling in front of his sister with his back to her,
-while she sat on the edge of his splint-bottomed armchair and threaded
-her needle. "What does Murray think, by the way, of having his bride
-rush over here to assist her family, and leave him to shift for himself?
-Why are n't you putting in his studs and things, like a dutiful wife?"
-
-"He could n't get home from the office till the last minute.
-Mr.--Father Townsend wanted to consult him on so much that's happened
-while we 've been gone. Of course I 'm going back before he comes,"
-responded Jane. "Dear me--wreck is certainly the word for this
-buttonhole. Did you try to put your thumb through it?"
-
-"Tried to climb through it myself bodily at the last. Anything better
-calculated to put a fellow into a lovely frame of mind for an affair
-where's he's expected to make himself agreeable I don't know. Wrestling
-to get an iron collar on a steel neckband is--well--it's a trifle
-upsetting to the nerves. Be sure you get that buttonhole the right
-size. Better try the collar-button in it before you make fast."
-
-"When you 're done with him you can tie my tie for me, if you 're
-looking for work," announced Rufus, appearing in the doorway. "I can't
-seem to get the right curve on the thing."
-
-"Janey, would you wear this bracelet Shirley gave me last Christmas, or
-would n't you?" Nancy looked in over Rufus's shoulder. At eighteen she
-was tall for her years; at twenty-one Rufus, although sturdily built,
-had no advantage of her in inches. It was Peter, with his six feet of
-brawn, who was the family pride in the matter of size.
-
-Jane snipped off her thread and turned to look at her younger sister.
-"Do as you like, Nan, of course," said she, "but--if you want to look
-quite perfect in my eyes you 'll leave it off."
-
-"Good for you!" Peter observed Nancy's simple frock and fair neck with
-approval. "Lots of time for the gewgaws when they 're needed to cover
-up the hollows."
-
-"Now I 'll go help mother," said Jane, having adjusted Rufus's cravat to
-his satisfaction, mended a tiny rip in Ross's glove, and given her
-father a hug, since his dressing was completed, and there seemed to be
-nothing else she could do for him. He had held her fast, regardless of
-her bridal attire, for he had missed her sorely during her two months'
-absence, and the thought that, however often she might seek it, his roof
-was no longer hers, was one not easily assimilated.
-
-"I should really not have felt properly dressed," averred Mrs. Bell, as
-Jane hovered about her, performing all sorts of small offices, "if you
-had not been here to assure me that I was quite right in all points."
-
-As Jane smiled, first at her mother, then at her father, wondering how
-she had ever been able, even for Murray's sake, to leave two people so
-dear, a low call, apparently proceeding from downstairs, reached her
-ear, and she turned quickly to listen.
-
-"Jane?" came the voice again, interrogatively. "Gentle Jane, you 're not
-lost to me for good and all?"
-
-Jane ran to the head of the small stairway and looked down. In the
-light from a bracket lamp at the foot, her husband's face smiled up at
-her. A bright, strong face it was, ruddy with health, and alert with
-interest in that which he beheld at the top of the stairs. Murray was
-in evening dress, and as Jane observed the fact she cried softly and
-regretfully:
-
-"Why, it must be later than I thought! I did n't mean to be away when
-you came--I 'm so sorry! It doesn't seem as if I 'd been here five
-minutes."
-
-"No excuses necessary, dear," he answered. "When I sent you word, I did
-n't expect to be able to get away till the last minute, but a telegram
-from a man who had an appointment with father let us out, and I followed
-my message home. I came after you because mother is getting a bit
-uneasy. She wants to be sure the bride is at her elbow, ready for the
-fray, though not a soul will show up, of course, till long after the
-hour on the cards."
-
-"I 'll come this minute," and Jane caught up her long coat, threw a kiss
-at her family, and hurried down. "You 'll all come right away, won't
-you?" she called back, and let Murray walk off with her.
-
-At the curb she paused. "I meant to have borrowed Nan's rubbers," she
-said, looking down at her white-shod feet. "I forgot when I came over."
-
-"That's easy," and Murray had her across the street before she could
-protest that she was too heavy for him.
-
-"You could n't have done that when I first knew you, could you?" laughed
-Jane, with pride in his strength of arm.
-
-"Not much. What a slim and sickly whiffet I was! I wonder you ever
-looked twice at me, with Pete at hand as a contrast."
-
-"I liked muscle, but I like brains too," explained Jane, as if this were
-the first time the matter had been made clear.
-
-"Thank you. I 'm afraid I had none too many of those, either. The
-house looks festive, does n't it? Have you seen the dining-room? Mother
-seemed to be particularly pleased with the decorations there."
-
-"I 'm afraid I ran away in too much of a hurry to notice."
-
-Murray gave his young wife an amused look as they stood together on the
-steps of the small side entrance by which Jane had come out an hour
-before.
-
-"Do you know where you are to stand in the receiving line?" he inquired.
-
-Jane shook her head.
-
-"Do you know whether you are to shake hands with the guests or merely
-bow?"
-
-"No. You 'll tell me, won't you?"
-
-"Do you know whether I 'm to present people you don't know to you, or
-whether you 're to depend on mother for that?"
-
-"I suppose I'll find that out when the time comes."
-
-"Do you know whether you ought to look beamingly happy or coolly
-composed?"
-
-"Which do you prefer?"
-
-Murray laughed. "A judicious mixture of both, I should say. Well, my
-small bride, ignorant as you profess to be of your part, I 'm not
-worried about you. Just the same, I expect we 'd better hunt up mother
-and be coached as to the precise line of conduct she expects of us. I
-'ve never played the leading man's part in a bridal 'At Home' myself,
-and mother's something of a stickler for doing things according to the
-latest revision of the code. Well, well," he added in surprise,
-glancing at his watch as they entered the hall, "it's later than I
-thought. Do you need to go upstairs?"
-
-"Just a minute--to smooth my unruly hair," and Jane ran away, leaving
-him gazing after her.
-
-"Murray!" His mother came toward him from the library, a striking, even
-imposing, figure in black and white lace and amethysts. "Between you
-and Jane, I was getting anxious. I have n't seen the child since I went
-to her room, at least two hours ago."
-
-"She is all ready--dressed early so she might run home, since I sent her
-word I should be late."
-
-"But where is she now?"
-
-"Ran upstairs to see if her hair was right. Is n't that the invariable
-custom at the last minute?"
-
-"She is wearing her wedding-gown, of course?"
-
-"She surely is."
-
-"No ornaments?"
-
-"I sent her some roses. She 'll carry them, or wear one, or something,
-I suppose."
-
-"But no jewels?"
-
-"I think she 's wearing the pearl pin I gave her."
-
-"Murray! You are quite as bad as Jane! To be sure, her girlish way of
-dressing has been very pretty and appropriate in view of her father's
-lack of means. But her position now, as your wife, is different. Olive
-insists that Jane does not care for ornaments of any sort, but I am sure
-she would not object, Murray, to wearing that beautiful pearl necklace
-of Grandmother Townsend's--if you explain to her that it's an heirloom
-and that it will give me great pleasure to have her wear it? Pearls are
-not becoming to Olive," added Mrs. Townsend, and her son smiled.
-
-"If you want Jane to wear that, mother, you will have to ask her
-yourself. She 's coming now, I think. Yes"--as Jane looked over the
-gallery rail and nodded down at him--"here she is. Do you really think
-she needs 'ornaments'? They strike me as superfluous."
-
-Mother and son were watching Jane as she came down the staircase, her
-white figure outlined against the dark green of the palms and foliage.
-Her bronze-tinted hair shone like a crown under the radiance of the
-lights, and her softly blooming face made one forget the simplicity of
-her attire. At least, it made Murray forget it. But Mrs. Harrison
-Townsend saw in the white neck and arms a background for her pearls.
-She picked up a case from the table where she had laid it.
-
-"My dear," she said, "you are very sweet, and I shall be very proud to
-present you as my daughter. And you won't mind wearing, to please me,
-these pearls of Murray's great-grandmother's, will you? They are just
-what you need to set off your colouring."
-
-Jane's face grew warm as her eyes fell upon the pearls, lying in a worn
-old case lined with faded green velvet. She looked from them to
-Murray--an appealing little glance and a questioning one. He nodded
-ever so slightly in return, smiling at her.
-
-"You are very kind," said Jane, simply, to her mother-in-law. "I will
-wear them--if you wish."
-
-She let Mrs. Townsend clasp the necklace, received that lady's kiss and
-approving comment on the difference it made in her appearance, and
-allowed herself to be led to a mirror to see the effect. As she stood
-before it, her lashes falling after one glance of a pair of unwilling
-eyes, somebody called Murray's mother away. Jane looked at her husband
-again.
-
-"Yes, I know you hate it, little modesty," said he. "And I own I like
-to see you without any jewels. Yet there can be no doubt you become
-those pearls. You set them off, not they you. And seeing they 're not
-diamonds----"
-
-Jane's eyes flashed. "Not even for you----"
-
-His eyes responded with an answering brilliance, as he shook his head,
-laughing. "Not even for me! Are you sure? But you need n't fear.
-Diamonds, little Jane Townsend, were not made for you. Let those
-sparkle who want to. I prefer a steady glow!"
-
-An hour later Ross McAndrew and Peter Bell, making their entrance to the
-long drawing-room together, and waiting their turn to advance toward the
-receiving party, exchanged a series of low-voiced comments, under cover
-of the general hum of talk.
-
-"My word, Pete! Can that be our small girl, standing up there like a
-young queen? Watch her! I say, watch her!"
-
-"I am watching her," said Peter, with great satisfaction. "If you see
-my eyes drop out, pick 'em up, will you?"
-
-"Not that we might n't have expected it of her. I knew well enough she
-'d be sweet and charming--but that little gracious manner--that
-self-possession--jolly, she's great!"
-
-"Look at Murray! Is he proud of her, or is n't he?"
-
-"Proud as Lucifer. And has a right to be. His mother looks pretty
-complacent herself. And Olive--she's stunning, as usual. But our
-Jane--"
-
-The time to go forward had arrived. With head up and shoulders squared
-Peter led the way. As he passed his host and hostess he was a model of
-well-trained propriety, but when he reached Jane and Murray his formal
-manner relaxed, and he grasped each hand with a hearty grip.
-
-"You're a delightful pair," he murmured, "and the sight of you takes me
-off my feet."
-
-"You look perfectly composed, even bored," retorted Murray, laughing,
-glad to greet a brother who could be relied upon not to say the usual
-thing.
-
-But Jane whispered as she smiled up at him, "I 'm dreadfully frightened,
-Petey, and I can't do it well at all."
-
-"Keep on being frightened, then," advised her brother. "The result's
-perfectly satisfactory, is n't it, Murray?"
-
-"You're not really frightened?" whispered her husband, taking advantage
-of a slight lull in his duties to detain Peter. "She does n't look it,
-does she?"
-
-"Not a bit."
-
-"You 've only to look at mother," was Murray's comforting assurance, "to
-know that she's entirely satisfied. If she were not--well--she'd look
-different, that 's all!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- SHIRLEY HAS GROWN UP
-
-
-As Peter Bell abruptly rounded the corner from Gay Street into
-Worthington Square he saw coming toward him an attractive young figure
-in a white frock. He glanced at it and away again; then back, as he
-came nearer; once more away; then returned to look steadily, positive
-that his second impression had been the right one, after all. It must
-be that he knew this girl. If he did, he must give her a chance to
-recognise him.
-
-She not only recognised him, she smiled outright, and stopping short
-held out her hand. The eyes which were laughing at him were eyes he had
-surely seen before.
-
-Peter's hat had come off promptly; when she stopped, he stopped. When
-she held out her hand he took it, and stood staring down into the merry
-eyes with puzzled interest.
-
-"O Mr. Peter Bell!" she jeered softly. "To be so slow to recognise an
-old friend--a connection of your own family. Dear, dear, you should go
-to an oculist! Has it been coming on long? Can you still distinguish
-trees and houses?"
-
-The voice told him who its owner was, though it was a degree richer in
-quality than when he had heard it last, two years before. "Shirley
-Townsend!" he cried. "Miss Shirley, I mean, of course. Well, well! No
-wonder I---- When did you come? And you've grown up!"
-
-"Of course I have. Has n't Nancy grown up? I 'm a year older than she,
-too. And I came last night--a whole month before they expected me. I
-was supposed to be going to stop in New York with Aunt Isabel for a
-month--after two long years away off in England at school! But Marian
-Hille's mother met her at the ship--she 's the girl who went with me,
-you know--and they came right along home. I could n't stand it to stop
-in New York, and I came with them. And you don't mean 'Miss Shirley' at
-all, of course--with Jane married to Murray!"
-
-"Then you don't mean 'Mr. Peter Bell.'"
-
-"You look terribly elderly yourself. But I knew you! The mere fact
-that you are not wearing the same clothes you were when I went away----"
-
-"It was n't your clothes--except the extension on the length of them.
-It was--it was----"
-
-"I understand. My hair is up. I no longer wear two big black bows
-behind my ears."
-
-"Your cheeks," protested Peter. "You--the English air, I suppose----"
-
-"No, I 'm not a pale little, frail little girl any more, thanks to miles
-and miles of walking. You don't look very frail, either. Are n't we
-delightfully frank--after staring each other out of countenance? Is
-Nancy at home, and Mrs. Bell?"
-
-"They 'll be delighted to see you."
-
-"They 'll _know_ me, too," laughed Shirley.
-
-"She certainly has grown up," thought Peter, when Shirley had walked
-away from him toward Gay Street. He rather wished he had not been so
-obviously rushing away from home when he met this new-old acquaintance.
-The little Shirley had always been a good friend of his; the older
-Shirley looked distinctly better worth knowing. But Peter's days were
-busy ones; he had few moments for lingering by the side of pretty girls;
-nor was he wont to spend much time lamenting his deprivations.
-
-Shirley Townsend's appearance at the door of the Bell house caused a
-flurry of welcoming. Nancy, after two minutes of shyness at the sight of
-her former chum looking so like and so unlike herself, discovered that
-the unlikeness was going to make no difference. It was a great relief,
-for somebody who had seen Marian Hille at the end of one year at the
-English school had declared her grown insufferably consequential, and
-had prophesied that Shirley Townsend would come home "spoiled."
-
-But almost the first remark Shirley made was, "Isn't Jane the dearest
-thing you ever saw? And are n't we just the luckiest people to get her
-into the family?" So then Nancy knew it was precisely the same Shirley,
-and was glad.
-
-"I don't suppose she's really as good-looking as Olive," commented
-Rufus, when he, too, had seen his old-time partner at tennis, and had
-had a game with her, "but she 's a lot more alive, and jollier, ten
-times over. And her playing form 's improved; she can serve a ball that
-keeps you up and doing for fair. She knows cricket too; she 's going to
-teach us. I 'm glad she 's got home. It 'll be a good deal pleasanter
-for Jane over there. Shirley won't go in for society, like Olive and
-Mrs. Harrison."
-
-Rufus's prophecy proved a true one. Upon the second day after Shirley's
-return, Mrs. Townsend, Senior, announced--with some languor, as if she
-herself found summer affairs wearisomer after a winter which had been
-unusually full--that a garden-party and _musicale_ would that afternoon
-claim all four feminine members of the household. "Our men ought to go,
-too," she added, "but your father simply will go to nothing that takes
-him away from his business, and Murray seems to be lapsing into the same
-attitude. Forrest, when he is at home, is my only standby, but this
-freak of his to spend his time travelling makes him seldom to be counted
-on. Shirley, I hope you have something suitable to wear. It was a
-strange idea for you to come home, after being two years within an hour
-of London, with nothing but tennis suits and cricketing shoes. If you
-had stopped in New York, as I expected, your Aunt Isabel would have
-remedied all deficiencies in your wardrobe. But as it is----"
-
-"As it is, I 've nothing suitable, mother mine. So you won't ask me to
-go, will you?"
-
-"You must have something that will do. The Hildreths will expect you,
-now that every one knows you are at home. Marian Hille will be sure to
-be there, and you ought to be, quite as much."
-
-"I 've had two years of Marie Anne--as she wishes to be called now. I
-can do without her very comfortably for a day or two," objected Shirley,
-smiling at Jane.
-
-Jane was indeed rejoicing in her new young sister's return. The
-relations between herself and Olive, although cordial and affectionate,
-were not based on so strong a congeniality of tastes as existed between
-Jane and Shirley. The girl, before she went away, had shown decided
-promise of originality and force of character. Looking at her now, as
-she stood before them in short tennis dress and fly-away hat, with
-vivacious, wide-awake face full of clear colour, it needed small
-discernment to make sure of the fact that here was a girl out of the
-common, and quite irresistibly out of the common, too.
-
-"I don't like to insist, Shirley, and I would not, if you were showing
-the slightest fatigue after your journey. But since all the apology I
-could make for you would be that you preferred to play tennis in the sun
-with Nancy Bell----"
-
-"I see. It's evident I must face the music--Miss Antoinette Southwode's
-searching soprano, and Mr. Clifford Burnham-Brisbane's wabbly tenor--and
-tea and little cakes. Since it's my duty I 'll do it. But, mother
-dear, please don't make many engagements for me. Give it out that I 'm
-eccentric--that Miss Cockburn told me positively, before I came away
-from Helmswood, that after a severe course of study under her
-unexceptionable tutelage I must have absolute relaxation. Say that I
-have no fine clothes, no floppy hats covered with roses, suitable for
-lawn-parties. Say anything, but after to-day don't make me go--unless I
-most awfully want to. Promise--_please_!"
-
-Two firm tanned hands clasped themselves behind Mrs. Townsend's neck,
-two importunate black-lashed blue eyes looked at her beseechingly. The
-mother sighed.
-
-"Child, what shall I do, with two of you? Here is Jane, accepting her
-invitations under protest, and now you are going to be still more
-unreasonable."
-
-"Is Jane another? Then why not just make a simple division of labour?
-You and Olive play the society parts, and give Jane and me the domestic
-ones."
-
-"My dear, nothing can be so unfortunate for a girl, or for a young
-married woman, as to become known as peculiar. Of course you are not
-serious--no girl of your age is ever serious in declaring that she wants
-nothing to do with society--but it distresses me to have you even talk
-as you are doing. Go and dress, and look your best, dear, and don't
-worry me with this sort of thing. I am quite worn out already. Doctor
-Warrener advises a course of baths at a rest-cure, and I think I shall
-have to follow his advice."
-
-"I'm sorry," and Shirley kissed her mother, with a pat upon the smooth
-white cheek, where faint lines were beginning to show. Then she went
-away to dress, discarding the short skirt and canvas shoes with a
-smothered breath of regret, but appearing, in due course of time, in a
-costume eminently suitable for a garden-party, at least from her own
-point of view. Her mother did not see her until the carriage was at the
-door, and then it was too late for her to do more than to murmur:
-
-"My dear, if that is the best you can do, I must take you to a
-dressmaker at once. White linen is well enough for some occasions, and
-that hat----Did you tell me that Miss Cockburn advised it, and you got
-it in Bond Street? But the effect is decidedly more girlish than is
-necessary."
-
-"I should think you would want me as infantile as possible, with Olive
-to do the dressy young lady. You and Jane and Olive, with your
-
- 'Ribbons and laces,
- And sweet, pretty faces,'
-
-need a plain little schoolgirl to set you off. And I shall not be 'out'
-until next winter. I 'm all right, mother dear. Miss Cockburn was
-always delighted with white linen, and discouraged fussy frocks. I 'm
-really beautifully 'English,' and you should be satisfied. Girls are
-n't allowed to grow up half so fast over there as here, and I think it
-is a sensible thing."
-
-Mrs. Townsend said no more until, crossing the Hildreth lawn an hour
-later, she caught sight of Marian Hille. At the first opportunity
-thereafter, she said in Shirley's ear, "Miss Cockburn certainly did not
-advise Marian to cling to the schoolgirl style of dressing. If that is
-not a French frock she is wearing, my eyes deceive me. She is charming
-in it, too, and not at all overdressed. That rose-covered hat is
-exquisite, and quite girlish enough."
-
-Shirley smiled, a protesting little smile, but she did not argue the
-question further. To her mind, "Marie Anne" looked like a Parisian
-fashion-plate, and her manner was certainly that of a young person of
-considerable social experience. Shirley did not like it. Her eye went
-from Miss Marian Hille to Mrs. Murray Townsend, and rejoiced at the
-contrast. The two were close together, taking their seats for the
-outdoor _musicale_, which was about to begin. No fault could possibly be
-found with Jane's attire, but in it she looked, beside Marian, like a
-dainty gray pigeon beside a golden pheasant.
-
-"I beg your pardon, but may I ask what you are staring at so intently?"
-said a voice beside her, and Shirley turned to confront the interested
-gaze of Brant Hille, Marian's elder brother. "I 've been standing beside
-you here all of three minutes, waiting for you to come back to earth and
-recognise me. Do you realise we have n't met since you and Marian came
-back? And won't you let me find you a chair over on the edge of the
-crowd, where we can talk?"
-
-This suited Shirley, and she let him establish her in a corner where a
-clump of shrubbery screened the two from a part of the audience. Until
-the music began, young Hille plied her with questions about her
-experiences at Miss Cockburn's school, evidently enjoying the fact that
-her point of view seemed decidedly to differ from that of his sister.
-
-"I should n't know you had been at the same place," was his whispered
-comment, as the first notes of the initial number on the programme smote
-the summer air and caused a partial hush to fall upon the assemblage.
-He had been noting, with interest, the change in her. He had known
-Shirley since their earliest days, but beyond the friendly liking she
-had always inspired in him, as in everybody, by her girlish good humour
-and love of sport, he had not thought her especially attractive. Now,
-however, as Peter Bell had done, he found himself discovering in her
-qualities distinctly noteworthy.
-
-"So they took you to a lot of old churches and cathedrals," he began
-suddenly to Shirley, after an interval during which they had listened
-politely to Miss Antoinette Southwode's truly "searching" soprano and
-Mr. Burnham-Brisbane's astonishingly "wabbly" tenor, intermingled in an
-elaborate Italian duet. "Did n't you find that sort of thing deadly
-dull?"
-
-"Not a bit," denied Shirley, promptly. "It was such fun to hear the
-dear old vergers proudly recite the histories of the antiquities. And
-the antiquities themselves! In one very, very old church there was a
-tablet of a man and his six wives, all kneeling before a shrine. He
-knelt first and they came after, all in profile. The poor dears were
-all dressed alike--they must have worn the same dress, handed down.
-One's head was gone--that made her more touching than the others. You
-could n't help feeling that her husband had been harder on her than on
-the rest. He looked that sort, you see."
-
-"No doubt he was," agreed Hille, laughing. "Did you see anything else
-equal to that?"
-
-"No end of things. Of course there was ever so much that was dignified
-and beautiful, but one could n't help being glad to find something funny
-now and then. One tablet in another ancient chapel showed three men,
-one above another on their painted wooden tombs, all lying sidewise and
-half rising on their elbows, and staring right down at you with their
-eyes wide open. They had pink cheeks and black hair. They were father,
-son, and grandson, and the father looked the youngest. Their wives were
-all lying quietly asleep at one side. It did n't seem fair for the men
-to be so wide awake, while the poor wives had to slumber and see
-nothing.--Oh, there goes Mr. Brisbane again! Why _does_ his voice shake
-so much harder than when I heard him last?"
-
-"He 's that much more celebrated," said Hille. "See here, are n't you
-and Marian about the same age."
-
-Shirley shook her head. But when the song was over he asked the
-question again.
-
-"I 'm three months older," admitted Shirley.
-
-"She looks three years older. Why is it?"
-
-Shirley shook her head again. It was one thing to air her views to her
-family, quite another to tell Brant that Marian was leaping into young
-ladyhood and its signs too fast. But Brant studied his sister. Her
-blond head, the hair elaborately waved, could be seen between the heads
-and shoulders in front, the striking rose-crowned hat conspicuous among
-other elaborate hats of all patterns.
-
-"She looks twenty-five, at least," he commented, approvingly. "She
-looks older than your sister Olive. And she seems to have that cad
-Maltbie glued to her for the afternoon. If that 's the best she can do,
-she 'd better take me. But she 's no use for brothers. Look here, when
-'s Forrest coming home?"
-
-"I 've no idea. He was leaving Ecuador before the hot season began, and
-was intending to stay at Jamaica as long as it was comfortable. He
-wrote he might be off for the South Sea Islands soon. He 's had a
-tempting invitation."
-
-"He 's a rover. His taste of army life gave him the fever. I wish he
-'d get enough of it and come back. Things always 'go' while Forrest's
-home."
-
-Altogether, between Brant Hille and two or three other young people,
-Shirley found the garden-party endurable. But its cakes and ices
-spoiled her appetite for dinner, and the moment that meal was over, she
-was off to the tennis-court. Here she and Rufus played several sets in
-so spirited a fashion that Murray and Jane, strolling over the lawn to
-watch them, were moved to comment upon Shirley's vigour.
-
-"I 'm just working off the garden-party," declared the girl, when her
-brother asked the cause of so much energy upon so warm an evening.
-
-"You should have put on your tennis skirt, dear," said Jane, as Shirley
-came up to her, racquet in hand.
-
-"So I ought, but I was afraid mother would be made ill by the sight of
-me, if I did, after dinner. Oh, how good it is to be at home! Let's
-camp down here on the grass and send for the rest of the clan. Run
-over, Rufie, will you, and get all the Bells that will come?"
-
-As she spoke, Shirley dropped upon the smooth turf close by the big
-wicker chair that Murray had just drawn up for Jane, on the terrace at
-the edge of the court. Her cheeks were flushed by the lively exercise
-she had been taking, her hair curled moistly about her forehead. Jane
-looked at her with a touch of envy in her affectionate glance. Being
-Mrs. Murray Townsend, she supposed it became her to sit demurely in a
-chair, instead of putting herself, as she longed to do, beside Shirley,
-on the grass. But Murray, with no such restraining thought in his head,
-cast himself upon the turf beside his sister, at his wife's feet.
-
-Presently Rufus returned, bringing Nancy and Ross McAndrew. Olive,
-spying the group upon the lawn, came trailing out in all her pretty
-finery of the afternoon. Two or three young neighbours appeared. By
-and by Peter Bell, just home from the paper-factory, looked across from
-the Gay Street porch and descried the distant group. Somebody had
-brought a banjo, and somebody else was essaying to sing a boating-song
-to the accompaniment.
-
-"Shall I go over?" thought Peter, when he had had his bath and his
-supper, and had come out upon the porch again.
-
-He was quite alone, for his mother, after serving his supper, had
-hurried out to see a neighbour who had been long ill, and who depended
-upon Mrs. Bell for her daily cheer. Mr. Bell had driven out to
-Grandfather Bell's farm. The little house seemed strangely silent, and
-the porch, in the early summer twilight, more companionable. A hammock
-swung behind the vines, and after a moment's indecision, Peter stretched
-his long form in it, clasping his hands under his head. He was
-unusually weary, for the day had been very hot. He lay quietly
-listening to the distant 'plunkings' of the banjo and to the faint
-sounds of talk and laughter which floated across the space to him. So,
-after a little, he fell asleep.
-
-He was awakened by the sound of voices on the step. The Bell porch,
-unlike that of the Townsends, possessed no electric lamps, and the
-nearest illumination to-night came from an arc-light on the corner.
-Peter, in his hammock, lay shrouded wholly in darkness. He could see a
-gleam of white between the vines which sheltered him, and the voices
-were those of his sister Nancy and Shirley Townsend.
-
-"It's such a relief," Shirley was saying, "to get away from that banjo.
-I seem to have been listening all day to the sorts of music I like
-least. Rodman Fielding and his banjo are the last straw. Nan, what do
-you suppose is the matter with me that I don't seem to care for the
-things most girls do--clothes and boys and--banjos. I detest banjos!"
-
-"What do you care for?" Nancy asked. "Tennis, anyhow. And you like
-Rufus and Ross and Peter, don't you? As for banjos--I don 't think
-anybody thinks they 're very musical. They just like the funny songs
-that go with them."
-
-"Rufus is like a brother, and Ross like an uncle--a young one. As for
-Peter--I don't seem to know Peter. He 's changed. What 's he been
-doing to make him look so old and sober? I almost thought I saw a gray
-hair--and he 's no older than Murray."
-
-"Peter old and sober?"--Peter himself was growing fairly awake, although
-not fully enough roused to the situation to realise that he was playing
-eavesdropper.--"What an idea! He has n't changed a particle. Gray
-hair! It could n't be. Why, Peter 's stronger than all the rest of us
-put together!"
-
-"He's been taxing his strength, then. He looks as if he had been
-carrying loads of responsibility--solving problems--worrying over some
-he could n't solve. He's working too hard."
-
-Nancy laughed incredulously, and said that Peter's work was quite the
-same as it had been, and that her friend's absence had made her see
-things unnaturally. But Peter's eyes, in the darkness, opened wide.
-Here was extraordinary discernment for a nineteen-year-old girl, who had
-met him only once since her return, casually upon the street, during
-which time she had merely laughed at him for not knowing her
-immediately, and then had walked on. Was it possible that she had seen
-that which he had been carefully guarding from the eyes of his family
-for a long, long time, and at which even his mother did not guess?
-
-But here was Shirley again, speaking low and thoughtfully: "I seem to
-see everybody, since I came home, as if I had never seen them before. I
-see father looking as if he thought it did n't pay to have made so much
-money, after all; and mother looking worn-out playing the grand lady;
-Olive following after, and not finding much in it. Murray and Jane
-absorbed in each other, but Jane wishing--no, I 'll not say what I think
-Jane is wishing. She would n't admit it, I know. Ross and Rufus and
-you, busy and happy. Your father and mother contented as ever. But
-Peter----"
-
-It would not do. He was fully awake now. If she was going on to talk
-about him again he must let her know he was there. Besides, if she
-really divined something of the truth, he must not let her make Nancy
-anxious.
-
-Shirley had paused with his name upon her lips, as if soberly thinking.
-Peter sat up. But at the fortunate instant a figure dashed across Gay
-Street.
-
-"You runaways!" Rufus called, reproachfully. "A fine hostess you are,
-Shirley Townsend! They 're asking for you. You 'll have to come back."
-
-So they went away and Peter was left alone upon the porch. There was a
-queer feeling tugging at his heart. Nobody else had seen, nobody else
-had even noticed the slightest change in him. Of course it was not
-possible that Shirley could know the least thing about his situation,
-but it was something that she appreciated one fact--that he was working
-to the limit of his capacity, and that, although he was not yet
-overdone, the strain was beginning to tell. Not the strain of work, but
-the greater and more exhausting drain of anxiety.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- LUNCHEON FOR TWELVE
-
-
-"Mrs. Murray, Mrs. Townsend would like you to come to her room, if you
-please."
-
-"Yes, Sophy, certainly. Is Mrs. Townsend's headache better this
-morning?"
-
-"It's very bad, Mrs. Murray. And she's that upset about the luncheon
-she's giving. Cook's taken sick, too--the bad luck!"
-
-"Since breakfast, Sophy?"
-
-"'T was Norah and Mary served breakfast. Cook but got out of bed and
-went back. Mr. Townsend bade me send for the doctor. He says she 'll
-not leave her bed again the day. And Mrs. Townsend says the luncheon
-must go on, and not a bit of outside help to be had at this short
-notice."
-
-Jane hurried down the hall, Sophy's laments in her ears. She found
-Olive sitting on the foot of her mother's bed talking perturbedly with
-the elder woman, in the effort to dissuade her from the purpose of
-attempting to entertain any guests whatever in the circumstances. But
-it became evident to Jane at once that Mrs. Townsend was not to be
-dissuaded.
-
-"There must be somebody to be had," she asserted, as Jane drew up a
-chair, after laying a cool hand on the aching forehead and expressing
-her sympathy with the headache. "It can't be possible that Lemare could
-n't send me somebody if he understood the necessity--or Perceval. We
-don't need much done. Cook had all the preliminary baking done
-yesterday. It's only to get everything together."
-
-"But that's the whole of it, mother," Olive urged. "You may say it's
-only a simple luncheon, but Norah and Mary are certainly not equal to
-it. Is n't it excuse enough to send those women word that you 're ill?
-I 'll telephone--or write notes, if you prefer."
-
-She rose as she spoke, but Mrs. Townsend waved an agitated hand, and
-shook her head violently. "You don't understand," she moaned, pressing
-her hand to her head and falling back among the pillows. "There are
-reasons why I can't have this thing fail. Mrs. Arlo Stevenson is a most
-difficult person to get for any affair whatever--and this is
-particularly in her honour. I could have had a caterer, of course, but I
-consider it not good form to put small entertaining into any hands but
-one's cook's. I am indebted to Mrs. Wister very deeply, and she is
-bringing a guest whom she is very anxious to have meet Mrs. Stevenson.
-There are other reasons----"
-
-"But, mother"--Olive's tone was growing impatient--"what can't be, can't
-be. We can't get any one."
-
-"Perhaps I could do it," Jane began, with some hesitation. "If it's
-really a simple luncheon----"
-
-"It is!" Mrs. Townsend spoke with eagerness.
-
-"I might not be able to manage the most elaborate dishes----"
-
-"Cook can't be too ill to tell you what is necessary."
-
-"But, mother," Olive protested, "Jane must be at the table. She can't
-be in the kitchen, sending in courses."
-
-"That's of no consequence," declared Jane, quickly. "I don't mind
-missing the luncheon in the least."
-
-"They are all older women," murmured Mrs. Townsend, closing her eyes
-wearily. When Olive took things in hand, it was always difficult to
-oppose her.
-
-"Yes, but Jane is our bride. And you expect me to be there. If Jane
-stays in the kitchen, so shall I."
-
-"I don't know what to do," and the poor lady on the bed, among her
-pillows, looked as if she were indeed suffering.
-
-There was a minute's silence. Then Jane spoke with gentle decision.
-
-"Olive, dear, that is very nice of you, but I truly don't mind in the
-least. It is n't as if you had n't already introduced me everywhere,
-and I had n't been entertained over and over. If mother's guests are
-older ladies, my absence surely won't be noticed. And I 'd love to try
-what I can do. You know I 've had years of training at cookery, and if I
-can't manage all of Cook's dishes, perhaps I can substitute others that
-are n't at all common. I can promise at least that nothing will be
-burned."
-
-"You are a dear child," said Mrs. Townsend fervently. She wiped away a
-nervous tear or two.
-
-Olive followed Jane to her room to watch her new sister exchange her
-morning dress for one more suitable for the affairs she meant to take in
-hand.
-
-"This is going to be fun," said Jane gaily.
-
-"I don't see how you can think so. It's certainly very foolish of
-mother to persist against all odds. One would think her life depended
-on that luncheon."
-
-"It does--in a way. Her poor nerves are quite worn out. I 've seen it
-for a long time. Having things go wrong just now is the last straw."
-
-"Why, Jane, what's going to happen?" called Shirley, five minutes later,
-encountering Jane on the stairs which led to the servants' rooms on the
-third floor. Shirley had been up to see Cook, who adored her.
-
-"Is Bridget able to see me?" asked Jane.
-
-"She 'll be much flattered. It's sciatica, and it lays her low, but she
-can converse with intelligence, even with brilliancy. She 's in a
-terrible state over not being able to get up that luncheon."
-
-"I 'm going to hold a council of war with her," and Jane disappeared
-into Cook's room.
-
-Half an hour later she came out again, her eyes dancing with
-anticipation, pencil and paper in hand. As she ran downstairs, Sophy
-came up with a tray, and caught the overflow of Bridget's emotions.
-
-"The cleverness of her!" exclaimed the invalid. "To take the menyou
-into her own pretty hands and think she can see to it all! She can, too,
-or I 'm deceived. Consultin' with me and gettin' my directions, and
-tellin' me where she makes bold to follow, and where she 's not quite
-sure. It's a pity she 's not mistress of the house in Mrs. Townsend's
-place--and her so wore out she ought to be at a sanitarium this minute.
-Look to it, Sophy, that Norah and Mary does their duty by Mrs. Murray
-this day, If they 're inclined to be triflin', bid them come up to me.
-I 'll soon put them in mind of what Mr. Murray says to me when he
-brought home his wife. 'Whatever you do to please her will be
-appreciated,' he says, 'by me.' And it's nothing I would n't do for Mr.
-Murray and Miss Shirley, these seven years I 've lived here. And now I
-'m feelin' the same way toward Mrs. Murray."
-
-Whether it was the potency of the message which reached scullery maid
-and waitress by way of Sophy, or whether it was Jane's own engaging
-manner, together with the respect she soon inspired by the assured and
-competent way in which she "took hold," there could be no question that
-by the end of the first hour not only Norah and Mary, but also Ellen,
-the laundress, were flying about as they had rarely done before, even
-for Bridget, who certainly knew how to get out of them work enough and
-to spare.
-
-At a moment when they chanced to be all together, Jane had said to them,
-as with deft fingers she mixed a bowlful of ingredients, that if with
-their help she could only bring about the serving of a luncheon which
-the guests would like to eat, she should be happier than over any
-entertainment she herself had ever been offered. And she had been able
-to tell from their smiling interested faces that she was to have from
-that moment the best service they could give her.
-
-Shirley, when affairs were well under way, had gone to the telephone and
-called up Murray's office.
-
-"I want you to come home for a few minutes at two o'clock!" she said,
-imperatively.
-
-"What for? Anything the matter?" asked her brother.
-
-"Not a thing," said Shirley, reassuringly "But there 's something
-happening up here at the house that you must see."
-
-"I 'm pretty busy."
-
-"You 'll never forgive yourself, when you hear about it, if you don't
-see with your own eyes."
-
-"All right, I 'll try to make it. Anything connected with Jane?"
-
-"Of course. Do you suppose I 'd ask you if it was n't?"
-
-"I'll be there."
-
-"I thought you would," and Shirley laughed as she hung up the receiver.
-No doubt Murray was a happy man.
-
-"Do you suppose Jane is going to be able to do it?" queried Mrs.
-Townsend, dressing with the help of Shirley and Sophy. As the hour for
-the arrival of her guests approached, doubts were beginning to assail
-her. Jane was no doubt an extremely capable young matron, but the
-preparing of such a luncheon as Bridget had planned meant not only
-accomplished cookery, but much skill and care in the details of serving.
-Had Jane's eyes been open during the brief period of her entertainment
-at various fine tables! It was too late to do anything but hope so.
-
-"Don't worry, mother," Shirley had urged. "Jane's doing wonders. If she
-can keep it up she 'll surprise you."
-
-"I had a bit sip of the booly-on just now when I was down in the
-kitchen," offered Sophy, "and it was elegant. And you know yourself 'm,
-Bridget says that's one of the most trying things of all to get tasty."
-
-Mrs. Townsend went wanly down into her rooms, to find flowers all about,
-distributed by Olive's skilful fingers. She looked into the
-dining-room. Her table was faultlessly laid, to the last detail, and a
-charming arrangement of lilies was mirrored in the polished mahogany.
-
-"Now come and rest until the last minute," urged Shirley. "And don't
-worry. Mrs. Arlo Stevenson won't have a thing to criticise--except the
-conversation."
-
-An hour afterward, Murray, letting himself in with his latch-key, found
-Shirley awaiting him inside the door. "Don't say a word," she
-whispered. "Just walk straight past the dining-room without looking in.
-Mother 's entertaining Mrs. Stevenson at luncheon, you know, and it's a
-very solemn occasion."
-
-Wondering, Murray, hat in hand, followed his sister as she walked
-demurely by the wide entrance to the dining-room, from within which he
-could hear a subdued murmur of voices. But once past, she hurried him,
-by a circuitous route, to a narrow hallway at the back of the house,
-which led to the kitchen. Here she stationed him, and bade him push the
-door open a cautious crack and peep within. He obeyed her. Shirley
-stood behind him, alive with anticipation, while she watched her
-brother's shoulders.
-
-Shirley could not see his face, but she heard his subdued exclamation as
-he gazed at the scene within. She knew what it was. The luncheon had
-reached the salad course. Jane was arranging plates picturesque with an
-enticing combination of ingredients, parti-coloured, crisp and cool. Her
-fair arms were bared to the elbow, her cheeks were flushed. At her
-right hand Mary was ready with assistance, her eyes respectfully
-studying the arrangement--not of the salad, but of her young mistress's
-hair, which was certainly worth studying for its effective simplicity.
-The maid could never hope to match that daintiness of arrangement with
-her own ash-coloured locks, but she meant to try.
-
-Murray turned about at last. "Well, by Jove!" he exploded, softly.
-"How does this come about?"
-
-Shirley noiselessly closed the door and explained in a whisper.
-Murray's eyes grew eloquent as he listened. "The little trump!" was his
-comment. "I wish I could stay till she's finished. I suppose it would
-n't do to call her out now?"
-
-"Mercy, no! You might upset her. So far I don't think the least thing
-has gone wrong."
-
-"What possessed mother to put the thing through, anyhow? Jane ought to
-be in there with the others."
-
-"It was something about entertaining Mrs. Arlo Stevenson. Mother felt
-it must be done, though the heavens fell. They nearly did fall, till
-Jane came under and held them up. As for Jane's being at the table--she
-did n't want to be there. And Olive would n't be, without her, so
-there's nothing noticeable. They 're all women of mother 's age--on
-some special board of charities, or something like that, that makes them
-congenial."
-
-"Its making them congenial does n't necessarily follow, unfortunately.
-So Olive stayed out, did she? That's one count for Olive. Why is n't
-she helping Jane, though?"
-
-"Jane would n't have either of us in the kitchen. Olive did the flowers,
-and Norah and I the table. I got in an English fashion or two that will
-either drive mother to distraction or fill her with pride. I forgot to
-tell her," and Shirley began to laugh. She led Murray away to safer
-regions, but he looked at his watch and said he must be off.
-
-"Wasn't it worth coming up for?" she demanded.
-
-"No question of that. Much obliged for letting me know. I 'll settle
-with Jane later. Take her out for a drive, or something, to cool her
-off, will you? Good bye!" And Murray vanished, smiling to himself.
-"That ought to make her pretty solid with mother," he reflected, as he
-raced to his car.
-
-But when the last guest had rustled away, Mrs. Townsend was in no
-condition to fall upon Jane's neck and overwhelm her with thanks.
-Instead she had to be carried to her room by Phelps, the
-coachman--summoned in haste from the stable--and put to bed by her
-daughters. Her physician arrived in short order, and his edict, when he
-had telephoned for a nurse, was stern.
-
-"When you society women stop putting yourselves through a grind that no
-strong man could stand up under, you will get a grip upon your nerves,"
-said he. "Mrs. Townsend was at the end of her forces two months ago,
-and I told her so. She has simply been keeping up on will--with the
-inevitable result. The moment she is fit to travel she must get off to
-the quietest place on my list--and stay there. Home would be a better
-place for her, if she would obey the rules; but she won 't, so that
-settles it. And you, Miss Olive"--he turned abruptly to the elder
-daughter of the house--"would do well to go with her. It's evident you
-'ve been travelling along the same road."
-
-"O Doctor Warrener, how absurd you are! I 'm perfectly well. And I 've
-half a dozen invitations to lovely places. They 'll do me far more good
-than going to some invalid resort and taking baths."
-
-He shook his head. "You're all alike," said he. "I may talk till I 'm
-dumb--you 'll pay the price. And when you 've paid it, you 'll
-remember."
-
-"There are two," said Olive, indicating Jane and Shirley, "who will
-never have nervous prostration on account of overdoing society."
-
-Doctor Warrener surveyed them, and the grimness of his face relaxed.
-"I'll acquit them on their faces," said he. "Tell your husband, Mrs.
-Murray, to shut you up in a bandbox--or, better, take you off West to
-that place where he got back his health--before he lets you drift into
-the swirl. As for Shirley,"--he laid his hand upon her shoulder--"if
-I'm any reader of destiny--and I ought to be--she 's going to swing that
-tennis racquet for several years yet before she gives up and settles
-down."
-
-All this had happened before Mr. Townsend and Murray came home. Mrs.
-Townsend's breakdowns after fatigue in fulfilling her engagements, and
-the summoning of the doctor, had become too frequent occurrences to
-imply the sending for her husband. The orders away, for rest and
-recuperation, were also, within the last few years, of semi-annual
-recurrence.
-
-"It simply means," said Murray, pacing with Jane up and down the long
-flower-bordered walk between the house and the tennis-court, "it simply
-means six weeks or two months for you to try your hand at being mistress
-of the establishment. And judging by what I saw that hand do
-to-day----"
-
-Jane looked quickly up at him.
-
-"I should say that it was competent to run anything. That salad was
-a--what do women say?--a symphony--a star. Not that I care much for
-salads myself, but to see you putting it together----"
-
-"Murray--you didn 't!"
-
-"Didn't I? You had on a pink-and-white checked apron that came up over
-your shoulders. Your sleeves were short, and your hair curled round your
-ears, the way it does on damp days. You----"
-
-"Where were you? How did you know! Who----"
-
-"I was on the other side of the door, which you forgot to lock. Never
-in my life was I so bowled over by the sight of a girl in a kitchen."
-
-"If I had known you were looking----"
-
-"Precisely. That was why Shirley wouldn't let me call you out. Of
-course I should have kissed you--I never felt more like it--and that
-might have endangered the composition of the salad."
-
-"I 'm afraid it would," laughed Jane. "As it was, I made the one real
-mistake of the luncheon--I sent that salad in on the game plates! The
-girls were in such a flurry they did n't notice till the plates began to
-come out again. I hope mother did n't mind very much."
-
-"I 'll warrant nobody else did. Mrs. Arlo Stevenson is as short-sighted
-as an owl in the day-time, and as I understand it, Mrs. Stevenson was
-the guest who counted--goodness knows why! I think she's insufferable.
-I 'm glad mother 's got her off her mind, for the time being. It will
-give her a chance to recuperate. Poor mother! She misses a lot of fun,
-does n't she?"
-
-"She thinks it's we who miss it."
-
-"Perhaps we can show her better some day--when we 've been very good and
-earned that house by ourselves. Hi! What?" exclaimed Murray. "How you
-jumped! Did you think that house by ourselves was n't really to
-materialise some day?"
-
-"I--wasn't sure." Jane's voice was low. She did not mean to show how
-much she cared, or how she longed to believe definitely in a prospect
-which, as yet, had not been in so many words held out to her.
-
-"Why, it's a certainty! Have n't I made that clear, little girl? You
-know, when I told you how anxious father was to have us live with them,
-I said it would n't be for all time. Don't you remember that?"
-
-"I know. But I thought----"
-
-"You thought, I see, it meant while he needed me, which would be as long
-as he lived. No, he does n't insist on that. It was to be only while
-he stayed an active partner in the business. He wanted me at his elbow,
-and I did n't feel like refusing him. He means to retire within five
-years--or sooner, if his health shows signs of breaking. Then he
-understands that I 'm to have a home by myself--build one, you know.
-Well, well, what a squeeze my arm is getting! Are you so glad?"
-
-"I'm pretty glad. It's not that--that this place is n't pleasant, and
-everybody more than kind, but----"
-
-"You needn't be afraid to tell me--in fact, you don't need to tell me.
-You 're too much of a born Jenny Wren not to want to feather your own
-nest. And I want to see you do it. We 'll begin to look over plans.
-We can talk about it and think about it----"
-
-"No, we can't, Murray."
-
-"Why not? Isn't anticipation----"
-
-"Yes, but it would make it harder to wait. Now I know it's sure, I
-can----"
-
-"Be good?" said her husband. "You are being good--heavenly. What you
-did to-day--well, if you could have known what I thought about you when
-I saw you out there putting those pretty shoulders to the domestic
-wheel--proud is n't the name for it. And let me tell you, Janey
-Townsend, it is n't every girl who could take command of the forces and
-have them working for you at the top of their ability, like that. Norah
-has n't a nose and chin of that perky shape for nothing; and Mary can
-soldier for fair when she chooses. As for Sophy--but you had Sophy for
-your own from the start. And it 's not been done with tips, either, has
-it? Honestly, now, have you ever given Sophy a tip since you came to the
-house?"
-
-"A tip?" said Jane. "Money, you mean? Why, no. Should I? I never
-thought of it. Does she expect it?"
-
-"She probably doesn't now--from you--or want it, as long as you reward
-her with your smiles and ask about her invalid brother, the way I
-overheard you doing the other day. She'd probably rather have your
-friendly interest than all Olive's dollar bills. Oh, there are several
-ways of winning people's loyalty, dear--and yours is the best. Only
-everybody can't do it. Do you know, gentle Jane, I 'm a good deal
-interested in seeing you in the role of mistress of this house for a
-while?"
-
-"Murray, I 'm so doubtful about it!"
-
-"You need n't be. The commanding officer who has proved to his regiment
-that in an emergency he can work with them, shoulder to shoulder--and
-work better than they can--need have no fears. It 'll just be a case of
-'Bridget, Norah, Sophy, Mary, Ellen--fall in! Shoulder arms! March!'
-And off the regiment will go, heads up, chests out, eyes to the front."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- POT-HOOKS
-
-
-"I want to have a talk with you, Murray."
-
-"All right, sister, I 'm at your service."
-
-"Please come over to the seat beyond the shrubbery, where nobody will
-see or hear. It's not a very suitable place, but it's better than the
-house this hot night."
-
-"Not a suitable place?" queried Murray, as he followed Shirley across
-the lawn. "Not so fast, child. It is a hot night, and I 've only just
-cooled off since dinner. It was insufferable in the office to-day--or
-would have been if anybody had had time to stop and think about it. Why
-is n't that romantic seat beyond the shrubbery just the place to talk?"
-
-"Because the talk has no romance about it. The office would be the place
-for it, only you 've no time to give me if I should come there."
-
-"You excite my curiosity." Murray disposed himself comfortably upon the
-wide rustic seat, screened from all beholders without and within the
-grounds, not only by shrubbery and hedges, but by the fast deepening
-July twilight. "Fire away. Anything gone wrong?"
-
-"Nothing--except me."
-
-"You alarm me."
-
-"Don't joke. I 'm serious."
-
-"I see you are. And that's what alarms me. Seriousness, at
-eighteen----"
-
-"I 'm nineteen--nearly twenty. And I 'm not only serious--I 'm cross.
-Murray, I want something to do."
-
-"Haven't you plenty? Jane tells me she could n't get on without you."
-
-"Jane is a dear. And I love to help her. But I want to be doing
-something--else. I want to amount to something. I want to learn
-something."
-
-"Miss Cockburn's finishing-school didn't finish then? Is college the
-bee you have in your bonnet?"
-
-"No, I 'm afraid I 'm too unsettled for that now--I don't know why.
-Once I spent a whole week trying to convince mother I must go to college
-instead of to school in England. But I don't want that any more. I
-want--Murray, please don't laugh when I tell you!"
-
-"Why should I laugh? It's plain you mean business of some sort, and I
-'m honoured by your confidence. Go ahead, little girl, and don't be
-afraid of your big brother."
-
-"Well, then, I want to learn stenography and typewriting." It came with
-a rush, and after it Shirley sat still, one hand holding the other
-tightly while she waited for the explosion she expected.
-
-It did not come. Murray turned his head until she could feel that he
-was looking directly at her through the dim light. He sat up slightly,
-and thrust his hands deeper down into his pockets--a masculine action
-which usually indicates concentration of attention. He was silent for a
-full minute before he spoke. When he did speak, it was in the tone that
-one man uses to another when the basis of their intercourse is that of
-mutual respect.
-
-"Would you mind giving me your idea? It's plain you have thought
-something out to the end. I need to know it from the beginning, if you
-want any advice worth while."
-
-"I can, now I know that you're not going to knock me down with arguments
-against it before you know mine for it."
-
-"That would be poor policy. That's the boomerang sort of argument--the
-one that comes back at one's self. Besides, I've too much confidence in
-my sister's good judgment to believe that she would fire a proposition
-like that at me without a reason back of it."
-
-"The reason is easy. I'm restless for something to do. I don't want to
-be a next season's debutante, and go through a winter like the five
-Olive has spent. I want to work. I want to fit myself to be
-independent. If anything should happen to father's money, I don't want
-to be like the Desmond girls after their father's failure, as helpless
-as baby birds pushed out of the nest. Olive could n't do a thing.
-Forrest is just an idler. You have Jane to take care of. But I--I
-could be learning to support myself."
-
-"The business is in fine condition. We never were so substantial a firm
-as now. There's very little danger of our going to pot."
-
-"That may be," said Shirley, "though things do happen, Murray, out of a
-clear sky. But that's not my real reason. My real reason is a genuine,
-great big longing to amount to something. I never come down to the
-office without envying the girls I see there. I envy them because they
-have to do it--because they 're supporting themselves and somebody else
-by it."
-
-"Do you mean that you would like a position in our office?"
-
-"Oh, would n't I! If I could study and study, and practise and
-practise, and then some day take a dictation from you or father and
-bring you a perfect copy, I believe I 'd be--Murray, I 'd be the
-happiest girl that ever lived!"
-
-"You mean that, do you?"
-
-"I do."
-
-"Have you thought that if you took a position in our office, or in any
-other, you 'd be shutting out some poor girl who really needs the
-salary?"
-
-"Yes, I've thought of it. I know that's an argument against it. But,
-Murray, don't you think the rich men's daughters need employment
-sometimes quite as much as the poor ones do? Why, I 'm telling you I
-envy the poor ones!"
-
-"I know; but the fact remains that they need the money, and you don't."
-
-"Are n't you keeping some poor man out of the salary you get by taking
-the place of father's right hand man?"
-
-Murray laughed. "There's a back-hander for me! But I 'm practically a
-partner, you know, and a firm can't do without its heads, no matter how
-many poor fellows would like the job."
-
-"And you have the right to make something of yourself. But I have n't
-because I should be taking work away from some girl who needs it. I
-don't want to do that. I 'd work for nothing, or give my salary away."
-
-"Ah, but that wouldn't solve the problem. The girl whose job you took
-from her would n't accept your salary from you."
-
-"Then, just because a girl's father can support her, must she give up
-learning how to support herself? And the fun of doing it?"
-
-"What do you expect the family to say about it?"
-
-"Of course they won't like it. Except father. I think he will."
-
-"Possibly, after you have wheedled him and hung round his neck. Well,
-do you feel you have a right to disappoint mother and Olive, as you will
-do, if you so much as begin on this course, to say nothing of sticking
-to it?"
-
-Shirley was silent for a moment. Then she answered, very gently, "I
-should be sorry for that, of course, but I think I have the right.
-Devoting one's self to society can't be a duty one owes to one's family,
-if one does n't feel satisfied with that life. And my learning to earn
-my own living won't disgrace my family--not in these days of millionaire
-milliners and violet raisers."
-
-"No, it won't disgrace your family. Instead, it makes one member of it
-sit up and look at his small sister with a good deal of respect. If you
-take hold of the thing, you 'll go through with it. I 've not the least
-doubt of that, for you 're no quitter."
-
-"Thank you. Then will you go with me to talk with father about it?"
-
-"When?"
-
-"Now. He 's in the library."
-
-Murray got up. "You are in earnest," he remarked. "Yes, I 'll go with
-you. But you 'll find the question will have to be pretty thoroughly
-threshed out with him before he agrees. He employs none but experts;
-you 'll have to win your spurs before you can wear them. And good
-stenographers are born, not made. If you 've got it in you, you 'll
-succeed; if you have n't, you won't, no matter how hard you try."
-
-He could not see his sister's eyes, but he could read the determination
-in her voice as she answered that it was the expectation of winning
-those spurs that made her heart jump just to think about it.
-
-It was a fortnight after this talk, and the longer and more earnest one
-which succeeded it, that, coming away from the factory one warm July
-afternoon at an earlier hour than usual, Peter Bell happened upon his
-young neighbour in a most unexpected place. Far downtown, blocks below
-the usual shopping district, he saw Shirley Townsend come out of a
-doorway and start rapidly up the street. She had not seen him, and he
-was too far away to call to her, so he was forced to quicken his pace
-almost to a run to overtake her at the next corner before she signalled
-her car.
-
-She had walked so fast that the best he could do was to run and swing
-himself aboard the same car just as it got under way. The car was full,
-and Shirley herself was obliged to stand, clinging to a strap. Peter
-secured a strap beside her. There was little chance for conversation
-during the long ride uptown, but Peter's eyes were observant, and he
-noticed a peculiarity in Shirley's attire.
-
-At an hour in the afternoon when the girls of her sort would all be
-wearing light frocks and ribbons, Shirley was dressed like the girls in
-the office he had just left. With a difference--which Peter's eyes also
-discerned, although he could not have told just where the difference
-lay. Shirley's white blouse, her blue serge skirt, her sailor hat, her
-trim shoes, all bore about them the stamp of quality, indefinable, yet
-not to be denied.
-
-As for her face, Peter thought he had never seen it so alight with life.
-The smile she had flashed at him was brilliant. He was glad he had
-caught the car. It was a decided enlivenment of the long ride,
-monotonous with daily repetition, just to stand beside the trim, swaying
-figure, and occasionally exchange a word with its possessor. Besides,
-he was feeling not a little curiosity as to the errand which had taken
-her to a place where hung the sign of a well-known commercial college.
-
-"It is a hot day, isn't it?" observed Shirley, when he had handed her
-off the car, and they were walking up Gay Street toward Worthington
-Square. "Just the day to get into the country. I 'd like a gallop over
-about ten miles of good roads--just to feel the wind in my face."
-
-"It would be great, would n't it?" agreed Peter.
-
-She looked up at him. "You and Olive don't ride as much as you used
-to."
-
-"She has n't seemed to care for it for the last year or so."
-
-"Hasn't she asked you to ride Grayback whenever you wanted?"
-
-"She 's been very kind about offering him. But I don't like to go over
-and order him out myself."
-
-"He 's pining for exercise. So is Pretty Polly, though I had one short
-canter on her before breakfast. You 've never been out with me on
-horseback. Perhaps you don't know I can ride."
-
-"I have my eyesight. And as for inviting you to go with me--how can I,
-when you have the horses? If you 're asking me to go with you--there 's
-nothing on earth I 'd rather do just now."
-
-"I believe that," thought Shirley, as she ran into the house to change
-her clothes. "If ever a man looked as if he 'd like to drop his cares
-and get off on a horse's back, Peter does to-day."
-
-In a few minutes she was crossing the lawn, in her riding habit, crop in
-hand. Peter met her, himself in riding trim. His face showed his
-pleasure in the prospect, as he put her up and swung into his own
-saddle.
-
-"'If wishes were horses,'" he quoted, as they turned toward the
-Northboro road. "And sometimes they are. An hour ago I was looking out
-of the office window at the factory, and wishing for this very sort of
-thing. I ought to see Grandfather Bell. Do you mind if we go that
-way?"
-
-"I 'm fond of that way. It will give us a good gallop down the old
-turnpike, and a cool walk through the woods to freshen the horses."
-
-Once out of the city they were off at a brisk trot, talking a little now
-and then, but mostly busy with thoughts. They had seen so little of
-each other since Shirley's return that a sense of having begun a new
-acquaintanceship hampered them both. They had not yet found common
-ground.
-
-"Now for the gallop," said Shirley, as they rounded a turn and came out
-upon a long, level stretch of road, with few vehicles in sight.
-
-"This is the spot where your sister lost most of her hairpins, when she
-took her first ride with me," said Peter, indicating to Grayback that a
-change of pace was in order. "I don't think she 'd ever had such a
-dashing get-away before. Off, are you? Well, well, you do mean
-business, don't you? All right, I 'm with you. But don't expect me to
-recover the hairpins!" he called, as Grayback picked up the pace Pretty
-Polly had set.
-
-But both Pretty Polly and her rider were evidently on their mettle, and
-Grayback, bigger and longer of stride though he was, had to look to his
-heels to keep up with the little brown mare.
-
-Shirley proved a daring rider, and before she finally pulled Polly down
-to a canter she certainly had felt the wind in her face with a rush.
-
-When she looked round at Peter, as they entered the mile-long course of
-wood-shaded road which succeeded the turnpike, she met a brighter smile
-than she had seen on his face since she came home, two months before.
-Once more, for the moment, he looked the care-free boy again.
-
-"You may be a pupil of the riding-schools, but you 've taken plenty of
-road-training since," was his comment. "And not a hairpin loose, so far
-as I can see."
-
-"That's because I always tie my mop with a ribbon for riding, like any
-schoolgirl. It's childish, but comfortable. Is n't this deliciously
-cool in here? And I 've forgotten all about the pothooks already." But
-having said this, Shirley bit her lip. She had not meant to tell yet.
-
-"Pothooks?" repeated Peter, curiously. "Have you been bothered by
-pothooks lately?"
-
-"A trifle." She turned away her head, and pointed out a fine clump of
-ferns, growing on a bank by the roadside.
-
-"Do you want them?" he asked.
-
-"No, no, not enough to get down for. I--said something I did n't mean
-to, and the ferns offered a way of escape."
-
-Peter was silent, wondering what she could mean.
-
-Then Shirley said, frankly:
-
-"That sounds rude, and I 'm going to tell you."
-
-"Not because something slipped out. I won't even guess at it, unless
-you want me to."
-
-"I do--now. I think I 'd like to tell you, though not even Nancy knows
-yet. My family do--but I don't think even they quite realise what it
-means to me. Perhaps you would."
-
-"I 'd like to try."
-
-"I--have begun to study stenography," said Shirley. "When I've learned
-it--and typewriting--thoroughly, I 'm to have a place in Murray's
-office."
-
-She said it with her eyes looking straight between her horse's ears; and
-she did not see the quick, astonished glance which fell upon her.
-
-Peter made no answer for so long that she turned, wondering and a little
-resentful.
-
-"I beg your pardon," said Peter. "I believe I forgot to answer. But
-that was n't from lack of interest. You took my breath away. When I
-got it back I fell to thinking that I might have expected it of you."
-
-"You might? Why?"
-
-"I 'm not good at telling my thoughts. But I knew you had a mind of
-your own from the day you first gave Nancy Bell of Gay Street the
-preference over the little Hille girl of Worthington Square."
-
-"Gay Street was sixteen times more interesting than Worthington Square,
-always," declared Shirley, frankly.
-
-"How do you like the pothooks?"
-
-"I 'm going to like them, whether they 're likable or not. Just now I
-'m in a sort of delirium ever them. Little black quirls and dots and
-dashes walk through my dreams. I 've just one week of it now, and I 'm
-fascinated. The only trouble is, I want to get hold of everything at
-once."
-
-"Hold steady and make sure as you go. Slow accuracy at first is much
-better than a fast jumble that you can't read yourself. If you like it,
-and are getting hold of it already, that shows you are going to win out.
-It's easy to tell, from the start, who 'll make a stenographer in the
-end and who won't."
-
-"That's what Murray says, and it encourages me. You 've studied it
-yourself, then?"
-
-"Taught myself in odd hours; thought it might be useful some time, and
-it has been, many times. I can show you a lot of technical short cuts
-that will be of use to you, when you 're familiar with the regular
-method.'
-
-"Oh, thank you--I'll be grateful. Come Polly--you 've cooled off--try a
-smooth little canter for a while."
-
-At Grandfather Bell's Peter took Shirley down and sent her to roam about
-the great orchard, while he hunted up the old gentleman and had a talk
-with him. This consumed nearly an hour, and when they were off upon the
-road once more, Shirley discovered that the care-free look had vanished
-from her companion's face, and that his mouth had taken again the grave
-expression it had acquired after she went away to school.
-
-She let him ride to the edge of the woods, four miles toward home, in
-the abstracted silence which had fallen upon him; but as they came under
-the first cool shadows, she brought Pretty Polly down to a walk, and
-began to talk lightly about Murray and Jane, and the successful way in
-which Jane had taken up the cares of managing the big house and its
-affairs. Peter obediently followed her lead, but after a short time she
-discovered that he gave her his attention only by an effort.
-
-She longed to know what was the matter, for that something had gone
-wrong with him she was more than ever sure. Two years ago she would
-have demanded, with the familiarity of long acquaintance, an explanation
-of any cloud upon his brow, for she and Peter had been as good friends
-as seventeen and twenty-six may be, when the families of both are united
-by certain common interests. But somehow nineteen and twenty-eight had
-not yet recovered quite the old ground of mutual frankness, and
-Shirley's anxious questions halted upon her lips.
-
-They had another gallop when they came to the smooth stretch, but this
-time, although Peter said, "That was a good one, was n't it?" his face
-did not clear.
-
-Just before they reached home, however, he appeared to realise all at
-once that he must have been poor company, and said so, with a word of
-regret.
-
-"I don't mind a bit," said Shirley. "One does n't always feel like
-talking. And I know in your position, you must have a good many cares."
-
-"A few. I 'm afraid I 'm not good at carrying them, since I let myself
-keep them on my own shoulders, even on horseback. They fell off on the
-way out, but at the farm they climbed up Grayback's tail again. I 'm
-sorry, for you 've been jolly company, and I 've honestly enjoyed the
-ride more than anything that has happened in a year."
-
-"We 'll go again, then, on another half-holiday, and next time we 'll
-leave Black Care behind altogether. Or, if you will take him along you
-shall introduce me. Will you?"
-
-Her look was so girlishly sympathetic and inviting, Peter could hardly
-be blamed for finding a ray of comfort in it, although he only said
-stoutly:
-
-"That would n't be fair."
-
-"Indeed it would. What are one's friends for? And Black Care does n't
-like the society of two."
-
-"That's true. But he's not a desirable acquaintance, and I don't mean
-to introduce him to you. Remember the pothooks--they 'll keep you
-busy."
-
-He smiled as he said it, but Shirley persisted, more boldly, for she
-thought she detected the fact that it would be a relief to Peter to tell
-somebody his troubles, if his conscience would let him.
-
-"I 've seen, ever since I came home, that something was worrying you.
-It's made me feel badly. Perhaps just telling would make it easier."
-
-"I should imagine it might. I 'll think about it. Meanwhile, thank you
-for two fine hours. We 're back just in time for your dinner--and my
-supper. Will you go to the house door, or dismount here at the stable?"
-
-"Here, please. And next Saturday we'll go again, if you really care
-to."
-
-"I shall think about it through the week. Here you are--you don't half
-let me help you. Success to the pothooks! Good-bye!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- BLACK CARE
-
-
-On the following Saturday it rained all day, and no horseback-riding or
-excursions of any sort were possible. Before another half-holiday had
-come round, an unusual and severe pressure of work had overtaken Peter,
-which shut him off from any leisure whatever for many successive weeks.
-Night after night, all through July and August, he came home late in the
-evening, too weary for anything but supper and bed. During all this
-time he saw little of the people in Worthington Square.
-
-As for Shirley, although she thought often of Peter, and was sorry that
-no chance seemed to favour her getting at the secret of his burdens,
-whatever they might be, her own work absorbed her. She was proving a
-ready pupil, keen of intellect and quick of eye and hand. As she
-advanced in the mastery of stenography, she became more and more
-fascinated by its details, and spent more and more of her spare hours in
-practice. The typewriting she acquired in an unexpectedly short space
-of time, but her chief ambition was to achieve the ability to take
-dictation rapidly and accurately, and to this end she laboured with much
-zeal.
-
-Nancy Bell was taken into confidence, and became an active and
-interested partner. Many were the hours she spent with Shirley, reading
-aloud to her from all sorts of books and papers, with a view to
-accustoming her to any kind of composition.
-
-"You certainly can do anything now," Nancy said, one day in late
-September, when she had given Shirley an unusually trying test at top
-speed, and the worker had typewritten it without an error worth
-mentioning.
-
-"I 'm not so sure." Shirley studied her paper. "I 'm used to you, and
-you don't flurry me much. But if I should go to father and offer myself
-for a trial, I 'm afraid I should bungle it."
-
-"But you can't get office practice without office practice. Nothing can
-take its place or give you confidence, I should think. Why don't you
-let Murray try you? If he dictates as fast as he talks when he 's
-discussing business with Peter, he must be hard enough for anybody."
-
-That evening, as Murray and Jane, in the library, were discussing
-certain household matters, Shirley, sitting at the big table with her
-notebook, turned a leaf and began to take down the conversation.
-
-"Did I say that?" Murray asked, toward the close of the conference. "I
-thought I put it quite differently."
-
-"You said, dear," said Jane, "that it ought to cost that, not that it
-did."
-
-"Are you sure?"
-
-"Quite sure."
-
-"I must have been wandering in my mind. I seem to hear myself saying in
-a tone of great assurance that it actually did cost seventeen dollars.
-I could n't have said anything else, knowing the facts."
-
-Jane merely smiled, sure of her ground, but not liking to dispute it
-further. Murray took a turn up and down the room, whistling softly. He
-himself would not insist upon the thing he was sure he had said, but he
-was none the less confident. It seemed to bring the discussion to a
-standstill, as such small differences of statement sometimes will.
-
-Shirley began to read aloud from her note-book a reproduction of the
-conversation which had just taken place. Listening incredulously,
-Murray heard himself quoted as saying precisely that which Jane had
-asserted.
-
-"Look here," said he, coming over to the table and seizing upon the
-note-book. "Are you sure you have that straight--that you 're not
-saying it from memory of what Jane said I said?"
-
-"I did n't get every word you said, but I did get that sentence. You
-brought out the 'ought' so strenuously I put the exact sign down."
-
-"I 'll give in, of course, but I 'll have to be careful of what I say in
-your hearing after this. You must be pretty good at it, if you caught
-all that off our tongues. We were talking fairly fast, if I remember."
-
-"You were very nearly too fast for me--in spots. Conversation 's harder
-to take than anything else. Do you want to try me on a business
-letter?"
-
-"With pleasure," and Murray promptly pulled a letter out of his pocket,
-glanced it over, and began to dictate a reply.
-
-Before she had done two lines, Shirley realised that the actual
-receiving of dictation from a man of business, who was seriously putting
-her to a test, was quite different from any amount of practice with
-Nancy Bell. Murray's keen eyes were upon her, he was watching her
-fingers as they flew, he was using business terms with which she was not
-familiar. These technicalities she was forced to omit, but after a
-little she steadied under the consciousness that he was speaking not too
-rapidly, and that he paused now and then between sentences, as if
-studying the letter he was answering.
-
-At the end she said, "I 'll make you a copy," and flew out of the room.
-Murray smiled at Jane, who had been an interested witness of the scene.
-
-"I can't get used to the idea that the child is serious in all this,"
-said he. "I know she's been working at it all summer, but I 've seen so
-little of it, and she 's been so quiet about it, I forget that she means
-business. If mother and Olive had been at home all this time I should
-have heard of little else."
-
-"There 's no doubt of her being in earnest. She and Nan have practised
-by the hour," answered Jane. "I think you'll find her copy pretty
-correct."
-
-"I doubt it. She certainly caught the gist of our conversation, but
-that 's comparatively easy, for her memory would help out on the sort of
-thing we were saying. But when it comes to getting it word for word, as
-a business letter must, she 'll find that 's another thing."
-
-Shirley came back presently and handed her brother the letter. He read
-it through carefully. "By Jove!" he ejaculated, and looked at his
-sister.
-
-"I had to leave spaces for the words you used that I had never heard,"
-said she. "I did n't think of it before, but there must be a lot of
-such words in your correspondence. Would you mind making me out a list
-of them, or giving me a catalogue? Next time I 'll know them."
-
-"I'll warrant you will. Except for them, you 've practically every word
-just as I gave it to you. See here, when have you done it? You have n't
-had time to accomplish so much. It takes at least six months to make a
-respectable stenographer. You 've been at it but four. Come here and
-let me look at you. By rights you ought to have grown thin. No, I
-can't see that you have."
-
-"Of course I have n't. I 've never been so happy in my life."
-
-"Miss Henley, who is in the office, is going to be married in October."
-He studied her face keenly.
-
-She looked at him with eager eyes. He laughed.
-
-"If you were a pauper with a family to support, you could n't look more
-appealing," he said. "Well, keep pegging away, and I 'll recommend you
-to father."
-
-
-Mrs. Harrison Townsend did not come home at all that autumn. Instead,
-she sailed for Italy, taking Olive with her. From Europe Mrs. Townsend
-wrote Murray a letter which he showed to no one, but which gave him no
-little discomfort of mind.
-
-"I am much better away," she wrote, "where I shall not be in the throes
-of the revolution which has overtaken my household. With Jane refusing
-many of her most important invitations, Forrest away, and Shirley
-casting herself into the business world, like any poor man's daughter, I
-should be too distressed to be able to play my own part with composure.
-I hear that Jane is not keeping up her calling list as conscientiously
-as she should do. Please try to impress her with her duty to our
-friends, even if she does not care to make them hers. When I return, I
-shall wish to take up my social life where I left it, and if I should
-find my friends alienated by the eccentricity of my daughter-in-law, I
-should feel that a wrong had been done which it would be difficult to
-overlook."
-
-"About the hardest thing in the world," thought Murray, as he pondered
-these lines, "seems to be for one woman to get another's point of view.
-Here 's Jane, staying at home all summer to keep me company, when she
-might have gone off to the seaside or the mountains with Olive. She 's
-tackling big problems every day in the management of the house, to say
-nothing of looking after all mother's social correspondence. She 's
-entertained relatives of ours from in town and from out of town, to say
-nothing of making father's evenings pleasant and seeing to her own
-family. Yet because some woman on mother's list writes her that Jane has
-failed to pay a call within the required limit of time, the poor girl is
-'eccentric.' Well, she shall not be taxed with it, if I can help it."
-
-Feeling that Jane, although unconscious of the elder woman's
-dissatisfaction with her endeavours, should have amends made her after
-some fashion, Murray arranged to take her with him upon a week's
-business trip, a flying journey half-way across the continent and back.
-In the absence of Mrs. Townsend and Olive, this left Shirley and her
-father quite alone for a week.
-
-One of the evenings of that week Mr. Townsend spent with Joseph Bell--as
-was now his frequent custom. On this evening Shirley settled down with
-a book before the library fire. She had been working harder and harder
-to perfect herself for the position which she had been assured should be
-hers upon the resignation of Miss Henley, a fortnight hence. And she
-had at last arrived at that state of confidence in her own powers which
-permitted an occasional indulgence in an idle evening without a twinge
-of conscience.
-
-The book proved so entertaining that an hour passed, during which she
-took no note of time. She could not have told whether it was late or
-early, when a slight stir in the hall brought her attention to the fact
-that somebody was there, awaiting her recognition. She looked up to see
-Peter Bell standing in the doorway, his face so grave and worn that she
-gave a little cry of amazement.
-
-"Why, Peter!" she said, and came forward to give him her hand. He
-looked down at her almost as if he did not see her. His hand was cold.
-
-"You 've been out in the wet--you 're chilled," she said, eagerly
-drawing him toward the fire. "Why, you 're very wet! You did n't have
-an umbrella."
-
-"I believe I did n't," Peter answered, glancing at his coat-sleeve,
-which was, indeed, almost dripping with dampness. "I 've been walking a
-long way--I don't know how far."
-
-He took the big armchair which she offered him, but she stood regarding
-his moist condition with concern. His visits were too few to make her
-willing to run the risk of losing this one by suggesting that he ought
-not to sit down in his wet coat; and after a moment she ran away and
-came back with a house coat of Murray's.
-
-"Please put this on," she said.
-
-Peter protested that he had no need of taking such precautions, but
-Shirley persisted until he obeyed her and donned the coat, throwing his
-own upon a chair, whence she rescued it and hung it where it might have
-a chance to dry.
-
-"Now rest and be comfortable," said she, drawing her own small chair
-into a friendly nearness to the big one, "and tell me what's wrong. It
-needs to be told at once, I know--or I 'd try to talk about something
-else first."
-
-"I'm afraid I couldn't talk about anything else first," said Peter.
-"Yet I don't know that I can talk about this. But--I had to come. There
-was no one else I could go to. I 've stood all the rest by myself, but
-this----"
-
-He stopped short, as if he could not go on. Something about his
-appearance made Shirley's heart begin to beat fast with apprehension.
-It must be a very bad trouble indeed which could make Peter act so
-unlike himself, Peter the strong, the self-reliant.
-
-Her mind went back in a flash to the day, weeks before, when he had half
-promised to give her his confidence in regard to matters which it was
-evident were bothering him. But he had not looked then in the least
-like this. It had been merely business care which was heavy on his
-shoulders at that time. This was trouble, or she did not know the
-signs. His set face, upon which her welcome had brought no hint of an
-answering smile, the lines about his mouth, the suggestion of pallor
-which was already succeeding to the colour which had been the result of
-the tramp in the rain, all made her sure of her conclusions.
-
-"I want to hear," began Shirley, very gently, controlling the anxiety in
-her voice. Then, suddenly, as a startling thought occurred to her,
-"Peter, it's not--Murray--or Jane?--or mother?"
-
-"No, no," said Peter, quickly, turning to her. "No, it's not your
-trouble, it's mine--ours. Only the others don't know it yet. They must
-n't know it till it--comes. That's why I came here. It' s not right to
-burden you with it, I 'm afraid. But, somehow I----"
-
-Shirley impulsively put out her hand, as if to touch his. He did not
-see it, and she withdrew it again. She longed to give him comfort in
-some way. Yet, until the story was told, she could not tell what to do.
-If only he would tell it quickly. But, plainly, it was hard to tell.
-
-He drew a deep breath; then sat up straight, staring into the fire.
-
-"There has been a long succession of misfortunes," he began, slowly. "I
-don't need to go into those, though I thought them bad enough--until
-now. Now--if it were nothing worse than those things, if I could just
-go back to them, I 'd shoulder them all gladly, and not mind. It was
-property business, all of it--foreclosure of a heavy mortgage
-threatening Grandfather Bell's farm, loss of the little money father had
-got together and put into stocks that have gone to pieces--that sort of
-thing. It was up to me to straighten it all out--and not much to do it
-with. And father--he seemed not very well--had two or three queer
-attacks of illness at the factory during the hot weather. I felt I could
-n't worry him with it. He seemed to be getting old--all at once.
-Finally, yesterday----"
-
-Peter paused; then he went on in a lower voice:
-
-"Yesterday he had another of those attacks--much worse than before. A
-man near him sent for me, and I sent for a doctor. The doctor brought
-him round, but it took some time. To-day I made him go to another
-doctor--a specialist. He examined father, and told me what it was."
-
-Shirley, in a breathless silence, waited.
-
-"Any over-exertion, excitement, worry--anything--may end it at any time.
-If he would give up and stay quietly at home, he might last a good
-while. But that's what he won't do. He knows it all--took it as coolly
-as if it were nothing at all, but won't give up. And he won't have
-anybody told. Says they 'd never know another happy moment--and that's
-true enough. He 'll just take his chances. It's brave of him, and I can
-understand how he feels, but the hard thing for me is--I 've got to keep
-still, and stand by, and--see it come."
-
-With the last word Peter's voice almost broke. He turned his head away.
-Shirley got up and went to him. She laid one hand on his shoulder,
-standing still beside him, her heart aching with sympathy, but finding
-not a word to say. In all his unhappiness, Peter recognised the light
-touch, and putting up his cold hand grasped the warm one. He held it
-tight for a minute, for the sense of comradeship and comprehension it
-brought him gave him courage to go on.
-
-Shirley understood the warm and close relations which had always existed
-between Peter and his father. And she realised, with a pang, that which
-Peter had not mentioned, but which must add its share to the poignancy
-of his apprehension--the fact that with the loss of the head of the
-family, the burden of the support of that family must fall upon the
-son's shoulders. Money problems were not to be mentioned in the same
-breath with the threatened loss of a dear parent, but the anxiety they
-were bound to cause would make Peter's trouble immeasurably more
-serious.
-
-When Peter spoke his voice was steady again.
-
-"Of course I 'm facing nothing harder than other people have to face
-every day, in one way or another. I mean to stand up to it, like a man,
-if I can--it would n't be worthy of a chap with a father like mine to be
-bowled over by what he bears with such courage. But it seemed to me I
-must tell somebody, and you--something you said weeks ago, when we went
-riding together, made me sure you would care."
-
-"I do care, very, very much," Shirley answered. "I 've wished ever so
-many times since then that I knew what was the matter. If you had told
-me that, it would have been easier for you to come to me with this, I
-think. I 'm so glad you did. I only wish--oh, how I wish--there were
-something I could do!"
-
-"You can. You 're doing it now. Just knowing you know makes it easier.
-If there were anything I could do myself I could bear it better."
-
-She slipped out of the room. In a few minutes she came back, bearing a
-tray, upon which was a cup of chocolate with a little mound of whipped
-cream on top, and beside it a plate of sandwiches. She set her tray at
-Peter's elbow.
-
-"Father is so fond of this, late in the evening, that Cook keeps a
-double boiler ready on the back of the range, and the rest of us make
-use of it," she explained. "You may not be hungry, but it will be good
-for you. Tell me, did you have your supper?"
-
-"No, I haven't been home," he owned. "If a fellow could eat at all, he
-ought to be able to eat this."
-
-To Shirley's satisfaction Peter consumed every one of the six thin
-sandwiches, and when she suggested a second cup of chocolate, he
-gratefully accepted it. He had been famishing, though he had not known
-it. The interview with the specialist had taken place before lunch
-time, and Peter had not remembered lunch at all.
-
-Being human, and very weary, creature comforts did their part in
-strengthening him, in mind as well as body. When he had finished, and
-had spent another half-hour listening to Shirley's account of news from
-Forrest, who was in the West Indies now, he rose, a very different young
-man from the one who had come in out of the rain an hour before.
-
-When he had exchanged the velvet house-coat for the rough tweed one, now
-dried by the fire, he stood before her, hat in hand. He looked down
-into her friendly uplifted face and something very appreciative showed
-in his own. He could summon only the suggestion of a smile, but his
-eyes were less heavy, his colour had come back, and resolution was once
-more in his bearing.
-
-"You would put heart into a craven," he said, shaking hands.
-
-"You 're no craven," answered Shirley, returning the look steadily with
-her frank eyes, "but one of the stoutest-hearted I ever knew. I know
-lots more about you than you think, and I know what you have been facing
-all these years in the way of sticking to work you did n't like."
-
-"That's nothing. Everybody does that, if he amounts to any thing."
-
-"Everybody doesn't. But it's made you strong and brave. You 're brave
-now--and you 're going to be braver yet."
-
-He studied her a moment in silence. Then the smile she had missed shone
-briefly out upon her as Peter said fervently: "If I am, it will be
-thanks to you, my friend. Good night!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- A BREAKDOWN
-
-
-"Now make her come!" commanded Marian Hille, as her brother Brant
-brought his big green motor-car to a stand in front of the great
-building belonging to Townsend & Company. "Don't let her refuse. How
-she can spend her days down here, drudging away, I don't see! Brant,
-tell her I shall simply never forgive her if she does n't shut up that
-typewriter at once and come along."
-
-"I 'll say what seems to me to suit the situation," declared her
-brother, sliding out of his seat and divesting himself of his motoring
-coat. "Whether it will make any impression I 'm not so sure."
-
-He walked leisurely off, but when he was inside the building he made a
-short trip of it to the fifth floor and the offices. He was quite as
-anxious as his sister for the success of his errand.
-
-Murray himself welcomed young Hille cordially, and when Brant asked for
-Shirley, he led his visitor into an inner office. Here Brant stood
-still, gazing with interest. He had not yet seen his old acquaintance
-at her new tasks.
-
-Shirley sat before a typewriting machine, her fingers playing as lightly
-and swiftly over the keys, for all Brant could see, as those of any
-veteran at the business. The girl did not look up. Plainly she was much
-absorbed in her work, a little flush on her cheek, her eyes devouring
-the "copy" before her in the shape of her note-book, held open by a
-device above her machine.
-
-Brant turned to look at Murray, and Murray smiled.
-
-"She looks as if she enjoyed it!" Brant exclaimed, under his breath.
-
-"She does. No question of that."
-
-"It 'll wear off, don't you think?"
-
-"I doubt it."
-
-He walked over and stood at her elbow, waiting. Shirley paid him no
-attention while she finished the long business letter before her, and
-she would not have turned then if her brother had not said quietly, "A
-caller is waiting to see you, Miss Townsend."
-
-Then she glanced up, and rose, pulling a glove finger from the
-forefinger of her right hand before she let the visitor take it. "I
-still seem to give this finger a bit of extra work," she said smiling.
-
-Brant said a complimentary thing or two in recognition of her
-businesslike command of the typewriter, and then proceeded to put his
-case.
-
-As she knew, a November house party was in progress at the Hildreth's
-country place, eighteen miles out. He and Marian had come in on an
-errand, and were going back. A particularly jolly evening was in
-prospect. Somebody had suggested that the Hilles bring Shirley back
-with them, just for the evening. They felt she owed them that much,
-after so resolutely declining the original invitation for the entire
-week. Would she not go? It was a rare evening for early November, the
-air mild, the moon magnificent, the roads like a floor.
-
-The Hildreths wanted her to stay the night; but Brant would rise with
-the lark and bring her back to town before breakfast, that she might not
-miss so much as a semicolon of her day's work. Or--as Shirley continued
-to look doubtful--he urged that, if she preferred, he would actually get
-her back to-night. Some of the married people would drive in with them
-for the sake of the run in the moonlight. Please!
-
-"Go, Shirley, and have a fine time," said her brother.
-
-She was only human--and a girl--after all, and after many weeks of close
-and serious work the prospect of the little spin of an hour's duration,
-with the "jolly evening," appealed to her. Smiling at Brant's last
-proposition, Shirley yielded.
-
-"I shall have to go to the house first," she said, setting the cover on
-her machine and putting away her work. The clock already indicated the
-end of the working-day in the Townsend office.
-
-"Of course. We 'll take you right up in a jiffy." And Brant led the
-way to the elevator, his soul filled with satisfaction.
-
-The green car was shortly _chug-chugging_ in front of the Townsend
-house, while Shirley ran up to exchange her office clothes for the
-pretty dull red silk frock which seemed to her to fit the November
-evening.
-
-A sense of exhilaration took possession of her as she pulled on her long
-driving-coat, and pinned in place the close hat and swathing gray veil
-which made her ready for the swift drive in the autumn air. To be
-really a working girl, and yet not to be shut out from an occasional
-taste of this sort of pleasure--it was certainly a pleasant combination.
-And Shirley had accomplished one of the best day's works that she had
-yet done, and felt as if she had earned whatever of jollity the evening
-might have in store for her.
-
-"Well, I'm certainly thankful to see you acting like one of us again, if
-only for a few hours," asserted "Marie Anne," as they whirled away.
-"Shirley Townsend in a blue serge at four o'clock in the afternoon is an
-extraordinary sight. Now you look like yourself again. What have you
-got on? That Indian-red silk? When you like a thing you like it
-forever, don't you? I wonder how many times you came down to dinner
-last winter at Miss Cockburn's in that red silk!"
-
-"Don't be brutal, Marian!" called her brother, over his shoulder. "As
-if it made any difference what she wears as long as she comes with us!
-Besides, I haven't seen the red silk."
-
-But Shirley was only smiling at Marian's comments on her attire. She
-had not summered and wintered Miss Hille as a room-mate for two years in
-the English school not to have become inured to her style of intimate
-criticism. Besides, she knew perfectly that that Indian-red silk frock
-had been her friend's envy for the first six weeks of its existence, on
-account of its beauty and the way it became Shirley's colouring.
-
-It does not take long for a motor-car of high horse-power driven by a
-young man with the usual dash of daring in his composition to cover
-eighteen miles of smooth roadway, and it was not yet six o'clock when
-the car shot up to the entrance of the Hildreth's country place. Half a
-dozen young people, returning from the golf links, hurried up to welcome
-Shirley Townsend back to the ranks of the pleasure-seekers, and she was
-borne into the house on a little wave of good-fellowship and merriment
-which she could not help decidedly enjoying.
-
-"It's a shame to think of that girl throwing herself away on the sort of
-fad she 's taken up!" growled Somers Hildreth to Brant Hille, as the two
-came in, after dressing for dinner, to find Shirley Townsend the centre
-of a gay group before the great fireplace, which was the heart of the
-country house.
-
-"I wonder what fault Marian had to find with that dress," Brant was
-thinking, as he caught its gleam in the firelight and saw the sparkling
-eyes and warm-tinted cheeks above it. "If she is n't by long odds the
-finest girl in that crowd I 'll go without my dinner." But aloud he
-responded, calmly, "It does n't seem to have dulled her charms. She
-never looked more as if she found things worth while, did she?"
-
-"That's reaction," declared the other young man. "Shut any girl up in a
-cage, and she'll stretch her wings when she gets out. It will tell on
-her after a while, though, if she keeps it up. But she won't. That
-goes without saying."
-
-"Don't you fool yourself!" muttered Brant, adopting Murray Townsend's
-view of the matter.
-
-Shirley, indeed, did not look like a girl who was accustomed to adopt
-courses, only to abandon them when weary. Whatever her views of the
-"things worth while," she certainly enjoyed that evening. Those who had
-sent for her congratulated themselves on their foresight.
-
-Without making herself in any way a conspicuous figure, or appearing to
-take the lead, Shirley's very presence seemed somehow to bring about
-that result most desirable to a hostess, the making things "go." The
-young people had been together for five successive evenings, and had
-about exhausted their resources and those of their entertainers in the
-way of diversion. But with Shirley Townsend's softly brilliant eyes
-looking on, her spirited mouth curving into mischief or merriment, her
-appreciative comments spurring them, the young men of the party at least
-found themselves stimulated to their best achievement, and exerted
-themselves to bring the response of her pleasure.
-
-As for the girls, they all liked her, although not without here and
-there a touch of envy at the success of a style so free from affectation
-that nobody could accuse its possessor of not being genuine.
-
-"You can't say you 're not having a good time," urged Hille, cornering
-Shirley as the evening went on.
-
-"There 's no reason why I should want to say it. I 'm having a
-delightful time."
-
-"I thought it was part of your code, from now on, to enjoy nothing but
-hard labour."
-
-Her laugh rang out softly.
-
-"You did n't believe anything of the sort. If all work and no play make
-Jack a dull boy, what would they do to Jill? She would be unendurable."
-
-"She would. But anybody would have taken alarm at sight of you to-day,
-over your typewriter. You looked as if you were nothing short of carried
-away with it. You did n't so much as notice I was in the room."
-
-"I 'm not supposed to notice people who come into Murray's office. I
-learned that at once, by watching Miss Henley. While I 'm there I 'm to
-be merely an intelligent machine."
-
-"'Machine' doesn't strike me as exactly the word--in your case. As for
-the 'intelligence'--I suppose Townsend & Company are very exacting. Do
-you suppose they 'd take me on the force?"
-
-"You!" It seemed to amuse her very much.
-
-Brant looked nettled. He had asked the question in sport, but he did
-not like to be taken that way. "Look here, am I such a joke as that?"
-
-"The notion of your working for anybody, even for yourself, is very
-interesting."
-
-"You think I 'm not capable?"
-
-"I think the mere thought of going to an office every morning at nine
-o'clock would be too much for you."
-
-"You must have a pretty poor opinion of me."
-
-"Not at all. But you have never needed to work, never expect to need to
-work, and have never shown the first sign of intending to work. Why
-shouldn't the idea of your working seem strange?"
-
-"I might have said the same of you a few months ago." Brant was getting
-red.
-
-"So you might. But I 'm a girl."
-
-"Does my being a man--I'm twenty-four--make it a foregone conclusion
-that I should roll up my sleeves and tackle a shovel and pick, whether I
-need the money or not?"
-
-Shirley surveyed him. "No, I don't think it does--_with you_."
-
-The red which had begun to show above Brant's collar now spread toward
-his ears, extended his forehead, and finally suffused his entire face.
-He broke out hotly: "Look here, you used not to be sharp-tongued like
-that. If your taking up this sort of thing is going to make you not mind
-how you cut your friends, it 's my opinion you 'd be better at your
-embroidery."
-
-Shirley bit her lip with a mischievous desire to say something which
-would make the angry gleam in his eyes light up still more vividly. She
-and Brant had played together and quarreled and made up since their
-nursery days, and this retort, which she would have resented from
-anybody else, merely delighted her from Brant.
-
-She liked to wake him up, and considered that hurting his feelings on
-the score of his idleness was both salutary and justifiable. Ever since
-she had returned she had been feeling more and more annoyed with him for
-seeming to settle down so unconcernedly to a life of absolute ease and
-the spending of his share of the estate left him by a father who had
-toiled a lifetime to get his property together.
-
-But she did not intend to be led into a serious argument with him now
-and here, nor did she wish to make him like her less on account of her
-new method of employing her time. She liked him for many good points,
-and she was rather wiser than most girls in perceiving when she had said
-enough. So after an instant's silence, she asked, with a bright glance,
-disarming because unexpected, "Shall we call it even?"
-
-"Did my shot about the embroidery hit?" Brant exulted.
-
-"Hard. It doesn't matter that I don't know how to embroider."
-
-"Not in the least. Yes, I 'll call it even, though I got the worst of
-it. I was mad enough to bite something a minute ago, but you always did
-have a way of making a chap double up his fists, and then open them
-again, feeling foolish. Oh, here comes Mrs. Hildreth. You don't want to
-go back to-night, do you?"
-
-"I 'll wait till morning. But we must be off early. I would n't miss
-being on time for a week's salary."
-
-"Before breakfast?"
-
-"Of course--if they'll let us. We'll have breakfast at home; the early
-morning run will make us hungry."
-
-"It certainly will. See here, we don't have to get anybody up to go in
-with us, do we?"
-
-Shirley looked doubtful. "I 'm afraid we do."
-
-"Then I 'd rather take you in to-night," said Brant, promptly. "We 'll
-fill up the car with chaperons, and you can sit in front with me. They
-'ll be tickled to go, in this moonlight. I 'll ask Mrs. Hildreth and
-Miss Armitage; they 'll discuss dressmakers all the way in and leave us
-in peace."
-
-Shirley let him arrange it, personally much preferring to reach home
-that night and get up at the usual hour in the morning, with an interval
-between her pleasure-making and her work. The hour was not late, and
-Brant professed to be able to make incredibly quick time, so he had no
-difficulty in arranging his party.
-
-There were many sallies at Shirley's expense as her friends saw her
-depart. Her devotion to business was considered a caprice, likely at
-any time to give way to more rational behaviour, and she was assured of
-an enthusiastic welcome back to the company of sane beings when her
-"craze" should be over. She went away smiling at the thought of how
-little they understood her, and with a sense of having at hand resources
-of contentment at which they could not even guess.
-
-With an empty road ahead, and the moonlight making all things clear,
-Brant sent his car humming. In the rush of air caused by their flight,
-all four travellers stopped talking, and it was upon a silence hitherto
-disturbed only by the muffled mechanism of the car that the startling
-_bang_ of an exploding tire woke the echoes.
-
-"Confound the luck!" burst from the young man in the driver's seat, as
-he brought the machine to a standstill. "That means stop and repair
-right here. We can't run her in on her rim. We 're not half way."
-
-Shirley looked about her. Ten rods away, its big barns looming against
-the sky, its white house showing clearly in the moonlight, lay the farm
-of Mr. Elihu Bell, the grandfather of her friends. Although it was
-after eleven o'clock, there were lights showing in windows which she
-knew belonged to the front room of the farm-house.
-
-"Shall you need help?" she asked, as Brant threw open the box which held
-his repair kit. "The noise has brought somebody to the door over there.
-It 's the Bell farm--my sister Jane's grandfather, you know."
-
-"Is it? Then we'll pull over there into the yard, and you people can go
-inside, since they seem to be up. It may take me quite a while to get
-out of this scrape. I 'm not much of a mechanic, and I 've been lucky
-enough not to puncture many tires."
-
-He got in again, and ran the car slowly over to the open gate of the
-Bell place. As he turned in, the two figures which had been standing in
-the doorway came out and crossed the yard.
-
-Shirley recognized them both, one tall and slim, with the slight stoop
-and characteristic walk of age; the other also tall, but
-broad-shouldered and erect. She wondered what Peter Bell could be doing
-out here, calling on his grandfather at this late hour, and then
-remembered that Peter's time was so full by day that he must needs make
-his visits by night. She thought of the mortgage he had spoken of, and
-surmised that the visit, prolonged past the hour when farmhouses are
-usually dark and silent, was on business.
-
-"Well, well!" called the kindly voice of the old man. "Broke down, have
-you? Anything we can do? Your lights are brighter than any we can
-furnish you."
-
-Peter came close. "Will the ladies come into the house?" he asked. He
-could not see who they were.
-
-Mrs. Hildreth and Miss Armitage accepted the offer, for the November air
-was not so mild as it had been during the day, and they had no great
-confidence in Brant's ability to repair his own machine.
-
-Peter offered a helping hand. When the older ladies were out, he turned
-to the girl on the front seat. She sprang down, and stood still before
-him. She had pulled her gray veil closely about her face, and she spoke
-in a muffled whisper: "Guess who I am."
-
-[Illustration: "SHE SPRANG DOWN, AND STOOD STILL BEFORE HIM"]
-
-Peter glanced toward Brant, who had now come around into the glare from
-his own headlights. Peter knew Brant, as anyone must who was included
-in the entertaining done in the Townsend house. But it had always been
-many leagues farther to Gay Street from the Hille home on the north side
-of Worthington Square than from that of Murray and Shirley Townsend on
-the south side.
-
-"I'm afraid I can't guess," admitted Peter, who thought he knew that
-Shirley was at home that night, having noted a light in her window when,
-at nine o'clock, he had mounted his bicycle to make the trip to
-Grandfather Bell's. Her figure in the long coat and shrouding veil was
-not familiar to him, and the whisper had conveyed no note of Shirley's
-real tones.
-
-"Then you shall never know," the sepulchral whisper assured him, and he
-found some difficulty in holding his hand from the desire forcibly to
-remove the provoking veil. The possibility that it was his sister Jane
-caused him to estimate sharply the height of the figure before him.
-
-It was a little too tall for Jane, and Peter was about to hazard a guess
-that it was one of the least formidable of the girls of Shirley's set
-whom he occasionally met at her home, when Brant Hille called out,
-annoyance sounding in his voice:
-
-"You 'd better go in with the others, Shirley--this is going to take
-time. I 've got to put on a new tire--worse luck!"
-
-Peter's fingers grasped the veil and gently pulled it aside from the
-laughing face beneath, "No wonder you wanted to hide!" he jeered, under
-his breath. "A working-girl like you, off on midnight larks like this,
-with to-morrow ahead."
-
-But there was a distinct hint of pleasure in his voice at the discovery
-of her here, thrown upon his hospitality. He led her away to the house,
-within whose open door the other ladies had disappeared.
-
-"Grandmother has gone to bed long ago," he said, as they came up on the
-porch, "and I don't think I 'll disturb her. She 's deaf and won't
-hear, and she needs her sleep. But I can get you all something hot to
-drink, and something to eat, too, if there 's much delay."
-
-Shirley presented him to Mrs. Hildreth and Miss Armitage, who were
-already making themselves at home in the low-ceiled, pleasant
-living-room which lay all across the front of the farm-house. A dying
-fire reddened the hearth, which Peter soon revived into a blaze. Then
-he went in search of refreshments. Thereafter, returning to the scene
-of the breakdown, he rendered Brant valuable assistance, proving handier
-at the process of replacing the injured tire than Brant himself. When
-they finally had done the work, and Brant pulled out his watch with a
-hand black with dirt and grease, he gave an exclamation of dismay.
-
-"One A.M., by all that's unfortunate! Better let me take you back to
-Longacre, Shirley, and get you home comfortably in the morning. What
-difference does it make if you do miss part of a day?"
-
-"Leave her here," said Mr. Elihu Bell. "We 'll take care of her
-to-night, and I 'll drive in with her in the morning, bright and early.
-That's the best way out, and you people can go back and go to bed.
-Grandma 'll be mightily pleased to wake up in the morning and find the
-little girl here."
-
-Feeling it the simplest solution of a situation which was involving
-somebody's sacrifice, whatever she did, Shirley accepted the offer.
-Brant did not feel altogether pleased over driving away and leaving her
-standing on the porch beside Peter, but he was decidedly weary with his
-exercise, and sleepy after two brimming glasses of milk, and he resigned
-his charge with one murmured speech: "Shows what a fool thing it is for
-a girl like you to play at holding down a business position. You can't
-be either one thing or the other with any comfort, and it even gets your
-friends into trouble."
-
-This surly farewell was punished by the girl's gay rejoinder:
-
-"I suppose it was the weight of your cares that was too much for the
-car! I 'm sorry, and I 'll promise not to run away from my work
-again--with you."
-
-When the car was off, Peter promptly brought round his bicycle. "This
-is n't quite so imposing a conveyance as Hille's automobile," he said,
-standing at the foot of the steps and looking up at Shirley, "and I
-can't invite anybody to share it with me and ride home. But it's very
-convenient for these little runs out to the farm, and I 'm glad I
-happened to be here to-night. Somehow, just the sight of you, without
-any chance to talk, does me good."
-
-"If that is true, I should think you might take advantage of living so
-near just a bit oftener than you do. Do you know how long it is since
-you 've been over?"
-
-"It seems six months to me," said Peter, smiling.
-
-"It is six weeks. Are you so busy all your evenings?"
-
-"Pretty busy. And I spend what little spare time I can make with
-father."
-
-"Of course," she agreed, gently. "But I think you need a little more
-change of scene than you get."
-
-"I 'd like it. But I can't be bothering a girl like you with
-entertaining an old chap like me."
-
-"An old chap!" mused Shirley. "Is that the way you feel?"
-
-"I was feeling forty, at least--till the tire blew up. Then I came down
-to thirty. When I found the girl under the veil, I dropped off several
-years more. But when I looked at that boy Hille I became a patriarch
-again."
-
-"I wish he could hear you call him a boy! Suppose I give you a special
-invitation, and run the risk of your bothering me, will you accept it?"
-
-"In a hurry!"
-
-"Your first spare evening then?"
-
-"You tempt me to cut everything and come to-morrow night. No--I 'll
-wait a decent interval, to let you get caught up after this midnight
-dissipation. May I come early?"
-
-"The earlier the better."
-
-"And you won't invite anybody else to help make it jolly for me? The
-last time I ventured over you had a roomful."
-
-"I 'll invite nobody. Come, Peter Bell--do you know I 'm being much
-nicer to you than I ordinarily am to anybody? I let mother and Olive do
-the inviting, and I just look demure, as if I did n't care."
-
-"You do care, then, this time?"
-
-"It's time you were off, is n't it?" and she retreated, laughing, to the
-open door.
-
-Peter looked back at her, an alluring figure, with the lamplight falling
-over the dull red silk of her frock, and wished he need not go at all.
-But Grandfather Bell's tall form appeared just behind Shirley's. This
-was an unheard-of hour for Grandfather Bell. So, with a friendly good
-night and a warm feeling at his heart, Peter bestrode his wheel and was
-off down the moonlit road toward home.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- CHRISTMAS GREENS
-
-
-"Jane, I've the most charming plan in my head for Christmas week you
-ever heard of."
-
-"Have you, Shirley dear? And are you going to tell it to me?"
-
-"I am, indeed. Listen. Let's take cook and Norah, and go--all of us,
-your houseful and ours--and spend part of holiday week at Grasslands."
-
-"Shirley! You take my breath away! Could we do it? Would n't it be
-fun if we could?"
-
-"I don't see a thing in the way. When I stayed overnight, in November,
-your Grandmother Bell said she wished she could get her family together
-once more at Christmas there, instead of going in to have dinner in Gay
-Street, as they 've been doing since your family went to live in town.
-She said she 'd like to have us all if she were younger again, but she
-has no 'help,' and thought it would be a pity to ask us, and then have
-your mother and Nan do the work. I 've thought about it ever so many
-times since, but this idea has only just popped into my head."
-
-"I should think it could be done," mused Jane. "There are rooms and
-rooms at the farm, and little open wood-stoves in every one. You and I
-could go out the day before, and get everything aired and ready."
-
-"What if you and Mrs. Bell and Nan and I went, without telling any of
-the men? I 'm to have Christmas week for my first vacation, you know.
-Then when they came home in the evening, have a bouncing big sleigh
-ready to carry them off to the farm, and a jolly supper waiting? Then a
-tree that night, and Christmas next day, with coasting and skating and
-snowballing, if the weather is right?"
-
-"You artful child!" exclaimed Jane. "It would do us all heaps of
-good--especially father and mother. Father looks to me so worn and
-tired. Have you noticed it?"
-
-Shirley nodded. She had indeed noticed it, and a deep-laid plot, having
-for its beneficiary Mr. Joseph Bell, was at the back of the planning.
-But she did not intend that anybody should find that out. So she agreed
-lightly that Jane's father needed a holiday, as did all the others.
-
-"If we can't get any of them to take more than Christmas day, we can at
-least bring them out there every night and back every morning," she
-said. "We 'll give them such good things to eat they won't mind the
-drive. With Grandfather Bell's big horses, all jingly with
-sleigh-bells, they certainly won't. Oh, will you go and speak to Cook
-now? I simply can't wait to get things under way."
-
-"Do you mean to surprise Grandmother Bell, too?"
-
-"Yes, if your grandfather agrees, as I 'm sure he will. If we told her
-she 'd tire herself all out, doing wholly unnecessary things.
-Everything in the house is always in apple-pie order, but she would n't
-think so."
-
-"You 're quite right, I think. I 'll go and talk with Cook"--and Jane
-hurried away, looking as girlishly eager as Shirley herself.
-
-She had small doubt of Cook. If Mrs. Murray Townsend had a friend in
-the house, it was Bridget. Mrs. Harrison Townsend had never considered
-Bridget a particularly amiable person, but Jane had won her completely
-by treating her always with consideration, and by showing the interest
-in her affairs, which is appreciated most by those who expect it least.
-
-"Sure, then, we 'll go, Mrs. Murray, and take it as a holiday," agreed
-Cook, when her young mistress had explained her plans. "And we 'll take
-some of the fixings with us they 'll not be havin' at the farm."
-
-During the week that intervened before Christmas, Shirley's head was so
-full of her schemes that for the first time since her initiation into
-office work she had considerable difficulty in keeping her mind upon her
-tasks. Christmas fell upon a Tuesday that year, fortunately for her
-plans, so after Saturday noon she was free to give her mind to the
-pleasures in prospect. Mrs. Bell and Nancy had agreed enthusiastically
-to every detail of the arrangements, and Grandfather Bell, when
-cautiously consulted over the telephone and urged to keep it all a
-secret from his wife, had responded as joyously as a boy that the party
-might occupy every nook and corner of the house and have things all
-their own way, if they would only come.
-
-It proved necessary to let somebody into the plan at the last, in order
-that the men, returning to their homes on Monday evening, should be
-directed what to do. Rufus was selected for this office, an appointment
-which tickled him so that it was with difficulty he kept from bursting
-out with his secret. At night he was first at home, and as the others
-one by one arrived, he haled them to their rooms, bade them make
-themselves ready in short order, and surreptitiously packed away several
-travelling bags in the recesses of Grandfather Bell's capacious
-market-wagon, now on runners and fitted with seats.
-
-"What on earth does it all mean?" asked Murray, taking his seat in the
-sleigh in which the energetic Rufus had stowed the male members of his
-own family, amidst a storm of questions and surmises, accompanied by
-much good humoured raillery at his own quite evident excitement.
-
-"It means that you 're kidnapped, and may never see home again,"
-responded Rufus, tucking a hot soapstone under his father's feet, for
-the night was sharp, and Shirley's orders imperative. "Warm, daddy?
-Want an extra rug over you? I 've enough here to wrap up a party of
-elephants."
-
-"I'm very comfortable," Mr. Bell replied. His shoulder rested against
-Peter's, and Peter's arm lay along the low back of the seat behind him.
-Mr. Bell always felt a comfortable sense of support and protection when
-Peter was near--and Peter generally was near in these days. The elder
-man well understood why, and appreciated the devotion which showed
-itself in acts rather than in words.
-
-"I've only one objection to make," declared Ross, as the sleigh moved
-briskly off, driven by Grandfather Bell's next neighbour, a man who did
-odd jobs for him when needed, and worked for him steadily during the
-summers. "I 'm hungry as a bear, and don't want to go more than fifty
-miles to supper."
-
-"It would pay you to go a hundred, judging by my observations," asserted
-Rufus, from among the fur robes at Ross's feet. "And we 'll be there in
-a jiffy. Don't these boys go, though? They must get fed plenty of
-oats."
-
-"They certainly do," agreed the driver. "Elihu Bell is n't the man to
-starve his horses, let alone humans."
-
-"That's encouraging," and Murray, who also boasted a vigorous appetite,
-fell to conjecturing, after the manner of hungry man, what supper at the
-farm would be like. He knew nothing of the arrangements that had been
-made, and felt rather doubtful whether anything could take the place of
-the dinner of Jane's planning he had expected to find at home.
-
-The ten miles were covered in a little more than an hour, for the
-sleighing was good, and the driver anxious to show what his horses could
-do. As they turned in at the gate and drew up at the side porch, they
-saw that the old house was aglow from top to bottom with lights in every
-window. At the jingle of their bells the door flew hospitably open,
-although no one was in sight, and only the roaring fire in the wide
-fireplace opposite the door seemed on hand to give them a welcome.
-
-"It looks Christmas-sy enough in there, does n't it?" said Ross,
-catching sight of holly branches and ropes of ground-pine adorning the
-chimney-piece, and holly wreaths tied with scarlet ribbons in the
-windows.
-
-"Well, well!" ejaculated Mr. Joseph Bell, slowly, as Peter gently pushed
-him ahead into the room, and his eyes fell upon a tree, its top touching
-the low ceiling, its branches twinkling with candles and loaded with
-packages. He blinked with astonishment, and sat abruptly down in the
-first chair that offered, looking as pleased as a boy.
-
-"Where are they all?" and Rufus, putting his hands to his mouth, gave a
-ringing hail.
-
-"Merry Christmas!" responded a chorus of gay voices, and a curtain fell
-aside. Grandmother Bell, her rosy old face beaming, advanced with
-outstretched hand, her husband close behind her. In the background
-appeared Mrs. Joseph Bell, Jane, Shirley and Nancy, all in white
-dresses, with holly berries gleaming in their hair.
-
-"This is the best surprise ever heard of!" cried Peter, stooping to kiss
-Grandmother Bell's soft, wrinkled cheek, and then turning to wring his
-grandfather's hand. "This beats Christmas in town all to nothing."
-
-"It _is_ jolly!" and Murray saluted the old lady in his turn, for he was
-a favourite with her, not only because he was Jane's husband, but
-because, from the first, he had taken pains to be very good to her. He
-smiled at Jane as he stood straight again, thinking she had never looked
-prettier than she did to-night. But Murray was apt to think that,
-wherever he first caught sight of her after a day's absence.
-
-"I 've been trying all day," said Ross, as he greeted the old people,
-"to make myself realise this was Christmas eve. But from this hour all
-difficulty leaves me. I smell Christmas in the air."
-
-"It's the pumpkin pies, and mince, and doughnuts, and plum pudding you
-smell," laughed Nancy.
-
-"The greens smell sweet and Christmas-sy, too," said Shirley. "We had
-such fun gathering them this morning. It seemed a pity to do it by
-ourselves."
-
-"If I 'd known of it, I should have blown out through the factory roof
-and landed over in grandfather's woods!" declared Peter, coming up to
-shake hands. "Woods in winter! And to-morrow's a holiday! Are we to
-stay? I thought I fell over a grip as I got out of the sleigh."
-
-"Indeed you are--for four days."
-
-"Four days! I only wish I could!"
-
-"You can--evenings and nights and mornings."
-
-"Do you mean it? Are we invited?"
-
-"We are."
-
-"Who thought this magnificent scheme up?" demanded Peter. "Ah, you 're
-blushing! I might have----"
-
-"I 've been out in the cold air more than half the day," and Shirley
-covered one brilliant cheek with her hand. "Are n't you hungry?"
-
-"Famishing!"
-
-"We 're to have supper right away. Your grandmother calls it supper,
-and Cook calls it dinner."
-
-"Cook!"
-
-"She 's here."
-
-"Well, of all the----"
-
-But Peter had to be hurried away by his sister Nancy to his room--his
-old room upstairs under the eaves, where he found his hand-bag awaiting
-him, and a brisk fire snapping in the old box stove. For the time
-being, he felt he could let himself forget that the old roof was
-encumbered by a heavy mortgage, due in six weeks now, and held by a man
-who had long coveted that farm. It was Christmas.
-
-The meal spread in the long, low dining-room, to which a merry company
-presently sat down, was a delicious one. Grandmother Bell's old
-blue-and-white Canton plates and cups had never been more delectably
-filled, nor had her antique silver forks and spoons clinked to a
-livelier measure than the talk and laughter which went round as the
-supper proceeded.
-
-"Does it seem like home here?" Shirley asked Mr. Joseph Bell.
-
-"Home?" said he, with a glance from the old prints upon the walls to the
-antique side table below, with its turned-up leaf. "It's the only place
-in the world that will ever really seem like home to me. It 's just a
-makeshift, living in the city, to people who were brought up on a place
-like this. You see, though I went away from here when I was a young
-man, and lived a long time in the city, working up in the paper factory,
-we came back here again and stayed five years, while the children were
-little, on account of a breakdown in my health. Then when I grew strong
-again, we moved back and settled in Gay Street. But the farm is
-home--always will be. My wife feels the same way, though she was a city
-girl. She 'd like to live here now as much as ever."
-
-"I don't wonder. It's one of the pleasantest farm-houses I ever saw."
-And Shirley smiled across the table at Peter as she spoke, meeting his
-eyes as he glanced from his father's face to hers, well pleased to see
-the elder man looking as if heartily enjoying himself.
-
-"The tree is only to look at this evening," announced Jane, when they
-were all back in the living-room. "Nothing is to be taken off it till
-to-morrow evening."
-
-"And we're to be tantalised all that while? I 'm willing to see it shorn
-of its fruit any time after I 've made a quick trip to town--which will
-be the first thing to-morrow morning," said Murray, with a meaning wink
-at Peter, who nodded, comprehending.
-
-Rufus grinned at his father, and a general spirit of understanding
-appeared to prevail among the guests, who had been brought away to the
-party without a chance to get together the parcels they had stowed in
-sundry secret places.
-
-"We 're glad you 're so clever at seeing our reasons for delay," said
-Nancy, gazing up into the thick branches of the tree, her eye upon
-various packages of her own, all tied in the same way, so that they were
-easily recognisable. She had worked for months over her gifts, having
-little money to spend, but possessing much love and ten skilful fingers.
-
-"Meanwhile we must have something doing this evening," said Rufus.
-"What shall it be?"
-
-"How will making candy suit your zest for sport?" asked Jane.
-
-"Bully! We haven't made candy since we grew up--not real candy. I
-don't count Nan's caramels and Shirley's fudge. Let's make some real
-old-fashioned molasses candy, and _pull_ it!"
-
-"What else, at the old farm? As soon as the kitchen is clear we 'll go
-out," and Jane disappeared, to hasten operations in the kitchen by tying
-on an apron and wiping dishes herself with Norah. Her blithe talk,
-while her fingers flew, kept both Cook and Norah smiling while they
-worked, and the big farm-house kitchen was soon in spotless order.
-
-"It does be after doin' me good to work in a place like this again,"
-declared Cook, as she helped Jane measure out molasses and get the big
-kettle on. "It's not that I don't like the tiles and the copper and all
-the conveniences of my kitchen in the city. But when a person has been
-brought up in the country, there 's always the fondness clingin' to them
-for the old ways, even if they 're a bit inconvenient. See the gourd
-dipper, now, Norah. Will you say that water does n't taste better out
-of it than from granite ware?"
-
-"I never saw a dipper like this before," answered Norah, who had been
-born in town, and could hardly share Cook's enthusiasm for these details
-of country living.
-
-"_She_ knows what I mean," said Cook, with a nod of the head after her
-young mistress, just departing. "Sure, I have n't seen such a sparkle
-in the eyes of her since she came to live at the house. She 's not born
-to be a great lady, just a home-keeping one. And that's the best sort,
-to my mind."
-
-Then she beckoned Norah away, and they fled up the back stairs, just as
-the sounds of approaching feet warned them that the company were coming.
-
-"Jolly! This is the stuff!" exulted Rufus, bursting first into the
-kitchen. "Doesn't that smell like the real thing? Tie an apron on me
-and let me take charge of the kettle. The rest of you can grease tins.
-I 'll offer a prize for the whitest candy. Secure your partners for the
-pulling!"
-
-"May I have the honour?" and Peter made his best bow to Shirley as she
-appeared from the pantry, her hands full of shining tins.
-
-"Of course you may, if you 'll show me how. I never pulled candy in my
-life."
-
-"Your education has been appallingly insufficient, in spite of those two
-years in England. But I used to be pretty good at it, and we 'll take
-the prize if you follow directions. Please begin by taking off those
-rings!" commanded Peter.
-
-Shirley obediently slipped off several pretty rings. Then she tied on a
-small and frivolous apron, at which Peter frowned.
-
-"Do you call that absurdity of lace and ribbons an apron?" he demanded.
-"What do you suppose will happen to it if you drop a hunk of candy in
-the sticky stage on it? Here, I 'll get you one of grandma's--they 're
-worth something." Shirley presently found herself invested in a
-bountifully made apron of checked white material, with a bib and
-strings, which nearly covered her from sight. "Now you're safe--and so
-is the candy. The minute it's fairly cool, we 'll seize a generous
-portion and get away to some cool spot with it."
-
-It was some time before this stage in the operations was reached, and
-meanwhile Peter found himself obliged to share his partner with Ross and
-Rufus, who had no idea of allowing monopolies, with no other girls
-present but Nancy.
-
-The elder people, however, proved themselves nearly as good company as
-the younger ones, for everybody seemed to have adopted the spirit of the
-season and to be ready for as much fun-making as possible. And to the
-great satisfaction of both Peter and Shirley, not the least care-free of
-the company seemed Mr. Joseph Bell himself.
-
-To Peter, especially, watching his father with an eye which took note,
-as the others could not, the very evident relaxation and refreshment of
-the occasion were a source of deep satisfaction. For once the son felt
-that he could himself relax and dare to get out of the hour all the joy
-there was in it. Happiness of this sort could not hurt, he was sure. It
-could only help.
-
-"Our panful is cool enough!" declared Peter, flourishing the
-blue-and-white-checked gingham apron which veiled his long legs, as he
-returned from the porch, where the candy had been cooling. "Now,
-partner, hands buttered, courage good? Stand ready to take hold when I
-say the word, I 'll work the lump into malleable condition. Open the
-door into the wood-shed, please. We 'll do our pulling there, if it's
-not too cool for you; then we 'll not get stuck."
-
-"_Ooh-h-h!_" Shirley gave a little shriek as Peter presently, with a
-deft pull of his big lump into a long, smooth skein, handed her one end
-with the injunction to draw it out quickly and swing it back to him.
-"But it's hot!"
-
-"Of course it is, Miss Tender-Fingers! If we let it get comfortably
-cool we could n't pull it at all. Keep hold--keep it moving. Don 't
-let it stay in your fingers long enough to stick.
-Pull--swing--pull--swing! Hold on! You're getting stuck! Wait a
-minute!"
-
-"I can't do anything but wait!" gasped Shirley, holding up ten fingers
-hopelessly embedded in a mass of uncomfortably warm material.
-
-"What! Can this be the expert stenographer, all balled up in a couple
-of quarts of molasses? Hold still! Don't try to work out. I 'll pull
-you loose. Don't let the others see. Keep away from that kitchen
-door!"
-
-But Rufus, pulling smoothly away from Jane, with the art acquired by
-much practice in past years, spied out the tangled ones. His shout of
-laughter brought all the others toward the wood-shed door.
-
-Shirley and Peter were obliged to return to the kitchen to obtain butter
-for the stuck-up fingers. They fell into a state of great merriment
-over the situation, in which everybody else joined appreciatively, and
-the old kitchen rafters rang with the laughter.
-
-"Where would the stage apron be now? This is no gallery play!" jeered
-Peter, rescuing one long string of brownish-yellow sweetness from the
-front of Shirley's big white apron. "Want a taste? Shut your eyes and
-open your mouth!"
-
-"No, thank you. Eat it yourself."
-
-"I will," and Peter tipped back his head.
-
-At this interesting moment the door between dining-room and kitchen
-swung open. A figure appeared upon the threshold--a figure clad in silk
-and furs, topped by a Parisian bonnet. Over its shoulder showed the
-heads of two others--one wearing a wonderful hat covered with fine black
-ostrich-plumes, the other its own thin thatch of short, iron-gray hair.
-
-"We have found you at last!" said the voice of Mrs. Harrison Townsend.
-
-Behind her, Olive burst into a musical peal of laughter.
-
-"Look at Shirley, mother! Don't you think it's about time we came home
-to prevent her quite returning to childhood?"
-
-Then Mr. Harrison Townsend, from the background:--"This is rather
-stealing a march on you, good friends. But we found our own house
-dark--and this is Christmas eve!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- PETER READS RHYMES
-
-
-"Stay? Of course you'll stay!" declared Grandfather Bell to Mr. and
-Mrs. Townsend. "It'll do you good after all your junketing, and we'll be
-mightily pleased to have you."
-
-It had not taken much persuasion. There certainly was a charm pervading
-the old farmhouse, and the thought of resting quietly there for a few
-days appealed to Mrs. Townsend. Her husband was delighted at the plan,
-for he had been persuaded to join his wife abroad, and several months of
-European travel had wearied him. Everything simple and homelike
-attracted him now more than ever. It had been his restlessness which
-had brought his party home a month before the date originally set for
-their return.
-
-If there had been a goodly number of packages upon the Christmas tree on
-Christmas eve, there were more than double that number by the evening of
-Christmas day. Not only had Murray and Peter made an excursion to town,
-but Mrs. Townsend, mindful of many intended gifts stored away in her
-trunks, had sent Olive in with the others to get them.
-
-When the Christmas dinner was over, Rufus proposed that the clan go out
-for an hour's skating on a pond not far away. "We can enjoy that tree a
-lot better if we have some good brisk exercise beforehand," he asserted.
-
-"I don't skate," said Olive, looking as if she wished she did.
-
-"Come along with us just the same," urged Ross, "and we 'll take turns,
-not exactly 'sitting out' with you, but walking up and down the shore.
-Or--we'll teach you."
-
-Olive declined to be taught, but agreed to accompany the others.
-Promenading along the bank, fur-wrapped, her dark beauty made brilliant
-by the frosty air which nipped her cheeks, she was a figure to compel
-attention. She had never seemed more companionable than now, and both
-Ross and Rufus enjoyed, with more zest than they had anticipated, the
-period allotted to them for bearing her company. Murray, observing her
-with brotherly penetration, found her decidedly improved, and wondered
-what had happened during the months of her absence to make her so much
-more appreciative of her family's society than she had been wont to be.
-
-When Peter, in his turn, came to offer himself as partner in her exile
-from the gaieties going on upon the ice, she greeted him with a smile so
-radiant that he looked at her in wonder. The old friendship between the
-two, begun in the earlier days of their acquaintance, and carried on
-through several years, while they grew from boy and girl to man and
-woman, had waned and nearly died of neglect on both sides during the
-past two years. Each had become absorbed in pursuits so different that
-they had little in common, and Olive, especially, had seemed to outgrow
-the traits of frankness and friendliness which had made Peter like her
-in spite of many obvious faults. Before she went away, he had come to
-think of her as hopelessly spoiled and artificial. But now--had
-something changed her point of view?
-
-"A few years ago." said Olive, as the two paced up and down, exchanging
-comments on the occurrences of the past months, "I was in a hurry to be
-grown up. When I look at Jane and Shirley and Nancy, after having been
-away from them for six months, I realise that their genius for remaining
-girls is going to be an advantage. What a trio they are! Shouldn't you
-say they were all three about sixteen?"
-
-The three had just joined hands and skated away from Murray, Ross, and
-Rufus, who had promptly started in pursuit. All three wore skirts of
-ankle length, short jackets and close little caps, and none had
-considered furs a necessary article of apparel for lively exercise. A
-blue silk scarf about Jane's throat and a scarlet one floating to the
-breeze from Shirley's furnished notes of colour to the agile, dark-clad
-figures, and three health-tinted, winsome faces looked up at the two on
-the bank with a gay greeting as the trio swung lightly by.
-
-"I certainly should," agreed Peter. "I don't think Jane will ever grow
-old. Nan is an infant, and will be for ten years yet, as far as
-settling down to consider herself too old for pranks like that, and I 'm
-glad of it. As for your sister Shirley----"
-
-"Tell me what you think of Shirley. The child is a continual puzzle to
-me; I can't make her out. This idea of working steadily at earning a
-salary in the office seems to be a fixed one, though I had supposed it
-only a freak. Does she look as contented as this all the time, or is it
-just the relaxation of the holiday?"
-
-"I should say it was a permanent condition of mind. She 's more
-interested to-day in her work than when she began, and is growing
-surprisingly expert. Murray told me yesterday she wants to tackle the
-special foreign correspondence--French, you know. That means a lot of
-extra labour."
-
-Peter spoke as if he felt a personal pride in Shirley's achievements, an
-attitude which Shirley's sister was quick to note.
-
-"I felt out of patience with you when she began, for I thought her zeal
-for making a working-girl of herself might be of your inspiring," said
-Olive, with a quick look at him.
-
-"Not a bit of it. I never heard of it till she had been a week at her
-first studies. How should I have dared suggest such a course?"
-
-"You and she seem to be great friends."
-
-"Do we? It is an honour I appreciate very much," answered Peter, with a
-little touch of courtliness in his manner such as had often surprised
-her in the early days of their acquaintance, and which struck her now as
-decidedly interesting in a young man who spent his days in a factory,
-even if he was many degrees higher in position in that factory than when
-she had first known him. What his position was at present she did not
-guess, nor did she know that Murray had begun to look at him as a man to
-be desired in his own business, a man whose brain was undoubtedly to
-make him an important factor wherever he might be.
-
-What she did recognise was that she had met few men anywhere who had the
-power to command her interest as Peter had always done, and seemed now
-more capable of doing than ever before. As for his looks--she owned to
-herself that she had never before realised quite how fine and resolute
-and altogether manly was his whole personality.
-
-"Speaking of contentment," said Peter, breaking the little silence which
-had followed upon his last words, "don't you think it follows rather
-naturally upon feeling that you are accomplishing something worth the
-doing? It does n't make so much difference what it is; the point is,
-that you 're doing it. If it costs effort, so much the better."
-
-"It depends on what you think is worth the doing," said Olive. "You and
-I would be apt to differ on that--as Shirley and I do."
-
-"Not much question of that," admitted Peter, smiling. He gave her one
-of his clear-sighted glances, under which she shrank a little though she
-did not show it. It made her say, rather defiantly:
-
-"Of course you think, as you always did, that I 'm the most useless
-creature living, and that my ideals are about as insignificant as the
-amount of actual work I do."
-
-Their eyes met, hers black and sparkling, his gray and steady and cool.
-He studied her for an instant, with a quality in his intent scrutiny
-before which her eyes went down. She was used to admiration in men's
-observation of her, and though that element could hardly be lacking in
-Peter's, since he was human, and she a more than ordinarily charming
-young woman, there was also in his regard that appearance of taking her
-measure, which, quite unconsciously, he could never help exercising when
-brought into contact with men or women. But his words, when they came,
-were gentle.
-
-"If you don't mind my saying so, I think you 're capable of things so
-well worth while that your life might be a wonderful thing to you. You
-could, if you cared to, do what you pleased with almost anybody. You
-have the art, the magnetism--whatever it may be--of the born leader.
-The only trouble is--you don't much mind--do you?--which way you lead."
-
-This from Peter Bell! For a minute Olive was left speechless. Yet it
-was impossible to resent his frank putting of the case, for it conveyed
-something which gave her a distinct pleasure.
-
-"I 'm not sure whether I ought to be angry with you or not," she said,
-after a minute.
-
-"Please don't be."
-
-"When did you take up the profession of preacher?"
-
-"To the queen?" suggested Peter, with an odd smile. "But you 're at
-liberty to order my head off at any minute, you know. Or to preach
-back--which would be worse."
-
-In spite of this passage-at-arms, they were both laughing when the
-others came up with the announcement that it was time to go back to the
-house. But Peter's keen speech sank in; Olive did not forget it soon.
-And somehow, she was more than ever sure that Peter himself was well
-worth cultivating.
-
-"I never was so excited over a Christmas tree as over this one,"
-confided Nancy to Shirley, as the two dressed for the evening. The
-Christmas dinner had taken place, after the country fashion, in the
-middle of the afternoon. It was now six o'clock, and the evening was
-before them. No supper was in order, after the tremendous banquet at
-three o'clock; but Jane had provided certain light refreshments of the
-decorative sort; salad and sandwiches, gay-coloured ices and bonbons,
-cakes and a great bowl of fruit punch, all of which waited in a cool
-spot ready for the serving by the young people themselves. Cook and
-Norah had been sent into town, for a celebration of their own with
-friends.
-
-"Oh, oh! What a pretty frock!" cried Nancy, as her friend shook out a
-soft silken fabric of pale gray, lighted up here and there with small
-sprigs of scarlet flowers, with belt and long streamers of scarlet
-velvet to match.
-
-"Do you like it? It's my one French gown, and an inexpensive one, too,
-but it looks festal, and I thought I 'd christen it to-night. Will you
-wear the one I have for you? I meant to put it on the tree, but it
-occurred to me you might like to wear it and keep me company," and
-Shirley pulled a long box from under the valance of the high
-'four-poster' bed.
-
-"You are the dearest thing that ever lived!" cried Nancy, going down on
-her knees before the box, and lifting out the frock of pale blue
-veiling, with its trimmings of flowered ribbon, a girlish creation of
-the sort to please young eyes.
-
-It was a very happy pair of maids who descended the staircase together.
-They were happy, however, in two quite different ways. Nancy's cup was
-overflowing in the delight of her pretty finery; but it was a joy of
-another sort which made Shirley's heart beat high. Under the folds of
-gray with the scarlet flowers a small envelope lay hidden, over the
-contents of which the girl had spent an anxious hour.
-
-There has not been room to tell of it in this brief chronicle, but for
-the last month Shirley had been having consultations with Murray over an
-important subject--the matter of an investment she wished to make. She
-owned not a small amount of property, in stocks and bonds, an
-inheritance from her grandfather, the management of which had been put
-into her hands by her father as a matter of education. Within a few
-weeks a chance for profitable investment of a portion of this holding
-had appealed to her, and after a spirited argument with her brother, she
-had received his sanction in the course she was eager to adopt.
-
-The legal part of the transaction had been completed two days before
-Christmas, and since then Shirley had been greatly occupied in spare
-moments with the composition of something which might seem to have small
-connection with so prosaic a subject as the transfer of certain legal
-documents from one pair of hands to another. She was not yet satisfied
-with the result of her endeavours, being no poet, but the best burlesque
-production of which she had been capable had been carefully copied on
-her typewriter, and was now reposing where its presence considerably
-quickened the heart-beats under the scarlet flowers.
-
-At a moment when she was alone in the room Shirley slipped round behind
-the tree, and extracting the envelope from its agitating position,
-quickly, although with fingers which mixed themselves up a little, tied
-it in an obscure place beneath a bough, where a gay golden ball nearly
-hid it from view.
-
-"Come out! Come out!" commanded Rufus, as, arriving upon the scene, he
-spied her. "Absolutely not a feather's weight more allowed on that tree.
-There never was a tree so bowed down with care as that one. Nor another
-small boy so impatient to begin as this one. I caught sight of my name
-on that package six feet long under there, and I 've been delirious with
-suspense ever since."
-
-"As soon as Santa Claus arrives," promised Jane, who had agreed with
-Shirley that no accompaniment of the traditional Christmas should be
-lacking, although there were no small children present to be edified by
-the sight of the patron saint. Older people, as she well knew,
-frequently enjoy a return to childish means of entertainment, and when
-Santa Claus, in full rig, walked into the room, she was not surprised to
-see the looks of greatest pleasure upon the faces of Grandfather and
-Grandmother Bell.
-
-Peter made a capital Santa Claus, treating them all as children, and
-making speeches as he presented the gifts which brought forth peals of
-merriment. The gifts themselves were many and varied, from the mittens
-knit by Grandmother Bell's skilful fingers, to the silken scarfs and
-fans and foreign photographs which were the contributions of the
-travelled Townsends.
-
-"Skees!" cried Rufus, going into contortions of ecstasy over Murray's
-present, and clumping up and down the room on the unwieldy articles.
-"Won't I get out to-morrow night on that hill back of the pond!"
-
-"Such beautiful lace I never saw," said Mrs. Joseph Bell to Mrs.
-Townsend, her fingers caressing the exquisite tracery of the pattern
-lying in her lap, which had come to her "with the love of Eleanor
-Forrest Townsend."
-
-"I thought it looked like you," returned Mrs. Townsend, who was looking
-very much pleased herself over a handkerchief wrought by Nancy's clever
-art. The others were busy over their gifts; it was a pandemonium of
-exclamations and congratulations, expressions of gratitude and
-observations of wonder and delight. Shirley, her lap full of parcels,
-tissue-paper, ribbons, and cards of presentation, talking and exclaiming
-with the rest, was yet keeping her eye on Santa Claus, as he stripped
-the tree. She was watching for the moment when he should find that
-envelope. When it came, she meant to be out of the room and away.
-
-Meanwhile Santa Claus dropped a fresh package into her lap. She
-recognised the saint's own handwriting on the wrapper--a bolder, firmer
-hand than one would have expected from a gentleman with so long and
-snowy a beard. She opened it with strong anticipation, and found within
-a set of note-books of special style and quality, evidently made to
-order, for the binding was of a beautiful texture of leather, and the
-paper within of the best known to trade--the thin India, used only for
-fine work. Her name, delicately stenciled on the covers, completed a
-gift which appealed to the girl with a sense of the thought and care put
-into its make-up. She looked up, to find Santa Claus's eyes watching
-her from behind the tree, his lips smiling beneath the white beard, for
-her surprise and pleasure were plainly to be read upon her face. She
-nodded at him, colouring rosily--a picture, in her gray and scarlet
-frock, as she sat upon the floor surrounded by her gifts, the sight of
-which was quite sufficient to reward any giver.
-
-Almost everything was off the tree. "Hello, here 's something I nearly
-missed!" murmured Santa Claus, catching sight of the corner of the white
-envelope beneath the golden ball. Shirley looked up quickly, saw him
-struggling with the red ribbon which tied the envelope in place, and
-rose to her feet, letting a lapful of miscellaneous articles slide to
-the floor.
-
-Everybody was busy, and only Mrs. Bell noticed, and said, gently, "Look
-out, dear, you 're dropping things." But Shirley was gone, through the
-crowd of people and packages, to the door, and had closed it softly
-behind her.
-
-Peter had already had a gift from Shirley, a little thing. She was not
-the girl to present any man with a keepsake more valuable than the small
-book of modern verse which had in it certain stirring lines that she
-knew would be a stimulus to him. So when he saw his own name in
-typewriting upon the envelope, he opened it without much consideration,
-thinking it a joke of Ross's or Rufus's. But a second envelope was
-fitted inside the first, and it was labeled, "Please don't read this in
-public."
-
-His curiosity was awakened now, and slipping the communication into his
-pocket, he summarily finished his duties by distributing the few
-remaining parcels without comment, and then walked away out of the room.
-It had occurred to him that that note-paper was of a sort that he had
-seen once or twice before, when Shirley had had occasion to send him a
-note of invitation.
-
-Outside in the hall, which was dimly lighted by an oil side-lamp screwed
-to the wall, Peter opened his inner envelope. Still in typewritten
-characters was a set of rhymes, cast in a popular fashion used by makers
-of humorous doggerel. His eye ran over them hurriedly, with a low
-ejaculation of astonishment and incredulity at the end; then he read
-them again more intently, looking as if he could not believe the
-evidence of his eyes, They ran thus:
-
- A farm owned by people named Bell
- Was a place where a Thorn would fain dwell.
- So he bought up a mortgage,
- Intending to war wage
- On the property-owners named Bell.
-
- Now one of the Bells, christened Peter,
- Thought life would be fuller and sweeter
- If the farm could be shorn
- Of this sharp-pricking Thorn,
- For he feared a foreclosure, did Peter.
-
- A designing young person called Townsend
- Was seeking investment (cash down), and
- She purchased the mortgage.
- She never will war wage,
- She'll never foreclose, will S. Townsend.
-
-
-Peter had noticed, if nobody else had, when Shirley went out of the
-room. He now understood her sudden disappearance. He made a quick trip
-through the lower part of the house, paper in hand, his questioning gaze
-penetrating every corner. She was not in the sitting-room, or the
-dining-room, or the kitchen--at least he thought she was not, although
-he even looked into the wood-shed. As he was returning through the
-kitchen, an expression of determination on his face not wholly obscured
-by his patriarchal beard, whose hitherto uncomfortable presence he had
-quite forgotten, a slight movement of the pantry door caught his eye.
-He seized the door-knob. It would not turn for a moment; then it
-slipped slowly round, for his fingers were stronger than hers.
-
-The two confronted each other--the white-bearded gentleman, with the
-figure of an athlete and the eyes of an excited youth, and the slim girl
-in the gray silk, with cheeks like her scarlet ribbons.
-
-"What does this mean?" demanded Santa Claus. He put forth one vigorous
-arm and drew the runaway out from the closet by her resisting hand.
-
-"Just what it says, I should think," answered Shirley, bravely, although
-trembling. Had she offended him? Through the whole transaction that
-had been the one burden of her anxiety. "It doesn't say it very clearly,
-but she never tried writing limericks before. They 're not so easy as
-you might think."
-
-"She! Who?"
-
-"'S. Townsend.'"
-
-"Do you mean to say you 've actually bought that mortgage?":
-
-"Murray did the business. I didn't see Mr. Thorn."
-
-"But you own the mortgage?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Thorn did n't want to sell it."
-
-"No--but he had to take payment if it came when the mortgage matured."
-
-"It is n't due for six weeks yet."
-
-"He did n't mind being paid sooner, when he found all hope of the chance
-of foreclosing was gone."
-
-"He would n't sell for the face of it?"
-
-"I 'm not familiar with business terms," urged Shirley.
-
-"Not? A girl who holds a position with Townsend & Company! Tell me,
-Shirley--you did n't get that mortgage six weeks before it was due, for
-the face value of it?"
-
-"Not quite."
-
-"How much did you pay?"
-
-"Not more than it was worth."
-
-"Please tell me _how much more_ you paid."
-
-"I think that's my affair," said Shirley, with her head up. But her
-eyes were down.
-
-There was a silence. Peter put his hand to his mouth with intent to
-cover a sudden urgent and unwonted necessity to steady his lips. He
-encountered the beard, tore it off, and cast the wig beside it upon the
-floor. A young man with a face of mingled light and shadow emerged from
-the disguise of the elderly one.
-
-"If I didn't know that, with this farm as security, you 'd made a safe
-investment, I could n't stand this." he said, in a low tone. "But I
-know that making a safe investment was the last thing you cared about.
-You wanted to stand by in a time of need--and you 've done it."
-
-"You mustn't think," said Shirley, looking up eagerly, "that you 're
-under the least obligation to me. It's just as you say. The farm
-itself is more than security. It's merely a matter of business. You
-know, I 'm learning to manage my little affairs. Father thought it
-would be good for me. And a change of investment like this is great
-fun."
-
-Peter looked at her steadily. "Oh, no, we 're not under the least
-obligation to you!" he answered. "It's very easy to find people to take
-a mortgage at terms that will induce a man to sell it who 's looking for
-a chance to foreclose--that's why I have n't done any worrying about the
-matter! Shirley--you 're----" he seized her hand. "You're----"
-
-"It 's all right," said Shirley, turning her head away with a sudden
-access of shyness. There was no knowing what terms Peter might be going
-to use, when his voice dropped to that vibrating note.
-
-But she did not escape. Peter was ordinarily a self-controlled young
-man, with a cool head not likely to be carried away by sudden emotion.
-But he had a warm heart, none the less, and the girl's friendly act had
-touched him deeply. Besides, he was, as has been admitted before,
-entirely human, and Shirley, in her gray and scarlet, with her brilliant
-cheeks and drooping eyes, was a very captivating figure. Tightening his
-grasp upon her hand he ended his impulsive speech half under his breath
-with--"You 're the--dearest--girl in the world!"
-
-What he would have said--or done--next can only be conjectured, for upon
-this unexpected and most disconcerting demonstration Shirley pulled her
-hand away and ran--somewhere--anywhere--she did not just know where. In
-this indefinite region she remained for fully half an hour. In the end
-she had to come back to the living-room, but when she did it was not to
-look at Peter.
-
-As for Peter himself, when he had got rid of his Santa Claus costume and
-put himself in order again, he also came back to the living-room. His
-face had been put in order as well as his dress, and nobody noticed
-anything odd about him. But there _was_ something odd about him--very
-odd. He felt like a railway locomotive off the track, obliged to convey
-to the beholders, by its steadiness of gait, the impression that it was
-still on!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- A RED GLARE
-
-
-"By all that's astonishing, are you actually idling? And may I come and
-idle, too?"
-
-Shirley looked up from the depths of one of the capacious willow chairs,
-which, well stocked with cushions, were favourite lounging-places upon
-the great side porch of the Townsend house, and from which one could
-look out over a long and charming stretch of lawn toward the
-tennis-court.
-
-It was a warm evening in late May. Everybody else was away, and Shirley
-had settled herself for one of the rare hours of rest and solitude which
-she so much enjoyed when her work was done. But she answered Brant
-Hille cordially:
-
-"Of course you may, if you will be nice and soothing. These first warm
-days make me feel a trifle lazy."
-
-"Not strange, when you spend them in a stuffy office." Brant accepted
-the cushions she tossed to him, and disposed himself comfortably upon
-them on the top step near her feet.
-
-"The office is n't stuffy. I 've sat by a wide-open window all day.
-Besides, the first thing Murray did when he went in with father was to
-overhaul our whole system of ventilation. So the office is never stuffy,
-even in winter."
-
-"Don't be belligerent, or I 'll not be responsible for the soothing
-effects of my society. What can I do to lull you to repose? You don't
-like banjo music, or I 'd have brought my banjo over. It's just the
-evening for that."
-
-"If you had, you'd have gone home again."
-
-"You _are_ in a sweet mood!" Brant spoke with the familiarity of old
-acquaintance. "Would you object to telling me what's gone wrong with
-your ladyship?"
-
-"I can't find out the French for certain phrases it's necessary to use
-in the correspondence we have on hand just now. There are no
-equivalents for the idioms that I can discover as yet, and it's most
-important that I get them right. I 've practically had to make a
-phrase-book for myself so far, because the dictionaries and hand-books
-don't give the terms I want. I got hold of some old correspondence last
-week that helped me immensely, but to-day I was completely baffled. I
-suppose it has got on my nerves, and made me fractious."
-
-Yet she did not look particularly nerve-worn, lying there in the low
-chair, in her thin white frock, her round arms resting upon the arms of
-the chair, her head thrown back, as she regarded her visitor from under
-low-sweeping lashes. Neither did she look in the least like the young
-woman of business she had become.
-
-Brant was always trying to convince himself that her work was spoiling
-her--it would be a comforting realisation if he could think it. But as
-often as he had succeeded in making himself half believe that some other
-girl, whose ways of living were such as he approved, was nearly as
-attractive as Shirley Townsend, just so often did the sight of Shirley
-in some unbusinesslike surroundings upset his convictions. To-night she
-looked particularly feminine and alluring, in spite of her avowed
-fractiousness and her explanation of the cause.
-
-"All baffling things wear on one," he answered, with an air of being
-sympathetic. "I know how it is, from experience. I 'd like a
-dictionary or a phrase-book myself--one that would tell me what to say
-to you when you want to be 'soothed.' Shall I go in and get a book of
-verse and read aloud to you?"
-
-"Please don't."
-
-"Fiction, then?
-
-"Worse and worse."
-
-"History? Philosophy? Science? Travel?--Or humour?"
-
-"None of them. I don't like to be read to--as a duty."
-
-"Duty! I'd be delighted."
-
-"I should n't, then."
-
-"What _do_ you want?"
-
-"Silence, I think," said the girl in the chair, with a mischievous look
-at the back of her companion's head. Her face was demure again,
-however, when he turned. "Don't you like just to sit and gaze off into
-space on a languid night like this, and say nothing at all?"
-
-"If you prefer to have me go home----"
-
-"Not in the least. I 'd like to know you were there on call--if you
-would n't talk."
-
-A silence of some length ensued. Brant stared moodily off over the
-darkening lawn, watching distant electric lights twinkle into existence
-along the rows of tree-tops which outlined the streets. Shirley closed
-her eyes. She really was more weary than she knew. It had been a busy
-winter in the office, and she had worked hard to be able to fill the
-place she held. Her achievements in the matter of the technical French
-correspondence had proved of considerable importance to the firm, and
-her satisfaction at becoming so useful had led her to spend much of her
-spare time in making herself proficient.
-
-It was fully fifteen minutes--he thought it at least an hour--before
-Brant looked around. He had vowed to himself that he would give her all
-the silence she wanted, that he would not speak until she spoke. But
-after a time her absolute motionlessness struck him as caused by
-something even less flattering to himself than her desire for absence of
-speech.
-
-"Confound it--I believe she 's gone to sleep!" he said to himself, and
-rose abruptly, to stand looking down at her, discomfited and very nearly
-angry. Of all the odd girls, one who would tell you to stop talking,
-and then go off to sleep in your presence, was certainly the oddest. He
-supposed she might be tired, and with reason, but--to go to sleep!
-
-The shaded electric bulbs, which hung at each corner of the porch, at
-this moment came glowingly into life, as somebody within switched on the
-current. They were not designed to illuminate the porch strongly, only
-to turn its gloom into a mellow moonlight effect. But the light was
-quite sufficient to show Brant that although Shirley's lashes still
-swept her cheek, her lips were smiling.
-
-"It was a frightful test of your friendship, n't it?" she murmured,
-without opening her eyes. "But you did nobly. I never thought you
-could hold out so long!"
-
-"You--rascal! I 'll wager you wanted to talk, yourself, after a while."
-
-"Of course I did. The minute a woman gets what she wants, she
-wants--something else."
-
-"What is it now? Me to go home?"
-
-"How distrustful of yourself you are to-night!"
-
-"That's the effect you usually have on me." Brant drew up a chair.
-"Shirley," he began again abruptly, "do you know what I wish?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Do you want to know it?"
-
-"Not badly."
-
-"You don't care a straw for me, do you?"
-
-"Several straws."
-
-"You do! I say----"
-
-A door opened. Sophy said, deferentially, "You 're wanted at the
-telephone, if you please, Miss Shirley."
-
-Shirley vanished. Brant rose and paced about the porch, waiting.
-
-"Of course it's no use!" he said, discontentedly, to himself. "I 've
-got as far as this forty times--and no farther. The next thing she did
-would be to throw a soaking wet blanket over me. I ought to be used to
-it. But she might at least take me seriously. She never does. It 's
-no good--this growing up with a girl and then trying to convince her
-that you mean anything when you speak!"
-
-Inside, Shirley was listening to a rapid fire of words which woke her up
-as thoroughly as anything had ever done in her life. They came in the
-voice of Peter Bell, a voice at once excited and controlled:
-
-"Shirley, the factory is on fire. I don't want father to hear about
-it--he 'd come down--you understand. Will you think up some way to get
-him off with yourself for the next hour? We 'll probably have to turn in
-a general alarm, and if we do, somebody 'll be sure to call him up and
-tell him. That 's all. I can count on you?"
-
-"Yes--yes. Peter----"
-
-But Peter was already gone. Evidently he had no time to spare for
-answering questions. Shirley turned away from the telephone, thinking
-rapidly.
-
-She knew that Mr. Joseph Bell was at home, for she had seen him, an hour
-earlier, training vines over the front porch. She understood that Peter
-had remained for late work at the factory office, as he so often did,
-although it was now nearly nine o'clock. And she knew well that it
-would never do for Peter's father to go down to the burning
-building--the excitement of a great fire at his own place of business
-would be the worst thing in the world for him.
-
-Mr. Joseph Bell had kept steadily on at his work throughout the year,
-and nothing that Peter had feared had happened. It had been arranged
-somehow so that the most fatiguing part of his duties now came upon the
-broad shoulders of the son instead of the bent ones of the father. But
-it was as necessary as ever that there should be no sudden strain,
-either physical or mental, and it was this which she now must prevent.
-
-Brant Hille, waiting impatiently outside, saw Shirley fly back to him,
-and looked up at her with gratification. But her first words made him
-sit up, for she spoke in haste:
-
-"Brant, is your car ready for a start?"
-
-"Always is. Want to----"
-
-"Will you get it--quick? The Armstrong paper-factory is on fire. Mr.
-Bell mustn't know it. I can't stop to explain. I must get him away
-where he won't hear. I 'll go ask him and Mrs. Bell to take a drive
-with us--out to the farm, perhaps. I 'll run over. You drive round
-there--will you?"
-
-"Why on earth should n't he know? He----"
-
-"Oh, don't stop to talk about it. I 'll tell you afterward. The
-general alarm may go in any minute, and somebody will telephone him if
-he's at the house. Quick--please!"
-
-Of course Brant did not understand, but Shirley's manner was not to be
-taken lightly. Even as she spoke she left him and ran indoors again.
-Well, if he could serve her, it would be better than having to sit
-beside her in silence while she thought about technical French phrases.
-Besides, he was an enthusiastic motorist, and a hurry call for the car
-always gave him more or less pleasure. He bolted across the lawn,
-through the hedge by a short cut to the street, and so to his own home,
-on the farther side of Worthington Square.
-
-Shirley hurried across Gay Street, having stopped only to pick up a long
-coat and scarf. She caught sight of Mrs. Bell's light skirt at the edge
-of the vine-screen of the porch.
-
-"Isn't it a perfect night?" Mrs. Bell heard a familiar, clear-toned
-voice ask. "Don't you and Mr. Bell want to take a gentle little spin
-down Northboro road in Mr. Hille's car? He 's asked me out, and given
-me leave to invite whomever I want. I 'd love to have you."
-
-Mr. Brant Hille--inviting Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bell to go motoring with
-him at nine o'clock on a May evening--there was no precedent for this!
-But Mrs. Bell, with the intuition of the mother of young people, thought
-she understood. Shirley wanted a chaperon, and her kind young heart
-prompted her to ask a pair who were not much accustomed to the delights
-of automobiling in the moonlight.
-
-"Why, yes, we'll go," said Mr. Bell, getting up from his rocking-chair.
-"We 're all alone to-night--the young people are off at a party. If you
-'ll persuade the young man not to put on too much speed."
-
-So in less than five minutes the party were settling themselves in the
-big green car, its headlights making a wide, brilliant track before it
-down the quiet street.
-
-"All ready?" asked Hille, and started the car. As it began to move, the
-distant but distinct sound of a telephone-bell struck upon Shirley's
-ear. Mr. Bell turned his head. "Was that in our house?" he asked.
-
-Mrs. Bell was tying a scarf over her hair, slightly muffling her ears.
-She had not heard.
-
-"Go on--fast!" breathed Shirley in Hille's ear. The street was nearly
-empty, and he obeyed. For a moment Mr. Bell's attention was taken by
-the new sensation of speed,--not appreciable speed, from the motorist's
-stand-point, because the car was within city limits, but to the novice
-considerable.
-
-At the intersection of Gay Street with Conner Street it was possible to
-look for a moment straight down toward the heart of the city, into the
-business district. A red glare was plainly visible, although partly
-dimmed by hundreds of twinkling electric lights between.
-
-"Must be a big fire," said Mr. Bell, straining his eyes to see. Then
-the trees and houses hid the city from view. "It was down our way, too.
-I wish I could telephone the factory and find out. Peter's there. He
-'d know. Might be that was our telephone-bell that rang."
-
-"I did n't hear any bell, dear," his wife assured him.
-
-"A fire always looks nearer than it is," said Hille, over his shoulder,
-driving on without diminishing his speed. Instead, he accelerated it.
-The street was a quiet one, there was nobody in sight.
-
-"One summer, when I was a little girl, and we were staying in the
-country, father and I walked half a mile to see a fire--and found a big
-red moon coming up behind the trees," said Shirley, and talked lightly
-on.
-
-Brant seconded her efforts with skill, for which she inwardly thanked
-him, and between them they soon had the thoughts of their guests far
-away from the dangerous subject. They ran quickly through the suburbs
-out into the open country, taking the Northboro road, for that course
-led directly away from the red glare which, as Shirley covertly glanced
-back from time to time, could be clearly perceived on the western side
-of the city behind them.
-
-Gaily as she talked and laughed, the girl's thoughts were with Peter.
-He was somewhere back in that red glare, working, without doubt, if
-there were anything for him to do. She was thankful that it was after
-hours, and that there were probably few of the factory hands about the
-place, yet there were undoubtedly many things to be saved in the
-office--books and papers and drawings. She knew Peter well enough to be
-sure that his own personal safety would be the last thing he would think
-of, so long as he could do what might look like his duty to the house he
-served.
-
-The Bells did not know how far they went, nor did they guess at what a
-pace. Brant's machine was a fine one, and he was an expert at smooth
-running. The flight through the warm moonlight was a delightful
-experience, for few curves and no sharp grades gave accent to the speed,
-and the hour flew by as swiftly as the road. When they turned again
-toward the city, the crimson glow upon the clouds had gone.
-
-"The fire is out," remarked Mr. Bell, as they arrived at the top of a
-small hill in the suburbs, from which he could see into the heart of the
-business district. "Hope it was n't as serious as it looked."
-
-But Brant's eyes and Shirley's, younger and sharper, could make out a
-dense mass of smoke hanging over the place where the flames had been.
-
-"It won't do to take them home yet," thought the girl, setting her wits
-at work again.
-
-The result was an invitation to the Bells to alight at the great porch
-of the Townsend house, instead of in Gay Street, with the promise of
-some light refreshment. At first they shook their heads; but Hille
-declared so loudly that he knew what Shirley had to offer, and could not
-think of letting them down short of the full measure of the
-entertainment, that there seemed to be no way out without spoiling the
-pleasure of the two young people. So presently they were all partaking
-of a hastily concocted iced drink, served with tiny cakes, and laughing
-over Hille's stories of certain college incidents, which he told with
-gusto, incited thereto by Shirley's whispered, "You 're helping me
-splendidly. Please keep it up, and I 'll be forever in your debt."
-
-"If there's any way of making you forever in my debt," Brant made reply
-under his breath, "I 'll do a continuous performance for your friends
-till daylight."
-
-But such an effort as this would have been was unnecessary. Mrs. Bell
-presently took her husband away, and since it was a late hour, and no
-other chaperons appeared upon the scene, Brant was forced to go, also.
-He was obliged to give up making any further attempts at gaining headway
-in Shirley's good graces, for although she dismissed him with hearty
-thanks, it was with an air of abstraction hardly to be wondered at. Her
-one desire was to hear the telephone-bell ring again, and learn that
-although the factory might have burned to the ground, no lives were
-lost--and that not a hair of her friend's head was hurt.
-
-She stood alone upon the porch, waiting anxiously, when the Townsend
-landau drove in at the gate, bringing home Murray and Jane, who had been
-out to dinner.
-
-"There she is," said Murray, with suppressed excitement. The next
-instant he was out, had whirled Jane out also, and was grasping his
-young sister's hands.
-
-"Don't be frightened--it 's all right. But a few things have happened
-this evening. The Armstrong factory----"
-
-"I know. Is it gone?"
-
-"To the foundations. Peter found the fire, fought it alone till the
-firemen came, rescued the night-watchman--played the leading part
-generally--till an accident put him out. My word!--that
-fellow----Well--he 's all right, but he 's burned a bit, and his leg 's
-broken. He was so confoundedly risky, trying to save the last calendar
-on the wall----"
-
-"Where is he?"
-
-"St. Martin's Hospital. We 've just come from there. He got his
-knock-out the first half-hour after the thing began, so there 's been
-time to get him fixed up. Our man Larrabee was at the fire, saw Peter
-put into the ambulance, and telephoned me at the Kingsfords'. Tried
-three times to get his people at home, but could n't. See here, he wants
-you to tell his mother--says Jane is too much upset."
-
-[Illustration: "'LARRABEE WAS AT THE FIRE AND SAW PETER PUT INTO THE
-AMBULANCE'"]
-
-Shirley looked at Jane. "I 'm not upset," said Jane, but her lips were
-unsteady. Murray put his arm around her.
-
-"You see, Larrabee thought it was worse than it was with Peter, when
-they put him in the ambulance. He was stunned by the fall that broke
-his leg. It gave Janey a bad shock, and no wonder--it did me. But the
-old boy 's himself again, all right, and his one idea is to let his
-mother know why he does n't come home, but to keep even the news of the
-factory fire from his father to-night, if he can. We don't see why, but
-he seems to, so we 'll follow his wishes. It's the least we can do for
-him."
-
-Shirley slipped through the hedge, and slowly crossed Gay Street in the
-moonlight. She was trying hard to be cool and do as Peter wanted her to
-do. If she rang, Mr. Bell would come to the door, and then how should
-she manage, what excuse should she give? She thought of a way.
-
-"Mr. Bell," she said when he appeared, "Janey 's come home from her
-party--and she 's had just a little bit too much party. She feels like
-a small girl again, and wants her mother to come over for a few
-minutes."
-
-"Why, of course," said Mr. Bell, heartily, from the shadow of the
-doorway. "Nothing much the matter with the little girl?"
-
-"Oh, no--she 'll be all right in the morning."
-
-So Mrs. Bell crossed the road with Shirley, and the girl, with her arm
-round the elder woman's shoulders, gently told her the news. Mrs. Bell
-took it as Peter had known she would, quietly, although, aside from his
-personal injury, there was much cause for anxious thought in the loss of
-the factory and the consequent putting of its workers out of employment.
-
-When Peter's mother had gone home again, resting on Murray's promise
-that in the morning he would take her to the hospital, Shirley turned to
-her brother. He had taken Jane upstairs, and come down again, himself
-too restless to go to bed. He discovered his sister to be in a like
-mood, and they sat down once more in the moonlit porch to talk it over,
-regardless of the hour, which was past midnight.
-
-"I wonder sometimes," said Murray, suddenly, when he had told Shirley in
-detail all he knew of the events of the evening, "whether anybody but me
-fully appreciates that chap, Peter Bell. Do you know what I' ve been
-thinking a long time? That he 's the man we need at the head of one of
-our departments. From all I can learn, he 's been growing as nearly
-invaluable to the Armstrongs as a man can be, yet they have n't raised
-his salary for two years. Now 's our chance to jump in and get him. If
-I can only convince father--and I think he 's pretty nearly convinced--I
-'ll make Peter an offer to-morrow. Pretty good medicine for a broken
-leg and burned hands--eh?"
-
-"I should hope it would be."
-
-"You 'd like to see him in the business, would n't you?"
-
-"If you think him fit for it."
-
-"If I think him fit! What about you?"
-
-"How can I judge? It's for you to say."
-
-Murray looked sharply at her, in the shaded light of the electric bulbs.
-He smiled, for in spite of her remarkably quiet manner, her fingers,
-unconsciously twisting and untwisting her delicate handkerchief, were,
-as he put it to himself, "giving her away." He had an idea that it
-mattered a good deal to his sister what Peter Bell's future might be,
-although he was confident that there was no understanding between them.
-
-If he knew Peter, that young man was not the one to ask to marry a rich
-man's daughter until his own feet were on substantial ground. But that
-Peter cared, and cared very deeply, for Murray Townsend's sister, Murray
-was well assured.
-
-"It's for me to say, is it?" he went on, wickedly persisting in his
-theme. "But it's for you to think! How about having him round our
-office every day--desk next mine--giving you dictation, now and then,
-maybe, when it suits me to put it off on him? Think you could stand it?
-Look up at him as coolly as you do at me? Could you, Miss Townsend,
-stenographer? See here, what are you jumping up for?"
-
-"Because you are getting impudent," responded Miss Townsend, turning her
-head so that her face was in shadow. Her heart was beating so quickly
-she was afraid her brother would recognise the fact. It had been an
-agitating evening all through, and now this last suggestion was rather
-more than she could face with composure.
-
-"I 've a notion P. B. himself could put up with the situation," went on
-Murray, watching her. "His dictation might be a trifle flurried at
-first, and he might forget himself now and then, and ignore those purely
-businesslike relations which should always exist between a business man
-and his stenographer. But I 've no doubt that by a judicious course of
-snubbing you could----"
-
-But he was talking to the empty air. By a hasty flight and the abrupt
-closing of a door, his sister had put herself out of range.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- PETER PREFERS THE PORCH
-
-
-"You 're quite sure you want me?" asked Peter Bell.
-
-"Quite sure," replied Murray Townsend. The two pairs of eyes looked
-into each other.
-
-Peter's gaze shifted to his father. "I 'll do it under one condition,"
-he said. "That father gives up factory work and goes to live at the old
-farm."
-
-Mr. Harrison Townsend turned also toward Mr. Joseph Bell. He smiled
-slightly, noting the hesitation of the other man.
-
-"It's time you and I retired, Bell," said he. "I 've been getting to the
-point for a long time. Let's make a bargain of it. If you 'll go back
-to the farm, I 'll come and spend a good share of my time there. I 'd
-like to help with the haying. I should enjoy watching the cows come
-home. I 'll venture to say I could drive a mowing-machine--for an hour
-or two."
-
-The four men occupied the small rear porch of the house in Gay Street,
-looking out on Nancy's garden. Peter lay upon a couch, his leg in
-splints, his hands in bandages. After a few days at the hospital he had
-been brought home, to spend the long hours of his recovery where he
-could bear them best. The other three were close by, Murray nearest.
-He had put off making his proposition to Peter until he and his father
-could arrive at a perfect agreement as to every term of the offer.
-
-Joseph Bell met his son's meaning gaze with understanding. He knew
-nothing counted with Peter as did the anxiety over his father's physical
-condition. He had kept his boy a long time upon the rack, because of
-his own unwillingness to give up his old work. But the work was taken
-away from him now; there would be a considerable interval before the
-Armstrongs would be ready for him again; and he could hardly think of
-trying for a new position. Meanwhile, the haying season was
-approaching. He thought with longing of the scent of the newly cut
-grass. He could not work hard out under the sun, he knew that; but--he
-could play at work. And his friend, Harrison Townsend, rich man though
-he was, was offering to play, too.
-
-He looked at Peter and smiled, under his short gray beard. Peter smiled
-back entreatingly. Slowly Joseph Bell nodded. "All right, Peter," he
-said. "I'll let you have your way at last."
-
-For a moment Peter could not speak. He lay with dropped eyelids,
-fighting lest the sudden relief from the long strain should unman him
-before these who had been paying tribute to his manhood. But after a
-short space he looked from Mr. Townsend to his son.
-
-"I 'll come," said he, and forgetting his bandaged hands, started to
-hold one out. Then he smiled whimsically, and added in an odd tone, "If
-you 're not afraid of the bad omen in taking on a man with a pair of
-hands like these?"
-
-"Not much, when we remember what put them in that shape!" declared
-Murray, in a tone of great satisfaction; and his father gave an emphatic
-assent.
-
-
-"What do you think 's going to happen _now_?" cried Nancy, rushing out
-upon Peter's porch, a week later.
-
-"Give it up. But nothing can surprise me, after recent events," replied
-Peter, removing his gaze for a moment from the morning newspaper pinned
-up in front of him to the excited face of his sister, but looking
-immediately back again at the absorbing column of business news he had
-been with some difficulty perusing. His hands had been slow in
-recovering from the severe injuries they had received.
-
-"This will. Somebody's going to be married."
-
-"Remarkable. But such events have occurred before in the history of
-nations," replied her brother, abstractedly.
-
-"Not at the Townsend house, for Murray married Jane over here. Ah, ha!
-I thought you 'd give me your undivided attention at last," crowed
-Nancy, triumphantly.
-
-Peter did his best to look unconcerned, but his heart had begun to thump
-quite suddenly and disconcertingly. He waited. He forgot the
-newspaper.
-
-"Have n't you noticed how devoted Brant Hille has been for the last
-year?" Nancy demanded.
-
-"No."
-
-"Then you 've been blind."
-
-"I 've been busy."
-
-"How oddly you speak! Is your throat sore?"
-
-"Don't tease, Nan. I'm not up to it." It was no use trying to look
-unconcerned.
-
-Nancy saw, and took pity on him, as she might not have done if he had
-been upon his feet. "It's Olive, then--though I believe I could have
-made you think it was Shirley. It's not Brant Hille's fault that it is
-n't, I can tell you that. Olive's going to marry an Englishman she met
-last summer abroad--Mr. Arthur Crewe of Manchester. It's just announced.
-The wedding 's to be the first of July. You 'll be on crutches, Peter.
-Is n't that lucky? You can go."
-
-"Oh, yes, I 'll dance at the wedding!" agreed Peter, looking as if the
-shot that missed him had come uncomfortably close.
-
-"It's going to be a big wedding--a gorgeous one. Is n't that like
-Olive? Shirley's to be maid of honour, and there 'll be six
-bridesmaids. Six ushers--and you 'd have been one if you had n't broken
-your leg. Olive told me so."
-
-"Compensation in all things," murmured Peter.
-
-"The best man is the Englishman's brother. Olive says he 's stunning.
-Would n't it be funny if he and Shirley should take a fancy to each
-other? The maid of honour and the best man often do, you know."
-
-"Very interesting. I should say you had been taking a course of novels,
-you 're so full of possible plots." And Peter eyed his newspaper as if
-he preferred its practical columns to his sister's outlines of
-sentimental situations. Nancy laughed.
-
-"Shirley's to have a vacation, for a week before the wedding. Perhaps
-she 'll find time to get over to see you oftener, then."
-
-"She 's been over to see me."
-
-"How many times?"
-
-"Twice."
-
-"For how long?"
-
-"Five minutes, the first time, three, the second."
-
-"How many other people present?"
-
-"A dozen or so."
-
-"Have a satisfactory visit?"
-
-"Oh, very!" Peter hit the newspaper with his elbow, and it fell down.
-"What have you got it in for me this morning for, Sis?" he demanded,
-wrathfully.
-
-Nancy stopped laughing and looked serious. "It won't hurt you any. It
-may wake you up. I just want you to know that I 'm honestly and truly
-worried about Brant Hille."
-
-Then she vanished, and Peter lay wishing he had two good legs, that he
-might get up and go and see for himself just how much all this meant. He
-read the newspaper no more that morning; it lay forgotten on the floor
-where it had fallen.
-
-The weeks went by slowly enough to the convalescent, impatient to begin
-his new work, and full of plans for it. Long talks with Murray helped
-most to make the waiting endurable, and the two young men grew to know
-and respect each other still more deeply than ever before. Everybody was
-kind. Both Mr. and Mrs. Townsend came often to see Peter; and even
-Olive, although at times distraught with the business of preparation for
-her approaching marriage, found a half-hour now and then in which to
-slip across to Gay Street and talk with him.
-
-At these times she found decided refreshment in his society, for Peter's
-ideas on the subject of matrimony were both novel and sensible, and in
-after years she often found herself remembering and putting into
-practice one or another of his quizzical maxims, founded on much shrewd
-observation.
-
-"You are coming to my wedding, you know," she said, on the last of these
-occasions, three days before the date set for that event. "And I want
-you at dinner the evening before, so you may get to know Mr. Crewe, and
-he you, as well as you can in one short evening. I'm so disappointed he
-could n't be here all this week, as he planned."
-
-"Dinners?--weddings?--on these sticks?" scoffed Peter, that day promoted
-to crutches and finding them as yet merely invitations to ironic humour.
-
-"Certainly. If you make them an excuse for staying away, I shall never
-forgive you."
-
-"Please let me off from the dinner. If you 'll put me in the porch, and
-let me be found there afterward, I 'll agree, but I can't hobble out to
-the table on crutches of torture."
-
-"Not even to take out Shirley?" Olive glanced at him mischievously, and
-saw him colour slightly as he answered:
-
-"That would be an inducement if anything would. But I 'm sure you 'll
-adopt my point of view if I beg you to."
-
-"Then I shall have to send her in with Geoffrey Crewe--or Brant Hille."
-
-"Will the men stay behind when the ladies come out?"
-
-"Yes, of course."
-
-"Then I prefer the porch," persisted Peter, comfortably; and Olive
-acknowledged that he had chosen the wiser part.
-
-So on Tuesday evening, when Shirley, in the midst of a rainbow-tinted
-group of young women, floated airily out from the brightly lighted and
-oppressively warm dining-room to the cool, softly lighted recesses of
-the great porch, it was with a sense of refreshing change that she went
-straight to the big chair by a pillar, where Peter sat waiting for her.
-As she dropped into a low seat by his side, she thought she had never
-seen him show to greater advantage, although he could not rise to do her
-honour, and could only say, with a straight, upward glance, "This is
-kind of you. I 've been thinking for an hour how you 'd look when you
-came out that door."
-
-"Do I look it?"
-
-"My imagination fell a long way short. It's months since I 've seen you
-in this sort of thing."
-
-He indicated her gauzy evening frock of pale rose-colour. A wreath of
-tiny rosebuds crowned her hair; a little silver basket of roses,
-ribbon-tied, lay in her lap, a dinner favour like those the others
-carried, but suiting her attire with special charm.
-
-"Do you remember our first party?" asked Shirley, smiling at him.
-
-"I certainly do," Peter assured her. "You had on a white dress and pink
-ribbons--pink slippers, too. You came up and slid your hand into mine,
-because you saw I was feeling lonely. You were jolly kind to me that
-night, and I never forgot it. I suppose I was a pitiful object,
-standing there looking on, all by myself."
-
-"You did n't look pitiful at all, but rather superior, if I remember,
-like a big St. Bernard, condescending to watch the antics of a lot of
-frolicsome terriers."
-
-Peter threw back his head and laughed low, with a gleam of white teeth.
-Whatever there might have been that was odd about Peter's appearance at
-that first party, there could be no criticism of his looks to-night.
-
-Olive, taking critical note of Shirley's companion, owned that she
-should feel no hesitation in presenting him to Mr. Arthur Crewe and his
-brother as a connection of the family. When that moment arrived, the
-American and the Englishmen appeared to take a frank liking to one
-another on the spot, for the Crewes both sat down to talk, and Peter,
-sitting up, met them half-way in a cordial effort to become acquainted
-in the brief time allotted them.
-
-"Will you tell me what you think of him?" It was Olive, slipping for a
-moment toward the end of the evening into the chair by Peter's, he being
-temporarily left to himself.
-
-"I think he's a man," said Peter, heartily, and to the point. "There 's
-nothing better I could say than that, is there?"
-
-"I suppose not, being one yourself. A woman would think it necessary to
-add a number of complimentary things about his appearance and his manner
-and all that."
-
-"I could do that, at a pinch," said Peter, smiling, "for my memory would
-tell me that they were all right, though I thought nothing about them at
-the time. I was looking to see what it was you were going to marry, and
-I found out--as far as a half-hour's talk would show it. I wish you
-great happiness, Olive--and I believe you 'll get it."
-
-"Thank you," and Olive was gone again, being in constant demand, as the
-central figure of the occasion. She found time, however, to ask much
-the same question of Arthur Crewe concerning Peter Bell, and received so
-nearly the same sort of answer that she laughed, and told him of the
-similarity in the two estimates.
-
-"I am flattered," said Crewe, "for I don't know when I 've met a young
-American I 've liked better. He 's both frank and reserved--a
-combination which appeals to me. It looks a bit as if you were going to
-have him in the family, I believe you told me? I sincerely hope you
-will--though, if you don't mind my saying it, now that I see your
-sister, I feel as if I 'd like to leave Geoffrey here for the summer,
-with deliberate intention. I fancy it's too late for that, though."
-
-"I 'm glad you like Peter. It would be too unkind to the family to take
-more than one daughter to England."
-
-"See how well Geoffrey appreciates his privileges?" whispered Crewe,
-indicating his brother, as that personable young man went by with
-Shirley, his manner suggesting concentration of attention upon the
-subject in hand. Then he looked in Peter's direction. "The chap in the
-chair isn't deserted, is he? I think each bridesmaid has taken a turn
-at him, and he seems equal to them all."
-
-However this might have been, Peter found himself thoroughly weary at
-the end of the evening, and glad to be put into a wheeled chair and
-taken home, ignominious as that mode of departure seemed. Arthur Crewe
-insisted on walking at Peter's elbow, all the way round to the house in
-Gay Street and the two parted with friendly warmth of good-will on each
-side.
-
-According to Nancy, who kept Peter informed, Geoffrey Crewe neglected
-none of the opportunities afforded him by his brief visit, and in one
-way and another Shirley was kept busy all the next day. The wedding was
-to take place in the evening, so Peter had plenty of time to rest and
-reflect on the advantages an able-bodied man has over a temporary
-cripple, as he caught glimpses, from time to time, of such sights as
-Shirley driving off in the trap with the younger Englishman, or sitting
-beside Brant Hille as he took a portion of the bridal party away for a
-spin in his big green car.
-
-Olive had chosen to be married at home, so every effort at effective
-decoration had been expended upon the house and grounds in Worthington
-Square. For a hot night in July, it was expected that the outdoor
-arrangements would be most popular, and the great lawn, with its natural
-beauties of landscape-gardening enhanced by the devices of electricity
-and Chinese lanterns, flowers and bunting, was like a fairyland.
-
-"If a fellow's will amounted to anything, a scene like this would make
-him get on his legs, if both of them were only just out of the
-repair-shop!" groaned Peter, as he was brought through the gates by
-Rufus at an early hour. He took note of the paths winding away through
-the grounds, made enticing to promenades by every witchery of art, and
-his imagination already pictured Shirley, in her maid-of-honour attire,
-floating away down one of them, devotedly attended by Brant Hille or
-Geoffrey Crewe.
-
-"Cheer up. The wounded-hero role is awfully taking with the girls, you
-know," consoled Rufus, divining the tantalising effect of this stage
-setting upon his handicapped brother.
-
-"Wounded hero be shot!" retorted Peter.
-
-"It would be the most soothing thing that could happen to him. Would
-you like to change places with him, instead of being able to dash about
-in search of what you want?"
-
-"I shouldn't mind, if my crippled condition seemed to have the hypnotic
-effect yours did last evening. According to Nancy, the bride-elect was
-n't in it with you at posing as an interesting figure. She said the
-bridesmaids were four deep around you."
-
-"Kind-hearted things--they were nearly the finish of me. When I become
-a society man please notify my family. I shall not have the brains,
-myself."
-
-"I will. Where will you be placed for the ceremony?"
-
-"Behind a screen of palms, if possible," requested Peter. He did not
-get his wish literally, but by grace of a special plea to one of the
-ushers, he was put in an inconspicuous place of great advantage, where
-he could not only view the entire scene, but could watch the bridal
-party during its whole course, from stair-landing to improvised altar
-beneath a vine-covered canopy at one end of the long drawing-room.
-
-Olive made a strikingly beautiful bride, as her friends had known she
-would, and her bridesmaids were nearly all more than ordinarily fair--or
-seemed so in their picturesque garb. But to Peter, in all the bridal
-party there was only one face and figure worth more than a moment's
-glance. And when the maid-of-honour finally turned away from the altar
-to take her position by the side of the best man for the ceremonies of
-reception and congratulation which followed upon the conclusion of the
-marriage service, the one onlooker who could not get up and take his
-place in the gay company forming in line to greet the bridal party, was
-feeling more than ever like a stranded canal-boat in the company of a
-fleet of racing yachts.
-
-They came to him, however, when they were free--Olive Crewe and her
-husband, Shirley and Mr. Geoffrey Crewe, several of the bridesmaids, and
-even Brant Hille, and Peter said all the things that were expected of
-him, and said them well. He might be no "society man," as he had said,
-but he possessed the self-command and quickness of wit which take the
-place of familiarity with such situations. Arthur Crewe liked him
-better than ever as the two shook hands, and Peter spoke his quiet but
-earnest words of felicitation and prophecy for the future.
-
-"I 'm sorry I can't be here to see you when you get about again," said
-Crewe, at parting. "I can quite fancy the energy and enthusiasm you put
-into your work."
-
-"I don't need to see you at yours to be sure you 're a steam-engine both
-at project and performance," responded Peter, smiling.
-
-"We 'd work jolly well together, I venture to say," said the Englishman.
-"Perhaps we'll have the chance some day."
-
-"I wish we might," and Peter gave the friendly hand a hearty grip.
-"Good-bye--good-bye. The best of luck."
-
-
-Peter sat alone upon the Townsend porch, waiting for someone to come and
-take him home. Everything was over; the bridal pair had gone; the last
-lingerers along the lantern-lighted paths among the shrubbery had
-straggled in and reluctantly taken their departure. The big marquee in
-the centre of the lawn, where supper had been served, was empty except
-for scurrying caterer's men. The string orchestra stationed in the
-summer-house had at last stopped playing, mopped their perspiring heads,
-and packed up their instruments. Mrs. Townsend had betaken herself to
-her room in a state of collapse, requiring the attendance of her husband
-and Jane; and Murray paced up and down the upper hall, thinking to
-himself that he had never before realised what unpleasant things
-weddings were when they occurred in one's own family.
-
-As for Shirley, no one had laid eyes upon her since the moment when the
-Townsend landau had driven away, with everybody throwing confetti, and
-Olive, leaning out, had flung her bouquet straight at her sister's feet.
-Everybody had laughed as Shirley picked it up, but the girl had run away
-with the white bridal roses crushed close against her breast, her lips
-set tight and her eyes brilliant with unshed tears. She and Olive had
-been more to each other during this last year than ever before--and
-England, as a place of permanent residence, seemed a very, very long way
-off.
-
-It was odd that at the last everybody seemed to have forgotten Peter.
-Ross, laughing with a pretty girl, had walked directly past him and gone
-home, unmindful. Peter had supposed he would come back, but he did not.
-The servants were busy, the quiet of the deserted porch restful, and
-Peter leaned his head against one of the tall white pillars, thinking
-less of the evening that was past than of the future that was,
-coming--so soon as he could walk sturdily about once more.
-
-Up through the narrowest and least conspicuous path of all, one which
-few of the wedding revelers had noticed because its entrance was
-designedly unlighted, came a slim white figure with bent head. Peter,
-gazing dreamily out over the lawn, saw it at once, and recognised it
-with a start of gladness.
-
-Shirley came on across the velvety grass without looking up, and slowly
-ascended the porch steps with her eyes still cast down. Reaching the
-top, she turned about and stood leaning against the pillar, on the other
-side of which was Peter's chair, without noticing his presence, staring
-off at the rainbow-tinted lights, and seeing a little misty halo about
-each one.
-
-When she had stood motionless there for some time, Peter spoke, so
-quietly that he hardly startled her. She turned about with a little
-choking breath, said, "Oh, is it you?" in a tone of relief, and resumed
-her former position.
-
-"I wish I could help make it easier," said Peter, very gently. "You 've
-made things easier for me so many times, first and last."
-
-"You do," said Shirley, in a half-whisper.
-
-"Do I? I'm glad. But how?"
-
-"Just by being there."
-
-Peter's face lighted up. This was a most unusual tribute from his
-independent little friend. He got slowly to his crutches, and with a
-greater effort than he had yet made, came stumping round to her side of
-the pillar, and stood near her, leaning against a great green tub which
-held a towering palm. He felt somehow as if he must be literally upon
-his feet in order to stand by her in this crisis.
-
-Both were silent again for some minutes, until suddenly Shirley looked
-round at him, and exclaimed, "Why, I mustn't let you stand like this!
-Please sit down again."
-
-"Not unless you do."
-
-"Why? I 'm not tired."
-
-"But I want to be near you. I 've done nothing all the evening but envy
-the men who could get about and do things for you."
-
-"You 'll soon be walking off at your usual breakneck pace," said
-Shirley, the colour coming back with a rush into cheeks which had been
-pale since Olive went.
-
-"To the office--yes--your office. I can hardly wait. But I wonder
-sometimes if I can keep my wits and do my work there."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Don't you know why?"
-
-Shirley's little moist ball of a handkerchief was all at once being
-clutched very tight in her fingers. She shook her head.
-
-"I think you do. I think you must know why I 'm half out of my head
-with the prospect of being manager of the new house of Townsend & Son."
-
-"I 'm glad that you like the prospect," said Shirley, in the lowest of
-voices, and looking anywhere but at Peter.
-
-"Are you? Do _you_ like it?"
-
-"Very much."
-
-Peter forgot his crutches, and one of them fell with a rattle at
-Shirley's feet. She would have bent to pick it up, but he prevented
-her, and laboriously reached for it himself.
-
-"I 'm not going," said Peter, deliberately, "to let you wait on me, when
-all in life I want is the chance to serve you--all my life."
-
-"It would be a very poor partnership," said Shirley, in a half-whisper,
-after a minute--and Peter's heart stopped beating--"if the serving were
-all on one side"--and Peter's heart went thumping on again, though not
-in proper rhythm.
-
-"Partnership! _Is_ it a partnership, Shirley?"
-
-She nodded. But she moved three steps out of reach. Peter made a hasty
-movement, and both crutches slipped down to the floor with a crash, and
-slid away off the edge of the porch to the ground. Peter glared after
-them. Then he looked at Shirley, standing there, rose-cheeked, her
-tear-wet eyes now full of laughter.
-
-"Oh, _please_ get them for me, dear!" he pleaded. "Or--no--never mind
-the crutches! Just--_come here_!"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROUND THE CORNER IN GAY STREET
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